The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 312, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 21, 1966 Page: 4 of 16
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Sunday, Auguit 21, 1,966
Qbr lajttmra »»u
4
WIN AT BRIDGE
Experts Gain
Extra Chance
;« i
Purge In
China Is
Drastic
Mis
• Editorials And Features •
M-
Wi
f';
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By Oswald & James Jacoby
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Experts are luckier than
ordinary bridge players be-
cause they have the habit of
playing their cards so as to
give the best chance for silc-
m
Mi
Humble's Not Same;
True, It's Better Now
Miss Carol;
escorted' to
frttier, bees
David Reid
Saturday at
list Courch.
The bride
Mr. and Mrs
lan d, .1603 a
is the son oi
R. Brock
*. Dr. Brock,
Baptist Bibl
rito, Calif.,
double ring
The chu
with twin <
with Englisl
A large bas
,_and ivy cot
WatksHs,
Mrs. Rog-
“SSL1'?
w
ill
■ W
W -
M
By HENRY MMJtMMBB
,v
NEW YORK - While I am
•not an old China hand by any
means,.having spent only a
. month or two in Pekin* and
Shanghai Just before the Com*
: munlsts took over, I can’t help
but wonder if-the current politi-
cal purge in Red China isn’t
more drastic than the world
realises.
If the purge isn’t one that
threaten* the very pinnacle of
power in that country, then how
does one explain those pictures
of Mao Tse-tung bobbing about
. in the middle of the Yangtze “
(?) River?
The explanation of the pic-
tures was that Mao Jumped in
and took a long swim, both up-
stream and downstream, to show
the outside world that reports
of his falling health were lies,
and that he was in Channel >
swimmer shape.___
Blit was this explanation 0#'-'
the level?
You will recaliftat there
were no pictures of Mpo after
the swim — Just pictures of .Mr '. 4
balding head above the surface.
v that Mao Isn’t
'■v
cess
It wouldn’t be difficult at all
for most bridge players to go
down one at tour spades.
Tfrey ’WOTtW-HHiff the third
heart and draw trumps. Then
they would attack the clubs
some way or other and would
wind up losing two club tricky
Undoubtedly they would ex-
plain that they would have
made the hand with a 3-3 club
break but no ohe would be
impressed.
An expert would give the
hand considerable study and
finally decide that the best
would be to draw
> * ”
(*
X,
In the decade from 1948 to 1958, 41
new businesses made the list and 41
fell by the wayside.
Pressler concluded his talk by com-
ing back to "Changing Times.”
“We hear more and more that Hum-
ble is not like the old Humble. In many
ways this is true, and I say thank the
Lord for it If we were trying to fill
today’s needs with the organization
we had just 10 years ago, we would not
be ‘America’s Leading Energy Com-
pany’.
There is a great lesson to be learned
from Herman Pressler’s discussion of
Humble’s change.
V Baytown Is on the threshbold of
* great changes too - unless we stub our
Not long ago Herman P. Pressler Jr.,
a Humble Oil and Refining Co. vice
president in charge of public relations,
made a talk to a group of Houston
Humble annuitants on the subject,
“Changing Times."
It was the kind of talk that every
Humble or every company annuitant
or employe should have heard.
The entire text cannot be reproduc-
ed here, but here are some highlights:
A quote from Edmund Burke back in
18th century sets the stage. Burk*
said, "We must all obey the great law
of change. It is the most powerful law
of nature.” ■
The Humble company of yesterday,
Pressler, almost at retirement age
himself, pointed out, will always be re-
membered by veteran employes, but “l
rejoice * and I hope you do—• that
Humble has met change head on.”
The president of Humble was quot-
--■ * **• "' •*» #-» - -
“The path of business History la
strewn with the tones of those who
failed to keep up with changing times;
who failed to meet the changing needs
of their customers. Some businesses
fail and others loses, ground because
they failed to recogniie and meet those
needs. Of the nation's top 10 compan-
ies in 1909, only 36 remained on the-
list in 1948.
it;
A*
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jaj
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ifA
3
line of
most of the trumps but not
the
all
At trick four he would play
his queen of spades. At trick
five he would lead a low club ‘' *
and duck In dummy. A trump
return would be most likely
whereupon bur expert would
win in his own hand, lead a
club to dummy’s king and an-
other club back to his ace.
West wouldn’t follow but he .......
Z- .would not be able to ruff in ~
. since the second trump lead ..
would have pulled’ his last
t
mS*.
y
5BB
toe.
It’s time the Baytown community
1 took a leaf fro)m Humble’s book and did
the things that must be done If we are
r, not
-4m,
.....
st-
and
I
in what the community can offer its
citizens.
Baytown badly needs a unified look
at the future. -
Mammoth companies, history has mighty river and swim and pad-
revealed, have gone down the drain. ^ about for an-hour or two
So can cities and communities.
The Baytown Sun recommends the
Pressler Doctrine to all.
. {mr
I—-'''
still out
and yelling for help?
I find it hard to believe that
of Mao’s advanced years
voluntarily Jump Into a
BWqipkiapap
n
NORTH
AK8 2
V932
♦ K 8 7 5
4 K 8 4
ami
Same Old Question—Will It Fly?
m
T
Washington Merry-Go-Round
to show that he was okay. -
Can you imagine President
Johnson, who Is 20 or more
years younger than Mao, putting
an end to any rumors of his ID
health by plunging into the Po
tomac and swimming, say, to
MoantVemonandbackTIcan---------'
not either.
The question then is who put
Mao Tse-tung in the river?
Until we find that out, we won’t
know for sure who is running
the Chinese government these , _ , ........
days, the names of the men In By DREW PEARSON State Rusk deputizing Lynda and will probably be a better
the top seats of power. WASHINGTON — Here are Bird Johnson to officiate at the leader.
_ The pictures released by the - the answers to some of the swearing-in ceremony of a ml- Sonny Bougie, Philadelphia—
Chinese press agents show only questions asked of a Washing- "°r U. S. official in SpaiitThe vice President Humphrey was
Mao’s head. How do we know ton columnist! °“ly Question about Lyndas on the side of the Machinists
'iiglirtw'iimTlBiillB k Joseph BoridnrWasIdngtmn. .»■ £5? *?•' ^ ^ during the airline strike. Dur-
of solid lead trunks, made es- ' »^^tritelhat mrweeSt-eM... • -toE J*!. trump. Then South would
peclally for the occasion by his umn about LBJ being a push- — to at home to-lylp.the ■ ■ strike-legislation, HHH remind- trump his last club in dummy;
rivals? Were his feet bound? over a a father inspired- dollar balance Lynda ignored ed senators In the cloakrooms come bade to his own hand
Were the pictures we saw ones by LBJ himself so he could tell her father’s wishes. that they had shown no con- with the ace of diamonds;
taken Just before Mao "went - m. Hauehters "If you push me Smith Kline and French Lab- cem over last year's seven-week draw the last trump and claim
down for the third time? hard Drew Pearson will oratories, Philadelphia — Fig- bus strike, though it tied up far his contract.
write us up ”. ' 9 ures regarding drug prices used more passengers than WWe ifr - —This line of play was not
Travl« B Gissendanner Jr.. in the recent Jack Anderson col- convenienced by the airline sure to succeed. It would fail
Lehigh Acres Fla — It is not umn came from the Senate Fi- strike. Airline passengers may if West held the long trump
unusual for the State Depart- nance Committee. Any com- be more influential, Humphrey but in that case he would be
ment to deputize an American plaint* should be directed to argued, but bus passengers down the same one trick he
traveling abroad to officiate at that committee. were entitled to equal consider- would have been down on the
swearing-in ceremonies tor U.S. Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma atlon. first line of play. He would
officials. Therefore there was _ Users of the George Washing- Humphrey also pointed out lose his ace. of clubs but be
nothing wrong In Secretory of ton Memorial Highway report that the first wage settlement able to ruff his last club in
that you are the fastest in-and- which the s t r 1 k e r s rejected dummy,
out driver in crowded commuter would have boosted a top air- Suppose clubs broke 3-3.
traffic. line mechanic’s pay from J3.52 Both plays would succeed. All
Gordon Lange, Swarthmore, to H<* an hour, where bu* mei the expert line did was to give
Pa. — Vice President Humph- chanics are paid $4.78 and a * declarer the extra chance. ;
rey ha* used an Air Force garbage truck mechanic In New
plane to fly to his Minnesota York make* $4-53 an hour,
lakeside summer place every Fred Bets, Umar, Goto. —
weekend throughout the strike. Under Secretory of the Interior
He also made trip* to Fort John Carver did champion foe
Worth July 15, New Orleans right ol those claimant* to oil
July 18, New York July 26, and shale lands who had stoked out
Columbia, Mo., Aug. 8. aU court- claims approximately 40 years
esy of the Air Force and all dur- ago. But he has not been in fa-
ing the strike. vor of turning naval reserve oil
Mrs. Alfred Cross, Pennyfield shale lands over to the oil com-
Lock, Travtlah, Md. - Secre- panic*. Prior to toe Hoover ad-
tafy oTthe Interior Udell has ministration’s reserving of oil Year partner may re-
shale tor toe Navy, some oil opened with a very week hand,
men had staked out claims. In TODAY’S QUESTION
Instead of opening one club,
East has opened one diamond.
You double and after West
passes, your partner bids one
spade. What do you do now?
EAST
IP -0L.
T-, #;
WEST
A
H
4743
f QJ7
♦ Q 10 6
4 Q 10 9 2
4106
.f AK854
“♦ J94 3
Pearson Answers Some
Of Readers' Queries
M
; • . -
Fulton Lewis Speaks~ ^ ,
U. S. Merchant Marine
Is 'Withered, Dying'
4-
i
4J7
SOUTH (D)
4AQJ95
V 10 6
I
I
f
4 A 6 5 3
East-West vulnerable
West North East South
14
Pass 3 4
Pass Pass
Pass 2 4
Pass 4 4
Pass
Opening lead—V K
for political reasons. It seems
flag ships will be carrylng 75
per cent <rf toefr nations com-
merce. Less than nine per cent .
of American shipping is carried port us in world affairs. The
in U. S. bottoms. results of doing so can be di-
aBrssrtras
S’irxs's: asegsgs.
toe sea lane* toat ^ the price of transporting a bush-
of Commit bloc shipping ^ e| » ^ ^ ^ fiv<5 to
be required by 60 cents. Have we not learned
that have seen their merchant -
marine fleets vanish or become ... .
unable to compete with Soviet M
freight rater. Communist doml- Ihe Adminlstration to stopneg-
nance of shipping also could en- j ihat i^has
able Russia and her satellites marine and recognize that it has
to wiEV£,£ight serv- a m«Jorrole -
ices from any nation out of fa- 001 national transportation sys-
vor with Kremlin poUcles." a,^ ln our ^ yred .....
_ mnrini* k a fense.” There is, they said, not James a Hale.....
only a shortage of merchant. Preston Pendergrass
very real arm, of toe Soviet but of manpow- Beulah Mae Jackson
Navy. More than 1,200 vessels „ as^.n W ^ Bill Hartman .......
deliver military supplies to Ann B. Pritchett .
NH^r»^LNnublica^^lI£' ra0M ™E transcriPt of the John.Wadley.......
It ^ >meS,’e"^atio^frf ***"*• ^ 9 Pre» «**■ Paul PutmS l.:.:..
” terence: Oorrie Laughiln .............Wt.v...........National Manager
The American fleet is so “plti- “9- Presl^nt’ Setting Entered as second class matter at the Baytown, Texaa, 77821 post
M ” toe congressmen report, back to this question of tafia- Office under the Act of Oon*res* of March J, 1879.
that the U S is forced to char- --6on, out on the midwest trip ----------- Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
ter foreign' vessels to cariy war talking about toa rise * •ati Sandays by
materiel to Viet Nam Desper* ^ personal income with 11 extra at IB01 Drive In Bayto n, Texas,
ate officials have ta recent ^checks a year for families
>»»«“• « « —•
that with the figure from the
Commerce Department showing
that because of inflation, per
capita buying power in 1958
prices is actually down from $2.-
287 to 52,277?
“A. I would let you reconcile
.that.., I don’t have an answer
'to your question.
- By BILL SCHULZ
(For Fultoal Lewis)
WASHINGTON - The U. S.
Merchant Marine, often termed
the fourth branch of national
defense, Is today withered and
dying, congressional probers
have found.
Repa. Paul Roger* (D.-Fla.)
and Hastings Keith (R.-Mass.),
members of the House Mer-
chant Marine Committee, dis-
closed also that the Soviet Un-
ion is making giant strides in
a deadly earnest campaign to
control the seven seas.
The two lawmakers visited
cleaLthat weviWHstApend
even on allies always to sup-
-f:
»
He didn’t look very happy,
that i* for certain. . ..
One theory advanced by one
Far East expert is that the
Chinese Tourist Bureau arrang-
ed the shots to offset the pub-
licity the Scots get with the
LOck Ness monster, but I
doubt that.
i
?
I
■
the,USSR earlier titft year at
toe request of committee chair-
laytmmt $mt
man Edward Garmatx (D.-Md.).
. In • 26-page report, they char-
acterized the threat of the So-
viet merchant marine as every
bit as serious as toat posed by
r the Communists' space pro-
gram.
"We conclude that the Soviet
. maritime policy hp* already
gone a long way toward achiev-
ing supremacy at sea, and un-
less effectively, chaOnged by
toe free world, can be expected
to achieve tftjs strategic objec-
tive well before the end of this
century," Rogers and Keith re-
ported.
Statistics tell' a frightening
- story t , .
» Seventy per cent erf the
American merchant fleet is an-
tiquated, or more than 20 years
old. Eighty per cent of the* So-
viet fleet is less thair 10 years
old. , . .
• At the beginning of 1966,
the United States had a grand
total of 41 merchant ahips on
order. The Russians had 464—
24 per cent of toe world total.
While American shipyard* are
closing down, some of our lead-
ing allies — Britain, Japan,
Italy, and Holland — are filling
Soviet orders.
• By the end of 1966, Soviet-
«
y
Editor and Publisher
.... General Manager
f+CnRDJiwica?
.. Managing Editor
Assistant To The Publisher
Assistant to The Publisher
...........Office Manager
.....Manager
Q—The bidding has been:
West North East Sonth
14 Pass
Pass T4 Pass 2 4
Pass 2 4 Pass
You, South, hold:
4KJ65 VAQ4S424AK94
What do you do?
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
-
r.
:
4
n
A—Just bid four spades.
been advised by .his water ex-
P. O. Box »0, Baytown 77520
pert* toat it may be necessary
to build that high • rise dam
on the Potomac River after all
The dam, according to present
plans, would be Just above your
house. It would not be inun-
dated. The bouses along Seneca
Creek, Just above you, would be, whether they were valid. This
Mrs. Donna Hall, Westfield N.Y. 1* now betag done .before toa
U. S. District Court In Denver.
' TMs argument won Under Sec-
retary Carver toe reputatioo of
being prooil. However, my ex-
amination of his record con-
vtoce* me that he is pro-public.
Subscri
By Carrier $140 Month, $1940 per Tear.
Mall rates on request
Represented Nationally By
Texas Newspaper Representatives, Inc.
. MEMBER or TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS
TM„ Av«!ci*t«<i Pr»n la antltM asetaakaly to lha uaa tot rapuMtcatlon of
MsisinMUmf'MAKS'to tt or na* oUwrwka oodltad Is Osa Barer as*,
la nawa or aponunaotia oOfto poblWwS karala.. «UMa «* rwiMUalloa Ml * *
Ratas
an argument inside the Interior
Department between Solicitor
Frank Barry and Under Secre-
tary Carver, toe latter believed
these claims should go before
a court to be litigated to see
balls toe World War H victory
fleet. The speed of these vessels
makes them targets for even
.the most sluggish enemy war-
I'V.
ships.
Answer Monday
Rogers and Keith term short-
sighted the Administration view
that owing to the high cost of
shipbuilding and malntehance it
is wiser Md more economical
to rely on foreign - flag ship-
ping. They argue:
“We must remember toat ex-
ports and Import* did slow down
and, in some cases, stop prior
to World Wars I and II when
foreign ship* were withdrawn
tU Mm aatur btraln art alao naarraS.
■y
QUICK QUIZ
’ Q-W-ho was the first chief
justice of the United States
Supreme Court? _____
- A—John Jay.
Q—In what country did
modem boxing originate?
A—-Modern prize fighting
began with. James Figg, a
fighter who defeated all com-
ers in England from 1719 to
17fi0. One of his successors,
Jack Broughton, later made
boglng a national sport.
N. Y. — President Johnson paid
for Lucl’s wedding out- of his
own pockctoook. The taxpayers
paid for o n 1 y _ infinitesimal
amounts, such as the use of
YOUR DENTAL HEALTH
Yellow Tints of Teeth
Probably Are Inherited
By WILLIAM LAWRENCE, D-O.S.
NhF Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
stain as readily as dirty ones.
Brown stain may result
from use of antibiotics of the
tetracycline group. If any of
these drugs are taken by
child or expectant mother at
a time when enamel is form-
ing, baby’s teeth can become
stained, and these stains are
permanent. : ■ -
Other stains can be due to
ingestion of excearfluorides.
In some areas of tnfe United
States there are excessive
amounts of fluorides in water
and soil. This can produce
permanent mottling of
enamel.
Violent injury to teeth
often result! in hemorrhage
of blood into the tiny tubules
of the dentin. This
teeth various shades of yel-
low. It also results in death
•ft
”
*
Sept. 11s First
Day For Classes
In LP Schools
Secret Service agents as door-
keepers to check wedding guests,
this is necessary at any large
Bible Verse
gathering when to* President's
safety 1* involved.
A few days before the wed-
ding the Defense Department
took movie* of Pat Nugent's
brother, Lt Jerry Nugent, In
South Viet Nam and rushed
them to toe White House for
the benefit of toe Nugent fam-
ily. White House limousines
were sent to pick up she hair
stylists at the Jeu Louis beau-
ty salon and drive them to the
White House to fix the brides-
maids’ hair, but it was only a
few blocks. . _ ,
New Holland Farm Machin-
ery Company. New Holland, Pa.
— Uncle Sam's panel post de- t
liver* on Saturdays and Sun-
days, with a special delivery
stamp, where** United Parcel
which prides itself on private
enterprise initiative, eloses
down tight tor weekends Friday .
evenings. Farmers with broken
. . .. „ . machinery in need of spare
of nerve and finally abscess. parts can't dos« down for tha
Consult your dentist if weekend with thskr omps-bum-
O—The too four front stjiin can’t be cleaned oil. It's
teeftTof my 5-year-old daffgh- important that a diagnosis be
ter are dark and the enamel , made, because Infected baby
is wearing away. What causes teeth can tause injury to per-
manent teeth lying under
A—There are many reasons them,
for discolored baby teeth. . Wearing away of children’s
Most common stains are teeth Is usaally due to habiU,
caused by certain foods and mainly bruxlam (the clench-
medicines, including some mfi *nd grinding of teeth),
fruits and vegetables, some- These habits are difficult to
times yolks of soft-boiled eggs stop and seem to have some-
Such stains can be removed
by dental prophylaxis. But Mmm iW r*w qu*nnn, atom
prevention is the best, easiest *mA too/ik <• Or. Uwrtscs 1* car*
and least e x,p e n s I v e way of toi* ptpsr. wuh to cannot ««i»«
of eliminating discoloration: #oc* httar pacmtoUy, ktun of *<•-
" brush teeth after each time *nl inttmt will to anwtni in toil
you eat. Clean teeth don’t column.
if
THE LORD is not slack con-
cerning his promise, as some
From the mailbag:
Q—I’d like to know what
makes some people’s teeth
white and some yellow. I’ve
had yellow teeth for as long
as I can remember even
though I brush hard with bak-
ing soda and toothpaste.
A—Crowns of teeth are
made of dentin covered by a
layer of enamel. Coloration of
teeth is dependent on color of
dentin and thickness and
quality of enamel. If dentin is
yellow and enamel is thin, the
yellow dentin shines through
the thin translucent enamel
^ teeth a yellow look. If
1 is light yellow and
enamel is thick, teeth look
white. /.
Color of dentin and thick-
ness and quality of enamel
are ptobably inherited charac-
terlsiici.'
Try Your Word Power:
-NEA FEATURE-
men count slackness; but is
First day of classes In the La
Porte School System will be
Sept. 1, according to Supt. Ralph
B. Pearce.
The schools will observe Mon-
day, Sept. 5, Labor Day as a
holiday and classes will resume
Tuesday at the regular time. .
Other holidays during the 1966-
67 year include Thanksgiving.
Nov. 24 and 25; Christmas and
New Year’s, Dec. 22 through
JanT3; Easter, March 24 and
27, and San Jacinto Day, April
longsutfering to us • ward, not
willing that any should perish,
but that all should come to re-
pentance. H Peter 3$
Antwr to Previous Punto
Canine Life
v
ni
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Tha chihuihui 1 Smill pa*7
it t ■ Oat 1 Ileum (comb.
fens)
if
5 Young canine
3 Miicullne name
4 Color
v
/
12 Toward the
sheltered nde 5 Deep hole
SStostooean
Indian
7 Smite
6—- del
Dendret ... _
idoj breed) 27 Sounded, te i 47 Requirement!
SBear a bell ' «Incarnation of
compilation 28 Greet- f Vishnu
via* tODrosa 30Endure | SOAiwaya
-sSa“'S®swlsssr, S525.*
-"Sr- «*» . S2au.
rt firm 73 Ram. 40 D. MTrim brsnetoe
*iar-- .eui
n a hr
#
13 FoUower
14 Mountain
(comb form)
15 Genuine
15 Bevertse
17 Employer
Bridge taxea
l
■
21.
Student* will also be dismiss-
ed on faculty work days, which
will be Business • Education
Day in November, end of first
IB
I
20 rut
stains
semester Jan. 20. and end of
m
second semester May 26.
All students will be dismissed
one hour early May 12 for a
La Porte unit TSTA meeting.
BsoOalaureate service* will be
held May 21 and commencement
if
25
“We
V
33 F
tag up in toe field*.
n
m
T-
> 'I
a
Chad Calhoun, Palm Springs,
Klin
.14
tX ?
Calif. — The reason why Gov.
■Lass*
exercises May 26. School will
37 Ice cream
Pat Brown endorsed Mrs. Car-
I
officially end May 36.
An orientation for new facul-
ty memben will be held Wed-
nesday, Aug. 30.
nr
container
NGenuiot fresh-
water ducke a
41 Indonesian of
men Warschaw to be Demo-
cratic State Chairman for Call-
I
this?
1
*----rmrT'
fomla, despite to« fact that she
collaborated with Mayor Sam
Forty of Los Angels* during
York’s primary campaign to
defeat Brown, was to further
Democratic harmony. The new
Democratic chairman, Assem-
42 Fungoid disease
. ef rye
44 Supreme
monarch
Dallas Company Signs
Air force lomracfs
rprpr
%
wa<ii
ms saw........ .....
49 Grumble /
12 Retina#
55 Shekeepeeretn
■treem
A
S
#-
v I
more
- -tifagSjS
. year contract* with the Air
Force tor about 18$ million for
IS
l*-f
57 Guido’s note
■nr
toa |y
overhaul and related services
■ mXms)
: Try Sm
Classified
president.
Id ths company
The company
® IM4 by MU, lac.
ry L McGee, said
M Cotton
'
"It I hear one more complaint about high lodd prices, I
may cry!"
-Cl
*
Mr Force staoe 1S8^
w
■
j—±
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 312, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 21, 1966, newspaper, August 21, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145308/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.