The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 101, Ed. 1 Monday, October 3, 1949 Page: 4 of 8
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BIG DISCOVERT IN ATOMIC RESEARCH!
TOO LATE
lw Me NhA Am
* polio '■ y
* HoipitaliiaHon '
* Ufi Imuran** ..
S T I If 1
IhlAJtmUteTFA
Inswe-AndBeSw*
See Jim Bond
V* Complete 1MVMM
*
1 •#*£&***
Hwejrrori.i-a
- • r, mu Vmt , Sun Slants
, umtr.omunm
- ' ■ ...... ‘--.. -------------- ' '
1
■. sSsas®
to begotten of him. I John 5:1.
^fione Forever
Some weetefn Beropeen BAttons are folk-
By FroU Hartman
A KOBE WITH A WOBY
THERE WAS drams at Memortel fftadlum Friday
night in s ratting that a movie writer would have
welcomed. ’
I wonder how Han? people caught It ,
It was that cinching touchdown pane that want
from Clifton Price to David Johnson. ■' ,
4 to the «Af place, Clifton and Koss* ate Insepar-
able friends, and have been elnoe they wen sure
*0*1
Zl,
Sixth In Series--
m**5z
E.f^iag aboul^oonunoiLjppcy for trade
among them. Other propoaali call for fixed K(ma went ^ ^ gxcaii as an athlete, aiftoa, a
., • ••• tanrency ratioe that would let the eurreney ^ with great natural ability, decided to quii foot-
dt eeeh oountry be ured freely in all the ban in the middle of his high school days. He is a
»- j •" ’ countriea la that particular monetary union.
\ The pie-World War I gold standard i* obvi*
; *ously gone for all time. ' -•
r - Under that old standard, gold eupported
E SS the currency end currency wbmfreely trans-
-“Stable into gold. Secondly, gold could move
between countries without restriction, par-
natural athlete If Baytown ever produced one.
He decided to try football again Pile year,-his last
in Jjttt. •*.
The fates Were crusl to this tod, who was dtstlned
for flrtrt string quarterback play because pf, his
cool pe%s under fire, bis poise, arid his ability to
nwatH. .rf- ■>>•••.»
Tbs Jolt came one afternoon in practlos, and It
virtually tied his right leg in a knot to lour knoU,
to be specific.
Trainer 'Beverly Rockhold worked like* a deraon
trying to get those muscle knots out with diathermy,
just about everything else that can
_______real old-fashioned Charley-horse.
Clifton's leg got a head start at being bad because
the boy wanted to play so badly he didn't let the
coache# know he was hurt.
*•*t° M*wsw
supply with an aye on pnees, instead Of His leg Is almost well, and he hat been burning
j.i desire to play.
- £ tfoularly *0 redress unbalance in commodity
trade.
However,
money
mtEJuropean ... ... __ ,,
. .1. Price movement during and after the war
ahttons definitely
Trainer Beverly kockdoio wonted
Mr, • perfect .vclwche of paper WW|»»“■'»«
without gold backing wa, purSM- % jSStKSoSu
>pean belligerents dunng World war omoa> leg got a head start at bcin
supply ___________
allowing the money supply to be determined
automatically by normal economic processes
and by the amount of gold on hand from
free international gold, movements. . • .. .
■ The gold standard re-established in the
1920’bi was accordingly a modified one. In
1929 several “gold” countries had to'suspend
Finally the spot came for him. The Ganders were
threatening, but they were in a tough spot. They
needed a touch—and badly. They had been a ground
team all night. Their passing hadn't been good.
Coach Dan Stallworth told Clifton to go la and
throw.
“But don't youv run with that ball,” the eoach
,gold payments for currency; before the end * thinking *of Clifton's one remaining muscle
of -1931 the entire British Empire, except In w#-nt No 35 hu j*™, u fresh and white m
South Africa, was off the gold standard; in the day it was issued.
1*33 the United States 'formally went off : He galled e running play from the Orange *4
gold on the second day of the Roosevelt ad- “ ' ""
ministration.
The old price of gold had been $26.07 a
fipe ounce. Later in 1933 the U. S. treasury,
in the hope of raising commodity prices
thereby, began to buy gold steadily at
higher prices, finally reaching $35. The legal-
ity and the wisdom of that gold-buying pol-
icy were both disputed by the acting secre-
™fary of the treasury, who resigned because
of it. He was Dean G. Acheson.
• •
after Perry Beauchamp blocked that punt.
It carried to the Orange 19.
Orange braced to stop the Ganders on the ground.
The score was 27 to 18 at the time, and Orange was
still in the ball game.
Clifton took the ball from center and faded back,
looking straight ahead. Orange rushed to cover the
intended receivers downfleld.
Halfback Johnson, who would be a millionaire
if he had a dollar for every ball he had caught
that Clifton Price had tossed him, hesitated for a
count or two—on schedule—and then drifted out
into Orange's right flank.
Clifton calmly kept his eyes downfleld and then
at the last instant tossed a perfect pass to David,
Freezing Pack Trig
Strategy In Canastai
HIGHLANDS NEWS
One Of the feature* which dis- awkward”*iltuatlo^ ****• i
tlngulshe* Canasta from all other part with the 8’s » , -
rummy game* is the unique prac- don your one
tic* of freezing th* discard pile, best play 1* th* “foj
Freezing the pack ha* the effect pile. This la sound^' **•«
of vetoing the power of the wild strict* the opM*kurt*%
p^^r^^the'S Zlnfoc«&?^
CBVRtiB INSTALL^WOTFICERS
*S..wMPofimmrn* n.of the
with a t
Houston
"T* M *• CSuirch were to.talW at 8:45 p.m. Ze. Br,
#+,obt A. Wli*OM brought th* Slnday at thr ohurch. Riv. Bill Marilyn Ac
|gi
sffLniSSSS ^-'-“"ToT JSZSTLsl'~
-• ssapj-eJR* Ss’SftrtS JS
• itt RichardBon, Mr*. B. D. Hall, Departmental officer* are "Mrs. ot the
' lira Bill Baker, Mr*. Richard Mm- a c_ Tanner, Horace Wright and There w.
ibalh Mr*. C. L^Harria^Mr*. S. M. yre^ Chandler, adult; Mr. and Mrs. tending. 0
during the freeze be used for such wm not now he , ^1, dil
purpose, to order to go in, a play- ure. ; v*®ft4
er must have a natural pair to ..
match the last dlscMd. When the p«,),
‘jss ?? s xsTat"*?
'go in" If'the tost dhca'rd 1« a JZ.!rous*nJ-
SiSSSSweiSglS
sawasas is aySSSSfi
yarss'JK
you know that the enemy can use
(cards matching their melds! and DECEPTION
your purpose Is to restrict their The lets Information ym *,]
sphere of action. right hand opponent ,51
When you and your partner have hand the better. If
more cards than the him some misinforms.
a great many
opposing team, and each side has means do *o. If y^“^.
already made the Initial meld, *o the erroneous impressio,
that the pile Is not frozen, you_art .don’t.arr ‘ “
in a strategic position to apply„the your ad'
- 1's. It may
tage. Tou mav a, I
freeze. It will be a considerably effectively by dlicardtat
greater nul*anee to them than to them If you happen to hi*i
you. Because their hands have retaining a pafr to rth,
The same type of dee^M
been depleted, It le reasonable to
assume that they will find It dlf-
aseurne mar mey wm iina n au- u- .., , , .
ficult to put tgether paira, to that "h*" M(Nl
their chance, of going In wlU be ? l"*** °*h tt
A'S.i f,“ a£!21
muoh easier to accumulate a num-
Seersucker Coat Will Type Paris Visitor
It's 10 To I They'll Figure You Cafe Man
later reference.
bar of pair* and eooner or later Similarly when
the enemy will be obliged to part
Success Secrets
By Elmer Wheeler
DO PBOPUB accomplish big things bemuse they
have the aWltty, or dose doing thing! develop the
•»
somewhat Mbs asking whloh city* first, th*
n or the-egg. But I *unteiij that th? dOWg'
At__L. Al.. .Ult. 11...... AttAW “ A Kim,,” l.n’t
abiHty?
It'*
chicken
comes first; the ability follow* after. “Ability” Isn’t
•omstUng you are bom with. R is something that
must be developed. If you never take th* first step
toward developing H, you may be.
a genius and go to jromr grave;
without k:
at th* last instant tossed a perfect pass to David, . , • *r i fL 'll C*
who wa* as wide open as a church door on Sunday It S IU I 0 I I flSV II rlQ
morning. - * 9
Johnson took the-bail without missing a stride By HENRY McLEMORE street* munching on a turkey wing,
and skinned down that sideline like the sprinter PARIS.—Three times since. I have or handing out ham-on-ry* sand-
he Is. The toss wa* as casual as It would have becn )n Ptrll j havs been mistak- wlche*. Wit because of the seer?
been had it been In a Paine Brothers softball game. en for y,e owner 0f t delicatessen sucker coat that I wear with
It was a touchdown, and the slz-pointer that really gbop Not because I go about the slack*
put the game In the Icebox.
it mattered not that an Orange later was to § 0
Intercept a Price pass that undershot an end deep
down field. The ball game wa* sacked away oh that ^ ■ n
GrabBag
.................hie Initial meld,
with a eard to match on* of them Prartio# to add your mkIi k
and the, loot win be yours. melds, eepeoially g yog
Observe an Illustrative oaset Tou Pftlr “*"»• When playing ag
have not yet mad* your Initial ®Ppon*n^* *r* apt k i
-tUt-tgletfc-
knowlng it.
Pmreholagtoto tetl us that just
•bout al learning 1* by the pro-
earn of total Md error. Unleee you
toy aMd*!2 and toy again, ability
never ha* .a etmae* to make ltorif
hnouna
A tot of peopt* tot back and bold
their band* and ooiiptolh—1 wish
l could write or apeak to public or
be an engineer-hut I have
K you tot bao^and wait tor •‘abUtty”
Maybe that Price to Johnson pas* combination can
tie as many knots in forthcoming opposition as the
hand of fate meted out to Clifton's right leg.
If it docs, the Ganders will be a better ball club.
21 ever a football team needed "aerial supremacy"
^fp cover its ground attack, It's the Ganders of 1949.
The alternative is the facing of an ll-man line
every Friday night from here on In.
Of course, there were other brilliant plays in last
Friday night's football game. AH the kids did well,
and Sports Editor Dan Shult* did them all Justice In
hi* fin* report.
lcatessen owners
wear seersucker
coats. It i* as
much a sympol of
their trad* as
blue is for police-
man and-nothing
is for fhe girls
• "it ■ , Ot the foil pi B6T-
Easy Knowledge ger§. v
^^-^heir^lemi Aft*r drswln* you ho,d:
meld but tht opponent* have meld- j*°V ^pain mtf $cJ
ed Queen’* Jack’* Ten’* and Btx'*. ■•■y- « Ph»4 m {
The Answer, Quick!
X. Who is president of MexicoT
i. What it th* capital of Eire
(Ireland)?
3. Who invented the rocking
chair?
4. What is a "cam"?
- A Frefwh ac-
disciple of Siva, quaint“c? who
du dancing girl, v.«v.r.«
god of evil, a tall, slim, beautifully Polnt*d this outl
formed girl gained eternal notor- to me went on tol
iety a* a spy in World War L She P°lnt out t b a tl
wa* really born at Leeuwarden, In p»r“ *» »t the same time shocked
the Netherlands, August 7, 1876, and *mused at th* dress of the
haad opponent may throw J
2-Q-Q-J-J-10-10-10-8-8-8-4. the** cards, to to* b*M toj
The discard pile has reached de- ■ *•*•-
lirable proportions and you are But wImb your side tot i d
anxious to avoid giving tt to them., containing only threemtunl J
Tou may not, therefore, discard a you should batten to add i d
Q-J- or 10 your choice apparent- natural, which wlU be e brnl
ly narrow* down to an 8 or th* 4, a future Canasta Remember •
Ymi could get bv. let HI lUjal: CfflMI*
venlentiy enough by letting go th#
• *
Barclay On Bridge
5. Who wae the only United
Thl* on* Incident of a great offenelve battle stuck States president to corns
lllto 41CU1CIIMIIU*, raufuci. >1
daughter of a Dutch bu.ln.ee man. thousand* and thousand* of tour-
— (.|(jBriy profligate, i(t* Who have been nver-nmninv
_ — j i----— - thl* city
with me.
Pennsylvania?
you wXl aever
_ It I am reminded o< a lady I
•aw on a citf bus recuntly. Sh* toood at th* r*ar
door waiting toe R to.open but thd dobrTenSatned
doted. Finally, otte of the passenger* told her-''Step
on the tread!*.” She stepped on the treadle and th*
d LdeTeVb* ttat bne door. Always we must take
tb* Rrd step. W. stand before many tooeed door*
resumed
BE READT FOB BREAK
I GUESS this being on tbs editorial page some
moral muet be drawn from the incident.
And that Isn't hard either. If you and I and all
the rest will be a* ready for our big break as Clifton
Price was when his chance came to make It certain
hti side would prevail, success more often will crown
our work. Of course, in life there'll be some knots
dosed only because w* wM not
Map forward and "-tap at the trcdle ”
The Chinee* have a proverb, "A jouiner of ton
thousand mOe* begin* with one step.”
"Heaven oannot hdp the man who wM not act,”
■aid Stophodee. *
Whatever R i* you dream of doing or becoming—
don't wak tor ”toMHW” *tart doing R. Tb* door
won’t open antom you take that first dap.
tntide Washington
Married to an elderly profligate, who have been over-running
she divorced him and became a thl* «ty since eerly eprlng, per-
from model and dancer In Pari*, ghe Ocularly that of the American and
attended a German espionage English male*.
•chool before World War I and "pari» one* was th* elty of de-
Happy Birthday formed friendships with high of- ganoe, particularly la dress, the
Dr. Virginia Glldersleeve, edu- flclal* of that cduntry, France and Frenchman said, giving hi* waxed
cator and humanitarian, and Hen- the Netherlands. Innocent appear- mouatach* a twirl. "But no more,
ry Hull, actor, are due to receive ing letters written to her daugh- Tou tourist* have given our
birthday greeting* today. ter in Holland and conveyed In street* and boulevards the appear-
Dutch diplomatic pouches, gave anc* of a bathing beach or a
Tour Future valuable information to the Aliies’ mountain report, what with th*
________ ___________________________________ No need for pessimism in your enemies. She was convicted as a things you wear and don't wear.
that will make those four in Clifton's leg look like next year. Rely on your own judg- apy in paril an(i executed before Look, there's what I mean."
pimples, but th# main thing I* don't let ’em get you ment and intuition. The child who a jlring ,quad October 15, 1917. I looked, and I saw whe
(town and be ready when your coach tells you to is born on this date will success- \Vhat wa* her name? ' meant.
"go In there and throw." fully overcome any difficulties or • Striding by- was a man who U
oppoalton which he or sh* may I-He wa* born September 27. h . .
• *•*- • ...... sssarffls tOJaaS
■sjzsjn-« «.
asrr c““" “ k* ,,“"1 p5^
By Erich Brflfldfiis raried.—Robert M. Hutchln*.
Watch Tour Language
THERAPEUTIC - (THER - a-
PEW-tlk) — To take care of, to
treat medically; In medicine — of
By Shgphard Bari
«mm two to* a pair of tooM
club*—If he wm to mk J
rnniY rotmowN acm
ANY BRIDGE pUyer think* of
the honor* in hi* own hand, when
he to the declarer, a* primarily
trick-taker*, secondly entries lor
various purpose* and thirdly a*
card* 6n which he can dtooard
dummy * loser* in other suit*.
They can have a still different—
contrastingly different — use to
some situation*, especially to1:
some giiit of which th* dunmy to
void,. Entries to th* dummy may
be needed so badly that th* best
us* of jieclarer s honor* to to ruff
them, In effect tramping Ms men
•Med th* heart J, felled tto kg
At first gtaMiKi <
to dummy's only obriow atn
little »tudy of Rut mit rm
that by overtaking it lout
the A he might torn Re T tot
entry if he raved Mi mu
fourth-round lead to X. Wei.
fore playing to the MtMt
saw a gmt tight dwn. Eel
perfectly good spade toeorin
be ruffed to the (toMMy toi
other two en tries
So he nffed toe ft* h
hi* own Q, dBMMdl
Looking At Life
tne Beaver Patrol for a flower
^ "MnUflcatlon hike through the
by silicosis against the mine own- wrtnH> H„ ^ iborU ,
-r-
Witli Cffntrffl Prttt
WE HAD th* most wonderful dinner last night!
But to get R and to appreciate it fully, we had to
travel l)M miles.
Do you know what the menu was?
Frankfurter* and bean*.
Sliced peachea.
Ooffra.
^fe^^^flac^wirf’botSt
or pertaining to the healing art
S i- P«wM«t to vi.it the United Statos ^ ^AS a acoutmaatar, but I
concerned with remedies forju- ^ a jurat In the White ^
♦ J10M
gt
ff 41
♦ »**
MATY nWffl OH v
THE • NAVY’S orachdown on pubhe statement* by
‘ 1H personnel to the fend with the nir fore* wlU not
be effective beewuM more than fO vetirad officers
naoslly adRUrak' and flier*, are going to oar^r^m
One recently retired naval aviation pioneer 1
HOD NIGHT before w* had another very good din-
ner muoh more elaborate but not nearly aa tasty
and satisfying as last night’s.
Th# night before we had hors d’osuvrss, cream of
asparagus soup, brook trout with almonda, broecoll,
naw potato**, chocolate wnfflea a la mode and deml-
eases; curative. Origin:
therapeutikos; from therapeutei,
attendant, servant.
House. What Is his name?
(Namei at bottom of column)
ooRmm that the nun who will refu** to be allanesd
an entirely stocev* la their belief that the army
■ad nir force are rooeplring to eMmlnate'the sen
SfotoAfo imutt' ssdd: *Vs :nlh AMU* mjtp
5MMMF.gr mWiHImi, th »#%_*■»*#
would dear the ndvnntagM of unifleatM. Bat V*
~t) wtthoat •
- Very swanky, very expensive, very weH served—
bnl nothing like the Iranfurters of last night ,
IF YOU’D llks to know the only place where frank-
furters and beans oaa be such a wonderful dinner,
FI foil you: \
At hogMl ' ...V
. That’s when we had ours hut nighty after. re-
Hu speaker said that the navy wifi cad Its fight
anioftsgtnisxn
fontiaf from our rscution trip.-\
WE HAD intended to stay out h couple of days
longsr, . -
But when we got hMo the Green Mountains of
Vermont, R got pretty dan chilly and tt rained and
<tfa.
1 1
tt, because tb* streets of
are packed with men In
similar dress, and th* thancra of
that many acoutmasUrs bring tn
Paris at on* time are small, In-
deed.
—(Little Flower of Jeuus) — th# My French friend asked me If ,
children’s saint 1658~MUes Stand- American men dressed that way*,
' ......
R Happened Today
Feast of Ste. The row of Uritux
we were, fo a beautiful mountain resort,
Tffxai Laughs
MOO feet high surrounded by gorgeous scenecy,
set for the tm. • ■
I don't know whether you have ever been stuck
Folks of Fame—Guera
l—Passing hscMlf HI
which ws oouidB't
lsh, English cojonlst and military at horns when walking the streets
lender of. Pilgrims at Plymouth, of a city,
died. 1884—Wlllfam Crawford, saa- '*1 know Englishmen don’t,* be
itary engineer, surgeon general of laid, “because I am often In Lon-
United State* Army, born. 1«6*- don, but even you Americana are-
Eleanor* Duse, noted Italian act- at as—how shall we put It?—
ram,., bom. lMS-Italinns bombed carefree in your^drera in Paris as
Adowa, Ethiopia. Englishman. The moment they
»- m- • . a?
l Miguel Aleman. other , foapcdlment* to freedom
1 Dublin. o which they must wear hi England,
I. Benjamin FYMkltn. - and become aa sloppy as th# stud-
4. A routing or sliding pioco enU of the Loft I* wonder
Hf’ra a Sin- * P*0****0"- “ on ‘ what New Yorkers and Londoner*
Imparting or receiving motton.' would lay If Froaohmaa walkod
^ J|MiMM Riiakanan A ‘ V
(Dealer
nernbie.)
South Went
3ff Para
4 NT 'Para
5 NT Para
•»
When North's
f 98T8
ff A789
*108752
*K7|
41
«KU
ff 108
*X4t
Jaqjm
♦ KQJ4
♦ AQJ
grnrth Both todra vH>
X with the A. Mored to* duag
and Q, overtook the J Mkl
A, Am rased the Rub Q, W r
diamond 4 to the T, tatradl
Hub J and had left tto toll
and heart 10 for tod M 4
totoito, kavtog toMHitotoJ
“• toaimsri Pvetoto 1
A.
it
tl
ar««
1Q8II
Blackwood 5-No Trumps showed
no kings. South felt like settling
fra tora Umr gfogl afon, Ml H
course couldn’t Upon soring the
dummy afUr the spade J trad. Its
was still mom stumped by hto
tl
ii«»«
♦ *
North,
problem, as ha counted up the
baric need for fora entries
dummy—two to try two i
th* Naim
of hMrts, If th* K lay fa vorahiy,
DAILY CROSSWORD
(Dealer:
vulnerable.)
tt WeH bad --- ^
heart* and East erenttoRMl
Med Mttamoodi, bw^fl
South pleg after ••
leedt
X •
v:
mm
By ^oy«e Houio
*00 miles away from hom*, with ths rain .coming V*i t# >
SiSSr - umra M ratiting to do but f ^ ^
Prstty boom you get tired of reading and talking, ' „ ________.......s-------.
Md you bogia to wonder how things an at home. * prom 04;|y Sun dittos
about those eltira as Londoner*
and New Yortran walk about
i3teiSHES*Es,".“ !SEf7«^?>r±2 Try And Stop Me
■oratolls totoe, tb* former needed some mnqey, how long K would take to get hom*. T- .
so ha again ealed Hi th* president, who.....
■nidi ’Tou trant to see foe vtoej proeideot
^b^'kowraramlrto'plyoffthe
aestoa went to ms bank president, be wae I
r _- V, and dining in shirtsleeve*
Enter Rlgn Suburbs: Tsnas Regu- By Bonnott Corf ths Do^rhester in London or
SsSss ssissi i&Hsks
amount of bond* which can bs Is- dlgnatary to a Burmese cockUll The Frenchman made me feel *o
■ued by the city, (*) Increase In the party In Rangoon. "The Burmese Eu||ty that j _#nt .traisht back
city manager’s salary, and (I) elao- girls have • funny custom," th* *n my hoU>< and Lv. _v
tion of commissioner* on th# basis reporter started to explain, but the
hMto you Altlip the tony home. ~ ' of population from districts and a British stuffed-shirt out him short ^ -- 5M«oiiht
BY AFTERNOON you see th* sign "State Line.1 - , ,
ft’s your otoh state you are getting Into. Houston Natural <
Funny, you aevsr noticed the beauty of your state notified Mayor Jim
Aren’t those trees pretty? And thoee hUlsT wlll
The Fronohmna to right itosHjt ^ ^ tnm - ,
men and Amerionag $nk nothiM)
of wearing the most ranunl iporfi ‘ - name .
clothe* Into the co, ktall loungra1 14. Appearing
of hotels such as the Meurlce. the •. ^J*A* If eaten
Rlto, th* Continental, and Georg* wTstuttera
V, and dining In shirtatoeVp. If
w v , ... .......th*
St. Regis or th* Wsldorf In New
ACROSt—4 A sudden SS.DnHtofa
L^hklr^-^ ntoiiliil, 1 ,. racond
5.Happen anWraUto «.Rhym#rs
It Loan out S. Siberian . (m)
U. Spear of gulf SEHermlU
• Hotel 18. Caresses
- Am.tmmum ” omployw lightly
It Half an
Worthy's desk. «m< tn Imlr mt thn man flmm nt%* I,,*» r,mrr mg* oyuutua. TSXSS R*gU-
some inoqey, ________ _______r .. _______
who thl* time Not by that scenic route you had mapped out, but
hr charge by that direct route you had scorned when you
j , ....... originally laid out your trip. 1
raady to pay off the toaa and Yon go to Wd and, for aom* reaeon, you dream
bnuk president, he wa* told: “You of hom*.
.When you wake up In the morning you eat your
know**™' are MUthe*wav*tome# thl"* 5°U ol population from districts *nd a tontisn sruirca-snirt out mm short going tot th* sventng.
Ctortto? Fisher, representing th* customs fo this country, my drar
‘ Mow.*
Meek that he ittoy arrived at the party, and .
“ “SafJ55’iSS5 Quotes
ive dinner m ramv iwuureiu o M a * n query to the fofllRhtk In iheir
1* S i. i* cic
Ip see lb* vtw praridept in eharg* ot repur-
the banker eras rislUng
! n matt over in a field —
l.ZS.'SS.w
* *
I how clean th* I
19. Scallop th*i
»ar ■
21 Repsiipy
24. DwHf .. .
•$5 SuIt«V'-‘
■* dectug
-.MrExpresdil '
of .
®PPle»
27. Apportion
M-NlcK*
29. Resort
’> town ' ■
T. Automo-
bile. V
S? Japanese
v ,
9. Stores up
13. A plcasef
• expression
15, Comes In
17. AbetrnH
coriceotlon
U of being0™
* ’CPhllon.)
24. Kind of i
sandy
28. Smeared
with wax
28. Uncooked
80. Power
22. One of
many -
layers ’
21. Fresh-
water
porpoise ’ *
ttSS&r
From Great-Near Great
w
>1.1
i»»ia
fllllHI
kigBragjI
rarausrarara
of
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■
. .. "■
C M.d Mrs. Bobby Page Sebum Chap'pril, young people; were Mr.
WMU member, attending th* re- Mr Mrf B D. Hall and C. A. and Mr
» BLU *5 SM
M-,. R. M. Marshall, Mra. c. n. Jackson, Miss Nelda Simpson, and wrrH pra
ssssiaswut-3!5
fLL‘“«Z,::SS PWS ¥?•“!»
sssr-'KSssiE-s
George Wilkinson, elementary. ^ftSk
C^e Girl Scout* of Troop 18 hHd raTHT KUETON HAS F1 ®ma11 st
their regular meeting recently at jr0iiRTH BIRTHDAY roses were
the school. . n Kathy Kueton, daughter of Mr. about the
Mary Ann Trofaa, proaldent, call- and j(rs. W. R. Kueton, was honor- Rcfreshm
«< the meeting to order, and M«- ^ recently with a party celebrat- peaches wl
!jret Atm Morgan, racretaw, eaU- ,ng h(r fourth birthday. !"ved„to,
ed the roll with each Scout.ant- Games were played and refresh- *r
wertng with the Scout pledge and ments 0f gftndwlches, potato chipt, Lumpkin,
the paying of due*. punch ap(j cake were served to Mr8, ;_ \
■ Mr*. R- H Robin.on, leader aet- DorU Cookt Tommy Pftrtin) j#an er Mr*. A
I id to chairman during the eleetlM Digertlson^ Dee Digerti»on, John-" ^lynn'
I «fnew of(1 cere. Those elected were ^ wullmmi TuoUe Patton, BUlie Ann Hart
Bu"h... a-gi
Tmha secretary; and Evelyn fit#- BIBLE STUDY CONCLUDES KV7^*’ „ "
2Sn reporter. CHURCH FINANCE LESSON
Plane were mad* for an over- The Bible Study of the Church x““
aight camping trip to be held eoon. ^ Christ held it* weekly meeting 1 “ p .
Thera attending were Linda 5 the church. »t her bob
Prince Una Sue Burahart, Eve- c. E. Reed, minister and teacher, „ _ ,
ly- gtephan, Kathryn Yandell, brought the concluding lemon on ... m
MAry Ann Troha, Kay Dunka, “Church Finance*.’’
Osudett# Robinson, Olivia Slaugh- Those present were Mr*. J L. v R(fr.,hm
t*r Oleda Martin, Grace Burch, Long, Mr*. C. R. Wolfe, Mr*. Pat wicheg an(J
n ’ deiie White, Margaret Ann Byers, Mr*. M. V. Pace,_ Mr*. ,, A „
Stw, Mr*. K. A. Slaughter and Georg* Mv. Mra Herbert Smith, £
K„. R X Robinson. •. Mra Albert Patton, P«y WUk
PEuBS<,^IMra ft. Treat and 8"d ^- Stone
4.«hter Pam, are visiting with INTERMEDIATE TRAINING J&ste»9
(riittvra in Jfossachusetts. UNION FETED WITH PARTIES W E.E
, yrt a jt 2 Ion and daughter, The 15-Tear Union of the inter- Mre. C.
Omw Alta, are riiiting with her mediate department of the Flret Mr* M. C.
p^into to Duluth, Minnesota. Baptist Church was entertained and Mra
Television Never Invented; It Just
iver Station Licensed By Hoove
By LEO TURNER named Herbert.C. H-
NEW YORK Oct. I. — <P.H»—'Tele- wa* then secretary of
risloe sever was Invented, It Just That was the year «
tw, one of Its pioneers said to- ent, small-slz* dollar bills replaced Jlk* the
who and loaned
ommerce. for two-waj
at the prea- “Televlsio
illar bills replaced
. the old, blanket-sized greenback* It Ju*t gro
™A* old, yellowed newspaper rilp- Kemcmber? A dolar went a long grew with
siu show*, that the first publle way* them. "The fir*
demonstration of th* transmission That wm the year that Leon the old
«f human Hmagra through the air Trotsky was exiled from White a thre*-fo<
wm on"Au«u*t 28, 1998. Rurala, the Graf Zeppelin croseed i/i« inch
It sera transmitted from a radio th# Atlantic and Mr. Hoover waa photo-eleeti
itatioi at OoytemriUe, New Jersey, elected president vc™lty~of„
gist wa* Hcenscd by a fellow Several hundred Scientist, gath- ,et*. That
RELIEF AT LAST
rYora COUGH
ered at a hall In New York Uni- could get
vcrklty’i uppen Manhattan -cam- ln
pue and squinted into eom* three- television
luarter by three-quarter Inch lgr dtlly
qusnn v/ uucttiu..— —- i*r aauy
eereeM and watchad th# face* of ,rom
people who were speaking on th# (ft a(jvanc
other end.
; Osoostiiioo rtlievw peomptly becrase
k goes right to the •*« of the w6ubl#
'to help loosen end ezpH germ leden
j phlegm end eld nature to soothe ted
beel raw, trader, inflamed broo^jel
mucous oembrenee. Tell «•«*•
to tell you a bouto
with th* understand'
the wet k quickly
or vou ere to have tout money
CREC-------
fOrCoHghs
. the present
The first human face* to be iftlr r z
transmitted through the air In that j, or 15 yc
public demonstration of televlaion tub# wa*
were those of Hugo Geriback, now 8ariy tub*
publtoher of a radio magaalne, and of y,*
John Geloaco. chief engineer of the *Tiat t.
: CreoHultioo eM-PUot Electric Company, form- wialon?
you must like ^ Uwrenoe, Massachusetts. “Color,"
**“ Oeloece to now head of an Elec- “Our grt
tronlee Company at Milan, Italy, prasent tin
They were followed bp several No wonder
radio entertainer*.
“The received Image wa* of suf-
ficient definition to enable observ-
ers to see th# woman’* feature* dis- <
tinetiy.H **>• 0,d newspaper clip- Tfl
ping reportsd. ‘Th* animated 1m- vW) IV
22* St* lrJXK
tbs other,” Irador* Goldberg, prra-
Ment of th* PUot Radio Corpora-
tion, who built the television set
used In that demonstration, said
today.
Goldberg I* a laughing, roly*
tbs cough
r beck.
mm
WANNA SAVE
MONEY?
nmu discounts foe
CASH ON ALL HOUSEHOLD
FURNISHINGS.
Ml US IIFOM
YOU BUY
HOME
FURNITURE CO.
’M W. TEXAS PHONE H
tha veasel
- Th# soc
years to r
Allow ths
monument
Goldberg ■ a monumen
sasrja;,a?uE
mon
tha boat w
vage com]
” van la.
^ The boal
it. chriitwid
Jry tastoC
11. •100a guir
•M In Lake ,
„ tempt fo _
federate 0
The .hi
•crap in
waa beln
President
Into such 1
igan) eon*
factor‘wh
than the 1
TOPEKA,
•rty broui
roU of *1,
A court
to that su
roncy ahs
•r la a ho
I Th# too
lather, Mi.
isr£i
tinned.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 101, Ed. 1 Monday, October 3, 1949, newspaper, October 3, 1949; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027916/m1/4/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.