The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 262, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1960 Page: 4 of 8
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re*
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®b» l*gtJ»ani Dun
Tut way, July 5, iVfiu
>; V.
Editorials
X
\<rX
Jolts Fail To.
Faze Business
-^:'V
X
■
I
V—
flo«rCPOC«ttCAffr
SEEM TO COOPERATE ^
WiTBVOO TWl? SESSION/
Television Lqjg
__fty Mi tousoio ___
WASHIMCnm x Tb* artth-
KJi-?J»sa5
toe pollf, estimating the lia ..
nxaoAT non
I World At Large
American buaincar auffercd tome' jolt* lit wyk . •.
» the pbOp, estopating the size
of crowds, and calculating the m
thusiagm of the voler.AlI mil
havmg been taw, the eahdMatr
the optimiam lor continued improvement held by
businessmen lad economittt. ->v > . r ' v
Fidel Castro’s Cuban Government seized two Ameri-
* can jail reftnerie* and one belonging to British-Dutch
interest*.. -
"Steel production ntorrpedto the lowest level for. a
■ JBOS-Sirike period amce July 195$ ':.....
Eastern railroad* began ltying off worker* because
of alow business., \ - ri: '
lint hall, which was good by most standards but not •
booming aa had been expected..;
Cuban confiscation of thi hiuititttillioh-dollar re-
4 fineries of Texaco Co., Standard Oil Co. New Jersey..
and British-Dutch Shell Oil Co. followed their refusal
to process Russian crude oil. The action was consid-
ered a forerunner of-more confiscations ofi foreign*
owned businesses.
3^’
IRH
eoukj.. take (tlte
as,
The fame? nerwi
The drop in steel 'production to 54.8 per cent of
capacity 'threw thousands of men out'of work. Presi-
cP'Zntf1
dent David J. McDonald of the United Steelworkers
estimated that of the union’s 1,250.000 members,
330,000 were unemployed and 350.000 were working
1 short .weeks. - •*;•• ‘
Xhe-Fennsylvania Railroad said it would lay off
21200 employes for an d^WUs^rrod l^^^.ie'-''
"Ad**
10:35 I
10:« (
10:45
dining freight volume. Much of the line’s business
con#* from steel and allied, fields, The New Haven
Railroad planned to Jay off several hundred men for
the same reason.' , * "* .
■-rThemergerfevef,»weeping~the'radfc>ad"intdastry:'j
got- hotter when the New York Central'launched a
fight to-gain control of the Baltimore and Ohio, The
Centra! will make an offer and O stock to
counter a proposal already made by Chesapeake and
Ohio, ' >■” ' _ \
Stockholders approved purchase by the Chicago,and
North Western Railway of the Minneapolis and St.
Louis, This comhinatkin would be the third longest
railway system in thp United States,
AUtomobite production skidded to 128.00ft cars this
week bCHMuse of. early Iclosedowns for the, holiday
weekend. This was. 13.000 units below last week but
20,000 above the July 4, 1050, week.
Sales in the middle third of June totaled 170,000
mgengfr carst, nearly:eight per cent higher than in
the corresponding 1959 period.
Retail trade, helped by warm weather, picked up
and registered gains up to five per cent over a year
^Wholesale food prices declined to their lowest level
In three months, arousing hopes that the steady climb
In the cost of living would be stopped if hot reversed.
slackened and prices declined slightly in
an the New
jnjmmjxMtixxi
Drew Pearson Says-
Trading slackened and prices declined
the stock market during the week. Sales on the.,
York Stock Exchange amounted to 14,820,464, com-
pared with 18,279,530 the previous week and 12,957,-
220 a year ago. Bond sales were $24,883,000 par value,
$27,637,000 tho previous week and $23,409,000 a year
Ton the business scene: Benefician Finance _ Co.
-bought Gamble-Skogmb Co.’s interest in Western Auto -
•Supply Co. .for 51 million dollars ... Four billion dol-
lars of insurance ahf gnffult}r hencfite are expected —
to be paid this year . ., Minneapolis-Honeywell Regu-
lator Co. has issued a glossary to take the mystery
out of the iargon aurrounding electronic brains , ,.
Tek is marketing children’s toothbrushes that smell
like chocolate, vanilla, strawberry, orange, lemon and
By DREW PEARSON .
WASHINGTON—TV Democrat;
io Party one week hence will start
choosing between two men as its .
nominee for ..President of the
United States. Both men Lyndon
Johnson and John F. Kennedy!
have wmr-excellent ffljllifiea-
tions, both have some defects.
; This writer, who has known
both randidates for a number of
years, herewith undertakes to
analyse' the virtues and the de- ,
fsets plus^ffieymmlbaiiiaitKWBr”
It happens that both men have
weaitb behind them. Kennedy in-
herited his wealth. His. father,
from a relatively >maetesf stilt, has
become one of the 75 wealthiest
men in the United States. His
wealth has been * material factor
in financing one of the most
amazing publicity buildup* pirn*
the days of Wendell Wllfkle plus
a sttemsfuf and . very wtpMrtvr-;
primary campaign which most oth-
er candidates couldn f afford.
Johnson, «l’ the other hand,
Waited as a your Texas school
teacher, has acquired a modest
fortune through the acquisition of
radio-TV stations which have been
h«Wy-‘' ‘
ify which own Sun Oil contributed
*M6,*0 to the GOP in 55. the
Meffons, who, own Gulf (Ml, threw
in $150, COO; while the Roekefef.-'
lerr, '&nmt trf- Stshdstrd^ t»L m-
rfchtl the GOP kitty by 5152,604
SOME OIL companies, of course,
play both sides of the political
street-. And when you see what
they ha ye at staka kn profits and
taxes you can understand why.
Sen. Mugias ritsd some figures.
But he withheld names. This eoi-'
umn is not going to withhold the
names Here is the tax picture
of some of the companies which
will help pick the next President
of the united S'
not hurt at all by Johnson’s stra-
lime . . ; The Army hi buying 5,228 feep vehicles from
Wjllys Motors for $9,700,000 . . . American Machine
Money talks very big in Ameri-
can politics today — which is the
chief reason why Sen. Hubert
Humphrey of Minnesota, one of
the most courageous, members ot
Congress, had to how out of the
lited States:
Kerr-McGee — owned in part
by Sen. Bob Kerr of Oklahoma-
managed to chalk up so rriany
deductions under the tax loopholes
fh -196ft that Jt; paid absolutely no
ipeome taxes at all on $5,378,973
net income.
The most, taxea the company
has paid in the past 10 years was
$1,727,910 in 1957 on $7,972,558 net
income. This was still less than 22
per cent tax, compared to the 52
rent rate other corporations
required to pay.
In 1966, Kerr-McGee paid $699, .
000 on $5:371,964 net profits, which
amounts to only 13 per cent. For
. the previous years, Kerr seldom
paid much more than a trifling 1
per cent. In 1956 it paid 118,000
taxes .on $2,502,867, lesa than 1
per cent. In 1954, the company
paid only $23,923 tax on $1,603 682
income, slightly over 1 per cent.
For 19537 the company gst-away
with a mere $4,724 tax on, $3,077,,
447 income, a tax rate so small
the percentage can hardly be fig-
ured,
Superior Oil Co., whose presi-
dent, William Keck, got into a
national, scandal when Hi* lobby-
ists offered Sen. Franks Case,
Smfh Dakota Republican a $2,500
bribe for the latter’s vote or. oil-
gas lagislationr is one of the big-
gest tax beneficiaries.
Since 1953, the company not on-
ly has paid absolutely no income
taxes to Uncle Sam but . has used
the tax loopholes actually to col-
lect from the Treasury.
In 1953, Superior lamed $11,-
5(10,382. hit instead of paying fax-
es, Superior managed to. coll
a tax rebate of $500,000. This
the stockholders an income
taxes of $12,000,382. " ’J
In 1954, when Superior/Seamed
$10,260,388 net income, it/oilected
a $100,000 tax rebate ad a bonus
from Uncle Sam. For next five
®9-
tearned in 1948 But the Job must
be dsat. if only to show the com-
peting potmrar! parties where their
strenglhs and their sreaknesees
.-■»». "2'•* ..
lh.doingYtxv homework, both.., ....
7,^., Demodwa affitepubtienna
; itatM. Once Ihe HepMWJean Party
^could; . take the Midw^ Jar
.......
how "shops in, both .
parties..with the GOP steadi^ ioa- :KV- -T-
tng hi* business-. - —r»--. * .9:30
A series "of Milt, taken to gauge ' -
Vice President Nixon's strength 10:00'
and rented this week, tend to
■ *g
Con rr? have swung to him. In 10:30
• some cases, the result* are so
ov-erwhelmii^ that they can lead
to one of only two conclusions:.
Either the polls are weighted or
Mr; Nixon has vote-getting po-
tential* that even his most ardent
supporters failed to note.
In South Dakota, for example,
a poll taken by two newspapers
and a: professional sampling or-
- ginltstiw jsfiOw Mr. Nixon tead- —
tog S*h. Jofin'E. Kennedy by S7,3
per ceht to 32.7 per cent Against
Senator Lyndon Johnson, the vica
president doesn't do quite a* well:
S2 yet-cem to 38 per cent. If ftis
“^“pfi*;'ef' To be'inywhireTwar..........
the November dutcome, it means'
that, Sen. Karl Mundt, facing a
, totigh battle for re-election, wall
have had a broad coattail on
which to ride.
In Iowa, polls taken independ-
ently by a sampling outfit and
by the Des Moines fiegister-Tri-
btme show identical results in the
Ntxon-Kennedy trial heat: 54 per
rent Nixon, 33 per cent Kennedy,
and 13 per Cent undecided. In
Illinois, where Mr, Nixon’s pri-
Bigge
Jack U Laana
On the Go v -
Price la Right
Howard Finch
I Love Lucy
CoocentratiflB
December Bride
TVuth or ConaequeqeH
Love Of Life
It Could Be You
Sugarfoot
7:00 © Peck’s Bad GW
Playhouae
DoUe GlUto
Wyatt Earp
VThe. Paflemar
WEDNESDAY AFTEBNOOH
Toppef •
News
_ Restless Gun '
15 (D Joyce Hayward
Associated 1
■*-y
The PitUh.
-.-M^gnme-leai
m
1:00.
11:00 (
12:00 1
' Alriw'Preeento
Manhunt —-• .
US. Marsbal. "
(Highway-Patrol
.: Jttek Paar
Final. News ; :■»'
News,'Sports
ManmAbout Sports
MGM Theater
(‘■Public Hero No. 1”)
I Club 13 T
I Final News . \ ■'' '
! Midnight Theater
Naughty Marietta
m Full Circle ...
IS&rW
t*30 O House Party
0 Loretta Young
© All Star Theater
2:00 © Young Dr. Malone
ffi The Millionaire x
© Day In Court x
-■ bulge any N
he* had at ti
; A, . .—. --.I.-
2:30 I
I From These Rood
I The Verdict Is Yount
I Gale Storm
8»
8:45
6: SO
6:55
“TOO
7:30
7:45
»:#>T
WEDNESDAY MORNING
. (July *)
ddet Don
Daily Word • -
Morning Report
Farm Report
Today ■
Ginny Pace Slow
Today to Houston
Wilson News
Mr.'Caboose
Morning News
Romper Room
Newi/, .• -
Cadet Don'
3:00 © Comedy Theater
©Brighter Day ' \; N
© Beat The Clock
3:15 ffl Secret St(»m
3:30 © Adventure Theater
© Edge of Night
© Who Do You Trust
4:00 Q Looney Town
© Early Show
- © American Bandstand
People’s Choice.
Kitirlk’s Party .
San Francisco Beat
Milk Drop Moe Ranch
Oau Rather News
Huntley-Brtokley..
1’*%?/:■ V
4:40
3:00 I
aonsj- /_
They-have
1. Winning
last 10 game
2. Failing t
either of the
“to five starts
* 3. Blowing
hind their N
So how?
Easy. Milw
Braves have
last 12, and
Francisco Gi
five of their
The limpirij
bleheader at
blowing a l
Bob Friend a
. , Braves »m
innings. But
.second game
hit job by sol
5sJ0
5:38
.5:40
Bible Verse
*:L5 l
8:25 1
8:301
9:00 i
i Capt, Kangaroo
i Today in Houston
mary vote exceeded President Ei-
senhower's 1956 record, toe Vic*
Tumbleweed Tiraa
Dough Re Mi
Our Miss Brooks
) I Married Joan
LET YOUR light so shine before,
men. that they may see your
good wnrks, arei glorify your Fith-_
er which is in heaven. Matthew
•5:16 ■ . .......H:.....
\ x dix.
The.Giants
four-hi^er. T
them to a 1-1
• ailed afteri
darkness at
only park .in
, lights, ,
St. Louis sf
winning 6-2
Philadelphia
defeating C,
the Reds too
a four-hitter
President topped Senator Kennedy
decisively: 55 per eet to 45 per
cent, to Indians, a a sampling
candidates aivid-
showed the
ing 52 to. J8, jn percent- ..
ages, with Mr. Nixon leading.
This correspondent, who has fr«-.
quentj^ discussed the subject of
pollsib'ijlh the vice president, con-,
curs in . His view that no election
Know Your Bridge
•By 6. JAY BECKER
SAW
SAWS Mi
SHORfY'
lOlGres!1
South dealer.
Neither side vutoarahle.
isAian Until the voters have acted
ih November. In 1950, ~ *
/BO
years,
at all, although its
“ reached n8.877;r“
(its for 1957
"porter with ten years less experi-
enee; he let himself be conditioned
by polls in California which
showed that Mr, Nixtm, then run-
ning for the Senate, w(*ild at best
squeak through. The Nixon plur-
ality that year was over 600,000
votes.
Far mode impressive than any
farm belt poll has been the con-
sensus of reporters who covered
Mr. Nixon on his recent Western
swing." What struck them was the
WEST
♦ AQlf
♦ QJ#4
41078 2
vnsr
stole
During this entire period,
only income/ax the com:
impany.
shelled out was $175,000 in 1958 to
foreign governments,
presidential race, And in analyzing
' contend-
and Foundry Co., received an 81-million-dollar con-
tract to build 38 undreground launcher aystems tor
the two top Democratic i
ers. you have to • consider the
money behind them. Let’s take
Johnson first.
the Titan missile.
1
Leading Directors Give
Views Gn Film Gapital
THE SENATOR from Texas did
Try and Stop Me
-By BENNETT/6ERF-
an amarine' thing the other day.
For a man running lor President
By BOB THOMAS
AP Movie TV. Writer
.Last of ,three articles m Holly-
wood production problem*
HOLLYWOOD (APl-How can
HMtywood retain toe crown It ha*
I* certainly not the same a* ft
wm to the -days when the big
stiidio* ran the town. It never
wtfi -fe the same/iflther,” -
-What can be done to improve
the jituafiop?
..SteyeftS: ”1 think more time
it was courageous. But it showed
clearly where Johnson's money is
; coming from, * •
Johnson stood up on the Senate
floor and led the battle,: »gainst
reduction of the 27'j per cenr’oii
depletion allowance. He didn’t
have to do this. He could have*
ducked. But he didn’t,
Sen. Paul Douglas of Illinois,
like an elderly Don Quixote tilting
TACK BSNK7 doeen’t think i wife, Mary, appredatee
*1 the fiir stole he cave her for irtfcday present. Tt isa’t
you’,” grievae Jack, “but
r
the film capi- :mtW( be taken in making picture*,
^The men to ask are toe real Tot‘ m*ny °f fhPm
creators af the movie business,
such are Walt Disney.
at windmiUa, wa» va^antJy wag-
«ttl© to closf
■Three
prepared,; shot In 'a hurry ah3
edited ,-jiist . Is'
George Mevens ("A Ware in the
rGlanti't and
Sin,- - ./‘Stato?’
Mark Robson rCh»midon," ‘'My
Footish Hwtft. “Peyton Place >•
All three have recently reiunyx!
from trip* abroad with new it*
Mght to the .industry’s problem,*,
do they view Hollywood's
. . before the- producer
has h)’ grab a jet to New York.
Writers art expensive, so they're
hired for'10 weeks only, then get
laid oft”
Dlsn*jrf'‘7Ye’ve got to make tt
more comfortable fm- people to go
to the theater, as well as giv*
them good pHures Many thea-
ing his annual batti* to close one
of the biggest tax loopholes, IJe'
knew he couldn't win. But he
staged the fight, anti rolled up 30
yotps against toe ml - gas conw“
ptuties. JNiftsdn;'leading,toe pp-
pc|toon, heat him with 56 votes.
shottld be noted that the real-
A magazine featured oo
its first page thtoiquoution:
“Oce sentence often pro-
vides a* much -thought as a
Hated trr ted ft* tee to*
of to* Ooimac tiout
so mute that tet dldnt say
this morning I found it
hanging fitsn mr car’*
radiator ntuuoKtLm
• • •
ii
tn
to iel*ct tho sosit
s cynicism of the farmers
foward S8n?e of the' Democratic
candidates. Said one: “Dick Nixon
may be everything they say h * is.
, But he was a poor boy who strag-
gled to make ends meet. The
Democrats are offering us a crew
of millionaires. Maybe there is no
solution to the farm problem, but
we .voted for Harry Truman be- v
cause he was on «jr side. I think
Dick Nixon is on bur side, too.’’
Almost to a man, the reporter*
present at the . Nixon rallies
agreed that the response was
genuine and spontaneous. No one
can douht that the vice president *
well a - disciplined organization
helped to bring out the crowds.
But organization, however effici-
ent, cannot manufacture enthus-'
asm. And it cannot squeeze from
hard-bitten editors, subjecting a
candidate to rfeety. minutes of
intensive grilling, plaudits that
they do not feel.
Nor can organization generate
the-kind of .sptoit that brought out
ten thousand people in Fargo,
N.D., and lad them to break
through police lines to shake Mr.
Nixon's hand. The Fargo demon-
stration elicited one . comment
from a Secret Sendee man who
NORTH
♦ T6
»QJ4
♦ A85
4KJ983
EAST
4108643
f K865
ft K102
**
SOUTH
ft K J
ft A10732
------- ft 763 ------
*AQ6
‘ The bidding:
South Weat North
lft Pas* 2 +
34 Pas* 3ft
4ft
Opening lead-queen of dia-
monds.
A first-rate declarer takes
Into consideration every-possi-
bility that enters jils mind.'Deli-
cate refinements of play do oc-
casionally arise In bridge, and
the mark of the master is that
he observes and applies them
to the task at hani^
South was playing fo.ur
hearts. He won the diamond
lead and played the queen of
hearts and finessed, West drop-
next led a low club to tho Jack
and returned the four of hearts.
East played the six, which waa
gobbled up,by the seven, and
the ten then drew Uastis last
tramp.
Everything would have bees
fine except that when declarer
now led top ace of dubs, East
I showed out, and there was n»
way to cash the long dub suit
Weatis 10-7-6-2 blocked toft
suit. ■
So declarer led the qurto and
overtook with tea king in order
to lead a spade from dummy.
Ttus was of no avail because it
East
Pass
Pass
East covered with the
king and South took the ace,
Weat showing out
Declarer now had the 10-7-3
left and East the 8-6. To avoid
turned out that Weat had toft
A-Q, and South went down one.
Yet declarer ahould haw
made the hand. He did not giv*
himself the maximum chan eft
to win the contract After the
trump situation became expoe*
•dthat
ed, he should have realised
a 4-1 club break might defeat
him and taken toe
measures to guard
possible division of ______
Instead of leading the six of
clubs to the jack, he should
e appropriate
I against that
(the dubs.
have led the queen to the king.
••• lM»
Then, after picking up _________
trumps, he would cash the soft
of clubs. With East showing
out it would be a simple mat*
ter to take a proven finesse -
the nine. He then led the South wou^d have*n^eeLewa
tricks instead of nine.
The queen is led to the king;
not to boast of a wealth at re*
sources, or for histrionic effect,
but to serve a legitimate pw*
BLUE
x
Heater
on stee
power,
er trait
dows,
terior, i
per moi
. CAI
5903 C
the Ion of a trump trick. South pose.
(0 im King Features Brad teat* I«ek
has been with Nixon for years.
“You’d think we were back
*wev»h»!rt ness. Many of them have no air
Ttw ihirur conditioning. They've got to gear
to the Jet age,
IM- "I » ~
&3L'm £ a Mfla «
more than ever before.” , feave tt up to.?'l.Al,?^can pU^-
Stevens: ‘The picture business lie what should he shown. -
;*
®ljf Baytottm §un
. srr.um or Tire ssiocuttd mxs*
Pubttshed aftmoona Monday through Friday,
afternoons. Mo
Editor :«A Publisher
.........''.......- .Business Manager
’““MB:
«««*» Anrtte
John Wadley ..
, CorriaUagtea
»#*••*••***•**••»•*• '***••*•• .QicnWlw Mmm
ftPVBItTMWQ DEPARTMENT
« ft ft a'ft* #»«•*>••*,*« ft#* **»•*'••»** s'* •
....................“.......Retail Manager
1M
**•**• •* » i . J
* t*ft * * »* ♦» *4 « »* s • * » W» » » ♦ »»- WltWWl MIBIffi
Represented Nationally by '
Tom Newspaper Reprreentatlve*. lac.
F O Bos ft “
-ft to Bos tefi-Bsytcsa.-
lasfSsiSsultra"-
THi ANSWH, QUICKI . B0« Of fMH-OU«* THI NAM* oowtry-e permanent repreaenta-
H^i^^e^toiTb^Tf ^ k^Fnam^ Oeyton*
T^Urtsn was prim, min-
Tsatw, v r™ rs
rrirj^r" «■ - mm wm
• \rJ «J-nKW52f=£
Beau Brummel of our Revolu-.« ln i9„. he he,p«d found his
_________ HAFFY UITHDAY ......L
To JeOM Cocteau, French
author. ' f . ■
Business prospers;
' m te-|te-WteftL............
Today's child frill be extremely
, . ■ IVft MN SAID f--
ffe who has imagination Kith-
out learning hat wings and no
WATCH YOU* lANOUAGf
MINATORY a- OCN-s-t*
ri) — adjective; tortauning or kte
menacing. Origin: L
mftsri, to threaten.
threatening or
r Lata Latin—
riculture and ian» in 1988, ha
wm subatquenUy in charge iff
eemmunications, transport and
worts. Leader of Ceylop’s house
WM
»tS;2S,?RS
mttiator af iabar, hteiatiy ate
9itete.tetete«j
Wm
st twttfta ef this estaaa)
rrNtfNMD TODAY
Nineteen yean ago today tea
Osmans reached toe r——
rtvse U their invasion of
”*.SS
Wngfiota. Aft
of the rx tor
“• -ma mt-t ■•*"£> »y>»»sA
in
Venezuela all over .again” he
«id, “except that the crowd was
cheering „ instead of throwing
rocks.'.’ *
The vice president’s aides, who
are convinced that ‘ running
scared’’ is the only way to psh
Daily Crossword
--KING FEATURE--
DAILY
ACROSS
CROSSWORD
learned from Mr. Nixon — alter-
nately play up these. recent suc-
cesses in the farm belt and then
minimize it. They are aware that
a sharp drop in hog or wheat
prices might well reverse what
mutated]
now senu j
. Nixes tide.
Four Kidneys Operate
Just As Good As Two
FORT WORTH (APi-Doctor*
here hive ftiseovered what
v amounU te four kidneys in a 5-
^ year old boy.
After thorough study of the case,
Dsvld Wayne Lehew today was
discharged from Fort Worth Os-
teopatbic Hospital srito toe deci-
sion that the fair units were ftoc-
tkteng fiuf >i mffl m i nremiJ.
No need for surgery ‘
“In mr said the ho
was seen.
I h^=’f mm-
pathic physician, “if anything hap-
pens to om or nen jwp of his
kfdneys,
left,”
Jpjmm
A Pure
1L Solitary
II. Dedicate
13; Arabian
.gxrmentx
14. Put on .....*'
15. Orifice
IT. Metallic
rocks
18. Of the sun
31. Uncooked
34. Many
sided
figure
28. Maxim
30, Reptile
31. Precsived
beforehand
-M. fkplfiruug
abrub ■■
84. Scatter
M. Law (Dn.
1 ftp is -1—
5. Mandarin 22. Fuss
7. Stow race 2«iTurkUh
horse
I. A blurred
spot
ALargft
vohimft
10. Female
sheep
16. Treat*
lABteoW
gKhr
Force
(abbr.)
weight
JT. Fresh
29. Nazi
police
. 32. Land ;
measure
85. Howled
(Scot)
36. Affixes
snaeo
SAUbea-
wing
40. Measure
(6p.)
man^m - ■ is .v-fte . , -
yteertsris Aaswer
4L Prepare for
4tSm .....
44. Mr. Hosing
41. Before
David srill still have two
The youngster is the son of Mr.
dn. Thomas Lae Lehew Jr.
and Mrs.
Although such “congenital
anomalies” (Inborn variations)
are not unknown. David’i doctor
adif^teted ne-er seen feur kkh
43. Distend
46. African
riverbed
4T. Drygoods
dealer
48. Ireland
Dill Yw Know?
T/*
/ Boom
Snakes smell an bear through
- fiteir laiguM— -——
3. Two-toed
Hath
4. Outstrips
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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/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.