The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 291, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 5, 1961 Page: 2 of 10
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«*> and Fail of the
1 on the boardwalk in
of Delmonico'* reetaurent.
i with a three-day stubble of
the center runs the street, cov- This year
cred with real dirt. On both sides
re permanent sets.
The exterior of Doc Adams
This year T.unsmoke" is be- * By Donai
u »«*» *°°*t 1
Dodge Qty won’t change, nor will Monahan as a young man to
wm .... a 1
ior is across the street, around
the corner and on the ground.
On the east side of the street
arc the marshal’s office, the
boarding house, the stage depot,
era! store.
On the west side are Dodge
House. Delmonieos restaurant
(with the interior of Kitty's room
in the rear) and the Long Branch
saSoon. -
Depending on the needs of the
plot, the cast spends time at a
ranch outside Los Angeles film-
chairs in the middle of ing exterior scenes—those when
street, rehearsing their lines Matt and Chester are riding
who during past
has turned the fietitti
actor
seasons has turner ^fictitious
Marshal Matt Dillon into a fron-
tier officer as real as some who
really lived, will be fighting evil
■" ■ tu Weaver,
playing Chester, Dillon’s naive and
not-too-sharp assistant; Milburn
f heart-
stopped'dw patrol
car behind Wilson’s yellow sedan.
He drew kts pwol whispered to
Dr. Haledjitn to wait, and caUad:
three-day siunme oi Hoarding nouse, me stage mT-"*
ig ragged dothes toe Lady Gay saloon and the gfe as usual. So will
and carrying a rifle, was walking
down the dusty street, peering
into store windows, obviously
hunting down an enemy .
* Marshal Matt Dillon, Chester,
three evil-looking men in black
ha is and director Andy McLag
Jen, in sports shirt and beige
llacks, sat in a cirde of canvas-
backed chairs in
)» street, rehearsing thdi _________
and occasionally scribbling small across the prairie. That is the
changes on blue-paper manu- place, too, where scenes in black-
sofeta. , , . smith shops, farm houses and
On toe fringes of this quiet such-are shot,_
scene, a scote or more electri- *-: ■ 7 ’ T '
ciana, cameramen, carpenters "c-"‘ • •
SMWSS xst Southwest Conference
SffSzrSX"*" Teams Busy On Holiday
* ™e m**™™ *****
CMtS**! Lance Alworth. die Arkansas
uiester, limping h ha][back wlth ^ talented gait,
because his spurs
his steps, and Om
jLsrrjs —-.“
mim *****
slightly hard but always virtuous
saloon owner.
The difference will be that the
last three characters will play
important parts In toe show. «
What will happen during “Gun-
smoke’s’’ extra half hour? The
extra time will be devoted to
more plot and “character devel-
opment. /
saved an estimated 1
Injuries were plaguing Texas
Christian where first string end
Lynn Morrison was knocked out
of action for at least two weeks
with a knee injury^ _
the street and strode purposeful camera. oWthtek. its squad is as small as ours," said
Sg *'*m\»* Baylor_mdem^ ^ .......
Dodge?”
i t As the
»’
JB—BtearsaiSg
acton went mi wito
work, this reporter had
L sw ~{e»_sygfc as
L w'- St>* T
scene of shoot-outs ^ writers went to Texas A&M
m
Dodge omsiFls .if three adjoin-
ing. stages in one big studio. Down
JL.,-.;*"'-.
m/ . ■
HOtp
3gP
stiSBis-"
Texas Coach Darr^ Rnydl ^as
working at (
’
mil:
again heard from Coach
Tuesday and .the, .
- scrimmage for their benefit, fag,
HTSriSw.
hu infant son carcfrilly on the fender
of his car and lifted his hand*.
•What’i Hall about, sheriff’-
, ‘Murder. We have a witness who
says you entered Moose Long's bar
last night after closing. Halfanhour
latsr Mrs. Long fouad Moose stran-
gled to death with a yellow scarf.*
That's a lie. Why-
look out!* cried Haledjlan, as
the baby clambered onto the yellow
hood. Cooing happily, he attempted
to stand, only to t* saved by
Haledjlan from toeing to the
ground.
That witness is mistaken, sheriff
Wilson resumed Calmly. Tve been
in this car since eight o’clock last
night driving down from Philadel-
phia. I Just arrived five minute#
ago.*
The sheriff looked at his watch.
tween fUh and here in a hale over . w*l*wref
IS hours,' he said dubiously. . pyj»~p»oy »y, pun-.etom up npm
Tau you prove I dldaV 009 *»«»H .»** ***•*“ *1*
snapped Wrtion. — may pmus <ptu pay »»tM ft
.;. '■ ♦ '.....--------' fawwfaoa* ww-"
wars
fought.
____as toat of a milk
h has Mom-ken. - |
i lives Odd legislation: In I
:«r
Prosperity note: U.S. hanks last
; m&tJLSS&t
1 everybody mad at It?)
. .w.'WMrflsfi"
fa pw a beard give up within Had your eyea checked lately?
Did you know vanilla comes
from one of more than 20,000
varieties of orchids* ... Vanilla
is still the most popular ice cream
flavor, outselling all other flavors
combined.
i women were banned from
either droggista or doc-
Signs of
was posted
two on it
k the week: Walter jpations known to
up to three pounds a day during
svnuiWt
off.
It was
I Dorothy Dlx whi
who ob-
taara
occu-
Tip to tourists: In Michigan the
road to Hell is paved with more U«te’ to mow for the $100 million
$100 Million Oil Investment Is Bad
or gas,
and foui
rcial at
HOUSTON (AP)—An oil publi-
cation says the oil industry has
Me Mt Mi Mu) He earet.tty M
Ike fweder «f Mt ear «ud Shud Ml
huude.
"Nothing could M esiier,* <k
dared Haledjitn. .
WHAT VMS WRONG
WITH WILSON'S AUW?
than good intentions. . . .You can
go to Hell there by driving to
from a town called Paradise.
Women are invading bn nuts
outdoor sports once popular Aii
ly with men. . . .fishing is a big
example. .. .(toe out of four «ng-
lers now wears lipstick.
| Our quotable notables: ‘To the
average man, doomed to some
banal and sordid drudgery all his
Funeral
Notices
liliililikWi
RAIN SLOWS HARVEST IN
SOME TEXAS FARM AREAS
COJLLEGE STATION (AP) -cotton hawest The
Scattered showers slowed harvest- sorghum harvest is j
tag, especially in the upper Gulf yields are good.
Coast area, but ta other areas in Much of toe South I
PARKER
Pies James Parker, 5L died
early. . Tuesday .morning . at his
home at 920 Zoe St., Houston.
Parker lived In Baytown and
Highlands before moving to Hous-
ton and is well known in the Bay-
tuvvfc area.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs!
Katy Parker, of Houston; one ■ , ■ MWWii
daughter. Mrs. Linda Chaput, of £ *& record^ bet-
says t
i snow
spent on operations in federal wa-
it ters off the Texas coast.
The Oil and Gas Journal of Tul-
! sa said in its Sept. 4 edition toe
operations in Texas offshore areas
have been disappointing but geol-
ogists have not given
“It’s ju*t been harder to find
oil than we thought it would be,"
one geologist said.
The magazine said the indus-
try has paid $67.5 million for fed-
eral leases off Texas toe past sev-
en years, has drilled & tests cost-
ing $22 million, and has spent
many millions more on lease
rentals, seismic work and other
activities.
The federal area is beyond a
three-league, or about 10 miles,
coastal strip the Syprefne Court
has recognized-as being owned
by Texas.
“Of the expensive offshore wild-
cat* drilled, seven have found oil
or gas in some quantity," tot
magazine said. "But the quantity
has been so small it cannot be
produced commercially. It serves
only to whet the interest of drill-
er*.
‘Within the three-league limit
which found some oil or gas, four
have been abandoned and four are
shut-in as noncommercial at this
time,” the magazine said.
Pure Oil produced 21,110 bar-
rels from a Block 100 well about
12 miles southeast of Galveston
island and then tout it in. Pan
American abandoned production
in Block 14-1 about 12 miles to the
northeast of the Pure well and
sold its interest to Texas Eastern
in a Block 245 well about 12 miles
to the southwest. The Block 245
well subsequently was abandoned.
Stanotex has tout-to wells in
Blocks 52 and 14Q ta the High Is-
land area to the north and east.
Mobil hat abandoned a gas well
In Bkxto 389, some 25 miles off-
shore from Brazoria County. The
Mobil well was drilled originally
with Pan American.
Shell completed a gas weB this
summer in Block IS), about 40
miles southeast of Galveston.
Drilled jointly with Phillips Petro-
leum, the well tested marginally
at four million cubic feet of gas
dqily with five barrels of conden-
sate per million.
Shell recently drilled a dry hole
to 13,608 feet in Block 161 and
now has moved the rig back to
Block 160 for a 9,000 foot test.
M It's . . .
JEW&RY
Hack's Phamracits
rsi c. t«
MS-1755
004107
S»9>iSSSt
ym Kwd dSftJ* to m».
SPECIAL
* for ,
Reg. Order W A
Chicken JT
BROWN’S
CHICKENSHACK
E. Texas Hwy. 146
warn
klAUf THRU
NU Vf WEDNESDAY
Rock Hudson
GmaLOLLOBRIGIDA
Sandra Dee
Bobby Darin
I
%V
|w«e doing very well butjthe rea-
SRSS.-SSwSaS
IS out with a bruised hip.
The passing game petoed up
|in the Southern Methodist camp
with Harold Morgan doing the
throwing and Tommy Bramarn
the catching.
Sun Printer's
Sister Buried
Funeral services. were held at
\2 p.m. Monday at Heame for
Mrs. H. B. Cross at Vidor with
toe Rev. Harold Wasson, pastor of
Calvary Baptist Church of Heame,
officiating:
John Hutchison of - toe Texas stopped. Soil moisture is satisfac-
Agri cultural Extension Servfeto^ tory except for parts ofDawson
(tod Lynn counties. Insects have
been unusually short. Sorghum is
i Service,
stepped up.
i destruction
from adequate
as farra-
Tbe harvest
as did
and wheat
fa toort Itendie*s smile as
ers frown at hea\> downpours.
Ranchmen would like to see a
general rata to revive *y rmfo
and start cool season plant
growth. Plenty of grazing fa Still
avaftaWe to most cwmtfas toft
much of it is dry and mature, he
said. . - '• *
Harvesting ha^ beeh favdred-by
the opei weather and South Texas
farmers were busy finishing cot-
ton picking in- the Lower Valley
and Coastal Bead. Pastures gen-
erally are good and corn mid
grain sorghum are also looking
good.
airfare
South
tions are
ire moisture fa 400 in
Cental Texas but rondi-
goed for harvesting
'Ores, rister of Ray*Morgan, cotton, com and rice. Peanuts
■' i mat fa were beiig harvested and swv
ghum stubtte was being shredded
and plowed in preparation for
flax seeding. Livestock are doing
well. , :
All harvesting has been delayed
i counties where showers fell ,
member of The Sun’s composin
room staff, died 'at 6:20 a.m. Sat
H. B. Cross; one daughter. CbeiyL
Cross; one son, Kent Cross, all of
^ mit, csrcmt —* •'*’■—- ~
a svsa*?es
Rifhards; two sisters. Mrs. J. P- in“ aT'H *
maturing but harvesting is still
Gtos^xt, of
Houston; two sons, Ronnie Parker
and Donnie Parker, both of Hous-
Mmited basis. Range and fan-' fas mother, Mrs. Fannie Par-
livestock conditiOTs are above
average. * •
Moisture ranges from short to
adequate ta the Panhandle. Wheat
Mean*: went on in toe upper
counties. Sorghum was beginning
to head. Livestock and ranges
were in good condition.
ker, of Baytown, and three broth-
ers, M. O. Parker. Henry Parker
and Raymond Parker, all of Bay-
town.
Funeral Home.
ter. fait ’success’ fa hanfiy the
term to describe it There are
nine producing fields in this area,
all but one of them small as fields
go. Sane are of the one-well va-
riety. There ;is nothing compara-
ble to toe lush production along
the Gulf coast just a few miles
■The magazine’aveH
down of tests made in Texas fed-
thfa break-
EVEIl HAPPEN TO YOU?
By Blak«
milHSTESTS THE LICENSE BUREAU
poesN'r&ve: keeping both TehPEZ
MD CAR UNP5R CONTROL WHEN THE
super privet
rr:
\
SHE MAKflEP lS A PASSENGEg»
jStevens, .Hrerne and "Mrl P-Q. T(
Smith, Nederimid.
Rain More
Radioactive
TAIPEI (AP) - The Formosa
weather bureau reported today
that rain falling «■ Formosa
had become more radioactive
because of toe Soviet nuclear
test test Friday U said rain
| for grow-
ing crops and ranges in Central
Texas but the open Weather has
aided harvesting. Haiyesting of a
good crop cbm crop has started |
and about 75 per cent is becoming
more general. Peanuts made little,
progress and need rata. Stalk
shredding and plowing are, under
way. Pasture grasses are dry and|
I mature. livestock conditions are
nornutL
Moisture in Central West Texas
is short, but the open weather
aided sorghum and hay harvests.
Cotton, made satisfactory progress I
but pecan shedding was unusually
heavy. Ranges and livestock , are
water gathered M«4dsrws;-to~ fa-good OTKfitiod. fendffiWi are
tones more radioactive than busy with goat shearing,
rate water gaftered fteday be-
fore although far from being
dangerous.
The bureau predicted contam-
ination would continue to to-
ereaae in toe next few days.
T
mmm
ENDS TOr
HOMICIDAL
VINE BRAIN FROM I
PLANET AROUS"
"ANATOMY OF A
PSYCHO"
WE WILL BE CLOSED
WEDNESDAY
Sdl moisture fa short fa far
West .Texas where ‘range grass
plentiful but diy. There was
some danger from grass fires.
Cotton is maturing. Livestock are
ta good condition. . ■
Moisture. is adequate in att
Northeast Texas counties except
Gregg, Upshur and Van Zanat.
Silage and hay making are at
their peak. Rains have improved
sweet potato prospects. Some are
being marketed.
General conditions in North Cen-
tral Texas are well above average
far this, time- Farmer? fa. the
Blackland comties are beginning
to defoliate oottafi fra- mechanical
harvesting. Sorghum yields have
been good. Harvesting of an av-
erage or better <$n crop has
Blaze Destroys
La Porte Grocery
Isensee’s Grocery « 25 W-
■ La Porte was destroyc'
at 10 p.m. Monday. Hi
I estimated at $25,000.
Swjmssss
belieVtfd to-have started in a store
room, but toe cause was unde-
termined. The fire threatened ad-
jacent buildings and one was dam-
aged by smoke.
Owner of the grocery fa Harold
S. Lowe, who operates another
store on Highway 146 in La
Porte. He said his grocery stock
was estimated at J18,0Q0 and. fix-
tures $10,000. Approximately $14,-
000 of the loss was covered by in-
surance, Lowe said. ■
La Porte Fire Marshall Gflfad
Crofoot estimated file damage at
025,000.
eral waters so far: Shell, 12 tests;
Standard of Texas, 11; Pure Oil,
5; Pan American, 4; Atlantic Re-
fining, Continental Oil, and Hum-
ble, 3 each; Mobil,*!, and Pani
Air.erican-Mobil Jointly, L
"Of the eight wildcats which
•LIDS RULES
for today and tonirnw
ft m-mm. ftnnfafa ftjmnsM
to ‘26’*"'
matherne's «f baytown
mgm
^ . 207-214 West Pearce
m
© 1E61, Kins Feeturei
9-5
am
Keep Up With Sports
In The Daily Sun
■ •
.
NC
!lr.rrr^-~
FALL
.. ,E
; V f- , *!.. /■■ :v
’ V
—
nothing
• • •
started. Pastures ah 1 ranges vary
from dry to extra g tod. Livestock
are in fair eoihditiaj[ jj
dry h
in fair
Mofature is ■
toe Roiling Plains
m
kpr
WT ; '■
A n
OFF!
Mtrch 1,1861 priet
(Including inttmtdith inductions)
Hk
*
HU. :
throu^iout
) . The
S---«"
mmm DECKER
SHOWING NOW THRU WEDNESDAY |
MfiBMDt« 4 ACADEMY
OF I* AWARDS A including BEST PICTURE
H
fClrcl# K PIiwm
aRCLE K Internal I
organization at Lee
begin activities bv
information -booth
|tion. Any men
B| will be asked
application
Lawless at
hTS
lift
Mike
MOST SENSATIONAL OFFER
EVER MADE ON THE MACHINE
THATOUTSEWS THEM ALL!
FAMOUS
SLAHT-O-MATIC
-f ZIGZAG MACHINE
(MODEL 401) ,
........ » -
". ' . . - .... :
Use it to dam, sew buttons, make button-
holes, overcast seams, blindstitch hems
-and create hundreds of fancy stitches—
the new, easy zigzag way. Only $2.75 per
week after small down payment. :
Course
CAPT. SAMMY
son of S. M. Cc
Sue, has comp!
associate signal
SBASWggg
g.mSarM
29,
iPawy
13-week
career
■Port
■V
NO ONK
UKI.feU VO.: /
/, your need* » ,or,
:l:r . .
items you’d like to sell.
■■..dial m-mt !£,
TRADE-INS FROM *19.60 (various makes)
v - v' ■ .-
$*!• Mutt Tuesday, Supt ember Sth-open •Ut 9 P.M. ell week I
-:rr - . Bteakt limited on aeme Heme , ' \
SINGER SEWING CENTERS
headquarters TOR AIL YOUR SEWING AND FLOOR CARE NEEDS
"DRAWS AS FAST
"Not Even Mr. Dillon"
AS SUN
CLASSIFIED ADS
And, Partner... that means quick extra cash for you.
And, here's all you do to get it.
Look around your homa for all tha things that still hava •
value—but aren't being used or enjoyed anymore. Put
these things down on paper. When you have your list
just go to your phone and dial 582-8234. The friendly
Ad Writer who answers will help you word a result-gat. -
ting Baytown Sun Classified Acl that reaches your cash
buyers fast. *
Don't wait! Shoot straight for extra money. In those
parts... nothing outdraws Baytown Sun Classified Adi.
®l|p Saytmim &mt
Classified Ads
(Listed in phftie book under SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO.)
4
310 W. TEXAS
Mr
583-2400
582-8235
Day Or Night
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 291, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 5, 1961, newspaper, September 5, 1961; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1056861/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.