The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 122, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 26, 1953 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
THEOKANGL.LEADLE
MAY U, 1MJ
TU
1
Hostesses Like It
(AP-
}
(
•*>
Economic Shot in the Arm.
t,
Today, more than three-fourths
43.3
r
By-Products From Atom
The NEA study shows also that
to one. The
an apart-
Electric lights have
to
come
per cent now do their home work
on-
to the dollar.
water bathing facilities.
dollars by using atomic by-prod-
happening. where the radio-ac-
More
helped farmers get bigger
spoiling for months, to make a
better tooth paste.
ing that, to us, would have been a tragedy.
The Port Arthur News, which competes
may
its own way There are some 1,-
or
gold in the middle of some bog.
Onc« the emergency has passed—and that
gold to piston rings into the atom-
film, help to find out how to do
' chemical processes more cheaply
committally.
ic pile for a time.
WELLHAVET NQUIRE WELL,LET$GO!
I CAN STILL
AROUND AND FND
IN
COLLECTORS.
GOODMONEY
BOOKS ARE WRTH LOTS
QJCK!
OF MONEY! j
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FOR
OlO
s over on the other ride—or haul,
ing us out of comfortable chaina
fl
bi
SOMEONE WO SPEND A COUPLE
IS A COLLECTOR. OF MILLION AWNFUL
THE*0KUSIDMY BA
AT FMa<t AND bin
HE'S FAINTGD
HROM FEVER
ACTUALIN, TME "OME-
RUN MAOHine’ BOOSTED
rut LONFLiE INT
THE aUMO* o •
mt THE «oo»! rr
have
mm
Ts 19YOu2 BiG CHANCE 5
TOGErEVEN: SOPLAVHAZD
TO Ger:- TSLL HMTOer 2
g
E
D
T
H
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C
1
s
c
o
UN4WARE THAT HE « ATTRACTNG social.
NOTICE, PRANOIS PALETTE ETEes TE HOTEL
4
V
WE ‘Rs SOWA
MAKE iT,PATT)
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co wo
E
T
T
A
Scientists are now
find ways to keep
of normal living.
Simmons’ part in this thing is a long way
from heing finished. As president of the Sa-
bine River authority it will be his respon-
J
o
H
N
N
Y
lines so far because of iilnaaa with Peterson
and with the other community leaders in
I PREFER, IF possets
A ROOM WITH A I—'
SKYLiGHT NOT
AP Xewafeatures Writer
A woman of my acquaintance
n
o
83
f-u
I
L
E
Y
( EDDIE M
PHONED--
He wauts .
TO SEE r
V ME!
4
R
D
K
XJ
S
T
you were bewitched." 1.
She glared at me it l ut lb- ’’ inspect a clump of shy mari-
23
TATs THAT. JOMMNY! '
If Tuey WANT TO PuniSM
EASA220 MOW. THEY’LL
HAVE TO DRA6 THE RNVER
•K TO po rr! — e
I
G
S
I
s
T
E
live particle.
I last
( AND U
WANT TREMAIN
N THS 6ACKGKQUNO
wilut I AAc .
Te MT» ON THE
NUMSER or MoME
*UNs TOMHIT
• Men GAMEF
ed shutdown.
Tracer, for Oil Product.
Other oil companies put radio-
active tracers between the dit-
IT'S ALMOST TIME FOK THE
CORONATION, AND WEV& €or
TO RETUEN THE SCEPTER FOK
___ THE CEKEMONY... r
By JANEJADS
WASHINGTON—The National
to learn what really happens in
oil and perhaps thus extend the
study the underground flow of
J
O
E
radio-active materials, shipped product flows past a given point
from the Oak Ridge atomic plant. Engineers can then shut off the
8
B
C
■
K
ton ring, for example, then gives
off small radio-active particles.
The piston ring is put into an I
K
I
D
Measures Engine Wear
The resulting radio-aetive pis-
asting like a bunch of blithering
idiots. Yon cs per around as though
I semething to do. I broke down
and joined the farm couple with
whom I lived listening in on the
I party telephone I saved $400.
ABGAKD! AND,
FARO, TUK
HOMI MN
MACHIME HAO
BETTEK
.3SJ',
DUSTY
BOOtS?
4
j 6g 5
18,2
A
O
B
N
T
1
a
other tourist." and tobacco yields, have helped
doctors find and cure such dis-
r ...so THAT mobopy will
SUSPECT IT was even
MI55ING!
ritory, come to our rescue Plates on The
Leader's press were pulled off and rushed to
Port Arthur where the rival newspaper's
pressmen, their own day’s work finished,
were standing by.
The Leader came out Ftiday—a little late
—but it wouldn't have except for a display
of the same type of neighborliness that
brought hundreds of persons from the ad-
joining communities to help this city in its
hour of peril.
stout column to this county’s powerful eco-
nomic strueture.
R
A
Z
A
R
D
sent-mindedly scratching some re-
cent spider bites and trying to
remember the name of that new
sunburn lotion
“All of you are perfectly sane, 1
intelligent human beings who fol- I
lew orderly. pleasant lives until
r YEAM...IT‘S ALL
OM AND LOOk
. - ITS GETTING
—e LIGUT/
•e-me
I was in my 'teens. just out of
high school and teaching on an
their homes approximately
have pined in water ininplv.
more than half have central hea
ing systems and mproximasely
three-fourths have hot and cold
MOW
MUCH
c,g3
S
•A
eaaes as hyperthyroidism
Fars Own Way
in Texas and in Louisiana.
It will not, an oil man tells us. follow the
exact course of present development in the
Phoenix Lake field. And, he adds, the rich
new sand is likely to extend further into
the corporate limits of the City of Orange
than either of the two producing stratas pre-
viously found in the field.
It also could make the Navy's investment
THE ONY GUY WHO’S GETTING A BREAK
TeR-F*I-3
this ferent oil products they run
too much, aa it mostly pays through the aame pipe line De-
phase ia expected within the next 24 hours I
or so— McKenzie, who already has made a '
great contribution to his community in this i
crisis, will face his biggest task . .
It will be his job then to work with Mayor pWONDON AIRPPORT
Sid J. Caillavet—kept mostly on the side- - - uncertain
LOOK OUT FOR )
WHITE STAUIONS, £
URE0RDEB2.
Faro explains
the "homern
mechine’ to
embp*lm‘
U»A -
er haye gone to college two
years A quarter have finished -
college A typical teacher has
taught school IS years. In early
G
wonders may be on the way. I
I New chemical compounds are
( being found by atomic research.
VCAUSHT m HOPE
THIS VINE'S GTROM6
ENOU6H DMOLD
. Us? - 2
' ta)
4
The civil defense manuals are going to be
partly rewritten as a result of the lesson
which Orange and its neighboring communi-
ties taught the natioa during the present
emergency in thi4 city.
State and national civil defense officials
already are engaged in personal tours of the
area to see for themselves how the job is
being done and to hear for themselves the
reports of the people who are doing it.
And they have passed along the word that
their thinking on certain phases of civil de-
fense operations has been 'radically changed
. . . that the manuals which outline their
recommended courses of procedures, now
based largely on theory in some instances,
are due for major revision.
One section of the manuals which is al-
moat sure to be substantially altered is that
dealing with the declaration of martial law
That extreme step ordinarily is taken under
circumstances such as those existing here
during the past few days. It wasn't veces-
sary in Orange because, according to Capt
E E Garcia, the Navy officer who headed
up the local flood fighting forces, the civil-
ians of this_community imposed it upon
themselves.
He put it this way, “It was a perfect ex-
ample of a state of martial law voluntarily
assumed and enforced by the citizens."
In short, the people of Orange, by recog-
nizing that an emergency existed and acting
accordingly, made unnecessary the tempor-
ary surrender of civilian control of their
community.
KF.s
trying ~ , -- -—------------
meat from ence board petroleum sientists
told how one oil company saved '
1100.000 by measuring with ra-
dio-active beads the circulation'
of a catalyst in a big cracking
unit where gasoline is made, thus
avoiding an expensive threaten-
k
3
board erasers or to tune up the by the light of '•midnight
organ and get some curtains, the Tn ---h-
three-man board of directors in-half
formed the farmers thereabeuts
WHATDITELLYOUP)
SAY PAREE’S GONE so
HE COES R UNNINK5
BACK TO You •
when atomic energy may run
had. barns and pigstys to repair.
5o I raised the cash by putting on
a box supper.
There was no running water, no However, the eauipment in m-n,
aregon, radoa movies, no radios,,no Community elementar rural SCnoois i, a
Kon« and now socials, no dates. Once I went to sub-standard. Half of them have
Older methods of finding out Stbarnn warming, andwheeled no audio-visual equipment what-
about wear in an engine or a „ hut Aasquare dance to a ever. One out of five one-teacher
I costly machine tool required dis- #he! nddle accompaniment schopls. have no firm aid equip.
' mantling on engine or machinery kiMllr out of desperation for ment, not even bandages
and weighing the rings or other _ ~ -----------•
parts to find out how much had These Women: .
sibility to carry the batile to Austin or
Washington or ally other place and try to
see that steps are taken to keep thiapartic-
ular disaster from ever reposting itaelf
either st Deweyville or at Orange or an
where else along the Sabine river.
Radio-active materials
money." they said. > .______ .......
When I wanted money for a rural teachers Fewer than three
new stove bottom or some black- ------* _ " -
or bringing up strange bugs foe
ieentifieathon "
She semed-particularly, bitter
about our determination to in-
chide her in cur enthusiasma
Another phase of civil defense which is
likely to be given a re-examination is the
matter of civilian-milttary co-operation in
times of emergency.
Orange established beyond any shadow of
doubt that when a community is struck by
disaster the civilians and the military peo-
ple can work side by side without friction
and without the necessity of giving over
complete control of operations to either
It was, of course, a stroke of fortune that
this city had two men of the ability and lev-
elheadedness of Captain Garcia and Mayor
Pro Tern Howard S. Peterson to head up the
two groups engaged in the fight They made
a perfect pair of co-captains for the military-,
civilian team which went into the field and
stayed there until the job was finished.
And they had, in Col. H R. Halleck, dis-
trict Army Engineer, a technical adviser of
the highest caliber.
These three, together with County Civil
Defense Co-ordinator A. J. McKenzie. Sa-
bine River Authority President John W.
Simmons and Capt. C. O. Layne of the Texas
highway patrol, made up the top command,
provided the leadership without which the
army of workers down on the levee could
not have won their battle.
The contribution of Captain Layne and
the highway patrol to the struggle has been
invaluable and there were times when the
outcome depended on the ability of his or-
ganization to control traffic or to move ve-
hicles over considerable distances in the
shortest time possible.
Radio-active materials are pro- the complicated processes by
duced by sticking any of a num- which they create their products
A SWLIGHT1 WAT
«s TARNATION is r
—\THATT -
complained, all of her friends
turn into a species of human she
N€
~ 62
5 26 '
l emergency certificate, when I I days the typical rural one-room
, presided over a filmsy one-room ) school yas presided ever by a
frame school house in a sparsely schoolmaster. but today only one
I populated Inois county back in teacher in eight is a man
I the ’20’s My -salary was $800 The NEA study shows also that
i Parents of two big, strapping married rural teachers outnumber
eighth grade boys, one of whom single teachers three to one The
. had a beard and chewed tobacco, teacher is "ept to live in an apart
■ refused to let them lug the fuel in ment or house which he owns and
from the woodshed or help me to travel back and forth by auto.
I build a fire. “She's got to earn her mobile.”
to improve
not hamper
.The girls are like postmen on
their time off. They earn good
pay and they usually spend their
savings on monthlong vacation
trips to spots in the world they
haven't yet seen.
Help Firms Save Money
By 8AM DAWSON 1 Measures Engine Wear
NEW YORK (AP)— Radio-
active clouds from "atomic an- •
nie" may frighten some people
But industry is learning to live
INE ‘— LAUGH •—)—
TOY WITHHIMJ(YoURE
am 7 . gSr
which has about 100 different flow or divert the next product
kinds on sale. to another pipe, or study anv
The Atomic Energy commis- mixing of products as they flow
sion spends less than one per cent Tracers help the plastic and
of its budget on thia phase synthetic fiber industries control
Rem! To PROVE tN ON
TME LEVEL , DONT PVT
Any W poueM ON
TOOA9 84ME ' TIEN,
IFYVUKETE «WLT»,
Tu ON wt ABOAKD!
new industrial processes.
announced recently that she is
contemplating the life of a hermit
during a period of some six
months each veer—the pleasant
months. During this time, she
THE ORANGE Leader
22*rezmm:euu=
... t..do v* , - . uueu J, xnug mny • ■ num- xien iey create rneir proaucts
in New York Evelyn has more her of things from a hunk of help to measure very thin plastic
than one friend,' said Kay non- —• •——--'--— ■' - --
^i»«.rMAr Ywxg swgrTr T* rr mas ma
WAS SOITNy I IMIFORTANT / mofe THAN WE
somePM.".A- Guy5: ft bESERVEO, mur
, MAH • ---- ? \ NOMOERFUL
X "oM-
B Hsa He S / DONrb
CoGSE-N I WEAKEN:
THAT CurE CAR I
extends but geologists are optimistic
prospects that it underlies a wide area both
known limits of oil fields
The Eisenhower administra-
tions decision to cut the atomic
&
NO FOOUN3! PEOOLE (THAT SOUNDS
PY HIGH PRICES FOR SILLYTO ME!
OLD IWNGS. THEY RE f WOO PAY
iii'liiitiiltiiinliiiiiiliiiiii
OMMER MtTaK Laced TM*
Mu OUT OF THE PARKITHE
THOUtoh mwAsn AUMAN
u 4, 1 It
09
classifies as the "outdoor bore."
. .. . ----------— j She added:
tecting instruments quickly and, -A. . .. . ..
cheaply tell when the end of one mArusoona you people feel the
' —----- - first warm surshine, you start
ngmnt Boyle Writes:
Civil Defense: Some Changes Are Due Air Age Has Lost
Some Glamor But
r
A
L
o
o
K
KIMMI or THE ABSOCIATED PUM
malPfu"dsCurngarcenz.c.drpuruqnuzrzmpom,rop
somacnirnox aarus
- - Per Month a_____4125
" „Entaree Jan. 1. 1008, at pow o«i« orana. T... u .cona a.
to under of Conareaa Marea 2 107a 1
Washington Letter:
Country Schools Still Are
Far Below City Standard
engine nd wear on the ring can
be told Quickly and cheaply by
without waiting for the day draining the oil end measuring
* _ --- ______w ___its activity.
electric power plants, many com- ( The radio-active particles act
panies are saving thousands of as a tracer. With detecting in-
struments you can "see” what’s
___
DONNIE WERE RCHAFTER ALL! BETH
SAYS MAYBE HOSE OLD m----we
Gce MAS eeea
MBAY MOMOAED AS
onen PISTMAGA$HEO
MISAAS T SYDHEY
AE, 8 WMAWO
wnx# a FPETM
ON THE CENOTAPM.
m MemRy pr Tue
RiGrrnG OF
Bq vjns,
LATEA < < To M
I A c
■Kernel wine
low MATOA,
Education association (NEA) says
the average elementary country
school teacher today is 41 years ____......
of age, has had some coliege of|America‘s country schoot teach,
training and makes an average erk have ane +. --— -
salary of 12.484 a year.
the University of Michigan re-
port*.
11——(1BUT CSCO SUCH CLOTHeS:
Y HIS HAT HAS LOST ITs BRIM.'
KE
,6
A 5 I
DONT FORGEr How HE k
CAST YOU ASIDE LKE An )
OLD SHOE, AFTER Vou <
PACTICALLV Gave HIM )
THE BES-YEARS Or,
YOUR LIFE 2- ' 2
"A,
(3
sg60
kveMhiNetCBeen ,t it Kore tand
' seven yedreEech has flown three
million miler.the equivalent of
Ohio Oil company’s diseovery of the third: tmirh^” ________________
—and richest so far—oil producing strata Australia "**5 i mma- -ncazmere
in Orange’s Phoenix Like field adds another) The.work isshard and exAbtins — .------...—-—.
nebayrdomdspir ^Business Mirror1:
as much a chore as it ia at sea
Only further development will disclose teveh.bue it has fts rewards:
the exact area over which the new oil strata wofa,"tan Kkav.stidna A man”
over to be a girl in a man’s world."
Millionaire Shortage
The girls find plenty of ro-
mance. laughter and adventure
but few of them achieve the
dream of meeting and marrying
a multi-millionaire passenger.
"With the present tax situa-
tion is is hardly even worth while
looking for one," laughed Evelyn
“This kind of a life appeals to * — -
escapist girls who don’t want to: with the atom—and to harness it
havet derend om-some" poor * "*
miserable male to support them "
in a tract of land for a base an exceedingly 1 mMost o the stewardesses do
profitable one B • marrx. of.cqurse, but their choice
profitable one. is more likely to be a member of
And it means further that the city needs I • plane crew or the boy back _ - ___. -
to get some sort of a drilling ordinance on! home than * wealthy tickethold- “«• to Pertest.new products and
the books. er-
Our Thanks to a Neighbor
in the rush of work connected with the Llke Any Tourist
flood crisis we have failed to take time to "Just like any ____
acknowledge the assistance of a neighbor' saidEvelyn. "We dream of a
who came to The Leader’s rescue when it orlollang onna"beakh in Kazhmia
had an emergency of its own. j Bait is where I want to go nexe"
Last Friday afternoon, just after the press j tThesnoside journeys fave had :
started rolling, an unavoidable mechanical doe. Kay was in a ear Atenrokt
failure occurred. There was a good chance down while going through a vast livestock feeds, to find new and
that most of The Leader’s subscribers would Kame preserve in Africa . better insecticides and fungicide*,
not get thdr papers that day and with one with "the windowstssst'tthere ' “
of the biggest local stories of all time break- houhs while lion» and hyenas
prowled around the car," said
Kay.
+25 -y-- -cauu oKri#, wmm cvpetes Neither girl sees her ocean-
with us for circulation in a part of our ter- hopping job as much more dan-
-* * — — Sprout than routine office work
It hold* one lore dear to any
womans heart—bargain huting 800 sers of radio-isotopes,
in far places. All the steward- radio-active materials, ship
esses become wizard shoppers. * “ *
What is the question most pas-
sengers ask them*
“Well, the elderly men always J
seem curious about whether we
have a boy friend in e\ewy port."
said Evelyn.
•2^ City Girl Complains About Friends Who
to th. National mhssERan-ESte Turn to Outdoor Bores’ During Summer
By CYNTHIA Loway 1 the day when you spot your fieri
daffodil. Then you're complete
’ nuisances until snow flies
“In the first place, there's
carrying on any conversation.
You may be in the midie of a
Hery interesting disussion, and
: all of a sudden a strange look
temee into your eye, and yot rise,
command attention and fores
everyone to sneak up. to look at
I some dear little bird carring
I some nesting straw into that big
i elm—no, that’s the maple, the elm
- - --- --------- enough
i when they are on the ground But
get them up in tbs air—and any.
thing can hapgen
protecting the health of the citizens, in re- age"hhs‘iost"nualthruh themoir
storing their losses and in returning a state the international alr atewareg:
‘ ' woulan’t trade thelr job. for a
secretary’s desk
“You can na ver Ueli what peo-
ple TP11 ark you to do," mH Kay
Landin. "Once Gorgeous Georg-,
the wrestler, wanted me t hlp
pin up his eurls"
Kay and Evelyn Conlon were
stewardesses aboard the Fan
Amencan Stratoclipper in which
I flew here to attend the ore-
Nation. Most girls who adept this
h«n-tymz career drop out after
SkF/3-==Ee PREnos
Wze.WONT
• ( TRAP.- MY--WNQ
• Y HORSES A
/
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 122, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 26, 1953, newspaper, May 26, 1953; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1443614/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.