The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 123, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1950 Page: 4 of 10
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*
i 4—fMC BAYTOWN iUN, TUESDAY, OCTOIER
Editorials Sun sla-~
By Frsel Hartman
Today's Bible Verse
And b* ya kind on# to anothar, tan-
darhenrted, forgiving ono another, avan
as Cod for Christ's saka hath forgivan
you. Ephaaiana 4:32.
Can France Hold Indo-China?
** •
*
If the JCommuniat forces in Indo-China
should expand their recent Stories until
they finally controlled the whole country, or
moat of it. the Weatfrn democracies would
suffer | setback more serious than if the
Communists had taken over Southern Korea.
Indo-China has three times the area of all
Korea, is even more strategically situated, is
richer in resources. In normal times it is the
world's third largest producer of both rice
• and rubber.
French occupation of Indo-China dates
from 1862. The French made much economic
progress in their new possession, but did
Jittle in social or political reform. The na-
tives put up no resistance to the Japanese
occupation in 1940-41.
France today has a considerable part of
its professional army in Indo-China. The
United States has now committed itself to
step up its shipments of military equipment,
including planes, to the French there, also
to expand its aid for larger Frertch military
equipment and production in Europe. .But
in Indo-China more troops also seem to be
needed, and so far the United States has
been dead set against the dispatch of Ameri-
can troops.
Then why shouldn’t U.N. take steps to
keep the Communists out, as it took steps
in South Korea? The answer is that South
Korea was an .independent state, wherea.i
the French have retained certain controls
and granted only limited sovereignty to the
former colony of Indo-China. The U. N.
might well say to France. “First make Indo-
China completely independent," if the
French should try to dump their Indo-China
trouble slnto U.N.’s lap;
Older ..Workers And FEPC
PUT TOGETHER HURRIEDLY
A FEW LAST-mlaute thought* about a number at
thing* (whll* trying to g*t ready to bt^goa* for a
f*w day*): *# ' * -
Bob Mstherne always told m* that if 1 work ml
•vary day a* hard a* th* day before leaving town
for a f*w day*, th* manpower problem would al-
way* b# *oiv*d.
On* thing Z’bav* b*tn thinking about all morn-
ing I* that I hop* th* Rob*rt E. La* Sander* wi|l
V remember how easy It wae to score when GeraU
Orton to*a*d that fine pa*e to Paul Parkinson last
Friday night
With barren Edward* and thl* writer both out
of town for the remainder of th# we*k, the front
page boy* will have a field day. Of course, there la
the veteran Dan Shult*. who may be called upon
from time to time to shelve temporarily hi* pursuit
of touchdown# long enough to u*e hie ability along
other line* Dane the man-a* Dan Moody sue-
eeesfully pointed out when he ran for governor in
i»Jd. - - , • --T‘
I had thought how ntce'IUwould have been to
take the Robert E. Ue band with u». If th# fin-
ancing could be arranged hurriedly. I would *ur*
like for them to be on hand a* the official re-
presentative of Texas.
I hated to leave town on the eve of the Baytown
Fair, anjd It la great to know, however, that the
extravagan*a le In aueh capable handa. Tht wearing
of the western raiment waa all right. I conformed
to the dressing cod# of the west by not wearing
any nocke to wojrk yesterday. Next year I hope they *
will Inetltute the fad of growing whiskers. Imagine
not having to ahave for a couple of months.
Just to make Zero Fulmer* mouth w*ter. let U
be said that during the weekend I'll »ee the last
half of Saturday * Army-Columbia game and all of
the Chicago Bear-New York Yankee pro contest.
Zero wiU probably counter with the fact that he,i
see the Robert E. Lee-Pasadcn# game and the Rtce-
Texa* contest. So he won’t be too green with envy.
I don’t know whose mouth. 1 can make water by
the fact that we have tickets to Kthel Merman'*
"Call Me Madam." The last play I saw was "Getting
Gertie'* Garter,’ 'the senior class play when I was
In high school, or maybe it was In Harley Sadler's
tent show that I saw that epic.
If I can ever find my way out of the railroad . . ,
station, I win atart looking for Bill white. I want Reviewing btana:
to discuss New York City's water problem with him
• over a meal with him paying, of course. I under-
stand that Seientist White is In New York and-will
be there until around November L -________ *> HENRY McLEMORK_____ __
I hated not being able to be on hand to help Slim A delegation of Insects called on
Silsby and Bill Bruce link that first tunnel tube me todliy b,,ar|ng a petition which
Along Broodway:
How Different Is Life...
In Just One Generation
By EARL WILSON
war la
NEW YORK -Ever atop and think ruling in favorer t!Lw
bow different your lif*'a been from with suite and even » J
your parent*'? gallon scheduled ,, *-■
And how much different jfour “»ed a naughty word j*****
ding annlvtratry—and I found that ate
dad doesn't care a lot for thl* m*t- # ^ JJ* op*n«t Tlwy
* W# hid la
'ft V it flit W
ropolls.
H* w*nt home
th* fifth day —
wanted to go the
fourth.
He'd just had
enough. To him
thl* town I* "*1l
right” and that
say* It
He and mother
are young-t hey
were married at Wilson
tg and dad says:
em away and pottno*.
recording date ***r!
(Chambers wlU win,’.
arUcI* for John
macatlne -Th, rmenj"1
nowaday, the* nversg, _
more concerned about her^
"Yoifr# going to fight with your than her virtue
wife anyway so why not k e • p (J000 HL<M
rs:s :r.r;,r.r
neaae*." . club and h.v. only
DAD'S AMAZED that I we any- m"- *"d one foe U1
to thl* town. Figures ha Hnneyohli* VOif
thing
better but I must not *ift ,0 *l»mour, * i
man" dealing mostly In farms, and ,„ ^U %,"»«t D,
now live, "in town" but would pre- «** M,
for "a little patch somewhere " *
Give him Boston, or California. y*u ™p' [•»
of Atlanta, or Texa*. or Florida. CTT."*. I)intl
or "rh r, hi. chef and three <*£Z.
even Chicago which he think. jgmjn ^ ^
LOOKS FROM HERE AS II WF. NEED HYDRAULIC BRAKES!
"kw* lei
Reviewing Sidnds ^ ^
Florida Bugs Resent Anybody Moving Out
1 He'»yiivcd all ov.-r Ohio Akron, SSi?*2d
Lima, Van Wert, Rockfprd. Shsr-
wood. Spencervllle (all near Toledo
nnd Cleveland) — and In Fort
Wayne, Indiana,
HE MUST HAVE been a forward-
looking farmer when he farmed,
for he had a typewriter SO years
ago. and that's why I'm In New
LETTERS
First I want to mjt that 11
honored the movie ogeaUMf i
et lines thus far end Intend ted
B~#------
w
■
< •; v
hi
Br *=- *■
Massachusetts tries out an innovation in
social legislation next Monday. On that day
the State Commission against Discrimination
begins to administer new state legislation
forbidding discrimination against workers in
the 45-to-65 age jjroup. Refusal to hire
workers solely because they are ovei: 45 is
covered as well as discharge of employees
for that reason.
This state commission was originally the
Fair Employment Practice Commission, set
up to administer the state’s 1946 law against
discrimination in jobs because of race, color,
or creed. The name was changed after tne
state legislature decided that to bar a work-
er on the grounds of age was as bad as bar-
ring him on racial or religious grounds.
Older workers as a group have assets to
compensate for the fact that they may not
be able to match younger workers physically.
Often the older employee is steadier and
more reliable, less prone to seek greener
employment pastures elsewhere, more inter-,
std in the well-being of the plant or the
store that employs him.’And you hear much
talk about older, workers Having had better-
training than the younger workers of today.
This innovation in Massachusetts should be
aided by the present high demand for work-.
ers, amounting to a labor shortage in many
localities. The Massachusetts commission,
like F.E.P.C. commissions in other states,
relies primarily on friendly persuasion and
conciliatqt-y conferences, and it reports that
it has yet to -bring a court'case under the
state’s original F.E.P.C. law,
• " .r - -V’: * '
Success Secrets
. However, i_do frcUtbrnl I have hehiU them enouib m «irarm«-w•woTrtmm "Is
thl* far that they will be able to do the rest of da>'s ot hls boyho53 Tficwmg away Mteliror
100,000.000 of their brethren
The petition asked me to recon-
sider my decision to move from
Florida to New York for the fall.
The chairman of
the delegation, a
pettle whose beet-
le brow* w e r c
the job on their own. Nelson McElroy also Is
hiding (under a big hat> from these two' eminent
tuhnel builder*. If I have time, I hope to take a
little run over to Rhode Island and »ee that "cant-
lewr". bridge which Slim and Bill built way back
in 19J*.
If you must contact Nelson McElroy. Ibok for the
biggest hat In town. He is the guy under It.
I didn't know Marjorie Morie was so famous until • drHwn together in
I read that fine Item on the Sunday book page consternation, said
about Tom Wolfe, the North Carolinian. I really that for me to
enjoyed It and was glad, to see that North Carolina move to ^elv
had such a famous son. I admit I got a warped Idea ^orh and thus n0\
about North Carolina from last year’s Cotton Bowl plant my fall
and from driving through Winston-Salem, not to garden would re-
mention Greensboro and High Point. suit in the great-
We had a hard time getting away from home. My est mass starva-
wlfe’s brother and wife (being good folks) looked tlon In the history McLemore
forward to keeping our two youngsters, but Jic de-' of bugdom.
at a marigold in the northeast cor-
ner of the garden.
over.
H«w^Fr, t axSKTrtil
operators on on,- iniir $*t»i
morning 1 carried my fivt-yn
daughter to the 9 SO *m. j
that his great-great-great-great- garden In New York. Before I
grandfather spent hli honeymoon signed % lex»e for an apartment I York.
he ^Umsel/'lmd^spent'the "happl^t m^tho’living r^om" diningroom, tofof JcopThurrying hut nit go- ,0 110 unt11
.. —-----... ..^ —... _ . . . W4trhen; or any *U»»r toouu.. , tng-anywkM*. --------* — ----
It Isn't that I don't like flowers. He and mother saw "South Pa-
I am seldom Seen without a half clfic" They agreed that "It got a
The" co-chairman, a worm If ever doxen or so American Beauty roses l.ttl. tlreson.e toward the last ' _ ^ ...
I saw one. interrupted to say that >" my buttonhole, or xcalahlyor We went to th*'Milton Berle.no ^ ind ^ ^ ^
if I Iwent to New York the garden two T n>y hatband^ And I dorit Eddie Cantor T\ show, and to
c. .. ,,n i. s.. mind gardener*. I like to *lt In the *re the Rockcttes, and to
n 011 ° i' J° * ,hi . , shade and watch gardeners garden shor's and I.lndy's all of which
omeone who knew something about .
erdening. and that life would be- If. the tool, you have to u.c In they i.ked
gardening that get me. There Is But their big kick was seeing
omc unbearable for the Insects , , , .. . . , ... u____
. , no such thing as an automatic hoe Teel Mack s Original Amateur Hour,
no had come to love me as a . . .___. . / ... ,k.
When a man picks up a hoe he "We see Ted at home al, the
good provider. t0 ho,, with it to get anything time on the televisionthey said.
Jle pointed out that the chances #ccom-p|ish(.d And that means sore "It's wonderful how he helps
,i',-re that the new gardener might handj gn aching baeg, and a crick young people.”
,-ven bo so dastardly as to use a or two jn the n(,cj, Rsther than Ted's a homey sort of guy, clean
spray - something he and his haV(t th,,,0 thjngs I would rather and friendly and not very Broad-
; riends had never tasted in my gar- buy gome crepe paper, pull up a wayish. Ky folks are the same,
det\. Or that he might be so cruel chair to the dining room table, and they enjoy each other. They like to
as to plant things their proper make myself a bouquet of flowers. slt around talking to my Beautl-
depth, thus making it dfiflcult fot Ww,d pui|jng j don t mind so ful Wife snd Gorgeous Mother-ln-
murred at keeping the dog*- If you see two chains He went on to explain that the th(> milljons of crPaturM who |,ve much x lpanM,d year, aK<1 not ,0 Uw and Slugger.
litSle,
Trtni« prt,wi and disappolated to
loou picket line there. ■
In the first place the
owners don t m»k» Uteir
filling those t, sts one tint t
week at nine cestj eteh. It tatj
adult fares that m»k*thej
Once each week th»yhar«»|
die show at 9 .Vi am and Mjf
ent know* how the Idd* froal
three-year-olds to th* IJ-y»
look forward to that tfow, |
many of them It Is the only«
tunity to see » movl*.
Many parents won't rrw|
picket line and won't »Uo» I
kids to cross either, thus the |
miss their weekly movie. A I
number of these kids e*nt j
running loose around lown 'with dogs at the other succulence of my petunias, the |n my gardcn to got at the roots „ th wh)>n thev wpre
end), bang onto them until we get home. nouri.hment in my Queen Anne s whJcb Rrp mcRt and drink to thpm Pi(t £ thpm Kro’w M high MOTHER STII.L worrie. about me,
Like the old neater who left his home town after lace, and the tantalising flavor ot you-ve bpard about people who or more. When they reach this 0 read a pjci(ft s|p snd m
three-quarters of a century of continuous residence my zinnias were known to Insects wouldn t hurt a fly. Well. I'm the height a man can yank them up _ 1 w*!' *lsd y0U g0t those who esn retd dost
My kids, my dogs, my debts and my heart I leave as far south as Key West. He saiu ,gort .wj,0 vcouUin't. hurt a bug, so without bending over. Tbi* saw#* ,.*n ^-/-irtf-m?“ -W}*r**5---, — stand th* strike iMun.
with you."
•Iter yoOT'Mothe? said.
"Yes, he got a woman to look
Talk about taking ester]
Looking Af
union hasn't evwe
By Erich Brandsit
When we «ld goodbye, my tetad*
mother', farewell word. wgre » » »m. plekeuin* nt
-x
IT WAS ONE of those nasty day* when you felt
as if th* whole world wa* against you. You have
had them, so you know.
We had planned a little week-end trip, everything
was ready, the ear was greased and full of gasoline
By Elmer Wheeli
wmK‘r
lf§
m
IN 192,1 A YOUNG fellow nsmed Phil Meyers came
to an important, if rather obvious'conclusion:
The favorite topic of conversation when house-
wives got together was clothes. Women liked to talk
to other women in their own homes about clothes—
they ’liked to look at new clothes together, and ex-
-----» Npw it didn’t take a genius to
if come to these conclusions. They are
based on facts which any man has
observed who has ever seen two or
gaore women together.
But Meyers does qualify as a
genius—which... is Simply treating
facts creativdly^tor what he- did
with this Information. . ’ j ..
If w(Ttnen li ked to talk to
other women about clothes in
their own homes, then housewives
should make ideal sales , representa-
:lves to sell ,qther housewives,
dresses. Phil set up shop In a basement with five
sewing machines and started turning out dresses.
Today his Fashion Frocks, Incorporated, employs
an average of 90,000 housewife "sales representa-
tives" and does mors than 11 million dollars worth
of business annually.
toast goU-burned and the cream was sour.' -‘ from the vast quantities of equip-
"WHAT a life.’’’ I said'to myself, and to prove it I ment captured in Korea,
waa nasty to everyone who came “hear me, since The magnitude
life, I thought, wa* so nasty to me.
Then I sat down to read my paper. And there I
saw a picture. » ~ r -...........-
A-mother, with tears in her eyes, looking at a
photograph' of her 19-yaar-old son, who was on the
-way hpme to Boston from Korea. Then I read the
story -wondering why the woman should cry when
her boy wae coming home. < '
that for years and years milium.* totporrow i am going to start wear and tear and liniment bills,
of bugs have saved their money so planting one more fall garden for Anybody want to buy a^ljpe? ,e"\ baby, what ‘do you
they could spend their vacations lh mv friends to live on while I’m Ten years old but good as new. a *r * ’ honestly believe that tbs
nty l^rdcn:------— --------- — gone"—■ -* - * - Tattle*^or^^ h6'"^nelge. paint
The chairman went on to say Thank goodnesk I won't have to job,
vwlaUM.-
It was starting So rain and 1 ran
down the.street looking for a eab
to get out of th* wet.
I could just imagine mother say-
terribly' we “have discovered nothing that ferior in fire power to U. 8. wea- lug to dad, ‘He works too hard.
And dad saying: "It’s hi* own
fault for leaving a nice little town
Note: Act-ceding to Major Gene- for a plac# j,ke N>w york-»
ral Roy H. Parker, chief of Army
Washington Dispatch:
We Learned About Red Material From Korea
WASHINGTON - It's
-so it had to rain-cats and dogs and spoil the trip' C08tly leM0»- but our ordance '.«** i* comparable to our "squash-head” pons of this type.
When I put on my shoes, one of my laces broke P01*8 arc learning a great deal shell, sure death for any. tank it
and I didn't have another one. At breakfast the about Russian arms and production hits.
B'WAY BULLETINS: Pautett*
Goddard entered Doctor's Hospital
YES, the boy WAS coming home—on a stretcher.
He had been, badly wounded at Inchon, and both his
legs had to be amputated.
At 19, this kid, a few month* ago a sturdy, .military supplies
........
in history A spccjgl T-E lable c. .wounded Thf>re u no quMtion ot
Equipment) was prepared for Ab the unlver|al hlgh 8tandard of
purpose. Every second Red Infan- ^ CQnduct
tryman carried an automatic wea- ^ Rre gcorc> of i|)(Unc(( o| --
pon Also every unit down to fey c, a of wth.
.squads had motors. The tremcn- ^ » » .. . ♦
How about It, openttrs? |
give the kids a break. 11
believe if you will tsk* »1
stand in favor of remorlni.j
picket line, more of Use g
honor your picket Ones.
How about it. gesersl
What is your opinion Of I
sue? I^et your riewepsper *
hear from you.
Respectful!?.
V Ray Osllowsy
Bsrtown, TeXM
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowlw
A CantrlJ Prass I
heroic conduct by the chaplains.
There are scores of instances of
_ . this by clergymen of every faith.,
motors. The tremcn- Gcneral Park<A only problem hag _
dous number of these deadly wea- bp,,n.:to R3Cprtaln thp number of The An^ver, Quick! State. House d
pons accounts for the high pci- phap)aing lhe combat ionp De. j. What Is the title of the poem *here he served until Wj
mirr; SS3
World War n.
ind out exactly- how many chap- 2 Why, wording to Alfred i^lonel Robert
lam. we have over there. Nobody T WM h glrellgth ^ JJwJf dubbfd him
In the huge -ems to know and SO far no one ™Z7.. Z He w«
Wheeler
Look Into your own Experience,; There are literally
thousands of things that you know could be made
to pay off, if you will start assessing the facts at
your command and. start asking yourself—‘‘What
does this mean?" "How could this be uffd?" “What
.answer doe* this suggest**' fhA
XV, u,..n n.u, ® military supplies
healthy young athlete, was now crippled for life. He from y,,. Kremlin
himsHf, had not told hie folk, anything about the than wp have g0 ,ar given all our RED TERRORS - In the huge ™ ‘“r "u °"e Galahad as that of ten?: Knight." He was
amputation. Atlantic Pact allies put together, arsenal of captured equipment, one in General MacArthur sHeadguart- ,3 ^ wh#t Biblcal Senate, and was * A.
Just before he had been put on the ship for home Egtlmati„g conservatively, Rus- item is a mud) sought-after prise ers has been able to tell us. , character were the words, "Man present of the
"The best vears of mv life are ahead of me" said abortive Korean conquest is up worm tamous jeep. . special Commission that President fly upward”, said? * tim*. Under Js»M« *AV
th* latter ^ W *’ wards of $2,000,000,000. - The, Soviet vehicle is lightly xruman to - the Philippines «. Whst preventive of a con tag- served as secrdntfe^Cte
It will be months before all the larger and more comfortable than |aa\ gprlng has submitted its re- ious disease, compulsory in- many died In New York
HERE I was, getting mad at th* terrible treatment-# Intelligence reports are in on the ours, wWj softer seats, double pm-t to him, and it’s a scorcher. states, was discovered by Edward Can you name him?
the world was dealing me, what with broken shoe- RUlg|an equipment seised In the springs and better shock absorbers i„ fact, It’s *o scathing that It Jenner? 9—This poet
laces, burned toast and a spoiled week-end trip. wafi Hundreds of experts are work- UN forces seek these vehicles as may never be published in full. The 5. -What state )* called the Pins born at. Nouthgats,
But a 19-year-old boy, having gone through the |ng on these studies. Much of their enthusiastically as QI’s did the Lu- commission, headed by Daniel Bfll, Tree state? >*• '•"• her 19, 1?M. He wss **^1
hell of a barbarous war, having lost both of hls jnformati0n Is What ths military ger pistol in Germany and the Sa- former Undersecretary of the 4 . ^ ■ ■ a physician,-• but' NM*;
legs, writing to his mother "the best years of my labp, „clMgifipd.. f>om wbat can mural sword in the Pacific. v‘;' Treasury and now president of a ** Happened Today . vers* and beeafs* '
life are ahead of me!" ' : . be revealed the following ar* the Deadliest-of the captured Rus- Washington bank, Is Unsparing In . 1861—Transcontinental telegraph ^^,,,1. me .Btor/''*a..__
I FELT like hitting myself over the head and made most significant finding to date: slan weapon* are the following: B.^ndemnatlen of the Philippine tabil.h«l Ma t™* « *
up tny mind to be mveetnewand light fron) now on. We havebeenunder-estlmatlng 120 mm trtnchmmar^welgh. »y » danounoad „ „aft.rtdd,n Great Britain attaeJToeMral
mierns, wbll••***
120 mm trench molar—weigh*
But there was no way of healing-the hurts thst I Russia’s military production by a* 608 pounds and fires a 35 pound
had already caused on this day. There was no way
ot letting the newspaper boy and the delivery man
know that I was sorry I had bawled them out.
There would be a way, Of course, by simply
short
lieved had been concerted to clvl-
j&pj®-
___ _____ ________ ^ It is denounced as graft-ridden, Great Britain attacked
u . „ , shpl^with'ftTanee of 6000 yards. vena1, Incompetent, and a menace Edwin Rommell’s Afrlka Korps at _Lmg(
ZSVJSS.tJZ’-. ?• ■.«*!»*:** ww? Sg-Si*
-r—>^.3= ■sisfrs— -- -2--^. -
apologising to them the next time I see them. But ,i(m auppllegi Thl. |g proved by the proxlmately three tons and fires b,unUy adv)geg that Mofc ^ . ‘if, 3^. gald .;
The Glow *“a J
wb*4'
rotnm
,dels Named
lftia Alpha Si
selected for
children's Ilf* will b* from yours? Harriet Vsn Hors. (sr 1'*H
I did. You •*#, my mothw and Ptof k*. Jj!
magaslnc, _ .
Patricia Nesl dots , |
laying a report,, ^
Thre* 8*er»U"~|«
flunked journalism l.^1
KARL'S PEARIA;
p
fc
. ........XW, v'v .
m SdpfwnJfwt
* Published by
The Baytown Sun, Inc., at Pearce and
Ashbel in Baytown, Tcifts
, 0 s Fred,-Hartman .............Editor and Publisher
' . . .
(Names at bottoi* ^
war production, this is conclusive- used
Have A Laugh
u**4 . •
I
i
i ...
' Beul&h Mae Jacksoh '............ Office Manager
Warren Edwards ................ Managing Editor
SuFseription Rates IH|
Month $1.00: 3-mopths, • $2.90; 8-months, $9.76,
year, $11.50; jVrmcd Service 75c month.
ly proven * by dating and other SU-76 mm self-propelled gun - Ouster of
markings. . used effectively by the North Ko officials, Ini
None of this Russian armament r*ahs a* an antitank weapon. Does cabinet, who
Is (‘revolutionary" No "secret wea-. not have the striking power of 0
• nt'SlTJSUSS'l-
*■* more "
adjectice; threatening to occur Moi* .^ns^n hi*
» Immediately; impending; over- congratula ol|f |i
e hangingr'sail} c««clally of mis- Lj, an
Bluege, Jo* L*0"1 ,
fortuns or peril. Origin: Latin-- iB'uT’nfJe7oTb»»«b»11 ,WC' I
participle of le) Walker or ;;
have been
j .nd holiday fashion prs-
,lttgt-d next Monday un-
i*lpi(t. of Bprilon Sigma
^mrlty. was announced
'JVrs. 8sdy. Blum.
J " Me* vrlU b* modeled by
K following; Mr*. W
Melba Gray. Mr. BU-
Mrs Mary Btawt.
IJJtarto aad Mas Mar-
. j^iworth.
quote. Charity
j, Athena Club
! Attend 'Joshua ,
in# And God' ]
ASMS
* tkA Pul las
° the AUey The-
ot "Joshua
iZimben listening. He was born *“">* Md it
a farm, became a "real e.tat. ho<*
|\rtll attend
November 7
* dinner at Kalla/s
preceding th* plny£
- mad* the decision at
, meeting of the dub last
Ha the h°me **”■ ^ "* *
**■th*
ef the Palis* Athena pro-
j the floral aspect
j p Henderson and Mr*.
1 gaderll were awarded game
0
j,, members and -oae guesL
[L E. (iid>ling>. were present. R
# .*V’#
.D'Olive's Team Wins
[Attendance Race
j JUry Tsrrant Circle of 8t
g, gethodist Church com-
I gi Rudy course, "Toward A
Community," yesterday [
frl N S IFOttve'* team
T of the attendance and read-
IcdfiUtt
r1t»y Ptrkeeingi* teas*, th*
; must now serve a country t
j to the winning group at a g
Jtt be announced.later. h
;ng Mrs Bruce Day in the j,
n of the lesson were
I fern Hastings. Mrs. C. H .
I tnd Mrs. J. M. Douglas
t pay completed her study
I tritb * irue spd false and
- tMt . „
l Henry Lyles gave a report
r motivated by the study,
t committee is consider-
dng with the other two
joe s project to make money t
k wed in aiding rural churches j
I MM. - »
k Herbert showed a Commun-
t movie to the women be-
jttbeir program started,
e devotional part of the meet-
ited of the singing of old
►bymni.
t meeting wil lb* held In 8t.
recreational building bn
rl).
11» MONTHLY LOSSES?
PP»nd women who lose so
Iwtog monthly periods that
ftpsk. a-eak. "dragged out”—
Wljsdue tq lack of blood-
■Llry Lydia E. Plnkham's
Rcwk thstetimo,
M help build up red bldod to
K* ttrjrnFth and energy—In
L*wKStham's TaMauart'
F«*rreateit blood-iron tonics
l*¥ "V* At all drugstore#.
ntuiw'imsuTS
Ugly Fat With
i Home Recipe
• :>u in, .;..I*# horns mip* fee.
M rnninlr w,«ht tad htlpliw «•
lilunn* curvss sod srswtul
■sts. AU
smtWntit joist to looks a slab
MWw two isblsspseatM twM*
pshrful moltt mar h* sbulnsd
S St* sou mtr slim dewa MWH-
P km sounds of u*lr t*d without
?as:£
-WUnWO, Htt,
lh show fin
A!?. lTn*fiUl WTYI
• cdmim
•ImvU, tttp
I help rtxsle
1. retaratW
'it your beouty
r lop during;
B8&’: ' /
'iMA,
pAj£i
"'Jji
Coil fer
intmqnM
1 laws Imminehs, present
HI
TWO TEXANS were
purpose, Only _
stuff better than ours,
us, the Russians have de- 7.62
of a minimum ^"“1 figures of
ranging from $1 to born at Brownsville,
All mail subsenbtions are payable in advance. 1 veto^V^ew^fy^oT^nmunition. weighs 11 pounds and firce-At the ^^tfland reform, to break up rSTte ? tcache^ but when he
National Representative: Texas Daily Press League.....They dont hang people In Texas, they kill em ^ .tremendous peie- rate of 100 rounds ----------- P -
7.26 mm light machine gun - 'n orQer 5
The Korean Reds had hi
5 "My strcnglb j,
ten because my
. Job. , ';#Ga
^^Vaccination,
JL3S2S «■BIai"''
2-I^igb Hunt- ^
I, --
|«derabl e’
salon
Entcred»as second'class matter at the
Baytown.T'exas, postoffice under the
Act ot Congress of March 3, 1379.
with elocution/'
(And some afWr-dlnner speakers durn near
It.
: - ■-• :
i.:'
Some of it has .tremendous pene- rate of 100 rounds per minute, the great estates and to put thous- moved to Georgetown, Kentucky,
do fitting power; can shattw any-Thouaands of these "burp" guns ands of ImpdObrished peons on hr'bccam* a newspaper editor. In
- have been. captured. They are In small farms, ~ ~ 1662 »• was elected to the United
: - ' ’ , ' /.-.
"nssota
Phone 4038
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 123, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1950, newspaper, October 24, 1950; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1029158/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.