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Tyler Morning Telegraph du lieu suivant : Tyler, Texas • 8

Lieu:
Tyler, Texas
Date de parution:
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8
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Ji. 8 Tyler Woraln. Telegraph THURSDAY. JUNE 26, 1953 Concerning Alaska Territory Big Enough ToHumbleEvenTexans (I By ARTHUR EDSON WASHINGTON (AP) The Aleuts had a word for it. They called it i Alakhskhak.

or "The Great Land." Alakhskhak became a popular word, fortunately, and the great land now is known as Alaska. No one here seems to know the Aleut term for "49th state," which is too bad. For the Senate is again debating whether to admit Alaska to statehood, and the word, or words, might come in handy. The House has voted to make Alaska a state. Possibly the most surprising thing about Alaska is its vast size.

It's so big it could even, but undoubtedly won't, humble a Texan. Why, pardner, you could carve two Texases out of Alaska, and have enough trimmings left over for a couple of dozen Delawares. Texan Disputes Seaton Claim On Oil Quotas Plop Alaska over the United I States proper, and you'll fill most of the Mississippi Valley. The right-hand tail of Alaska, the part that stretches along Canada's western border, would reach to the Atlantic. The left-hand tail of islands would reach to the Pacific.

Alaska has had a hard time living down the legend that it's ex SALT LAKE CITY (AP) A Texas oilman says Interior Secretary Seaton is mistaken in his belief that a voluntary oil import program, is effective. the water after the Swedish freighter Nebraska rammed it in New York's East River. (AP Wirephoto). COLLISION SINKS OIL TANKER This is a closeup view of the sinking oil tanker Empress Bay with its bow sticking out of clusively a land of ice and snow. It gets cold up there, all right, but it can get hot, too.

In Fairbanks it has been as hot as 99 and as cold as below. CAR HALTED AT MISSILE PLANT Pickets gang up around a car at the Chrysler Corp. missile plant as United Auto Workers members mass in an effort to stop non- strikers from entering the Detroit plant Two were arrested during the incident, which caused traffic to back up for eight miles. (AP Wirephcto). W.

Earl Turner of Austin said Wednesday that if the administration had recognized that the present voluntary program is iheffec-tiv it wo-ild realize the situation in the oil industry. Turner, executive vice president of the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners spoke at a closing session here of Tomatoes Rot On Vines at Si" In Central Texas Fields Loyal Alaskans maintain that anyone who can live through a rugged New England winter will have no trouble in Alaska. The main problem, they say, is get-, the mid-year meeting of the Inter Adams-Goldf ine Investigation Erupts Angry Shouting Match BREMOND, Tex. (AP Toma- ers are feeding their crops to toes are rotting in the fields in this hogs. big tomato-growing center be- Roadside stands are selling to- WASHINGTON AP The gov ernment decided Wednesday that state Oil Compact Commission.

He took exception to a message from Seaton read to the gathering which said the voluntary program ting used to these long summer days and those seemingly longer winter nights. Modern history began in Alaska at 4 a.m., March 30, 1867. Even then, it seems, the Russians were cause the bottom has dropped for 5 cents a pound; and American Telephone Telegraph of the market. I purchasers willing to gather the i Cn is makin2 too much profit on is 95 per cent effective. Farmers say the two cents, a tomatoes can buy them for 75 prjVate telephone line service nound this vear's croD is bringing i cents a bushel.

Arrlorarl iWa firm in nit, rat.ps WASHINGTON (UPD The; ing to blame federal Judge Wil- auest bv Goldfine's 1awvers that Seaton's statement also is mcor- great ones for doing business in isn't enough to pay for the gath-j Normally, tomatoes sell for 14 1-for this service by about 15 per, rect, Turner said, because the ba- changed the dead of the night. Baron de House investigation into the Ham T. McCarthy of Boston for it meet in secret session Thursday Stoeckl of Russia and William i Adams-Goldfine case erupted into the SEC's failure to press crimi-1 to hear its next scheduled witness sis nf nil nroduction has ering' ot tne some gruw- ceftts a at iime of the I spason. The Federal Communications nal charges against Goldfine's i John Fox. Dublisher of th Hp- and imports have changed.

Seward of the United States I an ang shouting match Wednes firmArmstrong said dropping the funct Boston Post and a Goldfine Turner took exception to Sea-1 signed the papers that completed ody oeiween an inaignani govern ment official and congressmen Growers blame eastern and Commission order is effective in western retailers for their woes 1 60 A The order does not change rates "When the first tomatoes camelfor teiephone service used by the out of the Rio Grande Valley they Beneral DUblic. telegraph services BEIRUT (Continued From Page 1) criminal charge was part, of a stipulation by the judge. The SEC was then pushing civil charges. Bennett said the SEC could have ton's remark that the nation will one day find itself "using every drop of oil that it can both produce domestically and bring in from beyond our borders." "There is no factual information to support this," Turner said. who accused him of being "disorderly." J.

Sinclair Armstrong, former chairman of the Securities Exchange Commission and now assistant Navy Secretary, touched off the row when he accused the first tiiriA in thp rpvnlt. Informed i were shipped fcast and so as maintained by or wire cir pressed tne criminal case anyway. Miroc cnii tho armv Hno nn 71 high as 50 cents a pound," one cuits supplied to TV and radio sta- Judge McCarthy said in Bos mines near the vUlage of Talya grower said. Housewives reiusea Uons for radio pr0gram transmis- ton that his handling of the court the Baalbek Valley. vo Duy, men wnen puces uwypcu, sions House Influence Investigating sub-' Case was in no way influenced by Hammarskjold appeared was uiterested in toma-, Privately leased telephone cir-wardly optimistic over the re-! toes" And they stlU aren l' cuits are used primarily by gov- sults of his Middle East peace- About 1,000 acres are planted ernment agencies, stockbrokers, making mission But Lebanese tomatoes, in this area of Robert-; banks, large industries and others leaders did not share his outlook, son County in Central Texas.

For- interested in maintaining continu- committee of trying to "muzzle" the fact that Goldfine had paid a him. I $60 hotel bill for him a. few Some six hours and thousands months before case reached of words later Armstrong still in-; ns court. friend turned foe. The lawyers said Fox was prepared to make "reckless" and a 1 i i charges in an attempt to defame Goldfine.

Senate Republican Leader William F. Knowland who earlier expressed doubts about Adams "usefulness" to the4 GOP administration, said it would be "helpful" to President Eisenhower if Adams would resign. But he said Eisenhower and Adams would have to work out a "solution" ior themselves. During his 'turbulent testimony, Armstrong was accused by Reps. Moss and John Bell Williams (D-Miss.) of 'filibustering" instead of answering questions.

When Armstrong protested, Williams agreed to term Armstrong's answer an "extended discussion." Democratic members of the subcommittee also questioned Armstrong about a 1955 telephone SCHOOLS (Continued From Page 1) to integrate, and state laws that forbid integration under penalty of losing state education aid. Rippy's two and a half page statement told of the board's attempt to settle the issue in court, a fantastic real estate deal, ine whole place, 375,296,000 acres, had been bought for $7,200,000. At that time Alaska had a population of 30,000, Eskimos, Aleuts who are closely akin to the Eskimosand assorted Indians. The Tlingit Indians had a curious custom. They didn't want to get rich.

So when one of them got in the chips or, more specifically, in the blankets he held a pot-latch and gave them all away. Clever people, these Tlingits. For those who received the pot-latcher's gifts had to come to his aid when he was in need. This may have been one of the. earliest social security systems.

Oddity: After all these years, the native population still is reckoned at 30,000, out of an estimated total of 200,000. Living in Alaska is no bargain. Ninety per cent of all perishable produce is imported, and trans sisted that he was being muzzled I The subcommittee was told by President Chamoun told newsmen Wednesday morning the government expected a major rebel onslaught within 48 hours. "We have deduced this from tunately, the area doesn depend ous communications Deiween uis-wholly on tomatoes for its. farm tant points.

economy. It is first, normally ac-' The lower rate will affect pn-counting for 10 to 15 per cent of marily the Defense Department, the economy, but in second place It has a contract with for is cotton and corn. a Jarge number of private tele- Information we have received that one of its attorneys, Joseph T. Conlon, that the White House may have emphasized Goldfine's GOP political affiliations to the. SEC.

Conlon said Thomas G. Meeker, chief SEC counsel, told him during an interview that he conferred at the executive mansion with Gerald Morgan, White House counsel. At one point, Conlon said, following the original suit to in- in his attempt to testify on the SEC's handling of a case against the East Boston controlled by financier Bernard Goldfine. Things really got hot when Armstrong testified that Rep. Peter Mack a subcommittee member, once "summoned" him to his office to discuss a Penn-Texas Corp.

stockholders dispute while phone lines linking the SAGE a Early this month Waco stores flr defense warning system tegrate med by attorneys for Ne- ero students in JUiy, ido. I being built across the country. were selling tomatoes for 29 cents a pound. They now are selling President Frederick R. the rebels are massing strong forces in certain parts of the country they control," he said.

"Ail necessary precautions have been taken He estimated the rebels had between 10,000 and 12.000 men The board passed a resolution Wednesday night asking 'that the school's attorney, Andrew J. Thuss, began new litigation to resolve the differences between federal and state law. MeeKer told turn Morgan may Armstrong was with the SEC. it's a Hp" Mark shmitpH Hp-i have" emphasized Goldfine's Re duix lomaioes ior ic cenis. Kappel in New York said there One bright spot is an announce- Was no justification for the rate ment that the Elsa Canning Co.

cut. of Elsa, Tex plans on goirg into Wednesday's order resulted operation here the first of July, from a three-year FCC investiga-thus giving farmers an opportuni- tion into a proposal by to ty to sell their ripe tomatoes. But offer major discounts to cus- puuucan connections, Later, ne daring that Armstrong volun portation costs on all goods are Rippy said later that the action i high, Potatoes grow well there. under arms, triple their force at the start of the rebellion. Chamoun said the army could hold the rebels now but he -would of the board was unanimous.

He too short for but the season is Chairman Harris said the sub-' unA a corn or tomatoes. they don't know what the price tomers contracting for multiple committee would consider a re- tv v. private line service. will be. ask for an armed United Nations force "if infiltration from the United Arab Republic continues at said the board was not influenced by actions of any other community.

He did not mention Little Rock, Ark. Under state law, the Dallas school svstem would lose some teered to come to his office." Armstrong agreed to take back the word "summoned." At the suggestion of Chairman Oren Harris (D-Ark), Mack agreed to change "a lie" to "not true." There were these developments: Rep. John E. Moss (D-Calif.) accused Armstrong of being "un-ruy and disorderly" throughout the hearing and demanded that SEED ENDURANCE MARK DALLAS (UPD A Dallas ra- nauicman onrl flidht Army Chemical Corps General To Retire KeetonDemoted Draws Sentence Its present rate. He said that if the U.

N. Security Council failed to give U1V 1 V. UH'Ull iUtb1k tr in Congress. Armstrong testified that Adams sought the delay because a question had arisen as to whether the government should consider objecting to the testimony of a witness who was to appear before the SEC. He said he regarded Adams' call as proper.

whn HnuhW a a nnrt-timp S1.500.0UO a year in SXaie iunus 1 him the help, he would go to the General, Assembly. If that failed WASHINGTON (P) Maj. Gen. singer will try to establish a new thev followed the federal mandate William M. Creasy, chief of the i world's record for endurance to integrate without first submit- BILOXI, Miss.

OP) Airman tOO he WOUld ask the United' Arm rhniniral Pnrns for mnrp Lottery Measure Has 20,000 Signers WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. Paul A. Fino with signatures of 20,000 petitioners to back him up, called Wednesday for prompt establishment of his proposed national lottery. Fino presented his pile of petitions to chairman Wilbur D. Mills States and Britain directly under, than four yearSi has submitted his provisions of Article 51 of the aDDlication for retirement on Aug.

flights. Leo A. Brumm, 40, a Sta- ting tne issue ui a vyic tion KLIF newsman and Neil O. people, Fletcher, will take off Sunday on Rippy's statement was received the start of their endurance flight, generally with applause. he answer questions 'without bickering." When Armstrong repeated his "muzzling" charge, Moss accused him of being "im pertinent." Rep.

John B. Bennett 'R-Mich.) accused Armstrong of try- United Nations charter. .31 Donald Keeton, who went AWOL in a rented plane to see his girl friend in Dallas, faces 30 days at hard labor and a reduction in rank. A court-martial at Keesler Air Force Base convicted 19-year-old Keeton on an AWOL charge Tuesday and sentenced him to be broken to airman basic, forfeit $65 of pay and to 30 days hard labor. The sentence is subject to review.

Keeton rented a plane at near- ADS how SOVIET (Continued From Page 1) Soviet and East European experts on hand at Geneva. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko handed U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson a note Wednesday night warning the U.S. government that Soviet nuclear experts would not attend unless the Kremlin's conditions were met. The new development broke less than a week- before the nuclear experts of eight East-West governments were to start the laborious process of trying to work but (Continued From Page 1) cision may be asked within 75 (D-Ark.) of the House Ways Means Committee, which has jurisdiction over Fino's lottery bill.

"In view of. the opposition of your committee to any tax cuts," Fino told Mills, "I urge that my legislation be given immediate attention. My national lottery bill is not a gambling bill, but a revenue-raising measure which if enacted would produce 10 billion dollars a year in additional revenue. "This, you must agree, would be many HORSES can you AFFORD i by Gulfport June 12, eluded mili days. Texas State Opticrl brought suit against Lee Optical after a Beaumont newspaper carried an advertisement offering single vision glasses "as low as $12.50, easy tary and civilian aircraft searching for him and landed in a field near Tyler, Tex.

i When arrested two days later at his mother's home in Dallas, he said he made the flight to see 17-year-old Doris Lynn Bowling. Keeton said a suicide note left behind in his barracks at Keesler AFB here was a hoax. I credit, no money down, $1 per week." The suit alleged that the advertisement violated the new means for detecting nuclear explo more than enough to give our sions in the event of a universal ban on nuclear tests. hard pressed American wage-earners a substantial tax cut." Fino has been urging a government lottery for several years, but with, no luck. nil MOPQPC sicf vaii mnnov fn nwnl law, which Texas Optical attorneys said prohibited all types of price advertising whether true or misleading.

The suit quoted a Nov. 18 attorney general's opinion that the law was unconstitutional because its caption did not make direct reference to the anti-advertising pro I llvliw JVM IIIVIIV 1 TT Dallas To Integrate New Junior College DALLAS (UPD 'The superin- i Boy Chess Wizard or whether they are the hay-burning kind the ones built into Air Conditioning Units te.ident of Dallas public schools said Wednesday a proposed public junior college would serve both White and Negro students. The new Soviet position was that Secretary of State Dulles has laid down conditions unacceptable to The United States has insisted that the negotiations should not necessarily lead to any agreement to stop nuclear tests. It came soon after a howling mob of more than 1,000 Russians demonstrated in front of the American embassy in what was regarded here as part of a general sudden stiffening of Soviet policy toward the West. Diplomats here said the Kremlin's tough new look dates from last week's Soviet announcement of the execution of Hungarian revolutionary leaders.

It also follows the Kremlin's publication of secret East-West correspondence which broke off. at least temno- Arrives In Moscow MOSCOW (UPI) Bobby Fischer, the 15-year-old American chess wizard from New York, arrived by plane Wednesday for the start of an exhibition tour. and neither HORSES nor H.P. (horsepower) vision. The Beaumont District Court granted a temporary injunction against Lee Optical which banned price quoting in newspapers, radio, television, billboard signs, or by any other means in Beaumont, Corpus Christi, San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, Houston, Fort Worth Waco, Pasadena, Wichita Falls, Grand Prairie, Cleburne, Long-view and 1 Voters might as well know the junior college will be integrated before they vote on the question," Dr.

W. T. White said. and accurate measure of the of an Air Conditioner is a true comfort capacity There was no official welcoming party at the airport due to a misunderstanding as to the time The educator made the statement to members of the Dallas City Council of Parent Teacher not HORSES but BTU's (British Thermal Units) of arrival. The Moscow sports committee just managed to get a car out to the airport for him at In the appeal, attorneys for Tex as Optometrists Assn argued with the last moment.

Associations planned to circulate petitions calling for establishment of the junior college. Any public junior college built attorneys for Texas State Optical, the and unseen fairies that take the sweat sting out of summer heat are steam R. G. Scurry, Dallas, attorney for and in Dallas must be set up in inte-! Texas Daily Newspapers He is staying at the National Hotel. Thursday he will -meet officials of the U.S.S.R.

chess federation to draw up plans for his exhibition tour. grated basis because the courts prepd with attompvs for On- have already ruled that state-sup- tical. ported colleges must accept Ne- in the April 16 ruling the Su-gro students, Dr. White said. nreme Court uohcld the constitu- The action by the PTA is Ihc tionalitv of thp npw law and re- rich 12.Year-01d Boy Submits Space Plan first step toward bringing a junior! fused to lift the temporary injunc-college to the city If they can get1 tion against Lee Optical.

WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL ROOM AIR CONDITIONER The Texas Daily Newspaper 7,000 persons to sign the petitions, they can submit the matter to the school board which can either ac cept or reject the plans. If the local board approves the uiiuiiiaub ircguuaiiuua toward a summit conference. The Soviet ambassadors to Washington, London and Paris, were recalled to Moscow without explanation immediately before that. (In London, the British Foreign Office said the Geneva talks are necessary and it expressed hope they would take place. It held back any immediate interpretation of the new Soviet note, informed sources indicated that British officials here were a bi1 taken aback by the sudden harshness of the Soviet stand).

Wednesday night's Soviet note charged that Dulles at a news conference in Washington June 11 reversed President Eisenhower's position on calling a Geneva conference of technical experts. Dulles said, as the U.S. govern- ment has "said all along, that the United States would make no pri-or commitments on the banning of tests in advance of the meet-i ing. project, the matter then will; go to the state board of education. At any rate.

White said, it would be 1961 before a junior college could become a reality for Dallas. PUTS OUT MORE BTU's THAN ANY OTHER ROOM A I per HP CO NDITIONER WASHINGTON (UPI) A 12-year-old boy has sent the government a plan to out-Sputnik the Russians and then rocket a man into space for two weeks. What's more, defense scientists have dubbed it theoretically sound. Roy Johnson, director of the Defense Department's Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA). said the ideas were advanced by young Jonathan Orovitfc, of New York, and had "all the elements of a workable system." Elaborating, a Johnson aide said Jonathan's theory for launching a satellite with a live monkey aboard was "sensible Assn.

"agaLi joined Lee Optical at-! torneys in asking the court to reconsider its ruling. "The daily newspapers of Texas are vitally interested in this litigation," the TDNA petition said. -members of this association publish daily: newspapers in 59 cities of this state, of which are in cities in which the appellants have been enjoined from advertising which contains no fraudulent, deceitful or misleading statements about "prices and they earnestly request the court to clarify its opinion." The majority opinion Wednesday, written by Associate Justice St. John Garwood, said specifically that is the opinion of this court that the act must be construed as prohibiting only such price advertising as is LEBANON (Continued From Page 1) resist any increase in U.N. forces here is the proof and our personal guarantee: ANY AREA THAT CAN BE ADEQUATELY COOLED BY ANY OTHER MAKE OF 2 HP UNIT, CAN BE BETTER COOLED WITH A 1 Vi HP FRIEDRICH AND AT LESS EXPENSE FOR ELECTRIC CURRENT! "It is impossible to agree with and logical." But he said too many i such a position, the Soviet note in Lebanon, even if only to 500 unarmed observers.

It now numbers less than 100 men. Reports from Tripoli said the rebel chieftain, Rashid Karami, had issued an ultimatum for the surrender of the American Presby engineering difficulties were in- said. volved to make it practical. It claimed Eisenhower had orig- inally agreed that Geneva con- RULE SHOOTING ACCIDENTAL ference would be predicated on WACO, Tex. UPI Justice understanding for the universal of Peace Ray Mormino Wednes- banning of nuclear tests.

terian Hospital. No Americans are The opinion added that the court thpre. (I lazy budget terms to qualified people Kama! Jublatt 'powerful leader believed that "had the Legislature day returned a verdict of acci Actually, a basic U.S. principle intended such a drastic probibi of Druse tribesmen, said at his dental shooting in the death of a throughout all the negotiations and u-year-oid Waco Doy, Diastea Dy i correspondence between East and a 12-gauge shotgun. West has been that the United The victim was James Mathis, States would make no commit-son of J.

F. Mathis. Mormino said ments of this sort in advance of that the boy and his friend, Terry any East-West conference. Van Horn, 14. were playing with' The Soviet note.

marked no real the gun; which they believed un- reversal in the Soviet position headquarters 16 miles southeast of Beirut, that he would not permit U.N. observers access to the Syrian border in his territory. These were the areas where Chamoun told a news conference 10,000 to 12,000 rebels, a fourth of them Syrians and Egyptians, tion as one against all price advertising, it would normally have used language more positively evidencing its inten Smith's dissent said that he thought the court should not only dissolve the temporary injunction "but should go further and hold the act unconstitutional and void." IIAIO-TV APflfANCII KITCimUftUWMKMTl loaded, at the latter' home when it went off, only an abrupt take-iUor-leave-it stiffening rf the poalttoa. lhav concentrated. i f.

5.

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Pages disponibles:
699 572
Années disponibles:
1930-2024