The Daily Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1949 Page: 4 of 10
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The fear of the Lord is the baginning of
wisdom: a good understanding have all
they that do His commandments: Hu
praise endureth forever. Psalms 111:10.
By Fred Harfmaa
FHA'S 15-Year Record
MAKING ROIT OOMPLJBT*
NOW THAT THE July 4 holtdsy 1* over end moat
o| uc ere still In one piece, K le time to fret So Hie
etudy of the more ecrloue problems that face this
country and the world.
While raoet of you were enjoying a pleasant hoB-
the expense of Mother Nature, we wees
day at
thinking
The depression-born FHA completed Ra
fifteenth year of existence a few days ago,
and the report of ita activities should be
very conaolmg to all 'of “*• , ... yju Then President Roosevelt eaid that K Ruaela ever
In 15 years FHA has insured JIB Dlinon b#cajn# a threat to this country-a real threat-he
In* moat of tha International situation.
One of the greatest statements we ever heard the
late Franklin D. Roosevelt make In connection with
International relations was so typically American
It sure made a deep impression on me.
worth of mortgage and property-improve-
ment loans, and only six-tanth of one per
cent of these loan* resulted in foreclosure.
Some 2.500,000 American families, hun-
dreds of them right here in the Baytown
area, are living in dwellings financed
through FHA. More than 1,500,000 were
unite started with FHA financing. And it
k remarkable that less-than 12,000 ended
in mortgages! Payments are stretched out
over such a long period that few should ever
find themselves unable to meet their com-
mitments.
Evidently this seems to be one federal
ggency that is working well, and working
for the people.
fore We Go Again
A work stoppage by the coal miners early
hi JuJg would be greeted in moat quarters
with a yawn instead of with tee general
eonatetnation evoked by coal strikes during
and immediately after tha war. Then the
coal supplies were low: today the stockpiles
of ooal are considerable. John L ordered a
would lupport a project of printing 10,000.000 eoplee
of a 8#ars-Koebuck catalog and dropping them from
alrplanee In Ruwla.
The Ruuian people would open the big booki and
tee ao many thing* In them that we have In America
that they don't have in their country, they would
give up their fight for world domination and atart
a Juicy revolution the next day.
We have another suggestion to make which we
think would prove a greater undoing to Ruasia and
the satellite countries than even the atomic bomb.
It la simple, but it would be ever ao effective.
We auggeat that aquare dancing be Introduced
over there, -
Within three week* the entire nation will be re-
duced to ahamblea. .
Even when Premier Stalin w-ould lend the infam-
oua Gestapo out to find a political priaoner for either
extinction or a one way trip to Siberia, the aearch
would be in vain. There 1* no doubt but that the
man or woman aought would be gone —aquare
dancing.
We say this because we feel that human nature
1* very much the aame whether It be In Polk County,
Baytown or Moscow. And If people will go com-
pletely distracted over square dancing here, why
can’t we expect the aame result in Europe.
W* might even connect the Roosevelt suggestion
with mine. W* could get the aquare dance erase
started over there and while everybody was away
from home to dance, we could slip into th<j country
Sears-Rocbuck catalogs
. .and plant the Sears-Roebuck catalog* on every
tero-weeks “memorial stoppage last March dining tab)e in Ru„ia *, the family would be cer-
11 and a one-week “stabilizing" stoppage on tain to see them the very next morning.
June 13 in the obvious hope of cutting into ” ‘w"* ■* "" '*”*'*h .........*"*” """
the stockpiles ao as to improve his bargain-
ing position as expiration of his contract
wfth the operators approached.
In event of a prolonged strike, the miners
would have smaller savings to fall back upon
than during the war and the immediate
If there la any dearth of competent caller* over
there, Baytown could furnish them.
And then maybe a man around one of “these-
hcre” halls could get some sleep! Take it easy,
aquare dancers, we’re Just kiddin’.
Freak Reception Has
TV Talking To Itself
NEW YORK, July 6. —(DP)-Old tha moat generally
Mother Nature la putting the hex planation.
eceptlon in
on television reception In several He said television signsU
widely separated section* of th# baoome Images on screens
untry. travel - * .....
oountry. traval In a *tr*lght lln*
Clrcumatancea beyond the oon- tlon to TV set*. The effect >
trol of stations, set manufacture sun on the atmosphere he -
era, repair men and the people making tinea bend into *
and service co
Atmospheric
:h#r m>t»J
*»n’t muchT
at the dials have cauaed quit* a added, thus sending Imagn
few program* to pop up where *r diitanooe than Usually
they were least expected and to and skipping ov*r the norms'
fade out In their regular areas, caption area. The effacts
according to reorta from stations are noticed ahortly *ftfr ,,
ompanles. and continue until midnighM
conditions, gener- said.
ally attributed to the dry, hot Spokesman for the Colun
weather, have been putting some Broadcasting Syatem and crs
program* off the beam for the conducting a survey to its h
past week, television experts said, bad the situation Is and what
and completely normal conditions be done about It.
probably will not return until the An official of anothH
nation has a good, general rain. added that there I
The average rang# of a tele- worry about, that the trouble'!
vision station 1* about 50 miles, tually be Ironed out.
but tele-viewer* In Hartford, Con- “It** like the old daye of
nectlcutt, have seen several shows crystal set radios,” he said -n
originating in Miami, about ^1,200 pie In New York got all
mile* away, Atlanta. Chicago, De-
troit, Milwaukee and other cities.
Some program from the station
in nearby New Haven are nothing
but blurs on Hartford receivers
because of the temporary weather
phenomenon.
A number of watchers in the
New York area have reported get-
ting shows from Washington, Bal-
timore, Philadephia and Boston,
while some New York programs ~ *
have sprung up on seta 1,000 mile* WASHINGTON, July 6. (3p)-J
distant. Boston, Philadelphia snd * ......
Washington stations reported nor- • •,
mal reception in their areas. paradise of ours. Have been ti
Some Chicago receivers have t0 contact A. T. (Albert TI
been picking up East Coast sta- at his home today, but pita
tions, while Chicago programs by. hi* officetomorrow
have been popping up as far away *h* weather clears. The pcoplt
here seem to be1 enjoying the
about hearing signals from KJ
sas, but we got that str.iirhtel
out In time.”
Moseyin'Around
With Mose and San
TEXAS—BIGGEST 1919 HOUDAY KILLER
Then they’d know what dry 1
er really la
GETTING TOI'GII THE EASY W AY
THE STATE of Wisconsin claims it has found a way
to cut the number of drunk-driving cases. The pro-
_ _ __ Palm Reading Is Almost Biggest Racket
But If They're So Smart, Why Ain’t They Rich?
compared with $1.85 in March, 1948, but
they were averaging only 36 hours a week
against 40hours a year before. As a re-
mit, average weekly earnings were $6 low-
er than in March, 1948-1^.41 an against an occupations operator.who is going to leave me $03,240.2*
$74,61. During ‘he *>rst month of the new law . effect, the Th„ *orm% dire(.tIv froln m tpnt
state motor vehicle department revoked the operat-
..^SdC’S STwI^d^rv^ B? HENRY MoLEMORE
— the Southwest and even Mexi
co. The Federal Communications date after they suffered, from .
Commission reported that a station * tbFF * drouth. They ought
in Houston, recently wax received UP* one those Texas dry
in Ontario. Canada.
The reception of some of these
long-distance programs has been
reported ‘ good," but most of them
have looked like Venetian blinds
being opened and closed, accord-
ing to reports. This has prompted
an unusual flow of calls to service
companies, but they are unable to
do anything because the flaw Is
Con Han Too Choosy
So He Gets Work
MEMPHIS, Tcnn. CD-Ben
C. 8mith, negro confidence
from Detroit found the count!
justice difficult.
When first arrested, the
jmss&m gfB8g ifPg K5S WBM ii§i=-
y p * Two- stand on the route of a station's The sentence: three year*.
television beam. The conviction was reve
army
This comes directly from a tent, from a tent, I swore I’d never go find out what happened to
. A palmist's tent. back in one but I went back in one Gun Bill, I will.”
tag licenses of drivers. The palmist's name is Princess today. She turned to page 74 and read
last year the state agency revok. d ttu permits Carj0 p-or ^ lhe wlll rPad your When I walked llto the tent what happened to Two-Gun Bill.
Inside Washington
of 5146 drivers.
Of the total, 4631 case* represented the single
....... »•
Eugene Anthony, manager of the A second jury again conn
television service department of him. The second sentence; ;
"Princeis,” I said, "from which Geran Electric Corporation, gave years.
With Central Press
MORE FOOD PACTS?
WASHINGTON The International Wheat Agree-
ment, safely over the Senate ratification hurdle, is
expected to serve as a model for other pacts to con
offense of "operating automobile while intoxicated.
The legislature had those figures before It when it
wrote the severe new statute, as the result of ex-
haustive work by a special interim committee last
year.
What concerned the legislature also was the fact
.oyeiw n * w™«
W too.1 court.. Some court, h.v, brto .dmiu.dly
royal family do you stem?”
• Huh?” she said.
Grab Bag
Easy Knowledge
HAPPY BIRTHDAY search. He directed his inquiries
Greetings go today to Wanda to those diseases of silkworms by
which
Cocteau, poet, arid Andrei A. Gro-
By that simple remark I knew
I was in the presence of a Bour-
bon.
She held my hand and told me
the things that I’ve written above.
Then I asked her if I might look
at her hand. She said yes. By look-
AILY* CROSSWORD
A United Nations committee already Is studying municipal magistrates,
the need for such arrangements for coffee, cotton, The stage motor vehicle department SOmments WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE
et, rubber, sugar, tea, timber, tin and wood. approvingly c
If the wheat pact is a success, rice and sugar are
rice, rubber, sugar, tea, timber, tin and wood.
rice M
likely to be the next Items for which
heat pact is a success,
terns for
will be negotiated. H
Agriculture experts point out
that a greater segment of the
world population is dependent on
rice than on wheat as a basic food.
PREDECESSOR - (BRED - dee-
again,
heat can be used to
blood.
X asked, "how
kill micro- 5°u rind out that you could look
rson a hand and tell his
and paralysis, but he soon was at r°yal
work again. He discovered that “Princess,
approvingly on the new statute:
i sugar are “Now no matter how great the need for the use S^-Tr7“6ne who or‘that whieh 0*"™™ Sa’^usT wurtng'and
agreements of a vehicle, anyone convicted of drunken driving d especially one who has Xr chanLs in milk win * and destiny?"
_____ in Wisconsin will not be allowed to drive for at “Huh?”
Having said "huh” two time* in
And rice production has been the
dly dislocatec
more badly dislocated of the two in
the war and rehabilitation years.
Cuba plans to propose a world ]
sugar agreement within a few j
months, but it is unlikely that'
world bargaining talks will begin!
for another year. The chief ob-
stacle to a sugar pact is the string- j
ent global shortage of ddllars.
Sugar cultivation has shifted
from Europe and the Far East
largely to the Western Hemisphere. Under an agree-
ment, importers thus would be forced to buy in a
dollar area.
Sdc,n5n!no!^^chn' thc akc-
is nothing compared with the hardship inflicted by Predeces8eur: from Utin Praede-
i in accidents ______
drinking drivers who become involved
and cause injury and death to fellow passengers,
other motorists, cyclists, or pedestrians.”
Looking At Life
By Erich Brandeis
BUB-VERSED
UNITED STATES strategists wHl not admit it pub-'
Italy, but they are inclined to depreciate the much-
vaunted Russian submarine fleet.
Official reticence on the subject Is inspired by the
fsot that the strategists have no wish to be caught
in a position similar to that of any political pollster
on lgst November 3
Maybe the Soviet U-boats are as good as has been
claimed. They’re being built under the tuelage of
German experts and are advertised as the last word
In speed and ability to remain submerged for long
periods.
However, the Japanese placed great reliance in un-
dersea craft which, likewise, were built under Gcr-
A FEW WEEKS ago I wrote a tribute to the Alle-
ghenies as seen from the porch of the Fort Bedford
Inn after a bounteous breakfast.
That column brought me a lot of mall indicating
that people, after all, do net live by bread alone but
appreciate-the. beauties of nature.
So you will forgive me, I hope, if today I do a
little piece about the Catskili Mountains of New
York state as seen with the eyes and the heart of
the Rev. F. J. Fitch, minister of the Lakeside
Methodist Church, of Muskegon, Michigan, an old
Catskiller, who went back there last October to
visit his mother, “who had just passed the 82nd
The process by which
milk and other important foods
are made safe for human con- a row}, de^ided that- the Princess
sumption is named for him. What wa* a Hapsburg. I asked her if she
was his name? a Hapsburg and she said.
‘ When are you leaving for North
FOLKS OF FAME-GUESS THE
NAME
1. He was an English poet, noted
for his beautiful—but somewhat
hard-to-understand—poetry and his
charming love story. He was bom gray or tawny gackground.
May 7, 1812, at Camberwell, 5. They travel at the
speed.
ITS BEEN SAID Carolina?”
The voice of humility is God’s, tf this column makes non sense
music, and the silence of humility to you up until now it will be be-
ta God’s rhetoric. Humility on- there is no possible chance
forces where neither virtue nor to make any possible sense out of
strength, nor reason can prevail.— a palmist. Reading palms may not
Francis Quarles. bc the biggest racket in the world,
but I'm willing to bet you it will
YOUR FUTURE be a photo-finish with the racket
Fully explore opportunities avail- that wins. Mind you, here’s a fat
able at this time. Your ingenuity old lady from Davenport. Iowa,
should see you successful during reading Western stories, taking a
the coming months. Today’s child dollar from me, and telling me my
may be somewhat sensitive and so future, my past and my present. If
sympathetic and tactful with oth- *he knew what she was talking
ers—to his or her own advantage. about *he wouldn't be working in
a tent. She'd be surrounded by
marble, she’d be wearing Christian
Doir’s clothes, and she wouldn't be
interested in my dollar.
This column can only serve one
purpose. If this column will help
to eliminate palmists, then it has
same riot been Written in vain.
HOWT YOU MAKE OUT?
1. Hygienics.
2. Massachusetts.
3. Yes, if properly grounded!
4. A cow with dafk streaks 1
man guidance. This did not stop them from bccom-
many sitting ducks for United State
submarine forces.
It. is now believ
their lack of know-how in the operation of these
now believed that the Japs’ difficulty lay In
tricky craft
Aside from difficulties the Russians might face
in getting their U-boats into the open seas, and then
keeping them supplied, it is also doubtful if they
have the skilled crews to make them really effective.
i-operation Administration is
erica!
INNOCENTS’ FILL-IN
THE ECONOMIC Co-o
making sure that Americans vacationing in Europe
this summer have the basic facts of the Marshall
Plan at their finger tips.
ECA is distributing a 12-page brochure on "Th*
*ion " telling in the simplest layman’s language why
milestone.”
London. His first published poem,
FRANKLY I had never seen the Catskills that way, Pauline, appeared in 1833, anony-
although I had passed through them many a time, mously. He visited Russia in the THE ANSWER, QUICK!
Perhaps they are too close to my own home. Per- winter of 1833, and there wrote his 1 By what name is the science
haps I could not sec the forests for the thousands fjrst dramatic lyrics, then visited of health called ?
and thousands of “she’s too fat for me” ladies who Italy. In 1844 he met his wife-to- 2. Which of these states has
roam these mountains during the summer months, be—a poetess who had praised one the largest number of cities of
dressed in slacks that would look much better on 0f his poems. Sordello, Pippa IM.dOO population or over: New
« bushel of potatoes. Passes The Enelishman In Italv York, Massachusetts, Ohio? ____.
However", the next time I drive through the Cat- and Home Thoughts From Abroad 3. Do lightning rods afford real THREE CITIZENS of southwest-
skills again, I shall try to see them as William Her- were written about Italy where protection against lightning? Arizona, New
bert Carruth saw them, according to the Rev. Mr. he and his wife lived most of *■ W’bat I® a “brindlo” cow? ’ ex a 4 Texas were arguing
Fitch, who quotes the poet as follows: *--* ***- **- - -•••
"A haze on the far horizon,
An infinite tender sky;
The ripe, rich tint of the cornfields
Texas Laughs
By Boyce House
ACROSS
1. Dexterous
5. Close
9. Masculine
name
10. Goods
12. Highways
13. Fireplace
14. Cutting
tool
15. Theatrical
backers
16. Nabbing
19. Water god
(Babyl.)
-20. Weird
(var.)
21.Injure
23. Grayish-
blue
25. Taut
26. Final
27. Estuary of
Amazon
siver
28. Erbium
(ayiti.)
29. Repairs
as shoes
32. Dreas-
35. Bark
36. Pin used as
fulcrum
for an oar
37. A force
of men
39. Vends
40. Covered
with Ivy
41. headland
42. Go by
29. Salad green ..........
30. Relieve* * Vr*tfr4.r’« As.eit j
31. Hastened 34. Troubles
33. Tear in pieces 37. Apple seed
(Prov.Eng.U 38.Egge
DOWN
1. Dwelling
m
“
“
4
7*'""
7"*
1
~
_
n
T"
.
n
a
~
’
It
it
H
ll
• i
r*
5si
T”
27
7T“
W
si
IT”
_
1
it1
i
IT
V
*•
%
~
1
TI
1
ipe,
And wild geese sailing high;
And all over upland and lowland
The charm of the goldenrod:
Some people call it autumn,
But others call it God.”
era states —from
Mexico and Texas
their married life. He outlived 5- Which travels faster—light or 38 to which stat* Produced
his wife by 28 years, dying on radfo waves?
December 12, 1889. What was his
name?
Barclay On Bridge
Plan,”
suing
it came into being and how it works
most rugged cowboys. Bets were
made and a test was arranged.
IT HAPPENED TODAY A den of skunks was located and
1801—Admiral David Glasgow the winning cowboy would be thc
2. Born at Dole, France, Decern- Farragus born. 1804—George Sand one who could remain in the den
her 27, 1822, he studied at Besati- (Baroness Dudevant), French nov- the longest. The Arizona cow-
con and held academic positions at c|i,t, born. 1811-Venezuela's In- puncher went in first; he staggered
Straasburg, Lille and Paris, where dependence Day. 1883-Cecil John out after two minutes. The New
By Shephard Bari
The first six pages attompt to put the skids und
Communist propaganda which, the tourist is told,
is sure to encounter. Outbound ships and planes w
carry strate,
and others will
nder
he
Outbound ships and planes will
:ed copies of the document
ailable on the other side.
gically-place
viil be availi
aya ECA, i;
States as ‘Vile,
ing and imperialistic.” The pamphlet adds this cau
AND SO-1 am back on religion, that subject which
I pledged myself to leave alone because it is so con-
troversial, and yet a subject on which I get more
mail than on any other one—unless it be popovers
avi
Do not be surprised, say* ECA, if you hear some
one describe the United States as "vil
war-monger-
tie comment:
any other one—unless it be popovers
Only a few day* ago a reader wrote: “Please don’t
ever stop writing about religion. We need living
interpretation so badly. We need someone who can
explain it to us and make us live it when so many
happenings confuse us‘in these troubled days.”
(with her husband) of radium, and four minutes later, the skunks
died. 1946—United States granted camc °,jt!
Philippine independence.
Five Years Ago
7. Robert
Pasteur.
Browning; 2. Louis
AND THERE was the fellow #0
dumb he thought Western Union
was cowboy underwear.
"Somehow, the Cominform and the Communists
still seem to have faith in Hitler’s theory that the
bigger the lie the easier It Is to spread, and if you
■ some gullible non-communists to repeat
the chief purpose of the Marshall Plan is to enslave
Europe or to make it subject to American domi-
nance and control.
BUT BACK to the Rev. Mr. Fitch and the Catskills.
He goes on:
of time and sprinkled Nature with the contents. ta7ufy Coilawtag! ¥
From Daily Sun Files
TODAY’S HEADLINES: Rus-
Open
Try And Stop Me
High Cost of Cancer
in U.S. Tabulated
CAN’T HAVE THE HONOR
WHEN a conservative player
makes an opening lead of a 9-
spot against your suit contract,
he is certain to have nothing
higher in the suit and either two,
one or no lower cards. In other
words, It Is either a singleton or
"top of nothing." He can't pos-
sibly have four cards of the suit
topped by the nine, as in that
case his standard lead would b»
the fourth-best. The 9 lead could
indicate a different holding, if
made by a good player, only when
something special in the bidding
had made the lead desirable or
the player was trying to mislead
the declarer.
as 'beautiful to the point of tears’. I thought of that
as I looked across the hills and valleys; looked with
a fascination that brought me back again and again
to the out-of-doors.
“I thought of the Psalmist’s words: ’God reigneth
Harry Emerson Fosdick, in his book 'A Pilgrimage ’"rjlnl* ON THE BOWERY, Joe Gould, American home were described
I0. ?/]“!? from 1922 to 1943, SsTve, total ^ ?• Auteey Schneider at
CLEVELAND (UP)—The Incidence
Bv Bennett Cert of'cancer among children and the,
1 cost of the dread killer to the
♦ A Q T 8
f Q 8 4 S
4 10 8
*KQ9
only $22,623.65, according to fig-
HTh* Qtfttl “I thought of the Psalmist’s words: ’God reigneth uvf r-heW are not only illiterate bi
vil'ljv Odlll) Jgun He is clothed with beauty. I thought of the song of , “ J.Y® ,ero“ nt they graduated from Princeton.”
^ ^ Isaiah:‘How beautiful upon the mountain*’,,and the " 72 who me^S^d U'DPincott of Penn, Greenslet <
Publtahed By
The Daily Sim Company at Pearce and
Asbbel in Baytown, Texas
Robert Matherae ...................... Publisher
Fred Hertmap ............................ Editor
Syd 8. Gould ...........4.,,. Advertising Manager
Beulah M,*e Jackson .............. Office Manager
lovely lyric of Ecceslesiastes: ‘He has made every-
thing beautiful in His time’. I thought of the In-
his new book, Why a two-day Institute sponsored
2Lr"“ “
««xrTrt’S. Somers’
dren under 18 annually lose one
of parent, with a slightly higher per-
would become established then
no matter who had the K
he almost automatically ptayi
"dow from the dummy and
won with the K. The latter 1
turned the J, which North
“red with the Q and East ri
with the spade 2, After the 1
mond A was scored. West
couraging a continuance with I
2. East twitched to the
which the A won. It was folio
by the heart 5, which East ruff
with the spade 5 to set the
tract two trick*. ,
A thinking North would t
seen the singleton danger
won that first lead with the he
A. Two top spades, a dub
ward the k-Q and later * he
toward the Q would have
hi* losses to three tricks, one 1
each, side suit, since one of
dummy's hearts could have
parked on a club honor.
am
Tomorrow's Problem
Bvervthine but war . It L, Wesleyan, Canfield of Harvard, and centage of fathers dying from can-
a second parent every year and are
________ „ thereby orphaned.
EDITOR JOHN Woodburn poses Summarizing this tragic picture,
Hden Antonin on tIIM 00 - ' iis Problem: A single railroad the doctor estimated that at least
weien Antonio, on June 29. track, upon which two trains —......-
Independence holiday.
Mr, and Mrs. Karl Opryahek an-
nounced the birth of a daughter, this problem:
™ jone -o' iracn, upon wnicn two trams arc 475,000 children under 18 have-tost
Mrs, Laura Jean Johnson is vis- approaching each other hopelessly, at least one parent to cancer
Iting relatives in Austin. relentlessly, each maintaining P ° C r'
I WISH I had space to quote much more from the
letter.
But I must leave you now. And may I leave you
with this thought:
ps-sSss ^
•a srs ,,‘r, d.rsLT.r;
shsm wid enroll Souse is Souse,. %.nd raever the cancer or leukemia," su-hn*sa»*
I
4K106
5
*Q 9
♦ 8 T 4
* A10 9 5
Austin who
A K J 10 8
* A 7 6 2
K 6 3
*10
Neither
vulnerable.) /
North East South West
24 ♦♦
There was no excuse for North
to fumble that contract, which he
did by making a slip at the very
first which might be called "a
two-trick mistake” It was a good
deal similar to what to baseball ’
might be called “a two-base er-
----- -- even “a two-run error."
♦ 9 4 3 2
♦ 8 2
♦ A 9 5 2
4 J 7 3
♦Q
♦ A K J
10 7 651
♦ 3
♦ 62
ith Reveal
adding Dai
lAnnounce
♦ A 8
♦ 8 4
♦ K Q J 10 6
♦ K Q 8 4
toaster: North. East-West ”
twain* shall meat.
East led the heart 9, causing
J*.crth to W at ag, i
If East starts the bidding
1-Heart and South overcal's «?»
1-Diamond, bow should- the tit .
und Mi, I
tndorff of Bteti
Icing the vngalenl
Idling marriage ol
[Elaine, to Knymonl
I
lyette Drive, Bnytl
fcc wedding will ti
[ p.m., July 8 In tl
list Church, withl
I
] reception honorinl
Lie will bc held cr
|he B D. Thomail
Hunnicutt An I
[wedding and recel
led to all friends|
... couple through
1st Geiscndorff Is
Baytown Elemcnl
j-m, having taught I
I Ansor,-.Tones scliocl
ledical student at t|
illege.
1,'KM-1. PARK fill
|B MEETS . • |
... Morrell Park
[ meet tonight at
j home of Mr. and|
Id, 10 Park, for a
I A question box
j. I
1 Interested persons |
hviled to attend.
A E m M»AY OWES
and Mrs E. R.|
| Alva had as their
, Mrs. Wright's state!
stag and daughter,!
brother, Mrs.-John!
I of Dayton: their dif
hand, Mr. and Mrs. I
Allendale; and a fri|
lily, Bert Sadler.
Housewife 11
Friend In 11
_____ I’d found a frieiu
IMrs. P. R. Hughes. 41
It, Toledo, "when I put
p in the washtub. Ttiat
Ji turned out white anc
b. And ever since, those
5 problems go down the c
.... perk
flOCll, U!
nt that removes grayne
'zling ws whiteness
. Try Perk today!
NAMINCO W
ONLY . . S.0C
Machine Waves
Machineless Wat
ixperienced Operat
alley's Beauty
. N. Gallia rd , Phone
, ... And Comfort
Depends Upon
A GOOD PEP.MAN5
Styled
To Suit Your Persons
Special Prices Nov
SPECIAL
COLD WAVE
^50
< rcu-i \
*6
STERLING!
BEAUTY SALOf
I 111 E. Jack Phone 1
IXASl
LOSE
|TK«» following rpnmi k«Me stx>ry i
■ukively that BiurcentraW t»OKS
It contains nothing harmful; I
ingredlentii that mah« yoi
r- No ioo d*#t—no wen
POKt'r, Rarcpntrate. the opigitsal
F* take* off fat nuicklj,
“'1 «*t pWrii:
Here fs proof
« h what Mm. H. r. Bt«hoi).
f««l, Texas, wrote u»:
w? fflad to ♦ndor«i Bur
accept my shtcetw thank*
for tfuj great banefit 1
on, I not only- kwt weight,
H and felt better in **fery waj
to baaa a vary serious <
told Lhat I must loae a lot c
P t>Jea*e
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Hartman, Fred. The Daily Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1949, newspaper, July 5, 1949; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100131/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.