Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 212, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 3, 1955 Page: 1 of 14
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ENT DELAYED
r
m
*
Viet Nam
-
ction i
us
hll
-
3 (A— Agree-
selling permits,
house-approved omnibus
tax bill
to a senate subcomm ittee
dimmed pros]
bill
hearings yester-
bate
before t ie Sen-
restore
Rep.
MM.
Cox’s; “unfair sales”
Jack
high
As an ended it would let
’ vere to b e heard
merchants
ice highways the
of the
hearing
83
Chairman Dor sey Hardeman of
,33
a.
could
real estate
either ommittee
license
al84» won tentative
ms, to
be sub
amendments is
Such routing
basis for retai ni n
Distributors
liege.
e
h o u s e
switched sides
e to be
the
ate conference
the confer-.
Heard y e s t e
Two Men Accused in Oil
Man's Death Shot Down
803332
Gen. The had thrown four bat-
lose
the proposed
does,
He died
is in
the
com-
l not
t bill
tax
gunshot wound in
AGAIN—Mrs. Anna Williars.of Wichita Falls,
WALKS
men
TOW
on the Jacksboro
on bond. Clark's widow,
Mrs.
cil Gi
i, x-convict and Tex-
The new farm bill would n-
figure, was re-
husband.
Williams after shoving
’ (AP Wirephoto)
-----
“no-
Ci
sentatives
es Beard's
gr
ai
MORE stress is
lion
r cent of
port
a news-
tionary coi
75 to
I
Ye
thereafter.
cent
called to meet
ree men went to
ure
‘8
id
tors frowned u
am
present law.
a good
ion
t
«C
when he has a
for an all time high
a good
this
return for their products in rela-
hours this
to the cost of things they
April City Building
who
John L. Beard from
ector W. C,
Simpson has is-
how to
bania.
totalling $543,350,
perm ts
turn facts into i
h is more than $140,000 more
has grown as
ers began
halists come ale ng any
the journalism school
army re
annulment of
h
tter year.
ie
parked across
to a
a
number of proj-
first rubber-type
business buildings ac-
vo new
Med for $107,000 of the total
electrified when t he discovered a
A
The addition to the
h urnalism
in the
tl
in Gaines-
permit for the
non
st
today for
nied the accusation. He said the
vaccine.
plai
Sen
hower administration
late Public roads sub-
he
cel ar.
mated two ’
a series
text was
Secreta ry
against
ness
prepare
a news
mpsi
fire
ion
Averell Harriman of New York
and
that the
he
fight against polio will best
advanced by such legislation.”
be
agrees Dr. Beard is entitled to n
he Pulitzer prize
was made of
the Treasury
A
Eisenhower’s
full
went to
and
MRS.
who
Several
ne recipient,
ROLAND K.
and the other
was
to assure
the
she was
on
»
ble.
Nelson
ent
were
20, and Pete Strick*
‘ he
lies Nati
not all
GOOD newspaper
combed the
a national
lake
fl
terday
day.
favoritism’
saw the
Natio al
ter
a
cel
a
tion pro;
tall s
the first o
R — President
GREETS MOTHER OF THE
Eisenhower
rter has one of
“there
had
tion.
■ T 1
1
1*
b
A
5.
1
Chairman
yesterday
committee
y and
items:
committee; and Francis V. du
Pon t, special consultant to the
ded for the same
The four-month
- The Warsaw radio raid the So-
viet Union, Poland; Czechoslova-
fake
after
of commerce. All three
the Eisenhower road
makings o
Sen Morse
any con-
point con-
More witnesses
on resumption
this afternoon.
Sum Angelo sale the
called for all j ropo:
nesses on the
the other pro]
the true
since he
one m
new c
value of permits as’
eather caused post-
for a
of the
store
cent
9.
id
er life work.
There was a
aP
dol
ments, without
adoption or rej
mitted along v
subcommittee.
a;
hi
bol-
offi-
more
pres-
m
•ch
Th
Stricl
gar hears the appeal.
"They don’t choose to
him until Mr. Beard comes
li
si
V
house approval
senate.
i
T
I w<
wi
hi
ni
le fam
additii
l is moi
han co
l throu
s all tin
n the l
r the £
far hor
in tot
ment '
ment i
al and one of
■s of the free
•eement
amend-
1
over
i ito
Jean Whet
Fagan, 18.
miles to a
neday,
' cloudy,
York..
In New
Foundation
de-
re-
h
L -
ommendation to depose Bao Dai.
The assembly j
in Saigon tomorrow.
c
f
S
v
b
n
ETOPICS
By A MOR ’ON SMIT H
P
P md
♦ 8888
L g
82
28822
i
eti
s
c
s
q
p
textbook on
high school
ville.
a
L
i
P
e
Mary Clark, 43. is charged as an
accmpce in the death of her
Given tentativ house approval
was a watered down version of
to journalism s chool in
sense of the wi rd. But
school she attended, CIA (now
TSCW), at Dehton, and Towery
was a soil cons ervationi: st turned
reporter only three years ago.
s
f
7
2
t
s
c
b
0
The decision, however, it goes,
is certain to echo noisily in next
year’ll political campaigning. ?
TOWERY, managing editor of
the Cuero newspaper. He broke
the veterans’ la nd sale scandal.
I '
l. ■
editor,] who does
two people every
n
c
in
Ngo Dien Diem in an offensive
against the Binh Xuyen rebels.
Gen. The’s Cao Dai forces were
of Welfare Hobby said last nig ht
she will recommend curbs to the
White House “if it appears oh the
basis of! our findings and disc us-
Rep
a bin
jects as Latin, nath and English,
that textbook v as his daily read-
Red Military
CommandTo
Be Unified
war II peace treaties With Hun-
gary and Romania. Russia should
withdraw its troops from those
nations as soon as they are no
longer needed to protect the sup-
ply line to Soviet troops in Aus-
tria. Creation of a unified com-
mand would give the Russians a
legal basis to continue their
forces in the satellitesan esti-
mated 30,000 men in Hungary,
300,000 in Romania and 400,000
in Poland. The Soviets reportedly
have only military obervers in
Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria and Al-
nesses to the pi
cigarettes, tobai
ip -oved a five-year, 22-billion-
ilar new rad program with
premimum stamps,
beer selling permits,
would be set up if West Europe
went ahead with ratification of
the Paris treaties and With West
German rearmament. |
Western observers in Vienna
said the announcement appeared
a postive indication that Russia
expects to carry through its
promise to sign an Austrian in-
dependence treaty and end the
we feel In 11
the best staffs
b
J
he should have been released.
The four sides contending over
the question of dgar's jurisdic-
tion were:
sed a short
g troops of
sect joined
of Premier
I
- I n
he bill to a
, objection to
the procedure wi s voiced.
3
i
in t' J
I after the
communique
first session yesterday said
table progress was ede ”
newspaper
about, and we
vernors Split on
lat to Do About
yhway Program
By HERB ALTSCHULL
5
1
tion
buy.
Toda
Work
so mud
3
• I
April.
oSomristearpnge
ground as in the past when he
has stressed these points:
1. A Nationalist withdrawal
from Quemoy and Matsu is un-
thinkable.
2. Nationalist China opposes a
cease-fire in Formosa Strait.
3. The Nationalists will never
sit at the same table with the
Reds.
4. The White House envoys,
Adm. Arthur Radford and Asst.
Secretary of State Walter Rob-
ertson. did not press for a na-
tionalist abandonment of the off-
shore islands. '
5. The talks with Chiang cov-
ered the whole Far East situe-
11
months of
• Through
___ Only as esti-
rebel battalions with
units remained of the *
on building ac-
the first four
——
be willing to rehire the educator,
or a board will be chosen which
would want to defend against
Beard’s appeal.
Storey challenged the position
of the present board in not want
ing to take any action until Ed-
as underworld
ported in
cost, pro*
unlimited
dice in the state-
E
t ime in more than
building failed to
1 those ree >:
od last year
seci etary
end >rsed
His death was di
time after hard-hit
the Cao Dal religic
the Nationalist arr
rials — ! to pass
ie National revolu-
ttee’s weekend rec-
Construe
pears head
occupation. .
A big four ambassadors’ con-
ference to settle outstanding
questions on the Austrian treaty
now is in progress in Vienna. A
Issued
provincial of
judgment on
States are prepal
Bao Dai if his removal would
promote stability.
asid her wheel chair.
Top Cao Dai
General Is
Shot Down
if a
Most of the testimony pre-
sented the senate committee on
the tax proposal was a repeat of
earlier pleas hefore the house
___...__ 1
committee.
E. H. Thornton, Jr., of Galves-
ton, chairman of the highway
support
90 per
1 82% and 90
. ! Voting with
re 23 Republi
mopping up Vien’s
of 2,000 men on Sa
George M. Leader of Penn-
sylvania, endorsed the Gore
fan aula.
n on Saigon outskirts,
while directing
battalions in this action.
the
in New
valued at
est si igle
th.
Reporting to the governors
Reports of new Frenh support
and renewed U.S. backing * *
stered the Premier. French
attention. - ]
TODAY ANNOUNCEMENT
FORECAST
‘onight and
Spasmodic fighting continued,
meanwhile, between four nation-
present board feels the only way
to be fair to the people of rving
is to wait until all sides have
Germany, Hungary and Albania
would take part in th- nafe
ence, with Communist China
sending an observer: [
The eight European nations
met in Moscow last November to
warn that the unified command
Such routing could ta e any-
where from several days to a
addition t me for
The Cao Dai general was fired
upon by Binh Xuyen comman-
does in an armored motorboat
and died instantly.
This blow to the armed forces
supporting Diem came as the
premier was marshalling all his
support for a political victory
over Chief of State Bao Dai.
• t
*gN
The Eisel,, ,
has thus fir recommended
against such controls.
dividuals by tea hers.
But the need for persons
know somethin; about hov
.newspaper story
newspapers have
spread out thei r editorial cover- t
age, and not en ugh “bom” jour- P
halists come alc ng any rhore. So t
the journalism school graduates e
are much in de mand and nowa-
here and gets some kind of white-
washing and they offer no evi-
dence,” Storey charged.
supporting ______________
5.000 man private army which
sought to topple Diem from pow-
curred.
The drive-in, closed at the .time
of the shooting, was the same
place which Fort Worth gambler
Edell Evans recently named as
his destination before disappear-
ing.
Evans’ blood-soaked Cadillac
was found in northwest Dallas
county. Officers still are investi-
gating that case.
I. Kress and company store
$100,000 for the
by__T_______ _ _ - ,,,
committee, which instead adopt-
ed a “pay-as-you-go” formula pro-
posd by Sen. Gore (D-Tenn).
S< >me of the governors, notably
graduates as reporters, believing
that one makes
WASHINGTON, May 3 (A) —
Administration leaders reported
iqa pretty well split group of the
natibn’s governors today on what
cials in Paris said last night that
their government and the United
States are nrehred to "sacrifice”
Huggins was believed the ob-
ject of a widespread hunt by Fort
Worth police ahd sheriffs depu-
ties today. . . ' I .
It wwas Huggins’ statement, to
police that broke the Clark case
once allied with the Biny Xuyen
society and the Hoa Hao Sect in
a united front demanding Diem’s
13
1
i
I
she contracted polio twenty
paralyzing her from the waist
husband. Air
and just hea __ _
without having two parties to thi •
action,” Edgar said.
1. Representatives from the old
board that fired Beard. 2 Attor-
neys for the present board. 3. At-
torneys for Beard. 4. The attor-
ney for the Texas Education
agency. _ J
Charles P. Storey of Dallas,
representing the old board, urged
postponement until at least after
Saturday when a new board is to
be elected. He said it is his opin-
ion either an entirely pro-Beard
slate will be elected, which would
recently, officers said.
Huggins told poliss ::
ment that the thre
who were in
swam to safe-
HL
8
■
2e e
can pass the high support _
Repu blicanc were equally hopeft
of he iding city Democrats.
ate there las been evidence
the vaccine “was being dis
uted with favoritism’ in ’
, 1
j . : 38388388383
g
swim 150 yards________________
boat to shore shortly after noon
Monday.
Their girl f
the boat with
ty in choppy
winners, and tl ie two newspaper
prizes for sma l-town newspaper
enterprise in i eporting wet "
Texans in Cuer 1 and Alice.
approval,
proval and
flock of hi
expects to lose only about
18 vetes this time, but might also
lose some of last year’s Demo-
crati: support.
Regardless of what the house
does, no early change in the law
is in prospect.
Th? Senate Agriculture com-
mittee has indicated it will not
eveh consider a price support bill
hAfei ~ nov+ rrA,, 1 A ,m +L.
AIPEI, Formosa, May 3 (P}—
I Nationalist Chinese Foreign
ce flatly denied today a local
Ss report that Foreign Minis-
George Yeh had hinted Na-
today for [house hearings ir to
the wisdom of federal controls
over the distribution of Salk polio
published his _____ .. ..
paper when he was still tn gram-
mar school, he* was H tlte short of
.___________ condition. His
companion, Leroy Tincy Eggles-
VIENNA, May 3 (A) Warsaw
radio announced today that Rus-
sia and her seven East European
satellites will meet in! the Polish
capital May 11 to set up a uni-
fied military command.
Western observers in Vienna
said the move apparently was
spec al goyernment-sp on-
sored advi sory committee,- com-
prised chiefly of private medical
health officials,
A Sure Method I
DEEP RIVER, Conn. (UP) —
Volunteer firemen who raced to
blazing debris near the firehouse
learned that the fire had been set
by Chief Donald Moore wh o
wanted ’em to attend a' regular
meeting.
SAIGON, South Viet Nam, May
3, VP) — Gen. Trinh Minh The,
top Cao Dai gen
the chief supper
Viet Nam Revolutionary commit-
tee was killed in action tonight.
and that the ab lity to be a good
newspaper rep rter car inoi be
transferred fron i textboo Ks to in-
gun .yesterday -
ate’s State Afi firs committee.
her permits included 16 new
ly dwellings, $98,500;
ns to dwellings, $2,-
to two dwellings, $1,-
v frame garage, $750;
The premier formally con-
voked a "states general’’—an as-
sembly of political party repre-
- municipal and
FORT WORTH, May 3(A)-
Bodies of two young Dallas men
were fished from Grapevine lake
today by members of the Denton
and Justin fire departments.
ing requiren ents 1 for obtaining a
cmute salesman or broker-
federal and state govern-
mets sharing in the cost. Eisen-
rning the effect of the vaccl na-
an program—it’s still too ear y.n
The four dation said that of the
nine milli tn first and seco nd-
-.....r । 1 ■
■
NUMBER 212
Allies
commodities to the levels fi
fixed i
v V
i i
g ( -
But Mrs. Bn wwn says
kicked out of t! ie only journalism
_ time, years ago,
hen newspape • managing edi-
___ -______2 upon jou rnalism
Final house ap-
senate approval of a
)RT WORTH, May 3(A) —
accused of 1 slaying
oilman William P. Clark
AUSTIN, May
ment to send tie controversial
lg highway- program.
Tie meeting was held behind
clos ed doors.
* briefing was scheduled after
close of the session.
eanwhile, Gov. Robert F. Ken-
of Louisiana, chairman of the
highways.
Still to be hea rd are more wit-
taiions of his troops, perhaps 2,-
400 men, to Diem’s support in
battered force
for the tax
day but the house met for a long
work session.
Superintend ent.
Edgar re cessed conidertie in
of that question briefly as temp-
— .-----1 o flare in the argu-
developments „
PARR case w as one recipient.
program in hearings before the
?en ite subcommittee.
Tie subcommittee last Friday
ants last nightwere in three cars
> the highway from
drive-in cafe and that he knew
-— -f +*---1 He said he and
result of
aghin. Mrs. Williams saic
months after the accident,
down. She stands with her
York, the ,
for Infantile Paul;
were Secretary of
Humphrey, Gen. Lucius D. Clay,
heal of President Eh-3 -
Scheduled for two days of de
:to was a bill to junk the F2
and Huggins outside. The two
heard a shot, Huggins said, and
Eggleston walked out alon. "
Eggleston, Green, and Mrs.
Clark al| have denied any con-
nection with the shooting; Hug-
gins said Mrs. Clark offered $10,-
er.
The insurgents, led by Gen. Le
Van Vien were fighting a des-
perate but losing rear guard ac-
tion. Vien’s headquarters were
now reported to be between Can
Gioc, 12 miles south of Saigon,
and Go Cong, 30 miles to the
south.
__year based
tivity thro ugh
- .95$.
Opposition to
Liberalized Trade
Bill Disappears
By JOE HALL
WASHINGTON, May 3 (A) —
Sen. Byrd (D-Va) said today
most of the senate opposition to
the liberalized foreign trader bill
appeared to have disappeared.
Byrd, floor manager for the
bill, said in advance of a second
day of floor debate there is a
possibility of an agreement to
limit 'debate starting tomorrow
and that the bill might pass
without change tomorrow night.
"That would be three days,
and not so long ago we were
afraid it might take 30 days,”
he said. , I ’ .
Majority Leader Lyndon B.
Johnson (D-Tex) said he was
working .on a time limitation
agreement.* Such an agreement
requires unanimous consent. Its
fate appeared to be largely up to
Sen! Malone (R-Nev), bitter foe
of the reciprocal trade program.
Malone conceded in a separate
interview he believes there will
be only a few votes against the
measure on passage.
A rewriting job done on the
trade bill by the Finance com-
mittee, which Byrd heads, ap-
peared* to have quieted much of
the opposition.
The committee preserved the
key features of the bill requested
by President Eisenhower and
passed by the house. These ex-
tend the reciprocal trade pro -
gram three years and give t h e
chief executive additional pow-
ers .to cut tariffs during that
period by 15 per cent.
Strong Coffee
UP) — Too much
it pl ans to do about salvaging its
bi
troops in Hungary ar
after the expected end of the
of ny sial town
w know
000 for Clark’s death in a
robbery but only paid $6,000
the killing.
A few days before he was killed
cia ly approved any cease-fire plan
of
graders d ie to get free sh its,
about four million have recei red
the first o two injections. , -
Governm ent o f f i c 1 1 s, me an-
. 3 today
quick final adjournment
and aggressive
But journali rm studei its or ro,
_____ also reported that
ire runs were made in the
the past month with
Eric Eades, Jr., of Dallas, at
torrey for the present board, det
days usually 4he y have jobs wait-
ing for them be fore they receive
f their diplomas.
THIS WRITI R NEVER went
1 prpower ocsupatio 1 of Aus -
tioralist China might agree tq :
cea se-fil e in the Formosa strait.
I eh made a report today at ;
being taken to provide the legal
gRussian
d Romania
.a
Eisenhower shakes hands with Mrs. Lavina Christensen
Fugal of Pleasant Grove, Utah, the U. S. Mother of the
Year, st a White House ceremony. Sen. Arthur V. Watkins
(R-Utah) is at the center. • (AP Wirephoto)
none of them _________
Green had “just pulled up” at
the drive-in when the shooting oc-
Lake
ies of 2
I
CHICAGQ
coffee gave George Welter, 20, a
rving school system
16. ’He claimed t ie
proposes price
80 t» 90 per cent „ _____J ...
plac of 75 to 90 ppr cent under
commission, urged a twojcents
per gallon gasoline price hike in
lieu of the proposed one cent,
contending evert that would take
20 years to finan
state needs now,
For dairy products, the meas
supports at
of parity in
ler girl walked four
rocery store to call
Assn., told thescommittee he felt
there was no hbpe of getting out
of the proposed penny -pack
cigarette tax, jut he warned
against the day of diminishing
returns on ciga rette taxes.,
sis said fev ver children have, be en
stricken wi th polio this year tl an
in recent years, but a spokesn|an
said. “You can’t draw
elusions at all at this
aineshille
generally < thikdren from 5 to
Spence (D-Ky) sa
the Housej Banking
___________will hold hearings
the question "as soon as ppi Bi
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1955
J. W. Edgar should hear the ap-
peal of Dr.
his dismissal as Irving school
tian $220,000 great-
itriiction permits is-
April 1953. The
bi hiding record was
ports, $750; one new
$300; one new
ars j
ord
in Gainesville ap-
ing. Over and 4 ver agaih for the
two years he vas in the junior
and senior classes at Gainesville
high, he studied that book. One
feature of the 1 *
alist army battalions and the ,
broken Binh Xuyen forces out-
side the capital.
the arm. 1 < । even consiaer a price support bill
The. pair and Harry Huggins before next year. ’ And in the
are charged ip the. slaying of even congress should pass such
Clark May 19, 1953. Allarefree .... iis
min istration’s controversial road
financing program.
That plan has been scrapped
thy
shot d own
In a nationwide broadcast. Diem
said the National army also
would have voice in the final de-
cision oh the committee’s recom-
mendations. Both the states gen-
eral and the army were expected
to approve the ousting of the
playboy ex-Emperor^.who has
been living on the French Rivi-
era for the past 13 months.
The demands for Bao Dai’s de-
position followed his cabled or-
CARO BROW J of Alice, who
broke the news day after day on
n the GEORGE
Support of
Fpm Prices ...
Due for Fight Dies in
ly B. L. LIVINGSTONE "T"
WASHINGTON, May 3(P) —
Opposing house forces squared
off to day in a new battle over the
old is sue of farm price supports;
। t { I
•. Celler. (D-NY, Sponsor of
calling for controls, wrote
Spence that the situation has “1,
* traged f.”
(DOre.) told the sen-
l 'eporter
feel” for news
Restore ay
recommended voluntary cntrols
to deal wit i problems of upp ty,
distribution and priorities.
_ _ .2 members of congress
have calleq for federal Contr ols
T — _ hat the Vaccine goes
first to those who need it m: s:—
been heard l |
“It’s the board’s attitude they
don’t know whether they should
rehire Beard until a hearing in
held,” Eades told Edgar.
. Edgar told all parties that
Grape’
Yields
____ .. demanding Diem’s
resignation But the general
three months ago
ien, the
sell groceries below
rovided they are sold in
quantities.
A senate-last'd plan tighten-
__- junk the ad-
ministration’s fledging flexible
during the ,
red los 5 of $179.80. 1
made.”
Under the terms of the world
1 He estimated the cost would
be 2 cents a day for the average
highway -user, ‘ terming it "the
cheapest insurance policy any of
us can buy for highway safety."
Rep. Jerry Sadler of Hickory
Grove waved a bottle of snuff
before the committee and called
Clark’s 23-room mansion and that
Eggleston took Clark into a room
shut the dpor, leaving Green
—_______ ;
[ 65TH YEAR
ADJOURN
44.....1.1 . 1 ।
bui ding, $25,000; and one
s building remodeled, $5,-
Van Vy, a supporter of
supplant Diem. The c—. __
fused to follow Vy, who scurried
back to the hill resort of Dalat.
Eduar Recess
Hearing as Tempers Flare
By BO BYERS .show a professional reason Why
AUSTIN, May 3 (A)— Attorneys II
for four si des argued for tv /o
hours this morning on whether I
State Edi cation Commissioner 1
land, 17, brothers.
Rescue workers
when Gen. Le Van
Binh Xuyen leader, rejected de-
mands that armed struggle be
avoided.
Omni
board whicli fired him could rot
House to Open
Hearing on Polio
Control Proposal
Washington; May 3(A—
An early start appeared assured
at
I
i
!
i
of pages show ng the right and
wrong way to ~~~ - 22
story. That wa > one phase of the
book to which ie gave particular
govi ernors’ conference, said he
and his supporters will campaign
among members of the house of
representatives to revive the ad;
ministration’s controversial road
In Washington, Henry Suy-
dam, chief state department'
press officer, told newsmen the
United States “continues to sup-
snue port the legal government of free
GW, Viet Nam” headed by Diem. He
refused to say whether Washing-
ton still regards Bao Dai as chief
of state.
night be a certain area
understanding on the issue.”
Gffical quarters not only said
Tax Measure
gaily released Us .head of the
strife-torn
last Feb.
people t o d a ] ’ are journalism
school graduates. We have two
writers on Tie Register staff,
that for res purcefulness and
ideas are unequalled on small
town papers, who never
inside of a jou mnalism c assroom.
They are .MBS. EULA WEST,
woman’s page editor, who does
the work of two people every
day, so interes ted is si e in get-
ting the news, while BILL KING,
sports editor, Hanks with the best
of them .
This is not I ntended ds any re-
flection on o: r one journalism
school graduate. JACK JOYCE,
dity editor. Wh >m every reader of
clo ed session of the Legislative
Yu in parliament on the recent
tai! ts here between President
ment.as to ' whether or not he had
authority tc hear the matter.
Beard ha charged he was il e-
legislature.
The subcomm ttee plan w a s
disclosed at a pi iblic hearing be-
FOURTEEN PAGES!
---
-
—---
Parity is a legal standard in-
tend ed to assure farmers a fair
ionalist China
Might Agree to Cease-Fire
this was speculative, but that
Yeh covered much the same
week or more 1
consideration before the bill
would be submitted to th senate
2-
L>•
AND MESSENGER •u
for eight hours yes-
. . noon and last night,
then resumed the search early to-
The two failed in an effort to
from a borrowed
—Ee
_ J
L cc
8
U J1."
■
La it year, in a Rpublican-con-
trolle d house, 45 democrats af
teamed up with thei GOP majori- fo
ty to pass the present flexibl tri
law 1 supporting basic farm cro
at levels between "
per । ent of parity,
the* ! Democrats wei
cans. J
cRpp. Harrison (D-Neb) said the
while continued their sile
inquiries they are^mak
some 35 ci ises of polio W
veloped after children
ceived at least one shot.
u' - J J
Ch ang Kai-Shek and two special
Wi ite House envoys. ,
1 he English-language China
Nevs said Yeh hinted that while
Nationalist China had not offi-
der last week for Gen. Nguyen
his, to
the 63-year-old Clark filed suit for
____2____ L. his marriage and
said in the petition that Mrs.
j Clark “lured him into marriage”
! for his money
Eggleston told police his assail-
legis ation, it would almost ।
tainly be vetoed by]President
seph ower.
Tex., who has been confined to a wheel chair since 1951 as a
an auto-train accident at Houston, Tex., walks
■
floor.
Chances are final adj astment
of differences I etween
and senate waul l still hi
the proposed one-cent per pound
levy'on it “a tax on grandmha.".
- Jack Lwallen, secretary of the
Texas Tobatco
price supports at 90 per
of parity for wheat, corn,
cotton, rice and peanuts. Under
the present administration pro-
—am. these crops can be sup-
irtd at 82% to 90 pei
parity this year. The
range will drop to 75 "
next year and
kia, Romania, Bulgaria, East
he puse
still necessary.
The hous also gave tentative
approval to la bi l to make Tarle-
ton State colleg at Stephenville
a four-year col
A bill to require support and
grant inheritance rights for chil-
dren born of common law mar-
hover urged a 10-year program
involving 54 billion dollars
than would be spent at the
rate.
--------------1-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sub-Committee Gets
sions or developments
gar
full hearing.
“I intend to give him one, bui
the thing that concerns me nov
is whether we can give him a f, I
ring on his claim
g twr-----id- -lk-
CommanderDi
-Ag
Natural gas
wine and , . _ _
and uranium production.
' The senate slipped its usual
afternoon meeting to make way
/ !
d
j . L
L ! A
f .
headache. The coffee—six quarts
of it—was in a steel urn that fell
off a 15-foot. hydraulic lift and
hit him on the head.
support program and restore*
rigid price props on bas
’ L L first
in world war II to spur
prodi ction.
Both sides conceded the vote
I0id go either way when the
showlown comes tomorrow. . 1
Dei nocratic leaders, however,
predicted that if they capture 20
or more Republican votes they
?efu>
The Register I nows as a capable
-*e news wilter.
anything
auuu.,-----are wen acquaint-
ed with quit® 11 number,
NORE AND
171 being placed on journalism
study before em accepts
paper job and e iters inti his or
worked out by 1 joint hquse-sen-
i ommittee >.
e r d a y w ere wit-
ioposed lvies on
. - . u co, cigars and
snuff as well as one witness on
wey northeast of here last
r w
' h,
l f T9
hi t
LI H ‘ «
.%
fUj!
s‘1
I a
i; in
CLAYTON HICKERSON ton, suffered a
--------,—,-----—------
Weather in Texas
Springlike Today
By The Associated Press
Clear to partly cloudy skies and
warm temperatures "bathed Texas
in springlike weather Tuesday.
But the bath stopped there.
There had been no rain since
midnight and only scattered thun-
derstorms were indicated in fore-
casts for the next two days.
It appeared that the long, long
drought would continue.
Gainesville had 77-degree
weather at noon today with the
barometer rising at 29.99. The
low last night was 63 and the
high yesterday 90. The humidity
was 52 per cent.
Temperatures at 5:30 a. m.
ranged from a chilly 48 at Dal-
hart to a balmy 47 at Texas’ is-
land resort city, Galveston, ,
. _ o he-cent-pe r-gallon
tax on gasoline to build more
riages won fina
and went to the
Thereafter, h » was a different
arson. Insteac , of spending his
udy hall sess ons on such sub-
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 212, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 3, 1955, newspaper, May 3, 1955; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1580275/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.