The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 96, Ed. 1 Friday, April 22, 1955 Page: 4 of 12
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Moamri of Meditation
—~ Let w UmrwIbi* Mb* alter die
thing* which meke far peace, and
thing* wherewith ene may edify an-
ether. Bemana 14:19.
Today's Birthday I
Midmil porter, editor
'W- * »d Publisher,
Ml \ he has been one
111 il I Of the most pro-
RK3HT AWAV,
True life Adventures 1
HTY, LCMMC
taut rjoe
i« BEASTS ?
ARB TIMBS WWSN THE
•oom...
vr§ pm
Twmte;
MiHUTCft
*WB
-
•ei.Lt
MB WILL ABANDON MIS KILL
ANP SIT WHIMPERING AT A
grcssive journal-
ists since he re-
turned from
World War I
^■jPMNavy service^
Worked on
IWlseveral ncws-
H BiJ papers in
IftSflMloeorila *nd
MARS ETHSIOGC MiS»i«*rPP‘
while attending college ls e^Jor
asass&ttJ*?
5 DISTANCE WHILE
M&SSiiSl
TAKES THE U
CHOICEST M
. MOK6BL6. M
fpr safekeeping to complicated business
organisations dealing in two commodi-
ties—money and service,
v And of the two, probably service is
the more important. Certainly it is the
one where the greater amount of growth
has taken place.
Texas Parade magazine makes these
points in its current issue and offers in
support of its statements these observa-
i tions: I • ,.
Today, as in the past, banks still are
making agricultural loans, particularly
in the rural areas. But a fanner now
Is a good deal more likely to hear his
banker ask questions about fertilizers,
farm machinery and soil conservation
than he is about the least amount the
farmer needs to borrow to tide him
over until he makfes his crop.
Loans to business, of course, are ba-
sic. A good deal of the thinking back of
capital structure increases for banks in
Texas dealt with providing more funds
for financing business — both present
business and that anticipated in the fu-
ture.
But it isn’t sufficient now to loan
money or to be prepared to loan it. The ~ By James marlow
modern banker, more than ever before, Associated Press New* Anajyai
must know what he is doing. And busi- WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States got in on an act
ness is too complicated for any one man where it wasn’t supposed to be playing It used propaganda on^Red
to understand it all.
So the modem bank has experts—
economists, oil and gas specialists, engi-
neers, real estate experts.
It is almost inconceivable that the au-
tomobile industry could operate without
a financing system. Today virtually
JOI TALOOKA......41
AND BETH MAS BEEN A Gl
FOP VOU, TIMMY, FOR I WAVE GOOD
NEWS 1 TOMORROW MOONING VOU MAT
SET OUT OF BED AND SIT BY YOUR
mn oic um IDI ____Jnu
I'M FEELING
BETTER AND
8ETTER, U
DOCTOR' Jr
AND HOW IS
OURMTIENT
THIS
EVENING ?j
WEEK
Boyle Write*:
WINDOW FOR ONE HOUR.'
CAN SEND A
At Indiana College
By llAfc BOYLE
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) —
Ernie Pyle died on a far Pacific
Isle 10 years ago this week,
war he hated was drawing to an
'"He now lies buried in * Vf.
' H-l *yl. S/^55
Certainly his spirit is enshrined
here. Ernie remains a iivintf »ym-
'Pr;:toT«r i. »■>' „ h.***«
■(■jpthe 28 other Asian-African nations meeting with newspaper men and women who
fWrZ-A th.m n, RanHuntf Indonesia are bolstered in both heart and
tiBSSwfb And'President'Eisenhower asked Congress for hope by the example of his career.
mk Wat l»?ta.53n000.000 in foreign aid, most of it for Asia, Ernie nevef waf, graduated by
w jUst when the Red Chinese were most eager to bis alma mater. He quit during
JwWm over to their side the other Afro-Asians, or bis senior year to go to work,
many as they could influence. Some of the oldtimers here say
The united States, the Europeans, and Russia be left because of a broken ro-
BBiwora not invited to Bandung. The great mass of with^ fc red-haired gm.
^mdyj^Hpeople represented there are colored and im- Others say, No, it was just be-
yiHgSpoverished. All have reason to be concerned about cause he was Erhte-already rest-
Bg^^Hthe outbreak of war over Formosa. *ess be on his way.
BMHR. And, because of their poverty and their de- Stayed Away
James marlov sire to get on their economic feet, the help they Once Pyle did leave the campus
had from the United States would be a factor jn January, 1923, he stayed away
in keeping them from too close alliance with Red China. for 21 years. He loved the univer-
pn Sunday, just before the Bandung meeting opened, Dulles sjty but said he wanted to remem-
reported the Red Chinese had greatly intensified their airpower ber it as he had ^now it in his
opposite Formosa. Eisenhower followed this quickly with a state- youth. He came back only once
ment aimed at Bandung. in his lifetime—to take an honor-
He said “peace was in grave jeopardy1’ and that the leaders ary degree in 1944. A few months
at Bandung had ah “opportunity, at a critical hour, to voice the ]ater he was killed by a sniper’s
peaceful inspirations of the peoples of the world and exert a prac- bullet on Ie Shima.
tical influence for peace." , „ ' . But today the personality of the
Later in the week Dulles minimized a bit the danger of war shv brooding farmboy who be-
aver Formosa now, But the statements by him and Eisenhower ‘ ’ thp „reatest battle reoorter
HIHnH matr. it easier for the Chinese at Bandune to look too per- ine greuiesi.
BIG SISTER
“ Dtlis Majesty frequently
sgjrves as a Dutiful BABY-
SITTER WHILS HI6 QUBSH
<5065 FORAGING TOR FOOT.
MlM k, b, hM
we-RE ON 1H’ (ikSWTTRML/MLUt1
oontust’Em
con make him
IF YOU’RE RUNNIKP TALK NOW, RED/
mwlssss
•my ME/ HOTTPA/
RED RYDER
NOy lit HAVE A RLE
.CLERK RUN ACHBCk ON
k KNOWN PICKPOCKETS..,
WELL, WE VE <5OT
A ©OOP SET OF
^PRINTS, EUSTy.y
WERE IN
LUCK/ HERE'S
OUR BOV.'
RUSTY RILEY
YS5-I«CALl\
hearing her say
THAT 5HE WASN'T
. A STRONG _
swimmer! )v
WAIT, PHIL! .THE WAVES
-BUT WE'LL TAKE A
WALK AROUND THE
ISLAND, JUST TO m
f BE SURE! J
JUST DUMPED SOMETHIN*
ON THE SAND - A 5-MALL
BLUE SNEAKER! r«
WELL, PHIL-IT
BE0IN5 TO LOOK
AS IP BARGAIN BENNV
DIDN'T MAKE IT* e
SECRET AGENT X9I
''"oh,VOU MEAN
12 of the Asian countries represented at Bandung as among those he used to dig his own foxholes,
who would get American economic help. a beat-up dress cap he wore in
They were Burma, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Ceylon, London, his battered portable
Thailand, Indonesia, Laos, Cambodia, the Philippines, and Ja’pan. typewriter, his medals, and one
All but Burma and Ceylon already were receiving aid. of the last columns he wrote be-
--- fore his death.
Talevision-Radio News: “The students are quite proud
Comic s Individual Characterization, i^S&SSr^SZ
Style Has Won Him National Popularity ^
By WAYNE OLIVER “We still have the desk Ernie
NEW YORK (AP)—What lies ahead for comedian George Gobel, used when he was editor of the
now that he has risen with phenomenal speed to one of the top paper. It is being reglued right
rungs in show business? Will his popularity last? now, so it will last for another
The answer is a definite yes, according to Sylvester L. (Pat) 30 or 50 years. ’
Weaver, president of the National Broadcasting Co. , - ■
NO lODDiNG.1
BUT I FINALLY
FlGUCED A WAV ^
TO STOP HIM FROM
PESTERING ME FOP
--2* DATES X
GO STEADY
WITH HIM
/what happened
TO THE CUTE, DARK
Kl HAIRED BOV.’___
DON ? HE'S STILL
--, HANGING \
V ABOUND-'J
ETTA KETT
A Problem a Day
f BROTHERS, LETS SNOW HIM HE CANT
^ COME AROUND INTIMIDATIN' US LAW-
'ABIDIN' BRA ©60S! 6ET A ROPElj-^
LOOK! HE'S WEAR IN©
f A STAR! J—[T
MUST BE ANEW
~-i deputv! r-
B0IN6'<5-S/
If the difference between the
squares of two numbers is 1800,
and if they are in the ratio of 1
to 3, what are the numbers?
ANSWER
15 and 45. Subtract the square
of 1 from that of 3; divide into
1800; extract square root of re-
sult for the smaller number.
Experts estimate that commer-
cial air transport‘in the United
States uses about 1,400 planes
compared with 20,000 planes op-
erated by businesses and execu-
tives and 10,000 used by fanners
and ranchers.
retailer followg in buying hi« stock in ^riters like Jack Douglas, Harry Winkler and WAYNE OLIVER
trade and in determining the price at jimmy Aiierdyce. hut
which his wares will be offered for sale. “These fellows not only come up
Wh'when government, ml, or n.Uon.l, •** “» ** w
gets up artificial arbiters we, the con- ^.Jle droll comedian, short of stature and hair, can t quite get
sumers are the losers. \ used to the attention and notice brought by his TV success.
THE CISCO KID E2!
HERE THEY COME! NOW,..
IF THEY'RE A* NERVOUS AND
JUMPY AS I THINK THEY ARE,
THEIR IMAGINATION MAY ROUND
OUT MY ACT...
" SO MAYBE MY‘AMMO'ISNT
AS LETHAL AS THEIWu^nU., .
YOU CANT KILL A SUY FOR TRYINS
t ...OR CAN YOU m
THIS ISLANP IS THE ONLY
PLACE THEY CAN POSSIBLY BE'
REMEMBER,! WANT SHARI
UNHARMED-.. AND THE OTHER
M TWO DEAD' __ -
THE BIBLE . . .
CAN YOU QUOTE IT?
Cepyright 1955—Lavine Ross Fowler.
f. A word fitly spoken is like apples of
gold in . , .—Proverbs 25:11.
2. What did the men of Hezekiah, the
king, copy?—Proverbs 25:1.
3. For ye are bought with a price! there-
fore .. .—1 Corinthians 6:20.
4. Which apostle said, “Would to God y«
could bear a little with me in my folly"?—
2 Corinthians 11:2.
5. Whosoever putteth away his wife, and
marrieth another—SL Luke 16:18.
acted as baby sitter for her own son, in an
Five correct excellent; three correct good.
For wisdom, courage and peace read the
BUT LOOK WHO’S STILL STANDING GUARD
By D. C. WILLIAMS
1. What is wrong with this sen-
tence? “You are apt to get in
trouble if you don’t attend but one
meeting a month.”
2. What is the correct pronun-
ciation of “hors d’oeuvre”?
3. Which one of these words is
misspelled? Connivance, connote,
connoiseur, canape.
4. What does the word “medi-
ocrity" mean?
5. What is a word beginning
with er that means “to pluck up
by the roots"?
6. What is wrong with this sen-
tence? “Agreeable to your wish-
es, I consider her as worthy of
promotion”?
7. What js the correct pronun-
ciation of “canape” (appetizer)?
' ANSWERS
L Say, “you are liable to get
into trouble, if you (omit “don’t)
attend but one meeting a month."
2. Pronounce or-du-vr, o as in
or, u as in up, accent second syl-
lable. 3 Connoisseur. 4. Quality of
being moderate excellence; ordi-
nary. “His work was far above
the level of mediocrity.” 5, Eradi-
cate. B. Sty. “Agreeably with your
nounce ka-na-pa, first and second
a’. « in ah, final a as mpAy.sc-
JOHNNY HAZARD
I DCs - AOHP’ ABO.”
BOWLING SO LATE *
FRED.'THE GIRLS MAY GET .
MAO AT FIRST, BUT THEN 4
THEY MISS YOU A
OH, SURE
SHE WILL,
FRED'J
NO, NOT
ETHEL.'
WHAT DO I
TELL YOU f
THE ORANGE LEADER
Jam.. B Quljl.v _
J. Cullen Browning
Mn. Jamca D«i--
]» R I Bob I McHugh
%. r. Krietach..-
& R. Da TU J--
.Editor
Society
Jtdrorttung Director
Circulation Managor
MEMBER or THE ASSOCUTkD HFM
Puhliabad Sunday morning and dally each after,
on except Saturday. SOSA Front atroet, by the
an«e Leader Publishing company.
The Aaaoctated Praia to entitled exrluairely to tho
Ei
IX v
.... _1
1 l
1 .
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 96, Ed. 1 Friday, April 22, 1955, newspaper, April 22, 1955; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558679/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.