The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1959 Page: 2 of 10
ten 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:
Sip Sagtmra Bun Monday, October 5, 1959
Movie Queen Is Beautiful, Brainy
A iimilwl number good quality ! 30s, when a disillusioned, depres-jeute and cuddly in a sport*
i sion-ridden nation sought more el- parked on a lonely road.
oral have been teen-age brides,
mothers and divorcees.
Here are some prime
original Ml, color transpaifi)
cir* available on special sub- jegani
aeript on showing seven starlets, This was the heyday of the woman
aome in bathing suits, others in of the world, as played by Greta
atree. dress, price; (15. AP.V ! Garbo, Norma Shearer, Bette Da-
Print siibsrihcrs be mailed black I mis, Claudette Colbert, Irene
and white print of similar scene. I Dunne, Rosalind Russell, Kathar-
|ine Hepburn and Joan Crawford.
Bj BOB THOMAS The pin-up girl was the demand!dates for top stardom
HOU YWOQD (APt - Hole's a j ^ ltie wartime and postwar 40s, , ° P,. T T . . .
preview of the movie queen for which sought fast entertainment ^ Remick, Boston-born but
She is beautiful, but ,not in a :ubvKH,s Betty Grable adorned’, jm. fjJ^L Art^'fg udio
ravishing, unattainable way. Shaj^ery barracks wall, ami she i!!i* H»hu ’ -
lias the brains to discuss world;ruled the decade with Rita Hay- i^L’MnrolejJlRdto l£
politicti or space travel. worth, Esther Williams, Dorothy 'er )n role intended lor La
jLamour, Lana Turner, Ann Sheri- , , ,
I dan and other well-equipped beau-i Angie Dickinson, long-stemmed
|,i„ , North Dakota lovely with throaty
car I New York-born, started working
j at 2.
Youth is being served more and I ^ill St. Joltn, with IQ. of 16?,
more in the space age, and the | she graduated from high sclb»l at
hot prospects for the 1960s arejH was discovered actings at
young. But they have lived; sev* UCLA. Divorced and 18, she is
engaged to heir Lance Reventlow.
Carol Lynley, sweet-faced girl
Her proportions are not out-
sized, nor is her allure a blatantIjan
'one. But has an inner reserve of|(je;
lovely with throaty
pass,on that is apparent to men of ideal irl the ^ was a fn^Xavo”
all ages, yet is not so obvious as ti t ,h„ nrpVi0ILS ,ipoade imp,TSSI0n in Kj0 Braxo’ con"
to offend women, J^oiaWeX-eTZvefC IT
ll1"!burn, who had the figure of a boy, |Ui,
Briefly, she’s a sex kitten
brains.
maker Richard Brooks.
Siarh decade of Hollywood his-j?Fd tflk-Cu°! ^Hadelphiaheiress,|beauty chosen from thousands' to
toS ha^™™?£pes *^ Anne Frank, former cover
stars who reflected America s « Si that of Deborah girl "3th detP' off£at P***"??**
sires in female appeal. i Kfrr Eva Waw imt aJ Sandra Dee, Bayonne N.J.,
The flapper dominated the roar-lj,”^ M Sa t am J wur,„gter who became a famous
**• •>’fO&SSfSi
cqwtton of the American warn* chronism 0f the 50s. a throwback 1^*% butom
Leaders were Clara Bow, <«» ’ It to the w-artime pin-up girl. In-j^”®™.
^rdn^^f°rd °f °“r found fame as the ,e muTctan ari'ac^l'e-
Dancing Daughters.’ f foxhole sweetheart of the Korean
The sophisticate followed in the j yvar.
.mi L...L How can we tell what the 1960s
LOANS
Rewdewtiel-Cemmeroiel
Bayshore Mortgage Co.
W R. Tam ffc. JC HIM
buted on Broadway at 12, discov-
ered in "Bus Stop,’’ scored in
"Peyton Place,” career has paral-
leled that of husband Don Murray.
Stella Stevens, platinum blonde
DO YOU KNOW
ACME
EXTERMINATORS
ALL
WST
SAYS . . .
;we Have Enjoyed
Bringing You The
‘Do You Know*
Series!"
Last Week's Answer
Horace Greely did NOT
origniate the phrase,
“Go West, Young Man”!
It wa« put Halted Hi an editorial by
John L. B. Soule In The Terre Haute
Express m 1*S1. Herat* Greeley
tne phraae In a tatter In i*M
loyt'a Cyclopedia e* practical
Quotation!. Pf HO.
Termites may sight new be
damaging yonr property!
Call us for free inspection.
Insured termite and pest
control
A Satisfied Custonw
Is Our First
%
^ >■> Iwa maw A? te ■
■ Ipq^jiiPRVVWVnPI •. ;
109 E. Tax. JU 2-9650
i will bring? We can’t, of course.
| But w-e can try to foretell the
!r,22B«-
as the thinking man’s era. But all ™ “ff?®* *
| thinking and no play will make
life dull for even the thinking
man. He’ll want a girl who is as
{appealing outdoors as in.
j Hollywood is ready for him. The
: new movie girl can probably play
a smashing set of tennis and swim
Hike an otter. But she also looks
Sentencing Slated
Friday Of Slayer
Of La Porte Boy
, Sentencing . _____
McAinsh, a 35 - year - Old youth
declared a delinquent for slayi. g
another teen - ager, Chadwick
Burch, 17, of La Porte, in a June
night - time chase through the
San Jacinto Battleground, will be
Friday by Juvenile Judge J. W.
Mills.
The God-fearing jury held a mo-
ment of prayer for all teer-agers
and prayed their decision was
right before declaring the ver-
dict to the court after near!/ two
days deliberation.
The Pasadena delinquent, who
was denied admission to the
schools until after the trial, ap-
peared unshaken ly the verdict.
He said he thought he didn't get
a fair shake.
R. H. Fairbanks said the jury
was worried about two things, de-
j fining the term accident and the
'Li’l Abner". At 20, she's di-
vorced, mother of a 4-year-old
boy.
Tuesday Weld, another model
and amazingly developed at 15.
Age hasn’t hindered her career,
of 17, she played pregnant teen-
ager of “Blue Denim" on stage
and screen. A successful model at
ll, she acted In TV drama*.
Lunna Patten starred as young-
ster in Disney Films with' Bobby
Driscoll- Now an attractive 20 and
scorin-wwidp mg her for second
scoring high, she seeks for second
stardom.
NEW YORK (AP) - When the
U.S. Treasury has to pay 5 per
cent to borrow relatively abort
term money the little business-
man and the ordinary individual
know that tough days are in store
for those who don't have cash.
Stock traders become nervous
over what this might do to the
... „ _ . ,, business recovery and the espect-
Jo Morrow, Cuero, Tex., girl boom
chosen to play Alec Guinness’i ^ Treasury next week wlll of.
daughter in Our Man m Ha-jjer two billion dollars of four-year
vana. An outdoor girl of 19, she1 - * - y
won talent contest ami contract
Tough Days
Ahead For
Borrowers
By 8AM PAWSON
Al* Business News Analyst
- When I
GOOD SUMMER WEATHER
CHANGES MALE OUTLOOK
LONDON (AP) — Britain’s best When June turned out to be bet-
summer and fall weather in 200
years has started a revolution in
the outlook of the native male.
For one thing, he's noticing
women, a phenomenon in this
ter than May, they grumbled:
“Just wait till July. We’ll be
flooded."
But as July proved better than
June, a young man was heard
whistling at
shapely girl tod-
thin
dominantly male, land.
Not only that, he like, what he dli"8 down p’«’adu|y ln
cotton dress.
J' , The revolution had come.
The wolf whistle—purely a con-
tinental call of the wild in Eu-
to this side of the
foggy English Channel.
w
Dur
tring these golden days you
hear the sheik’s shriek from
as she can play much older roles, j stardom.
with Columbia.
Diane Raker, a college girl and
model, her quiet beauty brought
her role of older sister in ‘"Hie
Diary’ of Anne Frank". She gets
Pat Boone's first love scenes in
“Journey to the Center of the
Earth.”
Andra Martin, a farm girl from
Rockford, HI., but sophisticated in
looks, ghe piavs opposite Clint
Walker in "Yellowstone Kelly," is
married to his TV replacement,
TV Hardin.
Barbara Eden plays loco in TV
series “How to-Marry a Million-
aire," but she's no dope. Studied
music at San Francisco City Col-
lege. A direct descendant of Ben-
jamin Franklin, she's wed to
Micliael Angara, TV's Cochise.
Evy Norland, Miss Denmark in
the 1958 Miss Universe pageant.
Columbia gave her English lessons
for a year, now readying her for
John O’Groats to Land's End —
which means from one end of this
normally misty island to the other.
The brilliant days and nights
did it.
Hie nation had grown accus-
every
10-month notes with a 5-per cent
interest rate. In Walt Street the
scuttlebutt is that the offering
seems sure to be oversubscribed, tomed to decades of soggy’ sum-
U.S. Treasury notes are the best mers when it either ruined
of risks in this unpredictable ' .....
world. And a 5-per cent return on
mottey lent for less than five years
is handsome.
The Treasury is in this fix for
several reasons,
1. The government has been
Spending mote money
currently taking in. Ttn
day or threatened to.
Men forgot what the female fig-
ure looked like in daylight, Yean
of wet weather had kept the Brit-
ish female shrouded in raincoats,
or hidden beneath umbrellas.
On the rare occasions when the
than it is i sun did shine, it was so chilly
e Treasury | the girls seldom went 'outside
has to borrow cash to pay the I their drafty homes in anything
bills until tax collections pick up! less than bulky tweeds,
early next year. Also some old; But all that went with this
si utilities are coming due and tbeiyear’s unbroken string of lush
money must b" *™“J '---“---’— “J —“ teal—
refund them.
So many wolves appeared in
Trafalgar Square one sapphire-1
like evening in August that it'
sounded like a hungry night on
the Steppes.
It was too much.
A man wrote a letter- to The
Times. He expressed surprise in
’the transformation in our wom-
anhood, both young and not so
young."
Another man Joined the cor-
respondence and said:
"Never ln history have the wom-
en of this country turned out in
such elegantly cut dothe*."
Still another penned the same’
thoughts and with the good sense
and logic of the British male!
asked;
“Is it the sun!"
Brother, it was and It is.
Thursday whs the warmest
brightest October day alnce the
sdki
weather men Varied keeping rec-
money must be found to retire or!days and soft, starry nights,
refund them. j The girls came out in rhie hair
2. Demand for credit is greater j styles, colorful cotton dresses with
than the supply of lendable funds. I billowing skirts and the hemline
The demand comes from business- j hovered at the knees. v
It caught the men off stride.
Back last May when the perfect
Texas Farmers Put
In Bind By Weather
COLLEGE STATION (AP) -I The grain sorghum harvest is
Weird weather put Texas farmers i now concentrated in the Rolling
for John Richard Wjth mature crops in a bind last! Plains and in the.Lubbock area.
week. : It is getting well Aderway in-the
Moisture ranging from heavy! Amarillo area. Botley County
dews and fogs to heavy down-1 farmers with w^irrigated sor-
pours delayed or stopped the har-; ghum are getting 1,200 to 1,500
vest, the Texas Agricultural Ex-(pounds of grain per acre, and
tension Service said Saturday. j Jones County farmers 2,000 pounds
Otherwise, the moisture has l per acre,
been very beneficial to ranges and | jv com harvest is moving
pastures, and for land prepara-1 nordl from Central Texas where
tion, stalk destruction ami plant- yields have been good, The peanut
tng and germination of small; harvesl is centered in Smith Ten-
men either to finance their opera-
tions or to expand them. And it
conies from individuals wanting to
buy cars and appliances on time
or to get a mortgage for a new
home. The result is that interest
rates have been rising for a year
of the steel
rates have been rising for a year
or more.
3. The Federal Reserve System
holds that if it made money easier
so that people could barrow more
and with less pain, it would just
be feeding a speculative boom
which it fears will get along when
industry starts celebrating the end
of the steel strike.
So the Fed is keeping credit
what it considers reasonably tight.
Interest rates edge higher. The
Treasury has to pay the highest
rates since 1921. And the total an-
nual interest bill on the federal
debt has climbed well over nine
billion dollars.
4. The Treasury is prohibited by
law from paying more than 454
Trip Awarded
For Hospital
Visit, Claim
DALLAS, Tex. (AP)-Dr. Rob-
ert Curl’s trip to the hospital for
minor surgery turned out to be
a vacation with glittering fringe
“Limn, Methodist Univer-
sity professor filed a claim with
a hospitalization insurance com-
pany.
A letter saying the $198.28 set-:
tlemont put the company over the!
25 million dollar mark in claims
came right back. And wouldn’t
the professor like a trip-rail ex- j
ponses paid, of course—to help j
celebrate? i
Said Dr. Curl: "I went (to the
ispital) last August—right in the!
iddle of the summer. What with;
air-conditioning and now this trip,;
1 can really say that this is one |
Lwxanitnl ..mo fin " I
BAYTOWN DRIVERS
Received
2T'/j% DIVIDEND
Lett Yeer From
STATE FARM MUTUAL
on eligible suto Insursnec!
for Oetaile Call
JOHN MITCHELL
Its I. Tihm # JU l int
eiatt hm Mutual /asn
AutamMiit mauranaa I I
Caweaez '.....—*
Hama Of Mat etaamleetaa, llllnala
REVIVAL
Cedar Bayou Memorial
Assembly of God Church ,
F"Ti
*as|
Baca last May wnen me pe met ,imp Ihe hMpital W8I fun.”
weather began, they shook their; ^ dir{,rtQI. ^ fjpld education
to the Belgian Congo and the field i
missions ef the Methodist Church.
be horrible.’
Stork Stops
MILLER
Mr. and Mrs. George Michael
Miller, 207 Long Drive, announce
the birth of a son. Brent Mason
Friday, Oct. 2, at San Jacinto
Memorial Hospital. He weighed!
eight pounds, seven ounces, and’
has one brother, Kirk Michael.
Grandparents are Clyde Mason of
Baytown and Mr, and Mrs Mar-
tin Miller of Luxor, Pa. Great
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Emory Thompson of Sci ttdale,
Pa.
BEETLE BAILEY
Dr. IrnMt Smith
CHIROPRACTOR
(formerly of Baytown)
Is Now touted At
104 S. 7th St.
(Corner 7th 4 Mein)
BY APPOINTMENT
mg and germination oi small: harvest is rentered in Smith fen *aw lrom Paying mote man
grain, director John Hutchison fcl Texas.^ Late rice'in fee W {*r cent 0,1 ** ^ ol more than
said in his weekly report from dis-f^jtgi area is takm„ a five years or longer maturity. This
trict agents.
Some local areas still need
moisture, especially in the far
West, Southwest and parts of the
Panhandle.
The cotton harvest is said to be
about half complete in Central
Texas, about 65 per cent in North
Texas and cotton gins now are
penal code. The first jury vote bock area, where a little more
:_____ xt- is si __x. ____si. I ■bnn in run* rsf nrrtrt 1C
was tied 6-6 and gradually the
unanimous decision was reached.
Judge Mills ordered the records
of the probation department- turn-
ed over to him for study and
asked the attorneys in the mat-
ter to make recommendations as
to what judgment should be ei>
tered.
than 10 per cent of the crop is
harvested. Rains gave some gins
in North Texas a chanee to catch
up.
taking a setback
in quality due to wet fields and
a delay of the harvest.
All district agents say range*
are in fair to good condition. So
are cattle and other livestock.
Ted Martin at Denton said the
rain has been ideal for getting
land in shape for sowing small
running to full capacity in the Lub- BTain and to help pastures, which
• • ‘ “ * ---- — — in good
DlCKfU
iftrtwe fen iKitcrfri’
TONITE
"FRONTIER GUN"
TUESDAY
THRU
WED.
t ACTION HITS t
NO. 1
mjm
ml
QNKiilON
vsawim-mm
wmmmt
NO. I
•PPC^'^T
“ '"SMDQW
Yarborough Plans To
Inspect Padre Isle
RAYMONDVILLE (AP) - Sen.
Ralph Yarborough (D-Tex) and
members of his staff will inspect
Padres Island and Port Mansfield
: this w eek.
Port Mansfield director Charles
Johnson said Bob Bray, a Yar-
borough assistant, and Bob Core
and Max Fisher of the Senate re-
cording-television studio, arrived
; at the port Sunday.
The group will spend three or
lour days on aerial photographs oi
1 Padre Island from Port Isabel and
Brownsville to Corpus Christi.
! The pictures are to be made,
Johnson said, in connection with
(the seashore parks bill.
A bearing on the bill is set for
Corpus Christi in January.
Lai* Timai Today
am
yKKSMtfNOW
THRU TUISDAY
t BIG FEATURES I
Robert
Miichum
2 BIG FEATURES
TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY
MwMmMBJBM
IIIT NO. t
"DIARY OF A HIGH
SCHOOL BRIDE"
ANITA SANDS
HIT NO. I
"GHOST OF DRAGSTRIP
HOLLOW”
lOvt efjthAt^OOfl^
• fury of
« mo viol
’'VWwan
MS
Sat®
■BRENPYrtmiiBaar
REGULAR PRICES
Carelessness Is
Responsible For
Firearms Mishaps
AUSTIN (SP) — Carrying, pos-
session and the sale ol firearms
is, for the most part, governed
by law. But it is difficult to leg-
islate against carelessness, yet it
is carelessness that is responsible
for the most firearms injuries
and fatalities, says the Texas
Safety Association.
Almost half of all fatal fire-
arms accidents occur in the
home. These generally happen
when preparing to clean guns or
pistols, in dropping a gun or
knocking it off a support,! in
showing the “unloaded” gun, or
in actual horseplay.
One of the greatest hazards
from firearms comes from leav-
ing them loaded and in places
where they are accessible to ev-
eryone . . including children.
Other precautions listed by
TSA include:
1. Always treat a gun as though
it were loaded — until you have
proved that it is not; and never
aim unless you intend to fire. Put
firearms away unloaded, disman-
tled, with all ammunition in a
locked chest.
2. Before a person is allowed
to handle firearms alone, he:
should be taught how to use
them, on"s well-protected range
under competent instruction. .
3. When buying ammunition,
care should be taken to make
sure that it is suitable for the gun
in which it is to be used.
1 4. With mans’ accidental deaths
and serious injutles resulting
from the mishandling of revolvers
and guns, it is possible that the
hazard created to member* of the
household may outweigh their
protective value as defense weap-
ons.
5. Loaded guns should not be
leaned against trees, fences,
walls, or other objects, nor should
they be left unattended.
6. When carrying a loaded gun,
it should be kept on “safety" and
carried in such s way that if the,
1“safety” fails, no injury will re-
sult.
7. When climbing with a g u n
’ over or through obstacles, sure as
fallen trees and fences, “break”
the gun or open the breech and
put the gun over the obstacle
first.
i 8. Be sure of your target be-!
fore you pull the trigger, and nev-;
jer shoot at a flat, hard surface1
! or the surface of water.
D. It is also important to know
the maximum range of the gun
you are using so that your snoot- j
ing will he kept within safe lim-
its,
10. Ail hunters should know the
law* regarding hunting and the
us* of firearms.
TRY SUN CLASSIFIEDS
generally already are
shape.
W; H. Jones said at Lubbock
that South Plains ranges need
some rain, but not cotton and
grain farmers.
“We just need more sunshine
in deep East Texas," added Wal-
ter Scott at Nacogdoches. “Farm-
ers continue their cotton, corn and
sorghum harvest between showers
and they are planting winter le-
gumes and oats when they can.”
Livestock continues its seasonal
move to market. At Amarillo, con-
tract calves are being shipped.
Wheat seeding continues in the
Panhandle and the lettuce harvest
has begun in Deaf Smith County.
Vegetables such as cabbage,
cauliflower and carrots in the
it says, keeps it out of the long
term market because it can’t find
lenders at that rate. So it has to
do all its borrowing in the short
term market, already congested
with business and individual bor-
rowers.
Thus the Treasury becomes a
competitor of the businessman
wanting a short term loan or the
individual wanting an installment
loan.
It also becomes a competitor of
common stocks. It’s hard to find a
stock that yields 5 per cent a year,
and certainly none has the credit
of the entire United States be-
hind it.
Stationary Duck
Blind Ban lifted
FORT WORTH (AP) - Army
engineers have withdrawn a ban
on stationary duck blinds for the
nine Texas lakes it supervises.
Rules are aimed at insuring that
tauuiiun*, «*.u unuu 1.1 me hunters remove blinds at the end
Lower Rio Grande Valley and the of a hunting season.
John H- Ortaan, Pastor
Houston Lakewood
Baptist Church
HEAR.
1 Pariona) Taitimony
or
JOHN H. OSTEEN
TONIGHT
7:30 P.M.
S*rvlc*i Conrinu#
Nightly,. Oct. 5
Thru 10 ,
With Rev. Osteen
Preaching
|y Mort Water
for
BARNEY GOOOLl AND SNUffY SMfTK
By Fred Lm*v*B
Winter Garden are making good
growth. Onions, peas and carrots
are being planted. Labor is ampie.
In northeast Texas, squash in
Wood County and other late vege-
tables are moving to market.
Sweet potato yields are good, but
prices are low. Some late canta-
loupes should be ready for market
in about a week.
In far West Texas the cotton
harvest continues. Onions are be-
ing planted in the El Paso valley.
Oats are being plants and »
fair pecan harvest is underway.
Ranges need a good general rain.
Oats are being planted and a
fair pecan harvest is underway.
Ranges need a good general rain.
The hunter will post a $20 deposit
on application for a blind permit.
At the season's end, the deposit
will be returned if the hunter has
removed his blind.
The ruling applies to lakes Ben-
brook, Grapevine, Garza - Little
Elm, Lavon, Belton, Whitney, San
Angelo, Hords Creek and Dam
You Gen Buy
RIPRINTS
Of Any Picture ia The 80S
Made by
BAYTOWN PHOTOS
'Son Bollding
Phene JU MM
DURN YORE HIDE,
SHERIFF WT h
I GOT FRIENDS GALORE
AT-LL BAIL ME OUT!!
J6ST TELL ME
HOW MUCH I NEED-
£
Fl-fiilPfl
BIG BEN BOLT
TWO
POLLERS
IT IT
Pima
By John Cullen Murphy
G/W "7000 UNI" STEIl FILES
• Olobe-Wemick# Piles are precision built of
highest quality furniture steel and top grade ma-
terials to provide long, dependable service. The
drawers operate eaaily, silently, and smoothly. Each
drawer pull il equipped with the exclusive G/W
concealed trigger latch. These efficient and eco-
nomical file* are available two-, three-, four-, and
five-drawer heights.
•«r t. 'ii5"
1st ii tk*w y
k»w tk... «/W
•aui*sW with tk*
Nn*f Syrim nth* it y*Nlbi* t*
M* sag **«ily «*d *«i«My-
We have files at lower prices—but
there's a difference in quelityl
matherne's in bsytom
"Leading Printers—Office Outfitters"
SOOUEUTIW TOOK A
POKE AT VOUiHUH? UMd
...A flUY'S GOT TP BE PIEUTY SOK
TO MAKE A PASS AT THE CHAMP
CA WYIW0 THE TOeCW— J
BUS SAWYBR
By Ray Cron#
tvs tirarr xou hiqus«tb)m cdr.wyr, '
OPTAIH Itm. WS SUTWWNS FA0W UWWRTj
COMPlMtO TO StCK BAYOU TUI ttK*IK. V
(1 WANT TO QUESTION BAWVSR
ffl U0W WU MY PLAN WORKEP.
IF AT AliroiUBLE, HAVE HIM ,
TRANSFERRED HERE AT OUCt. >
\ Jr A
\2
CIO SUZ IS CLOWN F
AR4EXT1A..,p
FIEL1N5
,OK,*IR>
'O
YUBttlPUSBWM
TO BE HAVING AYUlll,
.iMAYff A LPtUi FIVfR
POGO
ly WALT KELLY
S
AT THE HOSPITAL
AFTERNOON /
YEP! THIS AFTERN0DR!
WOULD BE A 6000 fi
TIME FOR. WO~J VEAH'
VISIT [JlLLY ] r
- _
V
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. 39, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1959, newspaper, October 5, 1959; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104451/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.