The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 225, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1955 Page: 8 of 14
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Eire Railroad
Abandons Shop
Ruined by Flood
Cleveland, Sept. 22 (£1 — The
Erie Railroad has decided hot to
rebuild its flood-damaged freight
car repair shop at Dunmore, Pa.
The shop has been idle since the
blacksmith and machine depart-
ments were destroyed by a flood
following Hurricane Diane Aug-
ust 19th.
Normally about 2S0 men Were
employed at Dunmore and 7S of
them were recalled on Monday.
Employes will I* given a chance
to transfer to a new shop when
it is built next year at a main-
line location still to be decided'. ,
By MERRILL BLOSSER
Youite 6on6 ib 6tr
TMAX e>ocnr SLOCK g(6wr
ip ir takis all oar/
Mow eer set, Smitm -XN
jtu,Tfeu.TdxjwMB4 / dear,,
^IbCWAR6E Z--A COACH f
IPe COACH WANT’S UK OVER
AT His house ID ewe we
SOME SPECIA L INSTRUCT IONS
cog Tbuoegow's
y. W- jjylW. E«**r *n4 e»SH*fc*r
Washington, Sept. 22
agine driving from comet to ebast
and never seeing a traffic IMtt.
J. P. Buckley, chief highway
engineer for the automotive Safe-
ty Foundation, aays that miKha
possible by the year 2,00® on
great expressway* that will by-
pass cities.
- That'* nut all he predict*. Sleet
and snow will.jnclt as it hits the
highway. Headlights won’t be
needed on major roads which will
be illuminated as bri
Of WHAT'S V DiDM'T I TELL
ssst-its
TURNIN'
TH’ MO& 4
, Back/ V
HattOW, LtiOOT \ ft MU5TA BEEN
A COPPER* } YOU rr WOULD
HEAD LOOK \ PAY TO BRLo
LIKE? LOOK] THESE RUBBE
X H«R1/ h SHAKES/
OH, THERE'S ,
X\ \ ANOTHER-
1 N"i TWO— J
SURE WAS A \ESPEOALLY
MESS. SAKES \W1TH THAT
alive? i don't &g a'
SEE HOW HE/TIGER 4|
COULD /AFTER fll
, SURVIVE? 1'IM TOO? Ml
EM GO! WHATCHA 1 SUMPIN AWFUL1
THINK STAMPEDED/1 CANT IMAGINE
!jk EM SOZr^XfXGUZ LIVED si
<•»* THROUGH THAT'/*
WOW,
as day.
Opposing traffic wifi be separ-
ated. One-way'Streets and high-
ways will be the rula. Large lake*
will he bridged »f\d mountain
• ranges-will be tunnnelled.
A »*<i;11 ed Press cun esp<indent
Arthur Rdson spy* iTTell'iHM-lJgf
rwftlFthkrffctore afteri interview-
tog Buckley.Eot the Wow wore 1
off.. Edsott said he hailed a cab
and it took 10 minutes to go 8
blocks, / / . ----
By MICHAEL O’MALLEY
VIC FLINT
IF kOU CAN
SfVEN VSARfrDAP LUCK
MlS6 LOTUS BLOSSOM,
Dot scuu err more .
than that/ . L/|
IIpii
ARE MAPS-NOT BORN
ggwjkjmhjjk.
hkn
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THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Thursday, September 22. 1955.
—.............
Editorial andFeatures
‘Liberal*’ and Prosperity
/ For two or three decode? now It has
been fashionable for oelf-etyled liberal* to
awsert that they care for human values,
while their least enlightened opponents are
concerned only with property values.
ready have an eight-head herd of Black Angus cat-
tle.
The Moore daughters, Mamie Eisenhower and
Ellen, gave their l>ad tivo pigs. There are three
horses and a foal, two lambs, geese, kittens and
rabbits, owned by Mrs" Sfoore’x son, Michael Gill.
....... . ,... r. Mamie picked up a useful hint from Mike dur-
Thi* ha* hern rewarded a? the urutn- if»g one of the visits she’s made to the Moore place
X.-X-
awefabJe taunt. But if* not the clear-cut
propoftitign its articulate sponsors seem
to believe To listen to them, one would
imagine that liberals care for people while
conservative* can only snuggle up to faev
toyteft. building* and real estate in gen-
eral.
In truth—and this would appear to be
obvious to anyone not trapped in slogan-
ized thinking—people usually are richly
served by property values. And the man
who sees his task as protecting propertied
interests is not necessarily antihUmanita-
rian. .
Let’* **y, for instance, that* business-
man temporarily squeezed by high raw
material costs feels compelled to deny his
workers a wage boost. If he did grant it
and tfien found he 'could not pass on his
increased costs in the form of higher
prices, be might toon go out of business.
Supoose he were operating a plant
worth 25 million dollars, with a few thou-
sand workers producing generally low-
priced household appliances of some sort.
To close would cost thousands their jobs,
and rob perhapiLznillions of consumers of
a uafifol product at a price they can af-
ford to pay.
The liberal would sav these are stock
arguments used to cloak the businessman’s
harsh concern for property at the expense
of hi*.workers. Of course there are cases
where the charge i- true. But there are
also manv where it is not, aid the liberal
critic makes no distinction.
Today this country has thousands of
thoroughly enlightened businessmen just
as alert as any scb'-pronounied liberal to
the human values in our society. But
these men understand that humanity is
nerved in many ways—not all of them ob-
vious. or hand-out method.
We all know that Americans enjoy far
greater economic well-being than most
others in the world. It’s too bad one can’t
measure, exactly how much the economic
enterprisers and the vocal libeftds, respec-
tively. have, contributed to this achieve-
ment
One does not have to be very bold to
gue** that the.enterprisers are overwhelm-
ingly1 responsible for the high plane.of liv-
ing in thp United States. Their 'Initiative,
resourcefiltiiiess and energy have put us
w here we are,
In recognizing this, however, one need
not discredit the devoted labors of the
genuine liberals who have fought steadily
and well to keep our huge industrial ma-
chine from crunching mere men under-
foot. The problem is one of balance, and
they have performed a notable service to-
ward realizing it.
The point to remember is that neither
the conservatives nor the liberals have a
private pipeline to Heaven. Properly con-
ceived ,the philosophies and programs of
both ought to approach basic human
values—but from different sides.
—with ihe President—a dab of cotton stuck to
the screen door to keep the flies* out—and she’*
using same idea at Cifipbtuv.
ike thought the w hole farm pretty fine, but lie
didn’t go much for the original farmhouse, built
in 1*90, which is one of the three houses on the
place. Mist. Moore reported that when she asked
him what he thought could be done with the now
down-at-the-heeh structure, he merely handed her
a box of matches,
Mrs. Moore says she’s actually more interest-
ed in fixing up the outside of the place than the
interior of the house they’re living in.
“Mamie and 1 usually go to the same j mnni-
end; witlr tme Took at Trrc cxIt'TOSfnt ha'Yds
and broken fingernails, she says she knows who
is the, farmer in the family,’’ Mrs, Moore told
Washington reporters,
The Literary Guidepost
By W. G. Rogers
WATERFRONT. By Budd Schulberg. Ran-
dom House. *
Joey Doyle was in the Navy, and he can read,
even the fine print in the union’s constitution,
and ao he’s making trouble,' or so boss John Friend-
ly charges. Friendly is as Friendly does: he suc-
cors the widow, he let* the wife have the pay her
husband would drink up. But maybe he made the
woman a widow. He keeps the pay down; pockets
rake-offs; abets the loan shark; and if a fellow
doesn’t listen to reason, he may be beaten up, or
shot, or dumped ir, the river, or pushed off a
roof. N
No one know? this better than, Joey; his own
father is an example of what Friendly can do.
and of the way to get along with it. Joey is care-
ful not to go out alone. Friendly passes the word
to Charley Malloy, who tells his simple-minded
brother Terry to try to lure Joey out to the pigeon
Toft on the tenement roof.
So this novel starts off fast and tough, just
as the movie “On the Waterfront’’ did, and picks
up speed and violence at every lap.
Joey’s sister Katie comes Home'from the school
in which her father had attempted to shield her
from the vice and crime of the New York water-
front . Pop warned her that the waterfront “is
something you. don’t fool with—if ya wanna keep
alive.” But she’* an inquisitive girl **id a loyal
gutter; she challenges the neighborhood, the sys-
em, the Runty Nolan’s, the Mutt’s, even Father
arry. Thus Katie gets help though it’s granted
bit gingerly. A little justice doesn’t aompenyate
or the great deal of wrong and evil; the inform-
er is the only one who gets his come-uppance; the
punishment doesn’t fit the crime.
.8fhi.il.harg Writes this as he sees it, and offers
nothing very reassuring to the honest citizen. The
only one who really gets a break is the reader,
who comes off handsomely.
Deiour
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a EDSON IN WASHINGTON *
■ .o..n. n ii an i hi ^
Atmosphere of UN Meeting
Is as important os Agenda
BY PITY* KDSON
NBA Wiiklnitoi C*rmjK>ndent
"X
Ross Carlton Fights
To Uphold Segregation
be about him, not about segrega-
i lion argument!.
j "Guess my relations with Neg-
i roes have been about the same as
! everybody else’*.
”1 was born and raised light
; here in Dallas except for four
j years as a boy in Atlanta. My
By TIM PARKER | old auto accident. He slouches jn daddy wa* in the school book dis-
A**ociated Press Staff - : his big chair and talks easily. jtiibution business. I was puny as
Ross Carlton, who wants Texas' His office, rather small and old- a ^oy; ^ad asthma and spent
to continue segregating whites fashioned, is on the top floor of|?e^* m *vCarne<* to read in
We could stand fishermen telling tali tales if
they’d just keep ’em short
OmaMtltgmn
Washington Letter...
BY JANE EADS
A.P. STAfF WRITER
Washington.—Mamie Eisenhower’s sister Mike
and her husband, Washington businessman Gordon
Moore, are taking the k-ad set by the First Family
and-torning farmer-folk.
Mamie, who'* been kept plenty busy doing over
the old houto on the presidential farm at Gettys-
burg, can give Her sister some helpful tip* in the
renovation of the Moore'* old house on Holiday
Hill, the *05-acre farm the Moores bought near
Leesburg, Va Ike can give hi* brother-in-law
mi in* Helpful Up* on livestock. The Moore* al-
atnssciumoN kates
*y Mai): I* BuMm urf aAiotaiac esontka, me Booth, tk:
thm Booth* fernt ia o4noc*,i IZ.lt, Mi munth* |emh ta I*
nut) t*M ; wu M (cub in odraoe*) |7 M OotaM* Hmkin*
and adjoiniac undUb. 00a Booth. tl.M. thro* months (soak ta
•draocei K M. aix month* (aasc to advaao* ti.M, ao* yaor
teach 1* adfaooa) 111*. ..................=■-•...........
By Carrier Miirfji On* Booth, Tie. sti Booth* (eoah ia a*
aooeal Kit, on* yasr eoah la ad race* I ta.50. 0* ootlylne
kichway root* ana*, cm month *1.00, Mi Booth* (each in ad
aaoat■ B.TE, oha year (each to advance) Ill tO._______
li—litr AaaoeUtad Sob aad N*A larrio*.- AU right* at r»
atridlaaMoe nt Dutatclw* hrrwn ar« *J*o raarnt
— Texas Daily Hr***
,, . __ _ Ttia*. Now York Citf.
Lo* Afurdta, CaJif., 8aa VrmEcisoo, Cattf. *L
OUT OUR WAY
Williams
and Negroes, excused himself to the Commercial building in Dal-
answer the phone. ......j las. If he's wealthy, it doesn’t
Yes,' this is Carlton," he said show. The yellow paint is peeling
j bed.
We’ve always had Negro ser-
vant*. I’ve lived with Negroes all
T TOTTED NATIONS—(NBA)—Tht tenth Hseion of the United*
^ Nation* General Assembly convening In New York Sept. 20
looks like another meeting llrgely devoted to talk, without much
real accomplishment on settling many troublesome Issue*. ‘
American officials say the important thing to watch will be the
atmosphere. It the Soviet ahd satellite delegates reflect the new
spirit of Geneva, there may be some surprise developments. Barring
that change in tactics, there are no great expectations. ■ XT',
An agenda of 60 items to discuss has been prepared in advance.
But the general approach teems to be one of finding ways to put
issues aside or avoid thtm* ^ * j *
Typical Is the question of revision of the United Nations charter.
After a decade of experience in running the world organization,
this seems to be the year in which a decision would be made to
remove some of the roadblocks that have stopped progress.
.THESE OBSTACLES include misuse of the veto power, rejection'
of new member applications, unequal voting right* in the General
Assembly and inability of Security Council to preserve peace.
Two years ago Secretary of State John Foater Dulles favorsd call-
ing a review conference. Last month a Senate Foreign Relations
subcommittee studying charter review had to coufm lt did not ,
know whether he favored it or not
What seems to have happened is that some nations fear charter
revision now would convert the UN. into a world state. Other*
believe that charter revision would weaken or even destroy the
organization. So the decision has apparently been made to above
the whole issue under the table. ,
> There may be a pious resolution to call a charter revision confer-
ence at some unspecified future date. But arty idea of malting the
UN. really effective now will be ditched. And all the brave wonts
at the tenth anniversary of the charter signing in San Franciaeo,
last June, will be forgotten in the echoes of hollow mockery.
! THIS SAME ATTITUDE of procrastination will apparently be
taken In considering every other important isaue that the UN.
ought to be working on, harxL
The Korean question is on the agenda, but nothing controversial
is expected to be brought up. The matter of regulating the Neutral
Nations Supervisory Commissions, which has caused riots In Korea,
will be left for settlement in the field.
There will be several reports on the UN.*S Arab refugee relief
program. But action on Secretary Dulles’ latest proposal for
bringing peace to the Middle East by guaranteeing the present
boundaries of Israel and its neighbors will be left to direct negotia-
tion between thaw countries and the United States. —
THE QUESTIONS of Cyprus and Morocco are expected to be
brought op, though they are not on the first agenda. In the pant,
France has taken the position that the Moroccan question waa an
internal political matter. *
Election of new members to the Security Council, Trusteeship
Council and Economic and Social Council will cause toe usual
amount or politicking at the opening sessions.
This year, it is Latin America’s turn to have the General Aswm-'
bty presidency The usual procedure is for the Latin American
countries to caucus and decide among themselves who tt will he.
In the wake of the Geneva conference on peaceful uses of atomic
energy, there may be some new UN. program adopted to study
the effects of atomic bomb radiation But nothing more exciting
than that *
no ^candidate taking the right ^ can be showh something can be
in the kind of gravelly drawl in spot;; on his office ceiling, i m>r *nd ptoyed with little Neg- stand t (against integration) 1 done about it. I intend to show
many big men have "Good to! There’s a thumb-sised hole in the jro M*>- F don’t have anything would consider it T’ve ncvwr at- '
heai from you, George. Haven’t armrest of the leather sofa. The j »*fainst the Negroes.” j tualijf wanted public office.*’
seen you in years.” dust-covered, sil ve r cigarette; "No. I’ve never run for public* "I didn t ask for this job (Head-
Two minutes pass during which® li*hter on his de*k «•««*"’» ™k- j office., i waa assistant attorney *nMh<: T*.x“* Citizens Council).
Carlton listened to his caller, withi The Uw books are in the outer'**"«»« Mann in They|already had an informal or-
now and then an approving "Yup” office, shared with his partner. In *»*» through 1942 and I handled X«>«tot.on go.ng when they called
or “Uh Huh." Finally: , ! his office Carlton has a strange!M*nh’* ‘’*mP*i*n •" Coun- «■» "*• our council ia grow-
who ar^Negroes. It's not that at
ters from Lee’s Army,’’ "Ga*-jc<>k* Stevenson, inscribed to "my
"Sure, liti have a membership house McGinty" and a Spuish!*^ friMdf. Ross Carlton’’, Kings
card in the mail for you today, grammar.
Joh the wall). In 1982, well, I just
Sure will.
J
Carlton does all kinds of law
Thus another member is enroll- wdrk but concentrates on business
ed in the Texas Citizens Council.
Carlton is president and attorney.
law, which he likes despite the
fact it is colorless and "just damn
didn't vote."
"1956! Well, 1 think it (segre-
gation) will be at ieast one of the
outstanding issues fit the Southern
State?. It could be the only issue
More phone calls about the Jj governor here
The council is pledged to uphold * hard work."
segregation by ail peaceful and
legal means. council’* work interrupt the inter-
Carlton is a big (6 foot, 2 inch- view (’,rlton asks hU partner to,
es) friendly min who likes to , , __,, . . governor?
, , . ... take his calls so he can give all „„ . , , , . ,
wear sports shirt and stacks at . I I ve been asked about it but
work. He is 44 years old, his left bis time to answering the Ques.> )lgven’t given it any particular
arm is scarred and stiff from an tions, which he has been told will thought. I suppose if there were
gore, Gilmer, Marshall, Orange,
Fort Worth, Waco and I.sGrange.
So far w/’re doing it entirely on
a voluntary basis. There are no
salaries and the only money going
out is for out-of-pocket expenses,
like phone bills.*'
"It takes more than half my
time now and I’m not pushing it/*
Carlton was asxeu why he got
Had he thought of running for/"to >*•
"It’s a matter of principle. I'm
not going to aiccept integration.
It’s my belief a majority of the
people of Texas will not if they
them.’
The phone rang. An urgent call
was being let through.
“Yes, this is Carlton. Why, Hel-
lo Senator. Why, sure, sure.”
It was a very influential state
senator.
“That’s just taW wiy I feel,
after lis-
don’t Have
anything against Negroes. Yes,
I'll have a card in the mail for you
right away,’,
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIE NDS
ALLEY OOP
V. T. HAMLIN
ijjl
HO£1090
lip
Or
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:<is>...... _
It takes o lot of pluck for o girl
to keep h«r eyebrows In thope.
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 225, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1955, newspaper, September 22, 1955; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827341/m1/8/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.