Shawnee News-Star (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 209, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 17, 1960 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Oklahoma) and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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4 Shawnee (Okla) News-Star Saturday Dec 17 MO Boyle-ing it down
THE SHAWNEE NEWS-STAR
tumid Mornings lateePt Monday
THE SHAWNEE NEWS CO PUBLISHER SHAWNTE OKLA
till NORIO BELL TEL axioms S2OS
N B MUSSELMAN
Editor and General Manager
JACK REESE MAURICE C MOOR! curns L BYERS
$ews tditos Adrertisins Manages CirctitatiOn Mantises
Menthes Audit norms t Circulation
Member at the Assatiated Press—htembot ot the Oklahoma prose aosootostoo
no Associated PTss is entitled inclusively to the use tor republication t nil the
local news prtnicti in this newspaper as well as AP news dispatches
NATIONAL RKPILESEICIATIVES Burke Kutner Ss Mahoney ins
New York memo Atlanta Dallas Oklahoma City
Prittred at the Shawnee Oklahoma pcsiottice as second-class used under act st
March I ICC
Just hoping won't do the job
On the minds of most people in Shawnee is the question
of how the "Save Jonco" plan is coming along since the first
announcement was made last Sunday One can't walk very
far on the streets without being asked how the fund-raising
program is progressing The most usual response to any in-
formation is "I sure hope they can succeed for we sure need
the payroll to start again soon"
This is good sentiment of course but mere words won't
get the job done As it was said the Christmas season is a
busy one for everyone and would have been the last period
anyone would have picked to do such a titanic job of money
raising if they could have had their druthers But it's now or
never as regards the salvage of machinery and equipment
that is ready and rarin' to be put to work in the big facility
north of the city And just hoping won't turn a wheel
Money is needed and the Chamber of Commerce office
is the place to step up and lay it on the line Money spent to
provide industrial payrolls is like seed sown into a field It can
return a hundredfold and then some to the general prosperity
of all
Share your blessings too
How would you like to be a county judge and come in
contact with the needy and unfortunate families that live
in the community ? For this is one of the biggest chores that
goes with the office
It's bad enough (luring the entire year but at Christmas
time such an official may wish he had never tried for the
job To hear the reports of juvenile authorities appealing
for help from citizens who need shoes for the children to
continue in school is heart rending It's even worse to hear
about dozens of destitute families who will have nothing to
look forward to on Christmas morning let alone the chil-
dren whose visions of sugar plums have long since changed
to hopes for just something at all to eat Widows with many
children to support who have fallen in dire misfortune
fathers of big families unable to work because of illness or
inability to find a job — all these are part of a county judge's
trials and tribulations as he must make an effort to alleviate
the suffering At Christmas time everything seems doubly
hopeless unless good people come to the rescue
The appeal has already been made from County Judge
Green's office through his secretary Susan Henley for any
who can help to bring whatever they can—clothing groceries
money or toys to the judge's office
If enough people respond as they usually do at the
Christmas season the judge's lot is made easier along with
the happiness that is provided in many homes Try and re-
meml ier to share your blessings
Speak up before legislature meets
Announcement was made several days ago of a new or
ganization with Oklahoma City headquarters We don't
know any more about it than was reported in the news item
but we are heartily In accord with its name and its reported
purpose
The organization is called "Oklahomans for Merit Sys-
tem" and its purpose is to do whatever is necessary to see
that the Oklahoma Merit System laws are not stricken from
the books and a return made to the political spoils system
that costs so much in inefficiency and hard cash
That there is need for such an organization is apparent
from other news that reports a bill already drawn for the
new legislature to repeal the Merit System law enacted at the
last session
There are some mighty influential names connected with
the organization that comes to the defense of the Merit
System They include Dr II V Thornton of the Oklahoma
University government department Bob Kerr Jr of Kerr-
McGee Oil Company Steve Stahl Executive Vice President
of the Public Expendliures Council and Martin Hauan who
was the champion for those who opposed the governor's
petitions in September
More power to these men and all others who are willing
to step forward when there is good work to be accomplished
There's much merit in their aim
You too can help them immeasurably by telling your
representatives that you want them to help this organization
hold the line for a continuation of the Merit System in Oklahoma
Headline in Miami Iterald—"Ike Dick Can't Steer GOP
Boat it's Rocky and full of Goldwater"
We're kinda sorry that Rep William L Dawson of Illi-
nois declined the offer of John F Kennedy to be Postmaster
General and thus become the first Negro cabinet member
in history With the Postoffice so long in the red this would
have been a great chance for it to be in the black again
President Ike looks better than ever following his recent
head to toe physical Wish we'd have taken some of that bet-
ting money around that he wouldn't last out his first term
but as a good Shawneean we obey the laws and don't gamble
Paul Boone herded his combo players around the streets
and set up for tunes in business houses Friday It was only
natural that someone would refer to him as "The Music Man"
CARNIVAL—By Dick Turner
121 "
tk
leave you no incentive to work?
make—what better one do you want?"
I spend more than
you
New York needs
a monthly blizzard
By IIAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (il")--It takes a blizzard to melt
the cold cold heart of the world's great-
est city
So if you want to see America's leading
metropolis at its friendliest be sure to come
here during a blinding snowstorm
A human thaw occurs that turns sprawling
Gotham into a small town of some eight
million neighbors
A I7-inch snowfall here this week proved
that again A big storm always does
On ordinary days a stranger seeing Man-
hattan for the first time gets the eerie impres-
sion he has been set down in a vast civic
madhouse
Everybody seems to be in a tremendous
rush to get from where he is to where he
isn't Each person acts as if he were carrying
an important message to Garcia Each person
appears to believe the other eight million
citizens are trying to block his path
It is a city where folks don't really seem
to have time for each other It is a city where
you start mumbling "g'bye" before you finish
saying uh'Io"
To many visitors awed by the pace here
New York appears less a city than a huge
traffic problem—an intricate maze endlessly
threaded by two-legged ants hopped up by
pep pills ants endlessly bumping into each
other richocheting and then bumbling on
growling
But let five or more inches of snow fall
and all this magically changes
The hammering pulse of the city eases to
a steady purposeful throb traffic slows to a
crawl
All year long it has been a battle of man
against man in the mortal storm of day-to-day
living Humanity too crowded against itself
has rubbed its nerves raw
But the falling flakes herald the arrival
of an outside enemy—the blizzard—and in the
face of this ancient foe the human herd here
unites instinctively
The daily scramble to gain an edge on the
other fellow is forgotten The subway stare—
that self-protecting look of indifference—dis-
appears The city becomes a common white battle-
ground on which the community forges a
fresh unity
Gallantry emerges Men cheerfully break
paths through the deepening snow and old
ladies follow in their footsteps The bus
driver no longer shuts his door in the face
of a passenger Ile even stops his bus in the
middle of the block to pick up a red-faced
panting pilgrim of the drifts
Ill-temper vanishes Good nature reigns
An almost frolic atmosphere takes over Peo-
ple share cabs who never shared cabs before
Strangers grin and speak to each other Every-
body suddenly has time to be helpful
People who never even nodded before
now pause and trade tall tales of how they
had to struggle to make it from home to
train or bus or subway They are as eager
as small children to trade experiences
They have all at once become neighbors
They have something in common now They
have fought the elements together—and won
They are combat veteran of the weather
When the snow goes unfortunately that
feeling will evaporate too The frantic pace
resumes the subway stare returns people
bump each other and rebound and go their
separate ways without apology
It's too bad
It might make the big city a better place
to live in if it were hit with a real blizzard
at least once a month throughout the year
—just so it could show its real human heart
more often
Do you remember?
FIVE YEARS AGO
Miss Eugenia Brown's sophomore English
elasses had been di amnaizing portions of the
Shakespearean play "Julius Caesar" This
proved entertaining as well as educational to
the underclassmen Shawnee's Council of
Churches owned the religious scene on Boesch
Brothers Chapel which caused quite a bit of
talk The lovely work was painted and sold
to the city by Bob Paramore If the coldest
place in town had to be selected the Hawk
Auto Supply corner would rank high Wind
always seemed whooping through there
S
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Matt Hampton was directing plans for the
coming Scouters Christmas party Members
of the Pollyanna Class at St Paul's Methodist
Church met with their teacher Mrs Emmett
Cheek 38 E Drummond Mrs Frank
Knight entertained a group of guests at an
afternoon bridge party in her home 008 E
Seventh Mrs G C Wallace supervisor
of the girls' NYA school spoke to 50 members
of the Horace Mann PTA at the group's regu-
lar meeting
THIRTY YEARS AGO
Some 21000 county residents flocked to
the polls as Shawnee eked out 180 votes more
than the two-thirds required to move the
county seat here from Tecumseh Members
of the Printers Wives Club met at the home
of Mrs Frank E Brown Progressive Re-
search Club held a Yule party in the home
of Mr and Mrs Kib Warren 218 N Phila-
delphia Gaskill's and Badger's the city's
two ambulance services transported people
who were ill to and from the polls
Cordon Martin's
A house with some love and some comfort
to give is a house of the kind and a place
where the marks of a family show and
the fires of the spirit of friendliness glow A
house with its floors and its furniture worn
is a house where the love of its children
is born and a place where each blemish
and Juvenile scar is a constant reminder
that gleams like a star A house that is formal
end fit for the kings is a house that has
none of these wonderful things and a
house that is always as neat as a pin is a
mansion perhaps but forbidding within So
I'd treasure a house neither costly nor fine
but a house that is kindly to me and to
mine and a house with a spirit that never
departs and a place we can gather with
love in our hearts
Barbs and briars
You can't blame old-fashioned elderly
women for being proud of their gray hair
It's perfectly natural
Maybe the best suggestion for speedier
mail delivery ladies is don't give hubby
those letters to mail
Bandits got $4000 from an Eastern doc-
tor's safe It might interest other doctors to
know his collection methods
It's always guarded--one way or another
Jacoby on bridge
NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS Opponents lake
By RAT TUCKER
1VASHINGTON—As the Democrats prepare to take charge of the
v y government next month it becomes almost a certainty that they
will not enact any major political or legislative reforms during
President-elect Kennedy's first year in office
This observation applies to revision of the Electoral College a
reconstitution of the House Rules Committee to "democratize" it
ousting Southern committee chairmen who did not support the
Kennedy-Johnson ticket an attack on the Senate filibuster rule civil
rights proposals easing the Taft-
Hartley a n d Landrum -Griffin Needed innovations
legislation The civil rights issue revolves
All ce these questions are high- around establishing an enforce-
ly controv---sial berause of their ment division in the Department
emotional and economic content of Justice creating a permanent
Besides having small chance of and statutory Fair Employment
acceptance just to consider them Practices Commission and em-
would waste or consume many powering the government to bring
legislative days as did the civil suits in cases of alleged discrimi-
rights debate last year nation Now individuals must
Hartley in d Landrum - Griffin Needed innovations
legislation The civil rights issue revolves
All ce these questions are high- around establishing an enforce-
ly tCyntrov---sial berause of their ment division in the Department
emotional and economic content of Justice creating a permanent
Besides having small chance of and statutory Fair Employment
acceptance just to consider them Practices Commission and em-
would waste or consume many powering the government to bring
legislative days as did the civil suits in cases of alleged discrimi-
rights debate last year nation Now individuals must
sue
Bread-and-butter Congress may take up these
In view of his campaign pledge matters after the Kennedy leg-
to move America along to a "new islative program has been acted
frontier" thereby carrying out on But the delay will enable
the generous platform promises opponents to filibuster them to
Senator Kennedy cannot afford death
to antagonize powerful blocs and Efforts to relax certain Taft-
individuals opposed to these Hartley provisions opposed by
Ideas especially the Southerners labor have failed for the last 13
It will bet in short a bread- years and they will probably be
and-butter Congress if Senator turned down again And most
Kennedy has his way members feel that the Landrum-
The Electoral College reform
Griffin Act born of the McClel-
w i hich has been revived in acute an-Kennedy expose of James R
Hoffa's Teamsters' Union has not
form because of Senator Ken- had a sufficient test After
nedy's slim margin in the popular only one Congressman blacklist-
vote is bitterly opposed by the ed by Hoffa was defeated and
President-elect that for other reasons
In 1950 he led the opposition A needed innovation may be
to a proposed change which was the estathlishment of a Labor-
originally offered by his prede- Management Council represent-
cessor In the Senate the Repub ing the unions company bargain-
licans' vice-presidential nominee ers and the public It is said to
last month Henry Cabot Lodge be favored by Arthur Goldberg
AFL-CIO counsel and the next
conritv evefom secretary of labor
Seniority system
Ironically had the Lodge re-
form prevailed Senator Kennedy
might not have been elected last
month It passed the Senate by
a 64-27 vote with many liberals
supporting it but it was killed in
the House Rules Committee The
chairman was the late Rep
Adolph Sabath of Illinois where
the GOP now charges that the
Democrats "stole" the election
there
The liberals plan to "dump"
Chairman Howard W Smith of
Virginia and Rep William M
Cohner of Mississippi from House
Rules is doomed Veterans like
Speaker Sam Rayburn dread to
tamper with the hallowed sys-
tem of seniority
The membership may be in-
creased to build up a pro-Kennedy
majority But Chairman
Smith will still retain the power
to call meetings for a vote on leg-
islation or not to call them thus
blocking action
Trip was stow going
RICHMOND Va--Lt Lowell
W Roberts and Sgt Henry Sours
of the Virginia National Guard
volunteered to bring a surplus
Army light reconnaissance heli-
copter from Tucson Ariz
It took six days instead of the
estimated three They had to
follow highways on the watch
for filling stations because of
the small gas tank After aver-
aging 20 miles an hour against
headwinds at one point they
bought two five-gallon cans
filled them with gasoline and
tied them to the 'copter
Telephoned church bell
BRYAN Tex—Young people
at the First Methodist Church in
Bryan have a novel way of keep-
ing up attendance
Early Sunday morning they
telephone each of the church
members They let the tele
bidder's hint
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Opening lead-4
By OSWALD JACOBY
(Written for NES Service)
South knew that his three no-
trump call was an overbid but
the hour was late and South
wanted to finish the rubber and
head for home Also like most
bridge players South had confi-
dence in his ability to play the
dummy
of course if West had opened
the king of clubs and continued
the suit confidence or no confi-
dence South would have been
down before he could do anything
except follow suit but West
opened the four of spades and
South had a chance to operate
Before playing from dummy
South noted that if the diamond
finesse would work he was home
with the rubber but that if the
diamond finesse should lose a
club suit would beat him
How could South ensure a
spade continuation?
He found a vv) He played
the deuce of spades from dummy
and won East's jack with the ace
not the queen
He went over to dummy to try
the diamond finesse and West
was in with the king A club
shift at this point would have
brought the roof down on South's
head but West led another low
spade as the queen of spades
appeared to be marked in East's
hand And South was on his way
home with the rubber
More than 12000 firms in the
United States are in the business
of producing oil
phcme ring just once and don't
wait for an answer The ring is
just a reminder that it's time to
start getting ready for services
I They'll Do It Every Time
Swami IL I Pose IS
By Jimmy Hado I
(01141
WE'LL 14AVE TO
BUILD A TALL
FOOD CLOSET
Tool at-Noll
vv4 woNir
1 YOU BUY A NIAN'S
SIZE 50AP CAN
I-IAPDLY SEE 71-IESE
LITTLE CAKES!
Vo-IERE DO YOU
GET 'EM-STEAL
'EM FIZOM A )
HarEL ?
stir 11-1S SIG l-
SIZE LOOKS SO
OUT OP PLACE!
MAKES 11-IE
SA1141ZOOM
LOOK LIRE A
LAUNOCZY
ROSIOLA LIKES TWOSE LITTLE
MINIATURSSIZE CAKES OF SOAP
BIG ONES SI-IE WON'T GO F012
BUT GET A WAD OP 'ME SIZE MUT
JUICE AND BREAKFAST FOOD SI-1E
BUYS-STRIcrw COLOSSO -
1411 VAtras
The worry clink
How you can tutor
your child at home
Tommy is at the educational crossroads
His problem occurs in millions of good
homes If his mother adopts the sugar-
coated method of home tutoring outlined
below Tommy will make higher trades and
develop a fondness for school which will
lead him onward to college Otherwise be
may become a quick drop-out and an early
delinquent
By GEORGE V CRANE PhD MD
C ASE 6-462: Tommy T aged 11 is at the
crossroads
"Dr Crane" his worried mother began
"Tommy hates school For he makes such
poor grades in English and reading that some
of his classmates
even refer to him
as 'dummy' No
"He now wants to e
quit school And he
—
—
feigns illness to - s -
-
avoid having to 14"f
leave in the morn- 40
ing
"Yet his IQ is al 10‘
above normal so v
hat can I do to 'fl
change his atti '
tude?" "41111'
Within a few
weeks you parents
6162
can often raise your
child's standing to
at least the average of the class just by use
of "flash cards"
Go to the stationery shop and purchase
several large sheets of white cardboard Now
cut these into strips about 2 inches wide and
10 or 12 inches long
Get a printing set Then go into a huddle
with your child and let him point out the
words in his current reading book which he
doesn't know
Encourage him to print each one of these
strange words on a strip of the white card-
board Then you mothers can hold up two cards
explaining what each means and showing the
differences in the general contour of the
words
For example point out the difference in
length If a word such as "door" is involved
liken the "o" letters to eyes etc
Next shuffle the two cards after which
you can hold up one at a time for your child
to see If he can identify the word hand
him the flash card If not stack it on your
own pile The larger stack wins!
By thus letting the child select the un-
known words and print them you give him
double experience with those strange terms
even before you hold aloft the individual
flash cards
It is surprising how fast a child can learn
the new words when his interest is captured
by this sugar-coated game
As a variation let his daddy compete with
him But tactfully see that daddy "pulls his
punches" for a child must win about three
times out of four or his enthusiasm wanes
Let daddy fumble a little to give your
child a head start on calling out the new
word
With verbs you can also have your young-
ster "act out" their meaning instead of naming
them Thus he can "jump" when that flash
card is shown or "walk" "sing" "sleep" etc
On the backs of the word cards you can
also print the multiplication tables
For instance print "3 x 1" on the first
card then "3 x 2" on the next etc
A child can become so fast at multiplication
within a week that he can often zoom from
bottom to top position in his schoolroom Try
it and see what 15 minutes of sugar-coated
home tutoring will do
But don't overdo your drill Stop with 13
minutes And even in that period of time
shift to variations of the game alloting maybe
five minutes to each
You parents can change your child's entire
outlook on school within a few weeks Tom-
my's future career was at stalce
Many families will find it prudent to help
a youngster in math or reading at some time
in their early grades
So send for my booklet "How to Tutor
Your Child at Home" enclosing a stowed
return envelope plus 20c (non-profit) See
tomorrow's follow-up
(Always write to Dr Crane In care of
this newspaper enclosing a long tc stamped
addressed envelope and 20c to cover typing
and printing costs when you send for one of
his booklets)
The Mature Parent
By MRS MURIEL LAWRENCE
Newspaper Enterprise Assn
The year 1940 was a terrible and magnifi-
cent one for my generation
It was terrible because every day saw
another piece of Europe WI into the blaze
of Hitler's madness It was magnificent be-
cause we said to ourselves as he marched
implacably toward us:
Has our disconnection from Europe helped
to set loose this maniac? Have we Americans
been too involved with Ourselves?
"Why did we think we could stand aside
from Czechoslovakia's agony? Why didn't we
know we would feel this machine-gunning of
Polish women and children in our own flesh?
For we do feel it
"It is now clear that instead of being safe
from the fate of the Poles the French the
Dutch the British and Czechs we are inex-
tricably involved with it"
The parents of young adults must recall
this conclusion We must also recall the fact
that as we accepted identification with the
people of Europe we recovered the sense of
meaning we had lost to disconnection
In the terrible magnificent year of 1940
under the threat of Adolph Hitler we Amer-
icans lost our self-centeredness and regained
our souls
We need to recall this stirring experience
for young people deeply troubled by the Soviet
Union's threats Over and over they say to me:
"What's the use? Tomorrow' the Russians
may drop the H-bomb Why should we study
and work to become something when there
may be no world left for anyone to be any-
thing in?"
I am learning to answer:
"In 1940 my generation discovered we
were one with the peoples of Europe In 1960
you are discovering that you are one of the
people of the world As Adolf Hitler forced
us to identify ourselves with the Poles and
the Dutch Nikita Khrushchev is forcing you
to identify yourselves with the people of
India Indonesia The Congo Accept this fact
Stop being afraid of it Do something about it"
What I've been asking them to do is to get
in touch with the American Committee on
Africa 801 Second Avenue New York 17 NY
This organization has been created not only
to inform us about the struggle of the African
peoples but to tell us ways in which we as
individuals can help them
If you remember 1940 your own Year of
Identification you will urge your young adults
to take this action
It is their frustrated sense of identification
that troubles them Khrushchev like Hitler
has made sell-centeredneu intolerable
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Musselman, N. B. Shawnee News-Star (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 209, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 17, 1960, newspaper, December 17, 1960; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2107122/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.