The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 56, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 11, 1962 Page: 3 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brazoria County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Alvin Community College.
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1
d
■ 7'1
I
The Sun's
ii«
J
MIOX -o
PtATMRES
For "Benefits
are
r
i
It’s the Law
V
S. A. Worsham
lWW
an
6
built and up
Pauls pocket
Angleton. The petition
out-
of his
I.
submitted to the
|y
I claim to be a pione< r
February 7, 1962
*
of
£ :
Ft
£
books, the one- youngster
2
LBS
I—Red or
ES
0
LB
Sill Billion.
and
3
LB
(■ 3
4
LB
ON
rdf
1 t
of odr
a
on
n
a
goes
final
T.-mple, Texas
F bruary 5, 1962
Eddie Hillyer Jr.
Mayor of Alvin, Texas.
511,
the
Kindest regards
Hollis W. McGinness
President
it was
man m
J
: • hey do not
Ires or snow-
Th<•} co not pause
on
, prove tha
I century.
year t
States,
ling.
trie
ten
person
Xi
NEWS ’N REVIEWS
Catherine Munson Foster'1
Library Column
II
e s
of her boy friends
and rolled each one
Preik
■ot grass
X. M
A
g
hole. If she saw two objects, well and
good. But if only one—better luck next
year.
■ ter .
New
without
j t.iose
r that floated
believed to hold the
Mr. L. F. Nelson, Member
The Speaker sets a time for cit council
... —1 «:.~>ra in kxrxfh
r Library Board, and
j Rotary
Dear Sir:
This will acknow ledge receipt of your
MR. WORSHAM REMEMBERS THESE PEOPLE
Alvinites In 1912
receipt of your challenge, we
the library fund, having b en
be the recipients of all
and would handle all
the Alvin Lions Club
| two chances to w... ...
and the second chance was
in
Texas
The head of the Citizens Public
Expenditure Survey says: " .
even t.oe $89 Billion which the
t will pend
is not tlie whole picture.
^0'
-t Kennedy has asked that
?ak its will1' on his demand
:abinet-rank Department of
•s and Housing. It is, cf
proper duty of Congress to
t—*0 jay whether or not t
• ma*e federalizing of oi r
cutt'ng the umbibical corcis
ct them with the sovereic
vhich they are presently
i-ta
M
...................." i h >
Anaijfffr< b Wl zw&raid **"**■
ivocale of an indissoluble Union
of the American States. Marxist-
’ leaning historians have dispatch-
ed in a sentence, or made ob-
(scure, historical memoranda that
would have forever refuted this
wavs and other programs finan-
ced out of trust funds and not
included in the government's ad-
ministrative budget are added in
federal spending this year totals
o jut ♦'
Iwt or
,.. p
Library friend, he added in a
scornful 'aside, “He
have a television.”
It saddened me—this instintive
reaction to a devoted reader on
IF LINCOLN HAO LIVED
By GEORGE B. DEWEY
As an litor I have often been
asked wl it I thought Lincoln
would h; , e done had he lived.
Usually the questioner follows it
(up by projecting the same ques-
tion into the momentous events
of our times. Like a glimmering
1 star on ae border of a great
I dark, Lincoln has
tools." are applicable to Lincoln
as to no other man in history.
Communist propaganda has en-
veloped our people in a density
of ign*-ranee, until Lincoln has
become in millions of minds as
an equ .litarian instead of an ad-
And what does this new medi 11
urn have to give our children to
replace Lie books they never |
have time to read? It presents)
life at its most brutal and vio-
lent. heroes who are considered]
pure as the driven snow if they
onlv “wing" their opponents in-
stead of killing them, the glorifi-
cation of such cold - blooded mur-
derers as the infamous Doc Holli-
day, and such smalltime tor-
men as Wyatt Earp, and “private
eyes" who are forever showing
up the police force as stupid if
not downlight criminal.
On the rare occasions when tel-
evision attempts to offer some of
tae childhood classics, the resu.i
is as gaibled as a Walt Disney
version of a fairy tale. The view-
er gets something of the general
idea stripped of its true feeling,
of tlie beauty of the original style,
of the strength of the original
iharacterization. and often of
of fhe Alvin Hairdressers Unit, and Mrs.
w; ____' ° xy Salon
Eddie Hillyer Jr., signs the
the week's observance in
Lr.y fj-n'-r- -.-■■
m (pet ition-
e and work Ir. ifl
; trend, two cf Nffl
vvers hep ajaptsil
on his nay n a
spirits among our
this '-1!
our congressmen and sen i-
iro residents of our on
Be'.■ y, W.jih'ngton, D. C.—and
Bs seen the charge of Congress
■ founding in 1790—they have
B pportunity to study federal
Ik management at close rance.
^re a^are, of course, that
B v or d ias been blessed
B' julent buildings and moru-
Kr so many of them, at public
B. hey know, too, that govern-
■ ' ] the principal industry, the
Bosyroll make’. the city ecorio-
■bombproof. Yet, in the face
■exuliar advantages, they will
ight s+art out at mid- !
3 the church 12 times ;
the rhyme, ’’I sow hemp-
ed I sow, he that loves i
bcne after me now." If no
U- could still hope to see
L.ntire in her dreams. Of
E st took tie precaution
bay leaves to her pil- i
i one in the ;
Ws>
/FIRST
LEARY Liking to somebody . . .
] GLENDA LOFTLN looking pretty
GEORGE MATS stopping
for trafre . . . MRS. KENNETH
MRs' kI E. "MCGOWEN holding
■ her son’s hand . . . MRS. R. M.
■ r 1 a granddaughter
. . MRS. JERRY
,- a. v
2. He drops his bill into a ‘ leg- were advised the ariount of the bond that could be
w • The c,1®rkcnuIP'i floated was $25,000 so we voted the bond. Then came the de-
-x;
10 Dci - ■■ -r “die” unless advised of our intentions,
in*doubt the sponsor asks for action. We
3. If he does, the
K'
:• 'hI government can con-
tcK to gi*e its citizens
SMefih ♦ -le or no cost to the|
M ^Ke ■ v-$. This something-for-|
.• y is betd economically and
will—see to it
y also becomes bad poli-
rr-.-nt spending has become
n ble that it defies all logic.
f pes round and round—bui
r i from the Docketbooks ol
annual policy has comt
c robbing Peter to pay Pau
D ig Pauls pocket in ordei
L'
The Alvin Sun
eni. . . I
(This newsfeature, prepared by
State Bar of Texas, is writ-
to inform- not to advise. No
peason should ever apply or in-
terpret any law without the aid
of an attorney who is fully ad-
vised concerning the facts in-
volved, because a slight variance
in facts may change the applica-
tion of the law.
QUOTE!
The assertion is often made
that a third of our young people
with above average ability do not
go to college, with the inference
that all, or most of them, should.
This assertion assumes that all
■ ’ ' » a
_ _ 1 pro-
fit more from it than from other
of actio.i they are now
loosing to pursue.
.IDEA FOR A LAW
A bill before Congress is
idea for a law.
Who thinks it up? A congress-
man, the home folks, the Presi-
build the size school Alvin needed.
L
on the county board was prepared, taking in the new territory.
Editor
Soyousay Department, Alvin Sun
Alvin, Texas
Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Ware have sent me a copy of the
first section of your edition dated Sunday, Nov. 26, 1961
showing the picture of the Sanla Fe passenger sta’.ion and park.
This picture was taken ir 1912. I can positively identify
most of those in the group, however 50 years is quite some-
time to remember each name and I could be in error in some
of the names and proper spelling of them. Sorry I do not
know the whereabouts of the rest of those still living.
Reading left to right: Lev is Christian, W. H. Pace, H. B.
Chapman, S. A. Worsham, J. L. Calhoun, Mrs. Calhoun, Mar-
garite Calhoun, Mrs. Claud M- ngle, C. H. Rogers, Frank Horn
<?),---Rogers (?), Claud M< ngle, Elihu Searle, L. T. Tatum
and Unknown.
If you desire printing these names you may think it prop-
er to leave off the question n ark of those I'm not positive in
* my identification.
and I -------
I! vice to
an language.
\ I --------
old islative nopper .
i
k
r
F
|r
3 tc World Book Encyclo- |
IB
Ik
Qi
And likewise our solons are in an
eigh the argu-
are
Editor,
Alvin Sun
Glad to see the picture (f the red brick school house. It
has a history. I was president of the school board when it was
built and up to 1908. The line.' of the Alvin Independent School
District were the same as the city lines, two square miles, not
enough taxable property to float a bond issue large enough to
Day has become
n lor cashing in
But for the maids of
ys/as tine for serious
Soyousay’
Column.
I E. JACKSON riding I
I-ar with MB. ANDI
L‘.' ' fw ,rafrc ■ • • MKS-
. I.H 1 SOS going lL'KENS talking to a friend . .
| . CLARABELL ----— ■
h 'ill- HIGHWAY
P J'H-II II MCNABB
p’ - . ALLEN TO- - ...
F f'»r t iffee . . L ! JOL Rd3n getting out of the car
up to 'theI. MRS. G. M. KEENER
k MRS JOHN vailing [across tae yard.
f I- 11CHARDSON MIL Ab[£> MRS. CHARLES KIL-
"u’lway” . T mRR BARREL KNAPE
, her i talking labout club work . • •
[ HICK SKELTON MRS. DONALD KNIGHT telling
I: ■ \!\( < IIBAR MUD -oni'-boriv she had a letter . . ■
F1- •' •NM X parking at FRANK BROWN hailing a friend
III COMPANY MPS. H. E. COOK JR. going
'II I • xs going to to see jher mother . . . F. R-
l I. iiT’ART talk- DALY (jutting across the street
F1' i RWOOD . . ■A-iti. a (package under his arm
E ■ “ L - oing to work . . O.l O, DODSON going home
PiAi < i ; E. L.: from work . . . BETTY DUD-
li-ar*.- <,n -.he doorstep LEY w 1'ing a gay greeting . • •
[• Kt BECZKA running MRS. HESTER ELKINS saying
I TROT LAMBDEN "hl" . DONALD ELY discuss-
I paper . . . MiRS. T. E. I inz a plane trip . . .
il-ai . min v, a » VO. ---- ! V ^4
- Th?y are eyed monster usually comes out puea—i
i ina lonath winner I
Tlie i emark was made by a
w.a* - - letter of Jan. 22, in-
i formic the Alv-i’n Uons’ciub that Rotary Lad already submit-
ted their check to the Alvin Library Board, in the amount of
I' J You also indicated you had not as yet received funds from
(the Alvin Lions Club. May we hasten to inform you your letter
was the first indication we, in Lions, had concerning the results
of the contest. May we further explain that immediately upon
approved payment of SI00 to
informed that Rotarians would
fun is received from the sale of tickets,
accounting. The Board of Directors of
a immediately recognize they had only
win the contest. The first chance was “slim”,
mxc owwxiva “none.”
It is common informati m in the community that the “Lions
always go the extra mile”. In keeping with our traditions and
policy, we are enclosing our check in the amount of $101.
We are more than happy to assist Rotary in building a
library for Alvin. We feel there is a definite, need for such
aa institution, and we sin erely hope the members of Rotary
will take full advantage of this educational facility upon its
completition. If any organization needs this type of cultural
agency—its Rotary.
ter to Horace Greeley of the
York Tribune that refutes
equivocation
to make of
j in the com- '
f peek' through a keyhole :
. ” I rose early !
s ?t her e/e to her key- j
to do some straight!
a dangerous fallacy;
national life. This {all-;
the unfounded assumption!
Jeral government can
2
191
to pay Peter. And, of course, both
Peter and Paul—and everybody else—
turn out to be the losers.
There is no magic pipeline to a
source of free money. All the spending
of government must be paid for, and
we do the paying. We pay for the
spending either through increased taxes
or through inflation that cuts away the
value of our money-—or we pay botn
ways.
The need for increased fiscal re-
sponsibility is of vital concern to every
American. And you, the taxpayer, can
perform a service to your country by
hammering home that need at every
opportunity — in discussions with your
friends, for example, and in letters to
newspapers.
Pl j
SIGNING PROCLAMATION—Mrs. RuthJ-arker, left,
Fa/e Ashcraft, chairman of B®sutX
Week, watch while Mayor
proclamation designating
Alvin.
goes
He may (1)
from a specca delivered allsign it and make it a law; (2)
Springfield, 111-, on June 26, 1858, ve|0 jt (two-thirds of both hous-
in which he said, “I will say then ' may over-ride his veto); or
that I am not, nor ever have nejther sign nor veto it. even i.ie DUUUI
been in favor of bringing about | 13 he does not sign it, the fed<.ral government
in any way mv — •— ■-----iaci ucwiuto »*••• — —• ~— •—~ —- ------- -
eal equality of the white and ,Congress gtill meeting. If Con- federal expenditures for high-
black races. That I am not, nor has gone home, the Act
ever have been in favor of mak idies by - pocket veto”.
>ng voters or jurors of Negroes,! 14 piUs starting in the Senate
nor of qualifying them to hold of- must go t0 tbe House of Repre-
fice nor to intermarry’ with white t sentatiVes and thence to the Pres-
pccple. Ard I will say in addition
to this, that taere is a physical
difference between the white arxi
black races which I believe will
forever forbid the two races liv-
ing together on terms of social
not only to the raising of business and financial standards ^.^as^th^camiot so live,
wit’in this community, but also to the lifting ot personal (hey remain together there
is among our hospitalized and institutionalized, through must a position of superior
association's outstanding public welfare program; and anj inferior and I, as much as
—ir"*----a —. in favor of having
a jS. U W gip-. »
to I7, I962, as "National Beauty L----- ,
out America, dedicated to bringing a "lift fo those who
dimensions of personal confidence, hope and
k'OW, THEREFORE. I, Eddie Hillyer Jr„ Mayor of
| pi nfl f "e
‘,rd
MO -LI
Was la ':a9- Pd?s,ble
yr* that. The girl
(4) A promise to
mend ultimate <
loval owners
Every' distortion that malice
and ignorance can resort to to
serve the one - Communist world
slave labor dictatorship has been
built around Lincoln, but the
greatest lie of all is that his
cause was the cause of racial
equality. In his open letter to
Horace Greeley, there is basical-
ly a reiteration of his thinking
from a specca d e I i v e r e d at
characterization, and often
much of tlie original plot.
Who are these n^ple anyway
who feel so superior that they can
change a "script” taat has been
a loved classic for a hundred
years?
But try to get a child to reed
the book or story’ aft(T he has
seen it. He will dismiss it (h
an airy and offhand, “No, I ba e-
n't read it, but I saw it on TV,”
as if that was the erri and an-
swer to everything.
He saw it, he sat with h s
eyes glued to the 21-inch sere* ii,
ae was anesthetized, he was qui-
et—and Mamma was happy
But, ladies and gentlemen, let
me say to you from the soao-ljox
I have mounted, it just isn’t
good enough. Let’s throw out the
! canned anti packaged entertain-
- ment and get back to some good
old-fashioned nourishment.
I
traaw w _________
A?r erroneou* rHUrtioo »r<m th. eh».»eler or reputation (.1 MJ
ner»on» firm or corporation who* may apiear In tha eolnmna of thai SunahlJ
b. aladly cnrrectad upon Ita l»i. a brought o pni
In case of errod» or omlw m tn lejnJ or other ax»rertlaeinen».w» P
ll.bara do not bold Uema.lvra tabla for furth," thta
eeived by them for sjch advertisements. Advertising U accepted only cn W
basis. -
"published in Alvm. Brazm a ( minty. Te«s ev rsda, and >und..y
and dedicated te the pro^eas of Alvin and Braxerta County.
a PL -CENE" .*!. SJOB and PUBUISHH.
MRi ADELAIDE JACOB ......................niJpllT ADVEBTl’sUNC
I"!”-" ' "•« Tburrdaz »r »■>'*»■ **“•
will lie tn u n The Uvin Sun cannot assume reeponsibhity fo da
STS W pholZr.Pb’"•£------- enra.tamm.t picture, i. on. eotamr
M“&Sy'inJr^u" ■'(■ Monday for the ttuto
lay fer the Sunday edition. T< insure ample apace for a news atory, it ah
" ^..’'“rV’.bo^b: “’n£ Ttak Ad.ua. J-U. «
“eSl
S5.o« Per Year - - Paid In Advance
political
who seek
Lincoln a fellow - traveler with
Marx and Lenin Mr. Greeley in
his paper of Aug. 20, 1862. ad-
• ' j 7‘T letter to Mr. •
Lincoln, accusing him, among!
nek Sam For Mayor?
see in official reports—if reluctant to
look about them—a city cf expanding
slums, poor schools, rising delinquency,
flourishing crime as well as the usual
metropolitan ills that include an
of-hand transportaton problem.
excellent position to wi
ment that since farmers, who are a
minority, have their Department of Ag-
riculture, city people, now in the ma-
jority,. should have a cabinet depart-
ment, too. The lawmakers, aware of
agriculture's $6 Billion c year effort to
solve the "farm problem", and the fact
that it remains, after 30 years, as baffl-
ing as ever, may properly despair of
benefits to the taxpayer from federal
interference at City Hall.
But, most of all, our representa-
tives in Washington should recognize
—in what appears on the surface to
be merely the merging of two existing
federal agencies, the Housing and
Home Finance Agency and the Federal
Housing Authority—a further grab for
centralized power. And they should re-
ject it, flatly and decisively.
Still, perhaps she could identify her
husband-to-be. She wrote the names
on bits of paper
in a piece of clay.
Then she dropped the clay into water.
The first scrap of paper that floated
to the top was believed to hold the
name of her valentine.
If she already had a favorite, she
might test him by striking her forehead
with a folded rose petal. If the petal
cracked, obviously he loved her.
Today’s maid (or wife) may not
judge the love of her mate by the
monetary value of his Valentine's Day
gift but she still likes to be remember-
ed .. . with a box of chocolates, a
dozen red roses, or a simple card with
an appropriate sentiment.
r r t-ii ri
The terrible story of the Web-
ster Massacre is now written in
stone above its victims, in a
cemetery at Leander, in William-
son County, north of Austin.
In 1839 the Comanche Indians
attacked John Webster and his
party of about 30 settlers They
were trapped by tae Indians in
the open prairie after attempting
to escape under darkness.
Mrs. Webster and her two chil-
dren vere imprisoned, but all
others vere killed.
Victims were buried in one
I box. about the size of a wagon
I body. Their remains still
there.
olc gists
America, dedicated to bringing
seek new <---------
inspiration,
{/roi
Rea . ■ s Digest turning aj huge stack of books
|a II ane originally “Gosh,” no said, “did you read
o pm out by the all thosef” Then, turning to a
somewhat
must not
JONES J and
shopping . .
bn i i up to the . . MRS. G. M. KEENER
k MIS JOHN nailing iacross Me yard . . A.
or. iiooih Lane B. KENNEDY SR. nodding . . •
f I I 1CHARDSON MR AND MRS. CHARLES KIL-
p ■’ HI' IIARDSON’S BORN Lacking out of their dnve-
P'i'JN . . MRS U. way . T
I.X 'Aaiing from 1
the home folks, the Presi-
denQ almost anybody.
How does it become a law? (
1, The congressman calls
cast the idea into legal
4. At long last the committee
“out‘of"cmm| I claim to be a pione* r of the improved Alvin School
(District. My term expired in 1914. ’
5. It gets on tae calendar and] Davis
at the hour <
to an env.««.
that it was t--------------- .
faith in his promise surpassing right or -------- .... .
extension or restriction of slavery impatient and dictatorial tone,
under our national flag is on rec- wa,Ve it in deference to an (
possibility of mistake, its precise
port. We stand, as it were, in the purs‘u;ng!' as you say.
, now
, aigue against them,
there be perceptibk
and heroes who made us j would save the Union, I would j
il UIC SJUVLICOU — •• — I —- -
Constitution. The sooner the it to a subcommittee to consider
Not to 'nave cited them in ex-! cd, the nearer the Unior. will be niittee
_______ _ ... .r al. I li «tjnc If thprP ! U«lzl k
tion. Y> t today in this centenary posurc
ol the War Between t -
>, he lines of Rudyard Kip-
“M you can bear to hear
(rarles. It saddened me because
I thought it was probably true.
I have tried to encourage my-
! self with tae idea that television
; stimulates the youthful mind and
I poses questions the answers to |
! which can only be found in books.
To a certain extent this is true.
' but that “certain extent” does
the bookmobile that seemed to | nGt extend very far. For the most |
ia|t in this battle ol the! part television does just what the i
tv vc honks the one- youngster on the bookmob.te im
iy._VS._5?Sd!LT.H IrtiaU-it takes the place of read-
fe ; having length, winner.
I. th. Tiey are con- Tlie lemark was made by a
r am completely west Columbia youngster and
was prompted by nis noticing
I! ■ . bove quota another ijid of about his* age re-
/ C L?’ he said, “did you read
I mi out by the ail those?” Then, turning to
Wisconsin Library. /—''"'* in “ cnmowl
u pointing out the ;
> books over televi- ■
in a very vulner-1 It
1 had recently been i r:~ r- -
remark overheard j the part of one of his contempo-
the social and politi- Act becomes law in 10 days if tbis year
Act
I think we had three bids, two for eight room structures,
and a Galveston firm bid on the 12-room star building at
$22,500. We gave them the contract and that was the first
, building built on the enlarged distr ict. The district has also
iTnZt 'membere been enlarged since J hatjime.
support it, it goes
object in;
that in iis performance.
Washington won American in-
dt render ce; Lincoln won Ameri-
can liberty. To Lincoln was al-
lotted tlie noblest mission that
Heaven ever allotted to one man
of Ids eneration. It was more
than th< freeing of a feeble race; saSl‘?
he liberation of the hu-"
md from the concept of
slavery as an economic system
either r an individual or ,a_Jl_ | an(j COIMjemnation of the I — the Union as it was
the political dcmogogucs and oppor- be " 'A
I zloilv Hictnrh mirll’n
peace is a
Lie word you’ve spoken, twisted for.-es that seek to divide, con- them. If there,1/.,‘???einupss
bv kn os'to make a trap for quer, and deliver us into a form would rot save the Union unless votes on ,t
by kn.. es to maxe a u p__ _ m rt„ a( thc sanlL. t,me de- ;;
voided history has ever before stroy slavery, I do not agree witn mittee“ t0 the House.
. . . . > i .. ------♦ object in
’■•vbfu. iNUIIV Ml MAX j--- ------- I’nirxn 5 gdS Oil UIC vaicuuui —— I
invented any of this fiction (this struggle is to save the union, i House j(Uies Committee says |
e Lincoln lived. i and is not either to save or d - [ when ;m(1 {or how |Ong the
commit- thought eight rooms
received several replies of the estimated costs of a i
g, * g costs varying from $25,000 to
- - , firm of architects came and showed
;us a cut of a six-point st; r-shape< two-story building that
could be built for the bond i sue. I liked the plan. Some mem-
il
| dressed a long open
other things, of failure to exe-11
cute the Confiscation .Act “from ]
mistaken deference to rebel slav-
ery ”
in replv under date of Aug. 22. j
----„ lhe President said: “I have just I
image of togetherness . t h e > rea<J |rs of the 19th addressed
have sought to impugn to Lm- myseif through the New York
i Tribune. If there be in it any
Washington, istatements, or assumption of fact.
.... \ ? erroneous. I {
row and here, controvert
uiul w -------- . - . taem. If there lie any inferences^ vuueivaai„„„--... ---------------- ...
of his untimely death ers have from time to tune pro- which 1 may believe to be false- Congressional Legislative Ser- j E Davis, carried the petition. When completed, I was
. .. J - ’“ ““ I""*■ ,nh°* vice to cast thc idea into legal one of a committce thal pres< nted it ,n /. J.’ ~
the recognition of a ments of our federal pact, the. hpre aigue against them. 11 iqn{n,>oe niod
tne recogn secession, the th„’. be perceptible in it. an la"g^‘g<\ .. .... granted.
eJension or friction of slaimry ^atlellt ^etatorial tone^ - « bdl into a ^d^ the
'“^“r^U-lcisionoIhowiargea
“ .. * , I....... V. 4 i .irrKt r( ,<*rr c *
ord. and we know, beyond the frjen(j whose heart I 1
possibility of mistake, its precise ways supposed to be right. , |er g. ---—
terms as well as its general pu - ”As (0 the policy I ‘seem tu ----.7 ~
port. We stand, as it were, in the pursu;ng’’ as you say, I have not ;tee. There it may
immediate presence of the patriot nieant to leave anyone
1 -"'’■'S hZ~Z~Z n "c ~ ’ "■
a nanon, and listen to their well-1 save
1 weighed utterances as if they vhc (
coin.
:r ui « Wnat Franklin,
taken his place Adams, Jefferson. Laurens, the which I know to be
ameng the immortals. Yet the Pinckneys. Marshall. Jack s o n, j d0 not.
truth remains that he had come Clay. Calhoun. Webster, and oth-
viable recognition, and pounded as to the nature and tde-1|y (]rawn, I do not,
of secession, the
PROCLAMATION OF NATIONAL BEAUTY SALON WEEK
By the Mayor of Alvin, Texas
WHEREAS, our world has been given new and bound-
less dimensions through initial conquests of SP«C®* s° * a
our children may hope to probe the secrets of the Moon,
°r ' WHEREAS, this widening of horizons brings an even
qrerter need for human beings to offset outside pressure
bv a closer regard for those qualities which promise con-
fidence and well-being within the home and the com-
nur WHEREAS, each man, woman and child is uplifted
by both the sight and the practice of good grooming,
and in turn the community which can boast of hand.ome
members finds its prestige uplifted among fellow cem-
WHEREAS, the members of the National Hairdressers
and Cosmetologists Association have dedicated themselves
not only to the raising of business and financial standards
jnny, MM, M..M ~ 7. I ,1 L WDUC ll'ty LVJliczili -
hospitalized and institutionalized, through must a position of superior
WHEREAS, the National Hairdressers and Cosmet- any man. am
Salon Week" through- the white race.”
- • Tuday a form of slavery that
shocks the senses to contemplate
has swept more than a billion
human Ixings into its slave labor
• • »tt ihu.m-.xz.xu, . communes. The world has never
achieved by helping to lift the hearts of those about us. st!aned as they are today for the f------
' 1 ” support and spread of world slav-courses
eiy? What do you think? -itses™
v uie viuw. . - . - ~ —. committee (eight-room brick building, t ie
Tthe shortest wav under may consider tlie bill or assign $32,000. A San Antonio L..
11 __ .1- . • ____in nnnc-irtnr . _ • ,.C r. r-ltr
moved in life among us today . national auLiority can be restor- the bill. Usually, either the com- —--------------
~ ■ ,aa;;Le or the subcommittee will b(?rs did not but we advertised for bids,
uic l.um.. S If there hold hearings, study the merits - - • - ‘ - ----
those who would not save the of tte bill, and prepare a
I tunists that daily disturb our': Union unless at the same time on h to be te
peace is a contribution to those save slavery, I do not agree with House.
forces that seek to divide, con- , them. If there be those who
-_ • .----i j. the Union unless |
of slavery more ghastly than re- ■ they could at the same
coided history has ever befoi tj stroy slavery, I do not
witnessed. None of the biograph- taem. My paramount •
I______rax,, nt *F>ic fGvtifWl 1 Akira raTrnimzlo ic to save
while Lincoln lived. t wn m . how wnen> anu iui nvw
In the January, 1889, issue of. stroy slavery. If I.could would House may review the bill.
Century Magazine, there is a let- by freeing all the s . , Speaker sets a time for
----------------- ::: - an^"eWith <qual time to both city
■■■111*4 aWtllX and |’’t Afterwards the House votes. R"
lhc coiori-d race, I do because I if passed, the bill becomes an
believe it Ik Ips 10 s a v c ,hc “ael” ani1 Koes to thc Scn *
Union I intend no modification 8 senate President refers
! of my oft ■ expressed personal i Ule act once agajn to a commit-;
wish that all men everywhere tce whi(.h may - table'’ it, or re-l
I could be free.” | port it out with or without c.iang-
Any careful reading and anal- es
(ysis of the Emancipation Procla- Majority Policy Commit-
(mation shows it to have contain- setg the time tor debate on
id four leading propositions. <D(the ))iU and a member asks to
i A renewal of the plan for com-1 act considered. If this
| pensated abo isament. (2) A con- motjon carried, it calls for de-
tinuance of the effort at volun- perhaps amendments, and
tary colonization. (3) Thc an- &
: nouncement of the Pere™pt0'?1 10 often, if the Senate (or the
I (military emancipation o aU put, it goes
slaves in states in rebeH’tm at Ho^j amenos
l!he vote. Failing that.
| |uce. (4) A promisI b||[ goes (o a „corlference
committee" of both houses (as a.
rule, seven members from each)
to iron out differences. Result:
often a compromise. Should the
conference committee disagree,
the bill dies.
11. If it agrees, the Act
back to both houses for a
vote.
12. If approved, the Act
to the President. “
■ —— jt and make it a law; (2)
V
Sunday, February II, 1962
HE GOT THE GIRL
EDITORIAL PAGE
fM
■l-I-ETIX B0Ai]|
Sunday. Feb 11
dv in Mounted IM
MoiKlin. Fd',1
lebekah Loj,. I
Optimists Club I
Intel ican Bus J
sociation |
>'FW Post a I
Uvin Wiimets i,J
leta Sigma Pj J
rexas NVxi .J
i Phi Sorority J
lainiressers iiju
Ulin School 3J
dustangs venj. J
ieventh-Eightii M
Marque |
Tuesday, Feb 5
Uvin Charter (J
layci-eettes |
Uvin Volunteit rJ
nt
fellow Jackets J
rk
Wednesday, FA
k'Moiay ■
lortieulture !
'nite.1 Daughters |
<‘racy
Sty Council
Thursday, Feb. I
Jvin Rotary Chi
kid Fellows Ixdft
unior Chamber d
jverpool Houk Da
lustangs verbis
ever.th-Eighth Gri
Porte
’ellow Jackets ven
e Alvin Sun
♦
1
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M
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’id
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Bowen, A. E. The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 56, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 11, 1962, newspaper, February 11, 1962; Alvin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1245940/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Alvin Community College.