The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1950 Page: 1 of 12
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-—
—
VEATHER
JAYTOWX—CloHfly with occasional rain*
and continued cool tonight. Saturday
partly cloudy and a little warmer. Mod*
crate east at^l norjjheast winds.
(Hit Ilaptown
At________
BEAD THE SUN tO FIND
OUT HOW YOUR ELECTED
OFFICIALS BUN YOUR CITY
VOL 33, NO. 230
BAYTOWN, TEXAS; FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1950
FIVE CENTS A COPY
T-H LAW IS FIRED AT STRIKING MINERS
ioviet Won't
telease 37
IS. Citizens
■ kTnW
Economy'Block Reneges.
SENATE MAY HOLD UP AID
TO EUROPEAN COUNTRIES
iromyko Denies Claim
nd Charges Russian
ationafs Held Here *
WASHINGTON, Marpfe 3. QJ.E) — .bloc, said the report "Is not at allR., Massachusetts, said he would
Senate economy advocates threat- satisfactory.” Others said the de- try to find new ways to “mintm-
enwi today todelay foreignaid partment’s report'indicated the,ad- ize” the EGA program’s cost to
tunds until Secretary of State Dean ministration will ash- for mote 'AMeriean taxpaye;
sa In* On
Acheson reveals .the “real cost” money. Elsewhere in’Congress:,
indfnw ,rm\ of the recovery‘program. George, said the committee Would COAL- The Senate Labsf Com-
-vSLUW, Marcil o. -—{ Urv They said the department’s ask ;Secretary Acheson to return mittee^was called into secret se?-
-The , United States has promise to try to stick to Pr.si- at a closed session to “tell us in sion to consider stepping into the
iareed Russia with 'holding' dent Truman’s $4,500,000,000 request general what further foreign coal strike. Senator Wayne Morse,
l-Ameri*. citan. in the IVff" Z%£fG$SV‘j£Z
jvtet .Union, hut Russia has The department told the Senate Marshall Plan or extension of the mines for 60 days to ease the grow-
j A*- 1 -RptaHiino fVmimllfoft was. mlHtnhir oaslsfannh nwnffeom H («~ n«l«l> C&US6d th® HfttiCIl'S
Hintered* with a claim that Forei$n Relations Committee yes- military assistance program.” ing crisis
.„i jo on Am»hinan u terday .that tt planned to go along Meanwhile, Foreign Aid Chief worst coal shortage. Senator Rob-'
uy one IS an American, It w|th the oresident’a badeet reiiiieat P*n) a Hnffihim faced vieorous ert- A- Taf - —.....
tea disclosed today,.
with the president's budget request Paul G. Hoffman faced vigorous ert A’. Taft, R„ Ohio, called for an
for fiscal 1951 if possible. But It questioning-from Committee mem- Investigation of the government’s
The; controversy over Am- said ~ “unforeseen developments berg ftp the administration’s $2,- handling of its contempt of court
icans in,Russia was reveal- migbt foroe.Jhe department to ask 950.000.000 third year request- for case against the “ United Mine
in a note presented to the Amer- w n n f uropean Co-operation Admin- Workers
rSamifv Senator Walter F. George, D., istration. DFs-^AJ Senate jutfidary
embassy by Soviet
preign Minister Andrei Gromyko.
Soviet note was in reply to
recent American notes de-
fending telease. of the Ameri-
leader of the economy
■'-V v.......^
iAil except one of those claimed
citizens by the United States
fere either Soviet citizens" Other
[tonalities or were stateless per--
ns, the Russian reply said.
It djd not identfiy the one per-
il admitted to be an American,
jj’he Russian note said' however
four other Soviet citizens
feosc families were in the United
(ites would be granted perriiis-
to leave the Soviet Union.
U.S. Ambassador Alan Kirk was
[ a month's vacation in Europe
the Middle ' East and other
fmbers of the-American embassy
elined to comment
The latest American note on the
bject was sent to the Russian
reign .office by Kirk last October
[it asked the Soviets to aseer-
jn the addresses of 33 persons
liming American citizenship and
rmit them to leave the country.
Gromyko's denial that 37 of these
ha entitled to American citizen-
Ip contained a counter-charge
fet the Americans were holding
of thousands” of Russians
[-Germany and Austria, and at
1st three in the United States,
fiie three Russians held in the
. are children of a Soviet citi-
named Choiokian, who left .the
[itt'd States for Armenia In 1947,
Soviet note said. The children,
feald, were being kept in Catholic
Bdrcn’s fcamos. ■
--------- --- .. _______ ,-------sub-
Senstor Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr, committee summoned Alexander
Squadrilli, top official of the dis-
placcd*Persons Commission in Eu-
rope, .to aMwer charges that the
- fcorJTmis^ion Was lax In its admin-
istration of the DP law, Senator
James 0, Eastland, D, Mississippi,
fold the group yesterday that some
officials of the commission In Eu-
rope have been “guilty of moral
treason.” .
ATOMIC — Two congressional
committees set out to explore ques-
tions about the atom. The Joint
Congressional Atomic Energy Com-
W.C. Wismer withdrew from the mittee called Dr Edward Teller,
race for City Council todaV. cutting world-famed nuclear physicist, to
the number of candidates from helP 11 *tudy Proposals for inter-
nine to i*i^ht national controls or the atom. The
SSfeTSLSMat;
Wismer Scratched
In Race For City
Council Position
Truman
Report On
Peace Talks
1
‘
tbe new
tuy, Mcl
happy to
tbe new
fer wai
Floyd
Id a tek—
by the ett;
Old Baytoi
Since there
jpg the ea*
planned to i
he felt it
grant the
New Injunction Given
Little More Chance Of
Working Than Old One
Candidate Firfds He
.Lives In Wrong Area
SMOULDERING WRECKAGE of an Air Forotf B-45 jet bomber lies scattered over a farm eigM^piles
from Dayton, Ohio, where it crashed and carried two of its three-man crew to their death shortly after
taking off from Wright-Paterson Field in Dayton.
he does not live in the district for
. ©'JW^JSU-wax.mwa .______- . .
Wismer, who Hm at 3201.Iowa, atomic blitzkrieg. City councilmen were on their the next council meeting. the property for improvements, signed tho new order. The pred*
, — ■— ■“ PEACECongressional leaders S°°d behavior last night and the Middleton told the council that Mayor Ward^aid also that..tt was dent called on Chairman David
the state department in usual free-wheeling oratory was at/some.oLthq:.property owners alongappropriate lor the council tor L. Cole of MS* coal fact-finding
a minimum, the road would be forced to buy give leases which might be bind- board to get a report from bdtn
School Kids Subdue City Dads
Elementary Class Attends Council Meet
... the answer-.-would be rSadv to* that city in the future might need
WASHINGTON, March 3. —
(UP)—The government ob* ‘
tained a full Taft-Hartley
anti-strike injunction against
John L. Lewis’ defiant coal
miners today as President
Truman called pn union and
management leaders for an
immediate report on their dis-
pute.
Federal Judge Richmond B.
Keech granted the government’*
request for an 80-day Taft-Hartley^
Act injunction to replace the tem-
porary order which the miners have
defied since February M.
The 20 days that have expired
since that temporary order was
issued will be. included In the 80-
day period of the new injunction,
leaving another 60 day* in which
the miners are forbidden to strike.
There appeared little chancy
however, that the new injunction
Would’ work, ahy better than the
old one. The miners continued to
defy both the court and. their un-
ion leadership, and Keech himself
ruled yesterday that the (United
Mine Workers Union-could not—on
the basis of the government’s evi-
dence—be held responsible for the,
rank-and-file rebellion.
President Truman moved -into
the 'crisis shortly ; before Keeei|
1
fl
(Continued
and Lola
nets; Mary
Dili, ribraba
backs, barito|
The prog re
numbers the
contest at E
.and tbe reg
Baytown on
Burkett ei
cf the band
eould not acc
participate In!
being -sponsor!
and Profess1.!
March 16-17 ?1
band and the I
“We are ju*
Ing for our ait
the apn
Burkett said.
Witness
Sander
(Continued
fey Defense .
Booth, testifler
had "tbe highe
physician in N
regarded amonj|
“very eons
eient"
Attorney
Phirmey began I
-“Doctor, do yl
said this morning, “City Attorney
David Donoghue and Mayor J. A. joi^d the state
, (See Senate — Page 2)
follow tfee prtnc
eratic oa:h
“Ye*, air,
Lee Band
CIVILIAN" DEFENSE—Chief
Paul J. Larsen considers imme-
diate measures for defense of the
national capital the most press-1
ing assignment when he assumes
his new duties next month. He
say* he believes underground In-
stallations in or out of Washing-
ton will be the best means 6i de-
fense against A-bombs.
“NOTHING DOING”
Councilman R. H. Pruett is a
firm believer in the value of ex-
perience as he proved last night
by insisting!? urging the three _ nil I
outgoing members of the City Tes K« W nwy/4
Council to enter the race again. » W UC I ICUl U
However, Dr. H. I. Davis, Jeff-
*y
fused to budge In their determin-
ation not to run as Pruett kept
insisting that they had only been
1 minimum, the road would (jp; forced to buy ^ive leases which might be bind- board to get a repc
It was not that the council was new matWial 'Tor, driveway cul-'ing on councilmeh too far in the ,side* this afternoon "on the issues
in such a lamblike mood as it-was yerts. Pruett said that was taken future. and status of the dispute,
the effect of the fifth grade chll- care of in the paving ordinance The Missouri-Pacific will be Mr. Truman reviewed th* cod
SrrX5=SS?J2S *505: S5SJS •-
Hippocrates i»|
nf rw
LucinerSwL?^SleofMthe SmSrdtoTce and thcylr- of way'betw’een Nasro Street and ‘ pointmer.ts for the day'to dwot*
Stroud and Fahy Godfrey all re //) Co/lG6ff
there long enough to leant the Band will present , its
-chiWTMxv «oi4 4K«f «*» .HiAv nt the p1'.’.ng-ordinance and they should tdieir present tracks. The railroad himself exclusively to coal.
jarr^ays: as
vi ’ .. utoto no tianol Ivy 13dsrf/vtif« Attain.
RFnTyln|fleer
itnesses bolster
nits Flood Job Sander Reputation
ropes. He said, “Now you know spring concert at 7:30 p.m, Thurs-
enough of the council work to b« dat, March .9, in the hi#, school ? s
really valuable to the city.* auditorium, it was announced to- P9A°.tr.ea i;
annual was, as usual in Raytown, drain-
Borge^n urge^i that .the ifii¥-
tch at First arid Lobit
18 inches to aid draln-
•in other actions last nightvl(Irs.
A _;'N. JohnSoh fend ‘Mrs. D.irrHl
Ttck, representi.ig the Baytown
Councilman Fahy (Godfrey, who
The performance this year will had gaily reported th4t this was his
e an appreciation concert in next-t*slast council meeting, sug-
Ward told me that I wm In Dls- reply to the hundreds of band gested that C. W. (Red).Grantham,
fSinrts ___«___u:. ____
Mayor Ward made a motion Shortlv -after the cabinet iheet-
th.at the request fee granted pro- mg, Attorney General J. Howard
vided the taxes be paid
„__. of
that the group could haves?not - and the vote was tnumiy Interior Oscar L. Chapman fend
a five-year lea&o on city property K19lis- ... Solicitor General Philip PerlmaB.
i.1 Old Peily. Mrs. Johnson told The review of the proposed While the White House did not
_________ _____ the council that h; society hoped milk ordinance which was on the announce the reason for their call,
trict One 'when I filed. They told patrons who have donated funds dmecinr^of rmhl'ic woitks^shell the tl,s’ the cerebrt! palsy clinic to agenda was postponed.____•. there. wa» little, dmikt that Mftfr
me today that I was in District for the band’s trip to Chicago this ditches and use for be Placpd_ on the lot would be a—The councii approved the .plac- Truman was preparing for direct,
they , of medicine
he laid down in|
formed the basil
Ifeany medical arj
graduates to tafe
; Chief Dsfensel
Wyman objected
•the oath would
to the issue* of |
perior .Judge
, overruled him.
■,..-.jHewas 1
Carl P. James,
Sander when hel
also coached thef
which the doctos
Janies said Drl
exceptionally exd
Two so I will just have to with- summer. . „lv„ ____
--drawfrom the race” No admission will be oharged, from the school children. the lease be for a Io,,?nr Period- tQwn. One to be at Market and
Wismer .aid he had been con- Burkett said.° i Mayor J. A. Ward told Bergeron However the councilmen agreed (See Children - Page 2)
fused about the, district because The director said the band will that the ditch wouldn’t help be-
voter* eait of Huggin* voted at present a varied program, featur- cause storm sewers In that area
kjSTON March 8. <Sp>- R. J. MANCHESTER, N. H., March S. the Mexican Recreation Hall which ing instrumental solos, a wbod- are far too small. Council Jeff
Key, Harris County flood con- (UB— Dr Hermann N Sander sat ** located in District One. The di- wind quintet, a trombone trio, a Stroud suggested that what Ber-
immissioner Hugh May
Id Putney To Resign
Oath Provides Drama
In Mercy Murder Trial
dfaffiAke* ThiFeveiTdrew a laugh Pcmanent fixture and urged that ing of two street lights-in “Bay- action in the coal emergency.
8 ' ♦•*• *- »•- ~* jf the government seized the
mines, Chapman’* department
would fee put in at least nominal
No Place In America Safe
y, Harris County flood con- ®B— Dr Hermann N Sander sat ** located in District One. The di- wind quintet, a trombone trio, a Stroud suggested that what Ber- ■ w *
SLS.sraj;- Tg S Russia Nearly Ready For Atom War
Lee Band—rage 2)
charge of them. ...
Administration sources said M*r
Truman is extremely reluctant to
ask for power to seize the mines
because he is hdt sure the 370,000
striking miners would return to
the pits even under government
Irt yesterday, operation for a criminal pdrpose, Georgia to West Main and east on
lay ha* been loudly critical of «flicked” Main to Goose Creek Stream- North
rxstzx.’ woo° -“wa "a
I his angry blast at Putney, room came as the defense began City Councilman Rufus Bergeron
Tnot only criticized the delay Puttjng character witnesses on the holds the seat “from District Two .
be program but said ho would stland ;to ,a“est l° »e 41-yefer-oId and his term is not expiring. Workers Optimistic
[tolerate having an employee Application for a place on the Area To Do Its Share
Red Cross DriVeln
Full Steam Ahead
the street. Councilman R. H. Pruett
said that was almost useless since WASHINGTON, March 3. —(EE)— to attack some parts of the
the streets were lower in the mid- Air Force strategists think it will be tion- But'he said this wouldn't be operation.
ft21S Sul'S ’”,y • «”• «—> “ ............... .»» 7™“”
as a boy.
He summarized |
' achool career —
organizer of the t
her of the drama :
dent of the stud
president of tbe
* James said Dr. I
family’s regular p|
•rated on him, al
and “came day oif
we called him.”
has aaknowl-
able to start a strong atomic at- Other sections of the United edged that the problem is serious,
facetious suggestion. . . , TT .. , States, he said, qould be bombed HiS friends said he is “very much
Grantham, Who was accused of tack on any section of the United Qn two-wav missions from Sov!,>i disinrkMi” hu 4Kn contract dnadlock
LIVESTOCI
?poriera inai ix any, niemorr —^ * *. ------ ! * |UW* *“» can oe xii
*% court was dissati*fietf with flr ln*° **** .v5ini last with the mayor up to that hour. goine full steam ahead.
vay he had been handling the c^4m, as she lay dying at a hpa- The eight candidates who re- With early reports just coming <rihmirhTterrible con- dav ^
he would quit _ P“*L The state ha* produced wit- main In th. race are F. w; Burke, in (Tc3gn Sri were o^i- tt m mk * ^I»ble c°n day.^
nesses who Min fhev .n. —"—a J ”” that -the Baytown area
f ngof the oath came & Vw^Yl WR a chanman'at^—^ut^toT moblem, tokunch a"n a"tomiraTtockTn~sig- ‘ack on this nation.
Reeves, A. J. Rombs ^ and W. C. Roy Elms, campaign chairman'at-
•»s,£-„10te„ ,„„M bI
■SSitJZZSSSSiAn tg*. <• —*».«?* r*£l
Hrainmre sewer.. Ward noted that and other Air Force leaders in sec- f- , ^°|gg-,"rJh0Ught tinm ' ■— -*-v v- .
i hfes^o-mooey for ^toa ^ before a ^ of ^r‘a"‘ ■ <k»ngressionM leaders are ready
V..,. the nronriotton sohenmmittee on the Kussian copies of the B-29 to introduce at a moment’s notice
legislation granting the president
What of the road to FellyT I’ve hearings, \whieh were held last _ Bairchild said the possibility that seizure power if he feels such a
lived here a long time and I’ve month, were made public yester- **usaia to®* w® ••• **«6*s*ry to priwMit imp-
- _--------------— --■--Hr-£t~'*potrw!tlf'Wi;,albD^ weapon arable damage to the nation’s
dition.” General Muir S. Fairchild, vice-*"'*® tha Alf force to give first econofay. !
Ward said, “See what cup be chief of staff and acting chief at priority to its Strategic Air Com- Representative Cleveland M.
....... —- *•—•«---< nu. x.—,— -■j mand which is responsible for “in- Bailey, D, West Virginia, Mb
.i.„i ln event of at. drafted a bU! authorizing thd-gov-
L R. Jenseh. Jensen has been F- Dwinnell, chief' surgeon and District Fiw'seat'now Md by drive Is^my gSg^ndeway but atru^ons
th« Flood Control District of. Manchester s El- Stroud. In Godfrey’s District One, that tudeinr from the first reports ?ran -ha™.
since January 1,
.a.* w Mott Hospital where
’ has been
^ iss
emment to seize the mines and
goes to air de- bargain with the union. He de-
Symington said Russian planes fenses, he said,' and third to air scribed his measure as an “admin-
way would have to fly one-way missions support of Army aM^Navy forces, istration bill.”
FORT WORTH J
—(USDA)—Livesto
Cattle 200: Stel
_medium .and,, good !
ttnga 20.00-25.06. Col
him cows 1650-18.1
butters 12.00-16.50.1
16.00-20.00. Stocker!
-Calve* 75: Steadjf
odd head common
ter calve* i9.Q0-25.d
and stockers scarce!
s Hogs 300:- Stear
day1* average on al
and choice 190-2701
17.00. Medium ail
weights 14.00-16i0|
USA Feeder pig*
engineer with the District ye~r' namneii tu,4„ ana E- W.'Bueiow also an Humble Refinery. E. H. Busby, reported M the-
^ Engineer’s office. Putney jkti r,q ^ 8 *IT 1 z^V* fl ed T a P,ace. that two more of the plants’ 55 thp
“I know him to be a highly **
registered professional' en-
w»U Versed In the funda-
• of hydraulic*, as well as
I .County—Page 9)
Dr, Sander Emery
^ R ™ - Shivers Faces Future With Confidence
gSSSSl!.^» S^emor Gall?P» Vision, Planning, Co-Operation ,;\j
Cedar Bayou Old-Timer Dies iSssSa^t
iii
iListen ,
Always to
on the ballot
I ill r ■ I -r iii.i • ■ ported that the Idea was under with optimism, says Governor Al- action” > ferred to the S26.000.000 which was
Lonq ness Fata To W son Hunt ^n^ areas Gnv Henstv Seraium. lamshivers. ‘jl hold up this formula, to yjm, appropriated by the mid seiate.
3 1 0,01 • «UIII into three new areas. Guy Hensley Shivers said that vision nlannine the neoDle of Texas, as a sound through two tax feUU topay tee
And tel
, rnioAy svinino
4:00—Divlfi Ksee I
sii*-Xus ta u»
>UND TOWN
into Uiree new areas. Guy Hensley t0^^i^erted ^ the same Shivers said that Vision planning the people of Texas, as a eptind through tw o tax bills to pay for
VTJ& ** J2fSI «*-**«* ««. ttss SPT, ‘..“K s £S5S
------ resident"of**Cedar*Bayou dted^7 d“‘Foltz JST s^DeriXtoTVcSar^voti ri^7^wd^hw'Ward said, “magic formula” would form a tjSE\5*^ur^te^veromenV^'hL^rre%emindTt^yetrthat
....... .. ««- ...... y.-mK.-ry
T:*4-hManiAifye«'
lito nwmr Benv
The governor spoke about the business methods will work in gov- said. “Individual members of the '
future of the state ip- a radio ad- emment” legislature wiU ■ pay their share,
dress last-night. He said he was exceptionally Government money does hot grow
"I think we can face the future proud because the legislature had oh trees, even," he quipped, “to
Jrta ^tawnt°™'mbmt-“** mm*m SSISS?th.omd.
; the knob had fallen off the ^ kndmara on the Mrr Ltale winfree, both of Mont l^"~l - ollf ujto YORK. March 3. (EE)—The great state in area, in natural government for financial insist- and improve our state
h - .Wader if Brook. Wallace ptoahy^dar Bayou Road, burned ^ ^ving are two m ?SJSsMTS teooT^eri- wealth,' in industrial poeslbiUtoes Ince.” wffl come from the sm
p vote# back yet ... Don *° ^ ^wmd, dretroying grandawia, Wendell and Arthur is c^AWinei ground crewmen en- and in healthy, vigorous, straight- “The success of thii session is a cigarets. the consumer* of bresv
......— ^SoS Shearer Hunt, both of Cedar” Ba- £& thlrd% todV with,the thinking papier _ __ tribute JtoOte L* ^
“cnarge 01 ouuy,ns aim Air frewmen
bead Of ea iTaininiiM nm. lor *“*• ““to *«» Temrm «« ““ a foster son O. VL Smith as ’ sseaBWffiie, worker* froM the TwWMIl vl vlflllvll
baSr^ SfilOut'OnStnke
*:S9_M“ic sSto
syttLar'*"" s-s.
taking ft which |m hid kept hi her nx
a. _______ ■».__*__ oho hart BPMnfftof If
- . . Rayborn 'Johnson B0t« WWOd to his Baa’S kooo to
in for a ahort chat . . . Mve.
- Stephens giving us all tbe He jjontinued to the cattle bus-
the drive here by March 10,
company declaring it
its reduced operation*
tt
can continue
L^dstolta,
He praised the state legislature, to governmental problems," he takL
which used the ’.'mivir formula”-
arxccvrm *
In the special session' just con-
Missionary Killed Company E'Has
teg* *» • fc SJiiJVSSEje*£ «i2j.<SSI?Se
1 wHh models from Houston had ba*o confined to his home a warnlpg last night that the city profess{ona] chemists and
jKssraissBeSSSiSsS^iSCStoSi fwiMMae
) only 40 of the airiine’s usual
! the latest
since that time aad had been un- P1&nned soon to start clearing th*
ijWper MkhOetoe going to able to kevs his bed for more ** «*■ ^Sriew^orteoMiMd taa ay*^» *** ^
M Bronte “ *- - ..... “***■ — w„.w— Tr-fc-
»1 flights took off yesterday. |^|
But the airline said it would not
lection trucks.
been under consideration.
with Transport Workers Union
we irom i>ew xotk • • • McmDcrs ox me Uunsiiafl enuren, ■*ail*u_ §»*wua » “w uscvwucu society, wrote mty Manager u if* ^ -
whea heTl wear tt? . , - aad were flirigwlsod for their ia- aHeya Itat that the cleanup earn- Middleton a letter offering consul- fBWMItont negotiators stood by
Bob Barfield out at Orikr forest la paoag people. They ware Jalga, which ta planned soon, wfll triton eervicea of electrical engl- toAWto from either side to resume
ha* a track meet that no- first to organize and sponsor hfeve to have the use of the alleys neers of the society. C. E. Cun- negotiations.
lows about including us ... dance* a* a recreation for tJt collection. ningham and H. C. Lyles will work Michael QuiB. InternaUonal ua-
Pollee reported today that
Selma Maxville, «7-yeer-old
fornia missionary, ha* been
—-—— along with M raecuer* wk
By Oiia Millar tempted to release her from a kid- c
. nap gang.
|H.^ McKee gets his picture croupl 0f ml ages, and until Mr*. Just as soon at the ground ta with Fir. Marshall T. H. Bounds km
1 Rumor has it that pavH death, ho reittwl too dances firm enough to hold, Grantham and Fire Chief A. H Unteiman mi line wm M co
- and Bill ltoteskdt two {or most ot the square dance aaid, a bulldozer and grader win a review of the rough draft of the by Tuesday and
are making plans __ * be sent through the alleys to clean ordinance which has been turned plane will be u
to Louisiana . . Funeral rervira* will be held at and level them off »o that garbage over to City Attorney David Don-
- a pju. 8aturd*r at toe Wiri truekS sea tetea thsoegte - . ogham
that the
• men to an-
que witfe Fato
or a
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1950, newspaper, March 3, 1950; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1029156/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.