The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 217, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 14, 1953 Page: 1 of 8
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best quality
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ColdD*w
WEATHER — Shower* 1
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imidttV fair and cool with fresh to
d i ‘ alls strong easterly winds hecom-
^ northerly Saturday night and dlmin-
j*M Sunday.
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BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Saturday, February 14, 1953
TODAY'S NEWS TODAY
Swing La Port*, <
Highlands and
Tha Greater Baytown
............ ................-...........................*......... "■
TELEPHONE: 8302. Ry# Cenh Par Copy
savings
GALORE!
NEW FLOOD HITS HOLLAND
nH
Third Of A Series—
RUSSIANS OUT TO MATCH
PRODUCTION OF THE WEST
(EDITOR’S NOTE: Thin is the
third of four dispatches analyz-
ing the latest trend In Soviet
planning and thinking to over-
come the West.)
By W. A. RYSER
United Press Staff Correspondent
perts here after analyzing Instruc-
tions to the 19SO-5S Soviet eco-
nomic plan presented by the chief
planner, M. Z. Saburov, to the 19th
Communist Party congress. Other
material also has been made avail-
able during the same period.
In his report to the party con-
000,000 tons of pig Iron, 33,000,000
tons of steel, 27,000,000 tons ol
rolled steel, 300,000,000 tons of coal,
47,000,000 tons of oil and 117 bil-
lion kilowatt hours of electricity.
Saburov said that in 1953 the
production of basic materials,
compared to 1950, will Increase as
LONDON, Feb. 14 —iW— Russia greM, Saburov said the output of follows: pig iron—by 76 per cent;
m
SCYTHE MISvSED ITS SWING—Unbelievable as it may look th*» thr*»p i
! * C““,i "l * «ap
La Porte
by Hall
Uids Asked
U Porte's city commission was
is trying to catch up with the
industrially - advanced western
countries.
It is making a strong effort
to establish automatic production
methods in the Soviet industrial
machine.
The Soviet planners are build-
ing push-button factories for basic
industrial materials. They hope to
reach during the next 10 years a
level of production which will solve
most of Russia’s economic prob-
lems.
That is the conclusion of ex-
electric power In the Soviet Union
will increase by 80 per cent in 1955,
compared to 1950. That, he said,
“will permit us to raise the level of
electrification of Industry and to
introduce an extensive automati-
zation of production techniques.’’
Saburov said that during the
present five-year plan "the meth-
ods of oil extra'tlon will become,
on the whole, automatic.”
He called for greater mechaniza-
steel—62 per cent; rolled steel—64
per cent; coal—43 per cent; oil-
85 per cent; electricity — 80 per
cent
The over-all Increase In Indus-
trial production in 1955 will be 70
per cent compared to 1950.
That means that in 1955, Russia
will produce, If the plan is success-
ful, 372,000,000 tons of coal, 70,-
000,000 tons of oil 34,000,000 tons
of pig Iron, 44,200,000 tons of steel
British Fight
Raging Tides
Along Coast
tlon of all stages of coal produc- and 182,500,000,000 kilowatt-hours
tion and said “the building of pre- of electricity.
Three Escape Death In 2 Wrecks
Ditch On Highway Traps Two Automobiles
By ROSALIE MYERS
Two men narrowly escaped
drowning and a third was serlous-
About eight hours later, Grady
Fancher, 38, a Baytown industrial
worker, and Bert Williams, 58-
Ing toward Mont Belvleu In the
belief that he was walking back to
146 an(* highway ed into the deep gully in practi-
3 In Chambers county in separate rally the same spot as King’s car
aCwmftS ^a^rc*av morning. had been wrecked earlier.
llliam. (Bill) K'.ng, 20, employe Fancher was brought to Bay-
of the General Associated Tele- town hospital where attendants
. .. tnr ...... pbon® C0"»Pany, is in Baytown said his injuries were not serious.
•"’SSS? vfult Private of" T !' treatment of chest Williams, in a state of shock and
- counter, vault, pro ate of and possible internal injuries
ceived about 2:30 a, m.
_ the ’ 112.000 remodeling job
iich will turn the old Post Office
Iding into a new city hall.
} Final approval of the building
s was given by the city com-
mon at a called meeting during
t week,
King, whose home is In Mont
Belvleu, said he went to sleep
while going home from Baytown,
and his car left the road. He had
previously fallen asleep near the
clsion machinery must undergo a
serious further development.”
Soviet technicians have installed
automatic serial production of cer-
tain automobile and tractor parts
at the Stalin automobile works in
Moscow and the tractor plant in
Gorki. Air:raft plant No. 39 in
Moscow is also producing aircraft
parts in the same way.
The production of ball bearings,
which are now being rapidly in-
troduced on Soviet railways, has
been “automatized.” However, the
ball bearings until now appear to
be "not quite satisfactory."
As for the growth of basic Soviet
production, Secretary Georgi M.
In comparison to the leading in-
dustrial countries of the world,
basic Soviet production in t951—
the latest date for which compara-
tive figures are available—looked
like this:
U.S. — Coal, 523,000,000 tons;
Oil, 309,000,000; pig iron. 63,900,-
000; steel, 95,400,000; electricity,
3.700.000. 000 kw-hrs.
U.S.S.R. — Coal, 281,000,000; oil,
42.000. 000; pig Iron, 22,000,000;
steel, 31,300,000; electricity, 1,030,-
000,000 kw-hrs.
Britain, W. Germany and France
—Coal, 389,000,000; oil, 1,700,000;
pig iron, 29,300,000; steel, 39,700,-
000; electricity, 1,474,000,000 kw-
t sod restrooms inside the build-
half-drowned, disappeared from
the scene and was found wander-
| The structure will be completely
ashed inside and its stucko
s outside will be painted a sal*
i pink.
I Fluorescent lighting and air con-
^iiocing will be installed with all
v electrical fixtures and plumb-
jfsdfiies. ■ » -___j_____„
|Be building will have a recon- c_ntTT , , Arthur Barrow said,
d, all-glass, front with alum- jf?,’ febJ-4 *jve hours of bitter fighting Satur- About 10 30 am 1
i sash “ “ ID H ......
GIs Batter Way Out
Of Red Korean Trap
SEOUL, Korea, Feb. 14 —UP— five 1
Outnumbered Allied soldiers, sur- day.
Cedar Bayou bridge on Highway Malenkov and the Planner. Sabu- hrs.
rov, this time made no secret Comparison of production per
about it. head of population makes the ad-
Malenkov said that the Soviet vanced position of the West even
Union will produce this year 25,- more apparent.
148, but decided that since he was
so near home he would drive on.
His car knocked down two guard
post?, missed the bridge railing
and plunged end over end down
the 25-foot embankment. Buster
Smith who lives at the intersection
of the two highways helped King
out of the wreckage and brought
him to the hospital. The car wa*
totally demolished, Deputy Sheriff
Movie Changes Hands;
Texan Will Be Closed
The Cedars Drive-In Theater The Texan Is one of the oldest
AMSTERDAM, Peb. 14—
(UP) — Netherlands troops
and police forced families
from their homes Saturday
and a state of emergency
was declared in the Malines
area of Belgium as a menac-
ing flood tide swept in from
the North Sea.
On the British East Coast thous-
ands of troops and civilians worked
in a blinding storm, worst of a
grim winter, to bolster breached
sea walls.
The floods that two weeks ago
caused 1,856 deaths in four North
Sea countries threatened fresh dis-
aster this weekend.
A high tide will hit the coasts
again Sunday night. Even Satur-
day it crept menacingly in, sweep-
ing inexorably over lowlands
Councilman R. B. (Rufus) Ber- ^
dJS S'S.T.STS S
Candida.y for re-election to the force if necessary, from Zieriisee
on Schouwen-Duiveland Island,
devastated in the first floods.
City authorities of Mechelen
posts which will be up for grabs Malines, Belgium, 25 miles In-
in the city election April 7. Dead- land. declared a state of emer-
line for filing Is midnight Satur- $ency and appealed to the Belgian
day, March 7. government for Loops when the
In announcing hi, candidacy for
re-election Bergeron pledged to ^eafhln * *>ndbagged
continue his campaign for the bet- Tens of thousands of ^
terment of Baytown. “I have never iiCe and Lilians worked in shifts
been against any move for the 24 hours a day in the low coastal
progress of the city,” he said. "I areas of the Netherlands Belgium
offer myself as a candidate with and Great Britain to bolster their
the sincere pledge to continue dike and defenses against the men-
serving all of the people of this acing sea.
city.” The floods two weeks ago caused
The councilman from District a total of 1.856 dead in four na-
Two Is a brickmason at the Bay- tions—1,395 in Holland, 435 in Brit-
town Refinery and expects to re- ain, 19 in Belgium and seven in
tire in August, when he will have Germany,
more time to devote te the council
post.
“Experience Is a great teacher
and is an important factor in set-
RUFU8 BERGERON
Bergeron Enters
Race For Council
District 2 Seat
council from District Two.
Bergeron thus became the sec-
ond man to announce for the four
ting policy for a city the size of
Baytown," Bergeron declared. “I
About 10:30 a.m., Smith and his
m jgsn - -.«v. -W *““VU avnuvta, BW ucJ v. tjpnfhnp p 1 A A f . , ” ~ ~ ” —a_»oj vviw n, octftciun utrusau cu. x
lie design and specification, founded by M0 Chinese Commun- United Nations infantrymen and 8Z'T* Z* Corp., a new firm in which Howard movie houses in this section and think I can honestly say I have
7 town UP ^ Baytown Archi- heavy artillery killed Or wounded fng ii^the giMly wheVhis «r Teft E' Brunson and East Texas Thea' f°r years it was operated by the Earned a lot in my past two terms
laweil Lammers. tered then- way out of the trap in ,0 Reds in the fierce western front ^ ^ Sn^Wdr tte ^ tors, Inc. are interested, have Goose Creek Amusement Co„ In office and believe that know!*
bat,lp- which hori heen Unnrifprf bought the Cedars drive-in movie which still owns the hniMiW s«v- ed$e c8n be °‘ genuine service to
un Spots Ex-Sun Publisher
To Be On Program
Of News Clinic
posts
The Allied defenders radioed down by King’s car and rolled
twice for reinforcements but each down the embankment,
time fresh troops attempted to Fancher was brought to Bay-
reach the battleground they were town hospital by Clarence Moore,
stopped by Red forces planted be- who stopped at the scene of the
tween the mam lines and the out- accident. Fancher said he was en
P°Su anything of the accident excent
The Red assault was finally he had driven off “into the river.’’
broken up shortly after dawn, by _u11 which was Drastically
Robert Matherne will be on the more{armffrC„hlnegUn' artllIery and dry when King went into it at 2
- - ...... program of the fourth annual Tex- mortar lire. violer torrent hv 10
una was a clerk in the 731st as Newspaper Clinic to be held at four other Communist probing g m' because of the heavy rains
Inznce Detachment, 155th Regi- Texas A and M College next Sat- attacks .were repulsed along the Vy
it. He attended Robert E. Lee urday. 155-mile battlefront in the second
wheal.
had been knocked bought the Cedars drive-in movie which still owns the building. Sev-
[Out Of Army
(PiC -MIKE Santana son of Mr.
lad Mrs. Eugene Santana, 1213
Mia, was recently released
rent setive duty with the U.S.
rey at Gamp Atterbury, Ind.
on Highway 146. The price was
$45,000.
At the same time Brunson an-
nounced closing of the Texan on
eral pioneer Baytown men are
owners of this company.
Miss La Neil Stout, a former
Harris county employe, has been
named manager of the Bay to suc-
Texas avenue at the end of Satur- ceeri Bang son. She will be assisted
day night’s program. by Ellie (Buddy) Brunson.
Reluctant Manager
Imr MANAGER C. D. Middle-
|ln secepted “with reluctance”
f post of representing the City
Id Baytown on the Recreation
| Council.
He will replace W. M. Knowles
|h that post
Middleton told councilmen that
|j» would accept the post, but
pd hoped that someone else
|»wld prove suitable.
BAGE CAN covers made of
U are now legal In the City
'Baytown, after Ordinance 83
«heen amended Saturday
this morning. Fancher and Wil- Bengtson, former manager of the
Matherne is a former Texas day of stepped-up Chinese Com- drownin» ^
Press Association president and munist battle pressure. <See Wreck* PaRe Two) the new mana*er-
former publisher of the Baytown In the air, the leading Allied jet
Sun. ace in Korea shot down another
Mechanical problems from the Communist MIG-15 in a high-alti-
f.^nt office viewpoint and front hide battle between 17 Sabrejefs
office problems from the printer’s and 27 of the Russian-built planes
viewpoint will be the twin themes near the Yalu river,
of the Clinic. Donald D. Burchard, Col. Royal N, Baker, McKinney,
head of the A and M Journalism Tex., firing from 800 feet at the
Probe On Spy Data Asked
Pope's Plea Kept From White House
the people.”
Bergeron was elected to a second
term as councilman from District
Two by more votes than anyone
else on the ballot. He led his two
opponents with a 58.1 majority
over W. F. Spear and B, R. Zato-
. , , , , pek in 1951 with 1,173 votes to 681
Tne Cedars was constructed here The Bay will begin operating for Spear and 163 for Zatopek.
a little over a year ago by John under the old Texan policy featur- Bergeron, who has lived in Bay-
Myer, a Pasadena businessman, ing double programs for the most
The new owners will continue to part. It will maintain admission
operate the Cedars with Floyd T. schedules of 35 cents for adults at
night and 25 cents for matinees,
Children will be admitted at all
times for nine cents.
The movie partners also own
town more than 30 years, points
out that his familiarity with the
civic problems of the city arq also
of great value to one holding the
post of councilman.
With the deadline for filing only
three weeks away, Bergeron and
and operate the Brunson in Bay- Lacy Lusk from District Six were
town, the Sanja in Channelview the only avowed candidates in the
and the Port in La Porte. April 7 election.
NEW YORK. Feb.
iivau uic diiu in uvuiiiiuiam ******* www w*v. ----- *
Department, announced Saturdey, MIG, set the plane afire with Emanuel H. ^Bloch,^ attorney for committed “a most serious crime
14—UP— secrets to Russia the couple had
jarsr raa WirJM
field and educators wil] present a It was his ninth MIG kill of vestigation to determine why the states.
series of four panels during the the war. Justice Department never trans- Rosenberg, 34, and his wife, 36, Matilda (Tiniat
- -.....Col. Richard L. Ayersman, Sac- mitted to the White House a plea are being held in Sine Sine orison’s , . ‘ Johnson, em-
ramento, Calif., damaged another which Pope Pius XII made last De* death row. A new date for their p oye ot the Goose Creek Inde-
pendent School district for the
Tillie Johnson Chandler To Go
Succumbs On Training Tour
City Attorney George Chandler
will go to Houston Monday to
take his Navy physical examina-
1 water and mildew proofed,
I constructed with a ban en-
i to a loop so as to hold cover
tgainst the top of the con-
sr.
[There Be Light
‘ STATE Highway depart-
t has again refuser' the City
» request for permission
|J total! r regular light at East
1 *"4 Highway 146.
3' Manager C. D. Middleton
■w f®Bnfilmen that the request
™ “!*n turned down again.
®Md On Page Two)
deal with economy ceasures that ....... ______... _______________
commence with front office plan- MIG in the same battle. cember in behalf of the condemn- execution will be set Monday.
% TV D ■ t U inl „ White House Press Secretary past 12 years, died Friday morning tion before leaving for two weeks’
“How To Keep Printers Happy” while took advantage of the first Bloch said the investigation jame. n Haeertv „ „ ' , , , , , . , , , _ „ ,
will be discussed by a publisher, a clear weather in three days in should include whether ‘any other state SDeoarfmen(S nor tha White aft 8 n?er ng iIlness that f°l- naval training in Bayonne, N. J.
, . ----->- ----- -**•- ‘----*--* J ' ” •- ........pet nor ne wnne -*--------Chandler, an officer in the
Naval Reserve, plans to leave
Thursday for the training ses-
■ °cen amended Saturdey will be discussed Dy a puonsner, a ciear weauier m mree aays m snouiu inciuue wnemer any omer state DeDartmen, nor the White ----- * * ..... “
fie covers must be of 9 ounce shop foreman and a commercial batter Red supply routes with important data" in the case also House” received the Pope's com- lowed 8 sie*e of Pneumonia.
»Cater andUdew prS An Two angles of typesetting bombs rockets and machine guns, might have, been withheld from Znication 'Officiate of Z Me TUiie was known by thou:
thousands
economies—cost records and esti- Fifth Air Force announced mean- President Eisenhower and former nerartment aWsalrtthov haH^ no x«u.
hilo Am»rio.n Sahroiot. lrn,v-k«t ProciHont Tn,m,n tn «,hn|tl the ^n^ledge of it And Truman of y°un8sters in the £ rytown area. sjon
icutive said*in Kan°sas City he did notTt?
as dis- ceive the aPPe®1-
be co-hosts at combat. closed Friday, three davs after ^a/®rty Was asked whether it junjor eh
*--- * - .......... w—«S2L turned down (he wuld be assumed that despite the Junior High.
Patvil nnnon 1 iricnnnfttiin*‘"e H nr vn.a ro
Clear Skies
Due Sunday
It look* like Baytown can talc*
Its pick of two kfnds of weather:
fair and cold or warm and wet.
A new mild cold front moving
across Texas Saturday was expect-
ed to chase clouds which dumped
.82 of an inch of rain on Baytown
Saturday morning.
The forecast for the Baytown
area was partly cloudy and cooler
Saturday night; fair and cool Sun-
day warming up a little in the
afternoon.
The low temperature expected
Saturday night is 43, compared to
Saturday’s early morning low of
46 and a Friday morning low of
35.
The steady rain kept It from
warming up much Saturday. The
meroury climbed only two degrees,
to 48, by noon.
Baytown got more rain than any
other city in Texas, but precipi-
tation was fairly well distributed
all the way to Dallas and Sen An-
tonio.
The weather experts said the
new cold front was too weak to
drop temperatures very much, but
that It would disperse the rain
clouds.
Hughes Re-Elected
To Fire Chief Job
a ting while American Sabrejets knocked President Truman, to whom the knowledge of it And Mr ' Truman 01 y°un?sters in tne t aytown area.
Dr. M. T. Harrington. A and M down two Communist MIG-15s in Rosenbergs appealed for executive aaid jn Kansas City he did not re- She worked in the Robert E. Lee
v-ollege president and William Row- the past week but one of the Allied clemency. ceive the aDDeal —totoF), ,.*—n — oi-—
land, president of the Texas Press fighters also was destroyed in air The Pjspal intervention was dis- ',
Association, will
the luncheon. The
clinic is co- Action all along the front stepped Mr. Eisenhowi
1 "hit Mm ckonnlsr An tVlId DllnoCfl No'(f m
sponsoerd b,v the A and M Journa- up sharply
lism Department and the TPA. Year’s Da'-.
cafeteria until two years ago. Since
that time she had been at Baytown
- *• wswas fst s Ss-S
was an’official statement” and he ‘ ‘
thought it spoke for itselt
In Washington, apostolic delegate
Amleto Cicognani declined to say
to whom in the Justice Depart-
ment or how the Pope’s views were
include five directors of the Com- C0*mJJmea,ed-
An 80-man Red assault was beat-
en back in 90 minutes of heavy
fighting on the east central front
east of the Pukhan River.
In the same area, 40 Reds ran
Community Chest Election Set Monday
32 Baytonians Nbm;nated For 15 Positions On Agencies
helping Goodfellow distribution at
Christmas.
Funeral arrangements had not
been completed Saturday.
f°und Town
Fifteen officials of the Com- p.m. Monday in the Baytown Com-
munity Chest and its agencies will munlty house,
be elected at a meeting of the Thirty-two persons have been
Chest Council of Members at 7:30 "•'n'ne.ted for the positions, which
■IAN .D’OLTVE putting last
, ,<wdics on the big Shrine
, crippled children . . .
”°Use braving the weather
a CUP of coffee ... Marion
'^plaining about those raih
’ “»g cold . . . Friends re-
‘ Wat we report that Margie
Call Girl To Write Book
Pat Ward's Autobiography Slated
He will return about March 11,
in time to prepare for the sched-
uled public hearing on the rate
increase requested by Houston
Natural Gas Co.
Roy Hughes has been re-eleoted
volunteer fire chief of district No.
3.
Other new officers are I D.
Huggins, first assistant chief;
, . Richard Mock, second assistant;
While in Houston Chandler also Charles Shaffer, president; Lloyd
plans to consult with Clinton Townsend, secretary-treasurer.
Owsley, utility rate expert who is Alvin Derryberry Jr. is vice pres-
examlning the gas company’s ident, Odis Navarre, drill captain,
books in preparation for the Luther Bright and Harry Levine,
hearing. trustees.
munity Chest, three directors of
the Health League, five directors
of the Welfare League and the
president and secretary of the
council.
Following are the nominees:
Special National Guard Stamp To Be Issued
Military Organization Honored For 300 Years Service
i n
\ J
i
----------■ — .............post, other Rea awacn* near Duns- rrn^ ctamn was annrnvoa hv tho
er ffi11 and Sniper Ridge were re* Postmster (Leri in recog^iUon of
Postmaster Ballard also noted
By JAY BREEN men and one bachelor during four
GrSyel^atWa^sat^ro "^VconducC^S Inter-
IWy'^Ba mony included Pat’s word that Jel- wmmuntty chest director s
^ arfleld shows up at ing hours on Ihe more lurid chap- ke beat her repeatedly to force her «
the Rev. P. Walter Henckell, Hugh
Stewart and Norman Hargrave.
For secretary (one-year term)—
Mrs. Zenobia Booth, Mrs. Abe Ros-
enzweig and Mrs. Knox Beavers.
Community Chest di rectors
intn an Allied rwtrni ana f™,aht P* United StatRS Post 0ffice ribbon across the bottom of the duced after the initial run of 110
toto Jg ,Allled P3™ and fought wiU issue special National Guard wordinv “The Oldest millinn
the UN troops back to their out- commemorative stamp Feb. 23. ™ ‘ W“rd ng> mlUlon'
Red attacks near Bunk- u„ Military Organization in the U.S."
_ The stamps may not be avail- that commercial firms have been
more than 300 years abie the^y they are issued Post- producing special National Guard
vice to the American nennle in hnth castor N. B. Ballard said Satur- Stamp envelopes (cachets). Bay-
town philatelists can get more in*
QUICKIES ., By Ken Reynolds
. -J—„ shows up »» . . _ ____
"ni i v°n but she hasn,t i.liS h^rTifeTs a caU girffor al- to keep vice dates at $50 to $100 a B. E. Wilson. Harry F. Hartman,
6kvwndl '•' Roaie Connealy =oc:etv procurer Minot customer, that she used to get in- John W. Sylvester, Sam Paine,
ton hf/t* touSh time with that v,S Mickcv Jelke toxicated to dull her sense of shame W. C. Britt, Bert Black, James E.
Wiient Iaee suffered in an auto • * j‘ Roland Sala. re- before embarking on the appoint- Sherwood and Jack Furbee.
* Johnpii.' tj omen’s News Edi- , n.me'the publication that ments, and that Jelke protested her Health League directors (three-
*tforaL , nton wil1 be ab‘ haH sivned his pretty 19-year-old drinking on grounds some of her year terms)—Mrs. H. M. Johnson,
Nad rC ’ acc°mpanying her t f0r the inside story of how clients “might take advantage ot J. M. Stuart, Jack L. “’aylor, Dr.
Tw?” 8 trlp t0 Ncw «he drifted from modeling into her” by stealing her money. R. w. Pipkin, Edgar Nicholson,
r»iihL y e*VebyplaneSat' prostitution. He said the story Miss Ward swore, according to Hub Bounds and Mrs. Ted Lyman.
Fermi.™ would be trimmed of anything that her attorney, that Jelke talked her Welfare League directors (three-
^<»T>WtertotUrVeyo*8 8Se?i ' mi$ht embarrass anyone Pat knew into a life of prostitution on »«y- terms)-E. C. Woods, J. W.
ss’JStfss'xsa srB^s-rpMHir^
.25™. C?ldYreU d°- UD details Of Jelke’s trial. _ . ' V.'fe Wrigtt and N. B. Ballard.
Membership in the Chest Council
from his own cut. also of Members is open to anyone who
million he eventual- contributed in the 1952 United
n»JSlleph01e cheokin8 on “VtTnwgh had“ea°ked from Sala ine fortune on;his 25th birthday
SSteagri S-f- - - -
day. No additional issues of the
commemorative stamp will be pro-
formation at the post office.
Bar Sends Solans Letter
Attorney General Opinion Asked
lv will inhc
“Better look for a repairman
in The, Sun Want Ads—Junior
shot a bandit today on televi-
sion!”
vice to the American people in both
war and peace. Capt, Axel H.
Schoyen. commanding officer of
Co. E, Texas National Guard unit
in Baytown, declared Saturday.
“We’re proud to be thus honor-
ed,” the captain said, “We feel
that the Guard is a great outfit
and it’s record speaks for itself.”
The special commemorative
stamp has a central design de- Members of the Baytown Bar take whatever action is appropri-
plcting a Guardsman ready for ac- Association have officially endors- ate.
tion. In the background scene to ed the drive to get a county court Location of the courts here
the left, the war-time activties of and district court for Baytown, would probably require a constitu-
the Army and Air National Guard and a letter to that effect is on its tional amendment. The Legislature
are portrayed by an amphibious way to the Harris county delega- would have to call an election, and
landing With air cover. tion to the State Legislature. then the voters of Texas would
The Guard's traditional peace- The letter was prepared by have to approve the amendment,
time role of protecting life and Ethan W. Bruce, chairman of the C. D. Little, president of the bar
property In time of local disaster group’s legal and legislative com- group, said the association Would
is shown in the background scene mittee, Robert L. Gillette and take/ no further action until the
to the right. Across the top of the George Chandler. legislature acts,
stamp are the words, 'The Na- It asks the legislators to get an If an election is called, then tha
tional Guard of the U.S.,” "In official opinion from Atty. Gen. Baytown attorneys will lead a pub*
War,” “In Peace," in dark Archi- John Ben Shepperd on the correct licity campaign to acquaint tha
tectural Roman. In an ornamental procedure to follow, and then to public with the issue.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 217, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 14, 1953, newspaper, February 14, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042330/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.