The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 249, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 25, 1950 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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: 4 «w THi BAYTOWN SUM, SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1950
ign
Editorials Sun Slants
By Fred Harfman
sme
of placing
over hy-
fiving them to
I bulb blooms,
1 motif of the
Tint by Arne
, recently in
Tint also dem-
Influence
design
Today's Bible Verse
FOR THE LORD’S portion is tiis people;
Jacob is the lot of his inheritance. Deu-®
teronomy 32:9
TWO WEEK READING •VACATION’
I ALMOST hated to see today get here for it will be
the end of one of the most pleasant two weeks I ever
spent , '
There were 19 or 20 of us newspaper people’at the
recent American Press Institute seminar in New
York. We became rather intimately acquainted be-
fors the two weeks were over/
H.0.CWieJr.
We'decided that a Couple’of weeksu after we re-
turned home, we would send each other copies of
otir-own-papers for a couple of weeks. The two weeks
-----I the
i a series by
-"sh artist
themes
jimoa*,
and dec-
ili Carrillo,
print de-
. They used to say that Hiram 0. Clarke,
Jr., knew more about what was going on in
Houston, Harris County and on the Texas
Gulf Coast than *ny other one individual
- There is ao way io,provetbat. statement
is over today.
For the past several days I have been buried under
a heavy stack of fine newspapers. Tve dug through
them,, read them, clipped them and on one occasion
I used a nice 18-page job to swat my wayward son
whenbetarriedtoa long around my desk seeking
some extra media of exchange for % couple at tiew
Is print-
Swedish
in drap-
correct, but .also there is no way to prove it pisfois a”d scabbords.
false. . EVERYTHING IS HAPPENING
De&th ha* overtaken H. 0. CUAe, vta,
liamsport and Lockbaven (Pennsylvania), Geneva,
Portsmouth (New Hampshire), Fort Smith, Witaiing-
of glass-
|paper cupa
in var-'
corn-
burnt or-
«e: green
and blue.
, popular
| shades are
Car-
UFE
Die*
| • ■ ; 7
|| 0$
■ .
years
, In 1916 when he- came to Houston the
power firm he later was to manage was a
relatively small business in contrast to the
Vast industrial empire he left when illness
overtook him several months ago. His per-
sonality was felt at every hand, and his in-
fluence in Houston in every line of endeavor
likewise had been felt for years..
*' H.”0. Clarke had two outside hobbies. One
was the Houston Chamber of Commerce.
The other was the Houston Community
Chest. He also saw these two agencies grow
by mammoth proportion.*-jin recent years.
The Baytown’ area has been served by the
“light company” since it bought the power
properties of the late R. S. Sterling. For
years there have been business relations be-
tween the company and the Humble Oil and
Refining Company, Baytown’s biggest claim
to industrial fame.
H. 0. Clarke was 65 at the time of his
death, and Houston, Baytown, Galveston,
Freeport and this entire section, of the state
will be the loser for his not being able to live
out a longer life span. ",
, H. 0. Clarke and Sam R. Bertron, presi-
“ dent of the company, were a team known
till over the nation. It is hoped that good
health will favor President Bertron for
many years to come, now that his “other
arm” is gone.
The Sun extends sincere sympathy to the
family of H. 0. Clarke.
For instance, Bob Amos up in Ohio, editorially
chided Columbus and -Indianapolis fori their lack of
, city identification, after such gross neglect - wax
pointed out to him in the Baytown Sun.
And some folks up in upstate New York are trying
to get -one of these “authorities" legalized by the
State of New York to take over 'operations of the
lakes around Geneva. A page one editorial. iii' the
Geneva Daily Times puts the blast on the idea, and
good. Reading it, you would think you.were reading
in. The Baytown Sun where Mayor Oscar Holcombe
or Governor Allan Shivers hnvi in "fnimirar*
or Governor Allan Shivers had-decided, to "take over'
Baytown.
And the Record-Argus in Greenville (where the
land isn't'the blackest and the people the whitest)
runs an item each Monday that the-movie managers
have been arrested and fined for operating their
shows the previous day. A recent election to do
away with Sunday movies carried by a small mar-
gin, but the movie managers are bowing out tike
rugged Individuals.
And the, otherwise staid Fort Smith Times-Record
runs Hot Springs racing entries on page one each
afternoon. ;
The Wilmington, ’North Carolina, Morning Star
records that its junior band dipped; all the other
bands In district competition and is headed for a
statewide showdown in Greensboro next month. Pour
it on ’em, Wilmington. That reminds us here in Bay-
town that-Jake Burkett and Company will be staging
a band deal next Saturday that promises,to be the
biggest thing, of its kind ever attempted here. It
™urldwouldn’t 11"™ mtmlntton kids could C0M0 You Wouldn't Think It:
They had a bad day the first day of spring up hi
Meriden, Connecticut. According to_ the Daily Jour-
nal, they had rain, snow and report cards to herald
the official conning of spring. - Bv EARL WILSON
This type of fine information has been swirling NEW YORK—Even a Broadway
through my brain now for a couple of weeks. It has columnist has school teacher trou-
been great, and today it ends. .bie.
Washington DTspatcffi
Downey Back Home To Prepare
For Tough Bout With Helen
Baytown’s Old
FROEHNER RADK
SERVICE
WASHINGTON — Senator Sheri- ft, Nebraska, raised the question
dan Downey <D, California), is of ownership of new airports,
absenting .himself for a month to' "The policy J» to restrict federal
Btrenuous primary ownership.” Sawyer replied. “I
Representative opposed to the government
x\
Stromberg-Carieon Radio
[ 509 W. Texas Dial
SSK SttKSSSSSS I McADAMSCO.
Nebraska; » “Then vmir nnHnv fa tk.t • I I r‘" •.. ■ •
■eiBg- .. r.iarar’ew— ™ S& iMI
government now operate 7* asked
"Tm Leading Stores
In Baytown*
has commanded
a former » Atomic
Chairman David
Lilientbal for his
recent speeches
deploring exag ..
gerdted itdt’.l-'
ments about the
horrors of atom-
ic warfare . ri
Represent# i v e
Andrew ft i emil-
ler (D„ Wiscon-
sin) has a secre-____
tary named Haie Allen
Champion, which Biemiller con
Stefan.
‘The National Airport in Wash-
ington, and two In Alaska.”
Sawyer declared the 170,000000
CutJn airport funds is due to
"(MMY »WMg*; 'H*
ties of small communities will suf.
fer from the slash.
ITRON® CHURCHil
Mean a
STRONG COMMUNITY
.Support Yours *
SUBMARINE. TESTS - General
Omar Bradley now has toms idea '
liow It feels to be a crewman of a
submarine under attack.
HOUSTON
NATURAL GAS CO.
The7 head of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff voluntarily underwent the
GETTING OUT OF YOUR CLASS, SA.M7
aiders as unique as the name of experience during the recent joint
the State Department’s Outer- Caribbean maneuvers. After watch-
bridge Horsey. • nig Navy destroyers score repeated
“hits” on undersea boats, he asked
DISPLACED PERSONS - Con- to go aboard one of them. He made
trary to general belief, the Sen-’a "dive” last year during a short
ate did not set a fixed time to cruise. This time he was accom-
, vote on the displaced persons bill modated on the AMBERJACK
when consideration of It is ire- First thing Bradley asked On™
sumed March ,31. All that was mander Phll% Besham was ft
agreed upon when the legislation possible to escape depth chare*.*'
was temporarily laid aside Was a -Yes, if you Jake chances.” ‘ ’
limitation on debate. . . “How about showing me ” said
* Senator Leverett Saltonstali (R), Bradley.
Massaenusetts, stressed this at a Besham showed himrThe AM-
bi-partisan strategy meeting of BERjAGK was steered into” the
supporters of a liberalized mess- target area and when the destroy,
ure. *' era made contact and moved in for
“We must keep in mind,” he the kill, Besham retorted to *vWiv,
said, “that we do not have unan- maneuvers. Tho sub finally escaped,
imous consent on a fixed time to Later, thanking the rew, Brad-
’vote: -The unanimous consent ley remarked, <7 have a much
agreement was' only for .limited clearer idea of the need for bet-
debate. That is helpful, but It ter submarine defenses.” He alio
■till permits a lot of time-con- was highly complimentary of the-
suming.talk. Therefore, it is very meal he had eaten. “Best steak
important tha^ we arrange our I ever had,”
speaking schedule carefully' and „
assign a special aspect of this is- A7D THERE—Heads of
sue to each of our speakers. Oth
FOR BETTER
LDING MATERIAL*
utp FAD9TE
CALL R R WILLIAMS
■ AT
I Better Homes Lumbei
And Supply Co.
11*» ,N. Main . Dial Ml
Church Programs, Notices
Mimeographing
BREMER'S
MIMEOGRAPH SHOP
| Woods Bldg. ■ Dial 4185
PRICES REDUCED
THE
CUAUHTEMOC
FOR SUNDAY DINNER
Dial 2317
i ou vruuion i inmaiT!
Not Because He's My Boy, But-On Broadway
More Acreage For Cotton
. t§
rlti
1
■ I
:
A measure increasing cotton acreage to
help last season’s “hardship” cases is expect-
sd to become law with the President’s sig-
nature before April 1. The legislation will
increase peanut acreage also, and will with-
hold" price supports from 1951 potato grow-
ers .unless their production is controlled by
.marketing quotas. '
Cotton farmers will be allowed to plant an
‘ additional 1,150,000 acres this season, rais-
ing the total national pool to 22,150,000
acres. This is still about 5,000,000 fewer
than were planted last year. .
The “hardship” cases resulted from the
uneven -allotments that were permitted un-'
der a pew formula contained in the 1949
. cotton quota law. It was the big*cotton pro-
ducer who bore the brunt of the acreage
slash. ...
Under that formula, all cotton-growing
farms in a county were first allotted mini-
mum acreage not exceeding five acres. The
remainder of the county allotmerit then was
apportioned among those farms which prev-
iously had planted more than five acres.
The distribution was determined by divid-
ing the total cropland of these farms, wheth-
er planted to. cotton or to other crops, into
the county allotment.
A county allotted 100,000 acres, with 500,-
-000 acres of cropland,‘had a 20 per cent
factor. A farmer in that county who had
planted his total 100 acres of cropland to
cotton annually would be granted 20 acres.
Hjs neighbor with a farm of the same size
who, had planted only 20 of his acres to cot-
ton in one out of three years also would get
20 acres.
The new measure abandons this formula,
restoring the traditional historic cotton-pro-
ducing approach. This provides for distribu-
tion of acreage by a percentage of the aver-
age cotton acreage each iarm had planted in ,
a three-year base period.
RETIREMENT AT BIRTH — NEW PLAX
JUST ABOUT tbfr slickest thing I read ia.any of the
papers was a quotation from Representative Paul
Shafer of Michigan, who .hates the welfare state. He
has worked out, or discovered, a system whereby
every person, in the future can retire at birth and
never have to work.
It has long been the custom and policy of this col-
umn to point out to Baytown people any new fool-
proof plans and policies discovered, about making
money—lots of it—in a hurry.
I can truthfully say that this plan discovered and
“advocated” by Congressman Shafer is without ques-
tion one of the most sound economic dfscoverres of
the age.
- I quote the statesman,-as follows: * •
Every new-born child in the United States would
THEY STRAYED toward
the American Legion and Veter-
ing ourselves.” - ottff. cam* Me-
Twelve senators attended the [" ggfigl*
* OOU- meeting, pfesidedvovw^byDes Amcfens^^Gombattants . . Ta
pie of puppets and1 .also toward R^blrt H^dri^kson Tnd" hot *cramble ls <>» tor the Dem-
.. the Revision set. Puppets are H. Alexander Smith (R, New Jer- ^naVor "B^^Hi'kenTwn*^!^
It seems that my son Slugger, ' ___"H TT part of the television tfend. Many scy), Herbert Lebfhan <D., New . . L RV
who,’. 7, has some unreasonable Uf a young cowboy quits .hootin’ York) and Irving Ives (K, New ^ Under^re^
Blve him Jlhthe rustlers to play with puppets. York), Homer Ferguson (Ft. Michi- AJber't Ix,veland and f<,rmpr Re[;
give him all the - r ■ -gan), Hubert Humphrey (D., Min- re„ntativ, fth. “Z
spell;d W°rd* t0 *1 “SLUG,” WE said, “what sort of ^sota), Francis Myers (D., mgde a try for the gtn8te'.a, the
_' II hard words does the teacher give Penn sylvan la). jr®nk orlt<’rD7rR," cbeice of the lat® Harry Hopkins
wl?d*.7 *Thlv B >’ou? Words like ‘daddy/ -girl' and !" th* 1638 “purge” campaign,
ward* ? mey Til yCllE— Flanders (R„ termontri and Her Uovelapd ia running aa an all-out
give them to the ^ ' - . bert OConor. (D, Maryland.). supporter of ‘the' ftrannSn farm
t,^*00nd Wm JWf-8 * ,troked hi* gun and re- .rp’r^p-, poucY _ The Tru- p,an • • • The Atomic Enerp- .
dh*'I.t,h “NOt ?ASY WOrd' lik# that! nj»n'Administration is opposed to Commission has reported- to the
national ^ 'WB Hard words! . the government going Into the Air- J°'"t Congressional Atomic Com-
eainst Simrvert” 0ne day was very good at. ”what hard words?” Well, he port busines*. . 'fj**4..?-' ^ tciftl^sU *w
Jimmie I)ur- ‘‘Look”—but next day couldn't think of any. Also, It is heavily slashing next utions* since the° Fm^hs” srv'«•
ante would say. ft«,turned °»t to spell ‘Horse.” The B. W, had a brilliant fiscal year’s budget for new and poge _ . . Senator Joe O’Mahoney
THE beautiful SLUG IMPLIED it was all the . .. expanded airport facilities — from <D„ Wyoming!, chairman of the
receive from .the government a promissory note for wife and I found this out at home teacher's fault , , “ easy J*ord* the other 110000,<)0(l to {40.000,000. j„{nt Economic P'port. has been
$20,000 at 3 per cent interest, payable in 20 years. .work. time. “So you get'the hard words and ’ ’ ‘ J k* ’daddy.‘ ‘girl' Commerce Secretary Charles informed by the Metropolitan Ufe
“The 3 per cent would return $50 monthly to go We’d had a talk with th* Phil the other kids get' the easy thnL“ V ' * ’ • d° spe11 SawYer dKclosed- these policies in Insurance Company that it has
t6 the child’s parents until the child is 20. Harrises about their family spell- words?” we asked him e.f' , . , . • A a. private conference on Capitol established a new small business
....... ' Slug squirmed restlegdy in his safd VdoTknow’^ Hilt R«*P^entative Karl .Stefa;
n yau oowboy suit that he had thought- -
it looked like he’d fully put on in case he met any WE THINK
We Invite All Our Friends
to Visit Us
Karshall and Ercel Rembea
New Owners of the
FASHION CLEANERS
[14 E Sterling- Dial 2021
ENJOY LIFE TO THE
• UTMOST
Dr. John H. Whitfield
CHIROPRACTOR
1808 W. Pearce Dial. 609?
Easter Headquarters for
Pet* and Pet 8uppliea
MCDONALD
BIRD HAVEN
Dial 3-1272
■ * »i* N. Hwy. 148 left
Cedar Bayou, Bob-Smith Rd.
Wilson
“Each,year during the 20 years, the government ing troubles and we werie pressing
would pay $1000 into a sinking fund for the ‘retire- Slug. He seemed to be such a bad' oowboy *alt that he haT thought’
ment of the note; and, when the child reached the speller that * -........
investment division.
age of 20, the government would give him o
the $?0,000 it had paid into the sinking fund,
“Boys and girls of 20 who elected to.get married like “Life,” “Look,” etc.
would thus have -a capital of $40,000 and work would ing up magazine cover*,
forever be unnecessary!
“If they would undertake tot have four children
they would receive $50 a month for each child until
he reached the age of 20; and there would be enough
left of their original $40;000 to care for them, with-
out work, for the remainder of their lives.
“But there are other advantages. People of all ages
would be for it; nobody would ever’have to work
again; it would cost the government only $1600. per
- person.annually,’ It would'automatically end all the
agitation for birth control-
'll is further suggested that the parents could in-
vest their $40,000 in government bonds at 3 per cent
and have an added income of $100 or a total of .$300
per month,
°ihers ,s*v
wind up,a newspaperman. Indians in the apartment
We tried to teach him words He frowned deeply as be cause Slug later confessed he
by hold- thought of the injustice of it all. "
His eyes Strayed.
For a Foundation as Strong
as Your Religion. Us#
Transit-Mixed Concrete
IBANSMIX CORF,
Dial 3-1549 or
'Channelvtew 7134
The Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
Tax Reductions Would Really
Be Automatic Raises In Pay
.heard a television comedian say
something that caused him to
“have an experiment.”
“I’m experimenting to see whe-
ther I can learn without study-
ing* Siub announced. ‘That’s
----—1- what fbe man on television said boost T That question is addressed w a decrease in
A Central Pres* Feature h* dId’ And h*'l on television* to the wage earners and white would reorc
»r e-pTim _ „ , . l»if workers of America by Henry , , T . ,
7ndT^can\ do”*”“^BW H' Heirtann’ **««“tlve manager of valent , of a wag. boost or sa.srj
Attend , ^mr Church
Regularly
Would you like a real wage the largest part of the :
And
5ouHiw*$fern
Associated Telephone
Company
the practical eqsi-
Looking "At Life
n r . 1 ■ n 1 . 14 Happened Today
By finch prandeis 1609 — Hudson river discovered
Deserved TestImoilTaf
the National Association iof Credit increase.
Mcn, :in ac..open-lcttgr anpcal. -------The average consumer perhapi
“won’t you let me "complete the “You can ®et 11 ®“d >'ou can 8®1 <Joe* uot reafize that every time be
experiment?” it with much lessthrouble than you buy* anything/ whether it be a
We are pretty sure the experi- he assures them. “You donT pair of hose or un automobile, a
ment will be finished by toinor- have to go on strike to get It You large portion of the price he pays
The comedian will don't even have to form a commit- is due to a multitude of, hidden
too, if we find him. tee to wait on the boss and tell taxes. These taxes are paid bv the
, him what you want or lave your manufacturer and everybody «1»
WHATS HOT: Eddie Cantor union officers fight for yebi.” who has anything to do with the
S2ni!Srt'lBTV -Substantial wag. IncrUs, or P"*: ' . *
varietr show- -In October-v .t ^.isr^uT«^<-'*durf'ktahWakn«'. fean4^
to hear ii.ni,, 'n.», become effective if taxes were ^ material.until it is a, to th*
with Twedlsh trnf Z": duced^. Mr- Hcimann eapf-
stan
I
% There are hundreds and thousands of peo-
in and near Houston who would like to
other night in honor of the one and only
.Walter Jenkins.
v -S
■ -
Walter Jenkins has the title of minister of
DWsic-at the First Methodist Church in
Houston. He has the informal title of being
the “singingest” man in this part of the
country. -
The Answer, Quick!. the Henry E. Huntington art gal-
y how many United lery, San Marino, California, prob- said.
more than 1,000,000?
a What is a “foot pound”? *~He *** born ,n En«land ,n
3. What article of dress is some- lm He held * command under
. . .. , times used in a jazz band to mute Gen- James Wolfe, conqueror of
“Then they couid leave- the original $40,000 to be trumpet? Quebec raklmr row time,
divided among the children after they died; so each 4. Who wrote the poem, Enoch Battle of the Plain, of Ahwham **• Hnished, t(
of their children would now start off with a capital Arden? -, fe raroe not ior lnh
of $30,000 instead of $20,000. Likewise, each married 6. Can you giva the next line B r
couple would have $60,000 instead of the original after, “We are lost, th# captain
$40,000, and so on from generation to generation.” shouted”? ------— u u- wiu„.reim wuu« auramsucauv.-------k-»
gMs Meredith came to Bop, OW become effective if texes' rp re. material,until it is
and mud.—Austin O’Malley. ^ HJIM RWH g? a^ume tSIfXif tic is] S a 4,1«her' pric* ^ of tht ^
^e ’^e Sul"4^ Brownie limited to the withholdhfe from ^ ha* to pay. .
. . . .................... Keid, son of the late Ogden ReM,-.their P«Y «hcck but that to the , An essenti*- fvt to be kept ri-
.... by Hendrick Hudson. 1634-Mary-; I publisher of the New York Herald C0BtrRfy burden nojr paid is ways in mind »-
THIS IS a very unappetizing column. Please do not land Day, commemorating first ' Tribune, started work as a re- mo*Uy hidden. ail the taxer- ibythsns-
. read rt jurt-beforeeating.lt may speiLyour-ApMite--Romm»-Cfeth©lic mass which- porter on that paper . . Joey He points out .that in' thfe aver- tiohal, state c~- ’ -niraidpsi
If these things affect you the way they affect us onists sent t America by Lord Adanu fancies socialite Patty Pot- age situation the withholding tax governments from everybody *(«
.at home, you'll follow my advice. Baytimore celebrated on landing. H; *JBm *** ... Marion Brando displayed i* about bhe-fifth of the tai really paW by the Consumer. And that a-
m ^ s "f - - '
.ssf zpjs.si 5H 1
rSajgTj
j MU JOE
w l!AWT*’ >•» paint it
"T^ggar-
iWfe SM 81**g“*
“' W El’ Kill SOTS
uil GENE BAUER
Insurance For Everyone
4 • Hoejjitrtizatioj
raWdsni O Health
Your Southrand Man
Dial 9000
Bulldle;
» SSS(*
Jim-
--4I U
«y LUMBER CO.
. Dial 8272
Mel
enth-T
patedl
day dl
Buy From
The|
the ca
and
Hon Fencing
t
Jtk-
constitute today'a
kins, often tided ty Mt talented wife, has
brought as much happiness and joy toHous-
" -'-ns than.any other personality. Every-
: Walter Jenkins stands for is good. He
deserved the plaudits he received
’ «t the dinner in his honor.
And it war so typical of. Waiter Jenkiiis
7 he responded to the eulogies-
‘Do you want me te talk or sing?” he
Snt ■
The way that man am lead a group of
Hsging “Oh Wha> a Beautiful* Day,” will
have an effect on anybody—even a person
‘ who couldn’t tarry § tune fa a flour sack.
h nolirtv a icene
birthday toward1 rebels '*but1 ed*tha a™ P“t,ber out Of the
troopa actively engaged in the ®aow a few days . . . A flat-chest-
28, Robert Battiea of Bunker. Hill, White v* ****** Mb<i.Hob Hcp^ How
lurt^tai SB pIaywright'v'::? Se8lnt5icSorfhe^hts.Ren^is ^
eliminating the unappetizing stuff, by just turning w ^ yonr ' made eommander-ln^hlef in Am-,
FLACCID—(KLAK-sid)- adjec- flf8; 1TT? ?>•«“»« he out 2000 autograph'ed ’ rt^iea of
^erm
instruction
Dirt 5008
For some reason, most of our local commercials are ian,
of the drug store variety? I don’t have to tell you list,
what. On Sunday, March,
But jnost. of them don’t go very'well with ,*oup Frost, American, poet,"
Looking Backward
and gave Uprir pdUUcal jurwri j
representatives who will c-; - ’
with them in, their objects « »
lower cart, of government^,
would in short order have low®
Church
Regularly
tioiud Association of Credit Mm b :
aTO&AY« HEADLINESrFiMl ^
Assault On Reich Begins; workers of the nao^ ^
Ibf Sajdown^uo
do you like working with me af-
ter Jane Rusaell?” Hope answer-
w™. ________ ___________________ _____ ed, “You’re, my favorite boy”
proper second.
- ■-••flE'ja-. --.v . ' » ^ W?1 -» • || s—»s ■' 1—» -OUJCt*
-THftftE WAS an advertisement in the garden sec- tive; yielding to, preaekre readily felt
tion of our Sunday paper. ^ or without resistance; Jimp. Ori- . «nm«^ II« ntea July Bnnc to g9«w her ex-bus-
i.itijthousehold hint and also intended for people' gin; French—Flaccide from Latin at Plymouth, England. bana _ ’Crtony foursome• Ava
who want to make a little extra money. If youTWe —Hsccldua Gardner, FitokaimtaLWA Paul Storm Nasi Lines Near Berlin7 feali2#thelr m
good tor your. (Name, rt brttom <k columnr Giant atotraSTp^ Si
S»osa»-&S^S.SSSS.^. JJMSVSSBT'** a--
cauae there isn’t space enough here. But this will have to fight for auccesa-but will, . *• Adwby h%t
pyp* you die idea * vW 7'J . • win. . ■* « Alfpfiuj TnX)l _ ^
ealSwom-“ woSutta^o'^W SUP*'' iHfa^am^foseto rtth.'^
Coimfy Federal
Dr.
•will
munionl
8 a m.
“Let -Ah
man:*
voice was heard at the __
Radio Academy Award dinner died at a hospital her,
whara to got.* ^ Ed Sul- The fouraon. «d wmdtajw £***#£1
Published By
The Dally On Company at Pearce and
Aahbel in Baytown. Texas
....... PubUa
............ ........Editor
Advertising Manager
............. Office Manager
Bates:
of aB your garbage-and a wonderful way to make This attitude sboukl eee you con* Vonghttr, by James T. Fields,
marvelously rich comport for your gardes; fiowera, tentedly through th«. next year.
‘shrubs, etc? Look at these f«t»‘: Today’s child is Ifltely to prove a
■i, happy and clever person.
ifiEDEN ftswdSon to teU how “you can buy a few _.
hundred worm*" to start for a couple of dollar#! Folks of Fame -jGum tlia Naate y . - > > I
WttbLn a few weefca you'll have Hwnaiitel — t-Thto great Ba^iab artist was A I Bllflh
“Y<m cm put ALL your garbage in the pit-even born to the vrtag rt im to Sud- IIOVC M LQUyll
ofiBM peeU. faiifiwfetflu — gij- ifflwii oirf bV7* At 14 he nJUs wiflt ikctcnci . m.. . , „. . ,
f,?*“** •*I »*»»«*•* »4iU . - #i_, nrnhiiin„in -• m ' m raise anything hnt their hats.1
.rSyTSS'so odors -so™- so
NUIBANCE » any ktodr 1^^!? ^ .HI** « er psychiatrirt
ra'^toysotu Mvan (who alto got one) said, “I of Mr. and Mrs M. C. th* bei»efletol etfert F**^
^S^?3a»
ICIJSWtHAM
of Jake I
-BUmoiv’
Victor]
grave.;
'neKUt&**\
1—Thomas Gainsborough.
«-G«. William Howe. AVim-mm-rnw^sa
fmmero," say* J. B. Clark, “never iUsgrsve was elect- ^o^Afrttoa) Obrorver.
niao tnvthinF twit tk*fa ^ president of Alamo Parent*
Teacher Association.. ‘
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Anoth- T_v - ■
(beard at BUI .fgg __
f1*0? *“• ^ ***** "Will you h#9e luqcb with maW Sto^^why ‘‘hTrtSl* Sk ft Nm? j
selling the compost Ail you have to do » to tend jby his friends, he vrent to the dayr Ha repUad. Tao-wbo did ikt ffwAh wa« vrHb-'wr I
. «*.•«—TU’JrdSmfSTds i 2r sc**** r£-»* *—*“-^1
mm* “* *»'*»• ■mSJmSSiSS'S**^^SSS*8*“ W-
Dial 9307
lCE •«« ANNUITIES
See
^Shepherd Agency
The
Meaaon <
organ, i
An* To;
service i
nn aartl
hers.
.and f
Quotations
**f WAFFLE
to wotlc wonders with earthworms
8-moa, $5; year, $10- . W* NEED a new garbage Van. Ours has e hole to mdhs to the court of George
I didn’t get very far. But. from what she said. 1
of the royal family.
sets of piates-upper, lower and ers
- license”—Lynne Gilmore. and
Deroaahiro, of Mra rtsaridu and "Dent waft tot the undertaker to w*hSl ^"L!^*** *
Jfi&tfS? ra ^ ^ StSVWL'&'ajS 22^ SU-;. Dsat's s*fl, ^brother.
suspected that if I ever feli for anything like that. The portraits of the Ducheei of SKIN IN a .bank window at Kemp.
she'd feed me to the earthwoMM. - •’ - - -.....
* wui m wnicn ne naa "it la commoiuy *K I
holdinsr Mfit ii nn ...kh* #aiott<wi W“™. I
^Creek St feet^-as - destroyed -tog that rtf I
2*5sss g'S.'i*;
* w*Efs?ir3? liSS'ffi! j
- 2£r&2£SS&\
Dial 4687
Delivery
Dialog*
T.
Beaiiir the only sound'and well Using
eity oiticisl
WCK BOYD
MBMl
IrtMHll
elude
PM. We
munion at|
rehearsal
.
■ --
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 249, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 25, 1950, newspaper, March 25, 1950; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027601/m1/4/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.