The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 296, Ed. 1 Monday, August 5, 1963 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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■’ ' '
I Hank Aaron and
:hing of Bob Hend-
isy for Milwaukee
Mets In the first
Hied for two runs
le 11th on a single
, a .double by Jes-
ie Hicks’ run-pro-
ind Duke Carmel’s
in the nightcap,
saved it with a fine
off Del Crandall’s
ed Hank Aaron off
i game.
Dm Sub Invites
A. J. ODOM
604 E. Lobit
To The Brunson Theater. This coupon
is good througn Ail*. 0.
for two tickets when presented
.-------at the Brunson box office.
The movie now showing is
“SUMMER MAGIC”
Slip Siurtmmt §mt
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAI
Swing BAY-TEX—Tho Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
VOL. 40 NO- 296
TELEPHONE NUMBERr 582-8302
-BULLETINS-
Monday, Auguif 5, 1963
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Ten Conti Per Copy
HOUSTON
rr-
0 Spongier If
) Runnels 2b
5 Goss cf
) Aspro'ntt
03 0
00 0
,. . ,.... 8b 4 0 0 0
I Warwick rf 3 12 1
i Staub lb 3 0 0 0
HBB-* W
I Bateman-.t 3 0 0 3
I Lillis SS 4 0 1 0
i Farrell p 311 0
Totals It 416 3
or Sherry In Ith.
........000 100 000—]
........020 010 10X—«
. Los Anjeles 24-10,
• Runnels. Lillis and
and Fairly; Gilliam
Los Angeles 5, Hous-
iler. 3B— Moon. HR
> H R ERBB SO
9 4 4 3 2
10 0 11
0 0 0 0 0
6 1 1 13
I 7th.
lie (Bateman). U—
ir, Barllck. T—1 ;5S.
ilLE
STERING
of Materials
IM SHOP
Inventay
LE
ROUSTON (8p)—Harris Coun-
ty Commissioner W. Kyle Chap-
man of Precinct 1 proposed to
the court Monday that It give
consideration to placing a bond
issue on the Nov. I state consti-
tutional amendment ballot to.
correct crowded condition* at
the county Jail and to establish
a corrective farm. He aim sug-
gested that the court Invite
leading citizens of Houston and
Harris County to meet with it
and discuss the problems. Chap-
man said the election would
not cost the taxpayers any more
because of the state requirement
that the constitutional amend-
ments he voted on. Commission-
er V. V. Ramsey said the court
agreed unanimously with Chap,
man’s proposal. ‘T am willing
to make the study and if we de-
cide to go the route proposed by
Chapman, we wiB pot a lot of
planning Into the project,” Ram-
sey said.
WASHINGTON (Spy - The
House Monday passed a Mil au-
thorizing the U.S. Corp, of Amy
Engineers to conduct a flood
control and navigation survey of
Cedar Bayou Stream. The sur-
vey request was made six weeks
ago by Congressman Albert
Thomas of Houston, and prob-
ably will bo conducted by the
engineers’ Galveston District e!•
flee, according to aa announce-
ment shortly before noon Mon-
day by Congressman Thoms ,
who expressed hope the bill
would be passed by the senate.
Sun Spots
Turners Due Home
MR. AND MRS. Buck Turner of
Baytown, who have been *
fsawsstess
days in
le ill, but
ete their
|
be home Tuesday. The Turners
were delayed about four c
tAustralia when he became
were later able to complete
tour.
i -
Boy Scout District
C. C. POOL, newly elected district
chairman of the East Harris Boy
Scout District, will preside for the
first tima at a meeting at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Citizens National
Bank. All members of the dis-
ina b p.:
Walter Rundell announced. Hie
2 first pre - registration for the tall
semester will be held from 1 to 4
INGS!
ER
:RAMES
Ilhams
4PANY
Ph. 582-8268
Water Ski Event
BETH STANDLEY of Channel-
view took a first place in girls’
competition at a Houston Water
Ski Association event Sunday in
Austin. A Lee College student this
summer, she -win enroll this fall
at the University of Houston. -*=-«
Civil Wor Ploy
MR. AND MRS. W. Woodell of
Baytown were among those who
saw the nation’s first Civil War
musical, “Honey in the Rock/* at
Cliffside Amphitheater in Grand-
College Tests
LEE COLLEGE will give the
School Tax Value
Plan To Be Aired
MEMORY OF PIG
p.m. Thursday. Students must
have permits to register. .
Rotary Club
JACK WALKER, corresponding
secretary and past president of
the Bayshore Rod, Reel and Gun
Club, Will speak at noon Wednes-
dav at the Baytown Rotary Club
nwut •ptwjptxis 1VI U1C Oil
season which opens Aug. 15.
4-H Clubs ~
THE ANNUAL 4-H Club district
review by clothing demonstrators
from Harris County will be held
at 2 p,m. Thursday in the Sharps-
town shopping center mall. Win-
ners will take part in the state 4-H
Club fair in Dallas Oct. 5.
view State Park near Beckley, W.
Va. They saw the July II perform- g
ance.
Rev. Newsom
THE REV. DALE Newsum
Order Of The Arrow
THE EAST’ HARRIS Boy Scout
District Order of the'Arrow meet-
ing will bg held at 2p.m. Sunday
at the Grace Methodist Church
Scout House,
illfold Found
A BILLFOLD found Sunday at
Roseland Park has been turned
of over to the Baytowh Police De-
A NEW, PAVED driveway off Highway 148
east of Anna, III., leads to the grave of King
Nepture, patriotic pig that helped raise $19
million in war bond auction* during World
War II. Navy Chief Petty Of fleer Don Ungle,
of Anna, who helped launch the pig on ita
bond telling career to finance the battleship
Illinois, his daughter Lisa (center), and Jane
Michel are reading the inscription on the
marker.
Chrik Church Unity in Houston partment by Mrs. J. E. Prewitt
will lecture on ‘‘The Technique, of of 1300 Olive. The bllifoid cdrltain-
.
M:
SK
Prayer” at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Holiday Inn. A dinner will be
served Trom 6:30 to 8 p.m.
First Meeting Sot
MATER DEI Court, Catholic
Daughters of America, will not
foeet Monday as previously
.planned, Mrs. Charles O’Connell,
grand regent, announced. The
first meetingof the dub year will
be Aug. 26.
Humble Club Donee
:AN'HGMBLE*Ctub dafice is Slat-
ed for 9 p.m. Saturday at the
Knights of Columbus Hall at 2600
ed some money and identification
of Gregory Helltoghausen of 1101
S. Eric, Monahans.
Work Plans
WORK PLANS for construction of
a $900,000 improvement program
for La Porte High School will be
released By the architects, White,
Engberg and Associates. The work
includes 30 new classrooms, new
girls: gymnasium and air condi-
tioning of all existing facilities.
Lions Club
H. M. BEACHELL,
Shell Strike
End Awaits
Workers' OK
HOUSTON (Sp) - The year-old
Shell Oil Co. Strike appeared at
end today, but-toeaetttamant «UH •
must be submitted to workers for
final approval.
Settlement of the strike, one of
the longest in the industry, came
Sunday after 27 hours of continu-
ous negotiation.
About 2,200 members of the Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers
Union will vote on'ratification at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Pasa-
dena union hall.
Terms were not disclosed by
William Simkin, national director
of the Federal Mediation Service,
who disclosed the settlement. He
said the details would be divulged
when union members have a
chance to pass on them.
The Houston Post reported a
near draw on the issue of the
■—' s-
LOADED question
• The Army I* scrapping its
experimental program for rotat-
ing battle-group size outfit* on
six-month tours of duty In Eu-
rope. ......-4* - r-.......-
• Sen. Jacob K. davits, -R-
N.Y., says 8en*. Thomas Kuchel
of California, Clifford I*. Case
of New Jersey and John Sher-
man Cooper of Kentucky should
be considered as potential corn-
convention.
• Russia and Red China are
using the airwaves to step up
the war of words over their
Ideological differences, U.8. of-
ficial* report, and the Voice of
America appear* to be a bene-
ficiary of the split in the Com-
munist camp.
to outside firms.
The Post said the formula, urn
der which construction and main-
tenance work 'was let out More,
would be essentially the same un-
der the proposed agreement.
On manpower, the Post learned
that" if work is resumed as a >
suit of this agreement, the union
work force will be about 1,950,
or 250 fewer men than were em-
ployed before the strike.
Shell had said earlier that it
would lay off almost 400 men
when work was resumed.
The Post also was told that the
agreement calls for a genera 5
per cent wage increase.. Shell wid
it was paying an average of $3.02
an hour before the strike.
The marathon strike at two Baytown City Council Thursday
SMI plants in Deer Park began night Will consider passage of an
IMNMNNMMMMHflMi
• Syrian Prime Minister Sal-
ah Bltar announces formation of
hi* third cabinet tn five montha.
• Three explosions peppered
the heart of Botzana, Italy, Just
24 hour* after terrorist* In the
troubled Italian South Tyrol
dropped a bomb down a police
barracks chimney and gravely
Injured two prisoners.
• The leader, of Malaya, In-
1 the Philippines end
pledge to work together for
warn and progross in Southeast
• In Saigon a Buddhist monk
in his early twentle, burn to
death in the second fiery sui-
cide protesting alleged religious
persecution by President Ngo
Dinh. Diem’s government In
South Viet Nam.
Professional
Appraisers
Suggested
School trustees are expected to
hear a recommendation Monday
night from “the board of eqaliza-
tion that .professional. .«pyam.
be employed to study industrial,
utility, and oil production values
within the district.
The school board will meet at
7:30 p.m. in the district admin-
istration building with two items
on the agenda: Preliminary stu-
dies of the 1963 - 64 school bud-
get. and the board of equalization
report. 1
When the board was appointed
last May, members were asked to
study past methods of evaluating
industrial property, business prop-
erty, land and other real estate.
In the past, boards of equaliza-
pn have concentrat
and improvements. In most in-
for taxation and in a vast majority
of the eases, they were not
changed.
It was learned Monday that the
board of equalization will recom-
mend employment of a profession-
al appraisal firm to take a look at
these industrial values.
Council To Study
Fowl Ordinance „
last Aug. 18. Supervisory person-
nel kept both plants operating.
Union representatives would, not
predict how the membership
would vote. Local union president
Don Wilkers said 200 men gath-
ered at the union hall Sunday and
A STATE POLICEMAN looks over an over-
turned tractor-trailer rig in a field near
Ocean City, Md. The 62-foot vehicle was de-
STEEL 'PLANTED'
livering IS ton* of ateel rod* • to a highway of, going hack to work,
project. The driver escaped injury. (online »mmn the men
ordinance regulating the keeping of
fowls in the city-
The ordinance was recommend-
ed by the city health department,
which reported to ihe council af-
ter a study of conditions that rais- , - 7 _----,
ing fowls has created and is ere- raising or keeping any si
t — _ ___la.______Ji*2 ____’■ uatton all FivwJ
same shall not at' any time be-
come insanitary or. offensive to
...------------, an employe
of the Texas A&M Rice Pasture
Lee College is one of 16 areas
Experiment Station at Beautoont, fc the United States selected for
^ b™ Xd » iSEK
the Tower. Albert Nelson will pre-rr—*— “----
sent the program.
Begin Aug. 12, Sept. 9
LCJob Training Courses Scheduled
By WANDA ORTON
Dallas Meeting
JOHN R. GUEMPLE, director of
non - academic courses at Lee C*ona n:..
College, is in Dallas attending a c ”
state meeting of vocational
school directors.
-* . * * *
Weather And Tides
PARTLY CLOUDY and hot
through Tuesday with widely
scattered showers in the after-
noon. Temperature range ex-
pected Monday, 75-96. Ihe high
in Baytown Sunday was 96, and
low Monday morning, 78.
GALVESTON TIDES Tuesday
will be high at 6:67 a.m. and
3:16 p.m., low at 11:24 a.m. and
16:46 p.m.
ArouhdL,
iTTowh;
FUNERAL RITES will be held at
2 p.m. Tuesday at the Tanner Fu-
neral Home in Iowa Park, Tex.,
for John S. Stone, father of Virgil
Baytown. A resident of Holiday,
Tex., he died Sunday. Burial
will be in Holiday.
Houston Play
WEYMANH.D. Walker and Dav-
id C.-Welch II will produce the
play, wThe Cantilevered Terrace,”
by William Archibald. Sept. 4 at
the Houston Theater Center. The
cast will include Pauline Hecht,
Larry Wayne, Tom Boyd, Mel
Pennington, Odessa Sayles and
Nita Elliott, Pal Stephenson will
direct the ptay.
Troop 883
BOY SCOUT Troop 883, sponsored
by the Wooster Volunteer Fire De-
Development
Training Program, Homer Jack-
son, district director of the Tex-
as Employment Commission, an-
nounced. —
A course in auto mechanics ior
men from 16 to 22 years of hge
will be held for a year beginning
Aug. 12. A stenography course will
begin Sept. 9 for 22 weeks for
lent position to do a superior job mine their
in both areas.”
The auto mechanics course is
the second manpower develop-
ment mechanics course to be of-
fered by Lee College. The first
one began earlier this summer
and includes 20 men in all age
ptitudes,. Dean Run-
dell said. The students are per-
sons who are registered (p the
unemployment rolls of the Em-
down there ti real «o«l," «« J***?,lTOSti,',T**
miriitvhaPK^when Tu'Laynigto
™me7” " y g p-m. Thursday at city hall:
Principal issues were work ttofiijition of terms used in this
signmenls, seniority, employment oroinancc: - :
security and contract work inside FOWLS: Term “fowls” as
the , grounds of the two plants, .hereto used shall include Jhe sin-.
^Wageswere„a secondary, issue,. gular.aiKi.theuse.QfJ)ejditgUll8r.
both sides said The company shall include the plural, and shall
had offered a 5 per cent increase mean any member of the bird
during the first months of the family— chickens, turkeys, guin-
negotiations, eas, geese, ducks, pea -fowls,
Five strikes have been ealled at pheasants, partridges, etc,, or any
Shell’s refinery and chemical other bird or fowl, except para-
ranges. The new course starting
Aug. 12 is specifically designed
for the younger men and will help
oblem of ftigh ’ '
students to the same age range (ndude 20 men and the stenogra-
from 16 to 22. phy course will have 30 students.
*'“• **—J— Ttese students are sent by the
se:
been __________ _____ _______
and we feel we are in an excei-
tp see what can be done toward
the matter of training ' youth,
u neip Some Of those m the courses' will
solve the problem of high school hfe high school degrees and
rimn-nufc * some VVI“not*
Instructors for the mechanics
and stenography rourses will be
recommended Monday night at the
school board meeting, Rundell
said.-- •'
The auto mechanii'S course will
be held from 1 to 7 p.m. five days
“ week at a location behind the
ployment Commission.
This special youth project at Lee_______ ___________ ... r _ .. .
College is the only one in Texas, plant since the units went into op- keets, canaries or similar siize
Jackson said. “It is a pilot study eration. Ihe current strike, which birds living in the cpnfincs^of the
Texas Employment Commission
after being carefully screened
They are given tests to deter-
partment, left Sunday for Camp live to tell his story to Senate in-
Strake, The troop camped out ear- vesbgators.
Government Confident
Top Crime Figure Safe
WASHINGTON (AP)-The gov- at the hub of organized U.S. crime
' is confident that an un- has been supported for many
figure it says has given years by the Federal Bureau of
gents a detailed descrip- Narcotics. Valachi providod a
blueprint of the “Cosa Nostra”—
literally meaning "Our Thing”
agents a detailed descrip-
of the dominant crime organi-
to the United States will
lier this summer at El Rancho
Ctoia near Wimberly. W. H. (Bill)
Reber Jr. is scoutmaster.
To Amarillo
MR. AND MRS. Giyrrn Oakes va- bai
cationmg in Wyommg, visited a
Baptist church to Laramie recent-
ly and thought they had seen the
CAPT. GILBERT Martinez, hus-
nd of the forme “ " ‘
signed to Amarillo Air Force Base.
He graduated from the U.S. Air
preacher^ somewhere_ brfwe. It Force Squadron Officer School at
the Air University in Maxwell Air hgations subcommittee when
was the Rev. Bruce Coltharp, for-
mer Baytonian, leading the serv-
■ ice.
Noah T. Smith, 1906 Hartt Drive,
is recovering from surgery to
Room 532 at Hermann Hospital to
Houston.
Ed Ferguson and Richard Carr,
both of Explorer Post 562, enjoy
a canoeing trip in the Tall Tim-
bers area of Camp Shake. Robert
Shelton, Troop 562 member, tries
his hand at fishing toihe Tall Um-
bo's Area.
Mrs. O. B) Templin of 706 W.
Cleveland is ihe lucky Mdhday
morning shopper — and she's $10
in her
-Roy Baker welcomed as a new
'GuStalt 1^’t^ln^infto
eluded Jeff Fleming of Pasadena;
Herman Singletary and Robert
Force Base, Ala.
Story Hour
SERVICE LEAGUE women will
be to charge of the story hour at
In a secret hideout FBI agents
are guarding Joseph Valachi, > a
60-year-old New Yorker once fair-
the terror-ridden “Cosa Nestra”
and put the finger on some top
racketeers already under investe
gation.
Valachi hag a date with Sen.
John L. McClellan’s Senate Inves-
resumes its inquiry into illegal
narcotics traffic.
The McClellan" panel began its
probe of narcotics three years
ago, then turned to the Billie Sol
aataB«s!£3S£t
Mantua,
Lyons,
E. W.
through nine are invited.
Officer Tests
EXAMINATIONS for throe dis-
trict parole offi<pqS4rom the Hous-
ton-Galvestotf area will be con-
ducted at 9 a.m. Wednesday to
toe conference room of the Gal-
veston Chamber of Commerce, 315
Tremont.
THE STUDENT National Educa-
tion Association (Future Teach-
ers) of Lee College will sponsor
a pie • coffee sale Thursday. Pies to local «_________
be bought by the slice dr Guthraan, Justice
of its hearings, but. McClellan, an
Arkansas Democrat, said Sunday
he expects Valachi to be a wit-
ness. , - _ -(
The government considers Vala-
ehi’s account of crime in America’
—including an inside view of the
celebrated November 1*7 mob-
sters convention at Apalachin,
N.Y. - an important intelligence
His story has been corroborated finger of i
sometimes called the syndicate— 1 Pi
and confirmation that such an or- a week.
Auto Ranch on Alexander Drive. 1962-63 (through Sunday; — 351
but the chemical plant was not dividual, firm, partnership, asso-
built until just before World War ci; tion, corporation, club, society,
II to 1941. * co-operative trust, or political sub-
Here are the dates and diira- division,
lions of the five strikes at the two ;
plants: RUNNING AT LARGE: It shall
It is the same location of the auto
mechanics already in session.
The stenography, course will be
held from 9 am. to 5 p.m. five
days, a week in the Lee College
business education department,
The students will have short;
hand for seven hours a week; typ-
ing for seven hours a week: cal-
culating machines for five hours
a week; business communications
for three hours a weds; office
practice for three hours a week;
and business math for five hours
began Aug. 18 and went into its owners’ residence,
351st day Sunday, has outstripped PERSON: Word “person" as
the others in duration. herein used shall-Include both the
Shell's Deer Park Refinery first singular and, the plural, and shall
began operations in October 1929, mean and Include any person, in-
1947
days.
Trinity Bay
Crowded By
Shrimpers ~
ganization of criminals exists,
The story of the Valachi break-
through appeared Sunday to a
copyrighted story to the;,WM JRj
ton Star. The Justice Department
confirmed the essentials, h
KSXKs SSisI
the Texas Education Agency. ^ extra help from the remainder
Jackson said there is now a need 0f Region 4. * jacent to the
New Clash Arises
In North Korea
■ m
U.S. FIRST CAVALRY DIVI-
SION FRONT, Korea (AP)-Thir-
tern American soldiers fought off
seven grenade-hurling North Ko-
rean raiders today in the longest
clash to right days of fresh ac-
tion on the Korean front.
three Americans suffered
scratches from grenade fragments
in the two-hour battle in premiawn
darkness. There were no known
Communist casualties.
The North Koreans used whis-
tles like pheasant calls to guide
(Stir attack. They struck at an
but those
eligible for this.
The federal government pays for
the equipment and materials and
tlie instructors’ eateries, Jackson
said. ’ ; .
Lee'College recently was com-
mended by the Southern Associa-
tion "Of Colleges and Universities
Visiting GMitmktee tor'its increas-
ovuiucs aim-um;/a v/z ez«.
City of Baytown, or on the pre-
mises of any person residing ad-
,.,_v _____ _ J Region 4. Jacent to- the place or premises]
for -760 “additional 'Stenographers Region 4 extendsicoastwide pm' where such fowl* a^e being raised
and 500 auto mechanics in the Poet Laviu;,') to Port Arthur. or kept. *•, >
“jars* ■. •’***«» «*»»».-**
net T^ram is si^Sit be- ^th the heXon per person, or ENCLOSURE: It shall be toe duty I
cause it could pave toe way for four quarts maximum per boat, of every person raising or hare
Job training of young people on This Is the allowable with a reg- boring any such fowls tp keep thei
a much larger scale to the areas tilar fishing license. , enclosure heremabwe referred to
where there are manpower short- Bay bait dealers are-permitted in a sanitary conditMn, so that|
ages. 150 pounds'maximum on the boat,
Those from 19 Jo 22 in toe two in the trawl, or at home.
courses can receive $15 a week After toe season opens Aug, 15,
16 through 18 are not the poundage limit will be lifted,
J>y other sources and investiga- that:waste bloody battle ground
tions, and information he gave m the “
federal agents has been passed on
to local authorities, Edwin O.
whole at Les Collego or
the K- public
faatarta. Tha
TimmeM
information director said.
1950-%Korean War.
The outpost was about 1.666
yards east of where a Communist
patrol ambushed (hree
to a jeep iajt week,
Scotty Smith,- Mart Sumhine C«ntar Waahataria. Th« theory ri a secret zocety and wounding the third.
... new vocational courses
have been added in tfie past two *
years by Lee College. John R.
Guempie, director of noiKacadem-
ic courses at Lee College; tost fail
H made an extensive survey as*lo----- „„ __l I
triLUriR two the feasibility of haring a lull time normal number of tickets were
vocational-technical achooL written. • • •
adjacent neighbors or to the puh-
SANITARY CONDITION OF
FEED AND STORAGE BINS: It
shall be (he duty of every person
rich fov
attog unsanitary conditions con-^ cause all food provided there-
........ (See ORDINANCE. Page 2)
Hurricane
Fades Into
Showers
MIAMI, Ft a. (AP) — Hurricane
Arlcno has disintegrated into
band rof showers.
Dr, Joe T. Horeczy said Monday
it is not likely that such a firm
would be employed Monday night,
but he expects a motion to study
possible selection of an appraiser.
The equalization board is com*
posed of Dr. Henry Singleton,
chairman; Boyd - Hifl, Donald
Lang, Luke Miller, and Truman
Cox. .None has served on the board
previously.
to a statement to the board test
May, 27, Horeczy said: .
"Recently several members of
toe school board have expressed
their desire that we consider a
modification of our method and
fowls purposes for appointment of the
equalization board who have
not served our district in recent
years, whenever^ this is. possible.
"Ihe theory behind this is that
new people could take a more ob-
jective look at our methods of op-
eration and make some recom-
mendations to the school board for
future actions. I have no disagree-
ment with this suggestion if the
school hoard wiil first diseuss its
philosophy of r-equalization and
then discuss with the appointed
equalization board this same phi-
losophy and "charge tom with ex-
ecution,” Dr. Horeczy said.
The season’s ” first hurricane,
which built up winds ranging to
100.. mrles pep. hour,
,er rapidly Sunday
hed the '
lost pow-
, . s it ap-
proached the Leeward Islands of
Guadeloupe and Antigua,
Gordon Dunn, chief storm fore-
caster a! Miami, explained that
pressure at the 30,000 to 40,000.
foot level killed Arlene;
The Weather Bureau said to its
t
“For sample, members of the
school board may wish for the
equalization board to make a
study of the past methods of
evaluating industrial^ «o®erty,
business property, tend and other
real estate,,. The equalization
board might find that toe past
method of making these apprai-
sals is entirely satisfactory and
needs no modification.
'On toe other hand, they might
find some changes of procedure
in some areas are desirable. It
would be expected tha't the equali-
zation board would make such
any such fowls to run at targe up-
on the public streets, avenues or
alleys o£ the City'of Baytown., or
to wilfully permit such' fowls to
run at large upon the premises
owned or to possession of or un-
der toe control of any other per-
son to the City of Baytown.
ENCLOSURE REQUIRED: It
Ihe combination of a bumper shall be the duty of every person
crop of shrimp and new shrimp rising, keeping or harboring any
regulations made Trinity Bay a fowls, whether owned by such per-
........ son or under the control of such
person,“do keep the same to a
Ml Family Schooling
and the limit on short fishermen ift
wtil rochangedfroto two q™rts lOVeTefl 40-1^ SpOfl
to 100 pounds per day.
Scores of fishing boats, shrimp , Artie K. AfcKay, reading about
trawls and game wardens caused the F. M. Busch family having
final advisory On the .storm that
scattered showers were associated
with the area and highest winds
were not expected to exceed 25 to
30 m,p.h.
Small craft warnings flew along recommendations the .school
the southeast Florida coast from boi,rd ,(,r lheir '^deration.
t41........U 4L. „ T.rt___:rr_____ X\.. 1
Miami through the Florida Keys
as an easteriy, wave moved onto
the coast.
The easterly wave, with expec-
Dr. Iioreczy’s recommendation
was approved unanimously and
the committee agreed to meet
with Tax Assessor - Collector
ted top winds of 35 m.p.h. in brief George Bennett as soon as possi-
squalls, was not associated with] We and recommend appointees in
Arlene, which was more than
1,200 miles away.
order that the work may be start-
ed at toe earliest possible date.
. .................... . Cove, entered* school in 1909. Her!
than gam4. A1 ilury, information youngest sister Nova, how Sirs,
education officer ' of Region 4 Ben Bonner of Cove, graduated in
said, however, that for the most 1919. “Forty years is a long time
part only regular wardens were for a mother to have her own chil-
used and that no more than a dren .in school," McKay wrote,
* “Beth and Nova had-four
Thursday noon
is the deadline
for your questions to
The Baytown Sun’s
What’s The Answer
Column
In the Weekend Edition,
Sjr^ phbiterydur
X
questions to The Sun.
igAriiliaiai'*"
-it--. V’S
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 296, Ed. 1 Monday, August 5, 1963, newspaper, August 5, 1963; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1055236/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.