The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1965 Page: 1 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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Friday October i, 1965
VOL 43. NO. 7 •
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BAYTOWN. TEXAS. 77821
E NUMBER: 582-8302 .
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SAM RAYBURN TEXANS
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No. PLAYER *
48 Ronnie March
64 Scoff Barringor
65 Johnny Morrison
. 54 Howard Ptagens
66 Oannis Williams
75 Billy Barnotf
84 Tommy Pullan
17 Richard Oliver
22 Dwiqht Donson
" 26 Mickey Tiner
20 Kenny Fenelon
14 Mark Kirklend
•' Wf. Class Pos. PLAYER
183 Senior LE Kenneth Hogstrom
181 Junior LT Buck Barnard
187 Senior LG Alan Barnes
165 Senior .C Steve Terry
187 Senior RG Duane Guynes
205 Senior RT Larry MitcneH
170 Senior RE Joe Camarillo
185 Senior QB Ronnie Durretf ’
> 165 Seniors LHB ( Ronnie Sollock
172 Senior RHB Tommy Morrison,
150 Junior
190 Senior FB Tommy Ratliff \
Wt. Class No.
170 Senior 81
205 Senior 75
170 Senior 60
220 Senior 52
171 Senior 62
200 Senior 70
170 Junior 84
155 Senior 10
■•153 Senior 24
172 Senior 32
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Barbecue Saturday
CEDAR BAYOU Eastern Star
Chapter No. 11 will sponsor a
barbecue from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday at Cedar Bayou Meth-
odist Church. Deliveries can be
obtained by calling the church at
582-2496 on Saturday. Orders in
advance may be obtained by
phoning* Mrs. Rose-Fowler,
582-8852, or Mrs. Frances Par-
ker, worthy matron, phone
.582-9102. Donations are $1.50
adults, and 75 cents, children.
Houston Chapter
BAYTOWN MEMBERS of the
Houston Chapter of the National
Association of Accountants are
invited to a program at 6. p.m.
Oct. 12 at the Houston Club. W.
D.1 McGuire, vice president,
management services, Anderson,
Clayton and Co., will be the
guest speaker. X .
Eagle Rank
DENNIS R. BRAZIL, 16, son of
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Brazil, 2002
Bruce, has received the Eagle
rank In Explorer Post 459. Ac-
tive in the post for a year, he
formerly w a s a member of
Troop 183,
Cake Sale
LEE COLLEGE TSEA will hold
its annual cake sale Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. Cakes and
cookies will be sold at TG&Y,
K-Mart Plaza, O'Brien’s Food
Market and Highlands § t a t e
Bank.
Poll Tax Payments
THE BAYTOWN substation of
the Harris County tax office be-
gan accepting the $1.50 poll tax
payments Friday. However,
County Tax Assessor - Collector
Carl Smith suggests whiting to
see whether a decision may be
made soon in the federal suit at-
tacking the validity of the Tex-
as [toll tax.
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*
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TOKYO (API—Indonesian De-
fense Minister Gen. Abdul Haris ,
Nasution' hat crushed an upris-
ing against President Sukarno
and both he and Sukarno are
safe and well, Radio Jakarta re-
ported Friday night.
The broadcast announcement
came a few hours after a revo-
lutionary Council led by Lt, Col.
Untung, a battalion commander
in Sukarno's bodyguard, an-
nounced it had seized power
Monday in the Oct 23 bond elec-
source of all authority."
The Malaysian government
radio in Kuqla Lumpur, which
ha* been monitoring Jakarta
broadcasts, said army units un-
der Gen. Suharto, loyal to Su-
karno and Nasution, were In-
strumental in smashing Un- ,
tung’s power move.
The Jakarta Radio said
“those responsible for the coup
have been arrested,” Malaysian
officials reported.
Untung’s revolutionary coun-
cil, during its bid for suprema-
cy, had declared that Sukarno,
64, was "under protection" of
the council. This led to specula-
tion that the strongman had
been rmoved.
There was no immediate re-
port of Sukarno's whereabouts.
Untung, in a broadcast before
the government's countermove,
had said he took the action be-
cause a number of generals and
the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency had planned an anti-
Sukarno coup.
Radio Jakarta at that time
appealed to have been under his
control.
An earlier broadcast by Ra-
dio Jakarta announced forma-
tidn of a now, 45-mcmber cabi-
net laced with perhaps a dozen
Communisls, but D.N. Aidlt,
leader of Indonesia's 3 million-
member Commuhist party, was -
not on the list.
Tlie revolutionary council said
it had arrested a number of
generals.
Observers expected Commu-
nist influence to increase still
nore in Indonesia in the wake
of the upheaval. For years the
lountry's army leaders had spi-
ed as a check on the Commu-
nists, but recently Sukarno and
his government have been In-
-reasinglt responsive to de-
mands of Indonesia's 3-million-
member Communist party.
Indonesia's government radio
said those arrested were mem-
bers of a subversive "Council of
generals" sponsored by tile U.S. '
Central Iiitelligence Agency. It
tid not give their numtier nor
their identities.
The broadcast said the arrests
were made Thursday i n a "30th
of September operation."
In Washington, the State De-
partment said that preliminary
dispatohes from the U.S. Em-
bassy in Jakarta showed that
something irregular was hap-
pening but that the shape of
events was not clear.
U.S. officials were apprehen-
sive. The Indonesian Commu-
nists have repeatedly demanded
that the government break rela-
tions with the United Ststes, but
Sukarno had not taken this step
Jespite bitter opposition to U S.
policy in Asia.
The Ja|ianese ambassador in
Jakarta reported to Tokyo that
ihe Indonesian army had dis-
covered an attempted coup d'e-
tat and arrested about » offi-
cers, the Japanese Foreign Ol-
lier said.
Radio Jakarta said the
generals "had
planned to conduct a power ex-
minium on Armed Forces Day,
Oct. 5 this year, by sending to
Jakarta troops from East, Cen-
tral and West Java."
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184 Senior 30
GANDER DEFENSE—84—Pullen, 170 or, <8 - Morrison, 1ST; LE-71—Roseoo Zierieln,
Jr, LT—171; 78—Charlie Hendricks, Sr, MG—tK; 78-Lb Herrera, Sr. RT—IM; (8-WiIUnma,
RE-187; 14—Bobby Warren, Sr, LCB-1W; M-Dennls McAfee, Sr, LLB—188; 58—Arthur
Martinet, Sr, RLB—188; 48—Marsh, RCB—183; 18-Alan Aeoata, §r, US-131; X*-Mlckey
Nomed Cheerleader.....
^BOBBY ISAKSON of BaytoWn
is a freshman cheerleader at
Texas Lutheran College in Se-
"Ttaer, Sr, ItS—172.
TEXAN DEFENSE—75—Barnard, LE—MS; 78-L Mitchell. LT-MO; M-Bryan Teague,.
Jr, MO—178; 83-Cully Phillips, Sr, RT—1M; 88—Terry Mitchell, 8r, RE-178; 81-Hogstrom,
Douglas Varga, k,
LCB—170; 81—Paul Wilson, Sr, LLB-1M; 88-Barnes, RLB-178; 48
V RCB—108; 10—Durret, LS-158; 11—BUI 8tolt s, Sr, RS-188.
giiin.
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SJ Monument
BEGINNING NEXT week the
San Jacinto Museum and Monu-
ment will be open from 9.30
a.m. to 5:30' p.m. Tuesday
Through Saturday and from 10
. _ a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. It will
be closed every Monday. The
attendance meter at the front
entrance registered 165,967 visi-
tor* from June through August.
Garden Club Meet
’ ' BAYTOWN GARDEN Club will
meet at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in
/ Grace Methodist Church with
Mrs. R. E. Ferrell presenting
program entitled, "The Art of
[ Multiplying." .
Rcdio Program
REGULAR PROGRAM present-
ed by the Rev. Ramon Vasquez,
pastor of the First Mexican Bap-
tist Church, Baytown, is sched-
L: uled at 12:45 p.m. Saturday ov-
er Radio Station KLVL, Pasa-
dena. This program is support-
> cd by the brotherhood of the
t church .and the San -Jacinto
Brotherhood Association.
Citv Picnic
ANNUAL PICNIC for all city
employes and their families will
be held from 4 to 6:30 p m. on
Saturday at Roscland Park Pav-
ilion.
PTA Carnival
UNUSUAL BOOTHS (or the An-
Jone* PTA fall carnival on
Saturday will include fortune
telling ghost writing and a pup-
,;)et show. The carnival will open
at 5 p.m, and a western stage
show is scheduled at 7 30 Food
will be served in the cafeteria
BJH Parents
BAYTOWN JUNIOR High Par-
ents Night will lie held at 7 p m.
Monday ’ After a meeting in the
auditorium, parents will visit
classrooms and will have re-
freshments.
7:30 P.M. In Pasadena--
\\ \
V
REL-Texan Game
Heads 12-4 A List
HUMBLE’S UP GIFT $25,700
Meier, left, rrf’nery manager, to John C.
Echo's, Baytown UK general chairman. J. J.
Cnatca, manager of the Baytown Chemical
Plant, looks on. Baytown's goal is 5197,143
for the 1*88 Community Chest budgrt.
BAYTOWN’S UNITED Fund drive, only a
day-old, came into a "windfall” with a large
contribution from Humble Oil and Refining
Co.'s Raytown Refinery. A check for 528,700
from the company was presented by II. 1L
}
U.S. Solon From
Athens Legion's
Baytown Speaker
’Gates’ Open Oct. 10-
Castro To Let
Anyone Leave
starting guard Harold Brown I back at left tackle and senior
received a bump on the head.
End Jerry Johnson, who per-
forms at this position both ways
and has seen a lot of starting
offensive duty, hurt his leg
against Port Arthur and will
mis* his second consecutive
game.
Because of the toll of pract-
ice sessions, the Gander staifc
ing lineup will consist of a few
changes and a few doubts.
Marsh will open at left end,
but it remains to be seen how
effective a Job he is able to do
with a stiff knee
Junior Scott Barringer will be
By JOE WHITTINGTON
Sun Sports Editor
Johnny Morrison will get offen-
sive duty at left guard,
Morrison was injured and he
missed the Port Arthur game
and was scheduled to be held
out of the Jones game, but ne-
cessity reactivated him. Morri
son, a regular defensive end.
will possibly start at his regular
ffcfeP sivg spot‘as well.
SmuPwirt Plagens, who
receive® his first starting call
last weekend, will once again
man the center spot to give line-
backer Dennis McAfee time for
exclusive defensive duties.
(See REL, Page 3)
When the Roliert E. lee Gan-
ders line up against the Sam
Rayburn Texans to open 12-4A
competition at 7.30 p.m. Friday
in Pasadena, they will tie meet-
ing perhaps the most perfect
team to hit the loop this year
A Houston paper even quoted
the coach, James McNeil, as
verifying this quality statement
a
Garage Sale
Congressman John Dowdy of
Athens will s|ieak here Oct. 9-10
at the American Legion 8th dis-
trict meeting.
He represents the Seventh Con-
gressional District Other speak-
ers will he Clayton Mann of
Wichita Falls, Texas cornand-
or of the American Legion, and
Vlrs. Anita Ferguson of Houston,
state president of the American
-egion Auxiliary.
CHRISTIAN WOMEN S Fellow-
ship of Bayway Christian Church
wai| sponsor a garage sale Oct.
7-8 at 19 N. Bumet Drive. Many
items of furnishings, clothing
and other household goods will
be sold. Proceeds will be used to
buy banquet tables for church
activities. Hours will be from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.
*
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Fidel
Castro said today he was throw-
ing exit gates from hjs Commu-
nist island completely open and
challenged the United States to
cooperate through diplomatic
channels.
The Cuban prime minister
said he would let anyone on
the island leave for exile after
Oct. 16—a considerably- broader
offer than the one he made
Tuesday.
He suggested that the United
States, if it were interested, pur-
sue the matter through diplo-
mat^ channels. This was exact-
ly what the United States had
told Castro to do to sho* he was
serious when he made his origi-
nal open door policy announce-
ment Tuesday,
Castro’s promise Tuesday to
.lift Cuba’s- sugar cane curtain
involved only relatives of per-
s already livlfig in the Unit-
States. The offer was studied
cautiously in Washington and
viewed in some quarters 8$. an
attempt to embarrass the Amer-
ican government.
The bearded prime minister
said in a Havana radio broad-
cast monitored in Miami today
that if the United States doesn't
want to discus* the matter in
public, it should use the chan-
nels of diplomacy—in this case,
the Swiss Embassy in Havana
Since the break in U.S.-Cu-
ban relations in 1961, the Swiss
have represented American in-
terests in Cuba.
"The North American State
Department declared that if my
words of Sept. 28 related to
those who desired to leave for
the U.S. were serious, I should
make the proixwal through dip-
lomatic channels, in which ease
the State Department would
give it a most careful consider-
ation," Castro said.
The prime minister said in the
broadcast, monitored here, that
“we maintain the decision that
from Oct. ID we will give abso-
lute guarantees and facilities to
all those who wish to come to
Cubd by their own means or to
pick up their relntivs."
He said the Cuban govern-
ment would provide two free
daily flight* to transport Cubnns
to the United States, presum-
ably to Miami where the Urge
majority of Cubans seek haven
after fleeing their homeland in
small boats.
The Houston paper ran a mul
tl . column head that quoted
McNeil as saying he had np
weakness, and the thing that
makes it tough on the REL
group is the fact that-with 21
returning regulars, it's hard t>
argue the point.
But this will not be the fir;'
time that the Ganders haw
traveled to meet a team rated
superior in the area, and it will
not tic the last.
Guard Unit Here Awaits
Word On Brigade Plans
Approximately 200 people are
expected to attend, Oran l-ester,
1th district commander, said.
The 8th district includes 18
posts in towns as far as Tom-
■>all up to the Montgomery Coun-
ty Line and all areas north oTr
he Houston Ship Channel to the
Chambers County Line
Meetings will tie held at the
Tower restaurant. Entertain-
ment will include a Baytown
tittle Theater presentation on
Jet. 9, followed by dinner 3\“the
Tower with music for dancing
Mayor Seaborn Cravey will
present the welcoming address
for the first session of the meet-
ing at 2 p.m. Oct 9.
LATE
Ir !
NEWS:
Baytown's unit of the Texas
National Guard will benefit if
Third Brigade is selected as one
of the "maximum readiness"
brigades under .the order an-
nounced Thursday by Secretary
of Defense McNamara.
However, the headquarters of
the Second Battalion, 143rd In-
fantry, in Houston, one of the
Third Brigade units, had no
information Friday on the se-
lection, scheduled within the next
two weeks.
The Baytown unit is Company
B of the Second Battalion. If the
Third Brigade is selected for
maximum readiness, the Bay-
town unit's strength will be in-
creased, it will' receive more
equipment and unit members
will receive 24 additional drills
each year.
Under McNamara’* order, the
Army Reserve unit at Pasadena,
a part of the 90th Infantry Di-
vision, will be eliminated. Mem-
bers of that unit will be permit-
ted to join units of the new
readiness brigade.
The Sun was informed by Sec-
ond Battalion headquarters that
the Pasadena unit of the Na-
tional Guard, which is a part
of the 49!h Armored Division,
will not be affected, by McNa-
mara’s order. And the Baytown
unit will not be affected if tlx
Third Brigade is not selected
for maximum readiness.
WASHINGTON (API - Two
Texas unit* will be affected by
the plan under which six Army
reserve divisions Will be dis-
banded and a number of Na-
tional Guard and reserve units
brought to maximum readiness.
The plan was disclosed Thurs-
day by Defease Secretary Rob-
ert McNamara.
It embodies key features of
McNamara's effort to merge re-
serve units into the National
Guard or disband them. The
original plan was rejected by
Congress last year but many of
its critics applauded tie new
announcement.
A brigade from Texa* 36th
Infantry Division will be among
six National Guard brigades se-
lected ns high priority units.
At Amarillo the 36th corn-
commander, Maj. Gen, Selden
Simpaon, said the priority bri-
gade will be designated within
two weeks, after staff confer-
ences and consultation with the
state adjutant general, Maj.
Gen. Thomas Bishop.
One of the reserve outfits to
SASKATOON, Alta. <AP)-
Arthur l-ning, federal re-
source* minister, says an oil
field discovered In northern
Alberta is |ms*llily the largest
In North America. He said
Thursday that government of-
ficials estimate the field has
a potential of 6 to 7 billion bar-
Even the most liberal of prog
nosticators have picked the out
come of the game within a sev
en . |K>int spread.
The Ganders will be travellnf
to Pasadena with the burden ol
being number four in the state
upon their shoulders, a title
which they have now earned but
will have to fight tooth -and
nail to keep
The Ganders will be meeting
a team that closely resembles
the 1964 Galena Park Yellow
Jackets and will be doing this
in the poorest physical condi-
tion they have played under this
season.
son
rels.
★ ★ ★
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Sen.
Franklin 8pears said today he
will seek (lie Drinocrittir noml-
nntiim I or attorney General
nest yeur. Spears, 34, has
been In the state Senate since
1981. He told a ncHs confer-
ence he Mill run sa a sup
|s>rter of Gov. Connolly,
* * *
WEATHER
6'
This week of action on the
workout field saw quarterback
Richard Plato bruise a leg, end
Ronnie Marsh hurt a knee and
CLEARING AND cooler Fri-
day, becoming generally fair
Saturday. Teoqieruture range
expected Friday 57 76 do
gree». Thursday's range
71 88 degrees.
REL Twirlers Plan Dance
Routine In Halftime Show
*
★ ★ ★
waft
Absentee Vote To Start
Monday In Crosby Poll
VATICAN CITY (AP)-The
Vatican Ecumenical Council
today ordered a special Maaa
In St. Peter's Basilica for the
success ol Pope Paul’s mission
to the United Nations.
ArouYid^
nCTTOWh^
ante Warren. Carrie Casey.
Olivia McClelland, Beverly Cal-
houn, Ann Tillery, Rene Carroll,
Brenda Harmon and Sandy Mar-
shall.
Traditional drum major cos-
t u m e a will be worn by Har-
riet Sanders and her assistant,
iTiereaa Nelson
The Junior - senior band, com-
poaed of 172 members on th<
field, will present the drill. Thr
band will execute s number ol
difficult company front routines
never presented before.
The Lee Brigadier* will prr
sent a precision drill In thr hall
time show i.nd the Sam Ray
tarn Band will perform Hono-
rary lieutenants In the Brigs
tiers will be Cathy Hillard and
Debbie Jacobs.
The Brigadier* will attend •
football tram pep rally prior to
leaving for Pa*adena Friday af-
ternoon.
Robert E. Lee Band twirlers
will be featured in a dance rou-
tine to "Bill Bailey, Won't You
Please Come Home" Friday
night in the halftime show at
the Gander game in Pasadena
Special costumes have been
made for the number. The girls
will be dressed in derby hats,
black iGxedo coats spd shorts,
white shirts and red ties.
They are Debbie Server, head
twirler, and Susan Knox, Teph-
completed," Anderson empha-
sized.
The water ratei that will be
charged as announced earlier,
are: $2.50 minimum for the
first 3,000 gallons; 50 cents per
thousand for the next 10,000 gal-
lons; 45 cents per thousand for
the next 37,000 gallons; 40 oents
per thousand for the next 50,-
000 gallons; and 30 cents per
thousand for all over 100,000 gab
„ . i
Facilities planned will enable
service to be provided for prac-
tically all of the Crosby resi-
dents now served by Reidlond's
system.
Retdland has refused Ihe wa-
ter district's offer of 161.882 for
for his system, but the dis-
trict directon placed a proposi-
tion pertaining to this on the
ballot anyway.
Copies of a map of the Cros-
by area showing the district
boundaries, mats of the system
planned and other Information
have been distributed widely In
the community this week.
Anderson said perrons wno
want addition Information about
Absentee voting will begin
and proclaimed itself "the
lion to finance construction of
a new water system for Cros-
•v
DALLA8 (Al*| - The grand
Jury wild today that "('rime
figures rlearly indirate that
things are literally going from
bad to worae In mattera of
lau and order In Dallaa."
by.
Absentee ballots may he cast
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday at Ramsey
Chevrolet. Inc. C. D. Ramsey t*
the clerk for absentee voting.
Residents of the Crosby Mu-
nicipal Utility Water District
will vote on issuing 1319,000 of
bonds to finance construction
system and 162.000 to provide
funds for iiurchase of an exist-
ing system, owned by Theo E.
Re Id land
(fualiftcatiifas for voting, In
addition to being a bonaftd* res-
ident of the district, include re-
tiding in Texas at least one
year and In Harris County at
least six months, having a cur-
rent poll tax receipt or being
exempted because of age or
physical delect, and owning lax-
ibie property.
Voters do not have to own real
•state Personal property that
JOHN DOWDY
PAULA CANTRELL gets ready
lor her sixteenth birthday . •
Vicki Durham sheds her first
• tears over a football game . . .
Carolyn Ramsey delivers a book-
let . . - Mozelle Ruggles sends
a nice note , • ■ Boss Johnson
picks up some photos . , - Mrs
Velma Tharp presents an Award
of Merit from the National Fed
•eration of Music Clubs to The
Councilman Massey's
Father Is Dead At 75
council of
ER&E Has 25 Per Cent
Of United Fund Quota
William Albert Massey. 75,
father of Oty Councilman Clem
Maiaey, died at l;15p.m. Thurs-
day In a Baytown nursing home
after a brief Hint si.
Funeral service* will be held
at 1 p.m. Saturday at Martand
Funeral Home in Conroe, with
the Rev. G. Ray Lloyd officiat-
ing, Burial will be in Memorial
he disbanded is the 90ta Infan-
try Division of Texas.
Men In disbanded units may
W L.(Duh) Ward, chairman Ing and R R. Connor, Section
L; C. L. Thorpe, Section M, I.
A. Macon, Section N; H. W.
Kinsey. SHH Group: H. J Wris
ten, JTH Group; H. L. Keith,
service tnd supply; lewis' How-
"The 300-plus Baytown gm< ell, pilot unit group; A. E. Wat-
ters, technical Information; Mrs
Florlne Thlbodaux, administra-
tive group.
Steve Dedmsn, chairman of
thr Baytown Refinery campaign,
said the drive officially begin*
in the refinery Monday. He said
officials expect to have "on*
of the be*t opening day reports
in years.";;
Among the business place
Solicitors an D C. Woods, reports, (YlriM'i Orotery Mon
Section A; S. H. Killian, Section has already announced, 100 per
B; Mr*. Gene Hmdenon, lac- (M participation in the Wk
tlon C; C W Gordon, Section
D; T. J, Denson, Section E;
i
of the United Fund drive at
ESSO Research and Engineer
Ing Co. In Baytown, said Fri-
day that about 25 per cent of
their goal hsi been reached
[ 4,
Sun
shift cither to high priority ixtits
Mildred Clegg passes on some
information about former Bay
town resident George Danhart
of Parkersburg, W Vs, who
wrote her about tracing genes
logy Danhart and hi* sister
l ■ Jived In Baytown until his Hum-
ble retirement 12 years ago and
he's still reading The Sun where
* he saw a story about Mrs
‘ John Brunson and the newly or
gantsed Baytown Genealog)
or go Into a manpower pool of
units.
Jites To* Be Saturday
For Resident 30 Yean
"While R Is not my place to
"emeteiy In Conroe.
tor liM p-a. and that 88 p*»
Rev
ployes of Esso Rosearch .and
Engineering Co. are well on their
Way toward achieving their go#l
of U.308 at this time," Ward
question Mr. McNamara's deck
IJoyd Is pastor of Conroe* St
Psul's Methodist Church.
lion," lb* Mb's commander.
Maj. Gen. Robert Travis, said
Survivors art thr*, sons. W
ItosfwpM
CkaalM
at San Antonio, "In behalf of the
Funeral services for Mrs,
Maudie Lee Horton, 71, of 110
E. Dele* will be conducted at
10 a.m. Saturday In Earthmar
Chapel with the Rev. A. L. Jor-
Jon officiating. Burial will he In
San Jacinto Memorial Park.
Mrs. Horton, a resident of
Baytown M yean, died Thura
A. Massey Jr, Sweeney, Dan
Massey of Corpus Chrtaii and
Clem M Massey of Baytown; a
brother, A. C. Massey of Pasa-
• day la toe
said
division I wish to state that w*
rtay be rendered for taxation.
Units making their quotas in
pre - campaign solicitations are
Section B, Section M. SHH group
administrative, technical Infor-
mation group and service and
supply group.
deeply regret the toaa of this op-
including such Items as auto*
will meet this requirement
Lorry Anderson, pmldinl of
the water district, reported that
portunlty to serve In the defenee
the district's plans are Invited
M this MBm. especially at OkU
critical time.
dena; a slater, Mrs Erin Por-
ter of Mathis, Tex. Alao survlv-
Ing are nine grandchildren.
H* was a charier member of
St. Paul's Methodist Church In
Conroe
M la the warn AOs. hn hack
.0 contact him or any of the
other district's plans are invited
to contact him or any of the oth
»r directon, who are Ronald
Bryant, Keith May, Tom Novo
sad and Gilbert Thompom.
dub
now : Ada *r
Mctva Istre and Anna Klllough
prepare some name tags .
Grover Edge introduces a
Mend from the Texas Conservs-
tlon Federation
■Sen. John Tower, lUTkx., a
member of the Senate Armed
be hi
interest In the Oet. 23 election
seems to be Increasing.
In i (inaeclon with the In-
to*
statement: -•
"Mr. McNamara has made a
»
1
.leased Interest, Anderson said,1
rumors have been circulated (
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs, E. t Roth of Baytowm
three slaters, Mrs. Sam Vincent,
mistake. In Acte perilous
Ngw Computer -
IS
New Car Loans
*%
4'/z%
shout the »■
HolexptakwdH
rumors la that s $340 comec-
HARRIS coown
FEDERAL
GANDERS
-BEAT' THE TEEANS
CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANE \
EARN ON
SAVINGS
CITIZENS OP TEXAS
SAVINGS
C. L Griffis, Section F; R. A.
that one ol the*r
man would prttufn# to
Mr* LuM» Young i»n<i Mm 0
‘X
Velspoldi, Section G; Walter
Peoples State
L Wood, Sr., al of Baytown.
, i joy n i/ifntrvin o
L l»
(Ion fpf veiU bt charged.
perienced
Congress I
I As Mm*
—* o I c
(line Smith, Section L
H.W.H. Meyer. Section J; I.
S. Toups, Section K; J. H. Ksrd-
' No connection loo la pUwiaa
Sesbmok; and two grandchll-
had thoroughly studied
Amts Ora
SUMMON
latmst OB Savings
4%
4*
Roth, boA of Baytown.
when the water system la tint
4
I v*.
4 i
i
Hi
k
i4
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|
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, October 1, 1965, newspaper, October 1, 1965; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1144745/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.