The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 58, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1952 Page: 1 of 10
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.
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ImCr
I PER mORKl
tEI DRIVE At 710 WEST MAIN
MARKET ST. AT FOUR CODkim,
SPECIALS FOR
MONDAY-TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY
BEWLErS BEST FLi
5Lbs- 35c
L Nights Hot Days
F.v \vKATIIKR-P»rtl.y cloud}
F mmd l<ow eXpeC,rd
1,1 n|ght W. hiKh Wcdne«l»y 9«.
I frc»h southerly wind*.
Muytamtt#>tm
[no. 58
iAYTOWN. TEXAS
Tuesday, August 12, 1952
Giant
No. IVt Can
WALDORF TISSUE
Roll
HUNT'S BLUE LAKE
>REEN BEANS
No. 2
Cans
Ai-19
rULF SPRAY
.. -c
Qt.
ORODENT TOOTH PASTE
tm
MEATS
IR'S CRESENT
Lb.
ENERS»39
GETABLES
* ■ . ;
. 1 WHITE I
RA 249
Spots 1 Drowned, 17 Saved
As Bus Is Swept Off
Road By Flash Flood
JSaB broke into Jones
(oTlwt night, but noth-
t raising from the build-
,n«llce investigated.,
^!j*r kicked out a glass
IfftlrHoet'. police said.
Meeting
and mshGflo<^DS^nt’ fr Aug‘ .(UP)“A cloudburst A public hearing on the
SM75'm •«*"' **
SB »X.*SS2 welJ "«»* *** ponce reported. ”h°o1 %
Trooper Cooper Swingle said one passenger W S ets for 1952-53 will be held
Thonipson of Eufaula, Ala., was the hero of the rescue.' He at 7:30 p.m. Monday, August
waded through the swirling, chest-high water with a child 25.
Smse “x a mtehift We ^e°m f^ta,*driijj?The public 8cho°l bud*el
r!SS?5£73 , Me“wb‘l?' iwwwr. who.stayed in the bus tailed in “"“Jlo'fHf'?* t0“'
* -------- ----- ter™r for 90 minutes until a high-wheertruck was brought ing 52,082,104.60 plus an un-
to the scene and they were removed through a rear win- appropriated balance of
clow of the bus. $770.63. This is an increase of $16,-
r ive inches of rain in three hours caused the flood, 648 over last year’* budget,
swingle said. The bus driver, Earl Davidson, rounded a Anticipated expenditures for Lee
curve and sped Into the water from a normal small stream c0llegc total J2S2’060-29 with an
. bef?re, hfeknewhow high it had risen. The bus stopped “#
m with its fronfend otf the highway. ' .h0w.fi
[lub for 1:30 p.m. Wednea-
home of! Mrs. A. A.
i Stella,
nr Change
»welling at 9 a.m. daily
lay hut City Manager
„eton said not enough
, hair been showing up
»morning to make it
ARINES BEAT BACK SCREAMING REDS
Hearing Set
On $2 Million
School Budget
unappropriated balance of $895.37.
2-53 Lee college budget
increase of $24,797.53 over
fcpot
P RICE sale of 1982
j5e UkoJagCrkower, tid ^idson- Thompson and°two‘’unidentified Negro pas- ’ast year.
JS of century Patna at *enSe*J waded through the swift current toward high The total tax rate o( *u0 per
| Warehouse to the River ground, but the Negroes were swept away, Swingle said 8? ,v‘Luat,ion f maif, th.e,
h Sh'V/ rtS branches and LeSe JXt 5S t? £
l. toml * . ^ five One man tat the other slipped from his grasp and the eoUcnc.
I„, i6, 1951, Dixon also . Trustees tentatively approved
( first sale in Houston. While Davidson ran for help, witnesses said Thnirmcsnn the two budgets at a meeting .Mon-
... brought ^turned to Hie bus end made his way back to safety with
Davidson later was swept into the current during rescue givc" a chance t0 Proust,
if rRf PC operations, but hung on to branches until Thompson took Local taxes provide the Wt*e«t
II raws at the scene, tied a rope to it and SSf SSSJ
w 11 10 tne Dus oriver. collection, $1,270,625 will be collect-
ed for the public schools and $152,-
475 fqr the college.
State funds will provide an es-
timated $720,000 for the public
schools and $51,000 for the college.
Teachers salaries are the biggest
single item in the- list of expendi-
tures with $1,225,268 to be paid to
public school teachers and $103,219
to Lee college instructors.
. „ . Other major public school ex-
Lee college instructors Tuesday penses are-
had been granted a $200 yearly in- operating of plant, $108,119:
ertase in salaries, - •- maintenance. $81,6X8; capital out-
v, TM salary of Welter Hun dell, > lay <n^wbui Wings, alteraticrffrkflff”*
-dtait of 'fcee ’college also has been aclditForis, land: etc.) $78,9'50.; debt
lli. Demands Full
Details On Youth's
'Escape'From Reds
Rebuff In
nsas Election
SROCK. Ark.. Aug. 12 llf!
rts indicated Arkansas
: turning out in record
| Tuesday in a Democra-
rnatorial primary that
I to give President Tru-
econd- rebuff at the polls
|*eei.
McMath.. who held,.-a..
j-tesmg, -sought a tra» -
terBL-.
nidable Francis Cherry,
self-style “country
! TYuman critic,
pither was clear and some
fees reported twice as
rcast in Jhe first hour
; 35 were recorded for
|period of time in the 1950
Predictions of a total
ing 330.000, which would
were made by both
spoils opened aH a. rn..
turbulent campaigning
lin the state, was still go-
path made an eleciion-
■ of a “political gahg-
ierry who had as his
rsdifl “taTIfaihrM*** Mnn.
Cheaper To
BUY Junk
All Lee College
Instructors Get
Than Steal It $200 Pay Boost
An Oak Addition negro could
have bought a load of junk and
six plows with the fines he paid
for stealing a “little dab" of
scrap iron and one nkl plow near
"Cedar Bayog. -.........
The junk was stolen from a
man on Massey-Tompkins road
and the plow was owned by
Woodie Mele-aii at Coady. The
negro’* fines on two misdemean-
or theft charge* totaled $46 when
he pleaded guilty in Justice of
the Peaee Roseoe Zierlein’s court.
increased, from $7,200 to $8,100. A-
sistant Dean A. H. Miles had his
pay increased from $6,794 to $7,060.
Fifteen instructors will be af-
fected" by the $200 pay increase.
Under the new schedule, the
starting salary -was increased from
$3,206 to $3,406.
Leathernecks Dig In
For New Assault On
Korean 'Bunker Hill'
SEOUL, Korea, Aug. 12 (UPT- Hard fighting U. S.
• Marines threw back a horde of screaming Chinese Com-
munists who tried in vain to retake Bunker hill Tuesday
and grimly braced themselves for another assault as night
fell over the battlefield.' ' .
The couhter-attack on the strategic hill five miles east
of the truce village of Panmunjom came less than 12 hours
after the Leathernecks took it in a surprise move.
The battle for Bunker hill began Monday night with a
Marine tank attack. The lea thernecks then caught the Reds
off balance by feintihg an
attack at nearby , Siberia hill
with flamethrowers and in-
fantry. Then they attacked and
took the higher Bunker hill by
dawn.
The leathernecks worked franti-
cally .against time to set up pre-
fabricated bunkers out of logs they
had carried with them up the hill-
side during the attack. WASHINGTON. Aug. 12 im—The
10,11 m"? off,cer warn' State Department is drafting a
StLnt ^ 6 CT1lbfg'n agi!,n ln "0‘e demanding that the Commu.
fnh»xesL'~ and th,,t 11 C0Ud g° msts suppbr more details on an
either way. American youth’s strange ,les*
“The Chinese like to fight at cape" from a Czechoslovak prison
night," he said.-, . it was learned Tuesday.
As the sun set, an officer said This is by way of trying to re.
the Chinese had crawled up to the deem a pledge’ the department
base of Bunker hill atui that Ma- made Monday to the rnissirig
rine artillery fire was being with- youth’s heartsick parents—Mr. and
heidJ in the 'fear of hitting Allied Mrs, Michael Hvasta of Hillside,
soldiers. N.J.
“We made a diversionary attack John Hvasta, 25-year-old student
on Sibereia Hill," the Marine said jailed on trumped - up • Hed spy
in describing Monday night's ac- charges nearly four years ago, es.
tion. "Then we came around and caped from notorious Leopoldov
caught them completely off guard, prison Jan. 2 and hasn’t been
They didn't know what was hap- heard from, since,
pening." ' One of his fellow inmates, Jaros-
During the day, shells, bullets lav Bures, made his way to free^
and bombs from Allied warplanes, dom and told about it in Munich,
tanks, artillery and small arms Germany, Monday. But Hvasta ev«
rained, on‘the Reds to weaken the idently failed to get out of Czechia*
expected counter-attack. When it Slovakia. ’
came, the sharpshooting Marines U. S. officials fear he may have
mowed down the advance Com- fallen .back into Communist hands
munist battalion as it moved to-, and Ahat-he either- was killed or
ward the embattled UN troops, - returned to prison. But they have
The.Marinesdeiended the heights..;iQ_.acay.-afJftUmg<.-.’B>at--is- what
from1 prg-TOmiiWBuiik^rs built theyhopeto find out by serving
as soon as they took therhrif. They the note.
lugged up king-sized logs while the The Hvasta’s and their other son
assault, on the the hill was taking Steven, 22, went to the Department
That is why they are so reluctant Place. - Tuesday in the hope that the 9*»
to lose their "little red school." Air Force fighter-bombers* sup- perts might have theories and fact
T^AtjReaent the school has been ported: the Marines. For the first that would sustain their faith that
jraJ&MrWfii the students to go to in nine days there were ho John still lives.
„ „ n w oii ^ M IM t„e Crosby this year. But the Huffman battlts between Allied Sabrejets -Assistant Secretary of State Jack
rise of property valuations inside century-old community together. P°0Ple hope that next year, or the atid Communist MIG-15s. McFall talked With them for more
m
’ i
rvice (paying off bonds) $22i
LITTLE RED SCHOOL — It will stay closed this year.
7/ Will Grow Again1 --
Huffman Pins Hopes
For Future On School
Although the tax rate
the same, the school dis
remains
•ict ex-
B.v GEORGE PRENTICE
What is the full value of
, Huffman residents believe their
This increase is the result of a jtchool is all that is keeping the
Stevenson
Sees Truman
By DAYTON MOORE.
WASHINGTON, Aug, 12 (IPi-Gov.
The maximum salary that can be
paid is $5,512 for a teacher with
15 years experience, a masters de- tf" m
gree and at least 30 semester hours of 55 mlll,on-
of graduate study toward a doc-
tor's degree.
However, at the present time, no
one on the Lee college faculty qua-
lifies for the maximum salary. The
the school district. The Valuation
of property has jumped' from $102
million to $107 million, an increase
Mama Swipes
Daughter's
Sweetheart
KSHS ££^*£2: AsSSkSk
pary two weeks ago. Truman whether or not there will wjth 12 years experience.....
[pegged part of his cam- preslden la There was no change in the in-
Ithe run-off on the pledge e.a™P~ „“lls year' crements for experience and addl-
f same treatment to Me- The Democratic presidential tional study. They are:
|it to Truman-supported nominee was met at National Air- For those holding a bachelor's
pr in last Tuesday's P°rt when he landed by Sen. John degrt,e, $lg0 annua|ly to a maxi'.
Ik senatorial primary in J- Sparkman of Alabama, his vice mum o{ ^ 126 sweetheart and ran away with him.
I in which Tavlor was presidential -running mate, and p., thr, ' ,„it, „ , _ Located by police. Mrs. Giovan-
f? Stuart Symington. members of the White House staff. ,,H0 „ . -. ‘ „ .efrefl na Ferone said she fell in love with
■showed surprising The Illinois governor, smiling ^ »nd the" Gaetano Fraese, 23. when he came ... 4
' the preferential ballot- and dapper, told Sparkman, "I had ’ a ua y to a maximum of to ask for the hand of her daughter 4
1 in which no candidate not anticipated all this reception." ' . _ . . . • Maria in marriage. * ' Ai:|
majority, thus neces- Be referred to a crowd of about F®r thosd having done 30 semes- "j am madly in love with him * |p| /$
f run-off U'hveen the tw’o 309 that thronged airport rails for tor hours of graduate work above and can’t live without him,” Mrs
^Jonesboro judge trail- a glimpse of the Democratic nom- a master’s degrye applicable on a Ferone said.
by a scant margin in ’nee. . higher degree -$180 annually to Fraese and Mrs. Ferone said they
1 held Stevenson said he had come at $4,126. then $126 annually to a max- intend. to marry regardless of
■ n i g h t. Congressman the invitation of Mr. Truman and imum 5f $5,512. p . Mari’s feelings in the matter.
Pelt. Atty. Gen. Ike that after a luncheon with Mr. Tru-
> former Atty. Gen.’ Jack man and the Cabinet he expected ,, . , »al|l ■ •
Yed^tbem su^ortnr. jn Democratic national DfSgfl/lineO 5hhS RigMerS Still Tryifig
NAPLES. Italy. Aug. 12 IIP -A
17-year-old “girl- complained’ Tues-
mTvi’ day that her mother stole
sweetheart
Located
na Ferone - .......... -
Gaetano Fraese, 23, when he came
year after, their school again will
be in operation.
Huffman's first school, establish, ... .. . .
ed during the post-Civil War per^ Marines—I age Two)
iod, was held in a tiny one room
house about two miles north of
town on what is now known, as the
Crosby-Huffman road. Before the
days of school districts, pupils met
in the small frame building for
their courses in ’’Readin’, 'Riting'
and ’Rlthmetic."
The Marines had completely be- than an hour, and promised the,
wildered the Communists by feint- United States would use every Ik-
ing an attack at nearby Siberia cility at its command to learn
Hvasta s -fate.
UNCLE JIM S(X)TT
He remembesr when.
Disarmament Parley Urged
U.S. Proposes Big Five Conference
By BRUCE W. MtiNN hen made the suggestion to the It
Fa. h u ... UNITED NATIONS. N. Y., Aug., nation disarmament commission.
Each Sunday church was held x2 (IP-The United States. Tuesday In conjunction with Britain and
he same room with Rev. D, R. proposed a disarmament confer- France, he submitted a sup-
il 0 conducting services. - ence of the Big Five powers to plemeutary working plan designed
fin/ , K( V- n'Vu ° combined his church consider permitted arms and agree to meet Russian objections to an
a.uties with class instruction and upon elimination of mass destruc- earlier proposal to put ceilings on
during the week he assisted Miss tion weapons including atomic armed forces.
Vcrd Cole with the school i.urrfcm-'bombs.; ^ 'On May "28, “the three powers
U. S. Delegate Benjamin V, Co- proposed that the armed strength
. * of the U. S., Russia and China
1*. _ _ should be limited to a miliion to
VHABMJiar I « 1.5 million men and Britain and
*JliU! lUUCj I V France to 700,000 to 800,000. Other
— _T # countries would disarm on a pro-
MAQrl PriCPC portionate basis under the plan.
Itim. Even then organized study
was important to Huffman pion-
eers and they made the school-
church combination the heart of
their settlement.
Huffman thrived on a huge cat-
tle business and around 1888 the
first post office was built to re-
ceive mail from a pony express
■
Russia rejected that proposal as
radically deficient” because it
did. not deal specifically with dis-
was located near the present rail-
w Town
Stevenson then was driven to the
White House, for a conference with
(See Stevenson—Page Two)
route traveling overland through WASHINGTON, -Aug, 12 (If! - did not deal specifically with dis-
Crosby. The post office building Houswives, already aghast at the tnbuuon of armed forces among
t highest food prices in history, were the land, sea and air services and
forewarned Tuesday to brace them- did not restrict armaments per-
mitted for the support of the
armed forces allowed.
"If our proposal for fixing num-
In 1898,- 13 years before - the ?* ** W?#* food-crops Vlagging frical .limitations -on all arttMt
ATLANTA, Aug. 12 ttPI—Disgruntl- party and/ was believed planning ‘'steering ejornmittee"- decideri lit advenr-oTtlie railcttmi »-rYiii.ntr"r behind 1951 output. ”'*7“ ,y,e
*..... **■ * 4 ' " Most of fnnrlc Tnr whipR~rA- tommiSMon, ine^powers
■W to 7vrtteh“thek headquarters. UI9UI UU¥ICU xllUItT) HtfUfllCf O $91111 * « f Iff^ li^ry^Vofdn^d^nKXS ^ves to,•_worse.......
lerrF ln the run-off. “That’s all I can say because r ‘ , n ... ■ rx II l| -l J 11 D I * r II tion of the railway through Huff- The Agriculture Departmpnt re-
-joined the judge in that’s all I know,” Stevenson skill 50U-in©m K0DG1S UfUIYI UP mdepenOGnt pdCKItlfl TOf Ike man in 1998 * ^ed that this year’s prc^uction
lent—Page Two) Sf#»vpnsnn then was driven to the 1*1 J t« icqs 1* u~e—- ^ Of 23 popular fond omns is lafifiin*?
ed Democrats of two southern to attempt a similar independent a secret strategy meeting Monday, labor crew from the community
a OC1.1CV. Bwaitftj' Itivtitiig msvuvuij , •««'«* v«vn Jtwiu Iiu: bUJlimunuj *'*u*’‘ v*. i**vj fOOd.S .fOr ,*r **i\.*» sir i. « fiAn/>OWi«!| nV. npoiyihDll ia
states Tuesday sought to htuster slate.' to abandon his plan to offer Eisen- hauled lumber for a new church- dueed supplieS-are in'pt’ospect are ”
independent support for Dwight D: Hm South Carolina Democratic hower before the Democratic .con- school which was built where the fruits aiW vegetables, which are SShi*
Eisenhower despite a Dixie .trend rommittee, whipped into line by vention whdn it reconvenes Aug. Huffman Baptist CShurch'now exempt ’from prlte controls. They }on^ws. s ‘
pRSON sends word she
itta froh) all her
Pf address is Box 38,
m Springs Fouhda-
m Texas,
n„J0f a Rerrville vacn-
and Quite
Ike Pushes
'Peace' Idea
WhiclTre-
By REX CHANEY
-
toward endorsing regular party Gov. James F. Byrnes fw the sake 18- , ’ stands. Life began to stem from rose .sharply in price last month, <
nominees. ’ of party strength, had already v T^is, sotaie declared the group the new center, and during the and officials can find nothing in "Arrangements mi nt be made
"&»u& Carolinians for Eis- pledged its electors to Democratic of 21 Lumpkin followers had de- fetter part of the 19th century and the latest crop report to indicate fo1'a conference of the five great
enhower” claimed already to have nominee Adlui Stevenson. cided upon a "definite plan of ac- up to about 1920 school continued that the trend will be reversed power-, vtilth are permahem Bjtsm-
a, tent of the 10,000 petition signers In Mississippi, where the party tion" to carry Mississippi for Eis- to be held in the church. There were some origin spots bers >i t(it Set urity Council (U. S.,
_ , ........., ^............. , . : ne'ed«l to Place an independent is yet to pledge its electors, the enhower. That plan was not dis- Mrs. Gllie Dunks, who moved to however, to the statistic-laden re- .bhi.uii. eram-e. Russia and China)
|«Ud the h“ DENVER, Aug. 12 iff! -^-Dwight sjate 0f electors on the Novem- group led by fbrmfer Lt, Gov. Sam closed, 'but an inaependent slate Huffman in 1902, recalls long Sun- port which the Agriculture Depart- Wl,ti a view to reaching tentative .
itound to that0 ,.°y, D- Eisenhower is expected to open ber ballot. Lumpkin was discouraged by ad- had often been mentioned. days wlu-n tin. majority of tin- ment issued late Monday. Despite agreement among themselves.
W?„,. ^ a vt his Prcs'®ential campaign in a . .. a, group 0f states’ Rjghters in vance personal commitments of A spokesman for a grpuppf elec- citieens in the settlement met at widespread drouth, farmers are When the Big Five powers ••all
hon8» *' tk !" largn eastern city about Labor Day Mississippi decided against* trying state party leaders to support the tors who already had places On, the the ohurch to worship and then expected to turn in. a bumper wheat reached tentative agreement on * ]
)uqUertiu(' M r»in the r with a speech oh what he considers to ,jrum „p Eisenhower support Democratic ticket. Alabama ballot and a Democratic spent afternoons devouring picnic crop and the fourth largest coin their own armed strength, accord- mt
r their vo’,in» a 7?n* the overshadowing issue of the day wjthin the regular Democratic A spokesman said Lumpkin's elector in Georgia chose the mo- touches add being generally soci- crop on record. iug to the plan, regional confer- j j
’ keens -av- mi!1 “ worlci peace. _ ment to make renewed declara- able. That means that the livestock ences would be held to decide sim-
* thev auiTu® ha’ ,, The precise time and place of _ 6 ' tions of dissatisfaction with Demo- "We drifted away from the after- feed situation, while it may be ilar ceilings for the smaller
Id* ,, ner to the speech have not been decided, |k|— |M UaM*-'8hU> cratic party leadership. (See lltiffimm—Page Two) ' tight, at least won’t be desperate, powers,
r *nere the spent their but the GOP nominee mad it NO ■ rOQrC55 lH MClIT rlQIlT By coincidence, both were named
EwatsS Nation-Wide Strike May Be Averted Italy To Try Accused Killers In Absentia
^ata 1lalk be Work?ra
» to h,s which I dont bring that in, he repprted progress”in j
them cm to’the Asked whether there was any !^. *0. The UPW scheduled a meeting
58 Ming UD the hn* foundation to that, ^ had .A , conciliato„ ^fted anXjOU<i. with Swift & Co. for Tuesday morn-
early in* the Lit decided to open his campaign with =onc“^alt“Jn^ mg and one with Wilson 4 Co. for
^Mtaff, recupemtg avert a nation-wide strike, • Wednesday, negotiations with Ar-
U!
‘^nre’rarttenPe™l Au«- 28' Eisenhower consulted his
(See lke Bushel-Page Two) M
~n8 around again,
, _ *
“We have met throughout the mour and Cudahy were recessed
day with Cudahy, Swift and Ar- for Tuesday,
mour and are reporting no prog- The union-spokesman emphasized
ress," a spokesman for the CIO un- that the UPW is urging its mem-
ion said early Tuesday. ' * bers to stay on the job as long as
’ “Meantime, the contracts with the negotiations continue,
the big four meat packing compa- However, he said that, “a lot of
. »» ho ooiH "Wo 1—.1- oiitl 4Kav tttnn'l urAwl*
affiSSSS American Ex-Soldiers Still Deny Gruesome Murder
QUICKIES .. By Ken Reynolds ROME, Aug. 12 (IP) — Two Ameri- The government spokesman said have not been instituted;
. - . ■ __ cans accused of the 1944 slaying of the two partisans would go on trial The two Italians — Gualtierre
their commanding officer in .the shortly and that Lodolce and Icar- Tossini and Guiseppe Mannini —
Alps of northern Italy probably will di probably would be tried in ab- have been held in prison pending
be tried in absentia shortly, an sentia at the same time.. Extradi- the outcome of the extradition ef-
Kalian government spokesman said tion proceedings agaibsrt Icardi (See Italy—Page Two) ..
Tuesday. -
I'SKEsi
i 1Ss Miriam Gran- Al 101 IlCOlT AlTOCR me ms iulu meat t»<-iwn6 uukc>«, „c « — - —
X ft vacation trip nies have expired,” he said. “We locals still feel they won’t work
™° Grande Valley George Scott, construction sup- may have a statement on a strike without contract"
f school chum and erintendent for the Harris County Tuesday." "Spontaneous” walkouts hamper-
.- Flood Control District, suffered Negotiators for the UPW and Ar- ed operations in six major "big
wasn’t being a severe heart attack last night mour & Co. met late into the night four” plants across the country
■ffri’j refused to and wa8 taken to Baytown Hos- Monday, and conciliators hoped Monday, but 2,300 workers who
• °n the street; pital that a new offer by Armour might walked out at the Armour plant at
L jL31;3,1 st«ck up with Scott’s condition has improved at least provide a basis for further South St. Paul, Minn., voted to re-
leh h!thlng ■ • • Mrs. somewhat, but he must remain in negotiation. A previous company turn to work.
.not 8n mgs a friend up the hospital for several days, offer had been rejected as “trivial” Workers also left their jobs at
[ *9,.recent events. members of her famliy said. He by the union. Armour plants in Fort Worth, At-
is not allowed to have visitor*. The union would not comment lanta, Tifton, Ga., St. Joseph, Mo.
1
svSSSSSft Chemist Disappears On Galveston Beach
extradite Carl G. Lodolce. a former .» ~ , '. ’
sergeant in the OfficeTSf Strategic GALVESTON, Aug, 12 (if)—A 35- Mrs. Lindsay, 29, who married
Services, now living in Rochester, year-old DuPont chemist disap- the former Air Force major in New
^Lodolce, a tool engineer, and for- cro*d kMh SX^achte/lm
mer Lt. Aldo Icardi of Pittsburgh. on Stewart beach Moimay while sifted her husband didn’t drown.
’ have been charged with the killing his German war bride lounged un- “He wasn't too good a swimmer* I
of Maj. William V. Holohan behind der an umbrella. she said, “but toiew his limits- |
German lines on Dec. 6, 1944. He The search for Elijah Irvin Lind- tions. I just don’t believe ha 1
was poisoned and shot and'his body say, a chemist at the DuPont ny- drowned.”
was thrown into a-lake, according ion plant at Victoria, was resumed Mrs. Lindsay , her husband and
to a confession by two Italian parti- Tuesday by Galveston city detec- their three children, aged three,
sans charged with complicity in the tives, lifeguards and the beach pa- four and five, came to Galveston
case. trol this week for a vacation.
“ ... wish you were ambitious
—lot* of jobs for women offered
in today's Sun Want Ads!”
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 58, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1952, newspaper, August 12, 1952; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041882/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.