The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 343, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 9, 1952 Page: 1 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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' - ;
OWy THE BAYTOWN S
T#Mi
Th« BAYTOWN STO*\
farming Up Again
TvWltt'N WEATHER — Continued
4. with mattered showers. Sotne-
^wSltier. Low expected Wednes-
***njjht 70, high Thursday 90. Med-
iV northeast and east winds.
baytown; Texas
Wednesday, July 9, 1952,
TODAY'S NEWS TODAY
cee Golf Touri
I Open Thursdi
TELEPHONE.- (10!. Fi™ C.„t, P«- Cop,
n Country Club layout, Joe Isenhower
mnounced Tuesday. • , v 8J<>»
mate, state Jay cee champion two year* ago
no entry fee. To sign up for the tournev u <1
t> Pro Fred Marti or Choate not later than u1"
tey will be a 38-hole medal play affair, ft
1 on Thursday and the remaining I* on Fria
S$%!^5£“
playeni who chalk up the lowest medal ,
s will be sent to Denton, to the State Javc« T
fust 1, with all expensespaid % the 'Bavin*,?
also will award a trophy to the nhempoTr?
the runners-up. ,
tourney will be a 86-hole medal play affair Imk
Be four Baytown winners choose to go to mS
le practice licks hefore the tourney opens, thpy^j
■ Civil Rights Man’s How
jWIIHfflMHy Delays Okay f
I flf Platform Stack Up
^ ■ lull III III CHICAGO, July 9 tUV-Here is
SHBJWBKrt , vsSr^nBrSmn how the .candidates stand in
r flinl CHICAGO, July 9 (-UP)— Wednesday's United Press taUy of B LNrrED PRES8 - , ~ :«
™«s?ss*bSwS55o°Ld umon «-*,m,!h,r! and Fin"worth -•*«•» I
\ and guarded doors Wednes- date by the GOP national commit- against fierce comnetitinn .^8re reP°rted to have settled their difficulties at noon 1
tey to approve a 5,000,-word *»“£*? eredential* from Republicans, something Wed"!.sday- U"ion officials were on their way Jo the Bay-
2# jIWjUI campaign document pledging Taft <if !.......... ........ M7 of a turnabout for the Lone Tunne| construct.on site to pick up the pickets which
an end to inflational support Eisenhower <x> ............ 4(w Star state had Put a ha,t t0 work on th® tunnel early Wednesday.
°f collective security, and barren ............ 76 A few candidates in the .. ,Ther,ewas no word at noon asto the details of the labor
ftjmr quickest possible develop- Arthur...... ........... 5 July 26 first Democratic pri- dlfflcu,ties or what steps were taken to settle them.
IFflBCE#KKV SSsr::::::EE::::::A S£E%S,»SSm& *Wo?on-*Y««„«.
a£r SH3QFis fa*- -« asawistts*'
- # • • . John F. Lunsford, ^8irS&*il'S$. chJiJa,n's' jmie,?tsui*ri"t“de“f«Tr.r„*worth>nd i
LOIIISiami: wBCSK- & iteMifr *'JT'r’r* I
- / After Heart Attack Wjgf 9
If* tPYflC tin aarsiAyij.'va-.avg.'tttraa ~raa.$^&***'—:
R* ® WlA Hw %ttt S* dM ”1’ br‘““'He Mid James was in conterenaMrttli uninn nfRH.h .nd -'ll
irence J. Brown, leading The- cummitt«.*« »« . the whole document for several He apparently had been in good ir„- „ » *• ' •. *. that some information might he available hv Woilw—Aaw 9H
nant told reporters there hive mTT t J u W‘U h°UrS- ' ■ !?ealth recently- b“t ^oke abort AjM, rftT^ ^ Atto- afternoon.’ Y
be a fight" within the nave to be. ratified on the conven- Unusual security precaution* T a.m. today With a heart attack ,B*Y Ubneral Price Daniel, who un- - (..... , .. ... . „
,pn the 38 contesiea Bel- tion f,oor where other engagements were taken as the committee dc- his s°h said. An ambulance was T«as tide- secretary at the office^ef the Building^Tradeg COUB^ ^9
Texas. in the "war of the stolen dele, liberated. Employes of the Conrad- c®ufi an<i he was rushed to a hos- se to ttle U- S‘ SuPreme Cll knew only that.some of the union officials Were meat* -
pro-Taft forces "intend gates" will be fousht to »' ch„ Hilton hotel checked and locked all P1^*,. where he, died almost im- ’ - ing on the job shutdown.
sa«kk s^rs^siss: jafeidwi.- o’ss^rssaas:. m M 11
J». Hcseito.m«. sirSS s ar— -—- tss ks? aa n= sasais,- ? eaa,ect • ■ • i ■
leader of the anti-Taft tf»eR«iublican n S i ru!lng of Many general Drovisions of thn spent most of yeste^ay helping his he strongly -urged both the Demo- . ■ ■ II ■ rtw fcllSM
mi the committee, also it may sS to speed convcnHn'’ Platform had become Wn to ad- andt son pack h^°ld furn'' comn afndf Republican parties to 0|||\/ CaUJ UfillfC IpfV
hat there would be a proceeding convention vance, including ik cornmitment to Ish!nes to move and listening to come out strongly infavor of state %^|BBw iCff II Will 9 l»W IT # SM
he Texas delegates.■ Aw^rt rf T- • ■ support collective^^secwUvTnd tto fuadl5 reP°rts of the baU games and ownership of tidelands, _ f . * I I
p foiees to take the supporters for the two too ranrii Ttespite the security precautions r nn^fnrrl hois hi r.t —,-i j
vC'urc defend iV^ti0n date£ ,ou«h‘ and schemed and SSj*^1 details **“”* known hJ til“i?r®L”ilrS,d
v are defeated in com- scrabbled for votes among already Wednesday* '
. seated delegates. On national defense, the admin-
!, ,1™!“ his intention Taft men still claimed a second istration was denounced for dis-
i nfil» 1m IO« T ba!iot victory for their champion mantling the military machine aft-
'tb l7 ,, ,,^Tee t0 vyhile Eisonhower forces predicted er Wolld War II. The GOP is
aft 17 member Georgia that the general would win on the P1(>d8ed to build a balanced mili-
Dems Getting Farnsworth Dispute
Competition With Union Reported
From GOP Over At Noon Today
rED PRESS
rt Sports and San
is kept abreast of
their drive to stay
siofi' as only three
lyed in the Texas
night.
lhoma Oty game
as postponed be-
irounds.
to thbee weeks ago
ey had taken out
icy in the league
their third game
th the Beaumont
o 0. San Antonio
a 7 to 3 victory
louston Buffs and
game behind in
J 7 to 4 trouncing
PROTECTION
From '
POLIO
Steele McDonald Ages
3105 MARKET Sf.
“ DIAL 8105
m Willis scattered
lits as his mates
rick for 11 inciud-
>y Third Baseman
he fourth inning,
n three of Shreve-
with two singles
sagger.
on Post pitched
Antonio Missions
■ Houston, which
► last 16 games,
uff hurlers Bob'
reel with a five-
he had to have
ibson in the ninth
5-year-old Michi-
entv of damage
timing a two-run i
h inning, a triple
inio’s seven runs I
er route as Bob I
Martin hit for I
bird inning. I
ten but Houston |
s. ]
n to oppress her neigh- more "hours to take their children a 50-50 chance of possibly avoid* 1
to the Community House clinic for ing paralysis from polio this sum* 8
Who campaigned In inoculaUon in the Harris county mer as well as the satisfaction that 1
t, Orange, Port Arthur gamma globulin polio study. they may have helped science to -m
veston Tuesday, asked, The clinic closes operations at 9 stop the dread paraiysis. I
; forgotten Pearl Harbor? P-m- Wednesday, and its staff is Parents who take their children fl
forgoten Bataan and the h°Pin« to inoculate some 2,000 chil- are being asked by study leaders 1
reh?” dren for the week it's been here, for close co-operation during the ' i
rth told a postoffice _ -“7“ I~J * “*■ |
owd at Nacogdoches that i!l? morning, the staff had-given
0 537 delegates for Taft and 468 for ,me,nof appropriate and complete- trhood of Railroad Trainmen and’ Beckworth told a postoffice , When the clinic opened Wednes- remainder of the summer.
« fimhamcr. .-ft takgg JW to nom* air power.” ■< c TWHiT 1 ItolrTtoL TjKflii <i ‘Tnt'”*~“* “* ”~*ni|ftTiirii fiy morning, |fcr. William M. Hammop. dlree-
u,ate-' The Democratic adminisiratioii foreign Wars. He was a vetwan S uthls itete ^ «W^«n;..wh° -far of a>e ste^vartm’tllittjiimrtji,
was denounced for its failure to World War I and served with the had * chance to elect I Parae to, tref,u2* 4 $ev<?": .«» aI! normal health
* ■ • a a stabilize the economy. It was ac- railroad division of the 21st En- Hnl ^ senator who is just f*? period. If 280 children report ru.es; (2) not give their child any
r Saint HaAVOI* cused of using wage and priee con- gineers. United States Army. I9 Jears ,°jd and a^eady has be- la*f, day- dc*‘red goal of additional injections of gamma
• VIUIIII nwvvcr trols to advance the welfare of the Survivors include his widow Mrs bmd him 16 years of legislative eg- 20do ,wdI ,h*ye bee" reached. globulin;. (3) if the child .becomes
n J a . Democratic regime rather than to Jessie Lunsford, and a son, Pat Penence, 14 of them in the United Original plansi called forjnocula- ill, yeail the family phyoyan as
Ked ADDedSemeriT control inflation. * Lunsford, both of Baytown. Also Sfates ConSress.” , T tion of 4000 children in Baytown usual and in addition, remind him
^ ’ • - “Further-jnflation can and must surviying is a brother, Jim Luns- - «bo reaffirmed his stahd for 81^ surrounding, area. that the child is in the gBlio study
, "This ti the fifth tlme l have be, halted,'' toeTS fetSm - v, , state ownership^ the tidellnds. ^ -
1 had the high honor of addressing sakt , Euneralarrangemenis wiltbe an- in the governor’s wtf- ft}*0***..™™ Fne^Baytown cl,me is op.rating
r “ons •-^.-yy^sa ^^e. ^?2ss^i#s5; 9Tvi!^ixk^
i„ .^r°in Ahe inexorable.course of 1. A reduction in government _ '? ' tion’ made a rare sneeeif givea to 11811 of those w‘ho par' morni"g at Wesley elemenfafere
; 'nature, this i* likely to be the last spending. ^Aj:i B__^1 fade a we gpeech at lYe* odpate. . school in Houston. ^
time I.shall attend your conven- 2, A cut in taxes vOOl Oili „ ...
Ti--.- -»v»- -ftsr'Breaks Heat »lr Texas Polio Drops Sharplv
up from the audience. 4. Removal of ortside^lnfluences *FCOK5 If GOT At Bryan, incumbent coftmis-. r . L ,-Wf ,
I,'rSMS'»£S.S?i£Zg&£l Sbl1 Second Worst Week On Record
WA.MWE.go.K__ — 'nle 'piat/orm «. ‘ b, KlSSStB dSlffi ”**■'8"
Honu'r Ll » - ^ W* to endin* economic controls showers that have resulted in 1.85 hcan party as "the groundwork for buf^ ranked as the second have been ctoarJd im^
mVmS,zss sssys^jss^r&M*■ *• **«■ «**»*•• s,us ws/saxa««».
. «>• Mnkt. * <Wl»lllilll linaMlalMnnto.' The high Tuesday w«s M de- - - MdmES* D<>«“»«."P*W _
in the press box showed that tion has been accompanied by a Weds. It was the first time in 23 C||*A 4*|||a£ Wednesday. *****
the temperature rose from 75 critical housing shortage.” days that the mercury did not - ■ ■■ “ WIIIGT- to the Previous week 206 .cases Lr. th.n *
to 80 degrees during the 13 It denounces the Brannan farm Break the 90-degree mark.. W ■ were ^ported for an all-time high. Coi .. e cfl»rtl"g ^
nimpte Eleraonstration for Mr. plan and calls for a flexible farm It Was good sleeping Tuesday fimAVC JK.Dmiv Last week’s 163 cases pushed the tk! KT,. m. w,UJL
Hoover. . - price support system aimed at 100 night with showers cooling the air ”“Id» Aal%(iy year’s total to 1,309, almost, threei.XS,
.....Per cent parity in toe market and making sheets or light blank- - • times the 436 cases listed over a c “ -omriinv nnii« ia.e
^ .to, declye tfaaf P^cc- - ..-'•*&» comfortable. The maximum Fire Chief Art Lintelman^^ will^^ simdar period last year. In the w^“^erse; reP°rting 1)0110 last
^ ^*"d' It propose? a "reasonable deple- temperature was 72 degrees. have X-ray exam'Lflon of hS eyes record year of 1950, the disease had Dallas 24- Lavaca-
November ViCt0ry “* Uoa allowance” against taxes for Weathermen say the cool, front today to determine the artent of attacked 1,053 persons over the 24fTarranf’^Dawson’auditor-'
November can save ft. petKH engaged in production of mav civc BavtonUna another ss the damaee caused hv » hw*»n 'comparable period. c m»h. s-L
>un Spots
to» visit weiegores ac
Ex-President Hits
N, will be in Baytown tonight
bskeher official visit to Aquar- By REX CHANEY
Temple No. 136. Pythian Sis- CHICAGO, July 9 ftt»~ The old
fe gentleman won’t soon forget it,
fa. Roselle Mycra annotniced , Hfi stood ijelore the 35lh Repub-
I» special meeting has been ’!can national convention, a wisp
e4 at 7:30 p.m. at the Baytown smiIe on.hi* faee.wavteg his
W to receive Mrs Asmev hand* m .gentle circles to the thun-
" *' dering galleries.
Once or twice he opened his
TENDANCE at the summer mouth as if to speak, but there
Ration centers remains con- was no stopping the demonstration,
oil in spite of. the hot wrath- He waited, his eyes shining with
®d the interruptions, of sum- tears as they had four years be-
'puips ami vacations, Direr- ■. fore when he
wank Janies said’Tuesday, stood oil another
ore than 5.000 children at- Republican con-
l*d the centers last u-eeto;'.. vention platform
d attendance for the five’ By 4 ^Bin Philadelphia
ts the piaygrtmnds have been - rccelve the ac- -
feratinn is 27.297. James said. claim of his par-
Retires WjnS^miL Finally, the
KNOBLES, better, known to , turnult subsided,
lends as Bob, has retired af-
5 years in the oil fields. He tulTed “ thru‘r
een employed by O, A. Dyer H^^H!eat8’ alld . tha .
“ Uraee Oil Co. Knobles says 9HH .lrassLnt'JaEh,.°rf
to catch up on his hunt- ayb 3 .
B°*d P**® Twe) ■ gentlemen! * «"d :
PRESS
ATTERS
-eagle
B R H Pet.
85 ~ 56 95 r333
76 23 57 -.324
33 54 75 .315
*5 37 77 .314
II- 27 65 .308
EAGUE '
!14 31 72 .36
2 32 71 .335
9 50 92 .330 j
5 29 81 .318 |
9 43 76 .318 ,
ound Town
gotiatkms Wednesday wji
minute debstee —
r:m~ - ____________________ __________
le to an end to the shooting in Ki> Peiping
rea- “ " the “hriri
For the sixth straight. day, the
delegates met secretly to '.,earch'
jth» a 26- Chinese "volunteers” who have said undpr8° an eye operation. assisting lpcal health officials. armed fort-
on prisoner ox- thej-would forcibly resist repartia-
La Porfe Cafeteria. B*
issSsSwSssae SssatSresr^ss&ms^ul!!
heclfe y chants at the-final session of the dience Monday heard Lane and There was no information on fa«;savlng" Proposal to reclass- Board set Sept. 8 as opening school later than five p.m. Tuesday, July Board Pres
ywaM sss JS-’aur ^JSJstuTsss afrrfSHSf Ss £=“ — - -«•~
asa?1 rrrrsss saaa^ss&sf “r;:r«rt:r ~
ild man after a mus- iwum, which has been brought to Outstanding business leaders oo™ "«ws affecting the talks any prisoners while the negotiations the new band hall and bus garage office,; 3317 Wisconsin.
fishing trip Bob Baytown by the Houston Natural from this area will come to Bay? S.a^?„gom .fa6 c^ne.se Commumst are going on. He said the talks and advised board members on The plans provide for a main "t of s
special "private nm- Gas CorP- under the sponsorship town to participate in Tuesday fr®® a. Coi«- would “turn backward” if the Al- building materials and approxi- building 40 feet wide and 105 feet „„
ipreeiate—ask him of the retail merchants committee night’s panel discussion. PeifringWinsfsted (JN took any such "unilateral ac- mate construction costs. The plans long which will house the band QUICKIES
Dave. u.., ’’How to Get a Raise in Pay” Is A .......'__ ____“ unlform_room ’and four _pracUce’ |
rooms. The 30 by 40 foot bus gar-
age will be adjacent to the band
hall „ „ ,7 - -
Overall Obit of the project has
been estimated at $35,000t
An additional $1,500 was ap-
propriated., for completion of the;
school cafeteria and Contractor
Forrest Jones said work would be
finished hefore school started in
Wipes
you car
jmtm
September. The new provision will IBh
bring total contract cost of the "SI’I
cafeteria to approximately $11,600. * 1
John Klibler was reemployed as %
tax assessor and collector and El- rf-*' ■
la Sprague as tax clerk.
The resignation- of James Pate
as athletic director was formally BrSYill
accepted and Frank Akin, former -j,
snaaRirjtta an
p,„». . - w„,
GULF COAST
“MOTOR COi
420 W. TEXAS AV&
. ' BAYTOWN
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 343, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 9, 1952, newspaper, July 9, 1952; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041591/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.