An ordinance to repeal annexation of Spring Valley area residents into Winchester and Paradise townships was Dating, Rule License Bids Before City Nine applicants will appear on the agenda of Wednesday's Las Vegas City Commission meeting seeking licenses involved with massage or escort businesses. Donna Faye Simmons is listed as 90 per cent owner of C.A.S. Enterprises, Inc., which wants to do business as Refined Escort Service. It would be located at 2401 Industrial Road. Cherie Gordon, Ann C. Homan, Pamela Johnson and Margaret Ann Orlosky want licenses to work as escorts for Howard Senor’s Ladies-In-Waiting escort bureau at 210 E. Charleston Blvd. Ester Louise Chapman, Aline Benchetrit, Martha Sanchez Chavez and Thelma Jean Gruber will seek licenses to work at. Baxter Boulet’s Sultan's Palace massage parlor at 2309 Las Vegas Blvd. South, introduced at the Clark County Commis sion session Tuesday. County officials last month extended the boundaries of those townships to cover Spring Valley subdivision and ad jacent areas. With the annexation, residents’ property rose from $3.62 base rate to $5, the rate at which township property is assessed. Newly annexed residents protested the move by the county and Tuesday presented a petition of 371 names of per sons pame repeal of the annexa tion and tax hike. Debate on the annexa tion is set for public hearing at 11:30 a.m. Feb. 17. Boundaries of the area in question are roughly Rainbow Boulevard on the west, Oakey Boulevard on the north and Spring Valley subdivision on the south. A handful of residents complained at the January county commission session when the annexation was approved that homeowners had not been properly notified of the proposed change. Commissioners told unhappy residents the hike in tax rate would come with consolidation in January, 1977 anyway, when the boundaries of the new city limit are extended to cover that same are by state mandate. County officials have contended they can no longer afford to supply necessary fire and police protection to the rapidly growing Spring Valley area without the hike in property tax. Currently, fire and police calls are answered from area residents, but county officials said with the low tax rate, homeowners are not paying for those and other urban ser vices.