The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 2, 1973 Page: 4 of 18
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THE BAYTOWN SUN
Tuesday, January 2,1973
j*,, 1** ’2ZI2,
SPECIALS WED.-TUES.
JAN. 3rd THRU JAN. 9th
Poll)
Bridt
Miss Polly Ai
became the brid
~~ E. Good in a
ceremony Saturi
side Baptist Chv
r Dr. W.E. Thiel
Miss Susan Terr
' the music.
The bride is tl
of Mr. and Mrs.
man of 2205 Bel
and Mrs. Frank
Butler, Pa. are th
the groom.--------
Escorted by hei
bride chose a pr
gown of
tilly lace over
fitted sleeves.
Her mantilla
lace swept to <
! a
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1
POUCH MIXES
BISCUITS-C0RNBREA0
PAHCAKE-HUSHPUPPY
-1 fit
• ------------ ..
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By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP) -
Nothing will seem free*in 1973.
But there is no reason for
mankind to give up hope, ads.
cording to our annual Fuzzy
• Forecast of the year ahead. A
glance at the old crystal ball
reveals both good news and
bad news __________
The good news is that jobs
will., become more plentiful.
The bad news is that prices will
go on rising, awi more and
: more people will accept the
viewpoint that inflation has
become a permanent way of
life in the United States.
ish penny coins on the grounds
that they clutter up the pock-
ets slow cash transaction and
Christmaspresent from a well-
frjsfrer — ^f)d it turns .out to bp
are no longer worth counting. a brand new megaphone.
Twenty years from now an at-
tempt will be made to drop the
nickel for the same reasons.
A medical quack will an-
nounce that he has solved the
problem of cancer and that it is
on the edge of extinction. He
will die of the disease himself
later in the year.
smoking during meetings irr
.both the House and Senate
chambers. The telling of lewd
stories in the cloakrooms-will
also be prohibited Snuff and
chewing tobacco will continue
Dbndon will offer to set
Wales and Scotland free if the
struggling Irish will just settle
down and behave themselves
like the Mecerjt Englishmen'
they aren't, . '•
In Paris- the French Aead^
my will unanimously turn
down a proposal- that
Americanese be.taught as a
second language in France.
* A half-dozen mass riots and
small wars will break out in
Africa,, They will die down
soon, however, when the rest of
a war-weary world refuses to
pay any attention to them.
The loudest political laugh of
Henry Kissinger opens a
On the sports front
Moscow will announce that
the Russians defeated Red
China’s ping pong team in a ow
cret match. Peking will deny
the report for three straight
days, and on the fourth day
Chriman Mao will volunteer to.
play the whole Russian team
Congress-will han cigarette- Single-Handed himself - if he
can keep score.
Other developments:
Two long-haired teen-age
freaks in San Francisco will go
through a traditional wedding,
but only after the minister
agrees to read the marriage
mi*
congressional salaries and yo^.§ backward
pensions will be abandoned jp summarv, 1973 promises
after voters stagg* a national t0 (*> just another of those
chain letter protest. - yehre that will be more fun to
Developments on the inter- back on later than to go
national front:
through now.
Mountains Of Paper
i,.mi I-.Txrj—-•* ’• - ‘yw--
KeepU.S. In Business
CROW"
sROAST ..
BONfLCM CLU*
GOKKj
SPRITE7
CENTER CUT CHUCK
ROAST
RIBEYE
STEAKS .
GRADE ’A"
24 Hours
NIGHT FR. 427
Leggetts D
NEW YORK i APi - Paper
... paper .. paper!
One fears we may be stran-
gled by paper - —
Napoleon Bonaparte said an
army marches on its stomach
But the modern U S. business
world marches on paper The
American economy produces
an estimated one million pages dmjbie the m tolaj
of, neV documents every,
minute, .of .which some 250
billion page? a year must be
stored, temporarily at least.
Business firms alone - leav-
ing out the work of governing
j paper shufflers — now store-
and maintain more than a
them, thus creating a need for'
new legions of Girl Fridays.
"The clerical work force is
growutg hve times faster than
the generaf population, arid
now receives about $80 billion a
year in salaries
"The 10 million clerical em-
ployes now on the job is almost
Dr Polldijk. noted that
dedpite the current recession
there is still a shortagejaf
stenographers and trained
secretaries. Other studies have
shown that business
managements often are more
reluctant to cut their office
trillion pieces, of paper in 200 cteric*| luffs than their
million file drawers. Each
• year they ere adding 175 billion
factory employes
. ,__________..____The job future is also bright-
new pieces of paper to this „ foroffice workers,
enormous trove. Storage costs
* alone now run intn-jpillions of
dollars annually.
The problem of handling all
this material has given rise to
.a new profession - records
management - says Dr. Max-
well Pollack, president of Van
Dyk Research Corp.,. of
Whippany. N.J., a firm active
in communications
technology
Or PoUack predict* that in
Hit MKnft this piper blizzard
will intensify rather f—^
lent* and have far-re
affrcti on d>e economy
- Hare paperwork is
triple in a fast-paced, and
of etectraaic
iwiUrwffBl
hot add to lation
The government has predicted
there will be a need for at least
2N.IM new aecretarwa a year
for some time to come
The paper storm is height-
ened by the increasigg output
of educational institutions. It is
estimated that more than a
majority td all the scientists
ever bom «i earth are still
alive. They are producing
fresh paper mountains fil
docurttents, graphs, research
reports and
and learned jowmals. -*
One of the biggest problems of
scigice is how to dfest
It won't be long* some tx- .*
computerized {peru figwre, before America
'pa-
per a year for eadt man. wo-
man, and child in the popo-
U.S.D.A. ARMOURS BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
U.SM ARMOURS STAR BEEF SALE
* • .SHORT
CHUCK
.53c
* SPARE
.... !MSe RIBS ..
..... iXTBA LUB
, GROUND
s9c\BEEF ...
GRADE 'A'
.59 FRYERS .
v " 1—-
69c ""S’ ..33c
ii.1 $3.79
Z 65c
WIENERS
FRESH
ENTIRE
FRYERS ......1°;. u. 39c K
SifiFfS PREMIUM s
HAMS ...
PORK CHOPS. “a«v .
PRESHPORK
a 9m • • • • • • • •
* ARMOURS
89c WIENERS ...... . 69c
79c BACON .........AS.. 99c
HORMELS
c. 99c BACON.
ARMOURS
PAN SAUSAGE....
RATH SUMMER
SAUSAGE
RATH __OSCAR MATER
COOKED HAM .Si'S. .. 73c BACON...........« $«
RATH SLICED _ OSCAR WAVER ALL MEAt OR REEF
. . . .FHG S1.09
COOKIES A 99
4
OAK FARMS SUNNY DALE
4 HOMO MILK....
UBBYS FROZEN
ORANGE JUICE.....
BORDENS HALF MOON ’
CHEDDAR CHEESE..
CHIFFON SOFT
MARGARINE......
-- -»«asr~
ft ft • t « ft • Ctn wtrI#
4 E 89c
. ^ 59c
Lb.
• * ‘ * *• • l,
vn
v ItoRt
—
OPEN 9:30 te61
miiKU
SUGAR....,
SHASTA
SODA WATER
m
. w 63c
.<■ idc •.
-H
LYONS GAREEN FRESH PRODUCE
PURE EG6 NOODLES
GRAPE JELLY ....
ALPS CHICKEN AM) UNA
DOG FOOD......
TEji BAGS.
..;.’^35c
.. .“/39c
4o« si
^$1.19
- STOKLEYS CUT '
GREEN BEANS
PImm C7 SU
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 2, 1973, newspaper, January 2, 1973; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104063/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.