The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.)., Vol. 56, No. 82, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1959 Page: 1 of 10
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Defeats Pay
VOL. LVI—NUMBER 82 Member Associated Press ORANGE, TEXAS, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1959
10 Pages
Raise New Worries
- -J
LATEST EDITION
Youth Escapes
Death in Bayou
At Bridge City
m
A 14-year-old Bridge City school-
boy was pulled unconscious from
the waters of Cow Bayou near
Joe Bailey's Fish Camp about
12:30 p.m1. today and attempts to
revive hiip were still in progress)
an hour, later at Orange Memorial
Hospital.
The youth was identified as Dav-
id Vail, son of Mr. and Mrs. .War-
ren W. Vail of 285 Rasberry Dr.,
Bridge City.
Young Vail reportedly had pone
in the water for a brief swim dur-
ing the noon recess at the Bridge
City schools, which he attended.
Larry Lawson, a yoking boy who
had gone to the scene with Vail,
told authorities Vail apparently
suffered a cramp while in the cold
water and hollered for help.
Lawson jerked off his shoes and
plunged into the water in art at-
tempt to rescue the struggling Vail
but abandoned his try after Vail
almost pulled him under with him.
Lawson swam ashore and sum-
moned help. Several other young-
sters responded and pulled Vail
from die water.
Bridge City Sfchool Supt. Grover
Die, who was at the scene shortly
after Vailwas pulled ashore, said
(See YOUTH, Page 5)
BIG WHISKEY LOAD SEIZED — Oklahoma
Safety Commissioner Joe Cannpn, right, Tulsa
Police Commissioner Robert Mawhinney, left, and
two Tulsa vice sauad detectives e**tnirvs -some
of an estimated $35,000 worth of liquor seized
from a Tulsa bootlegger. Officers used an air-
★ ; ★ ★ ' ' ^ ★ ★
After 57 Years of Prohibition
plane to spot the dealer's car as it'was driven*
to the truck and loaded. Cannon has led a drive-
for rigid enforcement of Oklahoma's prohibition
•aw on wnicn proposed repeal w>U be voted
tomorrow. (AP Wirephoto)
★ ★ ★ ★
NEW DELHI. India (AP) — As
the fugitive Dalai Lama continued
his alow journey into India on
foot, Prime Minister Nehru cau-
tioned that India must steer a
careful' course betwen treaty ob-
ligations to Red China and sym-
pathy for the Tibetan rebels.
The young god-king of Tibet and
his prfrty of 80 reached Towang,
near India's isolated northeast
frontier,. Sunday at about the
aame the Red" Chinese were
instaftmg tile rival Panchen Lama
la the Tibetan capital of Lhasa.
As the exiled ruter neared the
approaches to Towang Monastery,
hundreds of tribesmen adorned
i with colorful sash-decorated hats
end silver swords sent up a cheer.
Aromatic leaves were burned to'
purify the air. as Tibet's spiritual
and political leader aet foot in the
monastery precincts. Villagers on
the lofty plateau 10,000 feet above
sea level, had sounded trumpets
and beaten drum* since dawn to
herald the Dalai Lama's coming.
. It was believed the next stage
of the journey, to Tazpur on the
Bramaputra River in Assam state,
would take another six days.
Much of the route must be coV-
y ered on foot, since it lies through
more of the rugged Himalayan
country over which the Tibetans
fled from the Communists after
the failure of the revolt in Lhasa.
After five days of marching,
they can switch to Indian army
jeeps at Bamdilla, in the foothills
68 miles from Towang, and farther
along to an Indian air force plane
whiCn could take the fugitive
ruler and his top aides to New
Delhi or wherever the Indian gov-
(See GOD-KING, Page S)
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — to repeal constitutional prohibition
Oklahomans wind up a short .but,in effect since statehood, and sub-
hard campaign Tuesday by decid-1stitute legal liquor. " The amend-
ing whether to swap 51 years of
prohibition for legal liquor
Observers-predict up to 700,000
voters will have their say.
One question determines whether
ment provides for private package
stores, with sale by the drink
banned.
The second question, determines
if county option will be adopted
By JAMES BACON
AP Motion Picture Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Debbie
Reynolds won't be there to face
Eddie Fisher and Elizabeth, but
Hollywood may still have to find
a better adlective than colossal to
tCII
properly describe tonight's big
ive
jam
I Academy Awards show
A two-hour telecast, without
commercials, will begin at 9:30
p.m., (Orange time), oVer NBC TV.
More than 100 of th$ biggest names
In moviedom will be seen.
They range all the way from
Millie Perkins, Hollywood's new-
est star, to Ingrid Bergman, mak-
ing a sentimental return to Holly-
wood — her first in 10 years. /
AUSTIN (AP)—Atty. Gen. Will
Wilson said today that one of the
best advertisements for Texas
would be the circulation of news
that Texas is free of organized
rackets.
Wilson welcomed about 200 state
law officials for the annual at-
torney general's law enforcement
conference. <■
"Texas is preparing to adver-
tise for industry," Wilson said/
"It would be a wonderful tljihg
if #we could run a series of ads
saying that Texas was fre? of or-
ganized rackets and ^specially
the exploitive rackets jivhich prey
oh working people./
"We are asking/all of you to
redouble your efforts to eliminate
organized crime and organized
rackets wherever possible. We are
almost at this condition now. Most
of . our cities are free of organized
gambling but there is some pol-
icy still in existence.
Earthly'Hell
As New T
By ALTON BLAKpSLEE
Associated Press Science Writer
BOSTON (AP)—X scientist to-
day declared wrought to create
"hill fires" or^ earth, just to see
what happen^
He warned the Soviet Union is
probably/trying to do it — first.
The^ hell fires would be labora-
iemperatures of 10,000 to
degrees — 2 to 12 times
^hotter than those usually pro*
-^duced on earth.
Out of research with them
come an entirely new chemistry
verful
ires' Suggested
for Researchers
"hell fires" was urged by Dr.
The/
tory/t<
ro.ooo
perhaps vastly more p$wi
rocket fuels, strong new mater-
ials^ strange new chemicals.
> A research jump into these
CONTINUED
if repeal passes. If both are ap-
proved. counties will vote May 12
ori whether to go wet dr stay dry.
The election follows by two days
a -huge effort by state law offi-
cers to dry up Oklahoma. Led by
33-year-old Safety. Commissioner
Joe Cannon, city, county and state
officers raided 13 Tulsa bootleg-
gers and 14 Tulsa nightclubs Sat-
urday night. /
Then at midnight a vpit net-
work of roadblocks set up
over most of the st,ale for six
hours.
Neither raids /for roadblocks
netted much—SJKbottles of liquor
and 22 person* arrested on liquor
charges-^but^ Cannon termed it a
success. /.
He hsrs headed1 the three-month
crackdown which Gov; J. Howard
Edjnondson promised voters in his
campaign last summer.
The crackdown had the an-
nounced aim of giving voters a
clear choice between repeal and
Plane Flight
Protest Puts
U.S. On Spot
Mass Prison Break
Fugitives Captured
JESSUPS, Md. (AP)—Hundreds two more going into the .woods." .
of state cilice, National Guards- j I Police also quelled'what Corbin
men, county police and Marinesisaid could have developed into,a
captured more fugitives today'riot this morning when four
from a mass prison break at the! prisoners refused to return to
•ru*en'« 'nst',ut'Pn- ' [their cells, threatened guards, and
Ihirty-four young inmates over-'otherwise caused trouble,
powered.-guards and broke out of Inmates made their break about
the Institution for Defective De-J p.m. Sunday by seizing keys
linquents Sunday night, Jfrem two ifnanwd guards and un-
Only six were still at large to-'locking six doors between them
u . . ,® V- Four of the latest arrested and freedom. State Supt. of Pris-
fpatpri hw ih . fSe ,were P,ckfd up in Baltimore When ions James W. Cyrran said it was
Pins tnrfnv, an .1 of mar- a passer-by saw them changing the'largest break in the history of
mil li ^Li. I t V r pnson civilian Maryland prisons.
h ft L oivito , clothes in a parke^,station wagon I Corbin estimated at least 300
& bv giving state em- they had stolen in Baltimore men were taking. pS'rt in the
pities a general, pay raise. County. ■ -search today for fugitives from
The vote was 72-69 to table an State Police It, W. W. Corbin ihe institution of 331 inmates' 15
amendment that would give" state said two airplanes flying low over miles southwest of Baltimore,
hospital employes raises ranging 'he area had accounted (pr the Harold M. Btklow, superintend*
from $480 a year upward, .//capture of six prisoners early to- ent of -the!' institution, said "some-
Supporters and' opporflrtts of tH> 'VW,-, can be considered dang rous. But
amendment by Rep. Obie Jones , planes found four of them it's a. bfessed fact that two wh.di
of Austin agreed the test vote prob i a u ,lrK'r "Jp tr-ee's."- he said, -have been caught are the most
re-'ably would gov%>n efforts to raise/ short time later they located dangerous." ,;/
AUSTIN (AP)
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
newed Soviet protest over a U.S. 'he pay for. meployes in ctlxcj dc
plane flight into Berlin, raised new partment.s also.
questions today about Soviet will- The state ,.employes' pay raise
ingness to settle German prob-! vote—so close that yoUng ma
lenrts. , , " chines total had 'o l-e ■ .ntieJ
Moscow accused the United by a roll call—was the first test
States of j deliberately violating ! in consid«ring the record*' si.^r
Berlin corridor regulations with I money bill. v •
the aim of wrecking chances of The House then recelsed until
agreement at the Geneva big' 2 p.m.
power foreign ministers confer-! Consideration of the 2'/2 billion
enc? slated to start May 11. | dollar measure was halted for half
The State.Department declined/n hour while representatives and
conlment. pending a study of the senators met in a joint session to
Lyndon Johnson (D-j
latmn
inv
hear Sen.
Tex).
Johnson urgpd that the
strengthen its stand for t
pending test at Berlin.
vThe Senate also laid aside its
\fork to hear the Senate majority
"erv in
special;
note, but U.S. officials informally
rejected the Soviet contention and
denied any violation.
"fhe Red protest referred, to the
March 27 flight to Berlin at 20,000
feet altitude of* a C130 U.S. air
transport plane. The Soviets say',..
Western flights to the Communist- 'f-a „• spectators gall
encircled city must rtot top 10.000 House was .filled and
fee^ , permission • was granted to let
.4- „• •. ,f. , friends of representatives stand!
^enS(SXh?-rM!CFme ar0Und the ,h" chamber/
h*«tv Mnfrnw Thit rVifoH thl al,houRh the House was technical-
bassy in Moscow. That raised the ,v tj.r j spcsi0n .
issue to the formal diplomatic • Kl|i/n )niiir
level. Earlier exchanges had been ™ rfh„^j,on , PTZ I
a?ransnatetdv 'Jente^ in^BeHm^The ~was lai'd m,t "W* « ^
United States which ob ected to!" TT^e?, thpir( first
tho, htxtyina nf rim Kv/ at !t* A sertion-hy-s^ctinn sfudv
c nn lpoal r# i1 hlJRe meaSUTP Was PXpOCtPd
Jets, claims there is no legal ceil- t0 takp ((p most Qf toc|ay ^
f,W . • ,j, 1 . , Sibly tomorrow.
While U.S. disagreement With A jo|nt session wj(h thp >Senaf(,
li a.m. to hear Sen. Lyndon
Is Scheduled
the Soviet charge was evident, the
question remained as to What
j response to make. Foreign minis-
ters of the 15-nation NATO have
j just concluded a three-day meet-
jing with avowed determination to
make the Geneva talks as fruitful
as the Soviets will allow.
at
MOTHER OF THE YFAK -
This' is Mi's. DeWitt Bow mer of
Temple, who has? been selected
as the T^xas "Mother of the.
Year " Mrs Bowmtfr is a widow
with .three chtldreri whose ages
range from 37 'to 41. A commit-
tee announced her..selection in
Fort Worth. She wHi b" honored
Johnson (D-Tex) interrupted .J! ,lr'
consideration of the sD?ndiniz bill! witn^ other state
A number of committee assign-
ments are to be made and past
work will he reviewed today by the
Orange Parks and Recreation
Board in a meeting at 7:30 prm. in
city hall., x '' ■
Dr. H. L. Rudesea!., chairman Of
the board, said Jack Kcrby Jr.,.
chairman of the. program and par-
ticipation committee, will report on
work accomplished by his group.
/His committee also wilKhe asked
i to investigate the possibility pt
more youth organizations in the
future such as a junior basketball
j league. •
!• The planning-committee, headed
j by L. A. - forsberg, is "scheduled
to .report on Vork accomplished
(toward establishing boat launching
| sites on the f-ibinel^iver. ;
I The planning committee'also will
| be. assigned to1; w ork on '-a master
;plan for future parks, -play fields
consideration of the spending' bill j witn otner state^ winners at a ! , . |f . . establish
for. about half an hour. d:nner ,n New York City. (AP L, ^
Big as the bill is, cries havep .!re? ^ .• r «•'
already been heard that it doesn't
give enough money to certain de-j
,■ i • c t j partments. So far, no one has!
Lisfi frszsr nasissi****** .m ■ m
get too much. - - I
For a while it looked as if Hay-
wood's most famous triancie _ j u u
mifjht give the show a badestage!en prohibition.
1 also was seen as an effort
to stir up thousands of wet voters
who in past years have either vot-
ed dry or stayed home election
suspense no script could hope to
match. ' /
But Miss Reynolds removed her-
self from the show' Saturday. She
said she will watch it at home on
TV,
erry Wald had ached-
and Liz an hour
Fisher somewhere in
Data From V.M. W« th*r Rama
OUTLOOK—Partly cloudy and' «-arir.
through tomorrow. Hlgheni t*mp*ralure
>W to ~ "
today D< tomorrow
S3 deg"'*".
:<f\
loweat tonight about « Ijfrctj Ueath-
and louth wind* 1* to 17 mlt « an
hour today and ft to 14 mltca an hour
. at night, lncreaatng to 19 to 10' mllo
an hour tomorrow. -
TIDra—Sabln« high. J 51 am 7 M
p.m.; low. 4-U am. T-ST put.: Bwttrar:
nigh, S:SV a.m., p.m.; low, 10:1*
a m . # 53 p.m.
aOW -RH« . S:5 a.m.: uti. t~.3 p.m
YE8TKRDAV—TempfraturMI high 74;
low SJ.
BXTCNDED FORECASf
April «-ll. IM , , /
By TBI ASSOCIATED PRESS
*a«t Ttxii: Tempera turn 3-a degraai
1,- < abort normal. Normal minimum S4-S4
Wwrtnal maximum 7J-S« I*o important
ehangn until rooler about Thurnday
> Precipitation light or none.
-Jj?"
Aristid V. Grosse, president of the
Research Institute of Temple Uni-
versity, at opening sessions of the
American Chemical Society's
135th national meeting.
"We simply don't know much
about what happens in chemical
and physical reactions above
about 5.000 degrees," he said.
"But temperatures above 10,000
degrees might kad to new fuels,
rocket propellents, and materials
able to resist tremendous heat."
"Our national security could be
involved, ff these high tempera-
tures do hold secrets to new fuels
and new chemicals.
"The Soviet Union is trying to Tables."
leabfrog os in the rhisesile race,
and probabfy is working hard on
facilities to create ultra-high tem-
peratures." ^
Really high temperatures cart be
created by furnaces focusing the
sun's rays, by some rocket mo-
tors, and by plasma jets, or
streams of gases created by elec-
tric arcs.
Dr. Grosse urges more such
facilities for, research Into the hell
fhre range; > -
' He described two new steps into
this higher temperature range
made at the research institute.
One is creating . hot flames,
through plasma jets using oxygen,
ozone, and other materials, that
can produce continuous tempera-
tures up to 60.000 degrees F.
Various chemicals and materials
will be exposed to these temper-
atures to tee how they react. New
types of chemical reactions might
lOccur. i.
Producer
uled Del
apart
betw
bie insisted Liz had nothing
with her pulling out of the
Show.
She was to have presented an
Oscar to one of the winners, the
same chore Miss Taylor will per-
form.
Fisher, taking a night off from
a hotel engagement in Las Vegas,
will sing one of the nominated
songs — "To Love and.be Loved."
Composer Sammy Cahn said he
personally picked Fisher because
"There is no other singer who bet-
ter fits that title."
With the triangle only two-thirds
present, it looks as if the Oscar
winners themselves will star in
the big show. Hollywoodites can't
remember a closer race for the
prize Oscars than this year's.
It is especially close among the
five nominated for best actress.
Rosalind Russell, Shirley Mac-
Laine, Susan Hayward, Deborah
Kerr and Miss Taylor all could
win without stirring a ripple of
surprise.
Among the men, most experts
figure David Niven to take the
top male Oscar, although Sidney
Poitier, the brilliant Negro actor,
has come up strong in recent
weeks. The other three nominated
are Tony Curtis. Spencer Tracy
and Paul Newman. -
Gigi" still is the favorite for
day. Registrations, especially in
wet Tulsa and Oklahoma City, are
qp considerably..
The United Dry Assn > financed
mostly by Churches, pitched the
prohibition ^campaign to the evils
of alcohol and weaknesses in the
amendment.
Dry hopes for victory in the
state's sixth repeal election rest
on a far superior organization
through a majority of the state's
churches.
However, not all faiths or even
all churches, of some faiths have
supported prohibition. A few are
actively working for repeal.
Wet optimism stems from sev-
eral factors. Repealists contend
there are several thousand young
(See OKLAHOMA, Page 5)
declared the NATO members
Wpl^rndfitohu'nintl(Rrlrim Tvvf> representatives announced
• tern r'^hts in Berlin. At thp| March 24 when the bill came out
same i.me, . reaffirmed read,. of cortiminee (hat ,hoy wou|() at
ness to negotiate an honorable,
settlement of German problems. |
In a television discussion Sun-
day, Britain's Foreign Minister!
Sefwyn Lloyd and France's For- ]
eigri Minister Maurice Couve dej
Murville . held out prospects that j
the Geneva meeting will havej
enough results to lead to a sum-
mit conference.
Germany's fOreign minister!
tempt to amend it on. the floor.
Get Jail Terms
Women Lose
Suit to Enter
Texas A&M
a system of priority for these
projects. . , •. . \
Rudeseal said .the new sites de-
velopment ' committee', of which
C. C. Ferguson is chairman; will
be asked to prepare plans for de-
velopment of a park site located
at Levingston and Moss Sts. and
the position of Memorial Park off
I ut( her drive not yet scheduled for
development,
\
Heinrich von BrentanO, cautionednjpa,|t
A nitinnt ni>r>A/<tix nr • ni i • /< U f ''
Three Vidor youths
against, expecting too much from " ff,''01* an, •"npro"
the Geneva parley but found|.v0R?d attack at Vidor last week
'•'some optimism" in the-fact that;were sentenced, in Orange County Siipre'mpCourt
WASHINGTON (AP) ■— Texas,
A&M won today its fight against!
arlmittin-g women students.'
On "motion of the college, - the
Supreme Court dismissed an ap-
peal by two women who had fail
ed in efforts to get into the all-;
male institution.
Mrs. Lena Ann Bristol, 34 and]
accused of the mother of two, and Mrs,, Bar- _
bar a' Tittle, 20, a widow and theJ T)AIJ.AS fAP) The .govern*
mother of one, bpth residing in ment, is auctioning off next month
Bryan, Tex,h had appealed to (he a'two-mile-stretch of the Galvesr
Beach for Sale
At Galveston
the Soviets
talks.
have agreed to the
Reds Linked
To Rail Tieup
MEXICO CITY (AP>—Agents off,
fie, federal attor
.ice said last nig
has been found
Cour^ today to lengthy
ment in county jail.
One of the trio, I ee McNeel,
1!).
- itha^e.' The property will be sold
' lature has control of. all state in- „hlv as a smR|6 block with sub-
Bank Robbery
Is Thwarted
ANNA, Tex. (AP) — A State
Highway Patrolman surprised and
captured single handed two would-
be bank robbers in this small
North Texas town today.
JPattolman, Sam Pirtle said the
itle i both from Dallas County, ad:
mittea they were planning on rob-
bing the First National Bank of
Anna.
They were captured at the rear
of the bank, all set to enter the
building and pul! trie robbery.
Pirtle said they had covered up
the license plate on their car and
. . , ---- — ,w. .had disguised their faces with an
best picture, but is being pressed j eyebrow pencil.
by "Auntie Mame," one of the He said one of the men carried
screen s funniest comedies. The a revolver." *
others, and all rate a Chance, are' The patrolman said one of (he
_Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." ' ihejmen was 19 and the other'31. They
Defiant Ones,' and "Separate' said they were truck drivers and
I that today wag their day off.
Texas Boxer Roy Harris and Wife Lose
First and Only Child Soon After Birth
from an- adverse '°P beac.fi. ' ■, • .
confine- decision1 by the Court of Civil Ap (egVnd Iras it.that pirate lean
' peals for the. 10th Supreme ,ludi-! l aFitte did much of his banking
jeial District of Texas'. [along this beach. The. G^neral Ser-'
i, :The two wornen contend d ac-;vices .Administra.ii.on office said
was given a two-year Sentence| tio^ of -directors' in excluding treasure rights go along with .the
while the other two — Richard worfien frpth Texas-- ASM- violated w\f> of the .T84 acres of the east
Gajvez, 19, and Frank Pipps, T7j.the IJ. S." Coastitution's guarantee end of the beach,
— were given one-year terms. jr'f due process and equal protec-' y,. |5 believed • that this is the
The three had been'charged with I t'n,n nf 'a.ws ,. , , -ilast large section of beach in the
the. federal attorney 'general's °ld: lirS^ld'^Se0^!^ naHan "VailaWe ^ V"*'
tice said last night more evidence " ^dor tempoirarifv 3S-;
linking Commu- ,'Kn ( t0 the u-s- Nava' Station stjtuti6n!! 0f, learning and it gav^, tj ( at the 0ptj0n 0-f the pur.
nists with the Easter railway- j .- -1 Texas A&M' discretionary power ,^'r
strike. -The attack occurred at a Vidor J to rule on - admissions, /' I nt .p v
They .said it was found during|^'_^in .Jasi[LTuesday nj^ht, ac- Texas court pointed otit the1 Sa^jap,,7to Resr-ryati^n The
ernment acquired th_e property in
firm or deny reports that Com-;liamson of Vidor. ' !ity of its dormitories are buiit fike
munist party headquarters also The three youths pleaded guilty barracks' not adaptable to use by
were searched. X |fO the charge before County Judge women students. M added the Tex-']
The government already has ex-j Sid J. Caiflavet, who meted out as system of - nigher education
pelled two Russian embassy of-j the punishment on the recornmen- made'r-ampljf and substantially
ficials on grounds they aided |he dation -of County. Atty. Feagin .W. equal provisioit for both sexes in
strike call-d by Demetrio Vallejo,j Windham. IB-other institutions.
leftist leaders of the National Rail-]x —4—-——i~— --r— ——
way Union.
a search yesterday of two private cording to the investigating - .of'fi- j co'Mege had 7.474 male students en
residences. They declined to' con-jeer. Constable Clyde (Hop) Wil-;rotted in October, 1957/'a major-
1917 from Maco Stewart, who
deeded it to the government for
$1 for the purpose of building a
sea wall.-
The City of Galveston had first
chance at the property at
;d value.
one-
half of. its appraised
Not Every Drunk Is Admitted
The government broke the strike
by moving swiftly to arrest lead-
ers of the walkout throughout tlv
country, and ordering workers to
return or be fired.
. 'Railway officials said last night
passenger service was back to By JUNFTTA WATSON Itransie'nt almost three years ago-about. 1 beltofe. frrirn trying. to
normal* today and that freight Houston Post Staff said, "I how call Houston my 'iv*1 the \JK program.' he said
movements are back alniost to (Written for Th^ As^ciateAPress) hone, for it was here that I be^an He now-has a good job, a wife,
par . • HOUSTON (AP,F-The house on-to- live." a new^-ime.. nice-.furniture, two
' The attorney general's officejMCK^nnev avenue looks ram- The alcoholic is often treated cars-'and gooil clothes.
said Vallejo Will be brought in :shack|Pf) and rUn down on th oui'-with alcohol' initially. "We give lawyer- told of sobering up on
for public questioning sometimev ifim a -drink if he is about - to «rnis>owrt but staying wber with
this week. He and about 600 others . . c, A d ,9to-.DT's (delirium tremens^ot>he AA. "Vou can't do it by- your*
capital are "tillcon^s. but we «ont^e self," he said. 1 got to (h^porfit
arrested in this
being detained at a military, camp
here. Betw
have been released.
bottle," One of the leaders said where I hid to have a half pinf
* vodka bM^ise I could tie my
here.' Between 300 and1 400 - others. vcLh and ThoiS' 15 Thf'n the alcohols IT RraduaHv of
others weaned. Sudden withdrawal ,s shoes in th morn.na
| It is the 12th Step HousKof Al- dan almfl<t ^Bt tmy
jcoholics Anonymous, which in the.P-v.'^^(
Hunt Pushed
For Murderer
. Next to erVe
^ the alcohOfic
GRAFTON, Wis
ties pushed an intensi
today for the slayer
about 1,100 drunks. It js^ryn
'alcoholics for alcjhobcs. .
.Every drunk" who
by
wounds in a roadsrde ditch.
the ffrst
sijtxtionths' f"W-as' dry. But after
him ^ourishm-nt-,'''sTxJ monihs f had mv business and
ic is -given a^^ohcoc- iriv problem of drink was partially
Ttio.n oMfrine';. milk anitViW egg, ,soU-ed,. Then it was easier
'"<Jf tastes terrijjler** one grAduat" Fiftv per cent of those who
approaches^ •'btiUarTalcoholir ^-ill drink take the AA program never drink
'mitted. He ,t tiTget the alcphoh." '-^eain Some 25 per cent fall off
w .„v« „,^.,hoiismv. d-;,.-th' a*-dav or two he is given-soft wagon once and climb back
a Vyear- mit it and want to-:do •som.emw!'*foods. 'In five or six days he Will on >\nother 12 5 per r^nt need'
Those who enJWr^GQme'begin to eat retain his food and seyeraKlries. and the remainder
mfrk
.. of
old boy kidnaped while on the way j about
to a store and found dead of stab-frim a cross section--^Wf^ Hotiston'sleep at night During this time neve'r m^kj? "the grade.
it.
'■
HOUSTON (AP)—Texis heavy
weight boxing champion Roy Har-
ris and his wife, Jean, 'jost their
first and only child yesterday,
apparently the victim of a lung
condition.
Infant Roy Robijjt Harris died
less than 22 hours after his birth
Saturday.'
*. Mrs. Harris entered the Hous-
ton hospital after accompanying
her husband to Dallas last
Wednesday where he successfully
defended his title in a T2-round
fight with Donnie Fleeman. *
A physician said a preliminary
autopsy blamed atelectasis as the
cause of death He described that
as failure of the lungs to expand ficiate.
at birth.
Harris said he had viewed his
son through a nursery Window,
early Saturday. "I had no idea
there was anything wrong," he
said. "He cried and was breath
ing fine for the first three or four
hours.
"After while I Went downstairs
for breakfast and when t came
back..the doctors and nurses were
working with the baby. He had
turned blue."
Funeral services were to be
held at 2 p.m today in the Dry
Greek Cemetery near the family
home at Cut and Shoot, Tex. The
Rev. Kenneth Walker was to of-
fessional,a*d' so'.;a! class'.
who entered
The body of Ben Wagner of Mil
wauk^e. was found by a newspa- One graduafe
per delivery man making ni|+^* '?*-
morning rounds Sunday. OraftOn i J
is If miles north of Milwadke*.
Bert 'still had seven ce'nts-ini/iee>
crearp money clenched in his fist l
He had been stabbed fiv< tipies
An autopsy' performed by Dr.]
L. J. Van Hecke, Milwaukee Coun-
ty medical examiner, showed the
boy had not 1 een sexually molest-
ed. . ' "■
The boy's father, Louis Wagner,
38, wept as he identified the body
of his only son; Wagner works in
a Milwaukee auto frame factory;
Christ Wilhelm, 6, "a' playmate
of young Ben, told oolice they met
in an alley near iheir home and
that he saw a stranger lure Ben
into a car and drive off. The Wil-
helm boy said that the man asked
them if they wanted a ride and
he said no.
|and represent .alniost every pro- } concerted attempt Is made fo in
as
p I ORANGE JUICE |
12
1^
doctrinate him. into the AA
a gram. •'
The alcoholic is allowed "fo stay , ,.re, - - „
. 'on - tintiI he ran Jind "a -job, go ^ 1 tFV^N^1 w.CU^'Fy
home, to his family, or find an- deuxedjo (he lighter sitfc .of life,
othe> place to stay. For those who.^''J- he used instead- tochiy for ^
have- no pla^-c' to go, the hntise sfimething very serious. I he >-l!)53
/:rh'as an f^terision ^roup -Kaster Seal-Sale has broijghf
who are not ready.^^ewrotionally to onlv The quota by thfif\
■ face t life of-srtWi-ty. ;Orarige--County Society for Crippled
> Both gr-Jtips are supported ex- Children and 'Adults -was $2,750. ^
IckisiAtfly'bv contributions from-?kA • The society is providing a valuable
members. "J go th"re just to as- service _to_Jhe crippled children of .
• sociate withvnonTdrinkers," a law-our county who need.asSjsMhce for
ver said- . medical treatment and' rehabilita-
'advertising ex^ciitive' witfvtion. But it cannot continue its pro-
■ almost three : vears^ of sobriety |gram. aWhe-^reserit level unless it
said he hit j$XJs "from Honolulujreceiveif more money. Won't you
to New Vorki "f had been on a mail a check today? In the event
4-vear drunk and traveled..25;0f)0j.you failed to receive an Easter
j,mdes," he said. H* had I6st .some[Seals- packet, or jf you no longer
good Jobs and hacLbOyrowed $5,000 have it, just .address the envelope
. Another thingT like about jwhirh he is now pa>nng back jto the society at Orange. The
>Arfpr Want Ads the com- "There have been a whole se-jcrippled children it will help will
rie* of miracles which have come thank yon. ^ ^ii
the Leader Want Adsthe com
merclals aren't so-windy"
" '.>
•;x-
i •
5*
>TT$1
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.)., Vol. 56, No. 82, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1959, newspaper, April 6, 1959; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth330509/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.