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RAFAEL HUEZO, JR., manager of thePort of Corinto, Nicaragua, returned to thePort of Houston for a visit in September todiscuss port operations with General Man-ager J. P. Turner and Marine and PlantProtection Manager D. M. Frazior. FormerlyConsul of Nicaragua in Houston, Huezo spenta year in training at the Port of Houstondocks and administrative offices, before as-suming his duties in Corinto two years ago.
W. L. ClaytonIs Named ByTrade Group
W. L. Clayton has accepted the honor-ary presidency of the Houston WorldTrade Association, Andre A. Crispin,chairman of the association’s member-ship drive, has announced.
"The fact we kave the sponsorshipof a man of Mr. Clayton’s reputationin international trade speaks well forthe future of our organization," Crispinsaid.
Clayton, a founder of Anderson, Clay-ton & Company, is known as a believerin the maxim "trade is a two-waystreet."
The World Trade Association willoperate the World Trade Club, a Texasnon-profit corporation, which will openin January in the Port of Houston’sWorld Trade Center, Texas and Craw-ford.
The club facilities will include diningfacilities, offices for use by foreignvisitors, an extensive library, and amuhi-lingual staff.
The Houston World Trade Associa-tion was formed in 1927 by a groupof businessmen engaged in foreigntrade.
"The opening of the World TradeCenter will be the realization of a longdream," Crispin said.
OCTOBER, 1961
Whatever your cargo...CUNARD has the rightships, facilities-experience
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 AgentsNEW 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 NARD
For VOLUME SHIPPERS who want to save money-- the answeris lower-cost barge transportation.
For shippers not located on a port--joint rates, with most ofthe journey on water can show big savings over other waysof shipping.
Get the full story on lower-cost barge transportation fromyour FBL Representative.
FEDERALBARGE LINES! INC.
RICHARD DEE, Agent6901 Avenue V WAlnut 3-9451P. O. Box 9128 HOUSTON 11, TEXAS
21
TheBANK LINE Ltd.Regular Service from
U. S. Gulf Ports to
Australiaand
New/eal,and¯ Brisbane
¯ Melbourne
¯ Auckland
¯ Lyttleton
¯ Sydney
¯ Adelaide
¯ Wellington
¯ Dunedin
mmm
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
Marchessini LineNames Dillon,
The appointment of Captain D,ana R.Dillion as general manager of opera-tions for Marchessini Lines has beenannounced in the New York headquar-ters.
Well-known in the shipping fraternity,Captain Dillion was formerly with A. L.Burbank & Co. and prior to that hewas master of an Isbrandtsen Companyship.
mNDEPENDENTGULF LmNf
(Vinke & Co., Amsterdam, Managers)
FORTNIGHTLYto and from the
CONTINENT
SHIPPING C 0 l:tP 0 I:tAT Z olqr
General Agent U.S.A.
Houston ̄ Galveston ̄ New YorkNew Orleans ¯ Memphis
AN ASSISTANT economist for Japan’sSanwa Bank of Osaka, Nobusuke Kanda, sta-tioned in New York, toured Houston industryin September and is shown here on the in-spection vessel SAM HOUSTON during atrip down the Ship Channel. Kanda observedlocal banking, foreign trade and oil interestsfor one week.
Grain ElevatorShipments Up
Houston’s Public Grain Elevator reg-istered a 16.8 per cent increase in grainshipments during the first eight ship-ment montbs of 1961 compared to thesame period in 1960, T. H. Sherwood,elevator manager, reported in September.
Through August of this year, 53,294,-572 bushels of grain went abroadagainst ~15,615,167 at this point lastyear.
Total shipments for the Public GrainElevator last year amounted to 60,960,-108 bushels.
]legal fldherlands Steamship tompanu25 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 4, N. Y.
Regular Sailings [romMobile, New Orleans and Houston
WEEKLYTo La Guaira, Puerto Cabello, Guanta, Curacao and Trinidad
EVERY TWO WEEKSTo Maracaibo, Aruba, Puerto Sucre, Carupano, 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
22 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
H. D. WARD
Traffic ClubsWill Hold 1962Convention Here
Houston will gain an important con-vention in 1962 when the AssociatedTraffic Clubs of America come here fortheir annual meeting, September 16, 17,and 18.
Plans to welcome some 1000 mem-bers representing over 75 clubs to theRice Hotel got underway here recentlywith the naming of Harold D. Ward,manager of Humble Oil and RefiningCompany’s Southwest region traffic de-partment, convention chairman. Wardwill co-ordinate committee activities andpreparations.
The three traffic clubs from the Hous-ton area provide the man power for theplanning committees. They are theMen’s Traffic Club. the Women’s Traf-fic Club, and the Houston Freight Car-rier’s Association.
Assisting Ward are two co-chairmen,A. R. Atkinson. Jr., manager Texas
Division of Covle Lines, and Ray W.Sager, assistant traffic manager, RockIsland Lines.
New ServiceThe Mississippi Shipping Company’s
DEL SANTOS sailed last month toinaugurate service to two new rangesof ports on the West African Coastwith sailings every two weeks.
The new Delta Line sailing offersshippers express service to Southernrange ports in the Ivory Coast, Ghana,Nigeria, Togoland, Dahomey, Came-roons, Gabon, the Congo Republics, andAngola.
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
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 Scandlnavia-Baltic
STATES MARINE LINES--Berth Agents
O~ces In All Principal Gulf Ports
OCTOBER, 1961
WE’VEOPENED THEDOORTO GREATER
SAVINGS
This small engine crank was restoredin close quarters without dismantling.
Emphasis is placed on PRECISIONcrank pin refinishing in place!
Our portable machines can save youmoney. Crank pins from 6" through18" in diameter promptly and accu-rately refinished in place. LET USHELP YOU MINIMIZE DOWNTIME.
Our equipment is readily adapted toall types of marine, stationary powerplant and compressor units. Damagedflywheel fits and key ways refinishedin place. Bearing seats line bored andbushed to standard diameters on loca-tion. Our portable equipment is avail-able for many other types of fieldrepairs with special .attention given toemergencies.
Immediately after a call, whether dayor night, you will find us preparedto start personnel and equipment toany trouble area within the WesternHemisphere.
Crankshafts of any size or type com-pletely refinished in our plant. Wehave the experience of more thanthree quarters of a century in suc-cessfully restoring broken and dam-aged shafts to service.
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTEFOR QUALITY.
WASHINGTON IRON WORKS, INC.< Established 1876 )
SHERMAN, TEXASPho. TW--2-8145
23
THE PORT’S INSPECTION vessel SAM HOUSTON got a facelifting last month as she went into drydock for a sand blasting andpainting and general overhaul. The busy ship carries upwards of
30,000 visitors up and down the Ship Channel annually to show thefacilities of the Port of ttouston and the area’s great industrialcomplex along the waterway.
Cable Address "’RICE,’" Houston
RICE, KERR & COMPANYA Division of Kerr Steamship Company, Inc.
United States Gulf Ports to Spain . . . Morocco . . . Portugal . . . Philippines . . . Japan . . .Brazilian Ports . . . Mediterranean Ports . . Pakistan . . . India . . . Ceylon . . . Panama
Canal and West Coast of South America Ports
Clegg Bldg.506 Caroline St.HOUSTON
Cotton Exchange Bldg.
DALLASCotton Exchange Bldg.
GALVESTON
POWE!;i!~i~i!!!ii~i~i~!!!~i~i~i~i~i~i~!i!~ii~i~i~i~i~i~i~i~ii~i~i~i~!~!i~i~ii~i~i~i!i~i~i~i~i~i~i~i~i~!i~i~i~i~i~i~!!~~
iiii!iiii ...............~56;;0;i ....................iiiiiiiii:i;:ii Cotton Exchange Building i~:ii!::i::i::i::Office Phone: CApitol 7-0830 ::!::i::i::!
!i~ii OALVESTO.ii!iiiiii!
U.S. National Bank Buildingi:i!ii!ii!i!Offico Phone: SO 3-2428
Wharf Ph .... SO 3-4673 ~iii~!~ii
::i::iii::i Houston- T .... City iiiiiiii::ii::i::i Galveston - Corpus Christi ::::::::::::i~::~::~
__/
SUDERMANand YOUNG
TOWING CO., INC.
MBOLIN HOUSTON’SBUSY PORTWherever there is work to bedone.., wherever muscle isneeded.., whether it’s fornudging a giant ship into itsberth . . . or for a job of harboror coast wise towing, thereyou’ll find a powerfulS & Y TUG.
OVER 50 YEARSOF DEPENDABL.E SERVI~E
24PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
Ship ViaFERN-VILLE
MEDITERRANEANLINES
BARBER MEDITERRANEAN LINEGENERAL AGENTS
FOWLER & McVITIE, INC.GULF AGENTS
Houston, Galveston, New Orleans, CorpusChristi, Brownsville, Port Arthur, Memphis,
Lake Charles.
ROBERT LEE DEBNER, second from right, of F. J. Herbelin Company, was electedpresident of the Houston World Trade Association in September and here accepts congratula-tions from Ben Golub, out-going president, who is president of Belle Products Company, Inc.Others elected were E. J. Fay, right, first vice president, director of Houston’s World TradeCenter, and Allen I. Newhouse, left, second vice president, manager of South Ports ForwardingCompany. William S. Patton, Texas National Bank, and A. F. Prieto, Houston Chamber ofCommerce, were re-elected treasurer and secretatT, respectively.
BIEHL & COMPANY, INC.STEAMSHIP AGENTS
HOUSTON NEW ORLEANS GALVESTON213 Cotton Exchange Bldg. 401 Sanlin Bldg. 312 Cotton Exchange Bldg.
Phone Capitol 2-9961 Phone 529-4211 Phone Southfield 5-5085
DALLAS MOBILE BEAUMONT MEMPHIS413 Cotton Exchange Bldg. 805 Milner Bldg. 305 Goodhue Bldg. 520 Cotton Exchange Bldg.
Phone Riverside 8-3318 Phone HEmlock 2-1605 Phone: Terminal 2-8418 Phone Jackson 5-8725
FERN-VILLE LINES ..................................................... GULF/FAR EAST SERVICENOPAL LINE ................................................ GULF/EAST COAST SOUTH AMERICAGULF/WEST AFRICA LINE ............................................ GULF/WEST COAST AFRICANORTH GERMAN LLOYD )HAMBURG AMERICAN LINE
I .....................................GULF/CONTINENTAL EUROPE
OZEAN/STINNES LINESIDARMA LINE .......................................................... GULF/MEDITERRANEANMAMENIC LINE ............................. GULF/WEST COAST, EAST COAST, CENTRAL AMERICASCINDIA STEAM NAVIGATION CO., LTD ............ GULF/EGYPT/SAUDI ARABIA~PAKISTAN~INDIABARON-IINO LINE ......................................................... GULF~SOUTH AFRICA
JUGOOCEANIJA LINE...}
GULF/MEDITERRANEAN................................. GULF/WEST COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA
L. SMIT & CO.’S ............................................. INTERNATIONAL TOWING SER%ICE
Dalton Steamship CorporationSHIP AGENTS AND OPERATORS
TERMINAL OPERATORS AND STEVEDORES
Agenu for:COLDEMAR LINE * CONCORDIA LINE
CUBAMAR 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 8-8661
10 LINESOffices in GALVESTON, BEAUMONT, PORT ARTHUR, DALLAS, NEW ORLEANS, MEMPHIS and
MOBILE
OCTOBER, 1961 25
Phone: SO 2-3191 Nite: SO 3-4090SO 2-3861 SH 4-2729
GULF COAST SUPPLY CO.Mechanical Equipment
Spare Parts -- Marine Specialties
16th and Water Streets Galveston, Texas
HARRISON LINE
~NFrequent Service U.S. Gulf toLIVERPOOL¯ MANCHESTER
SAFE, SPEEDY and EXPERT HANDLINGlaNr PARR INC. u.s. GENERALIJ,i ~" ¯ AGENTS
EXCHANGE BUILDING, HOUSTONNew Orleans ¯ Memphis ̄ Dallas ¯ Galveston
HOU-TEX LAUNDRY& CLEANING CO.
6835 Harrisburg Phone WA 6-2644
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
*Southbound New Orleans/C.Z. cargo subject to special BookTng arrangements
Dependable, Low Cost
ELECTRICSERVICE
and unmatched transportationfacilities ... serving the
Golden Gulf Coast throughthe Port of Houston.
HOUSTON LIGHTING & POWER COMPANY
THE FIRST SHIPMENT of bananas to be discharged at tilePort of Houston in 15 years was unloaded from the CITY OFGUAYAQUIL at City Dock 3 at the end of September. The Gran-colombiana line ship loaded at Guayaquil, Ecuador, the 10,000 stemsof bananas for the Southern Banana Corp. Similar shipments willarrive in Itouston every 10 days, according to present plans. E. S.Binnings, Inc., is agent for Grancolombiana.
FROM FINLAND’S Ministry of Commerce and Industry, ReinoRoutamo, right, made a visit to Houston’s growing port recently andis shown here with B. A. Grauer, president of Canadian Gulf Line,Ltd., and Raymond Edmonds, Finland’s honorary consul in Houstonand vice president of Canadian Gulf Line, in the exhibit room ofthe Navigation ])istrict’s executive offices.
THIS GROUP of Texas and Japanese businessmen got togetheron the bridge of the inspection vessel SAM HOUSTON during aSeptember trip down the Ship Channel. Front the left, B. F. Ivey,sales engineer in Houston and B. L. Greenwood, supervisor of customerorder department in Ft. Wroth, both of Stratoflex, Inc.; R. W. Smith,Smith & Company, Houston; Thomas T. Tosaya, Tokyo InternationalCommerce Co., Inc., New York office; and Mutsumi Matsui, AsahiNew York Inc.
26 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
HOUSTON’S PROMOTION of Transportation Week May 14-20won second place in the national Associated Traffic Clubs of Americacontest. Co-chairmeu of Houston Transportation Week, Mrs. Jo Newtonof States Marine-Isthmian Agm~cy and F. E. Johnson of SouthernPacific Transport Company, left, hold the scrapbook of publicityentered by the contestants which was part of the basis of the judging.Mike Zeigfinger, right, Houston representative for the New YorkJournal of Commerce, directed the campaign based on the theme,Export Expansion. Co-sponsors of Houston Transportation Week for1961 were Men and Women’s Traffic Clubs of Houston; HoustonFreight Carrier’s Association; Houston Oil Field Haulers’ Association;Houston Warehousemen’s Association and Houston Mover’s Association.
CAPTAIN WILLIAM AYERS, right, president of Ayers Steam-ship Company with headquarters in New Orleans, visited the Houstonoffice of his firm headed by Captain John C. Morgan, left. ttere theyare shown in the Navigation District’s offices after a visit with SalesDepartment persounel.
Delta Linei
i
~IISSISSIPPI SHIPPING C0., INC.
For schedules, rates and other ;nformation, consult--HOUSTON OFFICE
FIDELITY BANK BLDG., Phone CA. 7-5101
Builds a New Fleet
FROM HOUSTON AND OTHER
U.S. GULF PORTS . . . TO
oLSOUTH AMERICAPARANAGUA, SANTOS, RIO DE JANEIR
V I C T 0 R I A Regular Weekly Sailings
WEST AFRICAANGOLA, CAMEROONS, IVORY COAST
LIBERIA and REPUBLIC of CONGODirect Regular Service
AGENTS:NEW ORLEANS -- Hibernia Bank Bldg. ¯ NEW YORK -- 17 Battery Place ¯ CHICAGO--140 So. Clark StreetWASHINGTON -- 1625 K Street, N. W. ¯ ST. LOUIS -- 7 North Brentwood Boulevard
Texas Transport & Terminal Co., Inc.Cable Address
TERMINAL HOUSTONTel: CA 5-.5461
HOLLAND-AMERICA LINETo
Havre/Dunkirk-Rotterdam/AmsterdamAntwerp/Ghent-Bremen/Hamburg
CREOLE LINENavlgazlone Aha Italia)
ToGenoa, Naples, Venice, Trieste,Savona, Leghorn, Rijeka, and
Mediterranean and North African ports.
OFFICESNew York~ N.Y. Charleston, S. C.Philadelphm, Pa. Savannah, Ga.Baltimore. Md. New Orleans, La.
Chicago, Ill.
(Established 189.5)
Cotton Exchange BuildingHouston, Texas
STEAMSHIP AGENTSSHINNIHON LINE
ToYakohama-Kobe-Osaka
Nagoya-Yokkalchi
MAGSAYSAY LINESTo
hfanila-Philippiue PortsIIong Kong-Formosa-Pusan
VENEZUELAN LINE(C. A. Venezolana de Navegacion)
ToLa Guaira, Puerto Cabello, Maracaibo,
Guanta, Puerto La Cruz, and otherVenezuelan ports.
OFFICESGalveston Texas Corpus Christi, TexasHouston, ~exas Brownsville, TexasDallas, Texas Memphis, Tenn.
St. Louis, Mo.
OCTOBER, 1961 27
HELLENIC LINES
REGULAR
EXPRESS
SERVICE
From Gulf Ports
toMEDITERRANEAN
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
Foreign TradeConventionSpeakers Set
The National Foreign Trade Councilhas announced the names of 19 speakerswho will address the 48th National For-eign Trade Convention, to be heldOctober 30-November 1 at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel.
More than 2,000 executives of leadingAmerican international companies willattend the three-day meeting, NFTC saidin announcing the preliminary program.
BEN H. MOOREINSURANCE
MARINE - CASUALTY - FiRECable: MOORDEEN
JAckson 8-5511 P.O. Box 13195
E. S. Binnings, Inc.Steamship Agents
1114 TEXAS AVE. BLDG.Telephone: CApitol 5-0531
HOUSTON, TEXAS
C.T.O. LINE(Manila and Far Fast)
O.S.K. LINE(Far East)
FRENCH LINE(French Atlantic)
HANSA LINE(Med./Red Sea/Persian Gulf}
GRANCOLOMBIANA LINE(Central America, W. Coast So. America)
AMERICAN & INDIAN LINE(Pakistan and India)
OFFICESNEW ORLEANS HOUSTON
MEMPHIS GALVESTONST. LOUIS DALLAS
During the convention, the Port ofHouston will maintain a hospitalityroom in the Mirror Suite of the HotelSheraton-East.
Henry C. Alexander, chairman of theboard, Morgan Guaranty Trust Com-pany of New York, who is chairmanof the national Convention committee,will deliver welcoming remarks at thefirst general session on October 30, fol-lowing the call to order by George W.Wolf, NFTC chairman.
U.S. business leaders who will ad-dress general sessions are Carl J. Gilbert,chairman. The Gillette Company; Wil-liam B. Rand, president. United StatesLines Company, and Richard N. Benja-min, president, Stone & Webster, Inc.
Three ambassadors to the UnitedStates will address the Convention: SirHoward Beale of Australia. B. K. Nehruof India, and Sergio Fenoahea of Italy.Also presenting the foreign viewpointwill be Dr. Otmar Emminger, a directorof the Deutsche Bundesbank of Ger-marry; George Hees, Canadian Ministerof Trade arrd Commerce, arrd G. S.Browne. managing director of The Eco-nomist Intelligence Unit, England.
Speakers representing the U.S. Gov-ernment will include Harold F. Linder,president of the Export-Import Bank ofWashington, and Rowland Burnstanassistant Secretary of Commerce for In-ternational affairs.
CROWN STEVEDORINGCOMPANYCONTRACTING
STEVEDORE
Houston m GalvestonTexas City m Freeport
324 SHELL BUILDINGHOUSTON, TEX.
Ph.: CA 2-0751 Telex HO 850Cable: Crownstev
CABLE: MAHCO FMB 2187
Maher & CompanyCustomhouse Brokers ~ Foreign Freight Forwarders
Members: Custom Brokers & Forwarders Association of America, Inc.
416-420 tnternational Trade Mart 834 Bettes Building
New Orleans 12, Louisiana Houston, Texas
TUlane 7566 FAirfax 3-4101
TWX-301 TWX-735
28 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
of Port Commissioner J. G. Turney, thescholarship is limited to the study ofspecific problems of ports with trainingin the administration of ports and trans-portation in general.
Adkins has B.S. and M.S. degreesfrom A. & M. in agricultural adminis-tration. For the past two years, he hasheaded the economics section in the col-lege’s Texas Transportation Institute. He
will utilize the scholarship in devotingfull-time to completing a Ph.D. pro-gram.
Cadwell L. Ray, last year’s recipient.received his M. S. degree in Augustand is working on his doctorate pro-gram at the University of Texas. HovRichards, the first to receive the grant,now works for the Institute as a trans-portation economist.
CENTRAL GULFDIRECT TO
N=DIT~-~~."~iDDL= EAST,PAKISTAN. INDIA. CEYLON
W. G. ADKINS
Scholarship IsAwarded By PortTo W. G. Adkins
The Navigation District’s third annualTransportation Scholarship worth $3000for the 1961-62 year at Texas A. & M.College went to William G. Adkins, staffmember of A. & M.’s Texas Transporta-lion Institute.
Established in 1959 at the suggestion
~.
,er~, . i rit x’n- ’ u i~ ’ n - n .529 S461 WH lehall 4 8250 FA fa 3 4128 SO th( Id 3 5396
J. H. BLADES 8, CO.Marine Insurance
NOT A SIDELINEHOUSTON JA 9-4103
¯ 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 ¯ BandarShahput ̄ Dammam ¯ Kuwait ̄ Basrah ̄ Karachi ¯ BombayMadras ̄ Cochin ̄ Calcutta ̄ Chittagong ̄ Chalna ̄ Colombo
OCTOBER, 1961 29
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
SINCE 1914
Export and Domestic Crating
OFFICE MOVING AND STORING SPECIALISTS
TRANSFER & STORAGE CO.812-20 Live Oak St. Phone FA 3-2323
He Puts Wheels Under a Giant ContainerTO END CARGO HANDLING
He directs as 35-ft. shipping" containers turn into trailer bodies tosave you money. Cargo moves automatically. No handling, damageor pilferage. No extra packaging. Door-to-door delivery, TL orLTL. Expedited service. Continuous schedules to Eastern, Southern~U. S., Puerto Rico. For extra savings, call now!
SERVICE, INC.A McLeon Industries Company
8402 Clinton Road, Houston, TexasGeneral Office: Foot of Doremus Avenue, Port Newark, N. J. (P. O. Box 1050)
PUERTO RICAN DIVISION: 19 Rector Street, New York, N. Y.PORT OFFICES: Houston, Jacksonville, Miami, Tampa, San Juan, P. R.;
Ponce-Mayaguez, P. R.
Yin Wei-Liang, seated, and Raymond H. S. Hoo
New Consul GeneralFor China Assumes Duties
The Republic of China has sent a new Consul General toits capital’s (Taipei) sister-city of Houston.
He is Yin Wei-Liang who comes to Houston after six yearsservice in the United Nations where he filled the position ofFirst Secretary, Permanent Mission of China to the U. N.
He replaces Raymond H. S. Hoo who was sent to takemer the big Consulate General in Honoluht.
Yin, a 15-year veteran of the foreign service, entered theservice of his country after graduating with a Bachelor ofLaw degree from the National Institute of Political Sciencein 1945. Prior to his United Nations tour, he served as DeputyConsul in Bangkok, Thailand; Expert, Ministry of ForeignAffairs; and Chief, Southeast Asian Affairs in the Ministry.
Yin was married in 1916. He and his family will resideat the Consulate, 4808 Austin.
A 15-MEMBER GROUP, representing Japan, India, Brazil andNyasaland, currently on tour of the United States, visited Houstonfor three days recently as part of a program geared to the studyof American methods of handling, storing, marketing and gradingagricultural produets. Here they received a briefing on the PublicGrain Elevator from Elevator Manager T. It. Sherwood and made afirst hand inspection of the Port’s export grain operations. They areshown on the obselwation platform overlooking the Turning Basinabove Wharf Nine. From Houston, the group left for Portland, Oregoncompleting the five-week tour.
30 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
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33
Your Vessel will be met at the Barand Piloted to the Port of Houston ~~,
llI! HOUSTON P OTS
!:l
I~" 6302 GULF FREEWAY
~k~ HOUSTON 23, TEXAS
SOLICIIING YOUR BUSINESS IHiIOUGH THE POlll OF HOUSTONEXPORT PACKERSHOUSTON FREIGHT FORWARDERS
AND CUSTOM-HOUSE BROKERSDesignates Forwarders
IDeslgnates Forwarders and BrokersDesignates Brokers
~BEHRING SHIPPING CO.962 M. & M. Bldg ....... CApitol 2-1325, Teletype HO-236
iLESLIE B. CANION208 Fidelity Bank Bldg .................. CApitol 8-9546
:I:DORF INTERNATIONAL, INC.311 Cotton Bldg., P. O. Box 2342 ......... CApitol 4-6445
SE. 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 CORPORATIONCotton 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 ................. WAlnut3-5551
INTRACOASTAL CANAL ANDINLAND WATERWAY SERVICES
Common Carriers
JOHN I. HAY COMPANY2526 Sutherland St ..................... WAlnut 3-6664Barges Serving Chicago and the Gulf Coast
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY BARGE LINE CO.1714 C. & I. Life BIdg .................... 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 7-2297
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
34 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
Tk~ 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
S~g ~,~ ~,~,~
WEST COAST LINE, INC.New York- 67 Broad St.. Tel. WHitehall 3-9600New Orleans. American Bank Bldg.-Tel. 524-6751
C. T. O. LINECompagnie Maritime des Chargeurs Reunis
OPERATING FAST FRENCH FLAG MOTORSHIPSDIRECT FROM
U.S. GULF PORTS TO
MANILAmCEBU/HONG KONGSAIGON-~BANGKOK--SINGAPORE
DJAKARTAIPENANG#r
SAILINGS EVERY 3 WEEKS
¢r
l. S. BINNINGS, INC.Gulf Agents
COTTON EXCHANGE BUILDING, HOUSTON, TEXAS
"k
OfficesGALVESTON--NEW ORLEANS--DALLAS--MEMPHIS
.Or
General Agents for North America and the CaribbeanBLACK DIAMOND S/S CO., 2 BROADWAY, N. Y.
South Africa?
DIRECT... FAST... DEPENDABLE SERVICE TO BUILD BETTERBUSINESS FOR SHIPPERS AND CONSIGNEES
Regular Sailings from Houston, Galveston, NewOrleans, Savannah, Charleston, Baltimore,Philadelphia and New York.Direct To Capetown, Port Elizabeth, East London,Durban, Lourenco Marques and Beira.AGENTS AT: Baltimore, Boston, Charleston, S.C., Chicago, Cleve-land, Detroit, Jacksonville, Fla., Los Angeles, Milwaukee, NewportNews, Norfolk, Panama City, Pensacola, Philadelphia~ Portland,San Francisco, Savannah, Seattle, Tampa, Vancouver, B. C.GULF AGENT: Hansen & Tidemann, Inc.Corpus Christi, Dalla,~, Galveston, Houston, Memphis, Mobile,New Orleans, Sabine District.
South African Marine Corporation (N. Y.)2 Broadway ¯ DI 4-8940 ¯ New York 4, N. Y.
I
OCTOBER, 1961 35
POSTMASTER: If not dglivered in fivedays, return to P. O. Box 2562, Houston1, Texas. Return Postage Guaranteed. BULK RATE
U. S. POSTAGEPAID
Houston, TexasPermit No. 5441
Storage Tank for Chile
THIS IS LONG REACHA 30-ton storage tank is being lifted by ship’sboom direct from fiat car on the Long Reachapron. Loretz & Company were freight for-warders and Rice, Kerr & Company, Inc., wereagents for the steamer.
¯ Berthing for 8 vessels
¯ Marginal rail trackage 3428 ft.
¯ Simultaneous handling 200 cars
¯ Locomotive cranes, 75-ton derrick
¯ Modern freight handling equipment
¯ Covered area 1,400,000 sq. ft.
Wharves ¯ Warehouses ¯ Cotton CompressesOwned and Operated by GULF ATLANTIC WAREHOUSE CO., Houston 1, Texas
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