The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1967 Page: 8 of 20
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—
" 1,1 11111
Kji iai
Thunday, H»y 4, 1947
Most Of
Them Are
A Salute To 'Doves
Sun Carriers
*' The Baytown Sun is delivered to its readers daily
by 65 young “merchants” who are learning first-hand
the business of buying a product at wholesale prices
and selling at a slightly higher retail price. MgH
He learns to keep books and manage his small op-
eration to realize the greatest possible profit. He sub-
uently learns valuable lessons when he starts spend-
sequently learns valuable lessons when
ing his “own money."
Many of our carrier-salesmen are saving to help
pay for a college education. Others are using some of
their income to help pay for motorbikes, clothes and
other items they want.
They would rather pay for these “extra items”
themselves rather than asking for a handout from Dad.
Some of the other lessortS' -Jfcese young men .learn
are: m ......——• ............. ..........•
1. That there is no substitute for promptness and
service.
2. How to collect and handle money.
3. How to “get along" with all types of customers.
4. How to sell.
5. How to enjoy work!
The Baytown Sun’s “1
all these things, and more, through a systematic pro-
gram. It offers incentive for hard work, and rewards
for those who accept the challenge. . s.
This newspaper is proud of its junior sales force,
and it realizes the important task these boys perform.
No job in this newspaper is more important - edi-
tor, publisher, advertising salesmen, bookkeeper, report-™ ., ■ ■
salesmen6" °" pressmen " than that °f °Ur Carrier' aw !liJKjfSf'
They finish the job all these people start -- they
bring the newspaper to us readers.
We appreciate it when our readers help these in-
dependent young businessmen by expecting good serv-
ice, and expressing proper appreciation when good
service is given.
Sun’s “little merchant plan" teaches
By Him McLEMORE
NEW YORK - Mott of the
residents In my neighborhood
are doves.
Indeed, It has been suggested
by a hawk, • retired admiral,
that our area change its name
from Stratford-on-Avon Heights
to Dovecote Ridge, and that
the tiny private park we share
be called Surrender Acres. Both
suggestions are impossible, of
course. Stratford-on-Avon has a
ring to it that real estate sale-
men find helpful, and our park .
is not even an acre, much less
acres. a.
In talking to the doves —
something the admiral won’t do
— I find that the chief reason
they, are dayea, fi that no one, ,........
to hear thern toil iris, has
explained* how tfreUnited-States - -
is going to win the war in Viet-
nam. They see it going on for-
ever, or close to that date.
' A dove whose cote is three
doors south of mine, and who
was a captain in World War n,
has this to say after General
Westmoreland's speech to Con-
gress:
"The general la a f jpe-looking
man, and spoke with the confi-
dence that is expected from a
field commander, but what do
we know that we didn’t know
before? It's hardly news that _
James Ma--
GOP's Study
Of War Flops
'Fall In!"
This Day In History
Today In History
By THE AMOCSmp MEM
Today is Friday, May 5, the
125th day of 1967. There are 240
days left in the year.
Today’s highlight in history:
CM this date in 1942, the ra-
tioning of sugar began through-
out the United States as a result
of shortages caused by World
WarIL
On this date:
In 1778, George Washington
announced to his army at Valley
Forge that France had become
an ally of the United States in
its fight against Britain.
In 1821, Napoleon Bonaparte
died on the island of St Hel-
ena.
fit 1847, the American Medi-
cal Association was organized.
lit 1941, Haile Selassie re-
turned to Addis Ababa as em-
peror of Ethiopia.
In 1945, Grand Admiral Doe-
nitz admitted that Germany’s
struggle against the Allied pow-
ers had become helpless.
. In 1955, Western Germany be-
came a sovereign state.
Ten years ago — The Italian
Cabinet, headed by Premier An-
tonio Segni, resigned in the
midst of a .conflict over Italy’s
role in NATO.
Five years ago—An allegedly
Communist-inspired revolt was
put' down in Venezuela.
One yCar ago — General Mo-
tors announced a limited pro-
duction cutback because of a
decline in sales—and the stock
market tumbled.
Did You Know?
An acre is 160 square rods in
squar£measure.
Radiation or radioactivity is
the emission of very fast atom-
ic particles or rays by the nu-
clei of atoms.
Try Your Word Power
k F<
□,
NEA Feature
Footwear
Answsr to Previous Puzzle
ACROSS
lfMmsr
5 Lounging
zlippSrT
10 Frame for
drying skins
H Infant cupid
It laser satellite
of Uranus
14 Scolds
8 Mariner's
—dtoetor
• Distress signal
10 Stop
11 Opposites
ship's side
12 Encountered
IS Brief nsp (Sp )
18 Poisonous ^
intke
15 Sheltered side 1#(&£
lftacitettwordi) 20 Male sheep
17 Kinged sandals (el)
tarth.) 21 Great take
20 Basic color 22 Beloved
They have been brave for
long time, through many wan,
and have out-fought a lot of
tough people.
But where are they getting?
Where will they • be this time
next year, and the year after
next? Still fighting in. the same
murky delta, still taking num-
- bered liffls in the up-country?
Washington says nuclear weap-
ons are out,' and there appears
to be no plans to devastate
North Vietnam with convention-
al bombs and artillery, so-what
is ooming up to settle the war?
Those in command who back the
war say we are wi nning but in
the same brea th warn that the*
country is in for a long, and ex-
hausting pull? If tiie hawks
know the plans for winning they,
would be wise to let the doves ,
know what they are. If they do
not, there are liable to be a lot
more doves flying round.”
Other neighborhood doves
wonder why democracy for 11,-
000 miles-away South Vietnam is
so much more Important than
democracy for Cuba, which is
spitting distance away, or has
priority over troubles In our
own country. Others can't stom-
ach Ky. and rate him as a
lightweight scheming opportun-
ist. Still others can’t become en-
thusiastic over the world’s
. strongest nation beating the day-
lights out of a nation that must
be one ofc the weakest. And oth-
ers can't figure out why this
nation, a peaceful one if there
ever was one. Is the o% major
power now waging a war.
Unless I can makeup my
mind soon whether to soar with
the doves or swoop with the
hawks, I am going to have to
leave the old homestead for an-
other abode. 1 can’t keep taking
if from both sides forever, es-
pecially the admiral, who looks
at things through the barrels of
a cannon as others do through
Mfoeab.
Washington Merr
Javits Seeks To Be
First Jewish 'Veep'
WASHINGTON (AP) - It all
seemed so simple, starting out,
and it wound up in a gorgeous
political snafu.
The 36 Republican senators
have what they call a Republi-
can Policy Committee, made up
of 15 of them, including Sen.
Jacob K. Javits of New York.
About five or six weeks ago he.
had an idea which the commit-
tee thought sounded all right.
This was It: that the commit-
tee’s staff should make a study
of the war in Vietnam for the
benefit of all the Senate Repub-
licans who, like the Democrats,
are not all agreed on the war.
The hope was that through
this study the Senate Repubi-
cans might b*-.able to reach
fie kind of agreement about
letnrtn and President John-
son’s handling of the war.
Jt they could do that—or, bet-
ter yet, if there could be some
agreement on what position the
Republicans as a party should
take on the war—they would
have a big advantage over the
divided Democrats.
This would be a bit of a bles-
sing for the Republicans, if they
could do it, with the presidential
election year coming up.
But when the study was com-
pleted, it raised a, very sensible
question: What to do with it?
There couldn't be any agree-
ment among the Republicans
until they had seen it, and they
hadn’t seen It yet.
So the chairman of the Sen-
ate's Republican Policy Com-
By DREW PEARSON
And JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - The strong-
est opposition to Nelson Rocke-
feller as candidate forPresident
U coming, not from his bitter
Republican foe Barry GoMwa-
ter, but from his friend Jacob
Javits, the liberal Republican
from New York.
Most people don’t know it, but -
after Maryland’s Gov. Spiro Ag-
new set up the first trial balloon
for Rockefeller, Javits burned
up the wires to the state house
1n Annapolis.
In high excitement, Javits in-
sisted Rockefeller was not a . for President and a I
candidate, and urged Agnew to er for Vice President
FINALLY THE Two Republi-
cans, always good friends, got
gether. Nelson suggested that
Javits stop nudging him for gov-
ernor, and Javits, in turn, made
a frank confession that he want-
ed to run for Vice President. He
was willing to support Rockefel-
ler for governor if Rockefeller
would support him for Vice
President.
Rockefeller agreed. According
to Javits’s friends, he also made
a "sacred pledge’’ that he would
put his money on Gov. George
Romney of Michigan, thus giv-
ing the Republicans a well-bal-
anced ticket — a Midwesterner
has a fine record in Congress,
has had some sour reaction
from Jewish leaders because of
his championship of Gen. Julius
Klein, close friend of Sen. Tom
Dodd, in the argument over a
S75 million contract with Rhein-
met
for President and a New York-
drop the Rockerfeller-for-Presi-
dent idea. Die moderates should
unite, said Javits, around Mich-
igan’s Gov. George Romney.
Inside reason why the GOP
Senator from. New York opposes
Rockefeller for President is that
Javits is hungry to become the
first Jew in history to become
Vice President of the U S. If
Rockefeller should be nominated
Javits would be out, because
two New Yorkers could not run
on the same ticket.
Knowing th is, Sen. Javits
played his cards very shrewdly.
He began making noises about
rawing“fargovernor of ~Newr
Rockefeller’s most able pro-
fessional, Leonard Hall, then
took otfer the Romney cam-
paign, and Rockefeller was em-
phatic both in private and in
public about his determination
not to run for President. • *
Recently, however, the
“sacred deal” appears not .too
sacred after all. Two things
have happened LBJ’s ratings
have , dropped, and Rockefeller
admirers, led by Gov. Agnew,
have cooled toward Romney aft-
er personal exposure.
The Maryland governor Is
now trying to persuade Rocke-
feller to change his mind. When
2J Believe* 24 Light footwear 58 fave*
25 Female hor*e 25 Washington » 39 Star (coifib.
SsSKCT ‘
*9 KM oiood 26 Grcck love go
27 Low-cut iboe
28 Greek theater* 41 Baltic capital
30 Biblical town 42 River in Siberia
45 Alphabet letter
45 Pound* (lb.)
48 Upper limb
47NURH
Letter Ta
The Jditor
York himself. This Was before
Nelson had made up his mind
whether to run for a third term,
And, while making up his mind,
he found Sen. Javits making
speeches all over the state indi-
cating that he was not averse
to running for governor himself.
Agnew went to see Rocky in
Albany, the latter stuck to his
Javits pledge. His friends, how-
ever, are still hoping, and Jav-
its is still fuming. A pledge is a*
pledge, says Javits, and he ex-
pects Rockefeller to keep his.
rtetall for a 20 mm gun for the
U.S. armed forces,
Klein, a Chicago public rela-
tions man, acted as the paid
agent for Rheinmetall even
though that company had used
Nazi slave labor during the war
and had refused to make restitu-
tion to survivors of those horri-
ble concentration camps.
Because Rheinmetall had re-
fused to pay restitution to slave
labor camp survivors, the West
German defense minister had
recommended that the United
States refuse to sign* the 20 mm
contract. The closing of the his-
toric Springfield Arsenal was
also involved. The U S. Defense
Department had followed this
advice and the U.S. State De-
partment had also taken a firm
stand that Rheinmetal must pay
restitution to save labor vic-
tims,
Gen. Julius Klein, however,
though a former commander of
the Jewish War Veterans, pro-
tested that the company Was
“innocent of such charges as
have been alleged.” The Jewish
mittee, Bourke B. Hickenooper
of Iowa, distributed it to the
Senate Republicans.
The study listed in its 91
pages some of the confusions
and &>ntradictiohs of the war
and then got down to the dilem-
ma of Republican agreement by
asking some pointed political
questions without attempting to
answer them.
"Does toe Republican party,”
the study asked, "serve Ameri-
ca best by saying that politics
stops at the water’s edge? That
we must rally.behind the Presi-
dent? Does bipartisanship mean
that Democratic mistakes are
Republican responsibilities?”
This was a can of worms, it
ihere ever was one, and the
reaction of the Republicans
reading this study could be pre-
dicted before they ever saw it,
depending on which view they
had already. And it turned out
that way.
The study was not supposed to
be released publicly until toe
Republican senators had a
chance to discuss it. But toe
material was red hot. And Hlck-
enlooper feared toe whole thing
or parts of it might be leaked
before there was discussion.
So he decided last Friday to
release toe complete study this
week M Tuesday morning *jj •
poprasr D* study, whose pur-
pose was to encourage some
Republican agreement on Viet-
nam, wound up accomplishing
the opposite.
Republicans exploded for and
against the war or Johnson's
handling of it, with each ex-
pressing toe view he held before
the study was made.
News of the study so upset
Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illi-
nois, toe Republican Senate
leader recovering from pneu-
monia, that he rushed from his
hospital bed to toe Capitol to
aausss&rs
been a solid Johnson supporter
on the war all along.
Some were persuaded and
said they would stand four-,
square behind the President
Others weren’t. Sen. George D.
Aiken of Vermont was intensly-
criticai of the administration.
The Republicans' Senate dove,
Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon,_____
thought toe study supported bis
position. And to on,
Aiken admitted, “There is
almost as much divergence of
view among prominent Republi-
cans as among prominent Dem-
ocrats.”
Don Carter’s 300 game in the
1966 PBA championships was his
12th.
Play Bridge
With Jacoby
By Oswald & James Jacoby
Newspaper Enterprise Assli.
MEANWHILE, Sen. Javits, who
THE DOCTOR'S MAILBAG
War Yeterans, in turn, ftreat-
ened to expel him.
Even though fully aware of
toe seriousness of the State De-
partment’s Nazi claims against
Rheinmetall, and even though
the Senate Ethics Committee
had already begun its probe of
Klein and- Sen. Dodd, Javits
wrote Klein this letter:
“Within toe context of your
representation of West German
business concerns and Individ-
WEST
AJ987
V 6 4 3
♦ QJ1085
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NORTH (D) 5
*K63
VKJ97
♦ K 9
♦ A 9 4 3
EAST
AQ1054
V 5
♦ 7632
* Q J 10 6
SOUTH
AA2
VAQ1082
♦ A4
*K875
East-West vulnerable
West
North
East
South
1*
Pass
2 V
Pass
.
5 V
Pass
Pass
5*
5*
Pass
Pass-
6 V
Pass
Pass
his contract. 'On the other
hand there wgs. no reason
why* He sTfbtild nofhave made
it in spite of the bad break.
As tong as all four trumps
were not in the same hand
South had a sure thing play
at his disposal,
When West followed to the
low club lead at trick nine ail
South had to do was to play
dummy’s nine spot. East
would have been in with the
ten, jack or queen. A spade
or diamond return wouldgive
South a ruff and discard; a
low club return would lose to
South’s eight while a high
club return would run around
in Hiimmv’e Raa nnil CahIUV
to dummy's ace and South’s
king-eight would be right in
back of East’s last two clubs
for a proven finesse.
Suppose West held four
clubs and East’s honor was
a singleton! Then .East
wouldn’t have a club to lead
4
6
J
9
Holt Process of Aging 1=== A’SSSfi
II
IS
HteA&^^ddSrSS KZV ^ ^ STav^d^ur utm^t to . my with great, care and re: when the first club was led"
w iSpl’es iHpStou^£ BX WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D. -secure justice for the .victims of marked, “I’m sure*ftad we- Easy. South’ should play low
ment, ambiguityami metaphor- Newspaper Enterprise A„n. nWrlen’’ "° te?nd“3 ^and West would
14
gition might find inspiring.
You have attributed such ac-
tivities as “unruly demonstra-
tions, (and) the burning and
hanging of ooflege and Malms
lergy to pine tree pollen, the
dust Of walnut hulls or some
other allergen. In. the skin
and lymph nodes it causes a
lumpy enlargement. It may
lifting help? How Would a
person look a couple of years
after this operation? Are
most people satisfied after
™WP™BHMI^^^^™~TOgh,an operation? Can you —,, ______„......... .....
sity presidents in effigy”-*5®* that a person has had one? occur anywhere in the body
of ^ much "so-called A—to the technique now but the commonest location is
fSetf;1 fh incision i$ in the lungs. The nodules
made at the side of the face may exist for years without
near the hair line and the ex- causing any symptoms, de-
cess skin is removed. This re- pending on the part of the
moves the wrinkles but does body involved,
not halt the process of aging.
The operation leaves you
looking 10 to 12 years
younger. Two years later you
would still look good but
after four or five years you
did to get Javits to write such
a letter at toe very time Mein
wasunder Investigation by the
Ethics Committee. They have
their fingers crossed regarding
Javits for Vice President .. . ‘
North.
“Unless I am very unlucky,
I’ll make the slam,” replied
South. .Then he proceeded to
draw trumps, cash the re-
e+CnRDJfyiaW
attis Sz
dom,’* without esi
connection between toe
cause and result.
-You do not define "so-called
academic and intellectual free-
dom,” nor do you indicate the
boundary between an orderly
demonstration and one that is
“unruly." In the area of meta-
phorical confusion, consider toe
“blind alley that leads to toe
destruction of mind and body."
I always thought that a blind
alley, by definition, leads no-
where. Pertiap* it leads to “the
political spectrum,” which has
. -y been rtddn “from one extreme
to toe other.” On the other
hand, it may take us directly to
“toe middle of the academic
I can only conclude that you
were so disturbed by Dr. Leary's
speech that you leapt on your
horse and rode off to all direc-
tion* with your feet planted
firmly on toe ground.
May I respectfully suggest that
future editorials might be more
persuasive if toe author would
Homage to integrity,
Bible Verse
night need a retread.
Mo
lost people who depend
for their living on making a
pleasing appearance in public
are satisfied with the results.
When skillfully done, the scar
is hardly noticeable but In
women that is not so impor-
tant because they can choose
t will
a hairdo that
scar.
cover the
ly involved.
Because of the benign na-
ture of the disease, many doc-
tors prefer a course of watch-
ful waiting with periodic
checks rather than vigorous
treatment. Others prescribe
X-ray treatments or such
drugs as streptomycin, colchi-
cine, hydrocortisone or chlor-
oquine. The results with these
measures are varied. The dis-
ease runs a harmless course
unless a vital organ becomes
involved and most victims live
long enough to die of some
other cauae. ..... .......* -
LET NO man deceive you with
vain words: for because of these
things cometh the wrath of God
upon toe children of disobedi-
ence. Ephesians 5: 6
hand. West followed with the
deuce and South went up
with dummy’s ace. A club re-
turn disclosed the bad club
break and South was down
one.
Q—The bidding has been:
West North East South
IV Sble
2 V Pass Pass ? .
You, South, hold:
*A J10-65 V2 OK 4 3 *A Q 8 6
What do you do now?
A—Bid two spades. You have
already shown that you have
preparation for the minor suits.
-f-
Everyone at the table
agreed that South had been
QUICK QUIZ
Q—Why teas the Progres-
sive party in 1912 popularly
lied the “Bull Moose
unlucky and in one respect it
was true. If clubs had broken
3-2 South would have made
TODAY’S QUESTION
You, bid two spades. West
passes and your partner goes So
three diamonds. What do you
do now?
Answer Tomorrow
ca,
Party"?
A—The name originated
from Theodore Roosevelt’s
remark, “I feel as fit as a
bull moose.” The bull moose
was taken up as the emblem
of the party and the party it-
self came to be so-called.
(Wfe Sagtmtm Suit
"Okay, since you want to reject everything the older
generation stands lor—why don’t you stop smoking?"
pay nomage to integrity, con-
sort wi* logic, and epcak with
clarity.
“ P°Phfl£1Dignam belt'treatment?
' _1M Unwood A—Sarcoidosis ia a disease
(EDITOR’SNOTE:Tha»k ■ of unknown origin. Although
rn, FU. tor y«*r tetter. I» it reeemWe* tuberculoeie in
k a taaattftd exercise to Bfr m»ny waya, it is apparently
Q—Do human beings ever
get the mange? If so, what
would be the symptoms and
the best treatment? ,
A—Mange is an infestation
with an itch mite. Although
the animal itch mite can be
transmitted to, man, in man
______ , it clears up in about 10 days
in my lung*. What chose* it? without any treatment
Is it serious? What is the ——
Q—1 am 37 and have deep
wrinkles In my face. Am I too
young to have a face lifting?
A—-Some persons have this
operation in their 20s.
Q—How clid the television
quiz shows come to be called
‘5jackpot shows”?
Fred Hartman .. . .......................... Editor and Publisher
Hill Kjretinan .................................. General Mantger
John Wadley................ Business Manager
Preston Pendergrase,.......................... Managing Editor
Beulah Mae Jackson................ Assistant To The Publisher
P*"1 Putman^.....................v Assistant To The Publisher
Ann B. Pritchett ........ Office Manager
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Q—My doctor eays I have
sarcoidosis or Boeclc’s safcold
A—It comes from the game
stakes.
player is
able to “open the pot” to bid-
Manager
... Retail Manager
_ ..... , ....... National Manager
Entered as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas, 77521 poet
accumi
1# poker wbe
mlate until a
Office under the Act of Congress of March 8,1F79.
■*>
not caused
Hearn teed year
comments Is Wayne G. trandstait,
of t*h paper. White
Dr. traedtSedt cannot. answer Indi-
vidual letters he will aimer Utters el -
' 01 general interest in tetere columns.
ding by demonstrating that
among the cards he has drawn
he has a pair of “jacks or
better.”
Q—What term denotes the
touhd made dg -mtifeto and
locustsT
A—-Stridulation.
[HmW«i bNWlM AMdHMa)
Published aJternoons^Monday through Friday,
at Joi Memorial i^^InBaytown,' Texas.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1967, newspaper, May 5, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1044182/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.