The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1954 Page: 3 of 16
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THURSDAY, JULY I, 1954
THE SILSBEE BEE
l/fifai, Director, GAINES DOG RESEARCH CENTER
JOANNE CROSS, RuasELL, KAN.,
ONLY GIRL |NSCHOOL OF VET-
ERINARY MEPIONE, KANSAS
STATE COLLEGE, HAS 3 BROTHERS
WHO ARE PRACTICING VETERINAR-
IANS ANP A FOURTH WHO IS
A VETERINARY STUDENT
*T, A germanshepherp,
MASCOT OF THE U.S.TEAM, IS
THE WORLD'S ONLY BOB-
' 5LSPP/NG poc :
IN A.P. 565THE EMPEROR OF CHINA'
DOC WAS GIVEN THE RANK OF PURE
ANP RODE WITH HIM ON A HAT
PLACED IN FRONT F THE SAPPLE
V iKM, Gain»« Dog Research Ctntcr, N. If. C.
LiuleKnown
about your
the men Of THE battleship
mighty MO loss M.asoom)
IN ONE wEEA EAT 560
Gallons Of Soup. 17,000
POUNDS Of MEAT, 75.000
POUND5 Of VEGETABLES.
3,500 LOAVES Of HBEAO.
65,000 pounos of fwu'T,
and 5,250 gallons of
COffEE
THE MEN OF The csuisco USS
LOS ANGFLES amiosi theip
BOMBARDMENT hf WONSAN
HARBOR LOWFRED a SMALL BOAT
TO TAKE ICE CREAM TO the
QUO in ON
TWO OESTROVEO JARVIS
crewt-tcmbers UNDERWENT
APPENDECTOMIES during a
BRlEE -CEA5F. Fire" while their
SHIP was BOMBARDING the
north AOIlAN PORT Of WONSAN
%s>
"MR. PRESIDENT”
RcwaSD ARNOLD,
has played the pre-
sident op the as.
MORE TRAN ANY OTHER
DRAMATIC STAR IN HIS
many motion picture,
RADIO AND TV IZCL.ES.
HE IS ALSO ONE CP the
nation's top VOLUNTEER
6AVIN6C BONDS SALES-
MEN. AND HE PRACTICES
WHAT HE PREACHES
BECAUSE HE TELLS HI6
1 AUDIENCES:" WHY NOT
DO AS I DO? I SAVE
RESU'laRuv IN 6AVIN65
BONDS. FOR A SAFE
INVESTMENT VOU CanY
BEAT UNITED STATES SAWN6S BONDS. SAVINGS BONDS
ARE AS SAFE AND AS STRON6AS OUR FLAG ANO
OUR COUNTRY.'
HE CAME BACK
Admiral Robert e peary
REACHED the SOUTH POLE ON
APRIL 6,1909 actually HIS
PARTY PASSED RIGHT OVER THE
POLE, UNTIL PEARY FIGURED OUT
THE EXACT POSITION, RETURNED,
BUILT AN IGLOO, AND
REMAINET THERE FOR
3c HOURS,1
f?REEPOW TO
SAVE IS A PRE-
C'OLS AMERICAN
POQHT EVERY
PRESIDENT FRov\
WASHINGTON
TV EISENHOWER
MS ENCOURAGED
HOW IT BEGAN
COLUMBIA UNI-
VERSITY WAS FOUNDED IN PS4 AS KINGS
COLLEGE WITH AN ENROLLMENT OF 6 STUDENTS.
YOU CAN BEGIN
____iBUiuDiNfi
AN EDUCATION for your CHILDREN
THROUGH TH£ PAYROLL SAYINGS
PLAN WHERE you work:.
PACKAGED DESTRUCTION—Seven units of a •Matador"
pilotless bomber appear in this form Just before packaging. The
high-speed, deadly aircraft are constructed in seven units, which
are interchangeable with any other packaged bomber shipped
from the Glenn L. Martin Bomber plant in Baltimore, Md. Final
assembly is made by Armed Forces units, much as you'd assemble
parts from several model kits.
NATIONAL FARM SAFETY WEEK, 1954
Bf ika INMsI •/ As I/<M fee* •/ .Immim
A Jrorl
inti 11
WHKREAI more BCotknUi dealt* occur m formiAf thon hi Bay other
major iodurtry la ttUa country, and
WHEREAS a duobltng injury ttnkca •omr farm pernoo la America every
twenty «i* second*. on an awrage. aa the remit of an avoidable accident. and
WHEREAS thia appalling lorn can be greatly reduced by the eserciac
of care and caution on the part of farm people:
NOW. THEREFORE. I. DWIOHT D EISENHOWER. Prraident of the
United Statea of Amepdn. do hereby call upon the Nation to obeervt the week
beginning July IS. 1954. u National Farm Safety Week, and I urgently requeot
all farm rreidenta to make every effort to develop aafe work habits and skill*,
to that they may "Farm To Live and Live To Farm** I also request all peraona
and orgaiutationa interested in farm life and welfare to join in a campaign to
free as many farm homes as possible from the tragedies and losses caused by
needless accidents
IN WITNESS WHEREOF. 1 have hereunto set my hand and caused the
Seal of the United Statea of America to be affixed
DONE at the City of Washington this thirtieth day of March, in the yenr of
Our Lord nineteen hundred nnd
fifty four, and of the Independence
of the United States of A meric* the
one hundred and seventy eighth.
L
FARM CROPPERS-1954
RESPECT MACHINERY. Mistreated tractors can
be worse than wild horses.
HARE-RAISING EXPERIENCE - "Kirre," the rabbit. Is no
dumb bunny Clover, grass and garden vegetables aren’t for
him At left, he begs [or milk from owner Isidor Soderqvist, of
Stockholm, Sweden, and at right Kirre reaches for an apple—
his favorite fruit Sodeiqvist acquired his pet after Kirre'a
mother was killed during the hunting season.
Our Great America u< bf Mrri/ty
w
itfd rf roMt<
To NAMING
IMEi re
FOOT6AU TUSt*.
MOST AMERICAN
COUfY>f5 EWER
An imal4.
AMONG THE
eouwTsryls top
COUEGf flfVEd* TttfRf
A« 6 TEAM* CALIEP
TVSERS, 7 CALIEP MARC,
7 WILDCATS, S LIOECS,
9 panthers, 2 bobcats
AMO 2 COU4&ARS
SLEEK GREEK-Thi* shape-
ly Athenian model proves the
Greeks go tn for designing
bathing suits as heavily us do
Americans. The boldly printed
cotton suit is trimme<i with
white and has a matching
beach coaL
“MUDDER” LOVES HIM—
And only a mother could, in
this condition. Jockey Mike
Weismun, up on Mambo, had
just finished a race at Lincoln
Fields track, near Chicago, III.,
when this picture waa taken.
SPECIAL DEVILTRY —
There's something about a
! United States Mail parkage box
! that impels people to drop other
i things than mail in the slot.
' Carl K Marshall, Fort Worth,
Tex., post office claims chief,
\ exhibits a portion of a day’s
take: One cat, beer bottles,
wallets, wastepaper and ciga-
ret butts.
CARROT-TOP - Guiseppe
Archimboldo, 16th-Century pio-
neer of the surrealistic school,
had a market-place approach to
his art His "Greengrocer,”
above, now on exhibition in
Paris, is right out of the gar-
den. Other tasty subject* for
the Italian’s hungry brush in-
cluded crabs and fish.
PAGE THREE - SECTION ONI
A Forestry Career Offers
Opportunities to Young Men
vxiV* pp®
AimtIcm Fend Midi IMaMw FMt
An indaitrial forester five* practical pointers on woodland
management to a group of high school student*.
Meeting the wood requirements of a modem day nation takes
plenty of planning and technical “know how.” Among the men
providing these necessary talents are foresters.
Practically an unknown profession in the United States half •
century ago, forestry today offers
a promising nnd challenging
field for yo"i!" men seeking
careers with a future.
Time was when about the only
employment available to for-
esters, ami this for only a few,
was in federal or state conserva-
tion organisations. Thia is no
longer true. America’s wood-
using industries have taken in-
creasing responsibility for con-
servation and wise woodland
management. As a result, more
than 5,(XX) forrsters are em-
ployed by America’s forest in-
dustries. Another 1,200 for-
esters are working as consultants
or as managers of non-industrial
woodlands.
Industrial foresters work for
lumber companies, pulp and
paper manufacturers, plywood
and veneer mills, wood preserv-
ing companies, railroads, mining
companies and other industrial
woodland owners. While mod-
ern day forest industries produce
timber crops for today's markets
they also grow trees for
tomorrow’s.
Forester Has Many Jobs
The industrial forester'* as-
signments range all the way
from administrative planning to
the operation of tree nurseries
and planting programs. Fop
esters plan and supervise log-
ging; survey and build accea
roads into foreat areas; lay out
and direct forest protection and
fire fighting systems; cruise and
map timbrrland; direct cam*
paigns against tree-killing in-
sects and diseases; and carry out
studies designed to increase tim-
ber growth.
Where To Cel Information
In addition to all these
jolts on company woodlands,
many industrial foresters have
full-time or part-time jobs help-
ing small woodland owners with
tree growing and management
problems. All over the United
Statea industrial foresters are
encouraging their timherland
owning neighbor* to grow tree*
as a cash crop and manage their
woodlands so they can aualify
for membership in the industry-
sponsored American Tree Farm
System.
Educators advise high school
students interested in a forestry
career to study mathematics,
physics, chemistry and biology.
Liatings of forestry schools in
your state or ares can be ob-
tained from the nearest wood-
using industry.
EVERY CHILD WILL WANT ONE-Just the thmg for pre-
Christmas and birthday Inspections by small fry is this cargo
examining unit, u*ed by the Port of New York Authority. Sealed
cartons to be inspected are loaded into the machine and an
operator, at left, views an X-ray image projected on screen to
' check for contraband or undeclared articles.
PLEASANT “POINT OF PRIVILEGE”-R«y Jenkins, who
served as special counsel (or the Senate Investigating Subcom-
mittee during the Army-McCarthy hearings, really enjoys a "poini
of privilege" in his Knoxville, Tenn , home as he feeds his 20-
month-old granddaughter, Evalyn. some candy. Before returning
to Washington to correlate findiftMS of the committee, Jenkins
refused comment as to whether or not he’d become a candidate
for the Senate seat now held by Democrat Sen. Kates Kefauvtr.
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Read, Bob. The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1954, newspaper, July 1, 1954; Silsbee, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth770890/m1/3/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Silsbee Public Library.