MANILA~HONG KONG~SAIGON SINGAPORE~DJAKARTA … Page 25 to 40.pdf · 2015. 7. 3. ·...
Transcript of MANILA~HONG KONG~SAIGON SINGAPORE~DJAKARTA … Page 25 to 40.pdf · 2015. 7. 3. ·...
BIGGEST OLIVE SHIPMENT--The largest shipment ofolives ever to come into the Port of Houston was unloadedlast montl, from Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., Inc’s LIPSCOMBLYKES. Covering an entire wharf, the 3800 barrels weighedclose to 1.5 million pounds and came from Seville, Spain.E. D. "Doe" Martin, shipping clerk for Lykes Bros., standshere among the barrels which were distributed to processingphmts.
Delta Elects Board ChairmanF. Evans Farwell was elected chairman of the board of
directors of Delta Line {Mississippi Shipping Co.. Inc.)last month to suceed the late George G. Westfeldt, Sr.
Also. George G. \Veslfeldt, Jr., was elected a direetor ofthe steamship company.
Farwell is active in the American Sugar Cane League,American Society of Sugar Cane Technologists, the Hemis-phere International Corporation and the l)elgado-AlbaniaPlantation Commission. He was first elected a director ofDelta Line in 1956 then named ~iee chairman of the boardin 1960.
Westfeldt is a partner of ~*estfeldt grothers, Inc.. NewOrleans coffee firm, and a director of the Hibernia NationalBank. D. H. Holmes Co., Ltd., and the National CoffeeAssociation.
HOU-TEX LAUNDRY& CLEANING CO.
6835 Harrisburg Phone WA 6-2644
HARRISON LINE
~NFrequent Service U.S. Gulf toLIVERPOOL, MANCHESTER
SAFE, SPEEDY and EXPERT HANDLING
LANC-PARR, INC. u. ~,G~ENTsERALEXCHANGE BUILDING, HOUSTON
New Orleans ¯ Memphis ¯ Dallas ¯ Galveston
C. T. O. LINECompagnie Maritime des Chargeurs Reunis
OPERATING FAST FRENCH FLAG MOTORSHIPSDIRECT FROM
U.S. GULF PORTS TO
MANILA~HONG KONG~SAIGONSINGAPORE~DJAKARTA
PENANG#r
SAILINGS EVERY 3 WEEKS
~r
E. S. BINNINGS, INC.Gulf Agents
COTTON EXCHANGE BUILDING, HOUSTON, TEXAS
OfficesGALVESTON--NEW ORLEANS--DALLAS--MEMPHIS
~r
General Agents for North America and the CaribbeanBLACK DIAMOND S/S CO., 2 BROADWAY, N. Y.
service tosuit your needs!
To Canal Zone,Panama, Colombia, Ecuador,Peru, Bolivia and Chile.
1 FromNEW YORK, PHILADELPHIAand BALTIMORE
2 FromNEW ORLEANS, HOUSTON,GALVESTON and MOBILE
3 FromMONTREAL andEASTERN CANADIAN PORTS
WEST COAST LINE, INC.New York ¯ 67 Brood St. ° Tek WHitehall 3-9600
New Orleans. American Bank Bldg..Tel. 524-6751
FEBRUARY, 1962 25
TheBANK LINE Ltd.Regular Service from
U. S. Gulf Ports to
Australiaand
New/ealand¯ Brisbane
¯ Melbourne
¯ Auckland
¯ Lyttleton
¯ Sydney
¯ Adelaide
¯ Wellington
¯ Dunedin
mum
General Agents
BOYD, WEIR and
SEWELL, Inc.New York
mmm
Gulf Agents
STRACHAN
SHIPPING CO.
Houston - Galveston - Mobile
Memphis-New Orleans-Dallas
Chicago - Atlanta - St. Louis
Kansas City - Cincinnati
Rail Shipments Are Expedited To PortBy Houston Belt and Terminal System
In 1905, an already mushroomingindustrial complex in [-Iouston placeda heavy burden on the city’s transporta-tion facilities.
Railroad leaders in the communitysaw a need for a co-operative railwayservice to exDedite the mass movementof commodities in and out of Houston--using existing track of the variousrailroads on an interchange basis.
Thus the Houston Belt and TerminalRailway Co. was born.
The new company formed around anucleus of property owned in Houstonbv the Santa Fe, which was leased toH’.B. and T. for 99 years.
At that time, Houston had a popula-tion of only 79,000, and the H.B. andT., after a year’s service, served only 10industries.
Today the "Belt" system has gro~.nfrom a score of miles of track and ahandful of employees to an organizationwith 200 miles of track, 1600 employeesand an ammal payroll of $10 million.
The Belt today serves more than 600industries.
Ship Channel industries are served bythe Port Terminal Railroad Associationwhich makes an interchange with theH.B. & T. in the North Yards.
The member lines of the Belt--SantaFe, Missouri Pacific, Rock Island andBurlington--pour approximately $6 mil-lion into Houston’s eeonomy in expendi-tures for supplies, said J. T. Alexan-der, president and general manager.
"The Belt system has contributedgreatly to the Houston area’s industrialgrowth," said Alexander.
From an infant system that first op-erated over 20 miles of Santa Fe trackbetween Galveston and Houston, the
Belt’s member lines now have connectingroads to every corner of the nation.
The H.B. and T. has an elastic ex-pansion program geared to keep pacewith the constant industrial growth ofthis area.
New ChemicalPlant Is Started
The Marbon Chemical Division ofthe Borg-Warner Corp. has announcedplans to build a plant at Baytowu toproduce 75 million pounds of styrenea vear.
The plant will be erected adjacent tothe huge Humble Baytown Refinery atan estimated cost of $5 million.
Its raw material, ethyl-benzene, willbe provided by the Humble refinery.
Construction of the Baytown plant isexpected to be completed early in 1963.
Recently another styrene plantreached its full capacity of 70 millionpounds a year. This is the plant oper-ated by the Sinclair-Koppers ChemicalCorp. on La Porte Rt. Near Allen-Genoa Rd.
Styrene is a major ingredient in syn-thetic rubber and plastics.
The Borg-Warner Corp. operates aplastics plant near Parkersburg, W. Va.,
and Marbon produces high-styrene re-iuforcing resins for the rubber industryat Gary, Ind.
CABLE: MAHCO FMB 2187
Maher & CompanyCustomhouse Brokers- Foreign Freight Forwarders
Members: Custom Brokers & Forwarders Association of America, Inc.
416-420 International Trade Mort 834 Bettes Building
New Orleans 12, Louisiana Houston, Texas
TUlane 7566 FAirfax 3.4101
T~VX-301 TWX.735
26 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
CROWN STEVEDORINGCOMPANYCONTRACTING
STEVEDORE
Houston -- GalvestonTexas City -- Freeport
324 SHELL BUILDINGHOUSTON, TEX.
Ph.: CA 2-0751 Telex HO 850Cable: Crownstev
E. S. Binnings, Inc.Steamship Agents
1114 TEXAS AVE. BLDG.Telephone: CApitol 5-0531
HOUSTON, TEXAS
C.T.O. LINE(Manila and Far East)
O.S.K. LINE(Far East)
FRENCH LINE(French Atlantic)
HANSA LINE(Med./Red Sea/Perslan Gulf)
GRANCOLOMBIANA LINE
Central America, Colombia, Ecuador, PeruPanama via Cristobal
OFFICESNEW ORLEANS HOUSTON
MEMPHIS GALVESTONST. LOUIS DALLAS
NEW SERVICE STARTED--Opening for Houston a new monthly service to theCaribbean with the arrival of tile LUCIANA, Hansen & Tidemann, Inc., agents forthe new service, entertained shippers and port officials at luncheon aboard ship.Shown here leaving the ship, from left, Svend Hansen, Jr., Hansen & Tidemann,Inc.; Captain E. Gebert, LUCIANA master; O. F. Luer and J. W. (]lift, MetallicBuilding Company; J. P. Hamblen, Navigation District commissioner; and B. W.White, vice-president sales, Hansen & Tidemann, Inc. Metallic Building Contpanyshipped 18 prefabricated buildings on the LUCIANA to Barbados to go up at the1962 West Indies Federation Fair. Bookers Eastern Caribbean Services of Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, offers the regular and independent service between the U. S. Gulfand the ports of Trinidad, Port-of-Spain and Georgetown. Transshipment facilitiesare available for eight other ports in the British West Indies Federation.
Shipbuilding Contracts AwardedShil)building contraets worth $18<
618,000 were signed recently betweenLykes Bros. Steamship Company, Inc..Gulf & South American Steamship Coin-pany, Inc. The Maritime Subsidy Boardand Avondale Shipyards, Inc.
Four 11,195 ton (:argo ships will bebuilt for Lykes and two similar vesselsfor Gulf & South American bv A~on.
dale Shipyards of New Orleans.Principal characteristit’s of the ships
include a length of 495 feel, width of69 feet, total DWT capacity of 11,195tons, approximate cargo t:apacity of9,000 tons or 600,000 cubic feet.
Work began on the ships immediateh-with keel laying of the first ship tenta-tively scheduled for late February.
Texas Transport & Terminal Co., Inc.
Cable AddressTERMINAL HOUSTON
Tel: CA 5-5461
HOLLAND-AMERICA LINETo
Havre~Dunkirk-Rotterdam~AmsterdamAntwerp~Ghent-Bremen~Hamburg
CREOLE LINE(Navigazione Alta Italia)
ToGenoa, Naples, Venice, Trieste,
Savona, Leghorn, Rijeka, andMediterranean and North African ports.
STEAMSHIP AGENTS(Established 1895)
THE TEXPORTS STEVEDORE CO., INC.Cotton Exchange Building
Contracting Stevedores Houston, Texas
OFFICESIfouston, Texas
Galveston, TexasChica~zo, Ill.
SHINNIHON LINETo
Yokohama-Kobe-OsakaNagoya-Yokkaichi
VENEZUELAN LINE(C. A. Venezolana de Navegacion)
ToLa Guaira, Puerto Cabello, Maraeaibo,
Guanta, Puerto La Cruz, and otherVenezuelan ports.
New Oreans, l.a. New York, N. "C. ]~rowusville, Texas *temphis, Teml.Charleston, S. (’. I’hi|adelphia, Pa. Corpus Christi, Texas St. ].-uis, M,.Savannah, Ga. Baltilnore, Md. Dallas, Texas
FEBRUARY, 196227
THE NUCLEAR AGE
The Galveston plant of Todd Ship-yards Corporation has been designatedby the Maritime Administration as the
central servicing site for the world’sfirst nueh’ar merchant ship, the N. S.SAVANNAH. This includes drydock-tug. repair, maintenance and refuelingof the ship.
Compania Sud Americana de VaporesExpress Freight Service From
HOUSTON ̄ GALVESTONMOBILE ¯ NEW ORLEANS
AND OTHER PORTS AS CARGO OFFERS
TO
PERU ̄ BOLIVIA ¯ CHILE29 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Tel. WHitehall 3-8600
Gulf Agents
STRACHAN SHIPPING CO.NEW ORLEANS ¯ HOUSTON ¯ MOBILEGALVESTON ¯ CHICAGO ¯ ST. LOUISCINCINNATI ¯ DALLAS ¯ KANSAS CITY
MEMPHIS ̄ ATLANTA
C of C Adds NewMan To WorldTrade Staff
\Vayne Carroll. executive secretary of
the Houston Junior Chamber of Com-merce for the last two years, has ])een
named assistant manager of the WorhtTrade ])epartment, Chamber of Com-merce, President George T. Morse. Jr.
all l’lOU need.
A native of \Vaeo, Carroll has bache-lor of business administration andmaster of science degrees from Baylor[Iniversity where he majored in eco-nomics of international trade.
He and Manager Felix Prieto ~ill
staff the Chamber’s first branch officea world trade office in the ne~ \VorldTrade Center Building.
BEN H. MOOREINSURANCE
MARINE - CASUALTY - FIRECable: MOORDEEN
JAckson 8-5511 P. 0. Box 13195
New Lykes Ship IsOnMaidenVoyacje
Lykes Bros. Steamship Co.. Inc., hastaken delivery of its ninth new $10 mil-lion cargoliner following its compleli(mFebruary 2 by the shipbuilding divisionof the Bethlehem Steel Corp., at Spar-rows Point, Maryland.
The new ship. the S. S. l,eslie Lykes,i~s named for Leslie Anne Lykes. ll-
year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Joseph T. Lykes, Jr., of Ne~ Orleans.Lykes is a senior vice l)resident anddirector of Lykes lanes.
Scheduled to load cargo for betmaiden ~oyage at New Orleans. Hous-ton and Galw’ston, the ship will sail toMediterranean ports in Spain. halv.Greece and Morroco. Construction ofthe ship was begun on December 27.1960 and it was launched on July 2(I.]961.
Tim Leslie Lykes is 195 feet long andhas a 69 foot beam. She displaces 16.-370 tons and has 568,830 cubic feet ofgeneral cargo space, inchldiug 12.000cubic feet of special locker space forhighly valuable cargoes requiring extrasecurity while in transit.
Tell Us, Ij" It’s WrongHas there t)een a change in your address since ~e started sending you the Port
of Houston Magazine? Sometimes these things arc merlooked in the hurry ofdoing business. So, will you take a second now and check the address on thisissue. If it is not exactly as it should be, please write and giw, us the correctname and address.
~~~~ Fastest Servicebetween HOUSTON - OTHER U. S. GULF PORTS-
EAST COAST SOUTH AMERICA and WEST AFRICASailing Schedules You Can Depend On ̄ Weekly to South America ̄ Twice Monthly to Africa
MISSISSIPPI SHIPPING CO., INC., NEW ORLEANSFIDELITY BANK BLDG., HOUSTON CA 7-5101
NEW YORK CHICAGO ST. LOUIS WASHINGTON
28 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
Meet Edna Mae
MALDEN OF THE SEA GETS FACE LIFTINGMiss Edna May is a real sweetheart.
She’s just turned 24, but doesn’t look aday over sweet 16. You don’t have tohave a seaman’s eye to appreciate herfull round curves and trim beauty. Andthe proud way she carries herself is apleasure to behold.
Edna May first took up with seafaringmen on July 31, 1937. Now, almost aquarter-century later, she reigns as thesweetheart of the fleet.
Born in the Platzer Shipyard, EdnaMav was named for another beautifulnative Houstonian, Miss Edna MayParker. This Edna May is Captain BillParker’s daughter. Now her name haschanged to Mrs. Norman Busse.
From the first, Edna May’s life hasbeen an interesting one. The warm wa-ters of tile Gulf of Mexico were hercradle. She teethed on the white spill ather bow. Barges of oyster shell were herplaymates. She ran before the tide andcavorted in the whitecaps with the bestof them. In those good years the GulfCoast was her playground.
Sometimes it was rough. Back beforethe Intracoastal Canal was completed, itwas all blue-water work for the ParkerBrothers’ tugs. Edna May early had op-portunity to test her mettle against thestorm-swept sea. She was called on tomake several runs out in rough weatherafter dredges in danger. She always man-aged to bring them in safely.
Then came the great war. Like otherseagoing folk, Edna May turned to withcharacteristic fervor. With Captain O. V.Parker at the helm, Edna May estab-lished a reputation for dependability asshe towed crude oil barges from HighIsland through submarine-infested wa-ters to Chalmette, Louisiana.
One adventure during the War standsout in Edna May’s memory. It occurredin October, 19’1.2. The word came in--"Hurricane! Tug sunk, Barge Petroleum#1 adrift--filled with water and aban-doned." It was urgent that this bargebe recovered. So out went Edna May,with Captain George Singleton on watch,and Captain Briscoe Parker aboard tosupervise the salvage operations. Thebarge was found driven onto the beachbetween Point Bolivar and High Island.
It was night when Edna May ran into the beach to effect the salvage. Opera-tions were more difficult because of thewartime blackout which precluded theuse of lights. Captain Briscoe got pumpsaboard the barge and pumped her out.
Captain Briscoe relates that the mosqui-toes were so thick you could hardly see.
Then Edna May took hold and slippedthe barge neatly off the beach. Severalhours later Edna May nudged the sal-vaged barge snugly up against pier 18at Galveston. It was a rough, dangerousjob "well done."
As you know by now, Edna May isone of the nine tugs in the Parker Broth-ers fleet. She operates out of Houston.Her Captain now is Captain E. W. Ewald.She carries a crew of nine. Edna Mayspends most of her time towing oystershell to Houston. She makes the 200mile trip in from the reefs in about 44hours, with three loaded barges in tow.
Recently, Edna May came out of theyard after extensive rebuilding and re-fitting. Her wheelhouse was raised, so thehelmsman can see over barges piled highwith oyster shell. Aso in the wheelhouse,there is a new hydraulic steering gear,
and new radar. An all-new bottom wasbuilt and fitted in the yard. Edna Maywas lengthened by 72 inches, and herstern was changed from round to square.These changes give Edna May more sta-bility for pushing, and make her easierto handle under load.
But the biggest change came in theengine room. A powerful new GM tan-dem V-12-71 engine installation wasmade by Stewart & Stevenson Services.Inc., Houston. Some features of the newpropulsion system are 5 to 1 Falk reduc-tion gears, a 66" by 48" four blade pro-peller, and a Westinghouse air-controlledpneumatic brake on the propeller shaft.This brake operates automatically fromthe wheelhouse. When direction is shiftedthe air brake stops rotation of the shaft.then releases it to begin turning withopposite rotation. The object is to cutshock on the engine, and to give quickresponse.
Whatever your cargo...CUNARD has the rightships, facilities, experience ,(i
Fast, regular service betweenLiverpool, Manchester,London and Glasgow andGulf Ports in ships of theCunard and Brocklebankfleets.
There is no better way!
CUNARD LINENEW YORK 25 BroadwayCHICAGO 41 So. LaSalle St.CLEVELAND 1040 Union Commerce Bldg.
FUNCH, EDYE ~ CO., INC. Gulf General Agents
NEW ORLEANS 1415 American Bank Bldg.ST. LOUIS ¯ HOUSTON ¯ GALVESTON
DALLAS ̄ MEMPHIS Alexander Shipping Co.CORPUS CHRISTI Boyd-Campbell Co., Inc.BROWNSVILLE Philen Shipping Co.MOBILE Page & Jones, Inc.PENSACOLA ¯ TAMPA Fillett Green & Co.
CU NARDFEBRUARY, 1962 29
Buildings Sh,ppedThrough HoustonFor Barbados Fair
NEW BARGE LAUNCHED--Immediately after launching, a tug is pushing a newbarge to the dock at Todd Shipyard Corporation’s plant. This is the first of twoheated asphalt barges built for the National Maritime Service, Inc., of Houston andNew York. Heating coils and thorough insulation make it possible for each bargeto carry nearly 16,000 barrels of asphalt at a constant temperature of 350 degrees.The Port of Houston’s new Bulk Materials Handling Plant is across the channeland close inspection reveals a string of railcars which are ready to he unloaded.
IS YOUR NAME RIGHT?Please check this issue of the Port of Houston Magazine to see if we have
your name right in the address space. If there is a change, please notify us atP. O. Box 2562, Houston, Texas.
CENTRAL GULFDIRECT TO
MEDITER~.-~DDLE EAST,PAKISTAN, INDIA, CEYLON
¯ Fast, modern freighters--schedules that are saving days
in sailing time--highest frequency of sailings to leading
ports in the Middle-Near East--regular American Flag
service to Massawa, Djibouti--ship and shore staffs you
can depend on in emergencies.
U.S. GULF AND ATLANTIC PORTS TO:
Azores ̄ Casablanca ̄ Cadiz ̄ Barcelona ̄ Tripoli ¯ GenoaNaples ̄ Venice ¯ Trieste ¯ Rijeka ¯ Piraeus ¯ AlexandriaBeirut ¯ Jeddah ̄ Massawa ¯ Djibouti ¯ Khorramshahr ̄ BandarShahpur ¯ Dammam ¯ Kuwait ¯ Basrah ¯ Karachi ¯ BombayMadras ̄ Cochin ̄ Calcutta ¯ Chittagong ¯ Chalna ̄ Colombo
Eighteen pre-engineered steel build-lugs, which will serve as the major dis-play area for a big Caribbean trade fairand exposition this spring, have beenshipped from the Port of Houston bythe Metallic Building Company.
Bound for the island of Barbadoswhere the): will be erected for the 1962West Indies Federation Fair. these pre-fabricated buildings represent one of thelargest such orders shipped from thePort, tonnagewise. Total weight is ap-promiately 325,000 lbs.
Ranging in size. when erected, from20 x 10 feet to 80 × 200 feet. the Metallicbuildings will offer o~er 100,000 en-closed square fret of display area.
The buildings also will add to the eveappeal of the Fair as they will be con-structed of blue and green wall panelsand topped with white panel roofs. Panelcolors are vinyl, baked on at the factoryover galvanizing, to give added protec-tion against wear and corrosion.
Opening date for the Barbados expo-sition is March 2. Virtually every islandand country in the Caribbean will berepresented with an exhibit of productsand wares.
The new prefahrieated structures arethe first of their type on Barbados, al-though not the first used by the Fairwhose silo rotates every three years be-tween Jamaica, Trinidad and Barbados.Last year Metallic supplied two buiht-lugs for the exhibits held on Jamaica.
Following the close of the 1962 Fair.the Metallic buildings will be removedto permanent sites on Barbados wherethey will be used in such capacities asschools, industry installations and clinics.
Standings Given forMaritime League
Halfway through the season, the E. S.Binnings "Bounders" emerged as theteam to beat in the Maritime BowlingLeague.
Other teams listed in the order of theirstandings were: Michels’ Hed Labels.Strachan’s F.O.B.’s, Eagle Ocean’s(,olden Greeks. Zanes’ Shipwrecks, LykesBag Knots, Strachan’s Bues, Biehl’sBarons, Dalton’s Nauts and the Marches-sini Mariners.
L. D. Bangard of Ernst Cohn CottonCompany is president of the league. LeoRuiz of W. R. Zancs & Co. is vice presi-dent and J. A. Paul of Straehan ShippingCo. is secretary-treasurer.
CORPORATION~ New Orleans Houston New York Galveston
Hibernia BId’~ I 114 Texas Av(. Bldq 19 Rector SI 415 U S National Bank Bldg.
30 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
SPEAKERIR. B. Stewart, vice presi-(lent of the natural gas department of thePhillips Petroleum Co., Bartlesville, Okla-homa, will speak on, "A Glimpse Insideof Russia" at a Women’s Traffic Club ofHouston dinner, February 26, at the RiceHotel. He made a 7,000 mile, four-weektour of tile Soviet Union last July with aUnited States gas industry delegation. Theclub members will honor their bosses atthe meeting.
BRODHEAD PROMOTED
W. C. Brodhead. departmental co-ordinator of transportation in the Pitts-hurgh headquarters of Gulf Oil Corpo-ration, has been named manager of themarine department with headquartersin New York. He succeeds the late CarlF. Vander Clutc. He has worked in thetransportation department since 1926.
14 Barges AddedBy Chotin Towing
The newest barge in Chotin TowingCorporation’s fleet was scheduled to com-plete its maiden trip from Houston toChicago during the last week in January.
The barge, a 178-foot-long, all-steel,double-skin petro-chemical carrier, is thelast of 14 new barges to be added tothe Chotin fleet during 1961, accordingto Capt. Scott Chotiu, secretary-treasurerof the company.
The new barge will discharge about500,000 gallons of ltetro-chemicals inChicago for the Shell Chemical Corpo-ration. The chemicals, Methyl IsobutalKetone and lsopropil Alcohol, were
loaded at Shell’s plant in Houston, Capt.Chotin said.
Cargo capacity of the barge is about1700 tons at eight feet, six inches draft.The liquid volume is about 13,600barrels.
The barge interior consists of eightcargo compartments and ten void com-partments, Capt. Chotin said. The barge,he said, features inner bulkheads of cor-rugated plate and outer bulkheads ofbuilt-up angle stiffener. The barge is 50feet wide and 13 feet, seven inches high.The barge contains heating coils to ac-commodate cargoes that require specialheat treatment.
The Chotin company plans further ex-pansion of its muhi-million dollar fleetduring 1962, Capt. Chotin said. Sew’ralbarges are under construction, with morescheduled to be built, he said.
FAST FREIGHT, REEFER, DEEP TANK AND PASSENGER SERVICE
JOINT 5ERVICEU. S. Gulf/Far East Service Fearnley & Eger, Oslo, Norway
A. K. Klaveness & Co. A/SSAILINGS FROM: Lysaker, Norway
HOUSTON. GALVESTON " MOBILE" NEW ORLEANSTHREE MONTHLY SAILINGS to Manila and Hong Kong,Saigon, Bangkok, Djakarta and SingaporeFREQUENT CALLS AT TEXAS OUTPORTS AS CARGO WARRANTS
FEARNLEY & EGER, INC.39 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, N. Y. DI. 4-3770
AOENTS: BIEHL & COMPANYCOTTON EXCHANGE BLDG., HOUSTON, TEXAS, CApitol 2-9961
Dalton Steamship CorporationSHIP AGENTS AND OPERATORS
TERMINAL OPERATORS AND STEVEDORES
Agents for."
COLDEMAR LINE ¯ CONCORDIA LINE
CUBA_MAR LINE ¯ N.Y.K. LINE ¯ POLISH OCEAN LINE
CARGO TRANSPORT LINE
FIDELITY BANK BUILDING
Cables "DALSHIP" ¯ Teletype HO-17
KVARNERSKA PLOVIDBA LINE
HOUSTON 2, TEXAS
¯ Telephone CA 8-866110 LINES
Offices in GALVESTON, BEAUMONT, PORT ARTHUR, DALLAS, NEW ORLEANS, MEMPHIS andMOBILE
FEBRUARY, 1962 31
HELLENIC LINES
REGULAR
EXPRESS
SERVICE
From Gulf Ports
to
* MEDITERRANEAN
PORTS
¯ RED SEA PORTS¯ PERSIAN GULF
INDIA, PAKISTAN
CEYLON AND BURMA
Heavy Lifts
Deep Tanks
Refrigerated Space
PassengerAccommodations
HELLENICLINES, Ltd.NEW YORK: 39 BROADWAY
NEW ORLEANS: 319 INTER-NATIONAL TRADE MART
HANSENAND
TIDEMANNAGENTS AT
HOUSTONCORPUS CHRISTI
GALVESTONMOBILEDALLAS
MEMPHIS
Chicago Trade ConferenceWill Be Held February 25-26
Howard C. Petersen, special assistantto President Kennedy for the develop-ment of a new U. S. foreign trade pro-gram, will be the keynote speaker ofthe 25th Chicago World Trade Confer-ence at the opening luncheon on Febru-ary 26.
The Port of Houston will have alarge delegation attending the meetings.The Houston Hospitality Room will beopen from 4 to 8 p.m. February 26.
Petersen, who is president of the Fi-delity-Philadelphia Trust Company andxiee chairman of the Committee on Eco-nomic Development, was appointed lastAugust to study the reciprocal tradeagreements program in view of expira-
tion next June 30 of the extension actof 1958. He is charged with the formu-lation of legislative proposals and thecoordination of activities of all depart-ments concerned with the trade agree-ments program.
Theme of the quarter-century Chi-cago World Trade Conference, whichhas been sponsored since its inceptionby the Chicago Association of Com-merce and Industry and the Inter:ra-tional Trade Club of Chicago, is"International Trade Through PrivateEnterprise Challenge and Opportnnityfor the Free World." The 1962 meetingwill be held February 26-27 in the Pick-Congress Hotel.
New, Fast Service To AustraliaA new service connecting Houston
and other Gulf ports with Australia, tobe known as the Boomerang line. willbe started in March.
Dalton Steamship Corporation, U. S.Gulf agents for the Swedish Orient Line,announced that the new service wouldgo direct to the Australian ports ofBrisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and Ade-laide.
The modern Swedish tlag motor shipsused in the service will have a minimum16 knot speed and will offer the fastesttransit time from Gulf ports to Aus-tralia.
Garzia & Diaz, Inc. have been namedNew 3ork solicitation agents and Sea-lanes Internatimml, Inc., Chicago ha~ebeen named for the mid-west.
INDUSTRY ON CHANNEL
If you are interested in tire scores ofindustries located on the Houston ShipChannel, you may get a map shinningthe industrial area by writing to thePort of Houston, P. O. Box 2562,Houston, Texas.
ilogol ildhcrland$ Sleamship Uompamj25 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 4, N. Y.
Regular Sailings fromMobile, New Orleans and Houston
WEEKLYTo La Guaira, Puerto Cabello and Trinidad
EVERY TWO WEEKSTo Maracalbo, Curacao, Aruba, Carupano, Guanta, Georgetown and
Paramaribo
EVERY FOUR WEEKSTo Pampatar
Agents
STRACHAN SHIPPING COMPANYHOUSTON - NEW ORLEANS - MOBILE - CHICAGO - ST. LOUIS - CINCINNATI
DALLAS - KANSAS CITY - MEMPHIS - ATLANTA
FUNCH, EDYE & CO., INC.NEW YORK - DETROIT
32 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
TODD APPOINTMENTS--Todd Shipyards Corporation’sHooston plant has placed A. E. Allan, left, chief engineerin charge of industrial fabrication sales and new productdevelopment and has named J. B. Hrooks, right, sales co-ordinator for barge and towboat sales as well as sales coordi-nation within tile phmt and with other Todd Divisions. L. E.Gilbreath, general manager of Todd’s Houston plant, saidthe new appointments are part of a stepped-up marketingprogram.
AN AMERICAN FLAG FREIGHTER
Every 10 Days
Fast, efficient cargo handlingfrom Gulf Ports to Panama*, theWest Coast of South America.
GULF & SOUTH AMERICANSTEAMSHIP CO.
821 Gravier Street, New Orleans, Louisiana
In other cities contact Lykes or Grace
*South bound New Or[eans/C.Z. cargo subiect to special Booking arrangements
N.Y.K. LINETwice Monthly Service To
JAPANESE PORTSDALTON STEAMSHIP CORP.
Gulf General Agents
Cable Address: "Dalship"
Offices InHouston ̄ Galveston ̄ Beaumont ¯ Port Arthur ̄ Dallas ̄ New
Orleans ̄ Memphis ¯ Mobile
on top
... since 1919WATERMAN STEAMSHIP CORPORATION
Superior Service to Shippers for more than 42 YearsGeneral Offices: Mobile, Alabama
Houston: Cotton Exchange BuildingRegular Sailings
from all U. S. Coasts and The Great LakesUNITED KINGDOM -- MEDITERRANEANCONTINENTAL EUROPE ~ THE FAR EAST
SINCE 1914
Export and Domestic Crating
OFFICE MOVING AND STORING SPECIALISTS
TRANSFER & STORAGE CO.812-20 Live Oak St. Phone FA 3-2323
Dependable, Low Cost
ELECTRICSERVICE
and unmatched transportationfacilities . . . serving the
Golden Gulf Coast throughthe Port of Houston.
HOUSTON LIGHTING & POWER COMPANYFEBRUARY, 1962 33
Port’s Emergency Plan Is Praised By Governmentager, who had a big part in its prep-aration.
Turner said, "The plan we submittedsets out how to keep the port going andthe ships and cargoes moving in andout in the event of the Port beingpartially disabled as for example by anear-miss of atom bomb or after apartial bombing.
"It deals with problems which mightarise if other ports were bombed andships had to be diverted here.
"In fact, this plan envisages all thetypes of emergencies that might ariseshort of a complete knock-out."
The Port of Houston was commendedfor its disaster plan covering operationsin the event of an atom bomb attackor other national emergency.
Donald W. Alexander, federal mari-time administrator, sent a letter of com-mendation to J. P. Turner, generalmanager of the Port, for completingthe plan.
Alexander said the plan and thoseof other Ports represent "a significantcontribution to national preparedness."
Turner said that drawing up the planwas "quite a jolt" and he congratulatedI). M. Frazior. marine and plant man-
International Business Expected To Growments abroad increased by nearly $21billion from 1950 to 1960 and notedthat Canadian, British, German, French,Italian, Belgian. Dutch and Japanesecompanies also have been actively ex-tending their foreign operations.
Heatherington said the outflow ofprivate capital from the United Statesover the past decade has equalled or ex-ceeded the outflow of public funds forgrants and other foreign aid.
MERCHANDISENG
Private business may be expected tocontinue its rapid rate of worldwide ex-pansion, Donald F. Heatherington of theNational Foreign Trade Council said.
"We have entered an era in whichbusiness has become international andin which, barring the imposition of re-strictive and nationalistic barriers, itmay be expected to become even moreso," he said.
He said U.S. private direct invest-
The plan was drawn up by the Portin co-operation with Howard Marsden,director of port development for theFederal Maritime Administration.
Moore Is ElectedBy Library Group
William T. Moore, president ofMoore-McCormack Lines, was electedpresident of the American Merchant Ma-rine Library Association for 1962. Hesucceeds Jo[m D. Rogers, general man-ager, Humble Oil & Refining CompanyMarine Division, who becomes chair-man of the executive committee.
Donald W. Alexander, _Maritime Ad-ministrator, U. S. Department of Com-merce, was elected a member of theboard of trustees to fill the vacancycreated by the death of Eugene F. Moranfor the unexpired term ending in 1961.
At the same meeting, Richard ~-.Hughes, assistant treasurer of the ChaseManhattan Bank. was elected assistanttreasurer to sueced Frederick Rath, Jr.,who was transferred to Plainview. LongIsland.
Officers InstalledBy Railroad Men
B. T. Mitchell. assistant manager ofthe world commerce department of theChesapeake & Ohio Railway, has beeninstalled as the president of the RailroadForeign Freight Agents’ Association ofChicago.
Other o[ticers are D. E. Richardson.vice president; J. R. Henderson, secre-tary; D. C. Griffiths, treasurer. Directorselected are F. M. Ratkay, D. H. Tiernevand W. E. Gilbert.
34
BLOOMFIELDSTEAMSHIP COMPANY
Owners, Operators, Agents ,~ United States Flag Vessels
Regular Sailings From U. S. Gulf Ports to Continental Europe,East Coast of United Kingdom and Scandinavia-Baltic
STATES MARINE LINES--Berth Agents
Offices In All Principal Gulf Ports
Delta Is NamedBrazilian Agent
Delta Line ~Mississippi Shipping Co..Inc.), has been appointed general agentfor several important French steamshipcompanies serving Brazilian ports.
Capt. J. W. Clark, Delta Line presi-dent, said that Delta will act as passen-ger and cargo agents in Brazil for Com-pagnie Maritime des Chargeurs Reunis,Compagnie de Navigation Sud-Atlan-tique and S.E.A.S. Each line operatesvessels between Europe and SouthAmerica.
PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
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37
Your Vessel will be met at the Bar IPiloted to the Port of Houston by l il
HOUSTON PILOTS i,I6302 GULF FREEWAY
HOUSTON 23, TEXAS
SOLICIIINi; YOUR BUSINESS IHROUGH IHE PORI OF HOUSTONEXPORT PACKERSHOUSTON FREIGHT FORWARDERS
AND CUSTOM-HOUSE BROKERS* Designates Forwarders
IDesignates Forwarders and BrokersDesignates Brokers
:~BEHRING SHIPPING CO.962 M. & M. Bldg ....... CApitol 2-1325, Teletype HO-236
tLESLIE B. CANION208 Fidelity Bank BIdg .................. CApitol 8-9546
:I:DORF INTERNATIONAL, INC.311 Cotton Bldg., P. O. Box 2342 ......... CApitol 4-6445
:~E. R. HAWTHORNE & CO., INC.311 Cotton BIdg ....................... CApitol 4-6445
*TRANSOCEANIC SHIPPING CO., INC.411 Shell Bldg ......................... CApitol 4-9587
W. R. ZANES & CO.220 Cotton Exchange Bldg ............... CApitol 5-0541
STEVEDORESGENERAL STEVEDORES, INC.
5401 Navigation Blvd ................... WAlnut 3-6678
UNITED STEVEDORING DIV. of States Marine Lines, Inc.Cotton Exchange Bldg ................... CApitol 7-0687
and CApitol 7-3374
SHIP SUPPLIESTEXAS MARINE & INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY CO.
8106 Harrisburg Blvd .................... WAlnut 3-9771
HOUSTON EXPORT CRATING CO., INC.7414 Wingate ......................... WAlnut 3-5527William Peacock, Jr., Vice President
INTERNATIONAL EXPORT PACKERS818 Aleen (Zone 29) .................. ORchard 2-8236William L. Brewster, General Manager
LEE CONSTRUCTION CORP.1600 North 75th Street ................. WAlnut 3-5551
INTRACOASTAL CANAL ANDINLAND WATERWAY SERVICES
Common Corriers
JOHN I. HAY COMPANY2526 Sutherland St ..................... WAlnut 3-6664Barges Serving Chicago and the Gulf Coast
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY BARGE LINE CO.1714 C. & I. Life Bldg .................... FAirfax 3-4156Roger D. Winter, Manager of Sales, Houston
UNION BARGE LINE CORP.Suite 304-N, Adams Petroleum Center ..... JAckson 6-3908Warner J. Banes, District Traffic ManagerDennis L. McColgin, Traffic Representative
TOWING SERVICEBAY-HOUSTON TOWING CO.
811 Cotton Exchange Bldg ............... CApitol 2-6231
INTRACOASTAL TOWING & TRANSPORTATION CORP.1419 Texas Ave ....................... CApital T-2297
SUDERMAN & YOUNG TOWING CO., INC.708 Cotton Exchange Bldg ............... CApitol 7-0830
HAULINGImport - Export
LONGHORN TRANSFER SERVICE, INC.7112 Avenue C ........................ WAlnut 6-266112 Years Serving The Port of Houston
PORT HOUSTON TRANSPORT CORP.6917 Navigation Blvd ................... WAlnut 1-4168
38 PORTOF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
...after 25 years, we still do!It’s been a quarter of a century since we came to Texas. They’ve been good
years . . . rich in accomplishment for us . . . rich in friendships made inthe fine communities where we operate. Champion payrolls have contributed
to the growth of these communities. Champion’s conservation program helps
preserve our state’s valuable forest resources. We’re glad to
be a part of this dynamic state, proud to call ourselves
,Texas Champions !
Champion Papers Inc.TEXAS DIVISION
FEBRUARY, 196239
POSTMASTER: If not delivered in fivedays, relurn to P. O. Box 2562, Houston1, Texas. Return Postage Guaranteed.
BULK RATE
U. S. POSTAGEPAID
Houston, Texas
Permit No. 5441
THIS IS LONG REACHCarload shipments of Allis-Chalmers equipment standon Long Reach’s marginal tracks awaiting placementunder ship’s tackle for handling direct to the SS DeiSud owned by Mississippi Shipping Company, Inc.
¯ Berthing for 8 vesselsi
LoComotive cranes, 75-ton derrick
equipment