The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 92, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 27, 1955 Page: 12 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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THOSE HELMETS WERE N
DESIGNED by EXPMOf?:,,1:
MILLIONS OF DOLLARS WERE
SPENT PERFECTING THEM/
THEM WNB/^V^^
too wq!!
My HEAD IS
TOO SMALL
toobiq;
PEOPLE'
AN' I THUNK
Arizona Town.....
Becomes Screen's
Location Capital *
A-A ROTISN L06
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BILLY'S QCTS SEAL
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PLANE'S *OEliOAOEti*SR,
AND OECONTAMMWECZ 7 W*
—by Wayne Boring
Td better call in to the
OKAY -THANKS, JIMMY..,
DID YA SAY-.-
...... ""TnANKs, JIMMY...
YES, IT'S A PRETTY DULL
... DID YM
THE END
SUPERM,
I'LL BE T
OVER.'
OFFICE AND SEE IF THERE
ARE ANY MESSAGES FOR ME
—by Charlie Plumb and M Pox
ELLA CINDERS
I It will se mdur viorp *
against this miniature*
L taoc. ocrnaoco *
KRAS, I'LL PENT HAVING HIRED
Jasper Spafe tipped us on
TO YOUR WEIRP METHOD OF
TRYING TO SET ELLA j—^
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STOCK V yaJ'RE UNPER 1
SHARES'1 ARREST.' »rad
Mvu?/ibu pi-it/ rmrnw nirweM-
Sou TO BEAT UP HOMER SMITH.'
!——-, IT WILL BE VOIR •
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MISTAKEN/ V'—~t MINE J
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Next time tou hire a man to
PO YOUR P1RTY WORK,
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ISN'T A
COP'
STUDEBAKE
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and PA6KAI
SAVE
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story calls for.
at the age of 88.
—by At Capp and Bob Lubben
LONG SAM
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/WlSHT SfiOCWC-y AMONSTHEM, IF YOU UK6. ONLY 1
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MY FELLOW 1
SHEPHERDS M
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ABOUT f
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UfACKARD DEALER
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) N.m of Ohio a «t left end U. $.
DIAL 8331
' PAGE 12
THE BAYTOWN SUN
CURLY KAYOI
.
BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH
WHAR TH'
qq ^ x DING DONG IS HE,
UNK SNUFFY
js
—by Find Lauwtl
r 01 70
jtVSHOKK WEATHER—
night In expected to
Weather forecast
SkH. through Thar
scattered thuiiderohoweni. I
1 TIDES; High Low|
2:51 tun. 8:4
2:18 p.m. 8:4«|
. 3*. NO.«
fr~~
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■ ;U£< -
TMS IS AN *8«hi view of the newest, huge aircraft carrier USS Forrestal u she left the dock at
NVwportNews, Va, to begin U. S. Navy acceptance trials. (International BoundphotoJ
'Yellow Rose' Created On Times Square
Author Admits That He Rode Through Texas One Time
By GROVER BRINKMAN
Central Preaa Correspondent
SEDONA, Aris — The red-haired
boy in the Davy Crockett outfit
let out a war-whoop. “'Look, Pad-
dy — John Wayne!”
The kid wasn’t mistaken, John
Wayne it was — for sure — with
an entire movie production com-
pany, arivlng for a new picture
at one of Arizona’s moat unque
towns — Sedona, nestled along-
side the red-rock cliffs of Oak
Creek canyon.
Had the boy in the Crockett
getup remained longer at Sedona,
he might have seen Bob Taylor,
Randy Scott, Bob Mitchum, Errol
Flynn, Ray Milland, Dick Powell,
Tyrone Power, Maureen O'Hara,
Gene Tierney, Lizbeth Scott, and
dozens of other big-name Holly-
wood stars.
For suddenly almost overnight,
the little town of Sedona is the
new motion picture location capi-
tal of the world. To date, more
than 30 movies have been shot
there — and more are on the sche-
dule. V
Tai
I V,r; T-
' N*!'
JL* -V H
Take a second look at the photo
illustrating this article. Docs it
, bit familiar? It should, for
By ROBERT ZIMMERMAN never have become popular today
gs&rarEH :£r3T^arr. isr-Mus/ss
SSkBEk =raj££ «s
ollec . “ —w to my pubisher that somebody George.
look a —-------- —--------
it has been used in many westerns
shot at the foot of the towering
red-rock cliffs near the town. It
ought to make a pop song out of js known to Sedonians as ’’the
were too vague to be of much
help when he put together the cur-
rent No. 1 song hit, “Yellow Rose
of Texas.”
In fact, the inspiration came to
him in a barbershop, near Times
Square.
“Don't get me wrong. I’ve been
to Texas,” said George, fingering
a glass of milk at a local chuck-
wagon called Toots Shor’s. “Well,
through Texas, anyhow.”
' Though a confirmed New York-
er, bom within earshot of Hn Pan
Alley, George has made three or
four trips to Hollywood, the op-
posite pole of the songwriter's
world.
'Potential Danger' Of New
Drugs Studied By Doctors
Street.”
It is a typically stagecoach
town. Different camera angles,
different trapping, new names on
the doors, and a building moved
across the street perhaps, and it is
all ready for a new story.
Sedona's place in the celluloid
sun really dates back to 1945
when the hit movie California
was filmed there. Starring Ray
Milland, it was shot in and around
Oak canyon.
The company was housed In
Flagstaff, 30 miles to the north,
and each morning and night all
trucked up
the var
Ry DELOS SMITH mining a drug’s toxicity, and the
NEW YORK —UP— Modern risks involved in use of a drug.”
drugs are "wonderful” — sclenti- Dr Mauer> jn his report in the equipment had to" be tn
fic progress in devising new ones New Bngland Joun,ai 0f Medicine, anU down the canyon to ....
is “rapid - but a major prob- said ..physicians are importuned ious gets Bigger problems still was
lem of 8nyj™^cit^,,.fby advertisements and gratuitous provjdjng the cast and workprs
L hlrm” ^r^nv of them reprinlS t0 “SC ^ drUf? with three hot meals a day.
tiai harm of many of them, butazone) in a large variety of -- ■
This was the sense of an ad- conditions.” Dr. Vaughan said the
, . . ... dress ot Dr- s^!*rt L “sequence of events” going with
“Once they were having a bliz- of the University of Buffalo a „’w drug ..hag a rather definite
rani An the Midwest and I had to school of medicine at a recent pattern”
take a southern route. I thought meeting of the medical society of - . ” ho said !?• “La-
Td never get through Texas. It the state of New York. . ™* P™c™’ “
JuM goes on and on,” he raid. It was called to this writer’s at- Sa line hunmn beings)
a a .ssfi
ar.sw”c,r*r??.,si 7
George’s latest figures show the “It is obvious,” said Dr. Vaughn, .^^nation—revaluation ”
record sales have topped two mil- “that we owe it to our patients to d«n»«ton-revaluation,
lion. use new drugs whenever the dan- •
Die march-Uke air and its lyrics gers of the disease outweigh the fMff f* „
paying tribute to a Texas beauty dangers of the drugs. In so do- Xfh TAlIfnC A|nf|
were adapted from a traditionat tag we must know both the merits,
camp swig of dvtt War days. Die and the dangers of the drugs.” . ||- ,g___T„»!.*Sra«.
Dallas Chamber of Commerce last He said “toe type of knowledge” Hll f Af I raininn
month arranged a “Yellow Rose toe physician needed “concern *r * V| 3
of Texas Day” as a tribute to toe such items as “recognition of toe WAWrNPTnN_TIP_ ^ Armv
g.SS^
GwTe. M ofr-and^i songwrll.r dan to the patten,, the expert- mthSty
for more than JO years, doesn’t mental methoefas employed in use 'Zweek 7
feel guilty about collecting atito- of a new drug, basic principles of training -program next week. ™„,- ... - ----------------
*n”s royalties wi a tune which was blood production and blood cell That is a far cry from the 10,000- pany that resulted in a permanent
cribbed from a history hook He which drugs may affect normal a-month clip which the Army must building program. Since then, the
is Convinced “YeHOw Rose” could blood equilibrium, factors deteY-, attain to meet its goal of 90,000 in boom haij been continuous. Today,
j^ggggjggg^gggjggjjjjgaaBiiiaiaiiBigiira'/thg>- next nine, months. Hollywood makes an. average of
The still incomplete figures in- four high-budget pictures yearly
elude 386 predraft age youths who in Sedona’s vicinity,
have joined the Army reserves, and Making a picture at Sedona is
in AlfiAinnni f.iow/lcfYlnti Ufhrt mill . V. nee i r_
SELECT A 600D AGENT-HE WILL SELECT SOUND COMPANIES
TUCK INSURANCE AGENCY
PRUETT BUILDING
THIRD GENERATION OF SERVICE
DIAL 2912 OR 5474
' lifts. JULIA PIERSON |
HEART TEST — There’s really nothil
Health League receptionist said it did
Health League , the new electrocardiogrM
supervisor, demonstrated the machine to
BIG BEN BOLT
■ ■
—by Jolw CiAm
WY.SUYSf
LOCM WHO WS
THE W4TO31 WWTS YOU TO KNOW
HE'LL MAKE HO PEALS WITH YOU,
BILLY. HE SAYS WE
(50T VISITI we!
BEW BOLT-THE
AW NOTHIN®!
' YOUHWW,YOU
AIN'T 4SBI®4CX
TH0U6HT, BOLT/
BUZ SAWYER
THEM YOl’ffi TUWIWS ) WHAT POYOtf WlHK ? .
DOWN THE WWPEW'S jMii YOU2SELF T'HOME,
BgH. BE MY SUEST!
oersr- ?
Late Bulletin At
Ni
NEW YORK—Iff)—Carl Furil-
lo drove Whitey Ford’s first
pitch in the second inning into
the right field stands Wednes-
day to pace Brooklyn to an early
2-0 lead over New York in the
first game of the World Series.
SON SPOTS
Fire Inspection
HENRY TIMMERMAN, inspector
for the Fire Insurance Commis-
rate next year. Timmerman udll
check fire records, inspect^thej
Patierl
League f
MemoriJ
ing betl
BaytowJ
service 1
The
an ele
IUI LII1CC iluv a Mfsj.
Then a rancher came to the res-
cue. "Oscar,” he said to the cater-
ing boss, ''what you need here is
a permanent base of operations.
Locate it in our new town* and
your troubles will be over.”
The new town he spoke of
(Sedona) was just a wide place in
highway 89, with a store and a
post office. Actor John Wayne
overheard the remark, and said it
had possibilities.
John then, was under contract
with a studio to produce and star
in The Angel and the Badman.
After loking over the gorgeous
scenery on all sides of Sedona, he
decided that this was the ideal
spot to shoot the picture.
The catering outfit started a
building boom in Sedona that still
is in progress. Since then, big-
name Hollywood stars are com-
mon at Sedona Lodge. Today Se-
dona is a thriving western town.
Wayne really started .tiwhen he
brought In a big Hollywood com-
SOUNP THE 'AIL CIE8R."
MAY LEAVE THE ft WE,
P
WIMPYOU 11 THOUGHT THE ipflPKTIS
caw own! I fission kactoky'
WAS GENERATING
IllPrL TOO MUCH HEAT,
AND
Sw \STICKTOYCK
THE TIME! TT lUTIU'IUCK
WASAMWBf) m." FLYING
^■■■THISPIANEIS
own. / KSPONSiSiirr
-4>y Roy Cam | ftj
I n Manager C. D. Middleton said. f wf |
Kiwanis Speaker
DR. LEE C. PIERCE, pastor of
First Christian church of Tyler,
who is conducting a revival to>s
■ week at the Chriatian church here,
I will be the speaker at the Baytown
I Kiwanis club luncheon Thursday.
The club /drill meet at toe Tower
: at noon, ,
\ Red Gosilns Play
RED GOSLINS from Baytown jun-
ior high will meet Pasadena’s
Southmore junior high footballers
at Cedar Bayou Field Thursday at
6:30 pm. The Goslins own a 1-0
record.
Die
sending I
medicInJ
clinic ini
cinto Ml
Mr*:
ervisor,i
contribnl
oua Bnjrf
“We c|
as the i
for pilli
Mrs.
The
sacks.
The]
five
paper
ent mea|
Pierson
r . • . . . .
Xraund Tom-
Relative Dies
MRS. ELSIE ALLEMAN, 504
Ruth, left Wednesday for Port I
Arthur to attend the funeral of her |
brother-in-lnw, L T. Arnaud of
port Arthur. Arnaud, 58, died of a I
heart attack Tuesday. Mrs. Alle- I
• man will return to Baytown about A
Friday. ’ Reeiden
«,?•> •:>, wood ar
asked Wi
to halt ar:
plague th
much of t
w--. v. , . ■ . The Sou|
KOSSE JOHNSON calling from trol Ass<
Japan, where he is stationed with golicitati
Uncle Sato force*; at 5:30 a.m. next few
Wednesday to wish his wife Bar- pritchard
bara Sue “happy birthday” andf to - The pr0
talk to his daughter, Dava Sue ... of Harris
Friends report-Mrs. Hattie Panck
is still' in San Jacinto hospital and iprayjnK
wanting visitors ... Sue Weaver ^ g^y
being VERY hard to reach on the bum areai
phone... Mary Jo Watson atotold T”e ^
town from Dallas in her new Ford ;or
Victoria. sa|d., The
E. M. and Dora Mae Francis December,
spending their weekend# picking The arei
pecans from theit pecan trees .. . breeding i
Mrs. D. H. Marshall visiting "kin ris county
folks” in the deep, deep Sowth, property
Mobile, Ala. . . Wanda Orton and wfJte the
Ann Bishop are attending the Al- Baytown.
interested in going with, them UyJl*-
ehould cAU her, phone Mfft» . n|»W
Clarence SchUltz claimsbewitnot i
let bis wire rend hi* new column JIR $ J
"Marriage Memos” ... Dr, Wayne
McCleskey bringing in some Sun NEW Y
"Sth McKinney thinking she Wtu„c=,.a>
SSTiT'
itrday afternoon fisherman and
I ' *:., ■
-
V-V
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 92, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 27, 1955, newspaper, September 27, 1955; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043539/m1/12/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.