The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 70, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 11, 1962 Page: 4 of 16
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Page 4, Taylor Daily Press, Sunday, March 11, 1962
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Published In Taylor, Texas, since 1913 and serving a market area of
25,000 each Sunday and daily except Saturday.
Entered as second class mail matter at the Post Office at Taylor, Texas,
under the act of March 8, 1872.
Publishers — Taylor Newspapers, Inc.
News, Advertising and Circulation telephone EL2-3621
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for reproduction of
•ill local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP dispatches. All
reproduction rights of special dispatches here are also reserved.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation, which may appear in the columns of The
Taylor Daily Press will gladly be corrected upon being brought to the
attention of the Publisher.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Carrier delivery In Taylor, Thrall, Thorndale, Rockdale, Granger, Bart-
lett, Hutto, Elgin, Coupland and Georgetown — 30-cents per week.
Mail rates in Williamson and adjoining counties not served by carrier,
|1. per month; $2.75 for 3 months; $5. for 6 months; $9. per year.
Mail rates elsewhere: $1.35 per month, $16.20 per year. __
: NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES: Texas Daily Press League, Inc., Dallas,
Texas; New York City; Chicago, 111.; St. Louis, Mo.; Los Angeles, Calif.,
?an Francisco, Calif.; Memphis, Tenn.; Detroit, Mich.; Denver. Colo.,
Cash and Carryings-on
The average consumer, buying a car, a refrig-
erator, a tv (set, groceries and many another item,
undoubtedly can benefit from having public watch-
dogs on guard in his behalf, whether he buys on
credit or for cash.
The nation today is so awash with alluring pro-
ducts, offered on the most attractive terms, that
the consumer can understandably lose his way in
trying to figure out what is best for him. Occas-
ionally he may encounter shoddy goods, deliber-
ate misrepresentation, deceptive credit arrange-
ments.
Inquiries at the federal level have been delv-
ing into the consumer’s problems in this regard.
One concerns proper labeling and packaging of
foodstuffs and other household materials.
In the credit field, Sen. Paul Douglas, Illinois
Democrat, is proposing what he calls his “Truth in
Lending Act,” its aim being to compel all purvey-
ors of credit to state clearly the dollar cost of their
finance charges, and the simple annual interest
rate this represents.
Douglas argues that lenders too often state
finance costs in confusing or incomplete fashion,
and that borrowers hence cannot sensibly “shop
for credit” or know fairly what they are being
charged
Right now his proposal is stymied in a Senate
subcommittee with little early prospect of action.
Consumers have not risen in wide support. Nor has
all opposition come from lenders who presuma-
bly would be most affected.
Prof. Robert W. Johnson, a business adminis-
tration specialist at Michigan State University, says
the Douglas proposal would simply lead the un-
scrupulous lender to conceal his finance charge in
the price of the product.
Failing this, the tricky credit dealer can get
around the Douglas plan, says Johnson, by adding
to collection charges, commissions, cost of renew-
als, extensions and delinquencies.
The professor further suggests that the whole
realm of consumer credit has today become so com-
plex that even Douglas’ call for simple statements
of credit cost would not always produce the results
he seeks.
But this should hardly be news. Numerous
credit specialists have disagreed before the Douglas
committee on the size of finance charges and in-
terest rates in specific examples.
Douglas says people are sharper at shopping
for goods than for credit, and wouldn’t be fooled
by padded prices. Johnson says there’s no reason
to believe this is so.
It is hard to see where this leaves the consum-
mer. For the weight of the discussion indicates
that even that statistical wizard, Defense Secretary
McNamara, might have trouble braving the market-
place today. _
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When the Office Becomes
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WORLD
SPOTLJG
Disarmament: Actors in Endless Play
Merry-Go-Round.... By Drew Pearson
Guard to Man
Nike Batteries
t AUSTIN (IP) — The Texas Na-
tional Guard will take over sev-
eral Nike Hercules air defense
batteries as soon as training pro-
grams are completed.
Gov. Price Daniel said Thurs-
day he hoped this is merely a
•first step which will eventually
see state troops operating all Nike
sites in Texas.”
.• Guardsmen will man the sites
with several civilian technicians.
Employed by the adjutant gen-
eral’s department. The technic!
ahs will enter the active Army
training program, Daniel said.
Most of the full-time guards-
8 31 Si not ra to Miss
Visit Wth Kennedy
HOLLYWOOD (ff) — Frank Sina-
tra is ill with laryngitis, his
friends say and couldn’t meet
President Kennedy in Florida,
as planned.
The singer’s trip was canceled
Thursday. He also missed a bene
fit dinner Saturday for Sen.
George A. Smathers, D-Fla., in
Miami.
WASHINGTON — Mexico is
launching a vast program to mod-
ernize and beautify its cities
along the United States border.
The brothels, the cheap saloons,
the clip joints which have attract-
ed the worst class of. American
tourist will soon disappear.
This is the dream of President
Adolfo Lopez Mateos and he has
placed it in the hands of Sen.
Antonio Bermudez, whom he has
named director of the Program
for National Frontiers. Mexico
plans to spend $120,000,000 in re-
vamping 34 Mexican cities along
the U.S., Guatemalan, and Brit-
ish Honduran borders.
‘ ‘Progress is like a magnet,
Senator Bermudez told me when
I was in Mexico recently. ‘‘When
you improve one* place, others
follow the example.
‘‘Our wealthiest cities are along
the U.S. border,” he continued.
‘‘They have grown like mush-
rooms. They reflect the coopera-
tion and friendship we have de-
veloped with you, but they can
do much better.
‘‘We want them to be show-
places, not slums.”
Senator Bermudez showed me
figures illustrating the amazing
growth of Mexican cities along
the border. Tijuana had a popu-
lation of only 11,200 in 1930. In
1960 its population had shot up
to 167,000.
‘‘Or take the city of Juarez,
Senator Bermudez said. ‘‘In 1930
it had a population of only 43
Save gasoline and shop at home.
000, but today it is the fourth
largest city in Mexico with a
population of 325,000. El Paso,
across the Rio Grande, has a
population of 450,000. These two
cities are very friendly and co-
operative and will become moire
so as Juarez modernizes itself.”
Senator Bermudez pointed out
that 200,000 Americans visited Ti-
juana recently in eight days.
Every Saturday about 20,000 car-
loads of tourists come to see the
bullfights. The senator is not op-
posed to bullfights but he wants
American tourists to come for
other attractions such as thea-
tres, festivals, parks, and mu-
seums in which will be presetved
the history of old Mexico.
I asked Senator Bermudez how
long it would take to rebuild and
beautify these cities and where
he was going to get the money.
He replied that President Lope'z
Mateos had already allocated $120
million and that as the cities im-
proved they would attract more
funds for further improvement.
“We plan to start work right
away” he said.
“Mexico has a great history,”
he explained. ‘‘We want to pre-
serve that history with annual
festivals and museums which we
believe will attract far more tour-
ists and a better type of tourist
than the slums which now exist
in some cities across the border.
Note—Among the other cities
along the border are Nuevo La
redo opposite Laredo, Tex., Pied
It Occurs to Me ..
...by LIN MILLS
men will be trained at Army
Service schools. The courses vary
from eight to 45 weeks and most
will be at the Army Air Defense
School at Ft. Bliss.
Republic of Guinea
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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A TAYLORITE, Bobby Moe-
gle, baseball coach at Monterey
High School at Lubbock, has
a very nice article in the
March issue of “Texas Coach,”
official publication of the Texas
Coaches Assn.
Moegle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
O. G. Moegle and' brother of
Dicky Moegle of the Dallas
Cowboys wrote the article him-
self. Complete with pictures, it
takes up two complete pages.
Title of 4he article is “Weight
Training for Baseball Players.”
There’s a very good! picture of
Bobby, a graduate of Taylor
High School and Southwestern
University. He played three
years of professional baseball
in the St. Louis Cardinal organi-
zation befofe coming to Mon-
terey High School in 1959.
He won the bi-district title his
first year and went to the
state finals last year. He has a
48-1 record in two years.
In his article, Moegle says
weight: training for athletes
has become very popular in
the past few years.
“For the last two years
weight work has been used for
all of my baseball players with
significant results being noted,
especially in the hitters,” he
said.
His 'program includes training
with barbells and dumbbells.
THE AIRPLANE pilot ad-
dressed his passengers over the
intercom system to tell them
he had lost his way.
He explained that the radar
was not working, his radio
beam could not be picked up
and that the compass was brok-
en.
“But,” be added encouraging-
ly, “you’ll be glad to know we
are making very good time.”
THE FINANCIAL Tycoon’s
day was too much to bear.
Climbing into his limousine, he
told his chauffeur:
“George, drive over a cliff.
I’m committing suicide.”
TALKING ABOUT unusujal
accidents, how about this one:
Sleepwalking, Mrs. Faith
Blackmore, 43, of Fort Lau-
derdale, Fla., apparently decid-
ed to cease being a pedestrian.
Sound asleep one night, she
went to the garage and started
the car. The. damage was esti-
mated at $450 to the car and
$300 to the garage.
OR THIS ONE: Traffic was
tied up a few miles east of Ol-
ney. 111., when a panel truck
collided head-on with the car
it was towing. The truck tried
to pass a semi-trailer truck and
ran off the pavement.
The car being towed broke
loose, spun 180 degrees and
overturned in the highway. The
panel truck bounced through a
drainage ditch, returned to the
highway and hit the car.
HIGHWAY SIGNS are intend-
ed to help drivers .but Carl M.
Gelbke, 34 of Kalamazoo, Mich,
found they weren’t placed quite
right for airplane drivers.
Gelbke, a student pilot, crash-
ed after he became lost and
after he became lost and
brought his plane close to the
ground to read a sign. His craft
caught a high tension wire.
14-YEAR-OLD Steven Hardina
announced he was going to give
up baton twirling after lie shook
up Ventura, Calif.
With a mighty toss, Steve sent
his baton so high that it struck
two 4,000-volt power lines. This
blacked out: a 10-block area for
an hour, started a grass fire,
and knocked a radio station off
the air.
MAYOR HAROLD J. Grady
of Baltimore, Md., was handed
an appropriate schedule sheet
during Fire Prevention Week.
One of his secretaries dropped
a cigarette cinder on the para-
graph which mentioned, the spe-
cial week, and scorched 1he
word “hazards” in a sentence
reminding him he was to say
a few words of warning about,
fire hazards.
ras Negras opposite Eagle Pass,
Tex., Matamoros opposite Browns-
ville, Tex., and Nogales, Sonora,
opposite Nogales, Ariz.
Chatty Taxi Companion
A young lady was entering a
taxicab in front of the Depart-
ment of Health, Education, and
Welfare. Taxis we're scarce and
she offered a ride to a middle-
aged man emerging from the
building.
He was in a hurry to get to
Union Station. The two fell to
chatting — among other things
about: personnel condition at the
HEW, which compelled clerks
such as herself to work on Sat-
urday afternoons.
“It’s poor administration, if
you ask me,” she proclaimed,
and went into some detail.
“I hope I haven’t bored you”
she concluded as the taxi drew
up at Union Station.
“You haven’t bored me at all,”
was the reply. “My 'name is Ivan
A. Nestingen. I’m the under sec-
retary of HEW.”
Harangue of the Minute Men
Here is more on the secret
meeting of the California Minute
Men held not long ago near the
UCLA campus in Los Angeles.
Commander Jack, haranguing
his men, blasted the council on
foreign relations, a very respect-
able organization considered by
many to be quite conservative.
“I guess you’ve heard of the
Council on Foreign Relations,”
he said. “It’s controlled by the
illuminati. The 500 men. The illu-
minati is bigger than commuism.
The Council on Foreign Relations
is controlling us today. Nixon is
a member. That’s hard to under-
stand. He has a fair voting record
not too good, not too bad. But
after all he helped track down
Alger Hiss when he was attorney
general. I think he was chairman
of the Council on Foreign Rela-
tions in 1958 or ’59. That’s when
he was vice president. I think
maybe that’s part of the office—
the vice president is the chair-
man of the council. That only
shows how close it is to the gov-
ernment. And it has nothing to
do with the people. Kennedy’s
voting record. His actions. They’re
strictly Council on Foreign Rela-
tions.,
“It’s like the Supreme Court.
Warren and Frankfurter. The
FBI spend years gathering evi-
dence on communists and then
Warren says there’s not enough
evidence and lets the Commun-
ists go. Lets them go! No wonder
6,000,000 people want to impeach
him. The Supreme Court let
Mickey Cohen go. You know why
they give him bail? Because he
was going to go to the World
Court if he didn’t get it from
them. And the Supreme Court
didn’t want him doing that. Be-
cause then the people of the Unit-
ed States would find out and say
‘What the hell’s this World Court
that is over the Supreme Court?”
(Copyright, 1962, by The Bell
Syndicate) i
o-—
By TOM OCHILTREE
GENEVA iff) — Here in peace-
ful Geneva 17 nations will make
a new try Wednesday to find the
key that has eluded mankind
through the centuries: A way to
stop the world of its weapons.
A bleak and unbroken record
of failure will hang over the dele-
gates. They know their chances
for a breakthrough are slim. Yet
they must negotiate with the hope
that some stray beam of light
will disclose the road to mutual
trust.
It is officially a meeting of the
U. N. Disarmacent Committee,
set up by the General Assembly
of the United Nations.
Members are: West — United
States, Britain, Canada, Italy.
East — Soviet Unios, Bulgaria,
Czechoslovakia, Poland, Romania.
Others—Brazil, Burma, Ethiopia,
India, Mexico, Nigeria, Sweden,
United Arab Republic.
France also belongs to the com-
mittee, but pulled out: of this
meeting saying in effect it had
no hope such a large conference
could find even partial solutions
to the disarmament question.
Like1 actors in some endless
play, the delegates convene with
brief cases bulging with papers,
their speeches nicely polished.
The phrases can be predicted.
Opening statements will stress the
danger humanity faces and call
for an end to the arms race
Why, if all say they seek the
same goals, are the prospects so
slight of making any real start
toward disarmament?
The stakes involved are high.
The subject itself is dizzily com-
plex. A great nation could kill
itself off by making a faulty
judgment in the field of arms con-
trol.
John Foster Dulles always
stressed his own belief in disarm-
ament but once told newsmen,
“Maybe the human race missed
its best chance to end the arms
race back in the bow and arrow
days. Every weapon improvement
has made the problem more like
a nightmare.”
Even a workable agreement
simply banning further nuclear
tests would rank as a tremendous
diplomatic achievement. Such a
pact presumably would be easier
to achieve than a massive treaty
covering the whole field of gen-
eral and complete disarmament.
There seems little hope for that,
either.
To test the temperature on nu-
clear testing, the U.S. and Bri-
tish foreign secretaries, Dean
Rusk and Lord Home, will get to-
gether with the Soviet Union’s
Andrei A. Gromyko ahead of the
17-nation talks.
Gromyko’s government says it
is against all testing, but the So-
viets have never accepted what
the West regards as adequate in
ternational policing arrangements.
In the view of the American and
British governments it is too late
now for unverified promises.
Washington and London want a
test ban the whole world can
trust—one resting on enforcement
procedures to prevent cheating.
President Kennedy has served
notice the United States—in the
interest of its own safety and
that of its allies—must resume at-
mospheric tests in a few wks
unless the Soviets accept a treaty
the West can regard as having
some meaning.
For three years it looked as
if the three powers would come
up with a treaty. Then the Soviets
resumed testing.
Now another opportunity has
arisen. It may be the last chance
to head off a testing race betwen
the United States and the Soviet
Union with ultimate consequences
no one can forecast.
Even more doubt and' cynicism
underlie the field of broader dis-
armament. The average man has
been unable to extract much hope
from 70 distinct international
arms negotiations that have come
to a dead end since 1946.
A major question is where to
make a start, and how.
An inadequate disarmament
agreement could tip the balance
toward catastrophe.
Suppose, for example, that a
disarmament pact cut America’s
nuclear power faster than it re-
duced the Soviet Union’s conven-
tional military strength. Suppose
one great power cheated while the
other reduced its arsenal in good
faith. The result could be the
same as a war won or lost.
“Any chance of success at Ge-
neva depends on Russia’s ability
to cure herself of her obsession
that inspection is the equivalent
of espionage,” said Britain’s for-
eign secretary.
Tom Ochiltree has spent more
time at Geneva conferences than^^
most of the delegates who will*®
be there this week. An AP writ-
er since 1942, he has covered
many of the most important dip-
lomatic sessions of the last 15
years.
First lady Unknown
To Most in India
By HENRY S. BRADSHER
NEW DELHI UP) — “Amerika?”
The child sitting in the hospital
bed looked perplexed. He knew
nothing of the United States or
its President—or its First Lady.
Tarlochan Singh, 11, said shyly
he was only in the fourth grade.
Next Tuesday Mrs. John F.
Kennedy will visit the hospital
ward where he is critically ill
with leukemia.
Next door in the children’s ward
of the All-India Medical Institute,
Rejender lies in bed with useless
legs. A bright smiling girl, she
knows about Mrs. Kennedy and
says she is looking forward to
seeing her.
Few Indians are as well in-
formed. For most the United
States is an unknown country.
Tales of its First Lady have not
penetrated to 558,000 villages lit-
tle changed by the ages. Many
things Mrs. Kennedy will see on
her visit to India and Pakistan
are little changed since before the
United States was founded.
When Mrs. Kennedy leaves New
Delhi Thursday her visit becomes
mainly a tour of ancient splend-
ors.
The first is atehpur Sikri, an
intricately carved city of red
sandstone, built almost 400 years
ago by Moghul Emperor Akbar
and abandoned to the desert when
the water supply failed.
Then, to nearby Agra and the
famed monument to a deeply
loved wife—the Taj Mahal.
Mrs. Kennedy will see it in sun-
light and return by the half
moon’s light to see the white
marble tomb built by the Emper-
or Shah Jahan in the 17th cen-
tury.
She then flies to Udaipur, a
palaced city hidden in the moun-
tains behind the Rajasthan Des-
ert to protect its Hindu rulers
from Moslems like Akbar and
Shah Jahan.
Another stop is Jaipur, which
some globe trotting architects
have called one of the world’s
most beautiful cities. The old sec-
tion is carved from pink stone.
The Pakistan visit begins March
21 at Lahore, a city famed for
its horse show. The President’s
wife, who has won prizes in horse
shows, will see the closing day
of a spectacle that includes
dancing camels as well as horses.
Her trip concludes in Karachi.
Pakistan’s former capital and its
largest city. One of her last visits
is to another hospital, a symbol
of the modem to go with the an-
cient glories. She leaves for home
March 26.
Many of the places Mrs. Ken-
nedy will visit are familiar to
Henry S. Bradsher. He toured
with Queen Elizabeth last pear
and has traveled more than 10
000 miles through India and f
neighboring countries. Bradshe.
a native of Louisiana, is chief AP
correspondent for India and Pak-
istan.
Secrest Attacks
Insurance Rate
HOUSTON (IP) — Sen. Jarrard
Secrest attacked the method of
auto insurance rate making today
as a “monopolistic scheme *of
price fixing.” '
The candidate for lieutenant
governor told a television audi-
ence the present merit - rating
plan “is unfair and ought to be
junked.”
‘Competition in the fixing of
rates, which is now prohibited by
law, must replace the outmoded
system which is costing Texans
millions of dollars a year,” Se-
crest said.
ill
>
til
Happy Birthday
Greetings of “Happy Birthday’
are being extended to the follow
ing birthday celebrants:
Sybil Mokry, Mrs. E. D. McAd-
ams, R. E. Unnasch Jr. Edna
Pasemann, Betty Lou Meiske,
Mrs. George Nelson, Mrs. Joe
Balia Jr. Janie Kaderka, Adele
David.
And lo those who celebrated
(heir birthday Saturday: Richard
Slagle, Mrs. Fred Cameron, Miss
Dot: Lindsay, Mrs. Homer Gil-
strap and Mrs. Dan Tennill.
--o-
Taylor Press Want Ads are
your way to satisfaction. Use the
classified. *
Why Grow Old
Superflous hair must be dealt -
with in ho uncertain terms if a
woman is to be well groomed
and feminine. Hair which shows
through sheer hose, or is notice-
able on the arms detracts from
a woman’s appearance. Much
more harassing are hairs on the
face.
Even with all of the different - - •
methods for removing this un-
wanted hair, and all that has 1 :
been written about it, many wo-
men still seem to he at a loss as
to What to do. I think one reason
for this is because many wom-
en still cling to old-fashioned be-
liefs which are just not true.
For instance1, there seems to be
no evidence at all that shaving
cause's the hair to grow in thick-
er and stiffen If shaving made
hair grow in thicker, men and
women with thinning hair' would
shave their heads.
! Dermatologists and physicians
have studied the effects of shav-
ing and the use of depilatories.
Recently, some of the facts they
some of the facts they leadned
learned were reported in the Jour-
nal of the American Academy of
General Practice. There was no
evidence that the removal of su-
perfluous hair, either by razor or
depilatory, had' any effect on the
thickness or rate of hair growth.
This is good to know. Some
time's you do not have a depilo-
lory in the house, but there is
always a razor nearby. You can
remove hair from the face suc-
cessfully with one of the depila-
tories especially planned for the
face. Follow directions to he cer-
tain that you are not allergic to
the product.
I often have letters from 1een-
age girls who are deeply distress-
ed and embarrassed because their
mothers will not allow them to
• ® •
By Josephine (Lowman
■
I:;
HAIR REMOVAL IS EASY — The removal of sup-
erfluous hair is not difficult and it’s an absolute
must if you are to look your best. If you have
any kind of a skin problem, an electric razor is
your best bet.
use a razor to remove the hair some special instances such
from their legs in the conviction
that it will make the hairs grow
in thicker. This just is not so!
The1 kind of haitr a woman has
makes a difference. If it is very
blonde and fine, it may be best to
leave it because it may not be
unpleasantly noticeable.. This is
true of hair on the arms. How-
ever, if it is dark and coarse,
that is hair of a different color!
Dermatologists have found that
the electric razor is preferable in
as
eczema, acne, ingrown hairs, or
when a person is allergic to soap.
Of course, electrolysis is the
only method of permanent hair
removal. Readers often ask how
to select an electrolysist. One wy|^k
is to call your local hospital a^B
ask for the name of a dermato-
logist on their staff. He will be
able to advise you or call your
county medical society.
(Released by The Register and
Tribune Syndicate, 1962)
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 70, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 11, 1962, newspaper, March 11, 1962; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth800124/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Taylor Public Library.