The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 261, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1964 Page: 2 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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2
Bhr Sagtoora 9na
Friday, July 24, 1964
Channelview Wafer Ski
Meet Attracts Top Stars
By MAl'RINE HOLLIMAN
Channelview Correspondent
‘Water ski stars from 'several
states will be featured in tlje
Texas Open Water Ski Cham
pionship meet Saturday and
Sunday, July 25-26, at Lake San-
dy off Highway 73 in Channel-
View. 1 / ; '
Sponsored by the Houston Jun-
ior Chamber of Commerce, the
ski meet is sanctioned by the
American-Water Ski Association.
Houston Jaycees will be assist-
ed by Channelview’s Houston
Water Ski Association.
More than 70 entrants already
have r e g i s tered from Texas,
Louisiana,: Oklahoma, Arkansas,
Mississippi.and Nebraska.
- Penny Baker, former world
record holder^ will be one of the
participants in the ski meet.
Frank Kokenes will fly on a
kite, taking off from water skis
and soaring high above the lake,
" "n"~ of the most interesting
events wiH be Ihe men's- jump-
ing event Sunday afternoon,
oil Herren of Channelview, tour-
ament director, said. He said
some, of ihe jumps probably will
be as high as 135 feet:
Saturday afternoon: there will
be added attractions' such
down acts, barefoot skiing and
the Kak(
______Irenes Site feature,
Chief judge will be Sarah Me-
Keen of McQueen, Tex. Event
judges will be Jesse Ramo~ of
Orange, Monroe Scurlock of
'-Bete^SalassLtof; otbreidsion measuring tmflsrset-
Vicksburg, Miss, — -■ - '*
Tournament chairman is T-e-
Roy- Herren of Bellaire. The
tournament will start at, 9 a.m.
Saturday and Sunday and will
run until events are completed
each day, ,
First, second artS third place
trophies fcnaWc-r at) trophies
will be awarded, Herren said.
The Houston Water Ski Asso-
ciation- will sign up spectators
for free water ski lessons to be
given at a later1 Wiate, Herreh
said. v -
,a.Tbe official tournament Iniat
will be'an 18-foot Correct Craft
Ski Nautique, furnished by Mrs.
Molly James of Channelview.
Standby boat wall be an 18-foot,
Correct Craft Classic, furnished
by Herren Boat and Ski Sale
Cb. Ftckup .boats will he furn-
ished by Hill McDonald Boat Co.
and C. B. DelHomme. Shell Oil
Co!' will provide materials Mr
the ski jumps and the gasoline
and oil for the boats. 1 |
Donations will be SI per perl
son. Food and soft drihlS will I
be available on the grounds
Following the meet Saturday
night a watermelon party will
be given for ’ alF-entrants and
their friends by - the Houston
Water. Ski Association at its
clubhouse on Market Street
Road.
Funeral
Notices
SCHOUBROEK
Funeral services win be hi
Emmol EIIMbelh
8 Stlmpson, ot 2 B,
held foe-Mrs,
ihi Elisabeth Sctioubroek, 82, ol
mgion, ot 2 ».m. Saturday ot Ook-
ley-Metcolt Funerol Home In Culkln.
Mrs. Schoubroek died at 12:30 p.m,
Thursday in a hospital In Baytown. The
body was tokwi to .Lufkin Friday by Pool
U. Leo Funerol Home. Tt» Rev. George
Gildden, pastor of Fuller Springs Ml!-
Cemetery ot Nacogdoches. Grandsons wilt
Of piillhfnrers, " ' . .
Survivors ore three daughters, Mrs.
tvo Phans of Baytown, Mrs., Myrtle
Lakey ■ ot Beaumont obd Mrs. Gertie
Beaumont obd Mrs. Gertie
Morbarry ot Morchead, Mlss.r three
Charlie Barren Schoubroek ot Hunt!
» '
Courses
(Continued From Page))
«rS, drill presses, milling ma-
chines, .shapers and lathes, use
ting up of wprk on the machines,
reading of blueprints, arid meth-
ods of contributing to layout and
design Of material.to be made
on lhe equipment.
The offset printing course will
teach graphic .arts, composing
procedures, use of the process
camera and developing of film;
transfer process to make plates
from film, selection of paper for
particular jobs, operation of
printing-presses and such finish
work as binding and collating.
The cooking classes will he in
addition to the one which began
in early July. The two new
Classes will be composed entire-'
!y of youth-qualifying under the
program. _ _____ _____
son;., Choriie Barron Schoi
hgfon, Williom David
ICrltys ond EldrWge N. Schoi
Lutklft,* two sistors, Mrs. Augusta Pounds
ond Mrs. 0. W, Cummins, both of Bay-
fown; a broker, Charlie Kolb of Bima,
Tt< Also surviving ore 1? grandchildren
and 56 great-grandchildren.
A native of Nacogdoches County, Mrs.
Srboubroe* moved here three and a half
yeors ago.
STOVALL
Funeral services for Pat Alexander
Stovall, 42, of 1807 Gillette Drive, will be
held at 7 p.m, Sunday ot Paul U. Let
ral Home.
Funeral
Stovall died suddenly at 10 #.m. Thun.
in Baytown. Bom July
Racial Strife Dwindles In NY
(Continued From Page 1)
doy ot a hospital lb Boytowh. Bom Jul-
27, IWt. he moved to Baytown whei
three months old ond lived here all his
life except during the time he served In
World War II. .T .
He was employed ot Humble Oil ond
J2efCUng Co,s Baytown Refinery tar l»
VeorfttHis wife, Mrs. Jessie M, Stpvalt.
U .assistant ealhtej- pt Peoples State
Stovall served In the 82nd AJrbome Dl-
Ision In Europe In. World War II and
urope
made hr* < embet lumps, He
number of medals in the war.
umber of medals In the war.
Betides his wile, he Is survived by
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pat H. Sto-
vall of Baytown; a brother, Ben E. Sto-
vall at Baytown; two sisters, Mrs. Ray-
mond E. Parker and Mrs. L. .H. West,
ba*h of Baytown; several nieces, phd nep-
The Rev. Paul Stephens, Second Bap-
tist, Church pastor, will officiate in serv-
ices. Burial will be m Memory Gardens.
Pallbearers will be George Cheney,
N. B: Koigler,-RoH-Whltten, CvA. Behy-
mer, C. B. Welth and John Nelson. Hon-
orary pollbearers will be employes of
the welding department ot the Baytown
Refinery.
thrown missiles at demonstra-
tors picketing headquarters the
night before.
Thursay night, the Rev. Rob-
ert Perrella of the Roman Cath-
olic Church of the Most Sacred
fBlood near police headquarters,'
appealed to the white teen-agers
and the spectators to go home.
The priest said he had been
ordered to the scene by his su-
periors “to make sure none of
the neighborhood young men get
into trouble?''
-He later told newsmen:
“They’re only a bunch of kids
The cameras excite them. It’s
mass psychology. Most of them
don’t know what they’re saying.
They’re all actors,”
A number of Negro leaderS in
the city have rejected the racial
peace formula that Mayor Rob-
ert F, Wagner proposed
Wednesday night. "Too little
and too late” was a typical
comment.
But the mauor’s office said
his talk had brought hundreds of
congratulatory telephone calls
and telegrams, including a mes-
sage of support from Francis
Cardinal Spellman, Roman
"(Catholic archbishop of New
" York.. 4 -
A call for sermons Sunday on
"calm, 'reason and understand-
ing,‘"~wa^ issued
500 clergymen of all faiths,
enjoyment of a motion picture
house, the Leflore Theatre.”
Violence Curbs
DALLAS (AP) — A group of
whites and Negroes Thursday
night discussed ways to curb re-
cent outbreaks of racial violence
here and considered steps to
further integrate Dallas schools.
Dallas attorney W. J. Durham
called the unannounced meet-
ing, in which W Negroes met
Colored People, will head
group.
several whites, most
Police
... Any future conduct of this
nature will be handled accord-
ing to the provisions of Civil
Service rules.” ' ' f
This memorandum was dis-
tributed to poiijetpeit wllh the
sanction of- City Manager Friz
Lanharn, who had earlier dis-
cussed with members of the de-
First Arrests
GREENWOOD, Miss. (AP)
The FBI has made its first ar-
rests under the public accomo-
dations sections of the new Civil
Rights Act.
Agents of theijureau charged
three Greenwood white men
with a conspiracy designed tq,
keep a Negro from going to a
downtown movie theatre, /
The three men, Willie Amon
Belk, 47, a plumber; his son,
Jimmy Allen Belk, 19, and Sam
Alien Shafer Jr-, 40, a Belk em-
ploye* posted $1,000 bonds be-
fore U.S. Commissioner W. O
following their arrest Thursday.
The FBI., charged the three
with “unlawfully conspiring
injure, oppress, threaten ana
tiniidate" Silas McGhee, 21, of
partnwnthowhe expected ’them Greenwood, "in the free exer- want to com.
tn conduct themselves,' cisc of his right to full and equal ry schooling or take vocational
' —--- ' ‘ ■■ —training.
HOLDOVER
NOW THRU
SATURDAY
flv ' M-8-M presmts
Wl , » UWRENCE
WEINMTEN
PRODUCTION
SATURDAY
KIDDIE SHOW
8-f-CARTOONS—8
2 Comedies ~”2
Plus This Feature
k ■
HtohTLY THEY
STACKSHE
tSITYStKEETS
seeking human
nrpvl
1 TWIST CONTEST
ON STAGE
/ACKPO
3.00 AND
$50.00
SATURDAY!
LUCKEY’S
— UNDER* NEW MANAGEMENT“
DANCING NIGHTLY FEATURING
THE PERFECTIONS on
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
Located oh Highway 146 Between La Porte
and Baytown —- GA 4-4862
Beer Set-Ups
WWVlSiQITfc llOROCOIOlt—
Deckel
--TONIGHT
AND SATURDAY
3 FEATURES
7:45 pSl„ Again 10:19 A.M.
ENJOY THE FUN WITH YOUR FRIENDS
DA N C E
SATURDAY NIGHT
Aiericahtegion Bait, Ernstry, Texas
JOHN SAXON
IN
"RESTLESS
YEARS"
# HOLDOVER
9:30 PJVf.- .
HAYLEYS ROMANTIC
ELECTRIFYING ADVENTURE
W^lt DiSIMy presents
rtsW&CW-l
Spinners
11:40 PJM.--
itk'k'k'k irk'kirk'
TULBRYNNEB
Tomorrow Night
Happy Country Boys
Your Crosby American Legion Hall
Dallas Committee for Pull Citi-
zenship and the Catholic Inter-
racial Council.1 if-
Recent vidlence here involving
young Negroes and whites is a
concern to law-abiding Negro
citizens, Durham said.
“It’s getting out of hand. We
must do something about it and
We must do it now.” In a pre-
pared statement, he said the
meeting was called "to discuss
and reason together as citizens
of Dallas” ways to curb the "un-
lawful and unprovoked attacks
being mad# upon citizens.”
A five-member committee was
Motel Bombed
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP)
—The restaurant of a plush St.
Augustine motel, prime target
of integrationist activities, was
badly damaged by a fire bomb
today.
Manager James Brock of the Armeo
Monson Motor Lodge said two
one-gallon containers of inflam-
mable liquid were thrown
through the window of the jres-
:aurant~tEeh
tov cocktails.
, Brock, who integrated his res-
taurant after passage of the
Civil Rights Act and then segre-
gated it, again under what he
Noon Coll
Stock Quotes
Aileg Ludlum..............4014
Allis-Chalmers ........... 21
Aluminium Ltd............29%
AmcrCyan ............ 66%
Amer Tel & Tel...........33%
Am Viscose ................ 83
Anaconda Cop 45%
Rites Held For Ex-Crosby Man
Funeral services were held T. O. Johnson and Floyd Reld-
74%
Ashland Oil ............... 38
At Tp ft SF ............... 35%
Biaxter Lab ...............q23%
Beth Steel
Celanese .................TJ1
Celotex ...................31%
termed,threats by white segre-
gationists, said he did not know
who was responsible.
The incident followed a Ku
Klux Klan rally near St. Augus-
' “ - • • ttended by
tine Thursday night a:
several hundred segregationists
Priest Helps
BOSTON
helped dispel
named to put into written form today after a demonstration out-
suggestions made at the meet-
ing. Clarence Laws, regional di-
rector'of the National Associa-
tion for the Advancement, of
Bill
.X
(Continued From Page 1)
ized for the first year. This was
ers^a
a demc
}—A priest
crowd early
cut from $50 million proposed
3 combat
for loans and grants to
poverty in rural areas.
But the many-sided bill em-
erged from the Senate substan-
tially intact
The bill would authorize $412.5
million for programs designed
to increase the education, train-
ing and work experience of
young men and women. Includ-
ed is a provision for establish-
ment of a job corps in which
youths in the 16-21-year age
bracket Could enroll and be as-
Luckett at nearby Clarksdale signed to conservation camps or
resident training centers,
Authority also is provided for
the government to finance,.part-
time employment for college
students and fOr youths who
want to complete their seconda-
Another major part of the
measure
prqpriai
fiat i
pay, up.to. M
authorize ai>
of $315 million to
side an integrated East Boston
housing project.
It was the second, straight
night thqt.200 to 300 persons had
paraded and chanted agatns
four Negro families living in the
project. ...
One man who Allegedly took a
tog at a Negro policeman was
arrested. Identified as James
Hibbard, 22, he was charged
with assault and battery.
The crowd, mostly youths, de-
monstrated for several hours.
Shortly after midnight, the Rev,
Memie Pitaro of the nearby
Mother Redeemer Catholic
Chrysler
the Cities Service ............. 74
Colgate Palhio............47
Columbia Gas.............28%
Creole ....................51%
Delta Air L...............85%
Diamond Aik ....... 57%
Dow Chem .............. 72%
Du Pont ...................265
Eastman Kodak...........132
El Paso ...................20%
Ford .*............ 5j%
Foremost Dairies ......... 12%
Freeport Sulphur..........35%
Gen Eiec ..................84%
Gen Motors ................95%
Gen Tele .......... as
Greyhound ....iiijij,.... 26%
en Tiro .......
ia Pacifio......N
church appealed to the crowd Litton Ind
Thursday morning at Crosby
First Baptist Church for Adolph
Duerbeck, 84, formerly of Cros-
by.
Ministers were the Rev. Mar-
tin Duvall of Eastwood Baptist
Church in Houston and the Ri
R. C. Hammock Jr. of Dayton
First Baptist Church.
Duerbeck, a resident of Day-
ton before his death, is sur-
vived by his wife, Mandy Duer-
beck of Dayton and one son, Ed-
wto-Duerbeck of Arlington,_.Va
land of Dayton.
The Edwin Duerbeck* will re-
main in ihe Crosby, area for two
weeks. He-is connected with the
United Nations in Washington,
D. C. . ..... ..
Funeral arrangements
under the direetio
were
■oTsterling
Funeral Home of Dayton. Inter-
ment was at Evergreen Ceme-
tery near Crosby.
Pallbearers were Duerback’s
nephews,.. Dale Smith of Hous-
ton, Roy Brown of Baytown,
Thomas Denson and Leslie Reid-
land of Crosby, Gilbert Reidland
of Corpus Christ), Gene Gutherie,
Car Fire
A PARKED car In front of J.
C. Penney s of West Texas Ave-
nue had the Baytown Fire De-
partment out about 11 a.m. Fri-
day. f.itUptoamjce.W-d^
the car, Fire Chief Art
man said. 1
Rent Fans - Televisions -
Irons - Ice Cream Freezers
From
Pruitt st Pliroi Pti. 582-8018
Houiton, Toil
M
'Gihefte Saf .,i’ta-
Goodyear Tire * 43%^ m
~ulf Oil ......... 58%
ulf States Util ...........46%
Gustin-Bac ............... 21%
H L ft Po ....... 63%
IBM ...........465
Int’l Harv ............... 81%
Int’l Minerals ............. 62
Int’l Nickel ................ 79%
Jones ft Laugh ....■*.»...... SO
Kerr-McGee *. 44%
Liggett-Myers ............80
7M0 S. Main, J2A 1-M
fcml
Tot Thi Uoit Unuiiut
OUBMEAT SPECIALTT
■ IUTRI.M '
Restaurant
Mito, MA 8-Mtl
E.NTRm,
Crabmiat Imparld
CrabmeAt Suwtti
Tr/ It". . . You’ll Lovs It I
Op.n 11
Famous for Seafoods
and Charcoal Broiled
Steaks ,
Available for Private Partial
Private Dining Rooms
M00 So. Main—Closed ■ Monday—MA 8-4444
an dit began to break up
Jones
ncing ,
carried
level.
•poverty pro-
out at the com-
ment,
and
financi
grams
munity level
These community action pro-
grams could include employ-
job training, vocational
bilitation, housing, well
special remedial and other
educational aid for low-income
familcs and individuals^ Provi-
sion also is made for adult edu-
cation,
The bill Includes special as-
sistance to poverty-stricken
farmers and very small busi-
nesses, aid for migrant farm
workers, and establishment of
corps of volunteer workers, to
be paid $50 a month, to serve in
the ovet-all anti-poverty pro-
gram
Land**
of-wa.v or other improvements
”1 canwitha clear .Mgfi®SJ?
■f£0 ahead with this and let Mr. Ppnnpv manapir it a
Franta have the land as we of- g* ^Penney manager is
fered it, to him, subject to the
rpsprvation-of-a 10-foot strip for-
future street improvement tn
that area. We came mightly
-----ANNOUNCE
THE REOPENING OF
-MARGARET'S
STARUTE LOUNGE
MARGARET BRANCH
OWNER
Formerly at 410 North
Gans St, Houston, Tex.
MOVED 1%^
401 NORTH
BROADWAY
LA fORTE, TEXAS
NOTICE!
CHRISLEYS
DRIVE IN
Tri-City Beach R
b Now Under
New MaDagement
Foylett and Nora Lee Foyle
Open Seven Days A Week
-dose to entering into a contract
with Mr. Franta when we agreed
to sell him the land for $3,200.
1 ■ At that pointijir- the discussiorii
Baytown businessman' Billy An-
gel protested sale of the land,
saying he didn’t believe six or
seven men should sell or give
The compliment fits Lloyd-
even better than some of the
ffl^rrw&riir
away prope:
the taxpayers,
Before voting on whether to
. 11 the land to Franta, the
council voted 4-2 rto reserve a
10-foot strip ior possible use in
widening streets in the area, and
or easing a sharp curve there.
Councilman Huron and Mayor
Liggett voted against the mo-
Jay Ash, city planner, advised
the council that the city could
get By with the 10-foot s trip for
several years, but that a maxi-
mum of 25 feet probably would
be needed.
Councilman Barnes said he
didn’t think a “firm enough”
answer had been given by the
planner on the matter of need
and suggested that the problem
might need further study before
.oil give hint an answer. He said
Mobil Oil was Anxious to begin
construction of a station on the
property. A Mobil representative
accompanied F r a n l a to the
^Franfa tola the emmeitlie Had
owned property at Defee and
West Texas 14 years and that
he owned it . 11 years before
learning that he did not own the
strip he now seeks to obtain
from the city.
In 1961, the city council agreed
to give-Franta the land, but tor;
some reason the legal papers
•ed and own-
were never prepan.
ership of the land transferred
bv quit claim deed, as the coun-
cil had agreed it would do. •
The same council that, agreed
_i give Franta the iand later
rescinded its action and adopt-
3 ed a pointy at the suggeMion-of
then Councilman C. A. fChrist
(Continued From Pago 1)
here tor the entire city as well
as the Penney company. We
hope to announce my successor
by the first of next week,” he
said. >, ,
John flume, Penney zone
manager from Dallas, led a
group of Penney executives in-
to Baytown last weekend tor a
surprise party to honor Jones
Many of them were former em-
ployes o£ jQne,s,,.w.tofn, he had
helped train here in Baytown,
Pfizer
P. .hilip Morris
Philip Moms
Pure Oil
Royal Dutch
Safeway
Sears
Shell
Sinclair ......
Socony-Mob.“.TfS....... 85
In addition to honoring Mr.
and Mrs. Jones at the party, the
Penney visitors presented retir-
ing manager Jones with a new
wrist watch
■‘■TO*
‘It’s the veiy latest, one of
those' that doesn’t tick,’,’ Jones
proudly smiled.
In World War n, Jones was
a captain and served at several
stateside Air Force, bases
well as in Pudrto Rico.
Hq learned the retail merchan-
dizing business during the days
of the depression in the early
1930s, and like most J. C. Pen-
ney executives, he loves to sell
merchandise, even if it is only
a pair of socks or a handker-
chief.
The size
was more
This conjpliments both the com-
munity;' the management and
the staff,
- of the Baytown store
than tripled tom
55%
Lockheed ................. 34%
Louis Land ................. 86%
Magnavox ................ 30%
Marathon Oil ......... 62%
Monsanto ...... 81%
Nat Dist ..................27%
Newp News ...............45%
New York Central ...... 44%
Olin-Math ......... 44%^
Otis Elev ..................47%
.....76
..... 57%
.....46%
enney manager,
Stan Calif.................65%
Stan Ind ..................84%
Shin N J ..................*7
Stan Ohio................. 95
Stude-Packard .......... 7%
Sun Oil..........r......... 65%
Sunray-Mid ........ 31%
Syntex .................... 71
Tennessee Gas ............21%
Texas Co ..................82
Texas Eastern ............20%
Texas Gulf Prod.......... 57%
Texas Gulf Sulp .......... 48%
Tidewater .............. 30%
Timken ....... 90%
Transam Corp ............52%
Union Carbide ............125%
Un Oil of Calif............90%
United Aircraft............47%
Up.iohn Drug .....*......... 54
U S Steel..................57%
Del Webb ...... 8%
Westinghmise ............. 33%
Xerox ..................115%
' *
Try Oiii* Delicious _
• Seafood • Steak
DINNERS
O FROG LEGS 0. LOBSTER TAILS
•“"M!; ZEISIG'S
Refiner)
backgrc
%
Wooster Aid
One time a Penney customer pQ|> ^jy
*W>* Donnatr man.-.. U a _ , ___ ■ _
“All
Penney managers are
V J. C Penney rephed
Baytown and Wooster Emer-
gency Corps were called cut last
night to search Lake Houston
with emphasis.
Lloyd Jones lived up to the
Billing of- the'Btjrboss;
Houston girl whose
1D4*
-recovered.-about-
Dance Club Dane*
iRVENT-of-Port P
thur will be master of cere-
The corps .worked with the
Harris County Marine unit 'in
..je girl, Janfcefwi. Had been
wading with her 10-year-old sis-
ter about dark when Janice .dis-
appeared, presumably in a hole
monies at the Bayshore Wagon
quare Dance Club dance
WheeLSauare Dance t___
at 8 p.m. Satureday in the
Knights of Pythias Hall. He will
be assisted by other callers.—^day.
DINE AT WOLVERTON’S
Now tinder New Management
TWO MENU CHANGES DAILY
(Lunch and Dinner) -
Open Ha.n.-2:30 p.m.-4:30-p.m.-8 p'.m.
'WOLVERTON'S CAFETERIA
OKnana^-FrldM’
■n prohibiting the city from
giving away taxpayer
property.
- nwned
DINING AND DANCING
llliO iliQi
4 ha
w ' J25
J:
16-Pound Boy Born
To Montana Woman
MISSOULA, Mont (AP)—A
Ktt'sstmla woman gave birth
Thursday to . a boy .weighing 16
pounds 4 ■ ounces........- —
Dr. Steven Preston said he
has been delivering babies for
25 years and this was the larg-
est by about four pounds. Deliv-
was by Caesarean section.
......* nor Pres-
ery was by Caesarean
A
SUNDAY SPECIAL
ROAST
TOIWEY
DINNER
And All
The
Trimmings
2 CHILDREN*
FREE
Under 8 Yr*. ef
age when
accompanied by
Mother ft Father
SUNDAY ONLY
ADULTS ‘125
WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY SPECUl
FISH FRY
Served With French Friaa, CeleShW, Bet Mb
..........; ‘1.00
ALL YOU CAN EAT
We Take Pleasure in Catering To Large or Small Banquet*
im REBEL INN
a «i«av • ’ coo i
2782 MARKET
582-4272
And Daddy
•says it
SAVES HIM
MONEY
'cause
Friedrich
costs so little
to operate,.
W&-got our
riedrich
room air
conditioner
BETTER BUY NOW
OPEN
ALL DAY SATURDAY
SEE PROOF IN OUR SHOWROOM
APPELT
ELECTRIC COMPANY
LA PORTE
715 W.Maifc
Ph. GA 1-1208
BAYTOWN
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 261, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1964, newspaper, July 24, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057048/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.