The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 185, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 14, 1956 Page: 1 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
' *\
—
—
V *
AVSIIOKK WEATHER—Generally (sir
and Sunday, warmer Sunday,
east and southeast Wind*.
GALVESTON TIDES: lllKh Low
For Sunday— 4:63a.m. 11:11a.m.
6:53 p.m. U:51p.m.
atyrlagfaum^mt
VOL 36, NO. 185
TODAY'S NEWS TODAY
Saturday, January 14, 1956
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
TELEPHONE: 1302. Fiv# Canh Par
TAIPEI -art- Vie* Adm. Stu-
art ln*cr»oll aaid Saturday hi*
U, 8. Seventh Fleet will drfrnd
Fonnoaa and thr I’raradorr*
bland* "on, over and under the
ora" In the event o! Communbt
attack.
PARIS -4P- Rightwing rabble-
router Pierre Poujade divided hit
time Saturday between a conven-
' tion of hi* UDCA anti-tax move-
ment and a courtroom where he
la being tued for dander.
UNITED NATIONS, N. T. —
(W— United Nation* diplomat*
met privately Saturday In an
attempt to hammer out agree-
ment on a draft of censure
again*! Israel for an attack on
a Syrian outpost that would
gain unanimous support in the
aeeurlty council.
GALVESTON -dOt- Mr*. Helen
Dean Waldron Clough, wife of
Mayor George Roy Clough, died
Friday night following a heart
attack Thursday afternoon.
PITTSBURGH -4B- Top lev-
el strike talk* resumed here
Saturday In th* bitter 96-day
Westinghouse Else trie Corp.
strike following a “review" by-
hot h side* of development*
from two days of serret negoti-
ations In Philadelphia.
Lions SetUp Shop For Polio Telethon
THANKS SISTER FOR SAVING HER — Patricia Chmil, 5, of
Brooklyn, give* her slater Arlene, 7, a kiss a* a reward for saving
the live* of Patricia and their mother when their apartment be-
came filled with coal gas. Arlene awoke with a headache and ran
to neighbor when *hr couldn’t arouse her sister and mother. The
neighbor summoned police and alerted other families In the four-
«tcry building.__(International >
JP Handled 1,928 Cases In '56 --
Here's Tab On Crime In Baytown
Justice of the Peace Walter people were filed on for assault two assault by motor vehicle also
Queen handled a total of 1928 to murder, but only one carried were included in the list, as well
criminal cases, moat of them traf- out his intention. Two were as 70 miscellaneous charges,
fle cases, in his court in 1955, ac- charged with murder by motor
cording to a report he released vehicle.
Monday Thirty eight pollution charges
There' were 1203 traffic viola- were filed; sixty-three theft; 20
tions, ranging from speeding and disturbing the peace; 14 lunacy
running stop signs to failure to counts were on record,
stop and render aid. Four persons were charged with
Twelve felony driving while in- failure to require their children
toxicated charges were filed, and to attend school; five were charg-
35 misdemeanor; 103 people fac'd ed with game law violations; two
the judge for being drunk; 97 pco- with robbery by firearms, and 29
pie were filed on for simple or with burglary,
aggravated assault. Fourteen forgery charges, two
There were 13 trespassers, and embezzlements; 12 of unlawfully
149 were charged with swindle by carrying a weapon, 12 vagrancy,
check. Three persons were charge 1 six threat to take life, and two
with just plain swindling. narcotics charge were filed.
According to the record, eight Four negligent homicide and
Harris county’s first charge of
breaking and entefing a coin
operated machine also was filed
in Judge Queen's court. The de-
fendant was accused of breaking
into a jukebox in a place on West
Main street.
The judge held 124 preliminary
hearings on the felony charges. A
total of 826 person* charged with
misdemeanor offenses pleadVd
not guilty.
A total of 406 civil cases were
filed, and 324 claims. Judgements
by default were entered in 261
They'll Take
Pledges For
Dimes Drive
As the Baytown Sun staff pre-
pared to close up it’s week’s work
after Saturday’s Issue began rol’-
ing off the presses, advance units
of Baytown Lions club members
began moving into the desks in the
front office to set up shop fdr the-
March of Dimes telethon which
starts at 10:30 p.m.
The telephone switchboard will
be manned by Lions, and calls will
be taken by other Lions at uesks
vacated by the news staff, with
other members of the club's crack
corps, will go to homes of those
who call in pledges and contribu-
tions and pick them up.
Outside The Sun office, recep-
tacles were being placed and still
other members of the Lions club
were completing last minute plans
to keep the line of traffic moving
and receive contributions from
cars.
All these busy activities are part
of the nationally-famious KPRC-
TV telethon conducted annually by
Dick Gottlieb to raise funds for
the March of Dimes. The Baytown
Sun office will be used as a con-
venient branch for contributions
from folks in East Harris County.
Tabulations of donations from
this area will be flashed promptly
via short wave direct to KPRC-TV
studios. Homan Reed and a corps
of Baytown amateur radio hams
are ready to begin with the first
contribution that comes in Satur-
day night
Jack Kimmons and Co-Chairman
Allen Meistcr and Jack Strickler
are heading up a staff of Baytown
Lions club members who wifi take
turns in two-hour shifts as the
telethon runs through to 2 pm.
Sunday.
Members of the new Wooster
Lions Club were setting up shop
to assist Baytown. Lions by pick-
ing up contributions in the Woos-
ter
HAS MORE WIVES THAN LAW ALLOWS
WILMINGTON, Calif. —flfi— A 53-year-old sales-
man, who reportedly has four wives and 19 children,
was held in Jnil Saturday on a fugitive warrant Is-
sued at Salt Lake City, sheriff* deputies reported.
The salesman, David Brigham Darger, was taken
into custody Friday night at a Wilmington home
where he was living with Virginia Beth McDaniel,
46, an expectant mother, and their eight children,
deputies said.
According to deputies, Darger protested ho was
being persecuted for his religious belief* an* that,
a* a member of the Church of the Latter-bay flalnta,
his multi-married status agreed with Mormon doc-
trine. The churrh long ago abandoned t
Deputies said Darger admitted having three 4
wive* and 11 children in Salt Lake City. One
is the sister of the McDaniel woman, deputies i
28 Insurance
Firms Lauded
On 'Guarantee'
JOHN ORAHAM
KILLER INSANE? - A dis-
trict eourt*ury will be called
March 5 to decide if Graham
was sane when he aliegedly
set a time bomb aboard an
airliner Nov. 1, killing his mo-
ther and 43 other persons. The
sanity trial became mandatory
on Graham’s plea of innocence
by reason of insanity. Gra-
ham recently completed a 30-
day observation period at the
Crlcrado Psychopathic hospi-
tal where two psychiatrists
“concluded Graham was sane’’
at the time of the crime.
Moody Jr. Hits
Snag In Fight For
Father's Millions
Rangers Called Into
Strike At Corsicana
They Offer
To Make Good
On '56 Losses
CORSICANA, Tex. -UP—Three ley. He suffered only minor in-
Texas Rangers from Dallas were juries.
oh guard Saturday against any a spokesman for the company
further violence in the 12-day-old said Hurley ran into the bus de-
strike against the Oil City Iron uberately to try to make the com-
Works. pany look bad.
Some 140 of, the company's 170 Henry Rabun, a spokesman for
workers are on strike, and there the Steel Workers in Dallas. k
have been reports of fire bombs laughed at the reports of the fire
being thrown, a shot gun being bombs being thrown and said. J**19M
fired at a house and a striker hit "that is an old gag to make people “ a most audaD‘e step’
by a company bus. think the union is given to vio- •
Mayor Walter Irwin called in the lence.
AUSTIN —UP— The chairman
of the Texas Insurance Commis-
sion says an offer by 28 major
legal reserve stock insurance com-
panies to make good bn policies
The commission chairman, J.
Byron Saunders, said he hasn’t re-
Bangers M.OJL -jw,0,,_> —U*. S&JSrZT
Bob Crowder and Rangers Renest ciU(ied’in the contract provisions
Daniel and R. L. Baggett. that when a man reached 65 he
The Rangers held a secret con- would lose his seniority and con-
ference with Irwin, Police Chief sequently, his job,” Rabun said.
Pete McCain, Police Commissioner
GALVESTON -*UP— Threat of Walter Weems. Herman Roberts,
CUM CpnTC MILD WEEKEND SEEN
oun VTjn o BEfQRE FRQNT smKES
Scouts To Moot
BAYTOWN ORDER of the Arrow Thr temperature dropped below freesing in Baytown Friday night,
will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at but forecasters say It will be wanner Saturday and Sunday before
the 225 Scout house, Delwin Wal- another cold front cover* most of the state by Sunday night ’
ker an Arrow member, has re- The unofficial low in Baytown at 8 a.m. Saturday was 31 degree*,
aen’tly been elected vice chief of Friday’* high wa» 65 and a high of 76 wa« predicted for Saturday.
Obloneh lodge which includes sev- A cold front from Canada and the Great Plain* headed for Texas
oral citiee in this area The chap- Saturday a* most of the state enjoyed springlike weather. Tempera-
“ °» ’"*»i ~ injr-ssrsvAs
expected during the day in West Texas.
Forecasters said the cold air mass would move Into the state Sun-
day, covering most of Texas by late Sunday night or Monday.
Mayor Urges
San Jacinfo
UePot 5o,e
I tanT'-inh members who will a suit to break the will of the late an executive of the steel company.
Lions club ™pa|a°rs JJ® 1 (inancicr W. L. Moody Jr. ran into and J. J. Robinson of Dallas, dis-
oy oe.au,v were eniereu mm* serve on the vanous shifts in- " Saturday with grantingof trict representative of the United
of the cases, and 67 we-, -ntest- dude Pal Fuller, chairman; M M. a states Steelworkers.
tiincKier, nr , ,Tr Robinson said after the meeting
the union does not condone vio-
(Fats) Brown, John W. t, Moodv hi
R. L. Gillette. W. W. Lowe, Allen a^laf W; U Moody UI’
SaJL'SSVSHg jjjy-m-—sa-5-
Dr. J. T.
Jones, Ed
Missionaries May Have Died
For Refusing Shrunken Head
Horeczy, Dr. W. T. Crowder said the Rangers will Coontv tutors and to Sen.
aSSSEdSS
S nr Ben Ammons chairman’ Jounf Moody’s petitions diary bombs. None did any dam- ChlU,neM*
Dr. Bon Ammons, enairm^n, charged that his father, who died aee aii were thrown at the homes
William J. Strickler, I?r. William at g9 was not capable of distribut- 0f workers who are crossing the
K. Day, Dr. Keller P. Greenfield, inp his raoney p^rly, and also “““ wno m Cr0SSlng
Billy G. Smith, D C. Funderburk, charged fraud in connection with w The shotgun blast was fired at
Taylor Gerber, Jim Sheley, Roy the fortune of his late mother, the home of W. B. Cagle, one of
Elms, Allen Rice and Dr. S. P* Libby Moody. the same houses where a fire
McMurrey. The temporary restraining order bomb was thrown. It went in a
Wooster Lions club members was asked by the Moody Founda- window and tore up the window
who will assist in collecting con- tion. to which the elder Moody left pane, shade and curtain,
tributions in the Wooster, Brown- most of his wealth. The injunction The striker who said he was hit
wood and Lakewood area, include was asked on the basis that young by a company bus—used in taking
Bill Beck, Paul Cater, Eddie Cox, Moody's petition was “a fishing the non-striking workers past the
Frank Fowler, L. P. Hodges, Roy expedition.’’ picket lines—was Billy Ray Hur-
N.
trict kianjo.
Slick’s Slickers Win
SUCK ELUS’ Gande# B-team
won Its fourth consecutive district
8-4A victory, 53-51. over Pasadena
at Lee gym Friday night. Ronnie
Faulkner led the scorers with 25
points. James Ledbetter had 17 for
Pasadena, i'ft ,
hi , 1 m - ' Holzheuser, Jake Hannarr, N. D.
Vic DdVIS Sick QUITO, Ecuador -UP- Search- missionaries a shrunken head- Longnecker, E. D. Nelson Jr., ^ , mm . • ««#•>■ H I " Wfikev'he
srs-rtyssts; s tatty rtE 2rarar*K Community Chest Meeting Will Be Feb. 23
Mcmorlaf hospital. ^became^U racr^ Sund^ybytoto^f^m- to'reflge ^ ’’"a 'largTgrou^of' teen-agers Nominations No>Y Being Accepted FoP AgeflCy OfflCeTS
Mayor Pruett said he sent the
letters by request of County Com-
missioner V. V. Ramsey, who is
interested in getting the ordnance
depot moved so the land it occu-
pies will be available for indus-
trial development.
The depot area contains about
3,000 acres. It is located on Mar-
ket street road between Clover-
leaf and Channelview. A move
has been underway tor sometime
to hsrve it moved.
and entered the hospital Friday. ers perhaps because they
a shrunken head as a gift.
New TrofflC Light The dead, all members of the
A TRAFFIC light at the inter- Evangelical (Protestant) mission
section of East James and High- based here, are Nathaniel Saint,
way 146 will probably go into of Fullerton, Calif.; T. Edward
operation next Wednesday, City MeCully, Jr., of Wauwatosa, Wis.;
Manager C. Darwin Middleton Roger Youderian, of Billings,
said Saturday. Placing the light Mont;; Peter Fleming, of Seattle,
in operation has been delayed be- snd James Elliot, of Portland, Ore.
cause parts did' not arrive as
scheduled.
"However, I have discussed the
plan sufficiently to know that this
is a most laudable step and one
which is certain to help relieve
much public anxiety and con-
cern,” he said.
The 28 companies announced
they have formed the Texas Life
Convention. The policies they have
offered to make good must have
been taken out before Jan. 1. 1966.
They must be with legal reserve
Stock companies. The' companies
will have to have been closed in
the 12 months beginning last Jan.
1. the offer will help only policy-
holders. not stockholders in bad
companies.
Pat Greenwood, president of
Great Southern Life of Houston
and a spokesman for the group,
said the plan does not hint that
any other companies are unsound.
U.S. Attorney Malcolm R. Wil-
key said in Houston he has re-
ceived a preliminary report from
postal inspectors who looked into
the way U.S. Trust and Guaranty
Co. of Waco used the mails. He
said the report "justifies a longer
and harder look.”
It was the collapse of U.S. Trust
and Guaranty last Dec. 22, 87 mil-
lion in the red, that set off the
scandals. The president of the -
company, A. B. Shoemake, shot
himself in the head in Waco last
week but is still clinging to life.
will meet early*
. H. Allred, re-
gional administrator of the Securi-
ties and Exchange Commission,
to see whether the company broke
SEC
r°fUSe,i jjttjje hairtrigger tempers of the dMceV^tTer^h^h^^- The annual public meeting of Positions to be filled at the elec- pired in February 1957; Sylvester, regulatto£f P°Stal laWS
bloodthirsty savages, the experts nasjum iast Thursday night at the Baytown and East Harris tion are a chairman, to succeed Larry Hale, Walter H. Boucher, state Sen. Jimmy Phillips ac-
sa!“- which voluntary donations were County Community Chest mem- Strickler and a secretary, to sue- Elbert M. Watkins and Williams cused four members of the Senate
, .v1 * ”1 ,on,ares t!nor;l. -. wer ‘he only price of admission. Dick bership is scheduled for Feb. 23 ceed Mrs. Edna Boyer; five Com- C. Jackson, terms expire Febru- General Investigating committee
ihm,r vintf.J" Mahan, popular disk jockey at at Lee college auditorium, Wil- munity Chest directors; five Bay- ary 1958. wife "covering up" in the insur-
;adio station KREL, was master |iam j. Strickler, council chair- town Welfare league directors and Welfare league's retiring direc- ance scandal investigation and de-
af ceremonies, and played records man. announced Friday. three Health league directors. tors are Mrs. J. M. D. Heald, Sam manded that they resign,
most often requested on his ra- Strickler said the purpose of Retiring Chest directors are B. Bramlett, B. P, Hopper, Mrs. Paul “Who are they covering up. for?”
dio program. All music for the the meeting is to receive reports E. Wilson, Harry F. Hartman, Nickel and N. B. Ballard. In this PhimPs said in a prepared state-
dance was provided by the record of the financial and service ac- Sam Paine, A. E. Oliphint and group, members may succeed ment issued at Austin, Phillips is
participating agen- James E. Sherwood. Board mem- themselves.
when they ventured among the
Aucas, who have been continuous!’
on the warpath against all comer,
for at least 40 years.
“These people are killers,” Elite
Sho was reported Saturday to be
“resting fine.”
(Continued on Page Two)
They had enjoyed considerable said in his last letter to his mother,
success In early efforts to estab- Mrs. Fred Elliot, of Portland,
llsh friendly relations with the sav- (Mrs. Elliot said Friday nigh
age Auca Indian headhunters in she bears no ill will toward the
the "green hell" jungles of eastern Indians who slew her son.
Ecuador, They were massacred ("He was doing his duty to God.
er a groun of strange she said in Portland. "Possibl
Indians appeared on the scene. this is part' of His plan to bring
Indian experts here theorized the His word to these unfortunate sav-
strangers may have offered the ages.”)
player in the gymnasium. Calvin tivities of the
Mrs. McKee Sick
MNi'.ft in. XcKEE. wife of for
xssr-*r. szstss
Sui Jacinto Memorial hospital. Tnciians aDneaml on tho srono thte ic nayf nf wic nion tn
Simmons, and F. L. Lewis headed
up this special dance which net-
ted $12.67 for the March of Dimes
campaign.
running for governor.
Arnimrl Tnu/n- Evidence 'Complete1
nlUllilU 1UWII Bilked Hoodlum Spills All Details
4
m.
DEBBIE SUE Potts looking tor- _
ward to that day of the fourth BOSTON —UP— The FBI and Inc., north end counting house was
birthday celebration. She’ll be sing- state law enforcement officials "cased” for 18 months before the
ing, "I’m a big girl now” ... Jay claimed Saturday to have a "com- robbery was attempted. He said
Tower sending a belated Yule greet- ptete case” against the gang that that observation was made with
Ing card. Said she forget to mail staged the nation’s greatest hold- binoculars from various stations
cu^s^ b°X Hden" Mc^rreneShe^' Central figure in the _ govern- "Xbandit^ according to
ing out with a future feature . . . ™ent s case was baldish hoodlum O’Keefe, made daring entrances
Ditto Mrs. E. V. Erxcleben . . . Joseph (Specs) O Keefe, who Fri- at ntghti tlmln„ their arrivals and
Manton Davis wishing the triple dip day after six years of silence ap- departures so. they would be un-
nlckel Ice cream cones would come Peared before the Suffolk county seen jjy the nightwatchman
back grand jury to "tell all” about the . „ r .. , , ; ,.
• ft 219 nan RrinU’* mhherv Impressions of the locks leading
Anna Mae Jackson, in her Us- * f o’Kepfe’s exact to *he money vaults were made
.ual efficient manner, looks after amj d»tajied description of how the *“*« ni?ht0me visits,
minor details with finest . . . . 17, 1950 robbery took place, 0Keefe
Alvin Miles, Lee College man- th(, ,suffol’: eo:!-’-- yren-i jury ‘Each key permitted access to
ground-college, tells how easy it quickly returned indictments another door,” he was quoted as
is to change, habits of long stand- aerainst him and 10 others. saying. "We had no need for an
ing , .. . Ruby Meleen working There were a total of 46 indict- lnside man "
her way through the cafeteria ments on armed robbery and con-
BAYTOWN’S
TELETHON
HEADQUARTERS
8302
Is The Telephone
Number of
The Baytown Sun,
Located at
Pearce & Ashbel
nes and to elect new directors, a bers may not succeed themselves. Hold-over members whose terms T ^ |oar senat°rs are Wardlow
chairman and secretary. Hold-over members are the Rev. expire in 1957 are the Rev. John ifne , Center, Jarrard Secrest of
"Anyone who contributed in any M. E. McPhail, Barsalou, R. L. H. Osteen, F. E. Kelly. Miss Jes- R?g?rs„ .of
way to the Community Chest or Martin, Norman Hargrave and sie Lee Humphrey, Alfred Mosko- JSf i’11®"'
its member agencies is a member George Gentry, whose terms ex- (See CHEST—Page Two)
of the Community Chest and is " .
invited to attend the meeting,”
Strickler added.
Nominations for tile election of
Chest officials may be made by
anyone who will mail his nomina-
tions to the Community Chest,
Box 425, or to any member of
the nominating committee, the „ _ _____
council chairman pointed out. ?peciaI meeting at 7 p.m. stipulation that he post a certified who replaced Braccweli as chair-
Council Sets Special Meet
To Study Bids On Supplies
Baytown City Council will hold tral Height* subdivision, with the
Their vote for a secret meeting
caused Sen. Searcy BraceweU of
Houston to resign as commitee
chairman.
"Are they determined to play
politics as usual in the face of this
mess?” Phillips asked. "Why were
they afraid to question the state
auditor in open session about this
report?”
Sen. William S. Fly of Victoria,
The Rev. Wayne McCleskey is Wednesday to consider bids on check for $8,000 to guarantee per- man of the committee, has called
nominating committee chairman; supplies, such as water meters,
committeemen are Joe Barsalou, p.lpes and fittings, gasoline and
John W. Sylvester, Maurice Jen- 1 J;
nomlna* Ita UtuUtt
, * will not buy them all at one time.
Because of time consumed at
the council’* regular Thursday
night session b> the public hear-
QUICKIES ., By Ken Reynolds
forinance of his agreement in it into session for next Tuesday to
obedience to the city subdivision resume the investigation,
ordinance. . one of the four, Secrest issued
2. Approved naming the new (See INSURANCE—Ps»ge Two)
street, extending from Cedar
Bayou to Highway 146 in the vi-
einity of the new elementary Rat/fAn Ri+oc Fap
school, Clayton avenue. WIjIttll IIIIC5 101
S MProvrf urn, ,»„J ta. p^jpg yjcfjm
R. A, Wright, freight line opera-
tor, will head the La Porte Cham-
He said McGinnis didn’t partidl- ber of Commerce for the coming
line .... Mrs. Rosa Porter saying spiracy, carrying maximum pen- pate in the actual robbery but year.
•no, thank you” for a ride in the alties of life imprisonment stayed around town establishing an Wright and other new officers
early morning. The embittered O'Keefe, who alibi. were named in an election which
J.w ,?vc/. . aboveand Glnnls, 52, of Boston, a liquor store went inside the building and pulled ager and Mrs. Luciile Robertson,
beyond the call of duty .... Bar- operator, as the “brains” behind off the holdup. secretary. ,
bara Hollister being accused of the holdup and burly Anthony Later the gang met with McGin- Elected directors were Joel E.
being a blessing after a week’s pino, 48, as the second in com- nis, according to O’Keefe, at a Cook, Dr. P, J. Mock, Clyde Agee,
absence from her busy desk at mand. home in Boston's Roxbury section J. E. Stewart. E. J. Cade, Joe
our favorite newspaper. O'Keefe said that the Brinks, to split up the loot. ,.... Sonnenberg and Ray Van Deventer.
fers,
4. Referred to Police Chief W.
ing on federally financed housing, 5’ Mjmtsmiiery application by J.
the bids were not considered. _ ^ Martin, owner of Red
the bids were not considered.
The council did dispose of the
following items before the public
hearing started.
Top Cab Co., to establish a taxi
terminal in West Baytown.
5. Approved payment of engi-
neering services on the Maryland
1. Approved Ike Lerner's appli* street sanitary sewer line and the
cation for final approval of C6n- Martin ditch drainage project.
\ ■. , ‘ ;’
bw Moves Fast In Crosby Hijacking
"... If you ask me—the only
one that works at your office
is the mistletoe you got last
Year in the Sun Want Ads!”
: communication between
...jston, Baytown and Liberty
through thp police radio stations
resulted in the capture of a couple
in less than 45 minutes after the
Harris County sheriff's office re-
ceived a report that the couple
had hijacked a, man.
The victim, a Houston Negro,
phoned from Crosby that the wo-
Funerai services for Henry Ad-
ams Evans will be held at the
Pace Stancii funeral chapei in
Dayton, and burial will be in. Ce-
darcest cemetery. Other arrange-
ments for the service have not
yet been made.
Evans, a resident of Mont Bel-
vieu for 34 years, drowned Thurs-
day at Jack's Pass while on a
fishing trip, according to Justice
of the Peace R. L. Jarnagin of
Anahuac.
Survivors are hi? wife, Mrs. Ed-
na N. Evans of Mont Beivieu; hi* *
mother, Mrs. V. A. Evans of Tul-
sa, Ikla.; three daughters, Mra,
Harry Holub of League City; Mm
Henrietta Jordan of Riverside,
man used and .32 caliber pistol to
take $47 from him. She and a man
left the scene in a car which he
described. The sheriff’s office ra-
rioed Baytown, and Baytown re-
layed the description of the car
to Liberty. Ten minutes later. & HHji
liberty sheriffs car reported that Calif, Mr*. Odell Casey of Green?
the pair had been captured and, Bayou. Also surviving are a bro-
were being taken to Liberty coun- ther, three staters and three grand-
ty jail. children.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 185, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 14, 1956, newspaper, January 14, 1956; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100996/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.