The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 300, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1956 Page: 1 of 11
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r
as
Wednesday, Septem
Uttk Change
ORE WE AT
aHjeSagfoum^
BAT8HORE WEATHER—Partly cloudy
with little change in temperatorca
through Thursday with widely wittered
daytime showers.
OALVESTOV TIDES: High Law
For Thursday— t:SS».m. 11:06 a.m.
5:S7 p.m. 11:79 p.m.
...
ri>:'
VOL 36, NO. 300
TODAY'S NEWS TODAY
Wednesday, September 5, 1956
—
YOUR HOME NEWSPAPER
Serving East Harris And
Chambers Counties Each
Weekday Afternoon
;
hi
LAST TIMES TODI
BAYTOWN, TEXAS TELEPHONE: 8302. Five Cents Per Copy
BARS DOWN SOON ON JACINTO BRIDGE
'I Lost Everything'
QUICKIES ... By Km Reynolds
$100,000 Fire
Guts Gloss Co
• •
By ROSALIE VITERS tne top* of their cars Wednesday, determined, but ‘ there's not a thing
Sto Staff Writer** caused by hurtling sparks. ' left in ttere,” nre Cftief Lintel-
Downtown Baytown probably If the fire had occurred two man said.
was saved from ' more extensive weeks ago, when roofs were tinder All fire-fighting equipment ex-
damage by ram which fell before b^* started in the downtown Stations No. 1 Imd 3™ and about
and during a $100,000 fire which area, firemen said. 100 volunteer and regular firemen
Tuesday night destroyed the old Fire Chief Art Linteiman said were used In fighting the fire.
Lulman building occupied by the Wednesday that “this fire is the It was brought tfnder control
Vincent Glaring Co.. add Carew biggest one we've had since Woo!- within 45 minutes after a passing
Studio. - a - worth's burned on Texas avenue.” motorist Saw ’ the flames, shoot
Fiames leaped 100 feet into the The entire building, now owned through the roof and called the
air as ,the blase exploded through by Bi'iswanger Co. of Houston, the fire department,
the roof. Huge sparks of burning Vincent Glazing Co. and the Carew Three firemen and a spectator
roofing material were blown over Studio were destroyed. ‘ who volunteered to help were cut
a four block area of wood-ehingled "I test everylhing I had. All my by flying glass and were taken to
residences md old wood and cor- stock my tru ks and my equip- Bay-town hospital for emergency
An Editorial -
Quack Shack Serves
big week for the youth of The building has been moved. The build-
ing hu been enlarged. The whole plan
Ready To Go
On Trinity,
Old R. Span
“Fve gone native so I can
shop The Sun Want Ads with
both hands!”
Teens Stage
Roman Holiday
in Ft. Worth
This it a
Baytown. .
JfS'JHSBSTfSSSSi
*■***»?•'psrawt In gw-awa,-totoercuthrenifr*’-1
adults. The student* will start their trek
back to th*. classrooms. The oldsters will
be on the L sidelines trying to help out.
Then Saturday night marks another
epochal day In the lives of youngsters
here. The new enlarged and remodeled
Quack Shack will bo reopened.
'"•* -enage Canteen that has furnished
of operation has been changed. The mem-
heirs of. the Qnack Shack should be the
•■Ytar’QaaefcriShgcfc should "
be off and running for its biggest year.
The students have their own Quack
Shack organisation, and they run the
show. The Jaycees and the Jayoee-ette*
back them up.
The building was originally furnished to
the Junior Chamber of Commerce and the
By PRESTON PENDERGRASS
Sun Managing Editor
, . -Highway 73's completion from
east of the Trinity river to Hous-
I- ion byedging
toward completion Wednesday. with
work going on in both Harris and
Chambers Counties.
, , It is only a matter of days until
the east entrance to the new San *
Jacinto river bridge will be eont-
UteraUy thousands of hours of entertain
ment and relaxation for members of the
"high school set” Is all set for another
year.
The Baytown Junior Chamber of Com-
merce, which long ha* supported Hie
Quack Shack as one of It* major projects.
hat had
weeks.
its membership working
Quack Shack by the Humble Oil and Re-
fining Co. The land ,on which the build-
ing sit* has been made available through
the years by Mr. and Mr*. Sam Stassi.-
. The Sun has been watching the Quack
Shack at work and at play since its In-
ception. The Snn salutes all of those who
have had a part in the plans for the new
year. Here’s wishing you all the success
In the world.
and oid wood and cor- stock, my trucks and my tqU»y-. My.uiwu uuspiuu ivrr-mamwcunr
rugated iron-covered . business meat. My records aye badly dam- treatment. Their injuries were se- FORT WORTH (UP)- A crowd
-............, .
buildings. The sparks clung ._ , _
reefs and burned themselves out Gerald’Vincent, owner of the ,
as excited spectators watched. company, said.
; A few of the estimated 5,800 Herbert Carew has been oi
to the aged. There isn’t a thing left,'1 vere. but not serious enough to of noisy white persons, mostly
glass require hospitalization, Linteiman teen-agers out for a Roman holi-
said. day, gathered again Tuesday DOCK IO viCISScS
Herbert Carew has been out of The hundreds of people rushing night around the home of a Negro
fire town for the past week, and the to the fire in their cars hampered who moved into an all-white block
- ‘ • -- - FIRE—Pirn. Thn>*l four daVS 1M.
people who flocked to the . ------- --------------------
found small damaged places on extent of his loss could not be (See FIRE—Page Three)
mm
SUN
spots
%
'BABY' TORNADO HITS
EDGE OF GEORGETOWN
Club Meeting
BAYTOWN A AND M club will
meet at 7 pm. Thursday at the
National Guard armory for a din-
ner meeting. E. L. Wilson. presi-
dent. said that Aggie* are invited
to attend although they did not
make reservation*.
By UNITED PRESS
A small tornado smacked into the southern edge of Georgetown
Tuesday night damaging several buildings, as violent weather hit
the Central Texas area for the second night in a row.
Britsllng rains felite some parts of Central Texas, while more
seme storms hit other areas.
1,794 Absentee
.-.four .day*., ago,........ ........
There were reports they ‘planned
-to dynamite the home of the Ne-
gro. Lloyd G. Austin, at mid-
night. But police dispersed tha
crowd of 200 to 250 persons with-
out any violence being done.
Austin's home is only one block
away from the scene of a bomb-
ing of a Negro’s home about
three years ago.
A group of white neighbors- try-
ing to get Austin to move out re-
ported Monday he was willing to
sell the house for his $1,350 equity.
But E. G. Brown, leader of the
segregation group, said Austin
changed his mind and blamed
torists use of the new expressway
most of -the way to Houston.
Barring unfavorable weather,
paving of the one and one-quarter
mile strip between Trinity, Old and
Lost river bridges will begin Mon-
- day, 0. W. Syphrett, resident state
highway engineer at Anahuac,
said Wednesday.
Unanticipated dev e l o p in e n ts,
such as scraping and rolling In ex-
. cess of estimates, have delayed
paving of that section of Highway
73 and raised the contract cast
from $176,000 to $190,000, Syphrett
Gulf Blthuiithlc Co. of Houston
Is the prime contractor. The con-
tract was awarded by the Texas
Highway department on Nov. 3,
1955, and work was started on
Jan. 2, 1956.
Syphrett said the contract pro-'
vided that work would be com-
pleted in 130 working days, al-
though no target date was required.
The state does not charge por-
tions of working days against the
contractor, Syphrett explained. He
said that Gulf BithuHthic had en-
countered several weeks during
itra- if they felt perfectly at home in which only portions of days were
started. Among the first junior high...... worked due to unfavorable
who Last year’s seventh graders and weather,
that now members of the eighth clan, Gulf’s contract called for grad-
School Vacation
Ends For 10,000
some entering the portals for the men and tried in vain to look a*
first time as elementary regis:
flit* Amr
Benefit Bridge
SERVICE LEAGUE sponsored
benefit bridge games will be at 7:30
pjn. Wednesday in the Community
house. Open to the public, the
games will be conducted by Jack
Fkjrbee,
Heavy Freeway
Bond Vote Seen
works for a department store.-
A crowd of angry demonstrators
I W gj||9§|||0» ■ ■ gathered in front of Austin’s home
Heavier than expected absentee lacked a two-thirds majority. mydon tMree8in theTront yard"
voting indicated Wednesday that Texas State,-High way commis- Austin fired a rifle shot into the
BowKrQ Meet voter* will turn out in larger num- aion has said that unless Harris milling onob which didn’t hit any-
WOMEN INTERESTED in bowl- Saturday to support the $15 County provides the money to buy body but went through the hood
inz are to meet at 7:30 pm. Wed- n)Uilon freeway right-of-way bond rights-of-way for the freeway con- and radiator of an automobile.
Bsritar«the QimmffliOjr house to At MansSetd, Tex.. Ig miles
make plans for organizing teams Up to midnight Tuesday, 1,794 forced to allocate the $17 million southeast of Fort Worth, classes
and league* The meeting will b# absentee ballots had been cast in earmarked for Harris County to started at the Mansfield High
sponsored by toe Baytown Women’* the election,, according to Harris °theLr which have money School without any Negroes try-
f rill iilfl'? County Clerk W. X). Milier. to buy rights-of-way. ’ ing to enter despite a U.S. Sii-
Miller said the total absentee Saturday, then, is the county’s preme Court order backing them.
Chamber Meat votes cast for the forthcoming last chance to exchange $15 mil- . L- Clifford Davis, an attorney
Trrr WOOSTER Chamber of Com- bontl election was almost four (See BONDS—Page Three) f* fbe National Association for
THE WOOSTER Chamber of Com ^ ^ ^ abjente baUotJ ca,{ the Advancement of Colored Peo-
— —■**— — - —**•*------ "t® «»(<» late Tuesday that efforts
the school will be
E. least for the time
In the election on those issues, j”’ ■ A * . bgi.ng’. . ... ,
LULAC Session cunuTfi, it000 votM were AnM IS OttiCFCd v^Xel«
C^ePfEfiR 277 W^nMdav^ toe Harris County voter* Saturday « « IP il* f -
By SUE JONES
Sun Staff. Writer
Friday will be C-day in Baytown tion
as classes meet for the first of- graders there were some
ficial day of school. • boldly accepted the fat* ..... .... „
„ _________ Several thousand Baytown tchool awaited them behind the claas- along with ninth grade students, ing, drainage and structures on the
this on the National Association children changed their daily rou- room walls, while others held nonchalatly registered from 12:45 section between the bridges, which
for the Advancement of Colored tines Wednesday and climbed but tightly to the hand of a parent to 3:30 p.m. ad accepted the return were completed well ahead of High-
People. df bed early to start the ball roll- and were a little reluctant to say bout There was excitement a* re- way 73 schedule at a cost of about
Brown said he and his followers ing for the 1956-57 scholastic year, good-bye to the "good ole days.” unions between classmates took $3 million,
now will trv to eet Austin and his For them, summer officially From 8:30 to 11:40 a.m. things place and new schedules dom- Austin Road and Bridge Co. of
wife fired from their iohs unless ended after three month’s vaca- were hustling and bustling as ele- inated the conversation trend. Dallas ha* the contract for grad-
they move. Austin drives‘a truck tion’ and registration broke the , .“*«**“• ‘t^b*rtE. I^e ing drainage, structures and sur-,
for a grain comoanv and his wife lce for the good ole school days. During the same hours, tension high school, seniors started their facing of a six-mile section of
- ^ ’ Approximately 10,000 students was high at the three junior high final year and were .overjoyed at Highway 13 from the west end of*
are expected to enroll In the Bay- schools as students, formerly th* the thought of at last reaching the old and Lost River bridge west
town system this year. top men in the tower grad* level, top rung In the ladder. They re*- to the Harris County liner
became the seventh grade fresh- (See SCHOOL-Page Three) Thl, contraCt tnto!in„
★ ENDS TONIGHT
'GHHEE
CRIME AGAINST JO
777
■ A . '
- ALSO
★ TODAY IS ★
. "FAMILY BARGAIN D
ENTIRE FAMILY
FOR ONLY 50c
THURSDAY ★ 7,
★ First Baytown Showir
•rrxpa pofUtaapwaac cacoeanzasorcyna*
★ ADDED FEATURE
......... :•
The
First Texan
"Bel mccrea
I FELICIA FARR - JEFF MORROW f
Imm
IsJ
CARTOON ★ "AFTE
As always, Wednesday found
Santa Fe Trams Hit
Headon; 20 Are Killed
This contract, totaling approxi-
mately $3 million, calls for con-
m-Mm Egypt's Volunteer ;
LONDON —UP—Marilyn Mon-
roe is ill but she is not expect-
ing, her husband said today.
Her husband, playwright Are
thur Miller, Interrupted a New
York visit to his children to fly
to her bedside.
“It’s absolute rubbish,” he told
airport reporters who a*ked
struction of an overpass at the
Intersection of Highway 7.3 and
Farm to Market Road 565, at Cove,
And another at the intersection of
Highway 73 with Highway 146 a
mile south of Mont Belvieu.
Syphrett said work is “progress-
ing satisfactorily” on these Instal-
SPRINGER, N. M. (UP)— The jured. He believed the dead were lations and the six-mile section of
mta Fe Railway’s crack stream- f]1 railroad^ personnel but_at Las Highway 73 fjom Old and I>ost
Santa Fe Railway’s crack stream- «» railroad personnel but at Las Highway 73 from Old and Lost
liner the “Chief” slammed head- VeKas. N. M„ the Santa Fe’s as- river to the Harris County line,
on Into a mall express stopped ri*i*nt superintendent said he but that it will not be finished be-
aiong a siding about five miles thought some were passengers. ------*■* —
south ' ■ ■ ' ‘ ■* “■ ' ,J ' ■
idght as_ originally adheduled acV ^,j>rw?..l<*u.ane* ^ «>unt>' of " T " ' ———" school started.
Saute Fe Passenger
Into 'Frontlines'
when enrollment be-
gan, and again Tuesday when
'Sure Had A Rough Ride,'
secretary.
Davis said,
EDITOR’S NOTE: Herbert
of freeway construction
■SlftliltB®*3
dent of the auxiliary’. the Baytowa area where the traffic The order went out as the five-
__ j.. Pr°fa'em » becoming more compli- naaon Suez committee headed by
Football Film cat«d as time goes on and the Australian Prime Minister > Robert
BAYTOWN JfrlWANIANS, at their number of automobiles increaie*. Gordon Henries prepared for its
regular weekly meeting at noon _ The freeway bond issue failed to third round of meetings with Pres-
BABY FOUND DEAD-
BODY BITTEN BY RATS
tore mid-1957.
. south of here today, killing at Ater said the dead included four The bridge across Cedar Bayou
about London newspaper report* ]ea,t 20 persons, crewmen and at least 16 lounge will be built at a point one-half
the Monde actress is pregnant Ra]nh Ater nubile relations of. and dining car employes who were mile west of the intersection of
He said she had gastritis, ficial tor the 'railway said » per- ln a forward car of the Highway 73 wltfc Highway 146.
sons were dead and a number in- “Chief.’ Syphrett said that a contract for
The eastbound mail express had PavIn« 8 seven-mile section of
pulled onto the siding to let the Highway 73 from the east end of
westbound "Chief” pass. But for Trinity river bridge to State High-
some reason the fast - moving w*y 81 would be ready for letting
"Chief’ shunted onto the siding, sometime in November. This pore
too. and plowed headon into the ,,on 0( the ro»<! will Cost about
stooped express. $3 million.
The passenger train was de- When the 14-mile section of
railed and four of its care were Highway 73 is. completed from the
badly damaged. Some of the ex- Harris County line at Cedar Bayou
press train’s cars also were de- t0 Highway 61, the state will
railed. A long section of the siding have spent more than $7 million^
was tom to pieces. in Chamber* County, Syphrett,
Both trains were Dulled by huge said, which does not include the $3
- diesel locomo- million spent for Old and Lost and
Trinity river bridges,
Of the dead and in- Highway 7,3 between the two
was delayed for several Bridges will remain open to traffic
as crews sought to pry during the paving operation, Sy-
account he edscribes what he
saw and heard.
By HERBERT HUDSON
As Told to United Pres*
SPRINGER. N. M, -(U.P.)-We
were on x *
srninff in
Thursday at the Tower,'will see a P«« by about 1,700 votes in the ident Gamal Abdel Nasser late to-
5.” July 2* primary election because it day.
aiee^ron^ the Chief ^ h°rSeP°wr
, Ren
jured
in bouncing around. It Gov. John F. Simms of New .
roomette with Everett Rucfdell of
Springfield, Ohio. Our car was
about four back from the engine.
I was
film, "Football Highlight* of 1955.'
The film belongs to Humble Oil
and Refining Co.
We began bouncing around. It Gov. john r
didn't hurt anybody in our car but Mexico authorized the use of Na-
CHICAGO—(U.P,)—A father returned home from a trip Tuesday we sure had a rough rid* for a tion*] Guardsmen to help control
Ancient Flintlock Explodes
Around Town* ^°° pac^n9*
to discover th* body of Ms baby girt which apparently had been
bitten by rat*.
A coroner's physician, however, *ald that one-year-old Shvon
Janl* Ivey suffocated. She apparently had tried to squirm away
from the rata, and wedged her head between the mattress and bed
frame while doing so.
Her father, Edward Ivey, >5. returned from Madison, Ala,, and
found two other children unharmed In their bed*.
The mother, Susie Mae. 26, left labor Day to be with her seriously
ill mother In Pulaski, Tenn., police said.
Authorities said there wer* muttple rodent bite*, "both old and
fresh,” indicating that death did not halt the rats.
while.
There was quite a lot of noise. curd!ity^dthendscte°neP*rt0nn
Elder Nixon
Dies Quietly
wm
Services Today For
Negroes Crack Racial Barrier in Tennessee Jf1 ^Tnce
Jirfin Reddy did have a flintlock sion he decided he put too much.
RAY FERGUSON having enough ?Jle.!5'Ut Wedne!,day h* no ion^er Ready said the noise made by
£•£kSxSS « S Z& ™ ™
S tofkme in the big* eon’flag-a- j*lnaily belonged to Sgt, Walter
tion l"ftto cSl Siftphin, War- ^mer of Company E, Baytown’s
ren Edwards, B. B. Williams. Sue Guard unit. Ready
^ SUrw jdS^BSd .today to have .
Ureas ... Ske< ter Orton looking at ~ . cracked the racial barrier at Clin- segregated bus systems in Mont- vtunsfioiH classes to an all-Nerro *5 waf ure
the ’football schedule .. . Harold TtfLw-t E r.. hljrh ton High School but their counter- gomery, Ala,, and Tallahassee, M® f f rTwl ,*, !! 1,uck)r snc* he ST'eme 9°urt
Barclay, Jackie Parkinson, snd . Tb*„™t * _W».K90?1 parts ln other tense .Southern Fla. 8ch00‘ in Fort Worth- acUn8 un‘ Jered 1.........“
Buggar name* (r^l 1 e severri rime* 'w*«’rla*** M* SxU ema \ Wt'H fij*. riegrwr ■ rel^y Sphools at
Ass,«Mi':-v!iww-,*«pr-tanbaiishsaA,extra *6ta«fck-.4^TW«wvwwte^*'- _even a Imutmty-.6fc$sii^»i'fiHite««B». to prevent vloiencg, ” ’
uie kine In It but after the exolo- Armed National Guardsmen ton, others had failed to enter all- Fort Worth, Itself, was the cen- 7,' y h „„.m„ted
pacing in it, but after the expio 0lnton.s N(lgrw?s safe whlu, schoolg elsewhere in the ter of an integration controversy. NejrrCKS who at,*mpted
entry into Clinton's classrooms South and Southwest. a crowd of young white men and
D..i IIm A- CLisi lias wh*r® m*y stlldleJ peacefully At Mansfield, Tex., 18 miles women Tuesday night surrounded
lUl UD Ur JlllIT UD> Tuesd*y following a weekend of southeast of Fort Worth, Negroes the house of Lloyd G. Austin, a
' wr " wr pro-segregation demonstrations. abandoned their fight to attend Negro who moved into a white
Tell* D*ImIs Nine of the 12 Negroes who en- classes at the high school there, neighborhood last Saturday, and
i/uillvfl I ellS ndlDn f«red the previously all-white Clin- despite a U.S. Supreme Court or- threatened to bomb his home,
* ■ ton school eight days ago found der supporting their stand. About 25 to 80 p
ed Austin’s home.
” on, h "«« "P- Hith.M M. Nixon, dl,d „M,
Nixon,
Tuesday night from a painful 111-
No one screamed in our car. (rations
They were all asleep and awoke He declared an emergency and
liSiS w“d*r'’‘* *“•”*“ n~> «, «,t
(See RIDE-Page Three) _ who had been at bis bedside con-
* — - — stantly, : was holding his hand
when the elder Nixon, 77, slipped ’’
into death from a coma.
The vice president, who also
was at hi* father's bedside along
CLINTON, Tenn. (UP) -Negro main, borrowing a boycott tactic * Texas Rangers escorted Ne- stitutlon at Morganfield near Stur- was stricken Aug. 22 with a rup-
idents appeared today to have Negroes used successfully against g^* Who had planned to attend X1?- - - - - ......... ’ -,ured abdominal arterv. Later
It was the first incident in Ken- f°” f* offlcieting.
2S* htmoSginT^
If they play th# World Series
in Milwaukee, and Sam Paine can
wheedle a ticket or two from some,
body, He’ll be there for the first
pitch ... Joe Smith of Highlands
can’t get very excited about all
of this buriness about is there
realty a Joe Smith..., Speaking of
Highlands and environs, did you
ever see anything quite as fancy
a* the overpass, the bridge en-
trance and the new entrance to
Highlands as a result of the com-
pletion of Highway 73. You 11 governor s runoff,
have to admit that ol'Four Comers Yarborough conceded the race
Sin t what ahe used to he ... But, to Daniel Tuesday by saying he
lor that matter, wha is? did not intend to contest the «
Kx-Gander Clso Proctor leaving tion
VAMbtaadap tot Baylor. thee
mpted to atv
white schools
By UNITED PRESS
Sen. Price Daniel
called upon Ralph Yarborough to
produce facts If he knows of vot-
ing irregular!tie* in the
migh
of 1
Aug.
elec-
ton school eight days ago found der supporting their stand,
conditions unpleasant, but no NAACP Attorney L., Clifford Da
physical action was taken against yj* announced late Tuesday his Another mob. numUbring about
them by white student*. organization was postponing It* ef- 500 white townspeople, converged
A number of the white pupils fort to integrate the Mansfield at the all-white high school in
left the school after the Negroes school where mobs, threatening to 8turgi*. Ky., Tuesday and barred
arrived and shouted they would lynch, gathered last Friday and nine Negro students from enter-
not return until segregation is re- Tuesday. ing for first-day classes,
stored. "We have concluded we are not The Negroes left after seel
School teachers feared the white going to try to enroll those stu- the crowd at the school and th:
tend classes In four
at Knoxville went back to local
Negro schools Tuesday after they
were politely refused admittance.
There were no demonstrations
in Knoxville but the Negroes were
. ^ ___ told they could not enter white
About 25 to 30 policemen guard- SCMooIfl there until the board of
education changes Its WHcy...... Sm)th ot Denveri Co, and H(,r.
Here in Clinton, state Adjutant ^ t B om]ih of qan Antonio- 0 (I„/nttlla Ruotol°-
Too Wom-v cold ho was “*rt . •“mlln of o«n Antonio, jtbi aeents askod
Bedalla, Mo. She was * member
of the Stewart Heights Baptist
church,
Burial was to be In Cedarcrest
cemetery. Pallbearer* were Tracey
L: Van Burkieo, Lt. J. E. Stone,
Harry Mullins, Horace Jenklna, x. ,1,nc,,t „ ,, „
Sidney Guest and Uoaard Jen-
Survivor, are two sons, Ben S? «£» W **.*«»*
Rooming Houses Checked
For Lead In Kidnaping
leads In the kidnaping of 6-week-
which left Daniel t,84$ -votes students would stay away from dents under the dmuuatancea at of them enrolled late Tuesday at
‘ ‘ “ .....
eing
hree
•shoal as tong aa tha Nagroaa re- thia time," Daria mid.
Dunbar High ichool, a Negra to- hrought
General Joe Henry said he was
exnectlng no more trouble.
Henry, who brought 706 Nation-
al Guardsmen to this hot-spot to
help keep law and order follow-
ing a near riot here Saturday
{ht, said he was “wall plessed’’
th* results Ms troops had
night,
with
r. . ,, _ , FBI agents askeil customers at
three brothers, George Van Burk- the store where the lnffint was
B°rkfeo Uof* Adair ' Ok'l'^^obe*" l<i,lnaPe^ ,0 t,elP with any informa-
P. Van Burkieo of Altus, Okla.; Police officials appeared increas-
three grandchildren: a stepson, ]ngty pessimistic a b 0U t their
Bert Trie* of La Porte; a step- chances of finding the child of Mr..
daughter, Mrs. Guy Jenklna o< and Mrs. Stephen Rutolo, 83-year-
Baytown. old Marina Corps veteran.
t
FOOD
1600 N. M.
Specials For
1 WE RESERVE THE Rl
CAMELLIA
LIGHT CRUST
FLOUR
7rw^wf^r,
PUFFIN
BISCUITS
CUT RITE
WAXPAPI
KRAFT'S SALAD DRES
Miracle W
FRESH KENTUCKY
r|
BEANS
Medium Size California
orange:
U. S. No. I Long White C
POTATO!
Large
CELERY
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 300, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1956, newspaper, September 5, 1956; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043777/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.