The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 5, 1952 Page: 6 of 10
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Rochester, N. T. Hi. ambition li
to become the conductor of a
symphony orchestra. Who ki het
(Name* et bottom of column).
Your Future .
Although unusually diligent ef-
te* ueMmary, the re-
sults ahould Juitify the exertion.
Financial benefit* are also likely
to continue through the year, so
enjoy them. The child born under
the** aapecta probably will ba
most fortuned.
Tlrtniw Hir4Kilmir iI
nappy mnnosy _
'nd' What* thl*~a new breakfaat $ champion*. ^ 1950-Amsrican poet Bdgai
£*stts.^rai^ jmsc
enjamin Franklin. Folk, of Fwno-Ou^. the Nam.
imtJiWi IL8. Women bare loat the - ■■■■■ g|ajiuj|U|ihl|uH
Maybe so. but we ll bet anyone of y
/2isa>£:m?
There are thousand* whom quiz
W AND ALL THESE
YEARSITHOUSHT
HE WAS JUST
A BIG, . |
OFFSHORE WIND/]
THAT SMALL SUP Of
mkss
fOR TOURING NE
1? SUMMER
7b Ti MAS
From Thu Sun Files
hbf.yddJ|tT*^0U*h \ho,d ^ ass?
FIVE YE
TODAY’S
Noted
art of o
’em can
**F " Th# passport was Imm1:
elly (11,030)
«jr Official*
Carry-Out
,u» hMt
*PjecW
■psaw
8ICIAN and mlndreader v
' C3ub*ln^Mhl£nrtHed
asawrf*
I him, and laid to.the mind
d« youf *>ig mistake^-** In
■$.
be would jeopardize
ha* won- especially
pobcr. Furthermore
WAlTlN&TSI
ADOPTION
TiME{» J
isell Could Poll
If President Truman doesn't chooee to
ran again. Sen. Rich rad Brevard Ruaeell of
Georgia, now an avowed candidate for the
Democratic pramdentiaJ nomination, may
well get more votes than any other candi-
date on the first bsliot at the Democratic
convention. On the first and only taUbt at
the 1948 convention, Ruaeell received no
leas than 363 votes, and would have had
266, almost One-fourth, if the Mimtoaippi
delegation hadn't walked out before the
-note was taken.
But every one of those 1948 votes for
Rusatll came from the South. In 1962 he
is unlikely to get many votes for northern,
* piidwertern. or western states. The dele-
gates from those states would expect the
nomination of Russell to cost the ticket the
votes of Negroes .and perhaps other minor-
ity groups, and hence weaken Democratic
chances'in at least the large non-Southera
state?,
ore
r •. ■ ■ ’ ■ -,. ”,
Convenfion
Today's Bible Verse
AND HE taught skying uflto them, Is it
not written. My house shall be called of
all nations the house of prayer? but ye
have made tt a den of theieves. Mark
11:17
. 54,4s admittedly able. In fact, he
is regularly picked by the Southern Seng-
* tors as their leader and chief tactician
against civil right* kill*.' He won praise on .
ail aides by the fairness and tbs adroitness
with which, u chairman of the Joint see- .
Moos of Senate armed services and foreign
relations committee*, he conducted th* » *
hearings on the MscArthur ouster. •
On other than civil rights issues, Russell
has gone along with much of the Truman
, domestic program. For instance, he voted
for public housing end the excees profits
tax, against legalising the basing point pric-
ing system and overriding the veto of 1947
tax reduction bill. But he voted for the
*Taft-Hartley act , .
Unit Rule '' . - ' •—
If the 1952 Democratic national conven-
tion is a wide-open affair, its choice of can-
Weihin^ton Merry-Go-Round:
Truman's Decision To Run
Tied Up With Ike's Strength
didst** for president and vice preaident, al-
so the platform adopted, could be influenced
by the "unit rale" binding some state dele-
ptioas. Under this rale. aU votes from a
delegation so bound are cast according to
"S?6 Majority of th* delegation.
Whether the unit rule is to govern a state
delegation is decided by that sUte'a^wn
Democratic convention^*- ^ • ”* —
This unit rale is pointed to by the South
ta defending the two-thirds rule by which
Democratic national conventions were gov-
erned until 1936. The Southerners argue
that when a majority vote, inatead of a two-
thirds vote, suffices to nominate a presi-
dential candidate, he could be picked by an
actual minority of all the delegates tifthe
convention. »-V> s
This would be because the votes of some •
delegatee opposed to him might still be cast
for him, under the unit rule. When an at-
tempt was made at th* 1948 Democrat!#
Convention to have the two-tfiirds rule Ve-
adopted, Texas delegate Wright Morrow de-
clared: "By mciiiiy use of the unit rajc.in
the absence of the two-thirds rale, political
bosses of a few large stated can easily dom-
inate the national Democratic convention*
. and put forward unpopular candidate
upon the party: T- * ~ - . •
. ®>me of the early Republican conven-
tions also saw the unit rule in effect, but it
is now outlawed for the GOP, following re-
fusal! of the conventions of J876 and 1880
Jb recognise it. And it has become less pre-
valent in Democratic conventions than
formerly.
t * ’• ,* ' *
A new gun is said to be able to shoot
around corners. There goes that old slogan
about “Don’t shoot ’till you see the whites
of their eyes!"
Looking At Life-_
By'Erich Br.nd.il
rj vr m*n * inclination to nlr
By DREW PEARrin.N »uch issue* u civil libcrtiM mid-
Ips*
Eisenhower's political
h go*j down, ifo more Tru-
inclination to fun goes up
Approximately one month sgo
th* Preaident had definitely de-
cided he would not permit hlm«lf
to be drafted In hi* own mjnt
thi* cateforic, and tq one or
two of hi* mow intimate iffiend*.
he §o exprewed himtelf At that
tim*. however, he firmly expect«i
ceiiiin E.»enhower would be the Repuwf. jobs On the
txm refrettm* the condition in which Bclpum ia can nominee, and Truman had no JJ*™’
reoreaented" rei.ah for oppo*:ng Ike. not only fn«>‘mmedmtely aroond Uie pre*
be^au*e he personally made a
pledge to help Ike become presi-
dent but *!*o becauae he regarded
Ike at unbeatable
Since tnen however, the political
scout*, both Republican and
Democratic, report that Ei*er,-
hnwer* organization i* limping and
AT THE RECENT funeral of King George VI.
practically all the kir.gi who are atil! In their job*
were preterT
But K,ng Baudouin of Beir.urc «ai absent He
xu represented by hi* brother, Pnr.e* Albert of
Ltege..
A k>t of people naturally wanted to know why the
king did not zpter.d. in ap-te of th* fact that the
Belgian Chamber of Representative* passed • mo-
. tlon regrettr-- **■---•*“— “ “
r-preiented "
Well h developed that the K.ng of Belgium was
motivated by a perfectly human peeve It was the
aor; of peeve that has split »o many otherwise »en-
sibie familiea not of royal blood
It ahow* that when It comes to “having your
feelings hurt. ' k.ngs are no different from you and
me. ‘ •
HERE IS KING BaudbUins reason:
In :»34 bis grandfather. King Aloert. died They
gave him a splendid fun«p»- with ail th* trimmings
gr.d all the aoop-.* that a king get* when he has
doffed hi* scepter and hi* crown and finally found
the peace and qule: tnat comes to ail of us even-
tually
A*, that funera. there were *11 the then re.gning
kings and queens in attendance But King Georg#
V of England did not -ome Instead he sent the
Prune* of Wales—now the Duke of Windsor
Tnat was !* years ago But the present King of
Belgium never forgave the slight
I dor t know why the King of England did not
com*. Maybe he just had a cold
But protocol ia.protocol And. with kings the pro-
' tocol i* If you don’t come to my father s furteraL
I don't *o to your father s funeral ''
And »o King Baudouin stayed at . home.
OF OOUMB THI* may all »eem very silly. But
a rent set all?
I bet you a dollar to a doughnut that you have
earrlad aome foolish grudge yourself, or, st least,
that you know somebody who has.
Just s few day* ago one of our neighbor* wa*
burled. Mott of the other neighbor* went to her
funeral-all except one. I asked her whether she
was going
„ “I ahould say not” *hs replied with a defiant
shrug of her shoulder T haven't talked to that
"• It's
“Do you know.------------------
we bad th* row about?" she finfily said
a- 1L l_ * - * * *-* * a_
all thru he
hi* foerlgn policy,
even if he ran and won. he would
face a split In his own party which
might endanger hi* foreign policy.
Naturally these argument* have
counted heavily with the Preti-
dent. He know* they are disin-
terested and come from his best
friend.
PALACE GUARD PROTECTS
JOBS On the other hand, the
___»
Ident most of whom are rabidly
intent on keeping their jobs, know
that th«r only job-inauamc* is to
have Truman run again
A* * result, they constantly bring
In those caller* who they know
will urge their chief to run. tel!
him he ta the only man who can
that the general, though hiving ’ **v* th« nation. They .know what
tremendous popular appeal, li in lbs President'* vanities are, hi*
the hand* of an inept group who prejudice* and hi* passions. Ar.d
car, t tr.in*late popular appetl into, though he started wA by bein^
delegates quit* friendly to Sen. Kefauver,
As a re*ul;. the President h»» *h# palace guard ha* now fanned
been toying with the idea of run- h‘» jealousy to a point whers he
rir.g aga.n-first, beesuse he is would almost like to run if only to
itching to take on Bob Taft whom put the Tenn. senator in his place
he thinks he can lick second, be- To illustrate, Gov Adiai Steven-
cause the palace guard is cleverly son of Dl„ interviewed by the press
coking him up as the indispensable the other day, was asked what he
m,JL thought et Kefauver. Stevenson
^ and Kef surer hav» always been
^th^E ^9TICE' °r th* friendly, to the governor made the
'Sr A*' ""/J"?"*' natural obsenjtew that Kafkuvec
President has and in Ms day a HmerfiateW a member et th#
shrewd political observer, has been
spending some ume at the White P^*^,™ '
H°u*« strongly Arising Mr. Tru-
man not to run exoiamung chat the governor or in.
The Chief Justice took this move h#d b^8d
after a talk with Speaker Sam naw rootln« ^ Kefauvwr. The
Rayburn. Both men have a real <*»*"■ vnMtj
affection for the President, snd Kefauver nor Stevenson to
both are in a far better position run- Th*y only want the man who
to gauge the political winds than «« guarantee continuation of
the palace guard. their jobs—Harry S. Truman.
The Chief Justice’s argument
has been an appealing one—napit-
ftjtlSRBJ
ORPHAN OF THE STORM
By Fred Hartman-* ;j
NEW YORK —-(8p>— Pardon m* whlla I wrap up
Washington with a few more Item* I killed a imu
tjme Jn SmIUtaoalan Institute and wished f0,
Gordon L. Famed. They have a apectacul.tr display
’■of Wlnton automobiles Many of fos.ytds hsv,
never heard of • Wlnton. They were th* rase in
Worm War I when a younf Nary guy from Ak-
hama was the Admiral’s chauffeur. Th# car w»,
aWinton, and the driver was Gordo. Famed You
.jsugsyw-Wasawiw,:!
townb a hick town -t J
Sal^iSL*?ra 25f,1aN#'J ^ ^
agffiaffiSsSH
saBsawjNfca:?
n*rve center of the universe, and you lutV io m
mme*S? m*1' * 'fttW ** dwk- rtS
awMIe' th,t 0li,ht Uk* cw7 °^ the DC for
EVERYBODY'S c.rESSrso
WE ATTENDED a free for
dmg-out verbal baule’In thcltir
--------- Euf^?.
Reviewing Stand: • ■
Radio Quizmasters Are All Bunch Of Heels
if OT nm BDOIfteQrF. 1 OAVCni 141RC1 w UIBiV --- v •<|«iiitut
nan la 10 years. If there Is one thing I am NOT been an appealing one-name- ew , ,f
F..mL?i-!N."t6r..t feS?" SSSTsis
I haven’t the slightest ides what across the Marshall Plan, opposing But If the while I think on thee, Never again, as long as I have master with any sensitivity. Any- thlnlt i» my way.
■ — a communist aggressor In Korea, dear friend. All loateSc are restor- my senses about me, will I listen thing for a laugh, evfti If It tear*
blocking Communism in Greece ed and sorrows end. — William to a quiz program on the radio or the heart out of a person who
an,i t,—1—‘— ok.i..—.. watch a quiz program on t^levi- doesn’t even know his heart’s he-
re naa ins row aoout: sne unauy »»iu. •*
I can’t swear to thla but" somite# told me that blocking
li the next dsy the saw this n’oman at th* cefnsterv.
if laying a~beautiful wreath at her ’’ertemy’s’’ grave.
DO YOU CARRY a grudge? Don’t.
Go and make up. One kind word spoken to the
living is worth all the wreaths deposited at their
grave when they are dead.
and Turkey: and championing Shakespeare.
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
A Central Press Feature
Have A Laugh
17~Boyc® Hous7 wn** ^ Kerry Wld0'w
The Ansxver, Quick!.
1. What President Mgend
Social Security bill?
•Ion. ' ing torn out Someday, before I
If there’s one thing I can’t stand di®’1 Wift to conduct * <5nlz Jhave
It’s unkindness, particularly dill- gl* ""ther,!. w and sce
berate unkindness, and I have yet h0W mUch th*y know'
to see or hear a quiz program on * can,t waJt 10 *bout six or
which the master of ceremonies “ven' who»e namcs FW know, If
did not hurt those he was quizzing. tkey #re /k* u*’ 1"
ie
TryAnd^opM
By Bennetf Cerf
A HOLLYWOOD grfiup recently •
A MAN *®t on a City bus in Waoo. He was of course 3. What Is the * symbol of th*
wearing full length panta and the bus driver collect- YMA?
, «d full fare. At tlj* next corner, a boy got on. He 4. what is the scientific name
f was wearing knee length pants and the driver col- {or sleep-walking?
8. What is the name of the
He was a member of the state
senate for six year* and-the com „„ JU„L „ . ■
monwealth's attomej(| for Rock- much fun as a physical disability, average depth
bridge county for another six. He ahead and say what you're River (ha ha),
also aerved In World War T
tried out a three-act comedy that
was billed as "on It* way to a
triumphant Broadway production.”
how-
knock down and
the ds/beforetaking off Eu^f Hfn^7*Hulw’o.<
young Internationa! thinker, completely befuddled
a
County”^ eftmmi**‘on,r ln Precinct. Two of Harr s.
The truth Is that Furo^ •, i„ ,Ufh , mtm n„.
- Wyjwowa-what-u^^ whafao^to-tMwpm-.,—-
vdneed more than ever that.Ill never be able- v
•traightcn them out in one month.
lf.Vn.ESK RENT OF WAV
I MET A YOUNG radio man from Akron. Oh;,
whom I w jl alwaj-* like I rode with turn fro-
ST’n 'tf t0 thf h0,<,‘ Hl* B‘me, Inc:-
dentally. Is Tim Elliott.
~ the^trsin" 'al<1' Y°U mJ"* h*V* left y0llr h,t
He replied he hadn t because he’ didn t bav# .
flat. .
And to think I'd worn a hat all the way fr- ~ |
Baytown to from b^init conapiciiouii!
In less titjl* than it take* to writ* it. I sailed
my hat out the window. It came to rest in th„
marque* of Madison -Square Garden If vou set -- I
there soon, how about picking it up? j
In The Lyons Den
By Leonard Lyons 1
THE MORNING paper, quoted Margaret Trunuii I
as hating told Dunnmger, at a parts that he eor- 1
reetl, had read her mind about her father. pe» J
xiMe eandidaei: “I »Uh I kn,». hut I wouWn!
Ohjeet If he ran ' . . That’. Incorrect. Mis* Tru- I
man said nothin* which could possible he Inter-
preted as either faiorin* nr objecting to her fs-
ther. running again. Mv wife and 1 were ther, |
we brought her and took her home. This I, what , I
really happened: Dunninger said “Now Til read 1
your mind and tell vou if daddv will run agwirr 9
’ ’ ' ' Mis* Tnunsn replied, and gaie 1
■the answer she’s ahrayt given ever slnee the *pr,
ulalion hegsn. "because frankly I never asked and
•lon’t know." * »
THE DEAN at the I’nlvgrUty of Kentucky cam, ‘n
Z™. Y?rk Uu* *e<k *« «»n3«r with Judge Sa
WreiL before whom the fixed basketball player,
pieaded guilty Judge Strelt ha* been fettingVe
background, of the players, how they were recruited
their work at school, etc. . , . Bill Spivey. Kent -c
ky 7-foot sUr. will not be indicted by the New
rork Grand Jury, for there is no accusation of in-
voh-ement In any game played in New York
Century-Fox. bought the movie right to Er »
Scveretd s story of how he and 19 others bailed out
or a plane m the Burma jungle during the war and
marched back to civilization, with th# help of head-
?" .H?n. The movie wiU be called “Naga Htuki'ir
TRUMAN CAPOTE'S f|Mt play. “The Or...
iwP" -**°^*'** kavq iu out-of-the-town premier)'
in Boston. The young novelist discussed his hopes
for the play, and the effect he want* to aehieir.
When the final curtain goes down, after two
hours and M minutes," said Capote, "I’d like the
audience to feel that they’d gone to some place
and come bark—that they've mime bark changed*
if only a little bit changed, and for the better,
even if this change lasts only 21 hour*. That s
what a playwright wants.”
SHELLEY \\ INTERS and her fiance, Vittorio Gass-
mann. Dew back to Hollywood, and will decide on
some stage, offers they reeejved in New York. Maur-
£%fV?^f!Cr<‘d them "Lil!°,ra” ,or thp City Center,
Clifford Odeta wants them to tour in “The Courttn
Cxirl and producer Julc Styne has a new plav fo-
« rqil,prorr,« the *P°n*°r« 61 programs, h?ll mnTh^ ul^a We^ '^Prefsr^d to ^
** he doesn't want to. They ask for ether If T h*d to .kit hre.t,f..i ■ run tnree haj* longer than ____
aid not nuit those he was quizzing. ““ "ptTrird <ha ha*. how was qiuaa ns on iu way
Quiz programs are supposed to be 'L0",* Ijave they' marr!ed /ha triumphant Broadway produc
fun, but they are just about as ?*J’ “<rv^1J'any cb dr®n do they The producers’ dreams faded, ..™-
much fun as a Physical disability. :.*V* and ^h*t is the ever, when Critic Sid Skolsky pre-
dieted in print, “If the author
Heard what the audience was say
Kalbitz,
And Fra;
Accept
I By DAN HHIT.TN
j Thr»« weU-k.
i town Area iporti
Bob Kalbitx, Vic ~
E. (Lofty) Fr
Accepted ,m»m
tiona in the Utt
bAMball program, .
■ The fourth man{
four-team loop w
nounced in the nc
League Secretary E
subbing for Presldsntl
who was out of towi,
th* managerial appolJ
meeting of tbs governll
night, 1
KalWts played Te.
ball with the Houston
1st* thirtits, and later |
ber of Ui* Humble OIL
aged th* Oilers one
th# past two years
1 managed the Franta
In Vie Major City I
Piloted a tern-agr __
Highlands, jilt home.
Frailer I* a vetrf
baseballar, holding dou
for the Humble Oilers
years. H* retired as|
player after the 1M0
for* coming to Bsytc
played ball wtth Ingle
_- f)‘*s hiu bfun-1 m
with almost every spoil
_ the Baytown area His l
W f<>r *11 types of sports I
■ -beat When not partlcf
B. can usually be- found
B apectatora During the L
■ al year*, he ha* been!
9 participant In both
■ basketball In I960 hel
■ athletic chairman of I
■ (Sub He aleo has m
___ 9 Humble eoftball team.
”We are . indent fol
ti have these three me j [
K ,r*." Clarke eaid. ThJ
f type of men who will
li example for th# youth o_
Two of the four sponsl
■ Baytown Uttle UagueT
■ announced They are
B Funeral Home «nd Af
tm out at General Tire.
gB In other action last
I Little league nffi<-crs
■ the purchase of unifl
equifMtirnt.
Another meeting is
B •*' for T:A0 pm. next ’
I the Jayoee Quack Shac|
I time the other two i
■ the fourth manager
iJK nounced
Attending [ant night i
I were Treasurer Al
| Flayers’ Agent Fete
re* Park Committe*
. George Fergu«on. Fubiicl
man Dan Shults and ll
■ worth. Lee High athleuf
? SIGN TRADE AGREES
I TOKYO HP. Japan an I
m today signed new trade agf
■ providing for an exchange
3 «nd service* during the I
^ year 1962 amounting to I
mately 317 million in iiapt
Sweden and 310 million if
from Japan
F«r SafeI
BRAKE
SPEI
i i ?
lect^d half fare.
yrZnt.e^ysh°t h»d^ntr*n!i- f«^^*Hawailan b^h that”* ffresses until elected to the’ Senate programs have never had so much man ah'd a "decent American
ver dldnt collect any fare at all. She had a trans- , wlnteV^layground" >" «« to fill the unexpired term as a second In the sun. Just plain, woman and make fools out of £!, ^ f " “J
r" - . 7 H * wintof ptayground . ^ tfco ^ gen. OXrtaToim. HI wdlmuy pdople who make up this thsm,Td tMnk twTce before I went I*"' ^wlthg ^ jMt.kw jnMch
„ID SPEAKING of rich Houston (a* we were yes- IV* Been Said was re-elected to the Senate in country. In every man’s heart to sleep at night. •2r^tok.‘^e Tt T'*
ferday) everybody has heard of the Shamrock Hotel Whoever has even once become Nov. of 1948, What ia hi# name? there’* a desire to spemd at least W I had to put on a program g°l “ “** eyelashes
with KB shade* (I believe that’s the number) of notorious bjt base’fraud, even if „ a few second* In the spotlight be- where a man and a woman had to 10 Put on *^“*e*; Always
green—and the. prices In the dining room. Someone he speaks the. truth, gatna no be- , musician was fore he goes out carry balloons across the room? on something for a bookseller to fret,
said,’ ‘‘Order oysters—then, if yqu find a pearl, you lief.—Phaedrus. • h«w to- Phljildalplila, Rk, Feb; 14, They come out on the stage em- their no»c*. I’d try some other «hout.
may come out even.” 1925> and began playing the piano harmssed vet mraid What « hed mean» °i advertising, or admit to___ ,
" V i ; ’ *’ Watch Your Language at . the age of two. At four he' . r,j. SatorYwi to hr to hurt my*rif ^ 1 waa a lightweight IN DECATUR, the Morning Her-
the United State# Army. He was ht doesn’t want to. They ask for either If I had to sell breakfast J.T" U'1 J
elected to the 73rd United States It, which to rife is all the more rea- food at the cost of. somebody’s Ws ®how'
Congress in 1932, re-elected to »n tor treating them gently. Most dignity, Td rather not sell it Tf I TV PUTr -
the 74th and succeeding Con- of the people who appear on quiz had to take a decent American . fhiladklphia, Mae M eat
grosses until elected to the Satiate programs have never had so much man and
in 1018 Pa #411 4k. ....mluJ #------ oa • «WWl/( in flia aim Tttof nldin Vt’rtm
Match Your Language at. the age of two.
DEVASTATE - (DEV-as-tat)- was touring local theatres with' ^atTride*T^ou“lilTe to llTmo^l c'tize'i «nd should 1
v«e'tZ*ltiv*; 10 ^ jfeyhow. the quiz mastom in one and dam L^mf' C'tilen by Wh°
vage, synonym, waste, demnllsh, HI. comporition. include Suite tor them to treat, say, George Kauf- K thta'sound. „ if i _____
V V *nlmal*> J*1* *r3L™** °"fe man, at they do Joe Dock- -a *°undi M lf 1 were mad
wooden bowl from which'George
Washington reputedly ate bread
.„-4 ** ““ »vmuu» os ii s were msa soaked In milk. Commemorative
L about" flul* programs, then it's placard suggested by Editorial
You're Tel ling Me ... _____________
...... .................-----*- plunder, pillage. Origin: Latin Anunais, The Ivory Tower, Once 'r— rv^u.. ..a **.*?"■ “uu,,u* muz were maa swwea in uuik. commemorative
m ~ ■ ■ ■ By William Rill ggy. w y w. f y. u#» . .win. «. w. JYJC!*1
;'A?x!!’ ill concert ThLi occurred in _ ___ . - • ~ .■ '■ • •• - ' -v- a. ,
mmM
. Hartman...... .........Editor and
S. Gould.........
‘S^r.vr.v:..»
Subscription Rates
By Carrier-1100 Month; 313 Year
U-Month 3L00; S Month# 32.90; « Month.
Year IllJO. Armed Services 78c Month
subscriptions arc payable ln advance.
— -------------- 1—He Was educated in the pub-
Texa# Dally Press Leagues** *«hool* of Lynchburg and
-■class matter at the « Rockymount, Va., and after cel-
PoMnfflce under th* - lege and law course*, he was ad-
of March A MW. nritted to the Virginia bar in 1908.
York newspapermen the right to refuse to reveal
Sources of Information.
'' ILLra WTWW. V>* hank robber and
jail breaker. Has arrented the police marched hi-
tiny room in Brooklyn. They found among his
possessions* copy of Meyer Levin’s autoblogra
®?rch’ l'yjn wrote to Sutton about it,
■nd the prisoner replied: “I have followed your
career from my first reading Of The Old Bunch’
mtsny years ago. I purchased ‘In Search’ when it
first sppeared not only because I admire your
Style ef wrtUnt but f#r the a^WgMosuU reason that
ft might have aided me to solve a problem that
has plagued me tor years, 1 wap seeking a solution
to the purpose of my own Mfe and sought to dis-
cover the reason for my existence.. >•
ARTUR RUBINSTEIN la offering *10,000 FeHbwsliip.
.prises* evfry two y««,Jor the bwfc snuafdan. to
stat* ®«l>«tment favors this project. 1
Which encourages possible prise winners in compt - I
tit Ions against Soviet musicians . . . Judy Garland’j
will leave for Florida soon to rest from her long’ ]
nm st .the Ftf— .. . Pat Dolan, the former New 1
York advertising executive who opened his own
In Uiulon, is tha fatiiar odagffL On fits:
I* ?ornu he ru,h-ed t0 «• American Em-
bassy to register hpr as a citizen and get her Amer-
ican passport, "Passport' photos must show both
HERE’S HI
. • AN
• Adjust brokg
|l • Chuck
' ' • Add broku
-.fr • A
ALL FOR THI
SPECIAL £01
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 5, 1952, newspaper, March 5, 1952; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041477/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.