The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 20, 1983 Page: 7 of 86
eighty six pages : ill. ; page 18 x 12 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:
/ ERLANGER "
45" WIDE
"INFERNO"
50% POtYtSTK 40% tAYOEE
10% RAX
PASTEL AND BRIGHT
SOUD COLORS
"LINEN BLEND"
SUITING
T- I
SUNNY STYLES |
45" WIDE 1
45% rotVESTE»35% COTTON '
VOILES
$1*7
I YD. A
15% POLYESTER 35% COTTON
WHITE AND PASTIL
ALLOVER
EYELETS
STYLETOWN
45" WIDE
0* POLYESTER 50% RAYON
"ST. TROPEZ"
NAUTICAL
PRINTS
$288
MARCH 23 & 24 ONLY
ENTIRE STOCK!
HANCOCK | j
DRESS LACE I 2
/ BURLINGTON
45 WIDE
"LYNSHIRE"
EASY CARE
e5r-POLYESTER 35== COTTON
SOLID COLORS
IMITATION
HANDKERCHIEF
LINE”
% S277vo >
BLOUSE WEIGHT
' LINEN LOOK
STYLETOWN
45” WIDE
PORCELAIN”
50°- POLYESTER SOV RAYON
THE GLAZED LOOK1
CHINTZ
PRINTS
' SOUTH SEAS
45” WIDE
PRINTS AND SOLIDS
100°.POLYESTER
IN THE LOOK OF SILK
CHOP CHOP
SOLIDS PRINTS
, 9 i'jw
LEE COLLEGE Library staff presented Sterling Municipal Library
staff with a hand-painted china plate In honor of the 20th anniversary,
of the opening of Sterling Municipal Library. Pictured from left are
Nettie Brown, who painted the plate; Flora Wilhite, city librarian; and
DoIoAs Owens, LC assistant librarian. The staffs of both libraries
meet once a month for an informal coffee. Ms. Brown is a senior citizen
employee at LC Library.
Teen Sentenced To 5 To 15
Years In Father’s Death
CHEYENNE, Wyo.
(AP) - Richard J.
Jahnke, the teenager
convicted of killing
his abusive father,
was sentenced Fri-
day to 5 to 15 years in
prison and his sobb-
ing mother protested
that ‘‘they don’t know
the pain.”
“No one should be
permitted to act as
prosecutor, jury,
judge, court of appeal
and executioner
without being called
to account to socie-
ty,” said District
Judge Paul Liamos,
who could have
sentenced the 16-
year-old to as much
as 20 years in jail or
freed him on proba-
tion.
Liamos told Jahnke
he decided against
probation to “satisfy
trust in public
justice, as opposed in
private justice.”
Jahnke, wearing
the same navy blue
suit and red sweater
he wore throughout
his trial, sat im-
passively as the
sentence was an-
nounced. The boy’s
mother, Maria, 40,
spbbed and hugged a
friend afterward,
crying, “They don’t
know, they don’t
want to know. They
don’t know the pain,
dear God, they don’t
know.”
In earlier inter-
views, Mrs. Jahnke
said the boy had
freed the family by
killing his father.
Richard C. Jahnke,
38, an Internal
Revenue Service
agent, was shot to
death Nov. 16 as he
approached the
garage of his subur-
ban home north of
Cheyenne after an
anniversary evening
out with his wife.
The boy, who
waited in the garage,
fired six blasts from
a 12-gauge shotgun as
the door was being
raised. His sister,
waiting in the living
room, then fled
through a window
with her brother.
Young Jahnke was
charged with first-
degree murder, but a
jury convicted him
Feb. 19 of voluntary
manslaughter. His
sister Deborah, 18,
was convicted this
month of aiding and
abetting him, and is
awaiting sentencing.
She was in the court-
room Friday and
wept after her
brother was sentenc-
ed to the Wyoming
State Penitentiary.
Jahnke was return-
ed to the county jail
pending an appeal
bond hearing next
week.
“I think it’s
outrageous,” defense
attorney Jim Barrett
said, saying he
thought it “an odd
way” to inspire trust
inlaws.
“I’m sure we all
have compassion for
Richard Jahnke,”
said Liamos, who
said he read most of
the “hundreds” of
letters he received
seeking leniency for
the boy. “Regardless
of the circumstances,'
in this court’s opi-
nion, this cannot be
treated in a manner
to depreciate the
violence that was us-
ed.”
former fugitive
shouted to reporters
Friday after he arriv-
ed in Austin on a
private jet loaned to
the state by Dallas
millionaire H. Ross
Perot.
Before boarding a
state plane that took
him to state prison in
Hunt6ville, Yar-
brough also said, “I’d
rather have come a
different direction.”
He was handcuffed
the entire flight —
even while he ate his
fried chicken lunch.
Travis County
District Attorney
Ronald Earle, who
tracked the fugitive
Yarbr
Perot f
Yarbrough, 41, was
flown back to Texas
after U.S. District
Judge David O’Brien
on St. Thomas in the
Virgin Islands had
approved Texas GOv.
Mark White’s request
to extradite him.
Yarbrough was
sentenced to five
years in prison on
March 30, 1978, after
an aggravated per-
jury conviction, but
he jumped $5,000
bond and did not
show up in Austin for
formal sentencing in
August 1981.
Earle said Yar-
brough could be
returned to Austin to
island
onWi
Pi * ■
m -
kmi ......a
--0- like that,” said he asked Ya.
_ f ill m s told brough if he had a job l
the reporters. in Grenada. *
ent Willms said Yar- “No, medical}
brough told him that school is a full-time ___
„ , at- “atsomepointl’llex- job,” Yarbrough told do !
tending a St. Vincent plain how qli this Willms. aft I
branch of the St. ---
George’s Schoof of
Medicine. He %d
managed to elude
authorities as long as
he remained at his
home on Grenada,
because of the United
States’ strained
diplomatic relations
with that Marxist na-
tion.
He only recently
had moved to St. Vin-
cent to begin the fifth
semester of medical
school.
Assistant District
Attorney Bill Willms,
who flew home with
Grace Malone Rites Held
Funeral services
for Grace Emily
Malone, 70, of 1108
Edison Court were to
be held at 4 p.m.
Saturday at Earth-
man Funeral Home
Chaperwith the Rev.
Robert Schomp of-
ficiating.
Ms. Malone died
Friday in a Baytown
hospital.
A 51-year resident
of Baytown, Mrs.
Malone was the
retired owner of
Grace’s Beauty Shop.
She was an active
member of the Senior
Citizens Club, par-
ticipating each year
in the Senior Citizens
Olympics and the
Senior Citizens
Valentine parties.
She was also a
member of the Senior
Citizens softball
league and played
with the team in the
Astrodome last year.
She was also a
member of the Senior
Citizens Olympics
committee, the
Senior Citizens
Celebration Day
committee, the
American Associa-
tion of Retired Per-
sons, the Lee College
Fellowship program
and the Edison
Courts recreation
programs.
She is survived by a
son, Billy Malone of
Baytown; her father,
A.J. Gordon of
Dallas; and a sister,
Faye Nelson of
Dallas.
Several nieces and
nephews also sur-
vive.
Burial was to be in
Cedarcrest Cemetery
under the direction of
Earthman Funeral
Home.
OIE OF THESE KAY IE THE DOOR TO
YOUR PROSPEROUS FINANCIAL FUTURE!
Each door represents an INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT (IRA), one o
moy open a way for you to take advantage of income tax shelters today pnd <
vide a healthy income when you retire. An IRA is a savings plan which alio1
deposits to be tox deductible for the year in which they are deposited. Income
these deposits AND the earnings are not paid until you make withdrawals
ment when you will probably be in a lower tax bracket.
of which
can pro-
iws your,
taxes oh
at retire-'
Om THE DOM TO YOU* PROSPEROUS FINANCIAL FUTURE BY OPENING AN KA AT...
Exxon BBvtown crediC union
John'*
Home Services
• Reoliej
• 6fttirbl|, Etc. EK» -
For tho test
prict hi town
Rb. 422-5199
sears
* . ft» •«.»»• -.A A mtwuk . ,hj& &emib~
Pre-season AIR CONDITIONER
SALE
Most items reduced
Save *25 on Kenmore
Cool 'N' Lite air conditioner
Room size air conditioner has 4,000 BTUH
capacity...and it’s portable! Built-in carry-
ing case handle. Weighs only 43 lbs. 2-
speed fan. 115 volts.
Regular
$229.95
204”
Sove *80 on high
efficiency air conditioner
18,500(18,300 BTUH, Super Thrust feature,
4-way air flow. Improved Power Saver
switch. 3-speed fan. Convenient slide-out
chassis. 8.5 EER.
Regular
$729.95
649”
Save MOO on high
efficiency air conditioner
25,400 BTUH's, high efficiency “energy-
saver,” 230 volts, 13.5 amps, EER 8.2.
Fits windows 28-In. to 40-In. wide.
Regular
$859.95
759’1,»
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Room air conditioner
11,600 BTUH's, high efficiency. 3 speeds,
4 way air direction. Quick mount. 12.20
amps, 115 volts, EER 8.0, Woodgrain
front panel.
Sears
price
399l‘«.
A special purchase, though not
reduced, is an exceptional value
Sale ends April 2
Charge it on SearsCharge
You can
count on
Sears
MAM WHOM AHO CO
SaHalectioo guaranteed
^ e*ch of IhRie advertised llomt li readily RvtilAble for Ml* M advertieed m these full lino <Mr*» ''
1000 San jRcfctiMdt
Baytown, Trim
10*.n.l*f r-m- Now.-Frl.
Y n.m. tn 1 r.«. Sntnrdny
420-7241
CHARTER
WINDSONG"
45 WIDE
c POLYESTER 50% RAYON
NEW SOUD COLORS
BSTCrirsf.f'Asms
SALE PRICES
GOOD THRU THURSDAY
GREAT FOR SPRINGS
SUMMER SPORTSWEAR
POLYI5TER/COTTON
STRIPED & SOLID
T-SHIRT
KNITS
*177
CRAFT SPECIALS
pillowmIerts
100% POLYESTER
I" SQUARE (1.99 each
• SQUARE $2.39 EACH
• "ROUND $2.59 each
•" SQUARE $2.79 each
47" WIDE
100% POLYESTER
BONDED
BATTING
, BY THE VARD
SAVE ON OUR
"BARGAIN"
TABLES
e
•
a GINGHAMS
Z PLAIDS
7 OXFORDS
• 4-9 YD. LENGTHS
DAN RIVER'S
ASSORTED
SUMMER SHIRTINGS
■ AMERITEX
45" WIDE
100% COTTON
COUNTRY CLASSIC
CALICO PRINTS
$047
* YARD
WAMSUTTA ”
45" WIDE
50% POLYESTER 5<)% COTTON
PRINTED A SQUD
PLISSE' SEERSUCKER
YARD
•
33 ®
TARO 0'"
°Y!
B' YARD
J }j •
-stretches your Dollar!
$188
B YAR!
54" WIDE
ASSORTED
SOLID A FANCY
UPHOLSTERY
VELVET
1-10 YARD UENQTHS
$066
W YARD
"WHERE THE REST KNOT EXRtNSlVtr
STORI
HOtllll
UM
BAYTOWN UVALDE DEUHIICTE. PAJXLANO IHWII CUM LAKE ^ EM IMP ^ ^ HUEEMLE^ BIUAIRI MOUTH EM 1MO
■ 427-4444 «*A7901 44M6J9 ««• *3^0% 4*”“1 ""iSjE*
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.
Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 20, 1983, newspaper, March 20, 1983; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1063789/m1/7/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.