The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 25, 1958 Page: 6 of 6
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TTH r\\ Ml R H Ml »M -a TTwredU*, v,r»rwKr. ?V I*** ftut Down RwkK
Afff mwM with OH* c *ol»
Wilson Filos
Suit Against
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Daily Toxan Asks
Dallas To Quit
"Soaking Fans"
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State C API T OL
v operating
Worth and
tat* been on
>ks.
Border Patrol Confiscates
$72 000 Worth Marijuana
PASS (API.—T h c
Border Patrol announced t h o
>n of 72 pounds of
valued at $72,000
Xuthorities say the drug was
hidden in a black 1953 Ford sta
tion wagon and was found dur-
ing a routine check at Eagle
Pass international Bridge
Paso P
•war
T t I I \ M<>\ t I \SM V I'OK IITTI I
tendon! Y.itil Mokmiiu
'rdv
r Pr
,nf|s
cat in
arm
uana
\\ i!m*u » statement note*. he can-
not understand "whs the normal
selling price of major brand
regular gasoline in K1 Paso is
about 34 cents a gallon ineluding
the eight cents state and federal
tax. while the identical Texas-
refined gasoline is sold in Mex-
ico levs than one mile from El
Paso, as 111 cents a gallon.
Officers Trying to Identify
Bodies Found in Lake
FORT WORTH. (API. — Au-
thorities here are still trying to
Public Schools. State Roads
Use Taxpayers Money
P uhltr
high w ays
m of the
tate gov
fiscal
last
WASHINGTON
Bv
T* '.i-
hairman
:ore f<
?ries in vi
Twontv-two pounds were in a
special compartment in the back identify two bodies found with
; - w. a'n-n the new * the vehicle. and 50 pounds in in two days at Lake Worth Om
went into effect, .-aid Board the window Pands- was l*ct sk.e,clon found in a
Maurice Bullock The Border Patrol identified Rrave Saturday morning. Dental
the "ti 'htening-up" the driver as Rosa Linda Car- records have proved the dead
.........]i a drop of 37 p e r reon Rodriguez of Uvalde, who person was not police character
i\ return cent in the number of licensed "as born in San Antonio. H e Geor8« Kt‘an “ as was first
securities dealers. (2) investiga- was turned over to Custom offi- suspected, nor another ex-con-
Base pav ni-e- of almot $600 tion under way in 215 cases of cialg to await district court trial vict, James Iravis Scott of Hous-
nasi pay i.w » "« . nnna ----- ,♦ non i ton. an alternate suspect. Now
police are trying to determine
whether the body was that of
another missing police charact-
er. Gene Townley, Fort Worth.
The second body was found
YKR\ SVNFORD
Pr*'-- Vs-ociation
AUSTIN Sept 22 Teacher
pay raises, an is-ut that has
packed legislative g
past year-, will prob<
next session
Five Million Persons Visit
State Parks Last Year
a year will he recommended to P<k;-ible swuriues law violation Bond was set at $5,000.
the legislature bv the Hale A.k- and '*» 75 cases «-fcrr«l to dis-1 -
en Committee. Th, group of 24 lrlt'' al,orne>s over lhe slale-
lawmakers and private citizens Bullock said the board's aim
has spent almost two years in a was to weed out the wild promo-; aitcttm /»di m ---- ------- —^ — ------
massive study of wav* imorove tion schemes so as to restore f ' More than fioating in Lake Worth yester-
Texas' public school program. confidence in Texas securities,'lve”ll lon P£rsons visited 1 ex- <jay afternoon. The unidentified
Its recommendation, now be- but not to be so zealous as to as Parks for the fiscal
ing readied for final presenta- discourage legitimate offerings. *e~LC. n? Au^ust 31 st;
tion would *< »** .......— par! ! The total was more ti
involve extra spending running! PA,BKS LRGED , I “« the slate park attendance of
into million.. Cost of moving up „ Sevfal Parks now under 10 years ago
the floor on teacher salaries is the administrationi of the State A check of automobile regis-
estimated at $70,000 000 a year Barks Board should logically be tration plates showed more than
Represen'v vo L DeWitt Halt* in the hands °f locaJ communi-jone and one half million cars
of Corpus Christ! co-chairman ,ies- actording to State Auditor registered in Texas visited the j Joske’s Employee Charged In
voted against the raise recom- C- H- Cavncas' Parks durin8 the year white
mendation. He said this, plus Cavness’ audit reports on the j about 70.000 cars were from
other proposals would mean Barks Board noted that Gonzal-1 other states or foreign countries.
“about a quarter of a billion dol- jes State Park had been turned
AUSTIN (AIM.
schools and the Mat.
gathered in ttO per «
money spent by the
ornment during the
year.
State Comptroller Robert Cal-
vert issued a report Friday in
which he said 30 cents out of
every school doiiar spent by the
state government went into
highways. Public schools and
vocational education got almost 1,0 available,
the same.
Other major fractions were 16
cents for public welfare. 7 cents
for higher education and about
3 cents for teachers’ retirement
funds.
Calvert said the general reve-
nue fund had a net cash balance
of nearly $55,000,000 dollars at
the start of the past fiscal year
Land Mark Closed
For Installation
Of New Equipment
Beit Quail Crop In Yean
Prospect For Panhandle
Tek
it editorial 4 The TV*
W e re {lid te hear
M K 1- TWln* • f
ok- the Big l> hotel*
•are d-ung *n Vt
b But lo*w what *re
irate Muttent*, parent*
m th«*y are <kvn( an
• b of v mi king the
He til?- weekend
mnvity nf Te*a» K*
*m iatn»n passed a
tail w«*ek pledging
vifilantT nf the re
•l Texas and Oklahoma
.tM in Oatlas for t h a
niton Bowl game Ear
e\ student leaden said
(I'd playing the Okla-
a- game on a home and
That
AUSTIN,
heaviest qt
in prosper
handle.
(AIM On
»l crops ti
in the T
if t!
Pan
lan*lmark. The Washington
Monument, will l>o closed to
tourists for three months begin- j
mng November 17 After that,
however, a new elevator c a b
and other equipment to increase1
the pleasure of their visits, will,
The Game and Eli-
sion says bountiful y
in the Panhandle
Plains plus other fav
tors are responsible.
h Commix-
:ram crops
and South
orable lac*
Researches Leave Chamber
Commissionor of Education
To Decide on Not’l Defense
AUSTIN (AIM.—The Texan
. ommis-ioner of Education. Dr.
I W Edgar, has 11 days in which
lo decide whether to recom-
mend to the State Board of Edu-
e.tnon that iexas participate in
federal national defense educa-
tion programs.
Dr Edgar said here today h a
dors not know what his recom-
mendations w ill be.
He lias just returned from
Washington, where he partici-
pated in a 3-day meeting called
man—about fifty, was in three
. ... i fee* °f water. He carried a n
1 he total \vas more dou*: empty billfold. An autopsy shows
he had several broken ribs and
other injuries, but died of
drowning.
000 or more in the red. He will
give an exact estimate to the
next Legislature in January.
Pasadena Child Drowns In
Drainage Ditch After Fall
PASADENA. (AIM. Barbara
Suffering No Apparent Harm Eav A",ha" « M •'ro|,l iw
... _ |dcna«.rl tumhled off a bridge ........... . ......
a.monio, (A» I wo amj drowned in a drainage ditch t)V the U. S. Office of Education,
pale and weary researchers Sunday. The new federal laws are de-
cmerged from a cramped space Sh lh dailL(,l1rr ()f Mr | signed to give federal assistant
cabm at Randolph Air Force and Mrs c R Airh.„., lo schools in the improving of
dena science, math and language in-
struction: to institute a testing
The child clung to the edge program to find the ablest
of the bridge for a few minutes youngsters; and to set up a voca-
tional program to train skilled
Donny, tried to lift her to safety, technicians for occupations
but the little girl’s hand slipped | needed for the national defense.
Base near San Antonio this
morning and gulped their first
and ended with only about $13.- breath of fresh air in 10 days.
500.000 at the end of August. I)r. Bruno Balke and Senior
Calvert has predicted that at Master Sergeant Samuel Karst | while her nine-year-old brother
the end of the current fiscal are reported in good condition
year the state will be $100,000.- after the long experiment at
the School of Aviation Medicine.
Dr Robert Clark, in charge of
the test, said preliminary re-
sults indicate that men in good
physical condition can undergo
the hardships of high altitudes
without harming their physical
Fourth Victim of Headon
Collision Dies In Tahoka
TAHOKA. (AP).—A fourth performance.
lar tax bill.”
Other committee
Traffic Crash Victim
over to the City of Gonzales.
Others used on a community
members basis also could be community Dies in Hospital Today
said they felt the problem was j operated, he said,
not a shortage of teachers-bu! | Cavness als0 notcd t)lc addj.
nnequat distribution. Whl e tion of six new ks t0 t „ e
small districts may have trouble sJal(i svs»em
filling faculties, they said, some COLLEGE BUILDING
cities have a surplus. Twelve state colleges have
Many legislators, elected on so|d $12,375,948 in building
economy in governmen plat- bonds_afler adjusting to "buy-
orms. can be expected to echo market. .difficuUi|s.
Hales sentiments. Since a huge; Representatives of the schools
slate deficit is foreseen without _mwti here first offered
raising the cost of anything, the.sl7„v)0000 worth of bonds on a
squeeze could l.e especially id.year payback basis, but got
4 . no offers. Several of the schools
f alwavs a potent airea(jv bad let contracts for
force because oi their numberL.onstruction feel, { h
-—might be substantially rein- bonds would se|1
forced by Hie current concern , Bonds wcre ,hen rc.offcred on
acute.
Teachers,
DENISON (AP)—A 35-year-old
resident of Prosper, Texas died
in a Denison hospital today of
injuries suffered in a head-on
auto crash early yesterday just
north of the Texas-Oklahoma
border.
He was Zealous Owen Cowan.
Prosper is located north of Mc-
Kinney, in Collin County.
Two others injured in the ac-
cident remain in serious condi-
tion.
Robbery of Shoe Department
SAN ANTONIO. (AP). — A
charge of robbery with firearms
has been brought in San Antonio
against Louise Garza, 23. ac-
cused of putting on a disguise
Thursday night and holding up
the store where she worked.
She was freed on $2,500 bond.
Police also arrested Benito
Martinez who picked up Miss
Garza in his car a moment after
the $1,600 holdup in Joske’s of
Texas shoe department. Marti-
nez was released later after he
told police he did not know
that a holdup had occured until
he was arrested.
Two Texas Counties
Declared Disaster Areas
_______________U11 DALLAS. (AP).—Two squads
to “catch up with the Russians : an 8-year-old basis and partially i of Dallas police were dispatched
in education a head-on clash be- so!(j_ Remaining bonds may bc|to the city’s Marsalis Park Zoo
tween these groups and t h e 0ffcre(] iater. in the Oak Cliff section today to
enonomj forces might well pro-j w a TER NFFDS FORECAST coith! sn unidentified bull It’s
vide the flashiest fireworks of, Deman(j for Texas surface wa-1 the seventh report in two days
the next session | ter is expected to triple in the'of bulls plaguing the neighbor-
* I, , U i •* next 50 years. Prediction is by hood, and where the animals
Another Hale-Aiken Commit- Harry p Burleigh, area engi-
neer for the U. S. Bureau of
victim of a head-on traffic col-
lison one mile south of here in . ^ ie *wn mon woro greeted by
West Texas last Sunday died to- j “ie,r wlves when they emerged
day. She was Mrs. Mildred Cur- *r<,,n the small cabin. Both men
ry 29. j then took treadmill tests, walk*
i ing at three and one half miles
Killed outright were the 22-1 an hour, until their heartbeat
year-old director of the band at; reached 180 per minute.
New Deal school near Lubbock, | —-—..........
Marion Beverly Gregory; and
Mrs. Curry’s 8-year»old son,
Dan Jr., and 10-ycar-old daugh-
ter, Evelyn Louise.
E. M. McCLANE
(Formerly with Brashers)
announces
the purchase of Sorrell’s Barber Shop
114 N. Dallas
Your patronage greatly appreciated
should
Where will it all come from?
tee suggestion: Texas
quit accepting federal money | Reclamation
for the school lunch program
and vocational education. i .......__. .
Federal funds now received BurlC gh h3ys e™ugh water 15
r c iumis now being wasted to meet the
are estimated at $9,000,000 a ,, ,, ,
. - , ,. demand. Problem of saving it is
yea . Committee said local dJS-j t0 th ,,ngincers t0 ^]vc
tr,cts and P“rcnls 5hould P 3 > Needed is a simple low .cost
means of capturing run-off wa-
fer these services.
It did recommend, however ,er now flowing into the Gulf of
that federal aid be continued ! ____
where military
bring in a large non tax-paying
atttendance.
Other committee recommen-
dations.
1. State should quit levying
property tax, leave this
source to local districts.
2. Permanent school fund
should be kept as an en-
dowment, not spent for
current needs.
3. Counties, not state, should)
bear the cost of maintain-
ing county school super-
intendent’s offices.
BRIGHTER WEATHER
Texas Securities Board r c-
viewed its first year as’ a sep-
arate state agency and declar-
ed the “investment climate” had
improved under tougher regula-
tion.
Securities Board was set up
by the last legislatiure by com-
bining functions formerly
bandied partly by the Secretary
of State’s office—partly by the
inslallations ®*exico and delivering it to
installations pojnts where it jg needed>
Burleigh wa one of ten speak-
ers at a water conference spon-
sored by Texas A&M College.
Governor Price Daniel praised
the recently adopted statewide
water program and urged
against sliding back into apathy
as a result of recent drouth-
breaking rains.
Revision in the rate structure
for city water users was pro-
posed as one mean of conserva-
tion. Lubbock Hydrologist W. L.
Broadhurst said that increasing
the rate instead of decreasing it
as more water is used would cut
down household waste.
HIGHWAY WORK AT PEAK
Two-thirds the way through
1958 the State Highway Depart-
ment already has placed as
much highway construction work
under contract as in the entire
record-setting year of 1957.
JjMjMrance Department
Total for this year reached
investment dimale i $224,000,000 this month. Low
are coming from, police say, re-
mains a mystery. The seven
bulls were impounded until the
owner or owners can be found.
The animals are described as
Docile, but they have been
damaging lawns, shrubs and
flower beds. Authorities at the
Dallas Zoo say the livestock’s
origin is a mystery to them, too.
McAllen Attorney Named
Executive Secretary Gl Forum
McALLEN. (AP).—An attorney
here, Ed Idar Jr., has been nam-
ed executive secretary of t h e
American GI Forum of Texas.
Idar will succeed Atty. Man-
uel Velasco of Victoria on No-
vember 1. At that time the
Forum’s state headquarters of-
fice will be moved from Victoria
to McAllen. The new executive
secretary is a graduate of the
University of Texas and a native
of Laredo. The American GI
Forum of Texas is a veterans or-
ganization. Its work affects
persons of Latin-American ex-
traction, but membership is open
to anyone.
bids opened in a two-day tabu-
lation for this month’s propos-
ed projects amounted to $28,-
669,432. Department spending
on Texas roads ih the next three
years is expected to reach one
billion dollars, Highway Com
mission Chairman
Formby said.
ay Corn-
Marshall
Texan’s Giant Earth Mover
Showing In San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO, (AIM.—A
gigantic, Texas-built earth mov-
ing machine has been unveiled
at the American Mining Con-
gress at San Francisco.
The machine, built by the R.
G. Letourneau, Inc., of Long-
view was put on display by a
vice president of the firm, R. L.
Letourneau.
Letourneau called it the
“world’s biggest earth moving
scraper.” He said it can favor-
ably affect cost of coal to the
consumer and mtfke marginal
coal fields more profitable for
the mining companies.
Letourneau said the most, val-
uable contributions the new ma-
chine offers are its complete
maneuverability from one work
location to another.
Ford Motor Company’s
Dallas Manager Retires
DALLAS. (AP).—Ill health
has forced the retirement of the
manager of Ford Motor’s Com-
pany’s asembly plant here. He is
60-year-old Cliford Jessee, who
has been associated with the
Dallas operation since 1941. Jes-
see will be succeeded by Howard
Sullivan, who has been assistant
plant manager.
Pilot Bales Out Safely,
Plane Crashes Near Austin
AUSTIN. (AP).—An Air Force
pilot from Kansas had a narrow
escape early this morning when
his jet fighter crashed and ex-
ploded on the outskirts of Aus-
tin. The pilot, Lt. James Hare
of Parker, Kansas, bailed out
safely after the ship developed
engine trouble. At the time he
was preparing to land at Berg-
strom Air Force Base hero.
Jet Plane Crashes Near
San Antonio; Two Killed
SAN ANTONIO, (AP).—A T-33
jet plane from Lowry Air Force
Base at Denver crashed at Ci-
bolo, 15 miles east of San An-
tonio, around midnight and the
two occupants were believed to
have been killed.
Randolph Air Force Base at
San Antonio reported the craft
was in touch with the Randolph
Base a short time before the
crash. A heavy rain and fog en-
veloped the San Antonio area at
the time.
The wreckage was found this
morning in an open field.
Th* thrill of r*c*ivlng on on-
oxp*ct*d long diitonc* coll from
o good friond or tov*d on# l|
wonderful. Th* turprli*, th* *x«
dt*m*nt offer m*mori*i te b*
tr*oiur*d long after th* call it over.
Treat yourielf and your family
to that thrill tonight, Th# cost it
•moll . . . especially If you call
after 6 p.m. when low ratei art
oven lower.
\
Texas Telephone
Telegraph Co.
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The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 25, 1958, newspaper, September 25, 1958; Palmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth801269/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.