The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 221, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 25, 1956 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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I'
Pag* I OTir «ifjTiram #mt
Inside Washington
Gruenther Expected To Be Joint Chiefs Of Staff Chairman
WASHINGTON -Gen. Albert M. Gruen-
ther, supreme commander of Allied forces
in Europe, is expected to be the chairman
of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff.
In that post, Gruenther would succeed
Adm. Arthur W. Radford, who has been
President Eisenhower’s principal military
adviser since shortly after Ike entered the
White House.
Presidential intimates say that there is
no man on earth—soldier or civilian—who
is esteemed more highly by Mr. Eisenhower
that the modest, hard-working Gruenther.
However, these associates of the President
contend his feeling for Gruenther trans-
cends friendship; they say the President be-
lieves the general has the ability to solve
the big problems which still plague the Uni-
ted States high command.
Topmost among these problems is the
controversy over guided missile production,
dramatized by the recent resignation of
Trevor Gardner as Air Force secretary in
protest over what he called the American
“lag" in manufacture of intercontinental
weapons. Gruenther is known to have made
an intensive study of missile warfare.
BENSON’S POPULARITY—The Republi-
can national committee reportedly will
launch a new “campaign" soon to popular-
ize Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Ben-
son. Plans are said to be underway to have
a number of GOP congressional leaders go
out of their way to “endorse" Benson at
future campaign talks to public gatherings.
, The reason: The GOP high command is
won-ied that this year’s depressing farm-
price situation will cost the party a largo
number of farm belt votes this November.
The national committee also intends to
spend large sums of money in coming
months for advertising in midwest news-
papers and farm publications on the merits
of the Eisenhower-Benson farm .program.
Benson himself can be expected to in-
crease the number of public appearances he
makes. Newsmen anticipate that he also
will start holding regular weekly news con-
ferences to get his views across to the pub-
lic.
That’s the word from Washington sour-
ces who say that UN officials recognize
the dangerous situation that cbuld be caus-
ed were the Assembly to meet during this
autumn’s political campaign.
Pointing up this danger is the almost cer-
ASSEMBLY DELAY—The United Nations
General Asembly, which opened its 1955
~ ‘ bablywc
session in September, probably won’t meet
this year until sometime in November—af-
ter the American elections.
tainty that the Assembly will be asked
again to admit 'Red China to the UN and
injecting this issue into a political atmos-
phere would do neither the United States
or the UN any good.
There also is a change that the 1956 As-
sembly session will not be held at the UN
building in New York. There is some sup-
port for holding the meeting in Rome so
the Italians could celebrate tneir admission
to tbe UN by playing host to the organiza-
tion.
WHIP CRACKING — Senate Democratic
Leader Lyndon Johnson may not find quite
the smooth sailing this session that he did
last year in maintaining party unity on
thorny legislative issues.
Part of this will stem from the fact
that 1956 is an election year and legislators
are less likely to compromise their views if
they believe it will cost them votes.
In addition, some Democratics senators
are bristling over their belief that Johnson
used high-handed tactics in pushing pas-
sage of the controversial natural gas bill
which he strongly favored.
A good many northern Democrats feel
that Johnson, by giving top priority to the
gas bill, deprived them of effectively using
"big business giveaways” charges against
the Republicans in the election campaign.
MY NEW YORK
By Mel Heimer
NEW YORK — Things one New Yorker thinks
about:
Year by year, the plush and luxurious landmarks
of yesterday drop away from the Manhattan sky-
line. Now the Union Dime Savinas Bank Is gone.
Situated in midtown, just across Bryant park, this
46-year-old building was one of New York's archi-
tectural gems, constructed of blue Indiana lime-
stone with huge bronze Italian Renaissance doors
and an interior full of Imported stone and marble.
Its ceUing was fabulous, if the movies will lend the
word for a moment: six thousand five hundred
square feet of leaded glass, so striking and so
valuable that it twice was removed and stored
away for safekeeping—in 1139. when the Sixth
avenue subway was being built in a roar of drUls
and blasts and again during World War II.
Union Dimes sometimes was known as the actori'
bank. John Barrymore had an account there, which
may confuse those who figure thrift was a dirty word
to the great profile and so did the late Marilyn Mil-
ler. A new *15,000.000 building is being erected by
the bank, but'it hardly can have anything g0 grand
as the series of overhead colored tile panels done
by the celebrated Henry Varnum Poor. Poor sprink-
led the panels with dogs, cats, flowers, et al, studded
with formal stars, circles and other figures, and an
art critic of the time wrote. "To Mr. Poor's mild
great ovations. Well, I suppose I am wajpish. If I
got less than a healthy, two-legged, strident Lear,
I’d want my money back.
The National Laugh Foundation, which has offices
locally, has begun its "Laugh Olympics." Every
Wednesday night tryouts are held at the Rehearsal
Center to find '•skilled laughters.’' to be pressed into
service during National Laugh Week (April 2-6) as
laugh teachers ... I remain troubled by a sign on
the outride of Goodson’s Cafe, a Harlem night apot
I passed recently: "Gentlemen must wear coat and
tie in the Sweetheart Room." Seems such a crass
combination of romance governed by a sharp-eyed
maitre d’.
Washington Marry-So-Round—
Tempers Flare At Meeting
On Dixon-Yates Contract
surprise, the result bore a resemblance to Byzan-
tine.*
IT IS STARTLING to learn from “The Committee
of Five”—Elaine Malbin, Anita Ekberg, Jayne Mans-
field. Nancy Berg and Elsie Rhodes—that Greg
Bautzer, the. California bon vivant, 1s on their list
of the 10 men “at whom we’d most like to leap" in
this leap year of 1956. Bautzer would seem a poor
gamble. He has dated every beautiful woman in
Hollywood and thus far escaped the ring through
the nose . . . Orson Welles has been playing King
Lear in a wheelchair at the City Center here, to
THE NATIONAL council for the Advancement of
Recreation (who?) hai honored actress Fay Mor-
ley. who’i doing local TV work, in lingular fashion:
•he’s been named "The girl we would most like to
spend our recitation time with." . . . The Heimer
award for outstanding truth and candor for 1956
goes to a couple of young men named George and
Bill, who run an eatery called Hamburger Square
on First avenue near the swank Beekman Hill sec-
tion. A sign was hung recently on the door of this
place, patronized by such as Irving Berlin, Faye
Emerson, et al, reading “Closed for Hialeah."
Checked at the new Eden Roc restaurant the oth-
ed day. by a model: a mink coat bearing an inside
tag, “I bought this myself—for goodness’ sake!" .. .
I'm not Shakespearean student enough to report cri-
tically on Laurence Oliver’s filmed Richard III,
which you will see on TV shortly, but certainly it's
the bloodiest movie of recent years ... To my collec-
tion of great names of today (Wambly Bald, India
McIntosh, Denise McCluggage. etc.) let me add that
of a man in the hit musical The Threepenny Opera:
Tige Andrews . . . There’s & new dramatic hit in
town. Time Limit! May be the first show with Ar-
thur Kennedy in the cast in which Kennedy's per-
sonal reviews didn’t outstrip those of the play it-
self.
Capitol Summary
By Ed Koterba
EMERGENCY HIDEOUTS. As secretly as possible,
all of Washington’s major federal agencies are set-
ting up emergency headquarters in a perimeter
around the Nation's Capital.
The “in-case-of-attack" sites are listed as ‘ confi-
dential" at the Pentagon. However, it can be said
that many of them are setting up in college towns
where housing is more adequate.
Microfilms of important records will be moved to
these centers and skeleton forces assigned to the
areas.
Eventually, some of the emergency offices will be
linked by communication lines to the government's
huge underground “stand-by pentagon’’ near Way-
nesboro, Pa., 70 miles from the Capital.
up is taking definite form behind the scenes at Re-
publican Headquarters here for Vice President
Richard Nixon.
Republican leaders want to wash away the Demo-
cratic tag that Nixon "fights dirty.”
Significant point was the offer of *1,000 by Chair-
man Leonard Hall to anyone who could prove that
Dick Nixon did. indeed, say the Democrats were “a
party of treason.”
NIGHT BASEBALL
THE ATOM. Industrialists who are eager to see
research stepped up in the peaceful uses of the atom
will lay their plea* before the joint committee on
atomic energy March 5 and 6
A BIGGER ‘VOlVir. Moscow’s explosive threat of
an all-out economic war on the U. S. has all but
assured a double budget for the Voice of America
this year....
The United States Information Agency, which
handies America’s world-wide propaganda program,
was allotted *85 million last year .,. . Congress is
expected to boost that to *170 million this year
You Can Bet On It --
Women Change Minds But Not Luck Charms
Bv ELIZABETH TOOMEY the model hinged so that when it the most popular of all time," she
NEW YORK — UP — Women opened she could read.the inscrip- said.
change their hairdos and their tion “I do” engraved inside,
hemlines and their taste in hus- The most macabre sentiment
bands, but when it comes to good Miss Tucker recalls was from a
luck charms they’ll take the same woman who ordered a charm in
One of the reasons charm brace-
lets have gained in popularity in
recent years is their new mechan-
ization. The tiniest charms have
WASHINGTON—Chief problem
of the Democratic party, rebellion
in the South, ro»e to plague the
Dixon-Yates lasue, one of the best
the Democrats have, during a sec-
ret session of the Senate Judiciary
committee.
DemocraUc senators led by
Estes Kefauver have been pushing
for the appointment of a special
attorney both to defend the gov-
ernment In the Dixon-Yates claims
suit, and to prosecute those guilty
of any Dixon-Yates conflict of In-
terest. There appears to be a
clear-cut case of finagling inside
the Budget Bureau with Adolphe
Wensell placed Inside the govern-
ment to push and later finance
the Dixon-Yates deal.
So far, Attorney General Brown-
ell has not made the slightest
move toward prosecution. So
Democratic senators want to ap-
point a special attorney.
There is precedent for this in
the appointment of Owen J.
Roberts and Attlee Pomerene to
prosecute the Teapot Dome scan-
dal.
However, one lone southern
vote, that of Senator McClelland
of Arkansas in the secrecy of the
Judiciary committee, consistently
opposed this move. With every
Republican on the committee ex-
cept Langer of North Dakota
voting against the Democrats Mc-
Clelland's lone vote wa sail-im-
portant. He backstopped Senator
Butler of Maryland, who carried
the ball for the Republican*.
HERE IS WHAT happened dur-
ing a stormy session of the
Judiciary committee when Senator
Kefauver attempted to push
through his resolution for separate
counsel to prosecute Dixon-Yates.
“Let me get down to the meat
of the coconut," said Kefauver.
reading from the pro-Dixon-Yates
testimony given before the .Securi-
ties and Exchange Commission by
the Justice Department.
“Having twice gone on record
In favor of Dixon-Yates," Ke-
fauver argued, “the Justice De-
partment should be disqualified
from defending the government in
the damage suit brought to re-
cover *3,500,000 in cancellation
and statements," said Kefauvar,
"on the grounds that they are
privileged. Are you going to insist
and bring out in the defense of
the (government) these matters?"
"I can best answer that,” replied
Burger, "by saying that the staff
lawyers in charge of this case will
do everything that they think la
honorable and proper to do to win
this lawsuit.”
"Bren to the point of embarrass*
Ing Mr. Sherman Adams and Row*
land Hughe* and Admiral
Strauss?” quipped Kefauver, re-
ferring to the fact that both had
refused to testify In earlier Dixon-
Yates hearings.
"I will stand by my first state-
ment," Burger responded.
old four leaf clovers grandma the form of a tombstone, inscribed movjng parts. The latest Marchai
BALLOONS. There were storong hints here last
trusted. ■ exactly as her father’s tombstone
Our superstitions are highly re- was.
le Least* i_ sir « - , * *1, tJ * * auwic. w.csv otviviig iiu«w scoot asc suguij *v WaJ>,
to have“readv ooteSKf ^ tee P’““I(U!S may ** tellin* tr?th“ Hable. reports a young lady who 0na young woman who had com
na e ready poienuai or *,oourivo ja.ovvaiis or for a rhanee—when thev *»v the 11. S. balloons sneeializes m desisrmnsr charm ___.___i ____
charm Miss Tucker designed is a
tiny gold flash bulb camera. By
flipping the wheel a tiny flint
alpmic power by 1960 . . . This is more than twice
the expected nuclear power capacity to the U. S. at
that time.
for a change-when they say the U. S. balloons specializes in designing charm ordercd a charm in tj,0 form 0, spaVks and gives the effect of a
CANDIDACY. Greatest speculation the past few
days about President Eisenhower centered around
the possibility he may not give a definite “yes” or
“no” but may announce he will leave the decision
up to the Republican Nations! Convention in August
. . . This would give him five more months to “test”
his health.
brought down over Russia were
cameras ...
Full truth of the halted balloon program over the
Soviet has yet to be disclosed, insiders at the State
Department acknowledge.
equipped with bracelets. The horse may have lost a room with a tiny couch, ..
out to the horseless carriage, but woman’s figure reclining, and a
the horseshoe has never been man seated next to it taking notes,
threatened by the rubber tire
NIXON BUILDUP. A booming "personality" build-
WANT A JOB? Anyone hunting unusual employ-
ment in Washington may be interested to this gov-
ernment job now open:
Glass blower at the National Institutes of Health.
Apply Building 1, Room 18, 9000 Wisconsin Avenue,
Bethesda, Md.
Women generally look for deco-
rative charms, Miss Tucker said.
Men who order sentimental
charms for wdmen are fond of
commemorating special dates.
“The Calendar charm is one of match it.
flash bulb going off in the minute
"People pay from three dollars
to 500 for charms,’’ the designer
said. "The only one that ever
stumped us was a man who want-
ed us to exactly reproduce his in-
vention. The invention was such a
complicated gadget we couldn’t
IT'S THE LAW IN TEXAS
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
A Central Press Feature
"THEY OUGHT to pass a law . . .* You have
heard that said many times. But did you know that
much of our law was never “passed” by any legis-
lative body?
Actually there are several kinds of law which
oontrol our lives. Perhaps the following definitions
will help explain the differences:
Statute law is an enactment of the state legislature
or the Congress. It is the written law, setting forth
a system of principles arid rules of conduct.
Common law consists of those principles and rules
of action which derive their authority from usage
and custom, and from the decrees of our courts
affirming such rules. It may be written or unwritten,
and much of it we derived from the ancient unwrit-
ten law of England.
Parts of the statute and common law are some-
times further described;
Substantive law is that part of the law which
creates, defintes and regulates rights. It is the law
Prepared By Texas State Bar
Marchai shop and asked them to vation,” incorrect?
make up a gold charm in the form
of Gregory Peck wearing a full
Today’s Bible Verse
AND I SAW THE dead, small and great,
stand before God; and the books were open-
ed: and another book was opened, which is
the book of life: and the dead were judged
out of those things which were written in
the books, according to their works. Revela-
tions 20:12.
toe courts are established to administer, as opposed
to toe rules of procedure by which it is administered.
Adjective law is made up of our rules of proced-
ure and practice. It is the manners and methods by vorites.”
which we enforce our rights or obtain redress for
their invasion.
Criminal law is that branch of toe law which de-
fines and prohibits the various crimes and estab-
lishes their punishments.
Administrative law is that vast body of law and _ .
practice concerning toe public boards, commissions dress suit She wanted the jaw of
and ageneies which have power to make rules, or-
ders or regulations having the force of law.
You also hear of various fields of law, such as
admiralty law, patent law, corporation law, muni-
cipal law and many others. These are branches or
special fields of law.
Perhaps you find all this slightly confusing. But
these matters are just as important to you as to the
lawyer, because it is on the vast body of Jaw that
your rights and privileges, your government, and
your way of life are based.
(This column, based on Texas law, is written to
inform—not to advise. No person should ever ap-
ply or interpret any law without the aid of an attor-
ney who knows the facts because the facts may
change the application of the law.)
a good luck piece. .■!
Our sentimental moods are
something else again, Sheila Tuck-
er added. You simply can’t pre-
dict what women will pick as sen-
timental mementos.
Miss Tucker spends her days in
a small Fifth Ave. jewelry shop
which boasts toe world’s largest
collection of charms. If the 2,000
bracelet charms in the store don't
fit your needs. Miss Tucker will
sketch your sentimental favorite
and have it made up.
"Hardly a woman comes into the ,... . ■ ,, „ .
store who doesn’t have a good luck ant| the author, the first line of _ .
charm on her bracelet,” the at- which is, The sun stepped down ® , .. ,
tractive brunette said. "Four leaf his *olden throne ? caa°nL ZrAmbi L
clovers and horseshoes are the fa- VWhaU* the best conductor of craUon ^ ^ “Jjg* “**
She doesn’t even try to out-guess 3. When was Johann Strauss- mpnrbc..anl"y^hr<9«W°Anrr't
their sentimental favorites. One Blue Danube Waltz first played?
ta, Ohio mo t
forgiving disposition in the child
charge*
However, when Kefauver tried
to enter the Justice Department
testimony as evidence, Senator
Butler objected.
"Only these specific pages?"
asked Butler. “Only two pages?”
“I offer a substitute motion.”
suggested McClelland, backing up
Butler, "that all the records of the
SEC be procured and filed for
reference to this committee.”
Thi* would have made the rec-
ord so voluminous it would be too
expensive to publish and no one
would have read it anyway.
“We should also haze aa part of
this record before the committee
alt of the hearings in the anti-
monopoly subcommittee,” added
Butler, “complicating matters even
further.
MEANWHILE Senators Butler
and Welker of Idaho were watch-
ing the clock. Noting that K was
now past noon, they demanded in
end to the meeting. Hie full sen-
ate, they said, had just convened.
‘They just informed me that
they gave us authority to go
through to 12:30,” announced Kil-
gore. urging that the meeting con-
tlnue for another half hour so
Kefauver could finish his state-
ment •
“For the purpose of the record."
shouted Butler, “when we have a
pending order of business and we
had agreed among ourselves that
we would not go after 12 o’clock,
to ask permission on the floor
(for an extension) without notify-
ing the members of this committee
is not right!" Butler's voice con-
tinued to rise.
‘T am fully convinced.* Kilgora
replied, “that the Senator from
Maryland is try in- to put on a
little personal filibuster.
•Not at all!" bellowed Butler. ’
“On the business of this commit-
tee, let me have a little quiet from
you!” demanded Kilgore. “You do
not have to yell quite that loud!"
Eventually the committee room
settled down and the hearing re-
sumed. But Butler, with the sup-
port of Senator McClelland, stilt
insisted that the record be clutter-
ed up with hundreds of pages of
extraneous tertimony so as to be-
fog the issue.
Did You Know?
Twenty-four cents out of every
dollar spent on the purchase of an
automobile goes for taxes.
Special automotive taxes paid by
U. S. motorists In 1954 totaled *6.2
billion.
There are about 4.500,000 trac-
tors on farms in the U. S., a mil-
lion more than there were in 1960.
The Answer, Quick! the pattern shows it not yet.-
1. What is the name of the poem George MacDonald.
FINALLY, SEN. Arthur V. Wat-
kins (R., Utah) came to Ke-
fauver’s defense. Pleading for fair
play, he demanded that the
Tennessee senator be allowed to
state his case.
0g±SKk
‘T think probably we ought to
hear the evidence," said the
square-shooting Watkins. “I would
obje
5. Did an American man ever
forfeit his American citizenship
hv mflVwtncr a fr\re>\rrn wnman?
i vine;
toda:
Try And Top Me
by marrying a foreign woman
By Bennett Cerf
Watch Your Language
NOVELTY - (NOV-ul-tec) -
noun; quality or state of being
novel; newness; something novel;
an innovation. Chiefly plural—in
i the trade, any of a group of small
” manufactured articles used large-
'»ly in personal or household adorn-
ment. Origin: Old French—Nov-
clte, from Latin—Novcllitas.
Good Evening
OLD “FlVE-ACE” Slattery, slick-
est card sharp on Mississippi wat-
ers, aimed to persuade the travel-
ing reverend to turn his interest
elsewhere. “You shouldn’t ought
to look at me thataway,” wheeled
Five-Ace. “Fact is, I’d like mighty
well to hear you preach.”
“You could have heard me test FolIw of Fluw^_Gu^H Thc Xame un Sunday, Feb. 26, Made!
.I™,?: l-Eorn in Los Angeles, he Carroll, actress; Robert Alda,
not want to object to him bringing
in evidence. I want at least to con-
sider it”
Butler was still adamant, how-
ever, so Chairman Harley M. Kil-
gore (D., W. Va.) tried to change
the subject by shifting to other
committee business.
Butler wouldn’t hear of it. "I
insist that we continue with this
business,” he declared. "I object.
Let us go on with this.”
So Kefauver resumed the pres-
entation of his arguments, this
time questioning assistant Attor-
ney General Warren E. Burger.
"The Executive departments
have denied us certain records
"HI WHO Wia HOT ICON©-
MIZI WILL HAVI TO AGO-
NIZE"
©Jfp laylmmt §tm
By Tom Sims
Published each weekday afternoon by
The Baytown Sun. Inc., at Pearce and Azhbei
In Baytown, Texas
Fred Hartman ».**#. Editor and Publisher
Harry Boswell ....... Advertising Manager
Beulah Mae Jackson ......Office Manager
Happy Birthday
John Foster Dulles, secretary of
state, heads our birthday list, with
Darrel McClure, syndicated car-
toonist; Monty Irvin and Andy
Pafko of baseball fame.
On Sunday, Feb, 26, Madeleine
-• i—Dam in iuos ungeies, no '■-arroll, actress; Robert Alda, ac-
if youd been where you right- madc hjs movfe debut in Xhc tor; Elvin (Preacher) Rowe, base-
fuUy belong. With the Green Hair. He made his ba» Pitcher, are on today’s birth-
Where was that, sir? asked fjm reai hit ln Tako thc High day list.
Five-Ace. Ground followed by Seven Brides Tf _ . „
"In the state penitentiary.” said for Seven Brothers, and he starred Tt r<i - . .
the reverend. In Hit the Deck later. Do you
Confronted by that time-honored recognize hinip d Vlncenne*. In<i., from British
query: "If you were marooned on 2—They call him “Count” al-
desert Island, what would you though his real name is William.
in his teens he played
Hi
Subscription Rates
By Carrier—*1.20 Month; *14.40 Year
All mail subscriptions are payable in advance
By Mail-Month *1.20, 8 Months *3A0;
6 Months #7-00; Year *14.00
Armed Services 75c Month
Entered as second clans matter at toe Baytown,
Texas, Postoffice under toe Act of Congress «t
March A 1870.
National Advertising Representative:
General Advertising Service
OHATCHEE, U. S. A.—An anxious hitch-hiker at
a crossroad looked suspicious. An escaped convict?
Vaguely, I remember reading a desperate one was
at large somewhere. His picture appeared in. toe pa- looked to have for reading matter?” While
per, but I couldn’t recall how he looked. a Broadway chorus babe gave the around in theaters and small clubs.
answer to end all others: "A tat- ggf Sen NaP°Ico" Bonaparte escaped from
Rita Confan wants to tell us all the late Benny Molen’s Buffalo BAD O^JT^rn^out
“I should have stopped," I said to myself, farther
along. “Picked him up.”
After that it was easy to plan toe rest. Pull in
supposedly for gas, and phone toe sheriff to hurry
out and meet us.
Sirens screaming, pistols banging, with me grab-
bing toe car key as I opened toe door and jumped.
It was an exciting idea, but toe next day I had
a peculiar feeling when I read where toe wanted
man really was seen in that vicinity.
in Revolutionary war. 1913—United
States income tax became law.
1944—John J. McGraw, New York
Giants manager, died.
On Sunday, Feb. 28, 1815—
within a gallstone's throw of the °" ® 'J * w‘^ °"e You Make Out?
OCIock Jump, and since has play- t The star and thc Water Lily
cd countless clubs and theaters, by Hcnry w. Longfellow.
operating room.
What Not To Do
has appeared in' such films
Reveille with Beverly, Stage Door
,- . . — Canteen, Mister Big and Crazy
EVANSVILLE, Inu. •“ UP *“PO* y.,,.* nrt.n u v
Traveling alone at mght I’ve always locked toe car jjce had an easy time locating the , vam^ al L0ttom of column)
doors, unless I forgot Now I have decided I muet- burglar who took three billtolks ‘N m 1 bottom of c01u,n
n’t Jet my brush with danger make me a coward. I from hojnes in a suburb. The thief It’s Been Said
won’t start locking toe doors in toe daytime, at least left his own wallet at the scene Trust to God to weave your
not in town. and was traced to his home. thread into the great web, though
2. Silver.
3. On Feb. 13, 1867, at Vienna.
4. Because thc word innovation
is the introduction of something
new or novel.
5. No.
1—Russ Tamblyn. 2—Count
Basie.
Satul
'Devil
Is A. I
Topid
"The II
will be tl
Arthur L.I
mortal B«[
a.m. Sund|
Die cho
Parker w|
"Psalm
Hamil, I
be broadcl
radio statil
At 7:J0 [
for the ell
’’The Scan!
Men’s cho*
THR
To Serv
Expert
S
SCARE
116 N. Mai
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 221, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 25, 1956, newspaper, February 25, 1956; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101544/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.