The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 208, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1961 Page: 1 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 18 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
'
* - .
*'V
■: " > z W-W-' /MaiM
’„';1 -. ' .■■■■>«
VOL 42, NO. 208
Sun Spots
lAYTQViH ltXAS
CE TO RECALL RESERVISTS TO
Brain Lecture
DR. MELVIN D. Haley of toe
pathology department of Baylor
university will lecture on the'
brain, the nervous system and its
relative diseases at T p.m. Tues-
day at Gulf Coast Hospital for
former members and
the* terminology class
the hospital by Mrs.
Political Forum
I.
BAYTOWN LEAGUE of Women
sponsor a question-
Votsrs^will
forum in which can-
SSfta to Mayg^detionjf^oWj^ii Speaker
Coin Club ■
FIRST MEETING of the Baytown
Cota Club is scheduled for 7:30
p m. Tuesday at the Electricians’
M .....
on North Pruett. Anyone in-
terested in coin collecting is in-
vited to attend.
Rotary Program
CANCER CRUSADE Month will
be the topic at the Wednesday
meeting of ‘ “
noon meeting of the Baytown Ro-
tary Club at the Tower. A spokes-
man for the American Cancer So-
ciety will speak.
Solons Study
State Worker
Pay, Hours
AUSTIN (AP)-Pay raises for
many state workers and a^ 46-hour
week for others were recommend-
ed In the bulky House appropria-
tions; bill laid out for study on
members' desks today.
Another major recommendation
in the 414 pound spending Mil, a
revision and substitute for SB1,
the Senate’s appropriations
ure, includes flOO^DOO for the ad-
*:ir
sion.
Th
deba
and continue at the same time ^Me^^k^in'Te^^-
Stark will serve on a panel
Lifesaving Coon* *«■" e“e,,«
YMCA Lifesaving Course will be- IT-t,
gin Monday from 5:30-7:30 p.m. HC1
each day except Saturday and
■■■■ as srsis sas ass
■an^ion-nim- J wJi Cve Beaumont and^w by . P*
in liberty and Baytown to dance senafobill calls tor a 4 tier
ta the street and pick up addition- *
ry4
Sunday through Friday, May 5.
The course Js taught at the Rpb-
to both
hers.
In Concert al(
BAYTOWN students at the Uni- '
tag Verdi’s "Re- was Srlrt^his S^dto^'Sni’tt
trousers in the doctors’lounge at of J5.6 million in the next two
> -S£S3
■' -irtTiSS
presenting
- in an operating room.
££&*££* ss“.Sl
union, Baytown Local No. 4-333,
lowaWp supper at 6:30 pan. TW Tue*& at the
unto.) hall on Minnesota/ ,
day ta the Fell*
panel program,
Truth,” will be p
: :X «Wentee voting ta the /
dtjrawtai. Persons who
out of town
absentee at
may vote
~ y -
r
ROBERT
8th'lnfha* ^ assi^ to ***
sentatives, much later In the ses-
sion.
S4OT0NIANS » invited tepu- iSUWSttlTli
In a square dance town
The Texas City Woodm^Tof the tha^W bSt
in the Fellowship
ram, “To Tell The
be presented. Dr. p,ck To SpMk x
t. mm ba
. ? ibv
m_
mahum.; ui UK! Luijuiiuim
Hickerson Speaks
’’“‘tSiw-cm, j,rit“ga,‘2ss4
at Humble’s Baytown Refinery, —........
will gh» a demonstration and dis- Castro Invader______ I
and the public is invited. ' ‘ 'Properties of Liquid Nitro- roonded op as “counter-revolu-
P« ; an” at the'Clew Creek High Uonartes" during lil-lated inva-
Bivens Assigned ^School Science lUr Monday night aion of Cuba.
Hickerson is chief of the Baytown
£s SaE rS s ® 01 *&s±?2£ii r.
_
5l5ftrga City Men In
N A
Annexing Bill
Mayor R. R (Red^ Pgett and
City Atty. George Cha^pr were
in Austin Monday to hear a Tex-.
as Municipal League report on
the status of a proposed annexa-
tion bill.
J, B. LeFevre
htataSlSS: ^ Watery af Coiumblal
th,-. ^ versify, says Nad movement set
_ , J™e h*** overn,*ht to steady de-
* Ji??. 2SKmKS?™'*'
from toHoS TtejKte JJ? D- Taylor in an tevrstlg.
'v;r;
scholarship at Houston Monday. Le Fevre and . #
College for the Chief Accountant .David Funder-^ The annual school dothing
coming summer ten*. Mrs. Adams burit also attended tor tae^chy^ drtve^ sponsored by the_Baytown
is now teaching ta the Austin, Die electric
public schools. tor a rate increase
arranging place cards at Goose
Creek Country, Chib.
Bob (Bullet) Sutton in Houston
Baytown.
in the district.
Discarded, outgrown or repair-
Bottle, Rod Throwings |GB&£g
Supt. George
% LJIUngS SIS Are rrooea »y roiice ^row h. Gentry»ch.tr-
ernoon at the battlegrounds . . . man of the drive, hi a letter to
Mary Lois and Wayne Ha*tai parents, be pointed out that the
await their
Louisiana. |
Ada Brown, a new
6b the per- drift helps provide dothing dur-
V weekend trip to sons who threw a beet bottle tag the school year for needy chil-
through . plate glass window at dren and also helps employ
staffer. Town and Country department handicapped workers at Goodwill
Is now working ta die store on Texas Avenue and a rock Industries ta Houston.
Ad department*. .. Martha Lilly through4 bedram window at ft* dothing and shoes collected fa
enjoying i vacation . .. Charles hope of Mrs. Eddie
Tibbets ^ Ttas w^1^thW^roctataxLbot- era. the articles are then returned
m borne after astay hr the.hc*«|tie_ throwing incident reported to iojhe Bayteip Goodwill Outlet,
. .firiSKasssat
Mary O’Rear making week- room window of Uster Alford’s chairman of each school who din-
roam window of Lester Alford *
,«£&‘&££srr£&S» «*RfJB VUtim «
.-. Jo Ann Zeagler will mow to
Illinois ta May or June ;. . The
H. A. Starnrs driving a
vertiae Texas program.
Kzswss'as
i cf both Hou
included in the new job classifica-
tion plan. State hospital and jspe-
Laos Troops
Rushed To
Aid Defense
Home Guard
Need Feared
serve units with regular officers.’’
SSS"
■I
military lines.
borne attempt to seize the French
it precautions- were related, g
But the French air force re-
mained on the alert and jet .............»
interceptor squadrons were or-
dered to fire on any unauthorized
plane from Algeria.
As the right-wing mutineers ta
Algeria claimed more and more
of the troops there were joining
their rebellion against De Gaulle’s
Algerian policy, labor and pro-
fessional organizations from left
to right calied on their members
■alvo of accnssftmS Bded at
Cuban
Prime Minister Fidel Castro. No
quick response given to Castro’s
charge that “the threat of Ken-
Hitler.”
.... ■ , - . •<;
• Secretary of Defense Rob-
ert «. McNamara say* sblfte ta
military , requirements .aid
under administration’s
defenses cannot
spending under a
reappraisal of d
fcj35Jr
Wittmaver
• ■
““jp™» —
Chandler had planned to at-
_ Houston Lirfitine arid Pow*' PH
w Co rate hearim? Si Houston deut Wdmiw arrives In Wtrijr
Monday, but fdt that they should M^«»jpMtal-wMh,l>w^
rf t“^UetoKtTat^
also plan to dieck on the status
a. .
and East Hants county Thrift Ex-
— SJV3W3 S"S
airlifted to the front north of
Vientiane today to shore up
crumbling defenses against the
civil war.
Pathet Lao rebels pushed south-
ward along the main north-south
highway during the weekend,!
sending royal army troops into a
headlong retreat of 30 to 40 miles.
The rebels bolstered then- non-
government . military
headquarters 80 miles north of
here on the Vieti
Vientiane-Luang Pral
bang highway linking the admin-
istrative and royal capitals.
■There were conflicting reports
the iate of the Americans, One
iree said one of them was
wounded.
iHe said they were not wearing
U. S. uniforms. i
■The government radio, which
often paints a darker picture than
warranted ta hopes of receiving!
maximum military aid from oat-
side, called the situation north of
Vientiane "a Laotian Dien Bien
Phu.” That referred to the de-
cisive battle in the Indochina war
PARIS (AP) - Fearful of a
para troop invasion by army mu-
tineers from Algeria, the French
strengthen
Premier Michel Debre ta a
communique said Units loyal to
the government would be “Win-
Each large provincial dty was
nizing a civilian militia to
off any para troop attack.
ffottany
The govern)
penalties will be death
or life imprisonment.
and Algeria, a step that eventu
ally could freeze the insurgents’
Debr* announced the calluo Bn**** since the Algerian cur-
after a night of electric tension rf*^ '* based on tt,e f'rencb
sparked by his own warning that franc-
the government feared an air-
to defend the republlc^BH
Volunteers by the hundreds
streamed to the Interior Ministry
in jParlS’ c^mori^,
te-RgB kfven riflerw ear-
bines and partial uniforms, or-
ganized into 10-man squaiHWt
■Ai'dawnlHMMlHBHi
capital, thousands of tartt-«ta-
ported troops and security farces i
virtual war footing after Premier
Michel Deke told a
School Board Will LOTew1te:fi.
Study Cunkuluin, - "
BSfBRaHS
thatan attack from Algeria could
Rumora flew that
fa 3 planes
off from Algeria,
■irctal air traffic to
jjbft from France as halted.
Trucks were parked on airport
runways to prevent the landing of
GETTING
GRAVELY ILL AT his borne la Hollywood with cancer, re-
portedly of the tangs and Uver, western hero Gary Cooper
Itas IweR given cobalt treatment* reserved for extrenw eases.
“Certainly he knows what he’s got;” said one close friend.
Cooper, who win bo M May 7, won two bqst-aetor Oscars for
“Sergeant York” (left) and “High Noon” (right). »e under-
went major operations twice last year. (Oentral Press)
wjll be further studied by trua-
The projects are estimated to rfeidr’and^oM1 firid 'ta
non inrliiHim, fiirtiiture CCK10" .aml one.Ile a “*
Yanks Howl Like Castro
As 'Ump' Loses Argument
* By FBED HARTMAN
WASHINGTON <Sp)—The
day morning briefing by U.S. <rf-
diplomat before the U.N., caused
Runge to change his mind and
to reinstate the Baltimore runner
of the State Departrr
luta as preplexing as feejM ■Mill
to no avatl.
.. I was handed.» tav|- Do^ tell me «be wwld is not
tation to a reception horod fiy changing. ITs enough for ftt* Ori-
SecwSaty of State Dean Rusk, but oles to beat the New York Yank-
just prior to that I was given an fees, but to do that and win an
nformal invitation to attend a argument with an umpire the
««me day may be an iM
game to see Jack Kubisczyn, Dan even greater things to come.H
Stallworth’s son-in-law, perform as (Tell my wife I just happened
a rookie infielder, 4 to ,be in Baltimore by accident).
y Activities during the day will ~ ■
gg M“tte Ra Senior Vies
The big talk here this momtaf
was that President Kennedy
invited Gov. Rockefeller over
from Albany tor-a visit to talk
about Cuba. There wet*.-■amt
£ For Scholarship
probabilities expressed, that may- Robert E. Lee'wid son'of Mr'
Sardes «
one.1
lieve in God to.be a notary public.
Horn
’CoHy1
. A police oar raced to 310 Hay-
Mi Drive »t 2:to s-m. Monday
after receiving a call Mm Mm.
1. a. wntams that stone one
was fa be. garage blowing the
ear horn.
rtlutaw Aabfey Henscey
and Don HeHtag, with
■%rura?sss
weren’t that of a bwgHag burg
Thomas W. Epps, a senior at
We spots on the Mve, has been chosen as
front' " ' 1 v “
cStfiAii JSR SHttSSS SS
r.MS-SfS 2? *^NSTS a.
RodtestferHHBiHflB
I must admit ttot the taggest uWy and Sunda^tor finaf tests
Sat-
Sa®S^aKHS5;
leaB.-aa.-gargiai.a
nee* tor 1961 and toe curriculum
to junior high schools.
■Twelve additional dassrooins
for Travis Elementary, a mini-1
mum of six classrooms aniAjMta
cost 3500,000, including furniture
and equipment. Supt. George H.
Gentry previously called to pro-
posals emergency nee* and I
minimum building program. Trus-
tees have studied the program for
several week*.
iMscusston of the Rrtor high
Alsace, near the Swiss bortd^
JS£
as?
trucks spotting their runways.
I The situation in Algeria re-
mained confused. The Insurgent
School curriculum -Wifi-Cefitsif,on junta claimed the whole amW in
length;
4. perio^Hi (htir
to " be
Junior iiigh schools are now on
a seven-period day. Consideration
will be given to setting the tan?.
riculum on. a six-period day.
YouthJ
With Burglary
Algeria had rallied to iC-But the ~
SSwsito-SW*
loyal to De Gaulle, reported be P.__HI_____
asrr *&•%&■w rrouram
with the exception of those to A| • ft
0SLB5mW roaan that most of ^ I COplv
__ uir A l7-year-old Baytown ycwtti,
r ZZepZ Bobbins of Midway
Monday in connection wifli the
burglary of Fair Park Drive-In,
2801 N. Mpin. Sunday night.
Ae 16-year-W bty. aj» arrested
to work. He says he’s been hard
The interior Ministry-said 1.500 at it ever since - ev*n to retire-
civil defense volunteers had been .
enroHed in Paris tor guard duty j^He was topmtoh Ivr ®W <wer_
to supplement gendarmes and
thorities.*
Police Lt. R. R (Bo) Turner
said the 16-year-dlfl was arrwted
iat 3 a.m, Monday at Francis and
Main. Officers said when they saw
to boy he ran into a wooded
area where they caught him.
ner ont. Mdtaf*. arguing like a award a«endl on the ffaahdal
—■- of toe recipients.
, llte* of-flie recipients.
At Robert E. Lee, Epps ranks
third academically in the senior
class of 500 students. He is a mem-
ber of the National Honor So-
ctegr. fee fcjenca Oub snd the
La'to Jtonor Scxtoy. Berries be-
ing a member of the Westmg-
house Sciencjl Talent Honors
Group, his honors include awards
in state and regional science fairs
‘ rts in astronomy and
plans to specialize in
, | 1W allege,
■Maro ihan 600 fop science stu-
dents throughout the nation ap-
plied to ft* sdwtartolps. Th be
eligible tor the competition, the
m state and reg)
tor his projects:
optics. Epp* plai
astro physics in'
mt iqMt ltave won a Bau
I/mi# honorary sde
, awM^,a«nually to
•lence atadem m each
more than 6,919 participating high
SP school senior classes.
ver from Robbins’ home, along
with a glass cutter, a blackjack,
rubber gloves and a screwdriver,
.............
The building was entered
through a window on the north
Mde.
The drive-in is owned fay A.'N.
LaOourse of 1706 Ivie Lee,
Ex-Convict Charoed In
■■#1 VViniVI Vl»¥l JPMI
Property Deshucflow
An ex-convict from San Antonio
was charged by Baytown police
Monday with destruction offarlvate|
property
housfe at Gw Torres,
1214 Harbor Drive, climbed inside
and went to bed.HgM||
Torres discovered W, P. Avant,
36, In W a( J a.m. Sunday and
i police. They arrested Avant
gHd cflarged him with destrue-
calied 1
tton of private property. He said
have won a Bauseh he had attempted to awaken some
honorary science one ta the Torres home, but didn’t
Police estimated damage to the
window and frame at *30.
istry announced
what could have happened
■|yri
sSai
metropolitan France did not ma-
terialize.’’
As puWlc feaf-df’nn invasion
subsided somewhat, most civil-
lians went to work as usual. The
ban on commercial aviation was
strike at 5 p.m. to express their Saturday election.
allegiance to lie ^^nout thp
North of Ulle
bourg. frontier
their inspection. —-
gion at central France, security
LATE
NEWS
AUSTIN (AP)
buster today to toe Seriite agda
Mtaistn/ rilt olf
aH transactions between France . »«» ............
m m education rrootattM aad
;-i
On Saturday
- ijwtawn vokir* wiB fo back tba polls n#*t Saturdoy
to alact a mayor and thre# city councilman in a runoff
election. The survivor* won spota.ktt*,fu»l! in AprJ 4 vot-
tbffinallin Apri4 vot-
' Jho veteran W. C. (Pop) Swain, high man in a four,way
race, mu*t dispose of Al Clayton to claim the mayor's
fact, mutt dispose of Al Clayton dahn +h* mayor's
job. Both are former city councilman who $at together for
two yton.
In the three councilman posts, incumbent W. L. ffiub)
fard face* J. A. (Pete) Bryan. W»«l:ofmost dafaatod two
Jama* M. Bryan endued Canant vir for jnothor open
K —-j
council port. Bryan had a long load whon tho April 4 votos
ware cdimtod.butlaekoda majority: r*--------------
___________ —, RRilRMi——HMRPlUd, «4“,y* ' ,‘j
the winner will bo tho on# who can got most of th# veto*
of th* four eliminated candidata*. . *. 1
I ■■
.
I
lil;
w. W anrfWM'
AL CLAY
tot- -
Need For Growth
Within Baytown
Al Ctayton came to Baytowft ta
AJvLr^ctalmKf'ih? whota BSSrtSSStal
army in Algrttobad rallied-to its
■years
r.*
_ npptaiait g.ndamw, .™ llmr, oppomM, «i April md «J "S
SWSSt- toe key stroc “ - '
Labor organizations, from right mumty’5 a|
to left, scheduled a one-hour token hope or
... o— Saturday
"! am talking to all the
later he would be _ BPBB
formidable opponent for mayor.
A native of Mississippi, Clay-
ton continued schooling hoe and
was a depression student at Rob-
ert E. L«jf before be quit to help
-■JiraJS'iS'fcSS-*'**
w„ t.« -£ css
Parker anil Lawrence Reilly as
teammates.
After leaving school, Al worked
H£ji||H^M 8 ”E now i* general labor fore- .
at to plant with over^
'a55
— ail of
The air flight cetiter at Aix-en-
Provencfe. clearing house for
plane information over toe Medi-
terranean, kept its radar beamed
toward to Algerian coart for the
first sign of any troop carriers
headed toward France.
because the “folks who have
Uved here any length of time
knpw that I have tried to do my
tttnieBS'lf.
:eS^
Al can look back u, . ^ ■
Fortinberry Dairy across Cedar ; ;
part to support every worthwhile
thing this community has under-
taken to .toe. part tour decade*..
“I helped with the firet bond »-
(gee SWAIN, Page J)_ _
Chambers County a*
one of hte early assignments. He
stAtsaassS;
Si
ir-
u.
MAYOR: r 1
— W. C. (Pop) Swain
—— Al Clsyfon V
DISTRICT 2:
-— J. A- (Pofo) Bryan
---W. L, (Dub) Warsl
CAST YOUR BALLOT
Check Ok CMa h Etch Race
M«3 *w leWk, *00, *M W, iqfoM, Tk.
OISTRia St ; ;
——f Kenneth Badge#
C A. (Chris) Hamon
DISTRICT 6:
# v, V, - .. j-ryf* ^
— Jambs Monro# (Jim) Brynn
:• y
. 1
Frod C.‘ Canant Jr,
‘■furtm
Wm
■t—
:a.-:
. *
' I
——
—-- ■
—
_
________,_._i_._'_._...__._.
_V...JK ...
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 208, Ed. 1 Monday, April 24, 1961, newspaper, April 24, 1961; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057040/m1/1/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.