The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 193, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1963 Page: 10 of 26
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1
TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1963
THE ORANGE LEADER
TEN
nearer when the Senate finally
*
’ 3
J
in
was a passenger Friday
On ‘Dr. Kildare' Series
Dick Chamberlain Became Star Within Weeks
Rain
fund raisers still lack $4,000 of
Richard
named
actor
earnest
San Angelo in an effort to quench
the area's summer thirst.
Chamberlain, a modest, pleas-
ant young man, now faces the fight—just in the series, of course
—the other day over whether a
0
FLOOR COVERINQ
and salad1 Eyes follow his prog- should be told he was a terminal
original deadline fell Monday.
case."
Mooks Forward
star on the huge MGM lot, if his
Most of it comes from young-
But nuclear weapons can de-
SEE US FOR COMPLETE
drinks in their dressing rooms.
seem happy about the noble image
Chamberlain is at work on next
ARTISTS SUPPLIES
season's batch of "Kildare" epi- of the doctor created by the
The rain maker has promised to
□
as a star, "Twilight of Honor,” in note of hostility creeping in. When
the Communists wanted to break
there’s criticism. it usually re-
which he plays a lawyer.
the Caesarian birth of her third
Announcing CONN'S Big Annual
placed rumors that she might sociation’s president, and State
304 FRONT—TU 3-4342
OUNDERS DAYS
CHRYSLER
FEDDERS
YORK
BUILDING ? =
YOU’LL FIND OUTSTANDING VALUES
——orREMODELING?
Oranges are America's favorite
Monthly payments are
were 502 head of livestock sold
♦
Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner:
♦
eral minutes by the bolt.
RETAIL LUMBER DEALERS ASSOCIATION
The two were
of
SANDS
ORANGE COUNTY
2
♦
AND
Old at40,50,60?
7
I
COM
310 Front
TU 6-7443
•5
BATH
KITCHEN
ADD ON
STRAND.
Request To Up-Date Study
On McGee Reservoir Made
Sen. Yarborough Is Pleased
With Bill on Military Pay
Livestock Sale
Report Is Made
ARMSTRONG
VINYL ASBESTOS
NEED A
WATER
HEATER?
Light Vote Seen
On City Change
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)—A small
like a CONN GUARANTEE . .
MAKE IT RIGHT!
own buildings ... free from any
Dies at Aquarama
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - New-
ance off Communist armies.
But if nuclear weapons were
SAFE HAVEN—A baby seal appears to be contentee
as it rests in arms of a Copenhagen too keeper. The marina
mammal was found on beach in Denmark’s North Zealand.
real celebrity's ordeal en route to
and from,his noontime rare steak
701 DIVISION — TV 3-5616
Hit SHemmn-Wn.uAMS Ca
whole thing gracefully, but it is
easy to understand why t Jot of
Green Mid he hopes to contact
the Oklahoma rain maker within
Rain Fund
Still Lags
SAN ANGELO (AP) —
We Service
What We Sell
Open Thurs.
til 8 o'Clock
Begins
August
15th
needs.
The delegation was led by J. E.
Reese of Nacogdoches, the as-
CELEBRATING 23 YEARS
OF FURNISHING THE HOMES OF THIS AREA
... 90
- 75c
- 50c
*
ress to his table. Visitors whisper
to each other, even fellow players
stop talking shop
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP Television-Radic Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Two years
ago today, a young, handsome and
"Rent Til You Own"
a Flameless Electric
Water Heater. $10
now and only $1.95
a month plus sales
tax Lncludes com-
plete imstallation.
calls itself the San Angelo Weath-
er Information Center. Inc., met
without causing a single head to
turn.
A month later “Dr. Kildare”
their armies.
The tendency since the war. in
To Going Home
OTIS AIR FORCE BASE. Mass
(AP)—First Lady Jacqueline Ken-
nedy is looking forward to going
home from the military hospital
suite where she has been since
last Wednesday.
Mrs. Kennedy’s recovery from
liens of any kind.
★ We carry our own notes,
adjusted to your needs.
We Corry A
Complete Line Of
Armstrong Corlon
change of uniform—from the high-
collar intern’s jacket to a shirt,
necktie and white coat. -
Snip, applied artificial respiration
to no avail.
United States wouldn’t agree to
ban underground tests.
If the United States and Russia
agreed to disarmament—an even
more difficult inspection problem
—the Senate would hardly ap-
prove without a check.
The check would have to be
constant. Then there's the prob-
lem of nuclear weapons. Disarm-
ament without abolishing nuclear
weapons wouldn't mean much.
But the United States and Rus-
sia have nuclear weapons com-
ing out of their ears. Would the
ADULTS ............
CARDHOLDEIS ______
CHILDREN UNDER 11
Man Is Found
By Dead Friend
ROSEVILLE. Calif. (AP) - A
man who lay 100 feet down a re-
mote Northern California canyon
for 60 hours next to a dead friend
was reported recuperating and in
good condition at a hospital.
James D. Patten. 56, of Auburn,
week reports owner, J. M. Muckle-
roy of Buna today.
Cattle led the market with 390
going on the block followed by
85 hogs, 20 goats and 7 horses.
Baby calves brought $5 to $35
per head; fat calves $20 to $24.50
per hundred; stocker calves $20
to $32 50’ per hundred; cows and
calves $90 to $100 per pair
stacker cows $14 to $10 per hun-
FREE
PARKING
FREE COKES
OR COFFEE
• Easy to Clean
• As Main Free as a Floor
Can Bo
e Resists dirt, grease,
acids, lye l
* There is no guarantee
IF ITS WRONG, WE
* We operate from our
Founder's Days are days of reckoning! Days of truth! Days of comparison of
facts! These days we demonstrate values, values which built the solid found-
ation on which we stand today.
Fordetails. call
BELF STATES UTILITIES co.
...... So,
REGARDLESS OF CLAIMS, DISCOUNTS, TRADING STAMPS, OR ANY-
THING ELSE ... IF YOU CAN BUY FOR LESS, WE LL REFUND THE
DIFFERENCE! IF YOU’VE NEVER SHOPPED AT CONN’S, NOW’S THE
TIME TO START.
USE OUR CONVENIENT
REVOLVING
Charge Account
NO INTEREST OR
CARRYING CHARGE
Sen. Martin Dies Jr. of Lufkin.
Five of the seven county judges
were present.
D N. Beasley, president of the
Babine River Authority, State
Sen. Jack Strong of Longview and
Rept. Charles Wilson of Lufkin
were also present.
AUTO AU CONDITIONING SALEs AND SERVICE
STEAM CLEANING AND REPAIRING ON AU MAKES OF WINDOW
UNITS, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL, RESIDENTIAL AT . . .
RICHARDSON'S
906 WESTERN AVE—ORANGE, TEXAS—TU 3-3531
been her only family visitor. She
came to the hospital after Ken-
nedy’s departure Monday after-
noon and remained into early
evening.
Mrs. Kennedy Is continuing her
walks in the hallway of the eight-
bedroom suite, building up her
strength, and has taken up again
the reading of two books she left
behind when the emergency birth
took her from the Kennedy’s
Squaw Island summer home near I
government after 50 years.
The issue was the proposed
“strong mayor" system versus the
Ammhsinn - city manager ar-
rangement under which Dayton
has operated since Jan. 1, 1914.
When the voters adopted the
--------------------- »
Building Permits
Total $13,964
Building permits issued by the
City of Orange for home and busi-
LUFKIN (Spl)—Texas Highway .voir to include a seven - county
Department Engineer DeWitt area and the Toledo Bend reser-
I
-
lightning Monday as he trout
fished in the Pecos River.
fice.
A permit for $3,850 was issued
to Roy E. Bell for work at 2406
Pacific St. which will involve add-
ing 10 by 19 feet, closing in the
garage and removing the parti-
tion. ,
Permits issued for air condition-
ing went to Morrow’s. $900 to in-
stall a three-ton unit at 2301 Mc-
Kee Drive; to United Gas Corp.,
$5,392 to install a five-ton unit In
St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 1401
Park Ave.; and to Garrett Ap-
pliance Co., $1,004 to install a
three-ton unit at 004 Cherry Ave.
Minor repairs, included in the
total, were tagged at $2,818.
out 4.192 vehicles in 1900 but did
not start producing trucks until
1904 when they made 7W.______
a car driven by Roscoe F. Boyer,
52. of Placerville, a fellow-em-
ployee at a bedding firm. The car
skidded off a back road Into a
canyon on the middle fork of the
American River. Both men were
thrown out. Boyer was killed. Pat-
ten was too seriously injured to
crawl back to the road for help.
Logging truck driver J. C. Mar-
tin noticed the skid marks Mon-
day and found Patten.__________
per capita last year. Apples were
second at 26 pounds.
John Jr.. who will be 6 and 3
years old respectively in Novem-
ber, came with the President Mon-
day, their second visit since Mrs.
Kennedy lost her newborn child.
Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, last
Friday.
IMPROVE YOUR HOME NOW!
Why move! Let our experts improve your home. Well
handle everything, from start to finish. Work is guar-
anteed.
FOR FREE ESTIMATES DIAL RE 5-3559
No Job Too Largo or Too Small—No Down Paymont
HELDS LUMBER CO.
355 W. Round Bunch Rd. — Bridge City
k We operate all over this area in our weatherproof vans,
rain or shine.
* You can talk to the top man within minutes if occasion
or a simple desire asserts itself.
* Month after month families and friends bring to us
factory numbers of furniture we do not have on hand.
Within days, usually, we deliver the identical pieces,fresh
from factory cartons, at lower prices than they had been
quoted elsewhere.
ment.
The present population is about
270,000, but only 15,000 to 30,000
of the 85,000 registered voters
were likely to ballot today, elec-
tion officials said.
NOW
ONLY
$159
■
A companion. J. W.
Plainview. Tex., was stunned sev-
Senate ever feel sure Russia was A m w .
l*There"s^ anaher problem: num-Mrs. Kennedy
bers. The Russians and Red Chi-1 *
Y y Root Troubles
Ah. IN YOUR
83 SEWER UNES?
8263 Clogged and Rooted Sewer Lines
#8220 CLEANED ELECTRICALLY
JOHNSON’S INC.
1800 STRICKLAND DRIVE — TU 3-4300
some new aspects this season,
notably because Kildare will be
promoted from intern to resident
physician in the first episode. That
means our hero will achieve a
I Lightning Kills
Texas Fisherman
LAS VEGAS, N.M. (AP)-Ed-
gar Willmann, 38, a veterinarian
from Mason, Tex., was killed by
up to Dr. Gillespie. As a matter
of fact, Ray (Raymond Massey,
his costar) and I had our biggest
FILL "ER U P — Young pelican waits with wide open bln, hoping someone may
toes a hah. The chick wee one of a flock at Riverside Reservoir, near Greeley, Colo, thia
year. It was only second time local authorities could recoil pelicans nesting in the state.
minor disagreement anyway." ---------------
Fame and fortune have had Average investment per farm is
little effect on Chamberlain s way now approaching $50,000 — three
of life. times as much as in 1950.__
sodes. having spent most of his
vacation making his first movie
Man,GetWise!PepUp
quit blaming it on an if you want to feel
*
*
i
*
ness repairs and installation of :
air-conditioning units total $13,904. I
according to the weekly report E
'from the building inspection of-
Minor Episode
Test-Ban Treaty Won't Bring
World Disarmament Quickly
By JAMES MARLOW wisdom of the test treaty is an
Asaeriated Press News Analyst insight into the debate ahead it
WASHINGTON (AP) — World this country ever considers a dis-
disarmament won't be one step armament treaty.
• NOW SHOWING •
WaLDISNeYAc
The seven-man group which
stroy more territory and kill
man suffering from
war situations as South Vietnam.
Those sent overseas without
their families will draw $30 more
per month. Personnel who re-
tired prior to 1958 will receive
their recomputation increases.
Greer has been requested by the voir project.
Deep East Texas Development
later, has been proceeding well.
Normally. hospitalization after
such a birth could last one to two
weeks. There have been weH-
considering disarmament. has
1 been to think in terms of the Vnit-
' ed States and Russia.
Russia's relations with Red
China have become wretched. The
time might come when Russia
would trust the United States
enough to disarm.
But could it trust the Red Chi-
nese? And how could it dare to
disarm unless the Chinese did,
too.
I But the Chinese Insist that war
I with the West is inevitable, that
capitalism won't surrender peace-
fully. and therefore the West must
be overwhelmed.
How could the United States
disarm with the Chinese loose in
the world with that attitude: The
Senate would have a nightmare
over that
By one of the strangest paro-
doxes in history the big powers
have armed so much they're
afraid to disarm.
So long as they stay nuclear-
armed. they're afraid to take
chances with each other.
Fear has become an antidote '
for aggression and the search for I
peace has its roots in terror. <
Do not be "Taken In" by strangers wonting 6 remodel,
repair or re-work your home, using some as an adver-
tisement of their work and promising you a reduced
price or a commission—investigate them thoroughly
before signing contract fr inch work — it may be
more costly than you realize
"Mostotthe.doctorsasto.write ahurssand work out something AmeRicanp suclenr""
Disarmament seems unlikely in
votes its expected approval of a this generation, at least no mat-
MW
perhaps, as an opening to better
relations with Russia—is a minor
episode compared with -disarma-
ment
Under this treaty the United
States and Russia will retain
their full supply of nuclear
bombs, enough to devastate the
earth.
They will go on testing under-
ground to develop more weapons.
The treaty simply bans tests in
the atmosphere, outer space and
in the oceans.
President Kennedy end. Mon-
day. Secretary of State Dean
Rusk. said this country will con-
tinue underground tests. One was
fired Monday.
The present debate over the
Oranges are America's favorite turnout was expected today as
fruit Consumption was 54 pounds Daytonians voted to decide wheth-
- • er to change their form of city
Hyannis Port Mass.
Her two children. Caroline and
"89ckMow 10 Ea.
---- . sters, but Chamberlain also re-
stars prefer sandwiches and cold ceives some from physicians.
series,” the actor reported, “but bring at least two inches of rain
sometimes I think I sense a little
WASHINGTON (Spl)—U.S. Sen
Ralph Yarborough today ex-
pressed himself as pleased with
the Senate bill passed last week
to increase pay in the armed
forces.
He noted that Texas has a big
economic stake in this bill. "With
177,000 members of the armed
forces in Texas, we have more
servicemen than any state in the
Union,” be said.
"This is the first general pay
increase for service members in
five long years. The bill will help
to retain experienced officers and
enlisted men. It will provide a pay
increase in the officer grades of
an average of 18.8 per cent and
for men in the enlisted grades,
16.6 per cent.
"These pay increases will offset
in large part the expense of the
increases by cutting down the
high cost of constantly training
new military personnel. The De-
fense Department is now spend-
ing $1 billion a year to train and
retrain personnel."
According to Yarborough, $721
million was spent on salaries of
military personnel in Texas last
year. For federal civilian salaries
some $664 million was spent. The
increase will total more than $1.2
billion' nation-wide, with about
$100 million of the total to be
paid in Texas.
Particulars of the bill include
a $35 a month raise for corporals
and $55 increase for those in cold
SANDRaN
was reborn as an NBC television -He will also be more mature,” the $10,000 needed to entice
senes with Chamberlain in the said Chamberin, "and can stand Tulsa's mysterious rain maker to
Chamberlain could walk into the title role. He was a full-blown star
MGM commissary for luncheon within weeks.
Chamberlain is the most popular sJ0"2Sa sportpdedgadlinut that...mantxiwer
e- An the hane MCN Inf if hie 2':, —-1L Pg _ 'nese nave tar more manpower
president of the fund raisers.. than the West and could put
James Green, said there had been more armies in the field,
a mixup.
leukemia Monday. night and extended the
fund raising period two days. The
present system 50 years ago Mon-
day. Dayton became the first U.S. _____ ________ ________
city of more than 8,000 population at the local auction held here this
to establish this form of govern- "
dred; cannets-and cutters $8 to J
$14.50 per hundred; bulls $14 to
$19 per hundred and goats $4 toj
$8.50 per head.
Horses brought $25 to $110 per *
ver head; top hogs $15 to $17.50 per/:
Hambv of hundred; light butchers $10 to $15/3
per hundred; feeder shoats $14 2
the bolt to $22.50 per hundred; thin sows J
The two were fishing 1% miles $5 to $11 per hundred and pigs J
from Cowles. near here in North- $1.50 to $5 per head.
17
er New Mexico, during a thup- ---------------
dsrorormnhicLarovega.17 inch Second Whale
Hamby and a vacationing doc-
tor from San Antonio, Russell
leave the hospital sometime after
the President returns here tonight.
White House sources say no date
hawbeentset President back am
Washington, Mrs. Kennedy’s sla-
ter. Princess Lee Radziwill, has
AIR-CONDITIONING Service1
fACTORY WARRANTY and SERVICE ON
- . . . . . .... abolished by this country, the
to Pnwder dr Sanmngetoid" the odds would be reversed any time
------ . usuauy re $10,000 has beent raised. If he a disarmament treat yand rebuild
The television series will have volves around some problem of fails, he will pocket only $500 to
medicine about which there is cover expenses
Repatriates Return
TOKYO (AP)—The third group
of Chinese repatriates from
India returned to Communist Chi-
na aboard the S.S. Kuanghua Mon-
day. the New China News Agency
reported. It said there were 800.
limited nuclear test-ban treaty, ter bow much clamor smaller na-
A test ban—important as it is. lions make about it.
The United States, despite its
expressed concern over the years
about disarmament, would prob-
ably be the last to agree to it.
There are several reasons.
One of the most obvious is the
failure of the United States and
Russia this time to ban under-
ground tests. ,
This country feels confident it
can detect tests above ground
but not under To prevent cheat-
ing, it wants an inspection sys-
tem.
That would mean putting Amer-
ican inspectors in Russia and
Russian inspectors in American
territory, or international inspec-
tors i both.
The Russians complain inspec-
tion is spying. They wouldn’t
agree. Without inspectors, the
chldI, who died less than two dayshaving -ch county, being son-
- - cerned only with its individual
Access roads and transporta-
Association to update a composite lion facilities for the reservoir
study of the McGee Bend reser-'areas were studied last week by
the association leaders in a meet-
ing with Greer.
The two giant projects encom-
pass the seven counties included
in the association. The counties
are Shelby. Nacogdoches, San
Augustine, Sabine, Angelina, Ty-
ler and Newton.
The counties’ commissioners
courts and the association’s road
committees have engaged in sev-
eral months’ study of composite
maps of the area. The maps were
compiled for the purpose of pro-
viding orderly, economical and
coordinated access to the reser-
voir areas. A
The delegates emphasized to
Greer that the East Texans de-
sire to work together rather than
qurbtamingztog7 xo xamt te seel Consumer expenditures for food
SissOS fore — * increased •*
The 11-foot long, 1.001F pound
male whale was found floating up-
side down. Aquarama officials
said he apparently died of lung
congestion.
Brigus, another whale, died Aug.
4, the day after the four arrived
by plane.
The young star handles the mail is any measure.
• NOW SHOWING •
MATINEE 0 TO 7 ......... 45c
MUCH AFTER 7 fM.
Adahs 70s—Kida Under 11 Freel
A BIG JOHN
/ WAYNE
& icHITSUr
_________________ fie. the second of four pilot whales
American car makers. to
KIRBYVILLE (Spl) — There
Rurniture Store
-wvavA-•
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 193, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1963, newspaper, August 13, 1963; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530968/m1/10/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.