i) ’lnc steve© page 21 to 36.pdf · the s. s. genevieve lykes, lost of the lykes bros. steamship...
TRANSCRIPT
Hansen ElectedExchange Prexy
Svend Hansen, president of Hansen& Tideman, Inc., Houston-based steam-ship agents, has been elected presidentof the Houston Cotton Exchange andBoard of Trade for 1968.
Hansen’s election marks the first timethat a person engaged in work otherthan the cotton business has been electedto the post. Hansen is also HonoraryConsul for the Republic of South Africain Texas.
Scanus ShippingCorp. Is Formed
A new steamship agency, ScanusShipping Corporation, tlas been formedby Dedhamship Agencies, Inc., of NewYork and AB August LetIter & Son, ofGothenburg, Sweden, to handle the com-panies’ steamship activities.
Scanus will act as general agents inthe United States for Bahic AmericanLine, Scanscot Freighters Pool, and thetramp vessels of Brostroms’ ShipowningGroup of Sweden and of Atlantic BulkTrading Corporation.
Scanus Shipping Corporation will beunder the active management of JohnJ. Kilbride, formerly of Swedish AtlanticLine, New York. Fowler & McVitie, Inc.will represent Scanus Shipping in theU. S. Gulf, having been associated with
Farrell LinesElect Smith
Thomas J. Smith, formerly executivevice president of Farrell Lines, has beennamed president of the company to suc-ceed C. Carlton Lewis, who died in mid-March, James A. Farrell, Jr., chairmanof the Board of Farre]l Lines Incorpo-rated, has announced.
Smith joined Farrell Lines in 1912
as pier superintendent, working his wayup to jobs of terminal manager, vicepresident of operations, and president ofthe Monrovia Port Management Com-pany, which operates the Port of Mon-rovia for the Liberian government.
FORWARDER MOVESSchenkers, International Forwarders,
Inc. has moved from the World TradeBuilding to Suite 614, The PetroleumBuilding, 1314 Texas Avenue, Houston.The firm’s new telephone number is(713) 224-5561.
Sailings weekly from U.S. gulfports to Brazil, Uruguay andArgentina.Every 10 days to West Africa.
Modern American-flag cargo liners offering dependableexpress services for refrigerated, bulk, dry, liquid, heavy-lift, containerized and general cargoes.
some branches of these Swedish groupssince 1910.
: : I ,i~/~e
I) ’lncDirector NamedJLore$
"Henrik P. Rothlisberzer has been Steve© ’
named director, International Sales for A Subsidiary of NORTON, LILLY & CO., INC.R E A Express, A. Philip Visser, vicepresident, international department, hasannounced. Prior to joining R E A inDecember, 1966, Rothlisberger was vice CONTRACTING & CONSULTING STEVEDORESpresident of Rohner, Gehrig & Co., in-ternational freight forwarders, NewYork. His principal re,~ponsibility willbe to coordinate sales activities forR E A’s international department sys-temwide, with special emphasis on con-tainerization, Visser said.
BEN H. MOOREINSURANCE AGENCYBen H. Moore - William C. Moore
MARINE - CASUALTY- FIRECable: MOORDEEN
915 World Trade Bldg. CA 8-5227
GENERAL, BULK & GRAIN CARGO HANDLINGCAR & BARGE LOADING and UNLOADING
NEW ORLEANS1338 INTERNATIONAL TRADE MART
TEL: 522-6101HOUSTON GALVESTON
203 MARINE BLDG. 512 U.S. NAT’L. BANK BLDG.TEL: 222-9601 TEL: 765-9463
ii |
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MAY, 1968 21
Three giant logging trucks, weighing 15 tonseach, ready for loading aboard the Bank Line’sM. V. WILLOWBANK at the Port of Houston’sLong Reach Docks for direct shipment to theSolomon Islands in the Pacific for Lever PacificTimber Ltd. The units were manufactured inSeattle, Washington, by the Kenworth Motor Co.and shipped by rall to Houston for shipboardloading. Balfour MacLaine Inc. of New York Citywas the shipper with forwarding being handledby W. R. Zanes & Company. Strachan ShippingCompany are Bank Line agents.
We’re No. 1 to the Middle East(Jeddah, Massawa, Assab, Djibouti, Khorramshahr,Bandar Shahpour, Kuwait, Karachi, Bombay, or any-where else your cargo is going in the Middle East)
Call CA 4-6075
CENTRAL OULF711 FANNIN STREET * HOUSTON. TEXASNEW ORLEANS * NEW YORK ̄ BOMBAY
Veteran CaptainTelegraphs His’Slow Engines’
Captain Charles L. Spicer, DeltaSteamship Line’s vice president of oper-ations, is retiring after forty-seven con-secutive years with Delta, at sea andashore.
Captain Spicer first joined Delta (thennamed Mississippi Shipping Co.) asChief Officer aboard the S. S. SAUCONin June of 1921. He later served as mas-ter of several cargo vessels and com-bination cargo-passenger vessels, andwas a long-time Commodore of Deha’sfleet before being transferred ashorefrom the S. S. DEL BRASIL in 1943.
He is a past president of the PropellerClub of New Orleans, and a memberof the Chamber of Commerce, Interna-tional House, The National DefenseTransportation Association, and the Ma-rine Society of the City of New York.
fast and frequent
Deppe Lin elgian Line
H/~_~ri~
between the Gulf and North Europe
demann, Inc./Steamship Agents All Cotton Ports and Markets
22 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
The S. S. GENEVIEVE LYKES, lost of the Lykes Bros. Steamship Company’s twelve Gulf Clipper Classvessels designed for the Line’s Far East service was in Houston in April on her maiden voyage.Captain Erwin Jones, center, received the Port’s maiden voyage plaque honoring the vessel fromHouston Junior Chamber of Commerce member Ran Wade, left. Captain James Baker, Lykes portcaptain is on the right.
Saguaro Joins
ConferenceSaguaro Line, offering the only direct
West and Eastbound sailings betweenItalian ports and U. S. Gulf ports, hasjoined the Italy, South Franee-U. S. GulfWestbound Conference, ]an C. UiterwykCompany, Inc., U. S. General Agentsfor the line has announced.
First conference sailing was theLIBERATOR COLOCOTRONIS fromSavona, Genoa, Leghorn and Naples inmid-April for Mobile, New Orleans andHouston.
Nordship NamedNordship Agencies, Inc., of One East
Wacker Drive, Chicago, and the Nord-ship offices in Milwaukee and Detroit,have been appointed Mid West solicita-tion agents for the Fabre Atlantic andGulf services to the Mediterranean.
The appointment of NordshipAgencies, Inc. becomes effective May 1,according to the Columbus Line, generalagent for Fabre Line.
LONGHORNTRANSFER SERVICE, INC.SPECIALIZING---IMPORT/EXPORT TRUCKING
7112 Avenue C Houston, TexasWA 6-2661
"Perfection in Performance is Achieved Onlyby Experience’"
LORETZ & CO. MOVES
Loretz and Company, internationalfreight forwarders, customhouse brokers,insurance agents and shipping consul-tants, has moved its offices to The Pe-troleum Building, Suite 614, 1314 TexasAvenue, 77002, from the World TradeBuilding. The company telephone num-ber, 713-CA 8-4391, remains the same.
Strachan PromotesSeveral Men
Management changes in tile StrachanShipping Company, including the nam-ing of Warren A. Maher of New Orleansvice president-Gulf; William H. Oster-holtz, Jr., former Mobile manager, vicepresident-Florida with offices at Jackson-ville; J. R. Macpherson, Jr., local man-ager-Mobile; and R. S. Wrighton as-sistant local manager-Mobile, have beenannounced by Frank G. Strachan, com-pany president.
MAY, 1968
GULF PORTS CRATING CO.Export PackingCommercial--MilitaryBoxing--Crating--Processing
HOUSTON: 1600 N. 7Sth St., WA 3-5551NEW ORLEANS: 2731 Chartres, 945-7975
COMPLETE TESTING ANDINSPECTION SERVICE
¯ AnalyticalChemists
¯ TestingEngineers
¯ MaterialsInspectors
¯ CargoSurveyors
¯ Spectro-graphicAnalysis
SlllLSTONE TESTINGLABORATORY
1714 WEST CAPITOL AVE., HOUSTONOffices: Houston, New Orleans, Corpus
Christi, Baton RougeRepresentatives in all major cities
FEARNLEY & EGER, asia, Norway
Fast Freight, Reefer, Deep Tank and Passenger Service
U.S. GULF / FAR EAST SERVICERegular Sailings From:
HOUSTON ̄ GALVESTON ̄ BEAUMONTMOBILE ¯ NEW ORLEANS
ALSO OTHER TEXAS PORTS AS CARGO WARRANTS
MANILA ¯ HaNG KONG ¯ BANGKOK ̄ SAIGON ¯ SINGAPORED JAKARTA ¯ PORT SWEI"rENHAM ¯ PENANG ̄ BELAWAN DELl
General Agents Agents:
FEARNLEY & EGER, INC. BIEHL & COMPANYSixth Floor, WORLD TRADE BLDG.,
29 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 10006 HOUSTON, TEXAS344-3770 CApitol 2-9961
23
Biehl & Company was host at a ship party aboard the Barber MiddleEast Line’s M. V. TUGELA recently at the Port of Houston to honor EinarWettre Bredesen, left, New York representative of Barber Steamship Lines,Inc. Center is George H. McLean, assistant general manager, Reading &Bates Offshore Drilling Company. Don S. Waheed, sales manager for Biehl ison the right.
CABLE: MAHCO FBM 2187
Custon~ouse Brokers -- Foreign Freight Forwarders
Members: Custom Brakers & Forwarders Association o~ America, Inc.
Sanlln Building 802 World Trade Center
New Orleans 12, Louisiana Houston, Texas
Telephone: 529-5941 CApitol 4-8101
TWX-504422-5340 TWX-713-571 - 1283
The S. S. DELTA ARGENTINA, first of five ultra-modern highly automatedAmerican-flag cargo liners being built at Ingalls Shipyard Division of LittonIndustries at Pascagoula, Mississippi, for Delta Stea.mshlp Lines, Inc., received
her maiden voyage plaque at the Port of Houstonin mid-April. Shown with the plaque on the bridgeof the vessel are, left to right, William E. Walker,assistant vice president-Sales; Captain Warren E.Wyman; and L. R. Westerman, manager-Houston,all of Delta. The vessels have an over-all lengthof 522 feet, beam of 70 feet, deadweight ca-pacity of 13,350 tons, bale cubic of 646,869,
47,280 cubic feet of refrigerated space, andliquid cargo space of 1,658 long tons. Design
cruising speed is 18.6 knots with 11,660 shafthorsepower, and in excess of 20 knots when uti-
lizing total power at design draft. Heavy lift ca-pacity is 75 tons. The vessels can be readilyadapted for containerized and unitized cargo op-
erations.
HOUSTON SHIP CHANNEL
DISTANCES
INBOUND OUTBOUND
SEA BUOY 00.0 58.5Quarantine Anchorage 6:0 52.5Houston Ship Channel 8.5 50.0Red Fish Light 20.0 38.8Morgan’s Point 33.5 25.0Baytown 37.8 20.7Jacintoport 45.3 14,2Shell Refinery 46,8 11.7Todd Shipyard 49.5 9.0Adams Terminal 4g.9 8.6Hess Terminal 51.5 7.0Pasadena (Crown Dock) 52.8 5.7Galena (Texas Co.) 53.5 5.0Sinco (Sinclair) 54.5 4.0Manchester Terminal 55.2 3.3Signal Oil 55.8 2.7Did Manchester 56.3 2.2Petco 57.3 1.2Long Reach 57.8 .7TURNING BASIN 58.5 O0.0
INTRACOASTALI gMg HousToN GALVESTON FREEPORT
24 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
During ceremonies onboard the Isthmian Line’s S.S. "STEEL MAKER" atHouston in April, Federal Communications Commission Representative DanielCantrell presented to the ship’s radio operator, George MacCartney, theMarconi Memorial "Scroll of Honor." The award was in recognition of theoutstanding service performed during the rescue, from a life raft, of crewmembers of the sinking Spanish ship, MONTE PALOMARES during nearhurricane conditions, at nlgh’b in the North Atlantic. From the left areCaptain R. C. Minor, Master of the STEEL MAKER; "Sparks;" Amos Wood,Marine Superintendent; Cantrell, LCdr. N. Emory, United States Coast Guardand J. E. Davies, vice president of States Marlne-lsthmian Agency, Inc.
PORT HOUSTON TRANSPORT CORP.6917 NAVIGATION BLVD. ̄ P.O. BOX 9296
HOUSTON 11, TEXASWA 1-4168
U. S. CUSTOM BONDEDSPECIALIZING IN IMPORT & EXPORT HAULING
TRUCKS AND CARGO INSUREDBONDED PERSONNEL
Call Us on Your Local Transport P¢oblem
ALTO MTEAMSHIPORPORATION/p Agents & 7erm/na/ Operators
WEST GULF EAST GULF7th Floor World Trade Center 2300 International Trade MartHouston, Texas 77002 New Orleans, Louisiana 70130Tel: CA 8-8661 ̄ TWX: 713-571-1421Tel: 524-0701 ° TWX: 504-822-5024
Cable "DALSHIP"
GULF AGENTS FORCOLDEMAR LINE ̄ CONCORDIA LINE * FINNLINES
JUGOLINIJA LINE ̄ N.Y.K. LINE ̄ POLISH OCEAN LINESOFFICES IN: Beaumont ¯ Dallas ̄ Galveston ¯ Memphis ° Mobile ̄ New York
Port Arthur ̄ in Mexico City--Agencia Transoceanica de Vapores, S.A.
Scotsman Gordon B. Laughland, left, on a personal good will tour of theUnited States speaking to church groups and YMCA gatherings, was theguest of Fred James, safety director consultant of Tom Hicks Transport Co.,recently at the World Trade Club. Laughland made a previous visit toHouston and the United States in 1959-60 and has written a book on hisexperiences.
AN AMERICAN FLAG FREIGHTER
Every 10 DaysFast, efficient cargo handlingFrom Gulf Ports to Panama*, theWest ,Coast of South America
GULF & SOUTH AMERICANSTEAMSHIP CO.
831 Gravier Street, New Orleans, Louisiana
In other cities contact Lykes or Gra~e
*Southbound New Orleens/C. Z. cargo sub]ect to special Bookingarrangements.
IGULF AGENTS
WEST COAST LINE, INC.1113 INTERNATIONAL TRADE MART TOWER
NEW ORLEANS, LA. 70130 524-6751
HOUSTON NEW YORK GALVESTON817 WORLD TRADE CENTER 17 BATTERY PLACE 706 U.S. NAT’L BANK BLDG.
CA 3-4546 WHITEHALL 3-9600 SO 5-7353
Ship Via HoustonMAY, 1968
25
Working Partner with ~the Port of Houston ~Helping developthe Houston-Gulf Coast area
HOUSTON LIGHTING & POWER COMPANY
SINCE 1914
Export amd JDomestle Crating
OFFICE MOVING AND STORING SPECIALISTS
TRANSFER & STORAGE CO.812-20 Live Oak St. Phone CA 3-2323
N. Y. K. LINEThree Sailings per Month to
JAPANESE PORTSDALTON STEAMSHIPCORP.
Gulf General Agents
Cable Address: "Dalship"
Houston ¯ Galveston ¯ Beaumont ¯ Port Arthur ¯ Dallas ¯ NewOrleans ¯ Memphis ̄ Mobile
WARREN PETROLEUMCORPORATION
NATURAL GASOLINEGULF WARRENGAS
Tulsa, Oklahoma Houston, Texas
26
ii i~
The 1968 Maid of Cotton, Miss Susan Holder, left, a sophomore at Mis-sissippi State College for Women, was in Houston recently with Maid ofCotton Tour manager Estelle Heard, right. The Maid of Cotton contest andtour is sponsored by the National Cotton Council to increase the use of cottonin fashion design. Foley’s Department Stores sponsored Miss Holder’s activi-ties, including a luncheon fashion show and a series of television apparances.
Meeting for lunch and business discussions in the World Trade Clubrecently were, left to right, J. L. Campbell, foreign freight agent, SouthernPacific Railway; William Stout, CRC-Crose International, Houston basedpipeline laying and equipment company; John de Lucia of Ford Motor Co.,S. A., Mexico City; and C. A. Rousser, Jr., district sales representative,Port of Houston.
Personnel changes at the Houston office of the United Fruit Co. lastmonth saw B. B. Bennett, for the last several years manager of freighttraffic sales in Houston, transferred to Chicago in a like capacity. HereBennett, at left, shakes hands with T. F. Heidbrink who has been namedfreight agent in Houston to replace him. At right is Dick C. Chirllng,freight traffic manager of the United Fruit, with headquarters in New York.
PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
THE PORT OF HOUSTON--as advertised in VOGUE! When Houston’s fashionable Sakowltz storesdecided to feature Houston and its attractions in the April issue of VOGUE MAGAZINE, one of theplaces they selected--along with the Domed Stadlum--was, quite naturally, the busy Port. This photoappeared both in VOGUE and in newspaper advertisements and, because of its shapely approach tothings nautical, the PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE reproduces it here. The figure in the backgroundis an Eastern Airlines captain,, not the master of one of the more than 4500 ships entering the Portof Houston each year. He can jet you to San Antonio to enjoy HemisFair--another attraction featuredin the Sakowitz promotion.
AMROCK IN NEW JOB
Jan C. Uiterwyk Company, Inc., steam-ship agents for a number of lines servingthe U. S. Gulf, has appointed Edward S.Amrock, Jr. as manager of the firm’snew mid-Western office in Chicago, Il-linois at 327 South La Salle Street. Am-rock served with Alcoa Steamship Com-pany in New Orleans, Milwaukee andChicago.
Uiterwyk is agent for Azta Line, Flo-merca Gulf Line, Florida Lines, SaguaroLine, Capital Line and Oost AtlanticKijn, a tramping operation in the Gulfand Caribbean area.
E. S. Binnings, Inc.Steamship Agents
711 FANNIN, SUITE 906Telephone: CApital 5-0531
HOUSTON, TEXAS
C. R. LINES--Far East Service(Manila and Far East)
#FRENCH LINE
(French Atlantic)
HANSA LINE(Med./Red Sea/Persian Gulf)
GRANCOLOMBIANA LINE
Central America, Cglambia, Ecuador, PeruPanama via Cristobal
OFFICESNEW ORLEANS HOUSTON
MEMPHIS GALVESTONST. LOUIS DALLAS
MAY, 1968 27
Compania Sud Americana de VaporesExpress Freight Service From
HOUSTON . GALVESTONMOBILE ¯ NEW ORLEANS
AND OTHER PORTS AS CARGO OFFERS
TO
ECUADOR ̄ PERUBOLIVIA ¯ CHILE
29 Broadway, New York, N. Y.Tel. (212) 943-8600
Gulf Agents
STRACHAN SHIPPING CO.NEW ORLEANS ¯ HOUSTON ̄ MOBILEQALVESTON ̄ CHICAGO ¯ ST. LOUIS
ClHaNNATI ¯ DALLAS ¯ KANSAS CITYMEMPHIS ¯ ATLANTA ¯ MILWAUKEE
!ii!iiii!ilZi’!!i!iiiiiiii!!i
GULF
~~ PORTS
The .~hipping ~’orporalion Of lndia LId,
TO
Captain E. L. King, right, master of the tugZEUS of the Intracoastal Towing & TransportationCorp., recently received a letter of thanks andcommendation for the vessel’s crew from CaptainP. J. Neely, left, presiding officer of the HoustonPilots. The letter praised the ZEUS master andcrew "for their valiant efforts in assisting theS. S. CHRISTIANE during the early hours ofJanuary 16, 1968, after a collision . . . That thetrustworthy assistance given by the tug ZEUS wasabove the call of every day duties and has beennoted by the Houston Pilots, and regarded in thehighest calibre of seamanship."
Cable Address "RICE," Houston
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.
HOUSTONCotton Exchange Bldg.
DALLASCotton Exchange Bldg.
GALVESTON
28 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
The Offshore Company’s rig, JUBILEE, a giantseif-contained jack-up drilling platform, recently
started on the longest known trip for such a plat-form, some 14,000 miles from the Gulf of Mexicoto Western Australia. Tokyo Shipping Company’s8000 H.P. tug AMARYLLIS is towing the 130 feet
wide platform southwest across the AtlanticOcean, around the Cape of Good Hope and
across the indian Ocean to Australia because theJUBILEE is too large to pass through the PanamaCanal. The AMARYLLIS is represented by Dalton
Steamship Corporation and made her first towto the Gulf of Mexico with the 9,500 ton Brown
& Root plpe-lay and crane barge L. B. MEADERSfrom Japan to Houston in mid-summer 1967.
The World Trade Club of Houston, located in the World Trade Building, has promoted three membersof its staff to management positions. John P. Marriott, right, was named manager; Alton Evans, center,is the Club’s new chef, and Gilbert Salinas, left, a member of the original staff at the World TradeClub, is now Club maitre d’. Announcement of the promotions was made by club president H. R.Matriscianl.
Ship Via The Port of Houston
INDEPENDENTGULF LINE
(Vinke & Co., Amsterdam, Managers)
REGULAR SERVICEto and from the
CONTINENT
8~rIpPIN(~ C O P,,P ORAT ZOlq’
General Agent U.S.A.
Houston ̄ Galveston ̄ New YorkNew Orleans ¯ MemphisBaltimore ̄ Philadelphia
Refrigerated Space Available
Your Vessel will be met at the Barand Piloted to the Port of Houston by!
:|
HO USTON PI LOTS~" 6302 GULF FREEWAY
~¢ HOUSTON, TEXAS 77023MAY, 1968 29
HOUSTONSTEAMSHIP AGENTSALCOA STEAMSHIP COMPANY FOWLER & McVITIE, INC.711 Fannin, CA 4-6075 Cotton Exchange Building, CA 4-9795
Maersk LineAMERIND SHIPPING CORP. The East Asiatic Co., Ltd.110 Marine Building, CA 7-5335 Antilles Shipping Co.
American Export and Isbrantsen Lines FURNESS, WITHY & CO., LTD.Cargo Ships and Tankers, Inc.Fabre Line 814 World Trade Building, CA 7-1521Independent Gulf Line Blue Sea LineSeaway Shipping Corp. Furness LineShip Services, Ltd.; U.S. Bulk Carriers, London Express Service
Inc. ; Western Agency, Inc. Scandinavian American LineJames W. Elwell & Company Nordana LineWestern TankersCorporation GULF COAST SHIPPING CORP.Clipper Marine Corporation 204 Marine Bldg., CA 5-0869Westwaters Management, Inc. China Merchants Steam Navigation Co., Ltd.Colonial Tankers Corporation Eddie Steamship Lines, Inc.
AYERS STEAMSHIP CO., INC. JugooceanijaLines509 World Trade Building, CA 7-3261 Retla Steamship Co., Inc.
Constellation Line Transamerican SS Corp.Maritime Company of the Philippines GULF MOTORSHIPS, INC.Ocean-Wide Shipping Co., Ltd. 1316 Cotton Exchange Bldg., CA 7-0215
BIEHL & COMPANY China Union Lines6th Floor, World Trade Building, CA 2-9961 Cobelfret Lines
Wallenius Lines
HANSEN & TIDEMANN, INC.16th Floor, Cotton Exchange Bldg., CA 3-4181
Agrimar De PanamaBelgian African LineCorporacion Peruana De VaporesDeppe Line/Belgian LineFederal Commonwealth LineFederal Pacific Lakes LineFred. Olsen Interocean LineIrish Shipping LimitedMoran International Towing CorporationPacific Far East LineSouth African Marine CorporationSurinam Line
KERR STEAMSHIP COMPANY,INC.
506 Caroline CA 7-0165Columbus Line Australian ServiceKawasaki Kisen Kaisha, Ltd.Japan-Korea-Formosa, Hong KongLloyd Brasileiro Line BrazilNervion Line Spanish Mediterranean
North Spain, PortugalVega Line
LE BLANC.PARR, INC.Cotton Exchange Bldg., CA 4-1893
Harrison LineHellenic Line
LONE STAR SHIPPING, INC.1505 Texas Avenue, CA 4-7531
Fern LineNopal Line (Northern Pan AmericanNopal West Africa LineHamburg American LineInsco Lines, Ltd.North German LloydOzean/Stinnes LinesSidarma LineMamenic LineScindia Steam Navigation Co., Ltd.Barber Middle East LineL. Smit & Co.’sSmit-Lloyd, N.V.C. Clausen Steamship Co., Ltd.Marine Express LineFarrell Lines
E. S. BINNINGS, INC.711 Fannin, CA 5-0531
C. T. O. LineFlota Mereante Grancolombiana, S. A.
(Grancolombiana Line)French LineHansa Line
BLETSCH STEAMSHIP CO.Cotton Exchange Bldg., CA 5-1939
Orient Mid-East Line
CANADIAN-GULF LINE, LTD.P. O. Box 5355, WA 1-4196
Canadian-Gulf Line, Ltd.Montreal Shipping Co.Stockard Shipping Co.
Ferrarhos LineGallen LineOrient Overseas Far East LineOrient Overseas Southeast Asia LineOrient Overseas Continental LineStephen Bros. LineTorm Line
LYKES BROS. STEAMSHIPCO., INC.
Cotton Exchange Building, 3rd Floor, CA 7-7211Gulf & South American S.S. Co.Lykes African LineLykes Caribbean LineLykes Continent LineLykes Mediterranean LineLykes Orient LineLykes United Kingdom LineFarrell Lines
NORTON, LILLY & CO.203 Marine Bldg., CA 2-9601
Jayanti Shipping Co., Ltd.Lauro LineShipping Corporation of India
RETLA STEAMSHIP CO., INC.313 Marine Building, CA 7-3108
Retla Steamship Co., Inc.
CENTRAL GULF STEAMSHIPCORP.
711 Fannin, CA 4-6075Central Gulf-Mediterranean LineCentral Gulf-Red Sea LineCentral Gulf-Persian Gulf LineCentral Gulf-India/Pakistan LineCentral Gulf-World Wide Full Cargo Service
DALTON STEAMSHIP CORP.7th Floor, World Trade Building, CA 8-8661
Coldemar LineCuneordia LineFinnlinesJugolinija LineN. Y. K. LinePolish Ocean Lines
DEEPSEA AGENTS, INC.Cotton Exchange Building, CA 4-9798
Stevenson LinesMarchessini Lines
DELTA STEAMSHIP LINES, INC.1300 Texas Avenue, CA 7-5101
Delta East Coast South America LineDelta West Africa Line
SEA-LAND SERVICE, INC.8402 Clinton Drive, OR 2-6651
Truck Trailer Coastwise Service
STATES MARINE-ISTHMIANAGENCY, INC.
Cotton Exchange Building, CA 7-3374Agents For
Bloomfield Steamship Co.Isthmian Lines, Inc.
Isthmian-Gulf-Mediterranean ServiceIsthmian Gulf-Red Sea/Persian Gulf ServiceIsthmian Gulf-India/Pakistan ServiceIsthmian Gulf-Hawaiian Service
States Marine Lines, Inc.States-Marine-Continental ServiceStates Marine-Far East ServiceStates Marine-Mediterranean ServiceStates Marine-World Wide Full Cargo
ServiceSTATES SHIPPING AGENCY912 World Trade Bldg., CA 5-0357
Atlantic Shipping Company, S.A.Edm Van Meerbeeck & Co., S.A.
STRACHAN SHIPPING CO.Cot~n Exchange Building, CA 8-1431
Argentine LinesBank LineChilean LineHoegh LinesMexican LineMitsui-OSK Lines, Ltd.Nedlloyd LineRoyal Netherlands LineSwedish-Atlantic LineUnterweser ReedereiWilhelmsen Lines
TEXAS TRANSPORT &TERMINAL CO., INC.
llth Floor, 711 Fannin. CA 5-5461Anco Tanker Parcel ServiceCunard Brocklebank ServiceP. N. Djakarta LloydHolland-America LineNavigazione Aha Italia (Creole Line)Yamashita-Shinnihon LineUnion of Burma Five Star LineC.A. Venezolana de Navegacion
(Venezuelan Line)Westwind Africa LineWysmuller Ocean Towage & Salvage
Company
TRANSATLANTIC SHIPPINGAGENCY, INC.
1326 Cotton Exchange Bldg., CA 4-5805Belgo-American LineFerro Union CorporationUnimar GmbH
JAN C. UITERWYK CO., INC.711 Fannin, CA 7-9365
Contramar LineAzta LineFlomerca Gulf ServiceBlue Ribbon LineOost Atlantic LijnSaguaro Line
UNITED FRUIT COMPANYFreight Tral~c Department908 World Trade Bldg., CA 5-3597
United Fruit Company
WILKENS SHIPPING CO.Cotton Exchange Building, CA 7-4395
Waterman Steamship Corp.
J. M. COOK COMPANY817 World Trade Building, CA 3-4546
Black Star LineSeven Stars LineTurkish Cargo LinesWest Coast LineZim Israel Lines
30 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
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33
HOUSTON: link in the chain of Lykes 6 trade routes
Generations of LYKES shipping experience areback of today’s outstanding service to the ~ ¯export-import trade,
d H LAIh¯ L|NESOur new carg° fleet is am°ng America’s finest an~~l/~ ~j~__ ~_~fastest with more 20-knot ships than any othersingle privately-owned fleet in the world. They ~|are regularly and dependably scheduled. ~ ¯ LYKES BROS. STEAMSHIP CO., INC.
Cotton Exchange Bldg., Houston, Texas
Offices and Agents in the United States and in Principal World Ports
U. K. LINE ̄ CONTINENT LINE ̄ MEDITERRANEAN LINE ̄ AFRICA LINE ̄ ORIENT LINE, CARIBBEAN LINE
GET YOUR SHIP SUPPLIESWhere Stocks are Complete... More Than
50,000 Items On HandComplete deck & engine, provisions, electrical, steward
sundries and fire protection departments.
TEXAS MARINoE& INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY
8050 Harrisburg ¯ P. O. Box 5218 ° Telephone: 713-WA 3-9771Houston, Texas 77012
STEAMSHIP AGENTS & BROKERS6TH FLOOR WORLD TRADE CENTER
ESTABLISHED 1905 HOUSTON, TEXAS
FERN LINE ................................ GULF/FAR EASTNOPAL LINE ............... GULF EAST COAST SOUTH AMERICANOPAL WEST AFRICA LINE ................ GULF/WESTAFRICAHAMBURG AMERICA LINE ......... GULF/CONTINENTALEUROPENORTH GERMAN LLOYD ........... GULF/CONTINENTALEUROPEOZEAN/STINNES LINES ............ GULF/CONTINENTALEUROPESIDARMA LINE ....................... GULF/MEDITERRANEANMAMENIC LINE .... GULF/WEST & EAST COAST CENTRAL AMER.SCINDIA STEAM NAVIGATION CO., LTD ............ GULF/INDIA
PHONE CA 2-9961
REPRESENTINGOZEAN/STINNES LINES..SOUTH ATLANTIC/CONTINENTAL EUROPEBARBER MIDDLE EAST LINE ................ GULF/MIDDLE EASTFARRELL LINES ............................ GULF/AUSTRALIAMARINE EXPRESS LINE ...... GULF/EAST COAST CENTRAL AMER.KSC NEW YORK LINE .................... GULF/JAPAN/KOREAL. SMIT & CO.’s ............. INTERNATIONAL TOWINGSERVICESMIT-LLOYD, N.V ...................... SUPPLY BOATSERVICE
C. CLAUSEN STEAMSHIP CO., LTD...LIVESTOCK CHARTERSERVICE
HOUSTON ̄ NEW ORLEANS ̄ GALVESTON ̄ BEAUMONT ̄ ORANGE ̄ MOBILE ̄ BROWNSVILLECORPUS CHRISTI ¯ MEMPHIS ̄ DALLAS
CABLE ADDRESS: BIEHL, HOUSTON ¯ TELEX 077-412 ¯ TWX 910-881-1711
34 PORT OF HOUSTON MAGAZINE
Speeding cash flow from the middle east is another example of how our InternationalBanking Department keeps its customers’ far-flung enterprises operating smoothly. Many of our cus-tomers deal in new and used petroleum equipment in the Middle East. They rely on the Southwest’s
largest international banking department to see that remittances on their sales reach their home officesas quickly as possible. With correspondent banks throughout the world, we expedite payments and
collections on a world-wide basis. We issue letters of credit covering the importation and exportationof goods, deliver credit reports on foreign names, and otherwise provide full banking serv-ice anywhere it is needed overseas. Wherever you do business, you’ll appreciate the inter-
Mnational outlook of the Bank That Serves You Best. BANK OF THE SOUTHWESTBank of The Southwest National Association, Houston, Texas 77001 / (713) 225-1551// Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
POSTALASTER: If not delivered infive days, return to P. 0. Box 2562,Houston, Texas 77001. Return re-quested.
BULK RATE
U. S. POSTAGE
PAIDHouston, Texas
Permit No. 5441
\
THIS IS LONG REACHBags of cocoanut are lowered onto Long Reach Docksfrom the SS WILLIAM LYKES. Shipped from the Philip-pines, the cocoanut is destined for Dallas where it will beused in candy bars. Broker was R. W. Smith & Company.
iii!
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Operated by