The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 166, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1960 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Taylor Daily Press and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Taylor Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Page 4, Taylor Daily Press, Friday, July 1, 1960
Caplor ©aflp ffrestf
Pi’Mlshed In Taylor, Texas, since 1913 and serving a
15,000 each Sunday and dally except Saturday.
Publishers — Taylor Newspapers, Inc.
_News, Advertising and Circulation telephone EU-3621
Market area of
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for reproduction of
all local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP dispatches. Ail
republication rights of special dispatches here are also reserved.
Entered as second class mall matter at the Post Office at Taylor, Texas,
under the act of March 8, 1872.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation, which may appear In the columns of The
Taylor Dally Press will gladly be corrected upon being brought to the atten-
tion of the Publisher.
The Washington
Merry-Go-Round
By Drew Pearson
NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES: Texas Dally Press League, Inc., Dallas,
Texas; New York City; Chicago, 111.; St. Louis, Mo.; Los Angeles, Call!.;
Calif.; Memphis, Tenn.; Detroit, Mich.; Denver, Colo.;
Mexico City.
„ . _ SUBSCRIPTION RATES
<“^ery J11 Taylor, Thrall, Thomdale, Rockdale, Granger Bart-
CU’ i , Jr10’ *Elgln. Coupland and Georgetown — 30-cents per week.
^ Williamson and adjoining counties not served by carrier,
* ’ P?r month; $2.75 for 3 months; $5. for 6 months; $9. per year.
Mall rates elsewhere: $1.35 per month, $16.20 per year.
Those TYA Rates
The Tennessee Valley Authority, under a re-
cently passed congressional act, can now sell bonds
to finance expansion. It is planned to market $115
million worth of these securities during the 1961
fiscal year. And one result may be an increase in
TVA electric rates.
. This highly significant possibility came to light
during testimony by TVA director Jones before the
House Public Works Appropriations Committee.
Committee chairman Cannon asked if it would be
necessary to raise rates “because of the cost of
carrying bonded indebtedness and the Treasury
repayments required under the new act.” Mr. Jones
stated in answer that interest will be a very impor-
tant element in deciding “whether or not our rates
will have to be adjusted.”
This simply illustrates what everyone who has
made even a cursory study of TVA’s operations
knows—that its “cheap power” results from the fact
that it has been given all kinds of advantages, and
all kinds of direct and indirect taxpayer subsidies
that are denied to private business. Capital for ex-
pansion has been one of them. But now, in market-
ing bonds, TVA will have to pay the going interest
rate.
It’s interesting to speculate on what would
happen to the TVA rate structure if it were forced
to pay taxes on the same basis as comparable private
power systems. The latter now pay about a quarter
in taxes out of every dollar they receive. TVA pays
no federal taxes at all, and only relatively small
sums in lieu of taxes to local government.
No Easy Road
The Virginia school teacher fired for giving
too much homework may be going to extremes on
her side of the issue. But somehow the fact that
she was once forced to sign a contract forbidding
her to make any homework assignments during the
entire year seems to be taking this painless educa-
tion business too far.
The trend in recent years has been to get all
the learning done at school. And this learning often
appears to include not only such basic and necessary
subjects as English and history and mathematics.
Also included in some curricula are dancing, play-
acting and horn-blowing, leather-tooling, hog7call-
ing, et cetera—all of which certainly may “broaden
education.”
But it’s highly improbable that such a wide
range of subjects could even be lightly touched upon
in less than six hours a day. If the school is to be all
things to a child and at the same time provide him
with even a vague understanding of the basic sub-
jects, it will have to infringe occasionally on his
time during the television watching evening hours.
HUMBOLDT, IA., INDEPENDENT: “With
Russia trying to destroy the United States’ position
in the world, both as a military power, and as a
world leader of free nations, there should be no
political party lines drawn by either party. National
defense is not political. It is a fight for survival.”
Thought for the Day
Thy dead shall live, their bodies shall rise. O
dwellers in the dust, awake and sing for joy! For
thy dew is a dew of light, and on the land of shades
thou wilt let it fall. —Isaiah 26:19.
* * *
Birth into this life was the death of the embryo
life that preceded, and the death of this will be birth
into some new mode of being. —Rev. Dr. Hedge.
Famous Folks
Answer to Previous Puzzle
ACROSS
1 —— Houston
4-Ruth
8 American
actor
12 -Gershwin
13 Hebrew
month
14 Repetition
15 Mythical bird
16 Clinging
18 Hit
20 Pay
21 --Milland
22 Eye
suggestively
24 Botfly larva
26 Greek goddess
27 Fairy queen
30 Gaseous
'hydrocarbon
32 King of Huns
34 Tarter
35 Salt
36 Indian weight
37 Blood
39 Honey makers
40 Narrow road
41 Rocky hill
42 Splendor
45 Patio
49 Assist
51 Nod
52 Irritate
53 Sacred image
(var.)
54 Falsehood
55 Russian
mountains
56 Repair
57 High
transportation
DOWN
1 Knights
2 In a line
3 American
general
4 Miss Grable
5 Nautical term
6 Package
1—|E=
1
1
N T H E=
MpI
T
7 Guido’s high 29 Forbids
note 31 Nullify
8 Less moist 33 Small drum
9 Space 38 Film again
20 Needle case 40 Coat part
11 Writer, 41 Tendency
Rebecca 42 Unbleached
17 Make ' 43 Coconut fiber
19 Mongol 44 Character in
23 Wipe out “Damn
24 “Good Yankees’*
Queen 46 Famous
25 Indian English school
26 Egret 47 Wind
27 Wretched 48 Sheep (pi.)
28 Century plant 50 Edge
1”
2
3
5
6
7
8
9
10
TF
tf
~
TF
nr
w
18
ilH
B
20
□
2T
y
Hr
23
d
“
29“
24™
25
H26
n
WA
30
31
_P;32
33
34~
lli
36
u
37“
38
39
“
y
tr
41
d
44
45
“
47
48y
4S~
5°
52~
!F
54~
55
«S9
99
56
____
WT
~~
1
WASHINGTON — It isn’t Sen.
Lyndon Johnson’s fault, but some
of his fellow Texans aren’t build-
ing up any goodwill for Texas in
the nation’s capital. This includes
Speaker Sam Rayburn, Lyndon’s
campaign manager.
Two Texans have just maneu-
vered to disrupt the colonial ar-
chitecture of the most historic
square in America with a modern
new brick and glass court build-
ing, chiefly because one of them
wants to walk to work.
The Texan who wants to walk
to work is Judge Marvin Jones
of Amarillo, Sam Rayburn’s broth-
er-in-law, who wants a new Court
of Claims building erected' in
place of the historic Dolly Madi-
son Mansion the Benjamin D.
Tayloe house, and the old Belas-
co Theatre on Lafayette Square,
diagonally opposite the White
House.
The Dolly Madison Mansion,
where the wife of the fourth Presi-
dent gave some of her gayest
parties, is one of the oldest colon-
ial houses in Washington. The
Belasco Theatre is being pro-
posed as a small-scale opera
house in the one major capital
of the world which has no opera
house at all.
However, Judge Jones lives at
the University Club, a few blocks
away on 16th street. He testified
quite frankly that it was more
convenient for him to have his
new court building within walk-
ing distance. “If we were located
at the alternate site, transporta-
tion back and fourth would be
necessary,” he said.
The judge can also walk across
the square to the Metropolitan
Club for lunch, then back to the
University Club to play bridge.
Two Texans Plus a Republican
Another Texan close to Sam
Rayburn is Eugene Worley, judge
of the Customs and Patent Ap-
peals Court. He too wants to tear
down the Dolly Madison Mansion
et al in favor of a modem court
edifice.
These two Texans, who have
influence with the Democrats,
were joined by Republican Judge
I. Jack Martin, also of the Cus-
toms-Patent Appeals Court. Mar-
tin was Senator Taft’s assistant,
and former White House contact
man with Congress; so has in-
fluence with both the White House
and congressional Republicans.
So although every civic-minded
organization in the nation’s capi-
tal went to bat for the preserva-
tion of Lafayette Square, these
two Texans plus one Taft Repub-
lican proceeded to get their way.
At first, however, the White
House balked. Conscientious
Franklin Floete, head of General
Services and in charge of public
building, testified that he had a
better site in southwest Washing-!
ton. It would save the taxpayers
money, help urban development,
and was approved' by the Fine
Arts Commission. Furthermore
Floete said the new site would
hold three courts instead of two.
At the Lafayette Square site
there is no room for the U. S.
Tax Court which has to move
anyway. The two Texas judges
aren’t interested in it, however.
The head of the Tax Court, Judge
Edgar Murdock, isn’t from Texas,
has no political pull.
Immediately after Floete urged
another site, the two Texas jud-
ges got panicky. Judge Jones
phoned Carl Levin, head of the
Citizens Committee to Save La-
fayette Square, offered to make
a deal.
“You can keep Belasco Thea-
tre,” he proposed, “but let us
take the Dolly Madison house and
the Benjamin Tayloe house.”
“The people of Washington
aren’t interested in a barter
deal,” Levin replied. “We’re in-
terested in preserving the most
historic square in America.”
At this point the Republican
judge Jack Martin, began pulling
wires with old friends in the
White House. Suddenly Floete
found the ground being cut from
under him.
“You’ll have to get a lot of
support to make my proposal
stick,” he confided to civic lead-
ers.
They got a lot of support—
from 30 top civic organizations.
But Judge Martin got more from
the White House. Floete, a Repub-
lican, was tcid to reverse him-
self. Ike, he was told, favored the
demolition of the historic build-
ings on Lafayette Square.
Note—When Washington civic
leaders tried to testify before
Congressman Robert Jones of
Alabama, head of the House Pub-
lic Works subcommittee, Jones’s
office said no hearings were sche-
duled. Suddenly without giving
anyone a chance to be heard,
Jones OK’d the demolition of
Lafayette Square. Sam Rayburn
had given him the word.
More Texans
Last week another Texan, Sam
Rayburn, pushed a $5,000,000 ap-
propriation through the House to
buy up one city block to make
room for an expansion of Con-
gressional buildings. . .Simultane-
ously the House Appropriations
Committee told the District of
Columbia, in effect, to jump in
The Potomac when it came to
building four badly needed
schools. . .On the same day, Sen.
Dennis Chavez of New Mexico
put through an appropriation of
$40,000 to build a new swimming
pool for senators, Chavez is the
K
tNEA]
Dollarwise, It's Far More Practical Without the Boat'
10 And 20
Years Ago
10 YEARS AGO
U. S. troops land in Korea;
American ships warned to stay
out of Korean waters.
Mrs. Ed Schroeder to be buried
here.
Patriotic services slated at St.
Paul Church.
Piano recital scheduled at the
home of Mrs. R. A. Schulz.
July 4th means homecoming to
most Taylor folks—talent show to
highlight activities here.
Rice’s Crossing-Thrall Lutheran
keep lead.
20 YEARS AGO
Pickoff quits industrial post of
Chamber of Commerce.
City streets, county roads dam-
aged by 7-inch rainfall.
“Good Neighbors” to gather in
Taylor Wednesday.
Business men slate luncheon
Tuesday.
Texas’ flash flood death toll
may reach 10.
July 4th celebration expected
to attract thousands to Taylor.
chairman of the Public Works
Committee who is helping his
neighbors from Texas to raze
the historic buildings on Lafay-
ette Square. . .On the same day,
another Texan, charming Albert
Thomas of Houston, knocked $2,-
800,000 off the cost of building a
sewer from the new Dulles Air-
port. At the same time, the
same Congressman Thomas was
angling with the Interior Depart-
ment to turn part of Normanstone
Park, which is National Capital
Parks land opposite the British
Embassy, over to the ladies of
Congress and their Congressional
Club. These wives of congress-
men would not have to pay for
the government land.
(Copyright, 1960, The Bell
Syndicate)
* IT OCCURS TO ME *
FEELING STRONG
ON HEALTH FINANCES
By LIN MILLS
Taylor Press News Editor
OUR COMMISSIONERS feel
so strongly that the county
should take over the whole
health program budget they’re
going to try to get the entire
Georgetown city council to
meet with the county commis-
sioners court, too.
As you know, Taylor com-
missioners voted to attend the
July 11 meeting “en masse” to
talk about the financial struc-
ture of the department.
They had been told earlier
by Dr. John Bryson, director of
the county health unit, that the
Georgetown council had voted
to send a committee.
After the discussion here
Tuesday night, Mayor Kollman
said, “I’m going to call Mayor
Charles Forbes and maybe they
will send the whole council in-
stead of a committee.”
Both Taylor and Georgetown
have been asked to increase
their annual appropriations by
$1,260. The county was asked
to up its appropriation by a lit-
tle over $1,600, all of which the
health department wants to use
to hire a second sanitarian to
give Tom Teer some help, the
idea being that it is difficult
for one sanitarian to cover the
whole county effectively.
If the county should take over
the whole budget, the smaller
communities of the county will
be relieved of their financial
burden, too. Although they were
not asked for an increase this
time, they continue each year
to the support of the depart-
ment.
It’ll be interesting to see how
the county court reacts.
MAYOR KOLLMAN is wor-
ried about somebody’s car
smashing into the above-ground
water well equipment and the
million-gallon water storage
tank near the intersection of
East Lake Drive and the Old
Granger Road.
While they were discussing
the proposal to re-surface the
Old Granger Road and dig
ditches on both sides to elimin-
ate drainage problems in the
area, the mayor wanted to
know if there wasn’t something
that could be done to keep peo-
ple off the nearby property on
which the well and the storage
tank are located.
Finally City Manager F. R.
Cromwell was asked to look in-
to the cost of putting up a fence.
Commissioners thought that was
a good idea.
If the cost is under $500, the
city can go ahead with the work
immediately. If it costs more,
the commission will have to
call for bids.
GAS COMPANY Manager
Roy Day “somehow” gives one
the idea that Taylor was a lit-
tle slow in approving. the rate
increase.
After the ordinance was adopt-
ed on third reading, Day told
commissioners, “After tonight
we’ll lack only two towns out
of 250.”
Happy Birthday
Greetings of “Happy Birthday”
are being extended to the follow-
ing birthday celebrants:
Mrs. F. H. C. Nehring.
-o-
Taylor Press Want Ads are
your way to satisfaction. Use the
classified.
Why Grow Old?
Reaping Joy of the Marathon
By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN
(The Question Box)
Q. “I tried your 8-week Mara-
thon and lost 20 pounds. I really
enjoyed this and am happy with
the results. I am 5 feet 9 inches
tall and weigh 150 pounds. My
measurements are bust 38 inches,
waist 26 and hips 38. Am I over-
weight and are my measurements
correct?”
A. If you have a medium
frame, your weight is exactly
right, and your measurements are
in beautiful proportion. Congratu-
lations!
Q. “I have a problem. During
my first pregnancy the skin on
my abdomen and hips stretched
and left plenty of stretch marks.
I have these on my bust, too,
and it sags. Also my abdomen
is flabby. My husband isn’t pleas-
ed with this. It isn’t that he
does not love me because I know
he does, but I would like to
please him. What can I do?
A. Naturally you would like to
be as lovely as possible for the
man you love, but don’t worry
about .the stretch marks. They
will fade in time. Prevention is
more effective than correction in
this instance. You can tighten up
your abdominal muscles with dai-
ly exercise and' firm your bust
with exercises which develop the
underlying muscles. If you, or
any of my readers would like to
have these send a stamped, self-
addressed envelope with your re-
quest for bust and abdominal ex-
ercises, leaflet Nos. 15 and 2.
Q. “I am 29 years old and
am 4 feet, IOV2 inches tall. I
weigh 107 pounds. Is this weight
correct for me? I have a prob-
lem. Though I have lost many
inches from my thighs, I still
have a bulge on the outer sides.
What can I do about this?”
A. If you have a medium
frame, you are a little under-
weight. If you have a small build,
you are about three pounds over-
weight. So I would guess that
your weight is just right. For the
thighs do the following: Stand
erect. Contract the hip and thigh
muscles. Hold while you count to
10 slowly. Relax and continue.
Also, this one—Lie on the floor
on your left side. Brace yourself
with your right hand. Lift your
right leg up toward the ceiling
as high as comfortable. Lower
leg. Continue.
After a while turn onto your
right side, brace yourself with
your left hand and lift and lower
your left leg. Keep our knee stiff
throughout this exercise, and be
sure to have a straight line
from your head to your toes.
(Released by The Register and
Tribune Syndicate, 1960)
"1
r -4 ’
m * ' gj| s h
World Today
_—
Here is a fine exercise for the thighs: Lift your leg up toward the ceiling as
high as comfortable. Lower leg. Continue lifting and lowering.
Truman a Prima Donna
In Stirring Democrats
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON <® — Former
President Truman has fulfilled
the dream of every prima donna
who ever lived: To grab the spot-
light even before the curtain
goes up.
He’s done it twice in a row:
in 1956 and now again in 1960.
But in both those years at least
one famous Democrat, Eleanor
Roosevelt, was looking over his
shoulder suspiciously.
In 1956, as Democrats gathered
for their Chicago convention, Ad-
lai E. Stevenson was the front-
runner for their presidential nom-
ination. Until then Truman had
kept silent on his choice.
Then, two days before the con-
vention opened', he temporarily
stole the show by announcing for
New York’s Gov. W. Averell
Harriman. On the opening day
he bombshelled the party again.
That time he said he didn’t
think Stevenson could win if he
got the nomination. That was
hardly a sunny beginning for
Stevenson who did get the nom-
ination and didn’t win.
If all this proved aything it
was that Truman’s influence in
the party had declined a long
way since 1952 when he was the
retiring president.
Incidentally: In 1952 he was a
Stevenson fan himself.
But this year it seemed Tru-
man would be fresh out of
bombshells by the time the Dem-
ocratic convention opened in Los
Angeles July 11, and for this rea-
son:
Weeks ago he announced his
choice for this year’s nomination
was Sen. Stuart Symington. Tru-
man’s fellow Missourian. After
that there didn’t seem much left
that Truman could do to get at-
tention.
He was going to be one of the
Missouri delegates but, with his
waning influence in the party,
there was a good chance he’d get
lost in the shuffle.
But he found a way.
Wednesday, just 13 days before
the Democratic convention starts,
Truman shocked) his party by
suddenly announcing he would
not attend even though he had ac-
cepted the post of delegate.
And, to build up interest in him-
The PRAYER
For Today From
The UPPER ROOM
When Jesus beheld him, he
said, Thou art Simon the son
of Jona: thou shalt be called
Cephas, which is by interpre-
tation, A stone. (John 1:42.)
PRAYER: O God, we thank
Thee that Thou dost not look
so much upon our failures and
shortcomings as upon our pro-
mise of Christian growth and
service. Help us this day to
press toward the mark for
the prize of Thy high calling.
In Christ’s name we pray.
Amen.
self, instead of saying Wednesday
why he wouldn’t go, he said he
would wait until a Saturday news
conference to reveal his reason.
He said health was not his rea-
son.
Both times—in 1956 and again
in 1960—Mrs. Roosevelt wouldn’t
buy what he was trying to sell.
In 1956, the day after Truman
came out for Harriman, Mrs.
Roosevelt expressed belief his
real objective was to bring about
a Harriman-Stevenson stalemate
in order to get the nomination
for Symington.
Symington at that time said he
wasn’t a candidate but would ac-
cept the nomination.
Now here it is 1960 and Truman
has come out for Symington—
who this time is an announced
candidate. But now Mrs. Roose-
velt has expressed the belief
that Truman endorsed Symington
merely as a “feeler” and really
favors Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson
of Texas.
At least Mrs. Roosevelt has
been more consistent than Tru-
man. She was for Stevenson in
1952 and in 1956 and she is for
him now. Truman was a Steven-
son fan only in 1952.
It’s hard to imagine how a
fighter like Truman — since he
says health is not a factor—
would or could stay away from
the convention.
But maybe his Saturday ex-
planation will raise more hell in
the Democratic party than any-
thing he could do or say at the
convention. If he does, it’s sure
to please him plenty.
Workers to Seek
32-Hour Week
BUFFALO, N. Y. ®-The Unit-
ed Steelworkers Union will seek
a 32-hour week and retirement
at 60 years of age to combat au-
tomation, says a union district [!
director, Joseph P. Molony.
He blamed automation for steel
layoffs.
About 25,000 steel workers have
been idled throughout the country,
in the current slump. ---------—
Montreal Woman Asks
'Directions to Hell'
LANSING, Mich. ® — A Mon-
treal woman asking directions to
Hell, Mich., was counseled to vis-
it Paradise as well.
Mrs. E. Cartmell wrote the
State Department explairiin
she planned a visit to the De-
troit area, and “we thought it
would be fun to be able to say
we had been to Hell.”
The department responded by
mailing a marked map showing
the location of Hell, a tiny unin-
corporated community.
“To complete your trip you
might also visit Paradise in up-
per Michigan,” suggested John
Takacs in an accompanying mes-
sage.
-0-
Shop the ads in the Taylor Dai-
ly Press and save money.
★ EDSON IN WASHINGTON ★
Question: Are Reds Stalling
Disarm Talks Until'61?
BY PETER EDSON
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn,
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—Philip Noel-Baker, Nobel Peace Prize
winner, former British cabinet member and author of “The Arms
Race” (1958), has been circulating about Washington for several
weeks, trying to influence people on disarmament.
His line is based in part on a personal interview he had with
Khrushchev some time ago. He says that the Russian leader wanted
to use the Paris summit conference last May to restart the Geneva
disarmament talks.
But Noel-Baker says Khrushchev was prevented from doing
this by the U-2 incident and Eisenhower’s subsequent actions.
It is wrong, therefore, says the visiting Britisher, for Americans
to say that Khrushchev planned to break up the summit even
before he got to Paris.
Noel-Baker adds that Americans shouldn’t concentrate so much
on the insulting language which Khrushchev used in Paris.
They should negotiate with the Russian leader. For he is talking
like a man of common sense who wants disarmament so he can
raise Russian living standards, says Noel-Baker.
Nobody here accuses Noel-Baker of being Communist. He is an
estimable gentleman who organized the Friends Ambulance Corps
in World War I, was a delegate to the League of Nations and a
secretary at the 1932 Geneva Disarmament Conference.
The talk that he is making here is typical of the pressures being
put on the United States by British Labor party spokesmen and
many other statesmen among America’s European allies.
SOMETIMES THEY ARE MORE DIFFICULT to deal with than
the Russians. They all want the U.S. to give up something before
Russia gives up a thing.
This makes progress on disarmament difficult. For as long as
the Russians feel there is any Western support^ for Khrushchev’s
plan for general and complete disarmament—on his terms alone—
it’s going to be impossible to get Communist countries to agree to
disarmament with inspection and control.
Frederick M. Eaton, head of the American delegation to the
10-nation disarmament conference, has now returned to Geneva
after a week’s consultation in Washington.
Whatever changes have been made in the Western disarmament
plan and their presentation will be unveiled soon.
BUT IT WILL BE A SURPRISE if anything comes of them. For
ever since the conference began on March 15 and was resumed
June 7 after the summit recess, Russian delegation chief Valerian
A. Zorin has refused to consider the basic Western plan.
This is a three-stage program for nuclear and conventional
weapons limitation. It would be under strict controls supervised
by an International Disarmament Organization—IDO. ,
All Zorin will talk about is what he calls the new Khrushchev
plan of June 2. It calls for general and complete disarmament.
He wants the West to accept that in principle first, then talk about1’
the details later. It’s a pig in a poke.
The expectation is that the Geneva talks will continue through
July and August. A recess before the U.N. general assembly re-1
convenes in September is likely.
THEN NO PROGRESS WOULD BE MADE toward disarmament!
until next year. It is considered possible that the Russians are!"
stalling for a hoped-for better break after the November elections
and inauguration of a new administration in Washington.
i
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 166, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1960, newspaper, July 1, 1960; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth777827/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Taylor Public Library.