The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 4, 1961 Page: 10 of 16
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TWf OtANGt LEAD ft
WtnVfSnAY. JANUARY 4. 196!
/
Beaumont-
OBITUARIES
(Coaftmmd From Pag* D
bar. He Mid he would have visile
more except that he ran out Oi
“time and money.” . , ,
' “At least half.or more of the
girl.S. working tn these places
were not more than 17 to 18 years
Old.” he said.
He said his next move after this
survey of the houses was to file
criminal complaints against 11 of
the places. He said “nothing to
this date” has been done about
his charges.
Wpgemar related that he- went
before the Beaumont City Council
to try to get action. Also at the
session "was City'Police Chief Jim
Mi'ligan
The council thanked him. said
Weg“mar, and then Mulligan
made a statement that said “in
effect that th his knowledge,
there was no organized gambling
Mrs. Daisy Wimer
Funeral, services will be hold Fri-
S»v at 1 p.rrt in Cla>"bar-'Funeral
Home for- Mrs. Daisy Walker
Wimer. 60. of Houston,’a former
"Orange County treasurer.
Mrs Wimer‘died today at 5 a m
in a Houston hospital following a-
stroke yesterday in her home at
8507 Greenbush St
Dr. Cocker Waters, pastor of the
First Baptist Church, will offi-
ciate. Burial will be in Evergreen;
Cemetery. '
A native of Orange, Mrs. Wnper
attended public school here. She
was a charter member of the Pilot
and the Old Timers Clubs of Or-
ange and was a past matron of
the Order of the Easter Star. She
servi-d as county treasurer from
Noon Lunch I Only Thing
That Stops Belgian Riots
By EDDY GILMORE
■ a ru n
BRUSSELS, BelgiumMAPl—“IT hrfr
strike- Se
sounded the
f t kp V iton; one stepdaughter. Mrs. Joan*
Earl er. an unidentified state po-jCmwley of Prenton Colo: her
lice intelligence agent named nmr tnoth.r, Mrs. J. H. ft a.her of est
clubs in the two cities where he ^.nge; Jlrother^- £v!e * a£
said h"e witnessed bets beirig taken er £ort Arthur and Ossie ftajk-
and paid. . and listed five hotels of Beaumont, and one grandson
in Port Arthur as places wtiere!ot .«oush». -
he saw prostitutes. . . . . „
The mystery witness . testifiedj MfS. Julia DfOWII
before the General Investigating; Funeral services will be held to-
• Committee of the icxas House; morrow at 10 a m, in St.- Paul’s
! angient town '‘hall
r for feeding .
Belgium.” sajd one of the. strike-j Several 'thousand .hadn't had
beset country’s citizens, “'no revo-j enough. They surged up to the
iut,ions start Alter lunchtime. ” j Sabena Airlines-terminal and be-
.That comment is borne out by gan pegging away at the inviting
the “current - Socialist, demons^ra-; plate glass windows., Police
tions against the government’s! charged’. A mail, was- shot ai.id
proposed austerity program ofjfatallv wounded bv a bystander
higher taxes and lower social , who said-he got excited
benefits. , I The demonstration suddenly col-
This capital city' has erupted in; lapsed. and, again everyone
violence three times in the past seemed to go home to lunch. A
week. • > j few bout’s later the cafes and bars
Angry men have marched; near the scetle of gunshot, blood
through the statefv boulevards,j and police saber Charges were full
“shouting "to the gallows” arfthj of music and dancipg couples.
Prime Minister Gaston Eyskens Nobody ever comes back for
iqxo laxi cv>. Enough' plate glass to fill thej barite after the midday meal.
1939 through 1944. She was a mem- .wjmfcws $ 20 American mam, “We're the bourse of the
streets has been smashed. j world," sgid one young man
Saber-wielding mounted police-j"Examine obr history'. We revolt-
men'twice charged noisy inobs of ed against the Dutch ini ,1830—but
“demonstrators. , ! it-was in broad daylight And J’H
But everybody stopped for; bet, you it Was before lunch'
lunch. ' , /
Last... Thursday. •/15,000 strikers
surged' through the streets of this
beautiful city. They hurled brick*
bats, stones, and steel nuts and
bolts at hundreds of plate glass
window's.
.About noon the demonstration
dispersed and everybody went
home to lunch, A conservative
Julia I newspaper said' most of them
(Continued From Page 1)
county engineer, and F. L. Butch-
to attend a mosquito control
l
House butted
By Fire Today
A fire of unknown origin broke
out today in a Cove home and was
• . , •- ... . "ui luuay in a uuve hdiilc aiiu waa-
eeting in Anaheim. Calif., in the ■ we|J under way bv the time Or-
spring. . Iange firemen arrived on the scene.
HoIts tomadverpse1 * fo^bids'f for N° °ne was at *'ome at tirne-
partment, bids to Minty Ian. 18iGMrJJ^urch^ia^'^^ted^aSd
io-'o department hasima>,y of the furnishings were dam-
r ah'19 to trade. [aged or destroyed.
IQ. Allowed use of a room in the;
Aider Subcourthou.se bv Deputy L Th(> alarm 'vas wnFTmlo the
Sheriffs Roy I.augh'lin and O L l0ran«® Flre Department at 11:23
Whitman, and an extension of tele-ia n3' P^ojPor U was-sent out and
her of the Baptist church.
Survivors include her husband,
.Work To Begin
On Community
Theater Here
He 'dontifiedj £pjSCOpa| Church for Mrs -----
intelligence, Robertson Brown, 75, widow of the
Volunteer, work will-begin tonight
i rlrov
•> a.vav m their own automo building
.e^rwoi
ideHng
at 768
on remodeling the interior of the
of Representatives
himself only’ as , an - - ------— _ nugensvii raniwn, ,.,. wiuuw tn lui-j
agent of the Public • Saietv ! |ate g Frank Brown, former pres-] ■ / ' la theater for the Orange Com mu-
partment. | ident and general manager of the) 1 he, next day 5,000 or so charged:njty piavers.
He .said he spent most of Octo- j g^bine Supply- Co. She died yester-l through the streets Many of ihem, Members of dhe organization will
Jefferson jjay- at 12:30 p m. id her home, -IIO- knocked bff when the clock on ’he perform most' of the labor them-
Tax Collertbr-Assessor Lgwton
Smith reported that current and
.delinquent collections for the
* ■’ ‘ ~ —' * througl
aid $26,
phone lines from the office of
Justice of Peace Joe Bunn.
11. Approved appointment of
Charles Morvent jr. of West Or-
ange as deputy for Constable Mor-
ris Collier.
12. Allowed Foyle To advertise
reported baok at 12:34 p.m.
Perkins-
(Continued From Page 1)
for a desk for the engineers de-i-streetj,'ancj the feasibility of sur-
partment.
Mosquito Heads
Jp Attend Meet
facing streets whien they desig-
nate. p!apem?nt of sidewalk? and
pertinent improvements.
The drainage control committee
would make a study of present
drainage problems, would present
plans for improvement in connect-
ion with opening of new drainage
w'ays.vspeeding water runoff, study
storm setyerage and recommend
equipment needed for, ctonrol.
Perkins would like to see a parks
her and November in
County inquiring, intp crime,, con ,,^^ stv. following a long illness 1
ditibns. | "Dip body Will, remain at Claybar
, He said he saw bookmaking ^ FunPral Home until services- to-
bets made and paid, ticker tape The Rev. Roger Rishel,
sports reporting, and blacklxiards' pastbrt.will.bfficnate Burial will be,
listing the odds on sports events. - m .£vergreen Xemete/iy beside the
-primarilv football games _ 'grave of her late .bus'tvand
Congress-
J G. (Gus) Foyle, Orange Coun-
ty Mosquito Control District execu-
tive director, gild Board Chairman
F. L. Butcher are planning to 7at-j _
tend a national mosquito conlaol! and - recreation committee which
meeting in California Jan. 30, - j would survey the city to determine
_ The meeting, of the American-the best location of parks and
Division Ave. into! Mosquito Control Association will!recreation facilities and of base-
be in session in Anaheim, Calif, hall fields, football, picnic and
through Feb. 2, Fovle said today j other types of parks. <•»
Orange County Corrvmission?rs| The candidate added: “After
Coart yesterdav allowed the two careful study of; subcommitee re*
expenses for the tj-ip. . , ; ports, the main committee would
Foyle said that Texas will be!formulate a master plan of de-
well represented at the session and! veldpment to be presented to the
that all commitments >fiade last|citv council, w hich of course, would
tContinued From Page 1)
selves to convert the former post
office substafion into a theater
suitable for the presentation of
[Slays, y/yrrr* -r. '•
Meanwhile, work thd F W
Brown interests is /progressing on
perennial fights over matters per- ihe exterior of the building
of Mrs. faming to civil /rights legislation
Paul's! ‘u
- inn a
Ted MacFariane, building man-
In the Senate, the fight eemered; ager, announced last nigh^during-
proposed rules change to a business meeting of the plavers
I make it easier to halt a filibuster j that efforts must be expedited in
|—the ane’ent weapon of the South- jorder to have the work completed
erners to talk a civil rights bill, jn time for the troup's next pro-
duction. “Bus Stop,” scheduled for
The agent said the clubs ini Donations it{ memory
Beaumont were the Bowie, Texas. 1 Br(>wrl mav be sent to St.
Yukon, Rich's and Libera! and £PiSCOpal Church.
the Oyster Bar. All but the Ovs-j 7 -.....
ter Bar were raided in DSCfi'ftibet «jf* 1/
He . also named the Pm-Yan wCOfge t. JfiPCS
Club on thjglBeaumont-Port Arthur; Funeral services will be held to-to death.
highway. (day at 8 p.m. in Claybar Funeral) Sen. Clinton P. Anderson. D-ithe latter part of February
In Port Arthur, he said, the Home for George E Jones, 77,|N,M., has proposed that three-1 The work -party., will assemble
places ware Jones' Spprts Returns father of Morgan Jones, Acheson;fifths of the Senate-—60 senators— at 7 p.m. today,
and the Keyhole Club. Dispersed Pigments Co. official, could vote to cut off debate. At!, in other business conducted last
The agent named five hotels in; He was found dead in bed ear!v!Pres(,nf » two-thirds majority of;night~johh Smith was named di-
Port Arthur where he said be saw todav in hig son-5 home. 11 Zeto,«!l present and voting is needed'.: rector of "Bus Stop,” and Richard
prostitutes and viewed mixed Dnv'e. where he had been living. Another proposal is to cut the! Free and Mrs. F. G. Chesser
drinks sold j The Rev. Ben Gillespie, paster requirement to a, simply majority! named director and codirector re-
He named them as the Villa.jof the* First Presbyterian Church, of 51 senators. That is backed by spectively of “Picnic,” the final
Midship. New Ace and Pilot Ho-;wftU officiate. His body will be Sens,
tels and the Green House (shipped to Columbus. Ohio, for Mmft .
" David Witts of Dallas, attorney 'father services. ► R-Calif.
for the committee, said the com-
mittee hoped to investigate Fri-
day whether protection and pay-
offs occurred Tomorrow's testi-
mony will center on how vice af-
fects the communities.
A minor disruption occurred as
Hubert H. Humphrey. D- production of the season
and Thomas H. Kuchel, Smith announced that readings
for "Bus Stop” will he held in the
7 p m.
A native of Columbus. Jonesj Southern- senators spoke sharply (woman’s Club Monday. Tuesday,
was a retired deputy citv clerk against any rules change and pre--Thursday and Fridav nights of next
He has lived here with his son;Parpf an arsenal o* parliamentary week They each will begin at
for the past 5y2 years. „ ’moves to fight it. The new major- -
Jones attended Ohio State JUni-Tfv leader. Sen. Mike Man'sfield of
versitv and was a member of the Montana, said he hoped the issue
------ , Phi Delta Theta fraternity, the;can be settled this week.
witnesses were sw-orn-tn An »bjGol(ien Legtonaires and received 1" the House, Speaker Sam
toroev for four said they would|g 5f,.vear membership pm in 1956, Rayburn and other Democratic
not take the oath unless he were;^e a|so was a ^ern[)er 0f Ralph I leaders are determined to curb
allowed to represent them Later.|Rlshiey Masonic Lodge in CoKrm-ithe fsjwer of a Southern, Demo-
the committee said the attorney bus gncj the presbytenan Church. Icratic-Republican coalition in the
Other survivors include one blocked liberal legislation,
brother. Robert H. Jones of Co-! “The only question.” said one,
lumbus, Ohio: three sisters. Mrs.iV'* whether if is done painlessly
T, D. Banks and Mrs. Walter nr tfl® hard w-ay. It is going to
Boothe, both of Columbus and|be done, one way or the other ”
Mrs. P. B. Kemper of Sidney, The hard way would be to re-
vear’s aA-
will be
year in Boston for
nual meeting in Ga
“firmed up.”
Dr. Don Micks, president of the
Texas Mosquito Control Associa-
tion, will be proposed by the state
delegation for the vice presidency
have the right to accept or reject
such a plan 1 believe that a well-
deveioped plan would receive the
council’s approval ”
"A master plan.” he advised,
“would provide our city's leaders
with definite projects at which
of the American association. Micks they could aim and avoid a hit-
is from Galveston
WTien the next Legislature meets
in Austin Jan. 16, the Texas asso-
ciation will propose legislation
which will permit formation of
more mosquito control districts in
the state.
Ship Leaves Here
and-miss type of development
which would be unwise and costly
to taxpayers.”
His street program carts for the
opening of Newton Street as far
as Dowling with., construction to
alleviate congestion at Oateg Ele-
mentary School, appointment of the
subcommittee, widening and im-
provement of the street To the
south of the school between Newton
j and Quincy streets for a freer
l nnrlorl Wifrli Rina traffic; flow, development of more
uuuucu ’" •*» rviv-c ”pickup(. areaa around the sch0O|
, (parking lot, construction%of a turn-
Begmmng Orange County_ port|jne cir le by rhe parking lot and
Little Cypress Taxes Hit
63 Per Cent Collection Mark
LITTLE CYPRESS (Spl) — As (the district had *44,057 in delin-
of Jin. 3, the Little Cypress School(quent taxes outstanding on the roll.
District had collected $79,633 iniSince that time the, district has
current 'axes for 63.1 per Cent of | collected *20.591, in delinquent tax-
the 1960 roll. ” es leaving an uncollected balance
of $23,466. ‘v
Smith s»id delinquent tax' collec-
tions in the district have bben ex-
month of December and through ceptionally good. In May df 1959,
Jan. 3 totaled $41,136. He
.Ian. 3 totaled $41,136. He
591 of -thata mount Wgmn delin-
quent collecTTrm.1 pluYpenalty and
quent
interest.
Current collections for that peri-
pe
od amounted to $20,431, hejsaid.
tnc district had $124,679 in delm.
quent taxes on its roll, and all of
that amount has been paid except
the $23,466.
The official, announced that the
(Ax office will remain open on Jan.
Aa of the Jan, 3 date, SmRh^said’and jan ^ tit give taxpayers
-fal
the district had collected $102,820 j„ district opportunity To[ piy
m delinquent taxes, ’penalty and their taxes before they become de-
mterest and ftirrent collections. 'i1MJU^t on ,Ian jj. ,
In .^November I960. Smith said
Cuba--
(Continued From Page 1)
ferry sailing today for West Palm
Beach. Fla.
Cuban diplomats in this country
likewise were under expulsion be-
cause of the break. State Depart-
ment officials said these totaled
about 100, including about 10 at
the (Aiban Embassy in Washing-
ton and 90 at 13 Cuban consulates
in other cities throughout the
United States,
CastrA named the Communist
Penalty and interest amounting
to 114 Pff cent W'H be assessed
after the Jan. 31 deadline .withvtha
penalty to increase each month
taxes are overdue.
Explodes
mm
(Continued From Page 1) \
tionaI -Reactor Testing Station, a
major AEC installation.
It may be weeks before the AFC
knows exactly whet happened.
'But a spokesman sgid it apparent-
ly was a chemical explosion
About 4.500 permanent employes
Czechoslovak Embassy to ha,idlejw,k at the station w'est of here
future Cuban dealings ,ih Wash-anc| tk(, aF.C” said it planned no
ington.
Castro’s two years of anti-
American activity had been -high-
lighted by freewheeling accusa-
Jions, growing intimacy with the
Tommunist bloc including accept-
ance of arms aid and seizure of
about a billion dollars worth of
U.5.-owned property in Cuba.
Washington has reacted slowly.
It -repeatedly denied Castro's
charges, protested his growing in-
volvement with the Reds, with-
drew economic aid, and finally
ended U S. purchases of Cuban
sugar and banned shipment of
American goods to Cuba
changes in their schedules today
The engine for America's first
atomic submarine was developed
at the site and tests are nmv
being conducted there on a variety
of projects, including the power
plant for an atomic airplane.
The radiological crew members
who entered the metal building
pieced together this picture of the
explosion:
The experimental reactor, being
developed as a portable source of
electric pow*er and heat for th«
armed forces, apparently “blew
its top."
The reactor and the boiling ua-
The American Embassy staffjter in which it is immersed are
had been kept bn in Havana toihoused in a metal shell which was
and the four
could be present,
men were sworn.
Witts refused to Identify the in-
telligence agent by name.
Witts, seeking "to protect the
anonymity of the witness, de-
scribed him only as an intelli-
gence agent of the Department of
Two Orangeites
To Attend Meet
activities for the new year, the SS
Steel Seafarer, loaded with 675.060
pounds of rice, is .scheduled to sail
at 3:30 p.m. today for the Near
restricting outgoing traffic to a
right turn to Quincy, installation
of a traffic light to permit safe
crossing of Newton, and installa-
East‘ . ■ tion of proper warning signals at
The SS Jefferson City Victory! raiifoad crossings,
presently being loaded with 3,933,-i jn concluding. Perkins said: “If
000 pounds of flour will sat! some-;elected, I will work for a better
time tomorrow. Both the rice and;fire protection agreement between
Two representatives of Orange 1 flour shipments will go to the Near; west Orange, Orange and Orange
Memorial Hospital will attend the East under the atispicies of the,£ounty, a step designed to save
monthly meeting of the Southeast j Catholic World Relief Mission. |tax dollars . . . right now, if a
Texas Area Hospital Council in
gen
public Safety.
The attorney banned pictures
and pleaded with reporters not
even to describe the man. lest
his usefulness as an undercover
agent be broken.
One of the men refusing tn be
sworn is the district
of the Texas L i q refF Control; an gl]pped
Ohio, and five grandchildren.
(Continued From Page 1)
move Rep. Wtiliam Colmer,
D-Miss., from the committee and
replace him with a liberals He is
one of the two Southerners who
vote with Republicans on the com-
mittee.
Another wav would be to in-
Beaumont tomorrow.
Mrs. Bess "Schofield, adminis-l
trator, and Bob Hodges, business!
manager, will attend this session I
to be held in Hotel D.eo Hospital !
Orangeite Pleads
Innocent of DWI
The council, representing 12; Roy Wes
Southeast Texas hospitals, will be-iGreenbrier Ave., has entered a
Roy Wesley Fleming, 43, of 513
gin the. regular meeting at 2 p.m ^lea of innocence before County
Guest speaker will be Royce! Judge Sid J. Caillavet to a charge
Ashcraft, director of the division of first offense, driving while in-
fire occurs outside the City of Or-
ange, the call is automatically re-
ferred to the West Orange Voun-
ter F re Department. Some ex-
amples of this were recent fires
in the Cove, Little Cypress and
other areas north and west of Or-
ange. I would like to see a shared
cost of these,fires.”
hold open a channel of commu-
nication with the Castro regime,
ro report to Washington Cuban
developments and to grant visas
to Cubans wanting to come to the
Unfted States.
U S. officials believe Castro was
not penetrated This is capped by
a metal cover through which fuel
and control rods run to reach the
enriched uranium core of the re-
actor.
The reactor Is housed in the
basement, where the explosion ar>-
angered by The US. reporting and parentlv occurred. The blast did
by the heavy flight of Cubans to
Yankeeland
The U.S Fmbassv had been
granting about 1 500 visas a
month. About 50,000 Cubans seek
not appear to have penetrated
above the basement. The exterior
of the building was not damaged.
The AEC. said any theories on
the cause of the explosion would
to leave for America.' The visa’** P^V guesswork pendmg the
• • • eanhet of • ne/Vun of ini'nallnatorf
service was suspended Tuesday.
U.S. authorities were consider-
ing a means of treating future
Cuban arrivals in this country as
refugees, processing them for
temporary admission after
get here.
Bridge City Man
Fined by Judge
sing to be [l ” v,#U>w.'n *rrvmriand. Pac-k' it with liberals. If some-jeraft will speak on the results of j Fleming was charged yesterday Mosquito
supervisor !<',*. A. tl;,' „ t(,. i "?|thtQg is not done, the leadership; the first year of hospital licensing^ Highway Patrolman Shirley j.has done
F Control, 'I,,*., feels, much of the Kennedy pro-ifor Texas hospital*. •>' 'Swift. Fleming has been required! to work o
uestion it is the Cuban leaders creasf' the size •the committee of hospital licensing of Texas. Ash-, toxicated.
A fine of $75 and court costs
He added “I wish to keep theiba« been handed down by County
cordial relationship between West'Judge Sid J. Caillavet against Bert
Board. El Roy Mauldin Jr.
Approximately 40 witnesses apjaTid
peared in the hearing room as the1
committee called for all to be
sworn in a mass ceremony,
But attorney Quentin Keith, -rep
resenting four witnesses, includ-
ing Mauldin, interrupted tn say
'(is quartet would not be sworn
imminent invasion’ of!
their country bv the United. States ! P®?.-
- r, BpriicnccK.
might "get
leming
(Orange and the Orange County
Control District, which
a good job, but I hope
required!to work out a plan whereby spray-
therebv making themselves;
ridiculous ih the eyes of the,
world.”.
The U.S. delegate denied the I
existence of any U.S. document;
stating that the U.S, government
is prepared to order military-
intervention in Cuba Roa had
Kennedy pro-lfor Texas hospital*.
stock in this; Auxiliary members also ara in to post bond of $500 pending trialling of the city during the mosquito
vited to attend this session. _df his case in Orange County Court, seasons will be increased.”
Castile, 37, of General Delivery,
Bridge City.
Castile was found guilty yester-
day of aggravated assault in con-
nection with assault upon his wife,
the district attorney * office said.
report of a group of investigators
being flown from Washington,
DC.
However, the AEC 'spokesmen
said it probably was a chemical
thev exP'0*!°6, possibly caused bv a
ln - reaction between aluminum com-
ponents of the reactor and ths
boiling water,
The reactor would have two
functions in actual use—to gener-
ate steam which in turn would
generate power, and to use the
steam and boiling water to pro-
vide heat for barracks at remote
installations.
The experimental model is
manned by 60 Army and Navy's,
men who are being trained m re-
actor operation.
The AEC said names of the deed
are being withheld pending notifi-
cation of next of kin
rvga — - - - - , jj 11 ^ I V CUULZlI HI V-UL/u . rVXAH in
'nth the committee aemed for declared that his government was
them to have his counsel while
testifying.
Keith, in addition to represent-
ing Mauldin, also is attorney for
N H. Helms. Paul K. Collette and
Eugene De Frates
in possession of such a document.
Wadsworth said the attacker isi
not the United States but Cuba.
"The weapons," he said, “are[|
character assassination and false;
alarms. The target is not just thej;
PACKING HOUSE MKT
MacARTHUR DRIVE
TU 6-2574
SPECIALS GOOD THURS., THRU SAT.
— n—— ----- <x 101 11io, a tax; iai it* mn ju.ji mvi
Eight persons subpoenaed by I United States but all those govern-L
the committee have not beenjments ;n the Western Hemisphere!!
found. whose policies the leadership in f
In advance of the hearing, the Havana does not happen to like."
committee chairmnn. Rep M. J ; He said false propaganda is not;!
Murray of Harlingen, said a me onlv weapon being used by.
■ay c
breakdown in local law enforce-
ment has occurred in Southeast
Texas.
Committee members said the
inquiry would deal with what they
charged — and local authorities
generally denied — was a thriv-
ing business of hitherto open gam-
bling, prostitution, saloons and
dope traffic. They said these con-
ditions centered in the heavily in-
dustrialized Beaumont-Port Ar-
thur area, on the Gulf Coast in
Southeast Texas and boasting a
populaion of more than 300.000.
The legislators would name in
advance Only a handful of those
cited to appear as witnesses at
the locally televised hearing.
Known "to have received sub-
Cuba. There also i* an extra-!!
ordinary buildup of arms in Cuba,;
he asserted, and there is a coo-;,
tinuation of subversive efforts by jl
Cuban agents in other countries f
Of the Western Hemisphere.
“All these activities,” he saidJ
"are being carried out in an open!)
combination with the Soviet Union!
and Communist China and the ]
International Communist Move- j
ment.”
Forecasting the tone of the ;j
Fresh Ground
Jy
FRESH PORK
SPARE RIBS
Grade A
ftyefs 2y8
!*wni>miMw ii
TOP QUALITY VEAL
FULLY TRIMMED
I American reply, a U S. spokesman
called the charges
T-BONES
ROUND STEAK
LB.
poenas were Judge Owen M. pians.
Lord, who presides over the only
the latest ini
a series of lies” by the govern-'
ment of Prime Minister Fidel
Castro. It is the second timetCuba!
has accused the United Stated be-i|
fore the United Nations of invasion
- , ... Cuban Foreign Minister Raul-
criminal district court 'in Jeffer -goa was on hand to press the new ,
son County: Dist. Atty. Ramie charges befhre the lLnation coun- .
H. Griffin and Constable Reagan cj|. He said in a written complaint 1
Bia3t®lHiJ*1l0se Precmct embraces ]ast Saturday that the United
a I. of 'Beaumont. 'States was about to “perpetrate, j.
Committee spokesmen a al d^Htin a few hours, dirsset rfulitary I
State agents had been unable to a^ress)on- agajn«t Cuba
find Sheriff CH. Meyer to serve, -n,,, u.S delegation after con-
a summons but he presumably !#uhatjnn ^ councj] members
would turn up before the hearingwas reposed confident Roa would
arHh 54ni*or • r> rmo of nAarlvr If .
IDEAL FOR BROILING
SIRLOINS
RIB CHOPS
FRESH KILLED
LB.
VEAL LIVER
ends. Meyer is one of nearly .0 fjn{j little support except from the
nave - --
‘public officials who already
appeared voluntarily for question-
ing at closed sessions of the law-
makers.
.The House group called on each
to produce records of his tax pay-
ments and Other financial deal-
ings for the past five years.
This - new probe parallels one
conducted by the same legislative funded
group hundreds of miles across
the stale last March at Arnarillo.
in the Texas Panhandle. In testi-
mony there the committee heard
a sordid recital of murder threats,
gambling payoffs^ prostitute
ICE BOX SPECIAL
Soviet Union,.
Negroes To Get
Fines Refunded
READY FOR FREEZER
MEMPHIS, Tenn (AP>—Court
fines from *26 to *51 will be re- ;j
to about 46 Nggroes con-1;
victed of staging sit-in demonstra-
tions earlier this year at public,
facilities, a city spokesman said!
Tuesday.
At the request of Asst. City I
Atty. Arthur Shea. Circuit Court '*
_ . re-
cruiting and otheV unlsavqry tie-jjudges dismissed charges againsl
ups between public officials snd%e Negroes because the facilities;!
known criminals. involved—the library, zbo, art'
As a reault of the hearing last!gaIlery and museum—are now
3 lbs. ROUNDS
3 lbs. T-BONES
3 lbs. SIRLOINS
3 lbs. BIB CHOPS
4 lbs. 7.STEAKS
3 lbs. STEW7
3 lbs. HAMBURGER
3 lbs. ROAST
ForeDuarfer Package
READY FOR FREEZER
5 lbs. 7 Steaks
5 lbs. Chops
5 lbs. Stewr
5 lbs. Roast
5 lbs. Ground Meat
Lbs.
for Only
j*'
VEAL CROWN, ' I VEAL
ROAST u 4341 RUMP OR PEAK ROAST u 63<
HALF OR WHOLE
VEAL OR BABY
CUT, WRAPPED, FROZEN
BEEF ib 43<
FRESH PORK
Shoulder u 39d
CENTER CUT Lb.
Pork Chops 79d
SKINLESS
VEAL SEVEN
WIENERS
STEAKS ^ 53<
VEAL BRISKET
STEW ^ 39<
Hind Quarter Package
READY FOR FREEZER
5 lbs. Bound
S lbs. Sirloin
S lbs. Roast
5 lbs. Ground Meat
Lbs.
20
$1295
Heavy lleef
ROUNDS
t-bonBs
Beef Cutlets
GROUND
55<
SQUARE CUT
ROAST
49<
BEEF
Sirloins u> 79 <
OUR OWN SLICED
BACON ib 59*
RATH'S
MULBERRY BACON
Lbs.
1
WHOLE or HALF—60 to 120 Lbs.
spring, a county judge resigned ^segregated
hia office and a grand jury indict---——
ed half a dozen men on assorted
criminal chargtl. .
In Bean mom. the Houa# com
fnittw diacloadd1 undercover ante
agents haul been quietly gathering,
evidence after Texas Ranger*
I
staged Dec. 3 gambling raids oh7
seven clubs—one a plush estab-
lishment on the Beaumpnt-Poit ,
Arthur highway and aix in down*;|
town Beaumont, y'...-'"'
PIGS
Lb.
CUT UP FREE
FRESH
PORK
HAMS
FRESH PORK
RIB-IN
COUNTRY
STYLE
BACKBONE
y
FRESH
PORK
MIDDLINGS
SHOULDER
.y,
y
47;
•* y^--.
■
SS
S-
s
ys.
S'
y
y.
s*s
SA
y.
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 4, 1961, newspaper, January 4, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558839/m1/10/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.