The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 286, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 30, 1961 Page: 1 of 8
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M-m
The Bey town Son Invitee
CECIL E. JOHNSON
>U Midway
te the Brannon Theater to aae
‘COME SEPTEMBER'
Th1» coupon Ik good for two tickets when
prevented at the Brunson box office.
1
5for Imfomnt §im
Serving BAY-TEX—-The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
YOUR HON
L
NEWSPAPER
VOL 42. NO. 286
TELEPHONE NUMBER: JU 2-8302
Wednesday, August 30, 1961
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
five Cents Per Copy
$290 TO $504 TEACHER PAY HIKES HERE
^Staffs'
Pay Raised 10%
m
SJC Enrolls 582
SAN JACINTO College reported
y. 582 students prepared proposed
schedules by Aug. 29 with 232 en-
'** rolled in day classes and 350 at
night. Included in the group were
^ 114 college transfer students,
» GOP Office Moved
g STATE HEADQUARTERS for the
Republican Party. of Texas will
*■'. move from its present location at
. 4019 Montrose Blvd., Houston, to
Suite 107-170, 2625 Richmond,
Houston. The telephone number,
JA 8-5548, has not been changed.
Colts Te Meet
THERE WILL BE a Baytown Colt
reorganization meeting at 7:30
p.m. Thursday in the squad room
of the Baytqjvn police station. All
members and prospective mem-
bers are urged to attend.
Pasadena Picnic
FORMER SAN Saba residents liv-
ing in the Baytown area are re-
minded that the San Saba picnic
will he held Sept 10 at the Me-
morial Building in Pasadena. JbE
* 1 .; •
Hobo Party
JUNIOR HIGH Students will have|
a hobo party at 7 p.m. Wednesday
at the Goose Creek Country dub.
Refreshments will include a hot
dofyxasfc Guests are to come fo
Spots I
Register Friday
REGISTRATION of students at the
Baytown Opportunity School will
be held from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Friday. Classes will start Tues-
(feyTsept. 5.
lee Cream Supper
GRACE METHODIST Church
Men’s Brotherhood will sponsor an
ice cream supper from 6 to 8
p.m. Sept. 6 in the Fellowship
Hall of the church. John R. Hick-
drson is chairman of the fund
raising committee for the men’s
group.
iATE
NEWS
WASHINGTON (AP)-A pow-
erful coalition of Republicans
and Southern Democrats today
voted to prevent House consid-
eration of the llillllallUNiion's
federal aid to education MIL
The move, which came quick-
ly after the House me( at noon,
apparently ended chances of
getting through at this session
the principle the administra-
tion badly wanted to establish
federal money for the construc-
tion of public school facilities.. ;
EAST GERMAN SWIMS
TO FREEDOM
BERLIN (AP) — An East German swam
to freedom today across the Teltow Canal
under a hall of bullets from Communist bor-
der guards. He climbed out on the west bank
of the canal unhurt
' West Berlin police said they heard bullets
whipping,into the canal, whose center marks
the sector border, about 6:46 a.m. Five min-
utes later the dripping man clambered up the
west bank to freedom* He wa» not immed-
iately identified.
During the past week. Communist troop*
have killed two men trying, to swim the 60
yards across the canal, which forms part of
the border in the divided «tty. Berliners now
call it the "Death CanaL":.
Police imported that Communist guards
elsewhere on the border flung-tear gas gre-
Mt « **
■
^ !**, J’
4 I * w»il|
''■MM
nades and fired water cannon Tuesday night
at about 60 persons gathered at Alexandrien-
strasse, in Kreuzberg in the American sector.
Shortly after midnight the Cpmmunists
opened up again when a group of Western
youths started catcalling. ..
About S a.m., a Communist water cannon
at TreptowerStrlsse suddenly let fly at a
police patrol car on the Western side. -
President Heinrich Luebke of West Ger-
many was in the city today for a look at the
situation. He arrived unexpectedly after
breaking off hla vacation.
After talking ’ with Mayor Willy Brandt,
Luebke planned to' visit the refugee recep-
tion center at Marienfelde and take a look
at the barbed wire and concrete barriers
erected by the- Reds along the border.
Segregation
Tumbles
Atlanta (AP) - Nine Negro
pupils Strolled into classes In
previously white Atlanta schoola
today, and watchful police nip-
ped quickly any hint of trouble.
Thus the traditional sejjaal
segregation barriers — In force
in Citirgia mid Atlanta tor 166
y«nr» — tumbled, reluctantly
perhaps, but quietly. Total pub-
lie school segregation now re-
mains in only three Deep South
states "-i- Alabama, Mississippi
and Snetfc CaroRiM. mm
Teacher annual pay increases
of from $290 to $504 per year —
above the salary schedule now in
effect — were voted here Tuesday
gteht in a spedaiytrustee meet-
A. beginning teacher, with no ex-
perience will now make $4,500
a year, A teacher at the maxi-
mum on the salary schedule with
a master’s degree Will get $6,665
annually,
Afl school district employes also
received a pay increase. “
'The irihgease will amount to six
per cent, and It was recommend-
Still $50,000 Out Of Balance
$22,970 More Slashed*,
■ V b MI 1
- ■ ‘tt
■ toe plan be-
cause Lee College teachers got
an overall JO per cent Increase.
He thought toe difference was too
Gentry pointed out that the col-
lege got an extra $75,000 appro-
priation from the state which ena-
bled a. higher pay hike to be
made. He said the-public school
and college funds could not be cik
mingled.
Opryshek also pointed out that
until recent years, Baytown teach-
ers had been paid more than Tn
other nearby districts. Now Bay-
town is about par with, other dis-
tricts, a fact which Opryshek said
is ‘ alarming." It means, he said,
Baytown will no longer be
to attract outstanding per-
sonnel with a higher galuy sched-
Dr. J. T. Horeczy’s motion fed '?*%•
the board’s executive committee
study toe district's position in
teacher salaries and-future in- |
creases was approved unanimous- ^
BAYTOWN Little ThHtMf%oaid
of directors will meet at 8 pm.
Wednesday in the home of Mrs.
ssmmm LAUNCHING time near
Bowling League
COFFEE BREAKERS
League will meet, at
Bowling
League will meet at 8:45 a.m.
Sept. 6 at Bay Lanes. Anyone in-
terested in joining a. team may
attend*
COA Forty
MATER DEI Court, Catholic
Daughters of America, will have
a patio party Sept. 16 at toe
home of Dr. and Mrs. Frank L.
Jaubert Jr., 201 Southwood Cir-
cle. Members and their husbands
will attend with proceeds going
to the State Court CDA Theologi-
cal Fluid.
Baytown City Council Tuesday quately
night chopped $22,970 off. toe 1961-1
aPWirai
me council veioea me proposa
Another budget session will
held at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday
night) at city hall. Tlie sessi
CAPT. C. W. ROBINSON, left, and William ui,m, m iwns nsounc Oil ana neunwg r, , - . , ml
A. Uvett, right, plan to launch their house Oe. employe (Baytown Refinery), lives at 505 W5 tow, imd
nearing eompietlon. They win launch it at Robinson it a Baytown pharmacist
ladle Houston. The men built the beat in i
UW yd* of Boblutaa!* -Aetna-** 566 Bark.____________ • ,
‘ »
Mayor A1 Clayton said he would
"like to see us have a place for
all the men we have before add-
ing more."
amrmm r?*-- liYfflF
62 budget,' but it is still nearly
$50,000 put of balance.
The council began the budget
studies two weeks ago with a rev-
enue deficiency of $108,000. City
Manager J. B. '
mended that water rates be in-
creased to. yield that amount, but
toe council vetoed toe proposal.
(to-
Bii Marian*
may last through Thursday or Fri-
•s
cover the fob at
Station
the time being." He of an incentive to save money in
» “efficiency with which “s# imu Amm.
department is being op-
after noting that it had
. nt some budget appro- eted."
priations last year.
LeFevre remarked that city de-
partment heads would be deprived (See BUDGET, Pag»,|$^-
their budgets “if you (the coun-
cil) cut them every time they
don't spend ail that was budg-
H»- - .r ■■ ;
Hansen disagreed, saying he be-
lieved department heads should
School Board Appoints
is the council's hope that it will
be able to keep toe budget within
anticipated revenue for toe next
m
PARTLY CLOUDY and
through Thursday with scattered
Thursday's Tides
GALVESTON TIDES Thursday
will be high at 1:44 a m. and 2:41
p.m., low at 7:24 a.m. and 8:19
a night of
freezing col
Mont Blanc.
Helicopters ferried the last sur-
ivors 'back
P
M
I
ysiRH
L. F. BEAIRD spends his last
vacation week working away from
. the job . ,. Eddie and Faye Gray
I move into a new home in Gray-
Alpine Accident Kills Six-
Coble Cor Rescue Completed
I ..... 1
CHAMONIX, France (AP) - Aiguille du Midi to the French-
Italian 1
completed remov-
al Of 81 sightseers,, who spent
hours bf terror in tiny cable cars
stalled high above an Alpine gla-
cier by a freak accident that
killed sixSMhers. • .'
'We’ve had an awful time’and
we’re glad it's ova1,” was the
comnfent of "a Briton numbed by
little leg room and
arid on the slopes
border.
The cutting of toe tow cable
sent three cars spinning down the
steep incline of one section of the
support cable. At a way station
at foe foot of foe incline the three
cars jumped the cable and
plunged 700 feet to foe glacier
below, killing a German family
of four in one car and an Italian
of father and son-in another,
third car was empty.
a
their Chamonix hotels.
Sane of them had spent nearly
20 hours suspended hundreds* of
feet in the air while workers slow-
ly wound in . the broken traction
cable. . ' -
The cable was snapped «t 1:10
p.m. Tuesday by a French air
glad when you go hack to work, this spectacular cable
Dub Ward doesn't know anything linking France with Italy
about the weather.
Steffani Stephenson busy at work said,
orce jet combat plane flying low
through the valley between Mont
Blanc and Aiguille du Midi,.
Most of the passengers seemed
too fatigued by the experience to
lave much to say, other than that
were glad to get bade alive.
A German family of four and
an Italian man and his son were
killed when their cabins fell hun-
dreds of feet after the traction
cable was snapped......,,, ;
They were the only casualties
among the 87 persons on the ca-
Raymond Jacquet, -prefect of the
Haute Savoie Department, said it
was a miracle more people were
not killed.
This testifies -to the effective-
of foe safety measures on
railway
across
move into a new home in bray- among me at persons on ine ca-
wood . . . Sadie Wilson takes a bleway. _ ....._
firm stand — in the street , . .
Leroy Walker undergoes a tonsil-
lectomy te a Houston hospital.
Katie King, the refinery “weath-
er gal,” is a patient at Baytown
Hospital. Note to Kjttie: We’ll be
glad v’ —
zips; $350 for building repairs,
r m ^ m,
Alps. A winch was hurried into prjation. From the public works
place and Alpine rescuers inched department fund, $4,000 Was cut
way out on the support for an asphalt spreader, and $330
cable to attach cables to pull the was cut from toe operations fund
cars to safety. Through the night te the sanitation and waste re-
foe cars were slowly puHed,4o mqval categoty.
foe line’s terminals or to
which Alpinists could .
'N2aecieT:UPantS ** r°PeS *° ** named to study the proposal rec-
glacier' -ommended that no action be tak-
en. Chairman of the
'
Ex-Refinery Mon Owner
Of Area Adhesive Plant
By JOHN MARSH . Sealent for canned goods
Harris County consumers, as 8*ue teat keeps labels fai
well as those across the nation, tee can.
probably have used a product
made by Dr. H. M. Singleton at
one time or another.
Dr. Singleton is the man be-
hind Industrial Chemical Special-
ties Co. plant in Highlands which
nwkfs adhesives
with the addition of 20 new
products, foe plant will be mar-
king almost 150 soon.
Dr. Singleton’s plant makes the
fastened to
ree Insurance Agentsi*
Texas Education Agency
tions. Pay increases to ‘
■clerical workers,
workers, plant operation ' and
maintenance employes, cafeteria
Gentry said $50,564 in local jimds --
will be used to addition to toe
182,701 from toe school support ^
ill te meeting the new schedule
for all employes. ■
‘•We do not fed that we have
ther. a minimum or maximum
toe fairest and best
Three Baytown insurance agents jers. They were recommended bylcifie assignment we have in be devised
were appointed Tuesday night toifoe school board's executive eonhjmind,'' Fuller said. “We believ available.’’ ^ ^ ^ .
» foe school district's lonfe- mittee composed of Board Predt they can work’toforihrf well with JHie $333,265 Wril te dirtributed
range insurance program. dent Roy Fuller. Dr. W, A. other agents andeomf Up with a thfs way .Teachers, $243,787; cler
The three ^pointees, known as'Bridges, Knox Beavers and Oil- pfogram for final SpproVul.by foe ^1, W,5JS; "transportatton, M.-
insurance agents of record, are ton Adams. school board before it is finally 869: operation of plant, $19,180;
Stede'M. McDonald, chairman, “It is our opinion that this instituted.’’ maintenance of plant, 511.466;
David Y. Arnett and Odena Child- group can best carry out the spe- McDonald, who was present at cafeteria, $9,085; and ridmmistra-
----foe meeting, accepted his appoint- tors'and supervisors, C3.3C0
>. ment and expressed hope the com- Under this schedule, those
could arrive at
Military Chiefs OK
Veep Brazil Leader
, age lor the least amount oi mon-
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
—Brazil’s toreeTnilitary mfoisters finish out Quadras’ uneXpired Dr. Joe T. Horeczy urged foe
today agreed to accept Joao Gou- five-year term. -Then in 1963, an
Closing
and Engineering
for canned goods and the roc^mraS^tofcityV tee
Bureau of Texas. '-:J
A can of frozen orange juice
starts as a flat sheet of metal, that the council give aome^thought
— — er fire
mm *rf‘ HHHH
SH Teachers Get
S480 Pay Raise
the hipest Alpine range," he
\ for her father . . . John Sweeny
js a recent visitor to Garner ...
Goose Gesford plans to attend
Sara Houston . . . Kent Spitzmil-
ler has a favor done . . . Molly
Bowers tells about a recent in-
terview . .. Dorothy Zycha, Mary
Lou Zycha, Pauline Svrcek and
Linda Lavergne seen at La Porto
I r .. Jimmy Hamilton makes ah
unexpected trip downtown yg,.
| Johnny Fulkerson prepares to re-
turn to Texas A&M . . . Mrs.
Judy Brand is seen window shop-
ping.
More than 100 Alpine guides,
French army mountain troops, po-
lice and cableway workers coop-
erated in foe rescue operation.
The lift runs along a three-inch
thick traction cable strung for
more than three miles from the
Sift «« 2SSHP& M33* ^ **
r ; teachers with a
coming smile te town, Jack Holt
says. ■ M
Roy Montgomery calls te to re-
port that nothing happened on-foe
police beat Tuesday night, except
that two drunks were hauled te
..XLB. lee wonders how much ment objectives, choosing the
I
pay Increase teachers got . . .
Jack Kimmons brings te a brand
new picture of himself ... Jim
Bryan says he went through ^
"sane of the most rural sections by
you ever saw” during his vacation
| in the Ozarks . . , I. V. Waljjrop
solicits sane renovation ’ "—
Investments Course
Slated At Lee College
A course te investments will be
Barbers Hill School Board Tues-
day night approved a $480-a-year
pay raisa for all teadiers. Other
school district employes, with ex-
ception of bus drivers; also got
a raise. These included adminis-
trative and clerical personnel. Bus
drivers are teachers and will
benefit from the raise given
them. /
School Supt. W.
ax ft&*«-
as are the ltes of the m.________ man ^ to help man the No.
in Mate, but foe
ija ss K i
firemen work 72 hours a’ week
used to wrap labels around cans
fast enough for them to be filled
at a rate of up to 400 a minute.
The economic worries of Dr.
Singleton involve producing a
faster drying adhesive. For exam-
ple:, an oil company was filling
quart oil cans at a rate of 50 to
60 a minute until Dr. Singleton
developed an adhesive which is
attractive and airtight. Now 300
cans a minute are handled.
With his product foe company
divided the processing time six
times and are saving V* cent on
each can.
Starting in 1948 when he left
Humble Oil and Refining Co.’s
of
and at times the department does
r-.PI-■PW® . . Goulart broke off
government source said. wait in Paris earlier
The decision by “' the three top left tty air for New
™ toe, M. (to Mfb •“ Sri S4- « *»*
Bryan. Members were Council-
man C. A. (Chris) Hansen tod
Couneilwoman Vefoia Aasley, City
Mamgw Lrftevre^l Fire Chief political leaders in port Goulart. The det
~ • - b^n Brasilia, it might end-the serious sacked the commandcrs.oL.an
crisis, which has been rocking the fantry division and a cavalry <
country since Janio Quadros re- ' •
signed as presidfent last Friday.
Previwisty the three military
leaders had opposed having Gou-
lart even as a figurehead presi-
dent.
The formula proposed by the.
lart and a prime minister would
«»•« ™ agents to present several plans to
electicm Would- be held on sebed1- order that the board may select
ule. ■ foe me they believe to be most
three-day beneficial.
er today and Jn addition to serving as in-
:w York, ap-surance advisors to toe board,
to Brazil. L McDonald, Miss Childers and Ar-
and a government source said it Actinir President Rainier! Maz- nett wil1 furnish an evaluation and
• • has been transmitted to zifo HLd a decree firing the
----the Inland capital. armi, commander in southern'* -
If acceptable- to Congress and Brazil -Who had pledged' to sup- to use ro-msurance and deviated
vvemment political leaders in port Goulart. The decree also rdte» ln cases where they
military- chiefs considerably dif-
fered from
tfona! Congress
i congressional
fered fmn the recommcjpMMM
presented to the national
earlier today by a
committee.
The important difference is that
Congress rather than the presi-
dent would choose the prime min-
ister.
The prime minister would have
The congressional committee
openly took issue with tee service
chiefs who fear that tee assum-
ing of foe presidency by Goulart
would threaten the security of the
trig subtropical country.
War Minister Odyiio Denys
went info urgent talks with hiS
top officers.
Registration
Thursday
•school supt. w. L. unaerwooa gavtown Refinery at the aee of
stftarjftiirtai
g pay. The , previous figure
was $4,101. Teachers with a mas-
ter’* degree wfo now be paid a
startling salary of $4,661. The pre-
vious figure was $4,181. /
The salary bracket for teachers
tee state under the new
Dr. Singleton has built hi* plant
from a snail installation near his
house to a 10-man operation. It is
located on i 3)4 acre tract next
to the Southern Canning plant in
Highlands.
Dr, Singleton calls his business
a service industry, in that it sup-
plies a vital product for tee final
production- of consumer goods.
He is constantly at work de-
veloping hew and better adhesives
and tackling mechanical prob-
lems brought to him by large in-
dustries.
Hale-Alkte law passed te the testa te example, -a paper comp.a;
special session of tee Texas Leg- ■Ml
duriity, investment,
m?LSeSr£te m?ih. Stature. He said the salary in-
ods of expansion and reeufation creases will cost the school dis-
the Security and
Exdlange trict about $12,700 • a - year
Commission *** / ten chcrs slonc.
m, r&S,. *
of Business Administration, the appraisal Jinn of
Kids, get your pencils sharp-
ened and ready — registration
for school begins Thursday.
All student# in the Baytown
school district are to report at
the hour registration (or thefr
classification begins.
Here’s the schedule:
All elemeuiary school students
will enroll at 8:30 to 11:40 a-m-
Thursday, Aug- 31.
Seventh grade students will by
report at their school at 8:30 to 0f
11:40 a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 31.
Eighth and ninth grade stu-
dents will report to their schools
at 13:45 to 3:30 p-m. Thursday,
Aug. 31.
High school seniors will report
at 18:45 to 3:30 p.m. Thursday,
Aug- 31.
High school aoptaporeg. will
report at 8:30 to 11:40 a-m. Fri-
day, Sept. JU
HIfo school Juniors will report
Friday,
.Ear examnic-x DaDeraxMKtey •■nTgTVr.ViX « me w nls "Ju'-
needed a water base -cement Uwd 10
wcuW not wrinkle its-label and V _______- . some time ago from HumWe Oil
would -not wrinkle its label and
wpuld dry in three seconds. Dr,
Singleton developed it. Another
company, fin oil refinery which
produces waX for milk cartons
(tee second iaigest consumer of
wafoT needed an adhesive to bind
to wax, fie di«fvered it.
Run Mav Be
Discontinued
, ' / .
Baytown’s intcrurban, one of
Marshal Odyiio Denys, Navy Min- the last in Texas, may be dls-
presidents have held.
Goulart would hold little more
than a decorative job.
Under tee formula proposed by
the military chiefs—War Minister
ister Adm. Silvio Heckel and Air
Minister Brig. Grun Moss — Gou-
to save considerable money in a
carefully managed insurance pro-
gram.
The board agreed not to attempt
to institute a new program to be-
come effective before a portion of
the scKpol’s insurance expires in
early ^September. It may be Jan-
* believe that this ft
nd best plan teat can
with the resources
he $333,265 toil 1
> way: Teachers,!
„ $21,518: transp
teachers who have served longest
'■
• Applications for Texas sales
tag permits go to 1(18,800 holders
ot store tax licenses, accordhlg
to Comptroller Robert 8. Chi-
vwt. , ......-* ■■ *
_________ are • The .united Natfow rash
practical. Co-insurance is now be- 350 Ethiopian reinforcements to .
teg used te some iiKtjmces, but
deviated rates have not yet been
put to- use. Both methods are said
Uaiy or later before the insur-
Crosby Resident Dies,-
Rites fill Be Thursday
Funeral services will be held at
2 p.m. Thursday at Crosby Mefo-
odist Church for long-time Cros-
resident Albert Anderson, 73,
5610 Wilson Miller Road. He
died at his home Tuesday."
Rev. Dan Bynum, pastor ofi m
Crosby Methodist Church, will af-
fkiate at the service.
Anderson, who had lived in
Crosby 68 of his 73 years, was
the son of one of the original foun-
ders of the community. The eld-
AndeVson operated a grocery
continued if the Railroad Com-
mission approves a request by
the Missouri Pacific Railroad to
*ake off the trolley which com-
mutes dally to Green’s Bayou
and Houston. „
A hearing on the Missouri Pa-
cific’s application will be con-
ducted In Baytown Oct. 1 be-
fore Texas Railroad Commis-
sion examiners. The railroad
says the trolley, which has been
operation since June 18,
1937, is a losing proposition and
Is used by only to to 15 persons
The Interurban makes a round
trip fo Green's Bayou each
morning, leaving here at 8:50
, . - anee agents of record make their
The hoard in-
give foe matter
CMWWHIVC SWW( HU
There was no agreement reach-
ed on compensation for the in-
surance agents of record.,
In other action Tuesday night,
the board:
Elected three teachers, Mrs. Ol-
ga D. Maxoy. fourth grade at G.
W. Carver school: Mrs. Goldie B.
Moyc. special education, G. W.
Carver; and Donald H. Williams,
sixth grade, James Bowie Ele-
mentary.
Accepted bids on $2,366-40 worth
of audio-visual equipment includ-
ing microscopes, dissecting sets,
magnifiers, grafting exhibits and
slides; discussed plans for con-
struction of six additional class-
rooms at Carver High School with
Architect Lowell Lammers.
350 Ethiopian reinforcements to
Stanleyville as tension between
E N. and Congolese troops
smut,
• United Auto Workers Preel-
dent Walter Reuther, with a
planned General Motors strike
delayed at least six days at gov-
ernment request, returns to the
bargaining table of Ws No. 1
contract target among tee Big
Three automakers.
n Blaming the United States
and hitting the allies tor cur
rent world tension, the Soviet
government says it has stopped
returning serv icemen to eiviRaa
life and warns teat aggressors
will be wiped out “once and |
for all’’ If war starts.
• A special indoctrination pe-
riod has been planned for tee
small group of Dallas Negro
children slated to enroll to pre-
viously all • white schools foere
next week.
• A former Arizona police
fleer admits to a signed state
ment that he shot and killed a
Port Arthur golf pro and wound-
ed the man’s fatter, but chim-
ed the shootings were in self de-
i
Heavy Rains Drench Areas Of Texas
Monday, Labor Day, Sept. 4,
will be an official school hoildriy.
AH classes will meet for the
first time at aH schools In (he
district at 8:38 am. Tuesday,
Sept. 5.
School officials said teat bones
byfoat name to Crosby for many am ^ al g:So „.m.
yAtrSfoe time of his death, An-! « K**es for Houston at 3 p.m-.
arrives there at 4:05 p-m. and
returns to Bayiawn aTsTIs'ptin.
Automobiles and car pooh
have taken away much of the
trolley’s business, which has
been on a steady decline for
many years.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Heavy rain poured down on sec-
tors of Central Texas Tuesday,
including an estimated six inches
at Smithvifle in Bastrop Countv,
but slacked to light showers early
Wednesday.
The downpours at Smithvilte
were estimated by some residents
at as much as six inches, City
J. L. Bement said.
and Refin to" Co.'s Baytown Re-
finery. He also worked for Shelf
Oil Co.
He is survived by his widow,
Mrs.. Ada, Anderson; four
i Leon, Ira Randolph.
Clifford and William Ted An-
ings were
schedules knocked
there
P'S"ul. Waaitor. Bureau JaffiStJ
Austin. 40 miles to the northwest,
said 4.10 inches fell in Smithvilie
lietween 6 p.m- and 8 p.m: - ,
Some streets were under water « u,
for a time but ^“JfJ" ,
?, .but Dallas,.
at dawn from just '
Waco to about 40 miles i
of Mineral Wells. At tee 1
however, tee Weather
said the showers appeared to
decreasing. iaj
Elsewhere over
were’dear to partly
eept partly ckmdy
Fort Worth,
around El
I
reported lie
lijnbs from
flooded,
trees.
SskJ&fT’.l?
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 286, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 30, 1961, newspaper, August 30, 1961; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1056985/m1/1/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.