The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 206, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 5, 1955 Page: 2 of 10
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PAGE 2—THE BAN
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{SATURDAY; I
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Armyf$
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On Stevens'
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Newspaper
Circulation
n U.S. Up
, , Ai
Vjwl
!n Wichita I
Perish
iRre
4
WICHITA FA
Three small
to death Frill _
stroyed their two*H
The chUdr«i. whoe# mother was
■y C8ARLE
WASHINGTON,
CHARLES OORDORY
Feb. A—UP—
figure In the Army's right with
Sen. Joseph McCarthy, revived
speculation Saturday on Army
Secretary Robert T. Stevens’
political future.
Adame, whose face became
familiar to millions in last year’s
televised Army-McCarthy hearings,
disclosed late Friday that he had
resigned effective March 31.
Vagtoum dun
PuMlMwa Men mwKStr afttrnuoa oj
I Th« Baytown Sun. Inn., it Pntrcn and
, aahbai is Baytown. Turn
1 Wad Hartman Cdltoi and HubiltMi
Syd S. Onuld .. Advtrtuunt l>irtrtot
' Bautan Man fcektoa Orttca Manual
Warns Sidwaida ... Managma Cditm
Mam
t SsbaenptloB Rataa
By Oamar—|l.»# Month: ft*, ft taai
All mall annaarlptlnna art payabia in
advanea. By mall—Month si.U0; 3 Monthi
IS.SO; d Montha 17.00. Saar SUM
A am ad Barvlcaa *5c Month
Smartj aa aacond eiaaa mautr at tha
Baytown. Tana fnatornca undar tha
Act ol Contraaa of Marrh S. 187a
National Advarllalnt Repnaantatlaat
Otnaral Advartlatad Sar*:ro
SICK?
L FEEL BAD?
See Your Doctor . .
W Then Bring Your
W Prescription to
[ BLACK'S
L 223 W. Texas -A
721 £. Texas
Adams made no mention of the
Senate inquiry in his formal resig-
nation letter to Stevens. But he told
reporters later It was a "painful
experience for everybody" and he
was "proud of the Army's part in
the hearings.”
Stevens, in making public his
acceptance letter thanking Adams
for "loyal and steadfast support,”
obviously anticipated reporters’
nnestions about his own plans.
Spokesmen were ready with a
statement that he do«s not plan to
resign. At the White House
reporters were referred to earlier
Stevens statements on the same
line.
McCarthy, whose chief aides in
the battle with the Army have
resigned, immediately commented
that "a few more resignations
should be tendered and accepted."
He did not specify.
Adams' departure from Army
service will not scare him from
more Senate testimony on the
celebrated case of former Mai.
Irving Peress. the New York
dentist McCarthy called a “Fifth
Amendment Communist." Sen.
John L. McClellan (D-Ark.I, suc-
ceeding McCarthy as Senate Inves-
tigating subcommittee chairman,
said Adams "will probably be
needed as a witness later."
The subcommittee plans to go
into the case of Peress, who was
honorably discharged a year ago
after McCarthy proposed a court
martial The Army disclosed in a
10,000-word report a month ago
that Adams and I,t GenWalter L.
Welble, deputy chief of staff, gave
the final approval for Peress' dis-
charge after studying McCarthy's
protests.
The Peress case set off the angry
McCarthy-Stevens row which led to
last year's hear
Senate
cause
subcommittee!
was the Stevens-Adams Turner and Geor*e Adams. • embarrassing Patch#* Ready
ihat hi« enK. tha fSih Pnr*ir which th» iYu»n■ Texas, witii an emDarrassinK f
charge that McCarthy and his sub- The Cub Pack which the men’» ” nnuruAW eh.irm.n
committee counsel Roy Cohn organisation sponsors will also at- JLtto.n
sought special treatment for Pvt. tend under the leadership of Ken- Artan^s^wback^uintet mean* w.mI Hi^rict ^ ^nounMd ?hat
G. David Schlne, former McCar- neth Marth and Leo LaBorde.
l*ie Armv officmi^tri^teTblack1 t>The mi?ister of ,the cl?“r®h'„the ord and can cUmb with a victory go East Harris district explorer*
rite Army officials tried to black- rcv. Clyde D. Foltz. will deliver lnto gPCOn(i piace with Southern who went to El Ranch Sima last
mail him Into dropping Red hunts.
Scouts --
the sermon on the subject "The
Importance °f Unimportant Peo-
ple." The chancel choir under the
direction of Gerald Cox will sing
u
pla
Methodist (4-2).
Patterson To Widwestern
summer. The Explorers may get
them for 26 cents each by calling
Bowman, 2029.
SPECIAL
SUNDAY DINNER
★ ROAST TURKEY
★ FRIED CHICKEN
★ BREADED VEAL
CUTLETS
O Three Vegetables
O Salad
O KrrAh Strawberry
Shortcake
00
Only
CHILD'S
PLATE
BLUE ARROW
3505 MARKET
(Continued From Page One)
Troop and Pack 87, and Troop and
Pack 97 will have Father and Son
dinners together at Highlands
School cafeteria
Pack 562 will hold its Blue and
Gold dinner February 24 at the
First Christian Church.
Instead of Its usual Father and
Son dinner, Troop 179 will comme-
morate Boy Scout Week with a
reunion of ex-troop members and
their dads with present troop mem-
bers and their dads.
The affair will be held at Rose-
land Park Thursday, getting un-
derway at 6:30 p.m., according to
Scotumaster Albert Jacobs.
Included on the program will be
sqpgs and skits by members of the
troop. A feature of the program
will be a short opening ceremony
by Assistant Scoutmaster Frank
Sheffield, during which flaming
arrows wil lbe shot into the dark
to give emphasis to the Scouting
oath and laws a.‘
read.
In case of bad weather, the re-
union wil be held at the troop's
scouthouse, located at the corner
of Pruett and Sterling. Jacobs said.
Troop 179 is sponsored by Re-
deemer Lutheran Mens Club. Oth-
er assistant scoutmasters are W.
O. Kubik and Benny Moskowitz.
“Abide With Me” with Mrs. J. C.
Hoffpaulr Jr., soloist.
LIVESTOCK
LUBBOCK, Tex., Feb. (I —HfV—
Midwestern University Saturday
signed as Its barkfield coach C.
R, (Pat) Pattison, who led Lub-
bock high school to state Class
AAAA football crowns in 1951
and 1952.
Visiting Here
MRS. R. M. ANDERSON of St _ _
Louis, Mo., is visiting here this year
week with Dr. and Mrs. John T.
Porter, 118 Bayshore drive.
1954 for the first time in hiitory,
the magazine Editor ami Publish-
ed said Saturday.
The year’* gain in average net
paid circulation ofl,755 morning
and evening newspapers was more
than 600,000 - the largest gain
since 1960, according to figures
compiled for the Editor and Pub-
lisher year book, which will ap-
pear in March.
The magazine said the figures
were attained despite a net loss of
20 dally newspapers during the
Zepeda Jr„ .. ------------ .
and Emanuella Martlnti, Arftal
mother, Mrs. Neills RognifeAid
they were children by previous
marriages, -jgijfe
The mother said she had gone to
a nearby home to turn oft a gas
stove for a neighbor when ah*
looked back and saw her home to
flames. She and the neighbor, Mrg.
John Johnson, nttemnted to get tha
children out of the blazing house,
but the flames drove them back,
she said.
Cause of' the fire was not im-
mediately determined.
-UP-
FORD WORTH, Feb. 5
USDA—Weekly Livestock:
Cattle: Compared last Friday:
Beef steers strong to 60 higher,
heifers steady, cows fully 50 high-
bulls fully steady, Stockers and
Stengel Opens Camp
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Feb. 5
-HU1!— Ray and Roy Mantle, 19-
year-old twin brothers of Mickey,
head
Pioneer Dies
Average net paid circulation of
newspapers, as of Sept. 30, 1954,
was 55,072,480.
HARRY DUNKERLY, 85, died
suddenly at 8 a.m. Saturday at his
home at 211 South Galllard. Paul
U. Lee funeral home will announce
feeders strong. Week’s tops:,' Beef who will command Manager Casey
steers 26, highest for commercial- Stengel's personal attention at the
list of 33 potential stars funeral arrangements.
Coke Auction
Mrs. Lammers' Last
Ites Set Monday
• DANCE TONIGHT •
TRI - CITY CLUB
JAKE and
THE RHYTHM BOYS
Admission 50o
Mr. and Mr*. Lowell Lammers
ly fed cattle here since December New’York Yankees' sixth annual ^"^nrir Trnon T>8 soonsored ™eTe ,t0 le.aVe ~ 2 pnT
1952. Heifers 23.50, cows 13. bulls instructional school. ?.?* ?£°^F *™p T„m »n by plane ,or Clncmnati' Ohio' t0
14, stocker steer yearlings 21.50.
they are being. Mostly steady
stockers higher.
Week's bulks Good and choice
slaughter steers 21-24.50, utility
and commercial 13-19, good and
choice heifers 18-22.50, utility and
commercial 12-17. Utility cows
10.50-11.50. commercial bulls 13.50-
14, medium and good stocker and
feeder steers and yearlings 14-20.
Stocker cows scarce, few head
10-13.
Calves: :Compared last Friday:
to strong, some
Good and choice
slaughter offerings 16-19, few
choice 19.50, utility and commer-
cial 11-15, medium and good stock-
er steer calves 14-20.50, few good
and choice 21-22.
Palmer Wins Open
PHOENIX, Arlz., Feb. 5 -41*-
Veteran Johnny Palmer, a soft
spoken southerner with a -deft
putter, gave the forceful 195E
"youth movement” a setback Sat-
urday with his one stroke lead
at the start of the third round
of fho >16,000 Phoenix Open.
Stork Stops
Mexican Problem: Not
Enough School Space
MEXICO CITY. Feb. 5 - UP -
Education will find the going
rough in 1955 with thousands of
children throughout the country
turned' away from public schools
due to lack of space.
Tehuacan. a town of 35.000 in
on Feb. 3 at Galveston County Pllebla state- reported 2,000 chil-
dren could not be admitted to
schools because of insufficient class
rooms.
The Polytechnic Institute of Mex-
ico City had to refuse almost 8,000
applicants.
DUNAWAY
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Edward
Dunaway of Dickinson announce
the birth of a son. Otis Edward
Jr.
hospital. He weighed seven pounds
15 ounces. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Ulrich of Mont Bel-
vieu and Mr. and Mrs. Otis Ed-
ward Dunaway of Baytown.
Santee Tries Again
NEW YORK, Feb. S -flf-
We* Santee, the cocky Kansas
cowboy who set the world indoor
mile record a! 4:03.8 a week ago,
predicted he would hit the tape
“around 4:02" Saturday night in
the Millroso A. A. Track Sleet at
Madison Square Garden.
EI.KS TEAM TO HOUSTON
Members of the Baytown Elks’
Ix>dgc ritualistic team will be in
Houston at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Houston Elks' Lodge to compete
in the Texas Southeast district ri-
tualistic contest. This competition
is for the purpose of determining
which two teams wil represent the
district in the state ritual contest
at the convention of the Texas
Elks' State Association in El Paso
early in June.
Rain -•
Calumet Sheets Works
ARCADIA, Calif , Feb. 5 --(tfl—
Calumet Farms shot both barrels
Saturday at Santa Anita as 4he
famed Kentucky Stable went after
two stakes with a total value of
*86,600 in an effort to make up
for being disqualified out of a vic-
tory in last Saturday's Santa Anita
Maturity.
r
Sunday Dinner
A fONOEflH I. (JUMIK!
WILL BE AN ECONOMICAL TREAT
FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY AT
"THE FACE LIFTED"
TRI-CITY CAFE
Dinner
Served From 11 A.M.
.MENU - SUNDAY, FEB. 6.
CHOICE OF—CHICKEN SOUP, FRUIT COCKTAIL
OR FRUIT JUICE
CHOICE OF-ROAST LEG OF LAMB
BAKED CHICKEN WITH DRESSING, APPLE SAUCE
CHICKEN AND DUMPLING
FRIED SPRING CHICKEN
BROILED DINNER STEAK IN BUTTER
GRILLED FANCY PORK CHOPS, APPLE SAUCE
HEAD LETTUCE AND DRESSING-BUTTERED NEW POTATOES
CREAMED CAULIFLOWER
APPLE COBBLER, ICE CREAM $ 1
OR SHERBET - DRINK ..........................ONLY I
Enjoy The Best
Sunday Dinners
LONE STAR CAFE
3401
MINNESOTA PHONE
SPECIALIZING IN REAL HOME-COOKED
FOOD PREPARED AS YOU LIKE IT BY
MRS. SZULO
ROAST TURKEY-BAKED CHICKEN
BAKED HAM WITH GLAZED PINEAPPLE
BkEADED VEAL CUTLETS
FRIED CHICKEN
YOUR CHOICE OF THE ABOVE ENTREES
WITH 3 VEGETABLES, DRINK AND DESSERT
6902
(fontlrtued From Page One)
outs Saturday morning. The heav-
iest damage was reported on West
Main where a storm and sanitary
sewer line is being installed. Top-
ping on the street was ripped up
end left in piles between Lee Drive
and Thompson street. A large
freight truck stalled in the tor-
rent of water pouring down the
street and blocked traffic on West
Main for 30 minutes before the
truck could be pulled out.
Gas leaking from a broken main
on West Main between Oak and
Thompson was ignited and caused
considerable excitement when a
city street employe set out a
smudge pot flare to warn traffic
of the damaged street. City crews
and firemen stood by until gas
company employes could repair the
leak, and no damage resulted from
the blaze.
Grafham said a culvert washed
out somewhere and floated down
to Fayle and Danubina where it
lodged in a 48-inch pipe, blocking
the drainage and causing a torren-
tial flood in the area until it was
removed.
Fair Park residents, many of
them newcomers to this area, were
afraid they were going to drown
when they looked out and saw a
| veritable river rolling down North
Main, One excited man wanted a
I photographer to come out in the
rain and make a picture of it An-
other asked how to get eva.uated
if the flood got worse.
Sanitary sewer lines in the Fair
Park addition were flooded, and
practically every homeowner was
complaining Saturday of sewage
"backing up” into the houses. Sub-
division developers were taking
necessary steps to restore sewer
service since the addition has not
yet been accepted by the city.
There were two bright spots in
the storm area. Property owners
along Minnesota street, where such
a rain in .the past would have
flooded their buildings, reported
that the street was "as dry as a
desert" after the rain. Public
VVoraks Director Grantham and
City Manager C. D. Middleton were
well pleaseo' with the effectiveness
of the storm sewer recently in-
stalled to drain the street.
And. not one ttaffic accident
w»as reported in Baytown during
the storm. Police Chief Roy Mont-
gomery said. In fact, no accident,
minor or major, had been reported
from 1:30 p.m. Friday to 9 a.m.
Saturday, he said.
Three Baytown women, all em-
ployed at Ellington Field, were in-
jured' during the storm when their
car was in collision with one driv-
en by Sgt. Claude Conley, 37, of
Ellington Air Force Base. The
so'dier was killed when he was
thrown out of hi* car.
jgMiss Vada Asbwood, 23, Is still
in San Jacinto Memorial hospital
being treated for chest injuries
and severe lacerations about the
face and knees. Miss Faith Quid-
22, suffering from a broken
"Coint catering," help - yourself
dining cars have been introduced
on British railways offering a
choice of 25 hot and cold dishes
with “tea trolleys” assuring econ-
omy of time and money.
CAN CHIROPRACTIC HELP
snt you
first «t
best heal!
. . it may be your
-adunt health.
DR. W. T. TRAVIS
CHIROPRACTOR
15 E. Sterling 01*1
HIGHWAY 146 •
HUNGRY?
TRY ONE
OF OUR FAMOUS
DOUBLE BURGERS
Baytown'i Beit
and Biggest.
Over 6 Oi. of Fir*t'
Class Beef.
Each
Home Owned and Home
Operated Mean Lower
Prices for You.
CAM. 9590 FOR
TAKE HOME ORDERS
BROWN'S
CHICKEN SHACK
ft. Texas Am el Highway 1M
KREL
1360 ON YOUR DIAL
LISTENING GUIDE
SATURDAY EVENING
4:30—Dat* with tha Duka
6:00—Beat By Bequest
6:30—King’s Harvaete.a
7 :OOj—Duke's Jukebox
8:00—Dixie Downbeat
9:00—News Headlines
9:02—Night Train
12:00—Newa Headlines
12:02—Sign OH
SUNOAV MORNING
7:00—Sign On
7:00—Music For Sunday
7:30—cnennelvlew Aasembly of Go
8:00—Religion In the Nswa
8:18—The Christophers
8:30—Central Assembly of God.
9:00—Laun Hour
11:00—Tapestries In Music
GUNDAV AFTERNOON
12:00—Fair Park Hour
1:00—Sunday Matlnes
3:00—The Damascus Road
8:00—Dee College Callie
8:30—Tnls Is My Belov
6:00—Studio ~
lling
loved
roz, 22, suiiering rrom a orotten ' 8,11 g'unfoAY evening
liESSr*
ceived severe lacerations on the 9:00—cafe Continental
knees and boefy bruises, were ucoo—sigti^oH
mdav morning
treated at San Jacinto'and releas- g.-oo-Mornlmt Meditit&ne
Both returned to their physi- 7.00-utin Hour _
' s
CLEAN
ONLY
OPEN ,
5 A.M. to 11 P.M.
ed. Both returned to their physi- 7.oo-u«t» gout _
cians for treatment' Saturday j {^—Housewives’ Holiday
morning. Monday afternoon
Miss Aehwood who was driving
said they were travelling In very 12:ia—Lunch Can
heavy rain when the other car ep- 1 :i-i—Here’* To Vets
proaohed, apparently was braked
and skidded Into their car.__
Jars’* To
;30—Beams of Heaven
-Date With The^pul
by Baytown Elks, will hold
auction of home-made cakes at 7
p.m. Monday at the scouthouse on
Texas. Ralph Perdue, Troy Sor-
rells. Durwood Meadows and
Lowell Herrington are the leaders.
Gavifan Wants Action
NEW YORK, Feb. 5 -llf- Kid
Gavilan will omit a rest period
between fights for the first time
in his long career and return to
camp Monday in search of more
speed than he showed in Friday
night’s split victory over Ernie
Durando.
Last Rites
JOE SPECK was in Jacksonville
Saturday to attend the funeral ser-
vice of his brother-in-law, Jess Me
Bee. who died Thursday night aft-
er a long Illness.
attend funeral services Monday for
his mother, Mrs. Antoinette Lam-
mers. 84, who died Friday.
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m. Monday at the Mac Johnson
funeral home, 1309 East MacMil-
lan, Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. hammers expect
to return about Thursday.
DECKER
DRIVE IN THEATRE
TONIGHT
WALT DISNEY’S COLOR
"LIVING DESERT"
"BEN AND ME"
"FRONTIER OF *49"
SUNDAY
THRU
MON.
WARNER BROS.
PRESENT
mnr
LADD
asthelnjuihLovertn
OELMER OAVES'
DRUM
BEAT"
PLUS
Walt I )isno\ ■
SWORD
, Rose
•:ii 11 \kd * a )
lODD- jOH W
Latest New*
LAST DAY HURRY!
M- G*M presents
“DEEP IN MY HEART”
20 I0P rALFNT STARS'
SONG HITS! SPECTACLE!
in COLOR splendor!
SUNDAY . MONDAY
John ERICSON
EXTRA
TOM & JERRY CARTOON
-AND—
NEWS OF THE DAY
ENDS TONIGHT
. •JTBVCC
JOHN DEREK • JOIN IVANS
★ ALSO ★
HUMPHREY BOGART
AUDREY HEPBURN
WILLIAM HOLDEN
SUNDAY-MONDAY
★ TWO BIG HITS *
ON OUR WIDE SCREEN
“TtaLAST
iTtMElSffl^
Paris'
stirring EliZ3b9th TAYLOR
Van JOHNSON-Waller PIDGEON
Donna REED tw gabor Xt kaszna* ,
★ ADDED ACTION HIT *
WOMEN IN PRISON!
--I'omn# .. i.JFDUrai: Ir.Mtf— ^
OLVNIS JOHNS aiMONiaitVA ,
* COLOR CARTOON
“SATAN’S A WAITING”
FOX MOVIETONE NEWS J
SORRY!
LAST TIMES
TODAY!
Cinemascope Com/'
4 DAYS ONLY... SUNDAY THRU WEDNESDAY;
THE BATTLE OF THE GIANTS IN THE
BKGEST SPECTACLE JFrTHEM ALL!
SUPER SCOPE
1 Technicoli
DENISE DARCEL
CESAR ROMERO
GEORGE MACREADY
ERNEST BORGNINE mm* SARITA MONTIEl
CARTOON * "FIDO SETA KAPPA" * NEWS
Wm-K,
■ L V; * a
St. Val
Music Club Plans 1
WANDA ORTO
, w
U
h*v# a Valentine tea '
.).»,’jUght in the parish house 1
*4 to Episcopal church. Gue
r be Invited to the affair wl
«<*in« at 7:45 p.m.
.? A Valentine dance In th
• GMinity .house planned l
day night by the Humble
X* King, entertainment eh
•aid. It will be-from 9 p.i
«.m. with music provided
Water* band of Houston.
And four dances will be
-- Saturday night, Feb. 12.1
Sigma Alpha social sorori
have a Valentine dance a
•rview trin . . . The aeml-l
Sweetheart Dance at H
Yacht club will be underwi
Wagon Wheelers plan to
one of their square dance
night.
* Three Baytown Junior hi|
dents will be honorecs Sa
night at a Valentine dai
Lakewood clubhouse. • The
Carolyn Manuel, Carolyn
and Kay Morrow. Hostessi
be their mothers Mrs. J. M
uel, Mr*. E. C. Center and
Morrow.
Maybe it is just a co-inc
but even the Robert E. Le
achool play Saturday nigh
"carry out” the Valentine
At least in lie tltle-“0ur HE
Were Young and Gay.” The
act comedy will be staged Ii
auditorium by students of J
C. Farrar.
Looking way into the fu
Feb. 14 Itself—the calendar
Include a Valentine supper ft
la* Athena club members h
W. L, Beckman’s home.
HIGHLIGHTS O F orgs
tional ■ meetings next week
be the quarterly meeting of
Why Shop Around When
Finest Furniture Work
AT HOME Costa No Mor
★ Refinishing A Repair!
★ Upholstering
Baytown Furniture Clinl
808 Park Dial
HEIR!
YOU
Heirloon
era bat t
our price
every gei
to Penne
year!. W<
ol! 3 aid.
tag. Whi
---------
i§
EM
‘W- %‘S
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 206, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 5, 1955, newspaper, February 5, 1955; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041581/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.