Okemah Daily Leader (Okemah, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 155, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1958 Page: 4 of 6
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rAct roux
ttrzsDilt NIS I 1958
Tla OXIMAII (OKLA) DAILY LEAD1121
11
I 00--
OKEPAAH DAILY LEADER
Published daily except Saturtey
w bLakday by Vas °kernels Fula Ile&
bag Cit tie West Broadway Oka
tab Okla ?boon I
Entered as second class matter
tally except SaL Morn at the
pstoffice at Okemah °kis nodal
bet of March 1 11171
W Ci Street Publisher
I W ntroeg Editor la Seat rob
Helen Osborne News Editor
Joe Sewell Foreman
rh Associated Press is exclusive
ty entitled to the use of republics
don of all the news dispetches
credited by thls paper and also t4
all the local news therein All rights
of publications of spacial dispatches
herein also are reserved
National Adv Representatives
SOUTHWEST DAILIES
New York Chicago Memphis
Detroit Oklahoma City
ely carrier: per week 25a Per mo
ILO& a mos 2275 6 mos 2525
yr 21050
7114 PRINS!
POI TODAY CROAT
tin Or Room
Christ Joved the church and
save himself for it (Ephealane
5:25)
PRAYER: Our heavenly Father
we thnnk Thee for Thy Sun Jesus
Chr Ititt who came and founded the
Church Guido us that in the
Church we may grow in the love
and knowledge of Christ and that
wl may become perfect in him
In Big name we pray Amen
Daily Paper
Is Important
Almost os much a part of our
daily lives as fresh bread is the
daily paper Newspapers have
come a long way from the one-
page bulletins circulated in the
coffeehouses of Europe and Ameri-
ca two hundred years ago But
one thing that has not changed is
people's hunger for news Presses
roll night and 'day using miles of
paper — and rivers of ink — to
turn out the 60 million newspaper
that we Americans read every
day
Ink for news printing must have
a combination of qualities First
of all it must be fast-drying so
thet the papers can roll off the
press end be ready at your news-
stand in a question of minutes
It must flow smoothly and quickly
through the presses in order not
to slow them down and it must
produce a sharp easily read
print that doesn't smear
The two main ingredients innew-
sblack ink are oil and carbon black
both made from petroleum The
newest method of making the ink
calls for pellets of carbon black
to be added to ink oils in what
are called ''ball mills" As the
mills turn thousands of tiny steel
balls disperse the carbon black
evenly into the oil producing fin-
ished ink
The ingredients that go into our
superior inks are cheap and plenti-
ful thanks to petroleum By sup-
plying the products for scientific
ink manufacture petroleum has
made its mark in keeping Amer--
cans alert and well informed
Actress
ACROSS 8 Mineral rock 1-
0 Golf mound
I Mgr ess: 10 Greek letter d 144 - 1
1 tJE
Marjorie --- 11 Red doe
I
7 She is in 12 Wangs
— pictures 19 Rom (fib)
13 Form a notion 21 Broktnst fd 11 v
14 Interatica 21 Musical note i IL-' -
IS Squatter 23 Palm leaf :-t- )
16 Seesaw 24 Latest
17 Powerful 25 Health morts 38 Era
canloalve 26 American coin 39 Combined
18 Before 27 Price 40 Preposit io
20 In addition 29 Co by 41 Fortiticati
21 Color 30 Sea eagle 43 JONkYel
25 Tirades 31 Vamboolike 44 Challenge
28 Victim of grass 4$ Armed to
leprosy 35 Little (Scot) 47 Shred
31 Fruit
33 Coanizant insilla
34 Poker stakes
36 Domestic slave Alnunim I
37 Invisible
vaPne ' 1111111111111111
38 Gathered
41 Greatest 11111111111911113
43 Harem room
46 Always 11J111111
( poet I
47 sma &Aught insmumg
tk0 Separated
83 Stately (Fr) CIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
SO Armed fleet
57 Mare facile Olimulint
58 City in Tte limmonimu 5-
Netherlands
89 Autocrat ii III III
ISAMU
DOWN
I Intimation
rararhse
3 FAT' fear that
4 Pillar
5 Summer trr)
r Sea nymph
Camptninee
Editorial
A MATTER OF DEGREE
By Bruce Shout
The term "preferential Treat-
ment" is being kicked around pret-
ty loosely in the stillunfolding
Adams-Gob:Irina cue
By any fair standards no one
dealing with the government should'
be entitled to special faVor in any
messurt at all But it still is in
order to obeerve that there are'
sharply varying degrees of prefer-
ential treatment And presumably'
one may note Ole fact without
seeming to excuse even the small-11
est use of privilege
Obviously the biggest interest in
this matter must center on those
who either want the government to
do something rim them or to stop
doing something AGAINST them
This is favor in the highest degree
Easy examples are: getting a fat
US contract orhaltIng punitive
action for some infraction of fed-
eral law or regulation —
To the extent that a citieen a-
chieves either of these goals
through direct personal influence
upon a federal agency or through
the intercession of an "outaide"
government official or other wiel-
der of influence he has gained ad-
vantage that is vastly improper
and unfair
There has been no successful
showing yet that Sherman Adams'
tried to exert influence of this or-
der in behalf of his friend Bernard
Golcifine Ad there has been no
showing that Golding under fire
from the FTC for mislabeling
goods and from the SEC for fail-
ing to file reports received un-
deserved consideration of a de-
delve nature as result of Adam's'
Inquiries to them
Much has been made of the fact
that the FTC overrode an invest'
gating lawyer's recommendation
that Goldfine be criminally prose-
cuted for violation of the labeling
law
But commission members have'
stated and the record supports"
that their chief aim is to gain com-
pliance with the law rather than to
proaecute This they can usually
achieve if the violator agrees to
"cease and desist" from his ir-
regular practices
Criminal action is normally taken
only as a last resort As evidence
since the labeling law took effect
in 1941 only five case' have gone
to the Justice Department
Goldline in getting a cease and
deoist order thus got the normal
treatment
Top SEC officials Moist likewise
that he was effectively punished
for violating securities law and
consetiently got no special favor
ProbePs have not demonstrated
that he did Fein advantage
of a plainly lesser order la the
fact that Adams obtained for Gold-
fine confidential information from
the FTC to which neither was en-
titled Adams' profit:48m4 Ignorance
of the law cannot be an excuse
Ile should not have asked
But the information Goldfine got
has not been shown to have af-
fected the decision in his case He
did not mope the usual "cease
and destet" order
Adams' intercesoion however ill-
advised and whatever its intent
does not appear to have been cri-
tical Favors granted Goldfine ac-
cidental or otherwise thus far rank
as strictly secondary in character
Graduate student Roger Price
experimenting at the Laboratory of
Ornithology Cornell University is
pursuing a special project which
he hopes will earn him a PhD
degree Ho is studying the hearing
of owls
11 enonong pon omommommononemoom
Answer to Previous Punt
40 Prermit ion
41 rortification
41 Jewel
44 Challenge
4$ Armed force
47 Shred
48 Idea (comb
form)
49 Saucy
51 Small child
82 Dutch city
$4 Scottish
sallyard
55 Onager
IMMO MN
REM MUM
11111111111 1111111
npummati
11711111111M
1111MINMIUMMULEI
1 M
1 UM
111 11111111MU
1111111mia
1 AIMUM
MEMONMMM
' UM
EOM Mall
Mimi mom
RalmqMEI
MINIM
L mum
IDSON IN WASHINGTON
Storm Has Raged About
Administration's Gift List
' BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent '
WASHINGTCPN—(NEA)—Oregon Sen Wayne Morse's warning
at last August that it was "politically immoral" for the president
of the United States to accept gifts "worth thousands and thousands
of dollars" has tome home to roost in the White House with a
vengeance
Washington opinion is now divided sharply on the outcome of the
Assistant to the President Sherman Adam's acceptance of costly
favor a from his New England manufacturing friend Bernard Gold-
One view is that Adams will have to go The other is that for
the President to let Adams go would be an admission of guilt from
which the Republicans could not recover
As one Washington wag put it "Adams can't even resign for
reatons of lU health—not even if he has a heart attack it stroke or
an ileitis operation"
THE WHITE HOUSE keeps no official gift book One unofficial
tabulation shows over 100 gifts worth press mention In the last
five years
They range from about 25 head of pure-bred bases and enttle—
given by various groups and individuals and worth from $20000
to $25000—and a $4000 tractor complete with cigarette lighter
for Ike's Gettysburg farm to a Bible from the American Bible
Society end an annual pass to the National Symphony Orchestra
which he rarely attends
Total value of these gifts was once estimated at a million dollars
But when this figure was mentioned to the President he laid he
would sell out for that ''in a hurry"
One such otter came into the White House from Kidd Brewer of
Raleigh NC It wasn't accepted
THE ADMINISTRATION got In a prize mess last fall over King
Saud's gift of a $3000 Oldsmobile to the wife of Victor Purse former
assistant chief of protocol Things were made so unpleasant for
Purse that he finally resigned
King Saud also awed expensive watches around pretty liberally
to people who were nice to him on his tour But the White House
never revealed what the King gave Ike Otte rumor was that it was
a jeweled chigger for Ike a pearl necklace for Mamie
After the Purse affair however the administration became more
circumspect about gifts to gov'ment guys
President Eisenhower told a press conference that "good taste"
should be the guide for acceptance of presents if the gifts were
made within the law
MANY Or THE GIFTS given to presidents have no ulterior mo-
tive The donots have nothing more to gain than an increase in
their own self-esteem
They want to be able to brag to their friends that they have
given something to the president And they glory in the publicity
they get out of it
Then too the company that gave Ike the tractor didn't surfer
thereby obviously
Some gifts do get rejected
But the more fact that the president does accept gifts sets a bad
precedent for lesser government help
Few officio!! have the rectitude of the late Edwerd ouglns Whre
of Louisiana Chief Justice of the Supreme Court from 1010 to 1021
He said he wanted the members of his court to be Delphic Oracles
and recluses Ile wouldn't even allow his associates to attend
Washington Nock' functions That kept 'cm pure
MMIM
GRAYSON'S SCOREBOARD
Everything Bill Touched
Turned Into 100 Grand
ibN1111 BY HARRY GRAYSON
NEA Sports Editor
OCEANPORT NI--(NEA)--13111 Hartack first hit the national
racing scene in 1954 with a big showing it Monmouth Park
Now liartack broken left leg heskd Is butt at the would('
track for the first time since that summer extent for a rare
stakes visit or so and once more he is the leading rider there
This leads to the thought that the cocky young man could be
right back where be started
"Not that far" horsemen assure you "but without those Calu-
met horses Hartack comes back to the field more than a little"
THE REFERENCE IS TO THE obvious split between Calumet
srm and tiartack in connection with Jimmy Jones' selection of
Ismael Vitiennela to handle Tim Tam in the colt's ill-fated Bel-
mont Stakes Valensucla now is Calumet's top rider
Hartack is back on his own and despite booting home 17
winners and 18 place and 15 show horses in his first 78 mounts
since the accident Just prior to the Kentucky Derby he can't
be better off for the break with Calumet
"Nobody said we wouldn't ride for Calumet again" Chick Lang
his agent notes "That's like a ballplayer saying he won't play
with the Yankees"
HARTACK LOOKS AT IT differently
"What stock did Calumet have outside of Tim Tam and A Glitter?
he asks "There's plenty of good stock around the country My
leg doesn't bother me and aa long as I keep vOnning 'I'll have the
edge I'm staying right here except to go to Washington Park ir
Chicago to ride Nadir in the Stars and Stripes on July 4"
It would seem that Hernia wiU lease no sleep or money
through hie breach—he refuses to classify it as such—with
Ca linnet gut nwntion of next spring when those live Jones-
tmined three-year-olds show up is enough to send shivers
down agent Lang's spine His star Jockey was a two-time na-
tional champion won a ton of stakes while at it and the
foundation for this was el ilittnet steeds
To see what Calumet and the Jones boys have done for liartack
throughout the past three years all Lang has to do is check the
income tax statements he and the rider filed each March
FOR IT IS THE THOROUGHBRED as so many tend to forpt
which does just about all the work on the racing strip
Remembered is the Kentucky Derby of last year when Palack
bustled Iron Liege into a next to impossible position on the brick
stretch but his Calumet mount had so much run he balle1 the
jock out and a minute or so later Bill was standing In the winner's
circle being photographed with his thoughts on 10 per cent of the
rich purse
For a time It seemed that everything Itartaek touched wiled
Into $100000 Nadir In the Garden State last fall was a prime
example The Claiborne Fenn twoyearold took down the
richest rurse in racing and It is the last one Ws big eeIt has
won
But now with Calumet Farm oft to the w:irs NV111011t : im stern
nuickminded little Bill tartaric may find as el mart jocks that
Pometimes You lust can't find a live here In rt:k
0110a
FLYING CARD -This th
new five-cent Crmail postal cara
whtch will be placed on 14st-day sale et Wichita Kan on
July 31 Tht stamp printed on the card ts red in color and la
limtlae to the four-cent sirmsil stsmo tor Post etrds'
MONUMENT TO PAST
KENOSHA Wis — Wreckers
clearing buildings for the new
Richard Bong Air Force jet born-
ber base found a monument to the
past
Workers ripped the sides off an
old frame building to find that the
structure was really an ancient
cabin made of hand-hewn oak logs
The Kenosha County board ap-
proved a motion to preserve the
cabin as a monument to the pio-
neer past
CAPTAIN EASY
GOSHVAL --- IT
MUST SEEM KEEN
To BE MOVED
OUT OF THAT
TRAILER INTO
A HOUSE WHERE
YOU HAVE A ROOM
OP Talk OWN
"We Both N
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
LI'L ABNER
I -IN DOGPATCH I
NOW MAI4
InvLIN' PLutIABIlsr
WHATEVER WET Is—
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DISCORDANT CONTEST
AKRON Ohio VII — A singing
contest sponsored by the City Rec-
reation Department ended in dis-
cord Three members of one quintet
were sentenced to the City Work-
house one put on probation and
another turned over to juvenile au-
thorities According to testimony
they demanded another singing
group throw the contest
When the other group won any-
way a brawl started
'WHO i511115
AGATHA VAN
'Rat 4OLLY1
HMHLIM 71)K01)6
TO Kw Ow wHAT 5HE
Wk$414! NiiiK
ACCEPT HEK KEQuEST
TO JOA HSR TA519
SHE'S FAmOUS FOR:
NBR VICIOUS TAPE
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BACK TO 'VOL)
bi NIA Ser Asa km tit ae u & pa
OE HUSSIN PROMISED
TO sit P CRIME IN
'PARADISE PARK' SO
THEM NEW PEOPLE"
WOULD GO SACKTHAR
WHAR IS HE?--HAS HE
WEIRS HEAD77
ANOTHER TIP
FROM BASSETT!SO
WE INTRODOC:r))
CHICK
HIM TO ANOTUER I!-
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GOOD SI GliTy
Ski re
To Each—a Donny Skeleton
You've inherited a family kale cium to transmit m
ton Although it has been closet- your brain to the so
scl all your Welt under protective in your body Bloo
layers of muscle and skin yours cium so that it will o
Is I skeleton of whith to be proud out a Anger or skir
It is a living skeleton mad up of For calcium is close
iumes connoeted one to another to In the skeleton it
form the framework for you every cell in the bott
With such st skeleton have you Although the beg
given any thought to its upkoep this hard-to-get min
to a minoml on which it—end and choose new rem
you—depend for your very We: covered a runner-u
calcium? bread now tatikil
A strong support of your skele- source of calcium
ton calcium Is needed daily by can diet riread's
all parts of the body If it is not due partly to calcit
supplied in the food you eat your the baker partly t
hones are called upon to give up milk and partly bet
soma of their stores bread at every meal
Mitides need calchmi to do you can count on fc
their work he this twitting a little elude canned Balm
finger making your heart beat or (linos broccoli colic
digging a ditch Nerves need cal- mustard and tumit
With due apologies to the Scots
il1S 60ING TAXE TIME POR MS16
Ger USED TO ALL13-11S MINA SPOICE
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EMMMNIIIMMIMIS
YSNY VICAN'T REMEMBER AT'S RIGHT
WHERE VBEEN WHAT GUZ NOT
Wok2IPOIN' OR Nummi!
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2 atitilaitlailltR PENA
61Ndielt SOP air YO 'Ng CORRAL
1' 1::':rr t
- -
-
)nrlyr DIECICIOU
clum to transmit messagea from
your brain to the scene of action
in your body Blood needs eat
cium so that it will clot when you
out a finger or skin your knee
For calcium is closeted not only
In the skeleton it is a part of
every cell in the body
Although the beet 0 Uteel for
this hard-to-get mineral are milk
and cheese new research has tin
covered a runnerup: Enriched
bread now ranks eacoud as a
source of calcium in the Ameri-
can diet Bread's higb rating la
due partly to calcium added by
the baker partly to hie adding
milk and partly because you eat
broad at every meal Other foods
you can count on for calcium IA
elude canned salmon and oar
dines broccoli collards and kale
mustard and turnip greens
0M
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Strong, Jack W. Okemah Daily Leader (Okemah, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 155, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1958, newspaper, July 1, 1958; Okemah, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2166608/m1/4/: accessed June 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.