The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 115, Ed. 1 Monday, May 15, 1967 Page: 4 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
V
/
0
PERSISTANT LITTLE BIRD
Can Our Armed Forces Be All ■ Professional?
(
1
■ $
3 \
cancer specialists.
. NEW YORK CAP) - As the
e
stream.”
Vj
deed be the torerunner ol
93
From the Detroit area comes
hind him. Result: one hit, one
?
A
sy Carrt«r
ay Moil _
r ’
.1
4
e
5 •
■ :
)
THESE DAYS...
Possibilities in 1968 Presidential Race Cited
TU aan
TU am
Air
Shug
gar
West
Nava
Calif.
Squa
main
for E
El
Edw
Mr. ai
of 112
two-wi
to the
portin
Philip;
ti
cancer of the prostate if it oc-
curs. •
There are some super special-
ists who have devoted them-
Pf
Mr.
1019
com
Gor
to v
line ball at Indian Lake but mostly we used
small squares of white PAG soap.
Channel catfish dearly love white PAG soap
and we have taken as many as a dozen of them off
a trotline, baited with it during a single check.
And we never went on a trotlining excursion to
Indian Lake without trying to catch Old Blue.
- Special hooks — big ones tied to strong lines
and securely anchored — were used for that pur-
pose. And knowing the habits of big blue catfish,
we used live bait (generally a small catfish) for that
purpose.
Naturally. We never caught Old Blue. But on oc-
casion we found the tackle set out for him missing
when we returned and knew that he had been
there.
while the other two-thirds pro-
vide,*
generous planetary influences — with special em-
phasis on happy sentimental and social experiences
between now and Sept. 15; also between Nov. 15 and
Jan. 1; next April and May. With the exception
of brief periods in mid-December and next April,
when some tension may be evident, domestic af-
fairs should run smoothly.. . .
A child born on this day will be endowed with a
great sense of responsibility and will be unusually
gifted along creative lines. . ,
True Life Adventures
PENELIN PALS
Try And Stop Me
________By BENNETT CERF
the sob-provoking saga of a gent |
who spent over *10,000 in a vain (
t to pilot a car well |
enough to get a driver's license.
For his 14th try he had himself .
hypnotized to overcome what he <
YOUR HOROSCOPE ...
The Stars Say
toral vote.
And, by taking votes from
Republicans in Virginia and
Florida, Thurmond only suc-
ceeded in throwing those states
to Harry Truman.
ously climate
is not the only
factor in -the
don’t change horses in mid- . advance agent of the cashless
society, the credit card hardly
has tried to hide its identity. It
day by a universal card good
almost anywhere. This card
would be a person's chief identi-
fication. It might even carry his
Social Security number.
THE BUSINESS MIRRO . . .
Credit Card is Now
Known to Millions
By JOHN CUNNIFF
Another banker warns that
the credit card society msy in-
ACROSS THE EDITOR’S DESK...
There Used To Be Fine Fishing Inside Orange
By J. CULLEN BROWNING
/V:
2X3
11M
A lot, however, depends on
just how ornery people are go-
ing to feel in 1968. The dopestere
who give Romney a better ’
chance than Nixon against John-
son in a three-cornered race
Dr. Ooiwa of these dis-
eases. If it were then none of
these conditions would ever be
found in Tuscon, Arizona, or in
any of the other parts of the
country known for this type of
climate.
Some patients of mine have
been so enthusiastic about warm
temperatures that they have
moved their homes and busi-
nesses and permanently settled
down and enjoyed it.
All of us in the practice of
medicine have known people
who completely uprooted them-
selves and dislocated their fam-
ilies from schools, friends and
businesses only to come to the
unhappy realization that the
move was a mistake. The bene-
fits they sought .did not mate-
rialize and only emphasized
their error in moving.
In genera) it is a wise idea
for people with chronic arthri-
tis or sinusitis to take a long
trial period in a new climate
ly in. The many credit cards could,
if the conceivably, be replaced some-
estate bargains was the pur-
chase of Alaska from Russia by
the United States 100 years ago.
The price — $7.2 million—
amounted to two cents an acre.
Too much sleep can leave you
tired. It has been found that
people who sleep nine or more
hours a night have less energy
than those spend few hours in
the sack.
THE OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT . . .
Many Things Learned
By Opening Mail
By HAL BOYLE
There was a time during and immediately after
World War II when the fishing was better on the
Sabine River inside the city limits of Orange than
most anywhere else in this immediate area.
That isn’t the case any longer. I don't know why
urless it is due to years of pollution of the river at
Orange with raw sewage.
When Mama and I first moved here we lived at
*10 Border St., just a couple of blocks from the
river. I've caught long atrings of catfish and a few
ether freshwater varieties from the switching track
in that vieinity.
Later on, we moved to Navy Park Addition and
I started fishing from the riverbank just below the
mouth of Little Cypress Bayou.
One afternoon. In the spaee of about a halt-
hour, I caught 37 blue catfish weighing up to two
pounds each at that spot.
Little Cypress Bayou at that time also provided
excellent fishing for catfish, bream, bass, crappie
and at one spot a fisherman who wanted to have a
barral ef fun could haul in grindle until he wore
himself out.
The slip at the county docks was another spot
where at one time a fisherman could put a heap of
. Beat on the table in the form of freshwater species
And in summertime, when salt water moved in,
. It waa possible to make respectable catches of red-
fish, sheephcad, drum, striped bass and an occa-
sional flounder at the mouth of the slip.
Sometimes the freshwater and saltwater spe-
cics intermingled at that point. I recall returning
home from there one afternoon with a string that
included a channel catfish, Urgemouth bass, salt
water drum and a flounder.
At other times, I have encountered heavy
ereaker runs at the mouth of the slip and caught
enough in a couple of hours to MU an ice chest.
A few people still fish in the river inside Orange
bu it has been a number of years since I saw any
of them go away with a respectable catch.
Adams Bayou at one time also was a fine place
for fishing at times, Especially for crappie. Some
of the best catches of this species I have eve
seen were made under the bridge on MacArthur
Drive.
Back in the daya before I gave up night trot-
lining, Indian Lake, in southern Newton County
was my favorite spot. That was before it became
the crowded place it is now.
I have fond memories of arriving at Indian Lake
late of an afternoon and setting out a trotline or
two while freshwater drum grunted noisily in the
water beneath the boat.
Sometimes, my fishing partners and I would
use minnows, erawfish or small porch for trot-
1st
son ।
J. H
Driv
pilot
He v
jet t
scad
duri
most any job well now. Those engaged in writing
of any type will be especially favored, but bus’ness
personnel are also star-blessed.
FOR THE BIRTHDAY
If tomorrow is your birthday, your horoscope
indicates that during the first two weeks of Au-
gust, and also between mid-September and nid-
November, partnership and financial matters should
go exceptionally well.
Next good periods along these lines; Early De-
eember, next February and March... It will be im-
portant, however, to avoid speculation of any kind
during the entire year — but especially during the
first two weeks of September and the last two in
December.
Some excellent job opportunities are star-prom-
ised in July, late September and December; also
next January and February. And, where creative
workers are concerned, many of whom are Tau-
reans, the entire months of June, September, De-
cember, January and February should be notable
for inspiration, accomplishment and recognition.
All in all, your material interests should prove ex-
TMLEPMOMES
Pwww onwa md Clouained
OmSahM Dwartment--
on states like California, Vir-
ginia-and Florida, even as in
1948?
R.
Marini
ter Jr.,
Robert 1
Wreath,
Ing in a
ous Irai
Hitch II
- tnd Mai
ribbean.
8th Mai
gade.
A
Marit
son of 1
of Star!
a 20-da
a tour
ter his
El Ton
of dut
year M
gradua
Jami
was pr
Marine
son of
Matthe
rently
lay te
nam.
i
Cl
1
THE Orange LEADER
EDITORIAL PAGE
MONDAY, MAY 15,1967
RC
Roni
Orange
pleted <
at Ft.
been co
second
are Mr
Pointe
ange. L
Orange
North '
■ He has
at Ft. I
%
— Ching Chow.
“School days are the happi-
est daya of your life — provid-
ing, at course, your youngsters
are old enough to go." — Paul
Seldon.
!
Airr
a fol
with I
tenant
Vietni
Air F
for m
hide
Airm:
and I
1108 f
tionec
world of banking, since banks
are issuing most of the cards.
Early this year a banking ex-
ecutive said the little money
cards were being made availa-
ble "promiscuously," without
regard to traditional banking
practices.
. The Federal Reserve is con-
cerned with their possible link
to inflation, the thought being
that, since a credit card always
comes back into your hands aft-
er use and a dollar doesn’t,
overspending might thus be en-
couraged.
Eric Hodgins tells about an
old man who fell grievously ill
of a complication of diseases,
and then, after a long siege,
recovered. He was deeply
pleased with this recovery: he
was wont to boast that hla ap-
V
A
NORWALK. CONN., HOUR: "More than 250
Americans have been killed in Viet Nam, and the
total grows almost daily. ... In the last three
years, exports by America's allies to the Viet Cong
aggressors have Increased 25 per. cent, and their
purchases from North Viet Nam have nearly
doubled. . . . What the United States needs more
than sympathy is allies. Perhaps the welcome an-
nouncement by Australia that it ia seeding *00
troops to help U.S. combat forces will cause some
soul-searching among those who speak one loyalty
but practice another."
Moment of Meditation
Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above
and cometh from the Father of lights ... (James 1117
comfort they expected does not
come true.
The enthusiasm of the local
chamber of commerce must not
be used as the only index to
such an important step. They,
too, recommend that people
come and stay with them and
feel the benefits before making
a positive move.
Is there a medical specialty*
called cancer diagnostician or
cancer surgeon?
This is a mistaken idea. There
are no doctors who specialize in
the diagnosis of cancer and
there are no surgeons who are
classed as cancer specialists. All
cashless society because so
many people will overspend
they'll have no money left any-
way.
Some bankers, in fact, have
ceptionally pleasing during this new year in your
Nfc. / . anomR
in your private life you are alio governed by r
V
before making an abrupt
change. The move is expensive
mitments in Vietnam some form of involun-
tary and selective service is necessary.
Over the medium-rtin, the senator- be-
lieves, there is need to begin testing first
the outlines and then the specifics of a
caveer military service—a voluntary, pro-
fessional service, to provide the nation with-
a peacetime force-in-being and a wartime
cadre.
His guess is that Congress would have to
scale up the inducements," step by careful
step, to find out just how much it's going to
cost to provide the requisite number of
military professionals, embracing all the
many specialities that a modern military
establishment may call for.
Over the long-run, in the senator’s view,
there is no insurmountable obstacle to build-
ing a voluntary professional.force. Maybe,
he said in his speech, we can get by with
nothing more in the way of compulsion than
a national registration system, so that we
can maintain an inventory of manpower for
purposes of rapid crisis mobilization.
He also assumed that the nation would
maintain, side-by-side with the professional
cadre, a ready reserve. Through periodic if
brief training stints, this reserve would be
a further nucleus for rapid mobilization. And
if, too, would be a volunteer force of almost
full-time civilians.
Dominick sees finally, in his long-run
projection, a pressing need to assess which
of our present military specialties must
continue to be military and which can be
as well or better filled with civilian
prefessionals:
The senator admits that the nation must
keep preparing for many different modes of
warfare, for many years to come. And that is
why, he added, inequities and all, some form
of national selective service will continue to
physicians when they examine
patients accumulate as m u c h
control or cure ' evidence as they can before
coming to a conclusion or mak-
Romney, and all the rest of the
hopefuls.
But even some of the anti-
Nixon pros, such as Nelson
Rockefeller's George Hinman,
are mournfully conceding that
Nixon already has the edge.
The'’polls show that Romney is
• still the most popular with the
But this is the sort of pure
mechanical thinking that led the
dopesters astray in 1948. What if
the 1968 realities were to hinge
FOR TOMORROW ,----- ---------------
With a spirit of enterprise and a keen analysis that would include George. Wal-
at all situations, you should be able to handle al- Tace haven treckoned.with the
distinct likelihood that there will
be four parties in the fieldeven
as there were in 1948. I,
Given a further exacerbation
of the Vietnik mood, the various
"peace" organizations will al-
most certainly present a spoiler
candidate of their own out of
spite. If Rev. Martin Luther
King could be persuaded to run
against the field, what effect
would it have on the electoral
college vote? And would it
make any difference whether
the Republicans ran Romney
or Nixon?
is known now to millions of
Americans.
It has trumpeted its presence
in countless advertisements,
been promoted through trading
stamps, touted by skywriters,
offered to names culled blindly
from college class lists.
And, aside from having given '
a lot of people the false idea
that the dollar bill will be obso- .
lete, it has provoked or accom-
panied a controversy that
throbs in the once convehtional
declined to get in on What they
call the card craze. As a substi-
tute for the card’s line of credit,
these bankers permit overdrafts
of regular checking accounts.
Thus the overdraft, once a vio-
lation, is now sometimes a
right.
These are among the present
maneuverings and controversies
that may well be the predeces- '
sors of the checkless and cash-
less society. They are part of an
evolution to automation. The
outcome isn’t clear, but the
card is its present symbol.
Once these cards were asso-
ciated mostly with dining, en-
tertainment and travel. But the
hundreds of cards issued by
banks can do anything money
can do except light cigars.
Already the card has become
a major form of installment
credit through arrangements
between banks and department
stores. Both buyer and seller
benefit. The buyer obtains cred-
it through possession of the
card. The seller receives full
payment from the bank, which
then collects the "easy pay-
ments.”
This process, too, is evolving.
#M25Ak , --a
Slg--4*33
f Mom “3
‘xuTNG JUST IN IIM*
TO GAVE BOTH C TM,
815 memgwLanemwsem 3
So how is he going to be headed
off?
The only way to do it is to
come up with a candidate who
could incontestably beat Lyndon
Johnson. For a few weeks there
. was an undercover Rockefeller
boom. Now the effort is to prove
that George Wallace is setting ■
it up for Romney.
By. manipulating the third
party threat posed by the for-
, mer governor of Alabama, it
can be shown that Nixon would
be bereft of enough votes in the
South by Wallace to ruin the old
Goldwater "southern strategy.”
Romney, of course, would do
worse than Nixon in the states
of the old Confederacy. But the
argument goes that Romney can
win in the industrial North and
East where Nikon can’t.
X"“A
82323,
900 1
more than a third of the men
are married by the age of 21.
If you’re powerfully thirsty,
you can't fare better anywhere
than Canada. Our northern
neighbor—Uncle Sam'a greatest
customer— has about one-third
of the world’s supply of fresh
water.
Windows broken by vandals
cost the New York City school
" syste mmore than a million dol-
lars every year. The solution? A
new safety glass so strong that
it can stand pounding by a base-
ball bat without shattering.
If someone asked you to name
the five most important metals
in the world on a tonnage basis
11%
i V
Lm
MEMBR A$SOCIATED PRESS
TM AiwWM Prss H ezelusiveiy entihed b IM UM *
republctien t M bocol news printed la Nils hewspoper
Ot well 0« 011 AP djspoiches.
SUBSCRIPTION RATBS
_____Monthly; WIN Per Yegr
__ 9200 Monthiy; $040 Hr er
Speaking o YOUR HEALTH..
■ By LESTER L OOLEMAN; M.D, ——
Is it worthwhile to move to a
warm, dry climate for arthritis
or a sinus infection?
Patients with rheumatism, ar-
thritis and infections of the si-
mommMu nuses consis-
1810 tently
TaI that they feel
QUOTABLE: The hiccup is one of man’s
“Happiness is a place be- oldest afflictions. In the Middle
tween too little and too much” East it Was pictured on ancient
clay and stone tablets.
It was Will Rogers who ob-
served, “One-third of the people
in the United States"promote
F- ’
„es-
p o-N
Lgl
. ,ARNee
‘,9%
:THSkKKuk
ing a diagnosis. ,
A general examination fol-
lowed by blood studies and
X-rays indicate the need for
more intensive specialized work-
up. If any indecision or confu-
sion exists a doctor may sug-
gest a consultation with another
physician who may have a spe-
cial interest in a particular
problem.
All surgeons in all specialties
operate on cancers in their field.
For example, a general surgeon
will operate on a cancer of the
stomach or intestines. He will
also remove gall-bladders and
do appendectomies and all other
operations within the limits of
his capabilities.
A throat surgeon will remove
a cancer of the larynx as part
of his own specialty. A urologi-
cal surgeon will do all the op-
erations in his field and also a
See}
Ni
had reckoned was a simple case
of lack of confidence.
With his eyes somewhat
glased, he took the wheel be-
side the state otlicial, turned
the ignition key - and smacked
smartly into the car parked be-
and can be psychologically dis- .. — ----- -rt
tressing if the good health and selves to very unique types of
■ operations. They may. be called
in for a particularly difficult
problem. Heart surgery, for ex-
ample, would be in this cate-
gory. Thefe are, however, no
doctors who can be classed as
Mle
ma
np-‘
i{. ,/
vyg-wg-aMg*u
63,
"E
*500 repair bill, no license - -and heaven only knows you
and a punch in the nose for the can be asked anything thse days
hypnotist. —what would be your repiy?
----- The correct answer would be
By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN
Between now and the kickoff .In 1948, as an editorial writer
of the Republican presidential for Life magazine, I was
primaries in New Hampshire, charged with setting forth plaus-
we shall be reading rems of ible reasons for thinking that
copy on the chances of Nixon, Republican presidential nomi-
----- —------" nee Tom Dewey had it in the
bag. Dewey couldn’t miss.
The Progressive party’s can-
didate, Henry Wallace, would
take hard-core Left votes away
from Harry Truman in the
North and East. The Pixiecrat
candidate, Strom Thurmond,
would lick Truman in the Deep
better in a
warm, dry cli-
mate. Obvi-
In the nature of modern warfare and the
modern military establishment, what is the
most efficient way of meeting the man-
power needs of our national defense? And
does the present draft system really, do-the
J°bThese questionswere raised and discussed
in a recent address at the Yale Law Forum
delivered by Sen. Peter H. Dominick
‘(R-Colo.), member of the Senate Armed
Service* Committee.
They are very much in point at this time
because of the current debate in and out of
Congress over what should be changed or
. left unchanged when the present expiring
draft law is extended during the next few
weeks.
Dominick expressed the opinion that with
careful study and planning the present draft
system could be abolished. However, he
cautioned that this could not be accom-
plished overnight.
He also pointed out that any system which
may be devised for meeting the current and
future needs of our armed forces is going
to have elements.of unfairness.
That, he added, even goes for the "free-
market” system—for full dependence on in-
dividuals choosing a military career because
of its inducements of money, prestige and
fringe benefits.
This is because the principal source of
manpower under that system would be the
under-educated and underprivileged young
men who would join up because the job of
soldiering is about the best one available to
him.
A* the senator put it, “Let’s not kid our-
selves. He's not making a perfectly free
choice because, for lots of unhappy reasons,
he doesn't have all that many really attrac-
tive alternatives Open to him. Not today, and
not for a long, long time to come.” be a feature of the American landscape—
Nevertheless, Dominick is of the opinion until and unless the nation is able to develop
-----that overthe long haul the -nation should a fully professional career ..military
try to meet Its military manpower, needs - establishment.
with all possible professionalism—by going This may be an impossible goal but in the
after the talent it needs on the open market view of many, inequities that will exist in
and buying it, any system of involuntary military service
. He concedes that because present com- make it a goal worth striving for.
_ .•uemii" -m*,
EKgeAGAN..
Haffi ■ ■n
wr .‘ • ar
Sf* t ■■ /u83
••Xg
, ) ,D 1 s #5%, 4 , AeHa2*e
‘nc9- l ez* 82829
2.21)558043182225
28584E 3 ,22
8
Be.c i
, -• >
M2
iron, copper, aluminum. line
and lead, according to the Na-
tional Geographic Society.
Quotable notables: “I tell you,
you will serve only your God,
because man is too. noble to
_ ____ serve anyone but God?'—Stefan
petite was stronger than ever, Cardinal Wyszynski of Poland,
that he could walk farther, see Although this is the most vehl-
more clearly, hear more acute- cle-using nation on earth, 50 per
ly, and, in short, was better in cent of Americana have some
every way, despite the burden form of foot trouble, podiatrists
of his years. say.
Then the old man would smoke a pack of cigarettes s
pause, and add, "Of course, dey? That means you take be-
I've lost my mind, but I don't tween *0,000 and 100,000 puffs a
miss that!” year. My, doesn’t that leave you
—breathless?
NEW YORK (AP) — Things a Despite ell the jokes about
columnist might never know if matrimony there is a big rush
he didn’t open his mail: to the altar in the United States.
One of history’s greatest real Two-thirds of the women and
On the day after the election,
which Truman so unaccounta-
bly won, Henry Luce, who re-
garded the Life editorial page
as his soapbox, grabbed me .in
the elevator and said: "We
have group journalism. We’ve
got to say how wrong we went
on the election, and, you are
stuck with it.”
Having had one disastrous ex-
perience with a four - cornered
presidential race, I’m leery
about another. By geometrical •
people, but Nixon has southern . South. ' analysis, Johnson would ac-
convention strength pretty much " Well, Henry Wallace did help tually benefit from a four-cor-
in his pocket, which gives him Dewey in New York State and nered contest.
at least half of what he needs. in Michigan, and Thurmond George'Wallace would p u 11
captured the electoral votes Rightist votes away from the
of South Carolina, Alabama, Republican candidate, Martin
Mississippi, Tennessee and Lou- Luther King would capture the
isiana: Some, funny things hp- peacenik crowd which would
pened elsewhere, however. otherwise go to a Republican
Henry Wallace hd a big fol- just to spite LBJ, and the vast
lowing among the Hollywood . patriotic center would stay put
“liberals,” but he failed to par- for the Democrats because "you
lay this support into a big -u—. ". i mid
enough spoiler margin to let
Dewey win the California elec-
HNN
\MHE HIS vaas ARK ANAVY,
JDNiOK PENGUIN HEFN
A>OTH=% CHcK. 3nve*....
" - w-nGxem-
THE ORANGE LEADER
vvonshed Week De and sunde Mornine
Orenao Leodor PublisNing Co. <!•<->
IN W. Froni Ave , P. O. Box 1024, Orenge, Texq» mN
Jomes B. Quigle, Presideni end Pvblisher
2
V s.n"
e.c
/ ■ /h
’ . K
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 115, Ed. 1 Monday, May 15, 1967, newspaper, May 15, 1967; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1619863/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.