The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 40, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 15, 1967 Page: 1 of 28
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
7 1
t-
AUSTIN (AP)—In an over-
The motion, by Rep. Bill Bass
Wednesday.
a
>
All District
The: ORANGE LEADER
Teams Announced
See Page 11
VOL. LXIV—NUMBER 40
ORANGE, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1967
24 Pages
-
Major Stor
Enters State
K -
H-t
'■ 3
a’
District
4
.3
Firestone
Of Council
sional redistricting bill which
With House Investigation
By EDEE HOLLEMAN
She Will Cooperate
Says
Brooks’ proposed district
newspaper.
on a
Rep. Jim Hairgrove of Lake’
a
She said she was served with
was to elimi-
"I don’t want to talk about
Daves, 52, has been associated
it must report to the House
and
gets.
14 Latin Governments
tesman said two
Bodies Found
Korean marines
vision here.
— took moder-
■
ate casualties ir the big battle
Sign Nuclear Ban Pact
were
came assistant
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Four- nama, and Uruguay.
In the Akron
Most diplomats who took part
nami
for
between the United
it dead.
tory
persons
States and the antarctic.
But before the first treaty said, “because some countries
C. T. (Bud) Wilkinson.
a
ments
but did not answer when
five nuclear powers.
. Miss Swann has
term.
not yet been located.
Jones has been associated
(See CITY, Page 1*)
Seven countries within the
, (See MANAGER, Page 11)
zone did not sign at the cere-
News of Today
VIETNAM
LOCAL
Bert Daves has been named
when the treaty comes up for
WEATHER
congresses.
WASHINGTON
Alley Sie VVIHII, •>I -V.“s
Chile, Ecuador, El Salvador,
said.
Hi
pending hearing
n filed by Dist. A
Ten finalists have been cho-
and rather cool. Colder to-
and Cypress Avenue; removal
Bruce Smith cans T7-foot shot
The meeting will be the sec-
to 6th streets.
undefeated district play . . . Or-
tween
Randy Matson feels that he is
way lie . . . Texas Tech
(8m PARKING, Page 11)
The proposals came asasur
%
24
morrow night but tempera-
turee remaining above
W. Orange Sets
Drainage Talks
No Parking Is Okayed
On Part of Green Ave.
duced in the Texas House here.
The same bill would reunite
Brazoria County under one con-
Ronnie Ozio
Hearing Set
Marcli 16
ece
----
Its president is Miss Huff.
Asked if the committee knew
Schulman Plant
Manager Named
Merchants
Plan New
Promotion
A cross-section of Orange
merchants today decided to
revamp “Money Saving
Changes
Proposed
AUSTIN (Spl) - A congres.
Objections
Highlight
Session
Lifting Bodies
In Space Future
See Page 2 •
Various traffic experts have
said the flow of traffic through
Mh l
biggest battle in recent months
in Vietnam. They said they
killed 243 North Vietnamese
regulars in a three-hour fight
SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP)—U.S. jet pilots raced
through a clear sky today for attacks on North Vietnam,
screened through much of the winter by monsoon
clouds.
A Tass dispatch in Moscow said squadrons flew over
The new manager started in
Schulman's St. Louis plant as a
Drainage problems in West
Orange will be discussed at a
Feb. 27 meeting.
pursuing the North Vietnamese
tonight, he reported.
several, and anbther blew up in the house
from which the attack was made. Left is
Brig. Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, South Viet-
nam’s national police director. Right is Mai.
Pham Phu Tran, chief Of a Saigon police
precinct.__________________________________________
Populated Area
Of Hanoi Bombed
years ago.
Daves has been active in Boy
Scout work and Masonic Lodge
in Akron. He and his family also
are active Methodists.
Daves is married and has
three children. His oldest son is
married, and a second son and
The same issue, worded ’ al-
most exactly as the current
measure, tied previous legisla-
tures in lengthy controversies
and filibusters.
Mrs. Hermine Tobolowsky, a
reading: tabled a request for an
air-conditioning license for fur-
ther study; and made several
traffic changes.
would cause hardship.
W. P. Brown Jr., who lives on
Meeks Drive, said, “One of the
rnaRe NPrh nrhni
telolco Tuesday night to ban gotiations insisted they feel the what. Huff Enterprises does,-----o -
* • •• • —1*1----. associate counsel Robert P. Communist
By V,S. Planes
Soviets Claim
SPORTS
John Certa makes 11-AAAA
first team ... Pat Lavine
“I think it’s my duty,” Y.
Marjorie Flores Powell told re-
Data from U.S. Weather Bureau
Outlook — Cloudy, windy and
mild today and early to-
night with only slight
chance of showers late to-
t placement and engineer-
ing of the road is not included
trounced a motion to suspend
House rules, 30-117.
freezing.
High today . .
low tonight .
er beauty queen secretary, Mrs.
Powell said:
At mid-morning, it was 50 de-
grees at Dalhart and 57 at Am-
w,k2
Ik 2
Member Associated Press-
Kin Feqtvres Srvice
— ---------
from Puerto Rico.
“I’ve been working with him
long enough to take his word,”
Foreman said. Cheers and loud
applause greeted his word.
The entire four-member Trav-
is County delegation voted
against the Bass motion.
“I do believe this is an emer-
gency," Bass said. “State em-
ployes are going into debt right
now while the state is showing
a surplus.”
Wage Talks
Continue
Wage talks continued early
this afternoon between striking
members of the Oil, Chemical
and Atomic Workers Union and
Firestone Petrochemical Center
officials.
Mediation is aimed at ending
the strike which began Jan. 20
and has idled 386 members of
both OCAW Local 4-23 and Elec-
tricians Local 390.
Federal mediator Gayle Win-
enter of Houston, who called
the meeting to "take another
look at the situation,” said to-
day’s session started at 10
a.m.
At the noon recess he re-
ported “the only progress is
the fact that we’re still meet-
ing." How long the talks would
continue was not known.
Most of the petrochemical fa-
cility has remained in opera-
tion. Supervisory personnel
working extended shifts have
replaced the union members.
Liberty, Hardin, Polk, Tyler,
Jasper and Newton counties.
Huff Enterprises, a corpora-
tion doing business from Adam
ton Powell’s office, adds
named outstanding in 25-A . . .
Bobby Smith top player in
9-AAA . . . Marshall Willey tops
10 Finalists To Compete
In Recipe Contest Tonight
After pondering a stack of recipes as thick as the Orange,
Beaumont and Houston phone books put together judges tn
The Orange Leader recipe contest have chosen 10 finalisis.
The last stage of the six-week contest, the cook-off, will
be held today at 6 p.m. in the Gulf States Utilities Co. service
center here. All finalists have been notified and asked to pre-
pare their winning recipes. After sampling the savory dishes,
the judges will select five winners.
James B. Quigley, publisher of The Leader, will present
prizes of *25, *15; io, $5 and a gift to the top five at the
cook-off.
Recipes chosen for the finals are wild rice stuffed pork
chops, chieken casserohe, roast venison. Jiffy ventson spaghetti
sauce, stuffed eggplant, sauerkraut balls, sunball salad, tomato
soup salad with shrimp, Effie cake and magic meringue pie.
Winners and finalists’ names will be announced in The
Orange Deader tomorrow.
The bill was referred to the
House Committee on Legisla-
tive and Congressional Districts.
The 1965 redistricting act di-
vided Brazoria County between
the 9th Congressional District of
U.S. Rep. Jack Brooks, Beau-,
mont, and the 14th District of
Rep. John Young, Corpus Chris-
ti. i .
Hairgrove’s and Neugent’s
bill would put all of Brazoria
County in a new 9th District
without an incumbent congress-
man.
Young’s district would shift
‘south and west.
j The proposed 9th district;
would comprise Chambers, Gal
veston, Brazoria, Fort Bend,
night or early tomorrow
morning. Mild today and
Aac:53
. ‘1
Kt
SAIGON POLICE WITH BOMB EVI-
DENCE — Police officials in Saigon hold
a sawed-off American-made motar tube used
by Viet Cong in an attack on U.S. Military
headquarters in downtown Saigon. The head-
quarters itself was not hit. One shell exploded
in a convoy of Vietnamese troops, killing
She was accom-
1W • /
"i
a subpoena Monday at her law-
yer’s office, then allowed to go
home and make arrangements
h.r"
spokesman for the Texas Busi-
ness and Professional Women’s
Clubs, barely bad time to stand
and say she supported the issue,
as usual, before it was recom-
mended for passage by the com-
mittee.
"This is .the same as it has
been before," she said, "but I
think it had a different angle
this time. Several cases are
pending in federal courts testing
a proposed new 3rd Congres-
sional District served by Rep.
Jack Brooks has been intro-
High tomorrow .......
Outlook for Friday - Partly
cloudy and rather cool.
Of Airplane
ANAHUAC, Tex. (AP) - The
wreckage of a plane missing
since Friday was found by
searchers today with the four
-—s-— —_— b> early
ed dghYortso.r today’s expect-
Judge Hoyt said he has not
received the detailed written re-
port from the University of
Texas Medical Branch at Gal-
veston where the Ozio youth has
been under court-ordered ’ psy-
chiatric examination since early
last month.
Hanoi and bombed and
strafed “economic targets
and populated areas in the
provinces neighboring on
Hanoi."
The U.S Command, which or-
dinarily conducts briefings on
air operations the day after they
take place, declined to comment
on the Soviet news agency’s re-
port. Tass, in a dispatch from
Hanoi, Said the Americans sped
over Hanoi at noon and "heavy
antiaircraft guns and bursts of
rocket fire shook the sky."
this... I am afraid if the legis-
lature doesn’t act, the federal
courts will.”
"I really didn’t ask any women
to come down and testify this
time," said Sen. William T.
Moore, Bry-n a present spon-
sor and sponsor in past years.
“I decided this time that what
I needed was not talk, but
votes."
funset today . 6:06 p.m.
Sunrise tomorrow 6:84 a.m.
the Trinity and Turtle Bayou
after two rural families reported
they had heard a plane flying
so low Friday night It fright-
ened them and they ran out-
side to watch. They did not
see any crash but said the en-
gine was missing.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A major winter storm swept
Into Texas Wednesday, and the
Weather Bureau said tempera-
tures will drop as much as 50
degrees from today to Thurs-
day.
Blowing dust accompanied the
storm rather than crucial rain
or even wet snow to relieve
parched conditions across the
state.
One company of Koreans was
moving into a mountainous
5--------* i stronghold 11 miles
ang Ngai City when
The juvenile court hearing of Clayton --------
Ronnie Lee Ozio, 14, has been mystery to the Powell probe.
reset for March 18. -----
Bert Daves, former general
plant manager for A. Schulman, wiu ocuuuinan tor sr years, ne publie nearing to the streets
MASS Sri MS S
of he comninv’e dicnorcinn Hi. hae AfAn.N L.c:uA.. Ai... •* O . >« . J. .. .
★ *
porters after landing in Miami her.”
for a stopover before going to
Washington.___________________
Approval for removal of some
was given
Council
the treaty-writing commission
have indicated they may sign
later.
Ten of those who did sign are
expected to waive the require-
ments for putting it into force
RThnie"Leriozorihearcngso University ofAkron ec
in a Eriple-slaying here Jant will move here after the school ing ol
has been reset for March 18
said she did not think the plan terfit
was worked out properly.
Other questions about the ex-
Daves 52, has been associated Three persons objected in a
with Schulman for 31 years. He public hearing to the streets
controversial portlon was tabled Walter Cobb Jr. spent most of Guatemala, Haiti, Mexico, Pa
...... yesterday talking with mer-
Master plans, sale of beer on
Sunday, air - conditioning li-
censes and t r a f f i c problems
came up for their share of de-
bate, at last night’s meeting of
the Orange City Council.
About 25 persons attended the
meeting at the city hall, and the
majority of them spoke on one
of the varied subjects.
As a result, the council sent Clayton Powell’s estranged
Wharton, Matagorda, Jackson,
Victoria and Lavaca counties.
i Young’s district would take in
Calhoun, Refugio, Aransas, San
'Patricio, Nueces. Jim Wells,
Duval, Brooks, Kleberg, "Ken-
nedy and Willacy counties.
' The bill would force a con-
gressional race between U.S.
Reps Eligio de la Garza, Mis-
sion. and Abraham Kazen, La-
redo.
The districts of Congressmen
Ray Roberts of McKinney and
Wright Patman, Texarkana,
also would be merged.
Brazoria County residents
have been discontented over '
having their county divided to
balance population among con-
gressional districts. Hairgrove
said.
Other changes the bill would
(See DISTRICT, Page 10)
ORANGE JUI(4
STILL PAYING-Then there’s
an unnamed Orangeite, mar-
ried for more years than he
cares to remember, who com-
mitted a cardinal sin yesterday.
He neglected to pay the proper
respects to his wife yesterday —
it was Valentine’s Day. He’ll
pay and pay. •
PLUMP, 8AUCY—Noticed the
number of robins which have
taken over this immediate sec-
tion of the Sabine Area in the
past two weeks? All are excep-
tionally fat. They are delayed
slightly in this warmer dime
due to the bitter cold new
sweeping over the Middle West
; ■ - • \
arillo and falling sharply both
plkcee. .. 25d.i
As the forward edge of the
new front was crossing the
southern Colorado line near
dawn, the wind already was hit-
ting 40 miles per hour to gusts
at Dalhart to the Panhandle and
41 m.p.h. at El Paso. High fly-
dust. limited visibility to 10
miles in both areas.
A special dust storm alert
was out for the South Plains in
particular. Winds were expect-
ed to reach 50 m.p.h. or more
and visibility to drop below one-
half mile. ..2
Warm air flowing inland from
. the Gulf of Mexico kept all parts
of the state unusually warm
during the night. Early morning
lows ranged from 44 degrees at
Barnes Forces Beat Back Move on Pay Raise Bill
of the company's dispersion di- has attended business college in they went through parts of their
vision here. «• Louis and University of Ak- respective properties which
ron. would cause hardshin
b
I " -
Aground South Korean Slonal redistricting bill which
maFnesreported victory to the would throw orange county into
whelming show of strength,
speaker Ben Barnes' forces ane muuuu, uj nep. du
beat down an attempt to by- of Ben Wheeler, would have al-
pass House rules to allow coo-., lowed the appropriations com-
sideration of the Senate’s imme- mittee and the full House to
diate state employes’ pay raise consider a *5.2 million employe
bill today. pay raise, effective March 1. at
Spurred on by Austin Rep. any time. House rules prohibit
Wilson Foreman's emotional even a hearing on the measure
speech against "political dem- ahead of the general appropria-
agoguery," House members tion bill within the first 120 days
_ .u, _ Daves already has assumed
in Wreckage^^^retiieol',, c-
- - - Jones resigned last week. His working foreman. In 1940 he be- roads you're’ proposing comes
future plans have not been re- nama -----------” ’ ’ ......
vealed.
daughter are. students ing’w timpotdurnguthenmtee
must be ratified by all govern- will not. But even if only one buullia a: owauui, uave uv. s
controlling territory in country took the waiver it would peared. Miss Huff received
the zone and guaranteed by the still be important because that subpoena on Bimini last Satur-
-________________ means one more country in the day tu ™ -
ma. ----------- Only Mexico said definitely it world wants to stay out of the called Tuesday.
inane master Ban. . was waiving the requirements nuclear arms race." not yet been lo
The, commission has approved putting the treaty into force. ------------—--------------------------
ftw* r -D--- *A* . ____. - - Ka-as .1 ev m n
Summary • Index
wounded and one was missing The bulk of these counties ire
when guerrillas sank one 80-foot currently a part of the 2nd Con-
U.S. minesweeper, badly dam-gressional District now served
• ~ • by Rep. John Dowdy of Athens.
. +hA w DR « WIVICO -ueduA A8u • imu Edd A‘.M uicr .5.1
nuclear weapons from the. vast documeriswilbpnalmahleook Patterson Jr told a reporter in norih of Quang Ngai city when
like a patchwork quilt,” one Washington Tuesday: “No sir.” the North Vietnamese attacked
feel after working 10 years on
this to see members' come up
here trying to play political
.demagoguery with my state em-
ployes,” he sobbed.
Foreman and Rep. Gus
Mutscher of Brenham said
Barnes had assured them he
would try to work something
out to give the employes a pay
raise before the general appro-
priation bill takes effect Sept. 1.
- ’ -• While the tempo of the ground Jackson, co-sponsor with
war quickened, U.S. planes at- Dean Neugent, Texas City,
tacked transport routes to North the' main purpose _ ____
Vietnam's panhandle area. Bad nate the division of Brazoria
weather again was reported County to the 1965 Reapportion-
over most of the Communist ment Act.
of action in the case," Judge for further study. J - ... - .
Hoyt said. City Mgr. Jack Huffman pre- chants and other persons who
The pending hearing is on a sented a plan which, for pracllc- would be directly affected by
petition filed by Dist. Atty. Roy al purposes removed all parking the changes.
Wingate. The state is seeking to from Green Avenue from 4th to
of the regular session.
Teary flowing down his cheeks
and his voice choked by sobs,
Foreman urged defeat of the
motion, saying its. advocates
were playing Politics with state
employes and warning the
quickie pay raise would jeop-
ardize chances of passage of a
(25 million pay raise effective
Sept. 1.
“You just don’t know how I
_________ . ----_ Drainage i
Also in his proposal were the Orange would be easier if Green Orange will ____...______
. . *------ ----4------- —1 — put into cussion Feb. 27 at 7:30 p.m. .._ _____________________—- . .
, when the West Orange City ending the strike at the Fire- 48-B selections . . . George Bar-
With only eight days left until nadh angudestnemot teertan
mony in the Mexican Foreign
Ministry building for various
reasons, but their delegates to
ments signed the treaty of Tia- in the almost four years of ne-
______________ ____, „ ___________________________ Master plans, sale of beer on to Stark’s 59-40, loss to Beau
from four to two lanes and back ond to a series ot meetings be- Sunday, air - conditioning li- moot High . . . Chiefs elope out
the drainage district and censes and traffic problems 2: “u . m
............. ___j up for their share of de- angefield upsets Deweyville.
bate alast night's Orange City
------ stronger this year . . . Darrell
Approval for removal of some Royal using jet for high school
parking along Green Avenue signings ... Big Ten could end
was given by the Orange City to four-way lie .. . Texas Tech
Council last night. upsets SMU.
The last change reguired an
ordinance passed on first read-
ing. The other changes are i
ject l. " ‘
Mrs. Powell said she did not -— - _
know she was wanted for ques- for her +year-old son, Adam.
_ sen to The Orange Leader rec-
problems in West ipe contest.
be the topic of dis- ------
“ " . Wage negotiations aimed at 9-.
Powell’s Estranged Wife
, 3a
mayor.
All others were approved ex- ----w
cept the removal Of parking be- day came from
tween 4th and Sth streets. Beall’s and th
1 2 ---- -vu*E .
Blnntemanagerright through my kitchen. J m.cyr
plant. He was like part of the plan, but part Tatin-American
ned general plant manager of it really hurts me.” -atinAmerican
all the company’s plants two Mrs. Lester Wright, an heir
. T again as they progress. ..... —____________
ead- • Efforts to change the lanes the officials of the cities in the came
...______„___sub- always have resulted I
to the signature of the tions from merchants
not have off-street parking.
The major objections yesf
‘ay came from the managers o
the J. C. Penney
-- a.---- put vezore we ars ireaty sai, uecause suiue wumntes Two other women subpoenaed them, with mortars,
act placement of the roads also banning nuclear weapons from will waive the requirements for by the committee, Miss Huff
were raised nriCi Tiger and a populated area is binding, it putting it into force and others and former Powell receptionist
C t "Ru WiIkinenn ....... . .. ... .. " — * —* - Emma T. Swann, have not ap-
through rice paddies about 340
miles northeast of Saigon.
to the Mekong Delta south of gresman and put four other
Saigon, Vietnamese authorities congressmen into races with in-
aezmsz--t
'to the Long Tau River — the would take to Jefferson, Orange,
main shipping channel into Sai-
gon—14 American sailors were
Cold wave warnings for the
Panhandle forecast readings as
low as 12 degrees by dawn.
Temperatures will drop more
than 50 degrees to the Fort
Worth-Dallas
Bussey, 29; Mrs. Bobbie Jean
Nichols, all. of Baytown; and
Mrs. Gertrude Burns, a divor- , . Junes nas veen associatea
cee who worked in Houston but At 10 a.mg it was announced to- with the ioca Rlant through its
whose two young sons lived ln aa2: , ...... . ---------------
Baytown. I The. hearing .was originally
The search centered around scheduled for. tomorrow at 10
• - - - - a.m. before Dist. Judge Eugene
R. Hoyt in the 163rd District
Court.
MA * n
, - A
anudefE, <
The scattered wreckage was
between the Trinity River and
Interstate Highway 10 in Cham-
bers County in East Texas.
The occupants had been iden-
tified previously as Doyle Hu-
ron, 33, the pilot; Robert B.
father, John Ozio, 39; his grand- and Front Aveni
_ mother, Mrs Victoria Ozio, 77; sion of two-way I
...... 77 all of Orange', and his fa-Street from 8th
• • ■ 20 ther’s fiancee, Mrs. Bobby May-
•ue 60 berry, 34, of Foreman, Ark.
Da" The slaying occurred New
Year's Day at the Sussex Manor
Apartments on the MacArthur
traffic circle. Mrs. Mayberry
ow: and her two children were visit- ---------- .
Ing the Ozlo’s for the holldays tween 4th and 6th
when the incident occurred. ----------* “
in objec- county. The drainage officials-----,____.
i who do met earlier with the Orange Council meeting.
City Council. A meeting with Y-
yester- dor officials is pending,
gers of Drainage district officials are
seeking a cooperative agree-
ment with the cities.
gheshant"enitdlotkEhis
seat, a select House investigat- _ about 400 men
ing committee is trying to deci- ate casualties to . ------
pher„.the purpose and activities this morning against an esti-
of Huff Enterprises Ltd., a mated 1,200 North Vietnamese
Bahamian corporation that does attackers. The Koreans
busmess from Powell s office. " ...
.... -ionfen menine have the boy declared a ju- uth streets,
early. .tonightan.Turning venile delinquent and placed to .....
cooler late tonight. Cloudy state custody because he alleg-
to .partly cloudxe.windy edly committed murder with
malice.
Bert Daves has been named Viet Cong shells sink one U.S.
new manager of the A. Schul- minesweeper, damage two Oth-
man, Inc., plant here. ers. One American sailor is
----- missing, 13 are wounded.
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Adam Wearing a red knit dress and tioning to the House investiga-
as « xepuu, une cuuncu se • » a j iuu Fuweis eouguged a black fur coat, she said she tion until she read about it in a
the plans for street development third wife flew to the United had not seen her husband for _ —
MXSttrt CM& StatesatadazeiromuPueroFire morkeaanazyeanew A. paniedby herlawyer, Reinaldo aged .two others and fird
YiDES - fob’net HiqN, sties em.i
th art. gollvori Mioh, 1uM o-m
WFeS"BpAx - Tomperoturei Nth
____________-_________ ____ say I
terstate 10 back to the planning and said she would cooperate _______
and zoning commission; intro- with the House investigation of Huff, Powell’s 25-year-old form-
duced a beer ordinance on first her husband.
Monday" by offering prizes
through an Orange Leader
promotion.
About 15 merchants at-
tended a breakfast at the
Jack Tar Hotel, called by
<he Greater Orange Area
Chamber of Commerce.
Under the new plan, the
Isane of Spice! magazine in
The Orange Leader pub-
lished the first Sunday of
each month would be num-
bered consecutively. Local
merchants would offer prizes
the following day with each
prize assigned a correspond-
ing number to participating
stores.
The merchants agreed to
adopt the plan for a three-
month trial period beginning
in March, and meet again
■tn April to discuss the prog-
Eress.
All agreed that “Money
Saving Mooday" was a good
promotion, but had become
stagnant last year.
Other merchants not at the
meeting will be asked to par-
ticipate. The new promotion
resulted from a meeting of
the retail trade committee
last month.
In other action, the Senate
Constitutional Amendments
Committee approved the so-
' called women's rights amend-
ment to less than two minutes
Midland and 47 at Dalhart up
to 62 at Corpus Christi.
Long range forecasts, cover-
, tog the period through next
Monday, promised temperatures
averaging around normal to
four degrees above to the north-
ern half of the state and two
to eight degrees above normal
elsewhere.
At the same time, however,
the extended forecasts also
looked ahead to another cold
spell by the weekend to all sec-
tions, plus a little snow or rain
across the north and occasional
rain to Southeast Texas. “
The mercury dropped to more
than 20 below zero early today
in Grand Forks, N.D., and
beaded for 30 below to some
parts of the state.
10 Cents ★ * ★ ★ *
removal of the north stop sign Avenue could be
at the intersection of Sth Street four lanes. . ---------- -------------- -- --------—
. Jpu _______ 1 Parts of the streets are used Council meets with directors of stone Petrochemical Center re- row resigns at St. Mary's.
Ozio is accused of slaying his of a traffic signal at 4th Street for four lanes of traffic, but the Orange County Drainage sumed today.
• - - ■ • me; and exten- on-street and angle parking at District,
traffic on Main Intervals forces cars to bunch “
“It will.take considerable — •---,m.e i
time to evaluate the report and Council last night, but the most
decide what is the best course <
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.
Matching Search Results
View 13 places within this issue that match your search.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.
The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 40, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 15, 1967, newspaper, February 15, 1967; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1531232/m1/1/?q=little+elm: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.