The Texhoma Times (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1957 Page: 3 of 8
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1
Thursday March 14 1957
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A SERVICE Of THE OKLAHOMA PRESS
Absentee voting the new insurance
code legislative reapportionment and
the teachem' minimum salary bill are
currently the most important legis-
lation pending in the state legis-
lature Of course appropriation bills
continue to receive full attention
as they are taken up
Several appropriation bills have
cleared bah houses and been signed
by the Governor but these are mostly
for smaller amounts The point has
now been reached where any other
appropriation measures are sent to
a Joint house-senate conference
committee to work out a compromise
Oklahoma's constitutional require-
ment for a balanced budget is
actually in the hands of these joint
conference committees It is their
work to consider all money requests
snd see to it that no more is aPPro
KIIIO'S MILK
IT'S A PLEASURE
Kids love King's milk
and no wonder! It's
morning fresh delic-
ious and packed with
energy! Plain or flavor-
ed as a drink or in cook-
ing it's everybody's
favorite right around
the clock
FOR HEALTH'S
SAKE
DRINK MORE MILK!
KING'S DAIRY
Guymon Okla
troltlirZnillei211EITi
16
I
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AIR CONDITIONERS
Refrigerated And Water Cooled
All Sizes And Styles
House Trailer To Commercial
SEE US FIRST
FOR SUMMER COMFORT
MAC-A-B CONST Co
Bunch And Macormic
GENIERAL
SYSTUI
7 la
ASSOCIATION
priated than was collected In taxes
the two previous years Legislators
on these committees undergo tre-
mendous pressures and deserve a
lot of appreciation
One such committee is now con
sidering what to do about teachers'
salaries 'FiAtthe house pa-ssed HB
508 which guaranteed a beginning
salary of $3000 per year with $100
increases every year for 12 years
This didnt fit in Governor Gary's
budget so the senate grappled with
the hot issue and finally realistical-
ly tempered tt to provide a raise in
the guaranteed minimum from the
now $2400 yearly to $2700 for the
fiscal year beginning July 1 1957
The senate amendment also provides
that with the second year of the
biennium the miniraurn will be raised
to $3000
Thus teachers with a bachelor's
degree would ge at least $2700 next
year and $3000 the following year
Those with a masters degree would
start at $3000 next year and be
raised the following year to $3200
teachers with doctorate degrees
would start at $3200 and then go to
$3400 for the second year of the
biennium
This alternate proposal also in-
creases the number of annual raises
in teachers' salaries from $100 each
year for 12 o3sars to $100 each year
for 15 years beginning year after
next
Most legislators are taking a dim
view of threats from some teachers
that they will "strike" unless their
demands are cret in full There is
growing irritation at the lack of
consideration from school forces for
the other funations of state govern-
ment Roads mental institutions
colleges universities safety health
and scores of other government
services requmc money too so what's
available can't be spent in one place
It was pointed out in the senate that
to cut some of these other prograras
short would cause the state to lise
ledsral matching monies as much as
$5 federal for $1 state expenditure
Oklahomans may not be thinking
of atomic bombs affecting thi?rn but
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ESSEX
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AV speed up
your connections
Calling Long Distance? Calls go through twice as fast
when you give the operator the number
Our business office will be glad to give you free of
charge your personal address book for out-of-town
numbers you're apt to call Just ask for it
GENERAL TELEPHONE COMPANY
OF THE SOUTHWEST
4
gado si au) Pi ad Odd Toloplone Sokokt So4oing Isaacs
The Texhoma Times Texhoma Oklahoma
Central States News View-s-1
NOT A SCENT—
De-odorized skunk
adopted as pet by
her neighbors in
Mission Kan pass-
es Nancy Dearer's
nose test ipmow--
4' p'
4
SWEET REWARD — Two Midwest
charmers vacationing in Miami Beach 12
buss Walker A "Dub" Pagan after his )t-
five-under-par 67 won $8600 Pro-Amateur
tourney sponsored by distillers of
Canadian McNaughton whisky A third ry
gal adjusts cap Pagan wears as West
Palm Beach fire captain rememimaigyrwn
the senate committee on public
health is seriously concerned This
committee is studying SB 25 by
Sen Ecward Young of SVgler which
would regulata the handling cf radio-
active n te-lols A ptitl!': hearing
brought out repressntelvei of labor
mdustri and federal public hcalth
officials They agreed 01"ah:ma
needs regulations en handling of
these ekments because of tho harm
possible to both workers and the
public Radioactive materials are
now used by a number of firms and
institutions in this state with little
regulation of safety standards or
enforcement
The commitee witnessed contro-
versy as to whether the state labor
commissioner or the state depart-
ment of health should have juris-
diction A sub-commitee was ap-
pointed to work out a compromise
Committee Chairman Sen Young
thinks the bill will be ready for
senate consideration shortly As it
now stands $30000 would be appro-
priated to the State Department of
Health for administering regulations
which it would formulate Violators
would be fined not less than $50 nor
more than $100 for each day of an
offense provided by the regulationt
The house tacked 20 more amend-
ments on the absentee ballot control
bill &B 43 It's still not sure just
whether or not any restrictions will
be placed on this form of voting
despite public dissatisfaction over
1
I
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IARRESTED —Mrs
Cynthia Delores Cor-
raditti 23 who report-
! edly has left a trail of
: seven husbands in sev-
en states held by Day-
ton Ohio police on
suspicion of bigamy
what happened in some of last ear's
elections
The hulky new insurance code ---
totaling 331 printed pacc -- is being
considered by the house Hundreds
of people participated in its pmpar-
ation and the house will work on it
about an hour each day considering
it section by section Voluminous
end intricate the code is fear inspir-
ing to many legislators but may iv :1
be the most important Legislation
posed this session since it affects
every phase of insurance hi the state
Great salesmanship is a lot of little
sales put together
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PRETTY
CLOTHES
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A Palk Se Mee Mika et The
°Mebane Ow Aussiseeeh
7
TAX REVENUE
It's a well known fact that the
government of the United States is
the largest employer in the world
More than two and a third million
persons are on the federal payroll
And every one ol them is there
because of a law that was passed by
Congress
Since the government has no other
Income than that derived from taxes
it is axiomatic that the money to
pay these people must also come
from laws I e tax laws
Proposed laws which the present
Congress is working upon now—both
for spending and for taxing—involve
primarily the 1958 fiscal year You
might be interested in the estiniates
for that year in terms of the budget
dollar If you want to figure the
actual amount of money involved in
these laws all 5x:at have to do is to
take the total amount the President
requested and multiply it by the
number of cents in the budgeb dollar
with each cent representing 1 The
total amount the government expects
to receive from tax laws in 1958 is
roughly $75800000000
Example: If you wanted to figure
out how much would be received
from excise taxes on the basis that
12 cents of every dollar received by
the federal government comes from
that source you would multiple
$75800000000 by 12 and the
answer is S9036000000
Here is the estimate of where the
money comes from using the budget
dollar of 1958: Individual income
taxes - 51 cents corporation income
taxes - 23 cents excise taxes - 12
c:nts custom and other receipts
8 cents
Here is the estimate of where the
money will go from the budget dollar
of 1953: Major national security
includin ctilitary mutual security
atomic en2rgy stockpiling - 59 c2rfs:
intereit - 10 cents: veterans - 7
cents: agriculture - 7 cents: debt
retirement - 2 cents other - 15 cents
Figure those figures out and you'll
find that laws have a great deal to
do with your pocketbook
(This column based on Oklahoma
law is written to inform--not to
advise No person snould over apply
or interpret any law without the aid
of an attorney who kroyws the facts
because the facts may change the
application of the law
Game 8c Fish Dep't
To Aid Survival
Of Prairie Chicken
Once abundant the lesser prairie
Chicken has dwindled in numbers to
the extent that the Oldahoma Game
and Fish Department and other
wildlife conservation agencies fear
the bird may dissapear completely
from the prairie lands of western
Oklahoma
However new hope that the birds
may be saved is seen by Farrell F
Cope lin of the Oklahoma Cooperative
Wildlife Research Unit in a habitat
study now being planned Cope lin
hopes to determine why the birds
survive in some areas and not in
others
The study will get underway as
soon as a survey can be completed
locating all of the known lesser
prairie chickens in the state To
accomplish this Cope lin is asking the
help of sportsmen farmers ranchers
and others interested in wildlife con-
servation Information needed is the number
of birds seen their location and the
date He urges that these reports
be turned over to the state game
rangers and county farm agents or
mailed directly to the Oklahoma
Game and Fish Department Okla-
homa City or the wildlife research
unit at Stillwater
"Through the study of areas where
the birds are found some measures
of the needs of the lesser prairie
chicken may be learned" Cope lin
explained "This knowledge along
with other available information
may serve as a basis for better game
management"
Prairie chickens are frequently
seen this time of year feeding along
the edges of grain fields and from
I now until June or July may be
cbserved on their courtship grounds
during the early morning and late
afternoon
Not to be confused with the great-
er prairie chicken found principally
in northeastern Oklahoma the lesser
birds are most likely to be seen ta
I Bzcitham Roger Mills Dewey
1
Woodward Harper Woods Beaver
1 Texas and Cimarron counties
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Dry clothes the comfortable way of course it's
electric No more stretching bending stooping
or carrying heavy baskets of wet clothes
Just a simple transfer of the clothes from washer
to dryer gets the job done No weather
worries or chapped hands either You make
your own weather — day or night That's right
if you're a working-wife wash and dry your
clothes in the eveningtakes only a
few minutes of your time — Reddy does the rest
ral : it''' 11:4 yivi i--7- l'It :II
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SWEET REWARD — Two Midwest l-- '' ' -
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buss Walker A "Dub" Pagan after his )f ::'-'
five-under-par 67 won $8600 Pro-Arna- VI - -: p' - ' "-j
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Canadian McNaughton whisky A third r-::1-!:':' - 41!
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when you give the operator the number
Our businm office will be glad to give you free of
charge your personal addreu book for out-of-town
numbers you're apt to call Just ask for it
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Smith, Byron. The Texhoma Times (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1957, newspaper, March 14, 1957; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2160263/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.