The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 303, Ed. 1 Monday, September 30, 1957 Page: 6 of 14
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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Monday, Se|
&
VL
Ifigtoam »mt
Monday, S®pt«mb'«r 30, 1957- 1
Now H,
FROM AUSTIN
~£
. •
i farm Economy Bounce?
S- ■ r ... ..._____,______..
iiuch WillTfexas'
■> •
f-. -
. '• . -- •
By VERN SANFORD
,|. • Tou Pnm Asaodaitoa --
ALSTON f5p> — How much wffi tttM drought
shocked film economy be able to come back.
fEW2L"T«. — -
cash Jtewne, from all farm and ranch prtd-
J. Change In the minimum capital requirements
far StabS I company (presumably to re-
q1”cKtsC*ta France investment restrictions,
*sus'? “sitris/aSto
Although cases tripled (to >,1511 In a Afeek,
\
I
per cent from July of lari year. Farm Income
the most depressed sector of the Texas aroromy.
although rising prices and a better outlook for
crops give some grounds for optimism.’’
| Some attribute dm poor cash shoving in re-
ports thus far to lateness of crops in areas where
“■tinned spring rains delayed planting.
Katmmr final statistics show, most farmer*
itann observers seem to regard 1957 a* the
inning of better things. It rained. And though
rains mav have washed out cotton, rotted
Ions and mildewed grain. It ‘put a season in
e ground,’ ^
1011 in a
health taptata vte ^. ■»*>■_ reported a;-de-
cline Some said they felt they were ’tover the
hump.”
SHOEMAKE'S POLICY DROPPED - An Austin
district Judge has ordered .the state receiver to
stop paring premiums' oh A. B. Shoemake’s giant
insurance policy. Value of, the gradually dtapinishr
tag policy was down to >719,000. '
l At, one time the policy would have been worth
*1,000.000 on Shoemakers: death. Money would
have, been added to the assets of the bankrupt.
company collapsed. His death seemed imtaent,
and the 120,000-a-year premiums were,kept paid.
Now. doctors say Shoemake may live another 15
tog’O’ WATER - Water contests are back in
City of San Antonio lias been trying for more
\JK ■;
Drew Pearson
.......
. ”7. V' I. • .•
' _ . •
HaveTough Job
BUC
iceri
A*
If ADD
d*
*■-■» V
Ibv-*. 4
I
I.
mm
ion. urea w m ici^*»«a.
suen action, said Daniel, —»■- —— -
mis
ftate Capitol-at the time, for a Democratic worn-
gp’s fathering, said he was “concerned and dis-
I "I think there should be no troops from either
Mde pataoMihg our school campuses,” said
Johnson.
NEW LAWS SUGGESTED - Spectators -of the
ICT investigations are no longer interested in
What BenJack Cage did or didn't do. Or n what
he ay* tor doesn’t say. They are more interested •
in the effect the ICT matter wilt have on future
' ^^"answet^rfcw general questions for the
Senate irvvestif&tiH£ committee. But he refused
U *n»wer#> others on grounds of possible self
^However.^offictals 0f the State Insurance De-
Harrison suggested need tor possible legislation
in four areas:
| l. Board authority to determine the compe-
tency of management and topass on management
contacts. (Jack Cage Co. had a management
Witract with KT.i , ,
1 More board control over financial record
^keeping by companies.
"Liw ’ '' '
tonio's application. .......
San Antonio has now filed suit in an. Austin
court to get the board’s decision nullified.
Fort Worth had better luck with, the Water
Board. R gained permission to take 385,<XE acre
feet a year from tributaries of the Trinity.
Enough, presumably, to cart for the City's needs
1 ’in! the year 2000. - ■*”“. . .
But there were protests, both from within and
without Fort Worth. Board said permit is a new
time which will protect the supply of downstream
users. .....* "
rf$:
,
*-
B'
INFLATION
' -rB;-.
POIIBLE-EPOEP
(Editor’. Note: Drew Pear-
eon. writing from the New
East, gives some ideas on Lit-
tle Rock and segregation.)
, . 1-V-; AMMAN, Jordan -If you’re
U. S. information officer in
the Near East these days try-
ing to win friends for the USA,
you have a problem. The prob-
. lent ia how to counteract little
' Rock.
It's your job to make the
United States appear to be the
friend of the Arabs, the cham-
pion of underprivileged people.
Personally, you believe this to
be true. But what can you
. write or say to convince, the
Arab public when it is faced
with pictures of a Nashville,
Tenn., schoolhouse bombed and
blasted because one Negro child
—’5”Was admitted, of a lone Negro
child sitting in the back row of
a Tennessee classroom, of Ne.
gro students in little Rock be-
ing turned back by state troop-
ers. of a 15-year-old Negro girl
in Charlotte, N. C., telling how
rile Wanted to be a nurse but
finally gave up.
With the pictures, are news
stories . . . Stories of violence,
bitterness, race hatred against
a people because of the color of
their skin. People in this part
of the world generally have
colored skin • too - brown. In
fact, two-thirds of the world is
black, brown, or yellow.
There ii' no Soviet press here.
SSI
THAT WAS in July 1W2. A
few months later, as Roorevelt
entered the White House, the
bonus army came agan. But ^
FDR sent them to near-by Feet T
Hunt, arranged to give them
clothes and transportation back
home. They were not allowed to
pile up in Washington.
I have sometimes thought of £.
this as I have watched Eisen-
hower in later years. And a*th*
racial crisis built up, I some-
times wondered why the Presi-
dent did not move to head off
trouble earlier, why he did not
call a meeting of aouthern gov-
ernors immediately after the
Supreme Court 1954 school de-
cision, why he didn’t summon
southern leaders to the White--’
for solution of this deeply dif- -
ficitlt problem. '
But Ike just didn’t seem to
see the bitterness growing, or
how extremists were getting the
upper hand; that a crisis was
building up which might get
®ther
completely out of hand. _
he just doesn’t like trouble, or
he’s just too nice a guy.
So for three years the situa-
tion drifted—and got worse.
Last June, as the governors of
48 states gathered at Williams-
burg, Va., in a state already
charged with integration bit-
teme-ss, the President went to
Williamsburg but said nothing
more Tthe ‘committee
Corsicana Nat Wiliams of Lubbock and Stone
^Appointment of six persons by Governor Daniel
will complete the 24-member committee..
s°u^yof"(townstream . Alon* '* - > ^ ... TL* I
waggoner Wilbur Shook Up 6 y Womdnpowef Thinkers
file tataimittee which ... .. by dot OITOfi - • ‘ but that traditions will tootae and ho! Merry Christmas!” roared
Wilbur, his eyes strangely alight
’’They’ll never get that job-the
There is no Soviet press here. .V' .fVhrnrobtam uooermost in
There doesn’t have to’ be. The- ' (tubernatorial mindsXtead, he
pictures, the straight mws ac- proposed turning, federal power
counts tell their, own story. lK„
By DOC OCIGG ■- but that traditions will topple and
United Press Staff Correspondent they’ll invade fields that men new
NEW YORK (UPt-Wilbur, our- largely occupy.”
SCHOOL BUS LAW - There still are people who
don't observe Texas school bus law, say state
don't observe Texas senow ous iaw, say s«.i*
officials. Seven were killed in school bus coi-
U WdV^biiX on the provisions of the law are
urged by, Education, Highway apd Safety Dcpart-
ment officials. Basically, the laws say:
I A driver meeting or overtaking, a school bus
that has stopped to load or discharge passengers
must stop immediately. He may then proceed
cautiously at not more than 10 miles per hour.
2. Law does not apply in city limits or on a
divided highway where the bus U on a different
roadway from the other vehicle.
MEMO: From The Sun News Desk
—
JT TOOK: F. A. (Rich) Richardson's grandpa
and his four brothers a year to walk from Colum-
to Texas. We don’t know whether It
Imb SOB Marcos, where Rich was raised. He
Jh▼«>*««« moved In and took what;they
Bbs grandpa figured there wasn’t any
hanging around Columbia any longer. So
he rounded up his four brothers and headed tor
cow country.
Now the reason it took him so long to get to
Texas was that he stopped to teach school along
fthe way. After all, he had four strapping 's to
about this famous trek from Other relatires.
f fMtjSm' it’s about 1.000 miles from Baytown
to Ctaumbia. So assuming that Rich’s relatives
•came hare, or to some town in
east Texas, they could have made it in a year
Stalking between two and rvne-half and thr»
Mko a day, seven Myrt ’week;.....—...........
JUN’S NEW DR FA*
IT YOU’VE NOTICTO, the Mita*S*fcV<tay ia-
-suoa of Ttac Sw had on a new dress. It was a
green one trimmed In conventional white. Pages
• ■ . r
Secrets Of Success
ly PrBiftan Ptit^trfraM
t-2-7-8 were green and the other pages were
*®tteVat least one reader who wishes we’d
let. The Sun wear the new combination dress
'TV'webb. 408 West NarrO, said he found
that black type on green paper is^ much easier
paper gets wet. ’.
. "You have to diy out the ‘white’ Sun in an
oven before you can read it," Webb said, "but
not the !green’ Sun. All you-have to «h case
per gets wet la ta h* careful
l w___ auaw nifim mill
otfice grouch, had his head buried
in a newspaper when suddenly,
from the papery depths, he began,
yelping in anguish.
"Why don’t they leave us
alone?’ he screamed. "Why don't
they get out of our lives?”
Whatever is bothering you no.w
Wilbur? -*
"Womanpower," said Wilbur.
"The thinkers in Washington are
thinking about womanpower. The
secretary of labor says, and
here I quote, he says, ‘The future
of our economy depends upon
womanpower to a greater degree
than ever before,’ and here- I
unqUote."
Womanpower? What does that
mean?
"He is talking.” said Wilbur,
"about working gals—the female
answer to manpower. He says 10
million more persons will enter ,
the U.S. working force by 1965
and that more than half of them
will be women.
"And get this. The president of
foe U.S. Chamber of Commerce
says the ‘manpower pinch’-what-
ever that means — probably will
bring women’s wages up even
men*. He says long - standing
Wilbur wadded up the paper
and hurled it across the room,
Hupmiitlsr miccintf a fimifib hYmi.
iiurjt u ircvw
couldn't stand to give all those
things away,”
A crafty took Came on his face.
"I know." he said. "I know just
the thing. They can take over
' . - ^ ’ Aanl. J a/' tL a
ing a conee Dreaa rogeuier.
SuBdozers. . . telephone poles
. . .what next,” he muttered.
"Women mailmen, .maybe? Oh,
no, they, couldn’t do that. They’d
open ail the letters and read ’e,m
in the swift completion of their
appointed rounds,. Train engin-
eers, maybe! Whooo-wooo! Mm.
Casev Jones.,.come all ye chil-
dren if you want to hear the story
of a brave broad engineer...” he
crooned.
Then he hegan puffing like a
locomotive. Thip female executive
and the secretary watched him
ne’Women Santa Clauses! Ho, ho,
steering the rear end of the sec-
ond section of hook-and-ladder fire
trucks. They are natural back-
seat drivers. Ah, ha-ha-ha-ha! But
they’d probably want to change
the style of those fire department
hats, wouldn't you, dearier?"
He addressed the question to the
two women. They just stared.
He paused, frowned, and then
snapped his fingers,
“I’ve gol it! The perfect job.
Women bums. It’s a field they
haven’t yet invaded. The general
job of hobo. Do you agree?”
The iwo working ladies could
not answer. They had fled.
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
liftersi if. my ——re*
taboos against female executives
Will be wipM-out, He says may-
be dames.' wott t be climbing tele-
phone poles or running bulldozers
Did You Know
nanaie 11. -------------
titan on white paper. 1 wish my Sun came in
green everif day.
We told Jim we were sorry his paper got wet.
He said it might not have been raining when
the carrier delivered it because it didn’t have a
wax paper cover.
The boys use wax paper bags to keep your
paper dry when it’s raining. But, as all of you
know you can’revef tell When it might-mm tw,.,. .
Baytown. So if you happen to find your paper
wet sometime, don’t get too angry with the
carrier. The sun might have been shining when
he'delivered it. .....
Samuel Gridley How-e devised
the first method of teaching by
means of raised symbol!. He
educated Laura Bridgman, the
first blind, deaf and dumb per-
son ever -taught the use of tan*
guage.
The .Answer, Quick!
1. What is orography?
’ 2. What was the first name
of Gibbon, the famous historian?
4. What is a glOclrtalH?
5. What is a godwit?
It’s Been Said ,
There is not in nature, a thing
that makes man so deformed, so
beastly, as doth intemperate
anger.—John Webster.
A C«Mral Pr®» Featur®
Happy Birthday
This is the birthday of Ken-
ny Baker, actor-singer; Ralph
Forbes, actor; Fabian Sevitsky,
conductor, and Deborah Kerr,
|a ;amt*t‘
Watch Your Language
TRANS-LADE - ftraha-
M .
Dwight D. Eisenhower U the
twelfth general to .yrve M
President of the United States.
Because ginseng root resem-
bles the figure of a man, the
Chinese believe it can restore
virility.
Contact lenae* were developed
ht Germany.
LADE) - verb; to transfer the
cargo of, in transshipping.
It Happened Today
32 A.D.—Feast of St. Jerome,
church fathers and
Alongside the news are pic-
tures of Ike—smiling, golfing,
yachting, always smiling. If
ytfu’re a U. S. Information of-
ficer or even an ordinary Ameri-
can who tikes to have people
think well of his country, you
can t help wishing that Ike at
least sometimes would not
•mile.
VIEWING, THE integration bit-
terness of Little Rock from half- ■
way around the world, my mem-
ory' goes back to another bitter
scene when troops were marched
down Pennsylvania Avenue to
clear 20.000 destitute veterans
of World War I out of the Na-
tion’* Capital.
1 was a young reporter then.
It was the first time I saw
Dwight D. Eisenhower, then an
officer on the staff of Gen. Doug-
las MacArthur, Chief of Staff of
the U. S. Army.
The veterans at first arived
in a mere trickle. They wanted
Congress to pass a bonus. Grad-
ually; slowly, their number
grew'. Camped out on the flats
of Anacostia,. they put up
shacks, started soup kitchens, .
Friendly merchants contributed
to their support.
Eisenhower was appointed lie
aison man for the army .•«**'
local D C. police, to keep Gen.
MacArthur informed. We used
to see him in the District of
Columbia building, sitting in the
‘ press room'* reading westerns.-
He kept away from Anacostia,
obviously was not looking for
trouble.
But while Ike kept away from
trouble, trouble grew in Wash-
ington. The bonus army swelled
from a few hundred men to
over to the States,
Letters
To The Editor
Editor, The Sun
Dear Sir:
Folks of Fame-
Guess the Name
noted
.fNTERVdSmNG successful men and women ev-
brs’serawjjs
CCS*, mil m jpwiv ” — J —- —
aomewhat Mke this: “If it hadn’t been for the
fomewnai nw uu». **
encouragement of so-snd so. I would have rv,n
'0$:
monies it is a mother or a wife, sonte-
• brother or father or a close friend who
j.T----^ stimulates enthusiasm, and
ly Ef«n#t^
> mm®. »t*m . mm*# ■ • ; •
reacher his teens, Mrs. Eleanor Catares decided
her son was spending too much time on the
streets and with unknown companions.
Wisely, she realised the hoy needed, an outiet
for his energies, and she began encouijglng him
to take part in »porta and to join the YMCA.
A .... ../velri AMIUUI M til* .lffMfV VDil
There is no rectal, as in a gun,
when a rocket is fired.
representatives of
• Great Britain. France and Ger-
______ tn dismember
Mary, Queen of Scots, is buried
in Westminster Abbey.
many agreed to dismember
Chechoslovakia. Returning to
London, , British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain delivered
his “peace In our time” message.
' + J’: -. fy, - ,
O laKr pari ui spin ia
Contract Bridge
; ;**
SHKrtRtss
lick CfitftrCft of tk~ rk‘Ae0A ‘Rssat’c iMdlnr
Jrf gwner Of the
season.
%SSrM us
%n—'
Diamond Belt title and received several offei*
irxr.^„r»“ *—•
away from boxing. School there offered new_op-
portunities and. to his mothers pride. Rick
made a record in tour sports. He become an All-
American fullback, an All-State bMketball and
track star, and a sensational first baseman.
HONORS*'CONTINUED to snowball until his
senior year, when Rick was Inducted into the
Army. That wis the end of his football career,
,
FAMOUS HANOI
4 ITmaf MlfflNl
ly I. J«v
0- ’
03i
John '
lagtfltmt §un
Neither side’vulnerable.
®J97J
y KQ862
JSi
OJW875
<- fullback, and tiie Chicago Bears grabbed him
when he came out of service.
Rick gives all the credit to Mom, because she
believed in him and helped him to attain his
ambition. It’* a success secret that many parents
might well ponder.
East ruffed: Btefcromrtte deue*
of clubs (this was not an honest
return—It wss the jl/fh best
club).
West took the see and led an-
other heart, which East ruffed.
East now played a club, taken in
dummy. Declarer had lost four
tricks snd needed the rest to
make the hand.
make me nana.
The, king of diamonds wss led,
followed by another diamond, and
A Russian motorcyclist ran over and killed
three wolves sttacking a flock of sheep, How I
that for a tree life “wild And woolly" adventure?
The bidding:
South West
I ♦ It
Pans Pass
"*** sfa
pass
!t
In one respect, you must admit, the lowly sec-
ond-division New York Giants hav* pulled ahead
-n **.. *4—* iWo.ro Thov nr* rpttinr
North B
Dbte. 1
1NT ft
Pass Pi
Opening lead—king of spade*.
East produced the ten. The
critical point was now at hand.
The queetlon wu whether or not
to flnesie for the queen.
South took stock. Salt had
ahown up with no hearts. -His dis-
tributton was likely to be 5-4-4,
but had he started with five dia-
monds or only four? If East held
five diamonds originally, ths
finesse wu essential, hut if East
held only four, the ace would be
the proper play.
South came to a decision. He
Hi-Wh°n ho was a young man,
he wanted, to becopm a writqr, .
s tout,he gave up that ambition for .
the economic and financial field.'
.At 23, he was named a deputy
finance inspector of Francp!
Now this 37-year-oid six-footer
Is France’s youngest finance
minister since T913. He is the
grandson of a wine grower In
the heart of the cognac coun-
try He won. his first elective,
office in 1948. He was named
, . undersecretary of ftate for ec-
onomic affairs ^nd^a moved
into varied posts. He is a top
tennis player and enjoys golf
snd. swimming.
2- This world-famous scientist
and Nobel orise winner died re-
cently at 76- At the time of his
. death he was a consultant to
General Electric company. He
is particularly well known ior
his valuable research ta rain-
making and his work develop-
ing the gas-filled lamp. The tat-
ter work helped pave the way
for radlo-TV broadcasting. He
uncovered a Wholly new branch
of chemistry—’’surface” chem-
istry and was awarded the
A IASI 11 o aw-w — ——
several thousand. They took o .
vacant buildings along Penns..r-
vania avenue. One night they
started taarching on Congi-ess.
For the first time in history
three drawbridges across the
Anacostia river were raised, to
block them,
' It was at this point that Presi-
dent Hoover called out the army.
Eisenhower; the gental, trouble-
ducking liaison officer between
the army and the police, had
not seen what might develop;
so tanks; tear gfis, and cavalry
hrandishng sabres advanced-on
.defenseless veterans along Penn-
sylvania avenue._'
The Baytown Employees Fed-
eration through its Executive
Counbil would like to take this
opportunity to thank you for the
kind words in your editorial of
Sept. 18. 1957.
It is indeed heart warming to
know that organized labor in
.......this area, has the respect and
support of citizens in your posi-
tion. To sit back and hot
acknowledge such a tribute
- would be most ungrateful on our
part; therefore, we hope that
tbi: will in some small measure
convey our appreciation to you,
personally.
It is most unfortunate that
some parts of organized labor;
have become infested with un-
desirable characters; however,
it is gratifying to know that
most stable and fair minded citi-
zens don’t condemn an entire
organization or community be-
cause of a few bad apples. We
still have due process of law in
' this country and if allowed to
function will, in most cases, cor-
rect* the situation-. May it, God
willing, never be any other way.
-----Ther«~ls~T~gTett deal more-
that we might say and probably
should say; however, we believe
. action often speaks louder than
words. Therefore, we would
leave wth you and to the citi-
zens of this community, State
and Nation this thought.
“As Union men and women
we will ever strive for the bet-
terment Of our fellow man;
keeping in mind-our responsi-
bilities and conducting oursel-
ves in such a manner that we
will always have the respect of
iritrlligent men- and'the love. ol„
little children,”
Thanks again for your kind
remarks. \
Very truly yours,
. Executive council
Baytown Employes
Federation
R. R. Dawson, President
! By FRANK «
“* Sun Rustam
Probably no otl
in a city, Baytt
votes as much a>
service and rept
Baytown’s Buck
iw^Co,
©With the opet
customer repair
ing at 205 North
Turner operate
square’ fact of f!
with the businesi
servicing new
and trucks and u
In fact, the 1
iS larger than all
operated by He
Chevrolet dealer
T BuckTurncr
ate* from Jour,
tags.
Hie main sti
North Main hou.
offices, show rooi
ment, accounting
nance operation
of the custome
service departmi
The remainder
or service depar
Sterling in the b.
ner has compieti
it was gutted by
At 209 Nortl
Turner’s, third
voted to a custc
fender shop.
Fourth locatio
as, contains th<
a building in v
‘are serviced s
Buck Turner"
are checked be)
the lot.
In addition to
tions—all Of Whi
—a SO by 100 fo
terseetion of E
First is -rented
storage location
The scope of
iteration has
“'SQpnenal growth
ened in 1943.
' It was 14 yea:
ner came to Baj
ton, Okla. whe
a Ford dealer,
He rented thi
building at 401
present locatioi
Cobb Nash Co.-
the Buck Turn,
"V
aies memo* v**' incandescent
lamp, high-yacuum power tu"*
7‘ !te.e
(Names at bottom of column _
ekday afternoon tar
, atPearcs and Ashbel
" tn Baytown, Texas.
...77,...... Editor and PubUtawr
............ Adverttataig Manager
___-Mm'...'......kfanaging Editar
Mm Jackson .........Office Manager
■_fwier ....i......... Oreulation Manager
Mmeriptien Rate.
of the first-division Dodgere. They are getting
to California first-next year, in fact.
The planet Mercury revolves around the sun
every 88 days—Science item. Imagine—getting
an annual vacation every three months
Voting in the French national assembly, ac-
cording to a news dispatch, will hereafter be
done by push-button. A sort of modernised ver-
*ion of the old “rule-of-thumb” Idea?
•V® ratoa on requeeL
u aeoend class matter at the Baytown,
Peat Office under the Act of Congress
***' ef Merck I. Ml®.
Word comes Worn Paris that the Venus de Milo
measures 43!4-3*'s-44. That sculptor should’ve
used foundation garments.
•“srsauws:*"
Nearly half the American public is hoodwinked
regularly. That’s what we m^n by majority rule.
Opening ieaa—King oi South ctme to * aecisin. a.
fflHS?i^-SSS£Ss»
The reason ths pl*y 1* omitted his queen of diamonds,
from bridge tats 1* that It Is « South now corrected Ms
form of chsstihg. planned revoke substituted the
The Aleatr**; Coup, natursily *c« of diamonds for the ace f
enough, had it* origin in Aiea- hearts, and thus made the con
m»-.iar.*!2ggiJ3LlS "S'h™*!™
the many claimants Include seme are strictly dishonest, and play-
.re Who indulge In .uch tactic,
ten af the roruts' gallery. inevitably become ostracised.
The first recorded uss of ths In fact, to*
ptey occurred in the accompany now forbidden *v^. *
tag land. After winning the spade The penalty is solitary con
tend, West Shifted te a heart and ment.
C 1M7. King Features SysSksU. las.
Yonr Future
Conserve your resources and
check a tendency to extrava-
gance. Also, keep on good terms
* with your employer or superior.
Today’s child will be endowed
with some special tofent in art.
music or literature. Financial
sense and good temper should be
taught early.
Mow’d You Make Out?
1. The science of mountain*
and mountain • systems.
2. Edward.
3 Oldest pure glass known
date* from 7,000 B. C. in Egypt
4. A musical instrument, orig-
inally an arrancement of bells.
8. A species of wading bird.
1, Felix tail lard. 2-Dr. Irv-
ing Langmuir.
DAILY
ACROSS
l.Tftflt
5.Bfire
9. Wheel
support
10. Fragrant
wood (EI.)
12. Pleasanter
13. Hoist
14. Cheat
15. Excuse
lfi. Rhubarb
19. Tantalum
, (sym.)
20. Faihiona
21. Soak flax
22. Offensive |
sight
25. Not young
27. Pressed
30. Sun god
31. Rise by
buoyancy
33. Stir up
35. Equip with
men
J. Otrfs name
,J7. Steal
mu)
9. Underworld
river
*0. Sharpens
U. Antlered
animal
42. Breakfast
food
DOWN
1. *’-of
St. Louis"
2. Twisted
awry *
(slang)
3. Weight
(Turk)
4. Thrice
(mus.)
CROSSWORD
5. Poplar IS. She!-
(Asia Minor) tered
«.WMe-
awake
7. Burden ,
A Give up
wholly
•.Breaks
suddenly
11. Parliamen-
tary %
chamber
V
(PF.)
15. Sub.
min
side
,21. Titling
again
23. Mouth
(comb.
. form)
24. Decay
26. Bay
window
26. Diaem-
ms aesij
aaaig aoaunri
Wda wtirc
rcGTnns rwn
ed
aai4iSB atoawa
aanan aouan
barked
28. Public
(stariag’s Asiwsv
$1. Umber
32. Anesthetic
missive storehouse* 34. Quote
IT. Travel to 2>. Sand dunes 37. Pronoun
and fro (G.B.) Sb.Weg (dtel)
i * • * * ij;
M
r
m
Pl-
t
m
chang
« It’fi e
...ti
if
.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 303, Ed. 1 Monday, September 30, 1957, newspaper, September 30, 1957; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043551/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.