The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 241, Ed. 1 Monday, July 5, 1965 Page: 4 of 12
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i*
Ml
Monaay, Juiy a, |Y6o
I
“
2Hfp Sajjtatmt &ttn Washington Merry-Go-Round- | Anti-Poverty Editorials - .
De Gaulle Indicates LBJ Visit Welcome ”" ^ Righfs Are
By BBEW PKAIMON iei*n country. H* ran spot ml*- Secretary of Slate Cordell Hull ion ha* been careful to keep _ J||||U_
WASHINGTON It would ' ikes quicker than many of hU put llcly spanked De Gaulle a* While Houie reaction to De „*1,‘‘TTT *"t, + + I
rive a Wg hotel to iheAmerlean cabinet member!, will pick up head of the "ao-called Free Gaulle outwardly cordial, WAKllJNGTON-VlarlMn Con- ^ I I *
Image now sagging In Western 'he telephone to tell them aoout French” — a »lur which rankle* Whether becauae of thi* or for Rivswnan Adam Claytwt Powell II II AN
KTbSve made- It. the general to tWa day — John- other ram De Gaulle repeat- teritararaMer ttoyav IS r±~\ tf T 17] Pfl
a couple of goodwill pilgrimage* And In the aame m inner h* edly naked the vleepn.ldetit to ^ I \ VU II I I lllXAVl
abroad keep, an eagle eye oo th* pn* _ convey hi* best wlahe, to Preai- ^____
The Preaklent la arrest cam- [*J» 'tommltte#' CarJtai CommL//l/S/77 hope that the two couldmeet for "Sant fiesta* of jxilltleul putrev-
palnner at home and an effee- chef committee on Capitol K^UIIUIW III bill l^rt-o^arTtaS^ a<^" "roughout Ihc country.
Uy* diplomat abroad. A^ vice Hill. * nf“n ,<>nMn ,ant- Powell, powerful chairman of
president, he made pitartmares No President ever had aueh a Tn/prnnrp NOTH- Don't be surorised if the HouseEducation and Labor
to India. Pakistan. Northwest ramified gr*»p of government or I UlCl U//V.CT a meeting la arranged between Cbmmlttee. wa* irked because
Africa, Japan, and various part* worked harder at It. Thla makei _ . _ , thcae two long - legged leader* factional foes had been given
of Aaia. Fateh time lie won It all the more Important for f] n T La D.cp aomellme In the fall or late sum- control <4 the anti-poverty pro-
friend* for the USA. him to get nut of town occasion- Wfi / l/C A/jfc? mer when the end of the moo- gr,m |n his New York district.
ally; alao out of the country - won season In Viet Nam should But the flamboyant congress-
not only to find cut what others By H, L. HUNT put the North Vietnamese in a man-minister Is wearing a hap-
thinking, tad to Influence Apparently, tolerance of ('em- better mo*>_ nefotiate. IF. ,,y w.nile these day,. Poverty
monism It on the rise, while barely poaalble De G«ulle might Czar Sargent Shriver has lust
leslstance to communism Is ebb- use his K-sxi offices to help se.- announced a new grant of $1.5
Ing. In fart, the popularity o( tie the rrlsls. million to aid Ihc Harlem
Communism la rising In „ .. , The fund* will be
United Stale*. HIGHLIGHT OF Vice President |)y HARYOU-ACi',
[Humphrey's aatronsutleal trip to „1v KroUp that is tightly
France wa* the chat between trolled by Powell and his
srt* wvss "W'iwtau,.-.,*»...
(he two American astronauts. y(.ur fXlH utlve director, Living-
The three spacemen were so sllin winpste, is a former ad-
friendly that a Russian agent ministrntivc assistant n Pcwell
shadowing Cagur.n didn't like it j,,|in [| Young a veteran l*ow-
our Institutions and Humphrey, who is an old hand ell adviser. h«, been carried on
at competing with sideahowa and the HARYOU-ACT payroll as a
horse raqgs at county fain, tool: 550-a-day "real estate consult-
the two American astronauts In- anl "
to ihc Russian space exhibit The erganlratlon, by strange
The Russians had planned their coincidence, pays $50,000 in rent
exhibit well and the I lace was le the Abyssinian Baptist
crowded. Oirch. of which Adam Clayton
"('(■me on. boys." said Hubert Powell i« pastor,
to MrDivitt and White Grabbing Waldo Parrish, another Powell
each by the hand so they wmild associate and former aide has
not get cepnrMe I In the crowd been employed h> HARYOU-
Humphrey walked in. swept ACT as an Vt.lWO-a-year assist-
through the Russian pavilion, ant l< the group's h ud of di-
then swept cut. wit! alsu t twe tect ir ’riiose directors, irct-
thtrds of the crowd following the dentally, are sup-s,se t to receive
no salai.es from the non-prof
it" organisation. Hut five dim-
tors, nreonling to the New York
Herald Tribune, have received
lush "consultirg fees" from the
group
During the 'unc morths that
endeil last March HARYOU
ACT spent $2.1 milli n in fed-
era I and city lends more than
half of it in salaries and con-
sult.ml fees The I '«st funds
made a\ 'liable by Shiner's 0.
of Keor.oiiiir Opputunitv
will enable HAPYOH...(T t<
hue .mother 2 2VI ad niters of
Ref Pi well
Siur.d IIAUYJU-AfT pn.j-
eots It ,\e cane undi r slurp al-
t i< k One, the ro-callid Hi sires
Hntoipi'so I’ncrani, was de-
scried a. aid h o -I Imsmcssr.e n,
and several thousand dollar
were sis m to im. nce a "ei ffer-
s's-o ' »• the heart of M il 'em.
Tic * i.n. e .li.,p w s c-h 'lx stmt
d -w II, .-III ■ I -1 r and a li -If
in Apt11 tml Urn- de ui'l no'
>;iv whs '
General Uuifo
“*ul Putntsn
.. Mu *a
N*B*Ml Mutftfrr
Sant*
Utflea un4*r Uw Act of Omgrroa of Matroh A lt».
One of the major changeg in the Texag Coda of
Criminal Procedure by the mat aeailon of the Texaa
Legialature reaffirms the constitutional guarantee
that arrested peraons must be taken before a magis-
tfv». - ~4-
« Poore* and AshWl la Baytown, Toaaa
Bukocrtptloa ROM
% CBrrior 11.(0 Meath. $UJe gar Taar
little or no attention
Lawmen in Texas have
provision in the past. Suspects
have been arrested and jailed without any legal for-
mality. In some cases they have been questioned for
hours without being formally charged. •'
The change In fhe Texaa Code of Criminal Pro-
cedure makes it mandatory that a suspect In a crim-
inal case be taken before a magistrate "forthwith”
after arrest, there to be arraigned and a determina-
tion made as to whether or not he should remain in
custody. ,
to this constitutional
homey'way of
Rafrawmud NoU*n«Uy By
maimer, and his
log to people have Impact. «w
Mm. Johhaan la alao « grpewu*
good-will ambassador.
And with Western Kurope crit-
ical of the United State* over
Viet Nam and the Dominican
talk
*
their thinking.
VICE PRESIDENT Humphrey
SL’SSfcS-.riHS:
Ml
MM BN
i
-
adir
0- »l.
U>— MIMS
>
SB R
Mont than eoMdenee attends
Republic, $>■
a raxl UnM la go. * .
Furthermore, such a trip
would do the Prealdent a lot of
surnmer might be
alao anxious to fee him.
lieu-
the fact that crime 1* alao or
the riae In America, for there
Is now a recognition that Com-
.minium pity* an Important tmri
In the currant crime wave, with
ICnmMi In the vanguard of
Locks Are Hunted For Proper Stolen Keys
1.BJ has I wen ccreful not to
take,pot shot* at President de
good. Here hi Washington he
tend* to get heated down, with
detalli. He knows government *r
Gaulle, despite
to
The change further provides that a suspect shall
be informed of his constitutional rights, which in-
cludet tailing him whatever statement he might
make can be used against him in subsequent trials,
and offering him the'services of an attorney.
For the first time that veteran Harrla County
lawmen can remember, an arrested crime suspect
was taken immediately after his arrest last Friday
before a magistrate and informed <5f his rights.
, The suspect was Donald J. Davis, 21, of Hous-
ton drhd Abilene, who now stands accused of the mur-
der of a Houston policeman, F. T. De Loach. The lat-
ter was shot to death during a scuffle in a Houston
alley, presumably by Davis, who had the officer’s gun
in his possession when he was arrested in Hufsmith
last Friday.
The law change further provides that any con-
fession a defendant might make is inadmissible in
court unless he had been advised that he had a right
to legal counsel.
These changes are long overdue in Texas. In the
recent past, a Houston murder suspect was taken to
the jail in Humble and questioned for hours before
his arrest was announced. In fact, officers denied a
suspect was in custody.
Defendants in the past have complained through
their attorneys that they were mistreated, even
beaten, by interrogators during long hours of ques-
tioning without having been advised-of their legal
rights or offered benefit of legal counsel.
A number of high court decisions have struck at
(rtirt of this sort of treatment.
Ve may not have any sympathy fora suspected
criminal and, the weight of evidence against him
prior to court’action may be overwhelming, but in a
democracy we must give him every right to which he
is entitled under the state and national constitutions.
We operate our judicial system on the sound theory
that a person is innoceht until proven guilty. If we
ever lose sight of the democratic value of this con-
cept, we are indeed treading on dangerous ground.
In their zeal to prove themselves, and for other
obvious reasons, some law enforcement officers have
taken the law into their own hands, serving as judge,
jury and executioner, so to speak.
This is glaringly incompatible with the Ameri-
can concept of justice, to say nothing of our sense of
fairness and compassion, regardless of the crime
that may have been committed. We have time-test-
ed ways of dealing with criminals. These have with-
stood every kind of attack and have emerged as the
bulwark of our judicial system.
Regardless of how an officer may feel toward a
person who has run afoul of the law. no matter the
gravity of the crime, he has no right excenf to let the
law take its course - and the sooner some of them
learn this the better. ,
The rights of American citizens are inviolate?
and they must not be deprived of them except by due
process of law. Those who are instruments of the
law, or who aspire to be, should remember above
everything else that they hold no power of decision
as to guilt or innocence.
WESTFIELD. Mas*. (AP)
that end by State Departroeni
mlvUera. As he «Ke toM a
friend: I Just lean back and let
those fast ones eo by the plate
driatkm for evary bureau, mds without swlnrng at tnem."
reports on every branch of «ov- Unlike relation* during the
eminent and rknout every for-1 Roosevelt Administration, when
It la like the prince looking tor a*1 Pjjbo
Cinderella and trying to fit 1 ** **y y* *
the wall, can tell you
leal most the last do'la
tatien aimed at de-
sUppera on 900 fret.
ears and merchandise from the
our law*, we can expect popu-
larity of Bobhevlam to go hand-
in-hand with the weakening of
Mu
The tan wi
Juvenile Court
kfi <o try to « In their proper I brought before
l>»
the moral code and the erosion
A:
of law and ordar.
mu*
When people claim a right to
disobey laws with which they
disagree, they tear down the
foundations ot all laws. When
they take Ihc path ot anarchy to
flout their defiance, rather than
work through the constitutional
system to secure legislative re-
peal of an unjust or unpo;>ular
aw, they take a giant step to-
ward the complete mob - rule
which i« C'nmmtin'im.
It if Ironic that the rise in
tolerance of Communism in
America come* at a time when
some p>litical interpreters en-
vision the Russians converting
their own communism Into a
“ttbmr *ocialinn
Socialism Is more dangerous
In iti "liberal'' form than In its
Communistic state. There Is little
question about the total force
behind a Communis* government
but "liberal" socialism is more
likely to produce new convert*
and, strengihen the Kremlin's
stranglehold.
In (air own country, liberal so-
cialism has made far greeter in-
, roeds than ha* the straight Com-
^l^B munist approach.
rest
f
can
•If
i] »
a*
fm
m
tlon
pm
///
ttrtc
"nui
find
remi
yj
if
irk)
Then thay sat down wilh Ga-
garin, an Interpreter in be-
lha
,-HP
rrve
Nroen, io discuss their reedi'mx
and experience* in oufer
Watching their enthusiasm, no
one would have believed that
their two countries were eyeing
each ether warily over Viet
Nam and exchanging warnings
over the luture. They were In-
tel-ruled only In swapping ex-
periences.
This caused the Soviet agent
attached to Gagarin to 'become
alarmed He kept making mo-
tions to ihc Interpreter to shut
off the talk. His motions went
unheeded. Finally he called, in
Russian, ".Shut up!" The three
H>nre men. however, kept on
t.ilkinr.
ed
BIG BONUS
| STAMPS ■
WITH 1.M PVICHAM OR MORI
TUESDAY
DOUBLE
Tim
Real
!*
Dodi
Bill
39'
Rinso
I I
mm
I) ra
DETERGENT
text
GIANT
IOX (net)
and
ten
fire
H.ui
hav
.1
cum
Me Morton Honey Buns
MAXWfU
HOUjg ..
Instant Coffee
27c
♦ Os.
Thri
Mt».
men
islat
cim
8 u H
CANS
the
Tti
sued
Com
"Spc
"era
dene
lent
FOOD CLUB
EVAPORATED
Know Your Bridge
-By B. JAY DECKER-
pnn
lice
"We have learned from our
mistakes and won't make Ihcn,
again,” he says.
Local
M-OL
CAN!
2
49c Weingarten Sherbet
Hill! Iff*
■ Dog Food
OT
35c
fee
It Is plain to see that either
North or South, or possibly
both, lost control of the bid-
ding, aince they eventually got
to an absurd contract of five
diamonds doubled—down three,
500 points.
North’s spade bid ovtr the
first double may have been
consistent with his style, but. If
so, South never caught on to
the bid at all. South carried
on as though North were the
moat honest bidder in the
world, though obviously the
hand proved that North had at
least a tiny streak of larceny
coursing in his veins.
Psychics may be paying pro-
position! in a well-developed
partnership—though even this
ia debatable—but psychic bid-
ding between partners Who are
not operating on the same wave
length can be murderous, as
proved to be the case In this
North dealer. -
East-West vulnerable.
MB BiAVY
CTN
lose
residents are a little
more candid. They told report-
ers the coffee shop had become
a hangout Irr narcotic addirt.s
and pros'itutes.
HIGH SCHOOL and college stu-
dents active In leftist peer or-
ganizations have been sum-
moned to a Communist training
eamp in Midvale. N.J. The
camp, less' than -'0 miles from
Ti nes Squire, has I een used
frequently foi putty funetirns.
Those students how at O.mp
Midvale were selected by Amer-
ican Red leaders for extensive
indoctrination.
Communist P- rty general-roc-
rotary Gus Hall has been on the
scene supervising the summer
project. So has Hyman Lumer,
a member of the party's nation-
al committee in charge o* edu-
cation. Claude L'ghtfoot, an Il-
linoisan who has served time
for conspiracy te teach the viol-
ent overthrow of the U.S. gov-
ernment i* a member of the
camp's faculty. So is Gil Green,
another leader of the Illinois
party.
One of the party’s bright
voung leaders, Mortimer Daniel
Rubin, has been observed at the
eamp. Rubin, a member of the
Pennsylvania State Bar, served
until recently a* the party's
vmith director. He row occupies
the vital ixist of organizational
secretary.
M
pay
Ing
25'
NORTH
Tuna
♦ *2
•A
book
CHUNK STYLE NO. Vi
FOOD CLUB
f Qj»2
♦ VI854
4952
J
CAN
WEST
EAST
4 J109 7 4
V 105
4 10 8 7
4883
4 63
f AK76
95c
1-OZ
27c Chocolate Bars
Aerowax............
QUALITY CONTROLLED
Accent
Kraft Mayonnaise
NfSTUS
KING SIZE.
33c
4 J 3
sin
sin
4A KQ74
SOUTH
4 AKQ5
4843
4 AK62
4J10
OUART |-9C
79c
QUART
CAN
Prices Good Tuee, Wed.,
duly R-7 In Baytowu.
%
The bidding:
North East South West
Pass Pass 14 Dble
1 4 Pus 3 4 Pass
4 4 Pass 4 4 Pus
6 4 Pass Pass Dble
Opening lead—king of heart*.
If you play regularly with
fire, you must expect to get
burned once in a while. The
bridge player who gets fancy
occasionally in his bidding is,
In a sense, playing with fire,
and he should be prepared to
j pay & penalty at time* for his
j misbehavior.
! Here is a typical example
| of how things can go wrong,
| even in the best of circles. The
deal occurred in the match be-
tween France and the United
| States in 1956. The bidding
went as shown when a French
pair had the North-South cards.
(O lMv. King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
GROUND
BEEF - 39'
t
fk
At the second table, where an
American pair held the North-
South cards, the bidding went:
North East South West
Pass Pass 14 Dble
Pass 24 Dble 34
Pau Pads Pass
East went down one — 106
point* — and the outcome was
that the United State* team
gained 600 points on the deal.
The lesson to be learned, If
there Is one, la that in the long
run honesty pays, or, perhaps
more to the point, that Crime
Does Not Pay.
t
K
Daily Crossword Puzzle
-KING FEATURE-
K
i
Sliced Smoked Picnics. -
Hamburger Buns
39c
...Lb.
rr$
..JIIH-I l-l'JIln-l
rair tin tve sfr.i
ni2i9'4i:i nonnix
dr.'ll nulls 11141:1
OIK BTOkllR 1310
HBMUI rj,:i(Sls
warn :)(•) wuiRwn
Bosiio M®an
ui:i Mnr.’txri r/>i
wan »iio is 4;
MMII4,:. 04:3(0
0M3rjn f-114 :l'dl4
MISIIllM 111: <11
ACROSS
t Celerity
6. City: Ohio
11. Letter:
Sp.
12. Silly
13. Musical
instrument
14. Metal bolt
15. Verb form
16. Canopies
18. Belonging
to one of
the Little
Women
19. Chills
■ and fever
22. Three-toed
2. Monetary 19. Pre-
unit
lend
19c
Turk. "
3. Units of
work
4. Outcast
20. Tibetan
gazelle
21. One:
com-
bining
form
23. Shore
.........Pkg. of 8
Bible Verse
79'
MEDIUM SIZE
WHITE &ULF
SHRIMP LB. ;
class:
TO GIVE knowledge of salva-
tion unto his people by the re-
mission of their «tns. Luke 1:77
Jap
(.Italian
poet
*
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
6. Dirigible 24. Bho-
7. Mends,
By RUTH RAMSEY .
Central Pratt Writer
shonean astaf4sj*s
L f
25. Pri-
34. Mischievous
asa
bone
s-r;
Lernon Long Johns
tart
7c -Jelly Roll
RASPIUIY
IACH.....
35c
, THI ANSWER, QUICK!
1. How much was Columbus
paid for the discovery of Amer-
ica?
SfOT Of FAMI—OUISS THE NAME Poitou. France,’‘uho carved out
the principality during the Cru-
sades. Later, near the end ot
the 12th century, they pur-
chased the island of Cyprus
from the Knights Templar and
transferred
there, while still retaining the
title of kings, of Jerusalem. .
Before the extinction of the
family line in 1475, It had
placed a branch on the throne
of Armenia, from which flva
short-lived kings ruled after
■8. Rant -
9. Extra-
ordinary
person
10. Sednes
17. Cdtton or
worsted
cloth
35. (Boom
36. French
ChMBO
37. Greedy
38. Vend
28. Man’s . 39. Wmvsrfa
nickname
32 Shape 41 Girl's
33. Borders
color
27. Orna-
mental
shoulder
piece
n
5'
Oranges
VALENCIA
U.S. NO. 1 EA.
5c Home Grown Okra 2 us 25c
sloth
S
2. By what name Is the pres-
ident's guest house in Washing-
ton known?
3. What countries make up
Great Britain?
4. Name the state flower of
Washington.
5. Of vyhich state is the west-
tern hemlock the state tree? \
23. Prickly
envelope
of a fruit
26. Reflect 18.
their, dominion
fager
Vi
upon
k 19 |*o
WT/
IT
rr
rr
z.
i
29. Oriental
i
if
porgy
30. Jumble
31. Ogled
ftHaiflHir
churches:-
^.. - . !
Fresh Eggplant......
i
.... LB.
I
W
15
1342
IT
What and where, is thla spot
of fame ?
- jNsme at bottom of column)
K> 17
691
* post
34. Stained
with blood
37. Beast
of burden
40. Wall
. »ORN TODAY
Mm. David O. Karra put, au-
thor* George Bund and Jean
Cbeieau, ehdumah P. T. Bar-
mm, diplomat* Andrei Gromyko
and Henry Cabot Lodge, celliet
Janos Starker.
III
19 ZO U
m
16
-LB.
i
•r
IT'S BEEN SAID
A pkn i* a pMtol let off at
the ear, not a feather to tickle
the intellect.—Charles Latnb.
IT HAPPENED TODAY
On this 14ay In 18li, Vene-
zuela declared her independence
from Spain. u.
27
/
LOAF--
m
it,
n
Close to the present town of
Mersine. perched on the sum-
mit of a spur Which dominates
the plain of the river Djeyhan,
Is today’s ^pot of fame, one of
the last vestiges of the military
occupation of Cilicia in the Mid-
dle Ages. »
The castle is worthy of its
classification among the great
achievements of, military, archi-
tecture of, the Middle Ages due
& fta MteMIF defensive nite 1 N°rtl>er)iJ,Ireland. ,
4. The rhododendron
5. Washington
3,
41.
v-
- u
\
51
to
■
officer'*
Liver Sausage
: AH Meat Franks
l Korn Dogs UST?.
Salads PARMER MOWN.,.,
Sour Dough Ry9
•WWTS
69c Whole Wheat Danish ...6
37c Clorox Bleach
39c Grape Jelly
35c d-Con Roach Prufe
25c Dog Food
-
A.o:*..R.y*
35c
mallet
♦(.Foremost
Roman "
magistrate
44 Fan ft •
trapshoot-
IIP
z
u.
17
WATCH YOUR UNOUAOE
ABILITY — (a-BILL-l-ty) -
noun; th* power or capscity-, to
do or act; competence; capaci-
ty, skill or qualification.
2
r/.-
r
..43c
</> BALLON
RUSTIC....
IS Jfc
MOWN
12-OZ.
1.00
.
41
ll-OZ
.....3
HOW D you maxi out?
1. $320. •/■ V
I. Blair House. . /
3. England. Wales, Scotland,
ing
■RAND
JARS
• s
vz
&
46. Mourn- ,
fully
DOWN
1. Barge
#*
AND DIPS
l-OZ.
i
IACH
YOUR FUTURE
Take care not to offend em-
SIZE
27#
/
PRIMES
TALI
2m
ployers, other fpoucra-UMt lie." and $h* RMiutW toilhfgrisbility
Today's i'dld will have a strong of jts wo"r * \ ‘ ' ,
sense of justice., t, j. It wa* built by a famUy from ],j
LOAF
4
LIVER
/
f
Try Sun Classified Ads
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 241, Ed. 1 Monday, July 5, 1965, newspaper, July 5, 1965; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145381/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.