The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 291, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1964 Page: 1 of 14
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£*f*N4*
■ ■* i r'
The Sun invite*
GORDON LEWIS
400 Harold Lane V
to the Brunoon Theater. This coupon
is (rood through Aug. SO
for two. tickets when presented
at the Brunson box office.
The movie now showing is
— noooD NEIGHBOR SAM*
Smjfnnm 8>m
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAf
VOL.4I.NO. 291
BAYTOWN. TEXAS
Serving BAY-TEX—The Goiden Circle of South tost Texas
Friday, August 28, 1964
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 582-8302
Ten Conti Per Copy
BLAIR MANN NEW BAYTOWN POLICE CHIEF
S UN
Spots
Safari Films
SEMI-ANNUAL meeting c
Baytown Rifle and Pistol Pub
will be held at 7:30 p.m. Mon-
day in the meeting room at Cit-
izen's National Bank. A 16mm
color sound film on a safari in
Sfluth and Central America will
be shown.
Mother Dies
MR. AND MRS. Tom A. Wilkin-
son .left- Monday for Fort Worth
to attend the funeral of Wilkin-
son's mother. He is associated
with Tri-City Optical Co.
Water Office. *
HARRIS COUNTY Fresh Water
Supply District 27’s water office
wiil be located at 4807 Reddell
Road until the new office is
built, according to M. C.- Setliff,
chairman of the board.
Rodeo Tonight
SANDY FONTAINE and
Three Coins, Hitt Record Co. art-
ists, will perform at intermil*
sfcn at thp Highlands Jam-
boree rodeo at 8 p.m. Friday'at,
Chandler’s Arena. Fontaine "will
autograph his records for faiiS;
They will perform at intermis-
sion. Fontaine also will auto-
graph records from 2 to 4 p.m.
Saturday at Chandler’s Western
Store, 604 Park;
Exhibitions Set J
EXHIBITION swimming and
diving will be held Saturday
the Eva Maud Olympic pool,
Mrs. Robert Walton said.
Rummaae $ ole
MRS. NORMAN D’OlWe; worthy
matron of Eastern Star Chaptei
798. announced f# rummage sale
rf' ■ i • : l r ' i •' -r’ t
Convention Highlights -
It's Great To Be From
Texas At Demo Parley
Bv FRED HARTMAN
CONVENTION HALL,Atlan-
tic, Qty (Sp) — It was great
to be a Texan at the 1964 Demo-
cratic National Convention.
I didn’t see a single 10-gallon
hat and. only one pair of cow-
boy boots
iwld.Jhat mean, that Texas
‘ P-m
will be held front.8 a.m. to
p.m. Saturday at 3417 Market.
BLT Ticket’s
SOME TICKETS are stiU avail-
able for the Baytown Little
Theater’s production of Bell,
Book and Candle. Performances
of the production Will be staged
„ 8:30 p.m. Friday and Satur-
Riders
ROUGH Riders are
invited to ride in the Highlands
Jamboree parade at 10 a.m. on
Saturday. They\will gather at
9:30, a.m. at Jones^Road.
Weather And Tides
PARTLY CLOUDY and co
ttnued -warm, through gMPJv to
day. Temperature range
pec ted, 75-85 degrees.
GALVESTON Tide* Saturday
will be high *t 7*» •*"•***
11:2ft p,m. and low at 2:03
a.m. and 2:59 p-fo.
Arouhdv
.has gone effete, as we used to
say in Paris, or are all of the
swashbuckling Texans of old
voting, for Goldwater,?
You couldn't calLthe, Thurs-
day .night prof ram anticlimac-
tic, what with President John-
son making his acceptance
speech, Jiut the high point of
{he convention had to be LBJ’s
unheralded appearance. before
the convention to tell the dele-
gates to their teeth that lie
thought Sen. Hubert Humphrey
would make the best vice presi-
dent.
The President had tipped his
hand over television from Wash-
ington a matter of hours be-
fore, but you would be surpris
ed how many ^delegates were
surprised when he appeared in
the flesh. -
You shouldn’t feel too badly
: |ate(Dt "being -a-Nationat Conven-
tion TV viewer. The political
fan at home, for the most part
knows more about- what is go-
ing on than a beleaguered dele-
gate fighting his way through
hotel corridors, .traffic jammed
streets, highly regimented con-
vention halls and crowded res.
taurants.
PROMPTLY AT .THE’stroke of
noon Thursday I broke out in
my- I p.m. brown and headed
for a reception that Averill Har-
riman hosted at the fashionable
Humble Electricians
Get 2-Gent Pay Hike
Electricians at Humble Oil and Refining Co.’s Baytown
.•Refinery; have received a wage increase, of 2 cents per hour
and additional fringe’benefits as a result of recent negotiations
with the company.
Members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers, Local 844, approved the company’s wage offer of
13.55 per hour, which is comparable to the rate paid by Hum-
ble's leadingcompetitors.
— Hie electricians also received a 172 bonus, aw additional
week of vacation time after five years’ service and increased
hospitalization coverage.
Negotiations are continuing between Humble and the
International Association of Machinists with representatives
of the Federal Conciliation and Mediation Service. One *e*~
sion was held this week and another is scheduled for Sept4
it the Federal Building ta Houston. Hie principal difference
between the company and toe MM is over wages.
iaytown Fighting
incephalitis By
Malathion Usage
“Fill ’er up with Malatolon,”
Baytonians are saying by the
thousands at fire stations where
they are getting the insecticide
to kill mosquitoes in the fight
against enceph5Htfc. -
Between 4 and 7 p.m. Thurs-
day firemen and volunteer work-
320 gallons of Mal-
Chie? A. H. (Art)
said.
lit. Friday a total of
125 gallons had already been
OfeplQiMi.....
Collegiate
Subscriptions
The Baytown Sun is offer-
ing a special college.sub-
scription rate of $9 for nine
mohths for all Baytown area
collfege students.
“College students II k e to
keep up with their hometown
news and The Sun serves as
a daily letter from home,”
Sun circulation manager Bed)
Gilmore said.
To start your .Special col-
lege subscription, call 582-
8033 or come by The Sun
office at 118 West Pearce.
Deauville Hjjtel for-Jacqueline
Kennedy.
i don’t know why, but watch-
ing the people got me to think-1
ing of (he late Hugh Echols.
What a swell time he would I
have had waiting in. line to
shake hands with the great and
charming former First Lady)
wtA-seemg-evetybedy- ‘
their best foot forwaW.
Atiy. Gen, Robert F. Kennedy I
was first ! n .the receiving line at
the segment my.,invitation call-
ed for. He stood beside the hon-
ored guest as he has done so
dutifully since that assassin’s
bullet abruptly ended their hap-
py way of life. Next to him |
were Ambassador and Mrs. Har-
riman. And finally Mrs. Bobby
Kennedy,
Previous stories had said that
Lady Bird Johnson would be in
the receiving line but maybe
she planned to make her ap-
paaraneje later;
Portions of John F. Kennedy’s
writings and speeches were]
read — even some of the hum-
orous incidents related.
In a short formal program the
fatuous JFK quip that his father
would pay for enough votes 1o
insure 1960 victory but never a
landslide brought a laugh.
So did other famous quips
about Bobby being appointed at-
torney general to give him legal
:perience before he started
practicing law and that Vaughn
Mender’s famous recorded mim-
cry sounded more like Teddy’s)
toice than Jack's
Mrs. Kennedy made a brief)
appearance and in the same [
voice that thrilled millions in
that now famous television trip
through the White House, she
thanked those who had
much for her dead husband-_____
who are now making possible
the John F. Kennedy Memdrtelj
Library in Boston,
“A Rendezvous
brought enraptured attention;
The late President thought so
much of this verse he asked
Mrs. Kennedy to memorize it,
She had recited it to him many
times before that ill-fated trip
to Dallas.
MY FAVORITE Washington cor- - Hurricane Cleo, weakened by
respondent now has to be Ever- a multimiilion dollar
Blair Weimer Mann, 61, bf 118
•E. Cleveland, a deputy con-
stable here since 1936, will be-
come Baytown’s chief of police
on Sept. 1.
City: Managed Fritz Lanham
Council Vote
Is Unanimous
day School class tor teenagers,
a post he has held four years.
He is an honorary member of
the Baytown Police Association
and was recently presented the
Community Service "Award tor
recommendation that ManA be outstanding contributions to the
apiminted was unanimously con-
firmed by the city council af a
regular meeting Thursday night.
Mann.^a resident of Baytown
ENJOYING IT WHILE THEY CAN
Enjoying their tree-top tour are, left to right,
Mike, McCartney, Wallace St, John, Linda
ENJOY PLAYING NOW, these youngsters
have decided, because next week schooj starts.
In Paul Sheffield’s backyard at 227 John A
is tho biggest, most dlmbing-est tree in town.
StHI Mighty Dange
MeHenry, Randy McCartney and Yvonne Mc-
Henry. (Baytown Photos)
since Oct. 29, 1949, will succeed ^anized.
harassment,
R. H. (Bo) Turner, a veteran,
member of the police depart-
ment and assistant chief tor sev-
eral years, has been serving as
acting chief .since Forche’s res-
ignation. He will continue as as-
sistant chief under Mann.
Mann has been serving as
leputy constable under Precinct
Constable Paul Anderson. He
will be succeeded by, Charlie G.
Fisk of Highlands, a former
Harris County deputy sheriff,
The Manns have two children,
Kirk of Baytown, and Mrs. John
Langstoj of Austin. Kirk will, at-
tend Harding College in Searcy,
Ark., this fall under a four-year
athletic scholarship. ,
Mann Was horn in Clearfield,
Pa. He is married to the former
Dorothy Rebecca. Peterson of
Clearfield. >
He isi a veteran of 21 years
service in the U.S., Army, hav-
ing been discharged as. a^cap-
tain in 1948. He enlisted in 1927
and served in the commission-
ed grades, including that of first
sergeant./ .......................................
While s e r v i n g as captain,
Mann was commanding officer
in the maximum security unit
of the disciplinary barracks at
Camp Gordon, Ga.
After his discharge, he return-
community. ■m
Mann is also president of’the
tee,College Ex-Students Asso-
ciation which was recently or*
BLAIR MANN
Sentry Passes
ivaluation Test
School Board
ed to Clearfield and a year later • Supt. George Gentry has earn-
brought -his wife to Baytown ed an “above average’’ grade
isB«i Cape Kennedy Escapes
Brunt Of 'Miss Cleo'
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Six giant space rockets rode rounding countryside, bringing si
ett Collier of the Houston Chron* up Florida's populous East
icle, and an hour’s chat with Coast, slapped harmlessly at-
him before the Thursday night the nation’s space center today,
session added strength to my With a curopg, 2,500-milc
.belief that the major 1964 cam-(path of death and destruction
■L.. ______ ___„___... .. move .offshore this morning'and ami metropolitan '
paign issue will be foreign poli- behind her, Cleo swept slowly intensify. Hurricane .warnings bore the brunt of
out the stor'm lashed securely to
their launching pads and crews
resumed the-work- of readying
them for firing. ,
The Weather Bureau at Ml-
to 124 the official death toll from
Monday’s howling winds
-£a#Herr.<3w kilied-14 on the
French island of Guadeloupe
There was no definite esti* of
where he first worked in the on
public works department, snd
served as a patrolman under
former Police Chief H. E. Mc-
Kee. Mann also worked four di
years for the Prudential Insur-
ance Co. before being named
deputy constable.
Man ngraduated from Clear-
field High School, attended Ship-
tensburg State Teachers Col-
lege In Shtppensburg, Pa„ Colo-
rado College at »Colorado
Pierce Business
his performance as toe
achool district’s chief admtofo*
trator.
Gentry’s work watuevakialed
during a closed
school board Thu
Springs, Cblo., * ,c.vc
College In Philadelphia where
ami said Cleo was expected, to mMe of the damage to the Mi- studies
he majored in business admin-
istration, and is ff--grdduflte of
Lee College in Baytown, Class
1955. Hr majored in social
cy and thatJjie ^iyil rights issue northward from Cape Kennedy remained up at Brunswick
will become less and Less im-)and; wastod-residents ms
portant along the trail. north as Cape
keynote speaker John O. Pas- braced for her
(See PARLEY, Page 2) 1 '
far
Hatteras, N.C.,
stations,
The station No.
Ward
Road had a traffic tie-up as peo-
ple gathered with their contain-
approach .
Site’s still mighty danger-
tops, ”W forecaster warned;
Cleo, which left Miami and
1200 miles of Florida’s “Gold
Coast” looking like a battle zone
after striking with winds,up to
115 miles an hour, hit Cape Ken-
nedy with winds that peaked at
65 m.p.h. ■ _ ■ J
iou^&^hr" wer* a^X- /3*fv?ic,e is>nd 8 rfearw Mth™™t emZgtiTo
10US Friday to publicize an ordi- street and report has nnevious-| cause serious damage to the
Police Can Impound Cars
V&sES Under Revised Ordinance
N Pf 1}ce concerning removal of ve-4y been made that *uch vehicleiSrawline‘
Malathion is being provided "icles^from^ streets. City council has been stolen -----
......facility, which , was
ciiict 2 Commissioner V- V. ®^W^want^to_give^^ ^^^vehicle has been em-
and gale warnings extended to
Hatteras.
=The storm was moving
about 10 m.p.h.
Cleo' tookibb lives, in Florida,
but tho’. death toll still was
climbing in the southwestern tip
of Haiti, far behind in the Carib-
bean. •
in the Haitian port city of Les
t Cayes-; Cleo killed 80 persons
J destroyed or damaged neany
everj’ building and left the po-
pulation of 20,000 bewildered
and with little food.
Authorities rejiorted Thursday
that 44 other persons were
known to have died in the sur-
.........»"■'»>......................................
^arl>«eofhGalwstone a senior supply runf out, CiW Manager n^”rfi™c|lrt>visi<,ns. °? ^ vehicle has been abandmed.
01 rSK f w Fritz Lanham said. “7 ort™n“- X 5. A vehicle on a street Is so
..I Lanham_had another special ^ny^police gay- disabled that ite normal opera-
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan B$tos __ _ nHH
for a vacation trip -M barn€r jjuhe“mosquito war.y “ ' fK>n»8 street to the police
"B. Md Mrs. C. N. _Thomas ^ u feft
und vehicle are not able to remove
it or when the person is^iot in
. - —------- toe immediate‘vicinity of the open session Diursday night
ed on a bridge, viaduct or) disabled vehicle. » ) just long enough to attend to
Trustee Meeting Is Bot|i
Open, Closed To Public
The school board met In an John Guemple as director of
causeway or in any tube or. tun-
Drive Sept. 22,., . Bonnie Bond
leaves Sunday for Six Flags.
Betsy Wilson is ready to go back
vehicle for
a, £ £ gSMSSS
6. An officer arrests »•"' I some routine business - like
"'"tag or fa con..^ „ .. . . . ,
r an alleged offense and Kstyle barbecue
such officer is, by this code or|P.8lla.s and purchase of 110,-
Betsy Wilson
to Lubbock and
stations with
to take the 831-59 worth of scientific equip-
ediately be- ment'
- Th.
pal Jill Biddle of South RulS-put oil in water ponds. The oil w^y , in violation of any ordinance ofjconvened; “>ey
lip Middlesex, England. kills the larvae which breeds
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bouch- mosquitoes. w ^ R
er have returned front a tnp Lanham warned Baytown res- WOOSlPT 10 U6CI06
' ork where they maae - - ... - —*■-*- .
---------------S saw "
Then, at 8:11 p.m., 41 minutes
ial meeting was
went into a se-
, to New Yo
the usual
tour and
T18d6 JrTpnfg oat rjH nf anv COntuin- a A . 'v^.. .
xStsfSSx iS’Sfa irS'.-zzft
___
PPPPii-1 dent A.. ■
ad^g^rmance during the ■ - - ■ ^ Pfnijllll
al of any vehicle parked or Trustees recessed briefly in dOf 111*00V S ^UH I CSG11TS
standing on any portion of [fortify themselves with coffee 1
a highway when, in.this opinion, |before dealing with Gentry,
the same constitutes a hazard, During the open portion of the
or interferes with a normal func-1 meeting, the board set some
m of a governmental agency, [kind of record for brevity-han- Football arrives in piteyiew mie Woods say*. “We've been
hy reason <rf any catastrophe, dling seven ilemapf public sc,tool Sunday when the Baytown Sun
:enc-y or unusual clrcum- and Lee College business in 41
hole at Goose Creek Country The Malathion is being mixed Woosterites will get their wish, is imperiled,’’ 'the ordinance)
nub by the workers at the fire sta- but it may be a couple of states,
Memorial .Baptist youth ex- tax.£ —before toe rereice can , ^ mdinancc Mate, that
Dress appreciation to Rufus Hon- sociation, Local No. 73, is also be extended,
“ - —--assisting in the project.
pie are asked to bring non-
containers because Malai _ __
made stops in Philadelphia,' to mixtures resemble milk. If a and this will take time,
- ., The city council vehicle creatine onlv
ns,: sa -
| t Approved a 1100 cftntrlhu-. dual close-ups, schedules and
torn to help put on a barbecue prospects lor Robert E. 1-ee’s
a minor for delegates to the American Ganders, Baytown Career, Chaij-
mons, and in New York, to vis- warned.- ; ; .
it Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Holder Malathion is a dangerous in-
ami their son, during her vaca- secticlde and must be handled
tion carefully. It should not be in-
Jinx Honeycutt is home on haled and should not touch toe
leave for two weeks from the body.
Marine Corp in Washington, Maximum efforts we being
D.C. made to rid school grounds and
Happy birthday to Mgs. Ro-buildings of mosquitos, suspected
karta Jackson. « (See FIGHTING, Page 2)
way will result in a‘traffic vio-1which will meet in Dallas.) trict 12-3A, Crosby and Barbers
iatlon ticket. Effort will be made|Twenty-nine otoer Texas junior Hill of District 27-A and Ana-
tb determine the owner and
In a
out-
slitulim; a-bnzmto-antorttnnto-’hetoMmrre^
ice and 147 against. Forty-sev- removed within an hour. If jt is 2. Approved (he purchase of schedules and personnel through-,
en residents did opt return the not removed’within the prescrib- scientific supplies to be used by out toe season, and, this year,
straw poll ballots sent out with ed one hour period and remains teachers' and students in toe it includes a full page of major
water bills. unattended, the officer on duty [district's 22 schools during the college Schedules.
will take necessary action toll964-65 school year. Total cost "There isn’t a
-In BrownWood, 94 voted yes, win take necessary action to 1964-65 school year.
191 no, and 28 failed to vote, have the vehicle towed away totST toe Jong list , of . .
The vote against city service commercial storage, using the $10,831,59, based on the admin* area
m lopsided to Lakewood wherejnext wrecker on the rotating list istre(ion’s
561 voted no, 116 yes. Thirty-of the police dispatcher. , low bids.
one didn’t vote. |(gc« IMPOUND, Page 8) '• 3. Accepted
the Universal Security Life In-
ipany to offer insur-
itudents at public
ance on
ESSOSSRt attauafa,
«‘An>, iu- Ifnr evaluation of Su|it. George
area, which The new police chief is _
, Cleo's fury member of First Presbyterian
Thursday.1 ?, „ |Church of which he is an elder.
(See CLEO, Page 2) He also teaches toe junior Sun*
City Wonts Study
On Phone Service
,The Baytown Qty Council
Thursday night asked City At-
torney George Chandler to
“brief” General Telephone Co.’s
franchise as one method of de-
termining what, if anything, the
city Can do to get improved,
service in Baytown.
Chandler will report to the
council at its next regular meet-
ing Sept. 10.
City Councilman J. Robert
Barnes has been pressing for ac-
tion to improve. telephone serv-
ice which lie says is inadequate.
Other members of the council
May Lee Liggett said dgrihg
the discussion that th’e lack of
adequate telei
Baytown is the “most discussed
problem in town.
City Manager Fritz Lanham
read a letter from O. E. Cam-
non-academic . courses at Lee
College. Guemple has accepted
a post with the Texas Educa-
tion Agency in Austin. '
4. Accepted the resignation of
Mrs, Guemple, a teacher at
Robert E, Lee High School...... .. ....... ...........
5. Renewed an agreement with bertt, 'district rrmnager^of the
phone company’s
change, stating t
pany was conducting a continU-
and Houston and;,, wanted
make a report to the council at
it* nett meettojR
. In other action, the cbimcil:
1. Renewed a concession con-
tract with Leon. ^igginbotham
at Roseland Park for two years,
2. Established 36mp speed
limits on a portion of Spur 330 (!
(Decker Drive) witoiit the ‘
at the request or W. E. Cat
chael, district highway engin
during the period of const
lion. • • . - F
3. Gav>e. Constable Paul Ani
son permission to place an an-
The consensus Of trtl&ees is that
Gentry’s performance during
the last year has been “between
average and good." ■
Trustees considered:' Gentry’s
ponsibllity in these four ma-
jor areas: Oiaracter, mental
qualities, performance and lead-
ership. Under each of these
were subdivisions, including in-
tegrity, self »%Kance, know,
ledge, ability to analyze, ability
to make major decisons, re-
sourcefulness, initiative, emo-
tional stability, cost conscious-
ness. ability to keep work mov-
ing and carry out nlans, tact,
diplomacy,
to inspire i
ganize, delegati
personnel and others.
During , the closed meeting,
trustees shored Gentry on each
subdivision - - either poor, medi-
ocre, average, good or excel -
lent;
The rattogs were made pri-
vately by each trustee and re*
suits were, tabulated by Board
President A, R. (Von) Stark. ,
The ratings. on j any indivi-
dual criteria rangpd from some-
what below average to consider,
ably above average,” Stork said
Friday. “The consensus was a
little above average."
tfofn GENTRY, Page 2)
join him in protestiflg what toe tenna on a water tower near No.
describe as “poor” service, • “ rtro •fa,:™ -a « — »,«*!»•.
Liggett '
mpggi____an that __________________
adequate telephone service in 51,120 for the repair
In 4Kn liittPllCfiftH" limit r«v>1inn n«4
3 fire station and a base station
in a building nearby,
4. Authorized the payment of
.....t ff a water
well at Carlkm and Cleveland.
5. Approved the reappoint-
ment of Dr. George Wi'
D. Hinson and Mrs.
alrtisiey,
rs. Dan
Commission,
6. Set 6:30- p.m.- Sept.’ 10 as 43 years
date for a public hearing on toe ~
lofieer Of
Cedar B«»eu
Dies At 79
Mrs. Rosa Morgan (George
Marvin) Olive, 79, member of
pioneer Cedar Bayou family,,
died Thursday to a Pasadena ,
hospital, She was born in Cedar
undinger to the City Planning Bayou kov, 11, 1885, and had : t
lived to Pasadena for toe past
ing study of providing direct dis- 1964-65 city budget.
'tance dialing between Baytown 7. Passed ^resolution calling
-------- on members of (be Harris' Chun-
Annual Football Edition
Sunday when toe Baytown Sun
publishes its annual Bay-Tex
FoortbaH edition.
Die edition includes indivi-
This is iriiat they did:
a *100 cOnt
iarb
,met
of Junior Colleges nelview and' La Porte of Dig
Dallas.
4wh he saved - for reference., ta.
cost “Thert isn’t another news
toms, was paper .which publishes to our
able to add quite a bit of data
on individual players, which
should make this one of the
most informative football pre-
views toe Sun has ever publish-
ed.”.
Area writer Benny Moskowitz
has gone into more individual
details this year than In an y oi
toe previous editions, providing
thumbnail sketches of each Bay-
whichjTcx club's lettermen and out-
cli»
gtnnriimr pmepppis
___ ___mm Joe Whittington covers toe
Out toe season, and, this year. Ganders jn minute detail with
''""■f...... brief sketches of
and a preview of
each (
a preview of PEL’S brand
new defensive alignment.
Many of the l»ys who will
_.T_ which can equaltlie bring off the season’s oulstand-
recommendcd best amount of information we have ing plays are pictured in photo-
beep able to cram into t h i s|graphs by Horace Heims of
toe resignation of editiofc” Sun sport director Jim-1 Bay town Photos.
- ..... ■" : - ' U : .
ty delegation in the Texas Leg-
islature to support a move for
at the mouth of Cedar Bayou on
Tri-Oty Beach Road,
Retail Group
Meets Thursday
Raytown Retail Merchant*
will have a dinner'meeting at
7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 3, at
the Tower to dlacuas the fail
retail calendar. ,
Bob F a I ■twtg 'requested
mnrrhsnt members to contact
Dave Moore at the Chamber
iif'Commerce to make
ration*.
Dave Sherron, chairman of
tiie Retail Merchants Commit-
tee. announced the annual re-
ception for Baytown area
teacher* will be held at to
a m. Monday at Robert S. Lee
High School.
She was a member of the
First Methodist Church of Pasa-
dena. Pasadena Order , nf the
Eastern Star 711, Susannah Wes-
ley Sunday School Class. Pasa-
dena ^Garden Club, WSCS and
Survivors include one dauch-
ter, Mrs. O. Cj(Tnna) Shannon,
and three grandchildren, Mar-
vin' Shannon, Mrs. Jake (Eve-
lyn) WiJboum and Mrs. W. B.
(Rosa) May. eB rf Pasadena.
Other survivors are a sister.
Mrs Mary Wofford rf Crosby
and several nieces and hephetgjfc
Funeral services win be Nit
at 2 p.nj. Saturday at Pi rat
Methodist Church in Pasadena
with the Rev. Thomas M. Price
and the Rev. Joe B. Wells con-
ducting services.
Burial will be in Cedar Bayou
Masonic Cemetery, under toe db
rection of Colonial Funeral
■Homo to Pasadena . »—;—
Citizens National Bank
Now 6 Drive In Window*
. ........■ . y-v
_
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 291, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1964, newspaper, August 28, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057462/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.