The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 271, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1964 Page: 24 of 24
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I
*'
QTfjr Saijtnum fcmt Wednesday, August 5,_J964
Johnson's Actions Meet Entire Senate Approval
WASHINGTON .{API. It rtejscnce," Dirksen said- he lav
Republiciffi and Democratic
loaders agreed today to seek
swift bi-partisan Scnatp approv-
al of a declaration of support
of. President Johnson's actions
Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-
Mont., and Everett M. Dirksen,
1W11., the majority and minori-
ty leaders, reached the agree-
ment in a conference in the
Senate chamber in advance of
today's Senate session.."
■ Declaring - "Sliced is of es-
tieved a resolution expressing
bipartisan support of the Presi-
dent should receive immediate
action, without waiting for the
all necessary measures” to de-
fend peace and freedom in
Southeast Asia,
The two leaders held their
Senate Foreign
clear it first.
Relations and
.meeting in the So pate at Dirk-
'sen's desk, with newsmen clus-
Mansfipld said he agreed.
Titus, a vote might come be-
fore nightfall on a historic reso-
lution throwing the* Senate’s
behind the President's
declaration that the United
States is determined ^'.tp take
hear their every word,
Johns
son requested the resolu-
tion in a talk to the nation
Tuesday night, in which he dis-
closed the United States had
group there was unanimous
its approval of this sort of ac-
tion," the Montana Democrat
said.
Today In Washington
WASHINGTON (APi - Theidcaik^ resignation or removal of
Sena'te Judiciary Committee has a president from office.
annmvcd a mvmosed const it u- The amendment most be ap-
approved a proposed constitu-
tional amendment t% fleal with
presidential -disability and' a vat
cancy in the vice presidency.
filled by,nomination of a presi-
dent and confirmation by a ma-
jority of both houses of Con-
gress.--.....—------------*
The amendment teas devel-
oped by a judiciary subcommit-
tee headed by Sen. Birch Bayh,
D-Ind. , I,.
■ •nie amendment states that ^
the vice president shall be-1 WoUld resume office by inform-
come president” in case of theming Congress in writing.
The amendment mrfst ty ap-
proved by two-tmrds of the
House and Senate, and thfee-
three^fourths of the 50 stales
with oflivm von
launched an air strike against
North Vietnamese gun boats
and shore facilities in retalia-
tion for two attacks by PT
t>OHts - on HJi Sr destroyers..
The President had discussed
the-resolution earlier at a meet-
ing with congressional leaders
and Mansfield said there had
been no opposition to it.
“It seemed to me that the
Sen! Leverctt Saltonstall
thusttfa^ chairman of the
rfconfercnce of all Republican
senators, said, "I believe the
Republicans in Congress will
supi»rt the President in any
necessary action he may take to
obtain a measure of security for
the free world in the Far East."
Under the amendment, the of- with seven y<
flee of vice president would IxP.peare. unlikely at the current
-* - —« Session of Congress,
The vice president would be-
come "acting president" if the
president declares in writing he
is unable to discharge his du-
ties, or if he. with support of a
ajority of the Cabinet, informs
j Congress that the president is
U.S. Warships In Japan
TOKYO (API - More than 20
miles south.of here, left for un-
known destinations tonight, the
Kyodo News .Service said. The
Navy refused to confirm* the Ky-
odo report.
Kyodo, quoting reliable
sources, said all shore leave for
US. Navy servicemen in the
—val base had been canceled.
■»
Funeral
Notices
DERRY
Funeral services will be held at J p.m.
Ft laav for i Albert Layton Berry, 00. of
Sail For'Unknown'Site
ayton I
Wednei
at his home.
A retired school custodian, he naa uvea
in Baytown 77 years. He was a native of
Milam County.
US Navfbase m1 ^ikosuka *00 JrRcK
mil(>a snmhnf bore, teftfor’un- crwTcci
CONFIDENCE
ts not acquired overnight, it is
something built over the years
7*
X
x<
LI
BY Bj
^ > For m«iy years we have consid
ered CUSTOMER CONFIDENCE
OUR MOST VALUABLE ASSET.
F If R N ITU R E
OAVTOWN'S GREAT
FURNITURE STORE
mw.
fill be In Cedor Crest Cemetery.
Berry I* survived by~M» widow, Me*...
Eh Chambers Berry of Baytown; two
sons, V. L. Berry of Baytown ond W. W.
Berry of Taylor; two brothers, S. M.
Beiry of Sherman and Willte Berry of
Fort Worth; two sisters, Mrs. Doria Bid-
dy of Clair, Okla., and Mrs. Elvh Rich-
ard of Sweetwater. Also surviving are
five grandchildren and two great-grand-
Judy Ann Tilton
Injured In Car
Wreck On Texas
SINGAPORE PREMIER FACES
BIGGEST EIGHT OF CAREER
SINGAPORE (AP* Singa-
Gull Coast Hospital at 6:19 p.m.
Tuesday for treatment of inju-
ries In an automobile collision
at Texas and Seventh.
She suffered neck and throat
injuries. The passenger in her
car was Karen Gillespie, 15,
of Mont Beivieu, who was treat-
and released at Gulf Coast
JOHN Gl'EMpLE, director of
technical and vocational edu-
cation at Lee College, has
been elected) vice president of
tfie~ Texas Association for 01-
rectors and Supervisors of
Trade and Industrial Educa-
tion. Ho has also been named
section chairman for .tb« or-
ganization’s junior college
technical and .vocational edu-
cation division. Guemple was
named to these honors at the
group’s recent meeting in Aus-
tin.
the nose and minor injury
on her forehead. '■>
Driver of the other car was
Marie Lambert Zizelman, of 206
N. Seventh, who was not injur-
ed. according to Officer M. J.
Gill's report- . •
Gill said the Zizelman ear
was headed east on Texas and
had stopped in the traffic lane
to make a left turn on Seventh.
wha’t could be the biggest fight
of his-career.
At stake is his*rule over this
island city, the commercial ceh-
ter of young Malaysia. It has
long been a hotbed of leftist agi-
tation and a prime target for
Southeast Asia’s Reds.
Elected by a landslide In 1959,
r Lee has beaten back opposition
from) the extreme ‘ left-occa-
sionally jailing top pro-Commu-
nist politicians—while pushing a
moderately Socialist program
aimed at stabilizing Singapore.
This time, Lee says, the
threat comes from the far right.
He blames. Malay ‘toxtrem-
isls” for ldSU Week’s savage ra-
cial clashes betweeh Malays
and Chinese, and
Lee is a brilliant, Cambridge-
educated lawyer who combined
Powerful Malay circles in Ku-
.......____________ __________ ala Lumpur have begun calling
a toueh-of intebeetual amgflfice for m-ehange-lw-Singaporeis gov
with a sure feel of the masses.
He and his party have political
plans that stretch into the Ma-
layan heartland of Malaysia.
With Singapore’s. stability
again thrown in doubt by {he re-
cent racial outburst, Lee could
be facing an uphill struggle.
to the Brmisoi,
Is good t
for two tick'
at the Bn
The niovlt
“THE I NSINKA
eminent. , ...
But polittoal analysts here
point out that Lee, with contin-
ued s'upport of his people, holds
a trump card which Malaysia’s
leaders cannot ignore.
If he goes, Singapore may go
ith him—and Malaysia, too.
[VOL4l.NO.27J
* _
Second Stock Offer
Told By Gonzalez
openly In San Antonio and fhouj
it from-the housetops? He had
■may be just the beginning,
Unless "we read the di
Miss Tilton was traveling east ... ..... , .
on East* Texas and was unable a«,.Jhjn
^ASHiNGTON (AP) - Rep.
Henry B. Gonzalez, who told the
warns this House on Monday that a Texas
banker had offered to give him
GiU said.
Other auto accidents TUPSday
in which no injuries were re-
ported happened at Little Road
and Decker; in the 200 block of
West Texas; at West Main and
South Main; and on West Gulf.
ALGERIA IS REORGANIZING
ALONG SOVIET BLOC LINES
By MICHAEL GOLDSMITH
ALGIERS, Algeria (API -In
$14,000 worth of stock, disclosed
today that a Texas businessman
had offered him stock worth $13,-
000.
no answer.
"Then he said. 'Well, why
don’t I buy a house in Washing?
ton, and you can use it. I visit
ton, and you
Washington a lot.’
m
Gonzalez, a Texas Democrat, if some enemy' of his or
tin Hiv<na4 H/nnn hmki nftiw i* IK. Jus
thinking paint an even more
gloomy picture: an "ungovern-
able” Singapore—and the break-
ing premier’s ‘said he turned down both ofers mine Brought it out, He said he
as potential conflicts of interest, had done the same thing for a
He is a member of the House business associate. I said that’s
up of Malaysia.
Lee has a<
accused ultranation-
alist Malays in Kuala Lumpur,
the federal capital, of outdoing
hostile Indonesia in efforts to
“set Malaysian against Malay-
sian on the basis of race.”
Without naming names, Lee
has: made it plain, he -means
some of the leading figures in
the United Malay National Or-
Banking and Currency Commit-
tee.
He declined to name either of
the men.
On Monday, Gonzalez said in
a House speech that a banker in
his hometown of San Antonio of-
fered to put him on the board of
directors of a- new bank and
give him $14,000 worth of stock
in it ; -
talist, a smoking gun in each
hand, squatting comfortably on
the body of an African worker. _ ... ..
Sv A translated Chinese ulatlon through the , govern-
nsf ,nd
A cartoonlih the organ of the
Algerian Labor Federation de-
wagES«ag»*8& ttawaai
straight at tfie reader._______ . . - . _. _
Theseare allpartbf'a prop- dnee given ta aimed Eui
ganda campaign drummed .day mercenaries in Katanga.
Nearb;
poem p;
“With 1,000 Chinese corpses
we will cover our costs,-
“ With 100,000 Chinese dead
Sit&d
Down the street, an official
exhibit
and’nighV'into The Algerian pop- These men include Serge Mi-
nintinn thmimh the pnvem- chel. once press chief of the
the Korean War. The govern-
ment daily Le Peuple carries
two photographs side by side to
illustrale Ji^e in Korea:
girls, folk-dancing in the North,
police breaking up a students
demonstration in the South.
BOSCH’S
„„ now editor or Algiers omy *ve-
It irritates’American and oth- nihg paper, Alger.Ce Spir. j-
er Western diplomats, without, Communist sympathizers con-
however, making them fear an trol all the news Available to the
outright-Communist takeover or Algerian public through press or
a great spread of Red influence Tradio. The views of Ben Bella s
.1PUILP. __
, fugitive opponents are: sup-
Bella pressed. The Western viewpoint
on world issues is ignored or
to Soviet domination. Neverthe- confiscated whenever they con-
less, Ben Bella's National Li- tain material regarded by the
beration Front - FLN - is the regime as critical or merely
only ruling parly in. an Arab uhenthusiastic.
state to have established organ- Nevertheless. Western diplo-
ic .‘'brotherly ties” with jhe S«- mats believe ->fne propaganda
viet Communist party.
The Algerian Communist par- any widespread anti-Western
has been dissolved and its feeling among the Algerian po-
memibers were admitted indi- pulation.
vidually into the FLN. The FLN
is being reorganized throughout
All “ “■* "’1,n<7
PHONE 582-7974
If-
AUGUST
F 1S
SPECIALS
GOOD
THURJDAV
SB I DAY A
SATURDAY
• i—
DOUBLE STAMPS
TUESDAY -
WITH 2.50 GROCERY ORDER
SPECIALS
GOOD
THUBSDAV,
FBI DAY 4
SATUBDAY
SSr&fla
AUGUST
6-7-8
VEAL ROUND
STEAK
-Ltr-
Declcers lowaria
BACON .......
Fresh Ground
HAMBURGER
Vast
CUTLETS
......lb. 49c
T~- IT ~,rTn'~~0Uk........
..iB. 39c
:...u>. 98c
. Good Beef
SEVBJ STEAK
Good Beef Shoulder
ROAST
Grade A------------------.........
FRYERS
.CUTUP
33c Lb. 27c
Family
...Size
DRUGS
CREST .
TOOTHPASTE .
HEAP ‘N SHOULDERS
.Beg. 89t 69C
r
SHAMPOO* I
I GILLETTE STAINLESS STEEL
' RAZOR BLADES!
Criseo
Shortening
Gladiola
No Cigarettes.
3S5?c
FOR
69c
FROZEN FOOD
BANQUET Apple, Charry, Peach
FRUIT PIES..... 2
LIBBY
MIXED VEGETABLES Lb ».,
BLACHEYE.;.!^.- -v:- ...
rCAj .-iifiif..LB. BAG YvC
BANQUET • » r
43c
FLOUR
IlUUdale Mixed Freestone
PEACHES..........
fiosedalo Crashed —:
C 43c
..*14 Can
.;..SMCan
Alma Shoestring
POTATOES
Libby
PINK SALMON.....t.JL1
Breast of Chicken
CHUNK TUNA
Hama strawberry
PRESERVES
Foremost
MEUORINE
......
Can 27C
.12 Oz. Jar 29C
tsV
2 Cans 17C
59c
IJte Fluff
BISCUITS
Gold IV Korn 190^ Corn Gil
MARGARINE
..Can
^4
MAXWELL HOUSE
I
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: ■ j
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CALIFORNIA
POTATOES
| 1ABCC -—:
LETTUCE ..........
FRESH FLORIDA
| TOMATOES .....t........
peachT
Head
• it t's# • • <
LJ»|
The Dow Jones industrial av-
erage - which had been down
as much as 8.90 at the end of j
first hour — Hfid cut its loss ««
to 4.40 at noon, when it stood
at 828.37. T* .
International Harvester and
Du Pont were down about 2
each. Losses of a point or more
nFffUfimr 49c ii^a
Stock Market Has
’Worst Selling'
Since JFK Death
NEW. YORK (API — The
slock fitarl
under the . ..
.■President Kennedy’s assassina-
tion But was firming and cutting
known in Algiers political
.. "T., Affmiiv”
:hel, ■"*»<— .—
Congo’s Patrice Lumumba and
r editor of Algiers’ only
Today, he told a newsman
that a Texas businessman had
Minister
man’s ruling Alliance party.
approached him with an offer of
$13,000 worth of stock in a com-
pany he controlled.
lority. On)
lay minority, Only days before
the rioting erupted, they formed
an “action committee” which
they said was designed to safe-
guard Malay interests here.
A showdown on the r
betwreaLawaad Bahman seems ^ '“Avara buffered a ruiiture Of
lkTho mT.miAT fans cfrvpH nhtice self-made imlionaire, the con- blood vessels in the neck at ap- *.
The premier has served notice
he would like to see Rahman
muzzle ultranationalists i n
UMNO, as a starter.
The next step, Lee / says’, feitealez:
wmst:
top ot the racial riots, point up
the divisive factors at work in
10-month-qld Malaysia, with its
population of 4.2 million Chinese,
4 million Malays and a mixture
machine has failed to build .up 0f Indians, Pakistanis and Eura-
sinns. _.
The Chinese complain they
as an illustration ot nis beuei
that some businessmen "often
cannot tell the difference bet-
wee nthe private and the public
sectors.”
"I am sure this man had the
■HIP!,, ... onaire.
gressman said, with half a do-
zejt dhfersified ihterests, and Ae
felt like doing something for
fine, but he’s private and I m. a
public, elective official and
there’s a great difference.
there’s a great c........... {.
“He said, ‘I’m sure glad I’m
not a congressman.’ ’’
Gonzalez said the test he al*
s applied to such matters
whether the offer would be
made if he were not a member
of the House of Representatives,
adn its banking committee.
Stricken LP Principal
Reported Improving
~tir Porte High Bchool- Prinei-
pal W. L. Avara is reported to
have had "a good night" Tues-
day night, but is still in critical
condition at Ledbetter Clinic in
the Medical Arts Center in Hous-
blood vessels in the neck at ap-
proximately midnight Sunday
and was irnt found until noon
______lay when he* was rushed to
the Houston clinic.
La Porte School Superinten-
are being forced into the role of
second-class citizens by special
guarantees and* privileges for
Malays in government, educa-
tion and business.
insist
of Communist doctrine, some of has requested that motorists de-
his closest advisers are difficult tour from four blocks oT West
some of Ben Bella’s- speeches inch water "mam in four-blaeka
.Ert ^K.’SlMotorisls Uiped T«
SgiaUSfgS!’K ArouHf Stattig -rfTS5*!T3nf* -
Although Ben Bella himself .
may disapprove of some Aspects City Manager Fritz Lanham
guiding spirit in Malaysia,
The Malays, on the other
hand, are obviously fearful of
eventual domination by the hard
driving,
symbolized by Lee, 40, and his
militant. People’s Action party.
and sets the anti-Western tone ©f-Sterling, from Commerce to ahd trade: Many Malayi
of the government propaganda North Pruett. The street wilj be t0 see the handwriting
machine. His influence is partially blocked at various
curbed only by the Islam-orient- times, although the city will try
ed and frankly anti-Communist to keep at least on.e lane open
I..:-____ „f TVjfonco Ministpr Col. to traffic X
the water
[staff officers.
lews of Defense Minister Col. to traffic.
Houari Boumedienne and his Immediately ;aftei
mi - * line is completed a street .con-
tractor will rework this area of.
the street. ^
We regret the inconven,
” T onVlnm ‘ '
ience,” Lanham said. X
Intersection and curb and gut-
|K work is ■ also lindprWav nn
ter* work is also underway on
West Sterling in an area be-
. tween North F
In Singapore, -Chinese out-
iber Malays 5-1 and control
number Malays 5-1
the island -state’s government
wall.
ys claim
tfie
-P~
Nineteen Hole Round
Ends Broadmoor Match
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) - Judy Bell of Colorado
Springs, former Curtis Cup
player, had to go 19 holes before
downing Karen Reesling of1
Wichita, Kan., 1-up on the 19th
Jmln iV» tha pTonrlmonr TnuiJfU
^ JpLUorlh JPfueit ^nd Decker hole ih^the Broqdmoor Invita-
Drive. . tional Golf TournamenF
Datsurt check li$t •
Alternator/4-Door Unitfeody
60 HP OHV Engine/Bufcket Seats
4^g*Trunk/J3flluxftJDlerior________
12,000-mita? 12-month Warranty
Price: $l,696{3-speed) $1,746 (4-speed)
DATSUN
FULLERS
913 S. Main
582-8171
I
% Attend Funer
I MRV'AND MRS. N|
-J. -lwve.left for New I
*J§ attend the funeral I
“ grandmother, Mrs. I
brecht who died tJ
^ California ....
Wk MARION E. HA:
— z': ,, -. -j— . -
man thiid class,
Shirley Haines ofl
Drive, participated r
■aiim t a lj.cd PYff
■Jog” off the coast \
while aboard the atl
L-arricr USS Midwal
its losses early this afternoon.
/ The Vito Nam .crisis brought
typical “war scare” selling, ac-
ct mpanied in traditional fashion
b.v strength in the commodity
KnnAiiiiH‘ rtf ’ onneahtin.
markets because of apprehen-
I sion of shortages in the event
I of conflict.
began to dry' up and some
stocks began to convert losses
into gains as “bargain hunters”
•'•toked up high-guality stocks at
iwer, prices that have prevailed
for some time.
IBM, which had been down
about 2 points, snapped back to
lUhow.i^etJise.toLbajfa|draen
points. New York ,CenW'wiped
oul a loss of 114. Xerox, canceled
showed a l-inintvm*»,
I First-hour volume* was L72
. million shares, the biggest total
L since April 2 when 1.78 million
'(shares chsnged.hands in ti,e in-
itial 60 minutes.
The Associated Press average
of 60 stocks at noon was down
2.8 to 313.0 with industrials off
ko, rails off 2.2 and utilities off
Some brokers likened the pre-
sent situation to the mid mar-
ket slide and tremendous re*
II bound following the Cuban nris-
I LIQUID JOY
Cyanamid.
DOESKIN
2 TISSUE
ASST.COLORS-4,s^..
37c
i early trading, however,
‘ 3 and Polaroid
NEW BLUE
£ RINSO
Steel were only fractional
losers as the session wore on.
Except for CM, mast leading
motors were behind oply by
fractions. Ford edged to the up-
IHfr
Airlines were about even,
(j with -Kas4e«i climbing ahead
[tnearly a point. .
Prices declined in active trad-
[ fag on the American Stock Ex-
change.
■ •■.fl.-'J ■
DOLLARS FOR DIPLOMAS.
HAVE YOU JOINED?
You may mail your contributions to Box 42234 Baytown,Te„x a s, and
receive a receipt by return mail
MEMBERSHIP CARD
The Lee Collega Commu'ftify.Loart Fund, In’c/acJcnowledges
“^ reeelpf>ef■ "■ - ■
$
from
. .................................................................
and enrolls him/her as a voting member for the year......
Payment received by.
sa" Da te............................................
This contribution it lay joduotibla
............
V:
DO SO TODAY!
CHALLENGE OUR YOUNG PEOPLE!
Wm
CITIZEN S NATIONAL
■ ■'■'it'.-
MEMBER
BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
F.D.I.C.
"Baytown's Leading Bank Since 1921"
E U.S. Patent
I ft. A. SPEED and I
toot of Humble’s Bi
: search and Devclopl
I have been granted" 1
ii on a precipitati
[ (hey developed.
Insurance Meed
.mi:. \xn ?.ms. (h-L
ins of 801 S. .Circle!
■i mnntinfr nf enloJ
[ a meeting of sail
Jnlt " '
Co. Aug. 23-27 In .
* * ,
Weather And '
I CLEAR TO partly I
hot through Friday|
ly scattered after
(Icrshowcrs. T e m
■ range expected, 71-'
GALVESTON Till I
will be Ugh ai M il
11:18 ‘p.m. and loj
| a.m. and 8:17 p.n
Arouhi
I MR. AND MRS. . ..
J Houston* are proud i
ftssawf,
... Baytown Police I
the praises of 1
2
I mUnications,
I storm, in record i
-' Mrs. Sam'
I day for a trip to (
I with her three „
I She will visit her bn
| R. L. Parker is —
[to harvest his cott
®"ires he has 'about |
bale that just t_
Ithe gas meter ... ]
fens drops by with
Lerojr Masterson-1
ft V. Waldrop
lingham from
me to Texks many I
Dub Ward spoil
he cultivated r
E Pearl Laughlin
“■licious fresh —
rape jeDy . . . Ja
'ers when a t
r is going tot
storm damage I
' M t* the
i.
x
r*.
.j
m
»
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 271, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1964, newspaper, August 5, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057299/m1/24/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.