The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 1, 1950 Page: 8 of 8
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IT 1.1960
THE ORANGE LEADER
Aimtcwk Still in
For Tough Times
By Dewitt Mwkrnsir
At ifrri|n AKiln Analyst
.Via) Gen. Frederick H. Oaborn,
who has resigned a* U. S. deputy
on the United Nations Atomic
Energy commission, says he be-
lieves tne world is still In (or a
period of trial and American* will
tie deluding themselevs If they
feel an easy time is ahead.
The general has been trying for
three years to find the basis for
ari agreement with Russia on
world atomic control N'e er hav-
ing got close to a solution he
now declares:
“I do not think, the Soviet
Union will come to agreement on
the control of atomic energy un-
til they (the leaders) reassess their
relations with the world as a
whole and decide that they want
to live in a cooperative and
friendly world "
War Id Relations tome First
1m* means I take it. that
atomic control isn’t the primary
consideratirA) World relations
come first in importance, and
atomi< control depend* on them
—a thesis with which most’ob-
I EAST TEXAS PROJEC T
and Ample wUl bn involved
gltWMlUw Watershed
vttl) its beginning at Orange
Whrarlnq 1C Texas counties
uniqni project will set a ,
I new precedent In the com-
Ion at such a large group of
Texas counties, all aiming j
agnifylng the importance of 1
Mine river which is by all j
I the biggest and best stream
of the Mississippi
OfTORMATKiN ON ORANGE
tviag to do with future possihil-
M B general In the ma)or cities
f Tinea, according to some of
X landing businessmen of the
|y who have contacted these
■tort. For instance, there are
WW(M that are now speculating
k the direction that the Orangr
h Units will extend, also mak-
I predictions as to what some
EfRe major industi m will be
Itch of the predictions are based
MB the huge highway program
Ml pnwpert* lor oil davelopmept
lag with industrial growth
L L. Two candidate* for battery
JAPANESE WOMEN TAKE UP BASEBA-------------
positions warm up at the first tryout* for the womens professional baseball league in Tofcyo.
Eouba would spend their time j ing a long verbal argument wi
drafting petition* demanding # logjcal gonlla After a wh
equal rights for gorillas or com- *
plaining about the quality of the nobody would come to the too.
bananas. And they would make
ill-natured remarks about the
visitors and the ancestry of the
would take up
Apes May Start
Talking, Writing
that they try to evade It. The ;
answer i* that w* can't have ! ,\ev
friendship and cooperation until Arthur
our world-wide politico - social that if
upheaval has run its course [ down
That isn't confined to the cold eventu
war between communism and de- ! txioks
mocrac-y In one form or another So l
this politico-social readjustment 1 theory
is going on in every thinking , g . (h
country
CM War Bars Pe~e
This struggle for the ironing
out of inequalities is taking so j^'rr
Vnany forms that it can't he
pinned down with one character- 1
i/ation The most clean-cut divi- ' ...
. gunllai
slon. of course, is the political j__com)
and economic strife between com- ! g
munism and democracy. from '
The cold war is the chief bar- <j.he
rier to world peace This is true id a
because communism and democ- ,hig y<
racy are utterly irreconcilable i
That's the reason General Osborn e
wasn't able in three years to find j **'
a basis for agreement. It's the 1 *
reason the United Nations haven't "J*
been able to get togekther, and j ** oy
aren't likely to do so now g
So the ronflict between com- an
munism and other Ideologies will * y
continue indefinitely Most ob- ro™
servers feel that the warfare is rea y
bound to extend far beyond the zo°
present generation. j a i’u
Fight Is Looming Over Control of Girls
Basketball in Texas High School Circles
babee-tenda
-a n/iMiMBoof
gjL SAMTY CHAIR
G. W. McCray
W [ P. O. Box 1154
I Dial 880#
visitors They
swearing.
The reason people go to a zoo
now is because the animals don't
talk. No man could help but feel
he was lowering himself by los-
B* Harold V Ratlin
DALLAS.
The Texa In-
Bat mere people will tersrholastir league plans to add
time tol their home girls' basketball to Ms *;«»>* (in-
former years When rieulum nest sear ami vhethei
■ary to leave the anybody admits M or nut there s
for a swim, or i going to be » fight for eontrol
♦her kind of recrea- , The High School* Girls l>.*ket
, ' *s | ball league of Texas has iwen
" j operating a number of years Tin* I
season it has HIM teams
1,jT MrKurr.le, league i(n ecb-tr,
has said hi* oiganlzation <loes no'
plan to bow out a hen the Inlet-
scholastic league moves u*
Under Inlet sc holas'it league
rules those school* that do not i
participate In Its pto/rau could
be oatraci/ed Hut the Interscho- ,
lastir league is no! going to hike
such a step It prefer* to win the
Footnote* Our information i*
that Tom Hamilton, the great
University of Texas liaaketball
and baseball player, will turn pro
i at the conclusion of the current
basketball campaign. . He has
i another season of baseball eligl-
t bi 11 tv but won't take it. . . Dick
i Snider of The Odessa American,
commenting on pres* reports that
Odessa's Shrine club would *|»on-
I sor a “Permian bowl" football
| game between all-star teams from
West Texas and New Mexico,
said “At this time, we no more
hir e an all-star game lined up
definitely than we have an Army-
j Notre Dame game scheduled here
' The Shrine club voted to sponsor
the game IF Naw Mexico wanted
to gn along "... It seems the
| New Mexico roaches and officials
have to make the decision on
\ New Mexico participation and
they don't meet until the first
week in March.
GREEN’S Offer*
m leading pitchers In
if League In 112* only
r wag still active last
S|a>n*ors of the Milk bowl, a
football game put cm last fall be-
tween team* of boys none of
whom were over 100 pounds or
14 years ol age, have climbed
j right down the Intcracholastic
| league's throat for Its criticism of
the game x
Dr Williams rapped this Imwl
in an article in The Iwaguer. In-
’ i terscholagtlc league publication.
He did not actually name It but
left no doubt what he was talk-
ing about He criticized football
for kids from physiological rea-
son* unless it was design'd spe-
| clflcally for them and operated *»
■ there would be no danger Of In-
juries. He also indicated that the
league frowned upon anyone who
promoted elementary school foot-
ball for commercial reasons.
The Milk bowl was played be-
j tween San Saba and Cause at
j Cameron Dec. 10.
I F. (’ Weafei. athletic director
of the Cause school, a memlier of
I the lioard of directors of the
Milk bowl, said this project was
, iwit an elementary school foot-
iball game but was peewee foot-j
ball "the most humane form of
body contract game, in which the j
scales and birth certificates play j
an important part.”
Weater claim* a peewee team
Far
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fully guaranteed. Look for Gene
Autry "Flying A" Brand an leather
guns in coyote'territory.
In Texas from Sept 1, 194/1.
to Sept I, 1949. these trappers
killed 26.249 coyotes
But what about I he danger to
dogs?
Law. a newspaperman, quotes
fame warden Jess Felts at Dal-
hart as saying the government
seems to take the position that
If dogs are property — auch as
cattle or sheep-they should be
kept on the premises of the
owner.
Ne Right ta Fans
hart, "ha* precipitated a warm If they are not property. Felt*
controversy " added, they belong to no one
Cyanide guns use a blank and nobody should complain If
cartridge. It and the cyanide are one is accidentally killed
arranged on a metal peg that is ( Some hunters use dogs in hunt-
stuck solidly tn the ground. Above Ing coyote* for county bounties,
the cartridge Is a bait, usually about $3 a scalp. Some of these
wrapped with wool and saturated hunters complain they have lost
with a scent attractive to coyote* <to«* to the cyanide guns,
and bobcats. «„ State tranpers put up signs and
When the luckless animal closes warn ranchers In areas where
his mouth over the bait and at- cyanide guns are buried. But
tempts to pull it up a trigger is Felt* told law of one rancher
released and the cartridge fires . who toicj a trapper: “Don’t worrv
the deadly charge of cyanide into about my dogs They never get \
the animal's throat. ; out of my yard unless I take :
Rail latesMfed far Coyotes them."
State trappers, working with , But that night, the rancher lost
the U S. Fish and Wildlife ser- J all his dogs to cyanide guns,
vice and in cooperation with ! Felts said it has been proved
county commissioners' courts and* that dogs roam un to 10 miles
state agencies, plant the cyanide from home at night.
MONROE
CHAPMAN
ATTORNEY
Income Tax Service
Mitt FANITA
CHAPMAN
M BMC
RTENOGRA PIIFR
Cyanide Guns Kill
Coyotes in Texas
$d 59 With
Jl zipper fly
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 1, 1950, newspaper, February 1, 1950; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth556925/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.