The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 36, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 2, 1966 Page: 5 of 18
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TV TREND MAY BE Ti
NONHUMAN STAR C.
4-1,
r
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP TV Radto W riter r»
HOLLYWOOD (AP)-H there
is a discernible trend In televi-
sion it may be toward a fascina-
tion with nonbuman stars.
Animats, of course, continue
to be very big.'There is good pld
"hfassie,” moving into a 13th
season as undisputed star of the
program. Ttiere is also “flip-
per,’’ the indomitable dolphin,
eoing into a third sSa'Sdlt.'-
’’DaktarF’ has Clarence,"the
lion with the eye problem! and
everybody knows, that he\ and
the lovable chimp, Judy, are the
real stars of the show. Now
comes ’’Tarzan,’’ who seems
uncomfortable when dealing
with gorgeous girls but is happy
with Cheetah, his chimp side-
kick and fellow vine-swinger.
4, On the nonhuman front, there
! arp even more stars. There Is
the futuristic submarine of
__"Voyage to the Bottom of the
. Sea, ’ and the impressive space-
ship that appears to be about
the sizes of a. smalj city wan-
dering around', the galaxy in
;i "Star Trek.” ‘Time Tunnel”
makes a star of the vdkzzling
underground city—800 stories
deep with free-fall elevators—
that contains the marvelous
time machine. ,\ •
The re Vat lovable robot inclu-
cluded in the "Lost in Space”
family unit. It is so sophisticat-
ed it can deliver comedy lines
as well as save the hash of the
adventurous Robinson family.
But the most important stars
of the machine age are the trick
automobiles. They are impor-
tant to at least seven shows
It is probable that die vogue
for souped-up vehicles started
when James Bond turned Up in
a car that could do almost any-
■ thing from destroy pursuers to
change license plates while
traveling at enormous speeds-
When "Get Smart,” a James
nBSteaf'
really a radio microphone Si
radio that_Was reaHjTa cigarei
At midseason, along ’came the
The Bat mobile weighs 5,500
pounds, has a 5<XMi0rsepower oj
engine - and is believed capable tl
of 1(50 m.p.h. ft has ajjybble top
alleged to be proof against ma-
chine-gun bullet or hand gre-
nade. It's special headlight
beams can kill the ignition of
any car in front of it; it has
HOLLAND
- 'Bond spoof, arrivedjast season,
agent Maxwell Smart was pro-
vided with a .raty, zebra skin-
lined convertible loaded with
Boys Who Lost
Hair1 Case
jht Trim
DALLAS (AP) — The three
teen-aged rock ‘n roll singers
who lost their ..federal case with
..... the principal over their Beatle-
' length tresses were minus a few
locks today, but convinced that
a public trimming they took Fri-
day night would not satisfy the
school.
A father-and-son barber team
gestured menachingly with thin-
ning shears, and the girls at the
Club Uncle put their fists to
their mouths and cringed.
They needn't have.
When the barbers were done,
there were hardly enough,,clip-
pings to go around. The boys'
ears were visible for the mo-
ment, but quickly camouflaged
again wioth a flick of the climb.
Stephen Webb, 18, and Phillip
Farrell and Paul Jarvis, both
17 said they will turn to private
schools and a fight in U S. cir-
cuit court rather than submit to
. . Friday's federal ruling and -get
short haircuts as the price of
- admission to public school
The boys call their act
/'Sounds -Unlimited," and say.
their lank hairdoes are standard
show-business Equipment.
»' They told U S. Dist. Judge W.
M. Taylor that their civil rights
were violated last month when
the principal of Samuell High
Sehool, W. S. Lanham, told them
to visit a barber or stay
home,.
Taylor's temporary court or-
der kept the boys i nschool until
Friday, when he ruled against
* them. The judge said in effect
that the schools and not: the
students must make the
At first, it looked as though
the three planned to comply.
Stan Deyo, empresario of the
non-alcoholic Club Unci?, an-
nounced that the three would
submit on-stage to razor cut*
unveiling their ears. 4
But the combo's lawyer, Her
bert Hooks, said grimly. "Id
shave their heads If they allowed
Marshall Holland
Retires From
Enjay's Plant
Marshall Holland recently re-
tired from the Chemical Prod-
ucts Laboratory of Enjay’s Bay-
town Plant. '........—-
Although he plans to continue
to live Ip the Baytown area, he-
(••ill faVa ash. Vt«e ‘79 _ aaaa
farm near Carthage. Additional
plans include fishing and .duck
hunting at Highlands Reservoir
and in Anahuac.
He is a native of Carthage]-
and worked for a bridge and
the City of Longview three
years before moving - to Bay?
town.
He'joined the Baytown Refin-
er;
Polyolefin Unit labs.
Holland is a member and for-
mer deacon of St. John’s Bap-
tist Church. He and his wife,
Josephine, have a son, Eloice,
and a daughter, Katherine, Jboth
of Denver, Colo. Another daugh-
ter, Loren?, lives in Cuba, N.M.
The Hollands also, have 12
grandchildren and four great-
grandchiidren. ’
t television cameras and
npfete " crime laboratory
ding a computer. And if it
<=t on fire, it has automatic
extinguishers. In addition, it has
a very strange, bat-like shape.
This would seem to be the liv-
ing bnd of cars, but Black Beate
the crime-fighting machine
he “ween Hornet” makes
3atmobile seem as old-fash
,r j as a Stanley Steamer and
a vulgar display to boot.
' This ordlnaryVbhtcle- tras
____„___.Tf
telephone and television, of
course; plus~ secret compart-
ments for storing our crime?
fighter's arsenal. It also con-
tains a clothes closet so the Hor-
net can change costumes in
transit, -A television scanner
screen, even a drawing board
with-artists’ equipment.
For offense and defense, there
are front and rear rockets, a
gun that comes out of the front
grille and. a device that Spreads
a glaze of ice.-bghind -the car Jo
bedevil pursuers.
LAMAR A. Haffelflnger Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. L. A.
Haffelflnger 8r. of 000 East
AdOue, is home on *: 14-day;
leave after completing baste
training at Fort Polk, La. He
will return to Fort Politer
advanced training. Lamar is
a Robert E. Lee High School
graduate, later attending Lee
College- and University of
Houston. ----- !'
c:4 i
Beach City Student Is At University of Arkansas
Annual Staff Convention, along Texas, spent Wednesday of last (.Trinity, were recent weekend
Sunday, October 2, 1966
y~
«tr
,
SajjtfluM ftu» I
with nine other Robert E. Lee
Students. The convention was
held Sept. 24, at the University
of Houston. “ - •
Mrs. Maurice Ivey of t
By MARION NICHOLSON
Beach City Corespondent
Johnny Morrison, son of J. O.
Morrison of Bayridge, left re-
cently for Fayetteville, Ark.,
where he will attend the Uni- ENROUTE TO NE’
versity of Arkansas. Johnny , is
a freshman'and will major in
Business Administration.
WORKSHOP CONFERENCES
Camp Allen Episcopal Dtoces
of Texas was the location for
workshop conferences. The dis-
cussions were held for the
church and school staff of the
Church of Christ Cathedral of
Houston. !:4 ;
The St. Thqmaf' EpFscopaT
Church of Houston also , had
their rehearsal of.Bagpipe and
Drum Corp at Camp Allen.
LIONS CLUB
Trl City Beach Lions Club
will hold their annual fish fry
Saturday, Oct? 15, at Crawley’s
Fishing Camp on Trinity Bay,
from 11 a.m. till 7 p.m. Tickets
can be obtained from any Lions
Club metrtber.
PERSONAL MENTION
Peggy Compton and Jane Jor?
dan of Beach City, attended an
PARTY BICKERING MIGHT
HURT BROWN'S CAMPAIGN
week /with the Harold Clark visitors with her grandparents
to New Orleans, where she will Bayridge. Forester Is the assist-
Baytown Phones
Up By 627 For
Last 12 Months
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
current gag in California’s hot
gubernatorial fight has a promi-
nent Democrat saying:
“We have met the enemy and
they are us,” :
' The joke can be no joke to
Gov. Edmund G. Brown. Inter-
nal strife among his fellow
Democrats ranks high among
the hurdles he must clear to win
a third term in a campaign
drawing national attention.
If he wins, Brown will be the
first Democrat to get a tid'd
term in the California Gover-
nor’s Mansion. Chief. Justice
Earl Warren, a Republican,
held the office fob three terms,
but Warren was a "two-party
will take" care of his 73-acre governor.” who rogularlyre-
farm near Carthaec. Additional ceived support from the Demo-
crats as well. Brown enjoys no
such advantage.
! The third term, party dissen-
sion, a potential "white back-
lash,” - a • personable opponent
who is putting on a strong cam-
paign all adds up to a tight
race, At this point, Brown ap-
pears to be running slightly be-
hind the GOP candidate, Ronald
Reagan, former actor and tele-
vision personality. r
A Republican candidate must
win Democratic support for vic-
tory in California, where regis-
tered Democrats outnumbe|r Re-
publicans 3 to 2.
In seeking another
term, Brown isjware that he!
swimming against a ript
"time-for-a-change” sept
This sentiment, says Los An-
geles Mayor Samuel W. Yorty,
explains in part the startling
vote he attracted in the Demo-
cratic primary last June. Yorty
rolled Jip a whopping 981,000 In 1950, Baytown had 6,200 tele
” ’ occ'w' : phones. The number had grown
party to 13,250 in January 1960, an
increase of 6,000. The next, 6,000
telephones were gained in less
than six years.
The SunsTeleScope
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP TVRwdlo Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - The lo
• The los-
ers among this season’s televi-
-----wlled of{
sion, entries are being
sooner than usual.
In previous ..years, network
controllers of program destinies
have given programs several
weeks in which to find au-
diences and normally it could be
anticipated (hat the national
Nielsen reports published
Nov. 7 would indicate whether a
series would be summarily can-
celed or renewed,
“But , this year.”, a network
W-’’ .*
Men Of Divergent Faiths
Work Together On Chapel
Nonetheless,- Brown '
LENOX, Mass. (AP)-A Jew,
a^Buddhist, a Christian Scientist
and some Roman Catholics have brant's chair, backedby a dark
joined forces to recreate an Old
World Place of worship for tr
boy's school here.
A chapel, based upqpjjiltali
an sculptor Bernini's 17th cen-
tury classic church of Sant’ An-
drea al Quirfnale in Rome, is
being built for the Jesuit-run
Cranwell School for Boys. The
Cranwell chapel is larger than
that of Sant' Andrea, but the
proportion between length and
width is maintained.
Among the artists, engineers
and craftsmen assembled to con-
struct the chapel were: Peter
McLaughlin, Boston architect »||
Catholic from Ireland; Leonard
Baskin, professor of art at Smith
College, a sculptor who designed
the chapel’s crucifix, a Jew born
in Brooklyn; Biganess Living-
stone, whose paintings enliven
the chapel’s Interior, a Catholic
housewife fipm Brookline,
loseph Fei
Mass.; Ji
stained
signed
Worst Teacher
Shortage In 25
Years hi Texas
AUSTltf (AP) -The Texas
State Teachers Association said
Saturday Texas is facing the
"worst teacher shortefjr In 25
' years,” with nearly 5,500 posi-
tions either vacant or filled by
unqualified teachers,
r The association said It re-
ceived questionnaire replies
from 82 per cent of the state’s
1,300 school districts.
District* reported 1,092 vacant
jobs and’4,400 posts held by not
fully qualified teachers.
Charles H. Tennyson, associa-
tion director, said more than
10,000 teachers are employed
this year with only emergency
permits. * .
"Superintendents , apparently
feel that almost one half of ft?
holders of these 10,000 emer-
gency permits are not qualified
to handle the professional duties
required of a classroom teach-
er,’"he aald. ?
* Tennyson said that while other
factors are Involved In the short-
age, the "aingle ipost Important
source of the trouble' lies in the
feet that Texas la still not pay- and
tag Us teachers a decent living
wage."
Ferguson, whose
ass windows are de*
encourage an atmos-
phere of (prayer and contempla-
tion, a Christian Scientist; Ul-
lrich Bear, who designed the
vestments to be used at the al-
tar, a German Catholic; and
Arthur Choo, the engineer, a
Chinese 'Buddhist.
The building is of reinforced
concrete pillars, cantilevered to-
ward a central crown, The ex-
terior surfaces are finished with
brush-like strokes in,/ the con-
crete. The crown-like sculpture
with a spire on top will be
placed on the surnmitrof the
chapel by helicopter around Oct.
26. The crown was chosen be-
cause tt carries upward the flow
of the building’s lines.
The 26 stained-glass windows
verge over the altar
iTite again to draw i
an aluminum -spire
dominate the campus.
The altar, made ofunpdl
dry granite, 1*
e crown structui
with a baldichii
tel canopy. Two
Imunion tablet ate/
at the edge of the gancti
small pulpit, also of granite, is
located on one side. The cele-
oak screen, is at the other edg?
of the altar platform.
Curved pews, accommodating
worshipers, are
a have survived with low ones —
three rides. This is irftended to
encourage participation in the
Mass as called for Vati-
can’s Constitution on theiiturgy.
The chapel was designed with
the idea of satisfying present re-
ar ~qa wifrm,' nbc’s "Tefe^
quirements and those of Ihe next dies, the spy stories, the west- he has obtained nine r
century.
I
r.-.u: / ” "• ' // /, •' I
J. C. Harrison Is
J. C. (Babe) Harrison joined
the ranks of Humble annuitants
when he retired from the Bay-
town Refinery Machinist Depart-
:e of the Liberty Coiln-
ity of Oark, Harri-
i schpol theret Work-
, imble was his first
4\he\;Was only 18 when he
m worn i n the Baytown Re-
grimly, "The Nielsens released
on Oct. 10 — a week from Mon-
day — are the big ones. I pre-
dict that the result will be the
biggest explosion of cancella-
tions we’ve seen in a long
time.”
"The Tammy Grimes Show”
had its final broadcast — its
fourth show — on ABC Thurs-
day night. And the industry is
bursting with rumors about the
fate of six or seven or shows
which* in early ratings showed
symptoms of illness,
Among those reported to be
on the critical list are NBC’s
“The Hero" and "Roger Miller
Show,”’ CBS’ "Jean Arthur
Show" and “Run, Buddy, Run,”
as well as ABCs "Milton Berle
Show" and "12 O'Clock High," a
returning show in a new time
spot.
Network spokesmen, usually
protest vehemently that ratings
are not the only cauje uf pro-
gram death. It is certainly true
that a number of programs
otos to Brown's 1,355,000.
• ‘ ‘Therelg a feeling in. fte
.that it’s time for new leader-
ship,” the mayor said:
Brown is getting much outside
help.' The President’s wie was
here last week. No political im-
plications were attached to Mrs.
Johnson’s trip, the White House
said, but then she did find some
kind words for BrownJ$£i her
speeches.
Earlier this month, the Presi-
gave Brown a pat on the
'ter the governor had
televised confronta-
-with Reagan. Brown's aides
safe Johnson told him, via tele-
phone, he had put oh a'"magnif-
icent performance. ’ ’
The governor says Reagan
will be more difficult to beat
than his two previous' GOP gu-
bernatorial opponents, former
Sen. William F. Knowland ill _
1958 and former Vice President
Richard M. Nixon in 1962.
phone Hour" are two that come national average.
instantly to mind. But these are
prestige show* and the usual
rules don’t apply.
Most regularly scheduled en-
tertainment shows — the come-
six years. In Sap*
the Ma-
*r:,. / " j:
member of
Baptist Church,
is choir director and
•~T/L, «*r. "to Bin. Harrison .have
?* •» 4 *on, J/C Harrison Jr. of Tex-
as City, and a daughter, Mrs.
Rouse who lives in
They have two grand-
two granddaughters.
eras, live and die by the ratings
■and each season roughly one-
third of all shows fail to survive
— the lower third of the Nielsen
ratings list.
This viewer, having watched
at least one episode and more
Often two, of all the new series
is convinced that the seasons
new product shapes up as a lit:
tie more slick, a little better
produced — and considerably
MBSiilJgMfl and cllche^iled
even than that of last season.
And like other interested ob-
servers, I find it. curious that
amid the welter of new pro-
grams, no single series Has yet
shown any signs of becoming a
real hit as did, in other seasons,
shows like "Bewitched,” and
"Get Smart,” which took off
like rocket? from their pads,
It i* possible, of course, that
some of the trouble lies in the
nation’* living rooms. Over the
years our relationship with our
sets' has changed. We have all
seen so much entertainment
that we are no longer as easy to
•mow or move «i one*
were. > .
now," he says, "and.
we’re on the wsjy.”
A recent survey indicated he
may be right. The State Poll
showed Brown gaining on jRea-
jgan but still behind. Ini per-
centages, the poll rated Reagan
45, Brown 41, and "don’t know”
14. The comparable 'June
figures were Reagan 48, Brown
37, and "don’t know”, 15,
Political observers, in Califor-
nia said they consider the race
neck and neck now and likely to
remain so to the finish in No-
vember. A spectacular blunder
in either camp, of course, could
change the picture.
In order of importance,
Brown's aides rate the following
as his principal assets — pros-
perity, experience, his record,
and his proven ability as a cam-
paigner.
The governor takes every op-
portunity to . emphasize the
“booming economy’’ of Califor-
nia. With the exception -of
housing starts, the barometers
tend to bear him out. He claims
that personal income in the
state is- 20 per cent above the
In his record, Brown is espe-
cially proud of two achieve-
ments, water and education. He
put through the $1.75-billion, 20-
year California Water Project
VandoUt SetHg?
Writs Against Wife
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Cor*
nellus Vanderbilt jr. hat filed
suit to enforce two court orders
issued in New York against his
ex-wife. ; «
Vanderbilt’s attorney said the
suit filed Friday is based on
New York oourt orders that Pa-
tricia W. Vanderbilt pay her
former husband 17,575 and stop
using hts name. , ■,i
t
- and his former wife, 48. lives
in Beverly Hills, Calif., the suit
says;
The couple married in j
were divorced to 1963. She
ft wife. -W;
Ms fifft wife.
«
. rir
_
campuses for higher educai
JUmig with the "time^for^k
change" sentiment, Brown may
be burdened with another poten-
tial disadvantage, the "white
backlash,” aftermath of,,the
fight over the state fair housing
law, the Rumford Act
In & 1964 referendum Califor-
nian* voted more than two
one to eliminate the law; Bro
fought hard to retain it. I&f
the vote, 'it remained on 1
books when the State Supreme
Court ruled the referendum pro-
cedure wag not constitutional.
Edmund Gerald Brown was
born in San Francisco, April 2,
1905. As a 12-year-old selling
Liberty Bonds to World War, I,
h? quoted Patrick Henry so of-
ten -that he acquired his nick-
name, "Pat."
The record shows that he has
been running for offices most of
his life. In high school, at age
15, tie held 11 stuejent posts. Jfc
studied law in night school,
passed the bar exams when he
was 22, and opened a private
practice.
In his first political foray,
running for the state assembly,
Brown ran as a Republican. He
lost the race but won a phetty
wife, Bernice Laytie, daughter
of a San Francisco police cap*
tain. She was one of his best
precinct workers. r
He changed parties in 1934 be-
cause, he says, he approved of
the policies of President Frank-
lin D. Roosevelt. In 1950, on his
win a statewide office that year.
Eight years later, he became
Installation of the 20,000th
telephone In Baytown Jvas made
this week, acco’iajtag to E. O.
Cambem, district manager for
Gejieral Telephone Co. of the
Southwest.
The installation was made to
the home of .Mr. and Mrs. Rich?
ard Kimball, 504 South Seventh.
The - Kimballs recently moved
to Baytown front Vidor. He is
employed by Texas Eastern in
Mont Belvieu, -They have one
son, Daikon Reese, 10 months.
“This Is a gain tele-
phones since the first of: the
year and some 1,400 during the
last 12 months,” Cambem said.
He pointed ou| that Baytown had
been growing steadily for many
years, but noted that the rate of
growth had increased .since 1960.
vhere she will
qnd Derrick
attend the Desk
Club Convention.
SPENDS WEEKEND,
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn New,
spent the weekend with her par-
Trinity High School.
J HOSPITAL NOTES
Baptist
Aid On Agenda
DALLAS (AP) - The Baptist
ant coach and biology teacher of General Convention of Texas
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Comp- cently had surgery.
Hj ■ --------------- " 'Mrs.’William Whitworth is re-
cuperating from surgery at Her-
mann Hospital. ,
Mrs. Nolan Labit of Ocean
Trudis James Is a patient at posal to allow Baptist schools
Hermann Hospital, where he re- to obtain loan* from federal
. aim „ua. MU/u
tbn. New is a student of South-
west Baptist Theological Semi-
nary ofEort Worth.
VISIT GRANDPARENTS V. —
Mr. and Mrs: Roy Foster and Drive arrived home after having
daughter, Latyie Lee Ann, of surgery at a Houston hospital.
Judges Are Announced By
Lions For Essay Contest
Judges for the BaytoWn Lions
International Peace Essay Con-
test have been announced. The
contest is now in progress and
will continue until IDec. 10, ac-
cording to James M. Cauley,
Lions Club president.
Judges named are Max Moses?
man, 901 Lindenwood who % a
section head at the Humble Oil
and Refinery Co.’s Baytown .re-
finery; Mbs. Natalie Huckabee,
509 Scott St., who teaches Eng-
of People’s State Bank:
This contest Is open to all
young people in Baytown who
are currently 14 years of age,
and m*erJ2 years of age as of
Jan. 15, 1967. A grand prize of
$25,000 in the form of an educa-
grah, to the world winner wiii rf^rmi^T^tag
be awarded. v
Eight world division semi-fin-
alist prizes of $1,000 each will
be given and these semi -
finalists will also get travel ex-
penses to Chicago, in July, 1967.
Also Cauley added, 20,000 lo-
cal, district and , multiple dis-
trict awards will be made,.
details of the contests have been
lish at Robert E. Lee High advised to contact any member
School; and ePrry W. Britton of the local Lion* Club.
2212 Utah St., who is president This information is also avail-
This information is ai
able, Cauley advised, at the
office of each junior high school
and senior high school principal,
and at the office of the dean of
Lee College. *
"We are enxious to have sev-
eral entries submitted from the
Students of Baytown,” Cauleyt
tional and for career assistance said. * ‘
ing in Dallas to
is Nov.
approv,
e a pro-
to obtain
funds. /
The presidents of the denomi-
nation’s 10' educational institu-
tion* — this week approved a
report that would permit them
to borrow money as long a? the
loan did not involve a subsidy
from the government.
An official of the Texas Bap-
tist School Administrators’ As-
sociation, said long range financ-
ing from such funds would re-
sult to savings to students of as ffl
much as 40 per cent of the cost -
-I J,.__loviicmrr 1
The educators
urgent need for
V “to house 2,500 addi-
tional men and women at the _
Texas schod?:
In the past the state conven-
tion has been reluctant to accept
any federal money on fte
Anyone who would like to ferounds it would violate the prin-
have information on rules and cipie 0( separation of church
and state. , _.
Try Sun CkBSified
w if*.
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’
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f'-;
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ti
Draperies qnd Bedsp
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Elegant styling . y. ready-made ... pinch-pleated Draw Draperies, givt any room
a look of luxury! Those vibrant drkperios hang in deep pleats, backed with heavy I
buckram - full side seam* are blind-stitched. The wide bottom hem adds a dis* *
tincture mark of finest quality. Fabric is 100% acetate and lining 100% cotton.
Dry clean only. The "Queen" bedspreads are fully quilted with a delicate floral
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governor.
Viet
IS
SAIGON. South Viet Nam
(AP)—The Oonstitutent Assem-
sjs&S'Zzvs:
held anofter session today de-
voted to parliamentary details.
print which gives
the backing and lining is
Also dry cieanabl
• R
ning is. 100% cotton and bedspread,
©«fy. Both draperies and bedspreads
• Olive
filling is (00% acetate,
ere in rich colors of
• Geld.
Draperies: ~
4-*;
Bcdlsprcods
i-fi
SI
Only
'
. t-,
96"x 108"
;-
Penneys
-7-......... .....
m
220 W. Texas
9 to 6 daily Thurs. til
,,V.:
V
;V
L
■VjW''
’
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 36, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 2, 1966, newspaper, October 2, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1062070/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.