The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 103, Ed. 1 Monday, December 19, 1966 Page: 4 of 23
twenty three pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4 ffcr Smttm Wm Monday, Dectmber 19, 1966
| Editorials—Features
'Operation
Deathwatch'
When "Operation Deathwatch" goes into effect at
6 p.m. next Friday, Dec. 23, State Highway Patrol en-
forcement personnel of Region 2, which includes the
Baytown area, will initiate special enforcement activi-
ties in a co-ordinated effort to keep the Christmas-New
Year’s holiday death toll as low as possible.
Maj. Glen Rose of Houston, regional commander,
said the present regional Highway Patrol force of 148
men would be augmented by 40 officers from the Li-
cense and Weight and Motor Vehicle Inspection
Services.
The Houston Region is comprised of 30 counties,
Including the populous Beaumont area. This team of
enforcement officers will be scheduled for longer over-
lapping hours to provide better coverage for the travel-
ing public. Most of their time will be devoted to assist-
ing motorists, observing for dangerous violations and
investigating accidents.
Maj. Rose listed three positive acts by drivers
which, if put into practice, would almost surely result
in an accident free holiday season.
1. Make sure you are sober when you drive. This
means avoiding alcoholic beverages if there is a chance
you may be driving.
2. Know the meaning of "defensive driving," and
put it into practice when you drive.
3. Take your time when you are driving. Hurried
driving causes mistakes, accidents, and a spoiled holi-
day. ....... ■ ■ ■
Indications are that the death toll may reach 47
during the Christmas holidays in Texas, and 3& during
the New Year period, according to the Texas Depart-
ment of Public Safety.
“In addition to wishing everyone a happy holiday
season,” Maj. Rose said, “we are asking all drivers and
pedestrians to help insure their own safety and happi-
ness by driving and walking as though their life de-
pended upon it, because it actually does.”
Try Your Word Power
NEA Feature
Medicine Show
5 Unlucky
•neei 6 Needle {comb,
snake——* form I
ACROSS
1 “Sei
5"-restorer" 7 Meccan pilgrim
9“-liver oil” dress (pi.)
12 Biblical tower ?Rule
13 Continued pain .H^oai
14 Harem room
15 Mr. Arnaz
16 "Blood —• ,
18 Bonelike
20 Greek market
u&
mpass poir
imber of
Numismatic
jciety lab.)
, 9 Coconut (Iber
10 Greek theaters
11 Venture
17 Moat (var.)
19 Peer Gynt’a
mother
23“,— killer”
24 Roue
neral rocks
Answer to Previous Puisle
IHU WNHIdt
Iliad HUIdilfc
ir.m
25 Mineral
20 Race tip
28 Leave c
29 Hindu i
1 Dissents 29 Hindu quee
27 Short-billed rail 30 Fish sauce
31 River in .....
Switierland
32 Thus
33 Bad (comb,
form)
34 Presidential
nickname
35 Against gravity
37 Without (Latin)
38 Arboreal home
40-—Ocean
42 Continent (ab.)
44 Gone by
45 Pertaining to
an immature
86 td
48 Homily
52 Circumspect
54 Military cap
55 United
56 Italian
princely family
57 Biblical garden
58 Color
59 Heavenly body
60 Smooth
DOWN
1 Perform again
2 Poems
3 Hops’kiln
4 Adriatic inlet
37 Submarine
breathing tube
39 Soapstone
40 Seize by force
.ifetime
46 Climbing plant
47 Utilised
49 Persian
50 Unimpeded
41 Lifetime 51 Number
43 Prices of trips 53 Letter of
45 Smell Greek alphabet
Anyone
Want A
Fine Pet?
By JOHN KEA8LER
NEW YOR K- A guinea pig
named Sam livea at my house.
I wish he didn’t.
I could have gone all my life
without a guinea pig named
Sam living at my house. I would
prefer it that way.
But this time I am going to
say nothing about the guinea pig.
Everytime I try to get rid of
the constant turnover of animals
around my house, things get
worse. In fact, if I hadn’t been
• rid of the rabbits, we wouldn't
have the guinea pig or the cat
This guinea pig contributes
nothing. All he thinks of is wall-
to-wall lettuce. Frankly, I wish
he would run away from home.
No good will come of him. I
can tell that.
He has a sneaky look. I do not
know if he is an unusually dia-
bolical guinea pig or not. Some-
how my education was neglected,
when it came to guinea pigs.
When I thought of guinea pigs
at all — and, frankly, long per-
iods of time would pass without
guinea pigs ever crossing my
mind — I just thought of some
little animal used in experi-
ments, research and all that.
Vaguely I envisioned them
there in the laboratories, per-
haps wearing little white cmocks
choosing up sides and alternate-
~ ly puffing on filter tip cigarettes
and non - filter tips to see who
lost. (Actually, I guess, that
work was done by mice. I still
don’t see how they got those
little mice to smoke all tliose
cigarettes.)
Well, guinea pigs aren't like
that at all. They are bigger and
louder than really necessary.
“Have you seen Sam?’’ one
of • my kids asked the other
evening when I was reading the
paper.
Some day I will learn to be
wary and listen to my kids when
I am reading. That is when they
spring things.
“Huh?” I said. “Sam? No.” ’
Actually, I had no idea who
Sam was but the only way to
stay inside a sports section is
not to get involved.
“Would you Ike ito see Sam?”
my child inquired. ...
“Sure,” I said, turning a page
“Here,” he said, and put some-
thing in my lap.
I felt something stir. I looked
down. Sitting in my lap was a
horrible little monster.
’Shriek,” Went the fat kindly
operation "DEATHWATCH”
INDICATED TRAFFIC DEATHS
Q 6 P.M. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23 TO 11:59 P.M. MONDAY, DECEMBER 26
R &&&&&&&&&&&&
s &&&&&&&
M&&&&&&&&&&&&
s &&&&&&
N 6 PM. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30 TO 11:59 P.M. MONDAY, JANUARY 2
w &&&&&&&&&&&&
E &&&&&&&&&&&&
£ &&&&&&&&&&&
James Marlowe
Will Lyndon
Run Again?
The "COUNTDOWN BOARD" shown above will be ased by the Texas Department of Public
Safety during the Chriatmaa and New Year’e holiday weekenda to draw attention to the need
for aafe driving. The DPS and other organisations are going "all out” in order that the indi-
cated traffie death tolla might be kept down during "Operation Deathwatch.” Each motorist
is argod to join the effort to save as many Uvas as possible during the doeing days of 1H6.
-
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
Adam Clayton Powell
Skyrockets Payroll
J”
IT
TT
14
A JJJ
31
m
33
14
rW
35
37
a-
41
42
_
„
45
46
UT
4*
44
50
IT
5i
53
u
55"
M>
57
58
59
6b
Letter To The Editor
m
Editor, The Sun
Dear Sir:
Had I known you were going
to publish a picture Of the stones ‘
I collected in Polk County at
the bottom of the Trinity River,
I would have furnished you with
what they were. At the time
Chester Rogers took the picture
I had no reports as to what the
experts thought of them, conse-
quently could furnish only my
own opinion as to what they
were.
Since then I have received a
letter from a Museum where I
Sent two, and they were classi-
fied as artifacts, meaning made
by humans. Now they are on dis-
play in this Museum of Anthro-
pology. At the present time
there is’good evidence to show
humans were in Texas at a per-
iod when palm trees grew in
East Texas, which geologists
contend to"wt ten million years
or longer.
County and adjacent areas,
shaped bone material into pro-
jectile points, using bone axes
were able to split timbers and
construct shelters. Palm fibers
were used, possibly as siding
or roofing. All this has been
preserved by some sort of up-
ings with mud, thus cawing the
wood and palm fibers to carbon-
ize. I brought home some of this
carbonized wood and after wash-
ing the mud off it, found some ->
bone embedded in it. The shape
of the bone indicated it had
been used to split, or hew, these
timbers.
The evidence shows conclusive-
ly that humans were in Texas
millions of years before they ,
were in the Old World. There
is no evidence to show they
were in any manner related to
sub - human apes, such as the
Dryopithecus - RamapithecUs -
Australopithecus. Homo erectus
line.
Vague reference to the cross-
Many species of animals that ;ng of such a divergent specie
lived during the Miocene epoch , of humans is found in the Scrip-
became extinct in America. - -
These included, the rhinoceros,
several species of horses, masto-
tures, in Chapter 6 of Genesis,
Verse 2, where the sons of God
saw the daughters of men that
they were fair; and they took
them wives of all which
chose.
. f ■
dons, mammoths, numerous spe-
cies of deer and antelope. Is it
possible ohe specie of humans
became extinct also?
At the close of the Miocene
epoch, humans in San Jacinto
©Jp? Sagtoam £utt
.......................... *d,tor ud Publisher
T_u. ................................ General Manager
they
Yours truly,
W. L. Atwood
501 Ruth
Si
Daddy, falling over backwards.
"WHAT IS IT??”
Just a little guinea pig.
Well, I went through the rou-
tine. No more animals. I stalked
around the living room waving
my arms. I have it down pat.
I have squalled it about turtles,
cats, snakes, rabbits, hamsters,
chickens, ducks, extra dogs, and
I don’t know what all. My punch-
line is that we aren’t running a
zoo arund here, a rather clever
squelcher if I do say so myself,
despite the fact that I am con-
stantly surrounded by animals,
etc.
"But we got rid of the rab-
bits,” the defense said.
So they had. The big, dopey
rabbits were gone, both the pol-
kadot one and the white one —
I had been conducting an anti-
rabbit campaign furiously and
frantically. When you’re trying
to get rid of two rabbits, you
gotta be quick.
“Hm,” I said, trapped again.
I had to admit that one guinea
pig was better, or at least no
worse, than two rabbits who
might be a pair only momentari-
ly-
‘‘Well,” I said, grudgingly, sit-
ting dowh. On a coal • black
kitty cat I had never seen be-
—fore. .... ■ ■— '
■ We#, that'* what I rosan- A
deal’s a deal. At present, the
census is a new cat, the two old
dogs, one old snake, several new
fish and the sappy guinea pig
named Sam. And I’m afraid to
say a word. Things will only get
worse:
I do wish I weren’t so super-
stitious. It’s pretty hard to get
to any exit to put the guinea
pig out with a black cat con-
itantly surrounding you.
BARBS
By WALTER C. PARKES
If they......dream up any
more hidden taxes, they’fl
have a heck of a time dream-
ing' up new places to hide
them.
Making the most of small
opportunities develops mus-
cle to grab the big ones.
* ■■■• * '
The way some guys drink
you’d think they were Samar-
By DREW PEABSON
WASHINGTON - There is
some interesting arithmetic be-
hind the committee operations
of Rep. Adam Clayton Powell,
the Harlem globe trotter, whose
travel vouchers and payroll face
investigation by his own col-
leagues beginning today (Dec.
19.)
The year before PoWell be-
came chairman of the House
Education and Labor Commit-
tee that committee had only 18
full - time employees, of whom
only five were paid more than
$9J)00 a year. This was when
Graham Barden, a North Caro-
lyn Democrat, was chairman.
After Powell replaced him, the
number of employes began to
grow, until this summer when
the payroll numbered 76, of
whom seven were paid more
than 520,000. Of these, two were
paid nearly $26,000, about the
same as a member of the Little
Cabinet.
In addition, Mrs. Louise Dar-
dans, Powell's No. 1 secretary,
has been able to take junkets
abroad, including a trip to Can-
nes, the swank resort in south-
ern France, with her husband,
ostensibly to study problems for
the committee; while Miss Co-
rinne Huff, the beautiful Negro
winner of the Miss Ohio con-
test, also employed in Powell’s
office, takes all sorts of trips
with him to Europe and the
Bahamas — on committee busi-
ness.""'......
dThis is part of the interesting
record of the junketing Con-
gressman from Harlem which
Rep. Wayne Hays, D-Ohlo, will
investigate.
Note — In passing judgment
on Adam Clayton Powell, how-
ever, it should never be forgot-
ten that he took the initiative
in attending the first Asian -
African Bandung Conference in
Jakarta, where the Chinese
communists were preparing to
' pillory toe United States. Powell
valiantly defended the United
fltsrter wifi undereut communist
propaganda by pointing to the
fact that he, a Negro, had been
elected to one of the highest of-
fices in the land
THE QUESTION of naming toe
new Indiana sand dunes nation-
al park for the man who pio-
neered its acquisition — Sen.
Paul Douglas of Illinois —has
been under serious consideration
at toe Interior Department, but
toe suggestion has been turned
down.
It was Paul Douglas, retiring
after 18 years to the Senate,
who cajoled, needled, and arm-
twisted his colleagues into res-
cuing the Indiana sand dunes
from toe path of the steel mills
and making them into • a* na-
tional park.
Douglas operated a motion
picture projector to a basement
room of toe Capitol to which he
would ensnare Senators, news-
men and members of toe House
to see a film on toe beauty of
toe same dunes. Even when
viewers weren’t really interest-
ed In the great outdoors, they
came away sold, if only be -
cause of Douglas's earnest eag-
erness.
However, Secretary of the In-
terior Stewart UdaB informed
this column that it was against
Interior Department policy to
name a national park for a liv-
ing American, and it would take
an act of Congress to do so.
There would be no trouble
getting toe approval of Doug-
las's Senate successor, Sen. •
elect Charles Percy, the Repub-
lican who defeated him, because
Percy has expressed his high
admiration of Douglas. The
stumbling block would be crusty
toe man whose persuasive per-
severance made the park pos-
sible.
PRESIDENT Johnson sent ■
special Christmas message to
Ambassador John Gronouskl to
Warsaw thanking him for the
fine job he was doing to Poland.
The President was grateful to
the Polish - American former
Milwaukee professor for step-
ping down from the Cabinet—
he was Postmaster General —
to take the less glamorous job
to Warsaw.
Gronouskl immediately start-
ed studying Polish, has mingled
with the Polish people and is
one of the most popular figures
In Warsaw. Scores of people
greet him on the street
Gronouskl’s job is especially
important at this time because
he's the one American who
meets every month face to face
with the Chinese communist am-
bassador.
THERE IS ONE fact anyone
who works for Lyndon Johnson
can count on: He takes care of
his staff. Those who are loyal
to him get rewarded. Larry
O'Brien was the one member
of the old Kennedy staff at the
White House Who stayed (fe. A
grateful Johnson rewarded him
with an appointment to^the
Cabinet: Postmaster General.
The two closest men to John- ‘
son, Jack Valenti and Bill Moy-
ers, have now got high-paying
Jobs. The President had several
talks with Moyers about his
Newsday offer during which
> Associated Pres* News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) - Bill
D. Moyers got $30,000 a year as
President Johnson's pres* sec-
retary and after his brother
committed suicide last Septem-
ber friends began telling him he
ought to look out for himself.
Moyers is 32 and his brother,
James H. Moyers, a widely
liked but much more incon-
spicuous man, was aim a very
F hardworking Johnson aide. He
was 39 when he died.
Bill Moyers, with chronic ul-
cers and bright blue eyes, has
been to a kind of Johnson alter
ego. He labored endless hours.
He got involved In ail kinds of
White House business, foreign
and domestic.
i.: He could speak with great
confidence about what the Pres-
ident had on his mind which, in
this case, took some confidence.
,, He was always on hand and
totally dedicated. And he was
aways so coo), so composed,
that after watching him tor
months you'd ask yourself:
“Does anything bother him?
Does anything get under his
skin?"
But he hat a wile and three
children and almost from the
time he became Johnson's press
secretary In July 1965 — he had
been with Johnson almost con-
tinuously since 1959 — there
were rumors this was just a
stepping stone.
No one ever seemed to know
for sure where he wanted to go
but only that he was ambitious.
There were rumors, uncon-
firmed, that he’d like to be an
ambassador, that he'd like to go
into politics.
In either direction Johnson —
so long as he was in the White
House - could have been a big
help. But the months pasted,
Moyers stayed, so did the ul-
cers, so did the fixed salary of
$30,000, and there was the broth-
er dead at 39, and, as it turned
out, he was seriously thinking of
doing better for himself, at least
financially.
Wednesday came the news:
He was leaving Johnson and toe
. White House to become publish-
er of Long Island’s Newsday,
the country's largest suburban
daily, with a circulation of 415,-
000.
Although the salary wasn’t
disclosed, it can be assumed
Moyers will get a lot more than
$30,000.
The news of Moyers' new Job
was hardly -off the wires before
the Washington guessing game
began:
Was money the real reason
for his going into publishing or
did he have inside Information
that Johnson would not seek a
second term and that now was
the best time to make the best
kind of deal he could for him-
self?
That same question about
Johnson and the second term
was being asked before Moyers’
resignation was announced and
will continue to be asked until
there ta aonte change tar John-
son’s political attitude which for
months now haa seemed almost
indifferent.
Bible Verse
AND WHAT concord hath Chrtat
with Belial? or what part hath
he that believeth with an infi-
del? II Corinthians 6:15.
Play Bridge
With Jacoby |
By Oswald 8 Jomes Jacoby
Newipapcr Enterprise Ann.
NORTH 1»
A 7
VKB54
♦ AKQ103
*964
WEST EAST
*862 * K Q J 9 5 3
VJ 10983 »A
* 64 * 9752
* J 5 3 * Q 10
SOUTH (D)
* A 104
VQ72
♦ J 8
* A K 8 7 2
Both vulnerable
West North East South
1*
Pass 1* 1* lit.
Pass 3N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead—*2
not just following suit and
discarding.
There is a general play
known as the suit preference
signal in which a low card
shows * low suit and a high
card a high suit.
Expert East would play the
jack of spades at trick one.
When that held he would con-
tinue with the king and the
queen. This alone should
have been enough to tell West
that East held the ace of
hearts and not the ace of
clubs. East could have played
qu
the king to show the club ace.
the queen of spades before
"How was I to know?” asks
a J a c k s o n, Mich., reader.
South held off until the third.
siumoung WWW wouia oe crus.y Moyer* confessed that his two spade lead and discarded Q-The bid(
tFttSsi-Ss fesrr szss r r
However, when it came
time, for East to discard on
the fifth diamond he could
have really confirmed this
heart ace. He would discard
the nine of spades: This dis-
card of the highest spade
would confirm the previous
suit preference signal and ex-
pert West would have had no
further problem.
tr+cnRDji'/we*?
Q—The bidding has been:
House Interior Committee and
no great enthusiast for a red-
woods park or for new park
projects.
However, Secretary UdaU def-
initely plans to name some part
of the new sand duner park,'
“ flit ft** MR ft*;
THE WELL CHILD
-j - 45
Push-Button Toys Stifle
A Child's Imagination
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
' Newspaper Enterprise Assn. ,v
Toys should help children
learn without knowing they
are learning. Many modern
toys stifle a child’s imaging-
, tion rather than stimulate his
creativity. These are the toys
that do only one thing, leaving
the child nothing to do after
he has pushed a button. Here
is a list of some of the simple
toys that have stood the .test
of time:
• Well-made building
blocks in an assortment of
shapes and sizes.
• Wood or plastic con-
struction materials that fit to-
gether.
• Toys with which to play
equipment, color-m a t c h i n g
games, magnets, magnifying
glasses and ant farms.
This is just a partial list of
the many fine toys that will
help your child develop inter-
ests, many of which he will
keep throughout his life.
i .............. Assistant
Ann STSlim..............M”
' John ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT f
_ ” J7*<*tey .......................................
Managing Editor
To ThePubUsher
To The Publisher
itans removing
from mothers.
temptation
Paul Putman
Manager
Retail Manager
Carrie Leughlln..............................National Manager
“ttf* « the Baytown, Tex* 77811 Fort
_____ Subscription Rate*
8? Carrier!M-TB Month, 121.00 Per Year
Btofta Copy Price lOe
Man rates on request
Ropreesnted Nationally By
r^^,’SSSSTbSr
Credit cards enable you
to buy now and regret it
on the first of the month.
Italian Newspapers
!U H i
Q—What diseases do cats
carry? I’ve heard they will lie
on a baby’s head and smother
him and that swallowed cat
hairs will turn into worms.
A—Mysterious deaths oc-
curring in apparently healthy
babies—the so-called crib
deaths—have beenerrone-
at being’ grown-up," suchr as ously attributed to many
dolls, stuffed animals (pets), causes, including malevolent
dump trucks, doctor kits, car- Pf*?.The iuse of ,*°me
penter tools and chemistry ?l thes® ^oathi is an allergy
sets—all geared to the child’s to c°w® Worms are
age and attainments. caused by swallowing minute
• Simple materials for ar- e«*s-not cat hairs,
tistic endeavors-r-crayons, Cats make fine pets but
paints, slates, modeling clay their bites or scratches, like
ahd beads. - * those of any other animal, can
Italian Newspapers •.<>***,***#•<■* -"Ef’SSS.'1&&
Closed By 2nd Strike 'rSSFfii«»»».,. SXXlhl KL™ STLC £ C.S ‘SS ■ ■
. 1 - „« «... &emiw sauawastt a* ssSs
- “ ~ ~ **........
a virus that was
ROME (AP) - Most Italians
were left without newspapers
today by the second 24-hour
strike by journalists within a
week. The Italian news agency
Ansa also was closed.
The journalists are demand-
ing more pay and a shorter
business.
If he ran for ^Congress from
Texas, however, Moyers would
have had to run against Rep.
Wright Patman of Texarkana,
who has been in Congress long-
er than any otoer Texan and is
■-ml nld btoMv nf LBjr.
Lyndon told Moyers the story
which toe late Speaker Sam
Rayburn used to tell about toe
district judge to Texas who op-
posed Patman. He was well
qualified, campaigned hard, but
ended up winning not a stogie
county- ,
Later a justice of the peace
contested toe judge for his seat
on the bench, according to the
Rayburn story. The district
judge tqld toe voters: “I gradu-
ated with honors at the Univer-
sity of Texas. I went to law
School where I won the Order
of Ooif. I made toe staff of the
Law Review. I served on the
county court, the circuit court
and now the district court. What'
qualifications does my opponent
have to match that?”
Hta opponent replied, accord-
ing to same Sam Rayburn: "It
is true I never went to the unt-
versity. I never graduated from
law school, I don’t even know
what Coif Is. I haven’t served
on all these lower courts. But
there’, one thing I have got,
I’ve got enough si
run against Wright 1
So BUI Moyers decided to
take toe Newsday post
NY Congressman Plans
Viet Nam Christmas
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y, (AP)
— Rep. Josephs Resnick,
D-N.Y., who
holiday
my s
suit. He discarded clubs on
the third and fourth diamond
and I let two hearts go. I can
count to nine and I saw that
if South held both ace and
queen of hearts he had nine
top tricks. On the fifth dia-
mond my partner chucked a
"UpMg'Mlff’SuuUl11 IWll. 1 ■
let the three of clubs go
whereupon South made three
club tricks and his contract,"
West really had no way to
know in the ordinary bridge
game but he should probably
have hung onto all his clubs
On the theory that South was
trying to coax him tOithrbw
a club away.
In the expert bridge game
West would nave had no prob-
lem at all. That is if East
were right up on his toes and
West
North
East
South
1 *
Pass
1 ♦
Pass
'I*
Pass
' 2V
Pass
3 N T,
Pass
4*
Pass
4*
Pass
- .You,
4N.T. Pass
South, hold.
*AK87 WA2 *543 *K98S
What do you do?
A—In spite of toe fact that
year partner has naked for
wser wy reewainrod -w pare.-«
You overbid when yon jumped
to three no-trump. Apparently
your partner has nee spale.
four bearta, five diamonds and
three clubs and your kins of
Veffaa wffl be worth very Uttte.
at a slam eeelraef bet will be
valuable in ue-trump.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of responding one
diamond your partner responds
one spade. What do you do
now? .
Answer Tomorrow
• Equipment
tag, such as tricycles, bicycles, a virus that was present on
skates, swings, scooters and the skin at the time of the
wagons.
scratch. In the long run, hu-
II man Ha in era du* neie wiam
J ^
) V- ■ .
w?** ;•
\
work week.
'i0
• Educational toy! of all man beings give cats more
. ‘ - —“-— diseases than cats give hu-
blocks, geometric design
’
mans.
■
V
its
the
he’ll
recording^
and 600 pounds of salami for t
trffe*said toe tapes come from ■>
the families of servicemen in v .. _
hta area, toe medallions from
locfll THffrhinti you »• look like o rioter on Sunsot Strip!
'"V'- :'v’. ...... - ’ t •'
......- ^ •
C 1N4 HIA, Ik.
3;
.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 103, Ed. 1 Monday, December 19, 1966, newspaper, December 19, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061791/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.