The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 244, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1963 Page: 6 of 14
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Should We Go to the Aid of the Cuban People?
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BARBS
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ACROSS THE EDITOR’S DESK ...
How Can Anybody Own Two-Tenths of a Cat?
By J. CULLEN BROWNING
JONES' COLUMN
Odd Problem Facing Stewardesses
By PAUL JONES
nation’s
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THE OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT . . .
Palate Educated
-Not His Mind
R.‘
Not taking care of your ear
can lead to having it hauled
over to a garage to have it
overhauled
By JACK LEFLER
AP Business News Writer
NEW YORK (AP)—A new in-
Q-What is the record ad-
jourment time in the U.S. Sen-
ate?
A—In July 1963, the Senate
met and adjourned in three sec-
onds The old mark was five
seconds set in 1951.
lower than normal, you may need to take thyroid
extract. This would then re-establish regularity. If
your thyroid is not at fault, your doctor may want
to try one of the estrogen preparations (ovarian
hormones).
Q— I have heard of people having a craving for
such things as plaster or clay but I have a dif-
ferent problem. I am not pregnant but I can’t leave
chewing gum alone. I chew the sugar out of it
then eat the rest by stretching it over my tongue
and swallowing it by threads. Will it do any harm
to continue this habit?
A—Many different substances, not ordinarily con-
sidered to be food, are eaten compulsively. Some
people who have these appetities are suffering from
anemia, glandular disorders or some dietary de-
ficiency. In others the cause must be sought in
some deep-seated emotional disturbance In most
instances the digestive tract tolerates these sub-
stances if they are not actually poisonous Swallow-
ing gum is probably as harmless an idiosyncrasy
as you could ask for.
harmful as cigarettes.
The vending machine industry
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THE BUSINESS MIRROR . . .
New Industry
Has Emerged
NosovY 6 AEKAV
Q—How do rug dealers de-
fine antique Oriental rugs?
A—To classify as antiques the
rugs must have been 'In actual
use in the countries in which
they were woven for 50 years
or more
A taxi in Chicago hit a fire
plug when the passenger fainted
.Meters should be kept out of
sight.
This is a time of the year when us nimrods
engage in a form of outdoor diversion known as
squirrel hunting
in the days when our ancestors were just be-
ginning to populate the woods hereabouts. squirrel
bunting was not a sport but a part of the struggle
to survive.
Very often, In those times, the ability of the
man of the house to bag a squirrel meant that •
his wife didn’t have to choose between no meat
in the dumplings on Sunday and killing the old
red rooster or one of the laying bens
Today. squdrrel hunting is a sport. At least
we who Meige the yen to partieipate to this form
of recreation consider it a sport.
Most of us are seldom rewarded for our par-
ticipation in it with anything except fresh air and
exercise plus the satisfaction of blasting an occa-
sional blue jay or sparrow
But we keep hunting and on those rare occa-
sions when we do get lucky and fatally injure a
squirrel we carry it home with the tail hanging
out of our hunting coat. When we enter the house
we do as with the manful bearing displayed by
our caveman ancestors who returned to the cook-
ing fire toting a bear.
The Orange LEAD
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1963
EDITORIAL PAGE
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Any father can get the pro-
gram he wants on television af-
ter the kids have gone to bed.
it it suits his wife
is acting to make its wares less
dustry has emerged with the 'available to minors The ma-
Moment of Meditation
Therefore Gad has highly exalted him and be-
stowed on him the name which is above every name.
— Phil. 2:9
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THE ORANGE LEADER
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Speaktag olone for the read.” ever hear af
a 6,000-gallon Martial?
A western trucking company is shipping what
would amount to just that in stainless steel tank
trucks. The tankers have four compartments bulk
gin in one compartment, vodka in another, ver-
mouth tn a third and olives in the fourth. Reason
is that shipping by bulk has been found to be
cheaper than by the bottle.
This is the only instance on record where al-
cohol and driving go together successfully It would
be great if such spirits were always transported
inside containers and not inside drivers
chines are being moved from lo-
cations easily accessible to
youngsters
Cigarette advertising Is being
specifically aimed at adults To-
bacco ads have been withdrawn
from college publications.
In Buffalo, N Y, one of the
•E
e6
Institute, is experimenting with
a tobaccoless cigarette
Part of this research will
delve into the role. if any, of
nicotine in the smoking habit
The institute recently started
sn experimental dink for peo-
ple who want to quit smoking
The smoker will be given drugs
over several months.
WASHINGTON (NEA) - A lot of big words
about "monetary reform" are beginning to appear
in the papers
This will continue for some days. It will he s big
topic of discussion before the International Mone-
tary Fund and World Bank, whose annual meet-
ings are in Washington
But to the average citizen, the phrase monetary
reform will have only a vague association with de-
valuing the dollar, changing the price of gold or
maybe even setting up some new kind of funny
money.
These are worrisome ideas, only vaguely con-
nected with family finances or the purchasing power
of a pay check applied to the cost of living.
It is almost impossible to convert the complexi-
ties of international finance into everyday parallels.
Q— In Congress, what are the
chances of a bill becoming a
Isw?
A—About 1 In 10.
‘ By JOY STILLEY
NEW YORK (AP) - We sent
our son off to college to educate
his mind But what seems to
have gotten educated is his pal-
ate.
For the first 17 years of his
life, Breon's taste in food was
simple—and definite. A firm dis-
believer in togetherness, he
wanted everything cooked sepa-
rately, served separately and
eaten separately.
He liked meat, he liked pota.
toes and he liked vegetables But
put them all together in a caa-
sarole and he turned forks down.
Peas — fine: carrots — great,
peas and carrots — no thanks
In fact, he used to erect in-
visible barriers on his plate be-
tween the various foods. He'd
finish one item before starting
the next and would even surrep-
titiously wipe his fork on his
napkin in between if he thought
I wasn’t looking.
It was with misgivings that we
placed his dietary fate in the
hands of dormitory cooks 1,500
miles awsy.
Instead of the expected "save
our son" messages and urgent
requests for CARE packages,
we received glowing reports on
It was purely coincidental that the big
change in feadibility which you noticed in
your copy of The Leader yesterday occurred
at the beginning of National Newspaper
Week. But the coincidence lends emphasis to
our humble gratitude for the opportunities
we are having to grow with our community.
There are many kinds of newspapers.
We fit into the category moot often referred
to as “family." The term means that the
lives of the people who work for this news-
paper, the money invested in it by the own-
ers. and the contributions of the many in-
dividuals and organizations which go into
our columns, are all dedicated to a type of
family service.
This is the way we make our living, and
it is a richly rewarding way in terms of
personal satisfaction over being able to sup-
port our own families while rendering a
valuable service to thousands or other
families.
There are several parts to this service:
information, economics, entertainment, civie
enterprise, and youth development, to name
a few.
In the field of information we cover the
whole range of current events with both
news and editorial comment while emphasiz-
ing the local news. And we do this with
greater skill and more detail than is possible
with any competing news medium.
him were hurt by all thia there would be
no problem as far as Americans are con-
cerned But for the most part the little peo-
ple of Cuba are not Communists and don’t
want to be. They’re just trying to survive.
Some Americans have vociferously de-
manded that we turn our backs on the Cuban
people in this crisis and walk away without
giving them any assistance of any kind. A
few criticized the American Red Cross be-
cause it offered technical help and medical
supplies to the Cubans.
If turning our backs on this trouble of
one of our neighbors served any good pur-
pose in connection with our efforts to wrest
Cuba from the Communists, we could agree
that it is the thing to do.
We believe it would work in reverse—
that our refusal to apply the lesion of Good
Samaritan in this case will hinder rather
than help our program for restoring freedom
to the Cuban people. ,
One of the mere intriguing bits of news to fight
its way over the hot wires against such heavy com-
petition is Viet Nam, the tax cut bill, the test
ban treaty and the import-export balance is an
item about an odd problem now confronting British
airline stewardesses
Thia problem, contray to what may leap to your
mind, doesn't concern middle-aged gentlemen pas-
sengers who have a tendency to become cordial
to the stewardesses after a segment of the cham-
pagne flights.
Instead it arises from a physical phenomenon
known to science as Boyle's Isw. Reduced to un-
scientifie terms. Boyle's law says that when you
get high up to the air your tammy has a tendency
to expand because of lessening air pressure
outside.
Now anyone who has ever hsd occasion to
glance at an airline stewardess may have noticed
that these gala normally seem to have no problem
with their physiques or appearance, on the ground
or in the air.
But the British girls complain thst skirts which
fit perfectly (ah, yes, they do) on the ground be-
come uncomfortably tight at high altitudes when
Boyle's law takes over
Well, girls, if it's any comfort to you, we men
have the same problem And Mr Boyle may be
interested to know that we have to gain only about
| Qk/PiW True Life AdventuresJ
GROWING PAINS GGGN
Drs KOUSH ON
TELEPMONES
cum Ome « Ceusinee
OaatWtm Disrme------
0—For the last several months my throat has
been dry I have used camphor to swab my throat
for relief is camphor injurious to the throat?
A—Dryness of the throat may be due to chronic
irritation from a postnasal drip. If this is present
it should be treated Camphor will not harm the
throat but the mechanical effect of passing s mop
or swab of cotton over the throat will serve to
aggravate the condition Why not use the camphor
(or eucalyptus or benzoin) in a steam vaporizer
and inhale the steam?
Smoking should be avoided Drinking plenty of
water and sucking peppermint lozenges will help
but medicated lozenges and candy that contains
glycerin should not be used It is also important
to avoid stress or excessive nervous tension
Q-My menstrual periods have always come
every 28 to 30 days but in the last three months
the cycles were 36 days, then 32 days, then 22 days
What would cause this irregularity? ' .
A—Irregularity of the menstrual periods is
usually due to some mild disturbance in the glands
We triumphantly skinte little creature and pre-
pare it for cooking while the lady of the house
nags us about getting hair all over the place Then
she fries ft or makes dumplings and we sit down
st the table and have a meal at the end of which
moat of the squirrel meat is fed to the cat.
MU. we keep gatag squirrel hunting and I
guess we always will as long as say of this
particular species of animal fa to be found be-
yond the limits k eity gun ordinances, and some-
times to violation of those.
We will, that is, unless somebody forms an or-
ganization to render selfless, unpaid, dedicated
service to squirrels And that just may happen
because there already is an organization rendering
selfless, unpaid, dedicated service to the cat.
At least those are the adjectives used by one
Robert Lotbar Kandell, tub thumper for the
American Feline Society, Inc, in a news release
about Cat Week.
Robert Lothar is real enthusiastic about Cat
Week. Of course, he'd better be because cats, so
to speak, are his butter and bread
The year 1963, he tells os to Ms handout, is
something special for eats. It’s the American
FENa
N4ssFe
5355
Ve
Felime Society I XXV Jubilee Year. This means,
I suppose, that us cat haters have now had to
tolerate the attacks of this organization for a
whole quarter of a century.
And if Robert Lothar has his facts strsight, the
society is making progress in its campsign to get
catt into everybody’s house whether they're wanted
or not.
He sent along a fact sheet which says, among
other things, thst 20 per cent of all American
families now own 1.2 cats each I'm a little baf-
fled about how any family can own two-tenths of
s cat but then all forms of statistics puzzle me so
I'll just accept the figure at face value.
Maybe it's because there are a lot of cats
which don't wholly belong to anybody (does soy
cat) but share their time, appetite and reproduc-
tive prowess with five different families
There was a cat out to our neighborhood the
other day trying to share these things with 19
different families. It went from doer to door to
the apartment building panhandling and looking
to at those nice soft carpets.
Nobody would feed it or let it in the house,
even those who may at one time have given self-
less unpaid, dedicated service to the cst The res-
son being that the fine print in our leases ssys
that cats are felinanon gratis where we live.
This suits me fine because when I sit down to
the table for a squirrel dinner I don't want any
cotton-pickin' cst sitting beside me on the floor,
eyeballing me ss I eat and very plainly begrudging
every bite of the piece de resistance that I take".
s "eanondg-rmaEt Oe - — — mo"
Our principal service in the area of eco-
nomic* is the provision of a vehicle for mass
communication between advertisers and the
families who buy their products and services.
Beyond that, we use our influence in behalf
of business and industrial development, good
government, a favorable tax climate and
other things which are good for the economy.
We provide entertainment and informa-
tion covering the whole range of recreation
through comic strips and cartoons, bylined
columns, a TV log, and many articles, pic-
tures and newsfeatures.
We contribute to youth development in
many ways. The page of student columns
from throughout the county which appears in
The Leader each Sunday is a new addition to
this. But it is only a part of the many services
we render in behalf of the young people of
this area.
National Newspaper Week alsq. finds us
well along with the construction of a new
building for our plant and offices. This is
a structure especially designed for our op-
eration* and contain* a number of unique
features which have caused it to receive na-
tionwide publicity even before completion.
We mention these things, not to be boast-
ful, but only as some of the reasons we hope
our readers and advertisers will join with us
in the observance of National Newspaper
Week.
rates.-
$553 des , •
Meds,
Ekes.-
three feet of additional altitude to feel a tightness
around, the waist.
It happens when we rise from the table after
a hearty meal.
And if we looked as pretty as you girls do in
our temporary discomfort, we wouldn t be nearly
as alarmed as you seem to be.
So keep on flying, girls. And if your skirts get
too tight, and if British gentlemen are like Ameri-
can gentlemen, the passengers won’t complain
BULLETIN—A news flash has just come in that
airline hostesses in America have reported no
trouble with Boyle's law. But the least we men
can do is to keep sa eye on things
8828882*
55,-*
5-
has increased, too.
The smoker who wants to give
up the habit can find an increas-
ing number of aids in book and
drug stores, where sales of an-
tismoking products have grown
such vol
umes as “The Painless Way to
Stop Smoking," "The Consumers
Union Report on Smoking and
the Public Interest” and "Smok-
ing and Health "
Drug stores sell such items to
help stop smoking as "Niko-
ben." manufactured by M. R.
Thompson & Co. Crawford.
N J.; "Ban-Smoke” chewing
gum, Thompson Medical Co.
Inc., New York; "Bantron,"
Compania, Corp. Batavia, Ill,
and "Nobacco," Approved
Pharmaceutical Corp, Syra-
cuae. N.Y.
Tobacco manufacturers report
that sales of cigars and pipe to-
bacco are increasing Some
medical sources hold that smok-
ing cigars and pipes is not as
aim of helping smokers quit
smoking.
With some medical authorities
linking smoking with cancer and
other diseases, the urge to quit
smoking has grown But para-
Maybe it would make kids
think if a sign on each auto door
handle read “Don’t Slam
This!"
AHA-ROWN
COVOTW WHEN
KM FRO HONS
• 62* HiS OWN
TEKKITORY.
the quality and quantity of the
food.
The cafeteria waa operated
under a point system, with each •
resident entitled to 20 units per
day. Breakfast was to use four
units, lunch 7% and dinner the
remaining 8%. Every dish had
a unit value.
By the time Brenn got through
figuring out how to get the
choice of foods and points per
meal within hailing distance of
each other he must have worked
up quite an appetite.
Gradually references to food
crept into his letters: He and
some other fellows had gone out
for pizza; the tuna fish salad
was tasty; he liked the chicken
pie. «
Even ao. I wasn’t quite pre-
pared for his homecoming. We
hsd meatballs and spaghetti for
lunch, and as usual I had cooked
his separately, spaghetti uncon-
laminated by sauce
Mother,” said Brenn in dis-
gust. "Why don't you mix this
stuff all up like they do at
school and put a whole lot of
sauce on it. Must you cook
everything so plain?”
Hal Boyle is on vacation.
Sometimes, in the course of their relation*
with the people* of other countries, Ameri-
can* find themselves torn between the in-
stinct for self-preservation and the humani-
tarianism which has helped to make this
country respected throughout the world.
This is the case at present as we ponder
the political, social and religious ethics in-
volved in the question of whether and to
what extent we should go to the aid of the
Cuban people.
Cuba lies prostrate, right in our back
yard, after being devastated by the worst
hurricane in modem history. Her people,
already on short rations. have had their food
supplies cut to the bare subsistence level.
Thousands of Cuban families are home-
leas. Hundreds are injured and in desperate
need of medical attention. The nation's econ-
’, already badly crippled by the political
ditions and ineptitude of her Communist
rulers, is in a shambles,
if only Castro and the murderers around
Q — Why la Meyerbeer's
opera, “The Huguenots," rarely
performed?
A—Because it requires such
a large cast.
Q—In referring to himself,
does the Pope use the pronoun
A—No. he uses the formak
papal "we."
■9 zj
But at the risk of oversimplification, this one esn
be illustrated by starting with an assumption that a
solvent family needs two things.
It needs enough cash to rover current operat-
lag expenses and it needs reserves or credit that
eaa be drawn on to meet extraordinary ex-
penses. A family to this financlal situation is said
to be to good liquid condition.
Similarly, nations engaged in trade and friendly
relations with each other need cash and need re-
serves Sometimes Country A will buy sn unusual
amount of goods from Country B If Country A
can then quickly convert some of its reseryes into
the currency of Country B, it can pay its bills and
is said to be in a good liquid condition
All the debate about monetary reform now go-
ing on ia concerned with maintaining ample liquid-
ity in foreign exchange for transacting the free
world’s business affairs.
Msny nations have been holding their reserves in
U.S dollars the last few years because dollars are
readily convertible.
But the United States also has been spending
millions of dollars abroad for military aid and for-
eign development loans
This bss created a dollar shortage and a U.S.
balance of payments deficit. And that has bronght
on demands far reform of the imternational mone-
tary system.
It is primarily a problem for world bankers and
governments But the general public needs to have
a basic understanding of it, too. As the principal
financial and trading nation, the United States wants
to continue generating an adequate supply of dollars
for conduct of the world's expanding business.
U.S. officials maintain thst an adequate supply
of dollars is now being maintained by an intricate
system of swaps and borrowings of each others'
currency reserves
But difficulties are ‘foreseen when the United
States overcomes its balance of payments deficit.
State Department and Treasury officials won’t
make any public estimates of when this might be.
An independent study made for the Congressional
Economic Committee by Brookings Institution puts
the date five years away—to 1968.
What American officials are hopimg. without ap-
pearing to push the idea too forcefully aa a U.S.
master plan, fa that the Intermational Monetary
Fund at ita fortheoming meeting will authorize a
study of the problem for the coming year.
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 244, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1963, newspaper, October 15, 1963; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1531022/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.