The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 233, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 19, 1956 Page: 4 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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Pan-Americanism To Reach New High At Simon Bolivar
WASHINGTON - Whan high American
offlclali and head* of Latin America repub-
lic* gather on June 24-26 at Panama City
to help Organization of American State*
ambassador* commemorate the 130th an-
niversary of the Congress of Panama called
ia JH26 by Simon Bolivar, they will write
a new chapter in the long and dramatic
history of Pan Americanism.
The 21-nation OAS council will itart ita
first session at exactly 11 a. m. on June 22.
Sunday, June 24, the presidents will arrive.
On June 20, the government of Panama,
which extended the invitations, will con-
duct various civic events. On June 26, the
OAS council will honor the presidents of
American republics at this unprecedented
event. The president of Panama and one
other president, chosen by his fellow vis-
itors, will speak.
President Eisenhower waa among the
first of the presidents to accept the Pana-
ma government’s invitation. This was ap-
propriate, for United State* delegates to
the 1626 Congress of Panama did not ar-
rive before the Congress adjourned.
ONLY FOUR nations sent delegates 130
yean ago—Colombia, Centra] America, Pi-
. ru and Mexico.
Ten sessions were held, on June 22 and
23 and then from July 10 through July 15. .
Delegates accomplished four things. They
signed a "treaty of union, league, and per-.
petual confederation.” They agreed that
the congress should meet every two yean
in time of peace and yearly as long as trou-
ble with Spain prevailed. They fixed the
contingent of troops for each republic to
form an army of 00,000 men. They also
agreed on the organization and movement
or this army for their mutual defense.
Simon Bolivar was bom in 1783, the year
that marked the end of the American rev-
olution. In 1809, Bolivar, then 26, had vis-
ited the United States. He became so great
a leader in the Spaniah-American revolu-
tion that he ia known as the "liberator”
and as "the Washington of South America.”
He was not quite 43 years old at the time
orthe Cdbfren ef'PKSima:—• - ——
' THE UNITED STATES had maintained
neutrality throughout the Spanish-Ameri-
can revolution, which coincided in part with
our War of 1812.
In 1822, President James Monroe asked
that the U. 8. recognize Venezuela, Chile,
Colombia and La Plata as independent
states. In 1823, the United States recogniz-
ed Venezuela, Chile, Colombia and La Plata
as independent states In 1825, the United
. States recognized Brazil s independence. In
May, 1826, a month before the Congress of
' Panama convened, this nation recognized
Peru’s independence.
John Quincy Adams waa President at the
time of the Congress of Panama. Three
yean earlier, while secretary of state, he
had been largely respoiytfble for PreMdent
Monroe’s famous Monroe Doctrine — a
warning to European nations not to try to
seize Latin American territory and to Rus-
sia not to try to expand its holdings in
North America.
Anderson, of Kentu ...
of Pennsylvania. Senate approval
Houae appropriations were delayed so long,
however, that neither United States dele-
gate reached Panama.
MEMO: From The Sun News Desk,
By Prsifon Psnderqrau
■r—- CANDIDATES 'MEAT and that about 10 or 1} boats c**K from Onivea-
Hr * ’ SHINDTOS THAT attrset htg tmwds. tteh u too - ton, Houston and Baytown —........*
annual Fraternity of the WhlU fish fry
wh
I 1
— in
Aiiabuac, ---furnish • fin# medium through whlcn
candidate* for political office c*n solicit vote* In
wholesale fashion.
Candidate* at tht ttth annual fish fry Saturday
wart almost at plentiful as the fried fish. The.1
milled through the swatting, but Jolly throng wear
tag their Sunday smiles and passing out campaign
canto by tho thousands. _
We war* reminded of the old-fashioned political
rallies whew candidate* and their supporters put
no the feed bag Tsievlaton and air conditioning
have just about forcod this type Of politicking out
of buatnen*.
It* hard enough to get people to listen to a
candidate by radio or watch him on television to
air conditioned living roAms. let alone gat them
out to a political rally, even though a free meal to
provided.
mounts estimated '
Ot;r CADE Jackson Jr, of Anahuae, secretary «f
the Fraternity of tn* White Hr con, csllmnled Rat-
iirday'a crowd JOlt* history of the White Heron
Fraternity, which waa organised In 1044.
Jackson's ritinmto wa* bated on the number or
pounds of flail nerved, the number of tickets sold
abend of time and the number of people who regie-
tired They had bought 9,000 pounds Of catfish
for the fiesta and didn't have any left. White Heron
cook* any you can feet with that many flub.
PoWLtTION TRIPLED , '
THU POPULATION of Anahuae wa* almost tripled
by the fl*h fry turnout If there were 9,000 Ac
mmnf Vrm Jost- federal venaqg Anahuae ha* a
population Of i.soo,
Scores of those who came were perennial vuiltm *.
bavin* newer missed a fish fry alnce the firm <m«,
held 13 yearn ago In liberty. They came bv land,
atr and sea, mostly by land. Somebody intimated
that mo amall airplane* landed at Anahuae airport
Report From Austin-
NPEflAL EDITION V ;
THE BAYTOWN SUN ia highly gratified by thr
reception of ita special White Heron edition by
thoae attending the fish fry. We distributed I.Ort
■free copies of the edition among the crowd. It con
lathed picture* ami stories about the affair, includ-
ing a roundup of (he remarks made by Sen, Price
Daniel, principal speaker for the occasion.
One woman rematked, when handed a copy of
The Sun: "Well, now, this la what I call service
How did you get thla printed so feat? I didn't figure
or* reeding about the Halt fry until I got Monday's
paper"
Another said: "lad me'have to copies I want to
lend them to some of my friends who think Arm
huso Ln't even on th* map." She offered to pay
for them, hut wa* told they were free. 8hc found
that hard to understand, too.
DOG CONTROL I AW
UNDICIt PRESSURE of demand* that it do some
thing about the dug problem. Baytown City Council
ha* edactcd it stiff ordinance that prolilblts Hover
from having free range of oily streets, it will be-
come effective on Sunday, June 24, but enforcement
probably won't begin until Monday morning.
The, ordinance provide* that any person convicted
of allowing dog* to run looee will tie fined from
19 to $300, ami that anv person convicted of turn-
ing dogs loose Inside the city will be fined from
».!» to 1200.
Home folk* like the new law, Horne don't. One wo-
man called to euy »he didn't think the city could
henceforth enforce Its do* tag ordinance "because
tt the dogs .gre kept up the city officials won’t have
•wrights* route•no *-pcr*on'a pmpurty to .tee wheth-
er .dog* are property tagged'
■Hio- went on to »*y that thla would probably cost
the edy a lot of money each year. We haven't
looked into Die -matter. but w# don't think tt will
make much difference, The dty didn't .collect a
gteot deal of money from dog tags In the first place
,1$
ispowyf°l
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By Yarn Sanford we aure look good-on paper -
AUSTIN - (Hpt— Neat month, lot the first pine in
24 year*, Texan* will be asked to vote not only on
men but directly on leaue*.
State Democratic Kaecutlve Committee member*
....... ' " of three question* on
can o*pr*»* their de-
lutve approved the piecing of three question* on
the primary ballot, Voter* can
Mrs* for or against:
I, I-cguiatlon exempting
Nutshell Roundup - —
News That Will Make Headlines Viewed
child from compute
to move agent* in. It ha* used
Sen Marino for years as a base,
By to funnel funds to the Itali-
Ihe extra man ia elacted by th* entire atate.
Bill Elkina, candidate for oongreeemon atdergc,
told Uto DemooNtle executive committee the main
plank tn hi* platform ia to have the office he aeek*
abollabad.
Republican National ('ommitteeman Jack pot ter
eatd the OOP. legal committee might seek federal
court action to force the legislature to redtolrlct
ro.ya'tendanc* at Integrated .charts. nVt not Wr htv# th, Mm# wpr,KlltaU..n ^2, u^T'^k
PEARSON BLAMED AUA1N - In a report made
public by the Insurance t Wmmtaalon, TVman Drew
i’earaon received the brunt of the blame for luring
Texan* Into investing money tn the now defimrt
PS Trust and Ouaranfy i\>. The report was tweed
on anawett* to questionnaires sent draft purchaser*
bv tho atate liquidator'* office,
1
man lag* of Negroe# and whit**, end;
!t, I t* of Interposition to holt federal encroach-
ment on states rights.
Majority approval presumably would constitute
• mandate fw action by the next legtatature,
Historically, such voter referendum* seldom have
been used And not too successfully, present pro-
cedure* aliU substantially unchanged, were sol up
with the passage of th* Terrell Election low* in
1*07.
in the nearly .W year*; since then, referendum*
were held only three tlipt^. Am| failed to pass
twice. In ISOs a prohibttjon proposal was voted down
inure Ilia a two to one. In MIS the people rejected
three to, one a propoaal to call a copetitulionai' eon-
Wtrtton:~ ........ -......................................................-...................
But, in HUS Texan* voier overwhelmingly In favor
of repealing th* federal prohibition amendment A
year later the legislature followed suit and ratified
the repeal amendment.
This waa the last referendum submitted until tht*
yenr.. . -'
In other action the State ExeeuBve Commit ire
eerttfted a list of at candidates for statewide office,
ft ignored a charge by Reuben Senterfitt thal Priee
. Daniel's name was ineligible to appear on the hailot
because lie liar) not realigned his U. S. Senate poet,
Fort Worth waa selected by the committee as the
alto for the Sept, tl state eonveaUmi. principal basi-
Mri «l that time will be naming Tew party officert
_ and deciding on a general electron plauorm for (he
IMmocraUe gubernatorial nominee.
QDP CMODStt! CORPDS w Test** Republicans will
hold their August 2* state eoavettBon in CAsrpus
Christt, QOi* nominees tor stale office, preetiienUsl
electors, a new state chairman and a general plat-
form wlti be decided upon at that dm*,
Sslectton of the convention alt* waa made at the
party's State executive committee meeting in Austin
Owamittee member*went Pro*. Dwipht D, Etten
bower a telegram asserting their confidence that
he will carry Tex»* aml be r»-*le«ted tn November
iEDISTRICTINa DROED — Demands that Texas
congressional districts he reaBtiwd were hearet at
hoOi political pariy »*e tt ns*. .........
Texas was allotted an additional congressman
after the tsoo eensue Store the legtalature has
R.v CHAKLM M, Mtf ANN
t'nilei Press Staff (Vrrrespondenf
United Press correspondents
the headline*.
Cyprus Peace Move
lamk for nn important Rriltsh
pronouncement on Cyprus policy
any day now Prime Minister
Anthony Eden amt hts government
have decided to try to reopen ne-
, . . .-goUatkms with the Oreek Cypriots
gueaUonnalre* w*r* anawered by s ens purchaser*. Llw. tlemnnd the right of ‘self-
They represented tnveetment* of $4,711.til Nearly o«t*rmlnatlon — meaning union
half of them charged peerren wlijUtUliianeing them oWce, Britain may offer a
into buying. TM*'becauee of his poraonai, oft-re- newly grafter! fonstfhttoiK XorSloii
pealed statement that "You can put your trust in »«ya* it may even set a date on
U. S Trust." . which self-determination would be
the granted. The date would be far tn
ngo the future, however, toy lit to 19
pledged to refund til ''profits* mad* on hi* com- years The tragic murder of nn
merelais, As of this writing the Insurance Cfenunke- American vice-consul by Cypriot
iion'a reconls do not reveal any such repayments estremlet* may make moderate
self detenntniet* more ready to
Usten to compromise talk,
are throwing Icelanders out of
jobs. The plug-up in the dollar
flow t* simttng to affect the is-
land's economy.
All quiet Sport* Outlook
American authorities in Fornio- Althea Gibson, first Negro girt
s«t believe tire Chinese Cbmmti ever to achieve a high national
nlxts. have decided not to shirt ranking in American tennis, is a
anything in the Formosa Strait greet ted to win the women's sin-
this sunuiicr. This is tht: season flea championship in the Wimble-
when conditions would bo best for don tournament starting next Mon-
an attack on the creutal Islands day in London. Miss Gibson. $8-
the NationaUsta hold. But alt is year old New Yorker, started
quiet. y foreign tour in India
Backfire her. She ha* won to wn or me th„ Rmbassv wdviseA
ATASintnL. ISFSEtffnCS:£
United States be forcetl to give has beaten the best European eon-
up its ‘ . . . - . - ......
Washington Merry-Go-Round - -
Dulles Tells Ike He Wants*
To Retire Come Next Winter
Er Mlff lMIMf W» He dtontn at his ewa heme
WASHINGTON. ~ John Fortcr -the White House. He laid dawn
Dullea has told Ike that come next thi* rule shortly before Italian
winter he wont* to reUre as Sec- President Grohchl arrived in tho
retafy of State. He gave this word U.S.A. In February and refused to
before the President* illness, says f*ve » d "ncf,,0/ •»*« *ve“ th.0,UKlJ
he'* tired, very Ured.’ that , four he wa* the first ltalian President
^onT^D^tefwiuTt SdWSW It's‘routing tor
STusS?MT.IrT ‘h* Troaldv-nt to give a state din-
- «er for every head of state.
However this poses a problem. »Hnlth» was thc official excuse,
Attorney General Browne T also tho h thcre ^ lome diplomatic
eye. the Supreme Court (though ^row-lifting when Eisenhower
bed probably have tough conflr* *jaye(j up playing poker until
motion problem* in the Senate), as 12:30 three days before President
doe* ex-Gov. Tom Dewey. Gronchi arrived, held a stag White
But all are New Yorkers and House dinner just after he left,
can’t be piled Into the Supreme and attended John Foster Dulles’
Court even if the vacancies oc- .birthday dinner one day before he
curred, becauae there's already one arrived . . . The rule against
New Yorker there, John Harlan, White House dinners waa kept in
incidentally a Dewey recommenda- force for other visitors, including
' tion, and doing an A-l job . , . the President of Indonesia, but
Inside reason Milton Elsenhower the health excuse wore through
resigned from Penn State was not wllen Ike went to the huge Grid-
to lake a government job but to iron Dinner and the equally big
campaign for his brother. " h'to House Photographers din-
The decision wa* made before rll‘r- 11 was ®*ter ttle *h.at
the second illness, when Milton fi- he was stricken . . Those who
gured brother Ike would need wtched him say six little appe-
someone to make speeches tor t,I"rs at \ ^latl
ST.TZ StSSS Ike £
rnlvee* tv mireea o« In Mlitlcl n0t tBkc 8 dri"k' BUt hC did ey,>
University mixed up in polities R tray of appetizers and snitched
• - • More anf moro Republicans onc almost every time the waiter
.. Me ey**ng Milton in case brother piu,St,d hv VVlfat he liked was a
Ike now says no. CoL Bob Guggcn- miniature" meatball TcTy juicy,—
helm; ex-Ambaasado: to i’ortugal, hui also on the greasy side. He
started the idea by calling up Sher- had six . . Knowing he was on a
man Adams. Chairman Lcn Hall, diet. Secretary of Commerce Sin-
*nd others . . . The Dcniocrats, clair Weeks viewed this with
who trained Milton tor 10 long alarm, sidled over to Maj. Gen.
year* in government, have to ad- Howard Snyder, suggested he
mlt he's *n extremely able gent, police his Presidential patient.
But Len Hall grumble* that he* Either Snyder wasn't worried or
not really a Republican. too many small meatballs had
already downed the Presidential
THE DRAFT and Dewey — Air hatch.
Force officer* are urging that th* „„„
tiraft be abolished. They argue in- DOME — Arthur
side the Pentagon that the three P'aywright and friend of
service* can now recruit all the “?“«>*• the author of
men they really need ... Ex-Gov. TJ'? Crucible, story of Salem
Tom Dewey Is building up a terri- Hou,^ nmAmJrieln nrivlttea
closesT Drtnte^ttonte^^^an6 r°mmitte<‘ wi» burn Miller in the
h”’*8rt y*T*|* r, y«r° E n Congressional witness chair -
hower. Latest client* are - Pan thanks to the witch-burning tno
American Airways and Eastern tics of-new Committee Counsel
Airline* ... Though Mrs Eisen- p)ck Aten, He's determined to
hoa-er 1* confident her hueband get more headlines for the Un-
win recover Irom his present 111- American Activities Committee
ness, ehe Is more opposed than and knows that big Hollywood
ever to his running again. She names linked to beautiful actresses
readies, however, this Is a decision i* one way to do it . . . Senator
he will have to make himself . . . Watkins of Utah had a run-in
The British Embassy has cabled with Senator Eastland of Missis-
London that it'a now uncertain s>PPi behind closed doors of the
■ . a Eisenhower will run for a second Senate Judiciary Committee. Wat*
a test Decern- l(,rm Until ike ,peaim out himself, kin* angrily challenged Eastland’s
I# out of Uje the Embassy advised th e British to 1(,t a house employe,
* H«'»usO Pearimn paraonaily recommended
purchase, the TV broadcaster eeveral month*
range plans which deFriki oh Eis*
bases there Is backfiring, tenders and both Shirley'Fry and •• * totportiqit -job
Cutback* in American spending on' Louise Brough, who were ranked “e|ng tackled by Fred waton, new
constnution and other projects l-2 in the United States last rear. Secretary of the Interior, ia the
*• problem of converting salt Water
can Activity* Committee, run the
staff of the Senate Immigration
Subcommittee. He said Arens had
now left the Senate side of the
Capitol tor the House and he
should stay over on the House
TuMdty, June 19, 1056
BOLIVAR SENT out his invitation to tho
Congress of Panama on December 7,1824,
a year after the United States announced
the Monroe Doctrine. Bolivar at first was
not going to invite the United States. He
apparently was not much impressed by the
Monroe Doctrine. Bolivar, in fact, had a
broader scheme sometime before the con-
ference: that British influence should be-
come dominant in South America; but he ,
C^rjside1nt Adams favored sending United
States delegates, and named Richard C.
by Pearson.
CIVIL IMMUNITY DENIED OFFKTALJS - Public
official* are not immune from civil Uabitihr for act*
iii connection wtth their dutie*. An Austin district
judge *o ruled In a case involving two former em-
ploye* of the Insurance Commission.
Examiners tatty W. Blanchard and Robert it.
Butter are among more than so defendant* in
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge SS=S ~
- --5L— ----'---- ?-.V" S**ton believes that If scientists Arens' bin «ole
$0*0,000 damage suit. It wa*
the i*M collnpse of the teg General American
Casualty Co. of Ran Antonio.
PARR TRIAL DKIJtY EXPECTED - Another sit
Btrhclor trip* nbroad by Soviet
Russian bigwig* may be on the
way out European diplomats hr*r
that some Kremlin wire* will
start to aecompafty- their husbands
on missions to foreign ctmnirie*.
The ire it being broken now Oom-
flle.1 bv the state ,mmUt Party leader Ntktta S.
reZrrohie Khruahchev took his son with him
r**pon»tnie tor w)gn h* wynt to Lorxton In April,
New Foretgn Minister Dmitri T.
Rhepliov has taken hi* daughter
his Current visit to the Middle
The Answer, quick:
t. Whet ar* Peri ?
sk What explorer first
Greenland's le* J*P?
8. Can you name the
proei-
A C*ntr«l Pr#*s Feature
Ixwk for a very loving nature la
a child born under thee* influ-
eneea
Happy Birthday
__.___. . .... Arens' bill would sabotage Prrsl-
coi» develop a cheap method of dent Eisenhower's im mi gat ion
taking the salt out of salt water, program . . . Adlai Stevenson
huge areas of the world, Including plans to recruit Negro staff mem-
N#W Mexico, Nevada, and the here to counteract his southern
Sahara Desert, can be made to support, particularly the endorse-
Woseora like a Garden of Eden, went of Georgia’s Senator-to-be
Herman TaJmadge, Margaret But-
monthv dehiy seems likely before the trial of George ®*M. One reason Kretnlto f*nd^
B Patr to -iheotM tax'e'risiRM'sIiMtro'lakerptacv;
Parr’s plea to have the tpial in Laredw rather than
Austin, was rejected by the US Supreme (Must.
V, 8, Attorney* prompUy asked Judge Ben H. Hire
of Austin art early setBng, preferabSy to July .
But ParP# attnroeys steti they wilt file for * re-
heartng before the Supreme Court, Such action could
keep the ease from coming up until January of t»67. 8n*r
Parr wa* first Indicted In IW4. He 1* charged
wrth filing fade retain* tn sets,, two and lWl and
foiling to p#Pe gownment ||g.flSd; '
lie* hare stayed home tn the peat.
They were hostage* for pap * safe
return home,
flifal «MNk
campaigns for the Proatdency-
4.- What ancelnt city is the
capital ef Syria?
5 By whom was the city of
Augustine, Fla, founded?
Some Vatican quarters ire wori
ed over the heavy schedule of
nrk Pope Plus Xtl has resumed
work Bob* Pius
ww!~-
tigue. They fur hi*
rerent setback front fa-
ufiwc. «,rty tear hi* heart mav
weaken tf he. overtaxes himstif
tewtd Italian summer,
deetlai candidate* defeated hv Charles Cuburn, veteran actor HCE’S DINTfER PARTIES--Vice Cher and Mrs. Todd Duncan, two
J^r££«£u!t.S f •'«’ U»- S™'
Imrdo. band leader, Pier Angeit, ^ . chiidren ed to Join his national staff .. . .
ftlm actress, and *ctre**#» Mil- Democrat* over to the Congressman Udatl of Artoona is
dred Natwfck and Blanche Yurka, Xlf® may Vi' I)u,!,inX a bill to provide federal
ehould be celebrating their birth- to “to political arena, but fund* tor southern school districts
days. tovn* that want to integrate their school
father and husband. He* so nice districts that want to integrate
It Happened Teday £ “to nsigbborhood kids when their school children TWo Repub-
lics - The Statu* of Uberty th»>’ come in to play with his licans, only, voted in favor of
received in toe United States chUdre^hat they |» home telling hearings ^ on the bffi~4C«SfM^of
from Franc*, IMS —United State* Pennsylvania and Wainwright of
Senate paired the Wagner Labor R«tohlicans . . , New York. , ■
mil nm? t ruffisv UImtom fUr f«4e HOt tO fO W OIJ 4m* . _
lin and (tornanv new- M#ybe h* wouldn't have got Forest* mean income. Forest
to mid west Germany occupation s(ck. The trouble seems to be that fire* mean loss of income. Keep
■Ike some housewives he doesn’t Texas Green. \
If* Been Sold • t, ' ' a “ ...........‘
rejected
M| for the past two sreaions,
BIRTH tort BOTTLENECK - State WW^toMto?WMte
Today* Bible Vene
,1
right hand shall
„ .. . I 1 tef to the power of oil of us'; but
Hrc^aEFsHpK SHtHS^S'^5^^
year* ftMnmtd* v reqursts have swampiM Uje nl^X^n wss not a thwghtre- Fstoa 4tf IBwe-Ouwa the Name what you are.-Henry Alford,
'^btember. to mtaaW mm m uFfr+w progrom. H re- l -Thi* novelist was bom in . _ _____
Sfr.'*.1' •w* “ "”7re “• toe., ov. ». r* t
f £2^ K He was a reporter for his home exactly or sharply d«-
SHORT SNORTS - Soaring A*ta a»d Jack of town P*per w«k«d at^vertis- ir rewSte not ™
*
.
few
I Pubtodwr
area* except the high plain*, reports the U 8 De- teSSt ^K2SSi.^£SS "*ter P '
partmertt of Agriculture. The Ugh ptalas stfll are ^Bte to >re* •**»«*• ter the asovlea. and his
minutely ex«t; not varying
^Ma^wo* to^ofX^rontea^s^^tto ^ "«» i^w^T^h^trote to u“ »*««*«’£*w"8*P»«^
L* k»mdy au-are that this t* an elec- g balance; punctlUou*. roropteou*.
-i-t2Sfe*a2r
i I
L
'
\
r--tov
d Months
Tins, Pastafflce under the Art at Ooagrosa rt
1 March t, AOS
x »•*«-» RefiesentaUve:
.
Lifeboats made of matted glass, which arc said
to be stronger- lighter, less perishable than \uxxten
craft will be tried on Canadian Waterways. Let's
a.tM.^da.Jw'SailuMa -
The U. B plan* to road paekage* of spaghetti
_ .............. ..... - to Italy at part of an emergency relief
National Advertising Rejbrootative: The man at the next df*k wonder* tf the
General Adv.-rtwmg Service I ...............HMM
Atlanta.
siasgfcs-
■<m fIBi - MBSanttB* >a 3*# aart Jultet
GREELEY. Neb. —UP— A fir* two films. Oklahoma and ‘
9ji
K'--.
:
K Ht
I*
T.Y. Log-
CHANNEL 2. KPRC-TV
wesdat .
iM Bey Eagan
S:M Diooh Shore
' 4:48 Newt Caravan '. y'
4te World At L«p»
•dUa Today to fjporte
<:U News; WtwESre
4:JS Texas In Bertow
7:0S Firrsidr Theater
TtM Playwrights ’sa
I S* I Led Three Uvea
S:0# Dear Phoebe
Id* Show Buatoeos
10:00 Badge T14
10:4* N>w»; Weaaher
10:44 Leo Paul, Mary Fard
10:40 Mann About *orfc
1HN Tonight
U:W Sign Off
WEDNESDAY
i:» Morning DevoUonals
(:I4 George Raesner
- ire Today
•re Ding Dong Srhool
Stre Ernie Koran Show
- *:oo Jliin
UrtO n Could Be You
lore Feather Your Neat
HIM TV Kitchen
lire Marie Date
lt:M Tennexeee Ernie
ire NBC Theater
I:## Date With Life
t:U Modern Romance*
• ire Queen For A Day
ire I Married Joan
t:M Star Performance
4:00 Looney Ton ne
4:S0 Roy Rogers
•:» Jaye P. Morgan
8:45 New* Caravan
8:00 World At Largo
•:1« Today In Sport* . .
8:15 News; Weather.
8:40 Father Knows Beat
7:00 Waterfront
7:S0 (iildersleeve
8:00 This Ia Your Life
8:40 Rosemary Clooney
9:00 Screen Director
9:40 Dragnet
10:00 Celebrity Playhouse
1O:S0 News; Weather
10:45 les Paid, Mary Ford
10:50 Mann About Sports
11:00 Tonight
lire Sign Off
CHANNEL 11. KGUL-TV
TUESDAY
8:00 News; Weather
5:t5 Doug Falu-ard
5:40 Eleven Video Lane
8:00 I Minted Joan
8:40 Name Thaf Tune
7:ll0 Guv Lombardo
7:30 Red Skelton
8:00*01.000 Question
8:40 Trust Your Wife?
9:00 Phil Silvers
9:30 Douglas Fairbanks
lore Charades ----------
10:30 Ijtfe Show
12:45 Call To Prayer
WEDNESDAY
8:40 Rural Reveille
fi:55 I»land Headlines
7:00 Captain Kangaroo
7:55 News t
8:00 Garry’ Moore
8:40 Arthur Godfrey
9:40 Strike It Rich
10:00 Valiant Lady
10:15 Love of IJfe
10:30 Search For Tomorrow
10:45 Guiding light
11:00 Stu Erwin Show
11:50 World Turns
12:00 Johnny Carson Show
12:40 House Party
1:00 Big Payoff .
1:40 Boh Crosby
2:00 Brighter Day
2:15 Secret Storm
2:40 Edge of Night
8:00 Ray Miiland
3:40 I*te Matinee
4:40 Kit Carson
5:00 News; Weather
5:15 Doug Edwards
5:50 Eleven Video Lane
6:00 I Married Joan
6:30 Boston Blackie
7:00 The Millionaire
7:40 Pve Got A Secret
8:00 U, & Steel Hour ,
- 9:00 Arthur Godfrey
10:00 Sherlock Holmes
10:40 Late Show
12:88 CM T» Prayer
:HANNEL 13, KTRK-TV
TUESDAY
5 rOO Mickey Mouse
6:00 News, Weather
6:15 John Daly
6:30 Warner Bros,
7:30 Wyatt Earp
8:00 Stories of Century
8:40 Wild Bill Hirkok
9:00 Room For Daddy
9:30 Cavalcade Theater
lore News
10:15 Tow n and Country
10:40 Mystery Omnibu*
11:45 Sign Off
WEDNESDAY
7:45 News; Weather
8:00 Fiayranch
9:00 Romper Room
tore Hollywood Theater
11:40 Kitirik Comics
12:00 Middav Movie
1:09 Film Festival
3:89 Thd Buggies
3:40 Adventure*
4.re Little Rascals
sre Mickey Meow
0:00 News; Weather
8H5JaBtMir
0:30 Disneyland
7:40 Amaiing Dunniger
sre Fights
9:00 Masquerade Party
9:80 Break toe Bask
lore N«ws
19:15 Taumwad Country
■«re Mystery Omnibus
1 . '
». .
Cft ytfl.J IrfLLtoM
50 wiled as uimese
TnfTsIrertUriire
31
NEW DELHI (UP j— Fifty per-
^sjmre kaied when Communtet
trjs
reaching
^e°,)
»rs£*ste\
to Ualy a* part « an emergency relief program, trash_______ .
Th* man at to* h**t dtek wuhder* q toe ttMtaax, then rort tote the- i-------- ------ , L .
to return, w« aeud »| shtpnsent rt hot dogs and Little damage wa* d«« to the He happiness to the year- ahead t- MacKintoy Kanwr.
- to panto You ahoukl enjoy- groat donsa* to UBL
F
^«U. V..
resulted. -^P
__ j-.ifaas.,.-. --'f :
Cadillac Mountain on
hamburger.
house. The cat died.
os well as material prosperity. i-Shirtoy Jesras.
[
How MI k* pwttins-
■XPA
m
CSC point an we aiautMc wwi w
the United States. It to L»> feet
high.
as&toaaah
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 233, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 19, 1956, newspaper, June 19, 1956; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043099/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.