The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1966 Page: 2 of 22
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Tuesday, July 5, 1966
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By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CAMP PENDLETON, Calif,
<AP)-%t. William H. Yor* of
the U.S. Marine Corps is fol-
lowing a family tradition of mil*
another
serving
On River Run
2
A-
*
mmMf
■i
Mrs. Hersh was born on La-
bor Day, “21-plus years ago,"
SUN VALLEY, Idaho (AP) -
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-
NrY., and a group of adven-
turous friend* and relatives who
ran the rapids-filled "River of
No Return" in boats, air mat-1
tresses and a kayak were back
tion today..
y weren’t back to rest.
Kennedy — who shot the last
40 miles through some of the
river's rapids — planned to fly
out with -his family today ’lor
more vacation in Canada.
The senator abandoned the
TUbber boats for the-kayak—a—
lond thin covered , boat with a
hole in the middle for the rider
— just past the halfway point in -*
the 100-mile trip down the Sal-
mon Rivers middle fork.
He said he had ridden a kayak
only once before, but he maneu-
vered over the steep, roking
falls of the rapids between J
sharp rocks and shot up off
"rollback" wavs at the bottom
like a veeran. -
Willie Sehaeffler. Denver Uni-
versity ski coach, frying the
same things in a kayak made
unstable by a broken part, over-
turned in the rapids four times.
James Whittaker, a mountain
climber and a close outdoor
friend of the Kennedy*, over-
turned his kayak once.
The senator earlier- joined n
number of the 15 Kennedy chil-
dren, cousins and friends riding
leisurely down the river on air
mattresses.
The rest of the party
eluding John Glenn
and his wife, singer Andy Wil-
liams’ wife and Lemoyne Bill-
ings of New York swept
over the rapids in the eight yel-
low and black rubber boats.
Passengers often walk around
the worst rapids, but every
member of the Kennedy party
chose to shoot them all.
The trip ended in the mile-
deep canyon junction of the
middle fork and main Salmon
River near the Montana border
and Continental Divide late i
Monday afternoon.
Chartered buses carried the
river-runners out of the, wilder-
ness back to Sun Valley where
they capped the trip with an
informal party.
They had spent the previous
three nights in tents on the open
banks of the river — fishing,
swimming and water fighting.
:,
CORDELE, Ga,(AP) - Af>
racially mi*ed
swimming facilities
park Monday where' Negroes
and whites had battled With
rock* , and bottles several Jays
. The battle, June 24, sparked
acts of vandalism during the
following two days and culmi-
nated in a 30-minute gun Battle
between whites and Negroes
last Tuesday night. .
No one was reported injured
I
I
of 100
itary service
KYOTO, Japan (AP)-U.S.
Secretary, of Labor W. Willard
Wlrtz and his wife have been
. JX
r
>]
But he is shattering
family custom—by not
in the Army.
Pvt. York it4he.grandson oi
Sgt. Alvin York of Tennessee,
who won the Medal of Honor in
World War I, to the Army. Sgt
York's five sons also served to
the Amy-______________________________
Pvt. York,, awaiting orders to
combat duty in Viet Nam said:
Corps waa
the best outfit, and I wanted to
be part of the best.”
a
!*!
/,
%
sleeping on the' floor in a Japa-
ft
2# 'A
nese style hotel room since they
came to Kyoto last .Saturday to
attend a meeting with Japanese
officials.
in cl
W
K
m
But
<■
“I think it ig wonderful,
on our spines,’’ said
i;
very good
Mrs. Witte
M
f
I
pi;
!
Thes
$7 mill
facilitic
Secretary of State-Dean Rusk,
Interior S&retary Stewart XT
Udall, Agriculture Secretary
Orville L. Freeman, Commerce
Secretary John T. Conner, their
wives and the 40 ©Bier Ameri-
cans finite delegation chose
Western-style beds at Kyoto's
Miyako'Hotel.
• .
—-
I
$
lence prompted Cordele city
officials to clamp ah all-night
curfew on this south Georgia
city of 11,500 which was still in
effect today,
. Ob. Lowell. Conner, director
l* A- JL of the Department of Public
'<7^1,. Safety, was on hand Monday
with 100 state troopers to pre-
vent further violence
50 of the integrated group swam
in the swimming pool where the
melee had erupted earlier.
Whites had used thy pool ear-
lier In the dav but left. The inte.
grated group was ignored by
families who spread picnic
lunches on a riverbank in the
Georgia Veterans Park about
500 yards away. Other white
bathers swam in Lake Black-
shear about a half mile from the
efiemte
$4,844,1
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)—“It's
hysterical," said Mrs. David
Hersh of the Buffalo suburb of
Tonawanda, . N.Y., when her
- third child, a girl, was born July
Fourth.,
Her Eldest son was born ; on
Columbus Day 13 year* ago and
?
ments i
provem
“ 39 Kepi
, sortie t;
V ing the
Since
, range i
.ployes
survey
. cf speni
reportei
it hvl In-
‘ an aimi
(i00. Six
v1 ed inve
'• million
, costs rc
v nually.
The !
investor.
I approxi
the aV'
cost me
lit— * The :
eompan
equally
water.1
$33,491,!
totaled
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18
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HANNIBAL, Mb. ,(AP) -
Richard Van Abel, 10, Madiso/i
Wit., is the fence whitewashing
champion of Mark Twain coun-
1
i:
!'* :
l THINK CTE, FOUND IT”—It looks like a vigorous hunt for the car’s engine. How-
iUs just a gag photo during the safe-driving event at White Plata's, N.Y., in the
narCollege Queen contest. From left to right, contestants are Amanda von Tun-
geln, Oklahoma State; Diane Lee Hodges, Ohio University; Linda C. Van Walk, Univer-
sity of Washington; and Joellen Ayersman.West Virginia University,
petej and the winner wasCarleen Hjortsvang.EastCarolina College
-
v
as about
ever,
Natio
until, *4*
try
e won the title Monday dur-
ing national Tom Sawyer days
Hannibal, home of Mark
Twain. Richard whitewashed
his plank fence faster than
youths from 10 Mississippi Riv-
er states.
1/.
Fifty girls com-
Greenville, N.C.
He
XII
7 r
in
jt-
OR1ENTAL ARC—If it recalls, under the Oriental icing.
Paris’ farted-Ata:' de Triomphe, there’s! a reason. It’s
also a war memorial standing in sleepy Vientiane, capital
of onetime French-ruled Laos, and there could be a lot
more to memorialize by the time it’s finished. It was
started in 1960 to honor soldiers killed,in civil strife
still going on in the country’s jungle highlands between
forces of the neutralist government anij Communist
Pathet Lao troops. II'” - *
»*• AT LA AOATt
Briefing The News
From AP Wires 1
i
$r-r-
Commander Says
LAST NIGHT
NEVADA SMITH
—AND—
“Promise Her
' - Anything*.'
WEDNESDAY ONLY
BARGAIN NIGHT
ADULTS 25c
• I
li
Enough Forces
E
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -
Bill D, Moyers, who usually
fields reporters’ questions as
President Johnson's press sec-
retary, fields a mean grounder
as well.
By unanimous consent, Moy-
ers at shortstop was the most
valuable
f
pool
To Rout Reds
State troopers checked every
car as it entered the park. One
person was arrested for carry-
ing a pistol, and a machete arid
boomstick were ' confiscated
from another automobile.
An integrated group ' which
came to the park to go swim- President may be on the right lion's civil rights bill pendi ng to
ming Sunday found the pool had track in stepping up the bomb- Congress, particularly the open-
been drained. ings, "but it seems to me-,that housing section.
State Parks Director Horace over the past year and a half we pauj b. Johnson of Mis-
Caldwell said he did not know have attempted something sissippi. predicted in an inter-
who was responsible, but he as- similar in nature but it never vjew a “pretty good scrap'”
sured the group the pool would seems to end the war.” “ against it.
be refilled for the holiday, Hatfield continued his pace as «rm opposed to the bill," he
Tank trucks hauled water onc of ^ harsher critics of said. "I don’t see that a great
from Cordele to fill the P<x>l Johnson’s policies. deal would be gained by it. The
and if was, ready for swimmers Romney,-rf’potential contend- legislation puts a great deal of
on the Fourth. er for the 1968 GOP presidential emphasis on indolence and lazi-
nomination,.....announced he — "
would not support any "blank
check" endorsement of John-
son's course. He said Viet Nam
ought not to be an issue in the
conference, since the governors
had' no opportunity to influence
the policies involved."
Southern governors served
notice there will be a Tight over
any proposal for a conference
endorsement of the administra-
CaroUna girl can give one of
her healthy kidneys to her
twin sister In an effort to save
the frail girl’s life.
• Shooting mushrooms into
a melee on a crowded Miami
Negro beach Monday, One
person was critically wounded.
• Sargent Shrtver, director
of the antipoverty program,
will be made available to the
poor If they are desired.
• Diplomatic sources
Washington mention the Do-
minican Republic ae an alter-
nate site for next month’s In-
ter • American summit con-
ference. —----------- "
• Clarence Adams, a Ko •
reaa War turncoat, returns to
the U.S. mainland remarking
that “with all Ite faults, de-
money is better than what
they have” in Communist Chi-
i-X-
-
kx
HONOLULU (AP)
commander of U.S. forces in the
Pacific says after a visit to Sai-
gon that there are sufficient
fighting men in South Viet Nam
to rout the Communists.
But Adijn, U S- Grant Sharp
said in an airport interview
Monday night that this does not
necessarily mean there will be
no further increase in the Unit-
ed States’ manpower commit-
ment in the Southeast Asia
country. ' ,,
“I can’t say that necessarily.'
It depends oq--what the other
side does,1" Shftrp remarked.
"You can’t, in a war, ever say
'we’ve got enough now’ because
you don’t know what the enemy
is going to do."
The admiral, agreeing with
Gen. William C. Westmoreland
that the war against the Com-
munists is "now being won,"
gave this assessment of the sit-
uation after meeting with the
Army general who commands
U.S. troops in Viet Nam:
“We have got enough trqops
in the country that we can take
the offensive. Anytime we can
find the Viet
Vietnamese,
pressure on to beat them. In
other words. we have the neces-
sary forces to take the offensive
and stay on the offensive, which
The
Rights War
■■ (Continued From Page 1)
i ;
In-
LOVE IS A BALL
tND FEATURE
L.i
her of the Wash-
le mem
■press c
• Efforts to end the 7S-day-
old publication holdup of toe
World Journal Tribune Inc.,
.resume today after a four •
day holiday recess.
#• U.S. Dist. Judge Roy
Harper issues a restraining or-
der against the union that
forestalls a strike by Railway
Clerks against the Missouri
Pacific BdttWL'
corps team, which
lost Monday to the San,Antonio
Chamber of Commerce in a
softball game.
There were differing-opinions
on the score, but 8-6 was the
prevailing one.
"SERGEANTS 3" 1fl6,on
Wate;
almost
operate
water I
taled $(
al costs
____ $3.691,9<
Most
tures I
the Gul
plants <
» The su
than h
' dustry’:
’ ter invi
‘ within i
ton. th
radius
$33,951,!
In th
and wa
reportei
mers, s
treatme
goons, i
separat
sanitari
,, and c;
scrubbc
1c prei
tion, e>
mist re
' systems
asurveys
• sampiir
Sever
street©
permitt
terials s
low’ths
oflfronr
Othirs
’ .barges,
00 mill
-*
DRIVE IN
THEATRE
ENDS TONIGHT
NEVADA SMITH
■ —AND—
-| BOEING BOEING
WEDNESDAY ONLY
BARGAIN NIGHT
ADULTS 25c
ROBERT MITCHUM
“WONDERFUL COUNTRY”
' ■ I \ 1 HAND—
FRANK SINATRA
Johnny Concho
DECKER
;
f:! .*
in
j
Gov. George C. Wallace of
Alabama said that "property
ownership," as affected by the
bill’s ban agaihst racial dis-
crimination in the sale or rental
of housing, will be an issue in
the 1968 presidential campaign
ih which he may run on a third
party ticket.
Gov. Richard J. Hughes o!
New Jersey said he didn't come
to the conference to participate
in a brawl over civil rights. The
New Jersey govamor said con-
troversies ovei®iis issue have
nearly wreckea past confer-
ences.
He taid each governor has to
deal with the Issue individually
in his slate and there is nothing
to be gained by adopting a reso-
lution.' frotiDI Am
Protest ~
i
THRU WEDNESDAY
• Surgeons in Dallas decide
this week whether a South
tr
America Sends
Heavy Rocket
Into Orbit
(Continued From Page 1)
h
i
group's attempt to picket the
U.S. Embassy where many high
German - officials attended the
Independence Day reception.
Oslo—Some 500 Norwegian
leftists demonstrated outside
the U.S. Embassy, but Ambas-
sador Margaret Joy Tibbets was
away celebrating toe day in the
whaling port of Sandefjord.
Aalborg, Denmark — Premier
Jens Otto Krag was cheered by
leftists at the annual Danish-
American Fourth of July , pro-
gram when tie said his regime
opposed "any action by which
population centers in
Viet Nam would become
Mrs. Peari Hollis'
Rites Wednesday
ftj, ’ .
..-^•-HfaiHiRackinPiOducton
■
j'
• i
- Mrs, Pearl,, Evelyn Hollis, 64,
of 618 Park "in Highlands died
at 2 p.m. Monday in a Baytown
hospital. |
A resident of Highlands for 30
years, Ms. Hollis was a mem-
ber of the-Order of Eastern Star
Chapter 261 there.
She is suvived by her hus-
band, James A. Hollis Sr. of
Highlands; four sisters, Mrs.
Lillian Williams of Willis, Mrs.
Floft Mae Stuckey of High-
lands, Mrs. Vivian, Harrison and
Mrs. Sybil Fisher of Baytown;
two brothers, Walter Brown
and Felton Brown of High-
lands. Three grandchildren also
survive her. I t,
Services will be held 10 a.rh.
Wednesday at First Baptist
Church in Highlands
Bonner Magnejs officiating; In-
terment will be in San Jacinto
Memorial Park under the direc-
tion of Earthman’s Highlands
Funeral Home.
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)
—America’s heaviest satellite—
a 29-ton rocket stage like that
which one day will propel as-
tronauts to the moon vaulted
into .orbit- today. It was filled
with 10 tons of liquid hydrogen
in an engineering test to deter-
mine if this high-energy fuel
has‘at last been harnessed for
space use. —
The 17-story-teH Saturn l|is ,he important thing.
"We have enough air power in
there now to do the job of sup-
porting the ground troops.
There is a fine team in there,
and they're doing a hell of a
goodrjob.”' ;
Sharp, whose headquarters
are in Honolulu, visited Saigon
after attending a meeting of the
Southeast Asia Treaty Organi-
zation in Canberra, Australia.
He said he talked at length with
Westmoreland in Saigon.
Assessing the recent air
strikes against fuel depots near
Haiphong and the North Viet-
namese capital of Hanoi, Sharp
said the raids are having the
desired effect. _^
Harbour --
DnemaSr one • Color tw Oeiuxe
m mg
WEDNESDAY T
MORNING JU^Y 13
BOX OFFICE OPENS
SHOW STARTS 10:00 AM.
ON OUR SCREEN
4 CARTOONS
A COMEDY
PLUS THIS FEATURE
ROAR with tto one
and
mti >
Jets --
HiniiKinnc
in ■■mis
ini ins
" v-Ult^DLlll^R^re *HMfWinn
UmM fiN39N jORuw utUGU^
*
i
(Continued From Page 1)
on East Jack Street. Soon aft-
w jettling down to Jive -per-
manently here, he bought a
cleaning and pressing shop
which he operated until 1935. -
He then went into the Victoria legislature
and marble table
operated ituntil the
H years when a scarcity of ma-
terials and supplies caused liim
to sellout. -
Later, Harbour worked a few
months on a drilling rig and
then decided to go into the real
estate business. He dealt in real ..... , . . ,
estate until 1955 whqn he s bill as sound leg- _
Z™? £rSt2'l£filCaArSa GO^ov. John H. Reed ‘St 'f W% . . .
-j""”
He is survived by his wife, ^n>( ^ ,h confer.
Mrs. Sadie Harbour, and one #nc# nsoMon ^ ^ «
son, Glenn, toth of Baytown; mertse lmport
three sisters, Mrs, Dora Bosley
Of Baytown, Mrs. Beckie Carr
of Houston, and Mrs. A. H. Tib-
bltts of Sour Lake; two broth-
ers, Ray and Jimmy Harbour
of Baytown.
Funeral services Will be held
at 3 p.‘m. Wednesday at Grace
Methodist Church, with the Rw.
Edwin Summers, pastor, offlei-
Cong or the North
wi can put enough
■
i
(Continued Frmn Page i)
fire in the South six miles south-
west of Vin I>ong city and about
l^niles southwest of Saigon. A
ICwtcsman said he had no re-
port on the fate of the crew,
normally two to four men. ’
Air Force B52 bombers struck
at two enemy targets 35 miles
south of Da Nang. One was a
Viet Cong troop area and the
other a headquarters camp. The
raids were six miles sojith of
B52 raids Sunday and Monday,
<
f-
II
large
North
•he target of bombing.” A few
listeners jeered when President
Johnson’s name was mentioned
housing bill* ontt l haven’t had
10 letters against it.” I
But Gov. Robert E. Smylie of
Idaho, chairman of the Republi-
can Governors’ Association,
said he would hate to think that
the conference was avoiding
taking a stand on civil rights.
He endorsed the Johnson ad-
rocket, most powerful ever
fired by the United States,
thundered off its launching pad
at 10:53 a.m. (EDT) on the 1.6-
million pounds of thrust find
trailed a plume of fire more
than 500 feet long as it darted
into the sky.
Eight minutes later, the Na-
tional* Aeronautics and Space
Administration announced that
the 92-foot second stage had ig-
nited with a 200,000-pound thrust
burst arid drilled itself into ah
orbit about 118 miles above the
earth. *. . f*
business
e World
and
CARTOON • NEWS
War
n a prayer.
Reykjavik, Iceland—About 50
side th e U.S. Embassy where
Ambassador James K. Penfield
was holdi ng a reception
Stockholm—Twenty
fasting in protest against the
U.S. bombings sat on a street
U.S. Embassy
__NOW
THRU WEDNESDAY
DIRECT FROM ITS RESERVED
SEAT ENGAGEMENTS'
youths
FIRST T1MEAT POPUIAR PRICES!
with Rev
adjoining th
where 200 police stood guard.
Singapore—Authorities arrest-
ed , 12 proCommunlsts and
broke up plans for a second day
of- demonstrations against the
war. Twenty-seven were arrest-
ed Saturday when about 700
demonstrated.
Montreal—-Police clashed with
about 175 pickets denouncing
U.S. "murders” In Viet Nam.
Several demonstrators tried to
take up.positions on the steps of
the U.S. Consulate.~'
Ml
FIRST AID!
,. Pract
imports
control
turing ]
signs. 1
pie, ar
ures ai
prevent
facturir
heavy r
The I
ward ci
maybe
eompan
er than
panies
re-use <
approac
Along
cvestmen
also rej
ment fi
sorinel.
ported i
whose p
ervatfon
In adi
Onglneei
300,000-1
eompan
ble nut
regular
plant m;
lution
their no
The 1
survey i
May, at
' Bamcs,
* Chemlca
ter Cm
said the
. survey
outstsnd
oompanl
vent pol
and wat
vey ind:
panies l
sponsibil
1 with the
and mix
'cult prol
Texas
worked
Improve!
trot By
board d
policy s
of any 1
the atmi
, body of 1
to the lm
ft urKi
to Indivl
slbllity ft
objective
urged mi
operate
agencies
6-
Black's Pharmacies
W I. T««»
lm-
sn-am
The 4-H Club program Is a
part of the national education
system of co - Operative exten-
sion work in which the,U. S. De-
partment ofe, Agriculture,- the
state land - grant colleges and
the counties share.
The launching was held up
nearly two hours because of
the failure of one of two tele-
vision cameras located in the
fuel tank to monitor behavior of
liquid hydrogen fuel. Flight con-
trollers finally decided to
launch with only one of the
cameras operating.
A tracking station at Bermuda
reported receiving clear pic-
tures from the camera as the
huge stag© passed overhead
sevefai rpinutes' after liftoff., .
The controller at Bermuda re-
ported the photos showed that
the hydrogen was "very stable”
and. was "behaving itself very
well" with only an occasion-
al ripple on the surface. .
The report said gases, evapo-
rating from the hydrogen were;
being expelled properly to pro-
vide a small amount of thrust
to' help settle the volatile fuel.
Officials said several hours
would be required to determine
how successful the mission was.
They termed the early portion
highly'successful
Success, would clear the way
for the launching of an unman-
ned Apollo moon ship in August
and the flight of a three-man
Apollo crew on an earth orbit
mission in November; Both
would be boosted by Saturn 1
roeteet*,- ’ .
*51.....-
BATTLE OF
it
—w— ffiW*......:
•J8P
‘
,„7 7-
Lost Chihuahua
THE OWNER may claim a lost
chihuahua by calling 583-3353.
It was found <4! the corner of
Ashbcl and DcFce streets Tues-
day morning.
ULTRA-PAJ»*OlSION
TECHNICOLOR
l
•HP -W W Ml l*f re MMBK 3B IK;
ie *w *•* *. ae** «■»•: — ...—
WHMmiaE
Me^roOMM
ON STAGE
IN PERSON
HOT BREAD am,ROLLS
11 a.m. DAILY
DONUT HOLE NO. 4
Mg north Main
Enqland Bound
A.VC ARTHUR. C. BOri», son of
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Sums of
Crosby left Tuesday for Mc-
Guire AFB, Newark, N.J., from
where he will be shipped tc
Bentwater, England, Airmar
Burns is a jet aircraft mechan-
CARTOON e NEWS
li
a ting.
a
Basic Training : ^
JAMES R. YOUNG, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry E. Young oi 112
Cabaniss, is taking seven weeks
of basic training at the Naval
training Center in San Diego,
Interment will be in Hill of
Rest Cemtery tinder direction
of EarUtman Funeral Home.
His Wends are Invited to be
honorary pallbearers.
SRI*
AIMIffAk
HS/0L MW
m
ic
Any way you .
m
US FILL THE
BRUNSON
r. EVERY
S
i.
Calif
figure It... . -----
THE FINEST/*
WELCOME^
TO BAYTOWN ,
IS WELCOME ^
DANCE
9S
Admiral
v
ESOAY
ver
.V
•in
riih'1
•]
INING
ROYAL "10" AIR CONDITIONER
MODEL 1428C23«
’
DURING SUMMER
FOR SPECIAL
KIDDIE SHOWS
-
Knights of Colianbus Hal
-»0 NOT JUDO! IY
5
ANYTH,NO MIN SI,OKI f
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14.200 eru/haw ’ .
•VMw"/iur fie» lyttewi... lets yea <lmt Mr
«h«f« yea v*M HI
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WAGON
2iOO W. Main
Baytown, Texas
!
II
SPONSORED BY
Beyfown Service League
r
f 6;
A vtelt from our hottni win riita
!
type window Wt Included
• Flta 27* to 44^
e Miuttobto thermoatotlc dlmito control 7
e Saatad-in steel "Penny PtoeheT power unit
a Smooth powerful btowar whael lan-2 speed!
e 230/206 v., I0.S/I0.S empe.
e 9 Comfort Control Settings. * Vent/lxheust Central
e To 6.250 cu. ft. cooling; 3.9 ptoto/hrmblstura romovel
e Qalvanlted throughout: 2 exterior baked-on enemel eoeto
yoe feel it horns, with her basket
1
IV
Lsf - :
el lifts and ahtwan to quntions
Saturday, July 9th,9 ’til 1
Musk by the Robbins Twins
8 CARTOONS
2 COMEDIES
about th* city, Hi urvfcat end
ficilitiat. Just call.
WilmfMva^n
x
Plus This Feature
Farmers,substantially helped
the development of American
railroad* in the early days by
granting right* of way.
r
Dane* in air-conditioned comfort «
RIGHT OUT OF A JUNGLE
BOOK OF ADVENTURE!
1
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wL-Jefl
I
wtJBcn
t
* Phone 5*3 *390
^B^Dcoollns capacity and atodrlcal Input In ampa and wefts era
NEMA® c«rri!la<) undar tha National Elactrlcal Manut,ctur#r« Aaaoc*
— jetion certification program for room elf conditioner!.
u
FAMILY FUN
f J-
i
AND THE
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT
READY MIX CONCRETE
STABIUZID material
.mow
FRIED FISH
: Better Service On All Makes
Of Room AirXonditioners
7;
7'
with
HUSH PUPPIES-COLE SLAW AND
FRENCH FRIED POTATOES./
“ ALL i
YOU CAN 1
nonir
i
A-
1:
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u.
23
J
,{
Wlillll pruuaam
1
Per
(RIATVAH $IT IV YOVt
Yt
li*
KIND TO HOSE—V^ith the
skimpy skirts, you have to
think of such things.
Melody Patterson, starof
fete rtrlWt' WmNt
show, approves the new
splinterless Fiberglau
eats being installed at the
the forthcoming U.S.-Rus-
sisn track meet. '
Person
“MARK IT A FAMILY AFFAIR"
7 TERMS AVAILABLE 7
John H. Kilgore
582-8118
EAT
m.
BASSE’S
311 Liens Are. . Phono5B2-73BI
CONTEST ON STAGE
10 KENNEDY HALF
DOLLARS GIVEN AWAY
t-ri
4 j-
Mr
!
i
V.
Adults and
Students 90c
Children 50c
-
Box Office Open* 9:30
Show Stars 10:00 A.M.
ALL SEATS 50c
rmt
resou
t
' M3-74CI100 S- HWY. 144
v
Show Over 1^0 FM.
A
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>•
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1966, newspaper, July 5, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1144771/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.