Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 235, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 21, 1965 Page: 2 of 8
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The Perry Daily Journal
Aa Independent Community Newspoper
MEMBER
toto
Oklahoma Press Association
A I know is whatl seed in the pepers—Wi No
Successor to The Noble County Sentinel established Sept. 16, 1893.
The Perry Republican, merged Moy 1, 1924; and The Morrison Trans-
script merged May 1, 1958.
X mnt
4
Every day or so someone asks
Published Six Days Weekly at 710-712 Delaware St., Perry, Oklahoma
by tho Perry Journal Company.
Second Class Postage Paid at Perry, Okla
about progress on the proposed
Cherokee Strip museum and it
is good to find interest is con-
tinuing in this vital project
It was heartening to see fre-
quent reference to the museum
started. The matter is being
carefully considered by minds
All unsolicited manuscripts, letters and pictures brought or sent
De The Journal are submitted at the risk of the sender. The publishers
expressly disclaim any responsibility for their safe return.
MILO W. WATSON
Editor & Publisher
P. 2, Perry Daily Journal
Tuesday, Sept. 21, 1965
Commentary
On Foreign
News Angles
Merry-Go-Round
LBJ’s Stock
Is Dropping
By DREW PEARSON
Fred G. Beers
Bill Faris
H. A. DeLashmu#t
Ernest Stoops
Managing Editor
Advertising Director
Cashier
Production Superintendent
giiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
★ WASHINGTON COLUMN *
in the parade Saturday and
many organizations and individ-
uals have discussed the pros
pect during meetings and pri-
vate conversations
The museum project is by no
means forgotten nor being un-
necessarily delayed A final
method for raising finances to
build the building and to get the
doors open is the point that is
still unsettled.
Many suggestions have been
ed. One is to possibly submit a
county-w ide one- or two-mill
mat are more qualified than I.
and a clear-cut plan of action
may be forthcoming before long
In the meantime, physical
plans for the museum build-
ing are not being neglected.
William Dale, chief curator
for the Oklahoma Historical
society, will be in Perry
Thursday of this week to do
more preliminary work to-
ward a proposed building de-
sign. He is recognized as one
of the h ading authorities in
this field in the nation. We
are indebted to the society
and to Mr. Dale personally
lor the services which he
has volunteered.
This is not a very conclusive
report on this vital project, but
Avalanche of Young Voters
To Have Political Impact
BY BRUCE BIOSSAT
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
WASHINGTON (NEA
levy to raise the money to add I hope it will indicate that the
to the $30,000 already appropriat- idea certainly has not been
ed by the state legislature This abandoned nor is it being neg
is a practical approach, but le- lected County-wide enthusiasm
gal angles dealing with the use ;> still the most valuable asset
of 'ax money must be resolved we an have and 1 find plenty
before such a movement can be of that everywhere 1 go.
In the next three presidential elections up through 1976. TITT T D •
Some 38 million Americans now age 10 to 20 will com e of ■ A/ H A TT A • A 7
voting age. The political effects of this avalanche of the W AOIOW
young are bound to be immense.. VV IU
The - i st of these new eligibles will have been born in
the year W rld War II ended. They will have no first and By RICK DL BROW
memory of the war, of the catastrophic events preceding it, HOLLYWOOD i ’I With
or1 Grea t De pression. .. Ar i ext opt , * netw UI
The ingest w 11 know only what they read of the Cold
W nnir Yu v President Tit break with M
co B rlin blockade, the Korean War, the French war week ' ' eric
in Viet Nam. .niscent of the Herb St iner sto-
Their experience with American presidents, as of now, is ry about the time his hor
lin ited t - Harry S Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. ... be test ,.
Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. | v n lad a beauty ‘ and
nobody won
NO sI RIOUS STUDENT of population imagines that when ■ used th it
this a young people begins cascading into the line probably
voting booths it will hit with monolithic force, son — but it stands. It couldn’t well-produced examples of
By K. C. THALER
LONDON (UPI) — Present
rumblings in the Kremlin re-
I fleet the Soviet leadership's
. growing uneasiness over worse-
ning relations with Peking,
! mounting domestic economic
troubles and disarray in the
- Warsaw pact alignment.
It has long been clear that
the chances of reconciliation
between Moscow and Peking
. are virtually nil while Mau Tze-
Tung’s regime is pushing with
increasing determination for
nuclear power status and lead-
ership of the Communist and
unaligned camps
Red China's aggressive pos-
ture in Asia has helped to
« range Russia in some cases-
- ! however reluctantly on the
side of the United States, thus
i supplying Peking with further
- ammunition to attack Moscow
for playing the "imperialists"
, game For Moscow it is a very
I -lave problem.
Domestic Problems
The domestic front, too,
(Editor’s Note: This is the
second in a series of Drew Pear-
son’s columns on the struggle
for Communist control of the
wealth of Africa.)
presents the Kremlin leadership
POLITICAL STYLE —At
Peking variety, but wrote
along with five volumes of po-
etry two philosophical essays
on African socialism, which
Ambassador Cook translated.
Ambassador Cook and his ex-
pert U S Information aid, Ten
Tanen, are now working on the
American contribution to the
Negro Arts Festival to be held
in Dakar next April. They hope
to persuade such famous Negro
artists as Sammy Davis Jr.,
Harry Belafonte and Dizzy Gil-
lespie to come to Dakar at that
time. The late Adlai Stevenson
had accepted the chairmanship
draft either Marian Anderson or
Sammy Davis, Jr., to replace
him.
Peanuts, Prosperity
However the problem indi-
rectly facing them, and direct-
ly facing President Senghor
entirely aside from Viet Nam —
| are considerable.
No. 1 Prob.em is the fact that
Sen gal is a one-crop country.
Its economy rests entirely on
peanuts Almost every farmer
plants peanuts, and will not
plant enough poratoes or wheat
Mo support the country. Food
must be imported This is be-
cause France pays a high sub-
sidy for peanuts.
The United States with its
own plentiful peanut crop,
doesn’t import from Senegal,
and Sen Herman Talmadge of
peanut pr duc ng Ge rgia would
probably raise cain it it tried
So one thing Sene gal needs if
it is to lx kept from swinging
into the zone of Chinese influ-
ence is a team of American
and perserver ance to teach crop
diversification
1 The beautiful university of
I Dakar, French-built and French-
DAKAR - When Lyndon
Johnson was a restless Vice
President of the United States
and John F. Kennedy wanted to
keep him busy, he sent Lyndon
to Senegal for the inauguration
of its first president. Leopold Se-
dar Senghor While here, Lyn
don visited the nearby fishing
village of Kayar, met a Senega
lese fisherman who was pad-
dling a cumbersome, wood-hewn
I canoe or pirogue. Returning
to America, the then Vice Pres-
.dent sent the fisherman an out-
board motor.
The gift did not make the
headlines of the pickup truck
1 given to the Pakistani camel
driver, but probably it has been
more productive For a great
many other Senegalese fisher-
men have now followed the
example oi President Johnson’s
friend and thus mechanized the
fishing industry
Lyndon Johnson is remember
ed pleasantly here But his pol
icy of massing military might
in Viet Nam is undoing part of
his earlier friendship Further
more it plays directly into the
hands of the Chinese Commu
nists in their campaign t pene
trate this wealthy and relative-
ly empty continent.
For the question continually
asked by the Senegale e
President Johnson can end
many troops halfway ar ind
the world to Viet Nam, why
can’t he send troops to Ala
bama M PE G
Louisiana, to protect the N
groes from being mobbed and
murdered?
These states, it’s pointed ut,
are much closer than Viet Nam
and Negroes are Ameri in
zens. Why cant they be pr -
tected?
African Negroes are convi
ed that it’s proof of race preju-
dice that American troops are
sent all the way to Saigon, yet
aren’t sent a few miles to pro-
tect Negroes.
with problems of extreme gra-
the World Archery Cham-
pionships in Vasteras, Swe-
den. there were many dem-
onstrations of bold and un-
usual garb Prominently
displayed in the pattern of
this dress worn by a young
lady from Liberia is a por-
trait of Liberian President
Tubman.
vity right now. The harvest is
once more bad and recent re-
ports suggest that things are
far worse than had been ex-
pected even a few weeks ago.
Moscow has placed orders in
the West for nearly 10 million
tons of wheat, at the cost of
about half a billion dollars.
Now it looks as if Russia will
have to buy another three mil-
lion tons
The powerful Central Com-
mittee is meeting II Moscow
next month to decide on emer-
gency measures They may in-
volve drastic changes in the
■ . - no I . economy and some changes in
new Lot 7 Blk 31 & Lots 13, 15 & 16 the governmental setup - not
' and , necessarily on the top level, at
or NBC 1 J. B Fox Jr e ux to Joe least not yet. The Kremlin lead-
1 like Dean Martin’s I’ Henry King et ux 6-30-65 $0 archin appears to be reluctantly
- toward the capitally
This Week in District Court idea tha........en-
Leonard L Gravel vs A B. tives can promote a significant
boost to the economic and agri-
1074010 1 cultural effort.
W Finally the latest comings
J Coleman et al 9-15-65 Quiet and goings in Moscow "f East
Title Lots 21 to 24 incl Blk 12 European leaders and a
Red Rock prise trip to Warsaw of party
— chief Leonid Brezhnev have
Ship in ’he Army," a comedy-
adventure with Jack Warden
and some excellent character
actors in a tale of an old
schooner on espionage missions
in the South Pacific in World
War 11
Both of these shows, if no
threats to “Hamlet” or e'en
The Odd Couple,’ are very
professional commercial a.id
In other words, there will not be—in the view of one such be much more applicable than plush
expert—a “youth bloc.”.
Like everybody else’s, the interests and attitudes of young
voters are extremely varied, reflecting differences of reli-
gion, race, economic status, family and cultural background,
geography. The young ones generally should break into
in grouping .
This does not mean they will he carbon copies of their
eld ■ Their judgments of the gr it w rld struggle with
Ru sia and China will be affected by the fact that some of
it is this new season Thus it
probably isn t much of an honor
to be the top freshman entry
this year—but in any case there
can be little doubt that the
class of the field is NBC-TV s
one-hour "I Spy series, in
escapism, and show
promise as unpretentious enter-
tainments
Noble County
Legal Record
Warranty Deed
L > Neuerburg et ux to Ted
E Wilkerson et ux 8-6-65 $10
tin intry’s harshest events are unk ■ to them except
as hist ry. They will never have seen the nation in dire
which R obert Culp and Bill Cos-
by play a couple of secret
Smart,’ 0! the same netw k
financed, has a crowded
agents knocking
about the
general economic distress.
They may or may not tend to favor ' one of their own" for
high " < Since the rise of the K nne ys, it i alm t ; irt
of Washington folklore to assume young voters will prefer
y or at least those
world pretending to be a tennis
bum and his trainer-compani in
The chief attraction ol this
Wednesday adventure - comedy
and dealing with a totally in-
competent secret agent is a Caskey 9-13-65 Quiet Title e‘.
relatively empty
and k. Bu at least one election specialist rates this charm is not so much the
largely nonsense, espionage idea as tne delightful
1 human and personal relatic n-
BOTH MAJOR PARTIES are keenly aware of the rising
nec athon tl e minds of young voters and find ways of
winnir their support.
ship of the tw principals, both
fine, intelligent performers in
light as well as heavy moments |
They could be playing two
truck drivers, and the result
would be the same.
of the population. The two other best freshman
Right now roughly half the country's 195 n people entries I've seen thus far
are below 28 years of median may well go on de-belong to NBC-TV
clining to a point around 25 by 1980 and 1985. . are also an hour in lens h:
S ■ the del ■ of 1964, in which youthful t ters i II e
C .....y Goldwater, the Republicans par-
ticularly have been talk t about new appeals to
the young They are struck by the diminishing median age
Run For Your T which
CERTAINLY, HOWEVER, the politicians are going to havea
to att 38 millions who w 11 swell the rar k Ber Gazzara
of vote r eli bles in the next 11 years—even though young cool hern wh as been 1
pt- • le on I lax «( ire le s like ly to ve to th in their elders.
'1 heir de ent on the voting scene will be a major phenom | and de id - t xp rie if
er ely to engu ' overwhelm the to the hilt and Tl • W • ’
rest of the electorate—or to control the national choices. ------------------------------
to the ' ' and The Wa kie •
half-hour comedy with possibili-
ties if it- writers can meet the
tough st andards of good satire
and farce over the long haul
And Hank another NBC hall-
hour comedy—about an unre-
gistered college "drop-in" who
wants an education—has an ap-
pealing notion, if it stays with
it.
Over at ABC-TV, meanwhile,
there is a good, old-fashioned,
b lo od - and - thunder western.
The Big Valley," with Bar.
bara Sta wyck IS the he id of
a wealthy ranching family. And
the same network also has a
alf-hour comedy with modest
possibilities — O.K Crack-
erbv,” starring Furl Ives as a
rich fellow with no n inners
who hires a young Harvard
It takes too long to graduate in
medicine
No. 2 Problem
Hard To Explain
that French West Africa never
TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH
Journal Crossword Puzzle
Variety
A swer to Previous Puzzle
AC ROSS
11 Revol is a
13 Letter of
14 Goober
16 Cereal gra
17 Operated
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28 Drunkard
36 S ght tastes
37 Eccent wheel
40 Drink brewed
47 Everlasting
tumult
DOW N
6 Dance step
9 Victims of
REEF F 1
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PODSABT
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SWANM
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submerged 37 Algonquian
Low-Sodium Diet
Joseph G. Molner, M.D.
Dear Dr. Molner: I have
been told to give up ham, ba-
con, a certain soft drink and a
number of other foods because
of swelling in my ankles as a
result ol too much sodium.
What does a low sodium diet
consist of MRS. N. G.
12 13
11 —
4
5
7
8
9
10
12
13
14
lb ,
20
18
24
31
32
27
29
15
28
30
19
36
40
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44
45
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NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN
| A low - sodium diet isn’t a
matter oi what it consists of,"
but of wi.it you leave out. And
I what you leave out is sodium.
For the most part, this
means ordinary salt. Bacon,
ham, and other preserved me ats
all have a lot of salt. So
avoid them — sausage, corned
beef, and such. Stick to fresh
meats.
Don’t put salt in food when
you took it. (This may mean
that the rest of the family will
have to do a little more salting
than usual at the table, but aft-
or all, that a mild inconven-
ience It is important for you
to avoid salt, which is sodium
chic ride 1
Don’t use salt on your food
Pickles, relish and such items
| contain salt. Avoid them. Don’t
I oat anything that you know i
salty nuts, potato chips,
1 food cooked with all
In some cases salt-free bread
and butter are necessary
The soft drink you mentioned
says on the label that it eon
| tains 1 dium citrate so tl at’s
why it prohibited Reading
labels will be a help to you
1 Avoid things with s dium.
This i- true of some medi
cines tor Your doctor will
watch out for the ones he gives
VI 1 but It will be up to v 1 to
learn al .t any others S me
of the fizzy ones as well as
powder and tablets taken for
headaches, contain sodium.
It is true of course, that the
body needs salt, but ordinary
meats as well as some other
foods, contain small trace of
it. Therefore, you still get a lit-
the even though you use n ta-
ble salt at all.
Dear Dr Molner: Can a per-
son have mumps twice on both
sides? M. son has it main,
but everybody till me a per-
son can have it only once. —
W. M M.
In general, we have mumps
only once and it lo n't mat-
ter whethe r the disease is ap-
parent on one side or both. We
still have the disease! Howev-
er, there are occasional in-
stances with tins and other dis-
eases, in which a second at-
tack MAY occur And there's
also the char e that one at-
tack or the other wasn't really
mumps but something else
caused the welling and
soreness.
Dear Dr Molner I am 47
and have been bothered with
pinworms all my life I have
been too embarrassed to con-
sult a doctor I have gone to
drug stores and bought pills,
and 1 must have taken barrels
of them but the condition has
. , spotlighted the Kremlin’s grow-
the pollan he Tack his ' " ren we preoccupation with its East
o , . European posture
CBS-TV apparently is stuck Realign Pact
with most of the schedule of its p ' tract ,
, , With Romania firmly set on
depc sed president. James Au- 1 , . J .1
man independent course and oth-
brey 1 e series er that er satellites anxious to widen
and €
blecontacts with the West, Moscow
The Smothers Brothers Show:
„ is apparently about to revamp
with Tom Smothers as an ap- ,he Warsaw Pact alignment
rentice 1 ' earth y mis There has been Russian talk
sions If CBS can only improve of “strengthening" the pact.
ories and ind ' ' 'I but it looks as if Russia may in
V right format, the -I v could effect have to loosen it, at least
' ' rill politically, to allow for the
growing tendency toward great-
3 er national independence
S * among the East Europe
F Russia which has dominated
the alliance in the past and
” •been in full control of its milita-
1 ryside, may now have to allow
X er say to some of her
YA
2 A ic alignment in Comecon. the
4 Communist counterpart to the
Tl Western Common Market, ha
Eall but petered out because of
never been cured Chocolate of the refusal of some of the East
any kind seems to irritate F ropean nation to merge
more than any food. Is there a their economic plans with those
cure for pinworms MBS f Russia and their respective
MB
There are excellent treat- The Kremlin leadership has
ments for pinworms but they a lot on its plate
aren't worth zero for treating
With some diffi ilty 1 ■ dependent ics Th
was not the fault of the French.
explain to the African intellec-
tuals that Mates rights put the
burden of police protection on
the individual states and that
only in rare cases are federal
troops sent into a state You ex
plain that even in the District
of Columbia the federal govern-
ment does not intervene to pro
tect the while population from
the growing wave of Negro
but of nationalist Af ican ambi-
French colonial
troubles that ARENT pin-
worms.
Pinworms don’t come and go
depending on what you eat
whether chocolate or anything
else
My suspicion is that your
trouble isn’t pinworms, but
more likely is sensitivity to cer-
tain foods inc lading chocolate
of any kind
Stop being embarrassed Go
to your doctor and let him find
out yes oi no whether you
have pinworms.
It you don’t then start letting
him help y u find out what
foods bother you, so you can
avoid them
Of course, you might have pin-
worm PLUS food sensitivities
but in that case you’d better
learn to comb at them BOTH
Full UPI coverage in The
Journal.
Need a baby sitter? Check
the classifieds.
Of all the problems that
pediatricians encounter in chil-
dren, pinworm i the common-
est To learn the newest meth-
od- of treatment for this pest
write for the booklet, “T he
Commonest Pest Pinworm
enclosing a long self address
ed tamped envelope and 20
cents in coin to cover the cost
of printing and handling
crime But though you can
make a slight dent on the pro-
fessors and journalists, it s ab
solutely impossible to get your
point across to great mass of
Africans
N
than Justice William 0 Doug
las of the supreme court tried
to convince an African a up at
the American embassy on one
occasion with only mediocre
success
The Johnson administration
otherwise is doing an excellent
job through Amba ador Mer
cer Cook, former professor al
Howard university a Negro
and one of the most gifted en
voys the State department has
sent to Africa He was a fellow
student with President Senghor
when they were both youngster
in Paris, also went to school
ing a somewhat different cu
ture, history or language insist-
ed on becoming independent,
pense. but also cut up the once
interdependent economy As a
result nr t of the new repub-
Like the splitting up of the
old Austro-Hungarian empire
after World war I national
pride has come before economic
self-sufficiency; and just as the
plight of Austria and Czechos-
to Hitler s invasion of those two
of dismembered French West
Africa is leading to the pene
tration of Chinese communism
tal of French West Africa, K
still beautiful, but not busy
Like Vienna, one-time capital of
the Austro-Hungarian Empire
between 1920 and 1930, it is
stagnant and politically rest
with other members of the
Senegalese cabinet has tian
lated one of the President’s
books “On African Socialism"
from French into English
President Senghor has vigor-
ously rejected socialism of the
Out Our Way
r HEY UP THERE!
J ( HOW MANY TIMES ' 50 UNDS Z' WIL L (7 H ''
/ DOIHAVE TO TELL LIKE HE EVERMAKE THIN
YOUTOPICKUP TH / POPSLEARN WORSES HE’LL
I t PG 5 DISH OFI ONE )
. CHOW WHEN HE )/ IT <
AR ES TO ( AGAIN
REFUSES TO
- AT IT 7/
FT
©
■
- HIS RADON THE
A REFRIGERATOR!
■ J HEROES ARE MADE -NOT BORN !
4-21
The railre ad from Dakar up
to Mali used to be a busy ar-
tery of commerce But Mali has
dropped out of the Freench cut
rency system; its money is
weak, and Senegal doesn’t rel-
ish Mali money to pay either
for port dues or railroad freight.
With Mali 5 president just re
turned from Peking an enthusi
1 Chine • booster it seems
only a matter of time before the
small, semi de sert country falls
into the hands of Chinese com
Senegal under the leadership
of President Senghor will hold
out longer perhaps indefinitely
Thi will depend on more ef-
ney poet-president
more financial support from
President de Gaulle in Paris
and more technical assistance
’ n Pr ident Johnson III
Washington. LBJ when Vice
President started the mechani-
zation of the fishing industry
If he can follow this up with
I diversifying the farming indus-
try this key country of Africa.
almost as el e to New Yolk
is London, can be saved
Still your best bargain — a
Journal subscription.
Renting? Tell the world via
Journal classifieds
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Watson, Milo W. Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 235, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 21, 1965, newspaper, September 21, 1965; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2246056/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.