The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 146, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 18, 1968 Page: 4 of 14
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Inn
RED RASH AGAIN
Moment of Meditation
20As
Set
932
Shoplifting Is Symptom of U.S. Social Ills
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4
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—
eeiem
929
ON THE LINE...
>
By J. CULLEN BROWNING
Press ($3.50),
9
of President Johson, the Tet
push the tide are these:
"When they reached a section of the fence where
The truth is that East Texas, and especially the
True Life Adventures
*34
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It was edited by J. Frank Dobie, famed Texas
folklorist, and published by the University of Texas
talvesof various checks and
balances.
The class war theories and
ARCTIC
ANTIC
AArend FOX
HAS LEMMING.
The newest edition to my family library is a
fascinating book about life in former days on a
ranch in Chambers County.
It was sent to Mama and me by our good friends,
THE BUSINESS MIRROR ...
Little Hope Seen To Halt
Paper Flow on Wall Street
By JOHN CUNNIFF
conception of politics, which is
built on the idea of temperate
argument between the represen-
Ae
THE OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT . . .
Charm Bracelet of Aging
Is Made Up of Memories
By HAL BOYLE
and 1.
Two eminent American play-
wrights, George S: Kaufman
and Robert Sherwood, were co-
hosts at a preChristmas dinner
in a famous midtown restaurant
some years ago.
Another recent.press report quotes Betty
Furness, special assistant to the President
for consumer affairs, to the effect -that one
It seems rather strange .to. contemplate
millions of Americans spending six months
of every year in leisure during the most
productive time of life.
NEW YORK(AP) - Many fi-
nancial men see little hope that
the flood of paper now inundat-
ing Wall Street can be turned
has 'tided to link the Kennedy
murders with that of King by—
saying that the subject of
"race” had so poisoned Ameri-
can life that violence has taken
NEW YORK - People . . .
Places . . .
It is reported that “friends”
of Sen. Ted Kennedy are urging
him to resign from his seat as
Ted Kennedy Not Expected
To Retire From Public Life
By BOB CONSIDINE
jobs.
Then there is the matter of shoplifting,
which costs retailers from $1 to $3 billion
annually. More than half these thieves are
teen-agers.
Where a decade ago there were only a few
thousand shoplifting arrests among teen-
agers each week, there are now about-100,000
a week. These are the statistics. They are
not nearly as chilling as the story behind
mon jailbird who has. yet to
speak out, and nothing really
definite ’ is known to the public
of his associates and his activi-
ties.-At least one commentator
billion. In 1957 they owned one-
eighth as much stock.
Other institutions, such as col-
lege and university endowments
and mutual savings banks, also
have' greatly increased their
participation in stocks. Bank-ad-
ministered personal trusts now
own as much as 15 per cent of
all stocks.
boy’s finger. The roots were cut into short lengths,
scrubbed with a brush and dried in the sun for sev-
eral days. ■”
"A handful of these dried roots steeped in a
pot of boiling water provided a most delectable
beverage when liberally laced with warm milk.
“The older boys made for the younger brothers
Try and Stop Me
_______ By BENNETT CERF________
give brokers time to update sys-
tems, hire workers, install auto-
mation equipment. But on some
ton, and said, among other
• things, "There are Negroes who
never roamed very far- away
from Tobacco Road, and prob-
ably never heard a courteous
years 1847 and 1925.
He adds, “My personal experiences on the JHK
Ranch are here related as they were understood
by a.hoy of 5 to 12 years of age and portray the
lighter side of ranch life without emphasixing the
hard work and worry of operating a large ranch.” ’
The book also will help to dispel a popular
notion that ranching in Texas is confined to the
arid western section of the state.
money to buy all she needs.
The teen-age shoplifter, said the Post,
- — ---,--- ----- - g. • I OUt
of an elderberry limb only a slender wooden tube
with a straight, smooth bore remains. . .
“A plunger whittled from a piece of white pine
to fit the bore completes a popgun that will shoot
back by measures such as early
slosing- of stock exchanges or
higher margin requirements.
These'moves might block the
waves for a while; they will
ing to buy your little woman a
surprise gift.” "Nonsense,"
scoffed 'be panhandler. “I want
to get really drunk to forget
about it." GT
1814, the seizure of Columbia
and other universities, etc. etc.
. etc.
Still, it seems hardly likely
that Ted Kennedy will accept
the advice of his “friends" and
But then (so you ruminate,
trying to avoid.smugness) there -
is'the reputation of your coun-
try to consider, and it can't be
that it is uniquely evil on a
planet that has never been
really cirilized within the full
meaning of the term.
With no desire to dodge any
issue, you find yourself bridlinge
at the accusation of collective
guilt. Trying to discover a com-
mon denominator in the recent
assassinations, you find it impos-
sible to link the Martirf Luther
King murder with the killing of
the two Kennedy's.
James Earl Ray, the accused
murderer of King, was a com-
boys would saunter along a fence testing each panel
for bumblebees by gently tapping it with their bats.
John F. Kennedy was killed
because he had a thoroughly de-
cent objection to the sanguinary
Golfers looked natty in caps
' and baggy knickers called “plus
fours.”
a green chinaberry over the barn or send the
chickens squawking for the safety of the chicken
house ...
"During the hot doldrum days of August, boys
could always while away an idle hour by batting
bumblebees. Every wood panel fence on the ranch
—E
ACROSS THE EDITOR’S DESK ...
New Book Holds Memories of East Texas Ranch
good man is rather to be chosen than great riches,
ing favour rather than silver and gold.—Prov. 22:1.
him »10’s a clip to play just one 1
more number. It was a great 1
night for the highlanders!
Humor from LsNon, Portugal:'
Tourist: “Waiter, there’s I
something peculiar about this -
coffee. It taste like cocoa.”
Waiter: "A hundred pardons, |
sir! I've given you another ’
customer's tea by mistake.” I
Sih
Ph
VINTO
summer
begin Th
from 1-
High Sc
All sti
school i
band ar
director
, ticipate
Rehea
-Thursda
hour-pei
be chai
Croom i
The b
he plan
outdoor
and the
possibly
YOUR HOROSCOPE . . .
The Stars Say
There's a panhandler on Wall
Street whose pitch for a dona-
tion is that his 25th wedding
THE ORANGE LEADER
Pubihshed Week Doys ond sundoy Morning
by the
Orqnge Leoder Publishing co (in
200 W, Pront Av, P. o. Box 1028, Orege, Texes ms
Jemes B. Qvigloy. President end Pvblisher
Act
LEVE
Mrs. La
land w
Jeffry
was inj
car a«
here.
"Then they hear Daddy at home bragging
about cheating his company on his expense
account and the government on his income ,
tax return. They're taught from childhood
that anything's OK, just so long as you don’t
get caught.”
Of course, all this is true of only a small
minority of America’s teen-agers and their
parents. But that minority is causing tre-
mendous problems forthe country’s retailers.
did it for something that is only
remotely related to the com-
fi-W
£ i
@
»
With mphey constantly flow-
ing into their treasuries, most
institutions are continually un-
der pressure to get these funds
invested. Almost in disregard of
’some market conditions, they
are forced to invest this money.
‘The roots, as we-dug- them from the ground,
had to be small and tender and no larger than a
$
La- Sherwood surprised the guests
by producing a group of Scotch
highlanders.to play some mar-
Hi
STARKS
tering Cale
this Tall sb
school imm
Dr. Guiller
sieu-Lake i
director, s
Represen
ish health
Starks are
Thursday <
high schoo
teThe hou
the summ
. gin Thursd
children ci
. Vasquez
Baby
birth. I
may git
as litila
• /
“Philadelphia,” she said
proudly. "I came oVer to New
York to pay my respects to
President Kennedy."
Bob Hope, speaking about or-
gan transplants at Cubby Broc-
coli's Waldorf Astoria dinner
for the benefit of the Boys Club
of Queens (New York City) said,
“I’ve ordered one of everything.
How else can you explain Bing
Crosby.” -
mon life of America, Bobby Ken-
nedy had made some remarks
about the need to maintain the
integrity at Israel which any-,
other U.S. political candidate
might have made.
His accused killer, a Jordan-
ian whose childhood was spent
in that hot and desiccated land
below the Mount of Olives in
the Arab part of Palestine, hap-
pened to hear Kennedy on the
subject of Israel instead of Gene
does not think her particular form of theft
is a crime but rather a game. There is no
moral understanding of right or wrong.
At feast part of the blame for this lies
with parents. As a former FBI agent says,
“Children learn by example. They see their
mothers eating grapes' in a supermarket
without paying for them, or slipping sticks of
butter into an oleomargarine carton before
going to the check-out counter, and they de-
velop the philosophy that it’s all right to
- steal from a big, rich organization because
nobody will miss it. *
Lid
—-— (Contii
muster su
ly.wants I
.The Ser
challenge
; In that
the mini-
is a few v
----andsevei
plicated t
in adding
. fusing to i
, Connall
face a te
there ren
the depth
the $123 i
- - unveiled
30-day sp
“His tax
for a we
Atwell's
Revenue
Atwell
forWedn
tee has
from Spe
a tax bill
this week
ment in
ters sim
tax, perl
emptlons
Connal
tax inert
emptions
products
peal of 1
$105 mill
the cities
the auto:
2 to 3 1
million
driver li
revenue
real est
liquor n
about $1
with a 1(
tax on
service
which is
age.
the sofa, it belonged to which
ever enterprising kid pulled up
the cushion and found it.
As soon as a girl reached
courting age the front porch be-
came her domain, and the rest
of the family no longer was as
free to sit there and drink lem-
tial airs on their bagpipes.
More surprised than any of the
guests, in fact, was cohost Kauf-
man, who hated bagpipe music
with a passion difficult to ex-
aggerate. So after each num-
ber, Kaufman, unknown to
Sherwood, would slip the leader
of the group a $10 bill to
vamoose while Sherwood, on
the other hand, was bribing
in a foreword, the author comments that the pur-
pose of his book is to entertain the reader with a
narrative of pioneer days in Southeast Texas. It is
particularly concerned with everyday life on the
JHK Ranch in Chambers County between the
- Where career interests are concerned, pleasant
prospects are in store. and there are indications
that both past and present good efforts should bring
gratifying ..recognition in late July and-or late
dent Kennedy his widow told
Frank Connilf and me that she
regarded Sen. Robert Kennedy
as the man who was holding the -
family together, giving her chil-
/%
A/?
$ xmeetge"
, 92=3.
•ZArene
.LEMMIN@.. u
A -report-by the New York ' dren the .vital father image .of
Stock Exchange estimates that which they had been deprived,
at the end 0f1965, financial as.- raNow,TedKe nnedy, A8% 38.is
sets of individuals totled31.35 father .or foster-father to 14 Ken-
trillion and that almost 40 per nedynchildreninhis,own 2.Jac-
centothis T in stocks. , dyew2h andherau K
—The development of profes-
sional stock management for
the masses, as shown by the
growth of mutual and pension
funds, bank trust accounts, and
now by growing participation in
stocks by the nation’s largest in-
surance companies.
In the year that ended Dec.
“The enclosed statement
ranks with the most stupid I
have h.ard or read in 30 years,
of editorial study. You obviously
have spent no time in the
South. Negroes in the' South
have the worst of it; there is no
doubt, economically speaking.
But you give the impression
that white men speak mean to
them in everyday meetings,
-which is not irue. • You have
written A coast-to-coast lie. You
are a liar.”
Thanks, W. G. I'd been try-
ing to decide all day just whal
I am.
Cheer up! The FBI caught
the guy who stole $500,000 in
She is likely to be 16 years old and her
father probably is a business or professional
man earning $15,000 a year or more. She gets
a sizable “weekly allowance and has enough
Shocking pictures of violence and vandal-
ism accompanied by the much-publicized
thesis that poverty is the prime cause of
spreading lawlessness'have led many people
to assume that the.growing trend toward
anarchy can be arrested by guaranteeing
everyone economic security.
But, the evidence is becoming more ob-
vious every day that the rise in all forms of
lawbreaking, including rioting and looting,
.____jnvolv.es far more than the actions of des-.
perate, poverty-stricken people,--------
Studies arc showing that in cities such as
. Washington, D.C., most of-the rioters and
• looters were in far from depressed circum-
stances. Many of those arrested held good
Cot
(Contin
county nai
are West F
ams Bayo
Jack’s Isl
north city
Avenue.
Also, M<
north city
10; West J
Adams Bi
15th Street
nue to Wi
- Also, W
Adams Ba
Bancroft
city limits
limits; 01
north city
Old Ai
Street) fn
Avenue; T
city limit!
South Ave
to Highwa
: Included
West Oral
by the c<x
from Higl
Bayou; V
Fore m
Bayou.
Broad !
thur Driv
Dayton S’
nue to W
rietta Str
Drive to 1
net Street
to Irving
over.
But Lee Harvey Oswald, the
presumed killer of John F. Ken-
nedy, was not interested in ra-
cial politics. He was a class
warrior who had cut his eye-
teeth on Marxist literature and
uary:
This is no year for positive-
sounding prognostication. It has
not run half its’ span, yet it has
produced the murders of Robert
Kennedy and Martin Luther
King, the announced abdication
19
onade and discuss the fate of
the nation—certainly not, at
least, after dusk on weekend
summer evenings.
A young lady could become a
social, success by being able to
was honeycombed .by a kind of large woodboring whose admiration went out to ________
bumblebee... — Fidel Castro. . .. stormy day that tide will roll in
class war politics of a Fidel
— — .... ...----- — Casro. And Bobby Kennedy was
the nationalist passions of the killed because he had an equally
Old World intrude upon the decent concern for. the safety
New World as Jefferson and of the State of Israel.
If tomorrow is your birthday, your horoscope in-
dicates that, from now until the end of December,
it would be advisable to devote your efforts toward
developing long-range financial programs rather
than to risk assets in hope of quick gain.
Plans made in September and-or October for ex-
pension along fiscal lines, if cleverly mapped out
and executed, should bring fine results within the
first three months of 1969, with another good mono-
ary uptrend beginning on May 1 and continuing
through Aug. 1. A few admoitions, however: Avoid
extravagance and sepculalion, and make no long-
term commitment of moneys - especially during
September, November and December.
— 3
Evidence of their impact on
volume was demonstrated June
13, when 75 trades of 10,000
shares or more moved across
the stock exchange ticker, the
largest number of big blocks in
history.
—Speculation, not just by the
little guy, who seems to get
more than his share of criticism
when something bizarre happens
in the market, but by these mul-
tibillion dollar institdtions.
Today's speculation is not a
typical market episode, a sud-
den flaring of activity by pro-
moters, the greedy, the bored, ’
that last for a few days or
weeks or even months. It is en-
tirelv different., .— .-------
40.%
${,e9
$528
the senior senator from Mas- word said to them by _a white
sachusetts and retire from pub- person . .
lictlife. . ,, W. G. Taylor of San Gabriel,
The persuasive argument, it Calif., ^0^:
is said, is that some nut will —
try to shoot him to complete the
tragic triumvirae, and the fam-
ily1 needs him badly. It is the
most closely linked family in
the land, in all probability. Af-
ter the assassination of Presi-
— f C
Pise.g-
z2r
2
- che-
The Orange LEAD
EDITORIAL PAGE
TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1968
offesive, truce talks, the burn- I asked a well . dressed lady
ing of Washington for the first • who was standing in the swelt-
time since the British did it in ering miles-long line waiting, to
‘ ’ get into St. Patrick’s Cahedral
last Friday where she was from.
4438MM
eLEMMN•VIBAPPHAG. 3
-m peLmattee-,
Helen and Camp Ezell of Beeville. Camp is editor
of the Beeville Bee-Picayune and immediate past
president of the Texas Gulf Coast Press Association.
The book is titled “Home bn the Double Bayou- popguns of straight sections of limb from the elder-
Memories of an East Texas Ranch.” The author is berry bush After the pithy center is rammed
Ralph Semmes Jackson, a consulting geophysicist ’ ■■ - - - -
in Beeville.
dimes. Mr. Hoover's men re-
covered half the money.
It reduces your chances of be-
ing called on the phone by the
bum in the middle of the night.
. a
ce6"455
Xe.m
*3"*
Children didn’t have to spend
money to have a good time.
' They got a real kick out of such
. simple pastimes as blowing bub-
bles and making-mud pies.
Anybody who was frustrated
about anything could go out in
the back yard and work the re-
sentment and bitterness out of
his soul by doing something use-
ful-such as chopping kindling
wood.
The financial life of wives was
so uncomplicated‘that they still
kept their household money in a
kitchen cookie jar or hidden un-
der a corner of the living room
rug.
If any loose change fell out of
Dad’s pocket while be dozed on
Merchants in many areas of the-nation
are cooperating with police by prosecuting
all offenders. They are_also.endeavoring to
them. make their stores less vulnerable to the
According to a recent article in the Sat- would-be shoplifter. Several communities
urday Evening Post, the typical teen-age have developed educational campaigns to
shoplifter in.the United States is a girl (girls show the tragic consequences of this petty THESE DAYS ‘
outnumber boys about 20 to 1 in this par- , form of thievery. ............ ' • • •
ticular area of crime). There are those who will see no connec- wz j w/:7e 1 3 > 1
tion between the shoplifting problem and the iXCnnCay Klllings UttShOre JObS
riots in Washington, D. C., and elsewhere. • • --- ————
■ - By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN
States that has nothing to do with the phys- when something like the Ken-
ical existence of poverty. . nedy tragedy happens, and peo-
ple respond by accusing them-
,4,
Traveling salesmen—those
double-talking smoothies—were
widely regarded as the greatest
threat to a farm girl's moral
welfare. They liked to think
they were, too.
An intellectual was anyone
who had read his way through
the first six inches of the Har-
vard Five-Foot Bookshelf.
You could travel for miles
across any part of America and <
never bear a jukebox or see a
neon sign.
arHmEk4
ddk.
FOR TOMORROW -
Fine stellar influenceswill govern all your en- . , — .gg
deavors on Wednesday. Continue to press on toward anniversary is in the offing,
worthwhile objectives and you can’t go wrong Eve/ "And..1 suppose," nodded one
ning hours promise to be exceptionally pleasant potential sucker, "you’re aim-
and there is a possibility that you will heap some
heart-warming news.
FOR THE BIRTHDAY------------ = —
run for cover. His eulogy of his
brother at St. Patrick's was
that of a man picking up, not
dropping, the torch.
Recently wrote a piece from
Resurrection city, the poverty
marchers headquarters near
Lincoln Memorial in Washing-
McCarthy, Hubert Humphrey, Washington feared they would
Richard Nixon or Nelson Rocke- if we took sides in the partisan
feller, all of whom shared Ken- quarrels f other peoples. -
nedy's feelings about the need The world, of course, is no
for a peaceful adjustment in the longer what it ws in the time
Middle East. _ of Washington and Jefferson.
So Bobby Kennedy became the For better or worse, we are
sacrifice. caught in the planetary under-
Should ■ we feel collectively tow. And this suggests a theme
guilty of his death because he that should be explored by Pres-
was murdered by someone bent ident Johnson’s recently cre-
on carrying on a quarrel that ated commission to conduct “a
is indigenous to the Middle penetratingsearch for the
East? causes of violence.”
The truth would seem to be nInstead of bowing,our heads
that the world niucks at in shame because of the death
America in ways that mock the - othe two Kennedys,wefhight
workings of the old Madisonian taliy"
world.
20,205 xvuqz822
azescp
NEW YORK (AP) - Young
people love the jingling' tinkle of
charm bracelets.
The middle aged and elderly
respond to another kind of
charm bracelet — the charm
bracelet of time, and it is made make good fudge,
up of memories. , . . A well-to-do family in a small
■ You're wearing a pretty long town was one which had a mo-
bracelet yourself if you can look tor car to ride in on fair days
back among your memories and but which also still kep a horse
remember when— and buggy for rainy days when
the roads were muddy.
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Assecialev Press is exctusively entined to tM us« tor
.v dsnfee * *• hewibosk
*• vs Dil Ar “apavEne3 . L
SUBSCRIPTION RATES 2c.
:: ST" 1 » «Fe
. TELEPHONE \
••AVer Office en Clossified _________ TU Fin l
-Ciruletion Doportment TU J 141)
Enyred ol oronge. Texes, Post OMice as second clesi mater
vnder H Congress More* 2, UN.
' -An increase in the number 3L 1967, insurance companies
of people who now invest in added $3.4 billion to the value of
stocks. In 1959 the total of their portfolios of "Big Board"
shareowners wss about 12.5 mil- Blocks, bringing their total hold-
lion. Now, less than nine years ings to $1.8 billion.
later, that figure has nearly The mutual funds during this
doubled. same time added $8.2 billion to
These stockholders are also • the value of their portfolios, for
more affluent than those of 1959. a total of $37.8 billion. These
They are much better educated funds have more than tripled
in the ways of the market. In- their stock holdings since 1957.
creasingly they seek in stocks The pension funds, largest of
not just a good return but a sec- the Institutions which buy and
ond income. sell stock, increased the value
of their portfolios in 1967 by
$13.3 billion, for a total of $48.9
More people . were afraid of
dying of tuberculosis than of
heart attacks.
H.L. Mencken praised Calvin
Coolidge as a good president be-
cause he let the country alone
and did’t do very much to
change its ways.
Hoboes .were known as
"knights of thfoad," and if
you lived near a railroad yard
hardly a day would go by but
one would knock on your back
door and ask for something to
eat.
______I__________ ____________________'—seleves and their fellow citizens
Utopia on Half Time No Promising Prospect ,'
-- •.. less feeling.
A study, by the Southern California Re- of the things which bothers consumers most You don't want to dissociate
search Council, a nonprofit organization for now is trying to get an automobile or home yoursell from the general ac-
economic and social inquiries sponsored by appliance repaired. perhaps you couhonxno"Sne
10 As our homes become increasingly auto- pernaps you ,coud nave done
educational and busmess groups, prophesies. mated and gadgetized, the problem of keep- something alons the line.to
that within 17 years Americans will have to ing everything in running order grows maknsth s asafe. environment
work only. 6 months a year for the same apace. Think What it will be like when ar—U u thePnlitre
standard of living that they have now. . pair experts work only six months of the brdamdtemoracy. the hea ‘
Presumably, this means that six-month year. - - - ‘
vacations will be the rule by 1985. " " •'
vadERe FoxXPAWN6
the volume of buzzing from within the panels indi-
cated a high concentration of bees ip residence, one
of the boys would thump the fence vigorously with
„ „ _ ------. - — a stick as an invitation to the bees to emerge and
Gulf Coast segment of it, has long been the _________do battle.
principal area for raising cattle. "The little warrior, alwayn accepted the Invi.
Would you believe that in 1984, the latest year for tation ... The boy, looked like a group of Indi in,
which figures are available, highly populous Harris doing a war dance as they hopped around, duck-
County still had 95.829 head of cattle on its farms tag. dodging and swinging their bat, al the
and ranches? - — K — bumblebees.
Jackson's book will bring back fond memories to "The battle usually lasted only a few minutes,
many people who grew up in this part of the because the reinforcements that continued to pour
country, especially those who spent thefr boyhood from the fence soon forced the paddle-wielding
on ranches along the Texas Gulf Coast. \. enemy to retreat.”
The chapter which fascinated me most is cap-
tioned “Tumblebug Time" and relates with complete
candor the games many boys have played-and
still do—with these insects.
It also recalls many other boyhood experiences
which a lot of. us older people shared with the au-
thor. Such as:
"Wben we were small the only summer beverage
that we were allowed, other than milk and cocoa,
was sassafras tea. The sassafras trees that grew
around the brand pens provided a steady.supply of
roots for tea.
t’T em@m
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 146, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 18, 1968, newspaper, June 18, 1968; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1561088/m1/4/: accessed June 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.