The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 180, Ed. 1 Friday, July 27, 1956 Page: 6 of 12
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FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1956
4
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AT LEAST HE’S NfVEIt CROSSED THE STREET
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THE ORANGE LEADER
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WE WONT HAVE
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Editor
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BEETLE BAILEY
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election
Election
MOLD IT DOWN IM
CASE OF A BLOW-
plu
tw
Ast
IS GOING TO
BE FUN!
the voting will be written by both
the Al* and soft members of the
pick up their Sunday papers and
read these accounts nil take W
ter zranted they will be there
1 G
a P
presses all over me state will be
ng out copies of newadapers
with accurate and up-to-the min-
ute accounts of how the candidates
came out in state, district and lo
l
i!
BIG SISTER
Adyertjaing Direetor
Circulation Manager
races
Mett of the subscribers who
Boyle Writes: •
Most Brides Get
Homesick for Mom
SLKEv w TH5 6CBNT OF""
5 FLANT5 JUICES . AN
NseCT COMES TO VI,
TUCHES A TK16EK HAiK..
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Dtnner
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WU, M. LELWY..
‘WELL, LEAVE 1—-
ANVTHIN@ that I9NT
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I LL ger THAT
F61 ASENILA
"wLLakALAMOE
ON 1Ra N HEGE
FOR DENVEG . r
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Varieiy
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name will get bigge
Ey midnight it will te possib e
except in any close races that may
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BeTTER EVEN,
THAN TH 08
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ABOse
MBS—12
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NBC—05
NBC—14
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AND NOWwTHIRTY
MILLION IN.PL ANE
CONTRACTS ARE
— OuRSZ Twfl
WHELLO,
JACKE2
Answers
I Omit bom "of a "
2. Accent first syllabie
second.
_ .i— r.
W fa as MALe EGON
A — OVER T-E WOR.O..
--EL ENJOY ‘OUR -
7 VACATON’MK.
38
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Im MITTIN” TM’
HAY .Mee
vou OUOMTfA
see T’mone
7
I
Across the
Editor's Desk
Be A CULLEN snowsnc
Aiong abou 1 o'clock tomorrow .
night a member of the newspapers
stt will pencil some figures on
/ OH SURE "RIGHr
k TO HER REFRIGERATOR
8- DOOR"_1
L
I
A magazine published entirely
in I ar in in the Vatican make* only
one concession to modern times.
The subscription rate has a dollar
sign, • t ____
,,
-
newspapers along about I 30 in
funnyman fath-'
er. Ed “The Per. '
HIM. HUR,AXlOA1» 1
wure iN/ TNI IACI ll
uns, MANS POWNI TRUST
CLP sour TO «• A soMB 1
- THAT PCESNTFALI xd
0 g
Megnemo: • COO
KAATNB.V MaNM.*
Mo HUA DEsOIVES A
eai«c TiFUL, Liver'-
POLL LIKE yu: «4
OUT OF THE
CAR- rr.
T- s MCA& .
EJ '-AN ■
ejweye-3E r
c0ac-, ME. P
-a-w’Ad
IK
Publisher
Editor
....... Managing Editor
Area Kews Editor
. City Ed tor
Women’s News Editor
K
S
tweea ne v’v married people — the
nesd to find a ianguage of their
o n '*
Some men make the same com-
piznt a hour rheir brides — that
they don't irstinctiyely understand
them, he said.
I Better English |
By D C. WILLIAMS
1. Whm is wrong with this sen-
tence? "All of the men wefe out-
side of the house."
2 What ia the correct pronun-
cintion of "pergola"’
3. Which one of these words is
misspelled? Tahsman. tamborine,
tarantula, tantamount •
P‘E
2.
S
4 00-Hi
4 15- Hi
4 30—Bi
5 45— Ne
4 00— Pi
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4 sO—Ni
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10 30- NI
11 00-- Ne
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289106127,
WEIC+KNG
STATIONS '
25
1
James B Q izley
J. Culler Browning
Joe Parley
Mrs. Mai; Alice Lalses
Bob Axelso
Mr. James Deer
U F. (Bob) Mckugh
f y Krietsch
s R. Davis .
E.2
THERE! NOW r
all SIT fob
TE COTS-J
PLAe UEAU
GENEEALLY in Nature
ANIMAL6 BAT BANTI, Bur
VENLs’S FLYTRAP
TUK~6 TABLE* ■
Ha . -A 200.. . u
V32(6zoLszewarnEy)
9
< WELL,we wow PH L
A 19 CN TLB 2ISHT TACe
IN $uspacTNG LANKY
LINES AG AN OUTFIT
• OPEZATED GY THS
m- ELF!
))
421
--A
mediately went on stage by
playing in a Skowhegan, Maine,'
summer theater.
/ T-EY -AVE
( CR- N
\ DENE8,
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7
MFi
•/3
e2
Mrs
Fef
Nene
honor
shower
at hen
Miss
of Ear
Mrs. E
Refre
were si
Mrs. I)
degraft
Bessie
and dai
and Mi
■nd gha m thought to hew the)
got Mere.
Niost of the people who got them
'1M eOHHA L0M KXI NO* W 15e
mL#|S? TOO TW LAW 222
3IeeBU »II*S ALATOuSe )59222
gTVLS . A*r dolesa.comb/,cn"
MV gruss ALL A-T«*». rGaan:
. ha Kw 2 _r NARDLY UNPEH"
Hg*—•0" "U( 5TA0
MBsaV < 1 s000 ujnr
There lie almost 15,000 eligibie voters in the county
this year. Som: of these are Republicans and soma are
independent voters in order to participate in tomor-
rows election these voters will be required to use a
: ballot stating they are Democrats and pledge them-
W
2
love Ire if he is so interested in
all those other things?
Alway Tell
"Why do I always have to led.
my huisbend the things I want io-
do’ if he were absolutetv in lose
with me, would I have to put ev-
erything in words? •
Dr Greenwald, admitting that
this femninine trait often was found
in wives married 30 years, said
it was undeniably difficult fnr any
man to learn to read a woman s
S-
.m
- Aef
l ...i WAI.
, TWE ctufr-rv-catfr
Mt V
nt -.1
i ay JowwwY MzAeg Mew” $ 4
7 E
Tnm‘"
OM1' WERE boys \
• 10RE COURTEOUS )
. -=K VU WER= <
AGRL THAJ ThE , m
1 AR=NOWIF—
< — (23.( IM
# fom,
JEAMy:
HOLD IT, 6 FE!
YOU'KE NOT
GOING ANY
-7 PLACE! F
N
s
6925
1-A8,
the election The final stories on
/al TlI, N •
-ALGUESS
'<'’^’500^ '
mb=/ BRING YOU -
=—( RIGHT TO YOUR
I DCORAFrERA
A DATE ? —4
5
On Honeymoon
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (API — What do
brides compiain about most on a
honeymoon?
“Surprisingly, the problem girls
mention most often is that they
mies their mothers — they feel
homesick." said psychologisi Har-
old Greenwald "but usunTly a
phone call home makes them
000 to US. E-1
Ty-p
!T M) ’
3. Tambourine
4 To put off from day to davit
to delay. "I procrastinate more
than I did several years ago
5. Crucible,
ties ia the state
At frequent intervals between
the arival of the-first figuresun-
ti 130 a r.i. this procedure will
be repeated. And each time the
numbers after each cndidate s
PlS
Eea
—2
5
Sunday and within
403. ) J
4. What does the word ‘pro- FTTX KETT
crastinate"’. mean ‘
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published Sundav i orning and daja each aftejnoon
exeept Saturday. 503A Front Ave., by The Oranze Leader
Publishing Co.
The Associptd Pi' is entiued exelus ely to the se
for repblicatioh of all the local news orinted in this news.
Daver as well as AP news disdatches.
SUBscnIPTON RATES
Par Month si 25
Epitered Jan 1 1)03 at Poet Office. Orange, leans aa
second class matter under act of Congress March 3. 1679.
* What is a- word beginning
with cr that means "a severe trial
or test, ) “ .
Moment of Meditation
Thou hast granted me life and favour and thy
■ visitation hath preserved my spirit. Job 10:12.
: How Many Won't Vote Tomorrow?
In a period such as this, when democracy is under
: attack throughout the world, it should be unnecessary to
write editorials appealing to citizens of a democratic na-
; uon to exerc.se their right to vote. 2
t But such editorials have to be written. Far too many
Americans jeopardlze their suffrage by failing to take
advantage of it and itlooks like that may be the case
i in tomorrow s Democratic primary election in Orange
County . ’ \
M} ten 1 attentive
enough I thought he would have RUSTY RILEY
eyes only for me on my honey- —
moon But hr wants to golf swim;
and play cards. I don t under-
stand h m How can hr real ,
4 b i5.
7 -- 0,3
6(4pMK
Mke L‛--)
7
5
BANTog,1 Tugv wAvi Runes y S-E * vgav A
Tv* PAPER 9HE,iS kq *000 to UsV
,78
}
SAY I DD" NN
YOUMBLN eoyS )
DONt. do -war )
NOWADAS 2Z
I Today’s Birthday]1
KEENAN wvNN. bom Juiy •
17. 1)11 in New York City. One
i
> 2
2E
acted as adviser io hundreds of U"-,
newiywed couples. KtD RYDER
muESE ouGuT TOYVAYBOY/’us
.F.
Em
—..ka2
Fl
\ 202422 '
228
’•tv
TLaeTeseezansa=
" I--vg0e--
ahug-
FS,
lerNonE>) | Seek in Cti W- T TFFY WSUL, Vve apT A
THE HIGHWaY AN— - ■rr ' T JOB FOE yoU. X TING Z
PATEOL TD 0us: \ A X. 1 CAN USE YOU. 1819
ALL. LANKY LINE I % ( 60 FOR A PLANE’EIPE: )
TEUCI«$ T4K0U6) v win
| wess-)- ■ < —-C- \
M--S i T-are 8y39:6N N N)
----( KE.. AN' .ENTY I r fig- A J
t EAK Etow 7 »ao£**.
MEPEc:-
K513coweonu
K / Me ceasse. weveS
IN I GOT A CURZCEG
\W>a. &
3N
most of his train-
Inn from Mol
mind or anticpate her whims,
a tided
"It dces show the desperate
po. ar.ee of cemmunication
R
ILL ClL". IA l^ t "
24
astpa _2g
• a strip of pink paper then pick
# up s telephone and call Western
” Union.
'c "Election ” the newsman witl.
1 say, and the person at the tele-
* g.upa 0ic3 bau reuca 0. a
pioce of paper identical with that
he’d by the caller except for the
sigures. i
The newsman will start dictat-
ing: "III Orange County returns
trom (some number) precincts out
• • of 30 precincts ia the county in-
ciudimj (some number) complete
"Governor—Price Daniel (then
e figure). Haley (another figure).
Holmes . . ”
his will go on through the full
list of candidates tor sts e and
) . ddistrict offices involved in to
4
$
i "
1 z
I •
LDlTQglAL FACE YHt ORANGE LEADEk
s
F .
□
I n
COD FIRST JOB is
TO PITCH OUR TENT
-UGH!-IT5 HEAVY!
mHqsec-
Mr-we
5"7} 52) •
inorxow s ill’S. Democratic pri:
mary election Figures also will
be dictated for three --ierendum
propositions on the ballot.
Within a few minutes a bell
on the teletype machine in a
liddle nook fuel eft The Leader’s
news room will jangle five
times. This is a signal that Im-
portant news is about to come
l hen the keys on the tejetype
machine, operating at an unvary-
ing to words a mine - wu st t
typing out something elong this or-
u... DULEEIIN — Dai as. Juiy
28 (AP) — Reurns from (some
numbe:) of the 254 counties in
Texas early tonight gave Joon’
—boe a slim lead in te race or
gov arnor." .
The tigures that follow will be
those just wired in from Orange
County added to others just wired
or phoned from mzny other coun-
selves to support the nominees of this primary.
4 Since they cannot particivate in the selection of state ue.r.op to determine or guess
: and local publicrofficials without voting in the Demo- accurately the entire outcome of
cratic primaries man- such voters are willing to sub-
scribe to‘the pledge, which does not bind them to sup:
2 port the Democratic nominee for president.
• Absentee voting indicated that only about 9,100 xot-
. ers in all categories will participate in tomorrow’s e ec-
tion. That s just s little over two-thirds of the potential:
. It seems unbelievable that almost 8,000 Orange County
residants will fail to exercise their rigbt to vote in this,
or-any other election but that’s goingto happen unlesst cal
the ratio of absentee votes to total votes that has pre-
vaiied in past years is substantially thangad.
Political observers say the apparen lack of interest
. in tomorrow’s election is due to the small number of
fact Fool” Wynn.
Graduat-
ing from St.
John’s Military
Academy, ht 1m-
I
JOHNNY HAZARD
there will be still asleep, worn
out by the tiring experience of be-
ing a small but fast moving cog
in a vast and complicated piece
of machinery
This piee of machinery is the
Texas lection Bureau, an organ •
ztion set up by the newspapers
of leva* for fast compilation of
returns in state elections.
»-E Tgi.ll US A WAV TO >
- kei P UP MR. REO RIATA N
7v-
/ 1
i
Mon Common
"After homesickness " he re-,
marked, "the most common prob-
lent brides mention is their hus-
bands lack of underline's They
are compietely dismayed by the
way he throws his clothes around
Brides have a nearer nesting in
si met They can r understand how
a man can be so untidy, and may-
be they worry a bitthat they'ir
have to spend the rest o' 1deir
lives pickthg up after him"
The rroblem of sexual adjust-
ment. Dr Greenwald has found,
often arises from feminine ignor,1
kgee.
/ Here are other complaints he
hears ft os' often from brides:, L
henpy again.
‘f** never met a bridegroom
who admitted he feltJoaesome fer
his father Women are more will-
ing to tell their hone, moon trou-h
bles thaq men Most men test
have to keep a suif upper
lip — like Gary Cooper"'
Dr Greenwaid, a midtown psy-|
thoanaiysr. is somethin* of-a.spe-
ciahst in the woes of honeymoon-’
e i As stafr consultant for the
Hotel Concord, a Catskil Mountaih
tesort at Kiamesha lake he has -
WELL HAVES
« zA-TsiRE 3) (w2Sta5, WVAnVTNINa,SI)) oranvyauug,— -----
gmmNd#
/ t 2
/e.
o f the m d f •
s o p h l a t i - •
cated comedians
on stage and
screen, he got .
g #e 59
r. H
A LANPiNa ....J—
* R-1UT THAT’F pgR'
PLANEI WWAr'§ TDOI
• BACK MEREr —
S_____
• AKM49AN, N yh
a, 2 ,4
rhe state totals ia return (at a
cost of $33 for the two primary
elections) The Leader will he
zetting lOgether the figures fr
the stories its staff member*
wil do on district, county and
precinet races.
Teo reporiers will be statjoned
in the county c erk a office at the
courthouse One will write down
the returns as •the*' are ca led eff
from sheets brought in by the
election judges, fhe other will
tlephone these figures over a
direct wire from the courthouse to
the ncwspaper office
A copy of the results from each
precinct wilt be sent down to the
composing room as soon as thev
art received for inclusion in a
box-by box report on the election
for this county
Whenever the returns for th s
county are all in the storv on the
local races will be written We
figure that will be somewhere be-
tween midnight and I am. Sun-
day.
The f-nat AP report will come
or' thete'etypeai 1 30 a m and
in a last furious burst of action
the peopie at the ropy desk, lino-
type operators a proofreader,
makeup men. stereotypers and
pressmen will "'putt the paper to
bed
Then they 11 go home to. brd
themseives, but not for long in
an effort to select a date when
the fewest number would be a a ay
on vacation the committee ar-
ranking this years picnic for
I eader employ es scheduled it for
the day after the election
23
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JAiFw-Xg
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8."
b-‛ c-E 2 24.
. county offices in which there is opposition. But the few
which are at stake are important positions and the suc-
: cessful candidaes should be chosen by a majority of the
total number of voters rather than just a majority of
those actually going to the polls.
Bsides, there are a number of state offices to be
Ji/ed and in most of these races there are at least two
Wcandidates. Moat important of these contests is the race
' for governor which'has-drawn six candidates in this
primary.
So we urge you: Vote tomorrow if you are eligible.
Don’t risk losing ' our right of expression at the ballot
box by failing to exercise it.
Unused yaccine Won't Stop Polio
One day this week the mother of an indigent Orange
‘ County family made the statement to a physician that
her children had not been given the free Salk vaccine
available to them because she is "opposed to it.”
, There is now overwhelming evidence that this vac-
j cine prevents polio in most people. And. when adminis-
’ tered far enough in adv a tee of 'he onset of an attack of
__; it appears to minimize the effects.
Yet there still seems to be many personsin the coun-
: fi besides the mother mention’zd who. if not actually
. opposed to the use of the vaccine, are not sold on the
• idea of using it.
• We are in the midst of an outbreak of polio that will
reach the epidemic stage by the time school reopens
; unless it is checked The State Department of Public
Health, joined by members of the medical profession
• here and the Orange City-County Health Unit, has said
• the best way to check an outbreak of polio is through
widespread use of the Salk vaccine. *
■ Thousands of residants of the couny already have
• been given the vaccine and the fact may cause some to
wonder why it is that we are having one of the worst
outbieaks of polio in history here That can be answered
j this way: Imagine what this outbreak would be ltke if
these thousands were not already protected against
I polio.
Supplies of the Salk vaccine have increased to the
• point wher it is now availdble to all persons between
. 6 months and 19 years of age and to every pregnant
mother:: . - •...
; A lot of vaccine for this eligible group is in refrig-
: erators but it does no good there. We will have to get
1 it out of the refrigerators and into people if we make
elfctive use of it-in checking this serious outbreak of
Fr olio.. f
QUINCY, IASS PATRiQT LEDGER: "George
. Washington explained why men owe some of their
time to their coumry. Ke said, '. . . every citizen who
' < oys protectioh of a free (unoppressed) government
owes not only a proportion of his property but even
his personal services to tile defense of it-' . . . When
George Washington spoke, the dangers wre small com-
pared to the terrible risks of (We Mid-Twentieth Cen-
tury.”
/(
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 180, Ed. 1 Friday, July 27, 1956, newspaper, July 27, 1956; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1443541/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.