The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 185, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 5, 1952 Page: 6 of 10
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THAT AT th* nam# of Jmu« gvgry knot
should bow, of things in hssvsn, and
things irv easth, and things undsK ths
'sarth. Philippians\2:10.
New Marine Chief
NEW FIRECRACKER LAWS? ‘ 1
WE THOUGHT MAYBE Baytown was the only
community which suffered from "fire crackerM*”
during the Christmas holidays, but apparently wa
were wrong.
Houston leaders are really up In arms. They are
going to the legislature with a proposal that state
law make the sale and flripg of fireworks illegal,
BALER CONTROL BEST WEAPON
m
IT SEEMED TO be worse than usual in Baytown
tltfp past OirlJtmaa. We thought maybe The Bay-
The new commandant of the Marine
Corps may become the moat powerful Mar*
ine chief in the hiatory of the corps.
’’ ViTfinia-hom ■ Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr.,
55, graduate of Virginia Military Institute
• and the battle-scarred veteran of both
World Wara, is the new- commandant He
Sun had missed the boat because tt did not
carry s waralnt etory and point out that fireworks
taslde the city was illegal. You can't blame the cope
wh*n seemingly half the felSe In town (Including
mei engaged |n eons pyrotechnic# purchasing from
stands set up very convenient for buyer* Just out-
side the city limits. It would take a pofice force
almost «s big a* the population to inforce the
ordinance If the'aal* can not bo eon trolled.
■But Houston was a battle field too, ao the Houe-
....... . . , „ ton papers report. Up there too the stands were
automatically gets the rank of a full gen- located outside tit* city limits. There was nothing.
I,
• 11
Under a bill passed by the Senate unani-
mously on May 4, the authorized strength
of the Marines would be greatly expanded,
to 400,000 officers, and men. Arid the com-
mandant'would have to be consulted by the
joint chiefs of staff on-all decisions affect*
tng the corps. The bill*<was sponsored by
Senator Douglas (D, Illinois), a former
Marine, who estimates that a strength of
Illegal about the stir*. The outltwyry started when
they were brought inside the city and set off.
It may be that if th* state passes additional
regulations, the stands'will then be set up Just
•cross , th# state lines and In Mexico. Thers will
be many parents’forced to take that'long junket
t for the ■ entertainers. I'm making that statement,
on the besls of the lO'u-year-old heat that wae
put on Tne. to jar loose here a couple of Weeks ago.
SOME MORE ILLEGALITY / ’
INCIDENTALLY, the leng arm of the law reach-
ed.out and grabbed me the other day. My car wee
400,000 would provide the Marme. with •£?£ J- f
four divisions, four full-strength air wings,
the necessary auxiliary services, and pos-
sibly a fifth division.
Douglas believes that the present defense
set-up tends to suppress the Marines, inas-
much as the armed forces decision-makers
are all regular Army or Navy men. He ar-
gues also that the Marines use personnel
the ointment was that the driveway happened
to be mine. /
I though I could appeal the caee to the U .S. Su-
preme .Court and maybe savj the two buck*, but
just a* I was preparing my case, up walked my old
friend and longtime neighbor, Walter Harvey.
He saw I up* In trouble and wheedled thd in-
formation from me. •
He said I didn't, have a chance. It's even against
the'law to park in-front of your own drive, he
ft
Army does. ~
As soon as the House convenes in 4952,
an attempt will be made to bring the Doug
las bill to a vote. However, many members
of the House are will the Arr^y in its tra-
ditional opposition to a big Marine Corps,
as giving the nation in effect "two land
armies.” President Truman himself is an
old Army man who wants the Marines to
remain the “Navy’s police force," and he
had to apologize to them in 1950 for ascrib-
ing to them "a propaganda machine that is
almost equal to Stalin's,"
I guess I'm lucky to get out for two bucks. Closer
inspection of the ticket shows the oar was parked
on the wrong side of the street and in a driveway.
I'm sending in m£ two bucks arid hoping that
will be enough. It says so on the back of ahe
ticket It yftu miss ntc one of these days. I'd ap-
preciate it If you would drop by the jail. I may be
needing bail. >
I've learned my lesson. From here on out I'm
Hitching my horse just outside the city limits,
the fire cracker people do. Or better. I'm leaving
my horse at home and walking to town
My Now Yorfc—
Men Better Card Players -
At Least In Tournaments
By MEL HEIMER samba—or three-deck
Central Freda Staff Writer •—> America Leventritt
NEW TORK Unless this coun- ford th* natlon'e "dbcathil C
try begin* producing e new breed champion, and says th«"„'
Of A mason*. It'll bo • long tipi* were to pick out 10 oua f I
beforg American women gain and have She contestant.®.,N
equal rank with men a* card play- 10, Crawford would bdu
•rs... In oplte of the fact that in tho world' ■
more women then men piny cards Although canasta h*.
Thie considered opinion i| that great Inroad* on Am*jw.'
Russl
Pac<
•ntrltt I* perfectly willing-*] most play canasta,'' h# decltr«l
anxious, matter of fact—to con* Leventritt has only <>i»^
cod* that women play as well as plaint about being Involved h
men. However, they never win operation of a card school -m
the big national and international
Hebeeause, he says, they don’t
titles
have .the stamina
When
■■■■Leventritt talks of stam-
ina In relatioit.to playing bridge,
he’t not being precocious. He
knows wkat he's talking about.
The Mg, good-looking 36-year-old
“eard ahark," a dlrector'and teach-
er of the new Card School in mid-
Mp3 Tort. la a former
Maeotaa kilter etar and laterl
get Uhte enough to pity
he complains. Tra lucky Lx
I get to play twice e week* 3
Looking Backwar
The Rot
final round
by virtue of I
lewbye. 1
Coacjt T
3:40 p.m.
Froeport gar
In the ott
semi-finals bj
and drawing ]
mount met
today, and tli
slated to playJ
J:.t0 p.m. todaj^l
The coheolsmoil
6 so p.m. end
FIVE YEARS AGO-
—„ — — TODAY’S HEADLINES: a
Ployed that roughest, toughest of Turn* All 'Guns On Bilbo- %
•ports professionally. Outline* Program of GOP.' ®
The Tri-Citiea, qratn't the
“DO TOO know whet a- grind ** V-TmL ’£7 u '* *
taurn^ent brtag. plw le?J Le^ jjg* Tri-du.n, Tbl*.
entritt d^mindi. Tftk# tht m* rilPv dronned tA m
FromThTi^f. 'KTSS.if
day by car to ><l
FYeeport cloah. Tl
left'Baytiwn by bl
Lee. paced by I
Russell .who hit tl
points, led WharJ
demands,
tlono)*—you play
from Monday
WE NEED A VAtT I M CLEANER. TOO:
cury dropped to 23 degrees.’
noon and three hour* at night. r Bt
Th# teams that stick it out to th# M w i &
well ITum on^of^he'wee* as d,y wlnouncwl **>• birth }
tae ^tanlnj 2? ta^ney- V>k'*
toughened teams, Just like tour- i* YEARS AGO- -
lajMoaghoned athletes .... Pf»idc»t_ Roosevelt
Tdu cell esoapeTC-most worn- ruary 16 as th* date for the -«
en Just,don't have enough sum- tration of all men bet»e*s i
ms. Look, for one round or even ages of 20 and 4t, in. iunvt
s little more, a good woman bridge Mrs. Harry Cier'attended g
player can give a man a real bat- -funeral services for her i*
tie, but over a long'period of play, Mrs J W Kelly who died
they tire too easily." New Orleans, and her m«|
Leventritt believes that's the big Mrs. L Bookter. who d.ed th
reason why. out of, say. the 100 hours later at McComo. .Vjg
best bridge players ip. America, sipppl '
only five or ao are women -He's
a good example of his theory, in-
(The Wharton
• game of it in thl
the King shot* of I
a* th* f?*t breaksl
. buried the South J
the last half
British Pay Debt
Prime Minister Churchill's bargair c,g
pewer in Wa.h.ngton has been made a lit-
tle stronger because tire British paid in full
the installment due DecembeY 31 on the
I S loan extended them in 194H.
The loan was for $2,750,000,1X10 and in
addition the United States refunded at
$650,000,000 the British lend-lease account
with this country,
Under the loan agreement signed on De-
remmber 6. 1945. both amounts were to be .
repaid within 55 years, at an average inter-
est rate of 3.18 per cent, but no payments
were to be made for five years. The first
.installment, a little more than $138,000,000
was due on December 31, 1951.
Of this‘total, $51 million represented
payments on principal—$44 million for the
loan, $7 million for the lend-lease. Repre-
senting payments on interest was $87 mil-
lion—$75 million for the loan. $12 million
for the lend-lease.
Great Britain %as given no option of
postponing the $51 million on principal. If
JUMP MAY NOT SET RECORD
I COULDN'T HELP but notice where some 60
college player* are turning professional today for
their first play for pay game over In Montgomery,
Alabama.
Some New York sports writer is wondering how
the transition from amateur to profeasional will
work and how the lads will make the big leap.
From some of the stories I have heard, the leap
from the college football amateurism to profes-
sional won't be as far as some of us -including the
.sports writers - have been Imagining
By HENRI McLEMORE
By Bennett
my car at only trip my suitcase is nothing but
GOOD ADVICE from th*
Looking At Life
Reviewing Stand:
“ Cutoms Officers Scare McLemore To Death sSSiHsSi Try And Stop Me
he and Kahn came from 'way back
trist about the fright that a uni- th* one who should be quivering, in 2Jnd place to win the worfd’s
n form awakens j — - - - - •— -
scare me to deatlf ’ dh'vinZ along in
Right now, waiting for them to " or 15, m ,M hof' •"d «
go through my bags after a month th" sou,nd • Pollcc *lr*n )
or to in Mexico. I am shakiog y f,ro“ my hand* for
like a pup on ,a vet's table To h" * ** on
Judge by my anxiety, one would 1 Police dog could arrest
tfilnk I had the Mona L»s* In my mf ^thout ev,,n ,ho'‘'ln* hl*
stud box, not only the Hope but
the Faith and Charity diamonds
in the toe* of my bedroom slip-
pers, and the Taxco I'athrrdral
II.L
l'layer
1’lllo.w .........
Grav ..........
■ Schirtldi ......
Russell .........
Orton .........
Law ...........
Carter .........
Jlcnnihgcr * ....
Gentry ........
Visser .......
fluey ..........
Ruxwiek
TOTALS- ....
soiled laundry bag with a handle ACTUALLY, for short haul* worn- 'of t hundred-year
•> _ 4% Malta aamstlma* Kn 11 la n t *n «
• badge.
Tliere Isn't i
that I haven't a perfect right
bring back from Mexico, that Is.
my shaving kft unless the US government, pitying
Experience should have taught my relatives, has recently forbid-
nie that American customs offi- d,n lht' importation of guaranteed
eers do not look
and locks For some reason I don't
trust foreign laundries. I’ll eat a
country’s food, drink Its water,
walk it* darkeat street*, play Its . ... . . . ,.
guitars or beat Us drum*, but I’ll h* ,'*{*• , ,*nd- » 'hough you d
have nothing to do with Its laun- think th»* d *** emotional, they fill
en make sometimes brilliant card
players, Leventritt adds. It's a
game where you have to be as
cool as a cucumber all the time.''
By Erich Brandeis
THIS JUST goes to show you how right T wa*
when I wrote a piece back in November, saying
that those great big appropriation figure* being
thrown at us all the time are meaningless
"One of the culest tricks our government ha*
is to express everything In billions.” I wrote.
Then I went on: "Why don't they tell us how
much it is" for each of us—like 60.billion is 48 dol-
lars for every one-of our ISO million people?"
It is. of’course, nothing of the kind.
My figures were all wrong, although my thoughts
were right:
But. would you believe it? I got Just one post card
calling my attention to my-mistake.
upon me as a
sinister person.
They always look
at my moon face
and pa** me
along almoat as
quickly a* they
would a six-year-
old girl carrying
little red na*-
thing In my bag* dries • ..
I believe this lanudry phobia Is
based on the fact that 1 can't
say "No Starch" in any language,
and people of other .landf are
crary about starch. They’ll starch
your socks, your neckties, your
ruff links, your shorts, your tou-
pee,'.and anything else they can
lay their hands on
If I had anything to sav about
it. I would raise the pay of every
ruatoms man who ha* ever been
so unfortunate a* to draw my
bags for inspection It can't po*
YOU MIGHT say that nobody reads my column, so
how can they tell when I make a mistake?
That is not so. I have recevied hundreds of let-
-ters since I wrote that column, lauding me for
some and criticizing me for others.
, . _ But apparently billion are Just too much for the
J951 proved to be a year of "adverse Condi- average person—and even for the way-above-aver-
tions.” she could request in any one of age person.' •
The one reader who corrected me, was a Miss or
ent leather
purse.
Law and order
and authority McLEMOI
have always aroused a sense of
guilt in me. I've often thought of
getting on a subwqy with my
couch'and going to see a psychia-
fresh antiques, oversized leather
slippers, undersized straw hats,
stolen hotel ashtrays shaped like
sombreros. »nd street sign* read-
ing Go Slow Men at Work" in
Spanish, the last named being for
acquaintance* who have turned
ba*ements into playroom* that
still look like basements.
I know just how Ml act
the custom* officer starts
through my hags. I’ll quiver every
time he pokes an Inquiring hand
into a corner, although\Y know
the bill fine."
I-eventrltt. who might be mis-
taken for one of th* Topping htlrs.
Is. incidentally, a typical bridge
plever in that he's highly super-
stitious
Like baseball players, many of
the good ones; won’t change their
tie* when winning, or do anything
differently One big star wopt
change hi* elothe* at all when he's
winning
"When Kahn and I were going
quips (source of many hr:gh:
Ing* attributed to clients »% pre
ent-day press agents'
"Build for yourself a strong Sox
Fashion each part with
Fit in with hasp and patthw
Put all your troubles ther. J
Hid* there your every f<
A* each bitter cup ><ui c
I<ock all your heartache*
In it
Then eit on the lid -and '•
YOU CAN'T convince 4 ■■ !r|
mer Croy that teles ^
changing the thought p*'te=4
our. younger fry. Hi* o'* n i,
daughter turned off » littlgX I
her about * gang of nvtrdeti|
the aewere of Pans
him, “Grandpa, ,whep Daddy |
t. orc bv Quartcr-
li barton -------
r>
full well that the most damaging
thing he can possibly find is a
to well in the worlds pair tour-
- -------------------- "*y" "7*** * him, Grandpa,,when .
when sibly be any exhilaration in root- ,hi* crowd, of kibrtier* ^ . bumped off, Monytiy a rA I
going Ing through the rat * nest I always *"d J„wo,jMn * 1 * f ,h m coming over,to live with joy*
Quotations
laundry
shirt , that hasn't seen
since I left New York.
Truth is, the officer, not I, is
bring back
I'd hate to hear what custom*
officers say when I have been
stamped and passed on Bet you
that lota of them have wondered
why I don’t quit travelling, eave
my money, and put it toward buy-
ing a washing machine.'
•way.
THE CARD SCHOOL, which of-
fer* instruction! to everyone from
beginners to experts, was opened
last February and already is knee-
deep in customer*. Its faculty in-
cludes three men who, as part of
From Great—Near Sri
Washington Merry-Go-Round:
Man Who Drugged Minszenty Now In U.S.
tions,” she could request, in any
three ways, a waiver of the $87 million.
This $87 million amounts to only about 1-8
of 1 per cent of the US Government’s an-
ticipated expenditures for the current fis-
cal year, but to more than three per cent
of the fast-dwindling dollar and gold re-
serves left in the British Treasury at the
end of 1951.
Japanese use paper umbrellas — Facto-
graphs. For use during showers predicted
by the weatherman but which, never hap-
pen?
Archeologists of the American Founda-
tion for the Study of Man must have their
signals crossed. They’re making plans to
- excavate the tomb-of--guesa*wh©4—the
Queen of Sheba!
Dmitri Shostakovich, Russian composer,
is criticized by Izvestia, Moscow sheet, for
Mrs. Salome Ann Mardos, of GirardsvIUe, Pennsyl
vania.
She wrote:
“Wap it Just a joke of yours or a wrong figure?
-I would gladly pay 345 to clear obr debt and stop
killing. But my figure shows different! Sixty billion
dollars debt on .150 million pcoplp is 3400 per per-
son—small and large.”
I stand corrected, of course. But like most, of us,
I can’t quite picture a billion dollars. There are
just too many naughts in it.
Four hundred, yes. Even 3800 — my wife’s share
and mine — that’s or.e thing. That means more
than a year's clothing or almost six months food
and rent for the average American family.
But 60 billion — phew!
HERE IS something else to which I must confess.
Maybe you are the same as we here at homer
The other day—about two weeks ago, to be more
precise — there was an eight-oolumn headline In high-up
the paper* about Try man starring «TM WM4Tw««k—councils
Commission (I use that name only for want of a country comes
better one i. - thia story , of the
My wife saw the headline and asked me whet it Hungarian min-
was all about# - Ister to the Unit-
B,v DREW PEARSON the Communist Party were let off
WASHINGTON — In 1934 a Com- lightly. Some of them were given
munist doctor named Emil Weil sentences, then tipped off that it
was arrested In Bydapest for sub- might help If they would see Dr.
versive activities and sentenced to Weil. And after waiting days in
friend, Dr. Catherine Winkler, had
long served on the same staff.
During the Naxi occupation Dr.
Winkler was deported to Ausch-
18 years . In jail. Sixteen years his outer-room for an audience ^t^^^war'he^anartment
later he became Hungarian ^min- with the No. 1 Communist doctor ^ ltI furnllurt WM pSt up by
Ister to Washington. of Hungary, they were told to Join
In between he had attained a the Communist Party,
position of supreme trust within Thus many members of the tac-
tile Communist government, so ulty of medicine of the University
that when it came to forcing a of Budapest who had become
confession from the greatest Ngzis were blackmailed into be-
church leader of Eastern Europe, coming Communists. r
"" Dr, .Weil, whp Is Jewish, appar-
ently did not care how passionate-
ly they had embraced the antl-
a five-man American team, Jmt,.8^!"* '
returned last week from winning Lofmanv Sov« <
the world's bridge championship tk« >0c»Uon « m,n> So':ni
from the Italian team at Naples . x .
The president la John R- Craw- Allen \V_.Dulleg, deput)
ford, the national canasta eham- t(>r. Central Intelligence
pion and the. man who Introduced cy.
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledi
'/ - " ’ "■ A Central Presi Feat
Cardinal MIndzcnty,
diplomat Was
chosen' to ad-
mt Ale ter the
drug.
From thor-
oughly reliable
refugees once
in the ^
the Communist government for
sale.
Whereupon Mrs. Well, (he close
friend of Dr. Winkler, appeared
at her friend's apartment to pick
up some of the choice paintings.
The
as
was
The Answer, Quick!
X. What United State* presi-
dent served for many years in
the House of Representatives
upon completion of his term?
2. Wlmt Is a stormy petrel?
S, Who popularized the words,
"And so to bed"? '
semitism of Hitler. Meanwhile P°°r. ,tdy„ 7°
e maid, remembering Mrs. Weil
a guest, ‘remonstrated that she
- "stealing the things of my Grlf 3pce 'of World War n?
After serving as county atu
of Neas County and mayor j
Nesa City, he waa appointed f
served as chairman of the ‘
poration Commiasion of the I
of Kansas until 1942. when '
signed. He was elected gov«
of Kansas in that .year and >
4. Can yoC Identify the ship elected In 1944, He wa* eUctri
anti-Nazis and Democrats who
had resisted the Nazi regime were
brutally ousted from the medical
faculties.
'WEIL'S WIFE—Dr ’Well’e wife.
Dr. Susan Lcichner, worked as a
radiologist at the Jewish hospital .
in Budapest, where her Intimate i lhunity.
Auschwitz." To which Mrs. Well
replied: “Your employer has be-
come a vile traitor, an agent »t
the Imperialists.”
_ .Mrs-. .IWeiL-t* -now-4n 'Washing*'
ton enjoying the free furnishings
of the Hungarian Legation and
the privileges of diplomatic im-
It Happened Teday
1779—Stephen Decatur born;
American naval commander, dis-
tinguished for action against Bar-
hAry'pifatet1’h"t4*ar Bf '1tl7. i*33
—Calvin Coolldge, former United
the United State* Senate in'l
- -----' -‘- year*. wl»4
for a term of six
he?
DICK (7HE GREAT)
nation's top baaketbali I
is headed for'another banil
fhek also I: an outstanrjij
2—She wa* a night club das
just 17 years
loTlywood's Franchot Tone
married hijn. The couple wesil
_ _ “I am too busy reading about the shooting of that ed States who
In The Lyons Den
instead of propaganda.
A little later I wanted to read the latest news
about the United Nations.
(
Have A Laugh
By this time my wife was reading the paper. r
“Could I have that section, please?” I asked-hen
British took 20,000 Italian soldiers him in "The Man in The
prisoners In World War II. 1943- Toward In which Charles
George Washington Carver, noted
'.'scientist and educator, died.
. . On Sunday,- Januay 6: 1759—
George Washington married Mrs.
. ' Martha Cuxti*. Mi-New Mexico
By L«onard Lyons ?d™ltt*d t0 Unlon iwi-Amy
Cardinal Mindszenty
While Hungary wxs gouging ran*
som money from us lor the rekurh ' / ■ W1 English avlptrix, dtown-
of four American, flier*, Dr, Weil VOICECS: Sir Laurence OBv- whispered: "Klpness never made *4 In cruh of pinna in Thame*
ton, Burgess Meredith, Rd
Hutton, Patricia Roc and - „
played lending roles. She gsvtt
her career then to be just a'
and mother, but chartgcd.,
mind and resumed ‘her
career. Sheia now divbrr.ed
Ton*. What la her name”
(Names at botto'm of colums'l
Happy
Today’# hlrjjiday celebranti i
CCk'FZ 3E
By .Boyce House -‘Andw0uldyoU believe it, when she handed me JYeU'J incarceratiop in Margit oam star, wM.ignea io appear theater; ueutenanz uenera. Eric, ^rln, nntH ronceri
.»V»YBODY WM.suppoSed to bring SSTmE? ^ fa* 2£’
I
♦he pidnio. 0oe-lri4hw>an -brmight-tt-t»skgt~~of~frled"
• chicken and another brought potato salad. A Scotch-
’Uu^Rgll broU'ght '— his brother. ^ • f
■twmX..: .MANY '■ year* agu, when *trans-Atlantic
were all tbe rage. a Scotchman offered 350,-
the first man to awftn the ocean-non-stop.
ty McTAVISH bet a dollar that he could stay
water longer than either of bis companions,
first one remained under almost a minute; the
.............one was below the surfaces* little over* min-
• ute.. Sandy won -the bet;-he hasn’t come up yet"
Vouwd'^11 ^~ "
about "Tallu.” . ....
“Ain’t people the cwazlest monkey*?”, to para-
phrase the late Lew Lehr. " ■'
You're Telling Me
leges which he could have uld voice'do you Intwid to use?" ahe
to help 6'ther members of his faith, asked Helpmann, who shrugged;
During part otfniis time, Hungary '! don’t know yet. If Olivier plays
was under Hlfer and Hungarian it with booming voice, I’ll play It
jglls were filled with Anti-Nazis, softly. If he plays It softly, Til
Dr. Well however, remained aloof, boom It out." But Ollviir gave no
,He Ad not want to focue tatten- Indication of how he planned to
uiflfc '
out of the anesthetic, ahe groan-
ed and asked the deeter: "Will
I be able t* Use a brace and bit
plank?” . ..He patted her eoa-
Wttelt fear Ian«*a» * jWmmmjj a»4,
"IdNATOKT'r- tAAN-n-toeri)-'.1
anlnvA ccaluctoe ta health: ORsPmtefi January. *,
' ' ----- Late Sandburg. poet|>. biogriiflM*i
tlon on hit Commu
play the roles. Helpmann therefore .
Still another, survey reports — this time that flat
^g|^WMing. Origin^Ute
!«1*
-Thomas CampbeU.
VlflltlHG FRIEH08 1
UKE BREAKING IN A If
RWK O' SHOEEi-* Jl]
A8HORTVHILE AT|
TIME ELIMINA1
fW CRAMP
£
l 'A' l LONG V/STAHCE
01 NT, NORTH ANUktCAHl
plained that her hobby le car-
pentry and metal .ttemo, that aha
tewnJun
m
ti
. 1". town!
tot. first nlghtars who shut their
found it Is difficult to dis-
between OHvier’i voice
ihtaMjBf Bt’ a MtiJnf S .“d’ Helpra*nn’‘' " ...
....... ..... • ■---------- ' - ---- *- xf
Phil Maat,
Fcrrick and Early Wynn,
ball playirs, get the feliclt*
Esr
,y*- World War n. Dr. Weil found
make* her own table* end chair*
high school student* who
haven^t dreamed up
assays
S’-—*—”
THE TRAVELER. CecU Brown
the commentator, just returned
... ™
Fr^d Hartman......
* leulsH Mae Jackson,
pf Warren Edwards.
Subsc
'ka^—MonthVl-OoF1 Month* 32-90;
5.76; Yq»r 3ltS0. Armed Services 75c
1 mail subscriptions are payable
I Representative; Texas Daily
Entered at second-class matter
“ ‘oWn, Texas, Rostoffice
• nf
An Auatian nine-year-old «gg gnwtad a driver’* immeoMiny tamr oeer ute tsuaa- he’d received m “nign nunon .— M juom
'license. And we think we have traffic troubles in pest Chamber of Doctors—Hun-, shoes” from its-to-producer, Joe T0”1 * “ * ou * 0 *”■
thl* town! , :■ „ * . - J TTwIj counterpart to fit* Ameri- Kipn '
, ■
n ' : : '
during which he met many head*
Of Xtata nnd virited the war t ^
A "Doc- Stone pay the chock, BA’S’tall her: m Formosa he wm with the
i himself "Klpnes* never let «e P*y for ang Kai-shek^ and Madame
appointed lunch.” When they’d ride In^cabs, ang ,howed him the 100 pic
■ " ' Tl PsJBtt .e* ojGi-: »«• a*W
compilehihenta you should
lence a year of steady pr
NWOriit* eucoese sBould
•tor* for the child bom todtf-j
For 8unday, January f:
concentration may be nee
bring your plan* to a sue
WPlion and latt#t
financial poSlUdn. Honeaty.
-T-
— JOIN the 1
Buying Auto Liab
v ★ SEMI-At
★ ATTRAC
under I
How’d You Make Out?
• 1. Johon Quincy Adam*.
„ he enlisted In the Naval Air serv- light cruisers ofl
as lee. After the armistice, he enter- Uruguay,
ar ed the Unlveraity of Nebraska i—Senator Andrew Sch
law school, graduating in 7922. 2—Jean Wallace.
vrUA ; ■ «;
■ 7 ...u',;.?. a
ImmodHite Pror
v'.-
- ’
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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/m1/6/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.