The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 185, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1955 Page: 4 of 18
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DAD! W HAVE A
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MARCH, cHuM! YOU'RE edine
TO BE A HOSTA6E -fu AM
YOU AT THE FIRST BULLET —
THAT FLOATS MY WAY: ■
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2. To be carnally minded in death: but to
be spiritually minded is— Romans 8:6,
2. Why didn’t Christ's enemies “lay hold”
on Him as He taught?--St. Mark 12:12.
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NOW LET ME TH'NK.’ I'LL LEAVE'
IT WHERE THEYLL BE SURE TO )
FND IT WHEN THEY COME____
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seemed that pace and clarity of meaning were what director
Don Petrie was trying to achieve. To one who has read the play
or seen it in the longer stare version, the result was flat and
broad. The acting too was shaped for pace and clarity of meaning.
It’s difficult to believe that anyone who saw the Studio One
production can now have any question concerning what "Julius
Caesar" is about.
Io etTEB
BE ROOD)
if TWAT’S
getting legislation passed or blocked—as Congress has seen in at
least a generation. Both work quietly behind the scenes lining up
votes and agreements.
Under Johnson’s guidance the Senate astonished itself with
the amount of work it got done with a minimum of argument.
poet, he writes in an infectious pentameter, a practice frowned on
by der most successful producers.
Noel Coward says no character's speech should be more than
two lines, but young Shakespeare's characters sometimes speak
a hundred lines. Shunning the modern situation, this English-
5. For what wrath killeth the foolish man,
and envy— Job 5:2.
6. Though David bestowed much praise to
the glory of God. who told us exactly how
to pray and what to say?—St Matt. 6.
5 correct, excellent, 2 correct, good.
THE ORANGE LEADER
2
NEW YORK (API—Television, hunting omnivorously for new
writers, might well take a closer look at a talented English dramatist
wire’s scored some tremendous hits with London theatergoers. His . wn at number is there which on
name is William Shakespere. being diminished by 7 and the re-
A few of his works have been televised from time to time. He mainder multiplied by 7, produces
presents technical difficulties because he breaks so many theatri- the same result as if it were di-
cal rules. He crowds a stage with characters and action. He seldom minished by 4 and the remainder
bothers to motivate a character's entrance or exit. Basically a multiplied by 4?
MY LAND!
WDISIT
FROM?
FNX2
8 24
"8#88083
V NEBBET
"■SHOW CAOeeT,
. UPVATM^EH.
thing: they backed programs those afflicted with hay fever is
Very often it's the men who make a record tor being against that they meet with little sympa-
something—like Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis), who cheerfully attacked thy from their nonallergic friends.
4. What is the marriage state” in heaven? ■ misspelled’ Aonof these words is
—St. Mark 12:25.
c
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man reaches far back into history for his themes.
/ Studio One (CBS-TV) presented one of his plays last Monday /
4. What does the word “propa-
gation” mean?
5. What is a word beginning
with ge that means ''sympathetic
cheerfulness"?
ANSWERS
1. Say, "Why did you do that?"
2. Pronounce as sll-is, and not
sole-is.
2. Magneto
4. Continuance bv generation
or successive production; as. "The
propagation of animals or plants."
1. Geniality.
1
g.380
THE BIBLE . . .
CAN YOU QUOTE IT?
Copyright 1955—Lavine Rom Fowler.
1. Openye the gates, that the righteous na-
tion which keepeth the truth—Isiah 26:2.
9
NUHEARD)
5
•V^OCO.' .
composition product which causes
the wheeling, sneezing, eye-wat-
ering, nose-running symptoms of
hay fever.
Dr. Mayer sees no immediate
hope of cutting down the inci-
dence of hay fever. He expects the'
number of cases to grow in the
next few years.
Many Europeans who never had
hay fever before develop it on
coming to this country. Dr. Mayer,
who came here in 1942. is an ex-
ception.
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•..he BOA AU olo
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e*t ’
HER CO sud
TUNKEiS CREATIONS
-EVERYBODY WANTS
both the Truman and Elsenhower administration—who are domi-
nant in the sense that they monopolize the spotlight.
The spotlight's full glow was on McCarthy last year as it was
ever since 1956 when he began making his charges of Commun-
ists in government. Last year, however, he had to share the cen-
ter of the stage with the two men who put the skids under him:
Flanders of Vermont and Watkins of Utah, both Republicans.
This year McCarthy, Flanders and Watkins all disappeared back
into the comparative obscurity from which they emerged.
Television-Radio News:
TV Might Well Consider an Author
Named Shakespeare, in Talent Search
By CHARLES MERCER
Af
4
George's influence and prestige on the side of Eisenhower came icals start the liver to manufac-
at a handy time for the President, whose own Republican Senate taring protective antibodies. They
leader, Knowland of California, was frequently critical of his in turn produce histamine, a de-
ideas on foreign affairs. ---
As George, without bluster, took full control in the foreign
field in the Senate, Knowland had less and less to say and dis-
appeared further in the background.
George went down the line for Eisenhower and at least once
seemed to provide the nudge that pushed Eisenhower into action.
It was George who first suggested the President meet with the
Russians a few weeks before Eisenhower agreed to it.
Johnson and Rayburn are as fine a pair of professionals—in
The World Today:
Three Men, All Democrats, Dominated
Session of Congress Which Just Ended
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP)—Every session of Congress produces at
least one dominant figure, dominant in the sense of being effective
or being in the spotlight. This year’s session produced three domi-
nant men who were outstandingly effective.
All three were Democrats: Sen. Walter George, 77, of Georgia;
- ' 203
S “
Orange mW Pumeehme emmpamy
TM SmHMsS Prem • lent w«
ms ter wwtoen • teu e
smia mewepepe wmnwa era <
somscrnow nans
Per Moni -
m-4 M L Mat SS
These creatures which Loox
luce FLOWEES AND PLANTS ARE
Sea ANEMONES ANP ARE A FORM
OF ANIMAL LIFE CALLEV POLYPS.
D--- W E-g "m-
ENA LULL, *4 K
BEADS. TAPTANN
LPLKf WLDFUE
WILL? If
and Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, of Texas. Demo- i
and Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, 47, of Txas, Demo-1
cratic majority leader of the Senate.
Democrat George was Republican President!
Eisenhower's chief reliance in Congress on foreign!
affairs. George is chairman of the Senate For- ’
eign Relations Committee.
Johnson and Rayburn, as bosses of their re-
spective houses, ran Congress.
They, more than anyone else in Congress, ’
steered through to passage the year’s bundle of
legislation with a minimum of fuss and feathers. |
That these three men—all quiet, undramatic, I
unsensational—should be the outstanding men in a
the Capitol in 1955 is the best evidence that this
was a peaceful and businesslike year in Congress.
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I WAS ONLY
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WANT To-THIRO5 FoR
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WHERE FATTY FOUND
tMEIYN:
g-
James B Quigley
J. Cullen Browning
Mrs. James Ml _
U R. MeRugh
■ F Krietsch _____
• R Davis ----
883,2
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if
11. Subtract the product of 4
and 4 from that of 7 and 7; di-
vide by the difference between
7 and 4.
Cengress Did a Commendable Job
—, Because it was Democratic-controll-
edata time when a Republican occupied
the White House, the session of Congress
just closed might well have been one of
the most unproductive in the nation's
history.
But, thanks largely to the leadership
of two Texas Democrats and the per-
sonal popularity of President Eisenhow- ”
er. the session's record is a good one.
The Texans who helped make it so
are Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson and Rep.
Sam Rayburn. Johnson, until he was
. stricken with a heart- attack several
weeks ago, was Senate majority leader
and Rayburn was speaker of the House.
Under their guidance the Congress
approved muoh of the President's pro-
posed legislative program, compromised
on some parts of it and left other por- '
tions pending for further consideration j
when the new-session is convened early
next year.
There has been talk during the past 1
few days of a special session calledby .
- the President for reconsieration of the
omnibus housing bill rammed through j
during the closing days of the session
but the prospects for this are dim. 1
J
I
nxan or rwi AssOCLATK• rears
finish •uneny mermine mm eafly men aftm-
neon assess Batureay MM rems MfMi. w UM
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... igrel,
magnetto, mastiff.
I Today's Birthday II
HERBERT HoovEI, JR, born
Aug. 4, 1993, to London, England
■' Si
4.
* 2 F
12
provided itself with Little League
and Teen-Age League baseball facilities
better than those of even the larger
cities in this area. These facilities—and
the good they do for our boys—are a
monument to all those adults who in this
and other years have labored to make
2. i-.t , 7‘Cu:
3uidsas*eaza 2Vo3
%8d22M. a
WO. THIS 16 not A SCENE FROM '
Laws Cazzou‘s"AuC5 in WONDEELANV"
CAfBseys True Life Adventures
maw
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EASY
7/
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DOIT you N
EVEN WNT f
TO KNOW 2
My Q-
EXCUSE? 3
| A Problem a Day j
What number is there which
being diminished by 7 and the
/ OKAY, MADELYN..
_______ / BE PATENT..IM
•-----~ TAKINO YOU HOME
Quac! QuAck? A5 FT AS I CAN
ouAGx-QUAC-©-
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THURSOAT, AUGUST 4, 1955
7
pule A mining MERBERT MOOVER JR.
engineer like his father he has
been decorated by many South
American governments Also holds
several patents for intentions of
oil detecting instruments.
Boyi Writes:
Hay Fever Victims
Brace for Season
Just Now Starting
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP)—America,
which leada the world in tele-
phones and automobiles, also has
more hay fever victims than any
other country.
Why? Prosperity, good old pros-
perity.
This is the theory of Dr. Ru-
dolph Mayer. discoverer of pyri-
bensamine, an antihistamine used
in the treatment of hay fever.
No Rarweed
In Europe, where every avail-
able piece of land is tilled or util-
ized in some way, there is no!
room for ragweed, which is 1
UK
3 gives its victims—whose annual
d seasonal torture begins this
“ month—anything but a sense of
1 individual well-being.
2 And the ailment is on the in-
■ crease.
Army of Vietims
The U.S. Public Health Service
says there are nearly four million
asthma and hay fever sufferers in
this country. It is estimated the I
two diseases cost some 24,750,000
lost workdays each year.
One of the sorest points with
Ji
49
11
"Only in the United States can
we afford the luxury of unused
open fields and lots, where rag-
weed grows,” said Dr. Mayer.
I While hay fever may be a by-
I l product of national prosperity, it
LOOKS UKS NEW FAD-SDi
all'ey Cry--
El
KNOW WHY PHIL CORRIAN
SMELLED AFTER- MAVE LOTION
• WHEN HE FIRST MET HOU! _
Aside from the unwanted features in
the housing. bill, the administration’s
major disappointments in this session
stemmed from the failure to pass either
a school construction or highway aid
bill. However, sound arguments can be
advanced for the delay on both of these
since ach would have involved the fed-
eral government more deeply in local
affairs at a time when public opinion fa-
vors less of that. . ■ «
As far as the nation's taxpayers are
concerned, the biggest item on the credit
side of the ledger in this first session of
the 84th Congress is the fact that it kept
spending down to a point where it will
be possible in the next fiscal year to bal-
ance the federal budget. It has been a
long, long time since the income of the
federal government matched its spend-
ing and a balanced budget will be a re-
freshing experience for which both Re-
publicans and Democrats can take
credit
Another major accomplishment of
the session was the continuation of a
bipartisan foreign policy which, for the
first time during the cold war, put this
nation on the offensive in international
affairs. This policy made possible the
recent summit conference, the current
low-level talk with Red China, and the
present air of hopefulness concerning
the prospects for world peace.
Sen. Johnson, whose health may or
may not permit him to resume the Sen-
ate majority, leadership at the next ses-
sion, summed it all up nicely by saying,
“Everyone of us can be proud of the rec-
ord of this Congress.”
Bouquet for a Group of Adults
There is a group of men and women
in Orange who are due a vote of thanks
from the entire citizenship of the com-
munity. They are the people who have
made it Possible for the kid baseball
program to be carried on this summer.
Altogether, about 650 boys living in
and around Orange played on organized
teams this year in by far the biggest
program ever.
Providing this wholesome outlet for
. youthful energy during this summer va-
cation period required a great deal of
time spent by several dozen adults serv-
ing as league officials, team managers,
concession booth operators and in other
capacities. Some of these people had
children of their own in the baseball
program, others did not.
Because of their willingness to de-
vote their time (and in a number of in-
cess in helpig mm -
settle the Anglo- i X 73
Iranian oil dis- —' • W-Aa
stances an appreciable amount of cash)
to the community’s boys two primary
objectives have been reached: (1) char-
acter building through supervised recre-
ation and (2) a juvenile problem which ... _______________
no doubt is considerably less than it evening—"Julius Caesar." It's a study of political power and the
would have been except for the kid ironic corruption of men who try to make any means justify their
baseball orogram goals. Its themes are as1 timely as today’s newspaper.
6 HA. ..E j 1. , This department was fortunate in being able to read the original
, Over the several J ears during which London script before seeing the American television version. The
this activity has been carried on Orange original contained great subtleties of thought apd characterization,
has provided itself With Little Lea Rue In cutting a three-hour play to a one-hour television drama. Leo
Penn sacrificed most of the subtlety. =,
But in losing subtlety, he did gain pace. To this viewer it
Qut st (0,77'1
bD'iSETHICs
Whet
shima
dies—e
- -some
newspa
bomb.
The
Commi
Japane
much c
ABCC,
statistic
effects
has son
The
years,
rials sa
finding:
1
1. I
disease,
lent th:
ors of
21 S
opacity
blindne
Forty p
m==
—
enarFU rALL
4h
I WAIT.' ILL LEAVE^ 1/" SME'S AT D-C
VMeEAdye) ETTA A NOTE TO " k MOVIE WITH DEbe/E
IRFs4
sFe
ehers
Two squares of different sizes
have a combined total perimeter
of 112 inches. If two sides of the
squares are placed together, the
outside perimeter of the figure
formed is 90 inches. What does
one side of each square measure?
ANSWER
11 and 17 inches. One-fourth
the perimeter of the smaller
square will be missing from the
perimeter of the new figure; mul-
tiply 112 by 4 and subtract 260
from this; divide by 2 for the
perimeter of the smaller square:
subtract from 112 for the perim-
eter of the larger.
I Better English |
By D. C. WILIAMS 1
,1. What is wrong with this sen- I
tence? "What did you do that
for?”
2. What is the correct pronun-
ciation at "solace ”?
>
cl
-E=
RED RYDER
j
i
05# .s
MEAD -MAT LOMLNG N TME DISTANCE?
GETTING FARTHER AND FARTER AWN!
■MATS OLD Md. WOLF LEAIN6 CAPTAIN
TUSkeTSDOce"zEescM"EsR
OH,DAD-ISNTITJ—--m HM!)
WONDERFUL?! A —oF
ay$<
K Y% 4 XKM/.K\ J A
the kid baseball program a success.
AHHH!!
pesim
p_
n
son at former
US President
Hoover, The un-
der secretary at
state was ap-
pointed by Pres-
ident Eisenhow-
er in 1954. The
appointment fol-
lowed his suc-
AT READING CONFKRENCE
ALPINE (Spl)— Isabelle Jack-
son, 807 Pine St. Orange, is one
at a number of Texas school
teachers attending the seventh
annual enference at Ow Texes
Assn, for the Improvement at
Rendine. being held A ng 1-6 on
the campus at Sul Ros State
Coleg. here I
wevewenoovnauraeme.1 11
nev COM ® •aiCN ..6 EM A 1
AM afrenre . „-----—--" A I
n. <7 mieury sw m I
Wa- I •0t A ru5.. “ h
MmK $ 1M mieit
i .lu
W7
$,
cueTW‘YsE2nEo2
.*N "J sueeEST THAT ALL
a « 6UH» ExCEPT ai»tt
am BE POUTELY
ra n DROPPED: E
"So far, I haven’t had any," he
said. After spending 25 years
studying allergies, the last thing
he wants is hay fever.
He knows it’s nothing to be
sneezed at.
V U
NTArCASE
/ame=
TW OtANGg LLADtR
Momedtad Meditation
Fee Ged hath not given MS the spir-
INDANS ARE ON THE WARPATH! THIS
TRIPS TOO DANGEROIS FOR WOMEN-
FOLK.' IM SENDING ALL YOU LADIES
—LAND CHILDREN BACK EAST)—
g
Li
STOP THE WAGONS!
WE’VE CHANOEP OUR
'--,-t PLANS' 3
t! —
a”.
BuT A SHALLOW OCEAN BOTTOM.
------teneez
H=esEkar
gYgymyeclaa
Their plight is regarded as oddly
humorous. The surest way to
make an enemy of man with hay
fever is to tell him, "It’s all in
your mind.” I
it isn’t ragweed pollen in itself
that causes hay fever, but certain
chemicals in it resembling the
chemicals in viruses. These chem-
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 185, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1955, newspaper, August 4, 1955; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1443727/m1/4/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.