The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 187, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1950 Page: 1 of 22
twenty two pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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>44
34.66
14-,
144.441
INER OF
WD MARKET
V BAYTOWN
*
E DELIVER
ife
—
;'¥:
- •' -iv .-V
rHER ?." T-
(X—Cloudy and warmer tonight
tomorrow. Moderate to fresh south
otilhrast winds.
'
~rU?-y
3L31.NO. is/
■4- _'
Ptown
—
BAYTOWN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1950
Termed
>t Hurt By
‘valuation
ci Sayt
Did Not'Solve All
oblems 'But Start Made
WASHINGTON, Jan. 12. —
|Jjp) — Because of Europe's
at strides toward recovery,
rencv devaluation over-
was achieved without
jjjjfinug disruptive effects,”
he Economic Cooperation
^ministration told Congress
ay.
im' ift sixth quarterly report to
(House and Senate, transmitted
Lpresidi-nt Truman, the recovery
gey pointed out that currency
dilation by Britain and other
European hatpins did not
all problems, but that it was
Bfood start.
Uy sharply devaluing their rur-
«ie^' ft said, "the Western
opean countries brought-their
tj levels, more nearly into, line
those, prevailing in the hard
ey areas, and thus prepared
|#a.v for a direct attack on their
aining economic problems
eport, 'covering the period
iptg September 30, I94t, pointed .
ptHat while world market prices
Advocates For 70
Group Air Force
Lose Their Campaign
today abandoned their campaign to increase the Air Fdrce
from 48 tq, 70 groups. ' ’ .
Chairman Carl Vinson, D., Georgia, of the House Armed,
Services Committee said, President Truman favors 48
groups and “I am going along with his recommendation.” .
But Vinson added that he “still thinks a 70-group Air
ForcA is the minimum for proper defense of the United
States.” ’
Two other influential air-minded House members agreed.
Chairman Clarence Cannon, D.,
Missouri, of the House Appropria- .. -■ .
tions Committee and Representa- Uflljf y AftAUfflAUfll
tlve Dewey Short, R,, Missouri, I Vlllf JIlvVVUvVVIl
said .they will go along with ^
'm*.Truman twice has refused^to Ufl vl)li13 LOOftlSf
spend extra fund* Congress voted u • - n • ."‘ss
A,, Hainan right Opens
like a bigger air arm
nation cannot afford one now
Vinson said the president lias the Military Leaders May Be.
mst' word and Congress might as _ .. . — _ J
welt face that fSct."
SMACKING GOOD BIRTHOAY-Foniier Nazi slave laborer Cor-
neliaMundlocb gets-a .smacking-good 25th birthday preseut at Dos
Angeles—marriage to Army Staff Sergeant George Lanier, 23, her ;l, x V,V1 .......
sweetheart of three years, and a wedding kiss. A Yugoslav refugee, ' p Knowiand, California, and ChaSi
sjtn met t apier, in an Amefican amjy camp in Bavaria following her <-urm.y, South ‘ ~‘J *’— heade
release from a German' prison camp in Czechoslovakia. would 'demand
{International) ~ •’
aided to the devaluation of
argt rates according to eom-
conditlons ..and ,^h.e • cie-
id pattern, price changes were
pjiniform. ’
full drop was reflected in
currency areas only where
were* overpriced before <ie-
Pljition. -But' dollar prices re*
add mostly unchanged for
■commodities, or on which
ffiaL.iales, were brisk.
he pattern for devaluation was-
hy the United Kingdom last
*mber 16 when it proposed to
e the dollar" value of the
I sterling from $1.03 to $2.80.
Eure
Sun Oil Is Named In
Civil Anti-Trust Suit
Called On Formosa Deal
■‘There is nothing to be gained • . ...
by Congress marching up Capitol PRESS _
3 - - just for the fighting between .Chinese Na-
tionalists forces and guerrillas
w _________ broke out on the tiny island of
Senators William Hainan in. the China Sea today
and Chaft wtlile W Washington Congress
Dakota, said they headed for a showdown over Pres'i:
that the Senate dent Truman’s China policy.
Armed’ Services Committee _ sum- The dispute in Congress . flared
man Na’vy Secretary Francis, P. over the administration "writing
Hill and down again
’exercise,” he said.
Elsewhere in Congress
NAVY GOI
FORMER FOES NOW ROOMMATES—Two former foes who have
(jaded the arms of war for (he tools of peace now are college room-
male's at tiny, Wilmington College in Wilmington, Ohio. They are
Charles Cornell of Pelham, . New York, a pre-medical student, and
Wakatsu Oshiro of Okinawa, Japan, studying international relations
and political science. (International) '
Livestock Speculators
Blamed In U.S. Probe
Or o s by - H ill High v
Holland Page firm of road* m
builders, constructors of if!
Decker Drive and many other Jig
projects in the Houston area, M
waited on the weather today
before starting’ the $143,809
Garth Road project from the m
city limits of/Baytown north" • P*
6.55-miles to the Crosby-Bar-
bers Hill Road.
Commissioners Court set up thin /
paving, project in* the 1947 bond
issue, and all preliminaries, in-
cluding engineering and contract
letting, have been completed. Com-
missioners Court has- ’issued the
work • order, and * the Austin com- jfl
Pany is just about ready tp start \-|B
' The road .will have a 20-foot’ 'M
strip of sand stabilized shell ("six - ,m
inches) bass with a double bi- ■ "i:
luminous asphalt base with Uvalde 2C
crushed rock topping. -
The contractors are given 165. £.’
working days -'apfox six
months) to finish the work.
XYHl- * wav* . . a. vw*/ . w
shek has chosen for his last stand The U.S. Department of Agricul- agreements on livestock purchases. Page firm here for several yea*4;
against the Oommtinlstg.'------------ turs today blamed speculator* for— This malpractice, Ball saidr-caused --- u
H Vandenbere ««<$ unfair trade practices at the Fort tower prices than under competi- are ge ucture*
Taft demanded that' Yforth stockyards^__^ , -Uve-bitiding. - .....
military leaders be called before J*/* announcement- which fol- ' Other violations listed TTBall’s
Certain commission firms had
Uurcpenn countries followed
.Commenting on tins move, the
, report said:
Matthews "to find out if naval of- dff” of Formosa, the island ’ re-.
ficers ar» free to “speak their doubt Generalissimo Chiang Kai- FORT WORTH, Jan. 12. —(UP)— holding.down competition toough
minds." He said he would seek i " ...... " -
full-scale Investigation unless Mat
thews esn <4s%tisfy y-g.**.. •• Seiti^
FIVE PERCENTERS — Repub- Robert A. Taft demanded that
ssrs pssSl ^§3, _
exclusive contracts with approximately 10,000"independent <5 It was MifcaT coh ™ ***
service station operators. learnfed that the OOP members jpague8 and appeared assured of
The charge was made in a civil anti-trust suit,filed by the g •|^,.^4^fher sections tw s'li,port ,t0.
Histlee"depSrtiftertt''1ir’T,fiilad5iph'!aAiT,ennsylvani&,' federal tough.' One report’was that they- /' . -
court. ‘ . •••■ are .dissatisfied with a section Secretary of State Dean Achpon
The suit charges that Sun Oil compelled the operators ^resid^rTri^anl-SdnL off-the-cuff spe^t/b"*
t« enter into agreement requiring them to buy all their mintarv aide who figured promln- fore the National Pr^ ciub 4t
1:30 p. m. and President Truman
was certain to be quizzed about it
E. R. Johnson is the Page super-
intendent In Southeast,. Texas;
ASout 30 men, ail from Bayto-vn,
will work on the project. David
Funderburk,' Baytown man, has
been an office manager for the
to be built along the road
along the road ditches cm i
AmosJennische,
been working witp buyers repre-
senting packing houscs'and others,
todav. Jacob Malik, the Russian These buyers, he saici, bought
... • *— at
1 on
1 Kurope-cPagr 2)
the United Nations .agentHi
00b Malik, the Russian r nese miyers, ne \sa.«, w
“delegate on the UN security coun- livestock from, the speculator:
Cit, waS iexpeoted to end his boy- , profitable prices for the gamblers,
eott of the council long enough to From 50 to- 70 lndividual.9, in-
voke for his resolution th.at the eluding commission firms and
Chinese Nationalist delegation be dealers, were involved, or about
ousted In favor of a Communist 15 to 20 per cent of the individuals
the Peiping, gov- employed by the firms and dealers
aerating at the stockyards.
Malik walked out of the council Bal&said certaiA' firms were fie-
Monday when Dr. Ttngfu F. Tsiang, !l«1ved ' t0 h^v® • «««^ra«ed Itheir
through speculation . _ .
normally useH/by the firms to han--
W. C. Ball, district supervisor die shippers’ livestock.”
of the packers and stockyards di- Registered agencies set up to
vision of Use tri^A's %restnck serve as' brokers and ciear OpiirH-
brarreh. listed mne separate viola- tions of other registrants, igere
tions of the packers and. stock- using fictitious names and accounts
yards act of 1921. to conceal operations of “irrespon-
However, Ball did not disclose sible speculators who had no legal
names of firms or individuals in- right to be operating.”
volved in the unfair labor prac- The U.S: Justice Department
■earl:
vhiie
ear other violations.
tices, but said his, investigation will handle hearings on specula-
•*'- -------- -u-rges, while a US.DA exam-
1 he
showed certain speculators
had Hon char
iner will
Violators, if
e disciplined
'.found guilty, -will
-probably fined
delegation from the Peiping gov-
ernment.
enter into agreement requiring them to buy all their mintk^akfe whTflpirV promln
Astern Europe had achieved a gasoline. Oil and petroleum products, as W?ll as 'various ently* In the inquiry.
tr degree of economic stability automotive accessories, exclusively from Sun. .’ ' NAZISM-RepreS'entaMve Adolph , f - . .
was generally recognized be- ... , „ ■, „ „ . • J. Sabath, D., Rimois. urged the « nia pres» eonrerenee at * p. m.
devaluation, the shock was Attorney General J. Howard McGrath said the company {Sw) A(,V0P*te-Page sv - The China situatiop also was -
>be<i without evidence or panic als’o used threat’ of cancellation and’ actual cancellation of
Ijaibhc disturbance. There were contracts or leases between Sun and independent dealers
its fifodufifc to keep the operators in line, ------
wey in exchange f0r goods or The Sun products are sold by the stations in states— . ^
witics. The people of the de- Maine. New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Massa- LQ JJS^C Ifl RflVmfl
Mng cou.ntriea-'seem to have ac-. chu-set-ts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsvi- v#i Vlva.lll IRlIJIWI
.XZSZZXSt Ohi0; WeSt Formerly Lived In -
$ , - . Cqdar Bayou For 35 Years
.Amos Frederick Jennisebe, 69, the Nationalist delegate and presi- saldamen and othe,i*^mp!oyes to Qomj3iro|jer Cav
resident of Cedar Bayou for 35 dent of the council ruled against fP^ulate.on the market to add to ^OmpTrouer hay Matters
- — ’■ ......... ***** ~ - “■ <”>«■ xNKsas«.. «i.o. «n
pm -Vt^ednesday n‘ *» r.. ‘ . ,1. . n , .______, that some commission fin
w . - , . pitai.
YOKK'ii Jan. 12. C.E) —The glowiy, he picked-at every point
Wanent and the defense pulied Binger had made in testifying on
hauled at the character of direct examination chat. Chambers that a symptom of vagabondage?” Funeral Home, with Rev. Ben F. r.8dpr Man Tze-tunr now" in’, iw?
•»" c“r* '«*>■ i-■ w- *"**£. *b“‘ 5»ar“:r t if”1,- “/'■ « “£ sytSSi-TSfai
A',„ H«. TO .n,l tt„ B,wr r.««- SA.-~-.ew » ..d A
psychiatric dog-fight wk* know. Hadn't,Dr ^Binger testified said another evidence of vagabon- tery.
|(d by a defense psychiatrist that J»e.ea«5e\Ch»mbefS ran away dsrge was that Chambers was tin- ‘ Jennische, a native of Mont Bel
‘ " ' " (See Amos Jehnisr'he-^Page 2d
and
rach
side. The largest will be the" con» ,
create culvert across the east fork ^
of -Goose Creek stream which y
cresses the road just north of theJ
City.. ’ ... • t..u ..
Another'major culvert will be .
used where a rice canal crosses the
highway still ‘further north._ri.
Eventually, this road will Stive
Baytown a direct north’ outlet to .
Highway 90 east of Crosby, for the
road will be taken over another
nearby route on into ^that state
highway.
The road also* will intersect tha
new" Port Arthur-Houston Highway
just north . of Baytown when
that superhighway is completed.
County Commissioner Hugh May,
ffiBr1*"' nlaf*—Said- today that the umurt had^au-'
“ thPi-i^ed anothur spm MlM bridge
rhittaker Chambers: Normal, Abnormal?
i *"*•*"»* 1 - * years before he moved to Dayton. an ironj:<
government And Defense^Battle Over Hiss Witness .)S%SSiff‘<nSS£S-nsU ~ »«.»• *~* J?s~g—g-",™ "S
"Hn aAniit 4|_Jol,ra~A. r„„ “'Kukeral nn-ioM will A. A«M >t M«g2r.l“pr!p«^d/mo”'!S.1 “’i„S°tA. ita, ££
away from home. Do you consider 2 pjn. Friday at the Paul U. Lee the benefits of Chinese Communist uaihg^^ shtppbrf1^und^to Tfinance
$26 Million State
Deficit Predicted
.Comptroller Say Mafteri
Setting Worse, Not Better
buyers were
wwmentkttorney.^'•$hc fronuhbmc as a youth he gavc-wvi-
^eraonality of Rh» pudgy dcnce of vagabondage; which is <
~-W
per
man. who came out of'the
Bunist underground in 1939
P> » years became a $30,000-
■ Time Magazine editor, was
tp&ue. • - - '
i-Pe serircncc, Uje’govcrhmoHt'
,prove him normai. In* the"
ijhe 'iefensc would ahoWrhim
[jikfiormai, .This has been going
ttr days,,The 45-ycar-old Hiss',
•Iwt in the trial, became vir-
forgotten man. He , is
with lying in denying
bers assertions that he stoic
ament secrets in 1937-38 for
fiet spy ring. ,
has sgt in his chair inside
1 .courtroom well, sometimes ‘
tidy, That a wjtiiess^had testifi^i
"the iinep he wore" on one.nccas*
symptom'of pswchopat.li’.c person- ion was dirty,
aiits' ? BingefN$aid that was right. . “Well; let s: spc/hoW about Pro-
Wcii,. didn't' Dick Whittington frssnr Einstein, is he a welt dressed
run awav from home and then be- manT” Murphy asked,
come lord mayor7 of l/oidon ° Bin- •' Binger said he had seen Einstein
pT^idl^gW^, ^iTT^ldhT^troncd: —" “
Benjamin Franklin run away ffoffl ”
home?
' I think he did,’
Binger said.
Woodruff Takes
Realtor Helm
One of the' first real- estate men
to open ‘ up shop In Baytown will
„. . . . , -... take ’ overE a pre-eminent place
with laughter—along-With, among Baytown realtors tomorrow.
U yctat?ra ~at. Vh„e femts’ Elmore Woodruff, a -Hay town
Md haymakers of the men- rea!tor and mPrthant since 1922,
DStt e' „ - - - will receive the gavel from out.
Opponents were Dr, Carl A. goin„ prPsirlent Frank Braswell of
.ter, a sedate, dignified psy- the Baytown Real Estate Board at
u wH(l sPe’aits wi‘hL“ cul' the hoard’s, luncheon meeting at bj behavior whether a
government prose- other new officer* of the board *“* place fo,r. .^■.ybeth,Tr
"He have on a sweat shirt?” Mur
pin asked. ;.
% was at the Harvard .tercen-.,
ary ;he wax’dressed up for the oc-
casion,” Binger replied.
Murphy asked how about Will'
Rogers? Owen D. Young?' Heywpod .
-Broun— "You remembur Heywood
Broun?” . . r . ..
"A classmate of mine," Binger
replied. n -
‘Tidy or untidy?" Murphy asked.
?Gh, dirty!” said Bmger.
Murphy asked . Binger, among
other things, whether he ever had
stolen a hotel towel or Pullman
towel, ever registered at a hotel
under a .fictitious name, whether
he thought “slanting" news stories
bizarre behavior, whether
-Murphy pronounces
and joined "jCrned.’’
erday, d e 1 i b e r a tely
he ever said that “every really
S-Sgt John Edward Sanders
.‘C Si*'- • •• - !*c ■ - -
Pasadena May Sue Bell Firm
Want Injunction To Bar Ton Collection
PASADENA, Jan. 12. — O) —seek to keep .the company from
—Southwestern Be.ll Telephone removing telephones Of customers
Company" received tlre'Ittreat--T>f-*-’-wtm. -refuse- to pay—the ■ nickel-
law suit today"after Pasadena tele uh.irgi-.---------------------—
phone ^subscribers . received their The dispute about telephone bills
bills yesterday. ", - - started in December when So^th-
.]■ City Attorney Tom F. Coleman, western Bell, with approval of the
; Jr,, said he would file in district Houston City Council, raised tele-
court asking, for an injunction tp.- phone rates there. A similar raise
,1 prevent Southwestern Bell from’ was planned here, byt Mayor.Sam-
. | collecting a five-cent toJJ charge ifoover recommended that* the
on calls from here to nea'rby Hous- "council withhold approval.
./.N 1 to®*, Southwestern Bell»reta!iated by
Coleman said his suit also \yould ,>rein?t^tij(g yje i0ng-dormant toll
fhpmtral SAriPfy ■ Upon receipt of the statements
VllvIIllVHl »VV»IV IJ yesterday, anxious residents be-
T i i i. II ’ ' - sieged'the mayor hndv councilmen
|A Mppf Hpro for advice. Some wanted to disre-
IW I »VV I llvly gard receipt of the bills altogether.
' The Southeastern Texas Section . Mityor Hoover advised puyment,
of fhe Americsn Chemical Society pf ail charges except-the, inteT-
h’astfchosen Houston and Baytown wng toU on caUs to Houston.
|or the first'Ywo meetings -at -lSMt - - ' . • - «
over Goose Creek stream on the
Morrell Park- - Wooster project
which Brown and Root is building.
Recent rains washed into -tri#
fill. there at the new bridge ap-
proaches, sov the court derided to
lengthen the bridge by.a span to
preclude this recurring.
The other unfinished project in
the -Baytown area is Robert E. Lee
______ , " , Drive through the achpol campus.
AUSTIN, Jan,12. (t.ll)— Taxpayfhg jhis engineering has “been com*
Texans pondered the official word pleted by th<, C0Unty and approved
today that the state was running :bj -the board of trustees of th*
out of money. ; , ’ . 6, b00j cHgtrlct This project from
* State Comptroller Robert S. ‘ — - ~ “ -----
Calvert in a-red-inked-tinge# re-
. pqrt officially advised Governor
Allan Shivers and members oh the
legislature that by the end of this
biennium—August 31, 1951—Texas
bodes to be in the hole some $26,-
900,000.
Declining oil production, main-
stay of Texas’ economy was blam-
ed. -
Last Ma ch, Calvert slashed $22,-
000,000 off his estimate of antici-
pated income for- this biennium, __
He said’then, that things were bad. ROME, Jatt. 12.
But he expressed hope they might jWTtisl(.r Adcide
get better. . ...... ,
Instead, he said yesterday the miltea
situation was worse
Market (Street‘to South Main may
be expect!# to go right along, May
Said. ■
Pro-Western
Cabinet In
Italy Resigns
was stiil" potential.
—(UP)— Prime
do Gasperi sub* •
his pro-western pabinet’ji
resignation today, and Communist
leaders were reported preparing jL
demand for a general election. .
A^klly the state hadsome $55,- re^6p^? -
000,000 .m the general revenue ^ eiecUon at this
fund, the state s .m»m bank bal- and they • control a majority |
aneft -But under the budget that of tte chamber of deputies. I
amount—and more — Was already risignatioii was billed as a *
ear-marked for spending. routine political maneuver t» . ’
The*goyernor expressed hope tbat De Gasperi’s cabinet,
things might get better. But he phe decision vas made p iblio
quoted TOrfsert asking he i 5.-000
-see no hope at the present time, workers rallied here under ban- ^
HoWever, the governor reminded ners demanding “blood for blood’ „ *
Texan's, and particularly the leg- to protest the labdb riot Monday at
(See f29 Million—Page *) (See Pro Western—Page 2)
sasaaftasa^ Found Shof Or Stabbed To Death
IND TOWN «
^POLTZ “almost threatens” to
P* to pray at any more civic
F» luncheonsri.Flojd Higgin-
arrayed “like Solomon in
8lory".. R. T. Kerr plug-
land trip benefit supper
.L?fek,._Note to Nathan Han-
jv*orry we couldn’t run your
I Fennema calls on Tommy
^ Bob Gillette and Knox Beav-
"e)P in gathering news for
tssed reporter.. ."Willie the
^Roper getting set for a hec-
^ weeks,. .John Krolczvk has
“ and figure every time he
hat fancy pitch pipe..,Two,
m Pufhbertson, visit, |
Place in town these days
-JwJs-Mw [office.. .Mrs. C.
welt nabs a customer who
Tdto browse iS3“ makes
[an old fine for; a late bhok
’ ijgets away.. .Prime sub-
conversation among Jay-
W days: Who will be the
and old map of the
Md niffoJ^My^^e’8^^iy^ good wife is partly mother,'*l*tor, .
treasurer. They wiftak’e the places n^^nlv^Ti't Rahlir'lfl I
of J., E. Ruttet and' Steele Me- w MODUfiOl • Of
WprinST^ artompre « wMe i.l»oth a mother «d rij j/*/I J
^ In-Germany-_______
^ ...... ^ ^
Afr6m bis* wife hid be^a ttxing ^ fiafd it had been established
Indiana Coroner Sees Wholesale Murder And Suicide
precedetf hy *a'dTnner inAhe^dto^ HAMMOND, Ind, Jan. 12 -OI - mas and t^atthe w.fte"W
■“lirsisir’s tAw -.ti.,
v-:
. ir
i*
DO m. w. *v fawns, asan
. institute, of .Paper Chemistry^ .here today ^th’^pne^do-
"• - ww-. - - --. of the.-children;
The bodies of the :
were found in the other
The fire gutted both
the basepeiit and'!
had not determined i
fire was Incendiary or
m.'"
Seven Men TraDoed bstkk-isktk k.a»
i c u uu E!„ !7*j““V“m?‘“ii'"a. a!S*u SSm tfifaLi: **• “ “■ — »> » a.a a«» -uaum h, ,
InSaltMmeRre ir-c£S'^’0”c~^ „,d siss’i/ss.'s
■■ vbrsiQr’ahd one of the outstanding
,gUIW*r “A chemists of this country, bre pistol, with which some of the heads,
esrly renorts Indicated seven men ™ P”1 . by firemen and poliee whoanswer- ■“ ’ .
oftbe an- HU 6ody *** buried first to town, Refinery chemists, as mueh f4 ?? aLarm HI NAiOR
Germany and later moved to a of his research work at Princeton !n th* ho’!Y’
Wt^AWjiLWai “sun-frof A^AA rt,,.,. ffUft
Hocklerindependent SchoolIMs- Mrs. Jack Ssmway ofBaytoWn; «ArrmWSNOT TO APPEAR £• was
tnct ^ ' V -his-rarent*. Me, and(-Mta-L Nf- ^ "WASHMHTON, ^n;-T2tr-lCB
Fire’equipment from .Houston, Sanders of. Gmton; fiv* sisters, —The Senate, Armed &n«*s * included his wife. Katherine, re; i
KaTaTnempstesd rushed to M« W. H. AbM. -Mrs. Canales Committee today rejected by a’ . th’dr children, Felix,
Hockley, in the northwest tip of Stanger and Mr*. H E. Hobbs of tie vote * Republican request to PhyHJs, 1* R,..har<(
Harris"Cbunty. Baytown,, Mrs. John Beggs -of Ben call Navy Secretary Francis P.
• Vho ”lcv»n -minpr« were said to Wheeler
bodies of Samaa his wife
the children were found to
tut of fire bungalow’s two bod-
Identification of
too 1
dertaking Home and a *
Mrs. Katherine f
He answered a e
bodies rat the scene <
Whan he arrive*
down at on* of the
■ 1 ’uflH
and Mrs.
Wal- T"* Matthews before it and ask him
I have been tti)*Md for a time when lace of Tereellr and two brothers, whether navy officers have
the fire burned through hoist ca- Woylond and Thurman Senders of pmrtrtcd tor “ipsskhr (
,t bi*s» abaltin* tfi fke , JksjjtoWto . .mtodm
- ■- - . - • ‘ ' * . - ... *
^------------ — —*— - - - _ - - * V •* . ‘ ; ; — - — —— —*---— —■ - -a*—*--=—*—.
ui?ua hcit-ivuuu
brought uhdjr contitfl.r
rihs wife " Kath”inc, 26:
«ssAm.,7srs,A.*SS:
A relative of Samoa. Mrs Frank
" he and w» ' “
m
rsiii
uy mm wt
all
I itoJ*
/
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 187, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1950, newspaper, January 12, 1950; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1027730/m1/1/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.