The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 185, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 5, 1952 Page: 3 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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Killing Wish Explain Whodunit Popularity
Good Guy' Psychology Provides Steam Valve By Stories
JAY RREEN toyed with identifying u the kill* "The main emphasis will be on
jE\V YORK —fUH1- If you're a er. ilcuthlng, with fight*, gunplay
Lund f<* reading, listening to or Thi, r^pecUbl. f.llpw I. St^klvMm."^;i to
tochlng murder myiterie*. pro* e**ily offended, too," Loveton con* th, |aod ^ uf who wonta to
Loveton icily pointed tinned, and that * why thero'g be -Dick Tracy."
SATURDAY
ucer John Loveton Icily pointed
,t, today khat the reaaon may bd
buried wiih to do In your
randma , or *ome other cIom
ilstlve. ' . , ’
•■Don't worry about It,* though'.'
pwton hattlly added, “because
I per lent of u* have a mental
ptice tore* that awlftly check*
irh Id***, ad. that listening to a
ho-dun-lt I* actually a psycho*,
igleal steaiR valve." * .,
!x)v. ton explained that there* a
iood..guy" apd 4 "bad guy"
»app*#\ I" Mch «of us. In the
, ' majority of persona. It's the
M guy who has the most
uiselea He wanu to* see a
a rfatiwtil'* 4 h pi I Is. i*
Eddie Scktiti
aaJHwN^
RfVELEERS" '
' from
LAKE CHARLES
lay, waa oeiievea to nr in gasoline is • *
Lake City. 'Utah, or Rock freeling temperature of_w»t»^_
THEATRE
SUNDAY and MONDAY
foundrel on a datsetive thriller
ymdlv punlghed. which is why
i piysWry fang evtiHually Identi-
[ themselves with the detective,
Len though they momentary
SPECIAL!
TAILORED
■oreign Youngsters Set World Afire In US
hilippine Newsmans1 Kids Overcome Handicaps
SEAT COVERS
p rana RESOtERS TO SURVIVORS OF AIR CRASH—HA 14'survivor* of this craah of a Pitts-
burgh-to-Buffalo airliner owe much to George Albert. SO. (upper sight), one of the 49 aboard, wha
heat hit way through snow-ehoked road* to a fannhooae to phone for help. The plane craahed near
in MNithweate'rn Vm York. Albert led reacuera to the eroah aoene where-IS other* were
found to have survived. (International Soundphotoal
J&KUisi
★ Choicer of Color*, Re
“ MOST $ 95
CARS db# *
i, HARMAN W. NICHOI.S • -Hr didn't tell hit father, bat Al get ahead of him In, the free bike
, \SHIMOTON —CE>— American come, home one night to aee a business. ' ' *
could* g*k some tips from ahiny bike in the front yard. Ra- He taved money from hla paper
group of youngsters who came mon had won the contest against rtfute to buy hlmaelf a yo-yo and
( h strange land and overcame competition from children who entered tne district competition,
li sorts It handicaps used nothing but English. ' • '* He won snd used the pels* money
ihev sre children of Al Voien* Three of the boy* Ramon, Ed- to buy a S75 bike,
j* former preaa attache at the* die.* and Henry-joined the dis- *No'v Edd'e 'f* ‘ on
L;,ppme Embtaay and now a trict police boya clubs and went h,*J' school baskeSbau team,
f .nmgion correspondent for a to the gymnasium regularly to Thr olhfr n)Iht he outdid hla
Lii ppm* new* service * leariy, boxing. ,, • • ln K0£!nf ,£}* IS* hl* ‘“f
tw** w- ;n m »M:.....Sir »5R S? ?T*XJ “S
[--m^-Thpy thAir nttn* "Come to the arena tonight And point*. t
| .!rrt TagalOg They were alel«l>' uatcH us." * Around the supper table, the
M skinny from a sk mp Al law his th^e bqyj_m lh.e.ii*- Valeneia* -itttt use • their native
!l dodging the encmy_lje tpr..T|>r... Kf... IT<|, Golden Gloves, tqngue ln conversation.
"IM ,n tn* llisnos Hinton weighed In at 100 pounds "I give it to the l(jda ln Tag*-
(A,! listen to what they have ac* weighed 90. and Henry, 75 log,1’ Al lays, “but they .give it
K c.pUahed: . The Valencia boy*, led by the back to me in English, which they
t^y. Ramon, picked up the proud father marched home that* now understand better.!.
L, language quickly in Washing- night with three titles. Al has a daughter, Marta aged
i «iho6!s For iong he had Eddie has kept up his athletiu tlx She is in the second grade at
t ed and dreamed about k nr. career Last fall'he wai co-captain school She la a master of her
Hc sawdn the papers where" of his high achool football team adopted language. She corrects her
k'l'ibady was sponsoring an e.s- at Sacred Heart School. A few daddy's grammar — a man who
[ ontest, with a new bicycle sis months before that he decided he makes a living putting one little
| rnIr ' , would dot let hia brother Ramon English word after another.
I Filin 6RJWGER |
I SHELLEY MNTERS |f
Sehave yoursof/
# a **» «*»•<*■•* if
Experts Forecast
New British Crisis
During CominglTear
..... , -r..*->4
KIRKINDALL UPHOLSTERY
Highway 146 at Cadar Bayou Road Phon*
A Central Pre»* Featurt
SS:
hie with a minimum ault bid, **" Vw .Ilk tb.^Je1
he doesn't know whether you have ,Jn„ P*Jp A *
any reil strength dr not. He can thM1 dnv*n out-
be sure only of a "roof over your Better bidding, however, would
bid,'' since .lt shows a hand not have put North and South into
stronr enourh to force the side an unbeatable 4*Hearts, which
LONDON — Oi— Britain face* a
bigger crista in 1952 than the one
lend-leese averted in World. War
II., economic expert* said today. •
According to their diagnosis, the
new'year begin* with a concentra-
tlon of troubles already visible—
monetary, industrial, and political.
This situation was foreseen by
the stock market as far back as
June when "insiders"-men of
substance heavily invested In lend-
ing industrial concerns — began
quietly selling.
Industrial shares had risen some
20 per cent during the first^half of
the year and. with ipfla^ion gain-
ing ground, they seemed predes-
tined to rise much further since
profita taken on capital apprecia-
tion are free from income tax.
But "insiders” sold. They had
learned that every industry in
which they were interested was
facing difficulties—chronic short-
ages of fuel and power, recurring
shortages in raw material, rising
costs, fresh German and Japanese
competition, and the question of
whether Britain's economy could
stand the burden of rearmament.
Leading industrial issues list-
exactly half of their inflated June^
market values with the Financial'
Times index falling from HQ to
125. '
Even the Churchill victory failed
to check the decline In fact, mar-
kets slumped for a full month
after Churchill took over. British
government stocks fell sharply
with the 3'x pcf cent War Loan
reaching a record low .
The situation abroad added to
the market's wocs^-Thcrc were
new difficulties in Malaya: Iran
threw out the Anglo-Iranian. Oil
Company;'* n<&s war developed in-
Egypt.
ILD HUE YONDER
strong enough to force the side »n unbeatable 4-Hearts,
Into a game contract if your part- would produce an extra trick. One
ner held a minimum doubling kibitzer pointed out that South
hand. After the doubler’s next might have tried 3-Hearts after
call, it is up to you to find some North's 2-Spades, to sho\y three-
way, if you can. to show any card support, but that risked be-
- - ■ -- — ing left below game since it
would show no club stopper..
Perhaps the fault was North's
who after the 1-Spade from South
might have bid 3-Hearts to show
that, with South holding spades,-
it looked gamey. That would have
advertised his own five-card
length in hearts; if South couldn't
fit such a suit, there vvould hayc
been room for South to try 3-
Sptdes in case he held five of
them, which North' could then
raise to game, or for South to try
3-No Trumps if he stepped the
minors. As it was, South would
have raised the 3-Hearts to 4-
East South West NorSh Hearts, and there would have
1 4 Dbl Pass 1 V been no need for bad defense then
Pass I A Pass 2 A to give the pair its game.
Pass 3 NT > • •, .
There was South in a contract Vour Weekend Question
which could have been beaten if ,f lftpr % c)&im or tonces!rton
West reckoning that the of trickBi your jide lias required
showed clubs bMUed Up d thf declarer to play out the hand,
upened the unbid suit of - wh<t gp(,ciaj rfason have you for
monds. Three tricks in that suit ^ ^suaU)r car(.flj to think
F1'** tw” bltcj! w°* * clearly before playing a card on
staled five. But an ummagrna- n.rlie..iar trick?
SUNDAY THRU
TUESDAY
nnSw
A A2
« H83
A K 7 4 2
*A JT
V Racket Getting Mighty Rough On Stars
0 Stunt Men Can Be Used On Live Video Programs
he swung out like a sailor, But Allan Young's really the
fell six feet and bruised his hip q,ard-Iuck kid of TV, He threw
t0 UPe him UP himself into a hot love scene with
°On 'another program the Doris*Singleton during a rehear-
Sihnojr” went long-hair on his sai and sprained hi* neck,
fans with a parr of crashing cym- My own wife," Isaacs grinned,
ha is Only his aim wasn't very "But Allan managed to make
good He crashed himself instead the show that night. And halfway
Time out while they stitched his through the script he fell through
thumb * "all and sprained his ankle!"
Ed Wynn tried to play Sam- Martha Raye was doing prat
son' to Dorothy Lamour’a "De- fall* one ntght when her shoulder
Utah" in a TV skit a while back, strap broke, she did the rest of
Stumbled o\er some scenery and her act clutching her necklin*
broke two bones in hi* foot And last week Berle got squirt-
Bob Hope took on J*«ck Damp- ed with whipped cream and a
sev for one round of prize-fight- sack of flour, a gag that turned
mg and wound up so winded he mighty unfunny when the flour
rouldn t crack a joke for almost got in his eye and closed It up
s full minute. tight.
A SENSE OF'FAIR PLAY is
deeply rooted in Americans. In
baseball, football or any sport,
the slightest tinge of unfair-
ness can ruin a tram or a
player, This sense of fairness
also extends into business and
politics.
However, sometimes when
our emotions overcome our
reason, we forget to be fair.
For instance, if “Freedom
means government by consent
of the governed”-any far-
reaching changes, such as sug-
gested in Compulsory Health
' Tax Mis, these facts should be
^considered: ,
Surveys show that the vast
majority.of our people do not
want Federal control 6f medi-
cal service, schools or church-
es; the vast majority of our
Doctors want no Federaliz*4
controls, to hamper them >a
service to their patients; great
numbers of our people cloeely
ally their religious beliefs with
the handling of their own per-
sonal health, and should cer-
tainly not be compelled to
“buy” a service they would
not use.
American aense of fair play
says: -Allow no minority pres-
sure groups to force through
legislation that IGNORES
these fact*.
VIRGINIA MarPMERSON
LLYWOOD <t P' Ask any
lomedian this television
,is getting downright dan-
-<■ customers a rent throwing
,:oe* y*t buMn'the past few
(* Ed Wynn Allan Young
Hope, Jimmy Durante.
• •ha Raye and Milton - Berle
a.) suffered "hat turned out
in painful Injur.'« . or some
■ were so embarrassing it was
as bad
-1 the sponsors are getting
• ed In the movies they hire
men to do the rough stuff
■ne 15000 a-week stars But in
ne celebrities have to do It
DEN WIST; — D O A.
THR4
ti r.\
•vat's why everybody's holler-
W a^chance to put their gags
i m
“aries'Isaacs’ and Jack Elm-
two boys who deeam up
n\ thing* for Jimmy Durante
do nn TV. think it's the only
a to keep shve what good
dian* there are left
Lmmy used one gag In a show
- scared u* stiff," Isaacs said
i , climbed on a fence tied a
ot in some long underwear and
it down. •
Now, Jimmy * no Boy Seout.
i can't even tie a very good
n V\> begged him to drop the
iole thlhg . . . but hot him Soon
Rat Board Bill Runs $6 Each Per Year
Farmer Urged To Save Money By Killing Off Rodents
out h ay stem for estimating the night, there are probably hetween gt Augustine, Florida, is the
number of rets on a firm. 1 V^heyTre sqpn every night and city m the_U3.-----^
If rats are never seen but occasionally in the daytime, there ■
signs of thhir presence »re visible, may be between 500 and 100Q, r—— --- 1 '■
there should be between one nnd It many are seen at ni^ht and | TVwwm ym t ;V>
100. several daily, there may oe be- j L V ^
If rets are seen occasionally at tween al000 and 5000.
Child Bride On Honeymoon ■ ■■
Florida Charges Will Be Filed .
RISING FAWN, G*. — two-room hut on Walden’s ridge ^
Eleven-year-old Eva Dean Bag-. near Signal Mountain, Tennessee.
gett and Arvil Ott, 23, honeymoon- he was going to
November Tax
Collections Soar
BIG DAYS 3 •
So. J—lid N. Main Phone.49«5
So. 2—126 TV. Texas Phone 2939
No. S—8419 Market. Phone 4034
S BIG STORES TO SERVE YOL'
By UNITED PRESS »
If you're trying- to cut corners
on farm expenses, get rid of your
rats. ^
That's the advice of Oklahoma
AAM College extension workers
who are enlisting the aid of state
14-H clubljers'in an all-out war on
the rodent*. They'd like to see
some farm parents take up the
campaign, too.
If you tend to underrate the
damage of the rodents, here sre
some eye-opening figures.
The room and boartR bill of one
rat Is about $6 to 18 a year, some-
times 120, sometimes hundreds of
dollars where, it passes a fatal
disease to a fine steer, hog, or
milk cow.
A medium-sized rat will eat as
much as several growing chick-
ens, or worse, gobble up the chlck'-
ens. to boot.
One rat can put away 50 pounds
of groin in a'year arid can cause
wastage of hundreds of pounds
through contamination.
WASHINGTON - Tax -col-
lections soared more than usual
in. November because of new and
higher taxes, the Internal Revenue
Bureau reports ^
Insignificant when compared to
the $4.600,000,000 total collection
figure, but of prime concern to
the underworld and most law-abid-.
ing. citizens'was the $26,000 col-
lected on wagering. <
Gamblers had to buy tax stamps
iq, November for the first time.
The collection-figure represented
about 800 stamps, but officials ex-
plained that most tax collectors'
bookr were closed for the month
•before the iast-minute atamp rush.
MONDAY MORNING
nOIOUS-IOMANTIC
UU IN TEAKS!
rou can't, find it anywhere else
if it isn't as good as you want
YOU CAN GET- IT AT
her Tennessee home to be mar-
ried by a'country squire.
The pair slipped across the
Georgia lute the . night after
Christmas, obtained n "quickie"
blood test at nearby Rossville, then
came her* jo h>__ by .W—
exas Hardware
■v Main Phone 8246
They Really
Celebrated
New Year's
TIME POfWl M-
iVIETOVE NEWS"
WOVEN
PLAIDS
g, came nfcrg.mjtejoamea
dlsraSbs tied of the Peace Charles Whited,
to livestock Including mastitis. Eva Dean* mother, Mrs. Wil-
ringworm, bangs, coccidiosls, tri- i;am Baggett, a child bride at 14
chinotis of swine, white scours of herself, said she was busy trying
calves and bronchitis of chickens, to find authorities to Intercept
Rats make rabbit* look Tike the couple arid “bring my baby
pikera when it cornea to reproduc- back”' on the .night they were
tlon. ' ■ ■" . married. ,, . .
If all the young of one rat Dade County authorities decltr-
couple survived, tt would be pos- the marriage void and said
sible for the parent* to produce they would, press charges against
3 million offspring In three years. the husband and an unidentified
They can breed at the age of woman who signed the girl’s
•hitli a OS' due MMIBWntl
YOU CAN
KNWVOWAY
;ret of'convict
-^gr«lggiJ«nna@r
Last out po‘st
SAVINGS
TOO!
'SHK^a
IF YOU DON'T LIKE
f 1
, \vOOL»
WestPointSad ^
TH'COOK FOR.
, a Httle bit of attention to
Sanforized' Msin ciircd*
' ' ' . * - ~ ‘ ' ... ' '■
All fall boll, . . . R« u«b count yorn. or. u,»d to*.,
new and exciting plaid*. Oli the wonderful skirti an;
clever sewers will glitch up! These ere mercerixed, %o, 1
just'eif Come see the bright colorfui nw spring color coml
»S TONIGHT •
^SeiiiDre#
iWjnmi*
i^oth^jeiM
Saddened ecade
ahead, however,
fur tho formal oj
•ST PAID ON
County
The glee club will dedicate a
; number 1" the dead . adds
Including three who were members
of the choral'group.
BV COSyfM Of T.HEoOURM:
decker
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 185, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 5, 1952, newspaper, January 5, 1952; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042718/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.