The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 153, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 26, 1956 Page: 4 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Hr RUNNING F<3* HI# UFK,
twe Ambkcan SWIFT or KIT FOX
r VBgRtf OPP at A gUWWN, WHARP
AJskSUI VJITWOUT LOWS OP WPEfcP.
HkS PURSUE?,UNABLf TO OMANOg
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. SHOOT-*
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RED RYDER? J
ROOSHfc-'f?
IP WTTtR «30 0V6e TO
VVgNTwOrrw ANO CASE
THfe. PLACg,MYS®LP!
MOM,LOOK* I'VE GOT
a sew hobby.' irs a
lock or banco fir—"
y-a. MASOONSEK ,
HAlQ.hQT /
CAM VOJJ IMAGINE
ANYONE besnG -<
COLLECT LOCKS OP X>UR
FAvoaire film stars'
HAIR".* SPME SMART
n BOV GOT QiCH SELLING,
i l PHONY HAlP TO l-
V\ FJLM FANS ' y
WHAT'S
SO
Funny/
HA/HA.
LISTEN TO
THIS-/,
ANYU^C DfciiNvj ^ i
FOOLISH ENOUGH I
TO fall fop a <:
TQiCiC LIKE THATn.
r«' the ilsmi: Y suhiu
r*<« THI TRAIN BACK TO <>C4NT 5b T
Naso: A rOM*
S2 WOULD KfLL KM I Hgl
TV r2.» ME LPT h M
LMi NTO THf C4ti „
TOWNS* M*TA*VlnJCAN!
tfTHi PLANE
WALLY FLYING!
UARPlB ONB IS A
. HOWTO
DOUlLI-CROIE
A DOUILI-CROSSIR,
IH, SCOTTY! VERY,
VERY CUTS'
.—------------ / HA| HAL >
Lira play a n/ get p we
THICK ON «*MI! \CAN «ET HIM
LOOK UP UK* I "TO LOOK j
YWK YWKHINe Atr.UPI S
I HADN’T
Noticed
how prv
THOSE TOP
WINDOW©
> WERE <
( BEFORE J
CWITMlA'S pOAMNi ThOW'TAkT
IT BAST,
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rUISPAT, JUNE IS, )W
TK* World Today:
Top Communists
Confess to Series
Of Bad Mistakes
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Preas News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Iwd-
:tr
Moment of Meditation
The hif|»W»/of the upright i* to depart from evif:
he that keepth hn way pre**rveih his soul. Proverbs
IE. 17. /
Traffic Crackdown Urged for Holiday
erihip of the American Communist
party has confessed to a series of
damaging mistakes and bad
guesses. /Besides conceding the
party looked silly in thinking Stalm
Infallible.
misiskes include a dumb
on Ksrl ‘ Marx without
looking at fsets, the party s sup-
port in forming the Progressive
party in 1948, and repeated pre-
dictions of war end depression
Some results: The party h?s lost,
heavily in membership and in in-
fluence in politics and organized
labor; it hasn’t been abie to win
any 'mass' suppoit; and it, has
isolated itself front the, main
stream of American life.
The admissions came/ from Eu-
geni Dennis, the party's real boss,
and Max Waiss. its educational di-
rector, in repons lo the ‘Central
'(onfmittee. Those repoits have
been printed ip pamphlet form.
Reports Made
The reports wgre made after
Russian-Communist patty boss
Khrushchev had listed the mis-
takes and crimes he said were,
committed under Stalin
Dennia said the party had freg-,
lected work in ihe big unions: had
backed away from united fronts,
/ With the nation facing ?n all-time hi,gh traffic death
record this year, two leadin * traffic safety organizations
have called for a crack-dov n enforcement policy during
the July 4 holiday -
Tb? National Safetv Council and the Internationa!
Assn, of Chiefs of Police said that appeals to driver-re-
sponsibiiitv must be supplemented by strict enforcement
of the law'to euro the needl-ess and reckless minority.
Such action is^he only effective way to hold down
tne death to!! on an immediate and short-term basis, the
two safety, grouj*. agreed
The ioil'st enforcement recommendations for the 3fl- •
hour Fourth- of Juiy period were:
■ l. Cancel all davs off for-police and put every avail*,
abie officer on duty. Assign as many personnel as possi-
ble in plain clothes and unmarked cars to traffic patrol,
especially from 6 p m to midnight on Tuesday and Wed-
nesday.
2. Concentrate manpower on high volume or high
speed streets ana highways where serious accidents aie
most likely to occur.
3. Concentrate on hazardous moving violations --es-
pecially speeding. Be alert for erratic driving and other
evidences of evening-hour driving after di inning
4 Coordinate the effort with othei enforcement
agencies.
5- Use whatever outer enforcement means are avail-
able locally, such as radar, i
6. Publicize the program irt advance so motorists
,\ iii understand,-and cooperate with the objective.
The-council estimates that there will be 50' million
vehicles on ,the move during the holiday. Usually extra
travel means extra hazard
One hundred and sixty national organizations are
which it is now^jeeking; did‘not
appreciate until a couple of year&
ajb the new e of Id role of the
Asians; had ewed m making-mem-
bership qualifications too tight;
was wrong in lumping the “Eisen-
and McCarthyism
hower farces '
together; and was bbyiously away
off in predicting imminent war,s-
and depressions ever since 1945
How did all this happen 5 Dennis
biamed some of it oh pressure
and proseemion by the govern-
ment. But he said, in effect, the
party was so eager to lead the
masses it' forgot to notice the
masses were going the other way.
But Weiss saiii pie Communists
Will have to ‘ rediscover America''.
and begin to study its realities ’
and struggles. Taking his cue from
KhrushcheVs revelations about the
extent of one-man rule in Russia,
W eiss said
No Authority
The general membership of the
American Communist party has
never been able to have’ a say in
tim 'big decisions, that these were
handed down from thye top The
participating in the July 4 effort to correct three mam
......holiday driver faults:, (1) haste, lo,ciow'd the must fun
'into the ^hertest time (2) impatience, which leads to
chance-iakfng'as the result of congestion delays' and Ci)
drinking and driving
Europe Recovers at Rapid Pace
Th$ name "Firestone” Has become another' magic
word in Orange County, and as time goes by it will
bfecome increasingly significant.
The present leader of that industrial family, Harvey
.S Firestone Jr., returned today aboard the Queen Eliza-
beth from an inspection tour of his company's manufac-
turing and, sales facilities in Europe, and his observations
in that continent were heartening from an economic
standpoint.
members ought to be able io dis-
wuss problems too. he said. .
The question hot answered by
tiie Dennis-Weiss statements was-
wny they suddenly thought the
members ought to be consulted a.
little only'" after Khrushchev said
collective leadership was better
than one-man'Kile. r;/
As to the Progressive party. set
up in 1948 with Henry Wallace as
its presidential candidate, Dennis
said:
/■‘I believe it was erroneous and
Harmful to support the formation
of the Progressive party as a thud-
party. He said he had to assume
a lot of the blame for this himself.
But then, he said, the party
made another mistake in thinking,
•after the 194S electrons, that the
Progressive party still had a fu-
ture.
Third Party
The .Communists have had Hieir
eye op a Third party—a united
fron'i or labdr.farmer/ party,
steered bv them but not under
their name—Uver sinc^ 19Z4 when
they trued and failwC
Stalin suggeiled-ii for this coun-
try in 1928, Earl Browder wanted
it when he was party boss in 1935.
And now Dennis rn his report hints
at that kind of party'in the future
but not right away.
V,>:ss biamed blind reliance on
"Everjlhing was very simple," he
said, if you followed Marx.
But the trouble, he said, was m
the difference between the present
world and the 19th century world
of Marx. Conditions-have changed
and facts too, he said. And Marx
was making predictions based on
19th century facts.
■ We must.” W’eiss said, ' do the
same thing Marx did in his day.
W‘e must study the facts." l>to-
date ones, that is
Business conditions in Europe today are better than SuesseT atai't
they have, been at any time since the end of the second,/ depressibns-between 1945 and 1954.
world war.” he said. "Ope of the most encouraging de-
velopments in Europe is the Increasing use of techniques
tp create new markets and to expand existing markets
m the manner we in the United States have employed
for some time. This is being accomplished in Europe
through iocreatseci and more intensive research programs
and improvements in productivity-y X • *
Firestone said thal through lesearch new products
are being developed and old products are being im-
proved. Greater productivity, made possible through
improved production methods and investments’ in new
and better equipment, has resulted in railing real in-
comes and the standard oUtiving.
He compared Europe's growth to that of the United
Slates bv citing increases in rubber consumption in the
i\vo places. The increase in Europe was 67 per cent, while
here it was 21.5 per cent. Vehicle registrations increased
there by 63 per cent while here it was 28 per cent.
“In short/ he,said, “intensified research and greater
productivity are,contributing greatly to Europe’s general
prospepi&'.”
The industrialist .didn't involve governmental con-
ditions as they are affected by this economic growth.
jYut with such marked improvement in general eco-
nomic conditions it appears that Europe is well on its
wav,to,ward standing on its own fe'eU
.This can be reflected in a reduced need for economic
assistance from 'us. Think how -this could affect our
income taxes. We all like to’ see others able to take
care of themselves, especially when- their prop has
been our pocketbook
Today's Birthday]
SEN. WILLIAM f. KNOW
LAND, bom June SI, S»0B,_io
Alameda,
Calif. Repub-
lican leader in
the US. Sen-
ate since the
death of Sen.!
Robert Tift In
1953, he hae
supported Ei-
senhower on
some policies
disagreed with
him on others.
Know land ha*
been « militant opi
Red China's efforts
United Nations. He was
publieher for his father'*
land. - Calif., Tribune. Ujitil
went Into the Army in
o*
M|NCV..«
JOE PALOOKA
Boyle Writes:
Multimillionaire
Re-Enters Field
Of MovieMaking
NEW vlp.li/!?—5^1
IN TWsj WORLD--A TOTAL 5TBAN6BB JUST
f/E ME FIVE Oat ADS TO (
r A SQUADS MEAL ON!
(YPi — MitHimtlllon-
a re Cprntlius-Vanderbilt Whitney: —..
may not be America's Ner 1 movie g|Q SiSTiR -
Han—but he rates high on the list. |-----———
“You always go back to youi j
first love." he said, while dis 1
cussing his active re-entry into the i
Held df movie-making. {
As president of his own inde
"pendent corporation, Whitney has
IDENTIFY UlM F
YOU SAW HIM
A^AINT
:SSED CANCY-A
Nit* JOE • WHY?
A STQANSEQ?
outlined an ambitious production i
program that will keep him busy!
RUSTY-1 DfPN'T MEAN
TO CAUL PATTY A SNOOP.
I VU6 JUST MAD
for years. He is bullish on the long
•term future of motion picture*, de
spite the heavy inroads made by
television.
“The box office is going down
hill, but I feel that is a temporary
thing,” he said. “What is needed!1
More quality pictures and special
attractions that will draw peopie
away from their TV screens. Bcr, pvnrB
Real Problem HEP ETDCK
“The major studios nave a real
problem in trying to turn out 4(1
to 60 pictures of the quality that
today's public demands. I know
1 couldn t do it There isn't that
much talent available.”
The Whitpey bankroll has played
quite a role in the movie wrorld in
the past. He helped finance Tech
ntcoior. Cinerama, and half a
dozen notable David Seiznick pic-
tures, including “Gone with the
Wind.’’ Whitney still retains a one
eighth interest in this highest gross-
ing film of all time/’ •
But in Ins new company Whitney
is pouring m more than money
I am now devoting the maior
part of my time to it," he said.
- ' We want to make nothing but top
quality pictures Our goal is to RUSTY RILEY
portray life faithfully, and I prom- —^ /- -----
i*e that none of our pictures win)
ever misrepresent or paint a false
picture of the United States or itsjf
people.'* • • • 7
Was Pilot
Whitney, descended from Eli
Whitney, inventor of the-cotton
YOU LtT-U‘\ QO
hY SUNDAY
•piNlNER..’
WSLL...I WAS A L'TTtl
MAP AT HER,MYSELF.
AND NOW SHE* AWFUL
MAP AT ME
,V.lV '
r CAUSE X TO,5 her M
SHE COULDN'T BELONG TO^
OvR au9. DO YOU THINK
WB COULD 6ET UFA LARES'
w AUtiLIARYCR SOMITHiNdf
NBVBUfl
4-~
gin. flew as a pilot in the World:
War I, and served as a colonel'
|If V*)tCh«S ,
vne VWntwOYtH (
on
His a«t r de
9000 BlPPANCS. I
HAVE TD WEEP OUT ALL
OF THE INCOMPETENTS
IN NtY 086AN 12. AT i ON 1
overseas in the second
His business interests have
ranged from mining to airlines He
was one of the nation's top polo
players and at 57 still enjoysxan
active game of tennis. He likes
to paint and fish. He owns one of,
America’s best known racing:
stables. He is a director of the j _
^-Metropolitan Opera and the Amer- ••**
ican Museum of Natural History. vo
He authored a book of his war aSCREi ALstNT XY
experiences caAIed “The Lone and
Level Sands ”
ii.
IN EVERY CA«E THE (SET.
AWAV CAR5 5EEM6P TO
VANISH INTO TWIN AIR!
Better English
By D. C. WILLIAMS
5 What is wrong with this sen- j
fence? “You didn't used to go i
there, until your stocks depreciated |
in value "
'l; What the correct pronuncia-!
tion of “chiropodist”?
3. Which one ot these word* is:
misspelled? Au revtjir, audacity,!
,audatorium. audacious.
y. What does the word "auroral”
mean?.
5, VUiat is a word beginning with |TTA KETT
pro that means "reproducing free-
ly”?
ANSWERS
■]. Say. “You didn't go there
FORMERLY, until your stocks de-
preciited (omit “in value).’* 2.
Pronounce kie-ropp-oe-dist. accent
second syllable 3, Auditorium. 4. j
Pertaining to or like the dawn:
NAMED IKE S DIKE'
MASSENA, N. Y. (APj-After
a massive lock ot the St .Lawrence
Seaway project was officially
named for President Eisenhower,
construction workers came up with
their own name for an adjoining
earth dam. They call it "Ike's
Dike/
roseate. '(His painting depicted an
auroralTscene 5. Prolific.
MAN DIF5S AT 115 ~
LOS ANGELES (AP)-3 he fam-
ily of Joe Gowaies, who died yes-
terdav. says he was 115. Coroner’s
deputies, called by his grand-
daughter, said he still had his own
teeth.
NSAWJT DOCTOR'* »AC<
N TOAn. Will You ta<8 h m
TUIta ON YOjA <4»l?
iikW’stef’s True Life Adventures
mm*? gMOPtr
TS-J1.
THE disco KID
/!•*
THE ORANGE LEADER
Maine/ B Qv.giey
J <
TJutlen Brxnvmng
Joe' Parsley ,
Mrs. Wary Alice Lakey
Bob Axalson
Mi>:. James Deer
I.. R. (Bob) McHugh
E. F. Krtetscb ■
S R. Davis
j • ■ v«
... . Publisher
.... Xditor
. Managing Editor
Area News Editor
.City Editor
Woman’s News Editor
■ ‘far
Sports? Editor
Advertising Director
Circulation Manager
•sc
Pub)
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kiblished Sunday morning and daily each afternoon
rept SnUuday, 503A Front Ave.. by The Orange Leader
Wishing C5: v , .
Th* Aaaociatvct Proas i entitled exclusively to the use
for repufaucstton o: all the local news printed in .this neivt-
V as wall «s AP news dispatches. / '
subscription rates
Par Month - si 25
Kntarad Jan. 1. Jfltu at post Office. Orange, Texas, as
paper
matter under act of Congress March 3. 1879.
THAT'f IT, SCOTTY!
I TOLD MASTIR5 Offi , ,
fO W6 CAN EXPECT \ OUR SKIRL EITHER l
yVHP, JOHNNY, AND
I'M NOT RELYING
i ON KITTY TO SAVE
OPEN WARFARE STARTS I GOT MY OWN
NOW' -J SECURITY SCHEME
" UNgP UP! CflME
__
NY
HAZARD
DAY AND NIGHT WATCH OF
TRUSTED GUARDS UP TO THE
MOMENT YOU TAKE OFF IN
THE IIS RACE! »UT JUST IN CASE
THEY SHOULP SLIP THROUGH AND j
IIITU RAILEY
...
"■ • v *
•’r"* ’
.. •
,1 ,. y.
■ " * ■
. "
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 153, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 26, 1956, newspaper, June 26, 1956; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth560496/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.