The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 288, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1953 Page: 4 of 16
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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Seventeen states have no indi-
vidual income tax. '_
more
- . - - -
•usiriess to cast
trr.p.y Btytawn Mothers for the q- f
end we ounelvei don't know kow to >k
......... to in, wo'ro the hoppio** ^olkt
......J .«k in -A.*—** « •»"'
DIAL 8161
THE BAYTOWN SUN, FRIDAY, MAY I, 1853
Jack Fowler
Says Thanks
For Support
File Suit
$209 Million
On Land Treaty
WASHINGTON, May 8 -UP-
Th* Indian Clsifts
Reclamation Burea pwens' Characters
In Coronation Show
Ordered To Fire
1,000 Employes
WASHINGTON. May 8 -UP-
LONDON, May 8-UP-It would
take 13 trucks and trailers to carry
all the principal characters from
the novel of Charles Dickens, cor-
onation pageant organizers have
A. R. Stark Gives
His Appreciation
For Trustee Vote
First Student
Council Set
Uo At Carver
Refinery Expert
Talks To His Old
High School Group
Day Of Older Is On
Way Out In Akron 1
AKRON. 0. May i-up
5gs‘asrsS&
caught short. na «
Jack Fowler, nawly-alaetad ^ interior Department Friday ,ound-
___ Comminion member of the Cedir ieyou ichool drdered the reclamation bureau to The organizers 4Vlll include a
Friday wheduled ftu-ther hear- board, this w«k thankad the vot- «* UW> oHti 13, gSg
ln*s July 0 on a 1209 million auit «rt for their eupport In the May 2 . . . rr«r onc* Uved- *nd where h# se* ****
J,** MlfSS,Ppi Ch0cUw,f°r . 2#vtaroId B,vtown 6. Aandahl said the staff reduc- J *ev*fl1 _
land they say never was received Fowler, a 28-year-old Baytown tlofl Mce,slrv -'to meet de. The 13 trucks and trailers will
under a treaty with the govern- Refinery employe and a nativa of mands- of House-approved ao- headed bv 'Dickens” himself.
Blent. Cedar Bayou received 514 votes. Dropri»,jon bf!] f0r the department s?*ted at a writing desk.
The Choctaws are demanding , 1 Jw°ul<1 “»• t9 th*nJ* 411 I*y for the 1954 fiscal year which be- Nearly all the Dickens* charac-
payment for 1.404,640 acres they frienda *or ^e*r support, he said. |jn, July j ters in the procession will be por-
elaim the government owes them “« * privilege to be The nouse provided 1133,146,675 trayed bv the Dickensian Tabard
according to an 1830 treaty. The elected to the school board and I for the reclamation bureau. Secre- Player* — a group of amateur and
treaty provided that the Indians ahall endeavor to do my best. tary of Interior Douglas McKay orofessional ac’ors who play ex-
cede to the government more than ____ had asked for *177,350,000. The Tru- cerpts from Dickens' novels in
10 miuion acres of Miasissippi land, man administration had request- their spare time.
put that the government reserve land they were due under the «d *231,188,000 * /
land for any Chocuws who did not treaty, he said, Aandahl said the order "covers
*’*«! to settle on an Oklahoma res- Handwerk said the Choctaws personnel in Washington and the
frwUoB. *‘ • "
A. R. Stark this week had a few
worda of thanks tor a number of
Baytonians.
Stark, wh* has served six year*
on the Baytown sohool board, wu
re-elected to his third term. And
New Traffic Haard
TOLEDRO, O.-UP- A car and
the board.
Stark said, "I personally want to
thank those that voted In the May
2 school election and those that
voted for me,”
“I task upon the results of the
election as a vote of confidence In
the school board," he added. “I per-
sonally shall do my utmost to con-
tinue that confidence."
rvation, ‘tried to get a bill through Con- ff*id” and was issued early so the toledko, o.—UP— A car and
Attorney Robert C. Handwerk. gress several times, but never had reduction can be made “orderly.” * P*destrial collided in an Inter-
representing the Choctaws, said a ehance to assert their claim’’*_ section hore, but it was the car
most of the tribe traveled to Okie- until the commission was set up in that suffered. The pedestrian was
homa. but that some 1,500 families 1948, Fingernail* grow on an average carylng a briefcase loaded with
Tim Bradley ha* be*n elected
first president of the newly-er-
ganlted Student Council »t Geerga
Washington Carver Wheel.
Other officers are:
Bob Jenkins, vie* president;
Louis* Baas, eecretary; Willie
Drew Thompson, assistant secre-
tary; Harriett Gaskins, treasurer;
and Waite. Wheatfall, chief of
monitors.
The officers and other council
members will be officially inltalled
next Wednesday by the Student
Council staff of Wheitley high
school of Houston.
Mrs. J. B Baker serve* as fac-
ulty sponsor and supervisor of the
new organisation.
C. E. Zerwekh, returned to his
old alma mater this week—and
he returned as a visiting digni-
tary.
Zerwekh, hea' of the technical
library at the Baytown Refinery,
lectured to the Ball High, Galves-
ton, chapter of the Junior Acad-
emy of Science of Texas.
The refinery expert was presi-
dent of th# Ball high chapter In
1939-
Hi* aubject was "Tho Unity of
Science."
In his talk, he related a series
any extent as paving Th.^*1
tion will be on stretches n/lJ
less than 300 feet i„
in* anH navAmsni ...n, . <
ing and pavement will kIwl^
for all streets where onc.r"
constituted — along ‘
stones - th* main surSer
streets here. c*
of true stories Illustrating the re-
lationship of tile sciences to one
IH^lngl^tothTfSM
that even now (0od nV,IL
dustries pulverize thtco*i
it into the furnaces.'Th* ‘Ji*
produce cinders." “""I
produce cinders.
In a few years. Davis
lijyed in Mississippi. Only about The commission held hearings on of about one-eighth of an inch a books which stuck and dented a
123 families of this group got the the case in Meridian, Miss., Mjrch month. fender. 1
More people speak Chinese In-
cluding the dialects of China
proper and the Mongolian tongues,
than any other language. Approx-
imately 800 million speak tha
language.
A woman of the Ainu race of
northern Japan must never pro-
nounce tha name of her husband.
Td do so Is supposed to subtract
something from hi* life.
another.
He emphasis'd that In this age
of specialisation, "we must not
lose sight of the fact that all sci-
ences are interrelated—the biol-
ogist cannot Ignore th# physicist
" ivau, hfllaui
•wen |
nor can the chemis
blelogist.
The Junior Academy 0f
is an organlatlon of hlgk
chemistry, physie, ,n(j
students and has chapters thJ
out th* state.
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,
that’s why w. pause In our bPty^
an appreciative eye on the reason for- our community being "<th* best
in the West."
* ' T - '
-
■
-
Sunday is Mother’s Day
We could just run an ad "paying tribute" to Mothers, ,and sort of feel
satisfied with that... but to us there's a reason for everything.. .and
we feel that the main characteristic of Baytown's greatness is the quality
of its YOUTH.
* ' 5 I
It's their sparkle! It's their refreshing personalities! It's their
honesty, and their love of life that promises our city its biggest
future asset... and it's due entirely to their backgrounds... to
their mothers' guidance and loving care.
j
”ii so n Motors.
~ * *1
700 W TEXAS AVI.
YOUR PONTIAC - CADILLAC DEALER
——__
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 288, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1953, newspaper, May 8, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041567/m1/4/?q=technical+manual: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.