The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 238, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 15, 1955 Page: 1 of 8
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, •• .'V ;
Salvador Enw
rEnvoy
jes US. To Use
■
OME FIN>
EDITION
iteHMb
xico cmr -up oniaHft
the American ambassador to
dvador who to driving (ran
mall Central American rcpub-
the United States to endor-
se of the Pan American hlgh-
headed (or Laredo Monday
xpected to reach the border
ay. --------*.......— ..........-.......
trip so fgr, Hill said before
K Mexico City on the iaat.
lie leg of the trip from here
redo, has been ‘‘interesting
neventful,”
r six-year-old son, Graham,
at even had a chance to use
»p pistols he brought along
Dot lions and tigers,”’ the 37-
ld diplomat reported,
his wife and two sons left
lalvador last Tuesday. They
riven a total of 1,067 miles
; time they reached Mexico
ate Saturday.
ambassador said U. S. Vice
ent Richard Nixon gave him
ea of making the drive ‘‘to
•age people to use the high-
Iwsht awslw »qfWw
family drove from San Salva-
! far as Tapachula, Mexico,
border with Guatemala bc-
lading their 1953 (Buick) con-
e on a flat car for the 164-
rip to Arriaga, Mexico.
Mexican version of the Pan
can highway ends at the ltt-
rder town of El Ocotal, but
nala has extended its section
h to Tapachula, the largest
in town on the border, about
ickless miles south,
on reaching Arriaga, found
ivas no gasoline for sale, so
aght "10 gallons of lighter
for the trip to Tehuantepec
gasoline station.
i Tehuantepec to Mexico City
beautiful trip, he said,
plans to make a full report
automfobile journey when he
reaches Washington, D. C.
Early
[PHIS, Tenn. -UP-Tailor
skew was asked on his 90th
y if he was making plans
Ire. "Nope," said Askew.
'c n
figure it's quite time yet."
n"knows the new look
ved by diet alone. The
>re youthfully rounded,
longer, the hips flatter,
we bring you these two
rations by PLAYTEX.j
-"... ■ -i.
gin with the new
EX LIVING
T...". .'3.95
In Elastic and Nylon/
1” to flatter, feel, and
hioned for you alone,
•ont dips low, divides
back sets lower, stays
tic sides self-adjust for
Snowy white. Instant -
(ling, dry ing. 32A-40C.
less, seamli
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less sheath of
that slims you down by
ives you free for action.
itside, cloud-soft fabric
torso-trimming non-roll
int washing and drying.
tm, ‘I?
-•II
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON
—(If)— Serif-
ket experts expressed fears Tues-
day of tighter government stock
............:_____:......_
tary of the Treasury George M.
restrictions on the heels of Mon-
day’s sharp market break — the
William Fulbrtght's banking com- the experts refused to concede that
mlttee. Tuesday’s market reflected condi-
Thcy said Monday’s break espe- tier: prevalent In 1929.
daily reflected fears that the in-
of the market
Humphrey Tuesday “urged~tlie" greatest since late 1929.
i the railbond.
While the track crewman in distance grinds rides of a Joint, i
THREE YEARS of research brought forth a revolutionary
ln*the*last M^eanT Thlf unft links nidi roctlon together aectutriy ns electrical conductors, eliminat-
•|jng faulty signal operations.
Senate Banking committee to ob-
serve caution in its investigation
of the stock market boom.
Humphrey testified In the
wake of the worst market break
since 1929- Some experts have
blamed the investigation for the
910 billion drop in stock values
In the last 10 days. The market
rallied Tuesday with defense
shares leading the recovery.
Prices tumbled as much-as. $12 curjtiCS,
ve:. igatlon would lead to stiffer
restrictions on the trading of se-
MARKET WATCHED
Monday in the king-sired selling
wave. The total value ot stocks
listed on the New York Stock Ex-
change dipped 93 billion.
The loss In values Monday was
added to a 97 billion decline of last
Some expressed fear the stock
market study would lead to inves-
tigations of the profits of Indus-
tries selling defense Items, such as
aircraft and shipbuilding firms.
They especially feared the possl-
(International)
week, the greatest for any wek- billty of renegotiation of contracts
long period in 15 years. 0r new tax proposals which would
Nearly every stock market ana- affect profits,
lyst attributed the stock break di- The general price decline which
rectly or indirectly to the market began March 7 was in itself dis-
NEW YORK — UP—Stock mar- study being conducted by Sen. J. concerting to most Investor*. But
WASHINGTON - UP-Treasury
Secretary George M. Humphrey
testified Tuesday in the wake of
the worst break In stock prices
since 1929 that the Eisenhower ad-
ministration is watching the mar-
ket closely.
But the overall tone of his state-
ment to the Senate Banking com-
mittee was that the sharp rise in
stock prices In the past 18 month*
had been generally healthy. The
committee Is conducting a ‘‘friend-
ly'* Investigation
boom.
The market rise reflected ‘‘in
part the rebirth of confidence In
the functioning of our free enter-
prise system," Humphrey said.
And he gave no indication the
administration is contemplating
any new restrictive measures.
Meanwhile, a split widened in
the committee over what part its
investigation had in recent mar-
ket drops which wiped out 910 bil-
lion in market values.
Monday's 93 billion break car-
ried the industrial average down
nearly 12 points. A recovery at the
close left the net loss for the ses-
sion at nearly 10 points.
New U.S.
Has Own
Missile
Brain'
Machinists
Okay Humble
Pay Increase
Peress Case Probed
tor planes as the new F-102 and Announcement of the new mis-
possible the present F-89. Both are silev and details on its electronic
long-range, all-weather jet fight- "brain” were timed to coincide
crs. with a speech in Dayton. Ohio, by
Die Falcon, under development Assistant Air Secretary Trevor
Bv CHARLES CORDDRY
WASHINGTON - UP-Thc Air
Force unveiled a supersonic guid-
ed missile Tuesday that can
“think” for itself and soon will be *.«= , .................. -------
available to destroy enemy bomb- by Hughes Aircraft Co., since 1947, Gardner.
ers at great distances from Amer- soon will become a part of the reg- He told an Air Force Institute of
lean targets. ular armament of some tntercep-
Making public first official de- tor units, the Air Force said.
Movies shown reporters revealed
guided rocket, pointed
tails on the Falcon guided aircraft
rocket (GARt, the Air Force de-
scribed It as "the smallest guided
missile in production and the only
air-to-air missile with a brain’ of
Its own."
The slender, six-foot, blunt-nosed
rocket will be carried beneath the
wing of such high speed intcrcCp-
how the
its way by the launching ail-plane,
pursues its target despite effort by
the bomber to evade it. World War
II B-17 target drones-"disintegrat-
ed as the Falcon plowed Into them.
The Air Force said similar results
have been achieved against jet
propelled targets. /
Technology graduating class that
Falcon will be one of the most Im-
portant air defense developments
since radar.
"What the American people will
perhaps take greatest comfort in
knowing Is that the Falcon is de-
signed for use in Air Force inter-
ceptors at bases in far-off Arctic
regions and other locations many,
many miles from our centers of
population," Gardner said.
Lodge 1051 of International
Association of Machinists at
Baytown Refinery Monday night
accepted a 10-cent hourly wage
Increase offered by Humble OIL
Some 70 members of the Ba.\ -
town lodge were on hand for the
voting, which took place at the
Carpenter’* hall on Decker
drive.
President R. M. Walker presid-
ed at the meeting.
Among the guests was J. B.
Ctingman, secretary of District
97 of IAM.
Next meeting will bet held
March 29,
By HERBERT FOSTER
WASHINGTON -UP-Scnate in-
vestigators Tuesday opened
The Peress case was a key bat- honorably discharged after refus-
tie In McCarthy’s war with the lng to tell McCarthy whether he
Army last year. He repeatedly de- was a Communist.
persons responsible for the den-
tist's promotion to major and his
honorable discharge while Army
files contained derogatory security
Information about him.
McClellan declared In an open-
ing statement that he felt the sub-
committee Is entitled to the in-
spector general's report on Peress,
the New York dentist who was
rctary Robert T. Stevens of with-
holding a pertinent document.
This time it was a Democratic
chairman, Sen. John L. McClellan
(Ark.), instead of Scn.^Joseph R.
McCarthy (R-Wis.), who accused
Stevens of less than full co-opera-
tion in disclosing all about the
Army career of former Maj. Irving
Peress.
had been co-Operatlve In meeting
other requests and making wit-
nesses available.
But McClellan said the Army re-
fused to disclose the report of the
Inspector general, who Investigated
the Peress case. Subcommittee
counsel Robert F. Kennedy got to
look at It for an hour and a half,
McClellan said, but it was taken
from him and the Army would not
return It.
He disclosed correspondence
with Stevens, who said the Army
was co-operating as hard as it
Stevens promised to furnish
"every substantive fact” from the
inspector general’s report, but not
the names of Informants.
And the Army secretary added:
"Of course, t he conclusions anil
recommendations made to me in
a confidential manner by (he in-
spector general are highly privi-
leged and are not being
furnished."
SUN SPOTS
Baytown Man's Stolen Auto
Stops Briefly In Cleveland
Tough Luck Kids
TOUGH LUCK, k-ds, but there
won’t be %n ftll-dcy holiday next
Friday to- the annual Southeast
Texas section mcct'ng o' teachers.
Only delegates to the convention
will be excused from their Classes.
There used to be holidays on this
day (BGA), but that was "BcfCse
Gilmer Aikin.’’
O. R. Kirkland’s 1950 Mercury was stolen Monday night while he
:d his
Streets No
Racetrack,
Says Chief
and his family attended a movie.
Kirkland told police he had the keys to the ear in his pocket.
The dark navY blue car has license number MS 9208.
7K tew minutes after police broadcast a description of the
car around midnight, Cleveland officers notified Baytown that a car
of that description (had been at a service station in Cleveland. The
driver was a blond teenage youth who drove into the service station,
bought $2.65 worth of gasoline' and sped away without paying for it.
Brotherhood Meet
MEN’S BROTHERHOOD of the
First Presbyterian church will
meet at 7 p.m- Tuesday/ at the
church fellowship hall. ,<
Cold Front Hits Panhandle.
But Arrival Here Doubtful
By A. SUFFERER
This used to be harl kari day, to
borrow a term from the Japanese.
It is March 15, and that used to
Police Chief W. R. Montgomery be the deadline for final payments
had news Tuesday for the hot- of income tax for those who did
Missouri street. ' checks.
‘That’s no speecfway. There’s a Even though the deadline has
30-mile speed limit from one end been moved back to April 15, this
of the street to the other, and it still is the time of year where peo-
will be enforced,” he said. pie are screaming at the income
Speed limit signs had been In- tax collectors about the amount
stalled Tuesday and patrolmen will of their tax bills,
be stationed along the street to en- The fojks are writing letter* to
March 15 Was Once-
'Hari-Kari Day
a aiTtwFRRK ehaneea are their salaries have not If you think too m
U.S.
Distinguished ■
THREE STUDENTS 'from Bay-
town have been designated distin-
guished students for the fall se-
mester, 1954, at Texas A and M
College. A distinguished student
must have a. gradeipoint ration of
2.25 Or better and/ had no grade
below that of "C.’’ They are X. B.
Reed Jr., William Joseph Ruez,
and Eddie V. Gr*y.
Rice. Rites 1
Funeral services for Joseph Pe-
ter Rice who died Monday in De-
Queen Ark., will be held at 10 a m.
Wedn
tral portion of the state by noon.
force the speed limit, Montgomery
Said.
Other traffic control measures
will be enforced also in order to
cut down the danger from speed-
flurries.
The front was expected to hold
temperatures 15 to 20 degrees be-
low the unseasonable highs of the
past several weeks as it pushes
into the state. Forecasters said
light snow flurries were expected
bv nightfall in tbe Texas Panhan-
dle.
, The front moved into the state
duriig the night and by morning
had reached Wichita Falls and
ora. « ojvss »-s
the editor*. White heat telephone
calls are received, but invariably
In the wrong place.
Don’t blame the tax collector.
The Internal Revenue Service la ft
good organization, carrying out its
job. Don’t cuas thoae boya. They
didn’t make the lawi and set the
rates. They have to pay, too, and
ten, pastor of Central Assembly of
God church, officiating.
By UNITED PRESS
A touch of winter returned to Forecasters said the front might ing cars and congested traffic.
gSSr SaSSS
»r., “ ssri
northeasterly direction and never 3toP on HuWn*. Montgomery
reach the coast. Streets Intersecting or entering
Cloudiness was back of the front Mlssourl aUo wlI1 ha\e atop signs
wssawaas sa “ sr-ust-ar
s *ttesTssrwss _________.... ______
rtop before 'Mitering Missouri. Tli. tan, ® to »!!»«*»“
day.' compared wfth temperatures
In the high 70s and low 80s the
expected to reach the north cen- past week.
chances are their aalarlea have not
been raiaed in proportion to yours.
If you think your Job of filling
out a return is complicated, write
your congressman—not .your Gut
collector. We have just studied the
type.
You may not realize It, but 4414
million people pay income taxes.
Of those, 33 million make'’ leas
than *5,000 ft year. Another''nine
million make between 95,000 and
910,000.
So, 42 of 44 million taxpayers
make under 910,000 but they pay
less than half the 930 millions col-
lected. There are only 30,000 who
make more than $100,000 a year,
only 1,131 who earn over *500,000
a year.
The group that makes *60,000 ft
year and less pays 81 per cent of
the Income taxes.
• jervice is pleased, future ones; :
vatlon.Ust year # fixed by V
.yJSftWSC*
i ^result, hum
of students g<
If you think too many people are
having to pay too much income
tax, don’t tell the tax collector. De-
mand less government, yourself.
The revenue jervice t* pleased
with on^ inno
mad* upjome
erk Ajwresuft. hindr*b at thou.
s«nda of student* got a good In-
struction in what their parents
have to pay, how they pay It and
what It goes for. They Icsrned,
among other things, that federal
spending Increased 87 fold in the
40 years and two global wars since
Woodrow Wilson prepared his na-
tional budget for 1918.
In 1918 the entire federal estab-
lishment spent less than one billion
dollars and had a surplus of >58
millions. In 1925 Cal Coolldge spent
only 92,881,000,000, had a surplus
of *7TP millions
In the wartime year of 1*45
Franklin Roosevelt spent 998 bil-
lions and went In debt *53 billions.
Of your tax dollar, 65 cents goes
(Or past wars and prepartion for
; 25 cent for ‘’charge*
Interest, veteran*
state . 0fc/at*
Th* government's dollar comes
48 cents from Income taxes,
26
cents from corporation Incomes,
15 cents from excise, 7 cents from
customs and other and 4 cents
from borrowing
It costs the government, among
other things. 9* millions a year
just to write checks for most —
not all civilian activities, about
4'» cent* a check.
By 1857 there will be electronic
devices able to produce checks »
day, eliminating the need of 225
employes.
Don’t blame the tax collector-
'New' Citizens Given Vote Right
San Anfonio
Baytown Ordinance Grants Them Franchise Woman Seeks
1 Husband Here
To Austin
Constable Paul Anderson and
Justice of (he Peace Walter Queen
were in Austin Tuesday to support
a bill before the legislature which
would increase the filing fee in
small claims suits from $2 to $5
'Turnabout' May Yet-Escape
Indictment In Perjury Case
Ettlinger To Speak
DR. H. J. ETTLINGER,
WASHINGTON -UP- No less
astonishing than Harvey Matu-
sow's claimed invention of a string-
less yo-yo is the fact that he has
succeeded in lying publicly under
The self • confessed liar will ap-
pear Wednesday before U.S. Dis-
trict Judge R. E. Thomason in El
Paso, Tex., for a hearing on crim-
Qualiflccf voter* added to Bay- limits of th* City of Baytown for Pruett and Bergeron have op-
ist 10 two years. ponents. No one chose to contest
ston regulations will be strictly annexation were officially given Under the revised rules, a can- Councilman Lacy I^sk of District
asA.52.ssw: srs T““dw * ‘ -vf ■ aars J*
are Installed he said Mrs. Edna Oliver, city secretary, qualify for a race. Bill Reichart opposes rrueii m
MontSy“saw he and City said Tuesday no change* In voting Meanwhile, Mrs. Oliver was the mayor. race u l Adrien F.
Manager C. D. Middleton had boxes had been made since the re- ready to order ballots for the up- ' dis-
mrtHp a ntirvov of Missouri street cent districting. coming election, which put* only Cyril (Dutch) i taceK wag ai»
through Monday and Tuesday A new ordinance also made in- Mayor R. H. Pruett and District qualified from the mayor i race y
morning and the movement of valid a sentence of the city charter 2 Councilman Rufus Bergeron to City Attorney Geo ge - '
traffic on that street warrants the that requires a city candidate to the test that Is, barr'n*'back°taxes’’ °
regulations that have been decided have lived in the incorporate Of the four incumbents, only owes back taxes.
upon.
of the faculty of the University of oath without any certainty of be- Inal contempt charges. Thomason
Texas, will be the principal speak- *n? indicted for perjury. upheld last week die conviction of
SSEi ££L-lavas
at, high schols urging youngster, h/was !yJng He may be trapped an affidavit required by the Na‘
t°‘ PrePare themselves for college on charges of criminal contempt tional Labor Relations Board,
work that will lead to engineering 0f court f0r that. But there has
degrees. Mose Sumner will be pro- been no progress so far on per-
In addition, traffic movement on
two one-way streets entering
Minnesota will be reversed to ex-
pedite traffic? from Missouri, onto
Oklahoma to Minnesota.
Beginning next Monday morn-
ing, traffic which flows south on
Oklahoma from W i« e o n s i n to magers
ss -s »-« *
on Colorado from Wisconsin to, P^bli™, of I’li8ln*
Minnesota which now moves north.
Texas Needs $60 Million In New Revenue
House Group Approves Budget $51 Million In 'Red'
William G. Carson’s wife In
San Antonio is trying to locate
him to tell him that their daugh-
ter Is seriously ill-
Carson came to Baytown this
weekend to look for work, and
m«y be trying to find employ-
ment as a merchant seaman or
truck driver, she said.
Mhe has requested police to as-
sist in locating him to give him
the message of their child's ill-
ness. Anyone who knows his
whereabouts is asked to call her
at Pershing 97511 in 8an An-
tonio or notify Baytown police
department.
AUSTIN -
looked
UP—Texas law- yt -rs. totaling *1,558,382,509 from
Tuesday to
will be reversed to move south.
gram chairn
Around Town
jury charges
will be made.
and perhaps none
Jencks had sought a new trial by
reason of the Matusow switch.
Matusow had been a witness
against him.
EVELYN TRCHALEK making
gobd use of Jier muscles, and this
time it’s......
Henry B; Field Dies At 60
Has Resided In Baytown 35 Years
Bearfcat Band Sets
Concert At REL
of raising an additional
S60 million in taxes, after the
House Appropriations committee
approved a gigantic 91,512,426,951
spending program for the next
biennium.
Possible floor action on the rec-
ord-sized spending program was
expected sometime this week.
Meantime, a Senate Finance sub-
committee recommended an, even
bigger budget for the 1956-57 fiscal
all funds. The recommended bill
calls for new tax needs of more
than 951 million.
House member* were toid Mon-
day by Speaker Jim Lindsey that
a speedup was needed in legisla-
tive work to meet the problem of
raising some 960 million in ad-
ditional taxes. 1 Lindsey says
stepped up action also was needed
on such issues as water conserva-
tion and proposed insurance and
veterans land reforms.
The House spending bill con-
tains an increase of *33.6 million
over the present spending, and
calls for a general fund appropria
tion of 9212.239,254. Much of the
extra money would go for public
schools, colleges and universities,
state hospitals, highways and pub-
lic welfare.
It also provides for a boost of
some *20 million in the state s
minimum foundation school fund.
Highways figured for an increase
of some *27.4 million. Public wel-
fare benefits, including old age as-
sistance, also come In for an extra
|14 million.
West Main
Bridge Traffic
Four Baytown students will per-
form with the Sam Houston Bear-
not the muscles in her ceri^llerf& ufhigh school “I SHClII R&tUrfla' ShG SfllCf ■» Afld Sltfs Did!*
tbligue . . . Lucile Beard telling Henry B. Field, 60, resident of Funeral services will be neld at auditorium. I vmBI BWTWlil H| vllte wWllA
tew "scared” she is . . . Beulah Baytown for 35 years and a well- 9;15 ^ Wednesday at Earthman Mta Anna Vann, former REL
Miles says her flowers are “Just known refinery worker, died at chapel, and at 9:30 a.m. at St £SJ5*Q1a' Brawn
readv°to'head^back fcThe? office 7:30 P'm' Mond8y at * Bayt0Wn JosePh’* CathoIic church w,th ^ ^mer REL trombonUt, playi
■- A— *3?. * a— - K-iKTSnSt ar c«
by on her way home. ® powernouse operator ai jaj wlllbe In the Garden of Geth- ... Bearkat band
£ aw?y° on,atiiSt*Me lS ffl^eVInd S. ~_at H°Uf,t0n ™der dike are Donny Hobbs, cornet, and Bu-
— * 1 £$th Gordon busy hospital treatment tor the most of
ssvavssj;
nalia... Grace Gaston getting all
set tor the summer with a pair of
pink shoes.
Mrs. C. B. Cunningham checking
her prospects,. . . Irene Conn so.
{itwaptvMi , , # « »»wvsui trot
boty these days she has no time
for anything but enjoying herself
Ides Of March Bring
Clouds, Wind Here
tion of Earthman’s.
A rosary will be recited at 8 p.m.
Tuesday with Rev. Hebert in
charge.
Survivors are hte widow, Mrs.
Mabel France* Field of Baytown;
two brothers, W. J. Field of Los
Angeles Calif., and R. C. Field of
Tucson, Ariz., and one sister, Mrs-
Abbie Fields of:
When Frank Pipkina’ wife re-
turned, a> she told him she would,
she came with a bang!
Pipkins’ lower jaw was shot off
by a blast from a shotgun she had
borrowed from a neighbor. He Is
in Jefferson Davis hospital in
critical condition.
The couple, living In Barrett Set-
tlement, had an argument oyer
shotgun, Pipkins ran Into the bath-
room and closed the door. She
placed the gun barrel against the
door and pulled the trigger, the
officers said.
The woman accompanied her
husband to San Jacinto Memorial
hospital where he was g*v«n em‘
ergency treatment. No charge has
been filed against her, Brown said.
Goose Creek stream bridge on
West Main was closed Monday
as the elty started laying a
sewage interceptor line across
the street near the bridge.
City Manager C. Darwin Mid-
dleton said Tuesday he was hop-
ing for good weather so the pro-
ject conuld be complete “as soon
AA pOS8iblf<w
Public Works Director C. W.
Grantham said last week - the
bridge would possibly be dosed
for two weeks.
_ - The ■ Ides of March brought „ _
being busy . , i Medora Breaux c)oud skjes a ^ bree2e Abbie Ftelds ot Ba?!iSwn-
among those qlotmg you-know- _ . _ . ’ , Pallbearers will be J. B. Phillips,
Which TV drodpan character . J. W- Hubbard, Robert Lange, Don
Art Liiitelman say* it’s not the weather thrMgti at least a part or Thurston Bietz and Albert
in the’weather but the age the day Tuesday,
some folks all chilly on The thermometer registered
Imorning . . . Louise tow of « Mosdmr and had risen to
headed for Houston in a 71 at 10 a.m. The
Monday was 79 degrees.
ford Fudge, bass.
Tickets mav be bought at the
door, J. C. Burket, REL band
director, said. They are 50 cents,
adults, and 35 cents, students. * .........
Directed by Ed Boyd, the 82- wj,'e'ther she should continue going
piece band ts now on toor and ar- ^ gchoo, 0eputy sheriff
rives In Baytown directly from a M M. Brown said.
Jill heein at T SO o m The woman told Brown and
concert will begin at 7.80 p.m. Deputy sheriff jack Middleton
m * n. " that Pipkin* struck her with a
Bums TO Is warn saucepan then beat her with a
WAXAHACHIE, Tex.-^tfT-Elpe broomstick. When she finally
Thurston, Ralph Bietz and Albert p Geddie of Dallas was burned to broke away from him she told
Marvick. death Monday night and two men him, “I’m leaving, but I'm coming
___ were "injured in a two-autottobite back,” according to Deputy 8her-
maxlmum “for Fund trill receive contribution* in accident on U.S. 77 about five Uf Brown. ,
memory of Field. miles north of Waxahachie. When she returned with the
1 — * » -f * r--*- • i--Tii»iantir'
Tax Cut Bill's Defeat Seen
Knowlend Says Senate Will 'Kill' It
Heber Page Begins
19S5 City Directory
Heber Page, publisher at Bay-
WA3HINGTON -UP-Senate
Republican leader William F.
Knowland predicted after a White
House, conference that the Senate
will defeat a Democratic tax cut
proposal in a showdown vote Tues-
day.
He made the forecast after he
and other GOP congressional lead-
ers held their weekly legislative
conference with
bower.
President Eisen-
Administration forces in the Sen- with Baytown.
__“W# nlAn M
town city directories since
ha* returned to atari work next
Monday on a 1955 edition.
The last directory was published
in 1953, and it marked tie 20th an-
niversary of Page’s association
ate claimed a two to four vote
edge to defeat the Democratic
plan, under which income taxes
would be cut by 920 for each tax-
payer and *10 for each dependent,
except wives. The cut would i>e
We plan several innovations
this year that should moke the ^
Baytown directory a model for O 1
city of its size anywhere in tho f
limited largely to persons earning
less than *5,000 a year.
country,” he said.
The book will be prepared
published for distribution ta
late summer, he said.
.aiasai^-j
TUL!
grinnln
Vtolta.
to rob
jail fi
The
suspcc
hash
since 1
superi
comm
•It
Doss
m*rk«
and v
is our
comm
ment.
Ada
house:
sane -
husbai
homa
est hi
Mr
115 M
of a s<
14 at
tal H
ounce:
Mrs.
and 1
Louis,
Mrs.
Kans..
VV. E
Mr
311 S
Tcresi
San Ji
weigh
Grand
L. Ga
V. Wi
Mr.
2301
birth
Marcl
hospil
ounce
Mrs.
and 3
of Ch
LEMS
Mr.
1900 M
twin <
town
weight
and I
pound:
___>
are' tl
Hawkl
Mr*. 1
Great-
Mrs. i
Kansa
Mr.
1002 I
a son,
at Sa:
He w
ounce
Mrs. :
Mr. ai
as Pi
grand
dna.
Edn
' i
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 238, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 15, 1955, newspaper, March 15, 1955; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041569/m1/1/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.