The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 254, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 1964 Page: 4 of 22
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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Jf *u* mafluiaui aruu inunaay, July to, up*
Editorials--
Hats Off To
Customs Unit
,/ . One of the oldest and most-colo'rful agencies of
the government, known first-hand to millions of
Americans, celebrates its 175th anniversary shortly,
It is the Bureau' of Customs, a Treasury Department
unit which antedates by one month its parent body.
• Since Aug, 1,1789, uncounted mitiiQns of people
--------------- have-passed through its hands, for no one enters the
United States without coming into contact with the
blue-uniformed customs officers who are stationed at
seaports, airports and border crossings. In one recent
year, almost 158 million people passed through Cus-
", toms. ‘ \
. V1 Some of the nation’s best-known people were con-
_ nected with the Customs Bureau, including.President
Herman Melville: historian George Bancroft; poet Ed-
r: ward Arlington Robinson, and Matthew A. Hensen,
who accompanied Peary to the North Pole. All work-
ed for the Customs Bureau. \
Bancroft appointed Hawthorne to a $l,500-a-
year post at the Boston customhouse^ The story is “
that Hawthorne discovered'some old records during
his work on which he based his famous novel, ‘The
Scarlet Letter.” r
.. ; Melville, author •of'"Moby pick,” worked at the
New York customhouS’e'for two decades, but wasn’t •
exactly a success there. His salaryjis an inspector
at $4 a day was later reduced to $5^60. Robinson was -
also a $4-a-day employe.
In the old records of the New’ York customhouse
are still to be found manifests and entries paid by
George Washington, a well-known merchant of his
day. 1 „ *
It was Washington who signed the legislation
creating the Customs Bureau. In fact, three of the
first five Jaws enacted by Congress in 1789 concern- .
#d customs, which was hot unusuai, considering that
the new country had little money and import duties
offered a way out of its financial difficulties.
The second law enacted by Congress provided for
^ylng a duty on goods, wares and merchandise im-
ported into the United States.” ,it was signed by
Washington July 4, 1789, and some newspapers at
%Ltime characterized it as “the second Declaration
of Independence." -
For the first time since the 13 colonies broke
away from Great Britain, the centra] government had
an independent source of income.
The new’ customs law made the country finan-
cially solvent. Until 1913, when the federal iheome
tax was enacted, the majority of the government’s
receipts came from customs duties. Even today, cus-
toms duties bring*in almost $2 billion annually.
Customs officers use many methods to detect un-
lawful entries. One Is an X-ray device, the inspect*
OSCOpe, Which shows contents of all packages. of course for the employes, if the
Then there are those who are convinced custom*------company ti prospering and can
Inspectors have a sixth sense; In some the sense of manafte ,0 *,av afloat, buFit
*mell is apparently highly developed. One customs of-
traced a familiar odor behind car panejs and
found 11 pounds of marihuana. Another unearthed
narcotics in a baby’s diaper -«.>
The Customs Bureau” employs 8,800 men and
women. In a recent year, It processed 93,000 ship
arrivals; 172,000 plane landings, and .43 million ve-
hicles and trains at the Mexican and Canadian bor-
ders. It is one of the nation’s busiest agencies and
it always takes in more than it spends. .
Happy birthday, Customs Bureau!
Washington-Merry-Go^QHfid -
Historic .Old 'Frisco*
*
V
Is City Of Contrasts
1ir
By DRKW PEARSON
SAN FRANCISCO - -This is
a oily of contrasts — ylvil, His-
torical, important contrasts.
■Here are some of them: .
Contrast No. I — When I was
here in 1945, San Francisco was
giving birth to the fulfillment of
man’s greatest (fleam — the en-
surement of peace. The Char-
tar of the United Nations was
being written.
A great Republican, Sen. Ar-
thur Vandenberg of Michigan
was a member of the delegation,
and helped to forge the docu-
ment which was to realize man’s
dream.
Republican leaders ail over
the country supported him. Sen.
Warrep Austin, a rock - ribbed-
Vermont Republican, was ap-
pointed first U.S. delegate to the
UN, followed by anotiftr New
England Republican, Henry Cab-
ot Lodge, whose grandfather had
helped wreck the League of Na-
tions. * ■
There was Republican-Demo-
cratic unity behind this new ef-
fort to fulfill man’s age old
■dream.
now in San Francisco, Is as sus-
picious as Molotov 19 years ago.
"'He proposes not only to give-
military men the right to use"
the atom bomb, but 1o remove
tffe hot line means of warning
against accidental, quick - fin-
gered use of the bomb.
In 19 years — what a contrast,
CONTRAST NO. 2 -L At exactly
this time 19 years ago, Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, was in
Moscow, standing on top of .
Lenin’s tomb in Red Square, re-
viewing the Red Army. He tells
about his Russian friendships in
his beok “Crusade in Europe.”
"Overshadowing all. EQals Jor ■■
US' Americans was the contribu-
tion we locally might make to-
ward establishing • a working
partnership between the United
States and Russia. My persist-
ence in this effort and my faith ’’
also in the ultimate success of
the United Nations were both
rooted in my experience as su-
preme commander... ”
Describing" his visit to Mos-
cow, Eisenhower said “We stood
for five hours
In 19 years — what a con-
trast.
Yet it was Lyndon Johnson,
who as Senate Majority Leader,
supported Eisenhower when he
invited Khrushchev to Washing-
ton: when he, Eisenhower, went
to two Summit conferences; and
who went down to the airport to
honor and console him, when he
came back from the second —'
the U-2 conference, a disappoint-
ed man.
CONTRAST NO. S - One: hun-
dred and one years ago, six Rus-
sians warships under Admiral
Poopv sailed into the same har-
bor of San Ersnslsco over which
Republican delegates efifflOSe
between drinks at the Top of
the Mark. Never was such a
foreign fleet given such a Wel-
come, ’
» Frftident Lincoln- had sent
Bayard Taylor with a personal
letter to St. Petersburg, asking
the Russian government for help
in ease the British and French
broke the northern blockade
against the confederacy and
started war against the United
States. The civil war was in it*
£
8
'II
■I
the tomb
while the show went on. None of „„ -.-a ... —
jajgffcg S' sskSwS- ■'SS.if'K'S1
saved the day.
Under sealed orders to defend
TVE GOT MY BIGHTS’
'Babson On Business'
Increase In Cost
Of Labor Is Seen
By ROGER BABSON
‘BABSON PARK, Mass. - Any
man who owns a business, no
matter what kind it is —. store,
service station, laundry or fac-
tor)’
his mone
the monti
ice stauon, launary or rae-
— is going to see more of
money go for labor costs in
month* ahead. This is fine.
Fringe benefit* will play a big-
ger part in labor costs over the
period ahead. The unions high-
light them in practically every
Session, and nonunion
Sporadically
manage to stay afloat,
means more problems than ever
■ for the owner*.
There are plenty of good solid
"reatonstoTfxpect fhr risrtorto--
bor costs to continue,' and both
business operators and their
workers should be interested in
keeping their company-thriving
under these conditions. I am
* talking as much to employes as
I. am to their bosses, because
only through their, joint efforts
~ can jobs and incomes be safe for
' both. If even a small firm goes
under, it means a further bur-
ployers can avoid raising prices
to hold profit margins is by
lowering other costs.. This means’
increasing efficiency, installi ng
time - saving and labor - saving
equipment, and cutting out all
possible waste..
Even then, it will test the In-
genuity of executives to coma
out ahead or at least hold their
own. With high materials and
service costs, still huge taxes,
and the endless expenditures
necessary to meet the bitter
competition in promotion and
sales, the very best and the
highest-grade executives should
be secured and encouraged.
IflfSayf-Anoxia
It Means Anoxia
. f BvALMEUNGER
“ The ephemeral rt a t u re of-
words written for daily publica-
«tlon (s among their greatest
blessings, Like an unpleasant bit
of garbage floatingjJownstream, .
todays goofups are quicHyWs-'
placed by the endless current of
tomorrow’s prose. This is also
true of today's triumphs, in case
there are any.
So wise writers,, sadly con-
templating fliinor errors, usual-
ly decide to let them go uflmen-'
tioned, figuring that the few who
read their words will soon for-
ances are certain gentlemen who
-practice the diealtag arts, Ram.
always, although not properly
appreciated, attempting to im-
prove the quality of their public
relations. And they, ’similarly
trying to. point out what they
consider is wrong with the news-
pajier reporting/business. I do
not-thM I have made any in-
road* in their-professional pos-
dure, And they have not. meas-
urably altered my conviction*
about what are'the legitimate
functions of the press. HoWev
- for fhe whole community.
A look at union contracts in
■:pjatoiesl1y-*ll of. the.toipartan.t..
industries shows that the trend
of both wages and fringe bene-
fits is .still strongly upward. I
predict that for at. least the rest
of this year and next there will
be no leveling off. Profits of
nearly all the big corporations
are high, and the union leaders
bargaining
businlases are forced to give
them serious consideration in or-
der to attract high-grade peo-
ple to work for them. 1 under-
stand that most of those who
■go talking for work ask the per-
sonnel director* about health
programs, [tensions, vacations,
holidays, insurance,, and such.
-Gnee’in a-while-ltseems-as if-.
an applicant is more interested
in whether or not he will get a
coffee break than he is in the
basic wage rates or in the work-
ing hours he will have. There
is no doubt about it —• fringe
benefits are here to stay, and
both employers and employes
should realize that such fringes
are very costly — even though
the Cost may not be so immedi-
ately evident** that of wages. «
I SUPPOSE nobody really,
wants to flout the government’s
Tdea' W hoito -theTine-onwages : -
and prices;- but the fact Is, they .
are doing it! Pay and price in-,
flation hag become such a habit . . . .
In mii coufltty. Hiat, urfdi Uiliiga-•>»* plan. The following la
going well it is easy to forget hom a section on "Problems.
- ----- - Affecting Growth.”)
There are several problems
which have a distinct effect up-
. the sour, dour Foreign Minister
of Soviet Russia, who glowered,
. criticized and * e v e r a 1 times
threatened to go back to Mos-
cow.
Today in the United Nations,
the4 Russians have just gone
further than any other major
power except the-United-States
— by proposing an established
UN peace force, ah army to ba
used to keep the peace. j
This is what Arriericn Presi-
dents, both Republican and
Democratic, have been urging
for some time, but which Mos- _
cow hitherto has viewed with
suspicion.
Simultaneously in San Fran-
cisco, the most dominant leader
In the Republican Party has
been saying that under certain
conditions he would pull the
United States out of the United
Nations.
His whole campaign for Presi-
dent has been based on a policy
of belittling, casting Suspicion on
this hard - won machinery bf
world peace.
This week his platform writers
have come out with the amazing
denunciation of the ‘‘hot line,”
the open teletype link between
Moscow and Washington, estab-
lished -after long negotiations,
and after considerable effort to .
allay Russian suspicions, for Hie
sole purpose -of -keeping.....the-
peace.
In brief, the most dominant
figure in the Republican party.
performers were dressed in the'
colorful costumes of their re-
spective countries and at time*
I 1
thousands of individuals per-
formed in .unison. Every kind of
folk dance, mass-exercise, acro-
batic feat and athletic exhibition
was executed with flawless pre-
cisionand,, apparently, with
greatest enthusiasm.”
the United States in case of at-
tack, Admiral Popov, in San
Francisco broke hta order*-to
the extent by handing confed-
erate raiders a letter stating
that he- wag prepared to take
“all measures which may be
ssbSBF^?ss£sasi
Nikita Khrushchev tiFTr com-
plete tour of the United States
and for friendly talks at Camp
David. No other American Pres-
ident has gone this.
Today in San Francisco, in
contrast, the same Eisenhower
has-been sitting in his hotel
suite, refusing to speak up as
his political party passes a plat-
form condemning the Johnson
Administration for seeking “an
accommodation with commu-
nism.”
If it had not been for the two
Russian fleets, the United
States today might be two sep-
arate and divided nations,
Today In the same city of San
Francisco, the party of the same
President Lincoln, who started
the emancipation of the Negro,
yet kept the Union together, is
sorely divided over the eontin-'
ued emancipation of the Negro
and over the question, of co-
existence with the descendents
of the two Russian fleets.
Know Your Bridge
-By B. JAY BECKER-
Sewer Extension
By City Is Urged
1963, this number has undoubt-
edly increased. The city should
North dealer.
North-South vulnerable.
-----— NORTH-----
AJ78
*A642
♦ KJ8S2
*6
WEST EAST
486 4 A Q10 9 5 2
*10758 *98
497654 *10
(EDITOR’S NOTE: This Is
one of a series of articles on
basic study report made by
Bernard J o It n son Engineers,
Bernard J o It n son Engineers,
Inc., on the city’s comprehen-
that serious difficulties ean.result
if such inflation becomes "run-
So, until government
suae Slice ui me pnaim pic iui
their members. Remember, too',
that It doesn’t take long for the
leaders and businessmen to keep
a careful eye on both wages and
production costs.
discourage the use -of - septic-
tanks and extend the public
sewer system to *11 areas.
_Another problem Is Inadequate
drainage m some areas, me
combination of clay soils, in-
adequate slope of the land, and
heavy rains result in'flooding.
They will certainly depress fu- drainage is developed, many ad-
ditional areas can also be de-
slam easily against the spade
lead If the clubs or the hearts
had been divided 3-3, or the dia-
monds either Or 4-2. But h*
nut Into bad distribution in all
these suits and was able to
m*ke the contract only because
he executed a squeeze against
West.
East took the spade lead with
the ace and returned a club. De-
clarer won with the ace and
cashed the A-Q of diamonds,
thinking at this point that he
had twelve easy tricks, but
when the Swedish East showed .
out on the second diamond,
South-had to-look elsewhere for-
a twelfth trick,
two more club*
discarding spades from dummy,
and thug discovered the 4-2
seE tfaem sn«wsvf unies« lihsi we bffih keep trylng.
or other criminal matter is inad- One of the by-produots of this -
vertently committed to type, endless colloquy is the exercise
This 1* a different proposition of more than ordinary bare In
and requires specific handling, . trying to keep any medical ref-.
‘ gal counsel ‘ *....."
LET ME STRESS that there not
only will be continued increases
may be bigger than they have
been. Package raises (wage plus*
•worker benefits) have been run-
..ture growth if not corrected or
■ at least greatly improved. ' veloped.
As 1 have pointed out, The Some of tliese problems-the-——Another
< “n'lhlr transportation. Before the com-
mean a tighter squeeze on labor cannot. Some must be correct- nletinn of 146 Tunnel Highway
outlays for businesses all ajdng^ ^ahnost«xdusivdybypte _ ^ a^^fatereUteg
ant Items should be-' studied travel
the line. The only way that em-
Bible Verse
ning about 3 to 4 per cent. Up-
coml:
i-.carefully and deffnite programs
undertaken to correct ttiem.
The soils in the Baytown area
are primarily clay*. These clays
betweeft Baytown and Houston.
A transportation problem that -
is not yet critical is caused by
146 Tunnel. ‘ In the future, a
resi-
i ■
usually involving legal -counsel erences here absolutely accurate
and sometimes hunting another and provable by accepted author-
job. \ ity. And now this anoxemia thing
But we are referring to the has happened to me. It has al-
relatively minor, accidents, like ready been pointed out to me by
typographical errors and editor!—my friendsofUippoerate*. - - -
a) misconceptions. Like the one , -
which appeared in this space Ye- EDITOR'S NOTE - The word,
cently. We wrote toe word "iiio- ’ anoxia, does not appear In the
SSSiS-fftSWSt
of the circumstance required. Dictionary, Anotla-l* listed, but
It, came out “anoxemia.”' Not that means absence of the ears*,
only was the fancier, longer and - and somehow, that word hardly
less appropriate word substituted seemed applicable although the
ling agreements may
stepped up closer to 5 per cent,
Tf so, this will be due-not only
to union hammerings for them,
but also to the fact that manage-
the use of septic tanks in,the
are*. It is estimated that about
portion with the great! and he
shall divide the spoil with the
strong;'because .he hath poured .»wh«wi n^u,
out his soul unto death: and -he 500 dwellings in the. city limits
_______ _ was numbered with 4hc»trans- -* either had septic tanks in 1960
mentis always more willing to gressorspr'and^lieJjare-Jme^^-sin or were not contiected to’public
allow larger gains When bus!- of many, and made intercession sewers. Since toe Wo«ter, La1cei
ness is booming and profits are tor the transgressors. Isaiah , wood, Brownwood areas were
sizable.
uwt -imiut xuivr rrm em*
ployed in the Baypdrt and low-
eT Ship Channel Industrial area.
As a result, the traffic through
the Baytown - La Porte tunnel
will soon exceed Its capacity,
Htig problem has been dis-
Opening lead—eight of spades.
You wouldn’t think, holding
the West hand with a ten and
* nine as 1U highest cards, that
you would be caught in
aqueeze, but that is exactly
what happened to West in the
ch between Sweden and
Israel in the receni
Bridge Olympiad.
The Swedish declarer at the
flrst tabl* bid-six.clubs and was
defeated when' he lost a spade
and a club to go down one, ^
-Whan the Israeli declarer (J,
Balaila, playing with L. Ko-
zeanu) played the hand at the
49 Jiff 54
SOUTH
4 K4
— , . —.—6), K J ^
4 AQ
4SAKQ983
.......?h« WiWM:.. ...............
North East South West
Pass Pass 2 4k Pass
2* 2 4 3 NT Pass
« 4 P»H—6 NT—— I break In that suit. This was
now the poaitlon:
West......
*1075.8
♦ 9 76
North
*A64 2
♦ KJ8
Xast
Immaterial
South
Balfttia would have made the
* KQJ
4)988
. The lead of the king of spade*
rendered West helpless. He
could not spare a diamond, so
ha diacarded a heart. D^Hwf ^
thereupon discarded the eight of
diamonds and made the rest of
the tricks by overtaking the
third round of hearts .Wtth ths
ace.
wuuu, Diuwiiwuwj turus were
brought into tog city limits in
—--- ' in th« body of (he article, it was
’ glamorized by being lifted into
the headline for all to fee, even
. Now, normally, this is af miitor
„ matter and, after we had
checked to see whether there
conditioh might sometimes-be
desirable In Austin's Memorial
Stadium. Wabatar define* anoxe-
mia as “an abnormal condition
due to deficient aeration, o( the
blood, as in balloon sickness arid
mountain Sickness." This seemed
:w.
really was such a word and reaa- approprlafe to one who has fre-
sured ourselves, we would have quented the rarefied atmo*-
torgotten it. But this was not an phere of the upper reaches of a
ordinary matter. It is a medical major college football stadium,
term which was Imprecisely eiri* So,, the well-meaning editor who
ployed. And we have tried al-: so carefully put Sporadically in
. ways to be. particularly sbrupu- hot water hereby absolves the
lous to- this area- for excellent author of eny guilt .fxcept the
f*Among our warmer acquaint- S^toa^fplare.
©Iff itoftimitt^ Jiiin '
Fred Hartman .......................... Editor and Publisher
Preeton Ihendergraa* Managing Editor
Beulth Mae Jsckson . Office Manager
^^.^VSraroabEPAjiiiitNT"1"1”"
mmSZ SSS5-H
Oorrie Laughlin ....................... National Manager
EnUred as second class matter at th* Baytown, Texas Post
Offio* under the Act of Ooagwee of March S, 187*.
■ Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sunday* by Th# Baytown Sun, Inc,
at Pearce and Ashhel In Ba.vtowji, Texas.
~t...... ..........-'*a~.....Subscription Rates: .
•*: 4 *1.45 per Month. *17.46 per year. '
Represented Nationally By ,
cussed with the State Highway
Department. They realize that
this is a problem and ft will be .
—-----A At- -
Daily Crossword Puzzle
--I—kins' feature-
• £ '
If
-the—urban-
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
»y IUTH RAMSEY
Control Press Writ or
TMI ANSWER, QUICK! 1POT Of PAMt-OUESS TH( NAMI er trains oould bandtofather for
t What nlatioh U Joan Fan- n -a* sggf . a .<* ,«[ '. greater protection against the
msM-ilmsr
reflected in a mirror, what time M /"J Fremont's expedition ot 1845
lx it? -T and troop* bound for the Mexl-
8. What was brought to the f Vim. ’ can War In 1846 camped here.
Pilgrim* in a sn&kcsklnT WtwMmMm,..,mm> H In 1849 th* overland mail wsa
4. If you euffer from aeluro- 'mEM ••tabllahed, with supply head-
phobia, what are you afraid of? quarters here, foUowed to 1650
the
ven -.
R Which century la called the
Age ot Reason? / " ^
t
IT’S WIN SAID
transportation study being
veloped in Harris and Gal
= S&JSm-gVS
highway needs, including ’
Baytown - La Porte tunnel. E'
to, Baytown’s leaders should do
all possible to expedite the so-
lution of this problem. •, ’
Highway 146 within toe city
, has two lanes In some sections
and four lanes to others. The
ACROSS 5, Solemn 22.D1*-
wonder - figure
6. Kind of air- 24. Female
deer
lanes
- . ." * /art TodaV1* soot Of fame Is one
the A m
powers of th* iMnir-Manel
Proust.
IT HArffNEO TODAY "
On this day Ja 1145, the fire*
experimental teat ot aa atomic
bomb occurred at Alamogordo,
XX-
BORN TODAY —
MoUoiouo leader Moty 'Mdkot
tidy, painter Sir Joshua Reyn-
olds, explorer Roald Amund-
sen. Hags Selassie ti empefbr
of MtMopio, former UX. Smo-
tary-Osnsrol Trygve Us, play-
wright Clifford Odets, author
Kathleen Norris, actresses Bar'-
bora Stanwyck and Ginger
Rogers, v -- i
or trails, part of which lies
WHeit beneath^ the pavtog of
this Kansas town's main Street.
It began and is stUl ln use as a
cattle trail, but its real fame
caisS* ti ptoneen used it to
.their westward trek to Cali-
i fomla. • * , '
By U36, traffic over ths trail
had grown to ths point where
a government surrey and right-
of-way treaties with local In-
dian tribe* were necessary. Th#
town takes Us name from a
pact mads hare that year with
theiOaega Indiana. ,
A large gwre hear th# river
became a rendezvous point tor
wagon trains. Here, to safety,
pioneers could purchase sup-
plies, make repairs from the
last available timber, and mall-
Mi
by monthly stagecoach senrlea.
Travel to Santa Ft through
hem andsd to 1665 when ti*
Union Pacific Railroad reached
Junction City.
Name thi 1.
(Boms at bottom of eohmu)
WATCH YOUR LANOUAOI
FAROUCHE - (fa-ROOSH)
—noun; adjective; fleree, un-
sociable « ahyr sullen. Origin; 1
nmik ”
YOUR lUIUM
Taks core act to dtopleaee
your superior. Today's child wiB
have a joyous natural
■ TTT% .. .
HOW* YOU MAKI OUT?
A Warumn.
A data.
5. The 18a
WMriO naumo iru* eg snsrmT1
Me.....igfei
• ■' *
S'
’•:-S
-r—
v4 2
J,:;
—il
i'ct ■
u.
: -••.
. ^re-
highway will soon need,
dolt nor already, tour
from Highway 73 to toe tunnel.
Loop 201, once it is completed,
w4U golv# some of Baytown’s
major0.traffic problems. Final-
ly, a transportation problem
as possible is the construction
of a direct route to Interstate
10 from downtown Baytown......
North Main or Garth Road ar*e
excellent routes, but they are
neither wide enough nor contin-
\ . Another major problem affect-
ing growth ti that there are
large vacant tract* of lind be-
tween and within development
areas of Baytown. It Is desir-
able to have the city a* com-
pactly developed as- possible.
Scattered developments create
■" many problems for the city. One
of these problems is that the'"
city must spend .large sums of
money providing facilities for
some areas which are not
(The next article will deal
with the central business dis-
trict, lire protection, water *
and sewage among other
things in n continuation “Prob-
lems Affecting Growth.”)
L Father:
colloq.
6. Burnt np ship
9. Custom t Ual$ Of
TO. Tele- • measure
graphed 8. Brietle-like
12. Occurrence organ
, 43. Muse Of 9. Exclama-
U.S3P*7 ii.iSl.-oo.
15. Moth 18. Sphere
17.Moham-_ .18. Deeecra-
.. medan priest tlon of
”11. A stunted sacred
-
30. A state of Early Eng.
intend- 20. Angora
■' biUty 21. Open: 1
28. Nuptial
87. Swiftly .
39. Aloft
10. Ring on A ’
harness for
rein*
32. Marshy
meadows
S3. Harden
86. A thruwuy
charge
SI. Earth aa *
goddess
39. Blue bird
42. Bay window
44. A beautiful
feather
mese
capital
26. Fr.
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28. Even:
poet
3L Pull With
effort
HMterdsjr'e Auww
39. Leap
gy hill 41. Yearning
36. Seaport: 43. Guided
Algiers 45. Hawaiian
poet 37. A goal mark garland
47. Fruit
48. Require
49. Barks
DOWN
1. Cover, as
•• with cement
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A Garret
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 254, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 1964, newspaper, July 16, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057513/m1/4/?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.