The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 221, Ed. 1 Monday, September 3, 1962 Page: 4 of 6
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NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES: Texas Daily Press League, Inc., Dallas,
Texas; New York City; Chicago, Ill.; St. Louis, Mo.; Los Angeles, Calif.
Colo.;
fbbjp
Peaceful Revolution
9
J
9
labor, and now
of the supreme1 court.
When Arthur became secretary wipe up all the remaining glass bits. In fact, I find
the famous business tycoon, smok-
L
I
dreamed and thought about it, a
Taylor said today that the United restlessly. They hated Daddykins’ holidays. Old J. P., who had come
States will increase its military long stories—but, after all, he did
M
lor said on his arrival in Tokyo, friend, Jim Broadbeam. We were
A. L.
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4
and
Back to School
TE
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M ARE
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A L
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peroxide and a piece of cotton cloth or some facial
tissues near the ironing board.
Judge William Hastie of Phila-
delphia, the first Negro appoint-
ed to the Court of Appeals; and
when
Alice Smith
Dear Heloise:
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CT
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3
Copyrgiht, 1962, King Features Syndicate, Inc.
tions . . . an A T & T stock-
M/N7 FfiOM.
I
»»
Like Topsy, White House
Committees 'Jest Growed'
10 and 20
Years Ago
buy such nice big diamonds. Duti-
fully, they leaned back to listen.
“Back in 1962,” began Henry.
“I was a young clerk in the ship-
ping department. So was my best
come
have
holder who’s a doctor
works in a steel mill.”
School to become the leading la-
bor attorney of Chicago, then
counsel of the CIO and the United
Steel Workers, then secretary of
BY THE WASHINGTON STAFF
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
“I was supposed to take Amelia
to the beach on Labor Day, but
the night before I lost all my
money in a poker game. So Jim
took Amelia instead, and she was
so mad at me that when he pro-
posed to her on the boat ride
back she up and accepted him.
“Having nothing else to do, I
up the reported choice of Robert
Weaver to be the first Negro
member of the cabinet as secre-
tary of HEW, it was intimated at
the White House that Judge Has-
tie would be promoted to the
Supreme Court instead.
NEW YORK ® — It was La-
bor Day in the year 1997, just 35
years from now.
A great trim white yacht stood
at anchor in the East River off
Manhattan.
At ease on its deck sat hand-
some Henry Palmer Bucksbound,
both courting a secretary, Amelia
Bland.
U.S. May Hike
Viet Nam Effort
TOKYO (P) — Gen. Maxwell D.
“Our government is watching our
efforts there and if they are not
enough, we are fully prepared to
do more.”
Taylor succeeds Gen. Lyman L.
Lemnitzer as chairman of the
U. S. Joint Chiefs of Staff next,
month.
ashes from his $450 vicuna sports
jacket.
At his feet sat his three current
chorus girl favorites—Rosebud la
Lulu, Gloria Glamour and Tawny
Hyde.
“Let’s go to Southampton for a
swim and a lobster dinner, Daddy-
kins,” suggested Rosebud.
LES
EAT
A Laugh for Labor Day
"‘Says here, Khrushchev predicts the downtrodden American work-
er will soon overthrow his capitalistic oppressors/7
Hal Boyle
Watch Man Who Works Holidays
effort in South Viet Nam “if nec-
essary.”
“Our progress in South Viet
Nam has been encouraging since
my visit there last October,” Tay-
up the hard way, was more and
more impressed.
“He made me his assistant,
then president, and chairman of
the board when he retired. When
he died he left me his fortune,
and I’d have gone to his funeral
except it was on the 4th of July
—and I- felt I should be in the
36 Sways
38 French painter
39 Limb
40 Buddy
41 Fire----•
44 Tastes
48 Rave
49 Rodent
50 Mind
51 Italian city
52 Exist
53 “Emerald Isle”
54 Mix
55 Fuel
56 Act
DOWN
1 School guard’s
station
2 Love god
3 Coin
4 Guided
5 Metal bar
6 Low tide
7 Clue
Dear Heloise:
When I iron white things, sometimes I scorch a
1
J
USE ____ ___
* N A[R RATEl
APOE22N* ''
N O1V| l~|C E.
ELATEB
34 Semester
37 Sourer
33 Bad (prefix)
40 Meat pastes
41 War god of
Greece
42 Final
43 Opposed
44 Brazilian state
45 Waste
allowance
46 Iroquoian
Indian
47 Transmit
49 Tatter
onto the paper. Fold paper, being careful that the
fluid is folded on the inside, and roll it up. Discard.
Then . . . look around you. You’ll still have glass
and fluid all over the place. Take another piece of
paper and repeat the process.
Then dampen and crumble a newspaper and
ff
Dear Heloise:
If mothers would put a few agate marbles in the
sterilizer with the baby’s bottles, the bottles will come
out crystal clear and the marbles get all the corrosion.
Shirley Sehraff
— - - ACROSS
1 Writing papr
(pl.)
5 Writing
material
8 Reader
12 Leave out
13 Born
14 Land measure
15 A few
16 Merry
.. 17 Auction
18 Where
“Rockaby
Baby” was
20 German city
21 Decay
22 Before (prefix)
23 West Point
student
26 Comfort
_. 30 Among
31 Rabbits
32 Demented
33 Moral wrong
34 Blow
35 Half (prefix)
A
Dear Heloise:
When I sprinkle clothes, I use my whisk broom.
I just dip the brush in very hot water (this will spread
evenly and better) and shake the broom on the clothes.
Does a beautiful sprinkling job.
Mrs. H.
Dear Heloise:
A satisfactory way to utilize those bits of soap that
are left is to make a “slash” (the length of the soap) in
any sponge, not cutting it all the way through. This will
look like a pocketbook.
Insert the soap pieces in the pocket and when the
sponge is dampened, it’s handy for many purposes!
How does one clean a can opener that has a gadget
which is inserted in the can and a handle which is
then twisted to effect opening?
Virginia Donahue
Anyone know? Write to Heloise, c/o Taylor
Press—I’ve got a messy opener too!
Heloise
■
ayg
i
-E
49
SECRETARY OF the Interior
Stewart Udall, known for his
quickie climb of 12,388 foot
Mt. Fujiyama, is about to depart
for the Soviet Union. Friends
say he is looking for a chance
to climb any mountains the
Russians will let him scale.
While Udall’s aides were ask-
ing around to find out what the
Russian equivalent of Mt. Fuji
is, the Soviet embassy extended
the secretary an invitation to
visit Russia’s Caucasus Moun-
tain range — located between
the Black and- Caspian Seas—
where they say he could climb
to his heart’s content. The high-
est point in the Caucasus
Range is 18,481-foot Mt. Elbrus.
The. Soviet embassy adds
that if he turns down this offer
he can still climb the rocks in
Bratsk, where he will be visit-
ing Siberia’s largest electric
power station.
P
it’s done, so quit worrying. At least you have an un-
expected clean floor.
I’m trying to tell myself!
And did you know that when you are sweeping
any uncarpeted floor or cement floor that you can take
a paper, dampen the edge of it tinder running water,
lay it on the floor and it would adhere? I find this
better than my dust pan. (Don’t drop any pickles today!)
Heloise
PRIVACY IS one of the
things that has begun to worry
the public in connection with
civil defense. Parents of school-
age children have been writing
Department of Defense to
make certain that boys and
girls, will have separate and
private rest room facilities in
shelters built in public schools.
«
Storm Kills 300
In Hong Kong
HONG KONG (—The toll from
Typhoon Wanda, Hong Kong’s
worst storm in a quarter of a
century, rose steadily today as
rescue workers continued dig-
ging into flooded and demolished
homes.
The government reported at
least 134 dead, 41 missing, 515
injured and 46,550 homeless. Lo-
cal Chinese newspapers estimat-
ed more than 300 were killed.
Wanda hit the refugee-crowded
British colony with winds of 160
m.p.h. Saturday. Damage was es-
timated unofficially at between
$2 million and $4 million.
--------0-------
Trade in Taylor and give your
merchants a chance to serve you.
H. T. T.
SUGAR-STARCH
Put % cup of water and a scant % cup of
sugar in a small pan. Put pan over low heat and stir
until the solution is clear and not sugary anymore,
but be sure that it does not come to a boil. In fact,
it should never come near the boiling point.
Dip the crocheted piece in warm water first
and then roll in a bath towel to remove as much of
the water as possible.
Dip crocheted piece in sugar-starch and
stretch to desired shape. Pat with cloth to remove
excess moisture and let dry thoroughly.
N
FORMER MISSISSIPPI Gov.
James P. Coleman is running
again for the office in 1963.
Mississippi does not allow, a
candidate to seek two consecu-
tive terms.
In the interim years, how-
ever, Coleman has practiced
law vigorously and has won a
feather in his cap which has
some people gaping in wonder.
He won a substantial damage
suit for a client whose automo-
bile ran into a moving freight
Dear Folks:
It does happen. I know. I just did it!
I dropped a whole quart glass jar of pickles from
the top shelf of the refrigerator!
When this happens, say what you want to . . . but,
it still has to be cleaned up. Why use a sponge, get
bits of glass in it, step on other bits and get your feet
soaked, too?
Take three or four sheets of newspaper. Not thgm
very one you are reading now, but the paper you rea
yesterday or the day before. Open it up wide and lay
)
Dear Heloise:
An exra shower curtain rod, hung over the batkem
tub . . . the length of the tub, is an excellent place t40
hang laundry. The drips all end up in the bath tubl "
Jean Basey
Dear Heloise:
Do you have a recipe for sugar-starch for cro-
cheted items?
Esi=g-=s==
WA
K f
1
i
was kept secret by the top lead
ers of the OSS. Some of the blue-
bloods who dominated the organi-
zation didn’t want it known that
they had labor leaders working
with them. But at the end of the
war it was the labor division
which got the most praise from
President. Truman and was an
important factor in the continua-
tion of the OSS under a revamp-
ed organization—the CIA.
( Copyright, 1962, by the Bell
Syndicate)
il
g
se 1
a damp paper far better than a dust pan.
Now is the time to mop. First mop with cold
water. Then warm water until the floor is clean. Some
condiments will remove the floor wax. If this happened,
rinse the floor with a slight mixture of vinegar and
water, rinse again with clear water before applying
your wax.
And, ladies, we know that 29 cents just went
Merry-Go-Round ... By Drew Pearson
SEN. HUGH SCOTT, R-Pa.,
says “During the long fili-
buster, senators were saying in
the style of the television com-
mercials: ‘Do YOU too suffer
from tired breath?’ ”
of labor, some predicted that or-
ganized labor would have its own
special advocate right inside the
Kennedy administration. But he
told his labor friends: “I’m work-
ing for all the people now.”
Goldberg did such a good job
of settling labor disputes that
when the first Supreme Court
Page 4, Taylor Daily Press, Monday, September 3, 1962
UheZaplorMapHress
Published in Taylor, Texas, since 1913 and serving a market area of
75.000 daily Monday through Friday.
Entered as second class mail matter at the Post Office at Taylor, Texas,
under the act of March 8, 1872.
Publishers — Taylor Newspapers, Inc.
News, Advertising and Circulation telephone EL2-3621
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for reproduetion of
ai local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP dispatches. All
reproduction rights of special dispatches here are also reserved.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation, which may appear in the columns of The
Taylor Daily Press will gladly be corrected upon being brought to the
attention of the Publisher.
* SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Carrier delivery in Taylor, Thrall, Thorndale, Round Rock, Granger, Bart-
lett, Hutto, Elgin, Coupland and Georgetown — $1.10 per month.
Mail rates in Williamson and adjoining counties not served by carrier:
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Mail rates elsewhere: $1.35 per month, $16.20 per year.
I
NII
DEMOCRATIC National
Committee Chairman John M.
Bailey quotes his Republican
counterpart, William E. Miller,
as saying in Washington that
“if the Republicans don’t win
in 1962 they will have to look
under a rock for their candi-
date in 1964.” Continues Chair-
man Bailey:
“I was aware that the Re-
publican prospect for 1964 was
Rocky, but I was surprised to
hear the Republican chairman
make such a frank admission
of his difficulties.”
J
8 Singing voices 31 College living
9 Wood sorrels quarters (coll.)
10 Heraldic band 35 Relieved
kia and the borders of Germ-
my. The Nazis, for instance,
vere airaid to tow barges down
the Rhine or the Elbe in the day-
time because of allied bombing.
So they assembled their barges
until night. However, Goldberg
was able to find out each night,
through his transport workers,
just where the barges were to
be assembled next day.
The Germans never knew how
the allies were able to get such
accurate information for their
bombing raids.
The labor division of the OSS
dreams. If they don’t come true
you have to keep on working
anyway.
“With us they’ve now come
true'. As Harry Golden says, ‘It
could only happen in America.’ ”
Tenacious Justice Frankfurter
Justice Felix Frankfurter, now
79, struggled valiantly to remain
on the court, also hoped to rec-
ommend his successor. But since
his stroke of last April his left
side has been partly paralyzed,
and he has not been able to use
his left arm. When President
Kennedy called on him last
month, he was able to rise from
his chair, but this has been the
only occasion he has been able
to stand without aid.
Justice Frankfurter had been
known to favor the appointment
of his close friend, Prof. Paul
Freund, professdr of the Harvard
Law School, or Judge Henry
Friendly of the U. S. Court of
Appeals in New York to his place
on the bench. He had helped se-
4
Nek
SATIRIST Mark Russell—ap-
pearing at an Ocean City, Md.,
resort — says “Kennedy sees
trouble ahead if Vice President
Johnson retires in 1964.
cure the appointment of Friendly spot. I find it an excellent idea to keep a bottle of
to the second circuit through the i
true. But you have to
Twenty Years Ago
Howard Debus, Delmer Nichols,
and Douglas Dunn finish war
course at University of Texas.
Public invited to Fort Hood
Opening.
Dewey Brown elected superin-
tendent in Lexington Schools.
Football underway at Taylor
High. _______________________
The PRAYER
For Today From
The UPPER ROOM
n
SMB
OF j •
----------0----------
Taylor Merchants are your
friends — shop with them and
save money.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
bor Day 35 years ago?” Tawny lot of people’s dreams don’t
asked. “What’ll you do?”
TRACER
STRESS
11 Sharp
19 Kindergartner
20 Sea birds
22 Keats for
instance
23 Threw
24 French friend
25 Eat
26 Dove calls
27 Portent
28 Kind of duck
29 Redact
called him to say: “You should
be getting this appointment, but
I can’t spare you.”
Kennedy appointed “Whizzer”
White to the court instead.
Some lawyers are now predict-
ing that Goldberg will line- up
with the1 liberal bloc on the Su-
preme Court. But according to
the lady who knows him best,
he will interpret the law as he
sees it.
“I don’t know where Aruthur
got his reverence for the1 law,”
says Dorothy Goldberg. “It must
go back to some ancestor close
to Moses.
“I first met him in the faculty
law library at Northwestern. He
was studying torts. We didn’t get
much studying done. Later when
he used to come on trips to
Washington, his first pilgrimage
was always to the Supreme Court.
“But who would have thought
he would ever be appointed to
that court! Of course, We’ve
it on the floor near the spilled goop. Use your kitchen
associate justice broom and literally sweep the fluid and all the mess
~ArIPf . . • c - « A ■■ a - 1 . V
When the first Labor Day was observed in
New York on Sept. 5, 1882, it was not the family
holiday we know today. It was a militant demon-
stration—a challenge and a protest by laboring
men.
The union movement at that time was splin-
tered and weak, but the common cry of “a fair
day’s pay for a fair day’s work” united all in spirit.
When the American Federation of Labor was
organized later, its platform called for compulsory
education, laws against child labor, provisions for
sanitation and safety in factories and—most radi-
cal of all—an eight-hour day.
All of these things came eventually, some
sooner and some later. Today they are generally
accepted as among the minimum requirements of
a civilized society.
The profound effect—a revolution, actually—
which the union movement has had upon Ameri-
can life is so all-embracing that it is, paradoxically,
all too easy to overlook.
At a picnic ground today, it would be diffi-
cult to tell who is a management executive and
who a machine operator. Not by their dress. Not
by their cars.
Perhaps one’s house is larger and more expen-
sive than the other’s. But inside the “working-
class” house (an adjective that has disappeared
from the language), the manual v/orker owns appli-
ances that would have made a company president’s
wife turn green with envy a generation or two ago.
This is, of course, due to technological pro-
gress. But it is also due in no small part to the
slow realization by manufacturers that their best
market was composed of their own workers and
the workers of other factories.
Thus, the higher the general level of pay, the
wider the market. The wider the market, the more
competition. And the more competition, the greater
the need for technological improvement.
Another aspect of the revolution, however, is
more apparent. Today in many cases, it is the em-
ployers who are at a disadvantage in the face of
strong, nationwide and industry-wide unions. Im-
balances in this situation will have to be redressed
in coming years.
Labor need no longer wear a chip on its
shoulder. This is proven by the fact that no one
anymore thinks of Labor Day as “labor’s day.”
It is a holiday for all Americans, blue-collar
and white-collar, laborer or manager, who have
helped produce and who share in the plenty that
is America.
Dear Heloise:
Those old embroidered scarfs and doilies that we
use no more—make lovely hand towels for the kitchen!
I never could discard mine.
berg, though logical, was difficult
for the President to make—from
one point of view. He hated to
spare him from his Cabinet.Ken-
nedy has leaned on Goldberg on
domestic problems as heavily as
Eisenhower leaned on John Fos-
ter Dulles on international prob-
lems. Goldberg will leave a hole
in the Cabinet.
Goldberg’s Moder ESpionage
In the many thousands of
words written about new Supreme
Court Justice Goldberg, most
people have overlooked his con-
tribution to winning the war. A
major in the Office of Strategic
Services, Goldberg devised a
brand new system of intelligence
—through labor unions behind the
lines.
Figuring that the old-fashioned
days of Mata Hari spying were
a thing of the past, he worked
with the European transport
workers to establish an amazing
intelligence system which reach-
ed into the heart of Czechoslok-
His career caused the Chicago
Tribune to print a long biography,
with the advice: “this should be
in the hands of every school
child in Chicago.”
Only in America
When I make pot-roast gravy, I always throw in
three or four cloves. Or better still, with cloves, make
an onion porcupine and let it remain in the pot during
cooking. (I think this is an onion with a few cloves
stuck in it. Am I right? It’s a great idea.—Heloise)
Daily Reader
They’re already looking for a
running mate in the next elec- train at the 37th box car.
ing a $2 cigar and brushing the went into the office that morning
to clean up some orders I should
PPEIKRA
RENLS
have sent out the week before.
Old J. P. McGrim—he ran the
firm then—came in and saw me,
and said, ‘I’m glad somebody
around this place besides me
thinks of something besides play.’
“The next week I got a raise
and a promotion. That taught me
all I needed to know.
“When Thanksgiving rolled
around old McGrim came in and
saw me at my desk, and made
me head of the department.”
Henry tossed his cigar on the
deck and squashed it out with
his $175 alligator shoes.
“After that,” he continued, “the
rest of the staff worked between
holidays—and I worked only on
———(Ag
322 -
25
I can then dab the scorched spot with some per-
Recentyshehadaso sugspsted oxide and let it set for a while. I then put a facial tissu
1 3516 , " over the spot and iron over it again. The brown spo
. .. is all gone and saves bleaching and washing the entire
President Kennedy passed garment over again.
I' ■
I
Ten Years Ago
Storm halts war in Korea.
Barbara Pfluger honored at par-
ty-
Don Smiths host Sunday School
Party.
Ford Foundation scholarship
awarded Zaida Brown of Snyder,
formerly of Taylor.
rEEN
-e©-N
...
office for fear, even then, he
might show up and find me miss-
ing.”
“What happened to Jim and
Amelia?” asked Rosebud.
“Oh, Jim’s still in the shipping
department,” said Henry. “They
had six kids. They all work for
me now, too.”
“Maybe if you had gone to the
beach that day with Amelia in-
stead of going to the office, she’d
have married you—don’t you ever
think of that?” suggested Gloria.
“Yes, I do,” said Henry. “I
saw Amelia at an office dinner
last year, and I must admit she
has something you girls don’t
have.”
“What?” the three girls chor-
used.
“Wrinkles,” chuckled Henry.
“Well, cuties, I’ll have to leave
you now. I still go into the office
on holidays as a sentimental ges-
ture.”
“What’ll you do if you find a
young man working there, just as
old Mr. McGrim foun dyou on La-
intervention of Vice President
Johnson.
^4^*
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525=“=
I lElR RIaI I I InIdI I IainI
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$ 5
“Fire him, of course!” said
Henry Palmer Bucksbound. “You
can’t trust a man like that.”
Mdral: Never work on your holi-
days. Even if it doesn’t cost you
your job ,in the end ti will only
make you old and rich and sur-
rounded with pretty girls._______
I beseech' you therefore,
brethren, by the mercies of
God, that ye present your bod-
ies a living sacrifice, holy, ac-
ceptable unto God, which is
your reasonable service. (Ro-
mans 12:1).
PRAYER: O God, help all
laymen in the church of Jesus
Christ to use in Thy service the
great strength which is theirs.
In their daily work, may they
give hands, heart, and voice
for the Master, in whose name
we make this prayer. Amen.
----------------0---------------•
Happy Birthday
Greetings of “Happy Birthday”
ire being extended to the follow
ing birthday celebrants:
Randall Richter, Albert Zeplin,
Charlie Rohlack, Mrs. Ned Fails
Jr., Holly Smith, Bland Smith,
Alicia Smith, Leland S. Lee III,
Mike Gossett.
--------0-------
Mr. Merchant: Your Taylor
Daily Press ad man has your
master plan for more results
from advertising.
“Tomorrow,” grunted Henry.
“Can’t today. Have to go to the1
office.”
“But Labor Day’s a holiday,”
said Tawny. “Nobody works on
Labor Day except bus drivers, po-
licemen, pickpockets, and—”
“And your Daddy kins,” fin-
ished Henry. “Shall I tell you
why?”
The girls looked at each other
'
x
\[
5:3
(83
When cooking from a recipe that says “tie spices
in gauze bag” and later you want to remove the bag,
try putting your spices in an aluminum tea infuser.
(That’s the gadget you put tea in with a chain on top
The President’s choice of Gold- of it! — Heloise)
s
I
39
43 —
San Francisco, Calif.; Memphis, Tenn.; Detroit, Mich.; Denver,
Mexico City.
vacancy opened up, Kennedy down the drain. Awful! This is hard on budgets but,
Li
In.
O3eaE,88$.
Washington — (NEA) —
President Kennedy’s adminis-
tration, which came to town
determined to wipe out the 24
White House committees that
cluttered up government dur-
ing the Eisenhower administra-
tion. not only kept them all
but added 22 more advisory
groups of its own on the job.
In fact there are four hanging
over from Truman and still do-
ing business, bringing the total
up to 50. White House em-
ployes at the close of the Eisen-
hower administration totaled
416. Kennedy’s workers now
number 450.
WASHINGTON — On (he cl
west side of Chicago, an area
which now borders on slums,
there is a little house where
was born the new justice of the
Supreme Court. His parents
Joseph and Rebecca Perlsteir.
Goldberg, had migrated from
Russia, and the elder Goldberg
drove a horse and wagon as a
commission merchant. Sometimes
he took his son, Arthur, with
him as he drove to market.
When Arthur was eight years
old his father died and all the
children went to work. Only one
went to high school. When the
justice of the supreme court was
12 years old, however, he an-
nounced that he was going to
high school. His brothers and sis-
ters were not too sympathetic.
“You’ll have to do it on your
own,” they said. “We can’t help
you.”
There were no child labor laws
in those days and young Arthur
went to work delivering stacks
of shoe boxes from warehouse
to retail stores in Chicago. He
made his deliveries by streetcar.
From these beginnings, Arthur
Goldberg worked his way through
Northwestern University Law
509 5
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 221, Ed. 1 Monday, September 3, 1962, newspaper, September 3, 1962; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1523892/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.