The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 300, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1966 Page: 4 of 22
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■4.. ;
mmA
* '
Sunday, August 7, 1966
4 W)r logtonm §nn
WIN AT BRIDGE"
Drop or Double ,
Finesse Better?
Is
ty>'
| ♦ Editorials And
Soci
Placi
•V,
Features #
-
1.
M
*-’
' - ✓
s
,
1
,
s* *
•M
(Eorroi
formation i
iV
By Oswald & Jomes Jacoby
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
if
I
a.
/
wan
;
Murray W,
roaentatlve
Social Sect
be reaohe
Social Sec
Federal I
Street.)
Q. Where
curity taxe:
ducted fron
A. Social
tions for rt
and disabi
credited to
'
Fund and tl
In- : .1! , !
,, used to pay
lstrative ex
ment, surv
insurance p
used,, for n
Two new
tinct trus
tablished t
m
$
Sometimes bridge players
argue about success. 'South
studied dummy for about ten
minutes before playing the
first card from dummy. Then
he won the trick in his own -
out dummy’s
clubs. When
■r
By HENRY McLEMORE
NEW YORK - I am for Ron-
ald Reagan.
A few day* ago I wasn't even ■
for him on the late show, much
less for governor of California
Thanks to healthy winter and spring pend upon for normal flow during the before/ knew,
precipitation, waiters in New York res- growing season. for sure, that I wasn't going to
taurants mav serve water with meals * The streamflows are also found to ge, an invitation from the White
taurants may serve water witn^meais ^ at record lows over m^h 0f the House to the marriage of Luci *
aga-in without-having to be asked ana- area. in Massachusetts, for.example, ani-Pat, and that Everett Dirk-....
experts have stopped talking about the deficiency in streamflow for a 56- sen was.
purifying the Hudson River, but the month period ending in March amount- Why Diricsen and not I?
drought which began several years ago ed to two full years of nprmal runoff, -1 ■"» a lifetong Democrat and
arougni wmcn oegan several yenn. j»ku significant point brought out Dirksen is a lifelong Republican.
in the northeast part of the country ,s by™ee tfft unlike agricul- » *«-"« ^t to
far from over. „ tural drought (lack of timely crop- rf a aSKtf ?p£
A report released by the U.S. Geo- nourishing rains), “the manifestations went of the us’
logical Survey shows that, based on 0f water-supply drought tend to persist i heiped elect Johnson I was
data up to the end‘of March, 1966 and intensify from one growing season „p early to vote for hini, want-
ground-water levels reached record * to the next/* ing to take no chance of being
lows in large areas of the Middle At- Even though enough precipitation shut out at the voting machine,
lantic and New England states. may occur to water crops, pastures and Was Dirksen up early? My
Ground water - the snows and rains forests, this moisture may not be \ guess is that he -wain't. Did he
of yesteryear which have seepetWnto enough to recharge the aquifers. nK. <T ! '
.-water-bearing rocks the geologists call ___ This is the situation in the north- ^nfdndf jnh^on ^
aquifers - is what hundreds of com-, east - and it promises to be one that "sked and r ”
munities depend upon for their water will be with the region for a long time party ]oyai,y? i* that the way
supply. It is also what streams de- to come.
\
W-y -
V
I
Si
.e-
■ -\
hand and played
ace and king of
both opponents followed to
the second club South con-
ceded a club trick and
claimed bis contract.
North remarked, “Your
- . piay-workfidJjut.as3-malter.......
of strict mathematics you
should have won the spade in
. dummy and taken a double
diamond finesse. Unless West
held both king and queen of
, diamonds that play would
•\ have worked. There is a 76
per cent chance of finding one
of two honors in the East _
hand. There is only a 68 per
. cent chance of breaking the
. clubs 3-2.” '
South replied, “The actual
chance of success with the
club play was 71 per cent. I
don’t play in a vacuum and
.clubs
:
\
V
*
SL
it
7J
iL
<M7i
\f
.1
>
Co-Chan
In Ches!
• \
' '
—' ^ r.
would* have-
had they" broken 5-0 blit yd'u.......
overlook the fact that my club •
play gave me a considerable
extra chance. Suppose East
showed out on the second
cluh^L,would go after dia-
• monds amfhave a 24 percent
chance of making my; .con-
tract. East could, hold both
diamond honors. Or West
might show out on the second
k~r~ club. Then I would still have
a 52 per cent chance of suc-
— JackTaj
vey were
pions at i
Chess Clul
j
to reward the faithful?
There are at least 50 other
treasons why I should have
been Invited to the marriage
and Dirksen left off the list, "
To start with, I take up less
_ __ ___^ ----------- room than he doe*, and would
Take cottage cheese, for Instance, a required a much less choice
product with low,cost and high nutri- t ^
t ion. • Tne lowest wconm * groups e&Pe He’U
surprisingly, indifferent to it. eat chile, but it isn't something
According to nutritionists, cottage he dotes on. I have helped sup-
cheese is a natural choice for low-bud--------port Texas cannen of chile for
get shoppers. But they tend to keep years. The President loves chile,
aloof from it because, like most low- *>■ why not ask chile lovers
cost foods, "it just doesn’t, have «ta-
Instead, often at great economic sac- . »S5*,nL,<
_rjftce, the low-income family goes m . been .told that Dirksen, on his
for status-related foods like beef be- occasional horseback rides, pre-
cause it gives them an illusion Of eco------fers an English saddle. Does
nomic well-being that they need, say Johnson ride an English sad-
thfr explainers. . ^ — -----------------dfcL—_________ IT I
The rich, on the other hand, don’t . J’U bet you Dirksen couldn’t
need tbat kind of reassurance, thus eat give you a recipe for combread
and, if he did, it would include
sugar. I can’t imagine Johnson
eating cornbread with sugar on
i
c. ■
.•
Ou
day.
%
Don Odo
trophy am
to Robert
played g
’— Crowley fo
The club
ment at 7
Aug. 10, 8
ter on Har
sets will b
best two
W::
Wfr:
Something’s wrong here: The poor
* are getting fatter, the Hch are getting
thinner.
Yet that’s what a study recently
published by the American <|ieticians
Association indicates. In a survey, the
council found “an impressive relation-
ship between socio-economic status
and obsesity.’’
To be specific, 30 per cent of the
“have not" group were on the heavy
..side. This contrasted with. 16 jier cent
for the middle class and only five per
cent for the very well-to-dos.
The council's findings are supported
‘ by those of two other research groups
\vho report that poor people favor pat-
terns of diet in which nutrition and
taste are not the only considerations..
Tension
gma
Washington Merry-G 6-Hound-
.......T8**""
. NORTH(D)
~ WQJ-----~‘
f J7
•'♦ 874 r
* A K 8 6 3 2
EAST
6
1
~+~;
,.t-
Mo\
tus.
WEST
♦97632
♦ 9 8 4 3
♦ K 6
♦ J 4"
I
♦ 854
.♦652
♦ Q532
4M5ims.
On
V
SOi’TH
By DREW PEARSON ------ big kiss, he said, "I Jove you.” Just three days before, hq had
WASHINGTON — All wreek The women guests cooed and celebrated 23 years of being an
the President has been trying aahed. "What a difference be- envoy to the USA, during which
to handle Viet Nam, the airlines tween him and Gov, Rockefel- he Jias served during terms of
strike, the visit of Israeli Presi- ler,” whispered one. six Nicaraguan presidents, five
dent Shazar, while the White when Mrs. Tillie Nugent, ‘ American Presidents, and eight
How many rattlesnakes has House was awash with brides- Luci's {utUre mother-in-law, was U.S, Secretaries of State.
Dirksen ever seen? Three or maids, groomsmen and his new as]{e<j how many Nugent rela- When Sevilla - Sacasa first
four,'at the most. Johnson was in-laws. tives had come for the wed- came to Washington the diplo-
t raised with them, and so was Once while a three - ring cir- ding, she replied: “Well, give matic corps consisted of only 47
L^'stsrs-iss
myc ---Httr ft fhf A ^ L„m. Niyent Pat’S njother^ w .”»*»■. hard as dean has
—* Seaborn Cravey, gity council- ers. Rattlesnake killers should L>i^-tfieharassgtfPfeifent : ;rr»he teved-g
Th™mrouet^t tWs meanTnX wav fumreta- men- ** Chimber of am, sMck together.--------- ---- burs^in on an assistant •“Ifiis: immigrant^ settled in Chi-:
Tmuw can be sren by wmpir. merce and individuals. Baytown How many times did Dirksen place is overrun with women,' cag0, Her son met Luci at Mar-
asssws «*»+*..***** sargs-ssai
tions are favorable, develop Ind„ woFks which employs 30,- extension of the MoPac as pres- that' Jenson walked a dustv contagious. RA»h^
here one of the Ingest md^tnal W people yd b one the two ently contemplated would cross ^ t0 schooI> with the dJ Lady Bird was holding a hen (“m e r assiLnt Walte/Sn-
complexes of Its to. ^ tojflt steel nulls to the worW. four nisjor streets. Instead of cniirtinp hetween hie toes I can Dartv -—'nothing to do with the inne
Urdted Sates, if not the world. The Gary site ‘s^y't.^acres boing antagonistic. Mayor Crav- thf, dust now _ sof| ^ Adding - when the President
Now this vast development is -less than one third as large^ ey said, “When the city council dery and wonderful feeling dropped in. Giving his wife, a
threatened because one rail- These plans are jeopardized becomes convinced of the best *
road is attempting to prevent because the Southern Pacific route, it will have to support
another from extending its line railroad brought suit to prevent the railroad company’s construc-
* so as to serve thel>lant. the-Missouri Pacific railroad tion there.”
It would be tragedy if a mam- from extending its track* so as u „,<Mn«r.hU ^ an ]o.
moth industrial complex is iqst to serve the plant. Boto UnM , interest would cause the loss
because of an uncivic attitude serve Baytown and the Baytown to m area of one of the might.
on the part (rf any one concern. area. je,t industrial complexes, po-
Let us review the situation. It seems to The Chronicle that tentially, in the world. It is
, v Last December U.S; Steel an- the crux of this situation lies in hoped that everybody will put
bounced that after carefully sur- the fact that U-S. Steel asked the welfare of the whole com-
MoPac to exte'nd its line to the munity above selfish interest —
plant site because it felt two Houston,.Chronicle -
railroads were essential to the
case, the initial statement construction of the plant; Ex-
_proved conservative. A mini- ecutive Vice President John
mum_£xpenditure of $150 mil- Pugsley of U.S. Ste^l testified
lion w*s indicated on a site ^ court hearing recently
that ultimately -would be 10,000 (Hat the services of two rail-
acres. Only a mill for produc- are essential; and Ken-
tion of steel plate was specified neth yore, vice president for
“ but mention was made of "ulti- traffic, stated that he would rec-
----- mate future integrated faefli* ommend to the company that it
__Ities " not bqJMkthe plant unless It Is
Later it wa* stated by com* served by two railroads,
pany officials that they "would The U.S. District Court in
not be surprised if we weren't ; Houston denigd the Southern Pa-
breaking ground for another fa- cjfjC s request for a temporary
cinty’before the plate mill is injunction. The S.P. has said it
finished." Plans are being made will appeal the decision to the
for production of other items at Fifth circuit Court of Appeals in
the site and it was indicated New Orleans. There the matter
that the Texas Works, as the , rests wjth plant for the plant
proposed complex has been
named, will become "a tremen-
dous big mill producing a wide
variety of products."
________♦ A K 10
If It’S
♦ A K Q 10
♦ A J 10 9
.. *75 *
North-South vulnerable
West North East South
1* Pass 2 ♦
Pass 3 * Pass 4 N.T.
Pass " 5 ♦
Pass 6 ♦
Pass Pass
Jl
more sensibly and stay slender.
Block
it.
at e. Ti
588-1755
a
Pass 5 N.T.
Pass 6 N.T.
Pass
Opening lead—♦ 3
■•eess- beesatw i iwould make*
the hand if honors divided.”
North and South have ap-
pealed to us for an opinion
and our answer is that as a
matter of strict mathematics ,
South's 1 in e of
superior. His. combination
play works out to better than
80 per cent.
, _ .... , Nevertheless we would al-
manv ey "lld(lle of,an most surely have attacked di-
oration at Washington and Lee amonds because we would
dor disturbs her mother a lit- University 10 years ago, hasn t
been around the Vice Presi-
Some Catholics have been crit- dent’s Office since he was re-
ical of the fact that Luci, a con- placed by Richard Nixon in
vert, is being married in the 1953.
National Shrine where thousands
of Catholic girl* have sought to
get married but have been re-
fused. "Go back to your parish
priest,” they have been told.
“Why should a converted
Catholic be permitted to get
married in the Shrine when
bom Catholics aren't?” the
critics have asked . . . Unoffi-
cial answer is that Luci picked
4he Shrine and this is Luci’s
day. ' - ■
---v-
NEWS APPARENTLY travels
slowly to the farthest comers
of the sprawling federal bu-
reaucracy. Vice President Hu-
bert Humphrey last week receiv-
ed a letter from the Federal
Power ammission, addressed
deference to her fiance, but as to "Alben W. Barkley, office of
a convert she takes her new
religion more seriously than
is
Luci became a Catholic in
the Vice President." . . . Bark-
©Ifs iagtomu §un
reason that West would sure-
ly have opened a diamond if
he held
tie.
....... Editor and Publisher
____....... General Manager
........... Managing Editor
. Assistant To The Publisher
. Assistant to The Publisher
........Office Manager
Fred Hartman.....
James H. Hale.....
Preston Pendergrass
Beulah Mae Jackson
BUI Hartman .......
Ann B. Pritchett ...
th the king and
(•.....
queen.
Over soup and crackers, Vice .
President Humphrey and West
Virginia industrialist Wes Ruby
exchanged Horatio Alger stories
the other day. The vice presi-
dent told how he helped stock p . . p
the family cupboard by jerk- You, South, Hold:
tog sodas in his fathers small AAK87 VA32 *KJ5*A84
drugstore to Huron, S.D , and
by hunting jackrabbits for food.
He would nail the rabbits on
the bam wall, where toe deep-
freeze South Dakota winter pre- real values.
♦4-CBRD.fr/wH
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
John Wadley .....
Paul Putman
Oorrie Laughlin ..
Etotered as second class matter at the Baytown,
Office under the Aea of Congress of March 3, 1879.
Published afternoons. Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by The Baytown : Sun., Inc.,
at 1301 Memorial Drive in Baytown, Texas.
. . ' . P. O. Box 90, Baytown T7520
Subscription Rates
By Carter $1.60 Month, $19.20 per Year.
Mall rates on request
Represented Nationally By .
........Texas Newspaper Representatives, Inc.
MEMBER 6T TH£ ASSOCIATED FKE8B ------*---
1%* Atsoelfttcd Pr**s if entitled exclusively to the uee for republte&tion of
any news dispatches' credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and . 4 „
locals new* of spontaneous “origin published herein.. Rifhts of republication of V late Conception at nignt taking
pictures of every alcove and
.......77 Meager
.. Retail Manager
National Manager
Texas, 77521 Post
Q—The bidding has been:
West North East South
it had settled upon Cedar Point
near Baytown. As often is toe
i*
Letter To
The Editor
What do you do now?
A—Bid four spades. This is a
very strong bid and asks your
partner to go on if he has some
Editor. The Sun
Dear Sir:
After attending the city coun-
cil meeting Monday night and
listening to where everyone
doesn’t1 want the Mopac - USS
spur, the solution to this prob-
lem, along with some others oc-
curred to me: •
Run it down the middle of
Texas Avenue.
Weeks before the wedding, served them.
--......ftqjjgqrat- Barvtca wa« hi-fha-------Ruby got Ms Mart, as a 30-____;
National Shrine of the Immacu- cents-an-hour laborer to one of
the plants he now owns. They
agreed America is still toe land
cloister in preparation for Lit- -of opportunity . , . After Ala-
* rfct’s wedding; Not only will Sec- - bama Republicans nominated! _
ret Service men be stationed in Rep. James Martin to mn .
these alcoves, but every guest against Mrs. George Wallace for
is ticketed. None will be admit- the governorship, a friend ask- -
ted without the little white wed- ed Martin who would be most
ding tickets — except the bridal likely to win the Negro vote-
party . .. . Newsmen and worn- “They h a ven ’ t got much Grass planted in the spring
en will be scarcer at the wed- choice,” conceded Martin, "be- came up just in tirtie to be
ding than at a presidential in-, tween George Wallace’s wife burned up by the summer
auguration — only 14 admitted and a GoldWater Republican.” sun. '
\jo toe church. .All will be local *. _ . .
except for one news represen- . D!L|A VOPCO
tative each from the bride’s and UIU11? Y Cl 5C
groom’s hometowns - Austin, HEAVEN AND earth shall pass
Tex , and Waukegan, 111 .
Only one foreign newsman will
be admitted, Pat Heffernan of
Reuters, dean of toe foreign
news corps . . . Newspaper ap-
plications for tickets phoned in
from Europe were turned down.
The President’s cousin, Miss
* TODAY’S QUESTION
-You hold! - -—.—-i—7—
♦ AKJ97 *AQ J98 75.4
What is your openfng bid?
1 ’
all oUmt mtutr htraln art «Uo rmrvul.
Answer Monday
YOUR DENTAL HEALTH
Immediate Dentures in One
Smooth, Painless Operation
By WILLIAM LAWRENCE, D.D.S. ...
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
BARBS
sr
The advantages of this route
are numerous.
I. Since nobody lives on it,
there would be no one to wake
up at night.
3. The shopping mall problem,
along with its cost, would be
eliminated.
J. In that this is an area of
declining property value, sotoe
of the poor people might just
let the railroad relieve them at
a reasonable price. ‘
4. There would be sufficient
stop lights to supply the city's
need for years to come.
5. Lastly, those that stand to
profit the most can have door,
front rail delivery along with
contingent benefits from a won-
derful railroad.
By WALTER C. PARKES
being held In abeyance and
construction delayed.
Meanwhile, Baytown people
, tfhKt*
*
Try Your Word Power
-NEA FEATURE-
Mrs. M never quite got over stone These upper and lower
the shock of sudden death of stone models were then moun.
her well-known author hus- ted on an instrument that
band. Feeling alone in the duplicated natural positions
world, and filled with grief, and movements of .patient's
she completely neglected her. jaw. v
self physically and mentally. Teeth were then cut from
She had little desire to live” the stone models, and as each
and no desire to adjust to her tooth was removed, .an arti-
new situation, » ficial one.,was put in its
The suark of life was gone place. On completion upper
She lostP81 nounds She loo£ and lower artificial teeth * WilUe Taylor- "ho ^ped
erf Jwfnl Her teeth were a were same size, same position bring up the Johnson girls, says
me« Thev rotted awav be- in the Jaw and with same 8en' that Lynda Hrd U 001 168,0113
3 reoair some *of them1 e»l contours as patient’s own of her younger sister. After all.
merely stSmos teeth. The finished dentures Lynda was once engaged to a
cu- u „ ' were made from these models. Naval lieutenant but broke It
She says she often thought c patient was hospitalized off in deference to paternal
of taking care of her teeth days prjor to her opera-' frowns. Luci used to get dh an
and getting them repaired, ti0n so that she could be extension phone when toe lieu-,
but she just couldn t face up medica 1 ly evaluated and tenant called Lynda and play
*° “• * ;« properly fed, prepared and 1* loud recor® to disrupt her sis-
What finally happened to medicated. - ter’s conversation.
Mrs. M? Her dramatic weight Then came the operation LBJ likes Pat Nugent better
loss worried her physician, which lasted about half-hour. than toe Naval lieutenant. He
He insisted on dentaj rehabil- Patient was put to sleep. All would have preferred to have
itation so that his patient teeth were extracted. Bone , his younger daughter wait an-
would be able to chew solid and soft tissue were trimmed. other year before getting mar-
food. With persistent efforts stitches were taken in gums ried, but didn't insist on it. . ,*
he got her to agree to dental to hold them together. And At first LBJ winced at all the
consultation. Mrs. M’s new teeth were put matriimmial publicity.
(j—wny are me two cutws After much consideration, in place! He loiew it wouldn’t go down
of the common lobster so dif- Mrs M had all her teeth out, when she awoke from an- wejl with families who nave
jerent from each other? or what was left Of them, and esthesia her new teeth were sons fighting in Viet Nam. How-
A—The lighter claw is used full dentures made. ........ 'In 'KSir moullKrttl|IBt:W|i'» r- ever, he’s become reconciled to
for cutting up food and the What's so remarkable about pleased with her looks it toe fact that a White House
heavier claw for crushing. that’ • perked her up amazingly/ wedding comes only once or
„ .... . . v . . rr WAS * DONE IN ONE It may have changed her twice every SO years.
Q-Who cotnedth* phrase ’ OPERATION by a method whole life.
Good-Neighbor Policy ? generally referred to a$ "Irh-
A—President Frtnkllri D. mediate Denture Technique." MMm mi mm sAaei
13 wr' ftotiu&tft, 'WS&frftS* snew A hour "tiro wealcs: fcaiw.c-r, »« Or Ltwn«<* i» W genial dean of the diplomatic
_ kind of policy with Latin- hospitalization, impressions' of »t flIMSto •»«**/ jeorps, preaented toe aUver wed-
America. upptr *nd lower teeth and sec* lertw ktttn tt »»- ding aet to Pat ......
jaws were taken and repro- >•»«•»« will to «• rth. » the corps, tt ww not only a
yrt.^At-v7.»g7«ter»TT- "UUW ■ .. .■ -VJ--«.---JL,
■ versary lor the ambassador.
When you’re looking for
trouble you never have to
advertise in the "Help
Wanted" columns. —~
away, but my word* shall not
pass away. Matthew tt:35
JZL.
Antwtr <o Pr»»ioul Punle
5Tu?n1 ! i
tTnTa It a e
Animal Life
FTT*
r Dts
T
3 Solemn
ravtnwl
4 VixiUnl
5 Wooden shaft
r 12 Malt bever»|e R Ancient I'rfa
IS Miners! de pout 7 Dry. as nine
8 Inscribe
. « Want part
15 In the middle i0 feminine
tebmb fwinirf . appellation
16 Arts of choosing i ipromontorv
by vote 17 cylindrical
IfJuvenals forte |» Girl's name
20 Feminine name a Angry
ACKOSS
IHoiim pet
4 Zoo primates
8 Small bird
s
nc a)
[WTT
T
VI
wm
. 'mining'
14 Was borne
*
o
6 5-; i It
a 4-Tb+aI e
g enr crl e
Your$ truly,
St Killian
41 Surrenders
42 Highest point
4 43 Kunibjt
44 Heap
29Communlat*
SlGrammalicat
construction
331 Jon --—
II
QUICK QUIZ
P
4
21 wile
22 Forefitber
24 Arrived /
2* Transportation 27 Wretched
' fe* Zl Angers
T T
a!4 C*\rrn
25 Ctaii of
vertebrates 3S Cowedtsn’s foil 46 VerslRer
26Keslial|H
H
__ Q—Where is the geographic
mMlsau’nehester ' center of the United States?
A—The geographic center
of the United States, includ-
ing Alaska and Hawaii, is in
South’ Dakota's Butte County,
17 miles west of Castle Rock,
14 miles east of junction of
borders of South Dakota,
Montana and Wyoming.
V
'stangi v .•
40 Prehistoric
chisels
nr......ir in
I
SO Harpy
tl Chief ' India i
30 Vindicate
12 Drew
> 34 Highly gland
„ »tST*
: ■ " 86 Fast trr.j
37 Demolish
Disorder
nnn
:rA
I
T
a
-frr
1
8
41 Haring wax
icomb formi it
42 Tremuloua
45 Work as a B
1ST
Sert
i!
ur
f
;... r"
4« state o( early Jf
youth
Balance lah > U
UShad feathers
. S3 Awry
SSSto1
tl *
.....
51
tort
TaTET
■jrnr
r
WHEN NICARAGUAN Ambas-
• sador Guillermo Sevilla -Sacasa,
<pi >
■sr
d*-
51
ST
C 1444 ky NIA, lac.
DOWN
liwinthg
i
"To 1
M-n/4/mius and fierce ‘ we leare Crmaby Street behind!"
2 Athna
-
■
T
*w
mwcPApn ENTEtnuse amn.
J
. *
.
♦
J
S1,
-I
*h7*
' /
4
• t. ;
* t
:-fL
;
i
t
■
_
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.
Matching Search Results
View 11 places within this issue that match your search.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. 43, No. 300, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1966, newspaper, August 7, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145013/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.