The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 14, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 11, 1964 Page: 4 of 12
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Sunday, October II, 1964
Editorials
m
School Board
In 'Long Look
t r~
fm •
-V*
3%.
Washington Merry
Barry's
Men
'LB/ New Meaning
The Board of Trustees of Baytown Schools Is
moving slowly on the proposal to separaU
school and Lee College governing boards.
It was planned for the board to study the pro-
posal -further at Monday night’s trustee meeting,
with possible action to be taken.
Board Incident A. R. Stark says no action is
likely to be taken Monday night.
The economics of the plan have been placed in
the hands of a Baytown Refinery economist, E. M.
(Bud) Carlisle, and Stark said he would favor no ac-
tion until the Carlisle report is received and every
member of the board has had a chance to study it
and to learn all of the ramifications.
The biggest point In favor of the separation of—
the boards is the fact that 30 of 32 junior college <tts> .
triets in Texas have already been separated. - '
However, there are some unique problems faced
by the schools and college here that may offset this
weight of action elsewhere. > , "
There is op doubt bud that the board has the le-
gal right to take the steps that have been proposed.
There are some school patrons who feel that
the problem is such a basic one of policy the ulti-
mate problem should be placed before the voters for
their confirmation.. Some school trustees feel this
way, but a majority of them feel it is a board respon-
sibility and should be settled at board level.
The Baytown Sun has never gotten into the con-
By DREW PEARSON
ALONG THE CAMPAIGN Wcandidate will say.
wide latitude l» iWMmg wtot--Dliss. GOP bus* Of 0
ope of the shrewdest
“HAVE INVENTED NEW FWECRACKER- YELI.Y BIG I*
TRAIL — Barry Gcldwater was
chatting with a friend hi Lima,
Ohio, while his train was being
switched and remarked that he
was waiting for public reaction
to Ms “LBJis soft on commu-
nis" charge before he plugged
‘Actually, that attack was
suggested by Nixon and Herbert
Hoover, Sr ,” Goklwater confid-
ed. •'We’re going to wait and,
what the reaction is before we
push it”
A tew hours later, newsmen
were handed the text of the GokJ-
watejr speech "for Indianapolis
using the "soft on communism"
theme again Oviously the
had been written and
— the mimeograph ma-
rioiine when Goklwater remark-
ed thathe was going to wait
for public reaction.
Later Judy Roeney. one of
Barry’s aides, admitted frank-
ly that the Senator no longer;
had time to outline a speech for
his writers. They simply write
what they want Goldwater to
say and he says it.
&
troversy, if there is t controversy, but The §un does
iction slowly! a
applaud Ibe bnrd for taking Action slowly! and be-
ing certain in advance that the problem grit plenty
of publicity and everybody has a chance to express
hiayiewa one way or another.—
It is unforttmate that the problem was first
broached totffie board at a “committee of the whole”
meeting at which the press and pubOr had not been
invited. Since then, there has been a stigma that the
plan was projected in secret. . ' V
This is not quite accurate, but it just goes to
point up the dangers of having secret or closed meet-
ings of governmental agencies. .
The Sun will always stand behind action of the
. Baytown community. It has rarely gone off the deep
end, and probably won’t on this or any other prob-
lem. .* .
• Any move that cannot stand the glare of pubUc-
lty-had better not be made. Butifyog Iirw in op- ’
portunity to express your beliefs, then you have no
kirk coming later.
On The Right - '
PoHr Show LBJ ts Faltering
He balks at somethings how-
ever. Karl Hess, the Ntr 1 Goto- ‘
water speech writer, confides,
“We want the Senajpr to start
.using the’ name “L.vndon Bird
JolmscftUtf—drj.ve*_thje
dent *razy. But Barry refuse*
to use it”
THE CHARGE Goklwater seems
to like moat, because he uses it
House, wa ______________„
and, is walking around the ite
also gets a kick out of ac-
j Johnson of “sweep! ng so
much dirt under the White
Hone nig tfiat it would quali-
fy as a soil bank."
But when It comes to talking
-tum problems or defense, Gold-
water falls flat. "He ‘can’t get
across to the crowd. At Marion,
Ohio, he talked about the bra-
CHO problem and "getting the
Government off your backs.”
Nobody in Ohio knew anything
about braceros, the Mexican
name for a working man and
applied wet-backs, or illegal
Mexican labor. 1
_____Funberaowriann pricerire
relatively high in Illinois and
Ohio. Farm surveys show many
farmers, normally Republican,
are leaning toward Johnson.
Goklwater didn’t seqd them,
l At Dayton, Ohio, home of th*
Jbiggest Air Force research cen-
ter in the world, Barry started
ta and
in the
Mad
refused to
whether Goldwater would cany
the state. He had made a flat
prediction in 1960 that Nixon
• —
would win in Ohio, but last week
m' said he “thought there was
still time to tum the tide.”
AN ARMY OF 175.0011 letter
carriers all over the nation
talking about the new aircraft
rF 12A and SR-71, which he
By \\ ILL 1AM F. BUCKLEY Jr.
Tlie most recent polls indi- ’
late, interestingly enough, not
so-much a ri,se in foe popular-
ity, of Senator Coldwater. as a
diminution to the popularity of
President Johnson. <-
It becomes clearer. In retro-,
spect, that Mr Johnson made
\some instant Calculations, hour*
/ liter achieving' rifiice, concern-
j tag his political future. Some-
:entl;
Idea won’t be decided Monday night
Like Game Of Life -
Novel About Chess Good
But Too Hard To Read ’
one recently remarked that if
America s llbtcala had bech to-
formed inT900 that the race to
J9M would be between Lyndon
Johnson and Barry Goldwataff,
foey Hwow4^~^dbabfy~4»ave
marched out into the ocean and
drowned themselves. Lyndon
Johnson’s image in 1960 was
that of the Southern, or at any
rate Southwestern, alternative
totoe Eastern and ipwr
Liberiil wtag of the Democratic
merely a part of that campaign
oratory that Wendell WUlkie had
taught us, way back in 1940, was
necessary to any. man who wants
to boobdiait his way into the
White House.
It was going swimmingly for
LBJ: but the more or less per-
sonal criticism of him is begin-
mm to tell. The public cxnecte
criticism of LBJ tfl«Goll-
water camp. But hem was the
Reverend Francis Sayre of
Washington,- an impeccable Lib-
eral, publicly denouncing John-
son's "private lack of ethics."
his “cynical manipulation of
power.'-- ——^—
The widely respected Arthur
Knock, in the same column in
which he admitted hit belief
that Johnson, if the "best-equip-
ped man lor the Presidency in
public life, "'wamsr gainst John-
son’s power “iinger. vv
And the long shadow of Bob-
not to convene
qut
Chi
discuss the
sion of Red
luestion of the adn
taa until, er, some time in
December or January. The ta-
bor union leaders, except for
show- - strikes such as the one
against CM. hold back.
But the tranquility sits on
some Americans ’-r- on how
many, again we cannot know—
as factitious, as having lament-
abiy little to do with the nature
of things; as suggesting wot to
-much--tn-organic evolution into
aft, era of peace and plenty, as
a precarious equilibrium wrench-
ed out of a mutinous work) by
the ten thumb* of Lyndon John-
son and his accommodating fel-
low leaders.
Can they maintain it for just
a lew more weeks? There it
no denying their skill. Or their
-cynicism, J.
Hess is the rightwing radical
credited with writing Goldwa-
ter’s acceptance speech in which
he championed “extremism ”
Hess’s background dates back
to the American Enterprise As-
sociation. a business-lobbying or-
ganization which Rep. Wright
Patman, D-Tex„ has exposed
for tapping big corporations for
contributions which they can
charge off as a tax-deductible
told the crowd are really out-
growths of the A-li, planned by
the Eisenhower Administration.
The crowd couldn't have cared
less.
“The Senator’s economic'
speeches are disasters," admit-
ted speechwriter Hess in a frank
moment to a newspaper friend.
NOTE At the end of the
Ohio segment of the jtrip. Ray
Bible Verse
expense. One of- its generous
is the Allen-Bradley Cpr-
g’vers .
poratkm of Milwaukee, which
- recently cancelled its advertis-
ing in the Saturday Eve-
ning Post because it endorsed
Hess is ? friend of Rev, Billy
Hargis, belongs to -various right
wing groups, once edited the
TO GIVE knowledge of salva-
tffa onto hH mmC tor the ito-
.rilsatan af their «in* Uike-447-
are marching to memoryof
Eleanor Roosevelt. They are
carrytog the story of the Eleanor
. Roosevelt Foundation to 25,-
060,000 homes. Oct 11 would
• have been ihe 80th birthday of
that Great First Lady. Dinneit
to raise money lor the Eleanor
Roosevelt. Mem o r 1 aj will ba
held in many parts of the coun-
try on Sunday night. ,
Bobbv Kennedy isn't dong «o
troll with Italo-American voters.
They remember the manner in
which the Kennedy family cut
Foster' Ferrate when Tie was
running for governor of Massa-
chusetts.
Bobby twice has been to sea
Fortune Poire-who runs the Co-
lumbus Day- Dinner,* biggest
ltalo - American event of the
.year, to get invited. Pope told
him the dinner would be embar-
rassing, he might be booed. Car.
dtoal Spellman so far has not
Invited Bobbv to the annual
Cardinal Spellman dinner, one
of the big political events of
New York.
Sen. Ken Keating, a Protest-
ant, has been invited . . . Old
Joe Kennedy used to contribute
hundreds of thousands of dol-
lars to Spellman’s charities,
once gave $50,000 to Sen. Joe
McCarthy during a joint meet-
ing with Spellman and McCarthy
at Hyannisport.
But the Cardinal has been
down on the Kenned.vs for some
time. He has been blocking the
aid to education bill In the Rules
'Committee through his friend
Rep. Jtm Delaney fer three
yuan.1 -——-- -
right wing "Washington WorM."
Hr ft probably the most right
wing of the extremists around
Goldwater. He seems to have
Know Your Bridge
--By B. JAY DECKUt—-
- %
Mrs. E.
taiw.' from
en Vo.rrs ,r
V , C I
rur?£>y:vi
a.m. fori'
"aytu jde 1
Mrs.''
dent.
A.; :. FisheJ
Vote Makes 1
she noted
Nr
votes cast to
23.6 million
Iso said, "0,
ligble voteil
n tie 1960 1
ranlied 44th
"Or^ of th.
combat this
.u. fiform qu|
c :e vote
tinued.
“Voters GI
:>Iat >d ta bus
before the No
.he Ijeague.
' Mrs. J. B. I
opi 'S of .
porsibility i|
iion” and
. • • ■ «•” ,
Dttrtag the
Mis. C. J.
-OiLtual
ounced the
uill and' thcl
gether for *■
• ’d Self - L.
C't. 27 in the
Mrs. Babin ,
Lnith will be |
•rograrn.
Mre. Babin
i represent G
Conference retL
''lethpdist Assl
__.ySft.PcJ- 22, i
..... M*' E"u.-s|
nouiiced that I
tounc
Itcgin a study ol
icans" Oct. 20.1
Mrs. E. J. r|
St. John's
St. Johns
WSCS holiday!
served in the II
the church IT I
4:30 p.m.-7:30 .
T ickets will bsl
75 celits for c|
25.reents--for '
Tickeis are
nembers. Mrs |
liiiirman of ar
•The DefCMC” by Vladimir
Nahokitv. pp. 3M, New York,
G. P. Tutoaut's Boa*,, It.
By WARY H. BROWN
In 1930 Vladimir Nabokov,
•mi «i(Mai Mdt^th* Baoto V.
Sirin, a Russian author, began
work on what to his own wonts
waa to tot Mi “toarawl novel."
The Mtato cj'tto book "JW
Defense" was to vividly purtray
life as a microcosm of the chess,
board. "Real life, chess life, is
orderly, clear - cut and rich in
adventure."
Nabokov's novel centers
around a Russian chess master,
game.” At that the chess mas-
ter smashes a bathroom win-
dow and plunges to his destruc.
tion. Luzhin's perfect defense is
the difficult suicide-mate.
Chess as an extended meta-
*!>oke*men, the thunder-makers
of the ADA, the tablet-keepera
of the Liberal ideology. He (lkl
little to woo their favor. On oh
’occasion he even denounced
"the KKK and the ADA.”
phor of life it not new Jn litera-
ture wifli this novel. History af-
fords many other attempts to
unite.life and the chess board. I
But when .Mr,: Kennedy was
I. Lyndon Johnson recog-
nized that he would be regard-
killed.
Johnson’* refusal to come clean
about his past.
Finally t here is working
against Lyndon Johnson the fcm-
damentoRy ayntfietfc nature of
America'* present euphoria. It
is not .only that we have been
Al's 'Sporadically' ~
Military Football Was
Called 'Real' Football
High on the list of other literary
men to employ this notion In
their works rank Chaucer, of
the Middle Ages, and Rabelais
in 1634.
Nabokov's handling of the
fttoto b peHtop Oia roast ex-
tensive attempt ta that he penr-
Akxandcr Ivanovich Luzhin. 11rates every sphere of the chess
Luzhin, a social misfit, is a fall- game and makes an effort to
ure as a human being which is include each somewhere In the
contrasted by his success as a scheme of his story. Structural-
chea* master. Hr and allegorically speaking,
Aa a youth. Luzhin discovers the novel probably achieves
that a talent for chess can be great success. It has a definite
maneuvered into a passport out drawback — and a big one to
of school. Quickly he 1* snatch- the reader. It just is not tater-
ed up to the abstract world of" eating to tfto average reader,
chess, and evolves years later
as a pedantic man possessing _ , , „ _ ...
few friend* but numerous chess Pools j06'l TfWlOlC;
victories.
FBI Rtcks Up Peak
big tournament and surprisingly
to afl awl tu listrell iBU. MM
to love' wijh him and,they mar-
j Acting mow tow capocHy
i than a wife, Mrs.
ton
of a gove rness tr
Luzhin double* aD eOarti to
“humanize" Lurftfn. but to no
avail. That he i» * failure to
SEATTLE; Wall. fAPT s-- ft-
was said the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, merely coinci- .
ilanes ' ».*
<wnct. °
Jack James Peak, 49, was
charging
ed by his toost vocal constit-
uents much as Hamlet's uncle
was when he came to bed be-
tween incestuous sheet*. Accord-
ingly. a new Johnson wa* bom.
Within minutes, or so it seem-
ed. he breathed Ore into the Civ-
il rights bill. He went to New
York and gave a speech so far-
gone ta UN-unction as might
have struck even Mrs. Roose-
velt as fulsome. -
Medicare . . . Anti-poverty..,
Increased social security . , .
See the Yellow Page* of the
ADA Directory; practically ev-
erything there was quickly
bought by Lyndon Johnson on
becoming President. It paid off
brilliantly.
Having consolidated his sup-
port among the Liberals, the
President turned to Business
America find identified himself
as, ta effect, Honorary Presi-
dent of the Chamber of GMk
nyree. Once again he succeed-
administered happy pills by the
federal government — the farm-
era, the old folks, the labor un-
ions, defense contractors, every-
body. AH the microbes appear
to be Democratic - oriented, a nd
are holding back their poisons
landing the renewal of thetr
life is more readily acceptable
tinfortra*'
to the reader than toe
tion he Inflicts upon those
around him, especially hit wife.
At the height of his ches* ca-
reer. Luzhin suffers a setback
from severe chert Insomnia and
la forced Into month* c( recuper-
ates. It la .daring IM* recuper-
ative period that Lutfita reaches
the moat important decision 'of
. Mr Me — toot al of Me. -Htor
■ rhrw game. j« dreeing him
arrested on a warrant chart _
unlawful flight to avoid prose, u-
ttan on a chaige of robbing a
Pasco; Wash , pawn shop ta
December, 1963.
The arrest was made Thurs-
day at Peak’* plate of employe
n-ent, the Robber* Roost pool
Many bu*ir*es.*men were eager
to believe that Lyndon Johnson
eras really at heart the Lyndon
Johnson the Liberals h -d fought
an ardently agntact during J?p,
that the overtures he new was
making to the Liberals were
license ta November.
Things are hunky dory. Few-
er people are killed in Vietnam
than on the Merritt Parkway.
Red China hasn't been admitted
to the United Nations Khrush-
chev hasn't recently uttered an
ultimatum against West Berlin;
The agitators' for revolutionary
action .in the domestic, scone
are strangely silent. '
A cynical manipulator of the
world scene?
Four years ago Khrushchev
told Drew Pearson that he had
intentionally laid lrr” pending
what he hoped would be the de-
feat of Richard Ni::grf Last July
the leader* of the civil rights
movements publicly instructed
their follower* to lav low pend-
ing the successful cooehisl
conclusion of
the campaign. * A decision in
Vietnrm is intention-’ll" >mc«r-
cluded (lending the arrival and
su'rf^fl^nctotiatkm pi the al-
The General Aw^bly of the
United Nations obligincly agrees
By AL MRUNGRB
One of the curious by-products
of a three-year military stint ta
World War II- was a weekly
comic strip produced by this
correspondent for the enlighten-
ment and divertisement of Air
Force personnel.
It ran regularly in the Ran-
dolph Field post newspaper and
ta various other air field publi-
cations,
Yellowing clips of this- piece
still rest on a secluded shelf and
my juvenile son. an omnivorous
comic book scholar, likes to
pull them out occasionally and
brood over the misadventures
of the pen arid ink GIs.
So do I because most of the
incidental characters who nop
Into the action were near - for- •'
gotten colleagues of the crentor
who shoved their iron trays
alongside his in the mess hall
line and wept over the chow,
particularly on Friday. That’s
when the entree appeared to be
baked beans marinated in sor-
ghum, green onions and bear
focus swam the Image of a
broad shouldered corporal who
wartdered one weekend into my
pen and ink PX. That was Glenn
Dobl
ebbs. too.
My Glenn Dobbs, doubtless
the father of the current edi-
tion. must lie a Tulsa immortal
for it wi’s with the Golden Hur-
ricanes that he blazed into grid-
iron glory- a running and pass-
ing wizard whose All America
acclaim was nationwide a gen-
eration ago.
At Randolph Field Dobbs, the
elder, sparked and eny^ized
a service team which was un-
defeated and untied in regular
season play, ther. met Te.x; - in
a 7-7, dedalock in the New
• Years' Day Cotton Bowl.
That summer Dobbs left for
officers' r-r-’idate school ‘and
r.xe* appeared as a second lieu-
tenant, dominating Air Force
teams on the West Coast and
■■ buiMrg his new- team into whet
probably was the second bea ta
grease.
Just last week, idly scanning
publicity story on the sport'
I encountered
Not even Dnhtw rnulri defeat
page, I encountered a name
JIT, a talented passer on the
Tuba football team. Into instant
Kd(*n Up
into a sfoec Innate and tort he
mart devote every waking mo-
mart Into tile correct defense
for the game.
In demented fury Ltabta nadi-
rs home from a dinner party
me night with toe sotu mn -
*1 have to drip out of the
Wltlf Sports
In The Sun
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
in one *
By RUTH IAMSIY
Central Press Write-
THI ANSWIt QUICK! MOT Of FAMI-OUlil TNI NAMI 16th and 17th centuries and its
The sctiool demanded and
,fU!, | •impcrt-d the condemnation of
He tor U* line: Laugh and the
awtttaagttigNhym'? •- -• Jg
abr Shift mint £un
: M, Mrit
•••••••••••••
Rob-it K.
John Waitey
Paul Patama
Editor and 'Publisher
.... General Manager
Managing Editor
Office Manager
Gbcuattoa Director
... Promotion Manager
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT * -
eeeeeaaeei*
-
• aa adaa aej^ Rltlll MHMftf
id Ham aatter at the Baytown, Tessa, Peat *
toe Act ad Oaagreaa of March R itTfo
by The Baytawa tottae.
-
, ■
own?
•'* I. What data G.A.R. stand
for?
«. What president of tha U.R
championed apeUing reform?
E What Bm Oritowa: “Mtor*
tha Cabou apeak only to Low-
aUa" T
. IT HAWtriO TODAY
; Ow thli <Skj la 1MJ, the TA.
JTaval academy was finality
a; ed at Part ftevara, Aa-i Today's a>ot of famo la the
aapalfo. Mi old, unaltered part ed the wide-
Oa Oct. 10. Mil. too tnt ly famous Uiuverady df Para;
Jo»« of.Aw;>ad Airing
>-proposed forty started dating from the
Ms ran between New left City' fury. Within are the tomb and
•nd Betoken MX
WATCH YOUR UNOUAM
EULOGY — iTOC-te-Jit—
noun; a speech or writtof ta
pratee of a person or thing,
to honor of a de-
a statue, of the Due da Riche-
lieu. minister ad Louis XIII. It
vwaa! thin powerful tad hated,
cardinal who, as bead of the
univesHty to the 17th century,
declared ttysi teacher* owed al-
legiance neither ta Paris nor
Reformation,Vaa the animating
spirit of the persecutions di-
rected against Protestants and,
unbelievers.
What and when Is this qmt
of famo?
•Kamels betlam of rolidhe)
V' OOIN TODAY •
George II ef Mnghni, octrees
Petes Haytt, Chintee yAilom-
jriar Xte yatosy, conipo»er
POal Creates sad juuwn Tim
teems Monk.
Bore Oet. 1J; Humanitarian
Rteoaor kooneietf, colaaiaut
Joerpk W. Ahop Jr„ motor
Promote Jfaeriac, ckoreoyre-
Ptor Jerome Robbbu. ferifeer-
perfumer Laden. LeLonf, Oen
Nathan Teeming ef ike Air
Tam. - -r - . •
* degree of independence and
. intellectual freedom that has
YOU* FuTUii become a French tradition to.
Aa bapertaat rtmage far the the
better feOews a n«rs ert- WM ^ February
Randolph Field, his aims mat-
er, for Air Force brass had
poured All America talent into
whrt wc* then the Wett Poto:.
of the Aii ta vnjireccdrnted bri-
gades. '
The new recruit*, cream of
professional talent ta Air Fore*
urlfam, cr-hed Souttavest Can-
ferrne* o|<!»nnents by top-heavy
scerr", Most cl the qle.jT?n • ha
had supiwrtcd Dobbs the year
before were still thr e.'.bu* rot-
clnssed lw- the massWc tajer-
ttah «l wptr • staff.-fWv of
last year's stars could get off
the bnch until 'heir term was
North dealer.
Neither aid* vulnerable
NORTH
- g ASS)
fK7
♦ Q9I54*
♦ A
WEST EAST
*4 A Q J 101)
• QJS ft)
. 4K100) 4 AJT
4970) 4JJ0 4
SOOTH
4KI7
. f A10904) .
4KQO
The bidding:
North East 8outh West
“14 P**» 14 Pui
14 Rase ) 4 Pans
2 4 Pise Sf* Pase
4f Pau 14
Opening lead—four of spades.:
The declarer can sometimes
telescope two losers into one
and thus accomplish what
would otherwise seem to be an
impossible task. South had this
experience In the accompanying
hand, where It appeared that ha
had bitten off more than he
could chew, „
West led a spade against th*
optimistic slam. South won with
th* king, playad a club to th*
act, and ruffed a diamond. After
trumping a club tn_dummy and
raffia
H* than cashed the ace of
hearts, both opponanta following
suit, and continuad with tha
Kq af dubs, Waat foRa alag
each time, aa East followed
once and than discarded a
spade. By this time th* poaltion
was:
North
4A0
4«
Wes* Ad
4Q * 4QJ10
4»
.v*:
aaotbaa diamond
tr entered dummy with a trump
and ruffed th* third round of
4«T
410
Declarer now led a spade grid
West had a choice of three play*
- all leading to th* same dead
end. If he ruffed th* spade.
South would make th* last two
trick* with tha ten of heart*
and ace of spades.
If he discarded a club Instead,
South would win the next two
trick* by taking the ace of
spades and ruffing th* queen of
diamond* with the ten of heart*.
Andjlnally, If West discarded
the king of diamonds, South
would win two tricks by taking
the ace of spades and discard,
tag a spade on the queen of dia-
monds.
Haw and I
• Mil
Safe,
HERRII
Theoretically, declarer had
tote kwera—a spade and a heart
-Mn th* three-card ending
ifo m wsy
for Wert to prevent South from
telescoping the two loser* tain
Daily Crossword Puzzle
■tt-^—KINS FEATURE
20 or D pointy fhead. That ate
'Sdf’t t-!v' bn".
uallv (’'(ff 't ta
C"i*t champions'to nr«*t his
gM fin ir a natkxul ;-«-rvir-
ehrmpionsh'p encounter. Even
D(tobs couldn't beat this bunch.
But it we* th. closest game
they ever plr;
ACROSS
1. Examine-
. DM
. O.Craat
• Briny . ____ ___
''■X
11 Wit
U.-4ha
7 of a
'Dawn Of New Day'
Is Meadows'Topic
NaUon"
If. Close to
IS. Kettle
IT. Rxdama-
tlan
It. Hippos-
rear-
birthplae*
“The "Dawn of a New Day”
will ba the Sunday set ion topic
at the Cofcdy Bapti« Church,
S3. City train
34. S-shaped
IT'S MIN SAID
Humility is the meet AiffienN
ef *U t-trtoet ta aeAleve; noth-
ing Ait* harder than the dertre
ta think MB of goarteif.~7,1.
* - *. - ■*'1‘
MOW'D YOU MAXI OUT7
1. Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
3. They are grawa from
announces the Rev. C E. Mea-
dows 4r.
Dwiqht Thorahov will k-ad the
congregational Mngmgr Accom-
panist will be M,' Rernioe War-
' • There win be an tastaRattan ‘
service lor officers and teach-
ers At Jhc Sunday School at
9:45 a.m. with L E. Potter in
charge. ......
, Training Union will begin at
it "Systematic Visitation Will
S;:o~-’.hcn tV Church " Robert
Uetafoy is Trehing Unfon dh
it the
’*■->
Choir re-
MetmMuamu
MmamMuamm
waumammm
■n-t
... - •
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 14, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 11, 1964, newspaper, October 11, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057164/m1/4/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.