The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 136, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 11, 1961 Page: 1 of 41
forty one pages : b&w ; page 23 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
• . .¡i
PSHpv'' /ÁX1'.1' 1'' " "■* " iH'W'b ■ ' " •* 'i .v... . > ■ V/:vrlrpj> • 'V ¿i v/ •.«¿¿í-*'/ * .i > «j* ..
#V ■ ''
V ■ . ' ' :18
'{-'.f' 'Hi'W. • ■"/ W ffifyp/ll «I/•,'! . .
/' Vi'"; JVKt •"■ ,rÍ*Í!fy\f'f"' -:1 V;tU'Jr': -y} \ , J ' ' ' ■'¿WW'J
Rinaldi
t,.; ' i
fe
** - '
¿rM-™
\ ,
VOL IVIII—NUMBER 136
ORANGE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JUNE 11, 1961
42 PoflM
10 Cents SUNRISE EDITION
IP
mm
,J§ :
n P1BSM 1
Mi 1
—i- MUL.
«• «¡ í : ■1 í■ ■ t'jf I vi-
■•.:■(■■ •■ MiK:. ■. . ■ , -X. .. --' ffgE • áf>iM
Youth Held in Mass
Can't Stand Television
Ptrtto by Bobbf* Broimo
Nuclear
I
A ction Explodes
Over Annexation
MOSCOW (AP)—Soviet Premier
Khrushchev denounced as dicta-
torship • Western proposal for a
neutral director of nuclear test
control machinery. Tass News
Agency said Sunday.
The Soviet agency distributed a
memorandum which it said
Khrushchev handed to President
Kennedy at their summit talks in
Vienna last weekend. It also pub-
Hope Seen
For Talk
L
GENEVA (AP)
lied int
New hope'
COOKS BY LIGHT OF KEROSENE LAMP
Fisherman's Biggest Nuisances Art Drunks, Hoboes
POST
SCRIPTS
to the
NEWS
He Never
vide/
By BOB AXELSON
The Orange municipal political
cauldron was moved onto the front
burner this past week and the con-,
trol^ft at simmer.
That's journalese fof^say'ng
" incum-
its have now
officially filed as
candidates for
re-election. Right
about here it
should be noted
that the filing
deadline is ex-
actly seven days
from today at
midnight.
i The Incum-
bents Include
' he fishes at leisure, sets
d sometimes hunts, to pro-
meager needs.
, „ . _ J© is Constant Dupree. 59. son
8l?.n- ' ... . 4 . 0t the late Dr. Louis Dupree, a
Id rather sit here and watclVplon^er physician in the Orange-
cars go by or talk to people/ Southwest Louisiana area, chose
he continued in. a quiet vqtee. (thfs of |ife 4iraost M years
By BOBBIE
"Never did like
remarked. "Electric . lights
my eyes and 1 can't stand televi-l
if ^
that the stalled international con
forence on Lao*/will get started
again was reamed Saturday in
U.S. and Communist campa. -
W.' Averelj/Harriman. chief U.S.
delegate to the conference, was
reportedyoptlmlstle about chulees
of reaching agreement with the
Union on pence in Laos,
let bloc sources talked op*
ti/Kistically about arranging an-
other meeting of the 14-nation
conference, which has not met
since Tuesday, and getting a true
cease-fire.
A high American source said
Harriman. who talked for an hoar
Friday with Soviet Foreign Min-
ister Andrei A. Gromyko. based
his optimism on this estimate of
the situation
J. The pro-Western forces of
Gen. Phoumi Nosa van. retreating
in Laos a month ago. have re-
grouped and grown stronger. The
over-all military picture is better.
2. No major ceasé-tire violations
.tii
lished a second memorandum
handed to the President on Ger-
many and West Berlin.
Tass said it was making public
the full text* because a number
of foreign news reports about them
had contained inaccuracies and
distortions.
The paper on nudear tests clung
to the Soviet ailments that have
been advanced through many
months at th^Geneva negotiations.
As for .Germany, Khrushchev
proposed/me immediate .calling of
a peace/éonference to fix irrevoca-
ble borders for Germany and es-
tablish West Berlin as a free de-
militarized city.
f no conference is called he sug-
gested that the two German states
be given six months to work out
n solution themselves.
He warned that if there is no
pence conference and no agree-
ment between the two German
states. Russia will then sign its
own peace treaty-with East Ger-
many. s
He accused Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer's West German gov-
ernment of saber-rattling and
seeking to bring about a revision
of the results of the war.
Khrushchev dwelt at length on
the East-West argument over the
nature of the control organ to pre-
vent violation of any ban on nu-
clear testing, this argument has
stalled the talks going on for 2Vx
years in Geneva on a nuclear test-
ban treaty.
"It is well fcnown that there
•re neutral states." Khrushchev
But there cannot be neu-
tral paople." He continued:
"The history of present interna-
tional relations knows not a few
examples of how one person, who
the
m
8
Whittled
On Pistols
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah ((AP)
■Two cocky teen-agers, their
wooden-handled pistol marked by
Action has exploded on two fronts in the heavily industrialized
Golden Triangle as the Cities of Orange and Port Arthur moved to
protect buffer strip claims.
. A quo warranto proceeding brought by City Atty. Charles Hol-
comb on behalf of .the City of Orange was filed in 80th District , ... . . - , . ,~
Court In Beaumont Friday. A hearing will be held Tuesday at 1 p.m. ¡ fígíj u\i2
brtot Pat. Judge Gordon G«ry on the IKOIOCO Ol I permanent L, ,S¡¡!
"^ín*«d « blocking Úie pass.se of a .noe Boo «dioa.ee |'""
on
square
of the Bridge City area.
This annexation ordinance introduced on first! reading May 18
by the Port Neches City Council also included Ta 1,500-foot wide
buffer strip established in 1937 by the Port Arthur City Commission.
The Orange legal proceeding followed action by the Port Arthur
City Commission which late last week adopted an ordinance
annexing a 50-ioot wide. 5.700-foot long strip of land on the eastern
edge of the Atlantic refinery.
Port Arthur, already had under annexation a strip on the other
three sides. The latest action completely closes off Port Neches'
only avenue of annexing the industry. Some 10 square miles of
Jefferson County land were included in the Port Neches annexation
measure which eivcompassed the Atlantic refinery.
Meantime Port Neches city officials indicated yesterday that
they "intend to stick by their guns." A second and final reading
of their ordinance is due June 18. Cóundlmen have steadfastly
maintained they are ".interested in promoting industrial growth and
creating more jobs."
An opposition point of yiew has been advanced by Orange
businessmen, major landowners and municipal officials along with
trustees of the Bridge City Independent School District who plan
legal action.
The school district is protesting on the grounds that the annexed
territory is within its boundaries and if developed by a -nonprofit
corporation, the tract would be exempt from school taxation.
POrt Neches officials have confirmed that they «rere interested
In a "tax sheltered" nonprofit corporation involving the purchase
of some 1.100 acres of land at the junction of Sabine and Neches
rivers on the Orange County side.
The new corporation beine formed under the tax shelter of the
(See ANNEXATION. Page 11)
I Latham, 19, Mauriceville, Tex..
' were in a car police said was
owned by a man slain Thursday
in Illinois.
One of the youths charged,
James D. Latham, grew up in Or-
ange County and attended school
at Mauriceville. Other relatives
live in Orange, the county seat.
Latham, marked by a tattoo
ms left arm bearing the woi
"Mom and Dad," also listed an
s
finds himself under the influence
of one or. another group of states
or acts to please them, carried
o«t already agreed decisions in-
correctly. That naturally was of
advantage only to the group of
states this person represented, but
have been reported since Wedne^ kd f0 d<¡mage for other 8t'at„;
dsy, when pro-Communist rebels —
won a victory at Padont,: near
weakened by the ravages of anulti- ' ag0
pie illnesses in the paj
months.
t lew
occ
Reared in a spacious country
home just across the Sabine River,
upant of a Dupree has always preferred the
houseboat outdoors and enjoyed sports.
After his wife left him in 1932
of Adams
their capital of Xieng Khouang
3. Neutral truce teams are tak-
ing new initiative to get to trouble
spots and enforce the cease-fire,
They need cooperation from the
Laotian factions, most of whose
leaders are in Geneva or nearby
where they can be influenced by
the big powers.
Because of the cease-fire viola-
tion at Padong. Western delegates
Speaking was the
ramshackle tarpaj
pullecj upon the bj
r^fh1 ftvíí.'•ndH<took' their "thre*""sons, "he1 have prevented the conference
neath moss sh/ouded cypress ^ ^ hif fjrst housebbat and be-[from meeting They have been
trapping around Cameron. La. urging stricter instructions for the
i th r.ar He cau*ht most,y ""UtraL coon truce teams, to enable themtogo
11 k *,! and mink. Tips from hunters also *here they please. The Soviets
Í supplémented his income. have been blocking this,
of speculation by hundreds K. „„,,M Some conference sources think
f nwrtorists on the busy thorough- trap a red G k returned from Moscow
K ^ IThursday with authority to make
.. $60 or a black one which would. >jrrangement for MVinc face
QPHHW
AXELSON James' "n * "fiiT /^Two small fishing boats, one par* . .
Ifem. local businessman and ^ «"bmerged, are almost hidbr¿ng " á „a"vfJ> Orange re-'°í ^oth í'dM- would take
chamber of commerce official for dcn ,he lense Ta"h T turned ^ tí area atout 13 vearé ,he ,orm putting less emphasis
Place 2 and R N iBobi Whiff, wood.en walkway leads from the turnea u> rue area anout ij years!0fk instructions for the truce
head, chemical' plant supervisor, ^? highway to thte. tiny boat- ^,*n¿sf^stríe^ tt^cf "the? boat °!pMd m°re ** *etUn,t
Seeking the Place 4 posL ' house. _ _ . . «SJi. -Eü! "ZlUOtians to cooperate.
This year to date — in marked
contrast to previous city elec-
tions — the seas have been rel-
at-zely calm. I rather susp. t
this Is the lull before what win
be a brief storm.
You can bo certain that the with the Joneses,
•giners and die-hards will be out
ui force for one last go-around.
r suspect tjiat after several years
of battling th's element, 1961 will
b« the year in which they were
tald to rest. From here on out,
it is hoped that municipal elec-
tions will hinge around the quali-
fications of individual candidates
and programs simed at municipal
progress.
The bombastic type of cam-
In the late afternoon,- he often *n kittle Caress Bayou. Then 1a-| ^ communist nations and (he
t« nn th( tinv norrh and watches' ter he moved it to the present Jo- j pro-Communist Laotians are wary
war ^ giving the truce teams more
power. They fear, the precedent
sits on the tiny porch and watches' .
people hurrying to and from their cation where he pays $1 per year,
time-limited activities. He doesn't ,.?f <
worry about the shrill ring, of the f comfortable here and I m
sffarm clock, heavy traffic in the ou.l_2' everjone s way, he stated,
heat of the day and keeping up biggest nuisi
palgning, the mud slingbig and
Slurs la slowly but surely being
Into the Umbo of forget-
for. one reason — you
(See P.S., Page 11)
nuisances,
i (See TRAPPER. Page II)
this would create when it comes
to Setting up long-term machinery
fte for investigating any future
' bl~esch of Laotian neutrality. ^
Technicians May Leave Monday
I.lfh
DETROIT (AP)—The TractorsI Even before Castro agreed Fri-
for Freedom Committee went to receive the techni-
,L„H Cians. the committee of private
ahead Saturday with plans t0 citizens had announced plans for
send a fout:member team of fw,r men to fly from Miami,
technicians to Cuba Monday. pia.. to Havana Monday in an-
But whether it would have full rcipátion he would confer with
power to effect a swap .*ith¡them.'
Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Cas-; Th? committee, which has
tro for 1,200 prisoners.taken in an pledged to raise 13 to 13.5 million
"Your committee cannot decide
by Itself what kind of equipment
Cuba is going to accept as com-
pensation for all the material
damage done toy the aggressive
action launched from the United
States against our country.'
South-of-the-Border
. 'V
Report Due by Adlai
RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil (AP)!video. Uruguay. The public was
— Ambassador Adlai E. Steven- barred, but he read a statement
son finished the first week of his, to a small group of newrfmen and
'"The nomination of one person South American tour Saturday; U.S. and Brazilian officials. Later,
to put into effect the decisions with a fairly clear picture of the he met with Foreign Minister
taken concerning the control, south-of-the-border situation he Afonso Arinas.
(See KHRUSHCHEV. Page II)
will describe to President Ken-
nedy.
¡ The statement praised Quadros
jas a leader showing "great cour-!
address of 425 Lafayette. El Paso.
Tex. Friends who knew the youth
at Mauriceville said he had "never
was in any trouble until he went in
service some two years ago."
Orange County law enforcement
authorities said they contacted his
father who lives near Mauriceville
when word was received there on -
their stockade breakout at Ft.
Hood
Sheriff Dale Carson of Duval
County (Jacksonville), said he will
send deputies Monday to question
the boys, about a possible link to
the murders of two Valdosta. Ga.,
women near Jacksonville May 29.
"We have established beyond a
reasonable doubt that the boys
were in this area about tile time
' or the slayiiigs," Carson said
without elaboration.
Mrs. - Althea Ottavio, 43, and
Mrs. Patricia Ann Hewitt, 25, were
found .strangled south of Jackson-
ville near where officers discov-
ered their abandoned automobile—
from which they said a .38-caliber
pistol was mtssuig. ■ < v.
Sheriff Fay Gillette said offi-
cers also want to question the two
about four other killing —to Ten*
nessee, Kansaa, Illinois and Colo*
rado.
Gillette said the youths offered
no resistance, but they calmly
scorned Immediate efforts to ques-
tion them. They were picked up
on U.S. Highway 40 near Grants-
vitle, 36 miles west of here on a
federal stolen truck warrant, then
transferred to Salt Lake City for
questioning by FBI agents.
Will Install
V .... Gillette spotted the oar, subject
It ^ sums up: Latin-American aKe ai)(] vigor'" in dealing With •" Illinois wanted bulletin.
- — * Saturday afternoon and ordered a
roadblock set up near Grantsville.
Officers found the notched .38-
caliber pistol and a .22-caliber re-
volver in the glove compartment
of the oar. ,
These are the k i 11 i n g s about
which officers wanted to question
the youths:
Wednesday—John A. Whitacker.
71, a railroad porter, was 'found
(See MURDERS. Page 11)
leaders are ready with varying;Brazil's economic problems.
rírni"-«-««i "Out of my exchange with
program to raise.ecooomi?
ards in the hemisphere. But most, t ,'ur# Vnvwt
are cool to any joint action toward -
^ime m v-uoa i Uruguay next month of the Inter-
largest nation still .re not fully
known, since Stevenson will not; " ; , ,
See Janio Quadros. Brazil's inde-!, Brazil is the fourth country vis-
v. in«fali' d pendent-minded new president; (fed so hr by Stevenson, who is
SngTyons Sunday. They will meet S gff " s- delegate to the United
"TsK a suburb of Sao Paulo. j Nations and has traveled prevj-
j This Is one of Stevenson's most I ously in Latin America. Despite
be difficult stops on his 18-day tour. differences in views, he has
conducted at a ladies night dinner!^ «drw.wt^ has adopted what £md the leaders friendly and hi,
at 7:30 p.m. in the Jack Tar Or-| PP<>srs to be neutralist fo^^.r'^e^jon^ exc^forone
ange House. Joe-Redman of Beau- policies, has refused to associate; "f4"
mont, international counselor .nd fmself with cnt^ of Caaro.jj^by
George H'cks will
as president of the Oran¡
Cluo tomorrow to succeed Shon
Hudson.
Installation ceremonies will
Set Hearings
past district governor, will ad- He is making a bid for .
minister the oath of office. . bloc trade, and at the same time n'RM-
Other officers are Morris OTy-, seeking continued U.S. aid.
son. first yiee president; Malcolm These moves are viewed by six more countries, including!--, -- - - ,
d vice president:! more sympathetic observers as some having internal political hoards will open this Fnaay at I
■ ■ - ■ ...... - —" • • ■ r in the school administration
Public hearings by the Orange
Stevenson is scheduled to visit Independent School District and
including'City of Orange, tax equalization
ards w~"
m. in I
t; Cecil Nantz, secretary: | high inflation and neutralize the where the government put down building.
Dormant second v Í
il Sasso, third vice presi-! attempts to stop Brazil's sky- troubles. These include Bolivia P_m.
oril Nantz. secretarv:: hish inflation and neutralize the'where the eovernment out down buiiC
rank Wallace, membership sec- noisy leftist political opposition.
i _ . ' ightty as Stt ir-.„ v .---v L
Colunbine II. closely, but so far there Is no in- morid Selzer, M..A Dehmark ana
opposition, a plot last week. The Stevens, n
itly as Ste-1 party is Wstching developments
retary; Clifford Weir, financial sec-1 The sun shone brij
retarv; Orval, Stoffer. treasurer; ¡'venson's plane, rhe (
M. S* Wozencrsft, tail twister; arrived at Rio's military airport dication any country will
Hall Wessinger, Lion tamer; loe Saturday afternoon from Monte- dropped from the schedule.
Parsley, bulletin editor; and Val-1 .
ray Franklin and Earl Hlnes, di-i
Redman will be accompanied by, Red Defection Dismissed
R. C. (Dickf Tollefson of Groves —
•Members of the school equaliza-
tion board include Chairman Ray-
deputy district governor.
Durin;
The technical team Is composed w. B. Waltman.
of Prof. Roy Bainer. head of the
University of California Agricul-
ring the meeting perfect at-
tendance pins will be presented to
five rwmbers. Arthur Wilson will-
receive a pin for a 15-year perfect
attendance record and one-ytar
ns will be given to Dan Cab'e,
More, Jim Pledger and
CTr'r
April invasion was an unanswered \ia public subscriptions to provide tural Engineering Department C.
. ¡tractors and agricultural imple-.H. Hansen* assistant professor of
jokesman said «"«"s to go with them, proposed agricultural engineering at Mich-
Castro's cablegram agreeing tn to g've SO crawler types for land i Ran State University. J. B. Liljed
question.
A committee spokesman
tlook .
toda;
tonight
tomorrow
tomorrow
today
tomorrow
Todov
Thundershowcrs
accept the technicians appeared clearing and 450 general purposelhal. agricultural engineering pro-,
to pose no conditions that could farming types. • itasor at Purdue University, and
not be met. He declined, however. But Castro's cablegram said in Duane P. Greathouse. director of
tft amplify if thii mnani thf- ^h-j riemandiig the technician team j the UAW i Agricultural Imole-
nicians wotild be given the full fee grvCT fuTr 'power to ^egftttate^Tnenr Department.
power demanded by Castro.
A source close to the commit- . ■% ,• # • a . ettf
tee said, on the other ha d, the!' DOnatlOttS JOf DlVÍHO Outfits at 5/66
technicians would not make m
71
Same
„ 7:17 p m.
... 5:14 a.m.
l.m/ 1Í.M
DCS — SotMnt: MflS. S «.i
!•*r, 7:11 a.m., f.H a.m. SoUvor:
4:01 «.m.. 1:40 p.m.; I «. .ff7 pm.,
Mo<M>3V
|OfS — Sobina: won. JM a.m.. 1?.
law, 7:4 p m.. t a.m. Bolivar: Mflh.
•.m¿ i*F pjn.i nw> ip-m-
STE ROA Y — Tamporatyro ; n'8h
1,
any
decisions and would repoa back
tn the committee on their negoti-
ations to trade 500 tractors for
prisoners taken by Castro.
The same source, which de-
clined identification, said the tech-
nician* would have authority to
aljer the "mix of various type
tractors" proposed by the com-
mittee, subject' to its later ap-
proval. It also would advise Cu-
ban authorities on what best
uS£8 could be made of the various
tractor*.
Contributions towards the pur-
chase of two' skin diving outfits for
the Orange Volunteer Rescue Unit
háve risen slowly to $186 in a drive
to raise the needed (424.
A report oh campaign progress
came yesterday from Asst. Chief
L. M. York of the Orange Fire De-
partment. Doners not- previously
listed are: Blue Bonnet Matrress
Co.. «25; N. ft. Strickland. S5;
Mrt. R. C. MarSh, 2: J. T. Brun-
ley. 12; Red Foster. ^; and J. M.
Burkhart, Ü.
. . >■ . "
York commented. "Since 1 ««it
1955, the Orange Volunteer Rescue
Unit has answered 72 emergency
calls over the Sabine Area. Of
these calls, 4B involved drownings
—eight of which have occurred in
the area to date this year."
The campaign was launched two
weeks ago by the fire department
for the purchase of. two complete
skin diving sets ot equipment' for
under water search and->reheue
work. Donors should contact York
at the fire departlnenL
/
be. J. Q- Stark. City board members
are Chairman Henry ¡Lee Wood-
— vwjrth, George Colbum and Mau-
rice Bryant.
Hearings are divided' into three
divisions which mclude real proper-
itv. Industrial and pipe lines and
persona] -property.
The schedule and alphabetical
listings when taxpayers should ap-
pear are as follows—real proper-
ty: A through,. J, June 16, 15
pm.; K through Q. June_ 19, 1^5
p.m.: and R through,Z, June 20,
ri-5 p.m.
Taxpayers falling in' the mdus-
. trial, pipeline, commercial and
WASHINGTON (AP)A 28- so secret that its employes are¡utility category will come on June
year-old employe of the super- 'not supposed to tell friends where j 21 from9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
swet National Security Agency iñey work. T™ days have beeiv set
was missing Saturday but officials; Thtr Defense Department, which,to hear protests on
discounted iffy ides that h«c mvratM nsa^ .«aid Cov i ríe ton tfrltrt* The following scncduic ts 'i-h*
defected to the Communists
William "Hyter Covington „ .
ish d early last week and was the operation. He asked to get off 1-5 p.m.
W Saturday* An employe of die De^med'cal treatment and has
' fense Department for five years, not reported for work since.
he held a 16.600-a-year job in As nearly as officials could de-
which he was reported to have termine. Covington left his home
limited access to secret informa- in nearby Laurel. Md. on- Tues-
tion. day His wife reported him
Urgency., of the search was missing Wednesday. Covington ¿¡^custody ol
heightened by the fact that last ¡was reported seen at the CTV'^!,^is7PFoidca? "isr^liS.
summer two NSA code clerks-. Town. W. Va.. race track and at« 1W.^ Mr. •¿- ««««•
both considerably higher on the Arlington. Va.. across the Poto-jJU roumU *t the Orange Louniy
he has operates NSA .said Covington :e-¡erty. The following schedulelis M-
ta. turned to work. May 31 after a ed: A Arttah M. June 22, 1-5
n van- tvo-month absence following an p.m.: and N through Z, June -3,
" "5 p.m.
ORANGE JUICE |
CASES MIXED — The story of
the judge who. after trying so
many child custody cases, wrote
this disposition on the docket:
GEORGE HICKS
Lions President
employment'scale — disappeared mac from Washington
and later turned up in Moscow.¡said to haVe cashed a check for
These men, Bernon F.' Mitchell;$520 before his disappearance.
and William H. Martin both have Also missing is his automobile, a
been serving as Soviet propa- |!>58 olive-green Plytjioiith t>car-
ganists since their defection. iii:a Maryland license FF1347. - - American divorc*
The I^TSA is: engaged in aroynd-i He Ts the father of two children, marriage . . . . American otvorca
Ihe-clock monitoring of
communications. Its
He was Courthouse. J _ ■ ,
ALSO IN COURT - One of the
remarks made Friday in 128th
District Court "Emanpipation
Day" was: "Well, Russian Soviet
leaders abolished the formality of
1118
1U activities are lycara. ,
' '' ., • • ' V?
.. ilSsstv;
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 136, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 11, 1961, newspaper, June 11, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143058/m1/1/: accessed April 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.