The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 59, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 22, 1959 Page: 13 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Thursday, October 22, 1959
Bif* Sqpmm tm
13
rolger Coffee
1-Lb.
Can
fi Tap Value Stamps
Fresh Fruit Cluster Coffee Coke c<h 33c
EMBASSY—YOUR SALADS WERE NEVER BETTER DRESSED! ,
Salad Dressing
BREAST O' CHICKEN—BEST O' TUNA!
Quart
Jar
Chunk Tuna
Light Meat
No. Vi Can
A "MUST" FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES!
S Pd in Luncheon Meat £
Kroger Catsup 2 29=
SALE OF KRAFTS CRACKERBARREL FINE CHEESES!
Mellow wt 37* w^55‘ '2£ 41* Sharp US. 39* ’^63*
10-0*.
Stick
a*5,000
NESTEGG
nx your daughter
k sere she enters the
2ndAn«HMl
nioger
Wfestinghouse
JUNIOR COOK
OF-THE-YEAR
CONTEST
GIT ENTRY BLANKS
AT HENKE'S!
jjkmm hi Bar-cured
Shank Half or A £
Whole—Par Lb. 43C
ed Ham
IMMUS IAANO
ticks
NiWI e I •TON'S
4 US T
4 SS
t 69c
tails
ALL PIN MEAT
napper Fillets
FINE, fRESH
ana Oys ters "iS 79c
FAMOUS DA BRAND
el Franks £ 59c
7SCAR MAYER B AaUNSCHWEIGER
Sausage j...........49c
U.S. NO. 1 RUBY RED
29c
Wolf Beef Tamales*-™ 25c
REGUUR WHITE
Quaker Grits........2
Q A BEST-SELLER!
Wolf Plain Chili..... S.159c
SERVE WITH CHILI!
. Ni
Can
SWEET AND CREAMY
Libby's Pumpkin 2 N&»3.03 27c
KROGER'S BAKED-TO-BE-BETTER
Vanilla Wafers ......xS 29c
ROGER'S—ALL POPULAR FLAVOR
Gelatin Desserts 3pSr23c
HARD GLOSS
Johnson Glo Coats!!. 59‘st 99‘
First
Prize
Lb.
Cello
Dried Pinto Beans
Freestone Peaches
Libby's Sliced Beets Noi“10'
Libby's Lima Beans £*■No L“25'
Kroger Fancy Tomato Juice ..46c°:„25‘
Betty Zone Popcorn IZ°' '°£„10‘
2 49-
Fruit Cocktail F»nc*r.
2 Nc.»3 45*
Banana
Praline
Nabisco Rili Crackers..........im*. 29c
SuMhine Hydr«f Cookies.....11 38c
Set of 5 9^
Each
. ■
All-Butter Cakes fZd. 55'
V.V.VJ.V.V.'.Vl!
Wooden
Hangers
Keep your clothes look-
ing n#et . . . round
dowel heng rod pre-
vents creeses. Mode of
solected hardwood —
smooth! natural, wax
finish.
Reds <§e
their glory
. Low, low
IU«pe
NEW FALL CROP FLORIDA
Golden Corn.....
At
1*
h\ ATH-TEX POTTERY Riehtony ..
Chili Bowls z
ES!
Spaghetti
Meet t
LOW IN CALORIES! NORTHWEST ■■
.£ 19c s
■■
COLORADO U.S. NO. 1 , ■■
3 ft 19c [j
PATIO FROZEN COMPLETE ' ■■ _____________________
Mexican Dinner......i.,h 59c :!
;; LARGE LEATHERGRAIN STACK
UVTT 11^ VAbVMKd
Bartlett Pears
COLORADO U
Yellow Onions
.. tX’*
f LT°,ok! w
they
Stack Neatly |j||pP
and X
Compactly! .'H ,•
START YOUR SET TODAY!
Natural Sciences Illustrated
tdited by The American Mmeum of Natural Hiitery
Volume 6
14 library bound oditloni New on Solo
*o the tat. Hoi ovor o mil-
lion words . . . moro than
3000 eicturas. A naw vol-
uma otfarad aaah weak.
PUNT NOW! RED BERRY
$159
Pyracontho......*1” 3 ... 5450 ii
Fancy heavy-barriad stock... patented variety.
Sold in gallon cans.
'ory
LAKES
C Pkg 79c
rory
iOAP
r 29c
Camay Soap
2 2ic
2 t! 3lc
Zest BEBAr
2 *£• 31c
2 K 43c
Kirk's
COCO CASTILE
2 S 21c
Duz
WASHDAY SOAR
Gient 7Q _
Pockofl* t/O
Hassocks
r Choic
J2’*
22 H I4"«!4"«I4”. Made Your Choice Each
■■ of durable plastic in
Jjjj cboica »f or.tr wbifo,
■ ■ or.no. or turquoiio .. .
J J boi modern brenz. lee*.
■■ lllmfrofion thowi throo.
■a
K5K
X l
FREE
n.. Pk«^iP. n. "r.r:h Izrr';. "•* 2
I , | now unit offtrtd ooch wooL
wOOKIIldfiY Don't min tbii opportunity...
pot youri today.
Whtn You Buy the Economy Size
9 Pepwd'ent Tooth Peite
Flashlight K* 59‘
FOR QUICK RELIEF I DEEP HEAT RUB
Bufferin0Tablets k». 89c IMenfholalum .<£
Oxydol
Cheer
Dreft
Cascade
DETERGENT
DETERGENT
DETERGENT
FOR DISHES
&33cGft77c
^33c pig 75c
p?' 35c pU 79c
, 20-Ox. JF
" Package *tOC
Dash
DETERGENT
Si 39c £ W9
Marshall's Strategy
I'Saved Day' In Korea
B\ ItKKW PEARSON' thrnn miles in the faun of Chinn sit
WASHINGTON 1SP1 — In the onslaughts, while using American
i thousands of words being written artillery, lined up almost as close
in tribute to the late great George together as Russian artillery, to
.Marshall, it seems to me that one make mincemeat out of the ad-
important chapter has been neg-1 vancing Chinese. This finally
1'ected. It's the manner in which stopped them, and turned the tide
he moved in as Secretary of De- in Korea,
fense during the lowest and most Later, it became Gen. Mar-
tragic period of the Korean War shall * duty as Secretary of De-
and turned defeat into victory. fense to sign the order reliev,ng
Most of this story has been M*cArthur from all duty in the
i either untold or distorted by the ^ar East, retiring him from hie
’political publicists who tried to ^onS career as a military officer,
.‘cover up some of the awful er-
! rors of the Korean War. How- M0ST PEOPLE outside the Army
lever, shortly after Gen. Marshall dtdn 1 know it, but MacArthur
came back to Washington from bad ear'‘er blocked Marshall'*
Leesburg, Va.. to relieve Louis ns'' ln tbe Army. In 1932, Mar-
Johnson as Secretary of Defense, waf recommended by Gen.
Gen. Douglas McArthur sent a Malin Craig for promotion to
long cable reporting that h e brigadier general, but MacArthur.
■would need so many thousand air- ‘bon Chief of Staff, said no. Mar-
planes, so many divisions of sEiafl had long been marked as
troops, and so many thousand an officer destined for big things,
tanks. Otherwise, he recommend- MacArthur shunted him off
ed complete withdrawal of Amer- ^ 411 instructor of the Illinois Na-
ican forces from the Korean pen- tional Guard, in those days any
insula even though it meant lg-1 National Guard unit was consid-
nominious defeat. Prf,d ot* of the boneyards of the
MacArthur'* requirements were Ar[?’e G r - . ., .
so heavy that they could not have! _
been supplied without months of “' rf>',cu!? ;\arsha, 's a£"
preparation and transport. So the P°ffi,hlm t0 Sta"'
new Secretary of Defense did 'a'er .r^mendcd ^ t0
nncL’ _ vutn him thev never knew him
men mm kev pos“ Fhfte mt t0 My an>thing dpro^to^ oi th«
,• , ‘ n icrhtnincr Tr^ i Ct\\ man w^° blocked his promotion.
S iXSTaSZ tsz.'Srs, **2S
Staff, to Korea. He also reshuf-J ° Fa^ “f*’
fled MacArthur's command and j„a*.,n° af'l,?'rv?/
D:j_ „ decision had been made bv Pres-
sent Oen. iVlatt Rid^sv, anothei ;:j._»
tough combat commander, to Ko ^ J ^ ^a(Mfhe
Simultaneously, Gen. MacAr-
thur was relegated in fact to be \h^ d ith "
commander of Japan. Officially. PrnmenT' .?greea um i(l-___
MacArthur was still able to take i
tiie bows in public. But actually! At /Tii| Ta Prnua \Anir
the Korean War was run by,"' VUl 10 rrUVC JVllIl
Ridgeway through direct orders D/um Cjnn /V4 Cpriifitu
from Gen. Marshall. Gen. Collins WWfll Jiyil VI JCUIIllJf
and Gen. Omar Bradley. FORT WORTH f APi-Convaif'
and the Air Force have taken 37
WHAT THE U. S. Army was up leaders from West Texas towns
against in Korea was the sudden to Omaha. Neb., in an effort to
change in the tactics of the Chi- convince them sonic booms are
nese Army. For years the Chi- "the sound of security.'1
nese Army had retreated when The booms are made by jet
it rained, stopped for tea in the planes fiyiag faster than the speed
afternoon, never fought at night, of sound. Several flights bv Con-
But suddenly, under Communist yair’s B38 Hustler are scheduled
indoctrination, the y sw-amped over West Texas and sonic booms
American troops with wave after are expected,
wave of screaming, howling sac- Making the trip from Fort
rifice troops. Using these tactics,; Command headuarters were
they had pushed American /Srces -leaders from Fredericksburg,
back from near the Yaiu raver Brady, Llano, San Saba, Brown-
in one of the most shameful re- wood, Hamilton, Coleman and
j treats in American history.
It was after this that Gen.
Marshall unofficially? relieved
MacAjd»yr, replacing-him with
Gen. Ridgway. The latter devised
a new* technique of ordering
American lines to fall back one to
Kerrville.
565 Scholarships
By The National
Foundation Given
NEW YORK (Sp) - Nearly one-
half million dollars worth of schol-
arships were awarded to 565 U. S.
students during August and Sep- i f
tember by The National Founda-; ;
tion, it was announced today by]
Dr. Catherine Worthingham, di-
rector of the professional educa-j
fment. t
Included were the first 403 win-!
ners of The National Founda-.
tion's new Health Scholarships, j
Dr. Worthingham said. Health
Scholarships went to students in
every state in the union, with the
new states of Hawaii and Alaska:
i n o. t!i , H- aith i
Scholarships are worth $500 a year
for four years of college training
in the five key health fields of rusMI<T ....
medicine, nursing, physical ther- “"T . u 1«*
! apv, medical social work and oc- B' Counts' * research cnem-
■c . j ist, skillfully manipulate* a
Among other scholarships. 124 i hypodermic syringe with his
j worth $208,204 were awarded for
| the final one or t\w years of
study to allow students to com-
jplete their education in the field
j of physical therapy. Thirty-eight
j scholarships, worth $86,240, went!
i to help students complete require- j
‘ ments for a master's degree in:
! medical social work.
artificial hand* as hemakes
a laboratory test of an infra-
red sodium chloride cell at
the U. S. Army’s Aberdeen,
Md., Proving Grounds. He is
one of some 100 handicapped
civilians employed at the
Army installation.
CALIFORNIA'S
P % t) %£, utfdtL
* i.
mm
tail’
W and NEW TOWER
CoRfornio | World Famous Resort overlooking the Blue Pocific wKoro WM*
ikiro meets the sea. Twenty minutes from Interno’tonol Airport. 450 hrxtifi-
out rooms and bungalows, all with television and radio. Complete convention
facilities. Boequet rooms for up to 2,000, oir^onditioned. Exciting now
Vonetion Room and Cantonese Room Swimming pool . . Beautiful ground*
•ad landscaped gardens. Rotes from SB. Writ* William W. Donnelly Gen. Mgr.
Acres* the U.S.A. and in HAWAII
MASSAGLIA
CREST OF GOOD LIVING
JOStPH MAJSACtIA, )!.,
UUt CUM. M.*«l MttAUAI «.* 'ul Cl*v N(W TOCS IS
Sm M, CUM. H*tal JAIWTI CLAItl ».*)<*■ »■ C W***1 **UI6H
L. h lt«l CUM. HUU WIITON Cm. MS*
M. f a. u. h*hi n sancmo r«. >m»i ih*«wv«
». W. Hutal MAMCtSCA* C0. JIKTOa
IMS HtM WAtStSI IKTMOII W.w. -CU. HWI SAM LAM*
CHICAGO MiDWfST HEADQUaSTEIS
IOOKIN6 OFFICE 200 E. WALTON OE 7-4344
Wtrte k«W»—Iftotyp* nrvice—T«l«»ni»s
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 59, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 22, 1959, newspaper, October 22, 1959; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104514/m1/13/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.