The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 28, 1953 Page: 4 of 10
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Editorials
m
l
Research Is Giving U. S. Motorists More Efficient GasoliJ
A top officer of one of our principal oil
companies recently made a speech entitled
“A Gallon of Gasoline.” And what he had
to say about that universally-used product
typifies the vast progress oil has made in
every phase of its operations.
Back in 1912 and for some 10 years
thereafter, gasplines had an octane rating
of 40 to 60. Today most of the premium
gasolines we motorists use exceeds 90 on
the octane scale, and special purpose fuels
go as high as 130. The result is that two
gallons now does as much work as three
did in the past—which is not only a real
economy for the consumer, but an import-
ant factor in oil conservation, _-—
SUN SLANTS
DOGS VS. HUMAN BEINGS
THERE HAVE BEEN many high-sounding editor-
iais, news stories and features stories in The Bay-
town Sun on behalf of and in defense of and for
the benefit of dogs all kinds of dogs.
But there have been too few editorials on behalf
of the poor, lowly, human being in The Sun. Es-
pecially, has it been that the dogs and humans
come into conflict on the front page.
The above two statements are the basis of the
essav that will follow, and we are rather grateful
that" dogs can’t read, or perhaps they would be
calling me over the phone or even coming down to
the office to beat on the desk in protest.
JUST CAUSE FOB COMPLAINT
NOT LONG AGO a very good friend of mine had
cause to complain, and just cause.
She and her husband had worked like Turks all
weekend on their lawn. They manicured and they
dug. They planted and they cultivated. They worked
as carefully in beautifying their grounds as many
women would work on their appearance when they
were really trying to impress someone.
And then what happened.
A band of dogs visited the lawn that night and
when the dawn dawned, the front yard, the per-
This is the result of research, of end-
less trial-and-error search for ways and
means to make each gallon of crude pro-
duce both a greater variety of products and
more efficient products. A modern refin-
ery is a miracle of chemistry, and the pro-
ducts which flow out of it in an endless
stream reflect that miracle.
In the matter of price, the consumer has
been well served too. In 1912, for instance,
gasoline sold at retail in typical cities for
about 18 cents a gallon and a loaf of bread
cost six cents. Now gas, exclusive of the
taxes over which the industry has no con-
trol, sells for around 22.5 cents and the
loaf of bread costs 16. In other words, in
By Fred Hartman
sorry for tfs poor human beings who seem to be
at the mercy of dogs in Baytown."
NOT EASY TO SOLVE
IT IS A PROBLEM, these dogs that run loose and
destroy property while they’re out on their nightly
marches.
You can’t take it out on the dogs, because the
dogs don’t leave their paw prints. And I’ve never
seen a dog yet that would even discuss the subject
with a human being.
Many of these dogs don’t have masters. Many of
them are footloose and fancy free.
I wish I could solve this problem, I regret being
so unfair to human beings in the past and hereby
place all Baytown dogs on notice: you can’t expect
us to be on your side at all times in the future.
All we Intend to do is give you an evenbreak.
DOGS PUT ON NOTICE
NOW WE KNOW that the above essay is not go-
ing to please everybody. It certainly isn’t going to
please the young woman whose front yard was torn
asunder by that band of mongrels.
However, we want to assure her that this is
just the first step in a planned crusade. If the
dogs of Baytown don’t take heed after getting this
warning, they can expect stronger-worded state-
terms of bread, a gallon of gasoline with-
out sales taxes is r.ow only about half as
expensive as it was then. And what is true
in the case of bread is also true in-varying
degree with most other commodities in gen-
eral use.
The Great Baby Boom
A recent issue of Time magazine carrie:1.
a feature article which began: “The U. S..
which was buying baby food at the rate of
270,000,000 cans in 1940, this year is buying
it at the rate of 1,500,000,000 cans. In the
same period, the U. S. toy industry has
grown from an $84,000,000-a-year stripling
to a $900,000,000 giant, and the sale of bi-
cycles has almost doubled... These are the
measuring sticks of the Great Baby Boom.
.Time then dealt at some length with the
far-reaching significance of this. One para-
graph said: “By 1975 the U. S. will need to
set a ‘fifth plate’ for every four persons
now consuming. Setting this fifth plate will
demand an increase in cattle production,
for instance, equivalent to all the present
production of Texas plus Oklahoma and
Minnesota, and enough more lambs to
match the great production of Montana,
Wyoming, Utah and Nevada combined. To
U. S. land must produce as muck ^
acres today—creating a H
for more tractors,
tioners and other means of in<W *■
production.” ^creasing
Grandpappy Jenkins says judging
sports pages there are onlV taSTt
onty two kii
football games—those played i„ .. 1
mud” and those played “ heath bin
tumnal skies.
The Communists failed to win a
m
produce this iiiuch food, every five acres of > people say “No !”-and moYumpC
vwit'H UIC UOWU unwucu, tilt HVIH joiu, wauling, tuejr van VApcvk
fectly-shaped flower be is looked as If they had merits against them in the future.
been hit by a 300 mile an hour wind.
It was that bad.
AN APPEAL FOB HELP
THIS YOUNG woman pondered their fate for sev-
eral days. She admits she had mayhem In her eyes
and venom in her heart. ..................
It's a good thing the dogs did a complete job the
first time and did not have to return to mop up.
They might have been mopped up or out them-
selves.
After about a week, this young woman decided
she'd take her problem to the press. She happened
to see the perpetrator of this column, and she gave
forth with her problem.
She challenged us to prepare an essay that would
not only make Baytown dogs in her end of town red
in the face but also would make it embarrassing
and tough on the dog owners as well as the city
fathers.
“Ail you ever do,” she said, "is brag on dogs and
feel sorry for them in print. But how about feeling
LOOKING AT LIFE
THERE IS AN OLD Latin saying, “Suum Cuique.”
I think it was the inscription on one of those five-
and dime medals the German Emperor used to be-
stow on people who had manufactured an especially
meritorious wurst — or something like that.
However, 1 am giving you the inscription in Latin
only to show you how smart I am. We have exactly
the same saying here in English—it’s "to each his
own.”
Further to display my education, there is another
saying "De gustibus non est disputandum,” which
means in our language, “You can't argue about
taste.”
By the way, a kid asked me the other day what
on earth good is Latin and Greek. Instead of teach-
ing dead languages, why not make Spanish and
French obligatory in schools, he asked. They are
languages that one can at least use.
WELL, I TOLD HIM, nothing could be farther
from the truth than to say that Latin and Greek
are dead.
So many of our English words derive from Latin
or Greek, and by knowing the meaning or root of
a word, you can use words as a painter uses his
colors. You can make words LIVE.
And as far as ’’dead” is concerned, I wish our
statesmen and politicians Would be MADE to read
Greek and Roman classics. It might do them a lot
of good and remind them of the fact that there
-eally isn’t anything new r-•*-- ‘u- —
Pretty nearly ail their
known to and used by their
Greek and Roman days.
BUT ABOUT THIS "suum cuique.”
My wife and I took a trip to Northampton, Mass.,
the late President Coelidge’s old home.
There is an old Colonial restaurant up there called
Ciita wiciu ssi tuvutv,
We may make it an issue in the next City Coun-
cil race, if we can. We will ask each forthcoming
candidate what he things of a dog that would tear
up a human being’s flower garden.
If he supports the human beings, well and good.
If he supports the dogs, we will let the public know
about it with the hope that the candidate’s cam-
paign goes to the dogs in high gear.
UNTIMELY INTERRUPTION
I WOULD WRITE more, but my wife has just
called me. We’ve got a dog named Rags. We didn't
buy him. We didn’t even ask for him. He just came
to our house about three years ago and liked the
food he got.
I'm afraid that a neighbor across the street sus-
pects that Rags visited his fall garden last night.
If Rags did it, he’s gotten his last can of dog
food from me!
I’m sincere in this battle. Dogs have a right to be
dogs, but they don’t have an Inherent right to tear
up this city’s landscape efforts.
By Erich Brandtis
Wiggins’ Old Tavern. It’s one of those affairs that
REEK of antiquity (no insult meant) and where
thousands of tourists just wallow in reveries of by-
gone days.
The food is nothing extra, just good, plain Amer-
ican chow. To give you an example of the variety rx .j . n _ „ i*.
of the menu—I had scrambled eggs with country Accident Prevention
sausages, a parsley potato and vanilla ice cream.
And, oh yes, I started off with onion soup. The wife
had filet of sole. She started with a fruit cocktail.
I asked the waitress whether the cocktail was fresh
or canned. “Half and half,’’ she said. She was right.
It was half sherbet and half canned fruit. -
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
Churchill Waxes Eloquent
Over Mission To Moscow
By DREW .PEARSON Meanwhile Humphrey.
WASHINGTON — John Foster are toying with the
Dulles, who has worked hard and to Congress with « stag*°3
bounced around the world more program. Instead nf , uj
than any other secretary of state changes to become effective!
in pursuit of a more stable peace, time, the changes would btl
came back from London none too °ut over a period of thru"
happy. He did not succeed in his This bes the advantiie of i
mission of dissuading Sir Winsion on* tax battle with Congresl
Churchill from going to Moscow', time, instead’ of every ye*l
but he did come back with renew- taxes taking effect in S
ed admiration for the grand old years-
mCh °rchiU*convineed "Foster,” as feaderY knL FR0NT~F‘(P|
Ike calls him in Cabinet meetings, " advance
that hi3 trip to Moscow was not Wnb^ii *fwlS ‘>resj CM1
al! personal vanity but rather to hta*» I
probe and exhaust every last pos- to chatle hi. J^^^ H
sibility of understanding with the Follow!™.^ but H
Soviet before throwing up our victories in el f- **
hands and admitting it’s no go. congressional victo^T,
Unless the mission to Moscow is Sjn, qoP learn... y “ 1
undertaken, Churchill told Foster, eloquent in telllnr'VI
unless the French are convinced House that the Grind Oldi
we have taken every possible step was in trouble Not 7
toward a Soviet agreement, the it’s true, got in to .‘ LI
French will not ratify the united dent himself Most «
European army pact and the rest Actams, or even lesser li.ki
of Europe will not re-arm. made little impression
Churchill argued so eloquently After the Wisconsin in>J
that Dulles was almost convinced House aides calmly remtal
he was right. As a compromise, politicos that the OsliJ
however, Dulles finally persuaded showed Ike more ponulal
Churohill to put off the meeting ever. Sourly remarked on*
! for three monhta. He still thinks a Head leader, after talking t
meeting with Malenkov is kow- House aide Homer Gruntht
towing appeasement to the Rus- "It looks as if the White
sians, will only give Moscow a pro- wants a Democratic Cong
paganda megaphone to shout in- It’s true Ike has been I
sincere mouthings about peace. better co-operation from I
Note—Meanwhile, the biggest de- erats on major issues tHi
bate going on inside the Pentagon the Republicans, but whi
is whether big land armies are leaders are worried aboul
hopeless for defending Europe, organization of Congress i
whether we shqud puli out our »H>le ioss of committee <
troops, depend on atomic defense ships,
and save money, Note — Final straw
Ike’s determination to kei,
HARRY HUMOR Leonard Lyons, local politics was the Paul
the Broadway columnist, got a let- letter asking, for the rele
ter from Harry Truman the other bor racketeer Joey Fay!
day which recalled Truman's last Sing, Ike, who had beenj
dinner in the White House. His w|th the idea,of
only guests were Leonard and New Jersey, realized he j
Sylvia Lyons and old family friend have been there when th* I
Mr*. Florence Mahoney. Fay parole letter broke.
At the dinner Truman jokingly
appointed Lyons as a judge and BIDAULT’S FACE-
Bx HARMAN W, NICHOUS mbeohip Mex'
Writing to his new apopintees
Editor Told Kids To Look Out For Selves
has been nil
the other day, Truman began:
"Dear Judge Leonard and Am-
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 —UP— er Dam, a city of 12,888, has spread cards whenever he goes.
Back in the 1920's, Joe Helfert was around the country' until today . The editor’s reward has
BUT AFTER LUNCH, that’s when the pilgramage a bright-eyed reporter in Milwau- something like a million children in dollars, but great in personal
started. Hundreds of people were milling around kee. are members—for free—qf “Open satisfaction for work well done. He -----------
outside, admiring the various exhibits. The first one One day he was on a fire-chasing Eye” clubs. has received a special honor from oassador Sylvia Lyons:
was an early 18th century double Chick Sale. Next assignment. Suddenly, a little fel- The American Legion, of which the National Safety Council, among “This salutation offend* me be-
to it was an old-type printing press. Then came all low streaked out between a cou- “Uncle Joe” is a member, and the other citations. cause it violates protocol. And an
kinds of tool sheds and exhibits of old-fashioned pl° of parked ears, right in the American Automobile Association “Open Eye Clubs,” Joe says, ambassador comes before a judge.”
household appliances, which showed the ladies how' path of Joe’s machine. The report- are behind the idea born of near- “now are organized in many In reply, Lyons wrote:
much better off they are than their forebears. er stomped on the brake and, as tragedy over 25 years ago. schools. The children name their “Thank you for the official con-
Finally. there was a shed with about a dozen old- he recalls, “a miracle happened.” The outside work has earned own officers. And whether they firmation of our appointment*.
svst:rsst sssk’j.'spsisnsar;sns srs-*
sleek 1953-modef automobiles were parked and gave cJ?a™ ^ flr® a,nd JeP?rted. sj*me- wh° loves children. He always car- become safety conscious. in Washington. Today many things Reason:
one a fine opportunity to compare the practical £* 2 . “ " .............•
“new” with the picturesque‘old ” result^ of the near-accident, an , _ » > /"N f 1“ «/ II
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
Irked than John Foster |
when he came back from 1
He got snubbed by i
body
In the first place, a i
ign office functionary met]
the airport Foreign Mia’
came down to glari-h*n4|
but snubbed Bidault.
Bidstult also failed to i
picturesque ‘old.’
The women went crazy over the exhibits. The men WeU> in 1928, not long aftes Hel-
really isn’t anything new under the sun. stood around outside, smoked their pipes, cigars and jfer^ had been made editor of the
Pretty nearly ail their “original'’ ideas were cigarettes^ got acquainted with each other, con- Beaver Dam, Wis., citizen stories
r forerunners of the demned Truman and Eisenhower, as the case may amj features began to appear in
be, and wished their wives would hurry up. . ...
idea formed.
A Central Press Feature
. ■ The French, il
are backward, Including protocai. Bidault, had been critical
Nowadays an ambassador comes chill’s earlier statement i
after a Judge and the President arming Germany, roundly
and secretary of state come after him in the press and
a senator from Wisconsin." with
anQ wlsnea lnclt wlves * 01110 hu"y up. the paper about something
When a woman was too long inside, every once in "The Open Eye Club.”
a while her man would toot his horn like mad. Out The editor’s Dremise was
called
senator from Wisconsin.”
TAX FRONT-Taxes are still
orrying the Ike administration.
would toot his horn like mad. Out
came the wife, and off would go the car.
There certainly was a lot of horn blowing, but,
I said before — to Each his Own.
DATELINE: HOLLYWOOD By Aline M«by
The Answer, Quick! July 10,1921, studied for the thea- . _ _________________
- , - 1. What does the French term, ter and appeared on stage before The tax experts don’t quite know
The editors premise was that if embonpoint mean? making her motion picture debut where to turn- for three good rea-
^brcak-neck« with a heavy 2 In mythoIogy) who WM *n m2 in My Sister Eileen, The sons:
Moloch? Boogie Man Will Get You, A 1. The Treasury doesn’t yet
Night to Remember. City With- know how much it will have to
out Men, Carolina Blues, etc,, were raise for defense spending,
earlier pictures. Later ones are '
careful enough to watch out for the
small fry, the little ones should be
with some justification. I
Churchill's untimely
teed off the public, upset!
plan* for rectifying me
army pact.
Result of snubbing Bii
London: The foreign mini
not be able to run lor
of France. President Aui
steps down from office,
If;
THE SIZZLING John Wayne alimony-divorce trial
repeated Hollywood history. The headlines blaze
when a movie-town wife puts the bite on the family
checkbook.
In most divorces of celluloid city couples, the
wife quietly testifies her ungrateful spouse didn’t
like her cooking. But down the years the scandals
of fllmville have included bitter divorce wrangles
when money reared its hot head.
Clark Gable, a he-man profile like Wayne, hol-
lered when Lady Ashley presented her alimony bill
in 1951. He claimed she spent more than he earned
during their marriage and she was a millionaire
from past husbands, anyway. Gable even moved to
Nevada so his property couldn’t be attached.
After suits and counter-suits, her $1,000,000 de-
mand was whittled to $160,000 at her 1952 divorce
trial.
Errol Flyrn still tries to get the courts to pare
the $23,000 a year alimony he started forking out
10 years ago to Lili Damlta. Flynn has added two
wives since, but his alimony battles with Lili play
a long-rurining engagement
Mrs. Brian Donlevy gave readers a keyhole peek
into movietown boudoirs when she fought for high-
er alimony in 1947.
She charged the actor tricked her into bed with
another man so he could charge her with adultery.
She also said he was too tired to be a proper hus-
band. Her alimony was upped from $75,000 to $125,-
000.
Rita Hayworth and Aly Khan have been tiffing
for three years over their divorce settlement.
Child custody sparked the most notorious divorce
battles of the cinema community. In 1936 Mary As-
tor’s famed Purple Diary was read in court when
Dr. Franglyn Thorpe tried to prevent her from get-
ting custody of their daughter, Marilyn.
This flaming tome, a sort of “bedroom baedeker”
of show business, related the romantic prowess of
six famous men. Many a Hollywoodite sighed in
relief when the impounded book finally was burned
by court custodians a year ago.
Todays Bible Verse
AND BE not conformed to this world:
but be ye transformed by the renewing
of your mind, that ye may prove what
is that good, and acceptable, and perfect,
will of God. Romans 12:2
3. What famous circus gorilla
taught to look out for themselves, died in 1949?
Helfert got some “Open Eye” 4- Of what nationality was
buttons printed. There is nothing Omar Khayyam?
which impresses a youngster so 5. Who composed toe song,
Another famed divorce trial of early Hollywood much as a button. These later were Over There, popular in World
involved Duncan Renaldo, a silent Screen hero now children and ^ I? Spars, and Mr, District Attorney, is taking . deflationary turn. T . , r. |u|J
enjoying a second game as televisions Cisco Kid. parents. He taught the kids a set Happy Birthday *n Roughshod she changed from Dr. Arthur Burns, head of Ike's | PU A 0(1 \|Q() JV|H
Mrs. Suzette Renaldo, in a child custody and $50,- 0f rules. Don’t he told them, play Elsa Lanchester, screen and film comed>’ to emotional roles. Who Council of Economic AdvUers, has •1 J nllu>>' “ ]
000 damage suit, charged Renaldo and Edwina in the street nor cross it without actress: Howard Hanson, Ameri- is she? warned that a slight business —————— r"~"“T
ss„Hr" —*«--»S?££.«ui3ur! ’’z*
love scenes under the African moon. stranger. Don’t play with fire. Nev- cr, should be celebrating today. Phllos<>Pher, lecturer and author, will be dangerous, but he’s put up THERE S ONE
He, in turn, charged her with insanity. er disloval nor disobedient to 1)01,0 on Au8- 27, 1770, at Stutt- a precautionary red flag writer who P1***
Testimony at the lurid trial led to his 1931 ar- vour Mom and Dad. Simple rules It Happened Today *art- A,ter ('olle*e he became a As a result, the Treasury has ter* *° flw*nt y, i
rest on charges of entering the country illegally. ]ike that illustrated in lectures by 90 A. D—Alfred the Great, king pnvate tutor, and made a study abandnned the hard-money policv » friend in the Iprofe.,Vj
He was sent to a federal prison for two years. glides and later by movies. of England, died. 1636 — Harvard of Christianity. He wrote a life almost in total. It almost broke ever good old So-ind-so. J
Bandleader LaTraine Cugat’s three-year divorce Nobody can estimate the number college founded by act of Massa- 01 Jesus in which Jesus was sim- sincere Secretary George Hum- * Tin Pan Alley w. /I
fight made headlines when she claimed she found of lives and broken little bodies, chusetts legislature. 1728 — Capt. ply son °f Joseph and Mary.,’phrey's heart to do it but for the melody that he likes, n,|
him in a Chicago hotel room with Singer Abbe Joe Helfert has saved in his labor James Cook, English naval can- Latcr he studied economics and time being he's won over home and writes it.
ic nrconnt snnnca Annfk/C. ».,4 ... 1m,n l ■ . ° “ (y/stine.mn.4__J l.i .... . ____ °
2 There'S tremendous opposition j.J1
Three is a Family, Eadie Was a to a sales tax-either in the form ault Planned “» h*" M " J
Lady, Dancing In Manhattan, of a manufacturer’s tax or in any ,or’ “>« of fa<*
Power of the Whistler, Over 21, °ther form. make this more difficult.
Song of the Prairie, Tars and *• There s evidence the economy
Spars, and Mr, District Attorney, is taking a deflationary turn.
In Roughshod she changed from Dr- Arthur Burns, head of Ike’s
comedy
is she?
emotional roles. Who Council of Economic AdvUers, has
warned that a slight business
slump can be expected in the next
Z-He was an eminent German three month*. He doesn’t think it
11 IneAnn nf n.J ...u. ...mi «... ...
Lane, his present spouse. Another drawn-out un- of love,
shedding suit was Bette Davis. Husband No. 3,
William Grant Sherry, balked temporarily on
grounds he still loved her.
The first Hollywood divorce of note was when
Francis X. Bushman, the greatest matinee idol of
them all, dropped his wife to marry his leading
lady, Beverly Bayne. His fans had thought he was
single. They dropped him cold when they read he
not only had a wife at home, but five little Bush-
mans, too.
tain and explorer, born. 1886 — government, and later still turned
Statue of Liberty dedicated. 1910 10 Philosophy, He was professor
— Italy invaded Greece. 1944 r- Philosophy at Heidelberg and
Bulgaria signed Russian armistice Jater at Berlin- Some of his pub-
terms. lished writing* were Philosophy of
-= T, c Religion, Philosophy of History
From The Sun Files It’s Been Said and the History of Philosophy, He
Careless their merits or their died of choleraon Nov. 14, 1831,
faults to scan, his pity gave ere after one day’s illness. What was
Lookinq Backward
WILLIE
F GOSH SAKES, RAM? HURRY/
WE'LL NEVER MAKE TH'
FIRST, SHOW 1
—by Ltonerd
Ycu’re Telling Mel
* By William Rift
Citizens of Ireland are the heaviest eaters—news police to come get a creature v
item. This backs up our contention that Irish stew "shoes on every leg, ciomp-cloi
and corn-beef-and-cabbage are mighty filling items
on the menu.
FIVE YEARS AGO'
NavvA^173 HTatev^Most Upowl charity began. Thus to relieve the his name?
Vy’ y. ° ' wretched was his pride, and even (Names at bottom of column)
his failings lend’d to Virtue’s side. „ ,
-Oliver Goldsmith. Vour Putui,«
A propitious and eventful year
Folks of Fame—Guess the Name way lie ahead of you, so use your
imagination and push your affairs
A football team made up of professional wrestlers
was soundly trounced in a gridiron contest on the
Pacific Coast. Serves ’em right for trying to muscle
in on someone else’s game.
erful Sea Force; U8S Texas Host
To Top Navy Man At Observance.
, J, C; (Jake) Kannarr bought
the International Harvester farm
machinery agency at 619 North
Commerce.
A frightened woman phoned the
with
mp-
ing” under her bedroom window,
The officers found a small brown
horse with "shoes on every leg.”
10 YEARS AGO
Sgt. W. J, Weils, gunner engi-
neer reported missing on Oct. 10,
telephoned his mother from Bos-
ton that he was no longer missing,
S-Sgt. Leon Hutto, radio-gunner
on a Liberator in the South Paci-
fic, was reported missing in ac-
tion.
James Harrop, superintendent
of toe Baytown Refinery of Hum-
Coal deposits, according to Factographs, Were ble Oil and Refining company, was
formed many millions of years ago. There’s no fuel elected president of toe Goose
like an old fuel! , Creek chamber of commerce.
A noted astrologer says he sees good news in the
sky. Shucks, so does the weatherman when he re-
ports, “Fair tomorrow—warmer."
Grandpappy Jenkins points out that office holders
aye always sworn In before taking the job. It’s af-
terward, he say’s, that they're sworn at.
1—She is a film actress and, so
far as we know, hasn't yet
switched to television. She was
born in South Windham, Me., on
to the utmost. Bom today, a child
may be exceptionally clever and
fortunate.
Watch Your Language
HORRENDOUS - (ho-REN-
dus) — adjective; fearful, horrible.
Origin: Latin—Horrendus.
How’d You Make Out?
1. Plumpness.
2. A Phoenician god to whom
human sacrifices were offered.
3. Gargantua; his skeleton is
now mounted in the Peabody mu-
seum at Yale university.
4. Persian.
5. George M. Cohan. /
1--Jeff Donnell.
2 L-beorg Wilhelm Friedrich He*
gel? |
of. RIGHT DOWN, WltLlEJ
NOW WHERE
.tt WILLIE?
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 28, 1953, newspaper, October 28, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042719/m1/4/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.