The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 24, Ed. 1 Monday, January 16, 1961 Page: 4 of 6
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Page 4, Taylor Daily Press, Monday, January 16, 1961
Qftje Caplor IBmlp
__ „l^blislled 111 Taylor, Texas, since 1913 and serving a market area of
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Can He Give the Personal Touch
World War II led many men, experts and
amateurs alike, to conclude that great wars are
essentially unmanageable affairs. More than a few
observers think the time may not be far off when
the national government falls in the same category.
Big wars, once under way, tend to take on a
shape and direction all their own, neither intended
or foreseen by those who began them. There are
too many elements, too many unpredictables, too
many loose ends, for precise human control of
events.
At its worst, the huge federal establishment
of a nation like the United States is hardly com-
parable to the planned chaos of war. Yet, more and
more as time passes, it becomes a thing of such
size and weight and built-in momentum that it
seems to defy any man or group of men who would
put an individual stamp upon it.
Certainly no realist imagines that government
in this country will ever be made small again. A big
country and a big government go together.
But its sheer bulk means that it extends and
proliferates in ways that even the most diligent
leaders cannot necessarily grasp. It operates through
countless built-in mechanisms, long since approved
by Congress, which compel continuing and often
rising expenditures in many fields.
President-elect Kennedy has made it clear he
is intent on being a strong president. That means
he plans, insofar as he is able, to place his own
personal stamp upon the American government in
at least the next four years.
If he succeeds, then he will have staved off the
day when government is as unmanageable as war.
He will have given shape to a glacier that, in this
age, few can chip away at.
Will he achieve this purpose? Obviously no one
can make even an educated guess at this stage,
before he has taken office.
For those who hope that government is still
governable, the most promising sign is that Kennedy
is bent on using the full political leverage of his
office. All strong presidents have done so.
. None, however, has had to test his weapons
against so immense an establishment as Kennedy
inherits Jan. 20.
The dedicated partisans of democracy every-
where will have their eyes fastened keenly on his
effort. They will be vastly heartened if he can
demonstrate that government on so huge a scale
still can be brought within reasonable human con-
trol and given the quality and flavor of its leader.
The Washington
Merry-Go-Round
By Drew Pearson
. BARBS . . .
A judge says that women forgive more often
than men. Maybe because they have so many more
opportunities.
* * ❖
A college professor says that talking often
cures troubles. Sometimes we wish we could find
out what cures talking.
* * *
When they take away the chorus line it takes
the show out of show business.
* * *
Nobody ever enjoys pipe smoking when it’s
the one that leads from the furnace.
* ❖ *
Success is what makes your friends think
you’re plain lucky.
* ❖ sjs
It’s easier to live on less when you can find
more things to live for.
Getting Around
Answer to Previous Puzzle
ACROSS getting around
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for getting 38 Seed vessel
around 39 Moral wrongs
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means
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16
WASHINGTON — One of the
ablest young men Kennedy has
appointed to his administration
is Texas oil attorney John Con-
nally to be the new secretary of
the navy. There are also rumb-
lings of dissent over his confirma-
tion. The rumblings are under-
standable and may reach serious
proportions. Here is what is be
hind them:
Rumble No. 1—Results from the
precedent of Ed Pauley, close
friend of President Truman, who
was blocked asr under secretary
of the navy because of Senate
protests that an oilman should
not handle the vast oil reserves
of the Navy. The Senate charged
nothing unethical about Pauley,
but believed there would be in-
evitable conflicts of interest. Op-
position was so strong that Tru-
man withdrew his name.
Rumble No. 2—Results from a
fortune magazine article report-
ing the amazing manner in, which
the Navy let a contract to three
Texans, one of them, the late
Sid Richardson. Vice President-
elect Lyndon Johnson’s brother
'ater gave up his $16,000-a-year
clerkship in the Senate to be an
official of the Texas company.
Connally, the proposed' new sec-
retary of the navy, was attorney
for Sid Richardson at the time
this amazing Navy contract was
awarded, practically without com-
petitive bidding.
Rumble No. 3—Connally was
the brains and mainspring of the
lobbying drive by gas and oil
companies' to pass the natural
gas act in 1956. Seldom has a
more effective lobbying operation
been seen in Washington. It suc-
ceeded in passing the gas act,
which set aside the Supreme
Court’s decision regulating na-
tural gas.
Will Sen. Case Fight?
Rut in doing so, the lobby
overreached itself and it was re-
vealed that lobbyists for Howard
Keck of Superior Oil of Califor-
nia had attempted’ to bribe Sen.
Francis Case of South Dakota.
Senator Case, who rejected the
$2,500 bribe and spilled the beans
to the Senate, is now a member
of the Senate Armed Forces Com-
mute which must pass on Con-
nally’s qualifications to be sec-
retary of the navy. Case is
mild-mannered man who usually
ducks a fight. It’s doubtful that
he will cross-examine Connally to
any great extent. Incidentally,
Connally was never put on the
witness stand by the McClellan
committee entrusted with invest!
gating the gas lobby.
However, some other Republi-
cans, plus some Democrats be-
lieve now might be a goo<%time
to dig into the influence of oil
as it affects Washington legisla-
tion.
These senators are getting fed
up with finding oil influencing
both Republicans and Democrats,
the Congress and the White
House—including the silent part-
nership of Texas oilman Billy
Byars in the Eisenhower farms
in Gettysburg.
Skillful Lyndon Johnson
Significantly, the reason there
was no penetrating probe of the
gas lobby following the attempt
to bribe Senator Case was the
personable and' popular vice pres-
ident-elect Lyndon Johnson.
Sen. Tom Hennings of Missouri
had introduced a resolution, for
a broad probe of the gas-oil lob-
by. Suddenly Johnson called the
Senate into a surprise session at
11 a.m., one hour early, and whip-
ped through a restricted investi-
gation to probe only the attempt-
ed bribe of Senator Case.
The he quickly appointed his
own special committee and staged
an immediate meeting in, Vice
President Nixon’s office to get a
ruling as to whether Hennings’
standing committee, which had
the standing power for a broad
investigation, or Johnson’s spe-
cial committee for a restricted
investigation, had jurisdiction
Nixon is supposed to make rul-
ings in public, not private. But
seme of his biggest backers in
California were oilmen. He ruled
privately that the special com-
mitte for a restricted probe had
jurisdiction.
All this took place within the
period of two hours. At 1:40 Sen-
ator Johnson called Hennings into
his office, tossed him a tele-
typed U.P. message reporting
that he, Hennings, had called
Senator Case to testify at 2 p.m.
“You’re in contempt of the Sen-
ate,” Johnson told his colleague
from Missouri. He referred to the
quickie ruling by Nixon that the
special pommittee, not Hennings’
standing committee, should in-
vestigate the gas lobbying.
“For three years,” countered
Hennings, who told me of the irv
cident with great indignation, “I
have tried to get off this stand-
ing committee. But every time
I’ve tried, you wanted me to
stay on—to investigate McCar-
thy, or the Maryland elections,
or Pat Hurley’s charges in New
Mexico. In deference to you I’ve
stayed. So it seems queer that
today you don’t want me to in-
vestigate • something where you
yourself said only yesterday the
integrity of the Senate was in-
volved.”
Johnson, however, was ada-
ment. One of Lyndon’s great
qualities is loyalty to his friends.
His former assistant, John Con-
nally, was the mastermind of the.
10 And 20
Years Ago
10 YEARS AGO
Activation of Camp Swift now
being considered by Army Sen-
ator Johnson and Con. Thombery
advises Chamber of Commerce
City launches street paving pro-
gram; votes to construct $15,000
water line.
Negro woman’s legs broken in
wreck here Saturday.
Sixteen more Chamber of Com
merce pledges are told.
' John T. Fulcher dies Friday.
20 YEARS AGO
Mrs. Roosevelt abandons plans
to visit Latins.
Greek troops gain on Valcona.
British refuse to lift blockade
for French ships.
Directors of Taylor banks are
reelected.
Coach T. H. John,son talks
football with local Kiwanians.
Supply bids for Williamson
County led by officials.
District Scout meeting slated
in Taylor.
Old Sang-Froid
Life Begins at Forty
Prospers Despite Retirement
By ROBERT PETERSON
Every day hundreds of ambiti-
ous businessmen are warned by
their doctors to slow down and
devote less time to their jobs.
But more successful men find
this difficult to do. Their love
and habit for work is so ingrain,- began acting up.
“I fook time off to marry and
become the father of three child-
ren. But I didn’t get much out
of life because of my frantic
determination to succeed. I had
done very well by the time I hit
40. But that’s when my heart
ed that they simply can’t let go
of the reins. As a result, many
pass on before their time.
But not Clarence Kaskel. When
he was 40 heart specialists told'
him his ticker was in bad shape
and he would simply have to end
his fast pace, or the fast pace
would end him. So he retired
from his shop a|td delegated al-
most full authority to his staff.
Today, some three decades later
he’s still around, and his shop
has grown into one of the world’s
most successful pawnbrokerages.
“I was a real go-getter as a
young man,” mused Kaskel, a
white-haired man of kindly mien
when I talked with him recent-
ly in his New York emporium
which, with its lush carpeting
and crystal chandeliers, resem-
bles a salon at Versailles. “I
began working at 14 and for the
next 25 years worked around the
clock.
“Fortunately, I had a number
of fine people working for me, in-
cluding four whom I trusted im-
plicitly. So I told them I was
going to let them run the busi-
ness for me from then on.
“Then I retired to a new life
in which I slept late, did light
chores around the house, and
took my boat into the bay every
afternoon where I got fresh air
and a little exercise. Our child-
ren were . growing up and I
was able to spend plenty of time
with them. Once a day I’d talk
with, the shop by phone, and once
a week I’d go into town and
spend an hour or two with my
staff. But I let my employees
run the show and tangle with
day-to-day decisions, following my
basic policies.
“The years passed and I began
to find real pleasure in the art
of living. I joined various service
and social clubs, traveled, en-
gaged in civic work, and took
things easy. They say that when
the cat’s away the mice will
play. But I discovered that an
executive can function effectively
away from his place of business
if he has trustworthy, competent
employees and if he has learned
to delegate authority wisely.
“I’ve survived to see my 70th
birthday,” he concluded with a
satisfied smile, “and my health
seems better than it was a quar-
ter century ago. My doctors al
low me to visit my shop occr
sionally. But I still delegate full
authority to my sons, who are
now active in the business, and
to my staff.
“I hope my experiences will be
helpful to other ambitious busi-
nessmen who may be facing the
same dilemma I faced at 40
My advice to them is to follow
the doctor’s orders.”
If you would like a free book-
let “Trailer Life in Retirement”
write to this column in care of
The Taylor Daily Press enclosing
a stamped, self-addressed enve-
lope.
(Copyright, 1961, King Features
Syndicate, Inc.)
Why Grow Old?
Thoughts Turn to Little Woman'
By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN I great personages have been say- some of which I printed yester-
I thought it would be fun to mg about us. I turned to “wo-1 day. Then I thought it would' be
look over some quotations about man’ ’ in my book of quotations fun to read what has been said
Women to see what some of the1 and found hundreds of ideas, about men. I looked under
I “man,” but there was nothing
specific about men here. The quo-
tations were all about mankind.
Evidently we women do not be-
long to the human race!
Undaunted, I looked under “hus-
band.” Quotes here were mostly
about us, too. For instance,
“A husband without faults is a
dangerous observer.”
—Lord Halifax
“If you want a man’s money
you should be willing to put up
with his company.”
—John Cole McKim
“A woman never forgets her
sex. She had rather talk with a
man than an angel.”
—O. W. Holmes
“I should like to see any kind
of a man, distinguishable from
a gorilla, that some good and
even pretty woman could not
shape a husband out of.”
—O. W. Holmes
“I am glad that I am not a
man because I should be obliged
to marry a woman.”
—Madame De Stael
“The only way for a woman
to provide for herself decently
is for her to be good to some
man who can afford to be good
to her.”
—Bern&rd Shaw
“Men make the laws. Women
make the manners.”
—Guibert
“I had rather live with the wo-
man I love in a world full of
trouble than to live in heaven
with nobody but men.”
—R. G. Ingersoll
So much has been said about
women, we must be very import-
ant!
1961 Broiler
Situation
Is Studied
COLLEGE STATION —The na-
tion’s broiler industry during the
past 20 years has established a
remarkable record of growth be-
cause of widespread and popular
acceptance of broilers by consum-
ers. Just 20 years ago, Marshall
Miller, extension poultry market-
ing specialist, points out that the
average American ate only 1.97
pounds of broiler annually. Ten
years ago the figure stood at
8.65 pounds but today it stands
at 23.65 pounds per capita.
Miller believes the upward trend
will continue but at a more mod-
est rate. As for 1961, he says in-
dications now point toward even
higher production. Total hatchery
supply flock pullets placed ran
7 per cent higher for the first 10
months of 1960 than for the same
period in 1959. These are the
flocks which supply the hatching
eggs for the broiler industry, Mil-
ler explains. Since Sept. 1, 1960,
broiler chick production has been
averaging about 15 per cent above
the previous year.
Broiler prices to the producer
in 1961 are likely to average
close to those of 1959. Principal
factors, according to Miller, are
the prospective larger supply of
broiler and other poultry meat
plus increased supplies of red
meats. The leveling off of the gen-
eral economy is not a serious
factor in the broiler price picture.
Miller points out that broilers
are already relatively low in
price compared with other maim
course foods.
Because of the troubled situa-
tion, Miller suggests to producers
that they and truckers deliver to
the processing plant broilers free
of skin and flesh bruises—an im-
provement which could add mil-
lions of dollars annually to pro-
ducers income. Also that all seg-
ments of the industry cooperate
in a program to reduce condem-
nations and that broilers be
Holden Plans
To Live in
Switzerland
By JAMES BACON
AP Movie-TV Writer
HOLLYWOOD m — Bill Holden
plans to make Switzerland his
home for a long time to come
and not, he says, for a tax
dodge.
Says he: “I’m paying more tax-
es now than I ever have in my
career. I’m loving in Switzer-
land for the same reason, a Mad-
ison Avenue advertising man gives
up his suburban home in Connec-
ticut and moves to Central Park
West.
“I just want to be closer to
my work.”
Many Hollywood stars have es-
tablished residence in Switzerland
—David Niven, Deborah Kerr, Au-
drey Hepburn, Yul Brynner and
Mel Ferrer are some. But Hol-
den, long a portrayer of the typi-
cal American male, has come in
for blistering attack.
The Hollywood Cameramen’s
Union, for instance, said it would
picket Holden pictures. This
stung Holden deeply, especially
when half of Hollywood is either
in Europe or Asia making mov-
ies. None of the others were so
rapped.
Holden moved to Switzerland
last year because “The World of
Suzie Wong” and “The Counter-
feit Traitor” were made there.
“Wong” was shot twice and
caused Holden to make two trips
around the world to Hong Kong.
Holden did not give up Ameri-
can citizenship—says he never
will.
“I can be—and hope I am—just
as good an, American in the Alps
as I could be in the High Sierra.”
Holden will make movies in Hol-
lywood if the script calls for it.
“Our business has changed. Eu-
rope is no longer 8,000 miles
from Hollywood. Hollywood is
8,000 miles from Europe. Do you
realize there were more movies
made in London and Rome last
year than in Hollywood?”
Swiss residence does not save
taxes, Holden argues.
“All my residual payments in-
cluding $50,000 a year for ‘Bridge
On The River Kwai’ for the next
50 years are all taxed in the U.
S. A. Uncle Sam will gets 91
cents out of every dollar of that.
“I now have income coming in
a half dozen countries and I’m
paying top bracket on all of
them. ‘Suzie Wong’ cost me 96
cents on the dollar in English
taxes. ‘Counterfeit Traitor’ cost
me taxes in Germany, Den-
mark and Sweden and its resid-
ual payments will cost me in the
United States. I also pay Swiss
taxes on my residence there.”
A law requiring that public
schools be established in, every
town of 50 families or more was
passed in 1647 in the Massachu-
setts Bay Colony.
--o-
Taylor Merchants are your
friends — shop with them and
save money.
Last but of major importance,
Miller suggests that everyone con-
nected with the broiler industry
know and strive to meet the d'e-
identified at the retail outlets as Inlands of consumers as related
to known quality and wholesome-1 to the industry.
ic Washington News Notebook ★
Rhyme Is by a Stevenson Fan
To Eulogize This Eloquent Man
“If yon want a man’s money you should be willing
to put up with his company.” —John Cole McKim
oil-gas lobby. So the special in-
vestigation followed very narrow
lines. Connally never testified.
And today, the same John Con-
nally, who guided Johnson’s cam-
paign for president and later for
vice president, comes up for Sen-
ate scrutiny to be head of the
U.S. Navy, the biggest buyer of
oil in the world.
Note — In the end, Elmer Pat-
man and John Neff, lobbyists for
Superior Oil of California, were
fined only $2,500 each and given
only one year suspended senten-
ces for attempting to bribe a U.
S. Senator. The U.S. judge who
let the two bribers off so lightly
was Joseph C. McGarraghy, ap-
pointed by Eisenhower after he
had served as an Ike delegate to
the 1952 GOP convention, and
chairman of the Eisenhower-Nix-
on inaugural parade committee.
Neither Howard Keck, head of
Superior Oil, nor any of the Keck
family were made defendants,
though the corporation, which can-
not be put in jail, pled guilty
and was fined $10,000.
(Copyright, 1961 The Bell Syn-
dicated ,
The PRAYER
For Today From
The UPPER ROOM
Let your light so shine be-
fore men, that they may see
your good works, and glorify
your Father which is in hea-
ven. (Matthew 5:16.)
PRAYER: O Lord, Thou who
didst go before Thy people
Israel through the wilderness
in a pillar of cloud by day
and of fire by night, guide
us by the Holy Spirit in life’s
journey. In Jesus’ name.
Amen.
JERRY BENNETT, Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
uniform looks as if it belonged
to someone who retired in
1940.”
Happy Birthday
Greetings of “Happy Birthday”
are being extended to the follow-
ing birthday celebrants:
Mrs. Frank Jones, Fred Goetz,
Eddie Griffith, Mrs. Wiley Pear-
son, Jr., and H. T. Alexander.
Taylor Merchants are your
friends — shop with them and
save money.
If you would like to have my
leaflet “Planning Clothes to Suit
Figure and Personality,” send a
stamped, self-addressed envelope
with your request for leaflet No.
54. Address Josephine Lowman
in care of this newspaper.
(Released by the Register and
Tribune Syndicate, 1961)
Buy in Taylor and build your
own home town.
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—En«
thusiastic followers of Adlai
Stevenson still write him many
mash notes. And since his ap-
pointment by President-e 1 e c t
Kennedy as U.S. ambassador to
the U.N., the flood of fan mail
has increased. One of his ar-
dent admirers turned to poetry
and wrote:
Adlai on the U.N. podium
Will drive away all gloom and
odium
Congolese and Hottentot
Will understand what voters
did not.
Thrive, Oh Adlai, flower and
bloom.
Let polysyllables fill the room.
STEVENSON HAD his pride
stepped on recently when he
went into a book store and
found that the price of one of
his last campaign books had
been cut from $1.89 to 98
cents.
But his confidence was re-
stored when he happened to
pick up a copy of one of Presi-
dent Eisenhower’s books. It
had been cut from $2.50 to 69
cents.
BOBBY KENNEDY’S ap-
pointment as U.S. attorney
general sparked this gag:
Immediately after the in-
auguration of John Kennedy,
government workers will be
issued signs which read, “Little
Brother is Watching You.”
GEN. DAVID M. SHOUP,
Marine Corps commandant,
sent New Year’s greetings to
his staff in the form of a 15-
page complaint of all he thinks
is wrong with the leathernecks.
One novel gripe: “The non-
commissioned officer whose
WILLIAM SILLS, who runs
a bird-proofing outfit called the
American Tree Service,
wouldn’t mind having an in-
auguration at least once a yea?.
He has just completed a $7,000
contract to rid the trees along
the inaugural parade route of
starlings.
Now all the birds have found
new roosts at such places as
the Motion Picture Association,
Red Cross Headquarters, and
the National Academy of
Sciences. I
The result is that these
agencies are hiring Sills to
solve the problem that his bird
proofing spray created in the
first place.
HERE’S HOW Gerry Wort-
man, secretary to a local stock
broker, broke the news to her
boss that she was resigning:
“My boy friend took out
$3.50 worth of stock on me
yesterday bybuyinga mar-
riage license.”
REPUBLICAN party goers
have concocted a special drink
in recognition of the Jan. 20
swearing-in of John Kennedy.
It’s called a “Black Friday”
and is composed of Jamaica
Rum and grape juice served
over ice with a ripe olive.
A WOMAN who wrote the
inaugural housing committee
for a hotel room on the same
floor where singer Frank Sina-
tra will stay during the Jan.
18-20 festivities, explained:
“Don’t worry. I’m too old to
be a threat to him.”
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 24, Ed. 1 Monday, January 16, 1961, newspaper, January 16, 1961; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth800873/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.