The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 296, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 5, 1965 Page: 4 of 14
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1% IWI
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
LA Riots Prober Is
Told Where To Look
r<
II
r
M
n>
d Sanity
puk
Chur
ln>
«r the wclMt he .uttered daw '
rkhta. tad
rtfhu.
Th
TUsigh
la ate
moat of the nation'* 87 million vehicle* ex-
be on the road* and traveling a record 8.9
e* over the upcoming thnre-day labor Day
(6 p.m. Friday to midnight Monday) the
Safety Council uigea ail motoriaU and pe-
extra caution at ad time*
WASHINGTON - Attention.
You will Had *l»o ttw the rlty
Oun
of Lh Angrlre. required
MMUtB l**h to to*
to pay
10 M
■%> ;#
he hat
n
ni a
lacked ea to
k?
Junk
<('
to
Met).
Aa usual. American fa ml ilea will take to the
of toe reeeet tea* riots,
failed to keep traek of other
la vast numbers to make the moat of the last
down to aitMH Thto all toe
Ik
\
at the summer Aa a reauit between
ipereons could die in traffic accident*
the 78 hour period, the council estimated.
tam-day period were not a holi-
day. about 440 would die. The council also estimated
that an additional 30.000 to 34.000 persons would
suffer disabling injuries over Lai>or Day.
Combining the fatadbr estimate with the ex-
pected volume of travel, the council said the result-
ing death rate for the holiday weekend could fall be-
tween 7.5 and 9.0 deaths per 100 million miles of
travel. The non holiday rate for the same three days
is 6J.
sort*
'U MM
r m
of the Lto An-
i prosperity
Dods*n. a
500 and 600
thaw E. Grtfaby, of Oahu-
*TF
ns protort to ttw
Duma baseball
ville, Fla, a member of (fu.i
that same
honw of ttw
St«l
.
Kavkw to ttw ton* of H r. i uoo
A
<
and aaaigiwd to Admiral Btandy'i
V
i
to ra
»!••« 1
Chile
and abl*
At
inf your Ulr»t Irnn of office
WAahUi^t.di
ty officer and moat of our dutlea
t
in
ik
partk
evani
want to grt to ttw bottom of
w
Int Imrrwlty of nwtoinlviiy in
loth*
and aboard target
tht Ufoon i
•Mpft. wtf
v
Will
<**r», and part of ttw *vtetod
Tamille* went to *wrtl
%
In. i
tot nmdiUona In attwr parta of
The council ftmaed that Ua eatlmate la baaed
rhi.
happen, but on paat experience:
an Increase In traffic deaths for the year ao far.
death tolls over previous holiday* and steady
craaaea In both the number of can on the road
the »wiua they travel.
The Labor Day toll can be held below the eatl-
mate If motorists will ahraya remember to adjust
their driving behavior to the weather, road and traf-
fic conditions they encounter, said Howard Pylo,
council prcaidsaL
iAS.®
not on what muit
beeai
Own
wait*
You will al*o find that some-
THE SUTERING of Command
in-
8km.
high up In Lo* Angeles real
tr WUUam W. MteheU. UJ.
cully
and
"Si
“Con a I a n t medical check.
■U
of Vnm to tt»* tola Qty
Hu*
A
lliktni IWifTib tefti nvrilt th#
men who participated In the
I
'■> rf1
•hocking fact that ttw armed
log project la favor of Uw Dad-
btllty
force* have failed to make ortV
5s.
fund,
.•■eklr
in so
mcmt
All ct
.civn
A mill
part f
shoulc
M.-th<
»•
tarn about which very ttttle *«•
Mn. Davenport, after her hue
Navy pmwmri rxpoaed to radla-
t
tlon at that time
:23k,.
an Injustice to have ttw same
c'iim maadif, )q|im| k
tof'fw any uiD* th^y might make and to be alert
for potentially dangerous mistakes of other drivers.
Beaumiers Life
Worth Emulation
dying at hi* home to Norfolk.
pert mem that occurred with ttw
women who painted the fluo-
•it box and ttw *27.570 found In
Va. broke and dlacouragad ov-
three checking account* were
reacent number* on the dial, of
watche* back In the early part
ADC Gets Controk
giro gifts of
Babson On Business ~
■With ao little known about ra- r
dlatlon and Hi effect, on ttw ^
ANDREWS AIR FORCE
BASE. Md (API - The Air
TH Repeal Will Help Unions
I he C
human body. It would aeem lm-
tor ttw medical force* of the
Gc
- You wttt find ttwt ttw city of
The people of Baytown who knew W. R. Beau-
mier personally will realize how those of us in the
newspaper business in Texas felt at news of his
Matt . Ita flrat semiautomatic
pirants to"both ttw House and "• ■ work* scheme*, and to eliminate,
eventually, other labor con -
attaints In the Taft ■ Hartley
■nMAAdrum • Griffin Acts.
Union lobbyist* feel that under
this Congress at least they have
UtUe to fear from force* that
would tty to cut back labor *
legal right* by such mean*, for
example, a* placing union* und-
er existing anti • trust measure*
And labor surely will fight vigor-
ously to Improve It* oongrrs. ton-
al "edge" at the 1966 election*
BABSON PARK. Msss The
big unions hav*'been waging an
one of the personnel engaged in
To
Lo, Angete* had atoeady receiv-
ed |t million from ttw federal
government to clean up the Neg-
ro shack! and Mexican ten*-
the senate Then. too. President
the Bikini atomic test. .
Johnson, ha* given encourage-
ment. even though sometime*
rather muted, to a number of
union legislative target* . . up-
ping of the minimum wage, for
example — eventually to II 75
uphill battle In recent year*.
8y
The highspeed, computerised
control center will provide air
defense commander* with up-to-
the-minute Information on any
airborne threats to ttw Boston
Gains In membership have been
hard to come by. Aa a percent-
Bible Verse
death last Wednesday.
Beaumier was publisher of the Lufkin Dally
Newt, and had held that post for nearly 25 year*.
But he wu more than a publisher. He was a man.
Often you hear people refer to friends as Mr. So
Sit, If aar one man had to b* pinpointed as Mr.
East Texas, it would have had to be Beaumier,
He waa distinctly different from most men. He
honors In his own home town than he did
beyond Lufkin’s confines
The Beaumier family has suffered a'biff
but to has every other person whose life the tal
newspaper man and citiaen had touched. W. R.
Beaumier wu a tremendous individual with more
capacity to get things done than any three or four
people you might mention.
menu In Chavc* Ravine
Then suddenly the city council,
thanks to pressure from ttw real
estate lobby and ttw switch of
councilman Ed Davenport * vote
decided to Junk ttw homing pro-
ject and sign a contract Instead
with Walter O'Malley, the Dod-
gers' owner, giving him parting
aga of the total wort force, un-
Vo
AND YE shall know the truth,
and ttw truth shall make you
free. John 1:32
tontam has been slipping. But
M v 1.
all that will be changed with re-
peal of Mb of the Tift-Hartley
Act . . . doing away with Uw
right of ttw atatei to prohibit ttw
Jack
— and wider coverage.
tourl
10 55
PERHAPS NO other piece of
legislation ha* nettled labor lead-
er* more than section Mb of ttw
Taft • Hartley Act. The reason
la dear. Thi* section give* Indi-
vidual state* the right to pass
Am
t 7 Pi
l» givi
union (closed) shop. From now
Know Your Bridge
-By B. JAY DECKER-
on. we say. watch the unions roll
to new height* of power
loss,
ented
trig an
It was JO year* ago that labor
truth
The Lighter Side -
Vacation In Mountains
Not One For Weaklings
waa given Ita first magna carta,
the Wagner Act. Under the spon-
sorship of the New Deal, this
measure guaranteed the right of
workers to organize, to negotiate
with employers, to itrlke, and
to be protected against unfair
labor practices. Employers, to
strike, and to be protected
•gainst unfair labor practices.
Employers. In general, claimed
that the law wa* one • aided,
giving full consideration to the
unions but restricting manage-
ment.-Over subsequent yean,
Oongrea* has appeared to agree
with thU claim.
In 1947 the Taft - Hartley Act
was passed, over a Truman veto
giving protection to manage-
ment's rightt. It waa promptly
dubbed a "slave labor act” by
ttw unions. The congressional
pendulum, nevertheless, continu-
ed to swing away from labor
and toward management. By
1958 Congress wu ready to force
union* to file reports on their
pension and welfare funds.
' • Further restrictions were plac-
ed on organized labor by way of
the Landrum - Griffin Act of
1959, which barred certain type*
of picketing and secondary boy-
their own right - to - work lawi
meank
Albert Benjamin, writing la
a hand to maet Uw condition*
making the Involuntary union
shop illegal.
In ttw 19 states which have
taken advantage of this <|>por-
tuoity under 14b, It has to get or
keep a Job. Repeal of 14b will
erase these state l#ws and bring
a return of the union -shop
labor contract.
Aa a result, unipn exchequers
in these 19 state* could bf la-
creased by as much a* 110 mil-
lion by initiation feet alone com-
ing from those employees who
will have to become union mem-
bers If they are to work with
firms that are under union con-
tract. ThU. of course, will sub-
stantially Improve the financial
condition of such labor organiza-
tions; for the newly signed up
members will be contributing
regular dues each month. This
will serve to strengthen labor's
economic position for lobbying
as well u in political campaigns.
At tt
(ha (British) Bridge Magazine.
stated by the UtUe man. Finally
Liter
relates some of his experiences
he comm up with a hand that
"What
out R(
With a UtUe man ha keeps nin-
ths UtUe man to And out whelh-
In addition to all of his other virtues, Publisher
Beaumier wu a
“I Could Be
Hibe
Ha Ukm the man aU right.
•r ha's right Hare U the hand
Benjamin composes
gifted writer.
Wrong," was the title of hi* daily
column in the Lufk'n News. The heading was a mis-
nomer, because Beau, as he was affectionately called
by thousands of friends and associates, wasn't very
often on the wrong side of anything that had as its
goal to make the world better.
Mrs. Beaumier, his wife, made a real contribu-
tion to the success of the team. Her husband died in
t the prime of life while still going at top speed. He
accomplished more in 58 years than
In a lifetime twice that long.
The life of W. R. Beaumier could well be emu-
lated by any young man wanting to be something.
And in the final analysis the things he did for others
and the pattern he set for living a worthwhile life
Rside by aide as the most lasting contributions to
times.
They don’t come in clusters like W. R. Beau-
mier. The Baytown Sun is deeply grieved that his
time ha* come.
If you knew W. R. Beaumier, you know how we
except for his ona bad habit
It
day
moat of ua, encourages only a
drive toward material thing*. A
house, a car, or two care. The
right school for our children, the
right clothe* to wear. -
What a dreary treadmill. AU
aimed at having enough money,
bu never enough time, A man
works like a dog to gain success,
spelled with a small “s". He
throws away his youth, his mid-
dle age,-and his old age, without
ever having time to study the
wonderful world in which he
By HENRY McLEMOBE
Vacations'are for the young.
And the vacation I Just finished
proved this to me.
Vacation* are supposed to pro-
vide an escape, a few weeks
away from the world. They do
that for children, but not for ad-
ults with any sense.
When you work 30-40 years,
you don't shed work with a
shrug of the shoulder,7 a reser-
vation In a hotel, resort, or mo-
tel, for two weeks.
Work is man’s life. It Is aU
moat of us are accustomed to.
Work is as natural to u* as
breathing. We accepted respon-
sibilities early, wore them at
lightly ts we could, and made
TOP LABOR officials are ateadi- them a pari at our lives.'Nine
ly raising their sight* tor further to five Is part of <
demands In Congress. .Still on born to work, aixT
the longer - term agenda are a vacation Is supposed to be
call* to reduce the basic work a time when newspaper* are
week from 40 hours to 35, to forgotten, telephones don't exist,
gain bigger and more prolonged and a man is loose, free and un-
payment* for the unemployed,Amiable, and every minute Is
to promote ever - wider public, carefree. ....,—.'.-----
No dice.
The world and work stays with
most of us all the time. We are
out of the shafts, but we re work-
WASHINGTON (AP) — Iran r horses all the same. Few men on
has had the help of the United’ * vacation relax. Most worry, and
States In heading off a possible feel guilty that for a few weeks
nritv u/hn r/ttiM nn in cholera outbreak by airlifting they are contributing nothing,
getbehb^ma£ XttandT of °^r f* Ju“ plsyln* ** J“ne' '
" ” Tf”***^. The Agency for International
8 Development says the contribu-
islation favorable to tabor. tion at a coat of *46,229 includ-
ed vaccines, air transport and
loaned services of Naples-based
U.S. Navy health advisers.
•tows Benjamin a hand, asks
The
East-Waat vulnerable.
what be would bid, waits for
presets
Marga
di r h
partmc
Smith,
I
gA 1053
. **«
#1011765
Benjamin never learns whether
the answer la right or wrong
4>
•aka Benjamin what ha would
do aa South, If Wart opened two
♦ QJ
• KQJ10M7654I f-
# AQ4I3
# AKQJ10M7
•> SOUTH
# K9I7642
clubs, North passed. East bid
high
most of us could
Bailey
♦-
*-
# KJ 74 #S> # AKQ10952
♦
marrie
Minor
la soma doubt whether it la bet-
♦
lives.
Rev
whether It Is better to pees end
♦ KJ
#4541
How many of us know about
the stars, the trees, the flower*,
— well, all the things that make
our world what it Is?
We are, most of ua, a sorry
lot. The clock and the bank run
our lives. W* are so steeped In
living from hour to hour, with
what we can earn per hour, that
the whole universe slides by ua.
I was glad to finish my vaca-
hop* that North will taatf a
Reti
dub against a high heart
Aft.
2# 2# 4#
»♦
The
U*. We were
work we do.
<4
• f •♦
Opening kM-ttsis ot hearts.
will rr
Dbit
feel.
< ■
(„vls
Sundi
-•r46fa.«
Uttis doesn't rwnsmbsr
com
Tiy and Stop Me
- By BENNETT CERF
Um Jack of
:_____i
tba king of
OVER TOE last several years,
union heads lor Ole moil prtl
have maintained agreeable re-
lations with the White House as
well as with government tabor
agencies. Labor’s progress with
Congress, however, has been
slow. Not until the current ses-
sion has there been a safe maj-
posts
■out* U
ssu
Good And
Evil Still
With Us
Train in
begin a
•hov wi
singing.
Cholera Battled
tba K-A
ANEW YORKER bound for Bangor, Maine, came to one
backwoods crossing north of Portland where two signs
reading "BANGOR” pointed in diametrically opposite di-
,J recti on*. The New York-
er protested to a fanner .
- - r~ plowing in a field nearby,
"This is a fine way to
confuse a tourist.” The
fanner looked quizzical-
trick! Tha
to
of
Mrs H
X
The p
' ■,;
p m Su
At 9
mission:
I’ott*-r V
IT am /
will be
The rr
will be;:
atom!
4#
M
a -
By H. L. HUNT
From the way aom* people
talk and appear to think, it
would aeem that the worst label
you can pin on an Idea nowa-
day* I* to call it “old-faihioned."
There can be fashions in dress
and manner* and custom and
habit. There can even be fash-
ion* In morals, the people In
some periods holding to a high-
er standard than those of dif-
ferent time*.
This feeling is the greatest
single Indictment of the world
we live in that I can think of.
I wish I were a philosopher and
able to put It into proper word*.
We live in a world which, for
5?
Daily Crossword Puzzle
-^KING FEATURE-—
Partly responsible has been
the hard - fought battle of AFL-
CIO groups to elect friendly al-
ly at the two signs, bit
off a chaw of terbaccy,
and shrugged, ‘Heck,
what difference do them1 ■
signs make? EVERY- ’
BODY knows where Ban- I
for Is!”
F'T'Sl
lay.
i
X
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
r
ACROSS
1. Mimic
. 5. Fallow
9. Tha
common
gaiwet
10. Skin
disorder
1
JTMTUI
2. Labor
union
2. Feather or
straw
4. Follow
5. Subdue
6. Eminence
7. Shun
8. Feather
9. Extras
11. Lily
18. Speak
lS.Matal
22. Magician
24. Worldly
I
28. Cistern
27. Turned
"V Inside
Q
By RUTH RAMSIY
Control Press Writ*
B!a<
[w7y.
out •
e e a
SPOT 09 FAMS-OUIS! THI NAMi tremendous task of rebuilding
was interrupted again and again
tor tack of money and building
matcrUli.
Yet, this magnificent building
waa completed and Inaugurated
by Nov. 5, 1955, when Beetho-
THI ANSWER, QUICK I
1. mat tarn Jabot?
2. In theatrical circles, what
to meant by "the heavy" ?
2. What la Popocatepetl?
4. Why to Iron galvanized?
0. What vice president of the
U.S. wu accused of treaeon?
28. Shelves
30. Moist
32. Minus
33. Dim. of
Emma
34. De-
grade
36. Tcxu
mlaelon I
38. Glacial
l
But good and evil are not fash-
ion a. They are existing funda-
O
thru fine boys and they're
all in college. One's at Princeton, one’s at Washington and Jaf-
‘ fareon, and one's at Vaaaar.” “But Vaaaar'a a GIRL’S coUaga,”
mentals and true designs Hone.
1
13. Solo
14. Sloth
15. Wrestling
17. Withdraw
19. PI. tree
20. Iroquolan
21. Affirma-
jj
Some today regard It u "so-
phisticated" to deny this fact
of existence. They devote a
great deal of time to making
fun of good and explaining evil
away. After doing this, they an-
nounce that there really to no
difference between them, and
never wu.
, Then they wonder what Is
happening to our young people
today, why even the best of us
too often lose a sense of personal
ambition and purpose,while the
protested his hoot “You don't say,” exclaim ad tha out-of-townar.
• No wonder that boy navar comas homa on vacation!”
ven a "Fidello”
con-
ducted here under the din
of Dr. Karl Bohm
' Name this spot of fame.
42. Grae&
1 P
i®
YOUR FUTURI
In C
ridge
totter
Ones agate, be warned
©{jf Saytmmt #un
I
[T
[F
O' |>
(Name at bottom of columa)
1^1
2.
against extravagance. Today's
tive
I
f
2
To
25. Unusual
29. Cutting
Editor and Publisher
■ORN TODAY
Fred Hartman
u
'(♦•••*•
ral
k
Jam ay H. Hals
Preston
Author t. Beott FUtgtraU,
compoier Dariut Milhaud, In-
dustrialist Henry Ford 11, dran-
atltt Port Otborn, actrm MM
Gay nor,
Horn Bept. S; Cardinal Riehe-
eotmonat An-
T
tool
Pendergrass
Beulah Mu Jackson
toe ant, progress be-
EToday's child will have
■a m
31. Rant
12. Maadow
35. Responded
9f. FartJfy
89. Football
ptayar:
Office
155*1
m
7,
1*7
Today's fpot of fame, Vlan-
rt K, Gilmore
Hartman ...................
....... Promotion Manager
na’t special pride. WU opened
i?
iB
oa that city's famous Ring, at
the corner.of Kamtnarstraaaa,
In IBM. It wu the supreme ex-
pression of a guiided age, whan
half the jewels and three-quar-
ters of the titled nobility of cen-
tral Europe displayed them-
ADVERnsma department
j»h« Wadley * Vfrtft •<( #*>• *♦»•»♦»•*• F »'*/.* iiMrXlilflll
Paul Putman .................................. Retail Manager
Conte Laughlin .............................. National Manager
Entered u second clam matter at tba Baytown, Texas. 77,521, Port
Of floe under the Act of Congress of March t, 1179.
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
HtWfl and Sundays by The Baytown Sun, lac,
at 1101 Memorial Drive In Baytown, Texas#
------VS, Baytown 77,521
ription Rates
Month, *19.20 per Yaar
Mail rates on request.
Represented Nationally By
Texas Newspaper Representative*. Iqc.
i
1
-
-WATCH YOUR UM0UA08
IMPERIL — (im-PER-U)j—
verb; to put in peril or ondan-
like wild bouts in tha concrete
Jungles of our great cities.
Good and evil exist. But their
existence can ba Ignored. We
can cease to honor the good and
condemn the evil. The result, na-
turally enough, will b« that more
and more men will do what to
wrong, because the way of evil
often seems euy while the way
of good Just u often seems hard.
To point out these simple facto
and their obvious consequences
to regarded u "old • fashioned"
by the chic and sophisticated
Perhaps that attitude Is b! itortf
one of the darkest examples of
lieu
o/ Prance,
Mikolayev
Newkart, violinist Jotoph Bet-
abbr.
I
ter
41. Mountain
gett, octrees Florence MUriigo,
wmwmm muum
frlm producer Porrjll Bonucfc,
43. Kind of
flbor
IT'S MIN, SAID
Mothing to the world is worth
/oof lair* Warm Mr,'
tM
55
§
5J
ceded and followad World War
I, ita quality declining la tha
1930a with tha political health
of Austria.
Bombs and artillery fire In
Ita most brilliant
44.
Apportions
45. Watrd ’
46. Toward tha
mouth
pre-
»r
turning ono'e bach oh what one
5
If
HOM'D YOU MAXI OUT? '
■I
loves Albert COMMA , -
u.
1. A shirt or dress front trim-
1
Tr
i I
17 HAFFfNID TODAY
On this day to 1>7I, the nird
mlng.
Subsc
By Canter $l«o
2. The villain. .
3. A' rrtfl*rtp '
4. To keep it from rusting.
5. Aaron Burr.
!A: wm-iW
'
1. French
writer of
pyouh Bapablle wu pro-
March. 1945, laft the building a
r
BA'
§Si
smoking skeleton, to the Vlan-
new the most heartbreaking
tragedy of the war, next to tha
o
comedfp*
^ T’ ■ w
■
On Sept 5, 1810,
■«
MSMBZn or THI AJIOCUTM PRKSS
,fs
b.
US Prw I* mtltietf •xclusivUr u tk* am for ruwbUaauae or
endure w II «r sol oUmtwIm «r-*M«* ls Jj^Soar^aae
'
. njn
twdo mi
burning of 8L Staphanto; Tht
V
:
evil In our time.
x4. ;
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- # 4_,-> :V
, ••
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A
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 296, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 5, 1965, newspaper, September 5, 1965; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145570/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.