The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 53, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 6, 1952 Page: 3 of 10
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A Central Press Feature
jjSWm- swa asnsrs
saa?2 «s ri
of four card, opposite four cards the contract was a No Trump
h ’.‘ e [Z, :TP^ Many 0f th"n’ **mc hy So",h' which was beaten
r d d, lhc, re<tuir<jment by a diamond lead to the A, fol-
from the outmoded too-high lowed by a club switch which
trick and a half" at the top to a eoabled the defense to have the
mere probable No Trump stop* first five tricks. t
per,” such as maybe eVen a jac k. Several of the few good play.
1,°.ng “ thLr« Itopfc strength Who would have bid 1-Spade
on the side. Now some few favor to open, declared their reason for
bidding any four-card suit when *>*ng *o was to make showing
It is adjacent to snpther four- of their second suit convenient.
Cfl.rd- Sllit in a hand nf amnia TheV U’Olllft hifl tha tnn onit eta«
PfNNEY’S BACK-TO-SCHOOL EVENT
IT'S TIME TO BUY FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL!
4 J8 3
f 1076
32
4 A3
Penney’s sturdy
i STANDARD QUALITY
FOR THIS EVENT
AT A NEW LOW PRICE
■ SIZES 6 to 16
★ Made of heavy 8-oz. denim!
★ Sanforized Can't shrink out of fit!
★ Triple orange stitched throughout!
★ Copper rivets at points of strain!
★ Bor tacked for greater strength!
★ Heavy duty rust resistant zippers!
HEAVIEST QUALITY
11-OZ.BLUE JEANS
' SIZES 6-14
BOY'S
CORDUROY
SPORT COATS
Box Office OpOM .......
Other grades, from one to six
ave only three each,
An expansion program during
ie summer has added two new
joms to the school and Hopper,
lid there would be no over-crowd- I
ig In Highlands schools this year. I
The new rooms will be used for I
sual education and other outside I
itivities not included in regular I
value! Handsome deep-toned pottery
colors—like maroon, green, cocoa, roy-
al, or Bluestone! Classic two-button
style—and aH rayon lined! 10-20.
THURSDAY
★ DOUBLE F
-J Kj)'
NEW! SLACKS
: JOB A
U M
EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA!
I
BOY’S
■QUILTED lined!
SATIN TWILL JACKETS
___ WYOMl
100 Nurses Needed
For Polio Outbreaks
• WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 <Uh—The
Red Cross issue* an urgent appeal
Tuesday for at least 100 graduate
nurses to work in areas stricken
with poliomyelitis.
Va* Ones said the number
lettuce
Grovenstein
. -*
meet toe needs in many
ern and eastern states wh
have been large outbreak
in recent weeks.
nurses recruited by the I
are paid Iff the National
tion tor Infantile Pantlys
and feels like fine wool. Crease
NOW SHOW;
THROUGH THU*'
fe feati-rk^1
; leocariuo
"PANCHO TIL1
featibe tjjj
1 CLIFTON WE'8
RAYON GABARDINE!
Expertly tailored In all the new sharp fail
shades.
HANK'S SUPERETTE
2205 W. MAIN ST.
Glossy rayon satin twill, lined with warm
quilting. Thick fur collar adds to warmth and
style. Water repellent! We have your fa-
vorite color. Sizes 6 to 18.
LIVESTOCK
Livestock: W0 TH' H (|
1 MEMORIAL.................Gattie q v-
□Intock 306 Lake- slaughter steers”'”11
•toady to 50c higher
ity and commer^
to
519 Williams. feeders ...firm: * • ^1 who a.is»^«‘'
Jr,-®..
>er Baytown. ll-v ana commercial’
J. Bros—Channel- cows, steady *
n Parris—211 Weat 26■ beef cbws^jita’J!*
and cutters mwivi,; ^
-3012 Market. mostly 14-23; few hiah. ^1
Rawls—Highlands. to. good stacker and Zi 'Hi
-401 Scarlet. yearling*. 1S.«. .Tjjtl
Smith-113 South 18 down. ’ *,ocktl
Calves 1.300. steady
__^Smer'icim "itoer Vee
irron—134H Wood, choice slaughter eilv« I
calves, &88. 10 ctWc*
Hog* 800. Butcher, &,
wer: sows mostly
180-240 C; \\
tower;
choice'
Jerry J. Bros of choice 292 lbs .♦ ai 8*
nounce the birth of mostly choice 169 W fi*
day at San Jacinto medium grade fight/ d^B;
Wayne ftawls are
son born Tuesday'
Memorial, Hospital,
ghlands.
Ployd Barron have
i Tuesday at San
41 Hospital. The
at 134 >4 Wood.
community of Craigs i
seven persons. 71*
sxs.tia.’i-ia
J. M. Holcomb,
have yarned their
tonroe Jr. He wa*
San Jacinto Me-
. weighing eight
unces. Grandpar*
J Mrs. C M. Hol-
n and Mrs. W. T.
Port Neches.
WuuGn jAT
: Guild
:h Music
fell!
v-'-iwJ
wail
lil
VIRGIL'S
| UPHOLSTERY AND
MATTRESS CO. .
Guild Of Trinity
i met Tuesday in
Guild room for
hiy meeting.
carried on by
S, vice president,
hriner gave the
insisted of church
W./-1NEPB«0i
i Retires
6 W — George
tor vice-president
railroad, has re-
n official of the
snta Fe Railroad
n 1939 to 1942.
RARILY
SED
|p
{LING
RROW
ITIONEO
It HEX
Js»n
JRU.
'olutaiofo
Rogers
TERMS
(FREE ESTIMATES—
NO OBLIGATION
M. Jacobs
! JR. !
'*•- M
JtllfdltK.
1 Parkway Dr., Baytown
Dial 530*
t Call ORrhard 6902, Houston
South. Neither: hide
vulnerable.)
South West North Fast
14 Pass - 24 pass »-
2» Pass 4 4 4 A 74
Would you have opened that ? ?95 2
deat with a spade bid? No, we
didn’t think you would. And we T Y - 3
wouldn't expect to, as a rule. But 6 a
the' brilliant tournament player
who did it reached the top-score *-
contract in the cards. And how
else could he have done it ?
Well, that could have happened
4 Q J 1052
*J8
4A1JJ7
4 A K10....................-
(Dealer; South. East-West vul. !
to......• rttuatian whereby Wrat atr,b*«4-
opened the bidding-and North If the bidding is simply 1-Spade,
made a takeout double. South’s 2-Spades, 4-Spad,es, what is West's
proper response to that would correct defense on this rubber
have been a bid of spades, at per- deal ?
’Amateur' Flies Jet Job
Pilot Passes Out And Gl Takes Over
SEOUL, Korea, Aug. 6 (W—The hour after the pilot’passed out and
Air Force told Wednesday how a toe engine failed,
maintenance man making his first M. Sgt. Charles E. Hilt, 31, of
■ had hitchhiked a ride
1st Lt.
Robert W. MacDuff of Avenel, N.
flight in a jet plane was forced to Parker, Fla., had hitchhiked
take" over the controls for a half in a two-seat T-33 jet with
Cracked, Dry Skin
Soothe—soften—help heal
and relieve fiery itch with
Oil-rich Resinol
OINTMENT—’Contain* lanolin
- POl’KVE ( ARTOONj
-SWIMMER TAKE .1
Latent W orld Sew* Evi
DANCE
me
CLUB
BRAND'S
BUDDIES
D
JE BOYS
i>
- Leon Payne
t
OM 5:30 fe b
sre STORE
* AM DIAL
YOUR FM
FAMILY NIGHT
HANK’S
VK ad
SUPERETTE GROCERY
|SPECIALS for THURS., FRI.&SAT.
NOW
TIIBI j
THtlW
ENTIRE
FAMILY
MOM - DAD
KIDD ItS TOO
GRANNY—Al'.Vf
SRE TWO KEATlgrtl
NO. 1
ROMAN1
OM-MBCa'
no. ?
ERROLftn®
ALEXIS SMITH
—in—
"MONTANA" j
IN COLOR
ALSO IMVK1
ENDS TONIGHT
"FRANKENSTar i
t .....~i§
"DRaCUIAL
lytow
1 i
I
READY-TO-EAT
PICNIC HAMS
45‘
I Chuck or Crown
. SLICED
1 ROAST
BACON
h49c
-47
SUN-UP'S
' flW ^
[QUEEN FREEZE
HQ
ICE CREAM
'h Gal. Cl
CUTrRITE
% WAX PAPER
125 FT. ROLL
N»WKMt
:li* ’ Air
Show. Starts
ADUJLTS . . .
chilpreN
15?’ . . . ;'1;! . ' . ■
CUTSUP
.........r 17c ■
■ 'AN CAMP'S
IlNA HS7.
,,..x .CAN 2lc ;
)WD"
'BELLS ON H«;
■>;
OPEN DAILY 7 A.M. — 8 P.M.
0PEN SUNDAYS 9 A.M. -1 P.M. and 4-7 P.M.
* .
During the flight, MacDuff asked
Hilt to hold the controls steady
while the pilot worked out a navi-
gation problem. At the time they
were flying 500 miles an hour at
37,500 feet.
“I knew that if you pushed for-
ward on the controls you went
down and if you pulled you went
up." Hilt said.
Hilt was seated behind. Now and
hen he would see MacDuff’s head
tod forward as if hi
if he were checking
instruments. Actually MacDuff
was undergoing convulsions from
lack of oxygen.
Off toe east coast of Japan, Hilt
wiggled the stick to attract Mac
Duff’s attention. There was no re-
sponse from toe pilot. Suddenly,
Hilt realized he alone was in con-
trol of the plane.
A few moments later, the jet
“flamed out.”
Hilt, piloting with difficulty from
the rear seat, skirted the coast in
the hope of finding an airfield.
“The flame-out scared me,” he
said.
Hilt let the plane down to 13,000
feet as slowly as he could. Mac
Duff regained consciousness, al-
though he could , not read toe in-
stenments. The pilot got the enginfe
started at 6,000 feet.
"I was worried about the landing
because MacDuff still couldn’t see
clearly,” Hilt said. "I had to read
the air spend to, him all the way
opwn, but he made one. of the
slickest landings I ever saw. We
had only a tow minutes’ fuel left
when; we landed."'
Highlands School
Hires 2 Teachers
Two., pew teachers will appear
r the H1 g h lands elementary
school staff this year, according to |
School Principal B. P. Hopper.
Hopper said that a third’ grade |
would be replaced by -Miss Jane
Bailey, a recent graduate of North
Texas State, Denton.
The only Increase In the staff
will be Mrs, Elaine G. Fields, also |
a third grade'teacher.
The principal explained that an
increase in the number of students
had made It necessary to add an-
teacber to the third grade
toe addition will give the
grade segment four divi-
.....V
—
THE BAYTOWN SUN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1952 •
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY!
• SELECTIONS ARE BIGGER!
• PRICES ARE EXTRA LOW!,
• 21 SHOPPING DAYS TIL SCHOOL STARTS!
Convicts Give Blood
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UR)—In-
mates of-the state reformatory got
a chance to help those "outside,
and did. Out of a possible 435 >lig-
ible blood donors, 425 volunteered.
Delighted Red Cross personnel
could handle only 200 men with the
equipment on hand but promised
be back again. '
■ v.
u s
. RAYON SHARKSKIN!
New belriess type that really fit. Sizes
10-18.
,
-1
I
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 53, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 6, 1952, newspaper, August 6, 1952; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042362/m1/3/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.