The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 352, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 26, 1957 Page: 2 of 10
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Gaodfellow-
tram Page oat)
TV names of some of the
feMiv;Mt contributors to the
Ooodfsllow campaign are never
list*! These folks prefer to be
known only as "Anonymous."
It ts not necessary- to list
you,- name as « contributor un-
less you want to Chief Good-
fellow will be glad to list your
gift as an anonvmoua one
Kemrmbrr, only a tew days
remain to make your contribu-
tion. Jr you haven't done so,
make it a point to do it today.
Bring or mail your gift to rhe
Bavtown Sun. or drop it into
one of the Cioodfellow contain
CITY CHARACTER DOESN'T
COME FROM ONE FEATURE
ssasaaffiSSi
inarets? —Milwaukee’s beef? Jakarta, the San Francisco Bay
. 1.____million
' OX U1C -------- |»l
in Baytown business estab- >jf,
San
minarets? -----------
Rome’s ruins? Houston s million-
No one feature can <io it. The
cities that have the real, recognis-
able personalities — that come
alive in your mind with the men-
tion of their names—are summa-
tions of many experiences that
tickle all the senses - smells,
muses, street voices, clothes, ve-
hicles, animals, buildings, terrain,
sculpture air to breathe, way of
ltshmcnts
And the cities of great charac-
ter display great differences in
sound smell, dress, voice. An elo-
CHICACoSlT- “in HIM X SKArt
aS’ES 1U JSw-n-fc *s^..y£is:
ear store wooden Indians, had to November Annals oi ine Ame
£n<i and buy one for its 100th am ican Society of and So
aiversary celebration.
icial Science in an article on ’"Hie
Urban Aesthetic" by John Ely
MIDNIGHT
SHOW
WEDNESDAY,
NOV. 27
Burchard, dean of the School of
Humanities and Social Studies of
Institute of
the Massachusetts
Technology.
FREE^vaiSmu*
LIPSTICKS AS
REVLON, LAOY FAIR
HAZEL BISHOP
CALYPSO, DU BARRY
Donnelly*
(Continued from Page One)
Club; and she was a Girl Scout
leader until Illness In early Oc-
tober forced her retirement as
an active worker.
Persons desiring to make con-
tributions to a memorial fund,
in lieu of sending flowers, are
asked to mail checks to Robert
Donnelly, 1806 Amelia, Bay-
town.
fog horns, the shrill engine whis-
tles at the Uare St, Lazare, the
subway rumble of Manhattan, un-
muffled motorcycles on the Corso.
As for talk, he cites: "The
sharpness of Albany, the softness
irpness of Albany, the soilness
New Orleans, the flatness of
Omaha, the twang of Portsmouth,
N. H...lhe diapasons of Hamburg,
the falsetto upturning* of London,
the liquids of Rome or Helsinki,
the wails or bleats of Bombay or
Cairo.”
Nor do cities smell alike. Bur-
chard says wood smoke and man-
ure provide the warm fall atmos-
phere of Bourges, coal gas cares
(or Birmingham or Washington,
Pa., oil for Galveston, coffee
roasting for Boston, and when the
wind is in the southwest, Chicago
knows the sick sweet odor of
drying blood and recently ardent
flesh," _
In the matter of dothing: The
bizarre open shirt of Hollywood
Vine is not the careful gray flan-
or the
hat of Fort Worth, or the bowler
of the city’ of London."
How true. I got one of those
big hats—a real 10-gallon Texas
special—as a gift from the late
Amon Carter in Fort Worth a few
years ago and wore it proudly
back to New York. Bui for how
long? One day. That’s all, brothei
Couldn’t stand the stares.
Well, I submit that one thing the
big burgs are getting together on
is a brain-wearying high noise
level. No less a Journalistic giant
than the Times of London wished
plaintively the other day for the
return of the tootle in auto horns.
A Times editorial said:
"Life has never really been the
same since the electric horn,
closely allied In villainy to the
steam whistle, took over from the
rubber ball contrivance that emit-
ted a mild and not unpleasant
toot. It took some little effort to
sound come out, and so there was
squeeze the thing to make the
nothing comparable to that im-
patient banging on the button, with
resulting assaults on peace, de-
nel of Grand Central, or the Mg Amen
cency, and good manners-..’
Is Detroit listening?
NOW
THRU WEDNESDAY
GREATEST
SPORTS CAR THRJUSI
rC
jpeviUS
i-HaiCpi'1-
M TECHNICOLOR I
CORNEL JEM
Wilde Wallace
f*w»,
UKlICt!
as*®!?
MONSTER®
TORTURE
BEAUTIFUL ,
SIRLSI
Cartoon “To Boo At You”
SPECIAL!
• MAN IN SPACE"
TODAY and WEDNESDAY
2 BIG FEATURES
Last Troops Due To
Leave Little Rock
LITTLE ROCK, Ark- <UP)-
Giant C-130 Troop Carriers will
take out of Arkansas Wednesday
the last 225 troops of the 101st
Airborne Division who made it
possible, with bare and ready bay-
onets, for nine Negroes to attend
Central High School.
The job protecting the Ne-
groes will be turned over to 900
National Guardsmen, federalized
by President Eisenhower when he
ordered in the paratroopers, but
still residents of Arkansas.
Because of the Thanksgiving
holidays, which begin Wednesday,
the first possible test of the qual-
ity of protection of the National
Guardsmen will come next Mon-
day. ‘
In command of the National
Guardsmen is Maj. Gen. Edwin
Walker, a regular Army officer
and commander of the Arkansas
military district._
Gov. Orval Faubus does not
think all the troops could leave
now without violence. «
"If I had to hazard a specula-
tion, it would be that some fed-
era! force will have to remain at
the school until the end of the
term if the Negroes are still en-
rolled,” Faubus said.
His phrase, “if the Negroes are
Jill enrolled," may spring from
eports that the NAACP at mid-
still __________ . , _
reports that the NAACP at mid
term Will give the Negro children
a choice of dropping out and at-
tending a segregated school,
remaining.
This Mrs. L. C- Bates, president
of the Arkansas Chapter of the
NAACP, bitterly denies.
Under the surface, there is still
plenty of tension in Little Rock.
There are scattered reports of in-
cidents between white students
and the Negroes. School officials
deny some and confirm others.
One TV Show Highlights
Teen-Agers' Pop Tunes
<m|> iiptoww
Tuesday, November 26. I?57
Noon Coll
Stock QuotM
{Courtesy MerrI Lynch,
Pierco. Fenner I Beane)
Atleg Ludlum .......*......M
AlUa-Chalmers ..... 25%
Amer Cyan ».....«^.«...... 4314
ATufT.................16744
Anaconda Co...............44%
Ander Prichard............36%
Bath Had.................»»
Br Am Oil ........••*».«.«. 8?4i
Celanese 1214
Celotex ........... ..IT
Chrysler ..... 6814
Cities Serv ................. 53%
Columb Gas ............... 1514
Creole ........ Til
Dow Chem ................ 86%
Du Pont ...................178%
Dresser .................... 39S.
Eastman Kodak ......... 86%
El Paso ........ OH
Fairchild Engra .......... 7%
Freeport Sulp .............. 7244
Font ................. 42H
Gen Electric............... 6244
Gen Motors ................ 85%
Gen Tele ..«»««.......«•««« 4644
Gen lira ..................28%
Getty Oil .....................
Gillette Saf ................55
nueTriar Tin............ UN
Greyhound............ 1444
(Ml (Ml ....... 11144
Gulf State Util............3844
Houston Oil .............. 4
H L and PO .............. 5444
HUMBLE................54
Imperial Oil ........... 43%
Int'l Nickel ............... 7644
Int'l Harv ................ 2844
Jones k Laugh ............44
Kerr*McGee ............... 484.
Libby McN ............... 8%
Liggett and Myers........ 8444
Ralph Yarborough (D-Tex.)
gested equipping the NATO coun-
tries with atomic weapons in a
speech before the Fourth Kansas
Congressional District Monday
The Texas junior senator said
"we cannot expect our friends to
face Russia’s atomic armaments
without having similar retaliatory
power."
The armament move was one
M four suggections Yarborough
NEW YORK (UP)—Teen-agers knows teen-agers knows that’s non
_ _ <m-
^Riat MiMitiin uwMNna .
CSMUS NcCMW MUM UMDtt
—Also On Seme Program
■AaxcwaxwocuciKy,
BING CROSBY
MAN ON FIRE
1 tCSWSMU I
«*»***!•
BP&
PRESLEY
make or break a pop record.
But strangley enough, although
TV trots out a bushel of musical
shows each week, only one is
pitched right at the saddle shoes
set—“American Bandstand.”
ABC-TV, which launched the
show mi its network in August (it
started as a local TV entry in
Philadelphia five years ago)
beams it to 74 of its stations for
90 minutes each afternoon, Mon-
day through Friday. The daytime
show has proved so successful
that, since October, the network
also has staged a half-hour even-
ing version each Monday.
The show's click with teen-agers
is based on a simple formula. It
shuns the high • priced, highly-
publicized “When-You-and-I- werc-
Young, Maggie” talent that other
network musieals offer so often.
Instead, “American Bandstand”
zeroes in on the artists the kids
are buying—Johnny Mathis, the
Everly' brothers, the Crickets,
many of them names that don’t
mean much to square elder audi-
tors.
“It’s no secret that TV neglects
the leen-agef,” says Dick Clark,
emcee of the show. “Even some
radio stations have stopped pro-
gramming for the kids. The situa-
tion exists because so many ad-
vertisers think the teen-agers lack
buying power. . 1
"But, of course, anybody who tlon.
sense. In any family, the teen-
ager influences the purchase of
the car, the toothpaste, the break-
fast cereal that goes into that
family. And he sets the styles for
the rest of the nation in other
things—in music, in fashion, for
example.” , . _ ,
At 27, the baby - faced Clark
commands a pretty loyal audi-
ence. One trade weekly ("Varie-
ty”), he pointed out, recently
called him ‘(he number one hit
maker in the nation.” Clark
turns that loyalty.
‘I think it was Mitch Miller
who said the teen-ager likes rock
‘n’ roll because nobody else does,”
says Clark. "The teen-ager would
like to be thought of as belonging
to a distinguishable group. He
wants an identity of his own.
"He thinks like an adult, but
he thinks of different things. Hes
not concerned too much with mak-
ing a living as adults are. His
concerns are things like the high
school football team, music...
"His heroes? Well, in music,
Rickv Nelson and Sal Mineo. El-
vis .Presley is still big. And there’s
Jerry Lee Lewis and Fats Domi-
no. With the exception of Fats,
who is 29, they’re all pretty young
- the kids can identify with
them. They buy Pat Boone, too,
but.they don’t get excited about
him. He’s sort of solid bread—
the Frank Sinatra of this genera-
Loews Inc •••*•»••*••••••• 1244
La Land 48
Mack Trucks ............. 2244
Merrill Petr .............. 10%
Monsanto .................85%
Nat Dairy Prod ......... 38*4
Newp Newa ..............78%
Ohio Oil ..... 33%
Olin-Math ................. 41%
Pacific Pet 2144
Pancoastal Oil ............ •%
Penney’* ............... *4%
Phillips Petr.............. 41%
Pure Oil ................. 84
Royal Dutch •••••••••»••• 4244
Sapphire .............. 8/18
Sear* ..... **
Shell ...................... ’144
Sinclair .................. 50%
Schick .................... 10%
Skclly .................... 59
Socony-Vac ............... <9%
Sou Pacific ............... 34
Spcrry-Rand ............. 18%
St, Regis Paper ........... 28
I SUn Calif ..... 49%
Stan Ind .................. 39%
Stan Ohio ...................
Stan NJ ..................80%
Stude-Packard ............ 3%
Sun Oil ................... fiR%
Sunray-Mid Cont .........22%
Tennessee Gas ............ 24%
Texas Co..................*4%
Texas Gulf Prod......... 30%
Texas Gulf Sulp .......... 16%
Tidewater ................23%
Textron .................. J*
Texas Eastern ......•.....41%
Union C and C ........... 96
Un Oil of Calif............ 45%
United Airlines ...........22%
United Carbon ............ 48%
U. S. Steel ................ 54
Woodley Pet........... 50%
W. R. Grace .............. 42’»
NO Cotton ...........Down 10
YARBOROUGH SUGGESTS
ARMS FOR NATO NATIONS
WICHITA, Kan. (UP)- Sen, PwgljiP Pentad
said he felt were necessary if tl
United States is to lake ‘de-
cisive and responsible leadership
of the free wood."
Among those attending the
Democratic rally were Kansas
Gov. George Docking, U. C
Joseph W. llenkle and Rep.
Floyd Breeding.
Yarborough praised the appoint-
ment of Adlai Stevenson, **“
Hospital
Beat
fly Wanda Orton
nominee
, advisory
position in the NATO group.H
The basic steps Yarborough
said this country must take so
that it "can move forward to de-
cisive and responsible leadership
of the free world” were outlined
as follows:
-’We must reorganize the gov
erament’s scientific sgencies. .
-‘We must appoint a missile
administrator or director with au-
thority and technical and leader-
ship ability to quarterback our
miutury and civilian missile de-
velopment team , . .
—"We must create a national
educational fund to search out the
many young men and women
who have special aptitudes, but!
no money for a college educa-
tion . . .
"We must combine our scien-
tific knowledge and resources
| with those of the other NATO
countries with atomic weapons
tor we cannot expect our friends
to face Russia’s atomic arma-
ments without having similar re-
taliatory power.” , ,
Yarborough attacked Agricul-
" Boi
t to the governor’s office in
oth^Shivers and Daniel sup-
ported President Eisenhower in
his two races and each time Tex-
as went Republican for the first
time in many years.__
Deaths-
Funerals
SUN SPOTS
(Continued from Pnge One)
Sorority Meetina
EPSILON SIGMA alpha sorority
will meet 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the Community house.
Rolico Meeting
BAYTOWN AUXIL1
BAYTOWN AUXILIARY police
will meet at the Community
house at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday to
watch a training film.
LEWIS FRAM, 510 North Whit-
ing, reported to Baytown police
Monday the theft of 25 duck
tore Secretary Ezra Taft Benson decoys from his garage between
WILLIAMS
Morris Williams, 55, veteran
sports columnist on the Austin
American-Statesmtn, died at
noon Monday In an Austin hos-
pital after a long Illness.
He had been on the sports
staff of the Austin newspaper
for the last 85 yean,
Williams was vice president of
the Texas Sportxwriten Associa-
tion at the time of his death.
Funeral rites will be held at
. p.m. Wednesday at the Weed-
Corley Funeral home at Austin.
Survivor* Include the widow,
Mrs Thelma Williams of Austin;
his mother, Mrs. Harry Williams
of Bayto -n; three sistere, Mrs.
Branch GuUett and Mrs. A. C.
Guilett. both of Baytown, and
Mn. E. ,C. Lewis of Corpus
Christ!; and one brother, Emory
Williams, a sportswriter on the
San Antonio Light, San Antonio.
A son. Morris Williams Jr., was
killed in the crash of an Air
Force Jet.
and said that with Benson at the 3 p m, Nov. 24 and 11 a m. Nov.
Mis* Sylvia McKinstry, Bay-
town insurance woman, is In
Room 342 at San Jacinto Memo-
rial hospital. She had surgery
last Wednesday, Miss McKins-
try is employed at Arnett, Mc-
Donald and Herbert Insurance
Co.
Baxter Littlefield Sr„ owner
of Littlefield Supermarket, is
"pretty sick" with a relapse
from influenza. He is in Room
315 at SJMH.
Mrs. W. E. Harlan, 116 High,
may return home Tuesday from
SJMH. She Is recuperating from
surgery.
Mrs G. L. Buford, better
known as "Josephine” at The
Fabric Shop, had surgery at
SJMH. Dismissed Monday from
tlic hospital, she is "getting
Finn "
head of the agricultural depart-
ment "Kansas has had the small-
est com acreage in many years.
He also blasted former Texas
Gov. Allan Shivers and Price
Daniel, the present chief execu-
tive of Texas,
"My state, as you know, has
been always regarded as a Dem-
ocratic party stronghold, Yarbor-
____L. ..iJ "anrl vfl# hflVP!) 1
25. He said each is marked with
black "F” on the bottom.
Value was placed at 235.
The Italian army Is said to
have been the first to employ
aerial bombing as pan of its
offensive.
Baskets Needed
SEVERAL FAMILIES sUll need!
Thanksgiving baskets, Mrs. B.J
M. Knowles announced. Names
of the families can be obtatnedi
by phoning the Jaycee-ettcs
REPRINTS
ough said, "and yet we haven t °y pm.....*
been able to elect a real Demo- clearingJm^JU 3-1442.
Of Any Picture in The 8un
May Be Bought From
BAYTOWN PHOTO#
Phone JU 2-8801
MARYLAND
CLUB
COFFEE
88c
—--FROZEN FOODS
i BIRDSEYE SLICED _ j
i Strawberries ......................25c;
OCEAN SPRAY
MIN IT MAID
along fine."
Miss Cynthia Mackrel),
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Mackrell, Ocear drive, is
in Room 204 at SJMH.
Mrs. John Nesselrode, wife of
Baytown physician, is in Room
340 at SJMH.
W. A. Felton, supervisor of
custodian work in all Baytown
schools, had surgery at SJMH.
He Is in Room 346.
Mrs, Fred W. Aebi, 202 Bay-
shore drive, is in Room 213 at
I ; Orange Juice can*- 35c 2 c*n» 39c
49c
CRANBERRY SAUCE
19
300
Can
reddi wir
Whipped Cream
7-ox.
Can
SPECIALS FOR
NOV. 27-29-30
CRISCO
3 & 85c
Qts.
Fire Burns
Women,
Children
"55 39c
Z 39c
Stork Stops
EILAND
Mr. and Mrs. Guinn L. Eiland
of Jacksonville, Fla., are parents
of a boy bom Saturday night.
He weighed seven poqnds. Grand-
parents are Mr. and; Mrs. C. G.
IJndstrom of Chanhelview and
Mr, and Mrs. G. L. Eiland of
Baytown. Great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. S. E, Smidt of
Houston and E. E. Eiland of
Rockdale, Tex.
2 Hits 2
NO. 1
Empty Graves Put Stop
To Probe In Plainfield
Rainfall Record
Set In East Texas
uNUAM
BRAVE MSN
P) —Lo- added, ’the last day of this hor-
"' Grin .follow
PLAINFIELD, Wis- (UP)
cal
looted
......"KNUTE ROCKNE -
ALL AMERICAN”
BAY
butcher - slayer Ed
ing the opening of the
graves of two women.
District Attorney Earl Kileen.
slid Monday night the ■ looting
proved Gein’s story that he ob-
tained all but two of his human
trophies in ghoulish raids of fresh
graves on moonlight nights.
However, Wisconsin Gov. Ver-
non Thomson directed state inves-
tigators to continue their probe.
Thomson ordered State Attorney
^_Ste^H^tocon-
Authorities, who found Geins
ramshackle farm home littered
with the grisly remains of 10
women, at first feared the 51-
year-otd bachelor was a mass
murderer.
NACOGDOCHES, Tex. (UP)—
A rainfall record of 66.65 inches
set in 1880 has been broken in
Nacogdoches with 70.42 inches so
far this year, the local weather
observer said today.
Soil throughout the county is
waterlogged and rural roads in
bad shaper agricultural authori-
ties said. There has been more
than 9 inches of rain so far in
November and .10.87 in October.
IPfell last April,
RAYMONDVILLE, Tex. (UP>-
Four children and two women
were burned severely today in a
gas explosion that collapsed an
apartment ceiling on them.
Gas from an open kitchen stove
tlet, ignited by a bathroom light
switch, caused the explosion, Fire
Chief Jack Scott said.
One of the victims, Mrs. Ray
Sherrell, 29, is expecting a baby
next month.
Others burned were her daugh-
ter, Linda, 4, her 5-year-old niece,
Sylvia Florez, her sistere, Rosa-
linda Diaz, 13, and Lydia Diaz
10 and a woman who was visit-
ing the family overnight, Maria
VMr’s.5°Sherrell told hospital at-
tendants she awoke shortly after
3 a.m. to find herself ‘ in the mid-
dle of a great ball of fire an in-
stant before the windows blew out
and the ceiling fell in. ’
A kitchen stove had been re-
moved from the apartment 10
days ago. The unclosed jet was
covered with linoleum and gas
collected between the ceiling and
the roof.
The bum victims were removed
to Raymondville Memorial Hospi-
tal. All suffered burns of vaiying
degrees on hands, face and legs.
Pouting Police
Take Another Job
Chihuahua dogs were belived
by the Aztecs to guide human
souls through the underworld.
Some of the natives of Tahiti
still believe that their gods live
in the trees.
ATHENS, Tex. (UP)-J<* Me-
taken a job as chief of police at
Van, Tex.
DEL DLXI SWEET MIXED
PICKLES ...........................
XOW’IE PLACED, QUEEN
OLIVES....................—
DEI. MONTE MART WASHINGTON
asparagus tips—
DEL MONTE WHOLE KERNEL
GOLDEN CORN________2.” 29c
SWEET POTATOES......«c.„ 23c
BROWnI SERVE ROLLS o., 19c
TISSUE............2 m 23c
SCOTTKINS
DINNER NAPKINS .........««23c
NBC - --
PREMIUM CRACKERS
Colgate’s Economy Site
TOOTHPASTE________49c
GLADIOLA
FLOUR
5 £ 43c
FOB THE TURKEY DRESSING
QUAKER MEAL
White or yellow 1
24-oz. Box.
FRATTLOW WHOLE SPICED
PEACHES
25c
No. 2l/2C«n
TOWH MAN7.HMLLA
STUFFED OLIVES
39c
73/|-oz. Jar.
Cured Hams
It Glorifies
Halo Shampoo
65c
....Size
Shank
End . Lb. W
Butt
End—Lb.
49c.iS5.89c
Green Onions
2 hr 15c
FRESH KILLED
HENS .....
Bunch..
TURKEY 16-20 LB. AVG.
TOMS ..........
Large Size Sunldst
ORANGES
SSSSAUSAGE
..Lb.
SUN VALE SLICED
i*COH
ROUND STEAK
Today & Wednesday
FAMILY BARGAIN DAYS
timie investigating "all the facts
• -=------*-----” in the Gein
FREE !
SO YOU ll ALWAYS REMtMBfR
TO SOTS loiflT Spoil Portia.1
MARILYN MONROE
Your Entire Immediate
Family Admitted
Afternoon and Evening
FOR CA~
ONLY.
and circumstances
CThe two graves were secretly
opened Monday by Waushara
county officials. One grave was
empty, the other contained a scat-
tering of a woman’s bones on top
VEAL «
LOIN STEAK u. 65c
OUR DELICIOUS
REGULAR 75c ORDER
TO OIRIS larq. Spun Partm.i
ELVIS PRESLEY
1001 MORE THRILLS!
:
FRIGHTENING! AWESOME
Doors
Show
ALL
of the casket. ,
"I had to brace myself to look
Kileen
into those graves,
*K was a grisly 1
‘But this was a
field day," he
Japanese
Protest
CHICKEN or
Hcmburger Meat 2 » 79c
■ ■ ■ . - % &
SBSHIPI
tickets Now On Sole ,
mm
I' '
' : ' ' . . .
M4
TOKYO —(IB— Some *6 Japa-
nese university student, staged
•jrtfSiSErsai
today, protesting what they
called “infringement of democ-
racy” by the U.' 8. high com-
misstoner oa Okinawa,
Tht* denionHt ration
Monday’s onstlng of Nsta’s
Communist Msyor Karaejlro
Henaga by a city assembly non-
ce vote. The
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 352, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 26, 1957, newspaper, November 26, 1957; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043681/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.