The Bandera Bulletin (Bandera, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1961 Page: 3 of 8
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FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1961
THE BANDERA BULLETIN
PAGE THREE
Pipe Creek News
Mrs. T. A. Lewis. Reporter
Bookmobile at Pipe Creek . Mrs. J. W. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
Don’t forget to come to the ! J. W. Edwards, Mr and Mrs J. B.
Bookmobile next Tuesday. This
will be the last time we shall be
able, to check out books. Remem-
ber 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, April
25.—Mrs. J. W. Edwards.
Mr. and Mrs. Dewitt Leibold and
son. Eddie, and Mrs. Lona Jackson
vi^ted Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Her-
rington, Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Her-
rington and Mr. and Mrs. George
A. Morgan in Brady Sunday. They
report the blue bonnets along the
highway are very beautiful, a solid
carpet of blue!
Alfred Reinarz of Bandera visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. I,. J. Edwards
Sunday and enjoyed a jeep ride
over the old Reinarz place.
Visitors of Mrs. Della Glenn
this week were Mrs. C. 11. Krause,
Mrs. C. A.
MEN OF THE WEST
By 0. W. (Orville) Keese
■ My good friend, Gus Spicer, and
I were sitting in the hotel lobby in
San Angelo just a few days ago
chatting about the prices of sheep
and cattle and the New Frontier.
We saw faces that were familiar
in the halls of the hotel and out
oil men and tourists, searching
! for the charm of the Old West.
Edwards and children, Jay, Jean-
ene, Jerome, Jan and Joslyn, en-.
joyed a picnic dinner with Mr. and I™ the^'ange, there;were C0W^0ys:
Mrs. T. A. Lewis Saturday at
their cottage at Bandera Falls., ,
Little Miss Joslyn was the cen-|As we talke<1 0,1 there were nlan>'
ter of attraction as it was her first | faces ,n fac> nlany
trip there. In the afternoon Dr. to reca11' They have found green'
and Mrs. J. F. Harrison called.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Dowda and
son, Rusty, spent the week-end
with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Edwards.
Little Misses Leanne and Pa-
trice Saathoff were visiting in
Rio Medina over the week-end
er pastures and camp fires that
shine like stars in the milky way.
Long will we miss them as they
ride the invisible trails. Their
saddles are empty now, their
[ lariats hang in memory in the
I Hall of Fame, they have gone to
with Mr. and Mrs. Welton Boehmeithat gl'eat ™u"<>-up f,om "hich
no cowboy has ever returned.
Men become part of a wonder-
ful picture, like trees and hills,
some of them grow old and bent
Some of our good friends and
neighbors have mowed the ceme-
tery and it looks all fresh and
nice.
and sons and Mrs. Henry Saathoff. .
Master Gary Boehme was honored |
with a barbecue Sunday and Mr. j
and Mrs. H. H. Saathoff joined !
Ruede, Mrs. Louise! their daughters in the afternoon. I"11' 1 s<imc ‘u< ca 11 '1,1 y to
Pickens and Mrs. J. W. Edwards. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Saathoff en- \ wear lhe g,'ldc" crown- rhere
joyed the Strawberry Festival and |are thosc who biossom 1,1 many
visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Clif- haa"ts liku beauliful V",letS’ thel'e
ford McCarthy and Mr. and Mrs. a,e thosp who leave thelr good
Claud McCarthy over the week-!advise in many appreciative lives.
Mr. and Mr-. Emmett Jefferson end. Mr. and '.Mrs. Roy Efoejiie, | Cowboys area part of the Old
of San Antonio, Miss Mabel New- \ Rita and Ruby Kav were also! * 1111 1 v< 1 lamom s
comer and Mrs. Mattie X. Johns- there. I1** ™ 1 ,mS6 th,em, and
ton mm ted Judge and Mrs, A. \. Mr. and Mrs. John Shelton ami ., , , ,, ...
1-t.e in Bandera Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Shelton spent j ^ ^ *** °n
Mr and Mrs. Sterling Polly of tho day with Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy m& and stl.eams.
San Antonio wo i o dinner quests ol Dowda and son and Mr. and Mrs.!'
Mr. and Mrs. 1. ,J,. Edwards 1-n-j.Jim Edward- Sunday. Mr. and tlRS McBRYDE IS ON
day and .later in the evening Mrs. John Shelton stayed over SICK LIST
visited Mr. and Mrs. Jrm Edwards, .through Monday with Mrs. Jim Friends- here will lie
Edwards. Mrs, H, II
SHOULD PRESS IDENTIFY | fenders in connection with crimes
JUVENILES? j with which they’re charged, “ex-
Iowa City, Iowa. — Five Iowa | ceptions are made with respect to
newspaper editors have tackled
the problem of what to do about
publicizing names of juveniles law
violaters. No uniform agreement
was reached.
The five newsmen' air their
views on the subject in the most
recent issue of the Iowa Publisher
magazine, published by the Uni-
versity of Iowa school of journal-
ism.
W. Earl Hall, editor of the Ma-
son City Globe-Gazette, comment-
ed: “With J. Edgar Hoover, direc-
tor of the FBI, I’m persuaded that
the net effect of (being solicitous
to juvenile offenders) has been to
encourage juvenile misdeeds rath-
er than to cut down on them . . .
To me the right of the people to
know the truth is something more
than picturesque language.”
Editor J. W. McCutcheon of the
Mount Vernon Hawkeye Record
says it’s his paper’s policy to print
names of juvenile offenders “if
the names are released by the
enforcement authorities., (But) it
is the policy, of juvenile officers,
of the county not to release names
of offenders under 18 ... ” Mc-
Cutcheon points out that “ . . .
an important reason for printing
names is that if a story of an
memory as unforgettable as the I offl’nst‘ is printed without names,
young-
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Blister (Yf
Dallas spent the week-end visit-
ing here and in Sat: Antonio, re-
turning homo Sunday. Mr-, J. R. |
Edwards Sr., aci oinpanied them '
home for a few weeks visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Newcomer of
Ki 11 mile \ i ited Mi and Mrs. I..:
• 1. Edwards Monday.
Mrs. A L,,-Stevens. Mm. Fabian
\ nderv :. Id .of 1 la : ■:• 'a. Mm A. J.
Flowers of Medina, M . Pat Free-(
nan and Mis. I.. J. E.hvai-I- at-
tends' i I 'i 11,,-- Til DA roe. ,
inn it: Coleman 1 . -day.
M - Ft tie! Lev. - was a Bo. m
vt.-ifOi Friday and while there
Mi. and Alt-. Eat i lin k
too frequently innocent
sters may be blamed.”
Another editor who agrees with
the publicity theory in general ia
sorry to Leo Mores of the Harlan news-
Saat of , learn that Mrs. Mark McBryde j papep. “We used to never men-
Leanne and Patrice, took them ; jlas m-eri confined to her. bed this '
home t-i San Antonio.
.lion juvenile names. Now, we
week and 'Mrs. \\ . II. Burns has j generally do.” Mores-regards the
! been attending her. On Wednesday ; publicity a youngster earns as re-
sile was taken to the Sid Peterson uuR of some offense as “part, of
hospital- in Renville lor treat- the price to be paid. Other juve-ja belief among many people? that
ini'iii. We hope she will soon be'idles . . . should know what hap- th«.‘re are taws against publishing
youth.”
The Grundy Center Register, ac-
cording to its editor, LeRoy Van-
derwicken, is guided in its treat-
ment of juvenile offenders by two
criteria: the seriousness of the
crime, and whether it was a first
offense for any youngsters in-
volved. If the offense were a
serious one, Vanderwicken says,
“we believe the names, the facts,
and the charges in court should
be printed in complete detail.”
But he adds, “We adhere to the
rule of not printing information
. . . involving a juvenile unless
the sheriff, county attorney, or in-
jured citizen files charges.”
Vanderwicken also believes some
concession should he made to a
“first offender,” if the- offense is
a misdemeanor.
Vanderwicken suggests that
newspaper editors, in wrestling
with problems about printing
names of juvenile offenders, fre-
quently might profit from back-
ground data about individual
youngsters obtained from school
officials.
Rome of tlie editors taking part
in the magazine symposium re-
ferred to the difficulty many Iowa
newsmen encounter in obtaining
the names of youthful law vio-
lators, particularly when the
youngster's case reaches the ju-
venile court stage. It is common
practice in Iowa (as in many other
J states) for juvenile court proceed-
ings to be “doled" (with news-
men either'.-haired or, if admitted,
admonished not to publicize names
of the youngsters).
As a result, there lias developed
far as he knows, there never has remaining woefully unconcerned
been a “test case” in Iowa over
the legality of a court’s direct pro-
hibition against a newsman from
publicizing the name of q youthful
law violator.
Estherville’s Deemer Lee prob-
ably sums up the sentiment of most
newsmen in regard to a “policy”
for reporting stories about juve-
nile crime news is one of the areas
conceded that treatment of juve-
nile crime news is one of the aeras
that does not seem to lend itself
to inflexibility of news policy.”
—Publishers’ Auxiliary.
about low standards of living,
jammed up housing conditions, and
shortages of every description.
In 1957 the Soviets fired their
sputnik into orbit—a first. They
practically broke their necks to
be “first.” But today, now that
the dust has settled, what do we
have? . The Commies have one
sputnik in orbit today—we have
22! We have scientific purposes
to achieve, and we proceed in an
orderly pace. But the Soviets,
goaded by a basic inferiority com-
plex, feel they have to be “first,”
■ at any cost, to prove they are not
inferior after all.
Anyhow, we have plenty of time
to get our astronauts into space,
and contribute many times in the
future to man’s conquest of the
| unknown. But we must move
I firmly and speedily, because there
ran he military as well as scientific
meaning to this penetration of
space business.
('haneellor Conrad Adenauer,
i" also view the festivities
that city for the I - ted vi-dt-e
M"
Da:
. Edw;
uidre
ni.-i
. M •.
.f
Mm.
and
A'
.. Mi
Roy Hr
M J-.l.
. i.i... M
-ter of
(ialia-
•I. B.
I. J. L:\yu] •
MR. AND MRS. AD \MIETZ
SEE VDENUER
Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Adamietz ,, , ,, , , , , ,
fl ( : ,V|. l( Ei edei iel -burg ' '■ aBaln al'd a 1 t‘ 10 aliout j pens . when they stray from the | such names. However, a theisis
la-' Sunday where they had the ' ll'sual ur,i lil '- j accepted path of behavior." study conducted in 1959 by Paul
pleasure meeting G.i'manvV -------- ■ Kiiitor Deemer Lee of the Esth- "''""assistant professor of
MRS. ('. II. MANSFIELD jerville Daily News bad a somfci i journalism at South Dakota State
j,, IN 11 DSP IT \L ' what different view. “Most news-'! and Walter A. Steigleman.
Mrs. ('. H. ’Mansfield has been ! papers, including the Daily News,' aSM"'hite professor of journalism
a patient in the Sid' Peterson Me- f,.,,.; a: keen responsibility to pub- at Iowa, showed otherwise. The
moiia; Hospital this Week! Hun- jy), aj] cn0 n(,w, _ an,[ have an ouvey reported Iowa “is one of
I'd reds of friends here wish t'-.n her 1 awareness of the duty that news- j states in which there are no
a speedy r- M very. ! paper’s policy should be a whole- j prohibitive laws on publication of
-- I seine one and not detrimental to | offender*’ names’’ if lte>v§-
M and Ml . Dewitt- Lei hold and society . .. . The Daily News sup- 1 papers can obtain the names in the
. Eddie,- and Mrs. Lona Jackson presses the news about, no grime. [I"’>t place. Often such intorma-
spent Ripi'lay :u Brady visiting big or small.” However, Lee said. !ti,m must obtained from a non-
Mrs. Jackson's father, A. J. Her- while his paper unfailingly pub- court source.
ringtoo, and Mrs. H.-rrington. lisltes the names of all adult of- ! Steigleman commented that as
OUR WASHINGTON
NEWSLETTER
By Congressman 0. C. Fisher
With both House and Senate in-
active the past week, New Fron-
tier Legislation is ori tap for this
week and the tempo is due to be
stepped up in the weeks immed-
iately ahead. The Senate has
tackled the minimum wage bill, and
a conference committee of both
House apd Senate members will
work out a compromise. Then it
will tic ,+ip to each body ft) accept tonio's annual B.-Utle of Flowers
or disJjq.rf.ve the version report- Parade on Friday. April 2J, 1961.
TV WILL PRESENT ANNUAL
BATTLE OF FLOWERS
Television viewers throughout
the south-central Texas area will
have an opportunity to see a
three-hour telecast of Ran An-
t'd.
The Russians have made a big
to-do about their spaceman who
spun .around the earth a couple of
times at 17.000miles per hour. It j Charles Dennis of the WOAI TV
was indeed a' great and spectacle , staff and Jane Stevens, a well-
'j)ir achievement, but it- signifi ‘ j established radio and t-sb-vision
entire should tie considered in prop- ! p*o-onulity. '
er prespective. Russia is bleak- ! Tins' will tie the third eeiisecu-
iiiV all travel records. One Com-*itic.- year that the Richter's Bak-
muuist went into orbit and ery. bakei.- of Mutter Krust Bread,
This will mark the 66th ■- Amnia!
Parade. The program will begin
promptly at 2:"(I pan., on Chan-
nel I. and will he narrated by
million others get out through
West Germany!
has p. e-'ent t-d tin parade as a
public sen ice
HOW \RI) (’ Mil. Ft Kll Vlt'l
l> IN \It I SHOW
Howard Kckhart, along
uiti: tbl"e. . Teva- T'-ch slil-
.it a ' - pr.-e- nt an a. t ex'o bit
in the home economics building
a ' college in Lubbock on
A 14r.il 21 and 22.
The sim|de fact- is that the So- | Tl"' '“‘Ole of Flowers Parade is
viets started their missile program!^1’’ hichlight id I-a-sta Week, and
six or eight years before we did, I'1 i!"'|:|,!’' Ki,fK x,'t«.i- in his
Practically nothing was done i,L ha: d-,.uu lim- drawn coach',' the
that field during Hie Truman ad-DHmen in her royal robe-', and the
mini mal,.-I The gap is „(AV !-'-uniMM ladies "f then court. In
practically closed, and we are now : 11L!it, a, civi-- leaders, punlic "f-
:ihend of- them in some areas of-I" ; : 1 'ganizati- , h-gh
mis-ih: development. m- I.ooI and c.ilJegc bands and drill
teain- fnun aII ov.. 1 this part of
T. XUS will be
diainutic final
W.a-k.
telev ised
event of
Fiesta
I
As i’resident. Kcmiedy pointed
out, the Commies under ilictator-
hip can concc'iUvate their enev-j
gies. nioiiey and 1. snuiv beliiod 1
anything, to the neglect id’ every-
j thing else if they clioose. Thus, | Oi’vTRo Ko-'-e of Medina \v;ls a'
they will spend billions to achieve ■ Pandora visitor Tuesday when he
a "first” for propaganda use. while-was here transacting l.usiiu -a
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The Bandera Bulletin (Bandera, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1961, newspaper, April 21, 1961; Bandera, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth711421/m1/3/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bandera Public Library.