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Lubbock Morning Avalanche from Lubbock, Texas • Page 6

Location:
Lubbock, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Poqe 6, See. I Lubbock. Avolonche-Jeurnol, Feb. 29, 195S Worst Blizzard Since Winter Of 49 Rakes Upper Midwest (Continued From Page motorists were trapped in the storm. Patrolmen tramped through six- foot drifts to reach the house and help the travelers to the waiting patrol cars.

All were to he in good condition By noon Sunday all other marooned travelers in Colorado and Wyoming were reported rescued. Snowplows were out at dawn but many remained blocked. Subzero cold moved behind the storm, with the mercury falling to a low oi 34 degrees zero at Fraser. Colo. Snow, sleet and freezing rain that fell during the day over a Vi wide area of East Texas had largely dissipated by Sunday night.

Skies cleared over the rest of the state. The Weather Bureau reported that still falling at Lufkin. Beaumont and Galveston early in the night. Skies were cloudy to partly in Oast Texas. Temperatures ranged from a low of 24 at Dalhart at 6:30 p.m.

to highs of 4k at Del Rio, 47 at Beaumont and 44 at El Paso. There was sbme blowing dust at Salt Flat. Tyler (lets Oxer Inch Ty ler reported 1.3 of an inch of moisture Saturdax and Sunday. Sleet and snow, xvhich melted as it hit the ground, ended about 4 p.m. Llano reported OS of moisture from sleet and snow that melted when it fell.

Freezing weather was forecast for much ot the state during the morning. Given The latest ra report to the Weather Bureau included these totals for the 24 hours ending at 6:30 p.m.: Austin 1.09 in' Beaumont .38. Browrwville .01, Galveston .28, Hauston .14, Waco .09. Lufkin oi .32. Palestine a at Cotulla The sleet and freezing rain followed heavy in the Tyler arras.

Earlier Sunday highway travel slowed to a crawl in the Longview and Ty ler areas with up to an inch and a halt of covering roads. Temperatures remained in the upper 20s as snow, sleet or rain fell south-! westward through East Texas to Waco. Austin and San Antonio. At Dal hart, where an inch of sn set'll h- thA ground, tiie dropped to even zero be- morning low of 4 degrees, Lubbock 6, and Abilene 18. Two-Year spree Of Eisenhower Urges Miami Accountant Cost City $46 000 Americans To Join 'Back To God' Move WASHINGTON Feb.

20 President Eisenhower tonight urged all Americans to join in a to God" campaign. God there could be no American form of government, nor an way of the President said. of the most of Americanism. Thus the founding fathers picked up at his modest home saw it and thus, with help, today on a charge of suspicion of it will continue to MIAMI, Feb. 20 INS-A 34-year- old male accountant confessed today he had embezzled more than $46,000 of the city of funds to cover costs of during the past two years.

Officials said it was the biggest swindle in the history of city administration. The accountant. George N. Parks, said he have a dime in his when he was DEDICATE NEW participating in the dedication and opening ceremonies of Lamcsa's new $60,000 National Guard Armory Sunday are left to right, Mayor Bob Crawley, the Rev. J.

IL Crawford, pastor. First Methodist Church, the Rev. Milo Arbuckle, pastor. First Baptist Church, Col. William A.

Stephens, if commander 3560th Air Base Group. Webh AFB, Big Spring. Maj. Willis McDonald. Fourth Army.

Maj. Mack Wassell. plans and training officer. 112th Armored Calvary Regiment, and Capt. L.

F. Morris, commander, Company 112th Regiment. (Staff Photo.) grand larceny. He reportedly confessed the embezzlement there and later at police headquarters. Operation City Auditor W.

Wirt Culbertson called operation talk was transcribed for a broadcast from New York City' launching the American to program. Self-Evident Truth He said the fathers and said the actual short- expressed in words for all to read age amounted to $46,421.02. the ideal of government based be spent every- upon human and AITS FOR William F. Dean breaks open his combat at ions during rehearsal for atomic hurst of the 1955 spring tests at AEC Nevada Test Site. Telephoto.

Naval Fleet Could Halt Red Offensive WASHINGTON, Feb. Navy Secretary Charles Thomas said Sunday he believes the U. S. Seventh Fleet can stop any Communist attack mounted against Quemoy ar.d the Matsu Islands. Thomas refused to say.

howex er. whether the fleet has received any orders of any type relating to defense of the islands. He said that is strictly a matter lor President Eisenhower and the Joint Chiefs of Sfaff to decide He also refused to say whether planes and ships in the fleet are carrying atomic weapons. But he said they are capable of it. Quemoy and the Matsus.

offshore islands now held by' th? Chi- Storms Lash (Continued From Page touch with the world for 48 days. Storms raging along coasts have sunk two ships and have taken at least three Gusts of-wind up to 118 miles swept across the French Rixiera and lashed th? Ligurian Sea off Italy Saturday and today. In Genoa, port officials estimated 25 per cent of the harbor capacity knocked out by the continuing storm. They' estimated damage at more than $6 million. A 1.400-foot breach was battered in the main harbor breakwater and installations for docking tankers were destroyed.

Genoa is Italv biggest port. Around the globe a violent gale rinped through Japan and its sea approaches Sundav. leaving ar least 65 persons dead or missing and scores of ships sunk or disabled. Sixteen persons were know killed and 49 were listed as missing. most of them presumed dead.

Officials predicted the toll would rise with further reports from areas stricken by the storm Lamesa Armory (Cont nued From Page National Anthem by the Lamesa High School Band. Maj. Mack Wassel, battlion plans and training officer, was master of ceremonies. He introduced Maj. Willis McDonald.

Fourth Army advisor to the unit, and Capt. L. F. Morris. Company commander.

FolVnving the more than townspeople and 200 troops inspected the new plant. recently, the armory ng contains a foot as emhly room that will hr utilized for practice. The room has a seating of 1.100 and. when not ir use by the guardsman, will be availabl chic club and other community gatherings of a socia! and educational rature. Ammunition and armament storage is provided for in a large vault.

Adjacent to the storage vault is a large stockroom for storing supplies. The bui1dinrr also has a kitchen, men and ladies rest rooms and a large locker room. Company headquarters is provided with three spacious offices in the front of the building. A large classroom for trainmg purposes, can be divided into two smaller rooms with a folding partition. Assisting in the ceremonies today were Comnanv P.

Snyder, commanded by Capt. Weldon Kincaid: Company Midland, commanded by Capt. Frank Johnson; and Company Brovvn- ficlri. commanded by Lt. Jerry Stoltz, all of the 112th The modern armory building was designed by Allen and Allen, architects.

Lamesa. General tracter was Robert L. Gauylor. Crvstal Citv. Wreck Victim In Serious Condition Carl Phares, 20.

1704 Ave. was in serious condition late Sunday at Methodist Hospital where he was being treated for a broken bark rereivrd when the car in hioh hrt was traveling alone overturned three miles north of 2 a Sunday. Officers who investigrted tiie accident said automobile flipped oxer after going into a barrow ditch rs it neared a curve. Phares was removed from the wreckage by a truck driver and was taken to Lamesa General Hospital. He was later transferred to the Lubbock hospital.

Vfv Ji Mexico -dri 1 Welding Equipment Taken By Thieves A number of thefts and break- ins, one in which more than $500 worth of welding supplies was taken, had been reported to police by late Sunday. Frvin dark of Plain view told officers that someone took welding eouinmrnt and supplies valued af from his truck parked on the of West Texas Oxygen Co 2601 Ave. H. Saturday nicht. The loot included two cutting torches.

50 cutting tips, five pressure and two welding helmets. An valued at $65 was taken hetween 3 p.m. and 4:30 Asst. City Mgr. Ray A.

Williams said adding there was than $10 each in two bank Culbertson said Parks told him that the most he ever took at one time was $2.000. his method was Culbertson added, his books always Parks, who was divorced and lived alone, earned $449 a month and had been a city employe for eight years. Authorities said he had detection in at least two audits of city financial affairs. ntlllS BRIifS A burglary in whirih between $100 and $150 was taken from the Lubbock Country' Club early Saturday was still undpr rain arioirs to: npse Nationalists, are regarded as which rushed in from the south likely stepping stones to the inxa- sion of Formosa, xvhich the United States is pledged to help defend. Reds Accused Of BreaVinq PANMUNJOM Korea.

Monday. Feb. 21 United Nations Command today formally accused the Communists of breaking the Korean armistice by bringing MIG jets into North Korea and demanded of this crime be pun shed." Mai. Gen. Leslie Carter, senior 'Hied member of the Korean Military' Armistice Commission.

thA at a meeting called by the U. Command Carter immediately that three neutral nations mobile inspection of Sxxiss, Swedes and Communist Czechs and to Norih KArea to look for evidence of the MTGs and thAir arms and ammunition. and raced up the middle of Japan through its northern reaches. Hardest hit bv the gale that eenerated winds of more than 50 miles per hour xvere the Nansei Isles off souther- most main island of Kyushu. There a 99-ton fishmg vessel xvent down with a crew of 50.

Sixteen of the crewmen were rescued and one bodv was recovered. The other 33 were miss- and beliexed drowned. Also off the Nanseis, the 250- ton cargo passenger steamer Midori Maru, carrying 172 including 147 passengers and 25 crewmen, flashed an SOS earlv Sundav. bringing the Amer- icp.n President Lines luxury ship President Gexeland to the scene. Former Lubhcck Family Wins Mid'H Main reported it could make no radio with snip, according to newspaper The Japanese Maritime Beard said another steamer, the Nanrhu Maru.

earning 169 persons including 146 passengers and 23 c-mvmen. was reported drtress 27 miles southwest of Lodge To Discuss Disarmament Plan UNITED NATIONS. N.Y.. Feb. 20 Cabot Lodge chief U.S.

delegate to the UN, flew to London todav to press for disarmament in closed-door. fixe- power talks. He said in a farewell statement that the United States still seeks a tamper-proof plan covering all countries and all kinds of arms. The talks begin next Fridav. The United States.

Britain. France. Russia and Canada are taking part. LaM Meet Deadlocked A similar conference deadlocked last year Soviet refusal to consider an American plan for rigid controls on a plan of disarmament bv stages. But since then the Russians appeared to have lessened insistence on banning all atom and hydrogen weapons before considering reductions of conventional arms and armed forces.

Mr. and Mrs. J. VV. St.

on birth of a daurhlor weurhinz pounds ounros at 3:50 pm. Sunday at Methodist Hospital. The father Is a aales man. Mr and Mrs Lloyd Croslin. 3024 21st on the birth of a daughter weighing 4 pounds 3 ounres at 02 p.m Sunday at Methodist Hospital.

The father is an attorney. Mr. and Mrs K. B. Cass 1720 25th St on the birth oi a son weicnina pounds 9,44 pm Sunday Methodis' Hospital The father is employed by Hester Mr and Mrs.

T. D. Dickens 315 Tempie St on the birth of a daughter weighing 6 pounds. 12 ounces at 549 pm. Sunday West Texas Hospital.

The father is emplojed by the TNMAO Lines. Mr. and Mrs A. Bickford. 2211 2nd on the birth of a son weighing 6 pounds.

ounces at 11:14 a.m. Sunday at West Texas Hospital. Mr and Mrs Vincent Davis. 211 Ave. on the birth of a daughter weighing 7 pounds.

9 ounces at 11:15 p.m. Sunday at St. Hospital. Mr and Mrs. Weatherly, 2407 3rd PL.

on the birth of a son weighing 7 pounds. 4 ounces at 3:50 a m. Sunday at St Mary's Hospital. The father is plojed by the Benson Parking Co. Evangelist Freed WHERE PLANE HIT Map locates Sandia Peak in New Mexico near where the smoking wreckage of a TWA airliner was found Sunday.

Searchers said none of the 16 persons aboard the plane apparently survived the crash. tAP Wirephoto.) 16 Die In Crash (Continued rom Page Onel Dr. Clav T. Smith, friend of one of the passengers, bedded rioxxn xvithin 600 yards of the pinnacle into which the plan? smashed in a blinding snowstorm. In the second party, hundreds of feet below, xvere nine airmen, seven TWA men and four Civil Air Pairol members.

They xvere heading toxxard a great black blotch scorched on the crag about 1.000 feet below the crest of the 10.000-foot range. The tremendous rock juts up as part of a series of jagged west face of the range. Far above the two parties on the 300 to 350-foot spire, which averages about 100 feet xvide. lay scattered parts of the plane. As the day ended, authorities began rounding up pack animals to bring out the bodies.

Meanwhile. Jack Hicks, who lives on the east slope of the range, mad? his wav hack from a spot he said was about 250 yards m. Sunday from th? inx'estigation by sheriff's deputies al Holiness Church 1001 2nd Sunday. George Sparks, 64-year- areording to Rev. Frank Garcia.

He said the church was old nightvxatchman at the Country Club, told officers the burglar left unlocked for the convenience held him at gun point while es of members of th? congregation, caping wdth the loot. God as the author of individual rights, declared that the purpose of government is to secure those you and Eisenhower said ideal of government is a self-evident truth. But in many lands the state claims to be the auhor of human rights. The tragedy of that claim runs through all history and. indeed, dominates our own times.

If the state gives rights, it inevitably will away those The President said he considered it significant that the legion, an organization of war veterans, was taking a lead in the to movement. realize, perhaps more clearly than others, the prior place that Almighty God holds in our national Eisenhower said. they can appreciate, through personal experience, that the really decisive battleground of American freedom is in the hearts and minds of our own The President said he and others in his administration are more and more of the magnitude of their task. Joyce Pryor. 1614 Ave.

D. reported th? theft of .22 caliber Herman Dax is, 41, Amherst, was revolver, with a value of from ln. fair. condition late Sunday at her former residence at 1410 Ave. about a week ago.

And to top the list, Weldon Webb, 1509 Ave. complained elevator, that while he was in his car parked near the Browmfield- Levelland early Sunday state someone took his wallet contain- bock ing a $90 wrist wratch. Methodist Hospital. Davis received neck injuries about 1 p.m. Friday when some lumber fell on him while he working at an Fugitive Killed Red Uprising Seen (Continued From Page One) force to put into th' Southeast Asia Organ, zation Okayed Washington willing to promise the availability of a striking based mostly in Japan and Okinaw-a.

if the area is endangered. The ministers will try to set up a military blockade against possible new Communist aggression in the area embraced by the treaty, and at the same time try to improve economic and living standards and thus destroy Red propaganda ammunition. The U. S. position disheartened Australia as well as the three (Continued From Page One) and sent to the tenement district.

Six detectives, including Malerba, Vincent Heffeman and Charles Domer to the apart- George S. Berry, S204 82nd ment. representatiev from Lub- Malerba said: wo started underwent an emer- to break the door down, he start- gency appendectomy Friday at ed blasting. I saw my partners St. Hospital, was in good fall.

I threw myself to the floor condition late Sunday. James Goss of Wolfforth told deputies Sunday that someone took an outboard motor from his residence Saturday night. The motor is valued at $250. (Continued From Page One) told Percy Foreman, noted Houston criminal lawyer who xtisited him briefly at the jail last night. The woman Bolin referred to was shapely Tressie Bandy, 36-year-old up the crag.

brunette acquaintance whom Rolin He said the plane, which had iust Asian nations. It was interpreted home shortly before midnight. visited Tuesday night of jPft Kirtland Field for the 70-mile as American acceptance of British Rivak staggered into a nearby tav- sma. the a. m.

flight to Santa Fe. right opposition to giving SEATO overly into a sheer warlike tones. he said, piece of British Control Seen the tail stood out, and pieces of The source said that what the Five Shot To Death (Continued From Page One) landtown, and a man believed using the alias of Alber French, 22. of Philadelphia. Anthony Rivak, of Masontown.

was reported near death at Uniontown Hospital with a bullet wound in the abdomen. Rivak told police Miller fired at him Saturday night just after he alighted from a bus near the Mil and started blasting back, and I stayed there until fire and smoke got too hot and heavy for me. Then I went onto an adjoining roof until the fire Heffeman was shot in the leg. Domer in the wrist. Neither was in serious condition.

As police and of them off into the area, Malerba called: out your guns first and come out with your hands up and you might come out of this The answer came back: "Coma get take you with Malerba tried at least once more during the battle as police evacuated everyone they could from the building into streets noxv jammed with thousands of curious onlookers. One woman, trapped under her bed in the apart, ment next to was unhurt I (Copt Gpp-n Onr I the China and S-'br' fAlds. tbA would do In Few York Show Members of a former Lubbock family were the startled winners of $3.600 in prize money two weeks ago on a tclexision program filmed in a New York studio and seen here Sunday night. of thA w'ind'aJ! xvere told last night by a friend of the family. C.

A. Paul, of 5305 Ave. H. Paul said that he had received Wednesday. Miss Bandy, a former Dallas telephone operator who in Houston now was a lie detector test Fnday and released.

Foreman said he had been asked by Fred Harr former state senator frcm Dallas, and Woody Zachary, a onetime U. S. commissioner at Waco, to talk with Bolin. He would not say what dis- cftissed during the three-minute visit. Bolin left the Houston jail after his release with Marshall Hosea.

another part-time Houston evangelist xvho quoted scriptures to him while he was being held. Police Capt. Frank said after release that have no now The only clue police said they found at the crime scene was part of a handle from a pistol believed used as the murder weapon em and collapsed Several hours later police came into her rooms. Checking cm the murder of Aro upon the first portion of the p-isly three plainclothe. Bisnlinohef? Peals Billv Gccdioe For Naiiona! Golf (kb Title ST.

AUGUSTINE. Feb. 20- Don Bisplinghoff of Or- xvrecked something that looked like rags whipped in the wind. The tail was still smoking. down, on a sort of shelf, lay xvhat.

looked like part of the fuselage. Pieces scattered over othnr small rock ledges all the wav down the cliff. was a passage between the pinnacle and the main cliff about 5 feet wide. I think the pilot could have made it through there, but if he'd been 100 feet higher he would have cleared Bixler. chief pilot for Carco Air Service, the line that shuttles between Albuquerque and the atomic of Los Alamos, was the first to spot the wTockage.

sort of figured he probably was in the Bixler said. must have flowm near the area 15 times keeping a watch. There was one I couldn't see very so I went in to there it The approximate location of the plane 12 miles out of US off guessing wha ih" o'femore 4. jet ovgd ci re-'I PC" alrepdv at Ch of Matsu improved -i. forge in rrcvirci r.

replied in reach Thousands of troops hundreds cf mn were moving in. VnV stT tnp mm lato novt cum. drafted troops Reserve divisions ue Davis Cun nlav was made Sunday and Brazil Cuua. Mexico against Australia and Pakistan against the British in the round. the seventh tean challenging in tV zone, anew a first round bye.

The Canadian team will meet th? Pakistan-BWI winner in the scconc round. The American Zone champion will play the Far East Zone winner. Tiie winner of that series will ay the European champion for the right to were being called to the colors. Military estimated the latest would a'fect more ttvm qpo i force to more than 500.000. Both Chinese mainlaoders and native Formosans were include.

the sliver cup late next summer at Forest Hills. N. Y. Mrs. Hill and the daughters.

Wendy. 13 and Maury Lee, 5, answered a series of questions capped by the grand prize-winner: was th? girl in the Wizard of Wendy supplied the answer: Dorothy. just Mrs. Hill write from France. all went She added that Maury Lee wanted to buy a doil with her winnings while Wendy wanted to spend Paul said Sunday night couldn't have happened to nicer Bisplinghoff xvho celebrated his the persons were 20th birthday Sunday, parred the 32nd hole to win five-up with four to go.

It xvas his first appearance in the tourney. Goodloe. who trailed most of the way in the 36-hole playoff round, had won the tournament twice in the six times he has participated. Bisplinghoff. Florida Amateur champion for the past two years.

A member of the search said impossible to believe anyone could have survived that horror dowm Only an act of God could have brought one of them out British want is a SEATO military secretariat Whitehall can control. Therefore. Britain behind the scenes is pressing for Singapore to be designated as a military command seat, urging that Britain. Australia and Zealand would commit a 500-plane air force in Malaya. Present Malayan forces and Australian and New Zealand contingents could be to SEATO in an emergency.

This being described by ctitics as SEATO with a grand set of false As security measures were tightened in Bangkok. H. Struve Hensel U. S. secretary of defense.

arrived for the conference. He was met at the airport by U. S. Ambassador John Peurifoy. Thai air force officials and a guard of honor.

First From IT. S. Hensel is the first major American delegate to arrive. He has been on a swing through Europe and the Middle East visiting military advisory groups. Sec.

of State Dulles, head of the U. S. Delegation, is due to arrive at noon Tuesday after stopovers in Honolulu and Manila. Most of the delegates from the eight nations which signed the defense pact against Communist aggression will begin arriving Mon- Besides the United States, Thai- ThfPP DlP land. France and Pakistan, other I CIJUMJ VW treaty powers are the United King- scene.

Miller and Demko found dead side-by-side on a bed in a downstairs bedroom. Miller had been shot in the chest and his wrists slashed. Shot, Hit by Hammer Demko also had been shot and his head had been crushed by a hammer found later in another room upstairs. The body of the man at first identified as Albert French. 24, was found on a bed in a second floor bedroom.

father in Philadelphia said his son was an Air Force private stationed at Sheppard Field. and that the body was not that of his son. He said the younger automobile was looted last June and some of his personal effects stolen. State police said a revolver lay near body. I Officers said Miller apparently iq27 went berserk and killed the other four with a gun and a hatchet before killing himself.

Police said Mrs. Miller was clad in only a slip and panties. Her daughter was fully clothed. Except for the bodies lying in blood-soaked beds, there were no signs of violence in the house, a two story frame duplex of eight rooms, police said. Neighbors reported they had heard no sound of a struggle.

officers had gone to the ment of girl friend. They found him, captured him and frisked him. But as they left, the wiry little man yanked a gun from a topcoat he handed to put on, shoved it into the back of one of the detectives and threatened to kill him unless officers dropped their weapons. They did. Robles picked up the guns and fled.

Soon afterward, four other detectives traced him to another apartment house. But he got again after exchanging shots with the police. Spectators on top of and a housing project, in and on street comers, watched and cheered as the shooting went on. Most seemed to cheering for Robles who had a police record stretching back to A detail of Air Force police dom, the Philippines, New Zealand posted arounu the tragic flare- illuminated scene to stand guard and Australia. Atlanta Scooting led one-un at the end of the mom- over the during the sub- ing round.

zero night. 3 9 9 f'siry Price ''ASH "cS The government Sunday predicted a substantial d-op in its dairy orice support spending vear because of an aotiHpated in demands for flu'd milk. The Agriculture Department estimated that L. S. milk production ill 123.5 billion pounds in 1955 to equal last record-breaking output But it said increased demands for fluid milk probably will result in a slight increase in average prices received by dairy farmers and a compamon decline in federal dairy support outlays.

The Department purchased 9.1 billion pcunds of surplus milk last vear, or just about half es much as in the previous Tax Plan Hit NOMINATED Julius C. Holmes has been nominated as U. S. ambassador to Iran. A career State Department officer.

he will succeed Loy Henderson. (Continued From Page One) budget to he more nearly in balance. By refusing to wait for the President, the Democrats figure to get credit foi the reduction. Their plan woutd not take effect until Jan. 1.

I9n6, however, thus providing fresh campaign material. The tax cut ill be proposed as a to an administration bill to extend present corporation levies and excise taxes for another year. Democrats believe this plan may be veto-proof. Eisenhower rejects the bill, the government will lose $3 billion in revenues provided by the corporation and excise levies. The reduction, which will be proposed in the House Ways and Means Committee Monday, would save each taxpayer $20 on next year's income tax, plus an extra $20 for each dependent.

Democrats hope to ish the hill through the House by next Thursday or Friday. i British Atom Bomb Survivor Pleads For Stronger Defense LONDON Feb. 20 only British prisoner to survive the atom-bombing of Nagasaki in World War II urged the free world from his sickbed Sun- lived ATLANTA. Feb. jealousy crazed man broke in on a drinking party Sunday night, killed three persons, wounded another and then committed suicide.

Police said Alton Nix Tredaway. Police used uncounted rounds of ammunition, from rifles, revolvers and tear gas guns in the climax to one of the most intensive manhunts. Officers grimly swarmed through East Harlem in bullet-proof vests as emergency fire equipment, fire apparatus and ambulances stood by for any eventuality. the end of the fight clouds of smoke billowed from refuge. There was a possibility he had set the fire himself in a last, desperate move to evade capture.

The building is near the border of the Harlem area, almost within hailing distance of the swank apartment buildings that line Park Avenue to the south. Officers of all ranks moved info every apartment facing the rear windows of the Cat where Robles had holed up. They piled furniture up near 46 aDnarentlv broke a nan? of luirmure up near -lass m5ho front to to emoT th? t0 stop anv more house where Mrs. Ella Warren, a Inside there a day to build stronger defenses uuric a against Communist nuclear Pmpfy pjnt whiskv bottles, to save millions from death and he might aim at them. Ther, they loosed a staccato barrage of gunfire in his direction.

The nearest police post was a kitchen in the third floor apart- party. Two a wine suffering a of Thomas Evans in a dramatic let- Ground the scatterpd seven yards from windows ter to the Sunday Chronicle, said Tredaway opened fire on the two he alone of a party of 65 war pris- the partv. Mrs. Warren, oners w-orkme as coohes survived Mrs AnnfJ Padgett Cone 45 of the Aug 9, atom bomb drop- Chattanooga. John Birlvn ped by the U.

S. Air Force on Nag-, B(X)th 49 and Ira 49 a a vi al Mrs- Cone, the only survivor. A blast like the rush of a mil- sajd Tredaway slugged her on the lion express (rams shattered the head with the pistol. He also shot a thousands, jn fhe abdomen, wounding her seriously. Mrs.

Cone was in such bad con- A stolen car found abandoned dition she could not give a complete in Brownfield had South Plains Evans wTote across a dimly-lighted areawav. A lieutenant, two detectives and a patrolman, wearing bulletproof vests, held the outpost as Rios and his wife huddled terror-stricken in a corner. Stolen Auto May Link To Fori Stockton Jail Escapee TRIES TO Convicted Commun st leader Irving Potash tries to duck newsmen as he enters his New York home. Federal attorneys have issued consent order to let Potash go to Washington to pick up visa for Red Polland so he can escape further prosecution. Potash says he has no plans to go to Washington and Polish embassy refused comment.

(NEA Telephoto.) Pontiff Defies CoM Wind To Issue Blessing To Pilgrims VATICAN CITY. Feb. Pope Pius XT! defied a cold wind Sunday to appear at his study window for the second time in a to bless a group of pilgrims in St. Peter's Square. The pontiff, who will be 79 March 2.

stood at the window for about three minutes despite a cold wind. account of the affray but police officers hoping they were hot on found the bodies of the victims (he trail of Wayland Gene Bal- scattered through the five room lard, 26- year-old man house. The were wearing under a 15-year prison sentence police found for hi-jacking jewel burglars, who escaped from the Fort Stockton last Monday. only slips when A detective said the shooting was jail due to Officers also were searching for a 17-year-old youth, believed to A plaster model offered for $2 50 have assisted Ballard in his ea- by a curio shop in London was i found to be worth $2,800. cape by stealing jail keys from a car..

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About Lubbock Morning Avalanche Archive

Pages Available:
130,770
Years Available:
1927-1959