The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 272, Ed. 1 Monday, April 20, 1953 Page: 4 of 14
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PAGE 4-THE BAYTOWN SUN, MONDAY, APRIL 20, 195!
he silent guardians only when he is ■
one appearing in public or at the Cap- ■ ■ ■ ” ■
i in itol They do not guard the house Id ■
at night or "shadow" Mrs. Nixon j
nn. and the youngsters. J
JUU Nixon uses his official limousine «
to spend and driver, provided by the taxpay- i
is lauiily—wife .rs, only for social functions anc' 1
Tricia, 7, and other official duties. For things like
iunday drives and going to church, wondi
n ■asws.’srsssss -jsa
•ied the wheel. « ttftMid. T
the As for his future plans. Nixon is «»*. /„*«
not saying. "I want to do a good Sold in Baytown by Black j
;rv- job in the job I have," he said, and Scarborough Drue st,
°i tn» fions' 'involving' the administra- Ice'^actiom to Nixon uses the •■There’s a l^tobetoeT_r«u> hearts drgj£
WACTAm W HSlPS EDITOR’S NOTE: How does life groups that understand if the Pres- one of their wives is attending, «ix-
TTWIVIII iimwiww g0 with , young man in the nation’s ident himself can’t make it see no on explained.
. . , ,.w Wood- second highest office? In the follow- reason why the vice president can- Nixon says the "easiest"—but one
UKIA, Ore, April M -w- , interview, Vice President Rich- not. The Nixons attend many of of the most important-parts of his ,,n.r*eeret worn o, it n» couih ikoikh u.c ...
chip seeding experiments now in ird M NUoB r)vM ,n insight into the events at Mr. Eisenhower s ob lt presiding over the Senate. » g^Xial icwlfr Council. He tion’s number two public job. Nix-
progress in this area may make it (,(„ personal experiences of the first personal request. is one of the few duties specifical- tne ixauonai ^ ,ilU i„ „ wqv to sriend
nrtsdihle to reclaim hundreds of three months. Nixon isn’t grumbling over his ly spelled out for the
f barren acreages „„„ role of "official greeter” for the by the Constitution,
thousands of barren acr.ag By WARREN DUFFEE new GOP regime. task is made easie:
throughout the West. WASHINGTON, April 20—UP- ..But j sometimeg think one rea- years’ experience in
Charles Rector, Umatilla Forest The tou(!hest part of being vice son ^ want me for dinner is so the expert help of Senate
supervisor, said the experiments- president, says Richard M. Nixon, thev c(m get one 0j the (military)
tion includes nine plots which nave js not the work but the social obli- servjce bands to play free," he
bD<*n seeded with grass and cov- jjanons.
ered with wood chips. They steal his time, his energy,
If the experiments prove sue- gnd (^ten his sleep. But they have
eessful, huge acreages of virtually to ^ met because tl.ey are a major
useless land can be transformed chore o( the nation's second high-
lnto useful watersheds or grazing est o{fice
land. Nixon compares attendance at
, The object is to use wood chips necessary social functions aiw af-
as a moisture-holding cover which jairs 0f sta(e to a kid eating ice
will present the grass from dying cream "When you eat a gallon,
out when the dry season arrives. jt's t00 much.”
Forestry experts believe the grass, "individually each occasion is
after it has had a chance to take . We but' collectively they’re
firm root, can withstand the dry ;nuch'” the youthful vice pres-
weather after the wood chips arc a(j(j’e(j
removed. Nixon at 40 is the second young-
Another aim of researchers is to es» vice president in history. He is
find a use for sawmill slash which working hard to "do a real job
has not been turned into a useful jn the vaguely-defined office he
product to date. Huge amounts of won ]ast November,
slash — or wood cuttings — are “it's taking far more time than I
available throughout the Pacific bad realized,” he said. "I’m work-
Northwest. ing harder and putting in longer
The project already has been hours than when I was a sen~°*"’
successful on gentle slopes with A decision by President Else-
rich soil. But the experimentation hower not to accept many oui-
now is aimed at land which has side” social engagements has mn a
been unsuitable to earlier reclama- heavier than normal load on Nixon
tlon methods. and his brown-eyed wife Pat. The
former has emerged_ ast ute number t
in the that role probably will increase.
,’ork of If he could ‘redesign" the 1
rsn’« niimlv»r two DUbliC job,
tlon., nUiltte'i
member by law. Nixon is im- on would work in a way t
‘th'e pressed by its importance. He more time with his family-
spends hours each week on its pat and daughter -.:c:a, -
problems. Julie. 414.
Nixon won't talk much about his His health is "excellent," he
role as chief “trouble shooter" in His weight, well disposed
__i Pmrteosc and the hmkv «ix-foot frame, hasn 11
parliamentarians.
- think it’s an
joked. the job. but any
Military band* are available for it,” Nixon said,
private social function* only when The "most inte
Wm*
UCKUIIliKn met l, MC AC* I. Uio IA.U <«» .
St. Francis hospital and was taken The privateer was the Braab,
by ambulance to the council cham- which went down May 28, 1798, in
bers. Delaware Bay about one mile off
- Cape Henlopen. One year later,
. the British tried to float her. The
Funds given the American Can- .ffnrt failefI-
cer Society's 1953 crusade will fi- .. ti venerations of
nance more than $4,500,000 worth toflnd
of cancer research next year. the%raak. Its location is listed in
A Minneapolis couple, both of a Bible owned by descendants of
whom had cancer within two years the sloop's co-pilot. None of the
are both alive and well today, the efforts was successful.
American Cancer Society discloses. Donald Geddes, 3rd, Bethesda,
Md., a student at George Wash-
ington College who spent eight
months on Braak research, told a
group searching for the ship that
records of the British Admiralty
show the Braak was carrying cop-
per and cocoa, but no gold.
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Wn N C I
ETHRIDGE
PRESCRIPTION DEPT.
In one recent year cancer caused
the loss of 1,109,000 working years
among Americans, according to es-
timates of the American Cancer
Society.
Cancer kills more children from
3 to 15 years of age than does any
other disease. American Cancer So-
«4o4!etini> etiAU?
Baytown Drag Store
131i Main
(Formwly Llndtr'i Pr.-
icriptlon Dept.)
foster P<
IHM. <
NEW
PHONE
ciety statistics show.
■A’DreM
i«fcrTrpe»
k Dressed I'oull
WHY PAY MOM?
Buy the BEST hr IESS
m our complete
Durable, Tilt Effect
I
INCLUSIVE I
I
M ^ I
Kit I
Tobaccos I
IH.AS A GIFtI
p w. to 1:00
FULL 54-DNCH WIDTH
Eaty to Install * Easy to Cloan
Tile-Hke, 4Ux4'A-ln. baked enamel de-
sign on resilient felt backing. Ideal far
kitchens, baths and nurseries.
Y0U* ■ £
choice m Sm ■
COLORS
The citizens of this community have a proud
record of achievement in making Baytown a better
place in which to live. Baytown Beautification
Week is an outstanding opportunity to’enhance
*his record.
Important benefits accrue to all residents from
this worth-while community-wide activity, which
merits the support of every citizen. You, and your
city, will gain from your active participation.
Fully in keeping with the objectives of Bay-
town Beautification Week are the improvement
and modernization of your home’s lighting.
Here are a few suggestions to help you give
your home “The Light Touch.”
• Wash lighting fixtures and lamp reflector
bowls. A clean reflecting surface gives more
usable light
• Fill empty sockets with bulbs of proper size.
•’ Place a good floor or table lamp at each read-
ing and study area.
FAMOUS Stratosphere
9x12 Ft. RUGS
MEDIUM WEIGHT
Colorful, h«at-toughan«d «nam«!
designs on thick, asphalt-saturated
felt base.
R«fl.
$5.65
Value!
HEAVY WEIGHT, FELT, BASE
fcjked-enomel finish on heavy
felt base. Beautiful, assarted
designs.
FOIL f-FT. WIDTH
a»ists Re
Sln m{
8 *n this ol
v- A. G
use COOK'S BUOOET-FAYMINT FIAN
DIAL 5085
512 W. TTXAS
DEPENDABLE LOW-COST. ELECTRIC SERVICE
1
>■ . WSam
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 272, Ed. 1 Monday, April 20, 1953, newspaper, April 20, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041930/m1/4/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.