The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 210, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1957 Page: 4 of 12
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! News From Hankame
h»ve returned
t vacation to Hope,
*le) Mr. and Mrs Dodaon Taylor
ire end son,
IU* from.
« Ark
*aU Mr. ad Mr*. Edwin Speight*
“* and daughter, Edwins, of Wal-
lott lUville visited hit mother, Mr*
,ew Sophie Speights:
By Delorcze Wtavr
MU* EJaie Faye Albritton re- Crocker,
* s' */c Aiwmvuu rc*
f turned from Bible camp at Cold
m Spring* Camp Penial Pats where
PI the stayed two. weeks. She will
, _ he leaving soon for Bible camp
B in Colorado to serve as a coun-
selor,
Mrs. King Brown of Houtton
is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Conrad
Fowler.
Mrs. A. T. Crocker and chil-
dren of Henrietta, Penn,, are
visiting her daughter and son.
Son, and Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Harbour and son and Verhie
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Albritton
and son, Ronnie, of Silsbee, vis
ited his parents and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Hayes Albritton.
Hankamer Women's Bible
class met at the Union church,
Verbie Crocker left for Hen-i Mrs. R. H. Harlow taught the
rietta, Penn., to drive through
with her mother, Mrs. A. T.
Crocker, Mr*, Crocker'* husband
will Join hi* family in August
Mr. and Mrs. E, J. Weaver
were Liberty business visitors
and also visited in the C. W.
Trants home In Eunice,
Mnt Annie Lee Ttbbit* is a
patient in Chambers Memorial
hospital.
Ovie Smith is at Renting hos-
pital at Liberty,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams
and son, Chris, of Houtton are
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood
Blair and family. „ j
lesson,
Mr. and Mrs. Denzel Weiser
and children, Ronnie and Mary
Carol, of Cralne, are visiting performances in major citiea.
! Mfg “Qin/ttk tha baImIU. A#
their parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Gerald Speights, Mrs. Merine
Weiser and her brother and sis- shooting created tremendous lo-
ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett cal interest, we hope to give the
Moore of Houston. picture its world premiere in
Fellowship dinner* of the nearby Louisville," .announced
Sweet Home Baptitt and Han- Joseph R. Vogel, president of
Houston, and Mr*. Ford Wil-
liams of Beaumont visited in
Hankamer.
-■■■■■■
Many Money
Trees Back
'Raintree'
NEW YORK —Wt— "Raintree
County," the costliest film ever
made in this country by M-G-M,
will be introduced in the fall
with two-a-day, reserved-seat
'Since the selection of Dan'
vllie, Ky., for major location
kamer Union churches are held
every fifth Sunday at the school
house,
Mrs. John Koenig of Faria,
Tex.; Mrs. Frank Walker and
Mrs. Morgan Biggs, both of
PH
BDl
Car Is Safest Place
From Bolts From Blue
By PETER CRONIN-
UP Staff Correspondent
A B08T0N -ffl- Lightning
will kill approximately 230 per-
lul sons in the United States this
Jul J*ar* That is the annual aver-
jul age during the past decade. An
additional 1,000 or so are injur-
ed every year,
of electricity. R is perfectly safe
to touch him,
The ordinary result of being
struck M electric shock
or the vicinity of a steep cliff.
Persons struck by lightning
are sometimes revived by arti-
ficial retjfiration. A person
sturck doe* not cany « charge *d by producer-director George
Loewto, Jhe.
It baa been decided definitely
to start in October in New York,
Chicago, Lot Angeles, Boston,
Philadelphia and San Francisco,
following the premiere.
“Raintree County” runs three
hours and five minutes,
Elisabeth Taylor, Montgomery
Clift and Eva Marie Saint have
the leading rolea. A record total
number of 119 speaking roles
are involved and there are
thousands of extras in sequences
such as the Battle of Chlcka-
mauga and Sherman'# march to
the sea.
Audey Hepburn has been Sign-
MMTN0MM
■MQUOWX
®! What are your chance Of be- burns, or both. The usual first
aid measures should be applied.
Though usually associated
ing hit by lightning? Not very
great if you take commonsense
precautions whenever you hear with the thunderstorm, light- trapped with her family in Ams-
the warning rumble of thunder.
Here are some suggestions from
the National Safety Council
1. If there is any choice of
shelter, choose—
: (a) Large metal or metal-
frame buildings.
Cb) Dwellings or other build-
ings protected by lightning rods,
<c> Large unprotected build-
ings.
(d) Small unprotected build-
ing*.
2. Avoid the immediate vicin-
ity Of electric light circuits,
lightning conductors and down-
Jjj spouts, screened doors and
| windows, especially if open;
| stoves and fireplaces, telephones
3 and any metal object projecting
1 through wall or roof.
I 3. If unavoidably out of doors,
I keep away from isolated trees,
wire fences, small sheds and
shelters in an exposed location,
4, Try to reach thick timber,
a cave, a depression in the
ground, a deep valley or canyon,
hing strikes have been observed
on clear days, giving rise to the
expression "a bolt from the
blue,"
There are many varieties of
lightning—sheet, streak, beaded,
ribbon, forked, heat and globular
or ball lightning. *
References to lightning are
found in the earliest known
writings, God’s control over
lightning is often mentioned in
the Old Testament. In ancient
Stevens to star in 20th Century-
Fox’ picturization of the Pulit-
zer Prize-winning play, “The
Diary of Anne Frank.”
Stevens is presently in Eur-
ope scouting locations on the
story of. a young- Dutch girl
Since male canaries sing enthf
iasfically as long as they lif
Bobs Babbles About How To Attract Guys' Eyei
***-"*** sxrsss SrSST 15 "•‘^-StSESSss-sS
'She* Canaries Need
Shots Before They Sing]
By DELOS SMITH
United Press Science Editor
NEW YORK —HIS—It is not at
alt impossible for female canary
birds to sing arid sing brilliantly^
but they need a little help, science
has found. The help is a
of masculinising hormone.
That may or may not be the
explanation of a phenomenon
which has appeared here and there
around the country of late. Canary
birds which sang their heads off ]
in the pet shop, lost the gift soon
after buyers took them home.
Since male canaries sing enthus'
lastically as long as they live,
This strangeness became colored
with suspicion when some of
these^irds were definitely identi-
fied as female of sex.
You see, among birds, females
don’t sing. They only chirp. But
here were female canaries who
had been singers, if only for a
time. Unless nature had suddenly
reversed-the rule, something had
beei
;en, done to these females...
E. H. Herick and J. O. Harris,
xiultry scientists of the Kansas imported canaries because he
State College of Agriculture and so much trouble with disappoim
er periods “and the sms was I
distinguishable from that of J
mate lard," fte ^srientists
ed.
For approximately one
the five females sang and
they stopped and, began chirpij
precisely like the four feri
who hadn’t been treated.
The scientists waited 10 we
and then repeated'the experim^
to see if the Results would be
same. They ,Were except that
second time they appeared soon
One female was singing like!
male within four days.
Reporting their experiments j
the American Assn, for the
vancemeiU; of .Science, Her
and Harris said some pet deala
had appealed .to them for a see
tide explariatiop of the sti
business of the ori-an-fben-forev
off singing of canaries.
These odd birds had been
pearing among imported canaril
the dealers told the seientisf
Indeed, one dealer told tire sde
ists he wasn't handling any ind
Applied Science, took nine young
but mature-female canaries,
By hypodermic needle, they
gave five a minute amount of a
male hormone preparation. With-
in nine days the female chirping
was beginning to sound like song,
and within 12 days all five were that
ted Outerwear Foundation of
America, says there are "two
reasons why a girl wears a
sweater."
“The first is obvious—to keep
Anyone who has doubts
about the powers Of attraction
of a sweater has only to Ob-
serve what happens when
girl with a good figure, and
sweater to match walks along
a street. The men's heads act
like those of tennis match spec-
warm,” she explained. "The sec- tators. Most men would keep
terdam during World War II.
Miss Hepbufn will travel to
Europe this summer for initial
shooting on the production.
Director Stevens is a two-time
Academy Award winner.
Irving Berlin has written the
title song for "Sayonara," the
Warner Bros, motion picture
starring Marlon Brando and
filmed largely on location In
Japan,
The number is sung by Mliko
in
Court Upholds Airline
Service From Houston
HOUSTON —(Sp.)— Contin- provide transcontinental service
Greece^thundCr and lightning Taka, Brando's co-star, in the
were corisideretTornens of Zeus. fllm versimi of James Michener’s
Records show that most light- best-selling novel. Miss Taka,
ning casualties in America oc-
cur in rural areas or small
towns.
The National Safety Council
pointed out that one of the saf-
est places for you in a thunder-
storm is your automobile,
Though the machine may be
struck, a person inside it does
not provide an easy path for the
bolt of lightning to pass to the
ground.
Magic Cnef
V
OAS MANGE
See them today at
Whitcomb's
I ,W* 325 w. Texa$ ph. 6285
Nisei resident of Los Angeles,
never acted before being chos-
en for the romantic role opposite
Brando.
"Seyonara," produced by Wil-
liam Goet* and directed by Jos
hua Logan from Paul Osborn's
screenplay, also has Red But-
tons, Richardo Montalban and
Patricia Owena.
Canine Dentist
BELL BUCKLE, Tenn.HW-
A Chihuahua dog pulled little
Steve Rigney’s tooth. The boy’s
father had tied A string around
Steve’s loose tooth and Steve
was lying on the floor when
the dog grabbed the string,
pulled it-*nd Steve’s tooth.
The Right Place
JERSEY CITY, N. J.—(IF—A
dog owned by Mrs. Jo Ann
Lacertosa became separated
from its owner, and, after
di
hi
ly into the
Bureau
lay of wandering, entered police
headquarters and walked direct-
Missing Persons
entai Air Lines will extend its
El Faao-San Antonio route to
Houston as part of arrange
ments for one-plane service to
the West Coast over Continen-
tal and American Airlines routes.
The U. S. Court of Appeals has
upheld a long-standing order of
the dvll Aeronautics board to
permit the air line this exten-
sion.
This three-flights-dally serv-
ice has been in effect continous-
ly since 1951, when a three-year
certificate was issued for the
interchange route. In 1954 the
certificate was made perman-
ent.
For a time Braniff Interna-
tional Airways operated the
Houston-San Antonio portion
of the service, but Braniff
dropped out and Continental was
authorised to take over BrainlfP*
part of the interchange,
Eastern Air Lines appealed
from the CAB’* ruling which ex-
tended Continental’s part of the
interchange.
Eastern complained that the
board denied its morion for
conalderatlon of its own pend-
ing application and allowed K
only limited intervention to the
proceeding concerning the Con-
tinental application.
The court said Eastern had
sought a certificate which In ef-
fect would have enabled It
by extending its Route 6 to the
West via intermediate points
which included El Paso and
other c|ties served by the fbn*
rinental-American interchange.
headed octopus suddenly came
from nowhere. Marine biolo-
gists might be interested in the
octopus, Y guess.”
Miss Nichols is a veteran of
such adventures, and her friends
weren’t surprlted when she was
elected to her present outerwear
queen status. The same qualities
which endeared her to the knit-
ting people probably'* also had
something,to do with her selec-
tion for an important role in
‘Pal Joey,” an Essex-George
Sidney -production now under?,
way at Columbia. She plays
Gladys Bumps, a burlesque dan-
cer.
"The strange thing about
sweaters is that they’re so ef-
fective and yet sometimes so
blonde actress said. "We\all
dress to attract men. Sweaters
are comparatively inexpensive,
and yet women will spend their
savings for expensive low-cut
gowns, luxurious minks and
things like sheer hose.
....."They also will spend a lot of
money on perfume and hairdos
—and rarely, if ever, realize that
they could attract as much ad
miration by wearing a simple
sweater. It doesn’t have to be
the sort of thing that would jar
your grandmother a great deal,
■either;’”......... ....... ;—t~-;■
Miss Nichols thinks a sweat
er can save time as well ai
money.
"There’* not a lot of elabor-
ate fixing to do to get dressed,"
she pxplalned.
-wS—..............—
But thereafter the females be-
gan singing for progressively long-
customers.
But please understand
scientists are not accusing anyd
of anything.
birds were definitely identified'!
female^
Religious Tensions
Cause For Conceri
Water Muddle,
To Be Cleared
KINGSTON, R. I —(IB—There By WILLIAM EWALD
are 314 known species of water *«*• Staff Correspondent
‘Country Music Time’
Is Travelingest Show
plants, with a total of 1,500
name*. During the next two
years, Dr. Richard D. Wood
hopes to straighten out this
scientific muddle.
Dr. Wood, associate professor
of botany at the University of
Rhode Island, heads a two-year
research project under a $15,000
grant from the National Science
Foundation. He will be assisted
by Dr. Kozo Imahori, a botan
1st from Kanazawa University
in Japan
Characcae—Chlara for short—
ar emultlcellular water plants
with jointed stems and whorls
of leaves at the nodes. Their
primary purpose is for the pro-
tection of young in the spawn-
ing of tropical fish. Newborn
guppies, for instance, hide
among the Chara leaves to
avoid being eaten by their
to parents.
NEW YORK (UP)—The travel-
ingest, show in fee broadcasting
business is a country music pack-
age that wheels around this na-
tion in a $45,000 bus.
The bus contains clothes closets,
Fort the distant future, Collie
sees a merger of all the commer-
cial fields of music into one divi-
sion. But for his immediate fu-
ture, Collie can only see a long
tour by his troupe in Florida,
Georgia, the Carolinas.
"It’s a rough grind," admitted
\UIa tiT IrMntii (4«- _ __j
Editor’s Note: Author of this
week's religious column is the
editor-in-chief of the well-known
Roman Catholic weekly, Araerl-
ca. He discusses the tension* be-
tween Protestants and Catholics
over questions of school bures,
politics and other matters,
By FR. THURSTON N. DAVIS
Editor In-Chiel Of America
National Catholic Weekly
By UNITED PRESS
There has been a lot Said and a
lot written recently about religious
tensions. Many of us are con-
cerned over them, particularly
over worsening relations between
Protestant and Catholics. I am not
alone in my judgment that these
tensions are mounting in the Unit-
a dub iounge, a scattering of Collie, "I know it’s a grind for r„ this tension a temporary
fiddles and 33 members of the and I’m sure it is for the rest thine’ Will it soon be relieved? I
"Country Music of the cast. But we’re certainly- g'-W- ” C
troupe of the
Time" show. The program, a 25- getting exposure. And we’re kind
minute potion of down-home tunes of getting to see the country, too.”
rock ’n’ roll and comedy, moves
over the CBS radio this Friday
after a hitch with Mutual radio,
y "It seems to me we’ve been al-
most everywhere in the South and
Southwest over the past six
months — Richmond, Memphis,
TAitittrilla Dnoiirennt Tnv »* uniJ
Antibiotic Sprays
To Aid Cherries
^uisville, Beaumont, Tex."‘said otto^pra^my
Biff Collie, emcee of the show, important advance in leaf spot
As a rule we play six towns
a week and it seems to me we’ve
biton in almost 115 dties so far.
In one town each week, we tape
our weekly show for radio.”
STRICTLY RICHER
/»Fainnont Badcj...
HOUSEWIVES DESIG HOMES
. ■ Fairmont Park homes are built to housewives* need*
- j and dreams ... from the entry hall to the
' all-built-in kitchens. ' *
! The builders of Fairmont Park found out from a
survey by the Federal Housing Administration jtut what
housewives wanted, and that’s how ehe homer were
planned. Oversized lots, large family rooms, extra closet
space, utility rooms, double garages and step-saver
kitchens characterize Fairmont Park homes.
Or, if you want to build to your own ideas, buy your
lot now for contract construction whenever you prefer.
See Fairmont Park, thoughtfully planned for family
living ... a truly distinctive residential community. .
Contemporary 2* to ^-bedroom homes from 117,500.
faimont
While other shows are fighting
the battle of Trendex, Collie’s
outfit is wrestling the elements.
"We’ve hit just about anything
you can imagine — rainstorms,
floods,-tornadoes,” said Collie.
"On the way to Fort Kflox, Ky
our carburetdr conked out on the
road. In Mobile, Ala., we hit
rainstorm so bad, we had to
push the people’s ears with our
bus after the show.”
Show business on tires may be
bumpety-bump, but Collie reports
that the reception accorded coun-
try music is smooth. In some
towns, the troupe has played to
audiences as large as. 17,000 in a
single night.
"1 know there are people who
look down on country music and
who think of countty performers as
illiterates, but I think those opin-
ions are gradually changing,” said
Collie.
"Country music has come a long
way. the past five years. It has
infiltrated the pop field and If you
look at the top 20 songs in the
country right now, you’ll find al-
most half are of country origin—
"Dye Bye Love" and "A Whi:
control on cherries In view of
experimental evidence obtained
here at Cornell University’s
New York State Experiment
Station,
Information about the new
spray materials and the effec-
tiveness ox other fungicides cur-
rently used by cherry growers
was reported • by Dr. Michael
Szkolnik, plant disease special-
ist at the station.
Dr. Szkolnik pointed out that
probably the outstanding ad-
vance in research on cherry leaf
spot control “is the discovery
that certain derivatives of
actidione, an antibiotic; can con-
trol leaf spot systemically.”
“This means,” he said, “that
when some of these materials
are sprayed on cherry trees,
they arc absorbed by the leaves
and carried forward to new
growth which they protect
against leaf spot infection from
within,”
Dr. Sskolnik said perfection
of these materials may result
in necessity for only half the
five or six sprays performed in
current spray programs.
ed States. My work as editor of tion.
fort to talk over this and reb
questions with their Protest!
neighbors.
Catholics believe in reiigiou
ucation, for their children,
want their youngsters to - Id
geography, ^arithmetic, histl
languages arid,, science. But
also want them to learn alj
God, about their duty to’ lor
love and serve Him. They
that this can be done‘best ini
atmosphere of a parochial ^eK
The Supreme Cotut has ele
upheld their right to choose
schools for their children- Will
told sacrifice to themselves
have built and are malnti
these schools. In addition,
pay their taxes as citizens to |
port the public schools of the
the Catholic weekly review Amer-
ica brings me Mo contact with a
number of respected Protestant
leaders. Many of them are wor-
ried over this trend in our society.
don’t think so.
As Dr. Robert McAfee Brown
wrote recently in the Protestant
magazine, Christianity And Crisis,
controversy is "sure to continue."
He points to the likelihood that
Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massa-
chusetts may emerge as Democra-
tic cancttdate for the presidency in
1960. It is clear, Dr. Brown writes,
"all »i
like "B^e Bye Love'
The peak wartime average
output of crude oil in 1946
ite reached tome four million 895
thousand barrels a day.
that in the next three years "all of
the old stock arguments about
‘Catholics in politics,’ plus a good
many new ones, will be hauled
out, aired and employed with an
increasing intensity, bitterness and
"igor.”
One source of religious tension
which is certain to be with us for
a long time is the current dispute
over the use of public bus trans
portation for parochial school chil-
dren. This important issue flared
up in Augusta, Maine, only a few
months ago. More recently, the
state of Connecticut was sharply
divided on this same question. A
133-133 tie vote in the state Leg-
islature was broken by the speak-
er’s ballot in favor of a bill which
authorizes Connecticut townships,
on the basis of local option, to ex-,
tend the benefits of this safety
measure to all children.
Naturally, Catholics feel that to
deny this public-welfare benefit to
a child—because he gets off the
bus at a parochial school rather
than a public school—is an act of
discrimination. They cite the Su-
preme Court’s 1947 decision in the
Everson case. Catholics demand
this right for their children. Prot-
estant spokesmen in Connecticut
and elsewhere vigorously oppose
it.
Information invariably helps to
solve problems of this kind. I
have for some time advocated
that Catholic parents make* an cf-
If Catholic parents would
discuss tiie whys and wherefi
of Catholic education with
Protestant friends, a lot of ten
would be relieved. Some Catho
are doing this, of course,
ipany more of them should do,
same. Most Protestants have ]
never had an-'opportunity to_
out, from a Catholic, what
olic schools are all about.
Wk&wt&l *l/c
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 210, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1957, newspaper, July 5, 1957; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043288/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.