The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 176, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 26, 1951 Page: 1 of 8
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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SecHonJf—Christmas
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TODAY'S NEWS TODAY
Wednesday, December 24, 1951
me Disaster
\trike Se en
[ffiANKFORT, 111. —(UP)— An aide to John L.
aid today the “United Mine Workera Union presi-
>ht call a 10-day nationwide coal mine work stop-
, memorial to the 119 .victims of the New Orient
^l°y mad about this disaster,” the aide saidJ
• stoppage would be called tomorrow, the aide
, would run for five days into the new year.
Ure called, the time off would coincide with a
1 gtrjke by the nation’s steel workers,
fwould catch the country at a time when coal con-
1 i, extremely high due to a prolonged siege of
Mther. ■ , , , , i
Isource, who refused the use of his name, said the
Sty that the mine union boss would order the stop-
r* period of mourning for the dead was '‘good.’’
UM contract, five days a year are permitted
animate the deaths of mine disaster victims......-
ent4ia. Illinois, mine explosion in 1947 prompted
Hiy work stoppage. • »
fe tlrheim, executive-secretary of the American Re.
(1 Association, said that coal stockpiles across the
,-w«re "binful."-He said a 10-day stoppage would
u hardship so long as the layoff did not continue
(that time.
* spent Chr istmas at the home of his brother, How-
fsearby Benton, where several of the miners killed
j^'a blast lived. ■
fELEPHONE: 8302. Five Cent* Per Copy
WAR MAY FLARE
*-*,**« I
'International BlackmailDa#!* fla(m
U.S. DEMANDS INFORMATION pSl“
ON RELEASE OF FOUR FLIERS Killed By UN
WASHINGTON -0>~ The Uni-
ted Statea has demanded specific
information from Communist
.Hungary on when, where and how
four American fliers will be re-
Iaaba/I ti suaI■' ei<wi firtff h.
leased if their $120,00<r "ransom”
is paid, it was disclosed today.
A high diplomatic official said
the State Department is expecting
a reply from Budapest “at any
time" and may irsuc a public
statement on jtHe tense situation ~t_
later.
“We are still short a few details
on how an exchange of men for
money would work" he said.
The airmen hay§ bfefi held in
Hungary since November 19, when
their unarmed C-47 transport
strayed off course on a flight from
government’s strategy for obtain- partment to go ahead and “ran-
sr*. «***»“ •» i?Mu,i7o_r ,N::
paid, the government itself will put dlplomttic rel*tlow flth Hun*“y War f [ » *
up the money. In this connection Officials declined to comment on *;ar are expected to shatter
it was pointed but that the, tm- his proposal, but their guarded re- . ^Onth-long lull on the
prisoned men were all uniformed marks indicated strong sympathy fighting fltint with the ex*
members of the US Air Force, for Steed’s view that the time to piration of the 30-dav tTUC«
on an official mission.: "get-tough” with Hungary is after j fv,
Representative Tom Steed D., the “personal safety* of the four
Oklahoma, urged the State Oei -Americans is a-suretf.
Hungary Prime Aims
Were For Propaganda
By HARRY FERGUSON
UP Foreign Analyst
BEAUTIFUL SCENE—St Peter’s in Rome Is beautifully lighted,
for the Christmas and New Year holidays. The ancient edifice
stands out majestically against the Italian night
MO
Steel Union Parley Holiday Accidents
Raises Hope Strike Strike In Baytown
May Be Called Off 7
today to halt
against King Fa-
intment of a royal
Jiffinai- considered to be
Police fired over’ PITTSBURGH A meeting
of rioting crowds in of steel utfion leaders, here tomor-
a row broyight hopes today that a
scheduled New Year's Day strike
of WpOOO steel workers may be
called off.
(flip Murray, president of the
C/O United Steel Worker?, refused
u say whether the union's execu-
’'Uve: hoard and wage policy-com-
mittee would discuss the strike at
two meetings here tomorrow.
But observers believed he would
recommend that the union’s policy
maker* reconsider the strike ord-
Holiday accidents
caused the death of
today had
Baytown
his car skidded and rolled oyer
in the 700 block of East James:
I. reports said five po-
st ie&st 20 demon-
Ktt hurt.
i declared a state
i a Alexandria and
i tkmonstration* aiso
t targe forces of police
( to key points iiy both
atsia order.
tions were' against
rent oi Hafez Afifi
Ittef-ef the royal cabin -
i office separate from
- ministers. Some of
illlled .Afifi a ‘British
i followed by the
/of Abdel el Fatteh
(recently recalled am-
> Britain, a* adviser on
i to the king,
i returned from Lon-
illlt week : •
Spots
Industry sources pointed out
that there, had been’ no wage offer
from producers and the only logi-
cal reason for the meetings was to
reconsider the scheduled walkout.
President Truman followed up
his appeal for continued steel pro-
duction with a promise be would
use whatever the law allowed to
avert a strike.
If the union struck by its strike
plan, Mr. TruiHan ‘ was believed
intent on invoking the Taft-Hart-
ley Law and seeking sn go-day
court injunction sgsinst
stoppage.
Alton Kaderil, 33, died in a Bay
City Ijospital early today as result
of an accident near there late
Christmas Eve. Details were not
known here. His body will be re-
turned to Baytown for burial
under direction of Earthman
Funeral Home.
Mrs. J. H. Enor. 63, of Hemp*
hill, mother of Mrs. Dixie Hargis
who is emploed ft Iliad, Felton’s,
was fatally injured yesterday
when two cars collided on a Beau-
mont Street. H-r husband was
critically injured.
Mr, and Mrs. Andy Bargainer
-of Wooster are in San Jacinto
Memorial Hospital for treatment
of injuries received yesterday
when their cad waa in collision
with one driven by R W. Webb
of 316 Stimpson on Decker Drive.
Webb wds unhurt, but J. E.
Ruby, 75. of Wells, a paasenger In
the car. had a shoulder dis-
located. a
. George Wayne Chapman of
work Wooster suffered minor chest and
shoulder injuries yesterday when
when
control and' skidded into a park-
ed cair on South MMn in High-
lands,
Christmas Laundry
Becomes Expensive
Christmas laundry became an expensive item for the
Louis Godwins today. /
Mrs. Godwin lost her husband's new bill fold contain-
ing $400 cash, a
between a MlHYwasir
trial period at midnight (I
a.m. tomorrow, B a y.f o w n ~~
time).
Under the agfeement the
opposing armies would have had
•to abondon any newly-captured
terrain and return to their No* i
vember 27 positions if the truce
terms were settled before tha
deadline. ..... — - — _ - ,
■m pp ^ But now they may retain, dur-
hkm-iar worklni:'fM''.iii«cii.iu|id..that *?! eventual truce parley, any
wo. the Western world, especially Iresh territory they capture.
S /«»! TCLTnil ta What, beside* \120,000 American America, is plotting World War Negotiators say there is not the
forc^ down on Hunganan eoil by dollars, did Hungary hope to gain III. slightest possible chance of agree-
Soviet flshter Dianes. A Commun- by it| trlt] an(j conviction of four 2. New* for !n:emal consump- ment by then. But there mutt be
American fliers? v - * ’ tion. The Hungarian people must an agreement to extend the tem-
Two things: " be led to believe that they are in porary truce line or another line
l A propaganda victory. The a constant state of danger from must be set later,
idea is to try to convince the na- the capitalist world. That makes In an explanation demanded by
tions still sitting on the fence in them more willing to put up with the UN, the Communists claimed
the Cold War that the Communist the sacrifices that oommunism de- that 871 missing American' war
mands of the civilian population, prisoners have been killed by Al-
It is a trick invented in Moscow, lied planes and guns or have died ’ ‘ ‘
apd it has been used so many of disease,
times now that th^ pattern no Another 152 American prisoners
longer varies much. Back in the have ' "escaped" and three have
1930s the economic situation in been “released,” the Red truce 1
Russia was bad. There had been negotiators informed the United
a famine in the Ukraine in which Nations command. -
some ,3 million persons starved to Names-of another 332 Americans 3
death. The supply of consumer missing from a Communist list of
goods was short. The best plans of prisoners are being Investigated, /
.... t the Soviet economic-planners hatL-the Reds said. - a
aeronautical engineer asserts that gone aground on the rocks of the 'Thus the Reds claimed toac-
Russia has broken the habit of fundamental law of supply-and de- count for 1058 missing GIs.
” ’ “ man. It is a fundamental policy In addition, it was disclosed, the 'j
of any Communist government UN command has asked the Com- |
that it is infallible. It has never munists to account for 25 more
made a mistake and never will. So Americans and 20 Britons listed
the decision was made by the rul- as prisoner*,
ers of Russia to' prove to the peo- Un -spokesman Brigadier Gen*
pie that, while the planning-had <*«**^“' *■- ***j**z**m**&
been sound and workable, it had
been sabotaged from within.
-That wgs the genesis of the Stal-
in: ipurje trials in which almost
all the old' Bolshevik leaders were
tried and convicted. The ones who
confessed under torture simply
1st court convicted them of illegal
border-cro'slhg and sentenced
them to pay fines of $30,000 each
or spend three months in prison.
Anxious to get the airmen re*
leased, but reluctant to have the
United States government submit
to "international blackmail,” pri*
vate citizens in many part* of the
country have started drives to
raise the $120,000 through volun-
tary contributions.
the "spirit” of the donors is “high-
ly commendable,” but the private
campaigns "do not fit in” with the
Aircraft Engineer
-Says Soviet Planes
No Longer^Copies'
WASHINGTON - (IZP) - A top
copying others in the aviation field'
and now boasts first-class develop-
ments of its own. V
$30 check and some change somewhere
HWBk street launderette and the home
The jet engines in some MiG-15
fighters in Korea are exhibit No.
1, according to Leonard S. Hobbs,
vice-president in-charge of engi-
neering at United Aircraft Cor-
poration.' ?
Interviewed recently at his East
Hartford, Connecticut, headquart-
ers, Hobbs said he is reluctantly
convinced that Russia’s aeronau-
tical deaignere are “going in the
right direction.”
I
eral William Ps Nuckois called
the Communist report on the 1059.
missing men “shocking” and full
af finer disnvnnannio* 11 Ua ooi/1
of. ‘‘glaring discrepancies.” He said
none .of those listed as escaped or
released «ver reached the UN
lines.
Nuckois. indicated a strong «is*
never were heard of if sin. litany picidn that the-152 prisoners Mstod
of her brother-in-law, Coleman Godwin, two blocks dway ^e Ruwians played it smart in b“ ^m^untaf^ards %>£
on Illinois.
She had the billfold when she paid for the laundry
and thought she put it in her coat pocket. It was miss-
ing when she got out of her car at the Coleman Godwin
home. There are identification cards and drivers license
for Louis Godwin in the billfold.
The Godwins are offering a liberal reward for return
of the billfold and money. -
(Sea i Airmen—Pave Two)
i Chickens
> E»rt L. Spring-
tnriSfer, whose home
in Baytown, ha*
JIN Run lieutenant
|*t*rdinf to a release
Air Force Base,
. Even Experts
Caught By
Inflation
Christmas Bells Toll Texas Tragedies
State Leads Whole Nation In Holiday Casuality List
*Wn|er, wing execu-
*a veterin of u
*. with 44 Rfontho
I the Uat war.
N «Md live in Bap*;\
By UNITED PRESS
Chriitmas" belis I ^ed^fragedy
for hi
BOSTON —The inflation
the nation’* economist* have
been predicting hit them in the
pocketbook $1 registration fee at
•he annual meeting of the Amer-
' lean Economic Association wa*
hiked to »1 - ‘ .
hundreds of Americans.
From the time the long holiday
weekend began Friday, 764 per-
sons were killed in accidents on
highways or in other Yuletide mls-
haps. / ‘
Of this number, 500 died In auto
craahea, 87 lost their lives in firea
two were killed in plane craihes
and 175 others died in miscellane-
ous accidents.
Texas was far ahead in the na-
tion’s, holiday casualty list with
at least 93 violent deaths over the
long Christmas weekend.
United Pres* report* and a tabu-
lation by the Department of Pub-
lic Safety showed 59 persons died
1947 when they bought numbers
Of the. Rolls Royce Nene jet en-
gine in Britain, Hobbs said. He
said the None at that time was the
"biggest: heat and simplest” jet
engine in the world.
Later the Pratt and Whitney
aircraft division of United Air-
craft copied, and developed a bet-
ter version of, the Nene for the
US Navy.
The sale to Russia was approved
by the late British Labor govern-
ment which contended there jvas a few hours remaining, in th* 30-
nothlng secret about the N^ne. day truce line agreement —
The new COnsservativc govern- united Nations pianes flevV only
ment, through spokesmen ir\ Com- HVen sorifies in 24 htjurs to match
, mons, has recently charged that
in traffic accidents since the count the jet engine shipment wi
began at 6 p.m. test Friday. "greit benefit to ttt Russian,
Twenty-ilx died ,^£5^
eous causes and eight in fires.
Some of the late deaths reported
because of the widely held belief
that Russia chiefly copies the
them to prison camps.
Snow Stalls Korean Combat
Plane Sorties Match Record Low
EIGHTH ARMY HEARQUART- fantrymen fell back, west of the
ERS, Korea —(U.R>— Up to right Mundung Valley, after beating off
inched of snow stalled combat ope-
rations in Korea today with Only
the record low of i^st February 9,
Almost 33 hours of snow piled up
attack by an estimtaed Com-
munist battalion, the most ambi-
tious Red offensive effort in many'
days.
_____Qri the western front, a UN com-
bat patrol drove of two platoon-
sized Communist attacks within an
hour. An estimated 40 Reds were
Iniuries Prove Fatal To J. F. Lawrence
' Postponed
flON of B. E. Wilson
' * tne Baytown Ki-
«i*inal).v scheduled '
^ wt hu been post* . _ . '$5? a..-« ■
’Police Records Carry"Wysterious Fall As Accidental
P.S!”“•«»« mm
krw Ul> lunch*°n meet-
•^UBunity House will
r®0® tomorrow.
. i Honork
B home far
*•« » couple- ef
r,*»ch Camp
in s Mississippi
™ UBS name
,r*d* and
*U~,roun(l
"wr wy n
* * *on • t Mr*.
•* Ot. Ben
Lawrence.
died yesterday of injuriea he
reived in a fail at a hotel here la«t
Wednesday.
Funeral services were to be held
at 4 p.m. today at a Houston fun-
eral home with Rev. William F.
Burcaw officiating. Burial will be
in Forest Park Cemetery.
Lawrence suffered a skull frac-
ture and other injuries in the fall.
Members of his family, doubtful
48. sheriff's office and the Baytown Mrs. W. S. Busch of Baytown and
police records carry the
accidental.
A native pf Chambers County,
Lawrence lived all his life, in the
vicinity of Cedar Bayou and Bay-
town.
Survivor* are his daughter, Mr*.
David M. Oliver of Baytown; hi*
mother. Mrs. A. B. Lawrence of
Houston; five si ters. Miss Pearl
Mm. V*i Wert* of New Orleans,
Louisiana and a brother, Belmont
Lawrence, of Chambers County.
Pallbearer* were to be Lanls.
Claude and St. Elmo Smith, Shan-
non Wolfe, Theo Wilburn, E.
Drouett Casey.
Honorary Pallbearers were to be
J, R. Barber, Ben Dutton, A. H.
included :
Peggy Adam*, six-week-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
D. Adams of Houston, fatally hurt
in an automobile accident two
miles south of Houston yesterday.
James D. Clark, 26-year-old Port
Arthur refinery worker, died.! to-,
day of injuria* received in a high-
way accident near Kerrville Mon-
day.
Tbee-year-old William Anthony
Kriikiei of Daifa* drowned yester-
day in a small creek near his
Dallas home. The bhild’s body was
found- after he failed to answer a
call to Christmas dinner.
Lynch Rimmer. 43, killed when
the car in which he and another
person were riding crashed into
v*s of_ ,.r ...... j........r _____ __
- eight inches on the eastern front lti!led in the fighting west of Ko»
-5a,u- “■<= now Temperatures^erwriown'to ^0 de^ ThTcommuniaU made six minor
have gone well beyond the Nene. gr^ in ^ eMt “ probing attacks aiongthe 145-mile
Allied troops on. tfte east-central bettlefrent Christmas Day UN un-
______^ _________.fyont counter-attaokedjn an effort its withdrew in .0 of 30 octroi
West in aviation devefopments to regain an advance position they
and therefore must lag behind. lost Christmas night. The UN in-
Florida Negro Leader Killed
10th Race Bombing Leads To Death
MIAMI, Fla. —OI- A Negro of-
ficial of the National Aasoclation
for the'Advancement of Colored The violent death of Moore fol-
"somebody bombed or dynamited"
his home.
People was killed last night when lows 10 dynamiting*.and attempted
a bomb exploded beneath his dynamiting* of Jewish synagogues,
house. * 4 Negro housing project and a
Harry T. Moore, 46, identified as Catholic church in Miami since
a high officer of the NAACP in June. None of tha Miami espto-
actions and the Reds yielded in
the other ten.
Ail Fifth Air Force night bomb-
ing operations were halted by bad •
weather last night. But 15 Okina-
wa-based Superforts guided by ra-
dar dropped bombs through the
Clouds, ' ;
The big bombers bit the rail
bridge over the Chongchon River
‘in northwest Korea, blasted the
Communist airfield at Hwangju
and pelted front-line Communist
troops with air-bursting bombs.
i
Brevard County, Florida, died
the way to the hospital at San-
ford, some 40 mile* away.
His death came soon after ~
sions has resulted AT* death, how-
over.
T. BUSCH
i. CRUMPLER
:n dittman
lD FELTON
BB GKEER
ES HARROI’
W. L. JONES, JR-
JB, R. IOLBI**-
JOHN M. KILOOBE
DR G. A LILLIE
.8. T. WEAVER
A. >L WILBCRX
*■ ^>m ts the Syd
tniirtT’ TJn#- 'who
|£y»$&*£
• ■ Mends report
4r
l:ao4° Swtu CUuV
bringing
into the
Foilhright, o. K and OteU Win- ■■■■■I
the district attorney and the-.her- Weather was not to blame for five mi*e* the eMt C0Mt
««*>veb Mco^s«dSufficiency pQ|»g||f$ Killed Bv* Workci* »®J5Sf‘ k Immedbut*H gub^ Whef S'
ttnSSwy nwnr ^ kin€d
,‘wlc never recovered ouuiueiiuj
to tell .what had happened. The
Well-Known
Double Christmas Slaying Admitted
Christmases
Enjoy Big
Christmas
School Work
Underway
1
LARAMIE. Wyo. -tUD- A 28- he shot both his parents through - m 'rm. mum -'■(
year-old railroad worker was held head a heavy cm,*,. “f ** D<partemnt ot rtltlONi KlfpC
, without bond today after he “ 3Z fuubllc have warned that 111110101 llllCS JCl
- ......^ • ------- -- nne- Burnstad said invest!eator* the carnage on the highways will
continue.
1,0)4 ANGELES -ft Pi- Cbrist-
Dies pleaded guilty to the Christmas
Eve murder of his parents “fee-
HOUSTON —ftLPi— Dr. William cause ray fa’*T had trouble
State Jacobs, widely-known Pres- breathing and r..y mother waa go-
byterian minister who forgave all jng blind."
hia debtor* of the *135,000 in ^ HenderMn tm officers
debta they owed him during, the hfre he ,hot ai)d killed hli
EMPLOYEES
depression, died late yesterday in
Hermann Hospital.
The 80-year-old minister, who
preached the Sermoh on the
Mount in the pulpit and lived it
market place, was also a ^ ^^ be“dr“oom'
Civic icMcr *na
mother, Mrs. Ethel Henderson, 64,
as she sat among gaily wrapped
Christmas gifts on a couch. Then
he shot and killed his 62-yea r-oki
father, John, and dragged hi*
rifle. Butnstad said investigators
found unopened Christmas pack-
oratat/11refT*anT a* Christmas tJ^ The department predicted 223
key in the refrigerator. Young vioIent de4th* in »tate during
Henderson was found asleep in his the Christmas-New Year’s period,
cabin behind the modest Hender- those, 115 were due to be traf-
, son home. He fatalities:
mas comes but once a year,
but Christmas reunion* are-a
let less frequent hi the Christ-
Construction had begun today on c
all but one-of tb* addition* to
Baytown schools uhder the cur- . -J
rent $647,497 emergency building . #
program. ?• _• / * /
Work on the $154,060. Stan Ja-
cinto addition, biggest of the
eight project#, has been held up
ponding allotment of scarce build-
National
For Gentry Baby
mas family. All It members of
JOYCE CAPPS
IRIS WHISHAM
BETTY GOODMAN
BOBBIE FORTINBERRY
BOB JENKINS .
, - ’ -
The double-slaying was dis
* y,,f* h, ■«, Iiwlor Ol * .ft “> ‘XCSLKS
JSt&SS S2SWP TJS
church grew until it became the
™viun* vt. largest congregation of the
very string Southern Presbyterian Assembly.
g He left the pulpit at the church
in 1932, after reaching whst he
Father Builds Atom Armor
AEC Expert Notes 'Possibilities'
D Santa
,T,&S“a"r
»«SUE
termed his peak.Htut he
’ the ministry for 14 more
returned home from a ohurch
service. Officers fixed the time of
the two shootings about 7 or $
p.m.
"Dad was ill and had trouble
told
breathing,” Henderaon
Sheriff Ted Burnstad.
■ I wanted to help out, but I just
* ' . - I
-siiMi-srs
■■Hi
to die
I P‘ Leave It Pauwels designed It is a quilted
to a proud father tb come up with material with a layer of shreded
a suit -of armor-designed to ward lead the only metal the AEC has
off the deadly radiation of An found that will stop the harmful
atomic attack. raya-given off from a nuclear ex-
Leo Pauwels, 50, didn't think plosion. • Tr
civil defense experts were fooling Outside layer of the
when they advised the p<
to be prepared for atomic
so he fashioned a
“lead” suit for his six-
son, Richard. * rev of flanhei for warmth.
Commission S’ suit weighs less than
another point the AEC
Graveside services will be held
at 2 p.m. today at, HH1 of Rest
Cemetery for the infant son of Mr.
and Mr* C, W. Gentry of lW
Hunt Houston. Rev. E. R. Couch,
pastor of the First Baptist Church,
will officiate. Burial will be under
direction of Paul U. Lee Funeral
Home. - ’ '
Survivor* besides the parent*
are Mr. and Mr* C. P. Gentry and
Mr. and Mrs, W. C. O'Sullivan, all
of Baytown, i V
thtfamily gathered here Christ-
mas Day at the home ef Mr.
amd Mr* Chester A. Christman.
The reunion included a fami-
ly member new to moot of the
Christmases, Merry Csrtetmas,
3. daughter of Mr and Mr*
Vernon Christmas of Amarillo.
Texas. ■
Woman, 2 Children
Barely Escape Fire
ing materials by the
Production Authority..
This addition! which carried a
steel framework tb support a pas-
sible secondflory, has more scarce
material* called for than another
of the other* The addition calls
for nine classroom and an enlarg-
ed cafeteri*
However, the government has
notified Superintendent George
Gentry that the school district's
application may be approved if
plans are redesigned to eliminate
some of the steel required.
School trustees have instructed
Architect
whst he can do. School
plosion.
.Outside layer of the “gamma
ray” quiK is khaki. Then there is
r of flannel, the la#Vr of
J lead similar to tiijael
Christmas trees and an-
HI NABOR
By Olin Miller
Athelea Huff barely sav
hopeful the
i the original i
I the determ-
An Atomic Energy Ce
expert, after examining the
raid it is the first* he has
which has “poKibilltie*"
"He. Halloween costume-like ||
A feller the+’i
in the
worl
self and her two
last night when
kerosene stove act
two-room home in M.
The explosion
l*e«im1^d th* uniform
E J
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 176, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 26, 1951, newspaper, December 26, 1951; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042560/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.