The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 5, 1966 Page: 4 of 15
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Ebr l»Htoam »nn Monday, S»ptemb#r S, 1966
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Old Flicks
Backbone
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I WIN AT BRIDGE
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• 'Editorials And Features •
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Pulling Trump
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Is Extravagant
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By Oswald & Jomes Jacoby
Newspapar Interprise Assn.
The. basic "idea of frump
management is that you as de-
clarer should pull as many ■
, trumps as you can afford to
" but that you can’t afford to
pull trumps when you need
fc- ■ the trumps in the short hand
for ruffing purposes.
West really- should have. ,
opened a'trump against the
? four heart contract but it -
takes a really strong-willed
- character to resist the attract-
ive lead of king from an ace-
king suit. Anyway, West failed
,_ to. resist that impulse.
• He shifted,to a trump at -
./■ trick two. South won in his .
own hand, cashed his ace of
spades, led a second trump to
dummy, then led dummy’s
last spade. If East had gone
up with his king of spades
South would have romped *
Great Of TV
. Rotary
Oil' inan i
. nt the Wb
of -the Day
Col'e-n
" Southwest
for Arrow
confer
Cheney R
ficers on
service a
Colema
&
By HENRY McLEMORF.
* Many persons say that they
can't
m
m
m,
• ■ >■
■-
t;
while a TV program
it
Is in progress, and find it neces-
' V sary either to turn off the set
L or retreat to a roo nc where the
sight and sound cannot reach’ 4
them. , -f
f
-V::-
Baytown is a good example of what - In addition to the skill and expert-
American labor can produce. ness of the work force, there are also
: J Fifty years ago—give or take a few these charged with the responsibilities rm just the opposite.
months or years—Baytown was a rice of management. The administrative ef- Drag me in front of a tv
field. forts, pf management are just as im- set, pinion my arms and bind
i________U Tndustrv in the form of oil nroduc- pottant in the overall picture as any my ankles,and my thought pro-
, ga*.—m**-
and now we have a community of about • ousiness. ___. .. m on
30,000 persons. ' , The point is this: Baytown has them
-■ we have Ihe technical people, the T'
. boast any more brilliant minds t h a n rraftempn and the management of American”life as food, sleep,
some of the citizenry who have been Th . _ other reaUjrement and and down payments' and de‘
, trained in their chosen fields in the come from outside We Vefe.- serves even more thought than
finest universities in the land and who In SXl There are those with money “ appears 19 Bet
are now national and even intemation- °ith p n. J.„h confjdence in Bavtown Here are 80,116 of the thoughts
al authorities in their chosen fields. ne^le to nut uo thfreouired funds I thought while watching a mon- -
jai.„ people to put up me required iunas. strousity called "The Wackiest
_The entire world benefits dally from So there you have the total picture. ship in The Army";
n^ecUCt*d nght hCre ' Each .eIe™nt 18 F3Ch f’f ' " What in the world does, the
under our very noses. ment is indispensible. Each element is toothpaste manufacturer mean
- - Because of the large number of in- dependent upon the other. , when he sayg his product is (in-
dustrial plants in the Baytown com- T ' Put them all together and they spell excelled at reducing "new cavi-
plex, there are some of the finest train- “Baytown.” ties”? If a man, woman, or
• ed technicians and craftsmemyou can Congratulations to all yoif workers child has a “new cavity" he has
find anywhere. Together they have on this Labor Day, 1966. it. and it jg too late for pre-
centuries of experience and the know Without you there wouldn’t be a vention. Does the manufacturer
. how, and almost every day they do as Baytown Sun. mewj that fjie “cn* formula
routine what might have been consid- In fact, without you. there wouldn’t mJtf Cr ^<fh
ered miracles a few short years ago. even be a Baytown. JSS _
be used to explain Just what
• the claim means.
I never- thought I’d be happy
, to hear my doctor tell me, af-
ter a physical checkup, that I
Mr. Fred Hartman, Editor,. department was cut 36 men with sighted and selfish interest in was years and years away from
Baytown Sun ' no logic or reason' as far as hav. company business brought to my second childhood. But I was,
Dear Sir: '' ing an abundance of work. We naught service Of loyalty. Man- for not until an adult reaches
It is needless to say I believ- were the youngest men in the agement brought hardships and second childhood canhe possi-
• plant, qualified, and could-get sorrows upon us and our beloved biyexpecttoappreciateanden-
the Job done when it was most families. It is not a matter’of Joy 90 per cent of the television
needed. We could do a safe, ef- being i n d i g n a n t. These facts programs that fill the screen I K I IK I IIQ I I n I nTOrpCf home but East; was smart
ficient and’fasrjob in anjrtum-' have been derived from earnest Hay aftw Hay, month after I \ wl I | | I .r I I 'VgA I I t enough toduck the trick to his
, around the company had in the meditation. y month, and year after year. Ask >. partner’s queen. West led-a
most and must requirements. \y€ hear a lot about discrimi- almost any child of eight, nine By drew PEARSON Treasury," Patman recalls. are supposed to be kept at 3:2 third trump and South'was a
Today contractors have taken nation these ciays, but it has or ^ years of age to name his WASHINGTON — President "And, in the past, John Snyder, percent. But last December the gone gosling.
Sir I can only speak for my- - our jobs by the numbers in the gone to seed in Humble’s last favorite programs, and.he'll.list Johnson of Johnson City, Tex.,, Secretary of the Treasury for interest rate went up from 4 to . East was still holding two
self though it cannot be called Humble plants. To my know!- move. The company has hired ' the ones that have ,he top rat' and Rep. Wright Patman of . Truman, kept hammering at the 5t4. That’s an increase of 37.5 good spades. South could still
insignificant to mention that edge, in all respect to the con- 25 new men previously, now its ings. They’re written for juve- Texarkana, Tex. are old friends. Federal Reserve Board to keep per cent in one month — a long trump one> spade in dummy
there is a rather large number tractors, they have not taken plans are for hiring more so- niles and, I believe, by juveniles. They once served in the House interest rates down. way from staying within the but ne had to lose one more
of Us who have been highly dis- our trained places nor qualified called "trainees" but didn't say Would it be too much t have of Representatives together, and “Truman even refused to re- guidelines. spade trick, one Club and one
appointed; I.still cannot imagine ‘ themselves. The e o m p a n y, anything about rehiring those ». clvirf nj1.iu -■« v th Patman, now dean of 'Texas _ appoint Marriner'EcclSs as Fed ' "The Fed upped the interest diamond and one spade al-
. so,me three years later now, that- ’.through our department, spent, (hat were laid off. In 1962 there ’ au spo 88 . sg ■ Congressmen, supports LBJ on chairman because he wouldn’t; rates to help out the big New readybeiongediohisoppon-.-*-.-
• a company can so inglori’ously large sums of time and money was display of ostentation in school for a month and Bam-' about 99 44-100th per eent of his cooperate with the Treasury. York banks which were in. a ents. .
boast about being "so great a in-training us to do our specific The Baytown Sun about the Jay- how to pronounce the words policies. Henry Morgenthaq also ifeld in- squeeze on their time de* -South wa9: naturally-ltfiset ^
strength or energy company” at type of work. Over the years off but yesterday it Was the "harass," "forehead,” and “hos- On the vital problem of high terest rates down under Roose- posits.” about the fact that neither
the expense of their employes. through experience on these jobs headline with all the pomp!. pitable’’ Interest rates,' however, the Veit. Hi told the bankets what Congressman Patman pointed spades or hearts had Wbten
II the employes did not make we had the know - how to 4,0 1 am still attentive and willing • ■ <ho r™ anH />.. Congressman from Texarkana t0 d0. He didn't let . them tell 0ut that the 1946 Employment well for him;but 3-J and j-2
that specific job, in a fast, ef- to give careful consideration as _« .“u - ... ^ ... . wishes that his old friend in the him how to run our fiscal poli- - Act under which the govern- breaks aren t at all unctom-
did? They may be putting tig- " fieient and safe way-------—_—in tuRincsc rpasnns, why we lost fhans manage to ftojd <^tjS , White House, or at least Hits cy. , ment operates to stabilize the mon. In any event proper
ers in tanks, but they took a lot Sir, in a fast trend-and a‘few our jobs. As far as I know, my long as they did in World War Secretary—of . die Treasury, “And, here is the difference economy specifies "coordinat - trump _ management ^ ^ ^
, . of inspiration from a host of months notice, management de- record is second to none; in and. II if they shoot as badly as they would clobber the Federal Re- between those days and tOday." ed” a c 110 n. Coordination, he have iet him mak€ ®JS
loyal employes. cided our services were no long- outside Hufnble gates. do on TV shows? They never: serve Board tlie way Harry , u- Congressman Patman pulled said, should include not only the a
I worked as a welder and , er needed. After _all the best Sincerely, hit anyone, while the Americans ^Tiiere is nothing in the Fed- a sheet of paper out of his desk. Fed, but the Treasury,, the Fed- .rumDS y,e indulged in an ilS-
■ fabricator before the layoff, Qttr yean of OUr short- Frank CampbeU always get their man, even with eral Reserve Act which requires . govemme^waspayj necessary’ extravagance. Hid
■ a .45 no matter the distance. tt to be independent of the J^V ^nT and Irt - B^ard and WComptroller on he simply played ace and*
term loans in 1946 under Tru- the Currency. spade after winning the . .
man as compared with 1966, 20 "This could give the nation a ft™ »
years later, under Johnson. The coordinated fiscal policy, not
Editor and Publisher figures showed that interest one dictated,by the spokesmen
. General Manager rates m some cases have gone for the big bankers," said the ana maKmg nls contract.
• up nearly 1,200 per cent. Congressman from Texarkana,
"Between 1941 and 1946," Pat- Tex. ,
man pointd :(ouf, "the Treasury
was paying % of 1 per cent in-
terest on short - term loans.. To-
day the government is paying strength in mid -1967. Apparent-
5.04 per cent. ly, the communists intend to Pass Pass
continue their buildup in South • You, South, hold:
Viet Nam for another year. If 6 5 VK W 3 ♦ A 3 2 •Q 8 7 6
their prospects haven’t improv- do
ed by that time, presumably A—Pass if you can depend
they will return to small-scale, y0Sr/an^"e6 i0tr^im‘ nnlv"
lars. In 1966 it cost him 350.480 hit . and . run guerrilla war- bld ane no-trump oBly.
to borrown one million. In other fare . . . the captured docu- X. “J.n I rnnH hand al * dy
words, it’s costing nearly 13 ments also disclose that the lat- *
times more." • st infiltrators from North Viet
Patman, who is chairman of Nam have been given special
the Hoiise Banking and Currency training in how to fight Ameri- bids one no-trumpr What do you
Committee, is as homey as an cans . . Sooth Viet Nam’s Pre- do now?
old shoe. When it comes to high mier Nguyen Cao Ky, who has ■
interest rates, however, he be- behaved like a martinet in the
comes passionate and indignant. past, now seems determined to
High iftton&f fStes^he believs, give his people a free election . *
are threatening the American jj stopped one general from “
economy, preventing home build- trying to add candidates after
Ing, indirectly causing racial un- the filing deadline. He also did ~ _____
rest in- Cleveland, Detroit and not permit the military to load By WALTER C. PARKES
Watts because of poor housing. the ballot, as expected, with
High grade municipal bonds their hand - picked candidates,
in 1946 bore an interest rate of
1.64 per cent, according to Pat-
man’s . research sheet. Twenty
years later the rate had gone
up to 4.14 per cent. Prime com- THEN SAID Jesug to those
In our annual salute tolabor suits, that the maximum bene- mercial paper for a 4-to-6 month jeWs which believed on him, If
too often lose sight of the fit comes from training for a period in 1946 paid a/v interest ye continue In my word, then
blessing of work. Kahlil specific job. rate of 0.81 per cent. Today the are ye my disciples indeed.
Gibran in his classic, ‘The Labor unions have been far- same business loans pay 5.88
Prophet," said, "Work is love sighted enough to realize that per cent Thls Is an Increase
made visible,” and E. F. Ware a union member might at any from $8,100 to 358,000 In the •
• cost of borrowing a million.
“Bullderg can’t afford to pay
these high rates to build hoifies
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- Opening lead—# K
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ed .in Standard Oil of New Jer-
sey stock, as I do have a num-
ber of shares.’ My deepest re-
gret and disappointment is that
——I cannot take advantage of the.
. same opportunity I once had as
an employe to Buy more.
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Salinger Reveals LBJ's Temper
§mt
eljr
t!TS ».
Fred Hartman .........
James H. Hale
Preston Pendergrass ...
Beulah Mae Jackson ...
Bill Hartman ......L...
Ann B. Pritchett .......
By RAYMOND J. CROWLEY ment in restoring national unity
WASHINGTON (API — New after Dallas, It was now clearly
Indications that President John- returning to its normal role,
son can be terrible tempered »
when ; crossed, art given in a
.vtst-puhiished book by Pierre:
Salinger.
In a volume entitled "With
Kennedy," Salinger relates his
work ag press secretary for the
late president and — for four
months — in the same post with
Johnson. .
For some weeks after Johnson
became president he had excel-
lent relations with the press,
Salinger writes, but— ' ^
“No president’s honeymoon
with the press has lasted very .
long and LBJ’s came,to an end, !he^,.1 668311 to get less ln’
• too, Misunderstanding's and re- lonTWtipn. ,
sentments broke out on both' “I had always been able to
sidek. • \
"The President, accustomed
to highly sympathetic treatment
by the press in the weeks after
the assassination, was incensed future.,
by the increasing frequency of
tough questions at his press com ' always had to c)ear with '(White
ferences and hostile editorials; ^ ^ Ken Q.^j, ^
ana columns. j an
"If the press hag voluntarily fore calling on JFK and, until
become a partner of govern- thW, I, had been the only mem-
ber of LBJ’s staff who had the
run of his office." ,
,. A sidelight on the less-than-
"In common with JFK, Presi- ” perfect rapport between Jobn-
dent Johnson would blow sky son and the now Sen. Robert F.
high over news leaks from the Kennedy, D-N.Y., is also provid-
White House, particularly those ed in the book. Salinger said he John Wndley
Involving presidential appoint- used to swim in the Whte House Paul Putman!"
ments. But he went further than pool wth Presdent Johnson and Corrie Laughlin
President Kennedy in express. converse. Johnson told hm how Entereo as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas, 77521 Post "DO YOU know what the costs
ing his anger. A few of these much he admred John F. Ken- Office under the Act of Congress of March 3,1879.
hapless choices didn't get their nedy. Published afternoons^ Mondaythrough F’f|ay>
appointments because of the "His admiration, however,” . at 1301 Memorial Drive in Baytown, Texas,
premature announcements. the. book relates, "did not ex- ■ V‘ P. O. Box 90, Baytown 77S20
• t^Gradiiially) the President tend to Atty. Gen. Robert Ken- v Subscription Rates /•
became.more secritive with the nedy who, he was convinced, By Carrier $1.75 Month, $21.00 Per Year '■
MmspbndeqtE^|Bd»!jbecause I1: , attemped to sabotage his nomi- Single Copy Price 10c .f
was his direct contact with nation for the vice-president In Re^emed Natl® By .
I Texas5 Newspaper Representatives, Inc.
-"So vehement were his feel- ' mkmbf.r or the associated cress
inm, m ,i,0» ... Th» AwoeUted Prill In entltUd Mcltulvely to tin u« for ropubllcallon of
ings on this matter that at one tnr newi oupmicliOi crtdlted to It or not otl»rwl«« crwdltvd In thin P»t ir and
enter his office at will, it he had session 1 told him my under- locaia nun «« apomanaow «ngia pubii«M« baram.. Kisms a Breimm of
no .visitors, but one day his sec- standing of the vice presidential
retary said I would have to ar- nomination as outlined ealrlier
range an appointment in the in this book.
“It was my feeling that the
"This didn't offend me. I had whole vice presidential hassle
was the result of a fatal mis-
understanding, but I do not be-
lieve President Johnson was
much persuaded by my story,
"He told me how (House
Speaker Sam Rayburn and Sen.
Robert Kerr (late senator from
Oklahoma) had insisted that he
>.• refuse the nomination, saying
he would tie ‘ruined’ by running
on the same ticket with ‘that
Catholic.’ And he added that he
finally convinced Rayburn and
Kerr by pointing out to them
that he and they considered the
greater danger of Richard Nix-
on being elected president."
In the earlier passage in the
book, Salinger referred to the-
hectic hours in which Johnson
\ was tapped as John F. Kenne-
dy’s running mate in 1960, and
jttkl: '•
"I believe that much of the
l controversy and confusion over
LBJ’s election is the result of
a semantic misunderstanding.
When Bob Kennedy told the
Johnson forces that certain la-
bor leaders and Northern politi-
cians were against his nomina-
tion for vice president, Bob’s
prime reason was to ascertain if
LBJ was willing to put up a
......light lariL.______\ _
.......... Managing Editor
Assistant To The Publisher
Assistant to The Publisher
...........Office Manager
% •
CAPTURED enemy documents
reveal that the Viet Cong expect
to reach their maximum West North
Q—The bidding has been;
East South
Dble Rdble
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
- .
1 ♦
........ . Manager
.. Retail Manager
National Manager
r
1*
■
the taxpayer?" the1 Congress-
man asked. “In 1946 it cost him
$3,750 to borrow a million dol-
■
S '
[;®; ’ ' ■■
TODAY’S QUESTION
You pass and your partner
V.
Answer Tomorrow
.■'I;
«ii oth#r matttt
THE DOCTOR SAYS
Thought for Labor Daf:
Work Aids Good Health
» By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
BARBS
■ ■
f.i ,
Fear of what the neighbors
would, say has kept many a
would-be suicide alive.
7**
i
Bible Verse
i
. -1 ■-
A trtiflic snarl is what
'one motorist gives another
who cuts, in front of him::,- •
Try Your Word Power
-r--NEA FEATURE—-
we
sr
f»i
* Answer to Previoue Punle
‘ Monasterial Bit
BE
>
r.
said, "Work brings its own re- time become a patient ana
’ lief.” Although it is true that that a patient may become a
the job that satisfies one union member. They have, _
man’s emotional needs may be therefore, lent theif support itxUy. said the Congressman,
mere drudgery for another, to the project. and people can t afford to pay
some form of useful work is One moral to be drawn from even higher rates for mort-
the greatest boon a person can this experience is that every gages.’’
have. Not only does work ere- adolescent should train, him- - Patman said that it was
ate the zest for a weekend of self for service in a field that 5eoEge Humphrey, Secretary of
change or a holiday, it is the stimulates his interest The ^Treasury under Elsenhower,
basis of both mental and man who goes through life at who firet started the trend to-
Dhvsical health t odds With his job is not only ward high interest rates. In
PTiS no accident that missing the whole point of April. 3953, he raised the Inter-
large armed forces hcfspitals, life—he Is paving the way for e»t on long - term government
Veterans Administration hos- a variety of ailments that are bonds to 3.25 per cent from a
pitals and even state mental produced or aggravated by prevlou, 2.5 per eent under Tru-
It0iidtoahrfmeenUenoffitoc^S: <*onlc disgruntlement. , ^ ^ ^ ^
tionaUherapy. Idleness leids O-My doctor prescribed
to unhealthy introspection, a saltpeter to be taken with my ^ i^
preoccupation with one’s own food A friend told me that ^oosd"« i?,mnh?^ nut^r^
minor sources of irritation, it is denterous lo Uke thU ^f86* ^
Whereas the devil finds work, every dayTIi that true? Of
or rather mischief, for idle what value Is it? S2£TLbS?.JKi debt
. hands to do,-a job of work .A-r8altpeter is potassium Interest on the national debt
-r -* well-done is a source of heal- nitrate. It was given routinely a^ r
Another passage In the book \ ing self-satisfaction. to soldiers in World War I to *3^"''B’SSVPS.
indicates that Johnson goes \ This has been amply. 11- suMue their "animal spirits “Ltod him *BobTtoeTwn He
■well-heeled. After SallnEer lustrsted at the VA Ifospltal It ha. also been given, in hllf
asasM«as .writs.; F^£Hsrs-.
aiasmrJSE?*
-W -asr—1 Uon ProJect) has enabled some more for any purpose. Jrv. ^1 not raKd lrierest
, cratlo,primary, but there ought. . rest oNheir lives 4n an ,i»- i***fi>- ?■ \ ' vifa llk# bourine gasoline on
to be wm, Wiy I call llvi xotti rtltutlon. lo return to uwful * ■*" ta**? V
there in Caiifomu. anpported by observed re- »•«•«/ inttmt in tutun columns guioeun^- on wa*e»
i
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J Monullc htil IX felE
S Reverend <ab.)' ILLaLi
7 Alien land
8 French river
t Network lahat I
• 1() Muuolini i title
'll Monastic office
Bolder it words)
ACROSS
A
1 Member of
• , a monastery
• 6 Monastic
. dignitary 5
/ to Estate
12 Weird
13Of mixed
Caucasian and 13 Blemish
17 Dessert
20 Twirled
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.* Negro blood
14Stop)maul.) ...
15 Maple genua 21 Malayan gibbon
IS Vicar tab) 22 Bake fltoit
18 Born 230stiole (mat) 31 Goddess 43 Fltgmsker,
10 Legal agenda 25 Music as written 34 Min's nickname Betsy-
20 Kitchen gsdget 2« Musical syllable 3« Body psrt 44 Soviet city
a Continuous * 27 Literary 38 Wild sheep 46 Sooty matter.
eioanse ' mucellany 30Change Ipl) 48 Regular tab)
24 Greek mountain 26 Seed care 40 Headgears MOppoiad to. ‘i-
28 lm«e 20Cyprinold Sah 41 Anger authority (coll)
ilAm/r'can 30lX. 42 One of .late 51 Set
industrialist PTs 1*1 ' ' inTTf M |tt
32 Creek theslcr
33 Sicilian wine
35 Believe
36 Monastic garb
. 37 Gets up
38 CreeVleller
x 42 Worthless
remnant
45 Fitting
46 Fly high
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"But Johnson’s people Inter-
preted this as an effort to. talk
him out of the Yace. This was
not Bob’s intention."-
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 5, 1966, newspaper, September 5, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145237/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.