The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 262, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1960 Page: 1 of 8
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_ •* i
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Lyndon B. John-
son of Texas announced l\js candidacy today for
the Democratic presidential nomination
official at a news conference.
His announcement came just six,days, before
the opening of the .Democratic convention in Los
porters to stem the momentum gained i>y Sen.
rat—
To applause from, an obviously pro-Johnson
crowd of spectators* the Texan told a packed news
conference in the auditorium of the Senate Office
The Baytown Sun Invitee
R. B. JACOBS __
4*1 Harvey
to the Brunson Theater, to tee
-BELLS ARE RINGING"
ii* coupon! I* food for two tkketo wR
presented at the Branson kpx office.
Ilte laiftoum
' ". ' - ' ' *- '
■ .
Serving RAY-TEX—Th* Golden Circle of Soathoost Texas
VOL 40, NO. 262
TREPHONI NUMBER: JU 24102 Tuesday. July 5, i960
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Five Cents Per Copy
Cabinet Has Long Session-
Building:
the new Republic of Congo, Pa-
trice Lumumba talks to news-
nien in Leopoldville, the capita)-.
rV
“I am of this moment a candidate for the Demo-
cratic nominfttioh for prestddftt of the UHitftd
; city. Tlgfaraer Betgtoq Crag*
lee—
is the 14th African country to
gate its
World War II.
Fidel Castro’S jSsenhower was expected to set can purchases of Cuban -sugar^ aUAmericatB "down to the nails of announcements, would be made by Americans. The Castro icgfnn
**$*«***«" ~ • **-•**#* *,hane’ already ha. taken, over almost all
•eft believed drafting orclers forj^ oftHe sfiirufflTi^SSiTwoS
seizure American property to^of Cuban^sugar imported into the
In retaliation, the bearded Cu-
ten President. Eisen-1 United States; Eisenhower can tan. revolutionary fids threatened
hower cuts the Cuban sugar quota, also reduce or suspend the Amcri- to take over the pro[>erty of An official told newsmen then no
neir snoes." and they could go home.
The ministers met at the presi- While the ministers wgre con-
dentiaf palace aT 2 p.m. Monday, ferfing, Conrado Beettuer. head of
Some were still iit the squat, white Cuba’s half-million sugar workers,
three-story building at midnight, told his forces Jo-gland ready to
Glob Meeting Set;
. HORTICULTCRE CLUB will mee!
at 9:30 a m. Wednesday in the:
home pi Mrs. Velma Tharp, 1301
North Pruett. A "program bn
“Lighting to Produce Flowers in,
the Garden” will he presented by
Mrs. E. O. Jones.
•t
Band Directors
BAND DIRECTORS Fred Parker
of Horace Mann/Douglas Wallace,
of Cpdar Bayou, Ramon Harbin of
Highlands and Charles Forque of
Robert E. Lee will attend the 13th u
annual marching t(Snd dinic-ftft’ft.
Thursday and Friday at the Uni- w
varsity of Oklahoma.
Total Deaths: 696--
Highways Claim
432 U.S. Lives
Trtiffic ••*•*••••»•*
- Boating • «*«•*•*•*•'-••••••••• «r*
Drowning ••••••••«••*••> 121.
11 aftfwur • y-»‘ *>yviy v» -
Total »* »-*«»••••••• i r»v
By.THE ASSOCIATEI) PRESS
. Traffic deaths set a high mark
for a three-day celebration' of In-
dependence Day, and brought a
call for action to curb such
. 432 this country received warning in the 367 traffic deaths of last Me-
’Llttie Roy* IB ‘
ROY MONTGOMERY . Jr., son of ,
Police Chief andJMrs,„ Roy Mont-
gomery, underwent surgery at Sgn
.Jacinto Memorial Hospital Tues-
day.
, Holy Nome Society
OFFICERS OF the Holy Name
Society of St. Joseph's Parish will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of -Ted. 1. Kloescl.
. Fatalities that hit arid held an
average of five an hour surpassed
the previous record of 407, set in
’1955, before the holiday period
ended at ...midnight :t ...
delated reports today boosted
it- toll. ft ^
But it fell short of the retard
for any three-day holiday observ-
tinue to prevail and to grow,” tour-day'Christmas observance in '
The weekend- tali also eclipsed 1956.
- Acfi the 609 piled up -Christ*
mas in 1955. '
Safety Classes
SENIOR CLASSES in Red Cross
life saviflgiand Water safety, spon-
sored by the Pilot Cluif, will hegjn
July 19-Aug. 11 with Mrs. T. F.
Stephens as instructor. Classes
will be held in the Elmer Gray
swimming pool, 604 West Jack.
Mrs. Hal Nix is in charge of reser-
vations. Junior classes are set
Aug. 1-24. ■'
—Scout Trip-
EAST HARRIS District Explorer
Scouts and their guests will take
a trip on the boat, ."Sam Hous-
ton,” down the Houston Ship
Channel On Aug, 3, R. C. (Dick)
Halter announced. The boat will
leave Wharf No, 8 at the Port of
Houston at 10 a.m. Each member
of the Explorers may bring a
guest.
VFW Sets Meeting
VETERANS. OF Foreign Wars
Post No. 912 will meet at 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Commander James
FYeneh said. ,A business session
will be conducted.
The National Safety Council to-
day stated:
“Public officials and all others
dedicated to safer highways must
act and act fast in an increased
effort to reduce this highway
slaughter —mot only on holidays ,
but every day.”
The Associated Press,, JabuJa-
tions—now on a 50-state basis-
showed .only three states, Alaska,
Delaware and New Hampshire,
reported no motor vehicle deaths.
Hawaii, a new state, had wi-
ly two traffic deaths, Ohio and
California bad 30 or more. *-
The council, which had estimat-
Chambers Asking
Baytown Plans
For Annexed Land
cloudy through
Wednesday with widely scattered
thundershowers. *- -■
Wednesday’s Tides
GALVESTON TIDES Wednesday
wail be high at 3:20 a.m. and
12:29 p.ro. Low tides win be at
Xg:48 a.m. and 8rll pro.
A citizens committee from the
portion of Chambers County west
of the Trinity River'and south of
•{Highway 73 will appear before the
Baytown City Council at its reg-
ular meeting July 14'to seek a
commitment on, what the city,
plans to do with' the West Cham-
bers County land it has annexed
on first reading.
Marshall Haas heads the seven-
man committee appointed June 27
at a mass meeting of-residents of
the area. Other members are Joel
McCone, Luther Mackrell, J. M.
; Dugas, C. . W. Plato, Rita Whitt-
redge and Bill.Whittrgjge-
The committee met Thursday,
juiie 30, and discussed possible
legal moves. If was felt that ..in-
corporation of the -area would be
difficult due to the .scattered,!
sparse population. j
Baytown has said if I
has no intention Of immediately
annexing any of the Chambers
in advance that a national mortal Day .weekend, which also
catastrophe would strike on a giv?
en wfirkend. bringing death ip
more than 4®, does anybody
doubt that emergency measures
would be taken to prevent such a
dripg frbm happening?- . , -
*‘?Yet enough people continue to
ignore appeals—not to stay-home,
not to give up driving, but merely
to drive so as to save their pwtr
lives and the lives of others—that
these appalling holiday tolls con-
spanned the 78 hours between 6
However, it fell short of the
record Independence Day holiday
toll of 491 .traffic deaths during
the our-day observance in 1956
and the record for any three-day
holiday---609 traffic deaths during
the 1955 Christmas weekend.
The record traffic toll for any
holiday period—706—wks set in a
Heart Attack Fatal
To Jim Massey, 54
James Allen (Jim) Massey, 54,
lifelong resident of Baytown arid
well-known electrical contractor,
Monday at Houston-
Aicport
He had gone to meet his daugh-
ter and son-in-law, Mr, and Mrs.
A. L. Hartless of Lake Jackson,
who were returning from a vaca-
tion trip to Hawaii. Stricken while
walking up a ramp to’ the .air-
plane runway, he never got to see
Hr. and Mrs. Hartless-
of Pythias Lodge, IOOF Lodge
No. 960; Rebekah Lodge No. 453;
rfod that began at-6 pm. FWcEy at m ^ hadbeei;
Sed A^stotemSIay!?^” in the .electrical business here
>.m. Wednesday at Paul U. Lee
Yuneral Home. Officiating vgili be
the Rev. P. Walter Henckell, pas-
tor of Trimly Episcopal
and the'Kw. E. R. Bu
tor of Cedar Bayou Baptist
visor of the Rainbow Chapter, and
had held top offices in Eastern
Star. .
Massey was a prominent Ufa-
son, belonging" to Lodge No. 12$,
Scottish Rite Lodge nf Houston,
Arabia Temple Lodge of Houston
and the Baytown Shrine Club. He
also was a member of the Knights
WOW L<x^|n Bay^mjnd Ced- rapply
He was a member, of the Inter-
al Workers, Baytown Local No.
____ , *pne« here 644: the National Electrical. Cbn-
stnee 1923. At one time he war §aetm^^ Asas., Houston Local; and
co-owner of the company with I.......~ -
M. (Deacon) Jones.
Funeral services will be at 4:30
the Associated General Contrac-
tors. -
seize the36 mills in Cubaowiyd federatiw, of Ubor. told, a; TV
• The Slate Board of Educ*.
(Ion will ask Atty. <Jen. Bill Bit-
son lor a ralln* .on the foiwUlu-
tionality of a law requiring an
election before a school district
Integrates. 1
• Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev continues his at-
. J
that would return Austria to
German domination.
• Britain demands that Prime
Minister Fidel Castro's regime
restore the seized Shell (Mrre-
finery In Cuba to the company’s
operators.
p A dog named Daring makes '
his fifth trip Into space aboard
a Soviet: rocket and safely re-
total* of 60.00b tons
;f"0it" to bolster the dwindling stock*
at the refineries. TTritt represents
about a week’s supply lor Cuba,
whidi has little hydroelectric of
turns to earth.
BEAUTY QUEEN TRACKSTER
• Construction on a- new
home for Emperor Hirohito and
Empress Nagako begins alter
Shinto rites on the moated Im-
perial Palace grounds near Tok-
yo's business center,
BETTY LCPORINI practice* (left) In San
Mateo, Eallf., for tlie W»rhehrs C;S. Track
r and Field ehainplonshlps- in Corpus Christ),
Tex., July 8 and », after being crowned
-iiiiBy^iBwi-'tmiRiF,* iaw;r"'......;"
• Oklahoma Bemoeral* and
Rr-puldicans pick their nominees
for Congress, a few. state jobs
aid all eduriiy ofilceri lit primary
elections. ^
City Traffic Record Is
Unmarred By Holiday
• An explosion rip* through
an El Paso gas and chomleal
the building.
An object sighted by
Write 432 perapp* died aptswiihayp. occurred Ifi.the past. ' One other traffic death in Har-
the nation in Fourth of july week- 0ne Baytown, man, Neal D.
aid traffic, Baytown confinued Ms nSdrata a Crosby reridM
record of no traffic falalities th ollle K-Xldk di® at noon
the city limits,
searchers for a I'.S. reconnais-
sanee bomber and Its’ crew of
six turns out to be only wooden
flotsam.
Sunday in a am-truck collision at
Baytown Police Department kept ar Bayou Road near Baytown. Ko-
down the city’s accident rate. Pa- valdk’s three -year - old daughter
trot tars were stationed through- Shirley was Injured in the aeci-
out Baytown at strategic locations dent and is in Gulf Coast Hos-
where accidents caused by speed pitai.
Church iBurial will be at Cedar-
crest Cemetery, with graveside
HST Gefs John's Reply-
Kennedy 'Will Not Withdraw From Race1
rites conducted by Goose Creek
Lodge No. 1192, AF&AM.'
Massey is survived by Ms wid-
ow, Mrs. Amesses Massey, 610
Denby;.his daughter, Mrs. A. L.
(Shirley) Hartless of Lake Jack-
son; and several cousins/ nieces
and nephews.
ton’ at Cedar Bayou July 9,
1905, he, was a member at a pio-
NEW, YORK (API—Sen. John
F. Kennedy has replied with an
emphatic "no” to Harry Tru-
man’s suggestion that he drop out
of the presidential race for 1960.
World War II naval officer and other jEJemotaats who would be dent elevated to that office id the
as a mpmhfr rnn^rfixii fnr 14 nrn«Wf>Tttial ivtetcihilitifw f*onfi»rv “Vhn«iM hautts
”1 do not intend to step aside
at anyone’s request,” the Massa-
chusetts Democrat declared .Mon-
day. "I was the only candidate
as a member .of congress .for 14
years. •
“I have traveled in every con-
tinent and country,” he added, — -
“and in the last few years alone, years
in every one of the-50 states— ’
more than any othes active presi-
dential contender now or in his-
good: presidential
Kennedy declared:
possibilities,
"li we are to establish a test
the.1 presidency whereby to
s in major elective office is
neer fttmily in the Baytown area.
An active civic Worker, he de-
insufficient experience, then all
but three of the K) possibilities
be ruled owf. Ail but a handful
of our presidents, since the very
29th century “should have been
ruled out,, including three grow-
Democratic presidents: Woodrow
Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt and
Harry Truman himself.” *’
..Kennedy, looking tanned -and
fit, told reporters, he expects 600
vote4 much time fo youth projects
such as the Rainbow Girls and De-
to risk my chances in allthe pri- to.ry, to the best of my know-
maries — tic only one to visit ledge", . _ founding of tricnation should have
Referring to Truman’s list of 10 been ruled out. And every presi*
received the honorary degree of
Grand Gross of Color from the
Rainbow Girls. He worked closely
' .....motherad-.
with his wife, who was mother;
•ft
Asa Luthringer
sure to prevent its annexatm
I: by a»y other dty-
2J" * •••- --***---
lown
' STELLA HERRING gets up "be-
fore breakfast” to get sqtne gar-
dening done . .. Tom Cranford is
feeling a lot better after another
short, stay in the hospital -_£apL J?
Jack Jacobs, all diked out in V ~
summer straw derby, gets to
work long before other main Stem
establishments have opened.
Frank (Speedy) Hruby entered a
» Hototon hospital Tuesday tor a
checkup , : . Mary Griffin wor-
ried about a long distance ' ’
. Pt*Kf's. arittti of-ira West
VsillWi wwiM iHiifsiatf it if
the person who has' her Chihua-
hua, Leta, would return Jwr. The
gie, who has just been released
from file hospital and is cottoned
Duke- Htwpfial. She had surgery ply
• '
of hte shoes and a stray shoe.
He te toe sm ut Mr and Mrs.
Odens
for flto
Women's dub.
takes an a job
! and Proferakxiai West Texas
County area; but took the first
reading action as a protective
Dies At Age 78
Funeral rites wUl be held at
3 p.m- Wednesday at Cedar Bayou opposition,” Kennedy emphasized
..Luth-
town’s present and future plans Monday at his heme on HijjftSy
for the area "first hand” train the 146 in Cedar Bayou,'
city council, so that the residents ‘ *-a
every state.”
Kennedy, 43, firid ■ nationwide
televiskip and radio audience he
is ready tor the presidency be-
cause a new generation of leader-
ship is needed to cope with new
problems and hew opportunities.
After reading a prepared state-
ment, he answered questions at a
news conference.
vThus -the front-runner*.in the
Democratic party nomination
dent g statements that he is too
young and inexperienced tor the
nation's highest office.
"I have encountered and sur-
vived every kind of hazard and
'^position,” Kennedy emphasized
vote* in early balloting and con-
ceded he may have to do, better
than that. A total of 761 votes is
needed for qrtmination.
ris County brought the county to-
tal to three. John Allen Hall of
Road. ,
Jasper Turner of Arcthuac died
Saturday night in a two-car acci-
Of the nation’s traffic death 1
24 lives were lost In Texas; .A j
*■» lives pot; iwf iu ft*** ™
total of 56 persons died violently
in-Texas during the holidays. Ten
persons drowned in the state-
There WbreT21 drownings across
the nation and .34 persons died in
boating accidents. Another 109
miscellaneous violent deaths Were
reported to bring the total number
of violent deaths in the United
States to 696. . .
The 432 traffic deaths recorded
by the National Safety Coon'S)
were 50 more than, their pre-holi-
sons died in traffic, accidents dur-
'•----'xl from 6 ~ " "
Monday.
sons aieo tn u
ihg the period frorit 6 p.m. Friday
to midnight M
already has taken, over almost all
American - owned agricultural
tanriL' - - - ,
Jesus Soto, left-wing organiza-
tion secretary of the Cuban Con-
audience workers aha ready to
sugar industry going 2 the United
States closes off its market, to
Cuban «■«*» ”
and radio, almost
government
sugar.
The press
completely under government
control, delivered a day-long har-
angue against the United States.
Revolueton likened Congress to a
"vulgar thief” for ks action on
the sugar quota.
Castoi;slMficial. family.exuded
confidence the government would
overcome the threat <rf an .oil
shortage artsing-frem the seteure
at toe itriand’s three toreign oft
refineries and the cwnpanies’ cut-
off in Cuba's normal supply of
Venezuelan oil.
■ The nation, apprehensive and
hungry for news, was told that ;
iv tn nicer* have heen offered
bring Soviet crude qll here
Under the oil-for-sugar batter
agreement signed with the Soviet
Union.
Authoritative
. owned
'sources said eight
1 or chartered by
th*e CobmuiristSi are . rushing a
r’M Soviet-crude;
coal farilifies and depends on oil
tor most of its power.
Oiie of the eight tankers' was
a big new Chinese Communist
_ ahip.- thfi, 19.500-ton Peking, which
Moscow radio Monday said was
for an oil run to
Cub£ ■
A tew hours later a tanker
named Peking collided with a
Norwegian tanker off the coast
of i Tunisia, French officials at
Ifeeriftsald^^Iwe iwr;
the tanker was Russian and was
carryingSoviet oilfor Cuba, hut
Lloylfs Register of' ships lists
only toe Chinese Communist tank*
er of that name.
Officials at Bizerte said toe
was
its own power. The
Norwegian ship, toe 15,007-ton
Rondefjell, was being towed into
Bizerte,
um Institute, told a television- au-
dience that Cuba’s supply of crude
oil-from the-Soviet Union is guar-
oil-from toe
anteed. ;• -
The British tmnaunced in Lon-
don they had ordered Ambas*ai-
dor Stanley Fordham to file a
facililies. ’Hie U.S. government
was preparing a simte protest
against toe takeover of toe Tex-
aco ond Esso refineries are! other
installations. ’
In addition to cutting off sup-
plies of crude oil from Venezuela,;
toe three foreign companies were
the line’s planes werscas except
for cash.
or'
Funeral "Rites Are Held
For Two Wreck Victims
Funeral services were field Mon- at Shilta Baptist Church with Rev,
* •’ “ - ----- M. E^Smith. pastor, ofiiciating.
Burial was in Memory Gardens
Idfiy lor Neii Delmmt Burnside, M. EftSmito, pastor, officiating,
843; o? WallteriUe Road, Baytown, Burial was in Memo-
; and CJiarlie Kovalcik, 27, ofCros- of Baytown Conetery;
jQUIieJltrT tan be informed.
. A retired rice farmer, he had
IhNHi liae 20 years, *
Rainstorms Erupt
Over Texas Area
■ Survivors are his widow,
Zettie * “ ■ - * “
convention.
Truman made his charge Satur-
day and threw in the implication
,l-‘ «- —-—inating con-
who were, killed in a traffic _Koval£!k..was a five-year resi-
accldent at noon Sunday at toe dent of Crosby and a native of
intersection <>! -II v lit Road East Gate. He was employed as
and Crosby-Cedar Bayou Road, a carpenter at Brown and Root
Shirley Kovalcik, 3, who was Construction Co. and was an active
; seriously injured'in the accident, church, worker. ’__
".spent a very good night Monday" Besides his wife and dp^iter, ,
I -and is recovering "as well as can,he is survived by his parents, Mr.
tes*8^
ventjtM),
son, L. S.b
two sisters,
iiy
rigged in
.... retatorft^ited:
"To. toe extent that I have any-
thing ’to do with it, ft will be an
open conventkat.” '
er of Victoria and Mrs, Albert
Adams of Mites. City,.- Mont.; four,
for I
; denfjSte-had been given sedatives and Mrs. Kenneth Henley of Cr»
Sunday. - by and Mrs. Ann.e Sm.kal : nd
. Burnride, a prominent Baytown Lawrence Gregory of Hous- -
tentatively retaivM toe blame for
two deaths at El Paso.
Six inches of rain fell ’in one
area near Lubbock. Thundershow-
ers continued during toe day at
many points.—-ft--,
Other, rainfall totals included
______ ______________ Colorado City 110 Inch. Farmers
2.57.
JtJtJHprttltelf — “ The £3 Paso death* «me s
- Mrs. Louise Clruti is at Lfflie- an Et Paso gag and diemicaf
Earl. Maughmer Jr./ 45,:« sfill Htefft;
SMI; ftp __,,.
Two- Border, Patrolmen said (hey
saw “
Teei aHtea Tteraday night storage tank alongside toe JjuJJj-
wonders who took the wrong shoe tag.
home. Tommy got home with one Kilted were Manuel Chavez, 25,
El ^tsd. Tb^ w^ worittog in
....... * '"ft ' :
to^-^rtted
around Btg
Fine, rains fen on
area
Burial.w
ftty.
PtStwiM
Sa>d SHU Trifel'
erell
preshtent by Troman in 1956,.and
Sen, William Praiftre oI Whc
oonsin said they left the reply
would win Kennedy new support.
At Independence, M6., Truman
stated be didn’t watdi toe Ken-
nedy telecast and couldn’t com-
ment.
- Sen,. Lyndon B, Johnson U Tex-
as. a contender for the nomina-
te work inw ,
he is believed to have gone . . .
tkm,
When pftiifteal partial meat fa nominate candidates for •loction to ths highest
politital offics^H ls lmportont that you recaiva rire tomplete story - unbiased and
*l?±k'i5JS,Af |M»ArH® Musa!.
“ «• 33-Year Hes-desi,
man of toe Harris County Agricttl-
tkm who has- echoed Truman’s
^ charges of a stacked convention,
HOUSTON — (SpT — PSItee Lf.^alio declined Immediate eom
accurate
attendantt’ said early Cod varation to fly here tor his
This newspaper is o member of The Associated Press. And AP has assembled from
tts bureaus throughout the nation o lorge staff of Its most experienced qolttkot reporters
and photographers to cover the Dpmoerptic notional convention, ^hich “opens July. II
at Las Angeles, .and the Republicon convention, which begins July 25 ot Chicago.
R» tern tfarH. Pilt-:et' - ew, ,?^C R’lllr0acd' Se<i 8h* 10- p,*'
™ in M- u.-i'y Card-n. al' Bay- y«jral‘ He wm . Wo
-Steu^mer mra*^ sccMrnfiy-.Aot M -ftp -crowded news conferenee
—,--------— by his wife, Bertie. 44, a rngm.
at.Jfte Roosevelt Hotel sat hi*
SSi
About his own 'youth, the
OS At parties select namhieet for president arid Vic* president of our nation.
Old hands at covering political conventions, these AP reooriers know how to (
end Raymond Gomez, 24, both of band _ _
' the g«r when ft. went off. Tbe.Wt
gun was a .357 magnum revolver.-'
Homicide U. F. C. Crittenden
•“ investigation 'proved - Mr*.
esqtlained tost young men
jut history — fnefuding
two sons. Michael Nixon Burnside Burial will be at White (
or Baytmvn; bis mother, Mrs. tar- Survivocs ai
Jeffer*6n, Pitt, Na-
po’eon and Cofumbus - have been
nolabl* successes.
He raid he bad been lk v- nrs
Mseghmer’s statement to be Me. the service of his country—a* a
eoorters knew hew to get
ihe news-for yeu—before ood behind, the *tene,ft ....... ’ o«yl(Wn. u.. ««»,^
You will get the complete news of the Demo<rc...c m.0 ftepuoncdn conven- jrte H. Burnside ef Addicks; his M
\ Walter; hhf twin sister. Miss Nina ton; b
% Burnside .of Houston; one broth- Dismuke (
er. Royal D. Burnside Jr.' of Bay- Jacksop o:
town. Johnson of
Woos — tofd with traditional AP accuracy and obfactlvhy - in
laijtmmt feint
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 262, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1960, newspaper, July 5, 1960; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057229/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.