The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961 Page: 1 of 43
forty three pages : b&w ; page 23 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ft-« ' 1 '
" it/"'' .«• ti,i':.uu.'í?,J,|¿'.' !_■_
,/■' v, 11!\y< "r A ¡ • rV
' i" 1' 1
<3* '* ! ..«•;.••. / it *'¿, "■'.*/i'■* < ■ '■""■.win■/', ,i II'i'I'/i1', H'.JII ,< Íi
X. 'r' • S ; ! " ' "■
I
1 '—
i m '■<: /T''
Old Arch
VOL LVIII—NUMBER 142
NBA torrwu
ORANGE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JUNE 18, 1961
46 Paget 10 Cantt
m | mmm 1
/
Despite reports to the contrary, Reports have "been rife in area on a new contract. They are now¡mittee, have been empowered by
™ - -T......... i.. . .< «sa*.— "itipwing settle-;the millwright membership to de*
there will be no construction'strike construction craft circles that mill- the lone holdouts following
in the Sabine Area Tuesday wright pickít ¡lines would be put ment of a new three-year contract
stager' by Orange Millwright Lo- •' up Tuesday following a breakoff with Ironworker Local 450.
cal 2484.- | in negotiations last week between In reference, to a.Tuesday strike
That was the comment yester-í mill .vrights and the Sabine Area j Millwright Business Agent Hamil-
day tr;m Ralph t. a'Jmilton. ¡Construction Committee (SACC). ton commented. "We will not
business manager and financial j The l H-membér millwright lo- strike Tuesday under present cir-
secretary and chairman of the cr! ir th • L--: oí e'f'it const>uj-;Cumstances. However, a strike
millwright local negotiating com- tion crafts in the Sabine . Area ■ vote has been taken. I, as chair
mi t tee.
;ar Jf99 „ HP^üWj.. . i '
¡which ha not reached agreement man. of the nigotlating com-
POST
SCRIPTS
to the
NEWS
Court Is
Tractor-Prisoner Deal
By BOB AXELSON
Federal government support for
The court petition asked that,ade around Cuba."
Atty. Geh. Robert Kennedy be or-
dered to halt negotiations of the
"Tractors for Freedom Commit-
Prime Minister Fidel
public school purposes in this
country is a series of frankly
dirty words in many quarters of
America with Orange as no ex-
ception;
j The Senate has tee" with
■ passed the Ken-;Castro. .
nedy Adminis- The committee, headed by Mrs.
tration's $2.5 bil-lEleanor Roosevelt, Dr. Milton Ei-
lion school aid senhower and Walter Reuther, the
bill. This meas-'action asserted, has violated the
jure is slated tó|tá¡pn' Act; which forbids individ-
CHICAGO (AP)—A group-of In- shared by the other members of
dianapolis residents asked the the group, whom he described as
Seventh U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- ; both Democrats and Republicans.
peals Saturday to halt negotia-| Asked for his solution to the wor(j
tions by a private citizcns' com- troubles with Cuba, Allen said,! ■ ¡. a., r^imh
mittce for release x>f some 1.200 "I would support Barry .Gold-' formcd that' ¡f we did
prisoners captured in the invasion water when he said we should put his terms we could walk
of Cuba. an economic ud physical block- i¡ro at anv time "
clare a strike anytime I see
to do so." .'
According to Hamilton; the Sa-
bine Area District Council of
Carpenters has given consent with
full backing if Millwright Local
2484 "decides to set up a picket
line and strike."
Negotiations between the mill-
wrights and SACC called ,b y
Federal Mediator Ray Majure
broke off last Wednesday In Beau-
mont. Among those present were
L, B. Gough. SACC executive
secretary. Jack Dishman of Beau-
mont, memh?r of the contractor
negotiating committee, and Gervis
L. Simmons, international carpen-
ter union representative from
Dallas..
Hamilton commented, "The
Millwright Local 2484 committee
has never once mentioned -the
'strike.' But. on numerous,
has
■fia
AXELSON
come before the
House this week.
Backers also
. If claim enough
. * • $ vote for ap-
proval there.
One point of
view was expressed earlier last
week by a Washington, tí. C. edu-
cator speaking at a general as-
sembly of the Texas Public
Schools Conferences held at Texas
A&M College. There were some
5CO Texas school officials pies
cnt.
The speaker contended that
Mr distribution of educa-
ilty cannot be
except through federal
It came from William
1. EDena, assistant executive
secretary of the American As-
sociation of School Admin'str#-
Natitftaal Education Asso-
"a Mr distribute
«tonal opportunity
achieved except tl
ual U.S. citizens to negotiate with
foreign powers. The suit specific-
ally demanded enforcement of the
Lo¿an Act.
Robert Kennedy was named as
defendant in the mandamus ac-
tion brought by a five-member
group named "Citizens to Block
Tractors for Castro."
His office" in .Washington de*
clrrM immediate comment on the
suit."
Richard Allen; 22. a member of
the Indianapolis «roup, said he
hoped the appeals court would
rule upon the petition by Monday
or Tuesday.
. Castro earlier this week told a
group of US, negotiators"in Ha-
vana that he would agree to take
tors, Ni
elation.
Further quotes from his speech
went this way, "Federal control
Is NOT only NOT dangerous but
aome of It would be eminently
desirable."
He also noted, "The federal
government could well establish
minimum standards for teachers
education, school buildlrig con-
struction. length of school term
and many other physical aspects
of the .program. At the same
it could be recognized that
of what children study
(See P.S., Page li
1,000 farm tractom instead of thff
500 giant construction tractors .he
originally demanded. /
The Cuban prime minis^r also
insisted that the United States un-
derstand the exchange was not
ransom, but a U.V payment of
Indemnity for daptkge caused by
the invasion
The petition to the court
charged tjje tractors committee
was opeply trying to "indemnify"
Cuba.,
we are going to deal with
I think it should be by the
esident," said Allen, an insur-
adjuster. However, he.made
it clear he would be against the
deal under any circumstances."
Allen said his views
DANIEL F. TALBERT
Services Set Today
Services Set
For Resident
Of Deweyville
He continued, "The ortiy men
tion of the word 'strike* during
the last negotiating/session on
Wednesday was /nade by Mr.
Dishman. a member of the SACC
negotiating copimittee. After, ne-
gotiations hajr been adjourned by
Ray Majucl; Mr. " Dishman ap-
proached/me and said. 'We'did
not kngw you wanted to strike us.'
answer to Mr. Dishman
wa^f 'W<? A) not want to strike
but K seems to me.that you
ant us to strike.' At this point
Mr. Gough informed me that "Wc
'"id better leafn «wn th? we are
dealing with a team of old pros."
Hamilton said.
Hamilton stressed, "Inasmuch
-s they are old pros, they may
lust as well learn that the mem-
bership of this committee of mill-
wrights are gentlemen of intel-
ligence and not idiots as we have
out many negotiating sessions."
Disagreement between the con-
tractor group and the millwright
local hinges around ^wage de.
mands. The craft has been of-
fered the over-all 32^-cent wage
hike keyed to a three-year cen-
tra rt.
They ape seeking 35 cents per
year for the first two years or
70 cents plus a 10-rent per hour
tool allowance, for- an overall
$1.50 boost.
Gough.' SACC executive secre-
tary, commented. "The millwright
demands are completely out of
lin" with the balance of the other
crafts. We couldn't stay in the
contracting business and ascede
to the demands they left on the
— Daniel table prior to adjournment the
EW OFFICERS ARE ELECTED-Some 135
ilegates and their wives of the Sabine-Néches
'Area Bank Auditors and Controllers Association
attended an annual meeting yesterday at the
Orange Boating Club here. Those shown (left
to right) are Gene C. Monger, outgoing presi-
dent. cashier of- the First National Bank, Beau-
mont; George A; Sackman. incoming.president,
cnshler, Calcasieu Marine National Bank, Lake
DEWEYVILLE.
F. Talbert, "recognized In May as other day.
the oldest resident of Deweyyllle. 1 The SACC official noted. "Thi
died Friday at 5:30 p.m. en route returned to th:ir original d?ma"S
to a hospital after suffering a of four months ago of 70 cents
Admj
learned Secrets From Toy Sub
/
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Adra, Hyman G. Rickover says
the Soviet Union got millions of
dollars worth of Information atibut
the U.S. nuclear submarines ,15?
$2.98.
That's the price of a toy model
of the Polaris submarine "which
can be bought at the dime store,"
•Rickover told the joint Atomic
Energy Subcommittee. His testi-
mony, given a year ago, has Just
been made public.
heart attack at his home. Hs
were wai 82.
j Funeral services will be held to-
day at 2 p.m. at the Claybar Fu-
neral Home with the Rev. G.,M.
Coe, pastor of the Conroe Baptist
Church; the Rev. C. W. Williams,
: pastor of toe North Oran?e Bao-
itist Church; and the Rev. Ed<Jie
Edwards, pastor of the First
! Pentecostal Church of DeweyViile,
will follow in
Vice lions of dollars worth of free in
formation."
The admiral
tion was released by the Navy.
Rickover said' the model was
built in accordance with official
Navy blueprints and gives accu-
rate details of the ship's dimen-
sions, including the size of its nu-
clear reactor compartment.
This he described as the most
officiating. Burial
the Deweyville Cemetery.
Ppllbefrers wi'l Farer Davis,
.... . , , Grady Berry., ,Nick Hryhorchuk,
said the informa- Cecil Kelly, Joe Gillis and Osburn
Fem'sOn.
Talbert was á native of Louis-
ville, Miss., and moved to Dewey-
ville in August 1907. He is the last
of h!s imrr-jdlate frm"' > ■ who
njoved here from Mississippi.
A retired grader with the Peavy-
"If I were a Russian I would
be most grateful to the United
States for its generosity In supply-
ing such information for $2.98,"
Rickover said. "A good ship de-
signer . . . can spend one hour
On that model and tell he has mil-
I'
Data Fran U.S. Weather Bureaa
Outlook Thundershowers
High today • • ••••• •• ■ 86
Low tonight 17
Outlook tomorrow Showers
High tomorrow
Sunset today 7;20^prm.
Sunrise tomorrow
Winds.— Nomwott to
m .h. .at night, ruing to
4urMg Am «jjr; y
TIOCS — SONnqy htdh,
J5 . \(kU m. Sotfvw. high,
SUN MmTIr.H •«.. Mtl I'M p
Jfioes IBÉ
1t:ll mí lotlvar:
i.* ¿a. m ■■■
' T — Rkm S:M #.m.. Mrtt 7: p.m.
JlJttAY - Twmrm/vrui was K
a.m.
s t« to
tg tl m.p.h.
7:45 tJn,
I. !i g.m.;
vital information conveyed by the
(Sec LABOR, Page 10)
V IMI KKAIM
LVUUVr Jiwh rPQIB
Charles; Matthew Skeeter, vice president, vice
president, Orange National Bank; and Richard
R. Goforth, secretary-treasurer, auditor. Gulf
National Bank, Lake Charles. Delegates present
represented 37 banks in Texas and Louisiana.
Beat rides and other sports were available and
a steak dinner was served at 6 p.m. by the
ooating club.
County Dads Table All Bids
For Construction of Bridges
By TOE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Eagle PasV police Saturday
night evacuate^? to <0 persons
from their homeKnear toe Rio
Grande as rains of úñ to 6 inches
soaked Texas sendingWks and
rivers over roads in somesareas.
The Rio Grande near iSagle
Pwa rose about a foot an f
Saturday night but the rate
clined about midnight as the
h«w«rains changed to a «low
Police said that, if the river con-
tinue to rise during 4he early
hours Sunday about eight more
families would have to Be evacu-
ated. The estimated 10 families
taken from their homes spent
Saturday night at the high schxri
field house at Eagle Pass.
. Heavy, steady rains along the
Mexican border near Del Rio
caused one spaa of a steel and
concrete bridge to collapse. No
one was injured, however, be-
cause the bridge had been closed
to traffic for hours due to high
water along the eporoaches.
"We expect one of the streets
by the river to be flooded by,
nightfall." said Pete Rossi, chief
police'at Eagle Pass. He $afd
the few families living in the low
lands had been ordered stand
by to be evacuated Vsometime
tonight.''
terday by Coiinty Commissioners
Court on the opening of proposals
for construction of • four bridges
and widening Adams Bayou.
Bids were submitted by 10 dif-
ferent construction firms from
Texas and Louisiana. Members of
the court tebled all bids pending
analysis and study by County
Engr. Gus Foyle and C. P. Smith
Associates of Orange, consulting
engineers. ■
Action on bid awards is snti-
cipated at the regular court ses-,
sion Wednesday at 10 a.m.. County
.fudge Sid J. Caillavet reported.
These four bridges and channel
widening on the bayou to improve
drainage are major projects in the
ÍM45.000 county wide bond pro-
gram. r
County officials yesterday were
somewhat disappointed on' pid to-
tals which exceeded estimates
They had figured on about $106,
ÓQ0 for channel work and around
Wage Increase Listed
Three-Year Contract Executei
Between SACC, Iron Worjcefs
low base bids Action on bid awards is anti- $700,000 for the four bridges,
were listed yes- c'pated at the regular court ses-, C. P. Smith commented. "We
will' have to check these bids
against paving quantities included
in the projects to determine our
cost "factors. We are well within
the money,- excluding channel
work."
The apparent low
the four, bridge oroiiK<
mitted by F. Miller, í Sons Inc.
of Lafke Charle*] at,JT78.226. It was
based bn an all' tk none proposal.
Their breakdown on individual
projects is ,ds follows: Western
Avenue, $M5,476, Main Street,
$M3.99.VWest Park, $182,465, end
Cow payou, $306,331.
bid-M.KM.163 was sub-
ted by Apex Excavators. Inc.
f Houston on the Adams Bayou
widening w.-rk. Contract specifica-
tions call for completion of the
channel work in 240 calendar
days. Work on the bridges was esti-
mated at a year if weather condi-
tions were favorable.
Execution of a new three-year.Ironworkers agreefKto an hourly The second low on channel work
contract between the Sabine Area rate hike of 12% cents for the «ña
Construction Committee (SACC) first year.^ f «¿""nTquallfylsgíettér they also
and Iron Workers Local 450 was¡ For the other two years, mem-'cited the possibility of a $40,000
reported Yesterday by Buslness¡bers oftfíe local will be required saving through,slight changes In
Agent H. H. (Arky) Mathews. 1
'-[--There ¡ire sogie 'p,
the local who will benefit by the' Tor tac
wage increases with the-'fi)rmer,"^c r<"r"nf. a" option formula. The
lourneyman scale listed at $3.6S^mw contract ends March 31. T!W1
was 24 feet
Saturday but
unless it g ts
The river, he
above normal
"we won't get.
45 or 50 fee£3
Heavy júa fell in the Austin
area ,Mte Saturday and toe
Weather Bureau predicted minor
l<K*f flooding of creeks and
.streams inside Austin and in the
hill country west of the city be-
fore Sunday morning -
Ranchers in the Big Bend Coun-
try hailed the rains.
1*ThU «1* country is the best 1
have seen it at this time of year."
iaaa^KEATOER, Page li)
choice between taking
Movie Star Jeff Chandlei
Dies After Spinal Surgery
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Jeff
Chandler, who made his boyhood
droam of movie stardom come
true, died Saturday of septicemia
—blood poisoning—a xomplicafioi
from spinai surgery p:
five weeks ago. He was 42,
M*i, I: «m. lo;w,
trtgti. r.M a.m.. /lew,
model. It also indicates, he S3id
the size of the clrews needed to
operate it "and all sort of other
things."
Rickover bhmed .Inters*rvice
rivalry—the Army, Nafy arid Air
Force competing for public ao-
proval—for leading to the release
of the Polaris information to a toy
manufacturer.
At the Pentagon, a Navy spokes-
man said Saturday, "The Navy
1 ias on occasion provided unclas-
ified photographs, artists concep-
ions, and when available unclas-
sified blueprints of various Navy,
ships to various model manufac-
turers. The Navy has. not provii
blueprints of Polaris subma
to such manufacturers.
VENICE, Calif. (AP¡MThe pres-
ident of one of several toy com-
panies that make* hundreds of
authentic models'of American air-
planes and Ships said Saturday
the models are based on data any-
one cair get. 7
s H. Gtoser. president of
11, Inc., said his firm does
.. ... use classified materials for its
models, advertised as accurate to
within one-thousandth of an inch.
No secret data is involved, he
said. 1
The Washington information did
not nam el toe company building
the modell_apd there are a num-
ber of firms; in that business.
The 1961! Revell catalog lists
Polaris-firing submarine models
and other
worked for the Sabine
ram Co. before it was sold to
the lumbering concern.
He was honored with the pres-
entation of a plaque at a Dewev
villc homecoming celebration .\Mv
•J Chandler succumbed
p.m. Three hours la
City Hospital issued a medical
bulletin disclosing, the cause of
death. /
, "it juit happened suddenly," a
hospital staff member said.'
Ed Tfaiibner, Chandler's busi-
ness manager, said the actor ap-
fed to be rallying from a se-
s of setbacks but that his con-
dition worsened again Friday. He
said an autopsy is planned.
For sevefal .days he lingered In
eritic^r.Condition, then he im
d and was taken, off the crit-
list.
On May 27. however, new bleed-
ing broke out. Doctors speedily
optTjtcd still attain and said his
4:351 condition had worsened
Culver! Chandler had always known.
Since his boyhod in Brrxjklyn,
thai his gojl in life was 4o be a
movje star. He once said he knew
it "would' háppen-7-"l was sur-
U took S0 -k)n8-thr'-.' ironworkers
years,
By April I, 19C2. ironworkers ojf
the local must decide on following
the agreed formula or accepting
10* cents for each of the remain
ing two years.
The alternative is figuring the
average of ironworker hourly rate
increases based on reports from
23 representative southern and
southwestern cities. This average
struck on the total Increases
granted ironworkers in the 23
cities would be hourly rate hike
to be authorized here for each of
the remaining two years of the
Sabine Area .contract.
It would be fhis sum which
would constitute the formula ap-
proach to be est?blished after the
iote when ironworkers will deter
mine the route to be followed.
In late May,
the work
reduction .In the over-all' cost
was regan —
negotiation between th? low and
(See BRIDGES. Page It)
Incumbents
Uncontested
In City Jobs
Orange election heat come July
IB will be generated solely from
the sun as filing deadline passed
last itoht with only the two in-
cumbents entering the field as
candidates for city council posts.
Mrs. Jerry Fairchild. city secre-
tary. said the two applications re-
ceived in her office for places on
the ballot were from R. N. Bob)
.Whitehead. Place 4. and James D.
GillUffC Tlácé 2rVbters wift
(See POLITICS, Page It)
members of £be
rejected a thjlfe-
H,s . start .to movies came at ° wií 2
fortunate time for him, án *efn htjL* ,*!„ tl!^
lead- 5ACC. At the same time they
when rugged presence in a icau-r . . . „„„
ing man was more important than;"^ce<1 ,0 a. onp->
handsome looks. He readily ad- 1 *he /^soi:lato.d G"neral C"n
_ , . ■ imn'i .' im fir m .iu.iy au-. '/Kr\r\ t-, a,%^;i i icm;i
21 as being the oldest resident of ! The husky. 6-foot-4 leading n.an mitted that he wasn't a pretty boy }ractor* (AW^trom April l, i. i.
the community. He was a Jiíemtíer; was hospitalized May 13 for cor-and refused to darken his hair.i1", .APri' J982.- ' „P.T
of First Baptist Churdr' here. rection of a slipped spinal disc'already graying in his 30s. 12'/j-cent rate increase
He is survived by five sons;'Five days later, he experienced• "John Wayne is certainly fio At that time. Mathews made
Daniel Lee, P. E .JQ. D. and John severe aodominial bleeding. , pretty •boy," he pointed rnit, "Nor reference to different wage pat-
Talbert, all of Dwéyville, andMil- i Surgeons kept him alive In a is Mar kin Brando nor Burt Lan turns' established in the Houston
ton TalbeiV'óf Orange; seven ,7'/i-hour operating room drama caster. The age of thp handsome an,-y and stressed that the local did
and two great: j during which they administered leading man is pretty much'not intend to tie itself up for three
grandchil
gtandepifdren.
an incredible 55 pints .of bl-)od 1 past."
I years on w^ages.
By FRANK CORMIER
WASHINGTON (AP) - A prl- reserve system.
vate commission with Impressive
credentials Saturday urged scores
of major changes in the country's
financial macni
tied to the creation of the federal could drop the rate to 13 per cent The commission was created
(from the present 20 per cent, or the Committee for Economic
'Trouble Spot' of County
Pinpointed by Statistics
By MARY ALICE LAKEY I. Only seven drunken (Jrivers have
The South Highway «7 área Inlbeen picked up thls.year^on the
Fridge City, stretching from Twin: Beaumont-to-Vidor^ strip and a sim-
Lakes near the Rainbow Bridge! Har number from Vldor to Or-
to the intersection of FM 1006 Islange. Only two have been arrested
maintaining Its reputation as Or-tcn FM 105 and none have been ap*
ange County's highway "trouble,prehended on Highway 12.
¡pot >• In I960. 5 persons were arrested
r That conclusion was reached for drunken driving on the Beau-
yesterday by county officials afterfmont to Vidor strip, 15 from Viaor
studying ' statistics compiled bv to Orange, 8 on FM IW, as com-
Sgt. Tom Carey of Beaufhont, in pered to the W on South 87.
charge,of a three-county control' The county has reached its half-
area for the Decartment of Public way record of 6 deaths in acci.
Safety, Traffic. Division.
Last year^.and for the first five
months of 1961. highVav oat ml-.
men arrested more persons for
drunken driving in that area than
anywhere else in the county, 69 in
I960 and 33 already this year. , _ - - - . -. -
In I960, the Bridge City area ledges j¡eP®rted¿'n ,Jh*..ú ® .itli
in the number of traffic arrest."¡ handled totals $66.IW. with a total
handled by the patrol. 613, as com- of «cedents_^rdedL .
pared with the 592 on the strip of Sgt. .rr^trA iktt
U.S. !j0 from Beaumont to Vidor. 'al of HO petsoni^i arrested last
5Ü7 from Vidor to Orange on U.S. yean in ^ county on drunken
10, 151 on FM 105 and 392 on¡ • (See TRAFFIC, Page 11)
other collective highways. '
In all, the h i g h w a y patrojjl ^ |/"*C
handled 2.345 arrests in Orange j QKANoC JUlLt
CThe"Vstrip from Vidor tó ¿range SAD ENDING —To another
dents in 1960. To date this year,
3 have occurred. Sgt, Carey re- _
ported. .In addition to deaths, dam-
ages of $475,990 to automobiles^
alone occurred In 256 of the total
of 369 accidents.
So far this year, property dam-
inery. .One eye-
catching proposal: Give toe presi-
to cut
While the present group pro-¡to any point in between. velopment, a business-suppoi
posed nothing so earthshaking, Congress would haVe B0 days research' group. Its chairman was
virtually all of Its 87 recommend- In which to veto such a move. Frazar B. Wilde, chairman of the
^ ^.--j — •• * ~ Life Insur-
ations wo-jld entail Important de-
partures from past practices.
The recommendations touch on
¡ring subr
dent standby authority
taxes in a recession. ¡the Federal Reserve Board, the sional veto
The 20-member Commission oh Treasury, banks, savings and
Money and Credit made public ? loan associations, Insurance, pri-
2.12'page report climaxing nearly vate pension funds, farmers <and
three years of effort on a budget home buyers.
$U million provided by the
Any reduction would be limited
tc six months but could be re
newed. subject again to congres-
of
million provided by
Frazar B
Connecticut General
ante Co.,, Hartford.
. Members'of the groups were re-
rruit'ed from the t/>p level of
In a runaway boom, if the' bankinp. business, labor, educa-
president felt inflation was get* tion ana the professions.
ting out of hand, he could in*; An the coihmission recom-
crease the . 20 per cént rate « mendátions were aimed at re*
The most striking idea was that maximum of 25 per cent. forming the financial system so
Ford Foundation. The report will of adjusting taxes to fit the eco Going one. step beyond this idea it COuld'work'better toward.three
be presented to the White House nomic times. Here is how it the commission urged that^ '^ priority goajs: low unemploy
slve stud:
items and bills [since
Mondfcy.
. This was the most comprehen-
would work:
In the event of a recession, the
tudv
1911,
of money and credit fpresldent could
when a congressional bracket income
cut ,the first
tax rate by, a
government try to devise ' fastar economic
formula tHat would automatically and Stable prices.
this year has had the same
amount of arrests as South 87 —
282 — while 279 are reported for
the strip from Beaumont to Vidor.
38 of FM '105 and 89 < n Highway
12. a total of 710 for the
months alreadv passed.
Wilde chairman of the' The South 87 strip has to share
wiiae, chairman oí ine,of spcederg w¡th 91 already
arrested this vear and 188 last
year. The speeding prize appears
to belong to the strip from Vldor
to Orange on U.S. 90. Last year,
370 speeders were processed and
already -this year. 210. with seven
more months to go.
>On U.S 90 from Beaumont to
Vidor. 158 persons have been
picked up for speeding this year:
6 arrested on FM 105 and 69 on
Highway 12. These figures may he
compared with the 1960 .number of
SAD ENDING-To
Lit.tie League story is
the one
ISM St
about the fellow who failed to tufa
ore-
growth
raíe0aacco0rd,nRWto chlnSffST «Sí I Other major proposals'advanced |M5 ^thc ro ^ fromBeaumont
commission issued a report thatj maximum of 2i per caot. Ha thus ¡ nomic conditions.
(Sea FINANCES, Paga 1^ lio Vidor. and 3 on FM 1 .
in a game report. When the scqr
keeper was asked why hc not.
H| he opined: "Well, 1 got lost in
five the third inning . , . and I knew
whatever I turned in would be
wrong so I Just didn't turn in
anything."
THEN—There's the story about
the poor mother who has the cara
oí two Little Leaguers. The other
oay. one of them had an afterhoon
game and the other, a night game.
In the process of getting one"
ready, cooking the evening meal
and doing a thousand other house
chores, she heard a complaint
from a member of the family
about dinner not being ready.
Said she: "Just be patient . . .
Fve got cite coming and on? going.
Dinner will be sandwiched in bo*
tweéa."
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.
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.
Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961, newspaper, June 18, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143064/m1/1/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.