The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 41, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1962 Page: 4 of 20
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■■■HESBhSmSh
BOS,
-1* I. JAY BECKER
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The bidding:
■ut South West North
I NT Pn Pun DM*.
trt Aw U Aw
Aw If ha 4|
Declarer had to play swap
wefi Hi thie hand to
• rtnpljrpq* Iwrawp
d, fcrdng the act. The
1 up Sufi re-
However, hi this hand South
faw that the usual method of
play could art noceed. Eveey
Biwsr hhth «t n» k
to ha hi Bart’s hand, since
had opened the bidding with a
artnanp (id to 18 plant!). So
he adopted a different Use of
play that gave him a chance of
ankteg th* contract
After ruffing th* dub, dectoiw
or eaahad the A-K of heaita and
tnaaped a heart He then en-
tewd dummy with a diamond
and ruffed the lart rtuh. Ha
Editors Speak
OAK MDGK fTgNN.)
OIK
The news pours m ovw* the
Associated Press wire of a
mg - mod amt iMtninj. You
scan and select. The long, a8m
sheet of paper, tore from the
teletype, slips through your
palm. Consciously, subconscious-
ly you choose and reject - con-
ditioned by the lessons of jour-
nalism professors of years ago,
the space for today, awareneu of
at:
the story of die day, the week,
incidental
♦ A«
II .
SKSMURB *2*
BoutK
• Q9g
now led tha atoe of
t noted that If ha
tow, South would make
89 he ruffed with
tte jadk, hoping to find Wert
with the hM or 1M of wadaa.
ft ww a good try by East,
hut South waa not to be dented!
Be ovamtfEed with the queen
and led the rtght of tpedet tor
* ffneaea ft didn't matter
overed or not
Wart M a eh* and Art
cashed toe A-K and returned
WaJ-Br -
hid to tad a way of today only
one spade trick.
Generally, with this suit com-
Wnatfcn, declarer begins Iff
leading low towards the king.
He hopes West waa dealt A-x,
and, if that is the ease, the play
■nensate. When Wert foUowa
tow, the king in dummy win#,
aadbtoft-tt* writ ia returned.
the general public interest (you
s) and, f*
hope) *nd, if you are even a lit-
tle bit honest with yourself, your
own personal preferences and pre-
judices.
Some is easy. It is, after all,
it seems. We will get ex-
cited about a smallpox scare, a
possible sleeping sickness epidem- ‘
fc, a questionable drug on the
fret, though no one, or
a few die. The standard of
ties, news to non-news, is only
to some extent numbers of hum-
an lives involved. Blood and thun-
the year. (It is rather
just bow it became .so.) Others
are irresistible — a bright item
that make* you laugh, a human
.....rA lot of the
interest “natural,
job is a snap. But, occasionally,
you get caught not so much by
what you select, but by what you
" “ a tenia*
toss aside with hardly
tion.
So another cease fire has g
by th« boards to Algiers. So
other eight have died in an auto
smash-up in another state. (Hie
unwritten rules say you report
all, or most all traffic'deaths in
your state, but cross the line and
the fatalities are tost statistics.)
So another lesser government of-
ficial is found to have done
wrong, So_Another fiaSk^aefu-
gee from East Berlin has been
shot by the Communist guard
so what.
It is not that we couldn't
der still rate high on the
But a little variation on the
old theme always serves to mate
the news nose twitch more.
Occasionally, however, the con-
science wins over the curiosity
and it is agreed that that Ber-
lin refugee, evsn is he is the
airport on a certain date last
month. Occasionally, it seams
considerably mom important to
mate the truly significant news,
even if repetitious in the nature
of toe event, available to the
reader, the readership surveys be
damned. And it is on these oc-
casional moment that you fed
more like a newspaperman and
less like a master of ceremon-
ies.
Moriah - '
Hi
his Should
e Stopped
IMM
;
• ■ v> • - , ;
■■■ ' .:V“-:
r'
le solemn dignity of the United Nation* was
:en Monday by a noisy demonstration inside the
iral Assembly Hall by pro-Castroites and anti-
roites, which later erupted into hand-to-hand
»t outside the U.N. gates.
Lis is the second or third time U.N. guards and
York City policemen have had to quell near-riots
U.N. buildings.
e inside demonstration this time erupted during
multuous General Assembly meeting at which
ident Osvaldo Dorticos Torrado of Cuba demanded
the U.N. condemn as an act of war any U.S.
lade of his country.
e riot started in the galleries of the General
Bible Verse
mbly Hall, and those who took part in it were
tted by tickets issued to them by U.N. delega-
BUT NOT as to* offence, 10 alao
free gift Toe if through|
toe offence Of cat many be dead, |
much more the grace of God,
and the gift by grace, which is by
one man, Jesus Christ, hath a-
m
was difficult for awhile to tell which was mart
the pro-Castroites or the anti-Castroites. Dor-
was interrupted by cries of “murderer** and’
rnerate” hurled at Mm by spectators.
less. But we do become tapervi- bounded unto many. Roman»-5:15 APPARITION OF THE WALL
SERVICE, QUALITY, LOW PRICES ALWAYS AT
SUFfR
MARKET
SPECIALS THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY i«i t. nvnr
LITTLEFIELD’S
Washington Report--
Mci yJuJIll Clllb Wirt $2,50 Purchase op Mop*
By FULTON LEWIS JR.
WASHINGTON
|| blue-blooded Richardson Mlworth
is personally unfamiliar with that
}| marvel of modem criminology,
the polygraph. And he aims to
stay just as unfamiliar.
The Democratic candidate tor
Governor against Republican Bill
EWIS JR. factory explanation of both ind- today so as to.override any veto
Philadelphia's dents in hto career the better It from u, oU friend and golfing
»M. eplKde ■
more confuting when if is seen
that DU worth has
COFFEE
jtaouum owiwo .
Scranton i* now busy dodging a
challenge that he submit to a
po^rapn.
The ca
or lie detects, test,
controveny began last
|| month, when Dilworto met Scran-
ton in a state-wide radio-TV de-
bate. The GOP candidate men-
tioned casually that Dilworth had
been find or forced to resign for
neglect of duty from the first
I State job he held, more than ®
(years ago. Dilworto was then a
lawyer for the State’s Attorney
| General, assigned to represent
jPem^anla to a case pending to
riven two dis- THE INTERESTING filing about
ttoct versions of his departure J?K to find. ho. has turned the
Dilworto tod not bother to n-
i charge during
_ to Scranton’s . ,
bflnfdeeg debater tor* port- ^
interview, he said that
‘ toat ha wuneito-
' to quit, hut se-
to return to a
j busy and growing PhUrtWri»to
^Ti^v^M appear to «d tha
But Democrat
LIBBY'S B
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
AMB1CAN
at tte time, has entered toe fray.
He says flatly that Dilworth lei.
H The fonner governor sen that
pawertt failed to repreaert Penn-
%v..#0toCAN
25c SARDINES
NISLfTSWHOtEKBINtt
CORN
2<^ 35c CATSUP
DWS
M44M4MIIIMie ittSM » 0
UJ .....
.test MMltldlll lUCAN
M
Wooster Cage
BAMA
PEANUT BUTTER..........
Frozen Food Specials
Meat Pies - - 5 to, $
Libby's ▼
Vegetables
6
CAMPBaL TOMATO
W.H. Corn, French Fries. Spinach
--S,-•---WHM
sylvania, as directed, to New
York, and shewed up to Cuba, to*
DUworto replies by saying that
arie, like Scranton, to wrong. Ao
irding to press agents of the
trie to angry
hTdWr
19c
|| he, Ulwortli, represented the flret
Pfrs. Earle to. divorc? proceed-
l^Mworth has tried to snd the
whole controversy by declaring
I that he to not a candidate against
I Earle. He chargre. that" Scranton
is trying to trick him. “I am not,”
||he says, "gdng to> won-
e mto a diversioo.
answer Mas satisfied
The highly-respected John
JFK’s policy of being too nice to
congressmen who were too nasty..
He followed the policy of turning gether
why Dilworth does not take up
Earle-, offer of a he detoctor
. ..........................
SCOTf- .f 1
7 1ft- TAU/CIC
a can lUC TOWcLj ....
’“rT"
MELLORINE
GROWN
ROAST
SHOULDER |
STEAK 1
............
to now ducking a lie
tost a, he reseated to ev«y
Si wlltiia Ms power to pro- „,
‘ ‘ investigation of at (
in hall ”
why Dilworth
detector test,
Vi Gal.
vent a grand Jury investigation «
graft and corruption to city hall.'
(Dilworth was Mayor of Philadel
phia In a icandal-racked Adminis-
tration.)
“In the candid opinion of most
AeHM»eHWNeOO»HO«WMHM«U»»>i
FRESH —■"
.u. 49c GROUND MEAT
SUCED ...
» 59c BOLOGNA ..........................39c
folks, many of them fonner sup-
■ end
porter* and admirers of Mr. Dil
worth, th* quicker he conies
Smafltori had voted with the
in the budget, and tile treasury
considers it so ......MH
recommended a
But Sen. Smathers, who has long
campaigned for a balanced budg-
et, announced last week he would
sre was loud applause, as if to drown out the
iastroites’ protests, by a group of Russian and
mnist bloc 'employes who left their desks to
participate in the demonstration.' „ .
Anti-Castro hecklers went into action at least five
times, and at the end of Dorticos’ lengthy speech a
group of pro-Castroites yelled and unfolded a" banner
reading, “Stop Kennedy. Hands Off Cubi
In New Yoric He insists he wa* senate elhakrooms that the Preti-
later “reinstated” by Gov. Earle dent's shin, are black and blue-
and continued on the job until bis though not merely from Smathers.
“voluntary’- retirement. Other I'toyaT Democrats, such as
Sudosayaitov Bob Kerr of Wdahoma, haVf c»
The solution, says columnist tributed to the bruise*.
Onmtogs, wtnld be for Dilworth, But Kerrdoesn't come to White
a to House breakfasts every week as
say: “All right, arte, bring on does dapper George, and look af-
yoor blasted machim* W s see fably- Across the breakfast
toa a Moomin’ liary- at the man he to about to kick
But this candidate DUwwto will (hortty alter he get# bade to ‘
ntoAb. tol IflB^S m a t h er , pwtel
~ v zz - "" JFK's bacon and eggs, fistens
By DREW PEAR80N the plans tor pushing JFK's strat-
WASHINGTON - Whenthehto- egy, then tatoiiS torthe senate
toy of the 87th Congress l> writ- and proceeds to oppose JFTCS
ten it will undoubtedly show that strategy whenever it will belp -
Charlie Halleck of Indiana, the not his friend to the White House
GOP leader, to right in claiming — but George Smather, of Flor-
that it was a Democratic Coo- kto.
gre« which stabbed its own pres- Early to toe Kennedy AdmMs-
Bert, John F. Kennedy, to the tration, SmatherTvn^ consider.
^ , .. . . . . . _ .. ad “the man to see” if you want.
S5 llhnw dcoe anxmd the White
aueck can go .ftnther and re- House. He went every weekend
U.N.oguards were kept busy hustling out at least
20 demonstrators. But that only dented the disgrace-
ful exhibition. Outside the U.N. gates, demonstrators
from both political camps got into a free-for-all slug-
fest, using their fists, rocks and rotten eggs. New
York police moved in and broke up the battle, hauling
33 participants off to jail. \ . .
Stronger precautions need to be taken to keep
extremists and rabble-rousers out of ILN. buildings
where sessions of the various bodies are being held.
It is plain to see in this case that Communist bloc
nationa purposely handed out passes to people on
their aide with full knowledge of what would take
place. —r ■ ■ ’
If we are going to permit this sort of thing to
continue happening, the high aims of the United Na-
tions, which is the
hope we have left for world
peace, will be irreparably damaged. It will come into
If the Sactremiste must demonstrate, let tbera do it
peacefully outside UN. buildings, and if they do
^ succeed in getting inside they should be jailed.
A* for the blockade Dorticos was talking- about,
if there ever was a country that deserved to be block-
aded, itte Castro’s CommunistCuba.
Halleck can go
count that.part «f tiie trouble was with JFK to Palm Beach, some-
They ptayed golf and lunched to
in the same plane.
r fhan^toe fart teat Con- * ih? Msstosipph
^ kept in session tonl was
Sree extra dai^ely becaure m
Fr«Menr, bert per- by ^ genial Irishman from Phil-
adelphia, Matt McCloakey.
But after about nine months of
cause be wanted to override an patiently tolerating Smathers’ bit-
expected presidential pocket veto jjgjhe hand teat fed. him.Jhe
cn a pet pension bill for doctors White House
and other professional men. Sen.
te leaked word that Ken-
“iWiKmrv”
cooling” on his old
the handsome
got an ap-
-flnanced peanut toboratoiy in ^“upsSsStUtiieWWte
-^ - IfeouM lJlm£lfor a rirowdowi.
doctors against medical care for He tod friends later with some
SL; jus? s ftsihf
Then le turned round and push- w eventeing and that
a.ipecial pension bill permit- had said the “cod
Stoeto^bft re^sent”1bto own
_ t special tax con-tog*-
oession, for preferred pensions. After that Kenna__________
The bill wffi eat a fcitiier hole out of hi* way to feed the mouth
__ gen-
bills. nedy that he couldn’t support him
OMHlMi 'M K«nedy
“rmert
"1 not,
BPr
togs.
After fliat Kennedy went farther
had said tiie "cooling off” rep
came from his staff and did
represent his own personal f<
g doctors and other self-cmploy-
, generally among the top-brack-
citizens, to get special tax con-
ferred pensions,
eat a further hole
and the treasury that bit him. He journeyed all
unjust that It has the way to Miami last March to
White House veto, speak before a JlOO-a plate dinner
dean with an adequate and satis- hold fire Congress in session until being reflected.
speak before a $100-aplate dinner
honoring Smathen and raising
money largely for Smathers' re-
election - though he's assured of
JNMiOtotod'torttItoSFtoO #i
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
lyNAN JOMB
Control Frees Writm
Bacon “ 49c
m.
DEODORANT
Drag Special
i/jGAt
Arrid
LIQUID SHA
Prell
Reg. 48c
LIQUID SHAMPOO
.Med. She
39c*
49c*
Pius Tax
BEST
BLEACH
MORTON’S T: .
SALAD DRESSMG............«r39c
ROSEDAU , SUGARY SAM
PEARS ;....No.%c«t29lf SWEET POTATOES
Russttt \ 1
otatoes .eaw'28
FRESH NICE
NO. 21/, CAN 19t
TALOW
-r GRAPES Z « Z5
THI ANSWER, QUICK!
tote oreMta
feoDDt bidif
WvrkrJ *www *
Z Arthur McArthur, Leonard
Wood and Quotes Sigsbea owe
heroes of what war?
3. Ekiward Everett to remem-
bered as the major speaker at
what Anns eventT
4. What Otnaasto Who to-
to the fifth owtoqr. - -
ft What la a Pickwickian
FOUC OF FAMI-OUESf THI NAMI ha attopreared the slave trad*
yhit m ___’ aM began a good admtatotrw
RVMMIAD
i m tOm*o afraid of » fool;
one oannot be awe he 1a aof a
haaow TriWare Beam,
WATCH TOOK lANOtfAOE
UTTBUTBCTR — (liU-re-
fUB)—noun; a writer of Uter-
aryworita Origin:
YOUR FUTURE
But Africa—tho Albert Ny-
ania—waa discovered by this
English explorer. Son of a West
India merchant, he mi bom to
London in 1831 and carefully
to~bus£
educated fte a canto to
neaa The desk soon bored him,
however, and ha traveled to
Ceylon where he founded a suc-
cessful .egrieokunU atfttimimt.
In, ISS& h* undertook .the con-
struction of a railway connect-
WleMveil to* year improve* art
to* soft Today** child wifi be
' HAFFY BIRTHDAY
Do acton* Bohn Bafee and
oomtmrPmaOnetoa,
In 1861to Africa he met Cap-
tains Speke and Grant on their
way back from their discovery
of th* Nile; their tip enabled
him to dlecover the Albert Ny-
ansa. Later he commanded a
military expedition into the
equatorial NUt sariktob whan
(Names at bottom of eohisml
IT HAFFINID TODAY
On tfrie date tat 1818 Italian
opera composer Gtoeeppe Verdi
MOW'D YOU MAKE OUT?
1. Tha ftoials and ofter or-
naments which terminate th*
probably cornu from the French
mm
Daily Crossword Puzzle
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88. Muffler
87.A gratuity
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Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by The Baytown Sun, Inc,
1 in Baytown, Texu.
at Pearce and Ashbel in 1
Fred Hartman ............................Editor and Publisher
James H. Hale..................................General Murngev
Preston Pendergrau ....................».....Managing Editor
Beulah MU Jackion............................Office Manager
Robert K. Gilmore .........................Circulation Director
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
— jotarw*aw».T.^^ ftfettiKif'
Paul Putman .f*.Retail Manager
Corrie Laughlto
National Maneger
By Carrier per fear
jBnacjjSKi m. nqnwt
8. The dedication ot Getty*,
burg Cemetery.
4. The Jute*.
5. A special meaning attached
to a word merely for an occa-
sion.
*» toWNNft
ww
bounce
rock tr
route to
bear pi(
Col. Ab
Preside:
the wiix
The ft
respond*
in six yi
thefMtii
laid acre
of thatd
A paur
with ban
and a 1
.^from hb
around 1
temmSk wihout c
P. O. Box 308. Baytqwn, Texas.
Represented Nationally By
Texu Newspaper Representatives, In*
tfftlir ft
tor need
permissk
MEMBER OF TKB ASSOOUTBP PRESS
Mentor at Taaai DaUr
the Aeiocleted Praia u i
at eu atfctr aittar
ta DaUr Newspaper Aaae. Ut Taiaa
fraia u tnuuad axenulvatr to Ua see
aa credited to U sr sat otharwlaa art
•pontaaaoua origin published harata. Rt
t herein wa Wat reamed. , ^
and Taua hah Urn,
aa far wpumiaahaa a<
aradltad In <tli pf|«
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 41, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 10, 1962, newspaper, October 10, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100171/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.