The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 228, Ed. 1 Friday, July 26, 1957 Page: 1 of 10
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- ....-;
Cloudy And Worm
BAVSHORE WEATHER—Partly dandy
scattered thundershowers.
- _-GALVESTON TIDES: High
R For Saturday—
■U#£'i
5:17 aja 19:84 ami.
S:0»(uii. 1»:19 pun.
MOD
SbelaulDunig-uti
*
Serving East Harris and C bombers Comfits
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAPER
VOL 37, NO. 228
IAYTOWN, TEXAS
Friday, July 26, 1957
Today's News Today
TELEPHONE JU 2-8202 five Cents Per Copy
PLANNERS ASK S3.6 MILLION BOND ISSUE;
COUNCIL WILL GIVE ‘VERDICT’ AUGUST 1
_..... ' ___... . ______ • . ...... ■
. ^ He
suiI
spots
Quack Shack
QUACK SHACK will be open
from 8 to 11 .p.m. Friday. How-
ever, the dance band originally
All Or Part
Of Program,
Is Question
Baytown City eouncil will meet
in special session Thursday, Aug.
1, to decide whether it wants, to
submit all or part of the $3,600,-
000 capital improvement bond
. . . . ., . , issue proposed by the Baytown
"■ “k* a*** **»—■ *> «* n
an appearance.
Soles Manager
TRAVIS MOSES, 403 Forrest,
has been named sales manager
of the Gulf Coast area for the
combined American Insurance 1
Co., with headquarter* in Dal*
the past year a manager in
North West Texas.
Welders Picnic
ABOUT 250 will attend the Bay-
town Refinery annual welders
picnic Aug. 10, announced L, L.
Tiemann, Games Will begin at
3 p.m. at the Community house.
The picnic supper will be ser-
ved at 5. ml
Time and place of the called
meeting will be announced by City
Manager C. Darwin Middleton.
Mayor R. H. (Red) Pruett, on ■
to the heart of this matter
7s HeIs, OrlsHe Ain’t'
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. -flfi- Former U. S.
airman Eugene R. Mugan is all “shook up"
over Ms British Sweetheart's denial o( their
proxy marriage performed by a municipal
judge last Saturday.
“I don’t understand it at all,” the 25-year-
old Mugan said today, as he awaited further
word from 19yearold Jean Smith of little
Glemham, England.
Although the proxy marriage was performed
by Denver Municipal Judge Henry E. Santo,
Miss Smith said the, first she knew about It
was from a* report In a London newspaper. -
"As far as I’m concerned,’’ she told English
newsmen, *Tm still Miss Smifii and not Mrs.
Mugan. . ....... ..... ■ -—
She also refused to (alk by telephone with
her would-be American husband, whom she met
in 1955 wMle he was with the Air Force in
England. But Mugan still hoped today they
could get things straightened out.
*T don't know why she’d do a thing like that,”
he said. "She must be all confused."
As for Mugan Mmeslf: “It’s got me all
shook up.’’
No School Construction
as possible,” called the
_____ meeting with council ap-
proval.
meeting
He urged councilmen to study a
lengthy report submitted by the
planning commission on ways of
financing the capital improvement
bond issue “during the rest of this
week and part of next, and then
** ready to state your opinion at -. ^ . „
the Thursday night meeting.’’ By NEIL MAIXKIL
The council will consider the United Press Staff Correspondent
Demos Rap Ike
For Bill Defeat
> Jf
t ~i y ' r~> -----t
■ — ”
Quiet
BAYTOWN POLICE beat was as
quiet as a country church last
night. The only call was from a
Lincoln Courts woman who re-
ported $30 missing front her
purse, and she believed it had
been stolen.
To Duty
LT. BILL DUPLANTIS, son of
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Duplantis of
Baytown, has received military
orders to report for duty on
Aug. 4. Assigned to the student
officers squadron, he will be at-
tached to the 3750th Technical
mining wing at Sheppard j
Force Base, Wichita Falls.
Gar Fire
WOOSTER VOLUNTEER fire de-
partment made an early morn-
ing run Friday to put out a car
fire on Greenbriar,
‘Screet Scene*
CHANNELETTES, girls’ drill
team for the new senior high
school in Channelview, will
sponsor “Street Scene” at 7:30
pro. Saturday in the commun-
ity’s shopping center. A street
dance will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Entertainment will Include a
dunking pool and concession
stands.
. _
saW-SiTst.
crease, although the commission
said the bond program could be
financed without any immediate
increase in taxes or valuations
WASHINGTON (UP)- House
Democrats bitterly blamed Presi-
dent Eisenhower today for defeat
of the $1,500,000,000 school con-
struction bill.
House Republicans defended the
publicans said the close vote as-
sured another attempt to pass the
legislation next year. Rut Demo-
| crats said the measure is dead for
a long time to come.
iv»v«oc ui ieuxv-3 w vniuauutra, «»y
The commission explained, how- President’s role. But they admit-
'er. that it did not take into con- ted his failure to give strong sup-
— - • - port to, the measure
chances of passage.
ever,
sideration increased
costs that would
sed operating
tionofnewmuniciWfi.cnfe,^
hurt its
™ Insured Passeng&efctiItib-
Plane Explosion Investigated
Bicyole Gone
RAI>H Tfl
TERRY got his bicycle
fJjHFlfi the mud where the
' MlMMl doing construction work
on Park street. When he went to
retrieve the cycle Friday morn-
ing it was gone. K you know the
I whereabouts Of Ms bike, please
call him at JU 2-7514.
Around
Town
In ealculattog it,_________
arsis; ass
used what it hopes will be a maxi-
mum figure of four and one-half
^The bonds would be retired
over a 30-year period from 1958
through 1986, Inclusive, and no
payment would be made on the
principal until 1970, whew-ft-Mp
ment of $50,000 would be due.
Of the total, $2,800,000 worth
of the bonds would be general
£s
bonds.
Based on a figure of four and
one-half per cent interest, It
(See VERDICT, Page Two)
The House killed the bill Thurs-
iouse ac-
expectation the
.............
On a party basis 111 Republi-
cans voted to kill (he bill and 77
to keep it alive. Among Demo-
crats 126 voted to keep it alive
and 97 to kill it.
. “I lay defeat of the bill squarely
at the feet of the President,” said
» £ a
rause of the long civil rights dc- pian to have the f«leral govern-
aafo uw™ *«». — ment spend 300 million dollars a
bate. Therefore, any final , con-
gressional showdown on school
construction was not expected be-
day by a narrow 208-203 vote. Re- fore next year in any case,
********%**>****
These Women Drivers
AMARILIK), Tex. Iff)—A pedestrian and W* pants are soon
separated In Amarillo, and Marion Clark will be keeping a
tight rein on his today when he crosses streets.
Clark, trainer for the Sioux City clnb of fito Western
League, walked out of an Amarillo hotel Thursday and
started across a street.
, A woman driver whizzed by and Clark felt a sudden draft.
He looked up to see most of his trousers attached to the
doorhandle of the ear,
.Clark, turning a bright red, drew whet was toft of Ms
pants about him and retreated late the hotel.
bad***
year for the next five years on
classroom construction,
"The general ordered the re-
treat,” said Rep. Edith Green (D-
Ore.l.
The House before killing the
measure added an amendment by
Rep. Stuyvesant Wainwright (R-
slctmtrt
«p __
of' the'measure 'said
could have saved the bill by tele-
phoning a down Republican mem-
“He didn’t do anything as fsr
as I can determine,” Bailey said,
"although as late as Wednesday I
was promised a letter or state-
ment.”
Tox Rate Increase
Considered ’Must'
Thursday night recom-
By PRESTON PENDERGRASS ,t
* JSun Managing Editor
Baytown residents within the next few weeks will
have opportunity to vote on a bond issue to provide
such improvements as a new city hall, recreation
facilities, and a library-community center.
After 14 months of intensive study, the Baytc
Planning commission
own
The council gave the planning'
mended to the city council a warm reception and promised
that it submit a $3,600,000 » thorough Study before making
capital improvement bond *
issue to the voters. " V
The council took the recom-
mendation under study.
Presented to the council by
James E. fJimt Sherwood, chair-
man of the planning commis-
sion's committee on finance, tax-
ation ami valuations, the pro-
posed bond issue carrier no
recommendation for a tax in-
a decision nS to how much of
the program should be submitted
to.the voters.
Most council members are of
the ofrfnion that a lax rote In-
crease within the next two years,
or sooner, is a “must,” regard-
less of whether a capital" im-
provement bond Issue is voted.
Presentation of the bond issua
im a rax m- recommendation was the crown-
crease or property revaluation. ,n* achievement of the planning*?
Morses Of Same Color >
PICTURED with the rare twin* and their mother, Sun Beam,
Laftene Berthelson of Boise, Id., says birth of mare twin*
happens only once In lOfiOO times. Miss Berthelson has one
of the most extensive horse book libraries in the west. She
i» seeking suitable Arabian nnme* for the Dolts, whose sire
is El Nar, a registered Boise Arabian stallion. (Internal.)
.......~tj&m*mi»W.. im
•1VJJ
■GEORG^lKR^AHSunt^n»^toiounxpS^^
euf. (UP) — Civil Aeronautics that ripped a large hole in the as beneficiary^^^^^^^—
Board officials and the FBI to- side of an airliner, hurtling a T
day took charge of an invest iga- heavily-insured passenger 10,000 err
■■■■■■■■■■■■I feet to
The CAB planned to make an
"inch by inch” search for powdpr
marks in the shattered rear sec-
tion of the Western airliner. At
the same time searchers rombed
the desolate desert area in an at-
tempt to find the body of the
Kesseler
Trial In
2nd Day
day of cross - examination faced
Miss Mildred Minshall as she look
the stand for the second day at
the impeachment trial of city]
councilman George Kesseler.
The redhaired woman printer
detailed her chargee of miscon-
duct in office against the council-
man Thursday at dty hall before
the council, sitting as a trial court
In the case.
Under questioning by City At-
torney^George Neal. Miss 1
The councilman Kesseler, him-
self a printer, insisted on furnish-
ing three items of her $56,666 con-
tract to print the ciW> btfiUtog
code: that he gave her $8,500 to
FBI agents also st
IV uuuy VI im
S. F. Binstock,
■ Calif.
agents also stepped Into the
ion- to determine if the
might have been a sui-
sBnrjs
help finance It; and that a bank
account was opened in his name
into which proceeds of the con-
tract were to be paid.
.....................-■......................
_____
BETTY BARBER, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barber, is
singing the praises of Califor-
nia these days. She accompanied
the Joe Murphy family on their
recant tour of the Golden Gate
state. The group visited Mur-
phy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, Joe
Murphy Sr. in Los Angeles. The
Baytown Murphys' children, all
of whom went on the trip, are
Pat, Mike, Kathy and Cheryl
. .. Mattie Skeete stops In The
Sun office for a chat . the
James Fronebergers have moved
to Hill Terrace.
Perry Beauchamp having
baseball troubles . . , Jo Ann
Ghrroll phoning up a former
classmate, discovering they are
neighbors ... Mrs. Orton Lam!
discussing a Galveston picnic
jaunt —Mrs. M. Df Cuthbert-
son and boys Mike. Pat and
Terry are in Baytown visiting
friends and relatives. Former
Baytonlans, they now live In
Lufkin.
Pat and Pam Berry wanting
to join the beach fun in Galves-
ton. Rev. P. Walter HenckeU
jokingly wondering what can be
done to avoid the Baptist in-
fluence filtering Into, his b*ck ... .
yard. The new Trinity Episcopal
rectory Is directly behind »>• 0 ^ -b 8St hich ripped. W® car
Memorial rectory.
Twelve other passengers and a
crew of three escaped injury.
“I thought someone had run]
into me,” Western Airlines pilot
Milton Shirk said. “I notified Los
Angeles International Airport by
SS'SKTJ
The explosion occurred at 30,000
et and was centered in the lav-1
^l^du,rkrn«l^edt’^a‘h^,rV^WN?v..h47
in night 1»s u r a n c e mingtes earlier on a f]ight from
I Minneapolis to Los Angeles, Bin-
s^k (warded tile plane in the pre-
dawn hours at Las Vegas and pas-,
said he entered the tiny!
shortly after takeoff.
oslovakia , . . He wants a
leader there who has no mind
of his own... Ia other words,
a blank Czech,
‘I’,TV ’ "fT”--------
Kyushu Island Has
27 Inches Of Rain
Uniforms Are
Required
"H uKy waiua «p|
Automobile
Explosion
Kills Three
OKLAHOMA CITY (UP) -
Oklahoma City police don’t mind
help to directing traffic so much,
but they would appreciate volun-
nzrz
wasn’t wearing
anything. A node man directed
traffic at a busy Intersection
If about five-minutes before
Mat-weary motorists became
convinced they weren’t seeing a
mirage.
Police harried to the scene
but found the man had forsaken
his post to the middle of the
street and darted down u alley. I
They couldn't find Mm.
| dawn beams
sengers sal
I washroom
Steward®
Fgi
Postmen
Will Have
To Walk!
By LEROY HANSEN
United /’res* Staff Correspondent
TOKYO (UP)-A deluge of 27
indies- of rain in less than 21
hours hit Kyushu Island with cata-
stropMc force today, causing
floods and landslides. The known
dead and missing were In the
hundreds.
Official police figures said there
were 157 person*- confirmed dead
and 249 missing. The figures were
expected to rise when communi-
cations are restored.
Japanese press reports froin the
scene said the death toll may run
as high as 3,000.
Police listed 47,998 persons be-
Dozens of landslides were re-
ported in the mountainous area
around Nagasaki and the UJ.
Navy said 100 persons were miss-
ing in a landslide between Naga-
" Hflrt • - t-Sflfl
perenu were “cut off.” A land-
slide in Tensui burled 50 more
persons and these too were feared
dead. '• ■■■ ---— - —
U.S. miiitary insfaltafiohs ap-
parently were in no danger.
However, in a brief question
and answer discussion following
Sherwood’s presentation, it was
brought out by Councilman Lacy
Lusk that a tax increase would
be necessary in the near future-
“with or without a bond issue.”
The p 1 a n n 1 n g commission's
recommendations called for
using *H7;000 of the $190,000-a-
year paid the city by Humble
(lit and Refining Co. tn “tax re-
placement'' to retire the pro-
posed bond issue. The $117,000
would be the annual bond pay-
ment
For the past several years, the
city has been allocating $120,000
of the Humble tax replacement
money to capital improvements.
It was pointed out by the plan-
ning commission that this sum
BB '
needs. The financial report was
prepared by Sherwood and E. C.
(Jack) Kimmons, co-chairman
of the finance, taxation and valu-
ation committee.
Actually, the recommended
$3,000,000 bond issue is only the
initial step In the planning com-
mission's long-range capital im-
provement program. When It
completed its study, it came up
with an estimate of nearly $7
million for all the Improvements
meeded.
However, Sherwood pointed
it, the commission feels it
|w*«M be "virtually Impossible
for the city to complete all of
file recommended Improvements
within a year or 18 month*, and
for that reason we have deter
s .v.7S irsrs juwsMEgs
com push more in the way «/
uMiifmsn more in m
capital improvements than is
possible under the present sys-
tem.
Of the $190,000 paid by
Humble, the city use* $70,000 to
help pay operating costa, such
a* salaries, equipment, etc.
OMMUman Lusk .pointed .out
lag costs, an' Increase in the
heWBPSS?
Sherwood told the council, “has
already submitted to you a re-
port of improvement* it recom-
mends, with the suggestion that
proper planning be made at this
time to accomplish ail of the im-
piovoments recommended as
quickly a* the city’s financial
position will justify borrowing of
funds for these purposes.
“It Is clearly evident that this
,SmnF
1
PITTSBURGH (UP) - A con-
struction project dynamite blaster
set off an explosive charge id Ms
car Thursday night killing himself,
his estranged wife and a nine-year-
old girl who was walking past eat-
Ing an ice cream cone.
Seven others were injured.
Police said there was “no
to shreds and broke nearly every
wjodow in a crowded North Side
block. - ,‘fv .
AirjHW,
post offices have decided against
the use of motor Scooters for
mail delivery.
The Baytown postmen consid-
ered getting them, Neal said,
but finally vetoed the idea. •
Stewardess Joan Hollinger"nar-| He explained that if scooters
rowly escaped being blown out of were used, mall boxes would
the plane with Binstock. have to be placed at the curbs.
RRRSHI Hospital
Baytown gtstmas- longing to 9,682 htmiljes as "af ' — s- -j
town fee,cd by the floods - the,
By Wanda Orton
Way Cleared For Ground
Assault On Rebel Troops
SHARJA, Trudal Oman (UP)- rebels who seek to overthrow pro-
A high-ranking British officer said British Sulfan Said Bln Tatar.
&xrjsi,'sm........
forces who, are providing the
sharpest threat to British MMeastj
prestige since the Suez crisis,
j Hll Royal Air Force jets
at the rebel fortress of
today with rockets and
the third day of a
Details of a ground assault
were planned at a three-way com
iMkHlmiiaW’ between the
homes washed away or wrecked.
Police reported 1,031 houses dam-
aged^256 washed away and 29,117
The worst hit were the cities ot
Isahaya, with a population of 60,-
000, and Omura, a city of half
that siat, on Omura Bay on the
west coast of Kyushu and some
10 miles from atom-bombed Na-
gasaki. Kyushu is Japan’s south-
ernmost main island.
'The MaintcM
spondent at Nbl,
ya a “dty of the dead” and said
dip into the $120,000 capital im-
provement fund to help pay the
cost of day-to-day operation of
the city government,” Council-
man Lusk said. *‘An,j we know
that operating costs are going
to continue to elimh Therefore,
we're going to have to increase
city revenue* to offset it, I
don’t see how we can do any-
thing but increase the tax rate
-bond issue or no bond issue,"
Sherwood explained to the
council that the planning com-
mission had not considered an-
ticipated increases in city
operating costs in planning Its
bond program, ndr had it con-
fldered that new facilities to be
Sd'«SWS?,K
Of the proposed $3,600,000
bond Issue, $2,600,000 wout.j be
general obligation bonds, which
would he retired from ad
valorem taxes, and the remain-
ing $1 million would be water-
sewer revenue bonds, which
would be retired from water*
*ew«jf revenue over and zbpve
fection. Godfrey is a partner in the co#t of operating the water
the insurance agency with hi* - .
Si“ racawsa
"We have come mighty close
several times to being forced to 1
day morning victim of * virus in-
dny morning victim
M Godfrey is
trance agency
W Godfrey.
Sful, young son of Mr.
fit hpttodiately but wtt-teMdl
on future growth of the city
which will Increase the city’s
capacity to issue bonds.”
Most members of the pan-
ning commission Were present
when the bond recommendation
was made, and about 20 citizens,
Including representatives of the
Baytown League of Women
Voters, were In the audience.
Planning Commission Chair-
man Harry F, Masney Intro-
duced Sherwood, and at the con-
clusion of the presentation called
upon the dty council to adopt
a paving ordinance similar to
that used by the City of Houston,
which requires that property
owners
street
The, comdj took no action on
Massey’s proposal • --J* -- ^
Bayfonian
Charged In
Accident
fattier, Ft
Walter
system and.paying off present! John RJward Butler of Bay-
■■■■■■diit
mggg| $4M!iViSSX!
if the dead” and Aft! day night. He ism Room 201 of
rated 2.000 to-
police estimated ; 2,000 to 3,000
Stilled there. Tie newspaper Yomi-
«ri said 3,000 were drowned in the
two cities.,
New* Service re-
Ishaya today that
^ , ,.w of persons" were
still clinging to rooftops clamor
for help at
two ernes..,-
The Kyodo N
ported from Isi
•large numbers <
BnUsh poll tied reprcscttttmfe to acmss the swirling waters.
the Perzian Gulf, and Air Flea
Marshal L. F. Sinclair, commsnd-
er of British force* to the Aiabi-
An nPwriiMMri* K ■ 1
»e gn HHfinwfia.- ;■ :s t;r, )■;
9 bool*-
Slogan Contest ’Going Over Big’
Entry Blanks Are Pouring Into Office Of Sun
That Merchant* Slogan Con-1
■St that ran in the Wednesday
only 2* Baytown
bride of six Promotion.
14, were
possible re-
saw him
forward and look at the floor
before the blast.
, )da Kraus, who had just left
dairy with her sister and grand-
father where they purchased ice
cream cones, was beside the car
when the explosion occurred.
test that ran In the Wednesday merchants are participating to
issue of The Sun is going over the game, more than twice that
far bigger than even the most!many have been deluged with
optimistic merchant expected ; persons coming into their atoms: will reeelve $15
when he got involved in the (Mking if theirs is par «f the ~
_ , . slogans Included In the 26 clues
Completed contest entry given In Wednesday s ad.
blank* began pouring into the At least One businessman
Sum office Thursday morntng. who didn’t participate to the first-place winner and the sec
By noon Friday more than 100 promotion -said he had to hii ■, o d, second-place winner,
had been filed and more were an extra girl just to answer the , Vu entries Will be judged
“-tong. telephone call* of contest par* {til *; r the deadline has pa
Deadline foe submitting en- tfolpants. at midnight Sunday,
tries is midnight Sunday. Another- who ta In on the Entries may either be nulled
Winners will be announced in, deal-aald he received Jo calls I to The ISun of brought to the
the July 31 issue of The Sun. I la an hour from people asking 'office.
Js wa* one of the slogans
rst prizetl* the contest Is
$35 eesh. 8e«ond place winner
Entries are numbered
are received at The Dui
Author of the first
swer received
as they
n office,
correct an-
will be named
un-
passed
■■
day night.
&JMH.
Mrs, M. L, Br'asjey, who hds
only been in Baytown two weeks,
was dismissed Thursday from San
Jacinto Memorial hospital where
she had minor surgery. Inciden-
tally, she ami her husband like
8nytow1«sg well they plan to
mat Japanese mal{(J their permanent residence
‘ here. Beasley Is employed by Kel-
logg Construction Co. They live al
5101k West Republic,
bonded Indebtedness.
The entire bond program, the
commission concluded In It*
study, could be financed without
an immediate increase In the
property tax rate or MMPNre
valuations, and without affect
Ing money available for general
operating expenses.
City Manager C. Darwin Mid-
dleton told the council be ted
made a “rough estimate” of the
Increase in costs of operating
the new facitttlre ratted tor in
the bond issue and had conclud-
ed that at least a 19-cent. in-
—
Why, You Big
Old Mecmy!
CHICAGO -m- They don’t
come much nastier than the
man who robbed the bicycle
of Lawrence Young, 9.
The middle-aged “gentle-
man” sent the boy, always
mindful of his elders, an an er-
rand for him. Mlnntea later,
the man asked Lawrence's
sister, Deborah, 7, te ran af-
ter her brother and bring him
back. t
That left the older man and
Lawrence's couein, Quincy, »,
standing with the bike. He
gave Quincy ■ shove, got on
the bike, aad pedaled away.
Milton Lowe of Baytown is to
'SJMHfo
town, driver of a car involved
an accident in which a young
Houston mother aad hfr six-
months old son were kilted on the
Gulf Freeway early Friday, has
been charged with murder with
a motor vehicle and driving on
the wrong side ot tte mod, ac-
cording to a United Press dis-
patch from Galveston. >aS? "
Mrs. Billie Ferguson. 28, and her
infant son, ^Bobbie Dean, were
dead on arrival at a Quvbtoa
hospital. Injured were' Thetemi
Force, 53, Calvin Holcombe,
for a check op.
Dan Herring had an appendec-
tomy Tuesday afternoon at SJMH.
A foot ailment is Joe Jarma's
reason lor being a patient at
SJMH- ilF
Mrs. M. X Kelley, Tri-Oty
Beacii road, said she hop d to go
home Friday from SJMH. She had
some X-ray* made.
Mrs. M, J, Sparks (who is in
the same room with Mrs. Kelley
and has the same initials) ted
— m
Clarence FetfrMon Jr„ htetoateF
brease In the tax rate would be- of the dead woman, and his lath-
rerte necessary In , er. Ctnrance Ferguson Sr. ■'_
Her* are th« ngw facilities proposed in 1
$3,600,000 capital improvement bond issue:
Recreation
New City Hall ..............|
, Library-Community Building
$225,000
$315,000
$505,000
surgery Monday. She reported she
will be dismissed Saturday.
.Sparkses live near Cedar Bayou.
Ar/ell Hale of Chnnnrlvicw is
! suffering from a broken leg which
j is being treated af SJMH. He was
[Injured on the job at San Jacinto
{Chemical Co. Hale is a reitive of!
; Cisco, Tqg.
{ David Ariiett, son of the insur-j
ancc man, David Y. Arnett, was
j released Thursday afternoon from
| LUlie-Duke hospital. He had an |
appendectomy.
Fire Building*......*...........-
Fire Equipment .......... ..............
....................$ 80.000
..................$ 85,000
Health Building...............
.....................$ 50,000
Drainage Facilities ......... .
$250,000
Streets ........... .....
....... $891,000
Police Building .........
......$140,000
Land For Police Building..........
Waste Collection (4- trucks)
..................$ 5.000
$ 32,000
Landfill Equipment
.$ 22.000
Water Supply .......................
$371,700
Water Building....................
..........$ 90,000
These items would be voted
as a “package" plan.
on separately, not
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 228, Ed. 1 Friday, July 26, 1957, newspaper, July 26, 1957; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043480/m1/1/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.