The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 4, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 29, 1964 Page: 1 of 12
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ar '■
The Sun Invites
J. T. GAY ,
812 Harding
to the Brunoon Theater. This coupon
it food through Sept. SO
(or two tickets when preiented
at the Brunoon box office.
The movie now Showing
“A SHOT IN THE DARK’
Slip iatdmiut §mt
THE SUN HAS
45,000 READERS
EVERT OAT
Serving BAY-TEX—The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
VOL. 42, NO. 4^
IAYTOWN. TEXAS
Tueidey, September 29, 1964
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 582.8302
Ten Cent* Per Copy
SUN
Spots
Literacy Council
DICK WHITTINGTON, presiden-
of the Houston Literacy CouncI
will speak at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at Sterling Municipal Library
auditorium. The meeting
open to the public. P:
forming a Baytown Literacy
' Council will be dUcoeed
Center To Cme
GIRLS SCOUT Service Centei
1101 N. Pruett, will be
Friday, Oct. 2 due to the Girt
Scput Leaders weekend
tag trip at Peach Creek
The center will be open Ocf.
G»n Club
GULF COAST Gun
have a regular bus]
ing at 7 p.m; Tuesday at the
Chamber of Commerce building.
Special presenta^nii will '
made.' - -
Sorority Mi
PSI BETA Gamma Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi will meet
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the home
of Mrs. J. W. Thomas
Church Affair
A FAMILY night affair will be
held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday
Highlands Methodist Church,
will be a homecoming meeting
and all friends and former men
here of the church are invited.
The Robert E. Lee High School
stage band will provide music,
Blood Bank
MISS JANICE Manteris, RN,
laboratory supervisor at Gulf
Coast Hospital, will speak on the
Southwest Blood Bank Insurance
program at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
3n open meeting fit the Kniphts
of Columbus Hall on West Main.
Admission is free and the public
invited by San Jacinto Council
No. 2788. -
GOP Caravan
REPUBLICAN headquarters an-
nounced that an auto caravan
will leave downtown headquar-
ters at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday and
arrive at Roseland Park Pavil-
ion at 6:30 p.m. Bfll Hayes,
candidate for congressmah-at-
large, and Bob Gilbert, candi-
date for congressman from the
Eighth District of Harris County
will speak.
Father Dios /
MR. AND MRS. G./L. Shields,
701 Schilling,/left Monday to at-
tend the funftar'bf jWrs; Shields’
father, A. J. H '
Henrietta, Okla. Hi
84.
St. Mark's Supper
ST. MARK’S Methodist Church
will have its fall quarter church- tion
wide fellowship Wednesday be-
ginning at 6 p.m. with a spagh-
etti supper. Supper tickets will
be 75 cents fer adults and 50 ieai
cents for children Wider 13. Af-
ter the supper a film will be
shown on worship and devotions
in the home by each member
of the family.
First Mooting
GIRL SCOUT troop
590 will
have its first Meeting of this
year at 3;15 p m Thursday.
' \
Imp
fillip
Sfii 118$ ill
/dra^:^3f jl'\ *
Cr-’ r» -Ar
*
Presidential
Security Due
Top Priority
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen-
ate Republican Leader Everett
, M. Dirksen today backed Demo-
*ne'cratic Leader Mike Mansfield’s
■5
1 W:
SELECTIVE STRIKERS
WORKERS MILL around the entrance to a General Motors
plant in Cleveland after walking off the job as the United
Auto Workers called a strike of more than 260,000 workers at
89 plants. Nearly 90,000 workers at 41 plants that produce
key defense parts or vital components for auto firms remained
on the job as bargainers tried to settle 17,000 local at-the-
plant demands.
Says Times-Herald - .
Disciplinary Action
By FBI Revealed
DALLAS (AP) — The Dallas made no announcement concem-
Times Herald said today in a ing them.
' Bod
cop;
took
story that the FBI
action against perts on subversives,
two FBI agents who were in j. Gordon Shanklin, in charge
charge of the Lee Harvey Os- 0f the Dallas FBI office, was
wald caw prior to toe assassi- out of toe city today and his
nation of President Kennedy. representative said the FBI
The newspaper did not name would have no comment,
toe agents,
The newspaper said one agent
was demoted at a loss of $1,000
in annual pay and the other, star
tioned in New Orleans, was or-
dered transferred but refused
kendorn, in the transfer and retired,
kendom was
Oswald, accused as toe assas-
sin of President Kennedy Nov.22
in Dallas, once lived in New Or-
leans where he was active in
"Fair Play for Cuba” organjza-
Oct. 1 at the Ashbel Smith
Scout House. j
* * *
Weather And Tides
CLOUDY TO PARTLY cloudy
and cool through Wednesday.
Temperature range expected,
CM* degree*. _ ^
GALVESTON TIDES Wednee-
day will be high at 1:12 a.m.
anil low at 8:0.1 p.m.
LOY WILLIAMS is recuperat-
ing at home, 1300 N. Eighth,
and may have visitors begin-
ning next Monday, Mrs. Wil-
liams said Tuesday . . . Gorton
(Skip) Robinson, Jr., 16, of 7624
Bayway Drive, is in room 200
at Baytown Hospital where he
is ill with pneumonia. He may
have visitors
Bayshore Drive, , ,
hurt at 10:45 a.m. Tuesday when
she lost fcontrol pf her car on
Wooster* Cutoff Road. She was
taken to Gulf Coast Hospital.
Lillian Rssher inquires about
some publicity . , . W. O.^Tid-
mon tells about what he con-
siders an unfair political tele -
phone survey. '
Fritz Lanham prepares tor a
talk on city administration,
which is right down his alley.
Mary DelHomme volunteers to
do some telephoning tor a ppliti-
The New Orleans agent had
been assigned the Oswald ease
while Oswald was in New Or-
He now works as a pri-
vate investigator in the Louisi-
ana city.
The Dallas man was on toe
second level of command in the
Dallas FBI office behind the
ipecial agent in charge and toe
assistant special agent.
The Dallas agent supervised
section under whose juris-
diction Oswato. as a returned
defector to Russia, fell. He now
investigates routine out-of-the-
office matters. '
The actions _ against the
agents, both, veterans of more
than 20 years of government
service, came in late spring,.toe
Times Herald said. The FBI
Short May BeKew
Chief In Houston
succeed Hobson
was fired as chief of, police.
who
Mayor
McGfll as
Church Vote
Relaxes Rule
On Marriage
VATICAN CITY (AP) - The
Vatican Ecumenical Council
voted down today a proposal
that young single men becoming
deacons be allowed to marry
but approved a measure permit-
ting Roman Catholic married
men to become deacons
The vote for married men
deacons was 1,598-629. The vote
against allowing young deacons
to marry was 1,364-839. A two-
thirds vote of 1,485 was required
tor approval, The deacons assist
priests.
With these decisions out of the
way, bishops rallied behind
council declaration on toe Jews,
asking that it be approved in
done form or another. Several
insisted_ it must declare
in thC proposal to give legislation
crnf'onlon °tChrlst., n presidential security top priori-
Pf. .speakers in the council ty when congress reconvenes in
session in St. Peter s, only one januarv
prelate, an archbishop from the .. .
Middle East,, opposed the dec- ,, ^>*rks?r! sa*d in an interview
laration in any form. . . 'hat quick actiop-m the waning^
Two Americans and a Briton days °* s.®sslof ,on ® su)£i?
- Archbishop Patrick O’Boyle ^ t0 a federaJ cf>ma
of Washington, Auxiliary Bishop •» assassinate a president or
Stephen A. liven of San Anto- vice president "might mean we
nio, Tex., and Archbishop John would hav?, t(> do our work aU
C. Heenan of Wstminister — ov®r,?8am next ye-r* .
strongly urged that the declare- ^ White House committee on
tion specifically exonerate Jews PFes',dentia sa^*y . se*
of deicide - God killing. Monday t0. consfoerthebi™
Council fathers - cardinals, recommendations of the Warren
archbishos, bishops, patriarchs Commission — plans to get
and other Roman Catholic s arted soon on draftulS propos.
prelates from around the world als. for congressional action
—voted approval Monday for a
permanent diaconate of deacons ” ’ *
t0TrtaSy thT council was called Secret Service preparedness tor
upon to vote on the more contro- Kenn.e(ty s
versial issue on whether the visit to Dallas. The commission
deacons might be married. «lled for ‘.‘complete overhaul”
In the two ballots, the council of the service’s advance detec-
voted that men who were mar- to practices and claser liaison
with toe FBI and other agen*
diaconate would be allowed to ,, .. ..'
become deacons, but that young Mansfield said that new secu-
single men would have to re- «ty measures should be ’’one of
main celibate after entering the first orders of business
diaconate when Congress reconvenes
In a ‘third ballot today, Mansfield called Sunday for
sources said, 1he council fathers consideration % Congress of
agreed that national confer- new security measures before
ences of bishops should be al- adjournment.
to men were considered ex- lowed to decide whether deac-
ons should serve in their areas,
(See CHURCH, Page 2)
United Fund Gets
Six More HORC
100 Per Centers
Car Skids Into Culvert
. *•-' ; • ‘ ; i .
Injuring Louisiana Man
But he told reporters Monday
it is "perhaps too late” to act on
any measures at this session Ni
and broad legislative action to
strengthen governmental agen-
cies should be put off until toe
White House committee reports.
Several bills to make it
Driver, 22,
Trapped For
10 Minutes
A 22-year-old New Orleans
»n\an suffered serious injuries on
Tuesday morning when his car
skidded off Interstate Highway
10 and crashed into a culvert.
A spokesman at a Dayton hos-
pital said diaries A. Robinson,
who was riding alone in the car,
may lose his left leg below the
knee as a result of the accident,
which happened about six miles
can of toe Interstate 19 inter-
section with Highway 146.
Rescuers, including Highway
Patrolman Henry Gladman of
Anahuac worked for more than
10 minutes to extricate Robin-
son from toe wreckage. They
were unable to opgn either door
because the car was "wrap -
amim/i iha miitrAPt fibllt1*
NEW ORLEANS MAN PINNED IN THIS WRECK 10 MINUTES
Auto Skidded In Heavy Rain Storm, Wrapped Around Interstate 10 Culvert
LBJ Rouses
Republican
Heartland
WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-
dent Johnson, /responding to
wildly enthusiastic Inceptions in »rd M, Ni
oftcn-Republican sections of rotary of
New England,* ha* pictured white Ho
hgland,! ha* pictured
himself as topping Barry Gold-
water in suport of GOP pro-
grams during toe Eisenhower
administration. >■ '
Johnson made this claim part
ABOARD GOLDWATER
TRAIN (AP) - Sen. Barry
to Goldwater, thinking about Rich'
Nixon as a possible sec-
* state If he wins toe
before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, which meets today,
The committee may act
another bill, — introduced by
____ . , Mansfield and Dirksen — to
The Umted Fund drive contin- provide Secret Service protec-
ued Tuesday morning* at. a fast fjon for toe Republican presi-
clip as six more units at Hum- dential nominee, Sen. Barry
bit* Oil and Refining Co.’s Bay- Goldwater, and for the Republi-
federal crime to kill a president of a concerted .appeal tor Re-
vice president are pending publican votes during a 20-hour
town Refinery reported 100 per can and Democratic vice-presi- welcomers during toe trip, re-
“ ■' ' " Wil-turned to the White House at
cent contributions. dential candidates, Rep,
The kick - off was Monday liam E. Miller and Sen. Hubert
morning. Approximately 200 H. Humphrey. —- —
workers began contacting busi- The legislation, if enacted,
nesses and profressional groups would extend such protection to
in the Baytown area in the an- aU future candidates for those
nual drive for funds that Will offices
benefit some 36 agencies. '/.The. Democratic ©residential
The goal this year is $197,145. nominee, President^ Johnson,
Divisions at the Baytown Re- has the protection that goes
finery announcing 100 per cent with his office..
contributions are payable sec- The Warren Commission
„ , tion of toe accounting division,
SAM ALFORD will solicit all specialties administrative group,
insurance agents of both life employe relations, brick masons,
and general insurance In toe service group of tne Service Lab
and group No. 18 of the techni-
Untted Fund drive campaign
which began Monday.
cal division.1
called for a drastic overhaul of
the system bf guarding the pres-
ident and said that legislation
making toe murter pf a presi-
dent or vice president a federal
(See SECURITY, Page 2)
Mike's A Frosh At 10
Seventh Grader Enrolled At MSU
wasn’t much help with
IS, so 10-year-old- Michael
of Lansing enrolled
HOUSTON (AP) - Inspector Michigan State University; «s ,
Herman Short is expected fo full-fledged freshman Moifia;
McGill, ‘
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) pies of mathematics. Mom
night.
Louie Welch relieved had dabbled in college subjects
s chief Monday be- for a year, as a special-status
toe mayor staid, McGill student at Michigan State,
had not been bearing down hard He had an “A-minus” average
enough on gambling. McGill dis- (,ver 38 hours'of classroom work
PUted this- _ in subjects such as history,
McGill Will return to his old humanities,- natural science
job as inspector in charge of. the an(j mathematics. That’s what
traffic division sold MSU on waiving require-
The mayor cited 12 federal in- ment of a hjgh school diploma.
“ Mike contes to MSU from the
“a larire to the oDeTation of thc seventh g*3* ~ he had been
PnirV^ r^noif,, 0 of the accelerated through the sixth —
Police Department. at Lansing** Cumberland Road
School, to which he returns now
and then to play marbjes, swap
comic books and play* touch
football.
He begins regular university
classes Thursday.
w, , .. . . . UniVerity psychologists rate
Effective Oct. 1, toe subscrip-a Well-adjusted 10-year-
tion price of The Baytowi Sun ye js looking forward to
be increased to $1.60 per steppjng up from Cub
Scout tois f^, jahikhe
Matter of fact, Mike already ten to me talk about calculus,
* up from Cub
m2Pth. ■ Scout this fall, and he reqtfest-
The 15 cents - per - m'^'1 ed l0 "Supei'man” comic books
able for The if to. •
m
reasons for toe advance. Mike's mother, Mrs. William ion, son of Mr. and Mrs. W, C.
Camera will begin collecting Grogt reca]ls that Michael be- Atherton, 1807 MacFariand; WU
the new subscription price on|gan to read aloud, at the age of liam K. Bickley, son
Because he’s only
didn’t have time: not with aland Weighs only
husband and two other children
Mike put it this way: “When I
come home and M6m is putting
a roast in the oven and making
salad, she just isn’t able to 11s-
fnn (a mn fallr oKamI nol/inlne **
Dr. Drews says Mike’s IQ is
too high to be measured mean-
ingfully; tltet om a graduate
student screening test he scored
in the top 10 per cent On a test
of mathematical ability for 12th
he scored in the upper one per
cent.
When MiJte isn’t.delving into
higher maihematics, his favor-
ite pastime is reading Sherlock
Holmes, Nancy Drew mysteries,
comic books — Or the works of
Thomas Aquinas, the 13th cen-
tury theologian,
4-feet-6%
pounds,
Mike was exempted from
MSU's ROTC and physical edu-
cation ^upes.
He] 1ml’a brother, Robert, 7.
and a sister, Patricia,' 9, both of
whom have demonstrated su-
peribr intelligence, although not
at Mike’s level
Mike’s father, William Grost
41, and Mrs. Grost both hold
degrees .’n journalism from
MSU. Grost enrolled with Mike
tour of the six New England
states. This journey was capped
early today by a visit to the
Boston bedside of Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, D-Mass,, who
recuperati ng f r 0 m airplane
crash injuries.
The President, who saw. sev-
eral hundred thousand cheering
4:22 a.m. with a cut hand,
hoarse throat and a good feeling
about his receptions in the far
northeastern corner of the na-
tion.
Johnson’s hand was cut by the
fingernails of well-wishers who
grabbed for it during the chief
executive’s repeated tom's into
surging, roaring crowds. -1 The
throat Was hoarsened IW five
formal speeches and at least
two dozen impromptu talks
The New England tour deft
nitely was in the political cate
gory, despite appearances at a
couple of nonpolitical functions.
Tliis afternoon Johnson will hit
the trail again —- this time mak- Nam
ing an official flight toOhtt£fflai.--lfliiam P
ha headquarters of the Sfratefffi'
Air Command with Manlio
Brosio, the new secretary-gen-
eral of the' North Atlantic Trea-
ty Organization.
Johnson, in picturing -himself
as a better-than-Goldwater sup-
porter of Republican programs
(See LBJ, Page 2)
graders and college freshmen f. ; u l cu^T ”,
L senrod in th» ^r nnp^.r Monday night j9 continue work
on a master s degree m evening
classes at MSU,
"Mike,” says his father, "ap-
parently realizes the child-
parent role and has decided to
abide by it.”
Says Mrs. Grost: “Mike is,
problem, but a happy one,"
Six REL Seniors Reach
Scholarship Semifinals
Six Robert E. Lee High
School seniors have been an-
nounced as semifinalists in toe
nationwide comfietition for
itrScholarships by the NaBohi
Merit Scholarship Corjwration
They are Robert W. Ather-
ness, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
B. C. Magness, 215 San Jacinto,
Highlands.
______ —^ , The semifihalist group is com-
the NafionaT posed of the highest - scoring
group, of students on the Na-
tksial
ahd ..Robert B.
to read. I still don’t son of Mr. and Mrs. J. N.
it Scholarship qualify-
dminisiered in March
, more than 17,000 high schools.
Semifinalists mitet substanti-
formance on a second WM
be endorsed by their
and fulfill certain rou-
tine requirements to become
offstage the
solid member of the
linese government and dirt Monday
following
tATSHOK MOTORS
LINCOLN-MERCURY
people again wrm the Johnson
ad--* migration to stop immedi-
ately tfto rrsh playing with
said Peking radiq. "P it
still plans to carry out ehteree-
ment of ite sw>r atfvwrtutoJll
ry. .
A terse. announcement from
Mf.1 Sinai Hospital said,: -‘‘Mr.
Marx died at 8:30 p.m. following
surgery - He was admitted .Sat
urday. His doctor will announce
McsUy retired in recent
years, Harpo — the silent one of
the act — led a quiet life at his
Palm Springs home hard by 'he
fairways of Tamarisk G0Ufi!>-v
dub. During the hot, summ< r
months on the desert, he moved
to Beverly Hills whepe hg otten
will pay dearly for this danger-’Seise of death Tuesday Wii*hb« walked - unreeegmsrt—em—the
oi's adventure.” . folfowtag.additional tests - streets._ ■
TroopS and police in Saigon It wa?>qculatrt that Harpo That Wa* bec*tBe his repOur
surgery,
Rites Held
For Grosbv
Resident,. 63
Funeral services for Mrs
Vlasta Lottie Ulrich, 63, a 44-
year resident bt Odsby, were
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
Crosby Brethren Church with
the’Rev.'Albert Michalik, pastor ‘J
officiating.
Mrs. Ulrich died at 3:50 a.m
Monday W home. She was a
member W Crosby Brethren
Church and SPJST Lodge No.
91. . ,
Interment was in the Cedar
Bayou Methodist Cemetery un-
der direction of Paul U. I-ee
Funeral Home.
She is survived by her hus-
band, Jerry Ulrich of Crosby:
one son, Jerome Jerry Ulrich
of Crosby; two sister?, Mrs.
Francis Adams of Crosby and
Mrs. Annie Krystinek of Bay-
town; five half - sisters, Mrs.
Albina Jaeeiek, Mrs. M i 11 i e
Kubula, Mrs. Libbie Gosch, Mrs.
Elsie Hlavaty and Mrs. Olga
Strickland, all of Baytown; one
brother, Fred Nedbalek of
Bloomington, Tex., and several
Whistle-Stop Tour-
Nixon Considered
For Cabinet Post
S M2
paign down the WhlsrleSnfo
track today.
The Republican presidential
nominee rolled into Ohio aboard
a 17-car; campaign special to
make at Marietta the first of 35
speeches scheduled on his five;
day, three-state swing after
saying toe GOP ticket probably
will remain the underdog
through the whole campaign.
He keynoted it with a de-
mand that President. Johnson
declare, war on lawlessness all
across the nation.
“Surely -it is time for the
White House to break its silence
the matter of local law en-
possible to encourage a mean-
ingful crackdown on lawless-
toe ear was
pad" around the culvert ah
nienf. Henry crawled into the
wreckage and lifted the victim
through it .window,
lienry said Robinson’g leg was
"shredded” from.the knee down
as the driver’s side of toe car.
was caved in by the impact.
Henry, who was assisted in the
investigation by Chambers Coun-
ty Deputy Sheriff James Tolar-
of Mont Belvieu, said Robinson
Bpiatrentiy was traveling at a
high rate of speed, when he lost
control of the 1964 model Pon-
tiac .Grand Prix.
The car skirted broadside sev-
eral hundred-feet down toe high-
way before hitting the culvert
ness and violence," he said in , . , , „
remarks prepared for delivery during a heavy rainfall,
at Marietta.
Goldwater called for. action
on the FBI’s 'report on "the
riots that recently shocked the
nation” and said slops taken by
President Johnson were insuffi-
cient.
Johnson ordered toe FBI to
make riot-training available to
after all local police departments and
urged a step-up in National
Guard riot training.
As he prepared for his fourth
week of campaigning, Gold-
wafer said he already Lias for-
mer Vice President Nixon in
mind as the chief foreign af-
fairs official of a new Republi-
can administration.
-Nixon- who proclaimed him-
forcemenf and lake; every step (See BARRY, Page 10)
Communists Warned U.S.
May Expand War In Asia
TOKYO (AP) - A top State
Department official warned the
North Vietnamese and Chinese
Communists today against in-
creasing their pressure on South
Viet Nam. He said they may
force the United States to ex-
pand the war outside South Viel jstagod the revolt to protest the
continued presence in office of
Government troops shot the
three demonstrators and wound-
ed 17 others • to end a week of
mob control - in which youths
took over the Qui Nhon radio
station and seized the provincial
chief. The rioters apparently
Bundy,, assistant
secretory of state for Far East-
ern affairs, told the Research
Institute of Japan:
"Expansion of the war outside
South Viet Nam, while not a
course we want or seek, could
be forced upon us by the in-
creased external pressures of
the Communists, including
rising scale of infiltration.’!
Bundy did not say how,.toe
war might be extdhded. But
high American source said ear-
lier in Tokyo that the United
States has considered the possi-
bility of bombing infiltration
bases in North Viet Nam and
neighboring Laos.
"We do not aim at overthrow-
ing the Communist regime of
North Viet Nam but rather at
members of the former Ngo
Dinh Diem regime,
U.S. Army officers in central
Viet Nam Were critical of tod
U.S. role in the ending of too
rebellion oi some 2,000 mountain
tribesmen the United States had
trained to fight toe Viet Cong.
The officers said the program &
utilize jS'WHmsnirflB' f-w-casn PIlze
inducing' it to call off toe war it of the chief rebel camp at Butin
directs and supports in South
Viet Nam,” Bundy said
He warned if South Viet Nam
fails under Red control, the rest
.Southeast Asia would face
similar danger and eventually
India, Australia and Japan
could be swallowed up. ?>
If Hanoi and Peking prevail
in Viet, Nam tn this (wy test] of
lCommunist ‘actios - of
wars«pi‘ national liberation,’
then the Communists will use
technique with growing
frequency elsewhere in Asia,
Africa and Latin America,” he
declared.
Communist ' China in turn
warned toe United States it will
“pay dearly”^ if it ventures
across the frontier info North
Troops art police
nr,reared for new trouble
students and robgiors sects
hreatened d»monsiretions to
protest the killing of three riot-
ers Sunday in Qui Nhon,
miles norheast of the capital.
to utilize the, tribesmen Tn the
war against the Viet'Cong may
have been jeopardized by Amer-
ican promises that were made
to toe, rebel montagnards —
mountain folk — and then bro-
ken.
US. Special Force* officers,
in charge of the montagnard
program, said the tribesmen
were assured that American
advisers would not be pulled out
22 Stores
To Observe
Late Hours
/if least J? Baytown stores will
begin staying open until 8 p.ra.
Thursday, at least two will re-
main open until 0 p.m, The ordi-
nary closing lime ‘for most
stoics is 5:30 p.m.
Special bargains will be offer-
ed by merchants participating in
the late opening shopping pro-
motion, -
Participating merchanjJu wiU
also sponsor a contest with an
advertisement in each Wednes-
day issue of The Baytown Sun.
Some lucky Thursday night shop-
per will receive a $100 e a s h •
pr.ze,
Shoppers may obtain tickets
for the cash prize give - a way
from, merchants observing the
late opening schedule. There is
no obligation, nothing to buy.
Tickets may be deposited in box-
es in each participating store.
They wil! be turned in to the
Chamber of Commerce and a
di awing held Friday morning.
The numbeg of the winning.tick-
et will he posted in participating
stores Friday afternoon, and if
toe winner does hot claim the
$100 by ckising time Saturday,
the winning number will be pub-
lished in Monday's Baytown Sun -
and the $100 carried over until
toe following week to make a
Sar Pa ami that Vietnamese
forces wailing to attack the
rebels would not be allowed into
the camp.
the 13 Americans at Boon Sar
Pa were pulled out Monday and
a few hours later the Vietnam-
ese army occupied the camp.
open
Here
A least two of toe stores par-
ticipating in the late opening
project- Sears and Town House
will be open until 9 p.m.
The remaining 22 stores par-
ticipating so far will be
until 8 p.m. on Thursdays,
they are:
a. Hr Kress, Wilkie's -GE Ap-
pliances, Paine Bros., Sherwin
Williams Paints, Scarborough
Drugs. Gene's Hi-Fi Center, Gre-
gory's, Bo Peep Shop, Penney’?,
Hobson's Jewelers, Whitcomb's,
Economy, Town and Country,
IV, H. House Jewelry, Drew's
Moore’s Shoes, House of Fash-
ion, Levin’s, Max Altman’s, P-;
N. tfirsch, Morrison Furniture
Cm Montgomery Wart, and
kronfo Food Bar, -
1
Silent, Wecky Harpo Marx
Dies At 75 After Surgery
HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Harpo Surviving brothers Groucho,
Marx, 75, on s.age the wackiest Zeppo and Gummo, were not
of the wacky Marx brothers, but present when toe end cattle, a
offstage the most normal, most hospital spokesman said.
dirt following
since be had
differed?
. recent
nmor. heart attacks:
At his bedSWewas his wife
an and two oflris four sons.
some from the curly v/iggrt, top-het- ._____m
horr-hfewkr. bkwd-riws-
t nut he played in the act. .
Precise ef spe- h — althopgh
(See HARPO, Page *)
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 4, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 29, 1964, newspaper, September 29, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057812/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.