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The Waco News-Tribune from Waco, Texas • Page 8

Location:
Waco, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Jhr IParo Nftttalnbunf Page Texas Wednesday, Mar. 22, 1961 Midway Boy Turns I in Dallas About 100 law enfor. emnt officers and Tuesday iltefdbed more fihan four hours for a boy reported mtfs- teg'iR the ay area, Tto child wax found later in Dallas. The hoy and his family moved to Midway from ,11 a boat two ago. is were notified on the that the child had returned to Dallas.

in Shopping COI NOI, Center bv Couneil Proposed chattgs in development of a shopping rentef at Bosque Boulevard and New Road received una apprm al Tuesday from Waco city council The council stipulated, however That i toot Law rene imi niant The If, S. center of population In 1790 sas 23 ifiiles west of Salt mi ore Today, it is located in Clay County, 111, about nine miles northwest of Ontralia. GET READY FOR SUMMER the rear he rurbec Thai ing th? fng is only The latter is use of a paved (are residential property Drive property owners Dm W1 abutting ru hr erected adh ra die rear of the or parking CAU YOUR AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE MAN NOW way of bwrtfing I 80 tor hot, by your cendttiOntng Or COII yOvf teat. oWsct to otpondoblo ttrvitt won. TEXAS POWER LIGHT COMPANY IHi mu.

1 UN 1 i'd to imut i adjoining Lawrence objocled to vehicles parking and driving near their rear property lines. Lawrence Drive poperty owners have been protesting commercial use of the property for years. List year Attorney Wilson got city council approval of change from residential to planned commercial zone. Three weeks ago Wilson asked for permission to change his plans to build a large, square department store and a service station on the south end of the property instead of an Lshaped building containing several small stores. Because the property was zoned for a specific use, the request had to be presented again to the City Plan Commission and the City Council.

Plan commissioners recommended that the City Council refuse Wilson's request for a change because vehicles were to be permitted to use the area behind the store. The building will be located 123 feet from the rear property line of Lawrence Drive homes and fix' developer has already erected a six-foot redwood fence separating the residential and commercial porperties. WALL-TO-WALL WOOL CARPET OCR AVERAGE SHOE LIVING ROOM ARPETED for in a wool carpet complete with heavy 40 pad and installation; or 20 yards of wool carpet installed for Your choice of wool hard- twist or wool sculptured broad loom in mir choice of colors. PAY OMA Per Mo. 10oo 4 1961 BEAUTYREST MATTRESSES IN NEW QUILTED BUTTONS IT LASTS LONGER Pounded by Torture Tester at United States Testing Beautyrest lasted twice as long as next best mattress.

IT SAG A (ordinary mattress). Springs wired together. Press one, others sag. (Beautyrest). CoiU individually pocketed.

Act separately. No sag. IT IS CERTIFIED POSTURE-RIGHT A (ordinary mattress). Wired together springs sog together. Resuh hemmocky position, curved spine, improper rest.

8 (Beoafyrest) Ecch of 837 cods adjusts to weight above. Result perfect support, straight spuve, Healthful sleep BEAUTY REST MATTRESS 79.50 MATCHING BOX SPRINGS 79-50 PAY ONLY $10.00 PER MO. You hove a choke of two Beautyrest models the Standard (Normal-Firm) model end the Extra-Firm Either way you get the best because either way it's Beautyrest, Come In and see, and feel, both and fake your choice, Home of Li feti me furniture 118-120 South Eighth Dial PL 3 Parking I art in Rear of Pay the Hill Offlrr la tu Open Night 9:00 Clast Saturday at Noon 3657 In other business Tuesday, the council I. Authorized bids to be received April 12 on rcrcmstruction of South nvelmth Street: from Speight Avenue to Primrose Drive, estimated (VHt mixed contract uith Mar in Turner Sftghteers to prepare plans tor water and lines under route of Interstate 35 expressway across s. east Waco; .1.

Notified the Texas Higtroa) Department that city Limits signs now can show Waco pupulation of 102.300 and Greater Warn uiation of I. left in effect bv S', sole an assessment charging W. I hi $220 or arb and cutter on right-of-way abutting his property ai Second Street and LaSalle Avenue. Attorney Bob Sheehy -asked councilman to exempt Gatto from paying for curb and gutter on 100 feet of feet of frontage, because that part of hip state right-of-way ranged as far back as 37.5 feet from the street; Appropriated the traffic de partmem $1.000 additional this year to spend cm parking meter maintenance; fi. Permitted Arthur row to withdraw5 request lor commercial zoning at Kendall tone and Old Springfield Road Timbercrest Addition; 1, Accepted M.

Crow Lew bid of $1,662 on new filing cabinets tor the tax (topartmem. ClXVTTNU'Eb FROM nuK OXK teenlh-A Street as it crosses D.v-v thy Avenue, To retnNy the situation, the i'oundl changed- Nineteenth-A to Twentieth Street between Dorothy and Edna Avenue Then they changed Twentieth Street to Twer. tieth-A between Edna arai Dorothy Avenue The new Twentieth- A Street is three long and at cither end. Hughes of 5-117 North a Street presented ooun- fh a petition against the Jobless Pav Bill Agreed; Passage Cto Ato Expected Today Or WASHINGTON (UPD A House-Senate conference committee agreed Tuesday on a compromise version of President billion dollar jobless pay plan, clearing the way tor final congressional approval on Wednesday. The House and Senate are expected to approve the compromise.

which would carry out the promise to put more funds in the hands of idle workers who have exhausted their regular state unemployment benefits. The Senate agreed to limit debate to one hour on the bill, once it is approved by the House. Senate action is expected after it votes on a compromise version of President emergency feed grain progrim. Die additional jobless tone fits would be made available two weeks after the President signs the bill, which tops 16 priority legislative proposals. An estimated 3,125.000 workers would receive up to 13 weeks of extra compensation during the next year or so.

dead-end Henry Twentieii oilmen change. He said the petition was signed by every resident of the three blocks of Twentieth to to affected Three times Hughes angrily told council men you ward to change it, you can buy all the property on both suies of the street at our Hughes also fold couneilmen that a letter advising residents the change would to considered Tuesday had one man in Cries of then broke out. Mayor Billy J. Hint on told the delegation the city would to glad to change those blocks of Twentieth Street to a name, rather than another number. New cries broke out and the matter was dropped.

For the past several weeks the planning department has been pro-! sen ting the city council with pro posais to correct street name that are confusing to the pas? office, fire department and visitors. AH the changes are aired in public hearmg. This was the first street name change to be protested at city hall. Most of the streets being i changed were built before Waco had a subdivision ordinance that requires new streets to line up with old. Cash Stolen From Station At Bellmead Thieves took the ca-A register and nearly $200 from the 11.

Webb service station at 3718 Bellmead Drive shortly after 8:30 Tuesday lad Oison, attendant on duty, said the thieves apparently slipped into the office while he was out side and walked off with the Bellmead Police Sgt, R. Kirk said he searched, the area, hut was unable to locate any clues. He theorized the thieves walked around the corner to a wading car and escaped, Webb said the register contained about $200. don't know exactly how much cash, was in the register because part of the stuff was from charge and credit card Webb said, Texas Highway Patrolman Henry Kluck and Deputy Sheriff Joe Thompson assisted Kirk in the in vestigation. Mrs.

Liermaun Of Burlington I )ies: Rites Set POPt CONTINUICI FROM oxf Frank Scitb, vice president of West National Rink, who presented records of Dope debts while he was president of the West hank; and Charles Ezell. Houston car salesman who sold Pope a white Volkswagen Nov. 14; Mrs, Lydia Tripp. Ain motel owner Dope a cabin on Nov. newspapers and monev, banking 'nted no 10.

Others Testify Others testifying were Maj H. brother of the acciiaed man; and FBI agents Morton B. Chiles, Ue Golden and I L. tor- more, who arrested Pope Nov 17 and searched his motel apartment and car; Thomas Bishop. FBI agent in charge of the San Antonio aroa; George W.

Carlson, FBI agent who helped arrest Pope; Oscar Warnke arai William T. Carver, both Bexar County jailers; end S. Marshal Vltort Seagert of San Antonio. Texas Bank and Trust Co. at torney Stigail testified about the Dallas banking firm's foreclosure on a $5,000 note which he said He P.tr OPt' Ida died chud REDS INI EM FROM BLAKLEY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE to vote againt the emergency feed gram bill now pending in Congress.

He suggested a program hich would gradually get government I out of ariculture. much is gradual? Three Five he was asked, think it can to done in three years. But in five years, a Sot can be accomplished toward getting the farmer out of government he explained Blakley said he thought his chances to wm in the senatorial election are very good, He said he thinks he is now the top running candidate, Blakley will be Austin Thursday, He also discussed federal aid to education and his plan in this matter. He said he is opposed to the presently advanced Kennedy plan of federal aid to education, saying he believed it would lead to government control of tto educate ma I system. His own plan, now in committee, would provide a 5 per cent rebate to states of federal income altitude tests taxes, 'Diis money could be used by the states for education purposes in any way the states saw fit.

It would mean about $100 million tor Texas. Blakley said to thinks his bill will remain in committee until the Kermedy plan has been thrashed out. Then, his bill, he said, W'iU probably see a chance tor consideration. He said he has received much favorable mail and comment about it, Blakley declined to say who he believed would he a run off election against him if there is a run-off. disarmament controls if the West will agree to his plan for scrap- ping nuclear and abolish-: ing Western overseas bases with- in 18 months.

American officials said the statement was a lion of many of past statements.) A proposal for parity on the control commission seemed the major concession. Fourf Western, four Communist and three neutral nations would have seats. This was considered safer than the previous plan of a 3-3-1 ratio under which the lone neutral would to subject to pressure from both sides. But even this offer was dulled somewhat by a Soviet move to turn tto top executive setup of the enforcement organization into a committee. Tsurapkin proposed an administrative board of one Westerner, one Communist and one neutral.

Arthur H. Dean, new' head of the U. S. delegation, introduced Westeoi proposals for breaking the 21 2 -year deadlock. With the backing of David Ormsby-Gore.

Dean proposed changes an administrative detail but no surrender on basic principles. Tto aim, Dean told the conference. is to conclude sound and fair treaty as soon as possible which would offer good prospects for a permanent ban of nuclear tests throughout the world under a system of adequate international There was no attempt to secure a series of concessions from the Russians but rather to get them to accept the idea of enforcement by tackling the problem on a broad front. The Western proposals Included 1. A three year moratorium on small underground tests to allow time tor scientific Inquiries.

Earlier tto West requested a 27-month moratorium; tto Soviet Unipn asked four years. 2. Reduction to 19 from 21 in the number of permanent control posts nted on Soviet territory. This would to accomplished by locating two stations in countries near the Soviet Union, Adoption of a full ban on high BURLINGTON ermann, 79, of Burlington at 7 a. m.

Tuesday in a Ros hospital. Funeral services to at 2 p. Thursday at the United Church of Ben Arnold, Rev. Gerald Cobb will officiate with burial in Burlington Ceme tery. Marek-Burns Funeral Home of Cameron is in Mrs.

Liermaun was born in Ger- many. She came to the U. when she was 18. She had lived in Burlington most of her life. Survivors are a son, Edward Lie-rmann of Rosebud; seven daughters, Mrs.

Willie Hoff and Airs. Herbert Englerock, both of Rosebud, Mrs. Oscar Kaulius and Mrs. Dick Henke, both of Temple, Mrs. Raymond Pimpler and Mrs, Edgar Lorenz, both of Burlington, and Mrs, Emeiia Isom of Waco; thre-' stepdaughters, Mrs.

Margaret MoAtee of BurUragton. Mrs. Ella Cox of Cleveland, Ohio, and Mrs. Anme Hinton of California; one brother, Paul Janke of Rosebud; four sisters, Mrs, Rot he of Burlington, Mrs, Mmnie Walker of Culberson, Airs, Marv Klatt of Canton, and Mrs, Annie Kafer of Henrietta; 15 grandchildren and 21 grandchildren. Owed on March 55, I960 it was.

foreclosed 10 by taking stix'k Pope owned in a Malone hank value the stock at abcw.it SS.000.” said Stigail. leaves an unpaid balance of Seith. who worked two years th Popt West National Bank, read the jury a letter listing $28,100 Pope said to owed to eight banks while president of the West bank. is our policy to require ployes to list such said Seith. letter was written by Pope to the Earned Monthly Seith said Pope was making $1,000 per month before the hoard of directors from his di the bank.

Mrs. Tr ing Pope court In he had WflVfTSktioriS with Pop; times dating his duee- month and lourai him extremely intelligent and in ferestrng to talk to Seargert said he talked to Pope about the family, how they make and jails. After the government rested its ease, Maiomw askrai Judge to grant his motion far acquittal because government did net prove up the insurance as pect of the Motion Ovefniled Judge Rice overruled the motion and the trail continued. Mrs. Pope testified about 10 minutes.

The small, pretty worn an was wearing a two-pto'e orange dress. Her voice broke only once during tor she said, Nov. 5, I had never know Larry Pofie to do a di.s- honeN or ungentlemanly thing in the 23 years I had known him Mrs. testified her husband was when he was bred from tto National Bank and became tixichv when she questioned him. was sloppy in his appearance, she said.

after we twdhased the newspapers in Giddings and Lexington, his attitude changed a little for the totter." She also id she knew of no need of which other witnesses said drove Pope to hank robbery, when I talked to him she said, told me if he lives to to 100 ami gets of this, he will get hra revenge on the people who hurt Burial Today for Ahlmtt Brothers Killed in Crash ABBOTT serv-1 ices for brothers Jerry and Jim- Pet ter will to at 9 a. m. today Abbott Cathode Church Rev Peehal will officiate. Burial will to Fatima Cemetery at Abbott, The two vouths were killed when the ar a utility on the Abbott-Malone road at the cast city limits of Abbott about 11 p. nV Monday.

They were mm of Mr and Mrs. Jerry Fetter of Mnnkw community four miles north of Ahtoft BOARD Jerry Potter was 18 He senior in high school. Jimmy wai 16 arid a freshman The youths taken in 0 Clinic in Hiilxtoro hut were dead when thev arrived there They car was clipped in half by the impact with the pole Their deaths were tto first traf fie fatalities of the year in County. Survivors include their patenp three brothers, Alois pet ter at Dallas, Henry Fetter of San An- lon.o, and Antony Fetter of bott; four sisters, Mias Lillian Fetter of Waco, Miss Helen Pet ter, AU -s Siijihie Pet tot and At Mary Defter, all of Abbott INtlllfATI 1 i GO 41 Waco con with an eve ry yea service woult in loss of air i the brief lift FEUER imCBftOOD' i WARNER BROS.gU )NTIXT K1 FR OH PA as president of chev cited a Secretary- of Goldberg that and tto Soviet tatement by U. Libor Arthur J.

the United States Union are close in pp testified a cabin at about rent- hcr part of San Antonio When Hoffman her if she noticed anything unusual about Pope during the week he stayed at her motel, u. S. output. steel production, (At Duluth. last Wednesday, while touring unemployment areas, Goldberg said he found it shocking that Soviet steel production had equaled or surpassed the LAOS CONTI KURD FROM PA, 018 ONE MOVIE INDEX Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A.

Gromyko. In that conference Rusk is said to have reinforced the earlier statement of U. S. position made to Khrushchev by U. S.

Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson 10 days ago. On both occasions, informants said, Kennedy 's readiness to try i to make Laos a completely peace-1 ful and neutral country was heavily emphasized, along with the concern about the dangers of increasing conflict unless the crisis us resolved, Khrushchev is said to have given Thompson no encouragement for Soviet cooperation in seeking a completely neutralized Laos. But reaction to Rusk's talk with Gromyko is still awaited here. There appeared to to little doubt in official quarters here that Kennedy is determined to move the near future, at least to the extent of increasing the flow of heavy military equipment to Laotian government One possible step would be to act through the Southeast Asian Treaty Organization to bolster the fighting power of the government of Premier Boun Oum. Another step could to to increase heavily the military aid and the number I of U.S.

military advisers to Boun Guru's government. A State Department spokesman said the Soviet airlift supplying guns, ammunition and other war materials to the rebel forces was continuing. Ylludmg to the fact she answered, you mean did that the U. S. steel industry oper a fed at only 66 per cent of eapae- tty last year, Goldberg said he I refused to accept the idea we do not need the steel that this country is I Referring to statement without quoting it in full.

Khrushchev told his cheering au! dience: bad, comrades. You can: not imagine the great happiness of (Mir people when we also over- take the United States in the per capita production of meat. That to a new victory important i not only economically hut of tre- mendous impcwrtanee politically, This will show more the i great force of the Socialist system. With such asms it is worthwhile to work well, Near End of Tour Khrushchev is nearing the end of a long tour aimed at lashing in- i efficient farm managers into pro- Thornton bank robbery and told of ducing more crops than during finding it Nov, 29 under a past two years. I think he was Judge Rice ordered her answer stricken from the record, but the 50 spectators and Pope laughed.

FBI agent Chiles read the court a letter which Rope wrote after his arrest intended for his son-in- law. The Seder explained where he had left the money from the Thornton robbery and suggested that the son-in-law and Mrs. Pope use the money to pay off debts, Money do anything with it the letter read, you are probably being watched by the FBI, Thk is tot money FBI has serial numbers. But noble about the money Use it. It is only a little dab but is the best I could i do for my efforts FBI Agent Larmore testified about searching for the brown satchel Pope used during the ties requi with tofh trunkline service, Braniff has finu-mdy since 3951 crease in business Cancellation of this immediately result business for states, Waco to give Tcans-Tex as an opportunity to improve the service it raw receives between Dallas and Houston from Continental.

Trans-Texas proposes to provide five daily flights tot ween Houston and Dallas, stopping at Waco. Two of the flights would use Convair aircraft and Waco would to the stop Three flights would me' the older DC-3 and would it op also at Temple arai College Station, One of W.ioi primary a needs at this time is -nv flights to Houston. service that will enable them to fly from Waco to Houston early I in the morning, conduct their buai- ness and return the same day, Houston businessmen need the same service to come to Houston is also tocximing increasingly important as air gateway to tto states. It is cheaper to fly to the south: east vja Houston than Dallas, Funeral Xotiee EKVZILK ViR-j oim Mm. Iteith er SJ.

of a irt puttAint at CoRwtcn'i Funarti ym Surv.vori Her Mr mi A. SmiUs of Oswiaa, ca: sons, Dotta.d Fraiiti. Robert FntJBer Oarden Grow. HroUver- an4 gratwt- ChUtlren 034 a a a 4VW444W444WWV4Www enna STARTS THURS. FIGHT FILMS JOHANSSON vs PATTERSON e- mrnm INIAtif HELD OYER OPEN 45 I SO I I tr.U IATI I AST DAY Feature tree in Colorado County.

Maionev demanded Hoffman and Larmore produce the brown! satchel and enter it into They did so and were listing its contents, when Maloney jumped up and objected to Lii more testifying that money was in a paper! sack in the satchel. is prejudicial, inflamma- i tory, a violation of my constitutional rights, and may cau.se a said Maloney, Judge tdd Maloney to had asked for the bag and its contents to to brought and entered into evidence and therefore Larmore would be allowed to testify currency was in the sack. During this argument, Pope leaned back in his chan- at the council table and grinned. The jailers, Warnke and Carver, testified Pope was a model prisoner, gave no trouble and was neat at ail times. They said he read constantly, mostly science fiction.

Marshall Seagert told the jury The trip has carried him halfway across the Soviet Union and back. The arduous journey was reflected in a number of small fluffs delivering his speech, but his voice remained relatively strong for more than three hours. The visit to Kazakhstan also brought Khrushchev a medal, presented to him the development of virgin by Dimu- hamed Kunaev, who is Kazakhstan's Communist party chief. TMIAtll A nGHTINh.SINGINh.lOVIN’ MAN -LIVING THE GREAT ADVENTURE Of THE SOUTHLAND! GET MOKE Ol TO A OI MOVIE Drive-In; the Young and Orpteeunt: John Wayne, Richard Widmarkh Texas Arts; of the Jungle arai 23th Street: Waco; Fever in the Blood I Efrem Zimbalist The bill establishing the land- grant system of higher education, under which 6k of the nation and universitie.s were founded, was signed by President Lincoln on July 2, 1862. XIM SO of the Jungle Tilt HMDS and JSh rrram L'l Imrimi ll.to AKIOAO LADD Sidney POITlilt DARREN Mort SAHL unmans WALK ilMMIE LUANA RODGERS-PATTEN CHILL mmmm HUTCHINGS AIM I I ATI'RFTTB wwtr 8 W.4MHI omm TERRACE CLUB Sadie Hawkins Dance Music By PAUL WAYNE Hatpoinl: BUILT-IN KITCHEN APPLIANCES FREE KITCHEN DESIGNING NEW OK EXISTING HOMES i Cecil (Red) Ogle IM SpseiaUst tHE PLaxa 2-6514 1825 N.

18th ST, Air CLUB SELMA DON BRUMBLE THE MFl.OOY AC Fk UAL At TRADEWINOS on LaSalle Curly at the Piano Bill an Drums NO ADMISSION NEW DO-IT-YOURSELF CATERING SERVICE We prepare tood give complete direct in na ynu serve iti Kverythmg; Hur M-ii ttam sa late dir a 6 a futin una nude arli fM- ,1 Pmtmr 0 rani ti or TROPICAL LOUNGE Music By Cruz Ortiz And II FIAMES Phone .3 ANY OF lU OK MOKE Ideal fur company parties, gatherings all types. Fartions Hickory foods! Kteonomteal! No dishes to wash! For details, call PL 4 1513 the HICKORY STICK 2300 North 18th. i vu ff, 3 nun eat, 15 CUNT NOW Walker JT Moore even aints ifTICIA mOMAN forme -C ck OM DRIVE IN II i vi south of NOW SHOWING First Feat. 7:13 M. LEO GORKY BOWERY BOY Triple TrouM 6 iovii WILLS "CALL HOLY OFFICE OPENS ADI TIIEDKKN rwu HOI Hs riif 4Hhl mmiK ami LAST SHOWING TODAY FEATURE STARTS AT 12:45 3:25 6:15 9:05 AKO NOMINEE FOR BEST PUTIRE THE MISSION THAT REr.AMFI FORIKt SH THE FORTRJKSiS THAI' BF( AM I Iti Fri IT WILL BE REMEMBERED FOREVER! THE WIDUARK UIKEKCE HARVEY fffm wns IMA cihSTAt RICHARD BOV OFFIC OPENS ft; REGULAR ADMISSIONS lie tNfflfll A4HMJ JOURPAN s'ir Sii OEMS HiiJHiEN r.

OFKte i hi luv XIUMT 414. mm JULlft MOWU a.

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About The Waco News-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
195,188
Years Available:
1907-1973