The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 40, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 15, 1959 Page: 7 of 14
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Wir liHlomn §un Tuesday, September 15, 1959
MAN WITHOUT COUNTRY
WANTS PASSPORT BACK
MOSCOW (API— Nicholas Pet-; uenshlp He asked the Soviet par-1 FVtrulli came here Aug, 1! on ■
rulli, a man without a country, llament lor Soviet citizenship. Le-| regular Intourist visit far which he
said today he is willing to take ter he filed to withdraw his re- paid $968,
whatever comes along nunciation. I After arriving, he said he had
Petralll, 38. of Valley Stream, 1 etralli said the U S Emb«i*y | decided that in the Soviet Union
NY came here as a tourist, hut has not told him if withdrawal of "people are not hurrying around
handed hi* passport over to the L,‘ “ “ L~~
U S. Embassy with a signed state-
ment renouncing his American clt-
9*SS®
now irk
double feature
Tido'rJM.
couw fM luxx
Consequently, "K .would stay 1
here" if the Soviet government |
NOW SHOWING
2 BIG FEATURES
_
Biftenies
STm.J* —■-
Also On Same Program
NO NAME
ON THE
BULLET
.MKHtaimtimi ua*
A UMVUtSAL-HinmATlONM. NllK
his renunciation has been ap-'getting nervous' and square pegs
proved, and the Russians have arf p,,t in holes by a
not told him anything about hislpjanned economy"
nearly monthold application. | Pp(ru]ll M|d * had held ^
al jobs in the United Stales since
„ .. , ., . he received an army discharge
m Cl,l2cn*hip, told « |°r wt)at ^ a nervous
n.’tLiii .i„ ...m a. a.. breakdown In 1M5. hut none of the
I trulli also said he has heard j ^ j tfd |ongor ,han eight
nothing from his brothers in the ' *
Valley Stream area, nor has he Im '
received a reply to his request for: EitherId dn t like the boas or
j3nn , , the boas diriqt like me, he said.
He has return plane tickets “to Iconsiders himself a sheet met-
the United States hut needs mon- ** worker,
ley to settle his hills In the luxury] Petralll says now that “it does-
Hotel Ukraine where he has been n't look like I could go back,
living off the cuff for two weeks. j Asked what would happen if
neither the Soviet government nor
i the American government re-
sponds to his various requests,
| Petralll replied; "I suppose I
j would he a stateless person."
| He carries pictures of his di-
Svorced wife and 4-year-old daugh-
ter living in California but com-
plains the pictures "are not very
good."
His former wife, who operates a
| candy store in I-os Angeles, has
I indicated a willingness to take him
back.
NOW
THRU WEDNESDAY
tvaroics out * ft'*’
AOVBfME Of AU THE ^ *
\Siik Disney's /
mum
u\\
'm
Plus Halt Disney's 'Portugsl'
Sponsored by
JAYCEE-ETTES
^W^kSnkIhT^
"THE NAKED MAJA"
AVA GARDNER
HIT SO. t
"KING CREOLE"
F-I-VIS PRESI-EY
DSSOtAM
KERR
■OUANO
IRAZZI
wsussa CHEVALIER a-a- -
WE WILL BE CLOSED
THIS
WEDNESDAY
Throwing Papers Away Is
Problem In Washington
to throw away
WASHINGTON (API-If aome- jpartments from throwing away1
body hadn't done something about too much material that might be i
it, Washington long ago would L, historical value-lt'i
have bfH*n mA»h«l flat «■ a Po-
Uxium mud bank by th# ahffr ,ua(*
weight of paper. i enough.
If the government records that The accumulation of permanet-!
are thrown away each year were |ly kept record! now stands at 23,- j
collected for 10 years, they would tqo.000 cubic feet. The Archives j
^g,agg2Laa!p»i* .» r.to «,,
grown in the last two
Freedom on top and all.
But deciding what to
The piling up of papert be-1
came an acute problem after
World War II. Congress provided I
some help by authorising dispos-
al of some records after fixed;
timet- but new categories still |
require approval.
• One thing cheers the archivists)
| considerably: nobody, no far as
(they can remember, has ever j
Figs With Haircuts
Provided By Baiter
CHICAGO (AP> - Customers of
'Joe and Jerry Del Giudice get a
fig with each haircut.
The harboring brothers planted
a fig tree in the basement of their
shop. The tree grew so well a
hole was cut in the floor of the
shop. The tree grew so well a
hole was cut in the floor of the
shop.
The tree's leaves now ran
to the roof of the one-story shop.
The barbers' fig tree produces
about two bushels of fruit a year.
During the fig hearing season,
each customer gets a fig.
WINTER-BEIGE double-
faced French wool Jersey ie
used for a slim day drew belt*
ed by a gold chain. It'a from
the fall and winter collection
of Talmack, designed by John
Moore. One shoulder is softly
draped — the other, plain.
the Capitol building—Senate and.
House wings, dome, statue of, hasn t
• | years,
throw! The
away can be difficult.
An 1889 law requires Congress
to give Its permission before any
executive department records are
chucked out.
, This brought Into being perhaps
(he moat obscure *of all congres-
sional committees—the Joint Com-
mittee on Disposal of Executive
1 TwTL.m rj ,wimon on, come around and asked to see a
The main burden of decision o which thev had
what is expendable, however, falls f>f<* '5»« whiCh
on the staff of the National Ar-thr<,wn ,»*,?>:-
chives.
Thfy recommend—the commit-1.. , _
tee always approves UflbUSV BeaVWS
About 3.600,000 cubic feet of rec J
ords have been authorised for |
disposal this year—most of it to j
beVold *s, *Mtr .a_„ MILWAUKEE <AP> - Beavers,
card receipts signed by govern-*, ^ right tlm(. 1
Records' of State ’ Department For year* Wlsrot^ ^teFilb'll
fi^al inspection trips prior
Transcripts of lie detector tests «rat* their dun building tech-1
§s" b,«, ,*» srsaszvr '
Philip Bauer, who heads Ar-! This year the (air replaced
chives’ Service Division, says the j them with otters, the comedians of
problem isn't really to keep de- !the woods.
Lose Show Billing
OPEN TRADE WITH USSR
COULD BE PROSPEROUS
By SAM DAWSON , wants from us—machinery that
AP Business New* Analyst could be used to make armaments
NEW YORK (APi—Americans ;or .*« gnomic warfare-we
could ship thousnds of items to>won * *et Americans sell him.
the Soviet Union and have little | Khrushchev arrives Tuesday,
trouble finding hordes of custom- and he's made it plain he wants
ers who would like to have them to get more from us—on credit, ...— , ...
Moscow has the gold to pay for [If possible-and sell us more-for i tain are traditional traders with
them cash or barter doubtless. our West European allies. Both
the satellites and the West Euro-
only a tenth of one per cent of
our total foreign trade.
Die urge for more trade with j
the Communist bloc gets keene
as you go west from Moscow and
east from Washington. The satel-
lites to the east of the Iron Cur-
HALEY’S
Add thin slices of avocado to
(rosh°!emon%«PfiratetoS prevent1 U. S. purchasing agents could I And many of the commodities j j* *naJ™
discoloring | buy a number of commodities and1 and raw materials he will be try- j P«". I™n,ne’ “v*
mscoionng;-_j£w materials from the Soviet ,ing peddle while he's here we dustnally in the last five years.
Union and often at cut rate prices , don’t want Americans to buy be- Many of the goods we still ban
with little relation to the cost of; cause they’re already getting as strategic our European allies
production. ithem from our friends—to the , now will sell to the nearby Com-
So why is the trade between the general good of the Western al* munists. And officials have been
United States and the Soviet Union liance—and also because when we going back and forth to see how
VARIETY
227 W. TEXAS
Wm
M
toa dfti
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SAT'DAY
Ladies 60-15
NYLON HOSE
REG. 89c PR.
59
PR.
LADIES'
SKIRTS
Values to 2.98
t
98
LADIES'
PANTIES
Reg. 59c
44
DOUBL-LOK
Girls' Triple Cuff
SOCKS
Reg. 49c
3-1
BOYS' SOCKS
Values to 29c Pr.
4 ■■ 88
BOYS' CAPS
.00
50
Reg. 1.00
Vl
PRICE
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS
YuncheoiTspecial
PIMENTO CHEESE
SANDWICH ON TOAST
Values To
3.98
1
I €” 44'
AFTERNOON SPECIAL
SUNDAE
2:30 P.M. to 5:45 P.M. Only
Chocolate *
such a trivial stream and such a
fluctuating one?
Because in this case the words
tree trade are just empty jargon-
It's government controlled—more
or less on both sides.
The goods we could eefl Ivan—
consumer items—the Kremlin
won t let him buy. The goods So-
viet Premier rCikita Khrushchev
whatever
Inter-Party Feud
Threatens Texas
Demo Delegation
AUSTIN (API— An inter-party
squabble has blossomed over
statements that Texas may lose
delegates to the Democratic Na-
tional Convention in 1960 because
the state went Republican in 4952
and 1956.
Mrs. R. D. Randolph of Hous-
ton, Democratic national commit-
teewoman, has accused national
committeeman Byron Skelton ofjj™
Temple of “questioning the In- ‘
tegrity of the members of the na-
tional committee."
Skelton said earlier in the week
he feared “possible skulduggery”
from the national committee,
which he said may take eight bo-
nus votes away from Texas be-
cause of the 1952 and 1956 support
of Eisenhower.
The bonus votes were given to,
Texas because the state went
Democratic in the 1948 election.
The Dallas Times Herald said
Friday Texas will gain six votes,
boosting the state's total to 62.
The newspaper said notification
of suggested delegate allotments
was mailed to members of the
national committee. The figures,
subject to ratification by the na-
tional committee on Wednesday,
probably will be made public Sun-
day.
gamer and spend
goods it will consent to buy and
we will consent to seU.
RFYcREND
did get them from the Soviet trade can be stepped up
Union they were subject to sudden But even if Khrushchev doesn t
embargo as political policies die-,get all the trade concessions he
tated | hopes from his visit here, he has
Here is how our trade with the f *
g'T^'Td dowTwath^m,'^ ‘'r£lh“
sra sw “* g»
In the first five months of this
year our Soviet imports came to
12 million dollars and our exports
to 3 million dollars. In 1958 we
bought 1714 million dollars worth
and sold 3V4 million.
The biggest items we bought
were benzene, scientific instru-
ments, wood pulp and furs. Mostly
they bought equipment for plastic
pipe, synthetic fiber, and milk-
product processing plants, and
crop seeds, tallow, butyl alcohol,
stereophonic, radio, TV and hear-
ing aid equipment.
Americans have tried to sell
more to the Communist bloc than
this. They have applied this year
for licenses to sell some 40 mil-
lion dollars worth of goods, and
Washington has rejected most of
strategic, or potentially
strategic, materials, Example:
steel pipelines.
In this decade the best export
year was 1956 with almost 4 mil-
lion dollars worth of goods going
to the Soviet Union, and the low-
est volume was $19,000 in 1953, At
best our trade with the Russians is
What To Do With 24
Old Capital Columns
WASHINGTON (AP) - A com-
pany has abandoned plana to give
away chunks ol the Capitol’s old
columns as soap premium.
The 24 historic columns were
dismantled to make way for an
extension of the Capitol’s east
front, and officials are trying to
figure out what to do with them.
Results? Sun Classifieds Get 'Em!
By Bin O’Mdtey
TRADES DAY ONLY
Our Regular 85c order Fried
Chicken or
Gizzards
59
Our Regular $1.25 Order
All White
Chicken
89
WATCH EACH TUES. FOR OUR
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
BROWN’S
CHICKEN SHACK
PHONE JU 2-9590
EAST TEXAS AVE. AT HIGHWAY 144 '
Home of Baytown's famous "Doubleburger"
and Golden Brown Fried Chicken
SPECIAL BACK-TO-SCHOOL OFFER!
$150
1 wee*c
| per
Brook Hays Lesson-Loan Plan
LOW-COST TRIAL OFFER
...Here's What You Get:
A Piano or Organ to for Only
practice on.
Private Lessons—Graduate
Teacher
All Music and Materials 222 E. TEXAS
BROOK MAYS
JU 2-8083
John Cullen Murphy
BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITh
IT SHORE WILL BE GOOD
TO HAVE A 6XTRV
HAND TO HELP OUT
WIF TH' PLOWIN'.
WOOD CHQPP1N',
FENCE MENDIN'
AN1 'TATER
GRUB8IN’
Rv Fred Lossv-ell
pr
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 40, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 15, 1959, newspaper, September 15, 1959; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104749/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.