The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 303, Ed. 1 Friday, September 11, 1964 Page: 2 of 14
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-......IMKlff
JDjr iaglmmt Gun Friday, September
Noon Call Stock Quotes
(Coiftoy Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner end Smith)
Alieg Ludlum ......
Allia-Chalmers 2°lf*'
JUuminifim Ltd 29?»
Amt r .Cyan...............VlMi
Amtr Tel & Tel ..........<69^a
Am Visdose ............... 81
417$ Magnavox
Marathon Oil.............. 61%
Monsanto ................. 82
Nat Dist ............ 28%
Newp News ...............47-\
N&w; York Central ........ 457$
' n-*'fhaconda Cop ............-43 oiin-MaJh ................427*
ft * Admeo ................... 73
ji Ashland Oil
Otis Elev v...
Pfizer. ‘
33
At Tp & SF ............... 337-
Baxter Lab ............... 26% > Philip Morris
Beth Steel....,. .... 3?%-j Phillips Pet
Celanese ................. 65% -
Chrysler ....................61%
Cities Serxiee ...'..........72%
Colgate'Bi-imo ............ 45%
Columbia Gas .*•■........• 29%
Creole .................47
Delta Air L ............... ,61%
Diamond Aik ............. 5:>%
Dow/ Ghent ..............70%
•mV.
48
.......47*4
....... 82%
........ 54',
Pure Oil ..*.......... 6-i%
Royal: Duifh . . .. ..... 4ft.
Safeway 68%
Sears ...... SW'<
DuPont
Shell ...................... 50 .
Sinclair %;.i.,.. 46’«
Socony-Moft................ 81
272% | Sop Pacific ............. 43%
iiiPa.an Xrdak........"l^j^erry-Rand .............. 13%
Ford',^..’*.ri.“.‘i.*“.,.i.«» f*“ ^5 .........V.....
Foremost Dairies ......... 12% Stsn Ind ...............83%
Freepbrt Sulphur ........... Stan N, J .................. gulf
4'
Gen Klee
Get) Motors .......,.s......08%
(Jett Tele ...................
Gen Tire .................•
Georgia Pacific ........... L:%jSunray-Mid
Gillette-Saf ............... 28% xvntnv ____
: Goodyear Tire
-Greyhound ..
Gulf Oil ......
oulfinC Gulf prod •••••'.....
Stan, Ohio ...........»... .v4t)%
Stude-Packard ............ 615
Sun 697s
34
j'SyjJtex,,;..,.,. ^............. 50%
24 ’I Tennessee'Gas .......... 21%
CT:%.)Texa^O)“ ...^........... 80%
Texas Eastern ............ so-1,
THIS WEEK
IN SPORTS
FRIDAY
B'jytown at Spring Branch—7:30 p.m.
Bill High vs Beaumont French at (
veston—7:30 p.m.
Goleno Park at Texarkana >-7:30 p.m.
Pasadena vs South Houston at Pasadena
—7:30 p.m.
Texas City ot Port Arthur-7:30 p.m.
East Chambers at Barbers Hill
C. E. King at Crosby
Anchuac at Hitchcock
Chcnnelvlew ot Cypress-Falrbanks
Deei Park at liberty
U Porte at Angleton
SATURDAY’
Unr ersity'ot Houston vs Trinity at Rico
Stodlum.
Carver vs Bay City Hilliard at Memorial,
Stadium — 7:30 p.m.
Sam Rayburn vs Spring Woods at Spring
Branch — 7:30 p.m.
Suicide Squad
Junior Varsity
':30 p.m.
it Spring
Boyou -
lUston Olli
ilty vi Spring
r 7 P-T .
Branch —2 p.m.
Branch at Cedar
vs San
night.
MONI
ib at
Dlege Chargers at
H L A Po ............
,tiB.M ................
Int’l Harv .........
In!T Minerals .....%••*%••• T1
. Int’l Nickel................*1
,<426%
84%
MRS. ROBERT I,. Stephens, the former Joy Fuller of Baytown,
visited here all sttmnfrr with their children from Kdwards Air
Force Base, Calif. Her husband is a Lt. Colonel stationed at
Edwards AFB. The family visited her mother, Mr*. Jewel
Fuller, and her sister, Sirs. Perry Britton. Left to right are
•a Stephens, Mrs. Stephens, .Mrs. Fuller and
Mrs. Stephens and children returned last
LHa Lou and Lis;
Linda Stephens,
weekend to California.
Texas Gulf Sulp .......... 54%
Tidewater .......;......... 34"
Timken ..
Transam Corff ............48-
t- c | Union Carbide .....: 22% j
{x-' l'o-Tli' -f Calif ............95 !
86
Budget
HOSPITAL NOTES
SSK£r:rx::5;$gj!-^-»........*,
Tnd * s*'Steel ............ Sftlg.roenut.
’ ‘ feheed- ^Jit nuiiay pjw*
* * Vetyiv ..............„ 7% | in thet, water and sewer fund in
■*■— -——%-r-r_ j $110,751 for extension . of |
th ' I M
hi :Ajouis Land
- *
.{»%
rui'.'.
Wholesale Prises
6n entipe stock
Luminall Paints
SHELEY
0 Market 583-1700
lumber company
Admitted to Gulf Coast:
three additions and 13 replace* Charlene To d d, daughter of
Mr.' and Mrs., David R. Todd,
202 J3eaomom, Room 129.
L. R. ‘Gilbert, 805 Kilgore
Road, Room 103.
Jack Odneal, 512 Gresham,
Play Night
Decker
We Spray Twice Nightly
NOW SATURDAY
S—FEATURES—i
7JO p.m., Again 12:S0 pjn.
BARRY SULLIVAN
saan
kiaffihow
2nd feature 8:20 p.m,
I Science Fiction Fun |
ROBINSON
WCRUSOEi
MARS
rrcHMicoio/r * «tux
Srd Feature—11:10 p.m.
All Stax Cast in
THE 7tfi.
COMMANDMENT-
(sanitary sewj-r lines, or; treat-!Room 105.
I merit plant construction. $45,000 j Mrs. Ep p 1 e Higginbotham
BAYTOVW*i4ough Riders will1 for extension of water mains or Mown X)m
have'a play night a 7:30 p.m. [loops. $21,000 for new-‘meter in-
Saturday at the Jenkins Arena), ..... , s,,roo f
on Cedar Bayou-Crosby Hoad.I”*,na f-jUU Iot niw
, “If you are between the- ages of - 'll e hydrants,
j two and 102 you will enjoy the ] There was :dne protest made
'play . night,*' Mack Warren. )(0 the budget during the public _
^id^t-.hearing preceding the budget tonighLA’ he said
approval.
-Mrs. Gerald Adams, 30s Kelly
Lane, Room 127.
Mrs. Cal D, Ellis. 14 Belview>
Room 111.
Mrs. Mimriee R. Francis, 2510
Cedar Ave.. Room 122. . FORT WORTH (AP> - A
Admitted to San Jacinto Mefit-] .yoyg fpfflCTW^Kaped^slabt
odist
Trustees
Mrs. Joe R. Busby, 5430 Bay-
ou Drive, Room 318.
| Mrs. Raymond Shvmnnski,
5113 Reddell Rd.. Room 530.
today and left
today in East
night.” Mack
Rough Riders v i c e president,
said. » • ■
(( ontinued From Page 1)
the first look I have had
SATURDAY
/ KIDDIE SHOW
8—CARTOONS—-8
2 - Comedies - 2
Plus This Feature
"THE GHOST OF
DRA6STNP
HOLLOr
TWIST CONTEST
^ ON STAGE
2 JACKPOTS 2
$50.00 AND $50.00
10 KENNEDY HALF
DOLLARS GIVEN
AWAY EACH
SATURDAYI
Now Thru Saturday I
one three
man,,, women,.,
one
night
FOR ADULTS AND
MATURE YOUNG PEOPLE
Charles Donnelly, coordinator
of the Baytown Little League
[requested that the council re-
] consider plans to cut the annual
I Little League donation, to $750.
I The Little League received $1,-
[500 from the city
bed and beaten
lying in grass
Fort Worth. ,
Mi's. Carolyn Adams, 20, and
i,* ru-uut-ii nu., jvooui mu. the mother of two,, was found
Mrs. William G. Hunt, High-1 nude and unconscious near-a
lands, Room 306. river bank by t>vo men who
Jesse Ybrra, Jr.;; Baytowm.j were looking for cattle.
a,]Room215. - 4 - “My uncle and I were driv-
Mrs. Be'la Roll, Highlands, | mg down the road, looking for
Suesse was questioned ahmitiRoora m
his statement: ' We ascertain Mi-s. Sophia Ellis 138 W. Bay-
whether r^rsonnel is operating shore Dr.,._Room 205. *
m Inc normal machine rate. We j r
are not concerned with person- h^evv arrivals * '
alities but we are uniquely Mr and Mrs Rav l. Aflord,
qualified to make a judgmentjpMadena; gir], bom sept. io.
in San Jacinto Methodist,
of competency.
The board seemed wary about
this point, questioning whether
Suesse would be telling the dis-
this year.
He told the council that the
League has an annual budget
between $10,000 and $11,500 andjtru t whom to hire,
that the $750 would support] Dr. Horeczy sak% "It_ would
about four teams irr the minorjbe better if it were said you
league. , I were a consultant."
The council, which also cut in I Suesse replied, Our advice
half the S3,Odd given ibis yearfw-*»ncrty m:accountmg .compe-
to tlie Teenage Leagdh, approved ,en<% - This
the budget with the cuts to both
lying out in the grass,
Edgar Friend, 26.
“He asked me what it was
and 1 looked and saw that it
was Ihe nude body of a woman,
[She had been badly beaten and
. , „ _ „ jstabbed in the back, chest and
Mr. and Mrs. Oswaldo I lores, | head
3208% Wisconsin girl, Sepf. 10 ‘
in San Jacinto Methodist.
Work Better
Worry Cure
ThanWhiskey
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP) -One of
life’s little ordeals is returning
to the job after a three - day
holiday weekend.
Some, of course, cah’t stand
to be away from the usual
routine of office or plant life.
They TeTOm lo "it with glad
neighs, as an old horse to its
Stall.
Others of us. on the other
hand, need a little reindoctrlna-
tion upon having to come back
to the chafing of the daily rut.
Freedom has made us a bit wild
and coltish.
yie need again to be recon-
ciled ta the thought that, while
variety may be the spice of life,
it is also good for our immortal
souls to be back once more
plodding through the old salt
mine. .
In that helpful spirit, we have
. , assembled some remarks by the
cows, when We saw something sages of the ages on why work
l.-IrwY ;« tkrt FYV.MCC »♦ saj(j •----J t--—*--* -*1- •— ■
Funeral Notices
FISHER
Funtrol I ■ r v I c • > lor Mrs. Martha
Amalir Flihar, u of 3JI W. Rg»u£lic;
will ha held ot J p.m. Saturday at Paul
Mrs. Flshor dlod at 7:J0 d.m. Thurs-
day ot tha homa at her son-M-low and
her daughters, Mrs. Jones In Boytown
and Mrs. Harry Troverso In Mont »el-
yleu. Othdr survivors are two sisters,
Mrs. Alice Grant of Texos City, and
Mrs. Josephine Williams of Cove; four
grandchildren and nine «reo*-frmdchi|.
Born on April 14,
ns a practical nursj
1M. at Com,
Try San
Classified
Ho:- TlStt
iAfphmi
/XT' Restaurant
For The Moet Unueuil
CreboiMt Imperii!
;,cr»bme«f Busitte
Try It . « . You’ll LOre III
7800 I. Htln, HA 8*5481
Cloeed Wtdntediy
Open 11:10 » m. te 11:10 ]
Fort Worth
LadjHRaped,
Lift To Die
‘help
Ethel
leagues. Jack Huron, acting ma-
yor pro-lem, said the money
would probably,, be used by the
city to build baseball diamonds
Gymkhana Set
GOOSE Cieck Sports Car Club
will have a gymkhana, vvhis is
a driver's excellence contest,
Sunday on the parking lot in
front of Ihe main office of Hum-
ble Oil and Refining Co.'s Bay-
town Refinery. Registration for
the contest is at 11 a.m., the
| drivers' meeting is set for noon
!and the gymkhana, at 1 p.m.
i! NOW
THRU TUESDAY
: Meet the zaniesi
^characters ever gathered
under ene bed!
DAVID NIVEN
PETER SEILERS
ROBERT WAGNER
CAFVCME.
THE PINK PANTHER,
Ttowour rtotmou-
UWTOMmtTt
Quiwkadile Tears
BAYTOWN
Wed.
Sept.
AFTERNOON & NIGHT
ALEXANDER DRIVE
AT HOLIDAY INN
BAYTOWN JAYCEES
WORLDS LARGEST
ml
-C®lroS
__
600 PEOPLE
150 PERFORMERS
200 ANIMALS
15 ELEPHANTS
$1,791,001 CAPITAL
$l.iN lilly [owk
★ CLYDE BEATTI
Battling 20 Lion*
and Bengal Tiger'
★ GFRIELANIJ
World’s Champior
Bicycl® Riders
★ Cirla Willend;
SENSATION OF
THEHIGH WIRE
BUOY THE FUN WITH YOUR FRIENDS.
DANCE
SATDRMT H6HT
. American Legion Rail, Crosby. Texas
• CROSBY POST 858
Sept. !2tll~. KITTY HELLS A THE SOUNDS
Sept* 1Wl»
SUXNTLAM) COWBOYS
A
Sept. IM^mb HAPPY OOLNTBY BOYS
BRING YOUR FRIENDS!
twh^dwly4ibp:n.1TO^
car POPULAR PRICES
TRI. CITY PHARMACY
126 W. Tmbi Ave.
a d v i s o r y
service. We realize that more
than anybody.”
Stark said, "We'd take a dim
view as the board of Education
in being told who to employ and
not employ.”
Suesse indicated this was not
his intention. Tie emphasized
that analysis of the entire-oper-
ation “must be first.”
Hinson said, "If we are get-
ting into general ledger ac-
counting, this would have to be
retroactive from Sepf. 1 begin-
ning of the new fiscal year.
Stark said, “Resolve this as
quiCklv as voil can.”
Truste Karl Opryshek
brought up the subject of sepa-
rate accounting systems for-Lee
College and public schools
Suesse replied, "This should
[be done. I have talked -with
Dean Walter Rundell, and he
wants an accounting department
to call his own. I know he Ls Un-
happy with the general situation
. .. Havine .two linos of produc-
tion parallel stands on its own
merit. You can’t do one job for
three weeks and get behind on
the 'other.1 1 ihin.k dual lines Of
accounting is an integral pari
of the sWfem. If and when you
separate, you can neatly lift the
college' accounting department
out. Right now ft hr so inter-
twined that would be impossi-
ble." .
Discussing Ihe need for spe-
cial analysis of 'he district busi-
ness procedures, Suesse said,
"When you run .into overtime
vou find machine fault. There is
■somedhe: here tonight Working
in the business office stuffing"
pay checks in, envelopes , .
Analysis Is like a time and mo-
tion study.” .-
Dr.-Horeczy asked about the
overall savings in setting up a
new accounting system. . ' , , , •
Suesse answered. "We couldn’t Yearbook PnOTOS
venture a guess. We don't know"
if we can effect great or small
efficiencies-. . . If we find that
(Continued From Page 1)
largely; out, ' Jacksonville, St.
Augustine and Brunswick
pitched into a monumental
repair and. cleanup job.
More than 30,000 persons who
spent two nights on the hard
floors of churches, schools and
armories in Georgia, Florida
and South Carolina returned to
their homes.
Some had "no homes left.
Fourteen houses north of St. j
Augustine were demolished. The
huge tides and driving waves
cut the land from under them
and they washed away. -- ^
However, considering Dora's of H. H. Hungcrfora, a Fort
massive reach, structural dam- Worth policeman assigned to the
"All she could say was,
me."' Friend continued.
Tlit- victim’s mother said her
daughter left the parents' home
about 10:30 p.m. Thursday -ir
ihe mother's-car With her sons
aged 2 and 1. , ^ .....'
Police launched a search for
the car. The boys are missing
Detective II. W. Sinclair told
the Star-Telegram the handle of
a paring knife was found at the
scene. He said the woman had
multiple cuts and bruises, about
her body,
The woman was reported in
an exlremely critical condition.
Attendants said . the woman had
been stabbed four or six times.
She was unable to tell detectives
what had happened.
Officers described her speech
as very- incoherent.
Mrs. Adams is the daughter
age was relatively light
The worst destruction W’as
caused by flood waters. They
ran Waist deep in the streets of
St. Augustine during high tide.
Florida's valuable citrus crop,
which escaped With little wind|&]
damage, was menaced by lhei§
torrential rains. Standing water
can rot the roots of young trees.
withina fewdays, ..... |
Tons of leaves", limbs, shin-
gles, signs, awnings, antennas
tiles, glass, wires, poles and
trees littered streets.
Majestic old oaks that lined
the streets of St. Augustine for
decades lay on their sides
Palms were scattered like,
toothpicks. , ; .
Damage to the roads in Duval
County, which, is metropolitan
Jacksonville, was estimated at
$5 million. Stretches of U:S. Al-
A, the highway that parallels
the Atlantic all ihe »way down
the coast, was under water. In
places it was* ripped away.
Dora gave Jacksonville and
St. Augustine 1heir worst beat-
ings jrom a hurricane in this
century. -
youth division,
Friend said the woman was
badly beaten.
He continued,'.' Auditing is a
sludy to show where you cnyld
| lead to efficiehces.” He-added,
t "Ytou have two accounting situ-
ations to solve,” referring to the
coUege and public school sys-
tes. ■■•■* ■' . r■—
Suesse. was hired to. audit
books this year for $7,000. If he
continues to work in re-vamping
the business procedures, he said
it would cost fhe-district about
$3,000. —;—---
During the .past 10 years
Suesse has made similar studies,
the latest being re * organizing
the business procedures for the
City of La Porte, The ebusiness
set-up for the- City of Baytown
stems from Suesse's work sev-
eral yeais ago.
ROBERT E. Lee High School
students must have their photo-
there is not
not necessary. Photographs, will
be made ail day Saturday at
Giadwick’s Studio.
is good for what ails us:
Where our work ls. there let
our joy l?e.” — Tertullian. <
"As a cure for worrying, work
is better than whisky.” —
Thomas A. Edison.
“Let us work without protest;
it is the only way to make life
endurable." — Voltaire.
"Work keeps at bay three
great evils: boredom, vice, and
need.”.— Voltaire.
"Work! God wills it. That, It
seems to me, is clear,” r'"-
!a\e Flaubert.
"I don’t pity any man who
docs hard Vcrk worth doing. I
admire him. I pity the creature
who doesn’t work, at whichever
gtd of the social scale he may
regard himself as being.” —■
Theodore Roosevelt.
Well, there's the case tor the
jrys of good old work. But how
about those, stubborn rebels who
have to be dragged kicking and
screaming back to the job?
Here is some consolation for
them:. -
''Never_work when hungry
Hippocrates.
“All work and no play makes
Jack a dull boy.” — James
Howell, 1650. , ...
Only horses work, and they
turn their backs on it.” — U.S.
hobo proverb.
“I like work; it’fascinates me.
I can sit and look at it for hours.
I love to keep if by me; the idea
of getting rid of it nearly breaks
my heart.”. —Jerome K. Jer-
ome. '
"Work only tires a woman,
but it ruins a man.” — African
SUNDAY SPECIAL
ROAST
TURKEY
DINNER
, And All
Th*
Trimming!
2 CHILDREN
FREE V
Under S Yr». eg
age when
accompanied by
Mother A Father
SUNDAY ONLY
ADULTS '1.25
WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY SPECIAL
FISH FRY %
Served With French Fries/Cole Stow, Hot Belli
ALL YOU CAN BAT .............. *leO0
W# Take Fleiagre In Catering To Large or Small Banqueta
THE REBEL INN
2702 MARKET
582-4272
proverb.
“Work
Hal Boyle.
is for the birds!” -tL
FUNERAL SERVICES were
held at 3 • p.m. Friday for
James Martin Green 18, of
Uhanneh lew at Chanclvlew
First Baptist Church, with the
Red'. Dan Sttihhle officiating.
Green was killed Tuesday
while working on a Chemical
plant tank in Freeport. He
was the son ot Mrs. J. E.
Green of Channelview.
Burglary
A TOOL box and mechanic’s
tools, hubcaps and a-floor shift
were stolen from the garage 61
H. W. Mirable, 312 W, Humble,,
according to a police report Fri-
day.
TRANSISTOR RADIO
Repairs at
FROEHNERS
5W \V. Tia;i8
LAST CALL
ONLY ^ DAYS LEFT
EVERYTHING MUST GO
NOW
GALAXIES
FAIRLANES
FALCONS
EXECUTIVE CARS
AND
DEMONSTRATORS
SINCE
622 W. Texas Ave.
1934
582-8186
.....Baytowns Host To
SUNDAY BUFFET _
>vu. Dining Pleasure,!, »
SERVING ONLY THE
" ‘I, : FINEST FOODS / . ' ■
Serving Hours ll ^O to l ^O
Adults
52 Children JQE
SCOTTIES FEATURES--
FRIENDLY-COURTEOUS
SERVICE
WONT YOU TRY OUR
FRIED CHICKEN, SHRIMP
& BARBECUED
BEEF-CHICKEN-PORK
| (3RDERS TO- GO
ENJOY SUNDAY DINNER WITH US . *;
SCOTTIES
BARBECUE
CLOSED MONDAYS , _
1641 Market St. Rd. ” Ph. 426-3361
f .—
PLANNING A PARTY
FOR THE KIDDIES?
SUGAR’N SPICE FUN LAND
"CAN HELP YOU
'-a.' - ' ' ••‘r5«3i
WE HAVE A
PARTY PLAN*
School, Church School,
•tc, Parti*!.
We Furnish
Everything Except
The Cake.
• INVITATIONS
• PARTY FAVORS
• ALL RIDES
7 F^r Children Up To
12 Y**re of Ag*
MINIMUM
CHARGE
*15«i
CALL 583-5512
583-5445
NEXT TO -
TASTEE-FREEZ NO. 2
2700 N. MAIN
Op*n Weekday! 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.—'"eekendi 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
_ ” - f......T
' — i” V
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 303, Ed. 1 Friday, September 11, 1964, newspaper, September 11, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057258/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.