The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 342, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 8, 1952 Page: 4 of 8
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Page 4—
BAYTOWN SUN, TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1952
Editorials...
GOP Platform
Wide and deep differences on foreign pol-
ity exist among Republicans, but the out-
look if for their 1952 platform to compro-
• mise on foreign policy so as to please every-
body—and nobody—and thus to prevent a
split on the issue. That was done in 1920 on
the League of Nations issue, on which the
Democrats similarly hedged in 1924.,
In fact, the platform of each party has
become largely rfteaningless in modern
times. With a determination to woo all
. groups—economic, social, racial, ideological '
—that could affect election results, the
conventions have made the platforms volu-
mihous catch-alls, meaning all things to all '
■men. . <*'
It is -true that in 1948 the Democrats
staged an open fight on the civil rights is-
sue. with the result that the convention re-
jected the compromise plank proposed by the
Written v To Please Everyone
tSun Slants
Women
HIGHWAY FINANCE PROBLEMS
resolutions^ committee. But the forthright
civil rights plank substituted by the con-
vention (by vote of 651! i to 5S21 j) was re-
pudiated by large numbers of Democrats.
Just so, Alfred E. Smtih had announced in
1928 that he repudiated the .pro-Prohibition
plarik’ adopted by the Democratic 'conven-
tion that had nominated him for President.
If ybu compare the twb platforms in 1948,
you will find that they differ chiefly in
praising and condemning the Democratic
administration and the Republican Con-
gress. On specific proposals for the futiire,
the two platforms were largely similar in
their generalities. ' —*■'
Toward the end of the last century James
G. Blaine, once a presidential candidate
himself, declared: “Formerly the platform
was Of first importance . .. The Presiden-
tial candidate was held closely to the text, *
and he made no excursions beyond it. Now
the position of the candidate, as delintd by
himself, is of far more weight with the
vote, n.”
Chicago And The GOP
.Chicago as the convention city is neither
a happy nor an unhappy augury for the
Republicans. They have met there in 12
previous election years, and in five of those
12 they lost the election to the Democrats.
-in 1884, 1912, 1916/1932, and 1944-for
a battiiig average of .583 for Chicago as the
. GOP convention city,
' And that is exactly the batting average
achieved by the Republicans when they
have gone to other cities—Philadelphia (five
times), Cleveland (twice),"Baltimore, Cin-
cinnati, Kansas City, Minneapolis, St. Louis
(once each)—in twelve previous election
years, and in five, of those 12 also lost'the
election to the Democrats.
(It will be noted- that the Republicans
have never picked New York for their na-
tional convention. The Democrats have mejt
there twice, in 1868 and 1924.) • / -•
Chicago as the convention city is a better
augury for the Democrats than for the Re-
publicans. The Democrats have met there
in seven previous election yearn—in 1864,
1884,1892,1896.1932,1940. and 1944-and
. in only two of these seven did they lose the.
election to the Republicans, for a batting
average of .714 for Chicago as the Demo-
cratic convention city.
THERE'S ONE or two questions about „ i
financing in Texas that E. H. Thornton j , N
man of the state highway commission
Janet Crawfort
vYjll Have Higl
^They h^ve to do with the. question of
For instance, Uncle Sam levies a centann I
fter gallon tax on gasoline sold in Texas'if
the federal government collected 4126.0000(tfl,t
oline taxes from Texas motorists ,uwitj|
trjr&ssxi
r:ried at high noon Sunday ton-
i-diately aftor the church services ,
the First BaPtlst church of 1
oline taxes from Texas motorists.
‘ The hew highway fun act possed by the
the other day gave us back *34,000,000 to apen?
fiffiss"crawford's engagement to ,
Bryant was announced Tues- j
arents, Mr. and Mrs. J
. fl.i.sL It..* ,
f 'EbyCrawtorh' 407 South Main, i;
1*5, y c, Kuester will officiate, b
I Mrs' Allen Reidland will be ma- h
of honor, and James Bryant, p
brother of the fu‘are bride- 0
Operating his power Iawnmower, Grand-
pappy Jenkinsycut down two of the missus’
rose bushes. Reckless driving!'
■ Just Folks —-
Names - W
1 , Today’s P'ble Verse
tX
...
TO GIVE KNOW Liu * E of salvation un>
to his people by thf ’i '.iHion ofttrajr
sins. Luke 1:77
Washington Morry-So-Round: . ’
Attorney General.Fifes,Man
Who Fought Monopoly In U.S.
■■M v
.
In The Lyons Der
By DREW PEARSON “All right. A T. and T, Is the
WASHINGTON—There was more sole owner of Western Electric,
than-meets tpe eye behind the sud- *”
il
IHIOOL DEFT.: law* Justice Norman ■ hfchaai
* wax discussing the honorary degree He vseived
from Harvard. He mentioned another man \ Ho re-
ceived an honorary degree the same time h did.
The man responded with an address to the f ixdu-
ating class at Cambridge. It was an endless, boring
speech, whose theme was "H it for Honesty, A is
for Achievement, R for Rectitude, etc., etc. He
went bn and on, devoting what seemed like hours
"te-each letter ..”. “It must have been awful. Lord
Justice.” a listener said, sympathetically ... “Oh,
it was lied, but it could have been worse," replied
Birkhead. "Instead of Harvard it could have,,been
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology."
______ _ _ den axing of three, assistant atlor-
Ru | ... rrli vamc ney* general .by Jim McGrancry,
by Leon rtf Lyon* B#w head of tht Justlce Depan.
■tent ■
One of them, Graham Morison,
head of the antitrust division, had
been a tough, uncompromising
prosecutor Of big business monop-
oly and was regarded as one of
the best men in the Justice De-
partment. .. .
However, he was the object of
an intercabinet argument a short
time ago which involved the sec-
retary of defense and the giant
Western Electric makes all the
equipment for A. T. and T, and
charges high prices. They Are not .
competitive prices. A. T. and T.
could, go out and buy the same
equipment from another company
for Jess. But it doesn’t It buys at
a high price from its own company
so it has an excn.se to hike phone
rates.
"That’s what this antitrust suit
is about” concluded ifbrison, “and
I’ll be hanged if I’m going to drop
it secretary of defense of no sec-
retary of defense.”
Perlman, having received a full
American Telephone and Tele- ‘ "XlTll/ TJ „„
NOTE Lo d M , K t SBS JKt *T *
“ r-s . «■». „„ to.
r Aiortson nas Been pushing a later> new Attorney General Me
dinner given by a small c Morison
iiisiii illrti ifilll
Morris explained:'“These are unusual times—and to Secretary of Defense Lovett asked Amerlca- David Sarnoff, head of
. . . ... - IL _ il . . __ PPA mklak nxnt.AU HT.i!___I
- V.
UU-fW.
VAS.lSPOSESOi
UM-m if
enlighten you about the princely privileges of the -the acting atqrney general, Phil controls National
......... • SgftSSraaaigg
PROMOTION DEPT.: Lord Morris then discussed . owned by A. T. and T., could
not cooperate properly, with the
Defense Department if A. T. and
T. were under antitrust investiga-
tion.
But when Perlman asked Mori-
son to drop the case, Morison re-
belled:
"That's the same baloney that
how he happened to became a peer of the realm.
“I was an M.P,” he said, “and one day I got into
the wring line, during one of the ceremonies. By
mistake I entered the House of Lords.” He looked
around at the magnificent hall, one of the most
remarkable in the world, and was impressed by
its grandeur and tradition. “So," said His Lord-
ship, "I said to myself, “Nathan, thin is for you'.*
POETRY DEPT.: T. 8. Eliot lunched at the Rit* *vuery firm brings in
gave Margaret Truman her radio
contract. He has carried - such
weight at the White House that, -
during the visit of Prime Minister
Clement Attlee, the President sus-
pended his conferences, kept tha
prime minister waiting while he
had a long luncheon with Sarnoff’
and Margaret.
But Morison. paying no attention
to this relationship, had called
WONTYOU
PLEASE
/S% USTEN
with Henry Sh.rek, the producer: The Nobel prise- t^w.totonfattornVXer^re" IcfJLTicls Ref fn'trTht
Winning poet was accompanied by John Haywood, monetrated. -“They appeal to the practices. RCA, in turn, has
the young expert on French poetry. Eliot has taken Army or Navy, and the Army or
STONE AGE VS, GAS AGE
I
Town Gone Mad —
Chicago Today Reminds Him Of ‘Roaring 20Y
.
hired the lawyer closest to, the
troduced me to Eliot: I prtaent—the gentle- war* and that’s what they are try- shortly after he took
man from New York; the gentleman from Salt Lake Ing to do now/' office. McGranery was discreet,
City.” The expatriate poet winced, and corrected said Little. But a few days later,
him: "Not CR? sT^ula sn SIT CABINET APPEAL—“But this Is he fired Morison.
foned sleepy plantation town, with “Ol-Man-Rivsr- me"Ier,°f ,the Note-Morison had long wanted
Singing all the time.” Xtnfwita department,
POLITICS: We were Joined by Maty Borden, the Lovett if I can’t cooperate.” had “8(* severf1 fher job open-
novelist, who said: “Bettor be nice to me. You “Listen, brother,’’ replied Mori4 !n*s’ but rema‘ned becauae of
Os snt eg Mto next PmMent ^ tough ex-Marine, “neitheff5r» dev0ft‘0n 1° AWitrusL-awk-
of the United Staten.” Eliot nodded approve! ef you nor Lovett seems to under- Af.ter gettln* hl* nottce- Morison
her nephew: “Good man, Adlai; good man, Stev- stand what fixes telephone rates. asked Permission to remain in the
Telephone rates are fixed on the Justice Department long enough to w .. ......
. basis of the cost. If the telephone finish a Collier’s magazine article tfon ha!1 at to*5
MuVIES: The British Screenwriters gave a testl- eompany can gh0W that jt, equip- answering David Lilienthal’s at- £ * (Ifl—This is a night sported a hand-painted
monlal dinner to Tommy aark, the screenwriter menf teyhIghi jt „MdVthe tack on the Justice Departments’ «ad.tfra’, „ , badSe which said: "I ____________
^Wlc -r"16* commission, to in- antitrust cases. McGranery said ing the GOP eonvMUon renhntftae /So outfit at the hall had a 2u sa^outontaJtX a^d
t0h55indSrarOUnd = Poises.of panorama picture of the opening dined on hot dogs and orange Juice
*nri** nonsense known to his- session all done up in package Down town was bedlam,
torians as the roaring 20 s. form, ready for-mailing. The price Bands played and loud speakers
Bellhops are making $30 a day for anybody who could circle his blared for Bob, Ike and the others
and up, lugging bags from ele- own likeness was $2 a copy, post- At the Conrad-Hilton hotel, the
vator to dbor—or they quit. •* - headquarters for the GOP. a fat
Jimmy Durante has his long nose torv L i5oere ^ man with a P°rtab!p mike got
Th. Answer, Quick! ant at first, then began writing for P°kmg scene and is writ- ^ . i ta5eo“ «? an old
t What time of day is spelled fiction magazines. He is known r. bemg fhosted^columnwise. houses a^ rens wheram 1re®kem hoS stu?t’ shout?ng-. CaIItng Eisen-
the same backward and forward? best for his writings on military %-Ci«1i1M. his hat and his dnd Rns wherem are kePl h°wer for president.”
_ . . t _ „ . ■ . 2, Who is the recently appoint- ftnit-J international affairs. He
•upcrlntndent of the Naval sefVld in the Australian Imperial T ,
. seeing and that at Trafalgar Square, whe.n he;Stop- academy at Annapoils? force in the Dardanelles and on .* 5*n • glfl on the street
The state levies a fbur-ceht gasoHne tax
half of that money is grabbed for other state
cies before the highway people get it i,
mated that at least half of the money-js,!
in one wad—never goes into, roads at all ’
Then Texas levies a sales tax on new can
tax raises around $17,000,000. a year. Not' a
that goes into the highway department 51
So you see that the. money 'Uncle Sam do**/
us have back and the money that'other ataU u
cies get from the state gasoline levy and the n™
tax that never reaches the highway departmT'
all of that money were available for highway
- ing and maintenance, Texas would have the
modern as well as the longest state system 0f
in the country. , .
Commissioner Thornton says we need an
tional $100,0W),000 a year,
Add it up: you see that we collect 3l93ooniwi_
year from the Texas motorist that nev>rIn ord? dld'nJIJ
the highway department to spend. |et|®ame route home as they did making
l know the money is spent for some useful P!an to stop over in Albe-
pose, bute I believe ifshould qpme from other mi “ ‘
for. these: othet; agencies and give the roarfi
j money needed to do the kind o.f job you and I
demanding.
Nearly, a whole month’s vacation i
OOTH family, 198 Bayshore drive,
itir through the west, .
Mr. and Mrs. Booth, daughter, CAI
* Mrs. Booth’s brother, J, PHlIj
lustln: they will all leave together f«
jirotigh New Mexico, Colorado, Wy
ind Oregon and Lake Louise in Cana
In order to see more points of in
L,rque, N. M., to visit relatives.
ANOTHER VACATION NOTE
HERE'S A VACATION note from Bob Math)
that could have been written under a Jackson,
. dateline. ^ ’
Bob reports that he and La Verne and Foxy
ped at Jackson and called the Lee C. Pierce i
only to find that the "reverend” is in EuroM
(I could have told him that).
- U1
MjSS MOLLY GUERARD hasn't q/
S5ff "bome" all summer. For aev- jg(
■al weeks in June she visited her
-nt in Odessa, Tex. and now she
adopted Georgia for her pres-
t homestead. Friends reach her
mail by sending letters show
re ie most enthusiastic about the
ijendiy Peach State.
Bob- was the third Baytown partv to call i
Pierce home that Hnv
day.
/I I a* n •*
The Mathernes didn't run into the Ben Im
Natchez, Miss., bub they-did run into their
Tile Loves had just pulled out.
Mrs. Matherne’s friends well know that she a
lnitely is not allergic to sleep. ' '
Bob concludes that their pace is very slow its
they can’t very well "sleep and drive too.”
SUN ALUMNI NOTE
ONE OF THE biggest kicks-1 get out of worki:
Baytown is running Into former Baytown Sun
rier boys now occupying key positions in tha cj
munity.
For instance, the other day we had a press bra
down and had to borrow &. couple of "come alo^
to urge a heavy piece of equipment to move.
Wayne McClurg handled by “begging and
Ing” and helped me get squared away on tie'ij
Til never forget the day The Sun had a states
which David Fun'dcrburk thought wasn't fair tot
employer.
'MISS VIRGINIA MOORE is get-
ig everything packed for a
ek's stay with her aunt in
nado, Tex. She plans to leave
iday.
ImISS CYNTHIA MOORE left
uesday with MRS. MAX ALT-
AN and her two daughtees;
HlROLE and TF;NA, for San An-
I nio. They plan to stay a week in
I e historic town visiting friends
,, I id relatives.
0 lu
Su:
wh
ily,
SO
the
Xrl
LY
whi
par
mo!
M
ed ]
brri
whi
knd
J Mr: and Mrs. ORE THURMAN,
14 Gresham, spent the weekend in
iint Jo visiting his brother, L.
THURMAN.
r and Mrs. A. D. ANTHONY,
North Whiting, had as week-
guests, Mr, and Mrs. JACK
iCK of Corpus Christi.
David for years had been a fine. Bavtowa 1
carrier, and he even took a postgraduate course ™
Mrs. T J FULLER. 119 Ashby,
id her grandfather, LUTHER
M
dau|
fron
the
ited
Mr
in G
Th
era
VVyo:
B use
Th:
RAHAM of Beaumont, have just trip
I must confess that I enjoyed him letting me J
It. And don't think he didn't.
In 20 years you’d be surprised at the namber
youngsters and not so youngsters there are
town and around the,country. I don't care if
get old, fat, baidheaded and even rich, I still
of them as youngsters and can't help it.
I hope that they will form an association and
care of me when I get too old to work. After ■£
worried with them. It won’t hurt them to w
with me .a little bit.
Iturned from a trip to Los An-
s Calif., where they visited
daughter and her husband,
IpCar.d Mrs. R. L. STEPHENS.
tt father's illness caused Mr
Mrs. FRED D1TTMAN, 509
ffcst Guif. to visit her father and
pther. Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
ITH of Silsby over the holiday.
plmvi
foot
Califi
At
witne
the I
at th
still c
to boi
Looking At Life
By Erich Bran
THE FRENCH, creators of many new ideas, 1
just hit upon an innovation which might w«
imitated by others and particularly by us in i
United States.
Communist i
uchanan Dam was the vacation
m over the Fourth of Ju4y tor
I r, and Mrs. L K.. HLANAK, and
■ •ee daughters, SHIRLEY, LA-
I ERNE, and VIRGINIA. The
Body/ spent their . time .fishing,
turning and sun bathing. Mr.
nak is blaming. the full moan-
his poor luck in fishing.
amazing country, England,” a Hollywood visitor told
the newly titled scratnwriter. “This is the kind of creMe l '
tfon hall at the stockyards Monday com or grass-fed sirloins on the
"■"i** ”—f''"1 ‘ ’-and-painted hoof. The beasts were comfortably Hereafter, anybody caught in a Communi
Dont Like MM*a « . safe tea. 2L£ gTS^EfiS&JiZ &
forever after tor what he is.
place where, if a screenwriter heare from the gov-
ernment, it’s not si subpena.”
FOOD DEPT.: Maj. Britt, the Cockney comic, waa
discussing the fact that horse meat frequently la
sold as steak. “I’m not saying that my favorite
restaurant is guilty of that,” he sighed, “but every
time someone cracks a whip, I start to gallep.”
HABIT DEPT.: Dennis Day, th* singer who just
made his first trip to England as part of the Jack
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
A Central Press Feature
This, of course, immediately should
fevery song writer in America some kind of i i
such as:
VE1
vieu,
Hill I
Sears
and .V
hasn't
will g<
to go
,Verl
ISS JUANITA MORRIS of LKS1-
y town and MISSES ANN .......'
DSTROM and ANN BULL- .
TON of Channelview returned
irday from an Assembly of
church camp in WaXahachie,
The girls spent nine days at
camp and report having .had a
derful time.
"You are Red because you’re blue,
“Darling, I am on to you.”
However, let us be serious.
ped to gawk, a man suddenly stood in back of him.
Day moved on to another place, and stopped, and
3. What group of fighting men the Western Front in World War; a wheat-cake size Taft but-
ere known a* fho in,.,.’ I„ and later was a major in the — irontside and the letters
Try And Stop Me
IMAGINE IF that sort of thing were done I
in this country!
In the first place it would prevent all these (
munists who claim to have “reformed" from raii
such claims. ! believe there is no such thing *1
reformed Communist. ■
the letters
By Bennett Cert
agaJ n th e m an stood i nbac k ofh 1 m. Wh e n thi j hap- were known as the Anzaes? ..... -- “x-a-f-t” tatooed In her prettv uy Dennett U
pened a third time, Day asked him: “Why do you _Ca!* you the ocatlon o{ Military Intelligence Reserve of SUn-burned back She would not A YUroqr av ,
always stand behind me when I stop? . . . ‘“Mister, * Cayuga’s waters? ■ the United States Army. His gjVe Sr T A YUG0SLAV Mgh-pres- phantly, “That specialist says
I don’t know what you're queuing up for,” was the 8. What city was saved by it* books: The BS&parts We Watch, was from Idaho Bn* »h. Ji* _?>.!! 8ured into subscribing 5000 dinars diagnosis is cockeyed,”' “O
How could anybody proclaim that he now
Communism and atl ft stands for if he is '
colored with blue dye?
But the law here should be not only to dye I
“ .....n a riot’Ml
P and Mrs. T. W. LYONS and
RONNIE left Saturday on a
weeks vacation to North
jrolina. Ronnie will attend the
?tist encampment there at
gecrest, while the Lyons will
It at Nashville.
Explorer scoutera BOB VISSER,
IHNNY VESELKA and WEN-
4LL DENMAN as well as their
Mtr, EIX) F. VESELKA and as-
leader, BILLY KUBIK,
fine 17-day trip' ahead of
’ was the
feply, “but being second in line ain't bad "
TRAVEL NOTE: Jack Benny was reviewing his
recent trip to Kona, where: Errol-Flynn was pert
Of their unit. During the 8-day stop-eyer ln Tokyo,
Mid Benny, Flynn must have gotten at least 440
phone call from women — mothers, leoklng for
their daughters . “Even I get one phone call,
ba Irl Rnnn "* “* “ 'k “
1944 -
D^Rhode island S***'
- ““ “=-■-
^ said Benny. “A daughter—looking for her
ROYALTY DEFT.: Prince Bernhard, hueband of Watch Your Language
It Happened Teday
1663
charter. 1838 — Ferdinand Count
von Zeppelin, German airship in- his name?
ventor and manufacturer, born. » «
United States forces com- He
stories for magazines. What is
was born in Atlantic > ^^“^rty.^nd^pS:
something happens to Ihe party?’
Quotations
% .hT,„;sr,rs„r7; g*.?• •>- »«• ».«* >»■ g-g
wm w» “• asa.»jRajs ™ •
mitted to the Florida bar in 1938, *«??** ^?*“
From Great—Near Great
Reds blue if they are CAUGHT in
soon .as they are FOUND to be Communists.
If would save millions of dollars, in court
How could a Communist swear that he. il
a Communist if he is blue all over? ;
And fellows like that. Elite chap, whfi wsi
heavy bail and ran away to Europe, could not
escaped. ’
It would" be very simple to bar all BLUE
and women from the steamships and railroad ti
And the police or F B I., instead of sending
lengthy descriptions that could fit anyone sj
pfoijdav they left
ouston and- eur-
chartered bus
^een Juhana, saw th. shew at th.P^adiVm then - verb Onebrazen rascal at the convert- SSmZX ^ *1"-
cam* backstage to see Jack Benny. He waited in intransitive; to breathe hard, and strict attorney in 1940. He re- • you?” y Mt.-Junius P ^ h°n‘
“tker r°om kalf an hour, while Benny fin- with an audible piping, or whis- ®'£ned tn 1942 to enter the Ma* 1 (I I |
kH'StS’SKk sssssiB^ Sfifa-arsisr Poking. Backward
this picture" . . . He then invited Jack aid Any___ - - . -
From Th* Sun Files
congres- FIVE YEARS AGO
’ .; '
..'. “Will the laod be good?” Benny aakad . .. “I 0ri*in: Medieval English -
don’t know,’’ said Bernhard, “but the price is right" W>e*en, from akin to Old
SASH'S tftS SSf mom and iOAgp
3 'tfasTssyis *s25?aa*ii*srts
olaliat for further consultation, them what they are. — Thomas
Then he told theh doctor irium- Mosquera
Sl.WI
Eisier.
That’S Br°WI? m'1Stache' BLUE^skin’
Of course, I suppose the Communists’
in°the ConsnytilnV°ke equa! ri-i[l,u pr0 J
They would say that to arrest a man beesuwj
is blue violates the 15th amendment, which
vides for equal rights for all colors.
, --- with other
“t» from .
Nd trees o
I Minnesota.
In Minnesota they will get off
bus at Ell, the canoe base for
: ®asueing trip. There, at the
■ will receive their canbes'
1 other equipment and rhake the
Venturous trip by water into the
erasss of Canada.
20 boys from the Hous-
area made the trip this year.
<y boys 14 years or older can
Jieipate.
Jisser is the son of Mr. and
EJ. ROBERT VISSER, 702 Cur-
Wendell’s parents are Mr.
z
DO
oe
Fer
Loc
BOOK DEFT.t A. E. Matthawt, tke 8t-yew-oid
kk . •» I1HQ 1 5t9 K*
tuber everything Bad 64 years ago-
notking that happened last year.”
IS!_ j'HjB
Norse—Hvsaa, to hiss.
United States
Who is he ?
(Names at bottom of clumn)
—By Gene Ahern
B*s Been Said
The freeman casting with un-
purchased hand the vote that
M K
Miss Edith Lamb, l«, was in an
unenviable position after an acci-
Happy Birthday
Birthday cakes and eongratu- dent on -Decker Drive" ^ Herimie^e
Smfn 5*016 STtCUt 'h*
Atomic Energy commission; Nel- S. T. Weaver and Georae H.
Rockefeller," financier, ■■ ’ ............
If
shakes the turrets of the land,
Oliver Wendell Holmes. ____________
As he prepares Jor his vacation n»tor-trip. Grand- Folks «f Fame—Guess the Naim Fav« financier, and Crawford were named, on Vhe Au-
pappy Jenkins opines that our greatest need is a “ th* i>ame F*y# Emerson, popular television «9ist grand jury panel,
se'f foldir -f at our greatest need i. a Four Baytown' teachers, Mrs.
*“■—— - .......... Your Future Marjorie Morse, Miss Carmsl Bou-
.....*** months ahead. Artistic and liter- Miss Patricia Meari Kernan of
ary abilities may be looked for in Redwood City, Calif, and Melvin
m»A «j n«,,w ___________ ____; mem.- lim » mm the chlld born today. i Gordon Cragg of Baytown were
fl _____ married at_ the First Methodist
JOVg, JUNIOR'^'AfW/Kf GUOROUS
SiASON
IS HERE AGAIN
WHEN MAN TAKES A
HOLIDAY FROM TOIL AND
GOSS ON A VACATION--SQAH
WHAT WILL IT BE FOR US THIS
YEAR,—-A VACATION AT A
---------ORA
LAKE CAMP C
SUMMER fe:
SORT?
CAnY MAKE IT OS ^
YEAR, JUDGE/ -ME
AN' SIX OTHER RASSLERS
ARE MAKIN1 PLANS
TUH GO TUH ORSTRAUA
ON A RASSLIN'TOUR/-
••I'M GONNA BRING
BACK A YOUNG
KANGAROO
'4 -i
'jLm
Warren* Edwards.................Mapa^ng1 Editor
H Sutocription Ratos
By Carnsr—$1,00 Month; $12 tear
All mail subscriptions are payable in advanee.
By AUil—Month $1.00; I Monthe |2.W; I Monthe
Mow’d You Make Out? Church in Redwood City.
1. Noon.
.s'zzzzzzzizjst. 3rs:^s-r
Entered as second-slaw matter at the 1 - This journalist and author saders in 1’06 - ? ° D^!,rpfrr®11 won **>•
a :1
m
H
i
tt* WE DO START n law of coloration to *
country, we may as well go t lltlklNW ^
We could have a different color for each cfii
such as purple fpr murder,- yellow for ember®
red for adultery, green for robbery and «o r
and so on. ^ .c ■
^SSSS5Ki35'SlJ»“’,
The only thing I am afraid of is that curl
ladies would immediately take the “whole thin*
aa_« fad and paint themselves all over
Even without the law, they certainly be?
pretty good etart. '
I AM NOW thinking of some wav to paint or o&
4 a
- .
By
G
Nearly
where at
used, bu!
right tyt
r Mrs. W. P. Denman, 601 East th® r ght
pn, and Johnny lives with Elo , “ -vou
1 Veselka. his brother.
that
WreT.
[—*'4
. IIIE. Taut
Opon Until 9 P.M.
tvory Thursday
Irene’s
*t?HE
EARL WAS
i
iti
..
t
If.
A house plan:
sink Is in the n
reminder to the
I 5/fSA. Yet to' be done?
7-8 tror*.aad h***. we read, invaded the —
* ~n“S*JL*tore. Now juet what kind of
could THEY be interested in?
ft,
MaaiZ3to>B
■^esota
- - - ' - •
”., ..
isiis
___
St Ann<
copal chu
Monday to
be distril
agency to
The gut
receiving
agency.
After a s
,OT members
tions to bf
''
present an
| Sawyer.
1( .... .«•»..
r ... -
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 342, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 8, 1952, newspaper, July 8, 1952; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041508/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.