The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 101, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 29, 1951 Page: 1 of 10
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|ONLY THE BEST.
ALWAYS COSTS
AT BEALLS
LUES PLAN LANDINGS, REDS GHAR
v
wif* Muvtomtt i>mt
i)5, NO.101
MEN’S
,UCHO STYLE
ORT SHIRTS
iae Subs
Ted Off
ia Coast
.ORAGE, Alaska —
.The US Army, Navy
Force' are in*
the sighting of
"definitely not
Bradley Talks
With Ridgway
Kept Secret
/'•
'M
Committee
Studies Tax
Compromise
A
/.
SIEVES ~ KNIT BOTTOM
., off the coast of
peninsula, less
[ijOmiles from Anchor-
[, high military source
|WO TONE: Maroon • Srfey;
Tan; Blue - Navy; Brown - Tan
SIZES: S-M-ML. L
Litsry dtticjai. who would
’ u«e of his name, re-
Itkit tffo ITS Pi«H and WiW-
m agents. flighted the
one on ~Xuguit
$099
'S SHORTS
- other on September 12.
j.,ting Officers "definite-
i oyt the possibility that*
f.nh.< were ITS vessels,
j gfOK. -Kield and Wild -
field sgent. 'was, ie~
|Tto have told a joint Arnn-
"jit Force investigating
I jut week that he saw a
f of the German snorkle-
rjrficp off Dick Arm at Z
Itoph-M- Dick Arm is on
i of fc KeniMPeninsuia..
t of Anchorage.
-told the hoard he got in-
Escsil boat and paddled away
U area. He said he we*
.A enough to the sub. to hear
|oiisd of its diesel engines
i,p*culiar4.uaiOja,!oupi,"f,„
tc;W apparatus.
WASHINGTON-r-A
conference committee will go
to” work next week to decide
whet her most persons will
have to pay an increase of 11
or 1211> percent this year on
their income taxes.
The committee-fates the
task of compromising the
$7,200,000,000 tax boost
passed by the House in June and
the $5,500,000,000 measure approved
by the Senate last night.
Both-bins fall far short of the
$10,700,000.000 tax increase, repeat-
edly requested by President Tru-
man, who thinks anything less.will.
plunge the' government, into the
Tops In Teamwork ■■
Gander Ground Drive
Edges Wildcats 6-0
NA
SANfORlZED
SIZES 28 - 42
PAIRS
■S
Spots
WALTER (GOLIATH) TAI.LM
HAH fLKSTY TO GIVE—-High altitude ia
Red < 'ro*«, blood hank in New Fork
M R.SJ ItOROTHY HARATH
reached by .nurse at
s Undershirts
i taking tejnp^raturt; of
Tiium, eight-foot (imi who Rho^?d up- i?? Goliath costume he wore
in wffnt movie. Tallinn is tallest blood donor yet. &
Sizes 34 • 36
00
it—
HIGH Panther,
i a liberty negro eleven
I pm, today in Memorial
Vlt will be Carver’* ne-
iiArtriet game of the oeaaon.
Trinity to
I la their loop open-
■ tkit week.
Ousted Cadets Still Trying
Congress Asked To Reappoint All 90
YORK, Maine M .P> Congress wi l
fteiasked to' pass legislation‘‘re-
appointing allftO ousted cadets to
West Point, it was disclosed today
The-announcement 'was made by
MEN'S
EALLCREST
FELT HATS,
ALL SIZES
Repor.s
tfw Class Sherwood
Islker. 19-,vear-oLd son
Mrs. U dft A*^L^^Robert Parti, general counsel of
Sue. borne^nhe 97th th* CommittM on J,i!rtice o( th'
Flag, snd hu been assign- **•* York Criminal and Chwl
JUnd Bomb Squadrona*a Court* Bat Association, which has
■c. Walker-wag graduated - been wnductih^ an investigation
Bayou High School in of the West Point dismissals
Ram said that***".resultM-wl
Army ruling making the dp-
oharged cadets eligible to 'return
’Ifr-Weist Bates* Ma-eommi.ttea "will
now: seek the introduction of an
omnibus bill in Congress appoinr-
ing-udl .90!' .to, the military acad-
emy. ’
He said itCwquld entail too much
delay and red tape if the ind,-
viiiuai cadets were required to
seek appointments
Darn said the proposed legists-,
tioti also will contain "adequate’
safeguards, against any possible
reprisals by the Academic -Board
in passing on the reappointments,'
'Btit both- measttres c-arry heavy-
income tax increases for individu-
als, and ebrporations, and' new or
increased excise taxes on cigar-
ettes, beer, liquor, gasoline, auto-
mobiles and other items.-'
The Senate passed its bill. 57 to
• 19. shortly before 10 p.m. after
nine days of debate,, which kept
the chamber in session for eight
to 12 hours daily.
Some senators,who” voted against
the bill complained that it was
"inequitable” and.'too small to bal-
ance the climbing federal budget.
... Others said, they ..opposed it. be:
cause federal spending could be
cut by rooting out "waste.and ex-
travagance"
; The manager of thy bill, Chair-
man Walter F. George of the Sen-
ate Finance Committee, said he
was "beginning to think pretty
well of this hill on account of the
enemies it has made." The Georgia
-Democrat has insisted repeatedly
that the bill will yield enough to
balance the budget.
The Senate measure carries an
U per cent increase in the pay- .
mefcts of most Individual income
taxpayers instead of the 12*,£ per
cent hike voted by the House.
■For upper bracket taxpayers,
the Senate voted a more compli-
rated formula They wj|I pay a" tg£
increase equal to eight per cent
of the difference between the tax
due under the prcSent law and
th net taxable income—that is.
after deductions and exemptions.
Personal income tax increases
And excise tax boosts would be
effective November. 1 under the
Senate bill. The house voted fo'r
a September 1 effective date, but
a provision providing retroactive
payment is undoubtedly out of the
question. .......
By DAN SHI FTS
Nothing but near-perfect teamwork could have
beaten the poised and1 ready Temple eleven here last
night, and it was a full team—the Robert 1E. Lee
Ganders - that could claim credit today for a 6-0
victory over , the Wildcats.
An alert pass defense and hard rushing played
as important a role in the, win as Lee's 35-yard
touchdown march in the fading minutes. *.....y y
Lee’s crunching' ground attack overpowered the
Wildcats on numerous occasions, but the Ganders
never seriously threatened until Guard Noel Chap-
lin pounced on a Temple fumble with four minutes
left to play:
The Gander stock thebali on.the Temple 35-..
yard line and one minute later they had their
beautiful jaunt to the 27. Littlq Eugene Fayle had
the next crack, and he.came through with a blister-
ing nine-yard scamper for a first down on the
Temple 18, " ,
TOKYO—(U.P.)—The Peip-
ing Radio charged today that
the United Nations Com-
mand planned troop landings
on both" the east and west
coasts of Korea north of the
present battle line.
The broadcast by the
mouthpiece of the Chinese
Communist government
came as General of the Army
Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the
United States Joint Chiefs of Staff,
conferred in the greatest secrecy ,
here with UN Supreme Command- * - In
er General Matthew B.' Ridgway. «■
Without mentioning Bradley's
presence, Peiping asserted that the
“American aggressors” had inten-
sified probing operations
South and North Korea, about *6
milea northwest of the pretent
battle line, and 25 miles south of
Pyongyang, the North Korean
x points. ,It took seven plays for the Lee GrMderS
hit the double stripe. Quarterback Gerald Orton
attempted to pass and was downed for a 13-yard, loss
on the first play to put the pigskin 47 yards away
'from the goal line, - - ' .'
Jim Waimsley got that 13 back and added seven
more when he SWept around his own left end on a
_ , . . - to am
Chlnnampo area of the west coast
. . - ... .. . .. , and the Wonsan vicinity of the
On the next three plays, it was Keviti Louns- east coast,
berry, Lounsberry and Lounsberry on bruising runs Chlnnampo f* 50 miles north of
that would have made a fast freight give ground, the 38th Parallel border between
The brilliant Gander fullback and co-capfain bulled “ “
bis way over right tackle for yards and a first
down on the six. He bored to the three on the next
carry. ..........
On the third trip he smashed ovbr the Jiliddle,
^arrying a.rnass of WildcatS.jyltfe hhn into thetond
zone. ■■: -■■,' : ■’
Orton's extfa pornt ’Kick was' bJocked by David
Keith and the Ganders held their precious 6-0 lead
by throwing up a blanket-like defense after the
final kickoff that stopped the Wildcats cold.
Doyle Traylor, Temple’s'great passer, was rushed
so hard in those fading minutes that he either
threw wild-or was thrown for a loss before he
capital for which it is the. port
i of the
Wonsan is 80 miles north
38th parallel end 780 mile* north v
(See Lee Teamwork—Page Two)
Santa Claus Britain May Blockade
Fo^Ganders From Iran
Complaining of the alleged prob-
ing activities, Peiping said:
“These facts show that the
American aggressors are in the
course of preparing numerous ad-
venutres in Korea, and after re-
peated American provocations
since the Kaesong (cease-fire) ne-
gotiations started to co-ordinate
lovnt nlnna "
their premeditated top-level plans."
.e The -broadcast mentioned tho
; .presence of the 40th and 45th
United States infantry divisions in
Japan and their present training ;
maneuvers as indications of the.
“new adventures,”
By FRED HARTMAN
Santa Claus came to Memo-
rial Stadium last night.
It’s no wonder the Robert E.
Ix»e coaching staff made the
long walk back to the dressing
room humming “Comes The
Glad Noel ”
He came—from out of no-
where with but four minutes
"'and 35 seconds of the fourth
quarter left and the shore none
to narv’n.
Temple Backs Doyle Traylor
and Hill Cooper laid the foot-
1ml! on-the ground j* deftly .as
LONDON—(TE)—DiploJnatic1 quar-
ters predicted today that Britain
will order its warships to intercept
any foreign tankers Communis],
or otherwise, which' load Iranian
-oil.
The diplomatic correspondent of
settlement of the dispute calling
for establishment of a new oil com-
pany with a neutral director It
would replace both the British
company and the Iranian-estab-
lished Iranian National Oil Com-
the pro-government Daily Mirror pany.
said he understood the cabinet MOSCOW-The Soviet government
in the labor government's
nouncement last night that it will
____________ , taka ltd worsening dll dispute with
St. Nick ever laid one of those- Iran 'to""lFC“*tDnted~^fetKjns-
silly bouncing pighides under a Security Council on Monday.
dispute, but reports have reached
Foperty "T*- the Soviet capitoi from aboard that
_W- ■ : the Russians are negotiating with
Toe action was foreshadowed Iran to buy oil or offering to assist
' * ‘ ■“ Iran in operating the industry.
Peiping said that paratroopers
also were being trained for land-
ings in North Korea, that the 27,*
100-ton aircraft carrier and other
warships had arrived in Korean
waters and that two new fighter-
bomber Air Force wings had been
transferred from the United States
to Japan. ' •
There was speculation here that
ith him
for Ridgway to ftx a
~—T—M
Noel
was a pleasant way of saying th,
did not seriously mean these young
men were cheats and conspirat-
Allies Rout
Christmas tree.
That, was Noel’s cue,
Chaplin, that is.
This 195-pound junior fell on
that ball and fondled it just like
a kid would his new Christmas
present.
That was all the help the
Ganders needed from Santa
Claus or anybody else. A tre-
mendous offensive surge, led by
(See Santa: F4g* Two),
The announcement said'Britain
proposed to “take ail practicable
steps to prevent nny atempt” by
Iran to dispose of products from
, its southern dU.Fields to Third par-
ties pending action by the Security
Council.
Other developments in the oil
dispute included:
TEHRAN, Iran — Vice premier
Hosaein Fatemi said premier Mo-
hammed Mossadegh will leave for
New York at the head of the
Iranian delegation as soon as the-
Security Council meets to take up
the British complaint, Iran sought
to line up support in other coun-
tries today for the council debate
and alerted military forces for any
“possibility of aggression.” Mos-
sadegh. when told of the British
.%
permission
deadline for the Reds to, quit stall-
ing and resumt the suspended
armistice talks. .
Ridgway was understood Jo have
asked tor such permission during
a previous breakdown In the cease-
fire conference. If the Reds should
refuse to comply with
posed Allied .demand, the UN com-
mand presumably would begin an
all-out war against them.
Bradley and Ridgway began
their talks while still awaiting a
Communist reply to the UN eom-—
mender’s proposal of Thursday to
shift the armistice parley from
Kaesong to the vicinity of the no-
man’s-land town of Songhyon,
WASHINGTON—The US prepared
a new compromise proposal for
appeal to the UN, said Iran would eight mile's to the'southeast
“take relevant action according- The Reds were expected to re-
ly” Dut did not elaborate. jeet it. “ ~ "
Coil
Biased
SfflON ■ Oi Assistant
JSfcrrtwy Anna M.Rosen-
Bwa toaay.lt will be necessary
at &m mm iw
P»y gnd Marine Corps in
■®oer *u(j December.:
the bigger draft total
t*»ry-because ef a recent
, strength
“Less than 25 cadets, are satis:
factorUy set. to continue their edu-
cation elsewhere,” Daru said.,
■. .’’Approximately. 56 would '.surely
.retHrrt with their heads up."
Daru s group ° previously had.
sought a congressional investiga-
tion of toe West Point cheating
scandai.cn n t endThg that the rights
of the'ousted cadets were "tram-
pled upon."
Red Attacks
EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUART-
ERS, Korea U'Ri Red troops
battered at the United Nations
line across Korea for the third
straight day today in a largely
Band Kicks
Over Traces
At Halftime
Police Probe Mystery Death Of Student
Shreveport Man Found Dead In Blood-Spattered Auto
HOUSTON ~~fl®— A 28-ycar-oid ordered an autopsy, adding,, “We
A rebellious Robert E. Lee band
Argentine Revolt Squelched
Rebels Will Face Immediate Trial
futile .effort to_^_ba<k terrainnightjratided.h«ytimn.hamot
lost to the Eighth Army* Opera- for a pacjtpd Gander stadium-
, Student Director Jimmy Russell
The Communists struck m key kppt-the band under hii capabIe
sectors along a 60-miie front from bajjds through "Men of Music
a point north of Seoul in the west March” and "Pizzicato Polka” but
to - the, eastern mountains •“
University of Houston petroleum
..engineering student from Shreve-
port was found dead early today
in his blood-spattered automobile
under m^teTious circumstances, f
Lieutenant Frank Murray of the
Police Homicide‘Bureau identified
him as Leon Eddy Gryder and
said investigation had disclosed h;is
family Hved in Shreveport
Murray said it could not. be de-
-immediateiy------whethux.
Gryder, a World War II Veteran
are not positive what is the cause
-of death.'' . '
Gryder was found in his auto-
mobile, parked in the driveway of
■•amagfclBk.eommuBx‘ae«it.Hfe.-im'&; ___
versity. The body was lying face '31, oF^Yeveftofte "ttod "Houstoft
down on the floor. police by telephone that she had
A glass coated in a greasy film seen her brother just before he re-
was found in a ditch alongside the turned to the university for the
2:30 a,m. when the left a friend’s
room at the university.
Thebody was found around 8:15
a.m. by a night watchman at the
plant. ■
A sister, Mrs. Marie TraVersey,
c
Found 1 own
IES' FLANNELETTE
GOWNS
1 .:,!KRtDGE *o«Wn’t have
SSjKXSStt
ri»w I* dld tegrH missing
wn-Iempie game. Seems
t to school st Temple .. .
;“L), the Blue Battalion,
^^ girlf dnw and
LStfsiaa -,h*
BUSiNOS AIRES, Argentina- iiLPi
Admiral Enrique Garcia, Navy
minister, resigned today as an al-,
termath of the short-lived revolt;
against President Jyan D. Peron
N£\y Capitan Anibal Olivieri im-
mediately took the oath of office
a* his successor.'
The ,jro-govem ment t a b 10 i 4
newspaper'EI I,»horista said that
one member of the armed forces
was. killed and four were wounded
in the uprising.
Casualties were listed as one
>LID PASTEL COLORS
SIZES 34 - 40
r*“Mto* Jown
loyal Army, man killed and one
wounded and ,tore,e rebels wounded
Including First Lieutenant ge^‘na'Xavw‘ Captain' Viceme-M
Menendez. son of one of two gen- Baroja -one of tte rebels" who flid
-tof-.sntwniFt-wa^^wce'.Tushhd-
through Congress last night.
—’Ybe.fovqrijgieiirt announced that
Madame Eva Peron. the presi-
dent's wife, was “rather seriou’si;'
ill'' with anemia "of medium in-
tensity” and was being given blood
transfusions. ” . -.
Peronista Deputy , Jose Emilio
Visea presented a bill in ths-
Chamber of-Deputies today to de-
prive all rebels who fled to Uru-
guay of their Argentine citizen- •
ship. and to cpnfiseate-Ai’.eir pos-
sessions.
jin Montevideo, Uruguay . At
fnrraa w ft,. -------- ------r- car, but Its contents could not be fall term and that he was in "tMr
strength rangitigHfrom 40 to 2500,-T-” , °, i! .’-., ,lg.°up? Mutray said it could not be de- immediately determined. . best of. hearth.”• She said he hid
=„s.s ^~
Justice of the Peace Tom Maes He was last seen
IfeV^ *«uS,ny erais accused of being m chief wh<m ^ ^oit collapsed,
, krfield was really revolt leaders. , said that the plan seamed fpul
Red attacks drove Allied forces
from two hills southeast of the
big central frqnt bastion of Kum-
song Friday, but UN troops routed
an enemy regiment mid recaptur-
ed one of them an hour later in
a counterattack.
Fifth Air Forije fighter-bombers,
supported toe counterattack with
their heaviest air blow of the war
against a single objective. P-51
MUstaigs and' Marine Corsairs field, exhibited some well-practie
blasled. burned and strafed the ed marching formations during
enemy with 122 bomb., napalm and their parade. With perfect eo-ordi-
machine-gun strikes'. --: ' nation, they executed three diffi-
Altogether, - the Eighth Army cult-military maneuvers,' a Single
counted 796 Communist dead after ,*chelon, a moving diamond forma-
Friday's flghting- all along - toe tion, and an intricate' weaving by
decided to swing into “Dixie,” a
wsltzy "Merry Oldsmobile” and
other popular numbers.
,.Then, when the director turned
for a digrtified bow to his audience,,
the capriciousb and started to play
again. ■ ■
But, the.Arieks were all in fun.
and the band finished its halftime
show with .customary precision.
The Brigadiers, second on the
fold, but it was found on toe floor
alive about of th’e ear empty.
“““osrueM was really
victory smile . . . .
front.
Eighth Army officers said they
did not consider the three-day
79
stank t.n7----• • EYwidrqt Juan D. ft*ron moved >pr00r but “something went wrong
"toe1*- *niffllhg after swiftly to deal with the -kej ‘‘g: (Baroja and more than 70 other .Communist drive a counterroffen-
010 » Puddle lip to his ur<* the revolt, which he said ^wteers o{ .b; Argentine, armed slve because of the limited
was aimed at assassinaung hm. jorcftS who ^ to Uruguay:were strength of the enemy attacks.
Street t J,*\es Slom ht,r ?nd hi* wifp »s well as overthrow- imeniw| and it „.as announced "The Communists are just be-
i*e-»^^gkout),*, ..Gaylung .ing govenuhrat their Arms and planes would be coming obnoxious.” an Eighth
■°P8 m a new place for Armed^^ with a martial law de-<f(,t,lrnod t0 Argentina.' - .Army briefing officer said.
^‘‘•nerbertAtwoodwf-~cl'ee^;6,bCpfyjrtss.'Peronsrepme --
M^t birthday, trkna- proceedings fot military
squads and files,
The music of the bailyr'e squad
was featured in the drum and
bugle, corps’show. •
Both- the band and- Brigadjcrs
were in full uniform for the first
tiihe this fall., A. cool breeze chilled
ferns who came to ue game In
short sleeves. •»
rS'S.S'Spunky Housewife Defies'Haunted'House
wBlalock ara celebrat- tovolt had been crushed * . « , , —,. I /\rf li V n • 1
^•wyear of wedded bust 5w Blood-Dnppwg oHost Chased Off Previous Residents
FRAJBCCTGN. T«« <** ***■ '7 dbor
of Palestine* to|d me if I heard fi0.» then fooUtens started down
\trwFS3E ^ ^ penslD under a •'slate
■Oik. -“tL',ad Mveral at ' ^ «*--"'**
haired housew^e.
\ LtTY ME*
AND IT ALWAYS COS®1
[EXAS
Late Bulletin
KoMlip^u*1 Gander fans ~~ 1
“ tick Lin»men lock Or Job
. Linemen ef the Hooston Ugb‘*
ing and Power Company re-,
two-day “hoBdcy" becauee of *
turned to work today after a
labor dispute. Twelve Baytown
“..... ' - " ‘ in the, return
walkout ■"'■ - ' -job in BBRBj
The linemen voted to return to "It looks to me Iiki
work at a special meeting of the it trying to scare me.
ATI, International Brotherhood
of Electrical Worker* last night.
They decided ts return in v.crk .
whflr negotintiens rontinur. them botn
close then footsteps started down
the halt I had a shotgun and
flashlight handy.'
“The footsteps kept coming
toward me and I waited until I
ggaff**?
f * special kick
told
with “one shotgun, a pistol and a anything to 'shbot to kilt,’she
bulldog" to protect he*, early to- said resolutely. *■ ' '
day moved into a house, which, Mbs. Carter said the strange
was vacated* three week* ago noises were first heard several
after tenants heard weird foot- weeks ago by Mr and Mrs. J. W.
steps and found a bloody hand
print in the bathroom. • -------- ...———..... — ----- ... .. ._
Furthermore, 38-year-old Mrs! of her father in, Oklahoma Otj’. thing there.
Lallie Carter said she'd “stick it Cely, a cousin rtf* Mrs. Carter, After each visit by ,the my-
mtt" hv herself except on the said the first time he. and his wife sterieus- “footateps” the Celya
weekends when her husband will heard the walking noise “we were found spots of Mood oa the batb-
h-re from his pipefltUng scared but thought it was our room floor. A specimen taken by
Rw*ginstiw>.” > Herrinateii wa» identified M
Cely. soon after Mrs. Carter had k«4wl wuldn’t miss and %shed
inherited the house on Die death the^iight. There wasn’Tany-
someone The next night,
Mrs-Car- heard the footsteps IHHB
J“but r» just not going. aAen Oely dalled out th- noise After the third visit by th#
to scare.'I've got a shotgun and a stopped A search of the house ghostly intnider. the Gelj- coupto
pistol antf’t kiHf-- bow to shoot
Strikes Halt
Work On US
Atom Plants
■-
By UNITED PBE88
Construction at two top-secrA
atomic energy projects was slow-
ed or halted by strikes today and I
negotiators sought to head off a
threatened / walkout which could
idle 70.000 General Electric work-
Cdnstruction workers at the Los
Alamos, New Mexico, atomic
weapons center refused ~to oross
picket lines which blocked raids
leading to the project. The strikers
were members of s plumbers’
Union. The walkout halted $42,500,-
009 worth of construction work.
At Paducah, Kentucky, 535 mem-
bers of the teamsters and
chauffeurs union remained off
their jobs, although a settlement
was reached with, iron workers on
the vital project. ", - 7T
More than 10,500 iron miners ia
the Mesabf and Vermillion ranges
of Minnesota staged a "spon-
taneous" walkout leaf night to at-
tend s union meeting at which
they discussed "stalling tactics"
they said employers used in in-
stituting a wage and equity
But the miners were back on I
job today. " '
hf aga?A 'but of Public Safety at Austin
:ioudy Tor
SAYTOWN
■ rc-x-taiea rnthing.
"The third time I was ready.
found a perfect 'handprint
"Fee TweF
IS-
STARTS WITH STRIPES-rSoose human* Wind up wearing strioes.
btrt this bab- arrived in world that v.aj. "Glrii>"is making debut
nith muther, an African irt.ro at PkMadeiphia Zoo. -.
• "
mk
Bis i
Gand
..
.take
when
" ton's i
Temple
Temj
In the
■ that
In the
fight
Bcfor
minutei
•trike
- put the
five-yar
P-aV- ^
Only
kept
In the
in the
' In the
a pass
Thorn to
bail
Thornto.
Temple
his ham
plays
a short
ful 30-y
who ran
more ya;
down bj
20.
In th«
standing
Mj^-rrperfeeA-j
ing into
couldn’t
The ha
ders in
as Lee’s
Traylor
With G
him from
ceivers
objective
the ball
;
Would .
couple of
Went clea
Herbert
Balke, anc
few of the
Traylor
final mini
* Temple’s
effective
fooler play
age to _
Lee’s gr<
better all
tough opp
way over
Lounsbei
in the bad
for 84 yar
The Gan
rage Was
Lounsberrj
times for
yards per
Visser pi
second qua
: slick ball-i
a sore thu
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old self in
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slippin got
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 101, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 29, 1951, newspaper, September 29, 1951; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041957/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.