The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 38, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 15, 1950 Page: 4 of 10
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JULY 15, !?50
tA&ii- rHi lAYiovh *iL)N, Saturday, july-h, itao
Along Broadway (European)':
Gl's In Germany Put Up R
Fight With German Langu,
Woman’s Page
I---- iy~VIRGINIA MEYER
[Miller-Mason
Wedding Is
Solemnized
u,« Hobby Maaon, daughter of
* union, breams the bride of i
Micheel Miller In • cere-
•* 7 Pm >"**'•
Sun Slants
8y Frad Hartman
FACl TO TACK POLITICS
DEAN WALTER RundtU won't approvs of thla type
of writing, hut 1 muit eoy I ain't never sajoyed any
thine more then n recent atop for a day or two In
South Carolina Just before their election.
They do It differently In South Carolina,
It la aa old euetom that all of the atate candidates
fet tofether and plan aa entourafe of the entire
atate (tt or 47 oouatieel. Then they all meet and make
the entourafe tofether, etopplnf for ralltee either
on the oourthouae lawna or In the eourthouaea.
Theae meet Inga are attended by thouaande of peo*
pie, and they get to meet theae eandldatea fare to
face And the eandldatea meet each other face to
fhoa.
In the recent race for the US Senate In South
Carolina, Senator Olln Johnston called Governor J.
Strom Thurmond, hia opponent, a “liar.* ,
Oaveraor Thurmond Immediately Invited Senetor
Johneton outelde.
Friends interfered, and the fight continued vocal.
Jamee P. Byrnee, who haa held every office that
South Carolina and the US government can give a
peraon, decided he wanted to be governor to etoae
out hie career. .
He announced, and very aoon thereafter three op-
ponenta announced.
They atarted tba tour.
Byrnea would appear when It waa hla time to
•peek, and would leave Immediately thereafter
Polka began to talk. They conaidered Jimmy waa
being too hlghhat. Finally, hla supporter* told him
he'd better atick around and do a little pllltlckln' In
the crowd and not be ao "hard to get."
Byrne* aay the light and changed hla tactlca He
won In a landallde. /
Today's Bible Verse
But the Scripture hath concluded all
under sin, that the promise by fsith of
Jmus Christ might be given to them
that believe. Galationa 3:22.
•hat t* happening on the other
aide of U»t world."
"A guy of IT dooaat hav* any
long-term eomnltmsata* aald
Cmlg Malay, a student of North
Adams, Massachusetts.
Faith In Advertising
More than 100 firms spent as much aa
$600,000 in newapapers for advertising dur-
ing 1049, and some spent far into the mil-
lions.
General Motors, with an expenditure of
$2,466,9072 for advertising in newspapers.
62 per cent more than they had in 1P48,
tope the list, followed by Colgate:Palmolive-
l LAW ENFORCEMENT
RE-ELECT
C. V. Buster
IW with 4i2.nMft.980. Among
- ' WlUl SuiS, nnT For3 M<
RoFTSirT
10" to expenu............_
pany, Chrysler Corporation. Proctor and
Gamble, Lever Brothers, Distillers Corp-
Setgrsms s Ltd., Schenley Industries, and
General Foods Corporation.
Some firms increased their budget in
* much as 460 per
centTuke Wrigley Company, and 420 per
Your
SHERIFF
newspaper advertising as
cent like the American Safety Razor Com-
pany. ' * , .
As Editor and Publisher says, is this
faith blind or proven?
Surely newspapers have something no
other medium must have, or else such firms
as RCA would not be buying 12 and 16-
page sections in newspapers to tell its story.
Surely, newspapers must have something
other mediums don’t have, or else these na-
tionally-known concerns would not be in-
creasing their budget as they are doing.
When money is spent, as these firms
spend it for advertising, there must be a
return in saies-and newspapers give that
return.
EN RECORD
ORMS OF LAW ENFORCE-
:ement OFFICER FOR 22
OVED THAT NO ONE CAN
R AND OTHER CRIMES IN
■ juriatuff bride and groom.
I u.mh.i« the hoimparty were
I jl ii SiJmc Jlmmefson'who re*-‘
|wered the gucate; Mr* Byron
iH»r.'.' -',r* “mT,rr Amman*, and
Ixm Polly tlaney who served
I After n *hnrt wedding lrip. .Mr
Iwd Mr* Miller will return to re-
5"T Writ Republic In Bay*
|tinrR for travrllng. thr held* wore
lauMSiu crepe dress with pink a< •
I \|r, Mtllrr in a graduate of Rob-
K Ia'i High School and at-
I Irafi <4 l/i College and Kant Texas
I Baptist College at Marshall She
fba^Brmber of the National An- Monday
laviatt'iri'i'f Woma* Broadcaster* ladus Auxiliary
I Thr bridegroom graduated from legion, la-gion Hall.
I thr Grrenjiuirg High School at Seth Ward Ha**,
ICfttosburg. Pennsylvania, and is Methodist Church. 7
I now stationed with the United Goose Creek Order
futei Air Force at Ellington Air star. Goose Creek ,V
B*v ln Houston. p m
Out if torn guest* for the wed. s. A,.n, , rjuiLt of
ling wre Mr. and Mr*. Grubbs ,-opal Church, a p m
Bd vm Jimmy, of Albuquerque, Woman's Auxiliary
Krw Mexico byterian thurch. Fe
TF.XAA MLOI IOO BIG
Betrothal
SUCH A Pl-AN would not work In Texa*. It would
take the group a year or two to grt around the 254
counties of this state.
There are more candidate* seeking office In a
normal Harrla Cohnty year than there ate In some
state* And a peraon winning a Harris County offlco
often get* more vote*- than many governor* and
senator* of smaller western state*. ,
It I* awfully good politic* to look the tupporter
in the eye.
President Truman proved that in IMF. Campaign-
. Ing had gone hlghhat at national level* until he car-
ried hi* fight to the folk* of the creek and won an
upset victory.
VIRGINIA CITIES STAND ALONE
VIRGINIA HAS an odd **tup. Cities over 10,000 ate
not a part of the counties In which they are located
Thla la even true of county *eat town*.
The cltte* are Independent entitle* Ju»t Ilk* Inde-
pendent school district*—only moreto. The cities
•tend on their own feet and handle all of their af-
fairs Independently of the counties.
For Instance, Baytown wouldn't pay any Harris
County taxes, But Baytown would have to look after
Baytown—all the w*y.
By the »ame token, Houston wouldn't pay any
Harris County taxes
That would mean that Harri* County would only
be the rural section*, and the county would be broke.
That wouldn't be good.
The beat way I* for Houston to keep on paying
Harri* County taxe*.
Of coune, we will alway* scream out here In the
weed* that "Houston I* trying to do this, that ami
the other to us."
But We know—down deep -that Houiton butter.-
Baytown* bread—and even furniihe* the bread, both
literally and figuratively.
We're jflfctty well satisfied with the setup most of
the time, but don’t you Houatona take thla admission
as one of weakness!
• We’re ready to scream down here In BaytoWn nf
the slightest provocation.
USELESS W ORRYING
THERE IS a certain nervousness her* In this area
about whether current war business will have any
influence on completion of the Baytown-La Porte
Tunnel. 1
That la something that ihould not worry anybody. *
It the war gets serious enough that completion of 1
the Baytown-La Porte Tunnel would Impede the war j
effort—there is only one thing to de, That wouU 1
be to halt the work and forget about the tunnel un 1
til the war emergency ended. 1
On the other hand, aa long a* the war emergency
Is not critical enough te cause any great^lMCUoir.
throughout the country, work will not doubt $■>
ahead on the tunnel as scheduled.
That Is one worry we will leave to the other pCo-
glH»
■RECEDING IIAIK LINE*
Washington Dispatch:
US Navy Building Up Its Pacific Power
President Truman should lose no more
time in asking Secretary’ of State Acheson
to step down so General Eisenhower could
be drafted as Secretary of State.
This is not a criticism of Acheson, al-
though there are grounds for such criticism.
This country ought to put forward its best
talent in time of stress, and no better talent
could be found than General Eisenhower.
President Truman is not expected to take
this step for he Is too much interested in
politics. He would be the last person in the
country to want to have anything tp do
with making the supreme commander of the
allied army in World War II a better can-
didate for President of the United States in
1952.
But it odght to be done. It would be an
act of statesmanship on the part of Mr. Tru-
man. Giving the chief executive credit for
everything he has accomplished, It must be
said that, he has done few things that will
cause his name to go down in history hooks
as a real statesman.
Give General Ike a chance, Mr. President,
and such action on your part might gain you
a niche in world history after all.
chool!
WEY'S
By ROBERT S. ALI.EN force, for patrol and Intelligence
.WASHINGTON - It s not gi'ttii.g ,vork a)nnR thr rna,t of rhino,
the attention, but a big build-up ot . .. , .. ,
... Out of the ees-thnn 100 *ub# In
Navy strength l* taking place in
the Pacific parallel to that of tin- operation, only a handful are in
Army and Air Force. the Far East.
A large number of patrol and Several hundred destroyer es-
other small combat craft are being ^ n ,andin|t rriftlnd
rushed out there, and two carriers
are being readied for the same pur- °lh"r ‘mall-type vessel* that can
pose. operate In shallow water. These
In addition to these initial men*- are especially needed for Korean
lire*, the Joint Chiefs of Staff are „nd Formosa operation*,
rr-. Vonne a large-scale reinforce- . Number of destroyers and
inent plan sub- rruisera to ward against possible
mitted by Admtr- Russian and Chinese Communist
j nl Arthur W. moves.
. 1 Radford, com- Xote: In his testimony during
uJH rounder of the ,|10 unification melee, Radford as-
Pacific Fleet. He sai[pd the Air Force's theory of
operates Indepen- strategic bombing as our best de-
dently of Mac- fenap Hs follows: “An aggressor
Arthur, although napjon can set the time and place
his requrst Is di- jnr j„jtjaj military operation*, and
ecctly related To hence they strongly effect early of-’ H!H KBd grabbed it and handed the siari sector ’of Berlin, wl saw a fes- penter, "sound so exefttttf yeti
MaeArthurs op- frnsp „nd drfonsc measures which waiter a bill. Carmichael protested, taurant named "The Ohio." you're missing something if ye
orations in Korea the g. must employ.” "Now look. Lister,” he argued, , healthy."
THEY'RE AMERICANIZING Ger -''urr*F • • • A f "»F
many surprisingly. *7tfr ***• ®,lcl<hurn Twin*
With American tools, car. and version cT"The Prinr# aai
speech everywhere, you sometimes ?,*up#r' ' * '
think you're In Pennsylvania or Inverted in * nee
IHinola * ,r*ck ln I'** Vf<*f !n ^ f0Ki
We turned on a radio In Berlin ln 0ctob»r- 1111 •* ,h''. °»>T
and heard a qulx contestant telling in ,he countr5, op*r*!irg Sul
Groucho Marx, "I've been riding ;VISH I'D SAID THAT: Jus
the range for 15 years” Groucho rty. -Not many know
answered, "It mu.t get pretty hot lt ,, about wom,n thi, nikM
riding a rang* for 15 years, espe- |ntr|guing_.but they're will:,
dally around your county seat" ,™d a ]lffUme fjndtnl
IfieWITEKIW AI XII.IAKY
[WU. MEET MONDAY NIGHT
I Mr, U' 1 Simpson will lead thr
[lesion s! the First Presbyterian
I Womens Auxiliary meeting at 7.30
pm. Monday In Fellowship Hail.
TG st-.-jly will be bn "One Man
Fevolu-.•■!!" Mrs A. KWer will
bring the meditation Mrs. J R
Stratton und Mrs Archie Halrwil
be the hostesses for the social hour.
Val< ’ in ■ • g- * *
ri|ie.
fry bun Classified Ads— Dial W02,
IF YCl'R WATCH
IS SICK-
IF*E THE DOCTORS
Success Secrets
W* guarantee all
r*p»if* »nd are
equipped to give
four wateh prreis-
»» ten ire.
See I * Now
For » I ree H atch
Cheek-l’p,
MAYF.AIR
JEWELRY
“Th* i|ou»e of
Diamond*”
!M W. Texas
Phone 44HH
PERCALE
PRINTS
By Elmer Wheeler
i
WORK la what you do becauae you “have to.”
Play la what you do becauae you “want to,"
Change the feeling of “have to” to a feeling of
“want to’’ and you can change the most stultifying
work into play. This not only Enables you to do
your work in a better mood, but helps you to do
your work better and with much less fatigue.
A psychologist found that effort expended ln a
spirit^ of play uses up, on the average, only half
... , as much energy as effort that fs
done because of-a sense of "duty."
This *• * success secret of most,
if not all, of our truly successful
jSJmen and women. Charles M, Sch-
ArM wab once
JAMES F. SMOKE
one year old today
day with hi- iiaren
Mr*. J. F. Smoke h
home in Portlar
Janie- I* the gran
and Mrs. M. M
town and Mr*. Nor
Marshall. Texas.
iKohllfa
n s unbeatable value at this
price!- New soft finish
Looking At Life
price!- New soft finish ex-
it i v e Feeling percales in
•. b’iqhr colors. All perfect
ity, full length pie’Gei. Save
Packed With U;S. Tourists ,
all but baying in our eagerness to our arms, our tie* ar* unknotted, Indian confederacy made up the York’ church- His *i,ter
' ----1.L----^^*^^^uAj(ILJ<SyOie»,iBgjeilI."tt|iJHil4f,taBl«e Nati«n*"-Mobawk*1 . Oflei- ”?!!.?? f.h* qUTt*ti<l|
like Americans you should be in , ™rn "‘ght ComM' a"d th* day ** ha,r " *h*lr thHr ** Onondag.s, Senecas, Cayu- JKTl
_ , , is finished, dresses are wrinkled, their make- gas? nroomij* on March 8, mi. w
Europe right now. He are here ln ^ gre we touriets. up Is off, and they do not care. name,
the mightiest tourist force in his- We stagger off the American Coming In yesterday Jean *aw Your Fu,u™ • Z-Thla popular author trsi
.Express or Thos. Cook buses in g *ightseer sink Into a sofa kick 1)0 "0t ri,k argument under ln Yonkers, New York, Is,
, Cathedral, are all but obscured Pretty grim shape. The bright eye. ofr her iho?i> turn to , fr,end a„5 u®°"d“^ if* ^
iWiiai
Texas, New York, Ohio, arrd Mis . cry. For the last two hours I don’t evidence for the child born today, and became associated is the
.^^^^^^^sisslppi. Royal I KafK\A/ai*H remejnber a thing I’ve seen." For Sunday, July II: Enjoy crea- ltorship of the magazine, Lift*1
• :^0^HHPalaces resound LUUiXlIiy UGLIXTTOI U Her friend was very comforting worlt at D1** time. Much sue- a comic weekly. His first book-
MTfcPBn^na Vlrglnm -Throuah Sun_Fil« ‘'Don,t y°U WOrry a bIt’’’ *he aald- Ce“,Ul actlvlty_,houW b*y0Ur' ,n Camorden' 8
Through Sun Files -j don.t elther> but my (iaUr ^
^H^^lMinnesota Mus- FIVE YEARS AGO careful notes on what we were see-
^SVtWeums are'alive TODAY'S HEADLINES: Sea, Air lng right up to the very end, and
'■Ull^Lw Iwith N o-r tb and MeeU.Battcr Japan; Failure Ends ^tll be glsd 16 let bttfh of Us copy W*tch Your Language _
HK^Isouth Carolina, British Self-Rule Plan; Cbennault them tomorrow morning atIriak- DEPLOT - (de-PLOI)
^RSwi.cos.is' We.t ^ Hi* Oemm«iAs Forrestal fast."
EWVviX andM.!. Slmkcs Up Navy, Chiefs. After making a .
HJKiiBsachurtiitA Effective October 1, the use of C at c*ean*nX up for dinner, _ .. . „ ,, _____
There can be gasoline coupons will be discontin- cora* to the dining, ropm. Things Ploy a column of troop*. Origin: parte_ ^ Water-Ghost,»!
McIiCirmre no doubt but that ued. wid all supplemental mileage ar* »o quiet you can hear an eyelid French-Deployer. — - ■ -
„ ... irtvinsr EuroDc’s historic rations thereafter will be Issued ln drop. The great majority of the,,
FIRST I wondered for a moment whether I had lost we are giving Europes h . { coupons the OPA diners have but one desire—to fln-. „ . . mor.
my mind and written this as part of my column on *Pot* a gating, but I I. equally ‘he of B C0up0n*' OPA iih dlnner 8nd blt the 8ack Writer Edmonds, nov.llst snd mxny^mora.
LOVE. • ' true that.wc are taking a good announcca. Th« m>i. « J°«n Edwards, actress, have birth- 1------------
-M-ww-tawr-.a-.aaiw Jaw T. “’Sa “ *S*** «r ». aw
1 ,s“ “• ,yw“" M * MzTzzrzz a- “? ■* rrs-c sasreBsaLTir1^
I started to get mad. Then I laughed. night than an American tourist at *V. Trl-CIties builder J group of^t£nmldTSTL. Kretn *ctreM and
h.„.lrr..t ,ni1 same tourist at *nd develpper, bought a Id-acre F-A Poup of them made me pos- dancer, and Barbara Stanwyck,
AFTER all—wasn’t It a pretty good "balance" item dinner. tract on Eaat TexM Avenu®' H1*h‘ wera^eated At th!”«xt Uhl fW rece,v,n* ,el,c,u"
at that? — ♦ . ... way 144, and announced plans for r*" **atM at “>• next table and tlons from pals.
Wasn’t It also about love? Yhe b"a«M ,cene he” * th* improving the tract for a re.lden- 1 £uld hear everything they said.
’ That flying squirrel Who makes his nest ln the PalaCe Hote1, f°r * * tiri sub-dlvlsion Th*F were leaving at five In the MUgj
wS^tarthS2vt,cheerful sight. Everyone Is bright- * morning and so decided It would
But one make* a nest only for thos* on* loves. eyed’ U*bt ,°f ‘r,*ad’ .and '° °dld TEN YEARS AGO h* *1I,jr «« to bed.
And, slthough be may not be a homemaker, as the f an CTTY ATTORNEY Shannon Morris ..B!‘‘!!f,J>f,horror through my
Item said, aren’t there many humans who sro in Y°u r®*t ’a,t t are waa master of ceremonies at a poll- *n®lent frame a* ^ I heard them
love but haven't the slightest Intention of making a **"* b«*Wnt room. ticri rally ln Pelly last night whera dUcuaa what night spots y
nest for those they love? They’d rether move Into Yh* c'*an nearly 4000 people lined the city’s ‘b*F wttu'd visit and what bands
somaon*. eWs horns. and fre,h<tbel* balr u aU ln.pUc*’ main Itreet to hear the candidates. tb*F wouW ,5ance to. HbIPI
their noses nicely powdered, and ^ and Mrs. .Vernon ]
AND yesterday I had lunch with a confirmed bache- they make u4 American inen proud ,rft thlg wgek ,/a tr) to,
lor who ha. been In love more time, than I have * ‘hcm- Wa man look pM“F «°°d’ Mountelns.
fingers and toes, yet never had the slightest Inten- too. Our suit* ar pressed, our neck-
tlon of making a home for his loved ones. ties are on straight, our shoes are ^
I* he any better then th. flying squirrel? Is he •hl"ed, end our face, are fresh WllOTcITlOnS
— ■ ,r^rrr,»M,
The best way the Russians could put us out of fast so as to be on time to start
commission would be to talk us Into celebrating a the day’s sightseeing. We have all "We must avoid’furth
Fourth of July wsekend one* a month. Th* aooslera- read up on what we gre going to see tion.”—Elder Statesman
tor Is mightier thap the acjj-aek, and are like hound* on the leash. Baruch, * '*•
. " :Y.• >,•; Jsd&MsmEM*:-^ i
said "A man.will succeed AMONG the most delightful features in most news- 1 #
Lin anything about which ho’ haa papers are those little fillers the typesetters put By HENRY McLEMORE i“ ' ‘ ' ’- -
pwl^tKSs(fliiirMto' • 4he-«nd of an article BRUSSELS, BELGIUM — l4irneA.Jaose oa^tbe city.
• genuinely Interested, provided he or news Item.
Swill take more' pains, more thought Sometimes, of course, they are a little bit IrrlUt-
■about his Job than the men work- ln* t0 the writer. But, on the other hand, they also
Jlng wtih him." make hlm see things ln their true value*.
* Most of us realize that we can- A»- {ot ‘"stance, a couple of day* ago when I read tory.
not get the most out of others by oneof my columns ln print.
e, and threats^ We know that "yq& « was about what I had considered an
,1 iuUh frtr wampU Pif^ ‘mpoftrilt subject—I^VE. "* '
t that the rule dots not apply when rilad philosophised on IU mysteries, Its beauties,
rlth ourselves. Yet the fact remains ita wond*r*-
et the m&st out of ourselves by com- 1 had flnl*bed wlth thli *»"tencs:
, or by trying to drive ourselves. ‘,Lct 1/3VE ** forever something thst 'passeth all
lew for FALL
SORORITY
AYONS
COMING!
to develop Into a popular, ambitious rle* of satirical and "tu®
Individual. ' piece* under the title of Nt*|
gings of Old Tries. MepfcbW
'• Profanation,-won much
transitive ^ wfth rCwd^jSH^*,
■light pretense tary and naval—to extend the front were for
, we all and reduce the depth of, aa to de- Topplatwl. y aientt coffee
,and Mr. Bonaparte of Corsic* J
other books of hi*. Then
--------_ He died Jww
1922. Who was he? ’ j
It Happened Today J
Fall pettaros and color*
ar prinfsl 39'' wida. Hand
bla.
• -v'
Charle* L
1 1607—Rembrandt van RUA
’ painter, born. l»4«-G«*f*L
’’ Mlkallovltcb, Yugoeisv
ChetnUca, condemned w-
1948—Harry Truman and W
Barkley,. nominated by D*
for prerident and vie#
United States. 194M3«#*r*i
J. Pershing, 67, died-
On Sunday, JuIy W^
Joshua Reynolds, not* g
portrait painter, bom-
Jostah Spode, Stafford«bI"J
originator of Spode china
How-d You Make OutT^
FA4MIKS are giving mere ehf FeMnany yesn, the eotlr
•wre comidtration to the problem profeiii»B }*• reeegn
Kealtfc, and prevision of good desirability that the t
*"**1 e»r* fee their fandliea modern medicine h»i I*
Modtrn Kitntidc rid. to eermet ‘T*‘,*W* W ^ *"d °*
X k»r, Metabolism tetter. Commastitles ever th*
Jectro-ctrdingraph and many ere speeding op nsch werl
**r‘> being mere available in operative plMitisg- Senm
t,b«, tempt the ymwg Dec tor Id have folly eqoipped heepi
",U* th»ri. - -medical service, worked <
VhU. moe, cem. of sfckam. c.o friary P«vp«d b.ri. w
di,*"«ed end Sreoted, by expe- *J'uh taJ <a*^*.*f *
^ physkUn., from office t.d monity » member, of tbe
^ h.„db.g, mojor illn.iM. «F-r community it i«««.
Folks of Faroe—Gueoe the Naroo S. "Praise God
•a#-I have to take 1 Thins noted American preach- blessing* flow.”
once In a while and er was born In Lltchflsld, Connectl- . 4. A brsed of di
write this column, cut, June 24,1818. Although he nev- 8. The Iroquois
b* known as Th# er achieved special destinction as a 1—Henry Ward
*t . student, h* becam* a fluent extern- KeAdrlck Bangs.
I V,’ ‘ '
time off e
sit down
•Tones
Phone 4448
Act et Congress ot March 3, 1879.
_
taking better
CARE
OF HIR-
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 38, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 15, 1950, newspaper, July 15, 1950; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027547/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.