The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 264, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1962 Page: 1 of 10
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The Sun Invitee:
TOMMY GREER
IMS Florida
To The Brunson Theater To See
•MR HOBBS TAKES A VACATION*
This coupon
presented at
the Branson ho* efflea.
(Flip lajjtmmt §mt
Serving BAY-TEX—The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
' a
YOUR HOME
. NEWSPAPER
VOL 43, NO. 264
TELEPHONE NUMBER: $82-8302
Monday, July 30, 1962
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
five Cant* Par Copy
BULLETINS
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sena
tors backing the administra-
tion’s communications satellite
bill argued today that unless op-
ponents abandon their filibuster
against it, the United States
could lose the race Apa>
mae.v in space.
WASHINGTON (AP)-A Texas
congressman said today the
House committee investigating
the Billie So| Estes case should
make public the names of all
the congressmen known to be
involved in the affair.
Grandmothers Meet
HIGMANDS Grandmothers will
_ meet at 7 p.m. Friday with Mrs.
Pear l Hemngtoh in Higl
a social. They will map —.—
route to the annual convention to
be held this year in Portland, Ore,
School Board Meeting
CAFETERIA OPERATIONS will
, dominate the Baytown school
board agenda at a called meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the ad-
ministration building. Bids will be
received on staple items that are
purdiased by contract.
KP Family Night
BAYTOWN KNIGHTS of Pythias
Lodge will have family night at 8
p.m. Tuesday at the lodge hall at
2010 Alexander Drive. Members,
their friends and guests are in
vfted. /
Lucky Shopper
MRS. B. L. BARFIELD, 800 W.
M Appear Favoring Ben Bella
Guerrillas Take Algiers
ALGIERS (AP)—Algerian guer-| The only sign of the coup were list slogans and waving green and
troops held Algiers today soldiers in camouflage uniforms | white Algerian /lags.
rilla JH ■_ ,
after a bloodless coup believed to
favor dissident Vice Premier
med Ben Bella’s quest for
Several known opponents of
Bella were arrestedAAmpng t
was Amar Oussedik. political
commissar of the Algiers autono-
mous zone, which the guerrilla
leaders said was dissolved.
Premier Ben Youssef Ben Khed-
da and officials of his government
were nof molested.
Two thousand guerrillas ot the
Wilaya (Zone) No. 4 surrounding
Algiers occupied the city at dawn
Sunday. Their commander, 27-
yeai^old Col. Si Hassan, said he
hoped to form a junta of Wilaya
commanders to head the govern-
ment until elections are held In
the newly independent nation.
Elections for a constituent assem-
bly are scheduled Aug. T2.
The. guerrilla command an-
nounced it had taken control to
re-establish national unity. It
pledged to “open the gates” of
and machine guns set up in some i Col. Hassan appointed Maj.
streets in predominantly Moslem Lakhdar military commander of
areas.
Toward
the cil
..WJj.J J -
evening, groups of Officials/of Ben Khedda’s re-
claimed Hassan acted to do away I an administrative and eeonomio
with "illegal power usurped by vacuum in Algeria,
the autonomous zone since last There wag no evidence of any
April 2.” hostility between the Wilaya 4
Privately, some of them admit- gerrillas and the troops of tha
ted the guerrillas acted to show autonomous zone. The latter «
political tinued to
created I buildings.
guard some official
young Moslems emerged from the gime said'the guerrilla coup “re- their anger with the
ancient Casbah, chanting national-1 stored the status quo." They squabbling, which has
Area Polio Centers Busy -
5,996 More Take Sabin Dose
First phase of the Sabifi oral
vaccine drive was completed Sun-
day hy the makeup climes for
Type One vaccine. \
A total of 5,896 persons in the
Baytown area clinics took the
(Type One vaccine Sunday, Dr. C.
L. Liggett, president of the East
Harris County Medical Society,
said. 7
Baytown Junior High did the
biggest business of .the four clinics
that were open in this area. Sorrie
4,194 doses of the oral vaccine
were administered at this central-
ly located schooL
Highlands Junior High clinic
drew 857 persons; McNair, 188;
and La Porte, 737.
“The clinics had about the turn-.
t expected Sunday,
said. “Thp toumout
out that we
Dr. Liggett
was slow In some areas tat every-
thing went very smoothly. There
'PORTABLE POLE'
A HEA\% WOOD, utility pole dangles from
a helicopter as it is moved for placement in
a hole on the steep slope of Freezout Hill near
Emmett, Id. Utility crewmen guide the poles
into place as they are lowered by the ’copter.
Circles indicate two of the holes.
* f- (Central Press)
cies seeking a solution to the new
nation’s political problems. i
The announcement was consid-
ered a prelude to the installation
in Algiers of the seven-man ooliti-
cal bureau Ben Bella is sponsor-
Union has built the world’s most
modern navy, its chief claims.
Murrill, shopped in Baytown Mon- Adm- “kov^d the
day morning and it paid off. She
Chief Makes Claim -
Reds Boast Most Modern Navy
MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet eluded a^felgvision program from | modern than foe _ navy of any
was awarded $10 as this week’s
lucky shopper.
- Tax Board Sessions
BAYTOWN’S BOARD of Tax
Equalization will meet at city hall
on Aug. 9-10-11, Thursday/Friday
and Saturday. It will meet from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday and
— Friday, and from 9 a.m. to noon
Saturday. Taxpayers wishing to
protest valuations may do so at
any time during the Med hours.
Child Injured By Car
DANNY VARGAS, five, of 6506
Hildalgo, suffered minor injuries
Sunday night when struck by a
car at Decker Drive-In Theater.
He was treated and later released
at Gulf Coast Hospital. W. L. Al-
lison, deputy sheriff, said the boy
must have been running toward Departure the Marines Sun-
the concession stand when he was ^ left the defense of Thailand
armed with rockets and torpedoes
with nuclear warheads.
The Soviet naval ..commander
made the boast Sunday in a Raw-
da article commemorating Navy Polaris,
Day, Part of the celebration in-
ing.
In Paris, Ben Bella’s right-hand
man, Mohammed Khider, told a
news conference the political
bureau would be in Algiers on
Thursday or Friday. It was set
up in the western Algerian city
Tlemcen under Ben Bella’s
control.
But .Khider also warned that
“the situation is very grave. H
stability is not established within
- month, I fear the worst."
the Baltic port of Leningrad show-
ing a submarine that resembled
American nuclear-powered under-
water craft.
Mhny Western
toe Soviet navy
capable of underwater
missiles similar to the
‘The Soviet fleet is now more
orines
Gone From Thailand
BANGKOK, Thailand (XP)— Udon, 40 miles belowfoe Laos
capitalist country,” Adm
kov wrote in Pravda,
Gorsh- ^The guerrilla
‘The basis of our naval fleet their appeal to toe population for
.1____• ___i___:________j "nolm on/1 ennrvu4 M
is atomic submarines armed with
powerful rockets and homing tor-
with nuclear warheads.
They have high speed, great depth poured
of submersion and can operate for usual.
extended periods in the most dis-
tant regions.”
Soviet Vice Adm
calm and support.
'Die city -remained quiet
throughout toe day. Crowds
out to the beaches as
S. Zahkarov
The last 1,800 U.S. Marines have
left Thailand tat America’s Navy
<toief says they can move bade
just as fast if needed to defend
toe country against toe Commu-
nists.
struck by toe car.
Bangkok Tuesday by rail., and
The Marines’ departure ob- submarines during
viously was linked to the 14 nation Barents Sea fleet e.
agreement signed in Geneva last
_ . , uv vTuuuuuiiua, &&iiicu m junkie week guaranteing the independ-
Rorary speaker ,r fighting, and the 90,000-man Thai ence and neutrality of Laos. The
JACK WALKER, past president of ahhy, U.S.-trained and equipped, withdrawal apparently signified a
_u— o-j n,m The American forces moved lessening of concern in Washing-
into Thailand in May when pro- ------
Communist guerrillas in Laos had
swept to toe Thai border. That
the Bayshore Rod. Reel and Gun
Club, will speak at norm Wednes-
day at the Baytown Rotary Club
luncheon at the Tower. He will
tell plans of toe Texas Game add
Fish Commission. Walker is a
member of toe governor's Bay
Study Committee and serves on
toe board ot directors of Bayshore
Rod, Red and Gun Club.
to the 2,000-man U.S. 27th Infan-
try Wolftounds, skilled in
border, and were flown tout to
Okinawa. Support personnel and
heavy equipment will be sent to
“ ‘ >k Tuesday
Woather And Tides
partly cloudy and
Tuesday.
CLEAR TO
hot through
GALVESTON TIDES Tuesday
will be high at 5: It a.m. and
•>::« p.m., low at ll:0J a.m. and
10: :05 p.m. .
Arouhd,
Sk
BAYTOWN CORPORATION Court
Judge and Mrs. Barney L. Ward
jeft Monday on a three-week vaca- ________
tion to Seattle. Wash., and other Fehr, longtime
points. City Attorney George
Chandler will serve as city judge
during Judge Ward’s absence.
Annon C.‘ Webb, a student at
Robert E. Lee High School, re-
ported his motor scooter stolen
Friday while he was attending a
class at the school. It was later
recovered.
Rusty Reber, Hal Parris and
Steve Schwartzkopf were three
tired Boy Scouts by the time they
- ’ “ rode
i fart,
[some of the way when
tired Boy scouts Dy me time i
ttaifSydeTaHtttaewaJhfo t
they Affixed some of toe way w
t
gle Club in Pasadena, winning the
firsl place trophy. Owner ol five
registered beagles, Butch is presi-
dent of toe Houston beagle club.
He is the son of Mrs. Glenella
Perry hears
Diebel . . s Aggie F___, ■.... ____ .
from toe Cedar Bayou Junior High to 7:30 p.m., with hot coffee, cold
graduates who are studying Span- drinks and snacks. The new fire
ish this summer In Mexico and
reports they are having a "fab-
ulous” time. (More abort this in G
three weeks when the students re-
lun home).
tem over toe security 61 Thafland’s
border.
was the guerrillas’ last big push
before the formation of a coalition
regime pledged to take Laos out
of toe cold war. \
Thai officials made plain Sun-
day they don’t have much confi-
dence. to toe ability rt JEtoLia
steer a neutral course and prevent
Communist infiltration into Thai-
land and South Viet Nam. Kennedy administration received
Adm. George W. Anderson, U3r a political boost in the deep South
sai<f .Saturday Soviet nuclear sub-
marines are faster and more
maneuverable than American
SUbs. V " ;
tor another Tfavy Day -
Gorshkov said in an interview
with -Sovyetskayh . Rossiya that
his new submarines, have jour-
neyed under the Arctic ice cap,
a feat first accomplished by the
American nuclear sub '
August 1958*
Trttd, toe labor union
paper, carried an eyewitness
count of missiles weighing “sev-
‘ " being launched from
during last week’s
Sea fleet exercises.
Reports of toe Barents Sea ex-
ercises, which were witnessed by
Prmier Khrushchev, convinced
specialists
thdt Russia now has toe Polaris-
type weapons systems which itl™*,. £
has boasted of for some time.
McClellan
McClellan Reveals
Z^«fftonandln
Nuclear Strike
WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. John ,.1
L. McClellan, D-Ark., told fluT
Senate today that a powerful im-
ionist has demanded a payoff as
the price for settlemen of a strike
holding up work on 11 nuclear
submarines for the Navy.
JfeClellan'
Sabin oral vaccine doses were ad-
ministered in the East Harris
County Medical Society area. This
Rail Mishap
Blamed On
Bad Track
covered about 88 per cant of tha
population. .
A total of 1,559 Channehdew res-
idents Sunday took the vaccine in
makeup clinics, bringing toe grand
total of 8,020. This is about 75 per
cent of toe Channelvlew commu-
ity s population.
Type Three vaccine will bt giv-
en in toe next mass driva in Sep-
tember.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Polioconscious Texans joined
Sunday in another massive surge
toward stamping out toe often
crippling disease.
By unofficial eount, 1,392,704
persons queued up in 27 counties
to obtain and munch cubes ot
STEELTON, Pa. (AP) - A sugar saturated with Sabin
Pennsylvania Railroad official vaccine.
says toe derailment of a baseball
special in which 19 persons were
killed and 100 injured Saturday
“was apparently the result of
track being out of alignment.”
"But a definite cause cannot be
assigned until a thorough investi-
gation has beat completed,”
James F. Newell, the Pennsyl-
vania’s vice president in charge
of operations, said Sunday. A-/
The Pennsylvania Public Utility
Commission joined toe railroad in
toe investigation of toe derail-
ment, and the Interstate Com-
merce Commission was prepared
to move into the probe.
Newell’s stagement <x
toe track alignment was baaed an
first-hand reports given - by
Kohout, toe railroad’s
Howard C. 1
<3*wrtHBflt /workedfin the mm
throughout Saturday night to re-
pair the 1,500 feet of took..
With its main line beck in
service, toe railroad began prepa-
rations to hoist the three death
cars which tumbled down an em-
The heaviest turnouts ware is
Dallas and Fort Worth, jnittonH
ing toe campaign, and in Houston,
where toe drive began toe previ-
ous Sunday.
Officials estimated 590,000, of
tion, filed through public dimes
in Dallas. In Fort Worth toe fig-
ure was 286,435.
An additional 241,931 in Houston
brought toe number immunized in
Harris County te t4O.806,'ir J|-
per cent
Greater incidence of polio to
Texas prompted civic leaders,
working with local doctors’ asso-
ciations, to set up the clinics to
schools ot other public buildings.
Thao have been reports of 150
cases in the state, this
one patient
Health!^
ARABY SHA
\ - \
Louisiana Ballot Boosts
Kennedy Administration
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The Hale Boggs, House Democratic
when Louisiana Democrats re-
nominated one of the President’s
inoBt loyal backers and defeated
a rash of strongly conservative
chief of naval operations, said in
Bangkok that the Marines could
return to Thailand "with utmost
celerity whenever needed ”
U.S. Ambassador Kenneth Todd
Young drained to discuss toe
drawal had been discussed with date* were, beaten to every key
Thai officials, first when 1,000 race in Saturday’s
Marines were flown out early in primary.
July and again when it was de- Kennedy backers were pleased
cided to pull the entire unit out. most by the resounding triumph
The Marines left their base at sewed in toe 2nd District by Rep.
.....
whip.
Boggs was marked for political
extinction by conservatives after
he supported Kennedy’s success-
ful campaign last year to increase
the size of the House Rules Com-
mittee. But he easily defeated
Us!!?
v.-
Highlands Resident Dies
Funeral services for Mrs. Eliza-
beth Rhoda Fehr, 77, of High-
lands wfll be at 10 amt. Tuesctey
at the Highlands Methodist
Church.
Widow of to* late Walter H.
lands busi-
nessman, Mrs. Fehr died at 5:45
a.m. Sunday In Houston. She had
lived in Highlands 30 years. „
, Survivors are her daughters,
Mrs. C M. Hodges Jr. of Houston
and Mrs. Moss Anderson Jr." Of
two staters, Mrs.
______ot Austin and Mrs.
Richard Nowlin of Center, Point;
two brothers. Sam Shone of North
Pleasanton and Ray Shone of
Denison; and a grandson, Paul
Anderson erf Highlands.
The Rev. G. W. Elmore of Madi-
sonville and the Rev. T. S. Hol-
their bikes got bogged downon a comb, pastor of IfigMands Meto-
sandy baric road. Camp Stroke, odist Church, will dfidate
by toe way, is all the way to Out- - - -
roe.
Dutch Diebel’s registered bea-
gles did very well in the field trial
runs held at the San Jacinto Boa
funeral rites. Interment
in Forest Park Cemetery in Hous-
ton, under direction of Earthman’s
Funeral Home.
Born in Denison, Mrs. Fehr lived
in Houston before moving to High-
lands. Her husband was in the
grocery business in Highlands.
Mrs. Fehr was a member of
Highlands Methodist Church and
the Fidel is Sunday School class.
She lived at 205 Riverside Drive,
three opponents, piling up 64 per
cent of the vote m a district
which includes uptown New Or-
leans and tour outlying parishes
Democratic (counties). •/.
Another asprt* pleasing „
Washington was that 25 East
Carroll Parish Negroes bec.nme
the first of their race to Vote in
that northeast Louisiana area
since at least 19K.
Sen. Russell Long, Louisiana’s
to his third foil six-year term by
a 4-to-l margin over Phil St
Amant, a retired Army lieutenant
colonel. St. Amant, an all-out
conservative, called toe Long’s
voting record “socialistic. :
The senators cousin, Gilhs
Long, 39, won the 8th District
House seat from Rep. Harold
McSween, 36, a conservative who
has generally opposed the admin-
istration.
Long was making hte first bid
for elective office In the political
iieartland of his famous family.
Platt Funeral Rites To Be Tuesday
Funeral rites will be held at 2 A retired plumbing contractor, he
lived in Highlands 32 years.
tun. Tuesday at Earthman High-
lands Chapel for Pul!Kidney
Platt, 74, of 317 E. Canal, High-
lands.
Platt died at 4:30 gjtt. Friday.
Tri-City lead) Voteiteer firemen Celebrate
new department by the Baftere
Hill Volunteer Fire Department
C. W. Piato is president '
Tri-aty Beaeh Volunteer F
Tri-aty Beach Volunteer Fire new
Department will make its bow Sat
unlay? Aug. 4.
The new fire bouse will be the
scene of the festivities from 4:30
house built by Chambers County
‘ on a site adjacent to Barr's
rocery.
The occasion will he highlighted
hy presentation «f a truck to thejRartment.
of toe
Fire De-
partment. C W. Montgomery is
vice president. Johnny Jennings is
secretary-treasurer. M. L Fleisch-
man is fire chief. W. A. Welch Is
first assistant chief, and W. V.
Lawrence is second assistant chief
There ire 25 members of the de-
Survivors are his widow, Mrs.
Bernice Platt of Highlands; four
daughters, Mrs. Helen Dunn and
Mrs. Dorothy Dunn, both of Rock-
ford, Mich.. Mrs. Margaret Harris
of Houston and Mrs. Anna Marie
Coffman of Highlands; two sons,
Sidney L. Plata and William II,
Matt, both of Highlands; two bro
there, Roy Fjfftt of PawPaw,
Mich . and Herbert Platt at Pe-
king. 111.; and two sisters, Miss
Pauline Matt of Rock Falls, HI.,
and Mrs. Myra Flynn of PawPaw,
Mich.; and "
The Rev.
of Highlands
and the Rev. Raul Horton, pastor
of Mtat Belvieu Methodist Church,
wifi officiate in the funeral rites.
Burial will be tn Memory Gsrdite
voiced the allegations
in appealing for permission for his
Senate Investigations subcommit-
tee to launch hearings.
Senators iSlitastering against
the administration’s communica-
tions satellite bill have invoked a
rule barring committees from
r the tfrpate -to--to
„ asked . unanimous
consent for hii committee
meet, but Sen. Wayne Mb
D-Ore., one of the leaders of the
filibuster fight, refused to agree.
Morse was cut off from an effort
“ ‘ tes imscma for ob-
In his Senate speech, McClellan
did not name toe man allegedly
demanding a payoff as a price for
allowing toe settlement of the
strike which had paralyzed work
on nuclear submarines at the
" ‘Vi Conn., plant of GroeraJ
Grotoiy fi
Dynamics
AN UNIDENTIFIED sheik does a twist and a shako with his
partner at a night club in Cairo, Egypt, despite a government
ban on tbe popular dance. Censor Gen. Mohained Lome! said
the dance was banned beeanse “we Mt compelled to protect
oar country and people from seduction hy this Vulgar, dis-
ruptive dance that leads to the destruction of social and moral
values.” v .. J; /A
bankment into toe shallow waters
of toe Susquehanna River.
Another railroad spokesman
said track was being repaired last
week in toe area of the derail-
ment. . ' -
“Whether or not toe repair ot
track adjacent to where toe wreck
occurred had anything to do with
toe derailment ig a matter ot
speculation,” said the spokesman.
-
n tne state tots year and
itient died at Houston.
: of toe Sabin oral vaccina
already had gone to approximate-
ly L7 million Texans, and the aim
is to see that around 45 million
receive it.
about 250,000 ^
- Cooke, (toUkv
Efoto. Grayson,
-d, Hunt, Jack.
Produced At Baytown Refinery.
Butyl Rubber Has 25th Anniversary
Monday marked the 25th ami- He also added that approximate-ground power cables, trar
ly 60 of the present operating ic cables, high voltage
force were otr the orfglnar tetifii lifliSi' ahd' ftfr mnsfrtmcr hOUk-
ughtgthe Baytown plant on
rubber has many uses, thing'from hot water bottles to
are being found. It is conveyor belts, from wading pools
‘ manufacture of tires, to protective clothing for missile
fining
of toe discovery of tatvl
which is-prodiwed lirhiige
at Humble (hi and Re-
’s Baytown Refinery.
OUR
WORLD
• Texas has total of» violent
death* during weekend, with
five lives taken by fire* and
nine traffic fataUtie.. ■
• Superior Court Judge bride
hey to Me oil Phorabt woman
who fears her unbom baby wtl
be ssaHormed after she took
drag. ■ V
• Albany, Ga.’s integration
fight heads for court battle over
marches, picketing, boycotting
and other activities. /
i \ v A ■
• Travis County fire fighters
rest on alert after controlling
two major grass fires that
blackened up to MM acres at
brash tad pasta reload.
• 'Cast and —_______tl
guards with raised rifle* face
each other across waU as police
of Communist regime Mb a ref-
ugee 1« yards from barrier.
• Robert SoMea, man under
Hte sentence hi thr DJS. as a
Soviet spy. is offered asylum In
a European country but cannot
tabs advantage at the otter
without approval of Urine Sec-
retary Henry Brooke,
• (jBKKBlIDMI RUJUIlin MNMNit
and kill* Mayor Mariano de
Kayo of Cavite Province, »
miles noth of Manila.
Butyl rubber was discovered by
W. J. (BiBl, ^orks and R. M.
(Bob) Thomas, members of Esso
Research and J^gineering Co. at
linden. NX\Sf$e men are sfill
active members oft the Esso re-
search organization. -and are be-
ing honored in ceremonies to be
The Baytown butyl rubber, plant
was put iilto operation in mid-
1944 to boost synthetic rubber pro-
duction for toe nation’s war ef-
fort- \ • ¥
the Bay- \
1 a total
ounds ot butyl
tomakelOTex-
around the <
ietion
snugly
equator.
“This outstanding
record was made possible by ef-
forts Ot the men and women who
operated the plant during the war
years and by those who have Op-
erated and expanded the unit’s ca-
pacity since World War fl,” Glen
W. Wilson, superintendent, said.
that brought
stream
Butyl
and more
used in the manufacture of tires,
tubes, weather stripping and pad-
ding for automobiles, trucks and
trailers. It is tried also in mod-
ern aircraft, its high insulating
qualities make it particularly val-
uable for sheathing on under-
transocean-
power
toff*
Butyl rubber is used in every-
to protective clothing
launching crews.
The new Humble office building,
now nearing completion in Hous-
ton, rests on a sheet of butyl rub- oiwiws
her to seal off the moisture in toe p
foundation.
reports showed
it 250,000 persons were given
toe vaccine In 18 other North
Texas counties - “ '
Denton, Ellis,
Hamilton, H o o
Johnson, Kaufman, Navarro,
Parker, Rains, Rockwall, Somer-
vell and Wise.
Three counties starting the proj-
ect in the Houston area-Austin,
Grimes and Waller-distributed
approximately 33,000 doses and
estimated 84 to 92 peFcent of their
residents were protected.
Clinics held for a second Sunday
in Brazoria and Montgomery
counties issued 7,754 serum-soaked
enough
fell 80 pet'
protect
cine for
given later;
have arranged makeup
next toinday for those un
participate in '
County
f 5
AFL-CIO Boss Testifies
In U.S. Economy Hearing
. \..... ' .-a " .
WASHINGTON (AP)—AFLrCIO maximum ettect on the economy.
would titjpreskfent George Meany, who ad- The House Ways and Means
Committee beard last week from
business representatives and
economists. The tax-writing group
has sought to keep its proceed-
ings under a tight lid, taking tes-
timony behind closed door “J
vocates -Immediate tax cutting to
help spur business recovery, tes-
tifies today before a congressional
group studying the nation’s econ-
omy. \
Meany said last month he had
written President Kennedy, urging
quick reduction in the lowest
income tax bracket; Such a cut,
Meany said then, would
have
at toe
fog possibilities of tax red
TT Sen. Paul Douglas,
Shown Cool Panhan* And Plains
.......i jfi' i i i i Hi ■ ' 3 $01 Douglas: “At Bu
sr«r
gram,
asked tot
Those in
urged
tage of toe
qu£
assure a i
Pobo,”l ...
chairman in 1
“We are
400,000 ]
tected. ‘
ttoue
by continutoi; to )
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Scattered showers and thunder-
storms kept the Texas Panhandle Big ^^countiy. Laredo reconh see toe
and High Plains a Mt cooler than
|y, retired
at M In
other parts of toe state Monday.
It was generally fair in other
section*.
Showery weather developed
over fte Panhandle-Plains behind
a cool front which pushed into
Northwest Texas Sunday and
played out It failed to dent toe
summer heat elsewhere across
the state.
Cloudbursts of late Iasi week
still were causing trouble, mean-
while, alotig thc swollen Trinity
River. The stieam elimbed to
flood stage Sunday at Rosser and
similar conditions were in pros- the'church
pert Monday for Trinidad,
Forecasts for continued fair
warmer weather throughout
state except the Panhandle.
High Plains, where
munnrrsnowrrs were in
The mercury hit a
degrees Sunday at:
ed 104, San Angelo 103, College wouldn
Station and Junction 101, and cut unt
Station and Junction Ml,
Austin, Lufkin and San Antonio
100. Amarillo’s high was 77.
Temperatures early Monday
ranwd from 63 at Dalhart to 81
at Galveston and IWacios. J
He said
that we are
ce«jon
iat toe
—--—-riri-a-
University Grid Coadt
All' Yeoman, head football Texas A arid
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 264, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1962, newspaper, July 30, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057348/m1/1/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.