The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1961 Page: 3 of 20
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mm
Modern Horatio Alger
U. S. Chamber of Commerce
President Started as Runner
WASHINGTON (AP) — Richard pins May 2. will leave Kim little
Trogne/u th® new President of the,time for company affairs.
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, isj The chamber job carries no sal-
a pot-bellied, sawed-off little ary.. Champlin pays Warner $70,-.
man with a big v ice." j000 a year, a large jump'ffym his^
If the description seems1* unflat- j f'rst earnings—12 '■ cents, an, .hour',
tering, it is W&gner's assessment ^ 8 60-hour week — as a bank
of his own inrage on the occasion [runner itl Chicagos Loop in 1910.'
• of his election as the chamber's! Wagner was 14 at the time and]
34th president. . • j went to work because of necessity.!
Wagner, 64,' is diajrman of the His fami,y Poor. His-fdtherj
board and chief executive officer w?s, a P'ofessiondl singer who
of the Champlin Oil and Refining tned t0 P'ec:e out the family in-j
Co., Chicago. He said, today he!Fome through sales jobs and wait^
may have (a revise, part of the|in^ t^We,"1
title because his one-ye!ar stand! ''Dont play, up the Horatio A1-;
as chamber president, which He-i".f'r Kit " Warner" saitj. "It's not j
" """i false modesty, believe me. , It's].
f just that in my day a lot of fel- j
i lows started with nothing and got i
somewhere. !t wasn't unusual."
Warner wf>.sn:t content as a
[bank rwTner and studied a short-
hand book in his spare ti.me.
Within a year he was assistant
j secretary to the batik's president.
, I Further p ro.m o 11 o n s meant]
three high school youths died as!shorter hours and an opportunity
a car smashpd against a culvert to attend night classes. He got a !
duritu: a hard rain storm Wedncs-, hit?h school diploma and took' j
day night. • . some courses at Northwestern i
The accident happened as five | University and the American In- j
youths, all 16 and students at |stitiite of Banking.
Bishop forest Catholic High] Bv-1929, he was vice president
School here in South Texas', werejof the Continental Illinois National!
driving to a cafe after working B;i"k and Trust Co.. the institu-l
late at the school. Jtion Jhat originally paid him $5 a
' Those killed in the crash were week.
Jimmie Hajovski Jr., .of Schu1en-| The stock market crash that
burg and Lawrence Bartosh and
Herbert Zimmerman jr., both of
Weimar, Tex. "
State highway* patrolman
Charles Polansky said the car
skidded -and hit a railing above
the' culvert near a cafe in' the
west edge of Schulenburg
TIZZY
THURSDAY. AWL i. 1*1
THE ORANGE LEADER
Mat THUS
Students Die
In Smashup
SCHULENBURG, Tew (AP)-
C
n
/
lK
r
1 61 ky h*. T.M. O S. P«f. 0*.
ELISABE.THVILLE, * Katanga
(AP) — The Katanga government
and black and white residents
pf Elisabethville kept up an eco-
nomic war today against United
ish garrison that was attacked
Tuesday. There was no resistance
to the arrival, and another 600
Irish were expected today.
Under the agreement with
Tshombe. the Irish and Katanga
guard the airport
whipped up a mob march ion the
airport.
Thousands of Africans stoned
Nations troops despite President
Moise Tshombe's truce with -the: police win
U.N! command. "; jointly.
All business places, including Swedish troops early Tuesday
garages* and cafes, still refused thwarted an attempt by a small
to serve U.N, personnel, (Katanga army detachment to|
The chief U.N. spokesman in take full control of the airfield,-
Katanga, Michel Tombelaine, was whicn was controlled jointly by
the airport building, but Katanga
army troops kept them from get- control
ting at the Swedish troops inside. !<,
Tshombe meanwhile had agreed
with U.N. officials" that the air-
port should continue under Joint
the U.N and Katanga , police. En
raged, Tshombe ordered "gener-:
je" against U.N. person-j
nel, cot off the electricity ,ind
ejected from, a downtowii hotel
Wednesday night by the hotel
manager and a Belgian police of-
ficer as a crowd of whites jeered
The Belgian officer and Marrel
Tignee, Belgian adviser' to Inter-
ior Minister Godefroid Munongo,
told Tombelaine that Tshombe's
order to,,impose economic sane
tions on U.N. troops had not been
rescinded. ;
A U.N, spokesman said Wednes-
day that after a conference w-th A six-hour extension course is
U.N. officials, Tshombe had being held for the fifst time at
agreed that sanctions would be Orange Memorial Hospital for I!-
"suppressed but no]( lifted." The.censed vocational nurses,
spokesman called this termlnolo-j Toeadav with!
gy a face-saving device by ^ an enrollment of approximately
president. But neither the Katan-:35 license nurses from thrmigh"nit
on radio nor local newspapers <- •. ..,.j rl-
al sabotage
nel, cut ol
water at UN. headquarters
Course Offered
*
By Local Hospital
"I'll say thia for Donna—her brother it cute!'*
year led to a new career as an
entrepreneur. Continental Illinois
had an ^interest in the Chicago
Corp.,.an investment ;trust badly
shaken in the market collapse.
Wagner was assigned to look aft-
er this interest. 4 1'
He. became president/of the
Freddie Berger, 16, of .Weimar, jChi >a«) Corp. in W58 and tui'ned
a fourth passenger in the auto, i it into a company supplying risk
was taken to a Weimar hospital j capital -for businesses and ideas
for treatment of shock. The driver jwith neglected potential. The firm
Richard Pavlas, also 16, of Schu-jfinanced many ventures and final-
lenburg, escaped injury.- [ly concentrated on oil. In 1954 it
purchased the Champlin company,
a family owjied business, and
adopted the Champlin name.
' Wagner says his success, in
business was achieved through
"the spur of necesity; the only
direction to. go was uo." He savs
he has more admiration for the
Midwest Terminal Markets
Watch Volume of Livestock
CORNING, Iowa (AP) — The: day of the National Farmers Or-
Midwest's big terminal markets | ganization holding action,
and buying stations, that help put; Livestock receipts were down
meat on the nation's dinne'r tables
are being watched for livestock
supply volume today in the fourth
It took workmen with Cutting
.torches more than two hours to
free the bodies of Hajovski and
Zimmerman from the crumped
wreckage.
Execution Stayed
of the 1959 slaying of Williarr
Rcdenhermer III, has won a sixth
stay of execution.
Gov. Price Daniel postponed
Johnson's execution from April 14
to May 16 Wednesday. This was
done to maintain a definite-execu-
tion date which will not "conflict
with an indefinite stay granted
by the U. S. District Court in
Houston.
The federal court ordered a
delay until it can hold a hearing
tin Johnson's application for a
writ of habeas corpus. The hear-
ing is set for May 2.
Johnson was convicted of killing
ther 12-year-old white boy July 20
Bill To Protect
Bicycle Riders
BOSTON (AP)— Massachusetts
motorists will be required to stop
on signal from youngsters riding
bicycles, under a bill signed into
law Tuesday, by Gov. John' A.
Volpe.^
The law reads; "Every person
_„m operating a motor vehicle ■ shall
1.959. Another Negro youth," .T~>ejreduce the speed of said vehicle
Smith, also has been .sentenced] to 15 miles i?er hour and sound
to die for the slaying. Several j his own horn when approaching
Negro boys under 17 were sent to
the Gatesvifle State School for
Boys in the same case.
New TV Show
As Well Worn
As Old Derby
Bv CYNTHIA I.OWRY
AP TV-Radio Writer
NEW YORK (AP) — Pat Mc-
Goohan is a new name, a new
face in American television. But
"Danger Man,'^ the series in
which he stars, seems as familiar
and .well-worn as last winter's
hat.
The - first episode of the CBS
program which started Wednes-
day night was a carbon copy of
all those foreign intrigue tales of
a 1,001 TV nights before it.
The hero, John Drake—played
by the dashing McGoohan—is an
international cloak-and-dagger op-
erative. There is the usual meet-
ing in a Paris Sidewalk dafe, with
exchange of secret passwords,
when hq receives his assignment.
Hans Vogler, chief executioner
of an unnamed enemy, has killed
old Prof. Barloff.
Get Vogler.
Drake does, of course, after the
usual chase through the. woods,
a child on a' bicycie, "and Tf"said,The chase' was a little more corn-
child shall signal for him to stopplicated* than usual because Drake
man born to wealth who achieves
. i success in his own right.
For Man in Prisnn The Wagners have a daughter,
I Ul IYIUII III rrisun ;threP sons and 12. grandchildren.
artctik? ,ao* . aj- Wagner has many hobbies, in-
c, «10 u f K- ^nan Jomi;'eluding geology, golf, fishing,
son, 19, Houston Negro convicted(mountain dimbing, music and po-
etry.
His politics: "Im a Republican.
Lets say I'm a conservative,'
Wednesday but .market Officials
and NFO leaders did not agree
on the cause. At the stockyards
made any mention of Tshomije's
assurance. ' ^
The U.N. ( military commander
in the Congo, Gen. Sean McKeown
of Ireland, warned Tshombe dur-
ing the two-hour conference hp
would reinfo'ree his garrison in
Elisabethville with Indian troops
if there was repetition of- Tues-
day's mob violence against tha
U.N. force. Tshombe violently op-
poses use of Indians in Katanga.
About 300 Irish troops poured
into Elisabethville Airport
Wednesday to relieve-the Swed-
' *!•'
Area Band Wins
Contest Awards
Oranee County. It included nurses
on the hospital staff in addition
to nurses employed by doctors in
private pi^ctice. ,
The classes; held each Tuesday
from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m., are und.'r
the sponsorship of the hosoi'al
and directed by Mrs. Lida Urqu-
hart, in-service training super-
visor.
The first instructions Vill be de-
voted to charting. When this phas?
is completed. Mrs. Urquhart said,
medication will be taught.
Nixon To Assist
Tower in Runoff
LOS ANGELES fAP)-An aide
Four second and five third plnces; says Richard M. Nixon will cam-
, n'st's TsP')kesmenWere won by West Orange High paign -in Texas for John G.
,K,,,a.er taster; arrd School Band members recently in Tower in the runoff for Vice
er? to dpJ fnV .ah„ n 90,0 and ensemble cfonttfsts at La- President Lyndon , B. Johnson's
erg to get into the. fields usuallyimar Tech vacant Senate seat if Tower and
bring normal fluctuations. | Prinrjpa| T<7mmy fluff said the Nixon "can agree on a'date to
and sheeCp °noff° th|P maTkeis ^s second P1aces were won bV Janice ■fi* ii,to Niaon's schedule."
wiirlcinp h J^Weatherford. saxophonist. Walter, Tower, only. Republican .In the
working," the NFO% president,
Oren Staley, said Wednesday;Smith, tfombonist, a trombone
night. "We're .cutting into, receipts ® composed of Betty Tavlor,
heavily. We couldn't hop." to J«hn"V
gotten off to a better start." jK^nneth Kittrell and Butch Trala,
Staley reiterated that con and another trombone quartet.
sumers have little to worry about.
"The price we get for our live-
The second trombone quartet in
eluded Roger Lowther, Lyle Over- £f"L 1
c_:.u --a INixon assistance.
stock has very little effect on th,> man. Walter Smith and Tom Har-
retail market,'. he said. "The
farmer gets only a minor part of
the consumer's dollar. We want
special election. gained the
largest vote total in Tuesday's
balloting to meet William A. Blik-
ley in the June 3 Texas runoff.
The Nixon spokesman said Tow-
er phoned the former vice Presi-
dent Tuesday night,, requesting
only a fair and just price for our
shall do so."
Week-End SPECIALS!
FANCY YORK IMPERIAL
APPLES 2
Ibi
19«
Ixtro Fancy Washington Oelleloui
APPLES 2 Ul. 35?:
Large Swcel Texas Valencia
ORANGES 5 .l.b 35f
20 lb. Bag $1.15
TEXAS RUBY RED-^O-lb. Bag
GRAPEFRUIT 85<
SNOBAIL — LARGE HEADS
CAULIFLOWER 15<
FANCY VINE RIPE
TOMATOES 2 C1„, 19*
FRESH GREEN
CABBAGE 3 lt,10<
East Texot Posto Rican
YAMS 8 50<
WHITE RUSSETT
Potatoes 10 lb, 25c
100 Yb«. $2.25
MINNESOTA, WHITE COBBLER
Potatoes 25 Lbi 59c
10 Lbs. 23c
jwas pursued while uncomfortably
jhandcuffed to-a pretty girl. But
it all ends neatly with the usual
jfight .scene during which a gun
[goes off. Vogler gets his — accU
dentally, of course.
I Unfortunately, "Danger .Man"
seems just another cliche-filled
! little TV trifle.
products."
Price goals in the holding a;
tion, which Staley saitj will con-
din.
Third places were won by Felesa
Matthews, flutist; n saxophone!
quartet composed of Verna Pollev,'
Fall Hurts Woman
At School Visit
Margaret Thomas, Janice Weath-
erford and Francine Clark; an en-r . «„« .;«
semble including Sandy Thomas, t . . . wj,ile
tinue indefinitely." are ghout SSAVI.eta Green. Dot Thomas. Mary!~." '",l
a hundredweight more than thdPobich'eaux. Felesa Matthews and ^'s'Ung SUrk H,gh S h00' *****
current price for fed cattle and Butch Trala, a brass ensemble ..a,
hogs and about $10 more for;and a clarinet player. ^ nr,„
lambs- i The brass ensemble featured
"Although the supply of live-;Tchnny Hughes, Kenneth Kittrell,|M ' Ho*l*taI s herf.she was
stock has its days up and down Lynda Owens, .Danny Bachelor,
we feel that the marketing sys- Roger Lowther, Walter Smith,
tem is getting pretty jitterv." Tom (Hardin, Sybil Mays, Margar-, _ ,, ...
Staley said. "The receipts at Chi-et ftates, Barbara >Goodwin, Lyle Slitters DOg BltC
Overman and Sandy Lewis. The; An area girl was administered
cago, Kansas City, St. Joseph.
Ma., East St. Louis, II1S, Omaha
and Sioux City bear this out."
Staley said the explanation from
market centers- that> farmers are
too busy in the fields to ship the'r
livestock, doesn't "hol.d water"
even under the impetus of small
gains under prices registered
Wednesday.
clarinet player placing third was
Betty Taylor.
Ex-Students Set
To Hear Address
„ , - j- . • .t. Dr. Oscar Weigang,^assistant pro-
!! of Christianity at Texas
CRISP FIRM
LETTUCE
1Spectator sports lovers will
jhave a jolly, busy summer. CBS
jwill move its Sunday "Sports
[Spectacular" into. the 7:30 p.m.
I spot on Thursday "evenings start-
ling April 27, starting off with an
lice skating show. A little later in
j the season ABC will launch a se-
iries of programs running the
(gamut from English soccer to So-
viet track events:
Head
10«
FRESH
Cucumbers 15c
YELIOW OR WHITE
ONIONS
HOT CHILI
PEPPERS
Lb.
H
25*
BEDDING PLANTS 55?
largo Varioty Fino TOMATO
WANTS 2 0„, 25<£
HOT OH BELL PEPPER
PUNTS 2 35<
Sturdy Dwarf Pink, Red, White f
A2ALEA5 49*
NICE LARGE
AZALEAS «, 59<up>
FREE ROSE CORSAGE
With $3 or more pvrchai*
•f bedding plants, pal
plant! or shrubbery.
URGE
GERANIUM
PLANTS
In Gat.
Cant
For Yard'
Planting
Dijiah Shore will definitely be
back on TV next season. NBC has
j finally decided to alternate Di-
|nah's variety hour with the Tele-
phone Hour on Friday nights,
9:30-10:30. The Shirlev«> Temple
Show has already gone into re-
runs, although there's one new
I show scheduled to be shown May
14 called "Rebel Gun."
' "Way Out," CBS' new horror
ISeries, attracted a big chunk of
( the Friday night audience with
jthe result that host Rnald Da hi.,
(originally signed for the first two
11 shows, has bepn made a perma-
nent fixture. Dahl became, one
"might saty, an Overnight rating
j success.
I Recommended tonight: "Silents
! Please," ABC, 10:30-11 Eastern
Standard Time — condensed ver-
lision of "The Hunchback of Notre
Dame," starring Lon Chaney.
Omaha Livestock Foundation said
the fluctuations in market re-
ceipts this week coutld occur un-
der normal conditions and "it'«
too early to tell if the NFO action
has had any effect." • "
At Chicago the butcher hog
market advanced 25 cents a hun-
dredweight Wednesday and there
Lutheran College, will be gues:
speaker at the annual banquet of
the Sabine Chapter, Texas Luth-
eran College Ex-Students Associa-
tion tomorrow In Beaumont.
The meeting will be held at 71
p.m. in the Prince of Pe^ce Luth-j
eran Church..
William Henze, assistant In de-j
emergency treatment Tuesday at
Orange Memorial Hospital for a
dog bite on the left ankle. Doris
Scarborough. IS of Rt. 3. Box 166,
was released following treatment
at 6:10 p.m.
j (• wiiiiam nenze, assistant n ae-
of
eight months. Buyers paid an ex-
tra top of $18.50 for No. 1 and 2
grade hogs, or about $4.23 under
the price sought by the NFO.
Singer's Manager
Sued for $5,000
«SAN -FRANCISCO (AP)—An at-
torney sued sinner Johnny Ma'his"
manager for $5,000 in Superior
Court here Tuesday.
Roy Sharff charged he had
made an oral five-year agreement
in 1955 with the nlanager, Helen
NOga, to do lesal work in ex-
change for 5 per cent of the]
singer's earnings.
His complaint, charged he had
received nothing since December
1958, when the co"'r^,ct had, two
years to run. Sharff estimated his
share to be at least $5,000.
lege, also will j>e present to give'
reports on progress at TLC.
Reservations tnay be made with j
the Rev. R. H. Ulachmeier of Or-j
ange, president of the association.'
M. W. PEARCE
INSURANCE AGENCY
IHI TRAVELER' IN JLIRANCf CO.
Phona TU 3-2621
AU KINDS OR INSURANCE
THURSDAY
THRU
SATURDAY
NO. 1 TYLER BLOOMING
ROSE BUSHES 50c
BEAUTIFUl PLANTS
CALADIUMS 3 *1
2-3-4 IIOOM
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50(2
OF INSIDE and OUTSIDE PAINT
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ivory Ind Can Fro*
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1961, newspaper, April 6, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth330562/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.