The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 215, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 16, 1955 Page: 2 of 12
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iYTOwn sun, Wednesday, February 1| i
_ —-■-
PAGE 2—THE ftA'
Another Exi
THEffo
JUNGLE
ess-
s AUSTIN, FW>. IV-UP—A #*n U,<
"weight-distance?’tex on tructa, It as a "
estimated to raise from H5 million The t»
to ISO million • year for highway of one o
construction, has been Introduced between
by Rep. Charles D. Kirkham Jr. of The levy
Cleburne. v ward to
- -1— issatij’-sasr.’s ISS
E'&SAHi'LS'Brts “*«« «* «**»* “
cts Due To Red Tricker^
Ry ALFRED LEEt* fjS^
ICAGO, Feb.. liw. at %~ Dr.
d Kmiley 18 off for the jungle
iley, a chiropodist by truth,
rnt with his parly Wednesday
for portions of the Central
lean wilderness never before
asiF£r«TSV!
nuns* :**?
SAVE ON B<
TAKE
COMMAND...
Gel Ike Thrill
First Hand
mwmss
Or to save himself and other Amer-
icans from the alternative of death.
Maj. Marian Green, a 41-year-
old short' stockv career officer
from Lawton, Okla., was to re-
sume his description ‘of enemy
mistreatment of prisoners of war
In North Korea.
Nugent. 45. of Merrill, Wls., Is
being court marttaled on nine
counts of working too closely with
the Communists while a POW. TV
original charge Included IS speci-
fications, but four of them were
dropped by the court martial board
after 18 days of prosecution testi-
mony.
Defense Attorney Maj. Robert
Hough told the court Tuesday that
Nugent’s side "will paint a picture
for you of the mind and reasoning Americans
of these POW’s to show you why
their actions were as they were."
Hie object evidently was to
prow that anything Nugent did
that looked like collaboration re
suited from enemv trickery or was
done for the good of other Amer-
ican POW’s.
Green, a career officer now sta-
tioned at Fort Sill, with almost 20
years service, described Tuesday
how he and 57 other men, cap-
but then marched them for three the leading officers with'the idea
or four days to Seoul, Korea,"! that camp conditions could be
He said some of the men had no made better by forming commit-
shoes: "you could see their bloody tees for that purpose. It was not
footprints as they marched along.*' told that these would be peace
Green said the Koreans beat and committees..
kicked the prisoners, and his group One of the charges against Nu-
went several days without water,
until they met another group In
which Nugent was a prisoner. He
said Nugent and another American
officer made sure they got water.
One defense witness testified
that one of Ihe surrender leaflets
Nugent is accused of signing was
a blank piece of paer when Ni
put his name down on It.
M.Sgt. Harvey N. Bailey of
Nugent
gent is that he headed a "peace
committee" that actually was a
propaganda vehicle for the Com-
munists.
The Rev. William Robert BootH.
57. of Mary Knoll. N Y., said 700
prisoners, including 20 civilians,
were forced to march eight days
:old of 1950.
In the bitter November cot
They were starved since their cap-
ture four months earlier and in
Amarillo, Tex., said he and Nugent order to be able to make the (rip,
and four other men, the ranking they had thrown away all excess
in a group of POW’s, baggage — including even their
signed only a blank piece of paper, blankets.
He said the next time they saw the Father Booth said a North Ko-
paper, It was a surrender leaflet rean called the "Tiger" was in
with his name on it. charge of the march and told them
The defense offered surrender anyone who fell out of line would
leaflets, pictures and signs of Nu- be severely punished. A 70-year-
gent and the other men. old French nun fell out and was years, George Jessel
"It is unfortunate there are only never seen again. Father Booth about show business,
two people alive who were present heard later she was shot.
cents per gallon.
opposed to the sales tax principle. Kirkham said revenue from his
Klrkham’s bill would levy a tax bill would be dedicated to highway
on motor vehicles weighing more construction.
'Coffee Grinder's Polka?'
Why, It's Just Plain Tea For Two'
ISLnjl JollMli't mfliwond Ttto who hove baud
why mori of them don't v W» travels before Ro
• ‘There’s nothing so strenuous the like. ;i
about it," be «ald.: "And.It's a tot ' "I gu-
thi
lol
they’re
After
ition bug at a youngster. "you sui
» "I itever ran away from home
when I was a kid, never hopped a
freight and never even owned a
Jalopy,” he said. "But I read about
Columbus and Marco Polo, and
travel became my secret passion."
He said he decided to "do some-
thing about it” before he wound up
in a wheelchair.
By AMNE MOSBY the morning, so she takes a little
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 16-UP- vo,(|k" wake her up. *
While Abigail Adams lav dead '^nd *° * goes. As long as Ma-
wniie Abigail Adams lay dead be, can k good-looking, it will
Sunday in her pink satin,bedroom, continue for a few years, and Ma-
a prediction of her death was bell will awaken every morning.
downstairs in a green paper-cov- sony about the night before, then
ererl manuscript. gs?!ve • damn and a“ U>e
The forecast was written by the
never been on such an outing be-
fore.
This year's he’s making the trip
with U recruits who are forsaking
their humdrum Uvea for « D-day
adventure Into the wilderness.
They’ll drive to New Orleans and
fly to aontheastem Mexico. From “Exploring virgin country, gel _____ __________ ,
there they’ll go by truck through ting away from civilisation, there’s mon vices—horses, liquor,
Honduras, and then by pack mule nothing to top It,” he said. “You and the like."
Jungle trails to Belise, In British climb a hill and look at a scene no
across Guatemala.
own home. Civilisation Is a new ex-
perience," he said.
"Why, I wgsh the dishes tor my
wife when I get back just because
there’s hot water In the faucet"
His wife, he said, Is reconciled
to his hobby. x>
"She’d rather have me i
these jaunts than adopt
1,370,000 Troops Overseas
®ljr Saginum §un This Amount Eligible For Combat
PuMirtirt mcd
Tks Baytown Sun
A«ht>
Hkaty afternoon by
Inc., at Pcarca and
Baytown. Ttxai.
Wed Hartman ..... Xditor and PubMebci
8yd S Oould . .Advertising Director
•tolas Ifaa Jtckeoa .. Office Manager
Warren Sdwarda ..... Managing Editor
Subacrtptton Rate*
Sy Carrtar—Jl.fO Month, 114.40 Taar
All mall ftihacrlptlona art payabla in
advance. By mall—Month 11.30: 3 Month!
S3 SO: d Month! ST.00: Tear 314.00
Aimed Servlet! TSe Month
Intend u eecond claaa matter at the
Baytown. Ttxa, Poatofflce undar tha
Act of Cong race of March S. 1870.
National Advartlalng RepreacntaUva:
Qaneral Advtrtlalna Ben lee
WASHINGTON. Feb 16 -UP-
The United States now has over-
seas 1.370.000 troops eligible to be
assigned to combat, the Defense
Department disclosed Wednesday.
The figure—previously held to be
secret—compares with 1.602,000 po-
tential combat troons who are sta-
tioned in this country, the depart-
ment said.
Neither figure includes such
service personnel as women, who
are not eligible for assignment to
combat duty. Total strength of the
KREL
LISTENING GUIDE
1360 ON YOUR DIAL
Baytown Youth To
March In Parades
For Mardi Gras
armed forces, Including service per-
sonnel, is 3,172,000.
The department also disclosed
that V. S. Military services cur-
rently are maintaining abroad a
total of 950 military bases employ-
ing five persons or more.
The figures were supplied to the
House by the Defense Department
in response to a so-called privileg-
ed resolution of inquiry introduced
bv Rep. Clare E. Hoffman (R-
Mich >.
"What I am trying to get at."
Hoffman told a reporter. 'Is the
need for the draft and the extent
of our military commitments
abroad."
man who was her escort for 11
In his book
"This Way,
Miss,” to be published in April.
I found the book in "Tommye"
Adams' now quiet apartment,
slacked on the dining room floor
with scrapbooks of clippings and
photographs about the two of them,
her best claim to fame, after 12
years in the tinsel city that ended
In what police called
suicide."
Sick List
Koundup
i;05—Recess Rendezvou*
15—Hill Eckstein Snow
-Larry Wayne Show
1:58—News Headlines
-8tardust Melody La
fUCDNUllAf EVEN Ilf Q
Date With The Duke
6:00—News Roundu
«;f -
, •:!
vi:2
7.00—Stardust Melt
8:ft8—News Headlin
9:00—Night Train
12:00—Sign Off
THURSDAY tfORNTKO
«:00—Morning Meditations
7:00—The Letlo dow
11:00—News Headlines
11:02—Housewives' Holiday.
THURSDAY AfThJKNQON
12:00—News Headlines
12:02—News
1:15—LuncJ
Mrs, Harry Brown—105 Chand-
Mrs Dewey C Henderson—912
Billy
Worth.
Wayne Davis -1900 Fort
Roundup
Call
-Dr. Boyd
■Beams of Heaven
30—Date With The Du
12:15—Lunch «
1:15—Dr. Bo:
NOW SHOWING
THRU SATURDAY
TKM&nm
NtomPiam
Of TminAlh
WALT DISNEY,
SPECIAL!
Donald Duck in
-GRAM) CANYON SCOPE”
In Cinemascope
HUNTSVILLE, Feb 1G Stephen
Hopkins of Baytown is one of 24
members of the Unman Rifles,
crack drill team at Sam Houston pat " Drive
State College, who will march In
• he New Orleans Mardi Gras
Parados next Tuesday
The team, named after president Mrs. Wilburn W. Brackin 1521
of the college, Dr. Harmon Low- Ash.
man, will march in three ten-mile Mrs. George C. Pope—404 Briar-
parade? Tills trip has been held w'ood.
as a goal since the group's organi- Mrs. Charlie Carlisle-Highlands
zation in 1952. Alvirx Lee Roe -307 E. Pearce.
The bowman Rifles march an- Sandra Secrest—3401 Illinois,
nually in the Splash Dav Parade
in Galveston and have 'been in- Mrs. CeciLA, Behymer-124 East
vited to march in the Battle of ■ „„ ... , ...
Flowers parade in San Antonio Michae VVhitlock-iOS W Uiams.
this year Possible trips to the Mrs. William G. King 231 Wild-
Brenham Maifcst and the Houston Drive.
Armistice Day Parade are slated.
Hopkins, son of Mrs. Frankey E
Hopkins, is a freshman journalism
major. He is a graduate of Robert
E. Lee High School.
Mrs. Tommie S. Holder—Bay-
town.
George Dudley 321 East Lobit.
Mrs Tommie E. Herring—413
West Francis.
In a chapter called "Beauty and
busts” Jessel tells about the young,
beautiful girls who crowd Into
Hollywood with stardust in (heir
eyes.
"Yes, I was thinking of Abigail
when I wrote it,” Jesse) said, "and
of girls like her.”
In the book he calls them 'very
nice people who have gotten into
a game that is a million-to-one
against them...poor little baby
peacocks—one may soon boast of
beautifully colored feathers, most
will soon be plucked of their tiny
plumage "
Jessel tells in the book of a myth-
ical "Mabel Zunza” who wins a
free trip to Hollywood and a *75-a-
week studio contract. The studio
drops her, but It is too late. Mabel
doesn't want to go home.
"She refuses to take nv job but
acting...she's made up her mind
that maybe the best way to get
anywhere is to go anywhere, .and
before you know it, Mabel makes
the rounds her name is in the
movie columns, but that doesn't
help her career.
"There's an actor she’s quite
fond of. Sometimes the promising
young ham does marry the little
girl who misses, but not very often.
So Mabel gets the air and finally
takes up with an older man who
sees her once in a while...’’
"Bv this time Mabel has learned
to drink pretty good Also Mabel
can't sleep, so she takes a sleep-
ing pill and after a while one does
not work so she takes two or three,
which find her awfully groggy In
Jessel concludes, "you can't
blame Hollywood for this. The
tiniest moth leaps at any possible
opportunity for a try at the glamor-
ous flame. Some are singed, most
are burned.”
In another chapter he writes Abi-
gail could have been a star "If
she'd gotten the right breaks at
the beginning...”
"I guess when young people
"possible don 1 make the grade here they
should go home, but hope shines
eternal, particularly in the amuse-
ment world."
Noon Quotes
Special To The Baytown Sun
Alleg Ludlum ............... 46
Allis-Chalmers .............77%
Amer Agri .................. 81'4
Amer Cyan .................. 53
Amer Repub ................ 70’i
A T and T ..................179®A
Amer Woolens .............. 26%
Anaconda Copper .......... 62%
"There'll be every possible haz-
ard," he said. 'Wild tigers, leop-
ards, the works."
Nevertheless, Emiley says any
average person could make such
Bell Aircraft To Get
Air force Contract
FORT WORTH, Feb. 16-UP-
The Department of Defense an-
nounced Wednesday that the Air
Force will award a contract to
Belt Aircraft Oorp. for development
of a new utility helicopter.
The helicopter, known as the Bell
212, will be utilized by the Army
for front line evacuation of wound-
ed, general utility missions, and as
an instrument trainer.
It will have a payload of 800
pounds, a cruising speed of 100
nautical miles per hour, a hover-
ing celling of 8,000 feet, and a rate
of climb of 1,500 feet per minute.
Bell will construct a mockup and
later produce a limited number of
flying models for test evaluation.
white man has set eyes on before.
And you don’t stumble over a pop
bottle or a halt-melted Ice cneam
cone.” I
Most of Emtley's companions
are people from ordinary walks of
Crude Oil Prediction
For March 1$ Good
AUSTIN, Feb. 16-UP-
Reflners Tuesday pegged their
prospective demand for Texas
crude oil tn March at 8,009,013 bar-
rets dally, an increase of 55,352
barrels over the February nomina-
tions.
The average calendar day allow-
able, as of last Saturday, was 3,-
241,581 barrels dally.
Members of the Texas Railroad
Commission, which considers pur-
chasers nominations, U.S. Bureau
of Mines estimate of consumer de-
mand and direct testimony, will set
the March allowable production
figure following a statewide hear-
ing scheduled for next Friday.
ENDS TONIGHT
DECKER
DRIVE IN THEATRE
-TONITE-
"HUMAN JUNGLE"
"LUCKY ME"
THURSDAY ONLY
LUCKY CAR
LICENSE NITE
450 Reasons To See
FEATURE NO. 1
JOSEPH GOTTEN
in
“EGYPT BY THREE1
FEATURE NO. • -
ALLAN -ROCKY"
"MARSHALL OF
CEDAR ROCK"
76 Below
In Alaska
LIVESTOCK
"CRIPPLE CREEK"
* ALSO ie
"GUNGA DIN"
3 DAYS STARTING
THURSDAY—FEB. 17
ON OUR NEW
WIDE SCREEN
* TWO GREAT HITS *
in COtOII!
Rod CAMERON
Journo DRU
John IRELAND
if ADDED HIT if
JAMES STEWART W
GRACE KELLY ,.g|f
WENDELL COREY ,**8^4
IREAR
POKT^
Last Times Today
DOUBLE PROGRAM
BOWERY BOYS
in
"JUNGLE GENTS"
—AND— *
RORY CALHOUN
in
"DAWN AT SOCORRO"
THURSDAY NIGHT
IS FAMILY NIGHT
YOUR ENTIRE FAMILY
ADMITTED FOR
ONLY 50c
TO SEE
window
TtTH^iCG'L^ft _________iAs*.
By UNITED PRESS
Alaska tied its all-lime cold rec-
ord of 76 degrees below zero
Wednesday as temperatures went
into the 80s in parts of the United
States
Alaska's low temperature was
reported Tuesday at Umtat, 485
miles north of Fairbanks, where
the temperature hasn't got warm-
er than 60 below for the past 10
days
An Air Force construction crew
working on a radar project turned
in the report, which matched the
all-time low of 76 below registered
in 1886 at Tanana on the Yukon
Rivei'.
Meanwhile, the worst blizzard in
the history of Whittier, Alaska,
marooned 72 children overnight in
a school house and Army chapel.
Men on snow shoes battled
through 40 and fiO-mile-per-hour
winds to reach the children in the
Alaska Army post town Tuesday.
The port of Whittier was still
completely immobilized Wednes-
day.
In the U.S , meanwhile, fresh
southerly winds boosted tempera-
tures 20 to 25 degrees into the 50s
as far north as the Ohio River. It
was a summery 83 Tuesday at
Presidio, Tex.. 72 at Ardmore,
Okla., and 80 at Los Angeles,
Calif.
Temperatures also soared into
the 50s In Colorado and Wyoming,
but a fresh blast of cold air turned
Bemidji, Minn., into the nation’s
ice box with a one degree below
zero reading.
A band of showers early Wedm
day stretched from Illinois througl
Missouri into Arkansas. Wausau,
Wis., got three inches of new snow.
FORT WORTH. Fob 16 —UP—
USDA—Livestock:
Cattle 1.700 Slow, about steady.
Good choice beef steers and year-
lings 20-24: utility and commercial
14- 19. Good heifers 18-21.50; util-
ity and commercial 12-17. Beef
rows 1113; canners and cutters
8-10.50, some strong weight cutters
to 11: shcllv canners down to 7
and below Commercial bulls 13.50-
14. Cutter and utility bulls 10-
13 50; medium and good stocker
and feeder steers and yearlings
15- 21. Few heads stocker cows 10-
12
Calves 300. Steady. Good to
choice killers IS 21. few over 550
pounds 21.50. Utility and commer-
cial 1317. culls 12 down. Medium
and good stocker steer calves 15-
21.50 Few heifers '18 down.
Hogs 300. Butchers steady to 25
rents higher. Sows st-ndv to 50
rents higher. Choice 185-245 lbs
17.50 auji 17 75
16.75-17.25. Sows mostly 13-15.50,
a few to 16.
Beth Steel ...........
.......117'4
Barber Oil ...........
Calv&n Oil ...........
Celanese .............
Celotex ..............
...... 30 ‘i
Chrysler Corp ........
.. exd 69'j
Cities Service ........
Columb Gas .........
Oeole Pet ...........
......145
Dow Ohem ...........
......461*
DuPont Chem ........
......171*4
Fastman Kodak .....
...... 69%
El Paso Nat’l Gas ...
...... 43
Fairchild Eng .......
...... 20%
Freeport Sulph ......
...... 77%
Gen Tel ..............
Gen Electric .........
...... 54%
Gen Motors ..........
...... 94%
Gen Tire .............
...... 57%
Gillette Saf ..........
...... 71%
Goodyear Tire .......
Greyhound Bus ......
...... 15
Gulf OH ...............
...... 66 %
Gulf Stat Util ........
. exd 34%
Houston Oil ...........
......103
II L and P Co.........
...... 46'/,
Humble ...............
...... 91*4
Imperial Oil ..........
...... 38%
Interlake Iron ........
Int'l Nickel ...........
. exd 64
Jones and Laugh ......
Kirby Pet ............
Libby Mc.N ...........
Liggett and Myers ...
Loew’s Inc ............
Mack Trucks .........
Merrill Pet............
Mid Con Pet ..........
Monsanto Chem .......
Nat l Dist .............
Nat’l Dairy Prod ......
Newp News Ship ......
..... 72
Oliver .................
Pac Pet ...............
Pacard-Stude Motors ..
Pac West Oil ..........
Pancoastal Oil ........
Panhandle P end R ......exd 10%
Penney’* Inc..............No Sale
Phillip* ..................... 74%
Pure Oil ...................
Rem Rand ................... 46’/»
Repub Steel ................. 88
Sear* ”........................ ,!0I^
St. Regis Paper ............. 39
Shell ........................
56
52 U
Socony-Vac ................. 566»
Sou Pacif ...................
Stan Oil Calif ............... 79 L
Stan Oil Ind ................. 461«
Stan Oil Ohio ...............
Stan N.J....................U514
Sterling Drug .............. 461*
ENID, Okla . Feb. 15-UP-The Sun Oil .............. 69H
murder trial of a 37-year-old Texas Sunray Oil
Few 250-275 pounds Sinclair
Skelly Oil
Trial Of Texan Woman
Is Reset For March 7
mother charged with slaying her
husband faced its second postpone-
ment Tuesday and was reset for
March 7.
The suspect Is Mrs. Marguerite
Tatom of Palestine, Tex. She is
charged in the pistol death of her
husband. Jack Dearl Tatom, 37,
who was shot to death in
trailer home here Dec. 10.
23%
Texa* Co ....................96
Tex Gulf Prod ...........exd 9014
Texx Gulf Sulph.............41%
Tidewater Corp ......... 25%
Union Oil Calif..............58
U.S. Steel ...................79
Westingh A.B................28%
Western Union ..............91%
their Woodley Pet ................55’4
Mar. N.O. Cotton ............3 up
lugh
Ho Third Party In
Mind Says McCarthy
BRIDGEPORT. Conn., Feb. 16-
UP—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-
Wis.). said Wednesday he was
not looking for the formation of a
third political party.
However, he told a Lincoln Day
gathering, "I think we should re-
iDtuK: our own party."
McCarthy spoke to some 1,000
persons. Top state party leaders
were invited to the affair by the
Bridgeport town committee, but
none showed up.
McCarthy who recently split with
over its Far
Eastern policies, said President
Eisenhower has to some ‘extent
duplicated the "evils of the Tru-
man administration."
a new
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DIAL 5993
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for the belt buy you'll find In
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IMPERIAL, PURE CANE
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SIMPLE SIMON, INDIVIDUALLY FROZEN
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FRUIT PIES 4 59
BORDEN'S
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BALLARD
BISCUITS
9c
Cans
BAYER ASPIRIN
100 Size
BAMA, STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES
Pork
SPARE RIBS
Full Cream
HOOP CHEESE
HORMEL, BUDGET, SLICED
BACON
FRESH DRESSED
Fryers > Hens
GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE
FIRM, CRISP
LETTUCE 2
U.S. NO. 1 CALIFORNIA
POTATOES 10
is
HEADS
LBS.
SfiZ.
'' DON MILLER
SHOW SOLOISTS—T
‘ Bartow* State* cteVtl
the high school audltol
‘ dance.
CAP Pit
t if Will Lai
i Plans have been comd
» land the Baytown Civil a|
* unit’s new plane cither oJ
Street or Decker Drive jul
the Baytown Shrine Clfl
parade gets under way
urday afternoon,
* 'Parade Chairman Eldol
stated today that arranl
{ have been made with poT
t thorities to stop traffic oil
f tion of the street where t|
t plane will be set down,
j Captain C. A. Behymel
J manding officer of the locT
' unit, will pilot the plan|
' landing on the street w
< favorable to-prevailing win
plane will be loaded on a
> trailer which will join the I
, Baytown CAP cadets r
' have six decorated ears In
ade.
The famed Boy Scout Trd
33 of La Porte will perform!
parade through dowhtowif
town.
“These youngsters ere"
for their fancy trick ropiH
rope twirling prowess,” Bcr|
today.
He announced also tha|
, Horace Mann, Baytown
high, and Cedar Bayou ban|
be numbered among many
line of march.
The Lee Brigadiers, girls
ing and drill unit from Led
school, will be in the parade!
Berry stated that morel
vertible cars are needed toT
care of vHHng Shriners
Arabia Temple.
:FH1 BABY'S Cl
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 215, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 16, 1955, newspaper, February 16, 1955; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041539/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.