The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 155, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1960 Page: 17 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Orange Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
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VOL. LyI-NUMBER 155
EATEST EDITION
ta
da
Of Pay Increase Bill
.. •
}
—
crat ic Leader Lynd n B. J oh nson1 condemn the measure
so, strong-
- 9+
-
‘Governor Thinks
os
V
K.
I
. f -
Jobs Stopped
ACS Names
(
Holiday
plant in Santiago. Seizure of toe
Perioc
— Conservation Committee.
Here Tonig
liar in-
past four .years.
A long Indi
ra-
session
Title
rance Firm Set Up
reopen as
Workers Hail
Trustees Hire
are
meat. Members of the five-man
Khrushchev
ew Teachers
final local proposal was a 15-cent
(See SHEET METAL, Page 8)
■al
Some 28 representatives of ri'
authorities and water districts in
Because of the friendliness of of the border. But Red China ear-
Johnn Hryhorchuk, vice pres-
lems can be
discuss.d.
It
in: to
An invitation to
extended
hinks It's Part of Act
and ending Monday at midnight.
the
Orange
threatens
cation)
(See HOLIDAY, Page 8)
Session's
house. damaging bams and
End Near
Stevenson, who says he's not a
and shattered
same
area.
me to Texas Friday and
July
(See POLITICS, Page 8)
big bills slid
The last of
leader. Capt.
Antony Laurence
Climax. involving several somer-
Fujiyama reportedly told the
TOKYO (AP) *— The Japanese
government strongly endorsed its
.t-k *Le
new
United States today in a scorching
49
A
g
collections.
electrical
4,’
- nd contributing to
"*
%
Foreign Minister Alichiro Fuji-
yama called in Soviet Ambassa-
chee
John-F. Kennedy of Mas-
-7
t ?
2 {
7->»
A
.l‛ '
>
t
•4
i.
* 7.
f
vestment i Cuba;
mated at 60 millig
Stevenson Is Willing To Have
His Name Placed in Nomination
diplomatic repiy to Soviet objec-
tions. It accused the Soviet Union
"River Authority I
ized here yesterday.
Three senior naval offi
the Orange area with a.
Japanese Government Gives Strong
Endorsement to Alliance With U.S.
trees,
the
tic ccalition substituted the smalls
er figures, end the. House passed
(See CONGRESS, Page t)
JOHNNIE C SVOBODA
New Office- Manager
Saults down the rope before land-
ing with a fl urish.
gerford and East Bernard. .
Svoboda said there would be no
change in office personnel.
July Is Given
Stormy Start
in Orange
1y formed
* organ
at 50 Trill
ment owe
panies ai
dollars ,4
At _
married
irs of a
the
Shell and Esso
Plants Slated.
ForTakeover
"I
pe
I by
.
' I
West Orange Financial Data
Shows City To Be in Black
work
Area
mem-
"distinguished American," whom
he didn't identify.
Sen. Lyndon B Johnson of Tex-
as. a leading aspitaitt for the
nomination, took the Senate floor
to make a scornful, sometimes
Skies were clear over most of
the state early it: the day, no rain
fell and tempetatures were- most-
ly in the 60s and 70s. The - high
early Friday was 80 at Galveston
and the low temperature was 66,
at Dalhart.___________________
and tattoo, slide to the ground on
a rope attached to the 85-foot-high
garden roof. The 200-foot long
i ope is at s 45-degree angle ."They
do it without using their hand’.
Then the Marine Command
— Orange Pulp & Paper Mills.
Inc. — the holiday signals a shut-
down for the start ot vacations.
(hat Japan will never permit nu-
clear-weapons to he based,on .its
territory and that the government
is confident the United States will
never take any military action
from its Japanese bases contrary
to Japan's wishes.
El‛s is esti-
r and Texacojs
Cuban ggefh.
end is scheduled to begin tonight
for most Orange area residents.
31Kminimum and exending its
iverge-without overtime provi-
Av
3---
c--2. --g——•i
Wage increases over a two-ear
contract expiring on June 30, 1962,
ly The President called it inde-
fensible.
The vote was 34340 override the
veto and 69 against overriding it.
This was 69 votes more than
"-f
i
.t
e l
The' new manager attended
Wharton County Junior College
and for three years was field su-
dachill in big no longer
rful voice, announces about
In Ceremonies at Texas Group
Three High - Ranking Navy Officers Retire Here
H0r7
letter of commendation and the
Royal Order of Phoenix (com-
mander's cross with swords) from
House Overrides Vela
—
DALLAS (AP) — The Weather BuH
issued today Ahi 5-day forecast for Ji
1-5. « a. _T-
WACOCS
ly meeting I
on Sept. 28
*±~
any estate. The initial capital
strenture is $125.00-
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the top prize "
Adlai E. Stevenson says Jie has Butler also announced he has
" ‘ " ----——— •—•* Draft-Stevenson
as “nasty, mean, vicious rumors”
charges that he’ has ri ~ ’
Democratic convention ___-
Re-affirming its faith in the
U.S.-Japan security treaty despite
a month of riotous leftwing pro-
tests. Prime Minister Nobusuke
Kishl’s government told the So-
viets:
j "tn view of the grim realities
in the Far East the stationing of
U.S. forces (in Japan). is neces-
sary for securing the safety of
An even more ominous killer
WASHINGTON. (AP) — The I of Texas said he would sek a
House teday voted to override vote as quickly as possible.
President. Eisenhower’s veto of a Johnson expressed confidence
7% per cent pay increase for 1% the’ Senate would also vote to
million federal employes. , override.- - '
The House action sent the bill| The Democratic leader -said he
on to the Senate where r
sAE: .
1
misinterpretation” of the treaty,
"onesided and dogmatieviews,"
slander, attempting to’weaken Ja-
pan's defenses and “distortion of
facts.”
The key 211-203' votesme
a Republican-Southern Demg
County residents ' thir afternoon
will be joining the mad rush of
vacation, bound motorists eager to
wring all the ■pleasure posible
out of the three-day July 4 hott-
™y. Drive carefully and sensibly:
The life you save may be that of
I
association committee said the
viet
got;
likes |
inches of rain in six hours during
the night, and nearly as much fell
in the same time at Kirksville. in
the northern' part- of the state:]
Rivers and striams over the area
already were near flood stage
from earlier rains.
Tornadic winds during ths night
smashed into a community near 1
Bendena, Kan., wrecking a farm
but it wih be. business as. usual
wig me woria war u ..„— •________ —- for police, firemen and some
campaign in whch he groups collapsed Wednsday night other "essential” workers.
--- *“---f *---- For one localindustrial plant
operate with the Texas
______ —______________ --, the two-thirds majopity-needed to
Demo- did not see hew Eisenhower could pass the bill' over the President's
ohnson’condemn the measure so strong- disapproval. '
-] Eisenhower vetoed the measure
:>4** -
. P.
4
/
age from • a storm Wednesday
night and early Thursday was es-
timated at 3*4 (_ _________
lars, was soaked by 1% inches of
it can wcjte title insurance,
in notes, bonds and. securi
and act as a lawful trustee und
board as directors are Rep. Jack
Brooks. Beaumont: James A. Cot-
__(See NEW FIRM, Page 8)____I
Castro acted through identicak
resolutions' which accused both ~
Esso and Shell of violating a 1938
meet again atter the conventions. 0
In.a similar defense mood. Na- the nation .
„ tional Democratic-Chairman Paullworid peace.
Butler at Los Angeles denounced E—1— **
— .. cauwo, au axpgu- Incoming commanding officer now
sed to the Texas Group of the At- undesignated.
Thaqtic Reserve Fleet , . Capt. Sampson has been group
These cereiponies and those of commander since December 1957
More Refineries Face Seizure in Cuba
TRIO RETIRES WITH 95 YEARS OF SERVICE Pholo * ’*
Base Ceremony Honors Mathews (Left), Nolan (Center), Sampson
angry attack on a long list of ma-
neuvers and tactics he said his
opponents have aimed at him. He
defended his handling.of the Sen-
ate leadership and the decision to
recess the Senate Saturday and
counting on this to hold enouga
Republicans in line to sustain he
veto. Only one of Eisenhower’s ve-
toes has been overridden since he
became President.
But Seme other Republicans
were saying the bill probably
would be passed over the veo.
“After all, this is an elecion
year," said one of them. Sen. Bar-
ry Goldwater (R-Ariz).
The House moved toward.the
veto vote after passing two ma-
’ -
h -
VIENNA, Austm (AP)—S
Premier Nikita Khrushchev
jor measures Thursday.
ens. Rejecting a bill to require a
$1.15 minimum and extending its
. I terstate commerce, the House
+ passed a measure providing a
S-. " union meeting in Beaumont.
J were held at/when he arrived in Orange. A Apparently acting on a premise
. • 11 at the base before the as- graduate of the U.S. Naval Acad-1 of "no- contract, no work” the
sembled erewgf officers and men emy, Sampson has served for 33 union move followed expiration of
of the group. Cmdg. Hall B. Wes- years in various capacities, includ- a two-year contract yesterday at
singer succeeded Capt. Sampson ing assignmepts on battleships, midnight between Sheet Metal
commander pending the cruisers. mine craft, amphibious Workers Local 196 and the. Sa-
•— ---,—_ craft and cargo ships. I bine Area Sheet Metal Contrac-
* He commanded the'USS J. W. Iters Assn. . .
it-uruen5naiu Pitter during the World War II Negotiations between the_two
Capt. Sampson has been group Okinawa c.,-ig. im„i., , . . —. . 15
- -------_ "2 ' won the Silver Star and Legion of in Beaumont after a five - hour
— ----------—---———— Merit for, conspicuous gallantry in session. This negotiating session
action against the Japs. waf attemnded bo Wilis h Rav
e -"4
—/
throhghyterrqlYirichtiqnPlmkp Easterbrook, 31, gets set for the
down and 26 more seuregation Alimav inunlvin everal
bills and the income tax withhold-
usual on Tuesday morning.
Municipal and county employes
. likewise will observe the three-
the prime factors of disagree- day holiday, with the exception of
* acd •f ha fiv---"lice ten and mherirs deuties. I
as group .____.
arrival later this summer
cefs inichnge of command
lai of 95/Pier II at the base
By BOB AXELSON
Constructm sheet metal
in the immediate Sabine
came to a halt today-when
I ’
a packing house enploye's lip.
WATCH IT! - Many Orange - '
years of active servisefetired yes-
terday afternoon in’ceremonies at
enson would be nominated by A of undue interference in Japan's .— --— ----- ----.
............. affairs and rejected neutrality in the Soviets were, guilty of “wilful
the cold wan misinterpretation" of the treaty,
. - t
The ORANGE Leader
the King of-ree e.
NOther commands held by Capt.
NNan . included mine" and destroy-
er sqadrons and as commanding
officer of the Orange Naval Sta- ----------,-----.----
tion from 1956 until it was console yide a forum at which mutual prob,
dated with the Texas Group on 1 ' —1 “ -
Jan. 1. 1960 NQapt. Nolan atso
served as professor of naval sci-
ence and tctics-fortbree years at
Conservation Assn., a
an Associated Press re
rain in six hours.
Winds of nearly 60 miles an
hour raked some sections of St.
Louis County, ripping down wires
end toppling trees. The latest
storm also produced occasional
flash flooding..
Columbia. Mo. measured 1%
Eost Texast Temperotures l*o< degrees
above normal No important remperatore ne S>m
Enengs-gprecipioTion ioh or none. A » 1 207
tea Toifee ihunger»bower». • sacbusel
peivSor for the Wharton County
AS&CC in charge of field opera
tions. He held that job before
i commg here.
asNHe came to. Orange as field su-
Fujiyama reportedly told the
_______ ______ _____ ___cabinet earlier it would be Ja- included-a bill to allow Gov. Jim-
military alliance’ with the pan's last word. to theSovjets on|mie Davis to close all schools in___
d States today in a scorching they matter and that anv further ; the state if any school is racially the
protests woald be ignored. • integrated under federal order..
Using rupusually strong lan|~ ~ ‘ ' .
guage, the Japanese note charged __. gy — ~
boda is ply, namely Venezuela:
of two ------------- ■■ ■
Svoboda suaceeds Marion" c2125,000 bands of Soviet
Ulery, who held the post for the processing.
- •------ - Shell has a 42 millioy
bers of Local 196 failed -to report —
on commerical, residential and .-
some industrial building projects.
It was not determined earlier
today whether picket lines would
be put up which would halt sev-
eral.thousand dollars worth of con-
struction projects. A strike notice
was filed earlier and a favorable
vote was taken last night at a
paftment, $2,311.06%, Office sa-
754.49: fire departmient. $1,686.34;
Street department, $5,225-21; mos-
quite control, $179.26; utilities, $l,-
124,58; fees, $2,895.32: and sen-
eral operating expenses, $112319day,
ieen.u. -UI-, „uy, ___The Icit's assets included a The
-25 minutes iater that Easterbrook $27,491.96, bank , balance, a. 730yous elgnbons
Officers are Tinsley, president:
__.-I, . B L. Morris, vice president; and
to 4 millton dol- Henry L. Woodworth, secretary-
treasurer. . Also serving on the
The ■jaunty, trim figure of
Easterbrook is attired in a black
the Texas Grous here.
They are Capt. R. R. Sampson,
Capt. RL Nolan Jr. and Lt.
Cmdr. J. R. Mathews, all assign-
$,4
Resolution Tops
AUSTIN (AP)—Gov. Price Dan-
iel says adpption of his resolution
urging that the "temporary I-cent
increase in the federal _ gasoline
tax not be renewed was the most
significant action of the'national
governor’s conference.
. The increase in the tax expires
automatically July 1, 1961.
Leader Want Adr eyery day we
' use them!’' •
“On the basis 6t my experience
so far,” said the two-time party
nominee, “I don’t- thihk it would
make any difference.” But his
questioners twisted his 'arm. Do
you have any objection?
“No, I dont. really," Stevenson
said finallv. That was all. -
Meanwbile in Loa Angeles.
James- E. Doyle, director ofs
Draft-Stevenson drive. said Stev:
perviser and one month later
lanagerupon Ulery's res
lureadonseHay tohsgke haifeee“"stosth,g itploves
rejected bill would have added
about 3% hilioh-workrsto the
law’s coverage. S • e 5
■ Construction
Sheet Metal
Adlai E. Stevenson says hi
no objection to hairing his name granted Doyle’s ______________
placed in nomination at the-Demo- movement working space at the
use. u.mg..g .... wuwcratie presidential convention, convention’s headquarters hotel.
. knocking down utility lines with now a ditle more than a week] He skid before he would not do
A hailstorm hit Trov. in away. this unless Stevenson himself
• - • et— - —— i—•- - - asked for it
(See RETIREMENTS, Page 8)
7/
-T*<L!L..‛15, IR8 ,
•‘I’m learning more about the {show,.
autnoriues and waver GISIIICIS m mSht nV/Dk1:e K,F.t.
Texas were present to organize ImehPublicsSafetyhas. PS;
H, ncw orrum He n-n,y w;1i nI ! dicted tht 27 vehiCle doaths willru ------- •
he new group. The panel will PrP-lgocr onfekas-streets and high- hegavoided name-calling.
wavs during thestree-day period. Beoese cf the ------------ z -------------------------- ------- --p-
Based on statistical,data from the audience he was a bit more her this week informed Nepal it ident. presided in the absence of
DPS records, the predicsiqn calls j farceful and the crowd responded had sent troops into the zone be-; President J D. Hatcher, who was
irt todav ,or LO00 cars to be damafedin with cheers, applause and. laugh- cause of the rebirth of rebellion ill And unable to attend -the.
the rirSe collisions, with bodily injuries heter.______________ in Tibet.__1 meeting. - _-
- 1,506 persons.
On a national basis, the Nation-!
From us wm»« aureow
OUTL OQK -Portly clouy and continued
BritishOffker is Fatally Injured During Show
NEW YORK I — You sit inhadsafered a TalLYouandyour broken.”
Madison Square Garden, perhaps fellow spestators. about 12.006 of: A couple of hours later the cap-
munching on popcorn or sipping them. are sheeked. You thought tain is dead.
a cold drink, and.they bring on it was part of thssact. . Easterbrook, who was not mar-
another -act—this one bjllcd as: You learn later thtthey rushed ried, sid in a recent interview-
"the death slide." Easterbrook to St ClareS^Hospt-! concerning his act: “If anyone did
One by one. Thursday (light. 301 W- where a nurse reported tkt (fall, he'd hever make thedescnt ■
British Royal Marines, taking every bone ,in__his body isLggsin. ' ' * * x __—
part in the' military tournament ’ . --- ■ /
windows. No imiuries caqdidate, was cornered by news- interest continued undiminished
Ju, .o.Ie • Tv™ 7. ;j<. .1 men Thursday as-he left a fund- about former President Harry S.
brought ideal weather . rondir inns Raising Washington "cocktail par- - -
• with t» ty. He was asked: "Would you ob-
ject if your name went before
the convention? 2
F 7
h ■
The note denied Communist i =
charges that the American bases | l
in Japan’ threaten • the Soviet Un I =
ion and Red China with nuclear) =
attack and can be used to launch ■ 2
spy plane flights over the Com- -
munist nations,' It sai, Japan's “
foreign policy is one of peace, <
By THE AssCATED PRESS . _ .. . .
showersand thunderstorms company is.authorized t
X gave July a stormy opening
-•ai'. across much of the country todav
and locally‘heavy rains posed new
flood threats in, waterlogged sec-
tions of the Missouri Valley,
The St. Louis area, where dam-
i suitapd black bowler, He carries
2 traditional British umbrella
in one haqd and holds a strap
i connected wifh ths rope in the
othet. "
I The master of ceremonies gives
I Easterbrook r metF buildup,
leaning him "our man from Ha-
Ivana.” a- reference to thewhimji-
cal character in a novel by
Gtaham Greene.,, , street rent,. _______
I Easterbrook plummets from CkiI Defense refiend,
[that high, high ceiling to thelers"Court grant an
ground below Ns, never touches building and electrical permits,
the rope. What a act! . Disbursements were for oper-
The Garden is plunged indark-ating expenses .of the -sanitation
ness. Figures scurry about, and {department, $121902.76; police de-
sou 'wait' for the lights too up —env• Afiea «
tothe next apt : A
The lights do go)up and the
Brig. Alastair G.L. MacLean
- director of the all-British
The City Erf West Orange ’re- sodjal ScoFity fund, $25 m petty
corded a net income of $8,128.43 cash and 825 in the cash box.
for the yeor ending last March 31. | Payable-notes included a $12, -
a financial statement from the 000 balance om the new city hall
city hall revealed today -- building and a $R 000 balance on. •
The report alio showed the city’s the motor grader prchased sev-’
finances to be more than $4,000] etal months ago. ' \
"in th- black”—wfth curretis de- X ‘
S25 WS.^.I ORANGE JUICE I ’
Total : income for the period I •nAE -VT-E |
amounted to .$49,939.30, with total INDUCEMENT? — Thea (
disbursements’ standing at] there's the case of a local ndusek
$41,810.87. =, I Wife who recently bought a small N
Sources of income included tax ham canned in Denmark. On . S
tarbage fees, fines, opening up the tin she was sur
, electrical license, prsed to find a Danish krone — ,
-.,Commission-|coin comparable in size to cur
grant and plumbing, [quarter'— tucked in the can She '
■ - ' —" can't wait to buy, another to see ■
if that’s a sales ’ inquce ’ nt of
was atteneded by Willis H.. Ray,
Other commands during his long field representatiye from the.Hous- down for the start o
service have been mine squad- ton office of the Federal Mediaboo Other industries will
rons and landing ship flotillas, and. Conciliation Service- neinel ni "Tunedee --
. _ Capt Sampson has been tn this
ore ;n C;+., area once previously when he
EIS III L IlY was executive officer of the naval*
‛ ROTC unit at Rice University in
Formation of a new title insur- fessaryPTkegin actual operations, Houston.
a nee company to be known as the was issued IWsqnesday. The char- The departing commanding of-
Title Insurance and Trust Coter for the newEspany was ap- ficer plans to remain in Orange
with headquarters in Orange wasi proved on April 2956’ the State for the pext year or more.He re-
announced today ■ by President Board of Insurance inAustin. isides at 502 Knox Ave. with his
Bryon Tinsley, local attorney. I This is the first such chakter wife and two children.
A certificate of authority, nec-[granted in four years in thekCapt. Nolan, a Naval Academy
State of Texas. There are only clssmate of Capt. Sampson, has
'nine, such companies in existence also srved the Navy for 33 years,
in Texas and the new Orange' He. frst sef*4 on te old aircraft
concern is'the 10th. | carrier Sarator-qd attended the
] .The'title and trust company is U.S. Naval Postgradnate School in
lsupervised and reulated’by the I Annapolis. Sm
State Boarckof Insurance The. The summer of 1945 found Sapt.
home office W be established ]Nolan preparing for his seconch
here for the present in the Sabine destroyer command. His first was
Tide Co. building. in 1942. While commanding officer
.Tineley explainett that the new । of the- USS Nea, he received a
. . ' ——2 busi--
ness throughout the United States. ]
16"Pages 5 Cents
, Cuban law requiring refineries '
A - , N . here to process state-owned oil.
()+Fice Chinf All companies have held that the
• I 11 CC • I ll Cl law mean- cil produc’d in Cuba
— and not oil imported-in competi-
r ~ tion with their own suppliers
rar l mlnT\/ The Cubans announced Thurs-
• •1 —vMI-Y j day they had already b an re-
! fining the Soviet crude at th- con-
Jchnnie C. Svoboda is the new fiscated, 26-mjll ion-dollar Texaco • ,
office manager of the Orange - — --- C----- ‛
County Agricultural Stabilization
session in Orangevwas
by. John W. Simmons, executive -u na-yat •e MHUII~ ,
vice oesidm? Fana-eneral man.lal Safety Council has predicted ( rowN
ager orgshesabineRfver AuX?- 370 traffic deaths during the -rowd2
y of Texas, Some 36 to Rer- period starting today at 6 pm.
sn/re expected to attend en8 emeine Mnee * immieh*
uelary6il they have imported, re-
fige and resold in Cuba
VThe American oil companies, in
refusing to handle the Soviet
crude, said they had to continue
using their usual sources of sup-
Garbage collectors will make!
—- mup aritheir usual pickups on Monday,
per hour across the boardhike for but residents have been urged to
wohd’fta 3
present sheet metal journeyman co lections' on the holiday. - ------- --------. -____
(See SHEET METAL, Page 8) Federa offices her will be the kind of welcome
S--------------- closed through.Monday, and the from workers at the Fiat au‛-
__ . _ - only mail delivered will be spe-mobile plant' toga in 1
D:..: C - A • V cial delivery items. Mail drops Communist district.
-KIVer )AcKion will be servtced as usuat, but Some 3,009<orkers mobbed him
a lit VI v--ai post office windows will remain as ha stemped from hisCar, into
'closed. Stores in the downtown [the epefrtvard just beyond the]
. Pl-1- III- . business district will be closed gatexof the factory. Many tried!
K XlAtPn Herp also. ' torshake bis band
3 UlUlvM I IVi • l City and county law-enforce Their enthuslasm worried So-len-,
meat, officers will join Texs|viet security chief L S. Saharov.' Some Nepalese -
ai inui., ... highway'patrolmen in "Opaftion who warned police to control the; ported.feeing fearfully to the: Saxton said the school district
An.initial quarter- Deathwatch" beginning Tomorrow crowd. Reinforccmentr .were south from the border area where. needed math, science and bus:-
at 12:01 a.m.The alfWill con- rushed to the area.' \ the Nepal government says Chi- ness teachers. Three vacacies ex-
tinue through ^Monday at! The Soviet Premier got achininese Communist troops killed anist in those fields, he added
11:59-p.m. VN- 1 weicome on-his arrival in Vienna, army, officer last week and kid- Treetees disopssedinserazmce fol
in this connection. Cel./Homer shook hands with several workers naped 17 persons, the school building-with represent-
■Garrison J.’of the Texas Depart-land asked about plant conditions. I Prime Minister B P Koirala Stives of Brown Insurance, Agency
uni. CfeA--He made a speech similar to his and Red Chinese Premier- Chou and McGce Insurance Agency.
two earlier addresses,1 in which En-lai had agreed to demilitarize-both of Orange, and Ma ver In-
ja 12%4-mile-wide zone on each side; surance Agency of Beaumont
—
\Mith Headq
children. He andJils family are
temporarily residing at 309 Dew-
ey Place.
! He was6omn at Smhkgille in
BastropCounty, 38 miles Suu th-'
east Austin His public scho
eptfeation was received at Hun- '
Hqt, dry weather is the out-
look for the days just ahead
(detalls below). And there are
expected to be some warm days
inside the halls of Congress
when the lawmakers return for
a post-convention session. Story
on page 12.
DEWEYVTME (SpD) — The
I Deweyville Cohhon School f
iat auto- N. • r! Board last night hirekthrie new
Vienna's Clitizens F l ee teachers. \
1.k. I ICC Employd were MrS ToTmije
” Lou Griggs. Mrs. W S. Fierc
I Pn,klo Cn+ and Mrs. Miriam Hearne.
I rOUDIC ^pOL Supt Donald D Saxton said all.
al 2 three would be placed in the ele-
KATMANDU, Nepal ‛(AP)-mentary school and given-«Si-
were re-tracts covering one year
K1 rafher wOm one humia IrOUo tomor:
208 fow. Higheshcempergtufe foddy and »<v
5 morrow neor W and the lowest fonlghf
aU' about 7S. Mostly Sugtherly winds 10 to 11
m p. dqytime and 3te 8 m.p h. at niONt.
/08 TIDES-Sabine: M06S.IM am,. 6:92
--0 dm., low, 3:19 p.m. Bohvor: high, 3,12
I a.m.. 10:07 a.m.; low. S lS bm
I SUN—rises 519 o,m., sets IXjre
U YESTERDAY — Temperotures"—"
The group asked,Atty. Gen. Will
Wilson and the Texaq Water Con-
servation Assn, to file briefs in the
City of Graham's suit against the
Brazos River Authority
Graham is suing on the claim
that the authority permitted parts
of Possum Kingdom Reservoir to
fill with silt, causing parts of Gra-,
ham to be flooded in the high
watgrof 1958..____ ________________
ig the dor icolai T. Fedorenko to pres
i"‛tavor den; Japan's one-packge reply to
Sovjet, protests of April 22. ’ May
the frontrunner for 20 anj Juna against the treaty
CarI Sereasingen_-coperations ,
assistant for the Tronbeidge Di- (ifI..past performance. anx indi-
vision ofthe Texes SRA, was also
in attendance yesterday at this
organizational session.
refinery had followed company of
ficials: refusal to take delivery on
oi/for
-l-"
NEW IN SPICE!
two related new features
make their bows in Spice! this
Sunday: a Picture of die Month
by a local artist and a column
sponsored by the Orange Art
League' and written by ope of
their members. Both will appear
on the first, Sunday of each
month, begineing Sunday. —
Le ' •
I .l., 2
c
■.■< r -
BATON ROUGE (AP) — Two
more days of work on relatively
minor legislation, will wrap up
Louishana’s Legislature ses-
sion. N
Thursday as "indefensible by any
light.” He said' it would intensify
the "conspicuous unfairness and
discrimination" he contended al-
ready exists in federal pay scales.
He also- said that “intensive and
unconcealed political pressure
(was) exerted flagrantly” on Con-
gress to pass the bill.
At the same time he said he was
willing to approve a "modest" in-
crease,. and GOP leaders were
I
I .
p l
J
HAVANA (AP) • Minis-
ter Fidel Castro today ordered
seizure of Esso Standard and
Shell Oil installations and refin-.
eries in Cuba. unlers-they refine’
token shipments bt -state-owned
(Russian) crude oil. •
Both companies aLready have
declined to handle th Russian
crude, obtained in a sugar-for-oil
barlet deal
Seizure of Esso and Shell would
put Cuba's whole petroleum in-
cdustry,, velued-atncarly 150 mil-
lion dollars, in the hands of Cas-
tro's revgluthoqary government.
Two days ago,-Cantro s. ized all
Texaco Oil Co. property, includ-
ing its Santiago reinits in a
similar stop."
-0*:
ALA .1
-0
-G
•‘ '
I
Member Associated, Press > ORANGE, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1960
hesreg,forejgK com-
- eetmated64-million
exchang fo- Veer-
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 155, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1960, newspaper, July 1, 1960; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1464503/m1/17/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.