The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 242, Ed. 1 Monday, March 16, 1953 Page: 4 of 11
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THE BAYTOWN SUN, MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1953
—
nside Washington ~
Outlook For Income Tax Cut Gets Dimmer And Dimmer
Special to The Baytown Hun
WASHINGTON — It U beginning to look leu and
cut !nc<
leu likely that Congreu will cut Income taxea on
July 1 ai propoaed by Chairman Danlfl Reed (R-
N. Y.) of the Houae waya and meana committee.
Republican leadera have aald publicly that any ac-
tion on the tax cut propoaal will have to be act
•aide until government apendlng can be cut to fit
government income.
To do thla, >10 billion will have to be whacked off
former Preaident Truman'a spending propoaala aub-
mltted ehortly before he left office in January.
Thia, GOP leadera admit, will be a tough Job. Even
though they are under preasure to make tax cute,
they alao are being told by conetituente to bring
taafirat-^^H^H
Rep. Leo Allen (R-Ill.) chairman of the Houae
rulea committee, aald hla mall ia running alx to one
for a balanced budget before a tax cut. Alien a
group muat give the green light to the Reed bill
before the Houae can act on it.
The apendlng propoaala are not aa eaay to eut at
the Republicana had expected. GOP leadtrt any
they feel that Preaident Eieenbower may need and
ask for more money for the Korran and Indo-Chlna
conflicts. Any fat trimmed off the present budget
might be used for that purpose.
•pending in line flrat.
RACKETEERS- Attorney General Herbert Brown
ell, Jr., it determined to put the full force of the
government behind the drive to deport notorious
foreign-born criminals and racketeers.
James P McQranery, former Justice department
chief, started the program which seems certain to
go Into high gear under the Republican adminis-
tration. Brownell did not hesitate to take up where
McGranery left off.
McGranery started action against a dozen or
more top underworld figures Including gambling
czar Prank Costello. Another *0 or 90 crime king-
pins were on the list when Brownell took over.
Hia first action In the field came with the de-
cision to deport gambler Joe Adonis, a New York
and New Jersey operator. Scores of others are ex-
pected to receive similar treatment in the coming
weeks.
The government plan la to revoke the citizenship
of naturalized aliens involved in crime and deport
the foreign-born racketeers who have no citizenship
papers.
DEMOCRATS HOPEFUL - A feeling of optimism
is sweeping the Democratic party. Not since last
November have the Drmocrats had such high hopes
for the future, meaning the 1954 congressional elec-
ivies U| ...I ailing t
tions and the 1956 presidential race.
Party officials give credit for this development
to Adlal Stevenson. They say that Stevenson’s re-
cent reception in New York and Washington made
up for any loss of prestige he might have suffered
in losing the presidential election.
Before Stevenson came east, the Democrats
frankly were worried that no one wools
attention to their defeated candidate w p‘1’ h I
former Illinois governor was well <2, , *v«i! I
he proved that hi. defeat did no" '
oblivion and many Democrats »r<, p>u 1 kitn j,
that he again be the party, stand.^
On the other side of the political 1
publicans don’t mind admitting th.* ll
tough Job In the 1954 Senate and Hn, h,y M
to maintain control of Congress H *' «WtJ
The Republican national committee
warned party members that thev e«n! , fH k
cause they are in power since the
trol In the two Houses of Congress k i "8
MY NEW YORK
By Mel Heimer
NEW YORK — Bob Hilliard was up to see me the
other afternoon, making with the mild gripe, but
the best I could do was to pat him on the shoulder
and tell him he waa dead wrong.
Bob is a big, reasonaoiy young man with the aura
of Broadway about him. who looks as if he should
be drinking coffee in Llndy’s. Set him down any-
where along the big drag, from 42nd street to Co-
lumbus Circle, put a cigar in his mouth and hang a
camel’s hair coat over his arm, and he’d seem at
home.
Whet sets him apart from hte rest of the in-
mates. however, is a talent for writing the words
to aongs. He Is one of Tin Pan Alley's top lyricists
and the citlsens are paying homage to him right
now as the guy who fashioned the rhymes to the
tunes in "Hasel Flagg.” the new musical starring
my doll, Helen Gallagher.
Except the citizens aren’t really paying homage
and therein lay Bob’s gripe. Now, he seems to have
no more than the average itch to be famous, but he
does feel that lyric-writers have been getting the
short end of the stick. In behalf of some of his col-
leagues that he admires—mention Larry Hart and,
rightfully, he almost kneels and prays—he'd like to
see them better known.
‘‘For example," he said to me, "take ‘Stardust.’
Everybody links Hoagy Carmichael with that. 'Hoa-
tune-writer, Richard Rodgers-and, of course, the
classic example may be Ira Gershwin, who did
nearly all the words for his brother George's songs.
Ira’s words to the "Porgy and Bess’’ score had more
than somewhat to do with that opera's success.
"About the only lyricist that people seem te
know,” Bob said, “is Oacar Hammerstein, now
Rodgers' partner, and I bellve they know him more
as a write rof show books than as a work-writer for
songs.”
gy Carmichael’s Stardust,’ they say. Well, it’s a fine
melody-4>ut did you know that a guy named Mltch-
n T»—i-L n...«. tho w/ipfti? You did? Well—I'll
all Parrish wrote the words?
bet most people don’t”
BOB SAT BACK and named more names. He point-
ed out that while Harold Arlen Is given credit for
the production of “Stormy Weather," the blues song
that did so much for Ethel Waters, the words were
the work of Ted Kohler. And Arlen's "Over the
Rainbow," sung for the magic lanterns by a soprano
named Garland (whatever became of her?) had
lyrics by Yip Harburg.
The aforementioned Hart, probably the greatest
•f them all (And tell me what street compares with
Mott street in July?) was much less known than his
HILLIARD, THEN, has a polnt-but I must tell
him that this is one case where the public is right.
If the public remembers "Stardust" as Hoagy Car-
michael’s son, the public is right. Without Its haunt-
ing melody—Just put the words down on paper and
look at them, without thinking of the tune—you’d
have nothing.
I am a man who deals in words and revere* them.
The great writers—the handful of them—make the
hair stand up at the nape of my neck—and I have
a wall lined with books, virtually any one of which
can take me out o fthis world and into another. I
consider myself a practitioner of one of the world's
most masterly arts.
On the other hand, I think you can take every
wonderful word ever written, and that goes right
back to the Song* of Solomon—and matched along-
side of a few note* correctly juxtaposed by the right
composer and sung or played by the right man,
they are as nothing.
I am a writer, and whenever someone tells me
that writing belongs on the same shelf as music In
the hril of fame, I tell him he has rocks in his
head. Writing is an art. Music is the art.
My guess is that this goes right down the scale,
to the cheap, amiable little music of show business.
The words are interesting, amusing, occasionally
moving—but the tunes make the songs go. Nobody
loved Larry Hart’s lyrics more than I—but Rodgers’
greatest music, “Slaughter on Tenth Avenue,” has
no words at all.
I write words, too, Bob—but great as I am. and
that’s pretty great, I’ll give Rachmaninoff billing
over ma.
LOOKING AT LIFE
By Erich Brandeis
ECONOMY IN THE government Is all to the good.
You and I and everybody else are all for it.
Not one unnecessary penny should be taken out
of the taxpayer’s pocket and used for any unneces-
sary folderol.
The first question before a dollar is spent should
. "T* it nefoisarv?” If not. out the window.
a couple of thousand dollars.
I for one, as a taxpayer, would have paid my
share of that expense, much more gladly than I
contributed to Harry Truman’s yachting trips and
to his political excursions.
be. "Is it necessary?” If not, out the window.
But, on the other hand, there is a time when
economy becomes miserliness and when the urge to
economize becomes a mania.
REP. ERRETT P. 8CRIVNER of Kansas wrote a
letter to Air Force Secretary Talbott requesting In-
formation on whether Arthur Godfrey’s recent In-
spection trip of the airbases overseas had been
made at government expense.
The letter implied that the Air Force HAD paid
for the trip and, between the lines, at least, Indi-
cated criticism.
The secretary promptly replied, and his answer
was put in the Congressional Record.
“He is traveling on a 'space available’ basis,”
wrote Talbott, "on a United State* Air Force plane
1
FOR THE MONEY the government would have
spent, it would have gotten in return a million dol-
lars' worth of morale building out of Godfrey, plus
at least another million dollars In the promotion of
aviation good-will, which Is badly needed.
There Is hardly a day that we don’t hear about
some awful airplane crash In ths military services.
These crashes reflect not only on the services
themselves, they scare thousands away from com-
mercial flying. Just ask the commercial airline*
and they will tell you.
Nobody on God's green earth has done more for
flying than Arthur Godfrey. And on this last in-
spection trip the soldiers, sailors and airmen wel-
Washington Merry-Go-Round—
Social Security*Reforms In
Middle Of Tax Cut Struggle
Ike ruefully told a
By DREW PEARSON
“~~ir
bullheaded Congressman
tax cut through Congreu that, If there by tradition *P ,ln*^
he doesn't get hie wty, he hat "IV only pi*ct' y,
threatened to sidetrack social has any leeway i« in
eecurity reforms In his powerful f’ce," he added. n 8
Ways and Means committee.
wiviijj
fee,
This has President Elsenhower found tw^itlw«eL”'ov,<l it,
o upset that he called upon Sen- ing down from the
ate majority leader Taft and House Jefferson and Andrpu,
Speaker Martin for help. The "I decided to tak» tKCksoi! I
President pointed out that he had of changing the scenerv^ Wl
promised in his campaign to ident grinned
liberalize the social security laws,
_ ; _ _______, ., oo he exchanged
so that 6.000,000 more Americans Jackson for Georce ur.!?
nu wai o.uuu.wu more Americans ror George Wa >
would be brought under protection. William Howard Taft
As a result, the GOP high com- Roosevelt. The next tim.
non J * b.I . J x---—a t -__— RPfV lK' ion ____ ' I
mand has assigned tough, lesn Republicans came into hi!1
Congressman Kean of New Jersey on* of them noticed Teddv B
to carry the social security battle jeit * Portrait and remark*1;
to the House floor—If Reed tries 9.lsm*5’: “Why, he’s just'v!l
to bottle It up in committee. ’ **
Reed’s strategy is to turn the s my kind erf 1™,
whole social security question over , w* President said he *2
to a hostile subcommittee, headed George
by Congressman Curtis of Nebras- '"**■ tn* only non-Repu£j
ka, who will try to sabotage Eleen- , * tr o' Roosevelt served J
bower’s reforms. «* * Republican pLJ
before he was steamroller* ™!
VELDE OVERDOES IT - Con- nomination by William JfoJ
gresiman Velde may not know too ”aft *nd formed tbe Bull 1
much about It, but his colleagues b*fty in protest.
have already conferred with House irttSJWnZJ
Parliamentarian Lewi, Deschler t i L
on the procedure. Just fallen flat on its fete.
MOSSADEGH’S FOLDING BED
Model Talk—
Movie Queens Practice 'Oscar' Speeches
By ALINE MOSBY ion from motion pictures to ele- You. I’m speechless (she pushes rf,ea*e toning down his proposed single dollar.
HOLLYWOOD, March 16 —(If)— vision.” Reagan from the microphone). Lad. P,ro.be °f ‘he churches. He eertb- One agency head privately
avSrfs sSch?broughTdown the ies and *«ntIemen- this is the big- Meanwhile,*oVr" cowmen •cheme^t'lV w™*'*
His plan was to do
Reaeon for this drastic move Is budget-cutting as he tnuti
Velde's reckless popping-off to the the palnlees, voluntarv im-
press and irresponsible handling Following out this Idea nL„3
of investigations. The last straw etructed the 1* big tod«J
was Velde’s threat to Inveetigate government agencies to sS
el"*r;VUt*T*nt * M*rch J’ one-sentenceV
which he later tried to tone down, containing the amount ef i
As * result, Vice President each agency could cut frwl
Nixon held a private conference 1954 budget. Among the un
with Speaker Joe Martin, at which asked to trim their own bad
he urged Martin to "straighten were the Atomic Energy Cop
0UL ’ Veld<“ , < *ion, General' Services Admiil
Afterward, a reporter caught tion, Veterans Admlnlstnt
Martin on the run and remarked: Federal Power Commission a
•T see that Velde It going to in- the Federal Trad# Commissi*.!
*• <„ By the March 2 deadline, d s'
"The hell he to!” mapped the repllee were on Dodge's deek-
speaker. there was one thing wrong i
Martin then cracked the whip them. Every agency had
on Velde so sharply that th# 111- Dodge that It wm rer
inois congressman didn’t even wait they were eorry, but they „
901 * mimeoffraphed prtse didn't trim their bud***!
which is performing a routine administrative flight.
The cost of the flight itself will be paid from regu-
ceptance s^ches for th6 academy *£S3ft'3Llt
ices about the misery, the loneliness, the home- awanjs next week might do well via De Havilland and Joan Craw- idea I could win this great award that they began exploring the nos- that it’* *Min*t hum.*
ences
sickness of the boys overseas. He admonished his
lar maintenance and operation funds.
"Since Mr. Godfrey Is paying his own personal
expenses and there Is traveling space available in
the aircraft, there is no cost to the government for
hie participation in thia inspection tour.”
NOW LET US SUPPOSE that the government
HAD paid for the entire cost of Godfrey's trip, and
for a few cups of tea, some of the onion and chick-
die soup and a couple of dozen cartons of
awards next week might do well via De Havilland and Joan Craw- idea I could win this great award that they began exploring the pos- that it's against human nstel
. . . ", „ . . , , . . to avoid a “model Speech” Merle ford blushing. It went as follows: in the face nf surh cuncrh aibility of ousting him as Un-Ameri- inflict pain on oneself And raSa
'ten,r* ertSntfor Them Ta" skfaf^Screen Writers’ “Master ” •*' Ronald Activities chairman. The com- httTSS OT
Guild annual banquet this week,
Miss Oberon portrayed "Merle Har-
court,” a fictitious actress accept-
I AM SURPRISED at Rep. Scrivner. He was a ing an award /or “the actress who -a few words.’
a budget Is the worst kind oft
Uon- etitutional pain. If my sgnd
,’t that worth ail the money the^ government 0^ aif trop^has^ML^mwtSouS in« ~ 'She encourages Olive to pressman Walter o/P^sylveX going bud^t
Stirquickly wavesher * BJ'S52?
soldier Tn“the‘Fi7sr World "w»r He" has‘the SiTver most successfully made the transit- “Merle: (overwhelmed) ‘Thank Television has enabled me to "wrecking” It, reflation ^ Note-Dodge feels he. jm.
m en noo.
| the cigarette he sells.
And supposing the trip had cost the government or to get himself some publicity?
Star and the Purple Heart.
Would he deprive other soldiers of such a per-
sonality as Arthur Godfrey (to whom, by the way,
I owe NOTHING) in order to save a few dollars,
IN THE LYONS DEN
By Leonard Lyons
JOB DEPT.: Judge Simon Sobeleff recently was
elevated to chief judge of the Court of Appeals of
Maryland. The next day he had an appointment
in Washington, at the White House. President
Eisenhower i
gotten
the new chief judge. “And so have you."
wain|i<m, ai me nww jiauuto.
lower greeted him: “Well, I see that you’ve
a promotion” . . . “I’m, General,” replied
•■r hK(a# nwlao uAnd a Si ha VP VAtl.*
“Doesn’t your President feel awful about those
attacks on the WPA program?” . , . She was
curious how a Russian child could know so much
about America, and the Commissar explained:
"We have to teach our children the mistakes of
the capital istio nations, so that they will appre-
ciate communism.”
TRAVEL NOTE: Fanny Hurst tells the story of a
young man she know* who served in the army in,
Europe and came home anxious to return to civil-
ian life. After several months he suddenly re-en-
ttsted for shipment back to Europe. Miss Hurst
asked him why he had changed his mind. “I want
to go back to Europe,” he told her. "There the
confusion Is better organized."
Success Secrets
wrecking” its reputation. , , . . .
spend many happy hours in your The question of Velde’s ouster
/a a n . ,/ || living room, and bedrooms. But was Pu* “P to Parliamentarian Des. ° yt0 a#
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge toLT,
a stfij E2B35S55ar£3Kr.
~ ESSHKS S55S'=
What baptismal name has in the firm. He has been with an Mr’ WlJllam Fa!e-' 'CBS head), who urged to review the rules in search th.t ,t , |mpog,|bi# to find
been held by the most Presidents investment firm since 1947, taking saw me not only *s a woman but °* ea*.er m®!, • , durinx the dav As a result'
time out to serve in World War as an actress...Harry Ackerman jJSSftTSld* iSSISi our tfr, find thrt they.
...... - --------- <CBS vice-president) who saw me K^n kT^y . d «ju.L .t nighty-J
not only as an actress, but as a man Republican, who has suggest- on* nat,,on ^
woman. ed that the Un-American Activities °n* NAT0 ,n* lon buB^
And all those wonderful little committee investigate the liberal, ^ irn,y ^tn
people behind the scenes...the car- anti-Communist group Americans *uPP!y it—Turkey • . 8°
penters...man in the parking lot... for Democratic Action, the Turks insist on
fhantinrr mid hiiff/tnc *» » Tatunhuf iproo the DaraWfi
The
L
stand for?
2.
of the United States?
S. Who is the head of the Jus-
tice department?
4. What la the political status of
New Zealand?
5. For what Is the Olympic Na-
tional Park, In Washington, not-
ed?
II from 1942-45, on the staff of
Gen. Omar Bradley. He now heads
a new Washington, D. C., board
named to survey the nation’s over-
seas information program and
step up the propaganda war
against the Soviets, appointed to
Happy Birthday
Elsie Janis, who
entertained
M ■■■■■■■ Istanbul, across the D»nf;
The janitor who kept the halls _ IKE LIKES TEDDY-Pmident the Turkish ,P*ni^ Jl
against tne Soviets, appo’.ntea to chanting gold buttons,.”
the post by President Dwight D. janitor who kem ___ __________ _______
- —..A. .............. Elsenhower.^ Is his name? r so clean,.the writers who did such Eisenhower hung Teddy Roosevih’s *• against the edvice^of «
By Elmer Wheeler troops of the AEF in World War Unionvllle Cente? o. on May 11 ^ scr‘Pt~two wonderful picture in his office ft# other day tary adviMra w^o hav*^.
,■ I, has a birthday today, and ao 1862. He was agent for a national .’ .?ad.,r* an?1,.was D^PUy. criticized by Re- that the defenders ®3
ADVERTISING DEPT.: Alan Jay Lerner, a lyric
I v &:{ AU V Hdl\ A AOAAYVF J-/c*A a.. j\iau o ay laii.cj, 3 lJ
writer who once was in the advertising business,
I, has a birthday today, and so m, n„nt ... „ mu, ana er, uianx ana was prompuy cnucized by He- mat me aewauw* - --
SOMEBODY ELSE’S MISTAKE has proved a wind- does James Caesar Petrillo, mull- JS “ T Pitoburgh Pa J®,5’ ,and tha"ks 10 that E*“Mn» who^il! haven’t forgiven would be euily cut off a«d ^
fall to State Rep. J. B. Walling of Texas. The young cians union official. a^^atveltd.^O. lf1872*74, and coaxial VX? C ta "
admitted to the Ohio bar in the
told of a distributor of canned white salmon unable
to sell his product. All customers preferred the
| popular pink salmon. He hired Harry Reichenbach,
the late famed press agent, who made canned white
' salmon an Immediate success—by emblazoning on
each label in large letterz—"GUARANTEED NOT
i TO TURN PINK IN THE CAN.”
m
ftSfle ‘H? you:’ 'overcome, she cries on Rea-
f :
TRAVEL NOTE: Dorothy Gordon was feted this
week ae a tribute to her Youth Forums. She said
the idea for these forums came to her during a
visit to Rusela in 19S5. A commissar of Education
Introduced a Russian boy, who asked her!
man from Wichita Falls has diligently dug up facts Watch Your Language
llill HH fH!
Sinee then, Walling has spent much of his avail- Ambire. Zf ^th StaRd,rl! “ a refrigerator. She
able time in West Texas. He gained the support of ^ _ . for Pr«2em Th„ t°fns ■tbe d00r 10 “• man««r of a
local ranchers because the result of his investiga- R Happened Today for PnMM, in 1916. The ticket television commercial.)
•• ........ * 1751 — Birth date of James was defeated by a narrow mar- ‘‘Merle
coaxial cable! Thank to all of vou, forming his own Bull Moose psrtv.
and bless you, bless you. bless -
FROM NINE TO RVE
—By Jo Fiscal
tlon would establish and fix the disputed boundar-
ies there.
The
■■^■■mhbbbbhk^BHP,. I WBSBJforcefully): 'You can
Madison, fourth President of the gin. He made a tour of the world be sure if i ’s Westinghouse1’
United States. 1802—United States in 1909-10, and died in his Indian- “(Curtain).”
I
* • :
Ttdsy’t Bible Verse
COME NOW, and let us reason together,
s&ith the Lord: though your sins be as
scarlet, they shall be as white as snow;
though they be red like crimson, they
shall be as wool. Isaiah 1:18
The survey proved that the old surveyor was ,TVT*!!
wrong, and Walling filed claim on two strips of un- MiUtary > Academy established^at apolis Ind home on June 4, 1918.
claimed land. Several ranchers filed good-faith W'rt Point, N. Y. 1935—Adolf Hit- h*’
claims on much of the land, but Walling came out ler 1®r'}cJfeA Versallle* by fName* at bottom of column)
Looking Backward
t of hard work"and *tudv went into Wallin***)in World War II, after 2B-day as- &ttend_t0 m?re lmPortant matters
-A kjs,,5Sirt •*“»■ irsrtaac3,aj“sa
From The Sun File*
8V Am
Published by
The Baytown Sun, Inc., at Pearce and
Ashbel In Baytown, Texas
Hartman .............. Editor and Publisher
yd S. Gould .................Advertising Manager
Beulah Mae Jackson...............Office Manager
Varren Edwards.................Managing Editor
Subscription Rates
By Carrier-41.20 Month; *14.40 Year
AH mail subscriptions are payable in advance.
Mail-Month *1.20; 3 Months *3.50; 6 Month*
' *7.00; Year *14.00. Armed Services 75c Month.
Entered as second-class matter at the
Baytown, Texas, Postoffic* under the
Act of Congress of March 1870.
National Advertising Representative:
discovery.
while remaining at home caring for their two chil-
dren, found time for a job to help provide the nee
essary cash for the project. Walling has four part-
ners in the venture, who helped him finance the
research.
Steady work on the trail of an idea led to aucceaa
for Wailing. Now he plans to continue devoting ail
his time to his work in the legislature. He smile#
and expresses his confidence that the big money
will be. coming his way without his having to go
Out looking for it.
The world’s richest man — a native of India,
natch! — j# said to be worth three billion. Since
he cannot have earned that much, Zadok Dumkopf
figures he must have won it on a radio quiz pro-
gram.
eventuate in the next year. Look
for a hard-working, cheerful and
good-natured personality to de-
velope in a child born today.
TODAY’S HEADLINES: Miners
Strike: Packers Next; European
Economic Alliance Is Sought at
Meet of Nations.
It’s Been Said
A careless song, with a little
nonsense in it now and then, does
not misbecome a monarch,
ace Walpole.
County Engineer Hugh Zapp j
dieted that the bridge over ~
vfnu/
app pre-
. -----Goose
Creoa stream on Baytown-Pelly
u,._ road will be open to traffic by the
jjor. last of March.
The Baytown Cooperative Asso-
ciation, Inc., let a contract for con-
How’d Yon Make Out? struction of a $29,160 super market
1. Fed ral Bureau of Investiga- on Market street.
tion. The Lynchburg ferry crew fished
2. James — Madison, Monroe, J. E. Janata out of the water when
Polk, Buchanan and Garfield. Ms motor boat capsized in the ship
3. Herbert Brownell, Jr. channel in the wage of a tugboat
4. It is a dominion of the Brit-
ish empire. 1® YEARS AGO
: 'n
A New York assemblyman says night clubs should , __RPI _
provide more space for dancing. Doesn't he know t . 5. For its “rain forests,” as The Highlands fire department
night club ia always fresh out of space? Folks of Fame—Guess the Name feeding grounds of the Roosevelt bought a siren and installed it on
I—He was born in Nashville, eik, and for its numerous glaciers, the water tower.
Adlal Stevenson knew all along that held get into Tenn., on March 25, 1902. He re- , Mr. and Mrs.
the White House eventually—even If it waa juat for ceived his law degree from Har-
Rinct^ ') vard In 1928, qnd was admitted to _
lui
fori
oldl
lortsT
I fowl
I be|
iokin|
hey :
t|
cost!
I womf
1 after!
fetal nI
troopl
frol
Lie
turn td
lurse J
ffice ef
yoi
|, pfrhg
lerste
I be of I
let r
1 open!
i you 'r
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lot men
market!
i find f
Ihsve oil
DAV.. .1
druggl
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il:00l
rs
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Okc,».t*
STAl
|WST(H8UIH
1-WUliapi H. . Jackson.
Wa - ■
rren Fairbanks.
—... ■■■■ vonnp, went to Ennis
to visit ilatives.
I’m sure Mr. Wump wonMn’t be interested in * subpo®*^]
pats an his spare cash into Defense Bonds.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 242, Ed. 1 Monday, March 16, 1953, newspaper, March 16, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042072/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.