The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 57, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1956 Page: 3 of 10
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■ ■ ■- ■ - 'V- ;
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High Command Taking New Look
At U.S. Military Establishment
* WASHINGTON (AP) — The! Disclosure of the strategy *es-
niiltUry high command ij taking {ston Tamf last' nfght when the
another new look at the forces, j Pentagon said in reply to report-
weapons and strategy required, in trs’ inquiries that the meeting will
the next three years to keep pace j continue through this week at the
wdh missile-atomic age science | isolated air base. It added that,the
and the changing face of world ; military chiefs meeting* there will
communism. . * j be able toj‘devotetheir full time
The Eisenhower admmistra - without interruption1" to * defence
lion s new reappraisal of the na- j business. *—- f
tion s defenses started Saturday,! Taking part are the chairman,-1
when tlje Joint Chiefs of Staff! Adm. Arthur W Radford: Armv
slipped out of Washington un-jctm Maxwell D. Taylor;. Navy
anno(inced^actd41ew to Ramey Air j Adm. Arleigh Burke; Air Force
Force Base ^ertojgjp^ -iGatvJiathan B. Twining, and Ma-!
. . ■_ t i rine Gen. Randolph McC. Pate.
Maw I nV*Nllltc F Thc military chiefs are under
I sC tt I UA vUII J ; orders from Secretary of Defense
. Wilson to make a ‘‘complete and!
Put on Record
In Court Here
-careful evaluation of the na-
ture and composition "of forces
j likely to be required" for the na-
' Hon's security during the next
I three years.-’• % ’ _•
Twenty-five new delinquent j WilsoitcdiscWPed these plans In,,
tax suits have been filed in 128th ; a slatFment to Congress in Jan-
. District- Court here bv tax attor- | Uaiy, He foresaw then no major
neys for the state and Orange I ghan?e in the over-all size of the
County. They s^ek The collertigflT armed forces. But he said there
of *3.(178-62 /' , j wouid be continuing changes in
Attorneys for the Orange School , ttip - nature and composition^ of
District said interventipypetitions | the mj|itarv forces ih line with
for school taxes ^etmqucnt on Lcientific progress'and changes in
some of the san.e property will be Ulp international situation,
filed immediately.
A recent ^campaign has resulted j
in 10.7 t#x rases being settled.
The secretary said such a long-
range study was needed to pro-
TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1956
Some Business Costs Going Up
And Others Due for Increases
NEW YORK (AP)—Costs are j oline, die4ef*fuel and truck tires
on the rise agsin m i number of (to ply for new highways
business fields. Further hikes are
shaping up by summer
Shippers will pay about 400
million dollars more a year to the
ra,,‘roads. The cost of sending iron
\>re. coal and limestone, over the
Great Lakes will rise an average
Of six per cent w hen these wateT-
waysjhaw out. And the cost of
senbmg goods c
goods over the highways w
mav ike if Congress goes ahead j recently '
with plans to raise tax on gar- ' Automatic
The price of things made of
steel and copper has tended high-
er of late-—due to excess of de-
mand over supply, as well as to
labor costs. Steelworkers and
miners are discussing new wage
demands for summer.
Some two million workers got a
pay hike w
mum w^ge
hen the federal mini-
rose to $1 an hour.
'Draft Rhee' Move
Under Way in Korea
— Lrad'r Photo bv Man* Alice h*'ym
... UNEXPECTED BOM S—Cleaning an acre of land for ,a tip
Tax pavers against whom *d<ii- 1 vide a sound base for planning home recently, Sam Hogg pud his daughter. Mrs. J. M G. Clark, <
tiopkl suits are pending arc being ! "future procurement and other Old Highway 90 near the Ballvillc oven-ass at Vidor, stared i-
- - - 1 ---- -----—This means i amazement and fear at what they thought was a snake lving t
the ground. The object was identified as a petrified eel and
thought to have been excavated by highway machinery. ,Hot.
described it as a ‘ lamprey cel, one of the most poisonous of rei
tiles, which lives in mud. ’ The petrified object will be given to t
Vidor High School science department for observation and stud.
wage increases for
perhaps 2 3/4 million others are!
m the cards this year under exist-;
mg union-management contracts.
The Textile Workers Union is j
out to thaw a five-year wage '
,, , ., freeze for employes in New Eng-
SEOUL. Korea. (AP) — The, land mills.
diaft Rhee bandwagon got roll- - ah thpse wage increases add to,
mg to the South Korean capital the total of consumers’ spending
toda:. • rS>’t)ey! to the joy of merchants, r
Some 500 labor unionist- na- But thev also acid to the cost
! raded Seoul streets carrying ban- of doing business for roanv an-i
['nets and chanting sibgans urging ■ other. When the cost can’t be
j HO’-year-old President Syngman abiorberjl out of prom-margins, or
Hhee to' seeker third term m thi.- when' it*se«m’t^br onset by more
summer's elections. »output per man hour, prices ,-go i
It w;as the first of a. scries of up. 7 !
* I pontaneous - public meetings People who think the slacken-
scheduled by Rhee's Liberal par- ing in automobile output and
ty, .which- offered its veteran housing construction has relieved;
j leader renomi nation at a eonven- inflationary dangers should take
tion \f;tcrday. * account of these cost-price press !
Jfhec tolch-a--party delegation lie «ures.-’ the First National City
wants to retire ip favor of a Bank of New York says in its >
,
-v>
- V. V
M&Mm >-*
— — * Mb » a-4
’Hadua find some way to get the rest of him rnsidef"
notified of the date their cases | military .programs.
-*are set for trial j new weapons and equipment. ,
Suits filed for the week end-[ Pentagon aides, under orders to
ing March 2.were f^ay no more than necessary about)
Mr and l^rs. A H Barney, b,p hideaway meeting bf the three j
$52 07; J. Ef Brooks. $446. Mr. „pnprajs an^ two admirals, eon-|______________,_____ . m ____H|
and Mrs. John Granger, $108.70; j (ipdpd they have “a whole flock” j C !___r ♦ • i # . W
Mrs Fannie Self $105 53: Ro Eva j nf f,,hfr f0rejCn -n domestic : jQ.Yi£t-LHQinegf-^RVl^lf>n<;‘Vfisf iJnm
—Haiin, >353.10; Mr. ami Mi.;. Ed- DroLiPTns to talk and think about. [
ward Ffbrris. $94 33 •!' . _
Mr./krtd Mrs. Jessie Lz»\ r Sand-
lin, K10.75: Elizabeth Eileh Si-
mop, $28.26; Mr. and Mrs. George
Mpore, $83 89: Anthony Giarra-
t/no. $64.59; Elzina . Cooper, $56-
/.14, James O'Neal Ahlman, $74.94.
lounger'rpan but added, "it will
:<• veil to listen to public opm-
Chubby Tot Rescued
From Cold Air Duct
. < AP )
Cops Admit Catching wide area for nearly an hour—but
u . _ ® | they couldn't stop him.
Morse Is Tough Job ' Filially, the horse dropped front
BROOKLINE. Mass. (AP) — f’xhaust‘on-
Police today were the first to ad- —---
nut that 'Hhe art. of catching a • SPAIN TO BUY SURPLUSES
runaway horse i> lost . MADRID (AP) — Spain has
LOUISVILLE.
■ | |(V.| 11.L—In hr
j;»': i r V
G a ry §c h weinha rt 7s
-What
cautHE
down-
Maich bank letter
I‘ secs “a danger that -wage in-
cma-es "mav force up^costs and ; Four radio-equipped police cars signed In agreement purchase of
prices to a point where farmers j participated in the chase of a, $64,800,000 w-orth of American
ann "!.btr peopje whp do not have horse.wild'y pulling a junk wagon, [surplus farm produce. This bfings
equivalent increases in..... income, Pol.ce add their modern equip- the amount contracted by S^)ain
anno* buy. That could bring a , ment chased the horse over a since last April to Sill,793,000.
-iron in sales and in time an in- ;----------- -------------,__________ . • .......
crease ip unemployment.
--T-flL-
Connectng Asian, American Continents
.In the forefgh field, the chiefs
will look into the deployment of : LONDON (AP)-A Soviet en- be saved* from the cold breath *•
troops in Europe and Asia, tn the j gjneer s^y< the atomic age has | iy,p 'arrtic
light of the Russians' softer ao- made possible the budding of a .‘The greaT^Siberi-an rive,
preach and the effect on alltes vast international dam across the [ Vould become imnnrtart intern
afiv s,ra* ! "-*"*'«*- connecting Asia jSnaF SajSd
lbTIMl IV e. iti"
bank economists note. Higher
prices mav be ‘‘validated by in-
flation of demand thro.ugh exces-
sive credit expansion.” The bank-
ers take a dim view of this ‘;choice
of evils.”
and neutrals alike. Also, any stra- j Bering'Straits
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Edward tegie review must consider the t with America.
Green. $24.27; Mr. and Mrs. Cur- possibility of how United States! Aftpr such a
tis Duhon. *108.88; Mr. and Mrs. forces might be embroiled if satci
ing shmrld break out
die East.
State's Salk Vaccine
Supply Is Exhausted
rouhUtun from London to Wash- j (jan|
ington vViph a branch line to Pei- 1
ping
London - to - Pans trams would !
run through an English Channel ;
tunnel that has been talked about
for 50 years.
• The gigantic 45-nrsiJe Bering
Straits dam would keep cold vya-
N. Hill $153 66; Elmer Wd
son, $177 42; Mr. and Mrs. H. W
Leaher, $117.18, Jack Donald
Bailey, $51.96
Mr, and. Mr*. J Price Baker,
$62.76; Mrs. Florence E Paltillo.
*834.64; John L, Kelcher and
others,'$85 05; Ixiubertha Alndge, j • AUSTIN (pi—The State Health
$37.15; Clo-Fi Guillojry. $125 81; Department has said supplies of
M Luther Percell, $215 64: Uarl | poljo vaccine for both public _________________________r..........
B Jackson. $105 50. j and private use are “completely j jpr and ice from the Arctic Ocean
Other school districts entering j exhausted” [from entering the Pacific Hun-
some of the suits as interveners j jjr j p Peavv, rhief of the ■ dreds of huge pumps in the pro-
are also We*t Orange, Btuige j departments communicable dis- i p0sPd[ etam would b<- "operated b>
City and Vidor. [ease division said “more is on the ; an atomic power station of about
------------— - , for did!ibution bv pubne j two 1o three rrulhon kilowatts."
President ot GE Predicts I agencies, but that he hart no1 idea : The Sov iet engineer continued;
High Employee Wages by 66 what the pro-next was for n<'‘‘ j “The pumps* would eroaie an
NEW YORK (AP i General; vaeonc to be adminiSieied P.v pn- j artincial warm vU,rent like the
Electric President Ralph J. Cor- j vate physicians . . h j Gulf Stream . . This wa'mith
diner says it is possible that his; Private physicians k ' •, would transform ‘he ‘ climate of
firm s employes will have average , have giv en the fit* • • ' i the continents of A.-ia and North
earnings of $8,000 to $9,000 a year ! they hav-e no vaccine > , America, which would become j
The chubby thrce-year-oldWent
alter tha shining object in a cold
air duct and fell into the duct.
He-vvas, fiv e feet dojww-the curv-
ing duct, when h.s screams
^ brought - his mother, Mrs. Joseph
„ „ . E Schweinhart, from the kitchen.; newspaper A.ftenposten says a
Ham was built, the * m■!, - A *&&-*»* iowred thetOTWf avataflChinjurrecJ Twolirms
*'! !i^"rUn«mew said on a Moscow radio ’ to^Mke aloimtiMd^rf tduc" and Gary ^rabbed u He was near the village of Oldra in north-
1hP j broadcast, an electric rail wav line inv*lsed in f •' pu-1,ed out bcfoiv fir™ and Jem Norway. A 57-year-oid farm-
o/miM mfenm T nn^/vP </-. Ilf m U A
AVALANCHE BURIES FARMS
OSLO, Norway |AP) — The
police and police emergency crews j er and two children>vere believed
arrived. dead under the mountain of snow.
MONEY PROBLEMS?
It you hovt bib that r«td la b» paid, •* peymant* that art (•• high w*
rnvda you lo visit us. Wo usually ten holp you. Wo m*fc* leant aa Auto-
mobiln or Furnituro. If your car paymonls er# loo bifh wo «an usually
roduto Ih*m to suit your budget—tamo appHtt to fumituro. Yaa may
hoy* Ooltors to spert out of oath pey chock if you use the Mondtyy-o
confidential services offered by:
Inn
517 FRONT ST.
PHONE 8 4319
by 1966
He said such earnings jamII be
possible in another 10 |tsa.r- as
automation increases the
of lob* requiring higher'
tion and skills.
Itoosfer shots.
Since 1900 the number of Am-
nber | prjcans over 65 years old has
quadrupled while the total popu-
lation of the nation has doubled.
NOW!
Dryer Demonstration Days
at electric dealers!
akin to the climates of the parte
of Europe passed by the 'Gulf j
Stream.”
The engineer said the darn al-«o !
would destroy the “notorious Si- '
berian anticyclone’’ and prevent j
forming of huge masses of cold j
arctic air. Thus Europe as well i
as the other two continents wouJdd
Orders Say Lion
Must Leave Town
offers
you
i
LOS ANGF.LES (APi K.: g
the lion must leave town with,*!
15 days
The animal regulation comniis- ,
sion so ordered after neighbors ;
objected to the 4-month old am- ,
mal and officials at the nearbv i
Los Angeles orphans home said I
they would rather the lion vveie:
elsewhere
On Fpb. 14 the commission re- j
fused King's owner, John Shin- i
ners. a permit to keep the am-I
mal hut said it might reconsider j
if the lion were confined to a ,
cage.
Shinner?, 25. a service j
attendant, now has a rage but the '
commission's executive officer, |
A. B. Stephenson, reported the- en- j
closure is occupied by paint cans j
and not by King
I* r v T C D B&S RADIO tr TV
V E A I C II H 05 Green Phone 6 73
1105 Green
B&S RADIO
1105 Green "
Phon^^2361
& TV
Ph. 6-2361
EASY
rwv C&L SUPPLY CO.
fc W J I 908 Division Phone 8-3815
FRIGIDAIRE stark s supply
riSIUIUHUVt Mo,Arthur Dr Ph. S I749
General-Electric Srfir%e"; s!r,
H0TP0INT
PIERCE SUPPLY
115 Fifth O. 8-2932
ORANCE-MAYTAC
1203 Green Ph. 8 3569
KELVINATOR
MAYTAG
Westinghouse 3,Sa CpEhNtT2i5
WHIRLPOOL Mor^Hom,pM
Bartender's Trial
Finally Gets Started
OMAHA (AP) — It took time
but the trial of Pete Nicotero on
charges of illegal sale of liquor
at his bottle club finally got
started.
The delay began when someone
forgot to bring the complaint to
court.
When they thought the jury was
filled, one prospect was excused j
He had a hearing defect
Another prospect was tagged in !
a hallway. He said he was a friend i
of the defense aft'ornev and, a ;
member of a private bottle club.
Then a second prospect was
tapped in the hallway. He said
he was a neighbor of the defense
attorney but would be Impartial.
He JtVas accepted.
\
V V *
/ [^
. ' V
,'VU $*.*•
Pyramid of City Hall _
To Get Gold Paint |ob
LOS ANGELES>AP1 — A ,32-
foot pyramid atop' the city hall
will get a waterproofing job that
includes a facing painted gold.
Decision on the gold color was
made by the municipal arts com-
mission, which said it felt such
a crowm would be emblematic of
Los Angeles’ standing as a mon-
arch among cities.
More reluctantly, the commis-
sion admitted the painting was
necessary in the first place to pro-
tect the aluminum facing from
smog deterioration,
Cardinal Soellman To Attend
Wedding Ceremony of Prince
NEW YORK (AP) — Prince
Rainier of Monoca says Francis
Cardinal Spellman, archbishop of
New* York, will attend the prince s
wedding to actress Grace Kelly
as a delegate of the Pope.
The Prince said the Bishop of
Monaco Will perform the cere- J
mony in Monaco April 19. 1
Come in
and well prove that
you get more GO for your
dough in a Ford V~8
For Tbg
Performance
in your
kind of ,
driving !
Im: z<" horsepower that makes horse sense ift
Ford's new 225-h.p. V-8. The purpose of this
new horsepower is more torque . . . more rotat.-.
ing power to turn the wheels of your car. With
more torque vou get greater response—quicker
getaway, -wilier passing power. You'll find it
the -likiest, quietest, thrillingest engine you
ever commanded. You get top performance for
your kind of driving!
This new 225-h.p. Thunderbird V-8 engine
ha.- a 'displacement of 312 cu. in.—which makes
it the biggest engine by far in the low-price field.
And it is available in all Fordomatic Fairlanea
and Station Wagons, at. slight extra coat.
Kqually important, these new 225-h.p. en-
gine' are rolling off of Ford’s production line
noir. So plan to see your Ford Dealer soon.
He’ll be glad to show you why you get more
GO for your dough in a Ford V-8!
PAUL GASOW MOTORS
105 SEVENTH ST.
Across From Courthouse
PHONE 8-3581
‘GREAT TV, FORD THEATRE, KFDM TV, CHANNEL 6, 8.00 P.M., TONIGHT-
•••>
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 57, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1956, newspaper, March 6, 1956; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth561865/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.