The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 202, Ed. 1 Friday, March 2, 1951 Page: 2 of 10
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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to the tab.
Dafiin'i plant cuts out some ot
these charges. It isn't sold to the.
farmer, himself. It's too expensive
corn, wheat
Yes...Alt 13 Pieces!
T.
»■
> ' J!
NOTHING
DOWN
50c A WEEK
Dayton
ade Sweethearts
young victims were Linda
Ice Poster, 10, and Richard
Rollwitai, 10.
driver of the automobile,
f Q. Haines, 20, said he was
f '*• xinjiirs, cm, saiu hk wna
d by lights of an approach-
hr. He said he swerved to
tt when he saw the scooter's
[ light approaching,, but t.he
[r collided broadside with Tits
remains of Julius Caesar
he tomb of the Caesars in
ipus Marltua in Rome.
Servo the gracious way, right from oven to table. Beautiful
chrome stands have smart, pierced and traced design that set
off the ivory baking dishes. Attractive enough for festive occa-
sions ... sturdy enough for every day. Just slip your dinner
into the oven! This famous ovenware is ideal for baking.
Put the casserole into its chrome frame .. and serve!
W, M. HOUSE
Plaait Mi‘“ tbs Pair ef China
lamp* and Matching Electric Clock
at SH.lt complete sat
□ full Anit. Encloied
D full Amt. C.O.O.
P OPEN AN ACCOUNT. I will pay
ewe
ADDRESS
Plan To Eliminate
Middleman May
Cut Food Costs
well To Build
Cedar Bayou
ioI Gymnasium
Emm Page Onel
Baytown Plumbing Companv on
a-blcf of .*17,824.
Maxwell reduced his fee when
tniatros decided on the cost phis
plan. HU original fee of S7T25 had
covered a finished “turnkey'' job
with supervision of electrical and
plumbing work.
Maxwell began jpreparing Ihe
building site this afternoon,
i The new gymnasium is the fjrst
project in a *300.000 building pro-
gram approved recently by district
taxpayers. Other projecU Include
tlx new elementary classrooms,
vocational shop, • a new negro
school and conversion of the
present gymnasium into an audi-
JEiwik • ,
Pope Pius Works
On 75th Birthday
VATICAN CITY - - Pope
Pius XII today observed his 75th
birthday and the 12th anniversary
of hU election -to the papal throne
with a normal schedule of work
and prayer: .............. ~
The 262nd pontiff of the Roman'
Catholic Church requested that
there be no official celebration*.
White and yellow flags flew from
all buildings in the . mile-square
Vatican State but He 1000 citizens
* worked as usual'
The double event will be com-
memorated, however, on March 12
- the anniversary of his corona-
tion as pope in 1939.
Born Eugenio .Maria Giuseppe
Ciovapni PacelU into a Roman
U; patrician family. Pope Pius made
a*y.»r
became a priest 52 years ago, oil
April 2.
Today, with an estimated 1(1000
Catholic priests, nuns, seminarists
and missionaries reported missing,
dead or imprisoned behind the
rUon curtain, his work has become
“Increasingly heavy.
Can't Get
Away From
Oil Wells
Stock Quotes
WASHINGTON O) A man I
know is out to kiiick the take-
home pay of the middle man. And
If he succeeds, it’s possible , (hat
one day we'll have cheaper steaks,
eheaper chops aad, a bottle, of. milk
a man ean afford.
This fellow is Irl A. Daffin. boss
of a manufacturing company at
Lancaster,1 Pennsylvania What
he's doing is bringing feed pro-
cessing plants .practically to the
farmer’s barn door. His new
Wrinkle is a mobile plant that
takes care of *uch things as grind-
ing, mixing, molasses blending
and introduction of vitamins into
grains and roughage
It calls for a bit of explaining
and wee'll get around to that in a
minute.
The vvay things have been for
lhany years, the farmer goes
through a monotonous routine.. He
sows and he plows aqd he reaps.
He hauls his stuff to the market.
From the market it goes to the
miller. The miller kicks in a few
little mixes and cvcntuallly the
man in the overalls buys his own
product back, at a fat mark-up,
as feed for his agimals.
The feed has to go all over heck
and bank to wind up eventually
in a bin only a few rods from
PUZZLING OVER PHOTOS off ORne'se Communist tittrature found in the the field where it apsouted and
rubble of captured Anyang. Korea, M/Sgt Paul Buries of Sarcoxl, grew.
Mo., and Cpt Robert Hodgeman of Plattaburg, N., Y., seem more Tnere are rail charges, handling
amused than amazed..
John McFerrin
New Kiwanian
Dr. Bridges Heads
Health League
gets it
trough.
into
LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH ~(IU»> (USDAi
Livestock: Cattle 200. About half
the run empruad good and choice
Slaughter yearlings " bought to ar- Svhdoi’ was made by R Trkm'.
John McFerrin was formally in-
troduced as a new member of the
Baytown Kiwanis Club yesterday
by a man who has set a good
example. • ■■
McFerrin was presented by his
father, J' B McFerrin, who has
been one of the,most active mem-
bers of a Houston club and boasts
a perfect attendance record for
over 15 years.
Rev. Karl H. Bracker, pastor of.
St. Paul's Lutheran Church, was
also presented to the club. Past
President James Sherwood pre-
sided over the introduction:
A plea for public co-operation
with the vocational agriculture
program at Robert £. Lee' High
rive at 35-37 Cither classes scarce,
nominally steady
Hogs m Butcher hqgs and
sows steady, feeder pigs dulj.
Good and choice 190-290 ibs 21:50
and 21.75, good and choice 160-185
lbs 19 75-21.25. Sows 17.M-18.50.
Asia is the largest continent.
In a brief talk, Kerr, who is the
.teacher and guidance head of the
program at.the high school, out-
lined the . work being done by .the
members of the Future Farmers,
of America club, and the .value'to
the community of such work.
P. Ml ' Minter was program
chairman and introduced Kerr. ••
-New officers for the Baytown
Health League, a Community
Chest agency, were elected last
night at a meeting of the board
of directors,
Dr. William Bridges was elected
chairman, replacing Dr. George
Bruce who served as chairman for
two years.
Mrs John Porter was elected
vice-chairman to succeed Dr.
Bridges. . ' , -
William T.1 LionsVas re-elected
secretary-treasurer;
A’leave of absence was granted
to Dr Frank Robbins, ‘ clinic
physician, due to illness. The ap-
pointment of Dr. Robert D. Dyer
as clinic physician was confirmed.
Present at' the meeting were
Dr. Bridges, Dr. Ben Ammons,
Lvous. Mrs. Porter, and Dr.
Richard Woods. ..
ler and cheaper all around
feed stores—and even the mill
themselves—to operate it.
It’s called Fe’ed-UtNit, and
used in various"'partS of-the-t
try. :
Government Limits
Surplus Wheat Sale
•101 NEIVSUSNE'SS. WHY LEAVE W# return to cor pis chr isti
- Mrs. C, J.’ Qiiiis Jr. arid little
S»l« trawl mo itissttiuiw cm'] TIBrn
IS’SBS^isiari I IncD
daughter Debbie ofCotpus Oh-riSti-
...t- ... , , ........ have'^tmm'ad-'hdTne.;afteT;'vifiBngi
-Mr Avkh Mr; -and. Mss. C. J.
fcg-Jglw Mjarba texixIHUUI .Gillis, 3,'Wo Minnesota.
WASHINGTON <1 Pi The gov-
ernment has limited domestic
sales, of wheat from its surplus
stocks tb 5.0001000 bushels in
Match in a mow to conserve re-
ahd oats, and even mix up a batch
of roughage.
A jobber can roll up the drive
and in practically no time at all
change a bin pt raw grain into
vitamin-hopped feed.
The machine consists of a heavy
duty hammer mill equipped with
an adjustable traveling feed tabic,
special feed miser, molasses tank
and a unique heating and meter-
ing arrangement, double bagging
attachment and auger discharge
chute, - ~ -------- —
The whole business can
mounted on most popular models
of lli ton trucks.
The. operation is speedy. If the
farmer called in all his hands
and' tried- to do the job himself,
it would take him half the winter
to process a barbful of corn, oats
or wheat and add all the ingre-
dients.
An operator of the new-fangled
tiling can take care of as many
as 20 farms in one day, and not
be too tired -when he. sits, down
oftoir
build I
!»:«•<
asesa—
S.8.S. Inam FnSy IM TaSe Fa 71 Tm
els of wheat in this country in
Ancient Egyptians of about .7000 February but dropped the grain
B C. built some of the largest from its export sales list at that
signs of all times. - ,--------- time
Slayter Chiropractic
Proof
RSrqNjlit Corpora-
Quit snrmo(tnn hiiah- of these 20 farmers vtlfl enougn
feed to stuff his cows, pigs or
Chickens for a fortnight.
Don’t quote me or anybody as
saying you can expect the price
of milk and. Steaks and chops to
drop overnight. Tn*lTiese perlouS-
times things tend to jump, not
drop. * ...
But with a single unit which
Results!
Results!
Results!
You Ju»t Can't Argue ;
With Remits!
Words . . . theories . . . argu-
ments ... are Tine. They sound
good to a person who, is not sick.
But to the unfortunate who is
paralyzed—confined to a wheel
chair or bed—or tormented by
pain—words offer little comfort.
Chiropractic does not rely on
words to correct your ailment. It
goes direct to the cause—-removes
that cause — and starts yop on
your way to real, natural health
—Quickly, effectively and econom-
ically.
See for yuursetf) Investigate to-
day!
CLINIC HOURS:
DAILY: tO AM. - 6 P.M.
SATURDAY: 9 A.M.-12 Noon
Knowing the penalty of ill-health and sincere-
ly wishing to direct others, Mrs. J. L. Walker of
1001 S. Main, Highland*,, Texas, has this to say
to those who are seeking relief:
"I know thaf chiropractors have a hard task
before them. But by us people who have been
helped by chiropractic and by us telling others
about it, we can help a little to get other sick
people to see the truth. In this way we can help
to get more sick people well. I want to tell what
was done for me at the Slayter Clinic. My trou-
ble started about two years after the birth of my
second child, I suffered from frequent and ex-
tremely violent headaches, female trouble, and
almost constant pain in my back. I also became
very nervous, which brought on a stomach dis-
order.
can grind, mix and sack between
four and six tons of grains an
hour-well, maybe someday.
And if the day comes, conceiv-
ably it could revolutionise the
billion-dollar a year milling in-
'fflotiy. - ——-. . .--■■■
Cupid Statue Banned
‘ mu
.ST. LOVIS - Ol -- Chimes and
soft music will replace Cupid in
the St. Louis Marriage license
Bureau.
“It’s an eyesore," Recorder of
Deeds Anthony J. Denny said of
the statue of Cupid which hov-
ered benignly over mates-to-be
for 46 years. He favored a set
of chimes and a radio.-----
Denny said if the statue wasn't
removed from City Hall in 15
days—by St. Patrick’s Day — he
Would paint it green.
"If you are sick, please, for your own sake, go
and see Dr. Wm. Slayter. Don't continue to suf-
fer when it is very probable he can cure you. He
will tell you truthfully whether he can nelp you
the first time you visit him."
Listen...
If only you could,hear what most of our
patients are saying about Chiropractic, you
would do as more and more people are doing
every day—place your health problems in
the hands of Chiropractic.
If you are sick, please feel free to consult
us, and find out for yourself if Chiropractic
can help you. Our services are within the
financial reach of all.
Wm. W. Slayter, D.C., Pb.C.
Visit The Clinic Today!
No Appointment Necessary!
SLAYTER CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
500 W. PEARCE
STEEL MAGNATE Alfred Krupp,
Whose vast German munitions
empire equipped Adolf Hitler's |
armies, ts among 21 condemned
German war criminal* reprieved
by United States officials ,ln
Frankfurt. Krupp was serving
12-year term. His confiscated i
erfy was returned, ff
ROOFING
AND SIDING
Pay — Sully Guarantaad
°r *STATE
BOOSEftS
R. L. REYNOLDS. Rep.
PHorw 31491
Most people would be glad
have an oil well or two on their
land, .but 25-year-old Byron T.
Compton is getting "fed up with
them." ' f
Foul years ago Compton, uRw
is a boilermaker at the Baytown
Refinery, purchased a lot in «
clean modest-priced section of
Baytown and built him a home.
He was going to get married
and the site appealed to him and
It was just across the road from
an elementary school.
Today, the kids on lb? school
campus have to, hurdle walking
beams to get to school because an
oil well was brought in on Comp-
ton’s iot. four months ago.
Compton had married and he
and his wife decided they didn’t
want to raise their daughter, 15-
month-old Penny Lynn, .where she
would learn to Swim in a slush-
Plt.
Aileg Lud Steel ............ 41%
Allis Clial vuiiMiiiy'dlii 46%
Amcrad Pet ..............no sale
Armco Steel ................ 47
A T and T ............1<Y7%
Amor WiWlons .............. 43%
AT and SF ................105%
Anaconda Cop • .......42% cxd
Beth Steel ..................55%
“Budtf c» .777;IT
-Calumet and Hec .......... io
Cclancse Corp ..............53%
Chrysler Corp .............. 79%
Cities Service .............. 91
Con Edison ................ 31%
Creole Pet ............
Dnvison Chem ........
Dow Chen................... 88%
Du Pont Cjiem .............90'i
Eastman Kodak ............ 45%
Gen Electric ................56 .
Gen Motors................. 50%
Goodyear Tire .............. 78
Greyhound Bus ............. li%
Gillette Snf ..............,.. 29%
Nat Dairy Prod
TNat. Steel ......
Ohio Oil .......
Penney’s Inc ..
Purr Oil......i.
Packard Motors
Repub Steel ...<
Bears . .......
St, Regis Paper
Soq Paelf ......
Stan Oil Ind ...
Stan Oil N J, .
Sunray Oil
Tex Gulf Sul
Texas Co ......
Tex Gulf Prod ,
‘ Tidewater Corp ,
33% Timken Bearing
US Steel w*.4.<
Woolworth Ine ,
3 Baytown
Spec,,! To The Mown Sun St/jOO/ Bandl
In Festival
46%
..50% cxd
.....47%
mchalent Pri\
iws Down 58
So, Compton picked out a nice
Humble Oil ........
site at Cedar Bayou, about five
Inti Nickel ........
miles away, and moved his cot-
Tntl Harv .........
tage to it.
Interlakc Iron ....
But he apparently can’t get
J and L Steel ....
**•••»*••»
away from oil wells. Last week a
Kirby Pet.........
new flowing well was brought in
Kenn Cop ........
on bis new acre homesite.
Libbv McN........
........ :.
Liggett and Myers
Forty-five per cent of a peanut
Mack Trucks .....
(a oil.
TtRif Con Pet .....
LAWYERS ARE SMART
BOSTON— (II.fi)--A Boston lawyer
has discovered an ingenious meth-
od of discouraging friends from
Gulf Oil .................. 90% .stppplng hlm on the street for free
Gulf’State Util-............. 22% advice. When they begin talking,
H L and P Co ......... 61% ‘ he snaps on a stopwatch. When
Hous Oil...,................63% they have finished, he turns It off.
At the end of the month he sends
(Continued From Page on»)
High School Auditorium, vg
Horace Mann Band, directed]
Fred Parker, will play at }j
p.m. in the same auditorium. 4
The Robert E. Lee Band
rected by J. C. Burkett, wilfjL
in the high achool gymnasium,
8 p.m. 1
Each band will play a
and two overtures. The
will be Dr. Frank Simon oTi
tla Institute in Cincinnati,
jne of the natlon'a . outstand
'judges, and Paul Yoder,
composer and publisher
The Judges-will-criticize eae|
band’s performance but n
siOn ratings will be made.'
Burkett said the festival is ,
garded as a training session
the regional contests to be
in Huntsville on April 28.
Try Sun Classified Ad*—Dial i
them a bill, charging by the min*
ute. -
TbRetitM
Misery of^
A* 181 IS CORRECT
PROVIDENCE, R. I. ~<UR>— A
' court defendant established the
perfect alibi. He proved that when
the offenae was committed, he
was at the Alibi cafe. -
eutd @wume
CASSEROLE ENSEMBLE
YOU GET ALL 13 PIECES:
A. FAMILY-SIZE CASSEROLE
B. OBLONG BAKING PAN
C. LARGE-PIE PAN . .
D. INDIVIDUAL BAKER-SERVERS
314 WEST TEXAS
~
SEVENTH division,
.ntral Front, Korea (LKi-
ht was black as pitch,
nd casually cranked the
in a camouflaged ma-
un outpost on the nose of
ivrrlooking a draw.
n hear 'em coming, sir,"
First Class Joe Casey, 23,
er, Mississippi, drawled In-
phone.
Cod’* sake, man, don't
c up to tell me about what
First Lieutenant Char-
Wagncr of Norfolk, Vir-
rcplied sleepily from the
„y rommand post. "Wait
»ou see something.”
minutes* later the phone
.gain. , . „
,*n see-'em coming, sir,’
said.
many do you see?”,
air/
wait until they get clos-
my dead Intal
on which the
which put I
Fifth Corps t
That's why
has been reeon
ver Star.
US Gold
Down $2
In Last 1
Iher five minutes and The
• rang again. . „
ly re right alongside, sir.
tl shoot dammit."
slight pause and
| of machine-gun fire.
L. sir" Gfl
|pt ’en. sir,
kchalantly.
(iout later the phone neAr
bunk fang again
hear ’em coming,
Haid softly.
let ’em come,” Wagner
' -’Don’t shoot until you sec
king." - ’v
kn set ’em, sir. .
■ many do you see?”
|ut 100. sir.”
11 hold your fire until they
WASHINUTOf
Al. -States has
348,000,000 of il
in the last 14
The Treasur
nothing alarm!
reversal pt ”th<
years" when g<
United States f
coiner of the f
Although soi
gold ha*--becn
quarteri to la
abroad in the l
officials don’t s
bulk of the g<
>>' abroad, they ir
goods the Unit
to buy, particu
ginning of the 1
The first shot
rca transforms!
into a buyer of
tcrials in quanl
could be found!
tries able to su
was only a brief-pause- ghave become mi
I tbs phbne rang again.
|rc arc 14’ right in. front of
; Casey said.
’rtn hav-e IK” the lieutenant
le ws* another pause white
ichinc-gun chattered. y
jit ’em. air”.
Ifoliowing morning 18 bodies
ounted in front of Casey’s
It and 40 more in the draw
|his hill perch.
was credited with stop-
1 attempted Communist
|hrough in the Red drive on
and with providing
Ih papers found on the ene-
Tlid Treasury
ed that US gold
duced in 1950
a result of sale
of US purchase
A gheck of th<
statement of co
uary 1 revealed
— through Feb
amounted to
085,162
As * result, go
United States
were down to
more- thao*2,6W
ail-time high of
Sapterhber 21
pop Bores Grisly
> Bodies Turn Out To Be C
|AN. Okla CHI Three
scooped up by a Startled
I shovel operator were simply
Reserved cadavers used by
hi students 40 years ago.
HTty of Oklahoma officmis
Shove! Operator Jim
life Pipeline
litract Goes To
And Root
Fisher of Okial
the bodies ye|t«
excavation for
education buiidi
Speculation of
asmoreUian
faculty memberj
the excavation f
However. J
dent of Norn
slopped the run
"Shucks. I've
those, were
"They've been tt
Those • bodies
when- the medics
wi with them,
10 or 12' feet dfe
Andrews for
Company has awarded
and Root, Inc . of Houston
Itract for construction of
(than 1000 mile* :of pipeline
built in Texas, Louisiana
ilsaissippi, it was announced
excavation: is coi
William F
instructor, said
had been pumpc
to keep them pe
FisHor adrfiitte
when .one of the
in his scoop,
"I was never n
life," he said.
eontract covers various
of engineering, construe-’
hd other- services.
a.contr.actcOLVcr]ng..addj-
[ major portions of the pro-
kve been virtually completed
gulf Southern contractors of
Torth. gas officials said,
of the pipeline and other
|es will be in excesa of fill,*:
| Federal Power Commission ■ fTl
pproved the project, which f
Jcoyide an initial increase in
|ty of United’s pipeline
of approximately 920,000,-
bic feet of gas daily;
iNGER—(IMb -rTwo fourth-
fsweethearts who went joy-
a motor scooter were
last night When their
Collided with’ an auto-
Misa MargarC
Jenkins and Vtr
Baytown were
.favorite positions
State Teachers
Miss Cox. da q
Mrs. W. W. Cox
coliegefavorite
ber. daughter of
A, Webber, wai
favorite. Jenkins,
Mrs, Curtis Jei
favorite.
The election »
earlier primary
which time two
girls were chosei
official ballot.
As winner of
three students wit
pictures feature)
Mortality section
Alcalde, the colic
will also take par
tion .Ball to be h
tha| time yisitin
college Campuses
will Bid in crowni
Queen of Sam H-
be Chosen in
tion.
•lOOKING Ivw.aii icing c - nil l ovCt.l .1:1
III., as Sgt. Tony F. Haliislts, Ctifton, N. il.|
for a false move on Korean feont. Defense photo.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 202, Ed. 1 Friday, March 2, 1951, newspaper, March 2, 1951; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041637/m1/2/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.