The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 142, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 17, 1951 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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PA&E 4— THE BAYTOWN SUN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 195!
Editorials ^ Editor's Roundtable
Eisenhower’s Position
Todays Bible Verse
0JT H|S delight is in the law of the
Lord; and in hie law doth he meditate
day and night. Psalms 1:2 >'
Sterling Area Crisis
British Prime Minister Qhurchill and Be-
tter, in; announcing
L chequer Chancellor Bu’
qew restrictions on imports into Great Bri-
tain, have warned of financial crisis con-
fronting the whole sterling area as well as
Britain. Butler told the House of Commons
recently that the area as a whole was run-
ning an unfavorable balance of trade with
. the dollar countries, that its gold and dollar
reserves were “being drained away Very
fast,’* and that a “weakening of confidence
in sterling” was to be found “throughout
Majority editorial opinion is that General Eisen-
hower will in time, state definitely his willingness
to be the Republican Party’s nominee for presi-
dent. But a very large minority of editors believe*
that the general Is still completely underided
about the matter. — The large majority feels that
the precedence over political statements non’
which Elsenhower gives his job of rebuilding
Western Europe's defenses will enhance his poli-
tical position. But a considerable minority of edi-
tors sees . here an implied comparison of the im-
portance of the1 presidency an# NATO work, and
thinks the general may be risking “overdoing the
Ml* ^
SAVANNAH (Georgia) MORNING NEWS: “It is
significant. .. that when we compare Elsenhower’s
statements and his attitude this year with what he
said and how he conducted 'himself in 1948, he
seems to be willing to run in 1952, if the sentiment
Is strong enough for him to do so. In 1948 he was
bluntly definite in his insistence that he had ho
desire to make a bid for the post of chief executive.
This year his words are much more conciliatory,
and they carry a note cf a willingness to offer If
the demand is made upon him.”
WILMINGTON (Delaware) MORNING NEWS:
"Eisenhower said he would not he a candidate in
J$sm world.” -------------------------------------------
/ •». Itt September,. 1949, when the Labor gov- 1948 in the absence, of ’overriding’ reasons capable
^ . a « lit J C . 0* J A n i show (VI vs cr his hoi 1 nf that nVAf h oe i A*. 1% I «a1 fi 1a aTvm
f2.80, the British financial plight was al-
most entirely & dollar shortage affair. Now
the British must meet also a trade deficit
of changing his belief that professional soldier lacks
the training required for high political office . . . As
for the arguments that mijht persuade him. they
would have to include proof that the foreign poirey-
he undoubtedly believes in . : . is in danger. He
would also have to be convinced that those who are
supporting him ere representative of enough Re-
publicans so that a ’draft’ would be the real thing.”
JACKSONVILLE (Florida 1'TIMES-UNION: "Des-
pite the fact that he has demurred time and again
when approached on the subject of his presidential
ambitions, the general traveled about the country'
when he was serving as active head of-Columbia
University making* speeches which definitely had a
political tain.t , . . He may not want to be called a
_______ politician, but he certainly acts like one . . . Ike’
sterling area. This now comprises the Uni- has a choice to make as to whether he is-going to
ted kingdom, the British Domhtion; except
with the world as a whole. Also, in 1949
other states in the sterling area cooperated
. in the pound devaluation by taking steps —
such as restriction of their dollar purchases
—which they are probably unable or un-
wiflingto take todays-
v So some of the financial experts have
been wondering, in print, whether what lies
ahead isn’t the virtual dissolution of the
Canada, the British colonies, and Eire, In-
dia^ Pakistan, Iceland and Iraq.
K I
These states, with certain exceptions, de-
posit \their dollar and other non-sterling
foreig\exchange earnings in a common
pool mahagedJjy the Bank ot England, and
they drawweir non-sterling requirements
out of that pool.
They are relatively free in transferring
sterling balances among themselves, and
are exempt from the new British import
restrictions. But several, including Austral-
ia, have been taking financial action that
indicates interest in being tied to the dollar
rather than to the pound.
of people believe that he is not adding to. his-
stature as a man by trying to play the enrl against •
the middle."
EL PASO (Texas) TIMES: “General Eisenhower
will be remembered as a bluff military man and as
a ciaver politician. It may appear impossible to be
both, but the general gives us that impression . .
He has a job to do in Europe. If he were to state
publicly that he had an eye on the White House,
his influence and prestige in VVestern Europe would
suffer a sharp slump. He immediately would leave
the economic and military field in the eyes?of .the
Europeans and become a politician, an office seeker-,
Beads And Buckskins—
Indian Restaurant To Sery.i
Bear Meat And Hickory k
By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON
HOLLYWOOD —(ILR)— It won’t be
long now before the local cele-
brities will be gnawing cn bear
meat and hickory nut* served by
pretty Pocahontaaes in bead* and
buckskins.
This is the plan of actor Don
Porter, who's building an authen-
tic American Indian restaurant
here. His recipes, he claims, are
fruits and berrV^**
corn.”
And for tile £f&om
]y *« into the.pferi
Porter has a pi*/„ * fj|
their own grub * '
“We'll show ’en, l
or wh.tev>*
in green leave*’’ /
urix
misgiving S(
/>. Walter Henc
Iri-JjiiM ifiSTa
right out of the Redskin cc*>k- you “roll 'It i„ ni,sh' **rt
books. And say what you will, fhia<the coals to coniT
is one thing nobody in Hollywood's “When the j
tried yet chip it off, Pe.,d
It’ll be a novelty deal, sure,” and man
the handsome actor explained.
“But that's .the- only way to
make any money, these days......-pre. casserole
“But I’m not gonna jiave it slyly. That’s wh.e ^
shaped like a teepee. That’s too rake in the real h* ’
corny.” - bar. w#raI"«-
ilty Day
]t. Paul's
Rev. Clyde
First Christian
side. Other Baj
prominent part
are as-follows:
Rev. M. S. Jc
odist, respdnsiv
corny.”
He's having a hole built in his
ceiling, though. That’s for the
smoke from the fife pit he's put-
ting in the center of the dining
room. •
“This is going to be the real
thing,” Porter says. “I’ve been
, collecting Indian receipes for
year*. I have ’em from the Sioux,
Blackfeet, Snake, Piankhha, Cher-
okee, Quapaw and Chickasha
tribes.
bar.
."Firewater,” be m
waitresses, Porter j, ?
full-blooded Indian
17hinke"ar'otofis
i trunk, he explains '
really add. atmosphere to n.
Dressed up in beads ,
sms • . . with their bi,
long braids ...
Porter, whom wg •
nursin? a subconfclowl
tor rvomona, grew un *7
b?ss?si
Episcop
Prayer
Morning pray
of service at “
/^cCrTh Month Trinity Episcop
f‘ted t.cither- Rector.- Rev. P
/g/rfaBracker, in charge. The
.JJeacho" the theme: George Mcason
rtankhhi
and CHl
"Our menus will feature buffalo, Indians Tn OWahoma
Letter To Editor:
She Agrees With McL,
On Royal Visit To America
THE WHITE ..C LIFFS
Gerijius With Fire Hos
To the Editor: and wife have to do a.
r always read "Henry MeLe- like to know whv
more’s” fcolumn and 1 think he haa Duke are paving
one of the best In the "Daily a royal visit? "
Sun” I agree with him on every----So I ask just bi« jfr T_
thing he wrote in his column on “Why couldn t Amrrft*'
November 6, 1951. the Princess and the nLl
What he said about the visit nide people, whica th,,*
of Princess Elisabeth and the Duke stead of all the noise’- '
of Edinburgh, "America is hypo- If there is anythin. i„ „
critical” where all of this "Royal” that you can':’ prj^ ^
jl’eitliood gp*dal.oUertorjl
„ Killed, wU1^e.1,eL W: K. Linsc
John Meekins will Massey will, be
e.' , ... in Bill Duplantis,
,ureh schbo will meet m ,fiobert Dippel
national Building at 9 30 Jr. wHl
ferFte**1*, Coffee time wi
|M in charge of the open Qu)W Room (lft
itlons in the „0!L , Holy Commui
a and Mrs. VV. H. Shute feraJ at 8 p
the kindergarten group W Mccltel 9crving
■rvice- School and Bibl
„ m. the Luther League at.9:30 a ra
*rs 'SingspiTAtion St Anne's Guil
liilistt;**-"’*1**1^*11** rtf*
111 conduct the worship structibns for ■
dramatize the meaning at j-jo p m.
coatot-arms. Char-
is pre'ident.
Foltz Plans
This ’Cop’ Has Toughest Beat In The World kpk
Hemoria
Cut Earl
will answer if’
*:...... * -
WICHITA (Kansas) EAGLE: "Eisenhower has ,a
very important assignment in Europe and mixing
men and women that Stumm is hosing rioters than anyone else,
an able marl. It is the good fortune anywhere.
Six Years Afterwards
Ijf 1
;j I
; ri
! 1 fl
; If
More than six years have now elapsed
since the end of the war in which General
Dwight David ("Ike” to you) Eisenhower
ted the US troops in Europe to victory, yet
he is being discussed on all sides as a 1952
presidential possibility. It was three years
after the end of the Civil War before Gen-
eral Grant could be, and was, nominated.
Fifteen years after the end of that war, the
Democrats gave their presidential nomina-
tion to General Hancock, one of the Union
commanders at Gettysburg.
Earlier, General Taylor had been picked
by the Whigs for president nine months af-
ter the end of the Mexican War, in which
he had been a military hero. One of the men
defeated by . Taylor for that Whig nomina-.
tion in 1848 was General Winfield Scott, an-
other Mexican War hero. Scott got the
Whig nomination four years later.
Still earlier, General Andrew Jackson had
been a candidate for the . presidency in
1824, almost nine years after his victory at
New Orleans at the end of the War of 1812.
Jackson had an electoral plurality but failed
of an electoral majority, and had to wait
until 1828 to be elected president. He was
then 61, the same age as Eisenhower today.
According to the late Harry L. Hopkins,
■ as quoted in Robert E. Sherwood’s “Roose-
velt and Hopkins," Eisenhower once told
Hopkins of having always been a Republi-
can, of voting against Roosevelt up to 1944,
but of voting for FDR that year. Sherwood
comments that, on the other hand, Eisen-
hower once told him of never having voted,
directly in partisan politics would reduce his ef-
fectiveness or eliminate him altogether . . . But the
practical political point remain's that a reticent Ike
is losing potential delegates His cause will have to
be almost an irresistible force indeed if he does not
start until next spring after many of the crucial
delegate lineups have jelled . . . His . Republican
friends, including those in Kansas, are plenty wor-
ried. Senator Taft is making delegate hay. and yon
can’t block him with the prospect that possihly Ike
will run”
years
American citizen in a few years
(I hope). I was just wondering
how many diapers or dishes she
He is called police president mf StummY police so far, with
here. Back home he would be chief more surely to come,
of police. The doctor before his Stumm commands 9500 police
name is for a law degree from who are truly the frontline shock
Halle University. Before he got it troops of western civilisation. By Bennett Cerf
He never has crossed the invls-
.... Elsenhower is playing his cards right. The ra, , vi K r wn 4nv
Times if convinced that wren the ‘call’ comes he £r> Johanneg
Stumm is the cop with the tough-
est beat in Europe). Maybe the
toughest in. the world. He is a
guiius with a fire hose, to hoot.
Stumm’s beat stretches for 100
miles around the irregular, borders
of a little blob of freedom. This
free area surrounded by hate and
danger is made up of the French,
British and American sectors of
Berlin.
Beyond, in all directions, are the fire hose comes in.
Russians and their unhappy Ger- Sitting in his police presidency
m;ins- office, Stumm allowed that maybe
It is the good fortune of all free he’d had more experience fire
NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE: "As far as if
was possible for him to do -- within the precise lim-
its set by his present military task-— General Eis-
enhower cleared the way for the active efforts of
his friends on his behalf . . . With this reassurance,
the movement for a, draft can surely ga forward
with added zeal . . . Without question he will speak , . po/w .
his mind as soon as events have ripened to a point J American, One was the “Mgj'shall with a tax amendment all his own. to
.which makes it possible for him to weigh in the ” AsHi.NGTO.N -Governor Dewey Field Amendent,” tucked into the Latest tax bill permits a capital sa
. . ... . . _ _— ntn nnr moot sonratlv tiritk IrlaoM inra Will __.1______ _ 1 - _ ■ • . • . . * 1
Americans feet the unT,
i'IMp M.r .
I also feel as 'Mr. m”i
bft Sess and Harry »w
impressed w .th Eft
TryAndStopMe
Philip than ElizabS^l
he also studied at Berlin. Stumm
is no ordinary cop.
As a p u 11 e r-down-of-riots,
Stumm is tops. That is where the
ible line which divides hia part of QUEEN MARIE of Rumania
Berlin from the Soviet sector. 1 particular friend of the late
"It wouldn’t be smart," said Mayor Hylan) took sick on one
Stumm; who knows his name is °f her last visits—or thought she
high on the Soviet list of those did, which amounted to about the
to die If the Communists ever take same thing. The doctor who had
over . * 1“-“ -------‘J —,J ■"*
were -with Harry and Eml
This is the first tim* {i
evt‘r written anything il
newspaper. So. you £ ,J
know too about
Washington Merry-Go-Round:
Secret Waldorf Meeting Did Not Include lice
looking Bach
From The Sunl
been hastily summoned could dis
cover absolutely nothing wrong
with her and suggested that a
psychiatrist might be heipful An
analyst was accordingly dug up
in the same hotel. When he FIVE YEARS 4(iO
bustled in, the regular doctor TODAY S HEADLINES:
aaidr"Sir, allow me to present you la Tobgher In Boat With
the Queen of Rumania." "Ah”
same scale his obligation to European defense and not meet secretly with Eisen- tax bill during the war to prevent gains tax for income when a form- wink, "And how long does ah*
--------- — bower at the Waldorf as retried Marshall Field from taking tax er employee sell. hi. rights to fu- iZgine she’, been queen r
losses on the Chicago Sun. Reac- ture profits to his former employ- Earl Hall, the genial Mason
i^!jly,,,fon®'res*Men er- This fits Mayer, now retiring City, Iowa, editor,- always car-
Fieid s liberal newspaper, hit back from MGM, right down to the but- ried a few "gaffs" from rival
with a tax amendment banning de- ton. The tax bill even provides that sheets with which to titillate his
k»*es - of more than $50,- the retiring, employee must have friends. He has one choice para-
obligation to the American people as a possible can- |10Wer the Waldorf as reported
didate for the Dresidencv.” . iast week. A Broadway columnist
got that* one mixed with d Waldorf
meeting which did take place be-
tween Dewey, Senator Duff of
Looking At Life
By Erich Brandeis
THERE HAVE BEEN so many "Mis$ Thisandthat
of 1951” that it is not very surprising* .to learn that
in the city of New Orleans the truckd rivers have
just named a “Miss Dump Truck of 1951."
The young lady upon whom the honor was con-
ferred is. a pretty waitress in a restaurant where
the drivers are meeting. Her name, in case you’d
Pennsylvania, Herbert Brownell,
the DeWey GOP mentor, and Gen-
eral Lucius Clay. Georgia-born
Clay, a lifelong Democrat, is new
in the Eisenhower camp.
000 for five straight years .
East Texas May Get
Weather .From’ Ccid
Regulation \\ bit,
Days Bac k
Rober t E. Lee _____
South Park Grwnie* iwi|
Mix .--add Mrs. Aubrey 3
.313 East Pear
I forth Reaching" will be
Ion subject of Rev. Clyde
j of the First Christian
fet the 10:50 a m. service
The message will ,bo
ito the theme of Thanks-
ijjtday School will he held
Em”
worship will begin at
gry G. Knowles, minister
of the First Christian
Jof Houston, will* be guest
(for the annual Steward-
Jqaet for the entire church
kip it 7 p.m Wednesday,
hies has been for 25 years
1 of the First Christian
i Houston.
fey'dinner will be-served
. of the church. The
fcip budget for the new
■lffi will be presented to
pegation at the banquet.
[l service of consecration
ftld ijext Sunday for the
lurch membership.
The early
MemorialBaptisi
discoiitinued for
There will be
the morning,
The pastor.
4an, will bring
mon on the
Holy Day.'.' The
the singing '
will sing as i
anthem. “Prayei
ing,’’ This sc’rvie
, cast over KRCT
At the 7:3" p ni
tor’* message
Tr
ject "Tied Toget
' mediate Choir
ship service and
musk
Sunday School,
tion of Mr C L
St 9:30 am. Tra
gins at 6:15 p.m,
Sunday is also
Day. T. C. Smith
the Building Com
(To Preach
(Services
'Mortals, lm
Is Scientist
meeting discussed ways and means
of rounding of delegates despite
the fact that-
Ike cannot- de-
clare until next
spring. . .There’s
not
but
Her trophy is the figure of a windblown goddess jjjat Ike sJ^arted
in a Grecian gown, holding aloft a horseshoe. ufe as a Uemo’
Miss Beaudry thinks that there is nothing funny
about this at all, particularly since in LOs Angeles
they have just named a "Miss Freight Forwarder
of 1951.” .
like to know, Is Helen Beaudry, and she is five feet not the slightest
ches in height and weighs 115 pounds. .question
I GUESS IT MUST* be. the "Dump Truck" that
makes me associate this event with a report on ov-
erweight by the Louisiana State Department of
Public Health.
V- although hoping for Roosevent’s defeat in . The report starts: "’Fat, dumb and happy’ the
■ 1940 because of the third term issue and saying *ocs But why baP>’y? 0verwei8ht shor
then hoping for Roosevelt’s re-election in
- - ----- worked for his company 20 years, a., ow
man to, get hit by this was not with profit rights for 12 years, and of a girls’ championship soft
Field, a Democrat, but the former be entitled to profit rights for five game: "Everything was going
The Republican national committeeman years after retirement Few peo- '** “ ■ ■-
from California, Movie Mogul Lqu- yer in the past has been astute
1* B, Mayer. His racing stable was this picture ... (Mayer’s tax law-
in the red by more " .......... ~
and. he got hit with
layer. His racing stable was this picture . .. (Mayer’s tax law.
red by more than *50,000 pie outside of Louis B. Mayer, fit
got hit with a Mg tax MU Ellsworth Alvord, close friend of
graph he clipped from an account
ball
going fine
until the bottom half of the
seventh, when all the bags got
loaded.”
birth of a son Wayne 1
Miss Viole: Blinks :ss|
purse containing *71 and a
fashioned wedding band.
A Lesson-Bermo
and Immortals"
the First Church
entist, at 11 a m
__r._ T
Now it looks as if Louis B. Senator George of Georgia, who
Mayer has staged a comeback largely Writes the tax Ml).)
Quotations
1944.
Well, Grant confessed, before being nom-
inated by the Republicans in 1868, that he
had voted only once foy president and then
for a Democrat because he mistrusted the
Republican nominee. Taylor said in 1848
that he had never voted for president; and
that although he was a Whig, he was not a
fanatical one { no one ever called him “Mr.
Whig"). "
life as a Demo-
crat. Hi3 first
speech at the age
of IS at Abilene,
Kansas, was at
a Jackson Day
dinner . . . Taft- pF.RsnN.
ites are suspect- * "EAKHr”
ed of putting a neat one over on
Arthur Krock. Jle reported that
Ike would come over to the Taft
why happy? Overweight shortens side if the senator would desert
life, reduces efficiency and lessens- the- satisfaction the isolationists ... It. now seems
one gets out of life.” , / certain tbat Ike will face Presi-
One out of every five adults is overweight, and dent Truman in the Oregon pri-
diabetea ,high blood pressure and stroke menace the *".nrww ho HUo. Jt
overweight person. ,
How on earth any inhabitant of New Orleans can
ever keep within the normal weight is something
beyond my ken. I don’t think I have ever seen, such
eating in all my life as they do here.
WE WENT TO ONE of the famous New Orleans
eating places called Galatoire’s- Iast -night The place
was packed not only to the doors but beyond the
doors ’way out into the street.
baked
In The Lyons Den
From Great—Near Great
By Leonard Lyons
THE RESERVE: Francis P. from the wrong pitcher,” said the
Vlfhitehair, the undersecretary playwright. "The ’sauce’ congealed
over the steak. It was. fudge for
Our doubts are traitors, and
make us lose the good we oft
might win by fearing to attempt
—William Shakesspeare.
10 YEARS AGO
Mis* Bess Ail*» and.8
dell Warn* jvere ratnMd
First Baptist Church ill
sota. * 1
President Eddie Cox i
that 500 reservation! iisfj
made for the annual iniB
banquet for officers of tnr|
town Chamber of Com!
Robert E. Lee- won m
Arthur, 21 to 20.-----
mary—whether he likes it or not.
He will also face Taft in the Re-
publican side of tha.t primary,
of (he Navy, was a sergeant in ____ ___________ .
the first World War. He was a,.: Irene’s Ice cream,
junior naval officer in the last
War, serving in both the Atlantic
and Pacific- Whitehair is a mem-
ber of the Naval Reserve a Tills
week the undersecretary of the
Navy, who now outranks all the
admirals, was notified to re-
port for his physical.
CHATTER: Jimmy Durante
Ike’s name has been entered on Just brought suit against producer
both the GOP and Tfemd tickets, Hal Wallis, Paramount Pictures,
which makes Oregon the most sig- and Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis,
nificant test of political strength for an injunction to restrain the
in the country—namely, Risen- showing of their taovie, "That’s
hower vs Taft and Eisenhowe . My Boy,” claiming that he made
— Truman. That’s My Boy” popular . . . Dr.
■*' •• • forn —
-fsador Lubin,
THE DIFFERENCE: Assistant
US, Attorney Bruno Schachner,
now serving as special counsel
to the King Committee Investi-
gating tax frauds, was a mem-
ber of the law panel addressing
the CIO Convention. He was
asked: “How do you differenti-
ate between a democratic tri-
bunal and a totalitarian oner.
. . . Schachner replied: “First,
you disregard the decision of the
tribunal—and wait Then, if you
hear that the man who appeared
before It says that the tribunal
was a terrible thing which
be. denounced, and kb
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowlec
A Central Press!
I’ijitt H McCicskey, pas-
Ipreach at all three wor-
phf at St. -Mark’s Metho-
Itti) Xtmriorrov/ At 8:»5
la*. lk> will use the topic mans: “If ye live
Show- -Our Gratitude." ye shall die: but i
it’s anthem will be “O Spirit do mortify
be Dorr by Herbert.' body, ye shall live
[pa. lervice topic Is "The Sunday school st
t, Road -A Road-of Con- The midweek mee
j “Sweet Peace, The Gift Wednesday. The
I Love" by Blihorn will be. open from 1 to
Pe'choir. • _ . / Tuesday, Thursdi
pm to be show-n after aUSi from 7 to 7:4
* “And Then There Were day” "
tllii film will be shovvn
l-mex and will be. intro- n La*
« b Patterson and Presbyterian
frs T. J Page. / -
Meeting Pcs
Have A Laugh
-
By Boyce House
r
THE BRAKEMAN was new so the conductor said,
“When we are about to stop, I’ll go to one end of the
ipoach and call out the name of the town and you
can call out the same at yotir end of. the coach.” So
when the train was pulling into the first town, the
conductor yelled, “Jonesviile, Jonesville." The brake-
' doors ’way out into the street.
We started off with Oysters Rockefeller
oysters with spihach and a rich sauce. Our next
itefh was a fish dish with a French name which I
forgot. It was a concoction of trout, shrimps, and
mushrooms with a rich Hollandaise sauce.
To set off the whole mess I had French pancakes
with jelly, and my wife had one of the richest sun-
daes ever concocted by a chef gone Wild,
With it — you should pardon the expression -
we. had a bottle of white wine. Also some good, coffee . . .».» .„.^o _
•WS43KB----fc SSSSSS SMSS asssli
tp have, plenty, of dough to spend * Carol Riegelman .until he could
on lobbying in Washington. Chref -each hig daughter In Swiixeriand
Franco Lobbyist Charles Patrick J
Clark sometimes passes out *20
tips ti
when
nd tell her the glad news himself.
Month Club selecti-m/is coming
nan yelled, “The aame at this end, the same at thl* almost everybody in the place was overweight.
“A NORMAL APPETITE is satisfied when the feel-
WHICH NO DOUBT reminds you 6f the' old lady
Who asked the brakeman, ’“What end of the coach
shall I get ptfr He said ,Tt don’t matter; they
*
both atop.’
A NIGHT-CLUB entertainer had a stock comeback
for hecklers. "How much will you charge' toJfiiUHt
a house?” But one night,, the heckler came back
“How many rooms?”
WOULD IT BE correct te speak of an architect at
a designing man?
As we looked around us we noticed that other sed the rank of brigadier general p._■ J Th- rw.iit
p„p„ «*..**; ara ». J •SASA'T&Jfr
, ^ 5StS£S5.% e-r, -
ing of hunger is gone. To go on eating just to get American Airways, has been head-
the pleasure.of food trickling through the mouth is line-hunting for Taft,
simply a vicious habit,” the report goes on.
o Well, it seems to me that most of fhe New Orleans CUBAN THANKSGIVING — Four
people certainly must be addicts to this vicious hate days before our Thanksgiving, the
- ; :_____i_____- , ..........Katie for thV first time
“Worry, fekr, disappointment, insecurity and in their - history, will celebrate
boredom, which drive some to the’bottle in order to their own Thanksgiving Day on
forget their troubles, drive others to the heaping November IS .. . While Cuba does
platter,” says the Luisiana Department of Health, not have over three hundred years
If that IS ao, I have never in my life seen so many of tradition behind .their celehra-
worried, insecure and bored people as in this city, tion aa do wc. the basic idea -of
And the strangest thing about them is that these Thanksgiving Day to thank God
to film "Madame Butterfly."
THE PREMIERE: When Ten-
nessee Williams’ “The Rose Tat-
too” opens In Philadelphia next
week, the east and author will
hf entertained by Jtlfiei Kirk
Merrick, the Htfl* MWaWr direc-
tor, who ia.a friend of the play's
author. Merrick was discussing
Mkatf ipifal nfl|tt )Nf)(«h
and told of the dinner party
givei-by producer Irene Sehnick
just before the premiere of*
The Answer, Quick! . . starring roles: In
1. Can you name the most fa- into films, both British trig
mous violin maker of all Umcs? . ican, including City of f
2. Who wrote The Confessions Hound of the Baskervilkgj
of sff English Opium Eater? toy Square, Charlie'OMrt
3. In what country ” is Mt. est Case, Orient
Ararat? ' . Three Musketeers, The 1
4. Who invented the electric the Mohicans, ’sewte:
telegraph? Drutnmond pictures',
' 5. In' American history, who Preujdice, That Hamili®!
was Nathaniel Greene? Suspicion, Lifeboat- »rij
It’s Been Said ” Meantime, Darling. WtP
The employer generally gets the been seeing bar so buPI
employes he deserves.—-Sir Walter but what is her namr 1
Gilbey. ” ‘ J—This opc-rs singer”
J. . . >"• V in Sosnowiec, Polsn^r
iLa**oP*n*d ated from a Warsaw1
£/rtf toNove®fc*r_18: S^Wc opa mV'
“•f.®* » tntnlitarian one.” French,
THE SENTTEIVE HOUTI- SU«««type profccss of photogra- iuly, in Paris,
dB&h CM> Atefl JteMte -•?***. , . Bueno. Aires, ArgrtWS
HWy Birthday fflncTlMSM*
SSSsap-'
a^M^IsCd
GreeUnga go to Eugene Ormandy,
orchestra conductor; Craig Wood,
golfer; Frank Shields, tehnis;
Rev. Ewing JAit
the First Prrsby
announced today
monthiy men’s, bn
Erwin, pastor, per will be held at
” « ‘Stewardship’’ at 7 p.m. Tuesday, N
'A ®. service tomorrow -'W.. raa ticUnfli
service tomorrow "We are pcstpo:
iptRt Church. The Ing exactly one wejs
..“S "Meke Me a Bless- Rev. J. Kelly 5
- si , . Trinity Presbyteris
■’Ciiool begins at .9:45 be the principal t
Jf P-m- and eve* supper, Chester Ro
P»t 7:30 p.m dent, will preside.
Hear H
DECEMBE
standiiig teat la him told him
some item of gossip about the
mayor of Now York. Then »
press agent arrived, mentioned
the mayor, and Small repeated
the gossip he had heard . .
Throe days later Small received
ft phene call at hit home, asking
If ho could coma to Grade Man-
Mbl th*.next day at ATm
kflftM you must have the wrong
numbrr” he told tor caihr. “I
don’t know the mayor”.,, you’re
Gleng Nelson and Roy Siovera, „„I?nY“ATrtnaIly a ^
hMeteU players, and Motto Bet- HfZ’J.lr i.ter. sny #
and My
is he? -■ M
(Names at bottom « S
Watch Yaur ItfNf
MOIRE — (MWAK «'
BA**
TEMP
Collie Small, the writer, aren’t
yeurjaje caBer aalud. “Yaa'ra
Una, light heavyweight baser.
FeBto Ot Fame—Guess The Nome
poor, misguided people do more laughing and chat- for helping them survive a diffl- • Ctf NaniwJ 0es(rf „
year in a free world - an ordered early, so that the^
3)|i Jsjtswn jinn
p the Baytown Sun, Inc, at Pearce ai
ting, and apparently have ah infinitely better Ume
than those who observe every law of dietetics and
__weigh themselves after every meal.
The Cuban people share our demo-
cratic birthright, and It la an tra-
JpH
would reaak the theater hi rime
for the curtain rise at the me
8. Gould..
Mae Jackson
logued or daadfled. and that everybody baa to be
happy or unhappy after hia own fashion.
. As for me, 1 am going to,lunch with the editor or
one of the newspapers today We are going to a
German restaurant famous for its pigs-knuckles and
sourkrteH,-' k
T guess I must be in the last stages of something
Managing Editor
Subscription Rates •
00 Month; *13 Year
3 Months *2.90; • Months
Armed Services 75c Month
are payable in advance. --—
: Texas Daily Press League In the “average” family, according to Facto-
matter at the graphs, the husband uses 3600 words, the wife only
3000. Unfortunately, we wouldn’t knof—never hav-
ing met Mr. e—* Mrs. Awer*<*v^ i * ■
the
tlteBiKk day, BteUi went to
Grade Mansion, expecting to find
a cocktail party in nrogrea-, but
discovered he was the only one
there. Ten ntf.ictes later the may-
or^ arrived, and was most cordial
in hia greeting to the guest Then
-ho Ihintisai* the reason for hia
invitation to tha writer: He’d bean
told about tha gossip Small had re-
, Postoffice undcr^tbe
sneaks into
. her-fitkig or HttThr one Indjridui
tax bill aimed a*
tal
Your Future
Good progress ana
are probable. Because « ,
ling character to d .s
should overcome all *"• jj
For Sunday. Noveftft^
should ^'optimistic
ture. Tpd&y's child J
a helpful soul. 7.
How-d You Make
1. Antonio Stradi'S
2. Thomas De^’J
3. In eastern Tiirse.-
Iranian border. erefst\
t ne naant been '«“■'* •> / “nowv1 *no^' “la in Oxford, England, on February 4. Samuel Finkf 1
the opening. 'T the mayor of New York, Then he », 1909. She was on the legitimate 5. A distingui'^ J
cause the sauce «Plsined the gouip to the guest stage In England, working up general in Uw ■
I poured on that fine steak came who listened, and departed. —— from waik-on roles to leading and 1—Heather Angel- *
ings of free thought and 4ree fered from firet-night jitters,”
speech on a day set aside for this said Merrick “because I saw him
specific pu-posy So this year order a steak, pour sauce on It . . _
they start a tradition which should and then I noticed he didn’t touch • * v*F • political writer,"
live forever with the freedom-lov- it all all” But the nekt year, when Sm*" tepdad. Tour name came
ing people of the republic of Cuba. Merrick referred to the steak in- u*> an“ * merely repeated some-
cident Williams corrected him and ^tag Td heard a few minutes
LOUIS B. MAYER’S TAXES — assured him that he hadn’t keen aartier” ... “I know, I know” said
Every so often, an amendment nervous before the i
didn't eat it because
ed mohair; liter, saT1
ric, especially silk M
watered app?*t*nce lii
gin: French from .
Bair.
*** *• “AOGAI
fjVENINGS
AT 7 PM.
1—This fine actress was hen
in Oxford, England,
W.O.W. HALL
TB<AS AVE. AND HFTH ST.
the message Of
WIN AND DELIVERANCE” DY
NORMAN RHODES Of ST,
■ •/'
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 142, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 17, 1951, newspaper, November 17, 1951; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042042/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.