The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 26, 1962 Page: 3 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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, Kenmore *
Vacuum |
Cleaners
. light yet powerfu
• Uses replaceable <
• For ««peU, floor
. ' HOWDY., FOLKS ^ - 4
MEXICO cmr (AP)-President
and Mn. Kennedy will be greeted
by 50,000 Mexican newsboys
dtwaed in gay hoiiday uniforms
'tUMmiS!1*
dH«w> rVmte.
£ «ma> tores
MV/AI6£ BaMOg
E*1* . ,1*
■■ • 8 Duct Runs And Regieters
i* •ai%w«aV-
feh buff pads
• Equipped to
5.1 Tons
• K
ALSO SEE OUR COMPLETE
UNI OF FRIEDRICH
ROOM AIR CONDITIONER
uainrc ,*
ug them for wyoymeat is the twilight
'-A - '■ 'PX 3
*
rl.iew u
Hun, und
Ooliig,
ll«i Du,,
•It Of
m™"
d wm-
fft?n
&
£H
!^SbKsk'|
- ... ......
......
WESTERN SOURCES SAY
CHINA BUILDUP DEFENSIVE
lUt-s-a*, vuue 20,
l HONG KONG (AP)-Moat West-
! cm intelligence sources in Hong___________________
i Kong believe Red China’s current Adm. Pei" Yu-feng! Nationalist
I military buildup opposite the Na- J * •
‘ tionalist ofshore islands of Que-
: moy and Matsu is defensive. But
I they do not discount the possibility
of a Communist attack.
These sources believe that any
triggered by fears that President
Ciliang Kai-shek's regime was
going to try to make good his
vow to retake the Chinese main-
land.
gression against the offshore is-
lands always exists," said Rear
Adm. Pei Yu-feng, Nationalist
defense ministry spokesman. "Our
forces are constantly alert for an)'
emergency."
He said the Communists have
gradually .shifted military fortes
buildup in the eoustal area of
Fukien Province opposite Quemoy
and Matsu now totals 400,000
troops, 300 planes and 400 small
ships. But he said Ihis Was nothing
But the White House has ex-
pressed concern over the Red
move.
U.S. officials in Washington
stressed, however, that the long-
standing U.S. policy on the Na-
tionalist islands remains un-
changed: U.S. defense obligations
offensive,” one well-placed intelli-
gence informant said today. "I
think the chances are about 3-1
commanders are confident they
can withstand an all-out Commu-
.. „ . ..... nist assault on Quemoy, the
against it. But if they felt the larger of the two islands, even
Chinese Nationalists were about though it is flanked on three sides
■
on I
to attack, hey would probably
want to beat them to the punch."
Top Nationalist officials havi
been predicting an ofensive
against Red China for some time.
But the possibility seems remote.
The Nationalists have said they
would launch an attack only after
an uprising on the mainland. The
recent exodus of hungry refugees
from Red China to Hong Kong
prompted anti-Communist news-
l>apers here and in Formosa to
declare the time for an assault
had come. But Western officials
believe the Red regime is still I
Nr
A Nationalist attack also would
need U.S. logistic support at least
to have any chance of success.
The United States has given no
indication that such aid would be
though it is flanked on three sides
by the Chinese mainland.
Communist artillery fired 39
shells at Quemoy in an 85-minute
period Thursday night. This was
not unusual, however. The islands
are much better defended today
than in 1958 when the Communists
made a determined but unsuccess-
ful effort to crash them by artil-
lery bombardment.
Unofficial sources in Formosa
believe reports of restrictions on
civilian rail travel in South China
might have erroneously contribut-
ed to the conclusion that extensive
Iway
tween Formosa and the mainland;
the United States will defend the
ofshore islands only if an attack
on them is considered a prelude
to an attack on Formosa.
i y 62
S''.’a
PH
m
U.S. CAN BE IN RED OR
BLACK; DEPENDS ON VIM
NEW YORK (API—Uncle Sam
has his fingers in so many things
today that when he doses his
books on this fiscal year June 30
it will be hard to say how mudi
he is behind. One way of figuring
will put him around $7 billion in
Duck Production
Brings Bad News
For Duck Hunters
highway and other trust funds. So
it bus a cash budget.
Tins shows what the Treasury
actually receives from the public
and pays out to the public.
In the 19(12 fiscal year now in
show him fairly dose to breaking billion higher than those in the
even. administrative Uidget.
And to adil to the confusion the Tliis cash budget is used by
federal debt — which includes many economists to trace the im-
everything from your U.S. Savings pact of government on the eeono-
insuranee, unemployment benefits, lion higher thaa corporate tax to*
'cepts.
National income accounts alio
exdude government loans tram
the spending side of the ledger,
hojding these will be paid back
GEORGE GENTRY JR., CENTER, DUBBED MAJOR
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Interior Department said today
the outlook is still precarious for
wild duck production this year.
This bad news for hunters was
based on reports that the duck
breeding population in the nesting
grounds in the northern United
States and Canada is smaller
than in, any year since the sum-
mer Waterfowl surveys began in
195L„
i'laur*"-'
icials in Taipei re-
ceived Washington and London
reports of the Red buildup with
outward calm.
“We are watching the situation
elosely,” said James Shen, a
secretary to President Chiang. A
similar noncommittal answer was
given to newsmen by a spokesman
for the U.S. Taiwan (Formosa)
Defense Command.
“Hie danger of Communist ag-
Chinese Communists are making
large-scale shifts of urban popula-
tions to rural areas in an attempt
to speed up farm production.
But —
source*
1i
pleted in the important’ 'seven
portions of Alberta, Saskatchewan
and Manitoba, the data indicated
37 per cent decrease in the
George Gentry Jr. Gets
Marine Corps Promotion
George H. Gentry Jr., son of Corps In 1951 and received his
School Supt. and Mrs. George H. commission as a second lieutenant.
SKShSS.E»- •» r? - «•*-
Corps in California at the Corps’ mander in Korea In 1952. His tours
Cold Weather Training Center. of duty have been commanding
Maj. Gentry.received his gold
more planes and troops into the cent in number below the 1961
Fukien coastal area. Other count and the number of Pintails
Now Many Wear
FALSE TEETH
With little Worry
Eot, talk, lsufh or «ntww Without
fe»r of tneecuro folio teeth dropping,
slipping or wobbUnf. FA8TSXTH
BaBBsnrtt
sources indicated that the Commu-
nist military has taken over al-
most all railway facilities in Fu-
kien and neighboring areas.
The Chinese Travel Service and
Hong Kong railroad officials
ported that on orders from Red
China no train tickets for Amoy,
Foochow and other points in Fu-
kien have been sold here for
nearly a month. Refuges from
Red China said the ban on railway
ticket sales also extends to many
areas adjacent to Fukien.
Hie refugees said the Commu-
nists also are replacing regular
army troops in the kwangtung
Province, south of Fukien, with
militia and other armed civilian
forces. Civilian train travel in
Kwangtung has been light recent-
ly, they said.
No precise figures on the Chi-
nese buildup have been reported.
John M. Kilgore
READY MIX CONCRETE
STABILIZED MATERIAL
■N,
582-8118
was down 28 per cent.
One bright spot is the improve-
ment of water and habitat in the
Dakotas and Minnesota. However,
increased production from this
U.S. area is not expected by the
service to compensate for the lack
of production indicated in the
southern portions of the Canadian
prairie provinces.
The duck situtation has become
increasingly serious during the
past several years because of se-
vere drought in the continent's
primary duck factory, the prairie
pithole region of the Dakotas and
Minnesota and the provinces of
Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Al-
berta in Canada.
the Sierra Nevada Mountain train-
ing site.
Hie former Baytonian attended
the University of Texas. He is an
inspector-instructor for the 31st
‘ “ Term.,
Bonds to tile Treasury's short-
‘MU1
$10 billion on the year.
There are three ways of fashion-
Doctors Made Him
'Sexless Freak,'
Salesman Charges
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)—In a $5
pany in me second Marine am- him into a woman turned him
sion; head of the algebra depart- instead into a sexless “freak"
ment at the l.S. Naval Prep xiie suit was filed in state Su-
preme Court Friday bv David
Prior to his present duty he Red Camera;/, 36. It names four
attended the Marine Corps Junior doctors and Buffalo General Hos-
Sffltxa af'Matofr Cblps5»H««,-' P*1f®Wm W
a maiHirvwipB wxwcs rc wui. * mamirc- irx iiwia, yiini, TYliriYr Dip UIRTBUUIEJ WPTT
Tennessee company is on active Quantico, Va. He is married to performed in 1960 and 1961, ac-
j..,.. —■------d~j— *u- /--------- «•—j---* /->■- cording to the complaint.
duty for two weeks near Bridge the former Jean Fowler of Dur-
port, Calif., training in mountain I ham, N'.C. Hiey have two children,
warfare. JoAnna, seven, and George III,
Maj. Gentry entered the Marine I four.
Europeans Living
In Algeria Fleeing
MARSEILLE (AP)—By air and guard the apartment and the fur-
a, the once defiant Europeans niture," said a woman with three
New TVA Leader
Is Aubrey Wagner
WASHINGTON (AP) - Aubrey
J. Wagner, who has been with
the Tennesse Valley Authority
from its earliest days, was named
chairman of its board of directors
today by President Kennedy.
Wagner was made a member
of the board last year. He has
been with TVA since 1934 and has
held a number of positions, in-
cluding general manager.
He succeeds Herbert D. Vogel,
who has resigned as chairman ef-
fective June 30. Hie White House
said the vacancy on the board
would probably be filled next
week.
There had been speculation in
congressional circles earlier that
Rep. Frank E. Smith, D-Miss.,
would get Vogel’s job. Smith has
lost his bid for a new term in
the House.
sea,
of Algeria are fleeing the land
they had vowed to keep French
forever.
About 6,500 sad, bewildered,
bitter and disillusioned French
people from Algeria arrive every
day in the homeland that many
have never before seen.
The number seems to be lim-
ited only by the availability of
transportation.
“If there were .ships to take
them out, no European* would
still be in Oran,” a man said as
he stepped onto the dock.
The old, the young and the
women make up the biggest share
of the arrivals. They come with
their dogs, cats and canaries.
Some come with their cars.
Many have come seeking new
homes, but some are looking only
for a haven. Almost all fear that
Algerian Moslems may run wild Customs
during the next month in celebra-
tion of independence.
France today represents secu-
rity that they could not be sure of
in independent Algeria.
“Hie number of men coming in
by ship is relatively small,’’ said
Albert Payan, police commission-
er for the Marseille port. "One
day this week we had 4,882 arriv-
als by sea, and only 530 of them
were men between the ages of
and 60.’’
Cameron’s complaint said that
he was told the surgery would
enable him to live a normal life
as a woman.
Instead, said the suit, he was
left “a freak and non-entity, with-
out sex or sexual reproduction
organs, male or female-"
Cameron, who said he also is
known as Joan Carol Reed, told
a newsman he tried wearing wo-
men's clothes for a time after the
operations but since has reas-
sumed his old identity. He was
ing a federal budget as variously
used by Congress, the Budget Bu-
reau, or the U S. Treasury and
some government and private
economists. Each serves a differ-
ent purpose in showing the gov-
ernment's impact on financial or
economic affairs.
A big storm, however, is Wow-
ing up as to which of the three
should be used—the ofieial or ad- - ---...—. » ... ,
ministrative budget, the cash future tax hills—funds it can
budget or the national income ae- spend in the business or commit
counts budget. Often when one | for expansion,
shows a deficit, another shows a | Budget Director David E. Boll
surplus. Tliis is handy in political | says that this fiscal year corpo-
debate. But also sheds light on rate tax accruals will run $3 bil-
dfrac
pact ot government on the econo- vve]| as
my—is the Treasury pumping mom j This theoi
aDd-arenT like MPWWMIF
paid out and gone forever,
Some would exclude still other
expenditures from the regular, of-
ficial budget-spending for educa-
tion, research and development as
well as loans and public works.
that even the cash budget gives i some time,
less than an accurate picture. So
this year, for the first time, Presi-
dent Kennedy offered Congress
still a third summary of federal
finances—the national Income ac-
counts.
Hiis was devised by the Depart-
ment s>f Commerce. It shows not
what Jfce Treasury has collected,
but vrtgfr has been put aside for
tax payments. For example, what
rorporate5ta„i*iHft,j
WE WILL BE
CLOSED
July 4th to July 15lh
For Vacation!
CLARK’S
BRAKE SERVICE
-2400 Markat—
V.wr-j
week
"If the administrative budget
were balanced, the federal govern-
ment would be taking in about $-1
billion more than it was spend-
He was contending that the offi-
cial budget, more often than not
in the red, gave far from an ac-
curate account.
This, greatly simplified, is how
the three budgets work:
Hie administrative budget, set
up by Congress in 1921, is the one
you hear about, the one the Con-
gress debates.
It is proposed by a president in
January and lists as expenditures
sums for national defens/’, space
research, foreign aid agriculture,
housing, commerce and transpor-
tation, health and welfare, educa-
tion, veterans benefits, and inter
and loafers. His hair was
crew-style.
He was married In 1954 but the
marriage ended in divorce two
years later.
Hie complaint said an operation
for substitution of genital organs
was performed Dec. 31, 1960, and
one for Implanation of artificial
breasts the following March 25.
It added:
“During ensuing medical diffi-
culties involving removal of the
implanted breasts as infected, the
defendants refused to treat the
plantiff further, and did, in fact,
abandon him.”
Named as defendants were: Dr.
Samuel YocheLson, a psychiatrist
now at SL Elizabeth’s Hospital,
Washington, D.C.; Dr. Leslie H-
Backus and Dr. John R. Paine of
Buffalo, and Dr. George F. Koepf
of suburban Snyder.
KEEP COMFORTABLE the
Year-Round. ASK About
the New Modern
rriAflnAh Uoof Piininl
rneunen m rump:
CENTRAL
[Oh AIR CONDITIONING
POOLING
trouble.
About 50 per cent of the repa-
triates move out of Marseille the
same day they arrive. Hiey go
by train or in friends’ cars. Most
“My husband stayed behind to of the rest stay only a day or two.
Wilkinson Asks American
Diplomats To Exercise
!■
WASHINGTON (AP- - To the
U.S. diplomat: Don’t be a "flab-
by American.” Climb some stairs.
Run a little. Exercise every
day.
So advises President Kennedy’s
reciaf consultant on physical fit-
..ess, Charles B. (Bud) Wilkinson,
Oklahoma University athletic di-
rector, who thinks too many
Americans present a sad sack
physical image abroad.
Writing in the latest issue of the
State Department Newsletter, a
monthly publication circulated
among State Department employ*
es here and overseas, Wilkinson
reported that the Communists are
making propaganda out of physi-
cally unfit appearance of Ameri-
cans.
"No group, at hone or over-
seas, is in a better position than
the employes ot the State Depart-
ment to improve the American
image," Wilkinson wrotp. cal activity—with your doctor’s
“It’s easy to understand why permission, of course." - * .
small children. "He may come
later or we may go back
to Algeria. We’ll have to see how
things go.”
An 80-year-old retired farmer
had tears in his eyes. "I’ve lived
there for 40 years. I wanted to
die there. I didn't want to leave
but my children wouldn’t let
me stay.”
About 3,500 repatriates — they
are never called refugees—come
to Marseille by ship on an aver-
age day, and another 3,000 arrive
by air. Other planes go to Paris,
Lyon or Toulouse. A few«(4ups
make the longer trip to Bordeaux.
Marseille, the traditional gate-
way to France from Algeria is
about 36 hours from Algiers by
ship and two hours by propeller
plane.
Soldiers help unload luggage,
regulation* have been
eased.
Red Cross volunteers cany the
sick and wounded on stretchers.
A nursery on the dock takes care
of children while parents go
through formalities.
The Ministry for Repatriates Trt Cau A„
has a large office to aid anyone IQ 110?° JOJ Ull
Cotton Prices
WASHINGTON (AP) - Cotton
held by the Commodity Credit
Corporation through price suppc*t
operations is expected to have a
major influence on the price of
the staple this year.
Hie International Cotton Advis-
ory Committee said that if cotton
yields in the United States are
low, there could be a situation
where the supply of new cotton
would only be sufficient or pos-
sibly even a little short of what
would be needed to cover demand.
b*&Sit£mJSi£'3.
dressed in a sports shirt, slacks lest — more than $9 billion a year
in Interest on the national delx.
Hie administrative .budget also
estimates receipts of individiual
income taxes, corporate income
taxes, excise, estate and gift
taxes, and customs revenue.
But the U.S. Treasury receives
and pays out money for other pur-
poses — Social Security, veterans
Ibis Nuks UnM SFECUUS
Why Pay $100 more to get these FeaUes
FAMOUS MAYTAG
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"SERVICE AFTER THE SALT
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the trim, erect, physically fit in-
dividual immediately creates t
pleasing first impression—for him
self and for his country," he said,
“State Department employes
owe it tp themselves tuxl to their
country to be physically fit.”
Wilkinson said the mere fact
that U.S, diplomats must pass
physical exams along with other
test* doesn’t mean tfiey are in
shape.
“Is your posture erect?” he
asked. “Are you overweight for
your build and height? Do you
find yourself short of breath after
walking up a flight or so of
stairs? Do you lack pep and en-
ergy? ,,
“If your answers are ‘Yes,’ then
the chances are you’re not physi-
cally fit.”
Wilkinson
is ptopoPi
rest and “regular vigorous physi-
9 WOW!
WEDNESDAY ONLY
lYour Choice!
the nev
.v MU.W.UI, u«, advisory mu-
mlttee said, there would be the
matter of how fast the new crop
comes on the market and the
matter of the supply of the vari-
ous qualities.
Attention, it said, thus centers
on the stocks held by the CCC
and fiie prices at which they are
available.
It now appears that the CCC
will own on Aug. 1 about 1.5 mil-
lion bales from the 196(161 and
earlier crops. This cotton will
only be available at a minimum
of 115 per cent of next season’s
loan rate plus carrying charges
Also, the committee said, ii
present regulations are Mowed,
the OCC would take title to abou :
3.5 million bales of 1961-62 cotton
advisory committee said,
however, that file Agriculture De-
partment could take various steps
if It wished to ease apy shortage
of supply. • -
I
f> at Sears and Save*-
I Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money
STORE HOURS 9:30 TO
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 26, 1962, newspaper, June 26, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1058121/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.