The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1966 Page: 4 of 22
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.
Extracted Text
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Tuesday, July 5, 1966 >
4 lagtimm ftw
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win at bridge
Trick Stolen
At Small Risk
Here
rffen/ys
Connally Irked About 'Survey
Weldon Watson Affair
i
• Editorials And Features #
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By JACOBY Sc SON A
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
of the things learned
from duplicate bridge is that
any trick is worth stealing. .
' In rubber bridge you don’t
try to steal an extra trick if
the attempted theft jeojjar- ,
dizes the contract. Or do you?
Sometimes it even pays to
go after that extra trick in a
rubber bridge game if the
risk is a small one. Thirty
points is 30 points and if you
can pick up enough points
------you can afford-to-throw syay— ....
an occasional game. That is,
if you are prepared to ex-
• plain the losses to your part-
ner.
• - South won the fjrst trick
'with his king of spades over
East’s Jack. . It didn’t take
much time to count nine nice,
easy top tricks and most rub-
• ber bridge players would run
. off four heart tricks and hope
to get a tenth trick in the
club suit. After all, someone
would have to discard some-
..... thing. ■ , . ............
South did not think much
of that possibility. His oppo-
nents both were very gobd
players and South’s two-dia-
mond response to his part-
ner’s two-club Stayman bid
\
)
One
1k
'Jm
By HENRY McLEMORE
Beliefs I Hold Without Know-
ing Why I Hold Them:
•err That whenever the Rus-
sians give a prize in music it
is much more important than a
prize, giverf by any other coun-
try. ... r:J r ■ - . ■
— BuR ftuits and vegetables
soid at roadside stands are
much fresher, tastier., and
cheaper Wan fruits aind vegeta-
bles sold in stores.
’—That a hotel bellhop would
not be satisfied with a 35 tip for
bringing a briefcase to. one's
room, and opening a window or
two.
— That universities with good
football teams aren't worth a
hoot academically,’
—That people who play golf
by themselves artrsUghtly bat-
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Kt'.
*
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The Gov. John Connally-appointed cemed, because he plans to recommend
-Parka and Wildlife Commission prob- to the next legislature a greatly ex-
ably is smarting under a tongue- lash- panded parks program,
ing administered by their obviously *T regret there have been actions
irked boss. which cast reflections on the agency
Connally slapped the wrists of the (Parks and“Wildlife Commission!,”
commlsioneis. for tltoiF handling of the Gov. Connally said, “since I was the
Weldon Watson affair. ' one who recommended (three year
Waston, the $184000-a-year execu- ago) the merger of the two depart-
tive secretary of the commission, was merits: And I still think it was a sound
either fired two weeks' ago by the merger.”
three-man commission or resigned. , There is sharp disagreement about
Questioning by reporters failed to dis- this between Gov. Connally and sports-
close the reasons for Watson’s resigna- men’s organizations throughout the
tion, but word leaked out in Austin state. They spenfa good deal of time
that he was summarily dismissed, •!' and money trying to defeat the merger .
Neither Commission Chairman Will ffjiree year* ago, but the governor** w
Odom nor Watson has explained the fforces were victorious. He. based his
action, and ho public announcement
of it was made until reporters acci-
dentally learned about it two days af-
t er it happehed. . . .
Gov. Connally seemed more than a
li ttle ruf fled about the matter when
ht* said:
•’.1 Chink the Weldon Watson affair
wais the worst mis-handled of any
tha t’s coime up in my administration. I
knew nothing about his resignation,
and no member of the commission has
discussed it with me, cither before or
angti; ,........
Hite governor’s anger is understand-
able, although he didn’t appoint Wat-
son. He did appoint the commissioners
and th*>y appointed Watson, He has
had * considerable trouble with the way .
the t commission has handled the af-
- fairs of the recently merged parks and
wildlife departments.
Spo rtsmen across Texas — particu-
larly In the Baytown area—have con-
sistently criticized the policies of the
^ new commission and have attacked
Watso n’s administration of the com-
mfssion's affairs; specifically as they
related to shell dredging.
Insofar as it affects marine life ini
the Texas Gulf Coast area, shell dredg-
„ ing too near live oyster reefs has be-
come so controversial that members
of the Flarris County delegation in the
next session of the state legislature
have pledged to introduce remedial
legislation.
Such pledges were extracted by
sportsme n’s organizations in exchange
for their support of legislative candi-
dates. 1
Gov. Connally told Austin newsmen
that the Watson affair comes at a par-
- ticularly frad time, as far as he is con-
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4- That stretch socks should
be banned by law. ■. "
— That anything sold in a
basement is a bargain; > j
— That it is better to have
your house bum down than have
firemen to fight the blaze. /
— That all brands of gasoline
.are the same:
— That all winners of Ameri-
can beauty paggants look the
■ lame.- ■ . . -
reasons for wanting the merger
economics that would accrue. He also
defended the action on the grounds
that a more efficient operation of t h e
parks end wildlife departments would
result from the merger.
The governor further argued tnat
’The functions of the two departments
were inter-related enough that they
should be combined. Again sportsmen ... at first.]ass
attacked! his reasoning contending rantshave waiters, not waitress-
there was little or no similarity, and
that a merger would relegate the fish- j — That taxi drivers and bar.
ing and oyster industry on the Texas f tenders are vastly overrated eg
Gulf Coast* to a place of minor import-; ■.“ homely philosophers,
ance. ■ ._■ — That the age you are iz
Gov. Connally said he was not going me hjff.
to try to dictate who the commission ~ Th*t J”0*1 rain ,alls 0,1
will select as Watson’s replacement,
^the said he would^Jo.talk to the mueh better fhMlJ3g&£ te
commissionbefore a selection is made. — iiiat watermelons are not
> The governor’s selection of men to worth eating until July,
run the merged Parks and Wildlife - _ That aii cough syrups are
Commission was under fire by sports-
men’s organizations at the time he
made it, and since, because the groups
claim the men appointed are politi-
cians and not conservationists.
Connally said one of the fallacies of
the Texas governmental system is .that
the governor "appoints numerous
boards and commissions, but has no
control over their actions once they
are appointed. However, he' often re-
ceives the blame for actions that, are
unpopular, he added.
The governor may have been trying
in the above statement to pour oil on
the troubled waters, but he is not the
kind of public official who hides from
responsibility. If he believed he made
a mistake when he recommended the
parks and wildlife department merger,
he would say so.
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on
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Scalpel!"
Fulton Lewis k
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5
NORTH
854
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A K J 10
♦ AX6 2
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Senators At Least
Battle For Passage
EAST
♦ JO 3
»V9-7 4
♦ K Q J
A 9 5 4 3
WEST
A A 10 7 2
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A J 76
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many I
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SOUTH (D)
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A A K Q 2
Neither vulnerable
West North East South
‘ 1 N.T.
Pass ‘2 #
3 N.T. Pass Pass
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phony,-'. '------------
— That anyone who orders
pancakes In. a restaurant never
has eaten decent pancakes.
[ — That air- conditioning is
very unhealthy.
X That to remember erne’s
zip code is ridiculous.
—’ The same for one’s area
code.
— All harp, players are intel-
lectuals, and vastly superior to
the rest of us,
— That really fine hridge
players are bores.- — - V-
—^ That women’s golf and
cross-country racing are the
two worst spectator sports.
By DREW PEARSON
WASHINGTON - If you were
" in an auto accident this July 4
weekend and you were injured
-as a result of a bad brake, a
weak steering system or orther-
wise faulty car, you will be in-
terested in knowing who voted
for criminal penalties in the
a Senate auto Safety bill.
This provision of the bill,
^-wMeh-was defeated, did not
hid auto manufacturers respon-
sible for accidental errors, only
if they wilfully and knowingly
undercut the safety standards
set by the Secretary of Com-
merce.---------'-i; v V—
The senators who made
speeches against criminal pen-
alties were Robert Griffin, Re-
publican, and Phil Hart, Demo.
crat, both of Michigan; John
Rastore, Rhode1 Island Demo-
crat, fiery champion of the auto
industry; Frank Lausche, the
Ohio Republicrat; and Thurston
Morton of Kentucky, former
chairman ot the Republican Na-
tional Committee,, i-,'
All Republican* joined them.
Fourteen Democrats voted for
tough provisions to enforce auto
safety. They were:
Dan Brewster, Md.; Frank
Church, Idaho; Tom Dodd and
Abe Ribicoff, Conn.; Ernest
Greening, Alaska; Vance
Hartke, Ind.; Russellliong, La.;
Warren Magnuson, Wash.; Gene
McCarthy, Minn.; Lee Metcalf,
Mont.; Wayne Morse and Mau-
rine Neuberger, both erf Oregon;
Ralph Yarborough, Tex., and
Steve Young, Ohio.
, Motorists over the Fourth of
July weekend can thank them
for at least putting up a battle.
WHILE THE United States cele-
brates its Independence Day,
one of our most Important
neighbors prepares not only to
celebrate Its Independence Day
tomorrow but a major victafy.
Five years ago, Venezuela
Was chosen as the No, 1 com-
munist target in the Western
Hemisphere. With major Ameri-
can oil companies owning bil-
lions of dollars in property
there, and with U.S. Steel and
Bethlehem Steel owning moun-
tains of iron in the Venezuelan
juhgles,
pimary school students has
doubled, and its Illiteracy rate
Is now only 11.9 per cent as
compared with 31.6 per ceiit
nine years ago.
The nine ■ year period is im-
portant because it yas just 11
years, ago that the dictatorship
of Col. Perez Jiminez was over-
thrown and replaced by a stable
democracy. -
Venezuela’s progress since
then is due to the democratic re-
forms pioneered by Presidents
Rghuio Betancourt and Raul
Pass 2 A
Pass
Pass
T*
Opening lead—A 2.
1
Shelej
operatec
Market,
useful s
For tl
starling
clinic in
be con i
fourth
month.
There
these c!
arrange
complin
,
denied four cards in either
major so East and West
would know how he hel* four
cards in at least one minor. „
Finally, South hit on an-
other way f A steal a trick. He
led his deuce of clubs toward
dummy. This play wasn’t go-
ing to do South any good if
East held the jack of clubs f
and might even cost South / >
his contract if West had
1
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Sf-
;
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I
President Perez Jlffiinez re-
cevied a special medal from the
Eisenhower administration. But
had he remained, in jpower it’s
probable the communist drive
from Cuba would have succeed-
ed — first beause transition
from fascist to communist dlc-
tatorship iy always easier; sec-
ond because Perez Jiminez Con-
centrated on building highways
and glittering office buildings
in the cities, almost completely
neglected the countryside. Hit
officers’ clubs were the finest
, In the world, while the hovels of — West
the funwn were among the
most pathetic, y
The revolutionary theory of
Mao Tse-tung is that commu-
nism must be like a "fish swim-
ming in the sea” of the peasan-
try. If the fanners cannot be
won over to revolution, revolu-
tion tafls,-
Did You Know?
Arabia is the largest penin-
sula in the world.
hi
opened the deuce of spades
from a five-card suit.
West
stead of the jack. Dummy;s
ten won and South had his_____*
extra’ trick.
*T.
Co
•i
The cl
r]!'su;n;itl
ed a low club in
Slhf feutmmt S’Utt
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
p.m
This
Courts May Have Aided
Top Ten' Membership
Editor and Publisher
.... General Manager
.......... Managing Editor
Assistant To The Publisher
Assistant To The Publisher
Office Manager
:|'
Fred Hartman ........
James H. Hale ......-
Preston Pendergrass .
Beulah Mae Jackson -,
Bill Hartman .........
~Ann B. PHtchett
t
Q—The bidding has been:
North East South
i i
( . , . ...... . . . . W. .. ... . . . ...
advertising department
\
1*
John Wadley .
Paul Putman ,
Corrle Laugblln .. _
Entered as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas, 77521 PoM
Office under the Act of Congress of March 8, 1879.
in,,t - as a slender young man &t 1301 Memorial Drive in Baytown, Texas,
with curly blond hair. Arrested , p. o. Box 308, Baytown 77520
five years later, he had put on Subscription Rates
almost 60 pounds, grown a heavy By Carrier $1.80 Month, $19.20 per Year
mustache, and dyed his hair red. Mall ratM on request
I^cii^nnncrio. A.hku o Represented Nationally By ■/
Leslie Douglas Ashley, a trans- . Texas Newspaper Representativ«kl$«t,|»
vestite and brutal killer was / uemsek or the xsaocMTCD press
caDtured last rstlHne in Atlanta Th. ammI.ik! Ptm. ta mtltM *elwlw»r to Um um for rapu.lle.Uoa at
capiurea last'spnng m AUania, MW< dlapatch>, eredit>d «, it or not eih.rwiM cradiud in thl. pwr »nt
Ga„ where he was working as no) am of iponumu onm pumum twnin. Ri*nw of raputuicsttoa ot
Manager
.... Retell Manager
.. National Manager
I 1
Pass IT
Pass 2 N.T
Pass 4 #
Past ?
Pass 1 ♦
Pass 2 A
Pass 3 #
Pass 4 T
You, South, hold:
AAZ VKJ84 #4 3 2 AA 10S6
What do you do?
A-J-Bid four spades. Your
partner will read this as show-
ing the spade aee and not as s
a
\
ceived judicial leniency in .the
form of parole.
The 35-year-old bandit-is want-
ed for two "jobs,”, the $6,000
stickup of a Chicago bank in
April,. 1965, and the $25,000
holdup,of a Melrose Park, HI.,
uSement park four months
later. Lesczynskl was captured
after a gun battle in which he
was shot seven times. He escap--"Bobo the Clown" in a traveling
ed from the Cook County prison “carnival,
hospital last December.
If JesczynskI follows the lead
of his Ten Most Wanted predeces-
sors he will resort to elaborate
disguise to avoid capture. Isaie
Aldy Beausoliel, a burly auto
mechanic, is a case in point. He
was picked up, in Chicago in
1953, dressed as a woman, com-
plete with high heels and pad-
ded lingerie.
Daniel WiWam O'Connor first
By BILL SCTfULZ
(Fulton U«1g Jr. I» ill. To-
day's column Is written by his
associate, Bill Schulz.)
WASHINGTON*- A buUet -
scarred gunman who has vow-
ed to kill before he 1s captured
has been added to the “Who's
Who" -tif the underworld, the
FBI's Ten Most Wanted list.
Walter Leonard;'Lesczynski is
unlikely to remain there long:
D u r i n’g the past 16 years, fed-
• erai,- state, and local authori-
ties have captured 216 Top Ten
^ fugitives. The average criminai
: stays on the list for less than
five months before he is nab-
bed.
Lesczynskl U a typical ,mem-
ber (rf the Ten Most Wanted
fraternity.- He boasts a crimin-
. al record dating back a dozen
years and has repeatedly re -
W
communist stretegy flg-
f if Venezuela could be
added to the Castro domain, the
United States, would suffer a
major defeat.
Accordingly, Venezuela was
subjected to guerrilla warfare,
and terrorist bombing of shop-
ping centers, Sears Roebuck
stores, American Oil. offices. On ...
one occasion the automobile of I1* wany Latin-American coun-
Vice President Nixon was. trie* ««rarian reform 1* talked
mobbed, and he narrowly es- about but not accomplished. In
caped death. others, land is distributed bt|t
Venezuela has now defeated the peasants lack the tools and seed
communist drive and has be- to work it. , „ ,
come one of the most stable na- In Venezuela, however, the
_ , , ... tkms to South America. Its per government produced
, fihgernsils crack lacquer will mask the spots. capita Income is now the high- - know-how pirn credit to finance and M cent* to: The Baytown
to the cuticle. est in Latin America, and its new farmers. Result: Venezue- 1M1 M«mori»i i»riv«
What can I _d° about this? ’ ft—What causes my toe- gross national product has tin"1 ian agricultural production has , 4 1"“’ _ _____ „
A—This is a common com- nails to become so hard I can’t creased over a 10-year period jumped from *331 million to rAJ. Bez aw, Baytown, 178M
-pliint, especially in women, cut them? Is there any rem- by 79 per cent During a nine- $496 million since the days of or to The Baytown San, Box
The cause is uhknown, but it. edy for this? • year period the number of its Perez Jiminez. .
is usually worse in older per- >' A—The cause may be a he
sons than in the young. There reditary trait, poor circula
is ho sure cure. Sevdfal h8il tiori dtie to wearing shoes that
hardeners are available but are too short, a fungus infec-
they are of doubtful value, tion or psoriasis Finding the
The same is true of special cause is the first step toward
diets for this condition. treatment but at best a cure is
The best treatment is to cut likely to prove difficult,
your nails short to prevent
.their catching on-various ob- Q—Which foods contain
jects and to protect them with keratin, the substance that
gloves when you do any man- makes the nails strong?
ual labor. * - A—Keratin is a hard pro-
^ tein that is found in skin,
Q—Is there any dure for a hair, nails and teeth. Your
fungus infection of the nails? body makes its own supply
A—Dee»#et)e4 fungus in- and various diets, advocated
fections of the nails are ad- to lend your body a helping
mittedly hard to cure but a hand with this task, have been
course of griseofulvin by disappointing. By the same
mouth, combined with local token, biting your nails and
applications of Advicln, swallowing the pieces will not
should clear up the infection solve your problem
within three m 0 n t h s unless
the fungus is Candida (Mo- •' Q—My doctor says I have
nllia), in which case tetracyc- circulatory stasis. What is it?
line phosphate with nystatin Can it be cured?
would be more effective. A—This Is sluggish drcula-
A t*on- 11 can cause cold hands
Q—For many year* I have and feet and it increases the
had White spots on my finger- • likelihood of clots forming in .
•nails. What causes them and your veins. Your doctor must
how can I get rid qf them? discover the underlying cause
A—These spots are due to before he can offer you any-
imperfect development of the thing more than symptomatic
nails as they leave the gi^wth relief. v
center under your akin. This
may be caused by injury to
the matrix or to separation of comm.ni, 1. w,,* G. Stand,t«lt,
fL0m the undwlyN era at thl! papa,. Whit,
nail bed. The condition IS no Dr Stand,tadt cannot onmor indl-
threat to your health. No tidual lattar, ha will «n,«or (otter,
treatment is known but nail ot aanaral intara,i in fatura
BUT VENEZUELAN peasants,
instead of rising up to help Cas-
- tro, combated Castro, largely
because the Venezuelan govern-
ment has instituted farsighted
agrarian reforms. A total of
117,460 farmers have acquired
their own land, totaling 6,523,000
acres. *
sutcestlen te play spades.
TODAYS QUESTION —
You bid four spades and
your partner bids six no-trump.
What do you do now?
ifl
-
22
■
Answer Tomorrow
I -
THE DQqTOR'S MAILBAG
No Sure Cure Known
For Fingernail Problem
.BY WAYNE & BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Newspaper Enterprise Assn. 1
In more than eighty cases,
members of th* Ten Most Want-
ed list have been captured
thanks to the aid of sharp-eyed
citizens. For example, Philip Al-
fred La Normandin, publicized
as a gun - toting, .three-fingered
trumpet player, was arrested by
the FBI within hours after his
addition to the Top Ten list in
April, 1961: An alert reader of a
Hackensack, N.J. newspaper tip-
ped off the Bureau to the fugi-
tive’* Jersey City residence.
Hugh Bion Morse, a savage
killer now serving a life sen-
tence in prison, has reason to
TU« both. Friday the 13th and
FBI.,«His October 13, 1961
ure followed by less than
"Wlnnlngeat bridge cham-
pion" Oswald Jacoby shore*
his tournament . winning tip*
I
ri
1 - — -
and technlqueo with reader*
of The Baytown gun In hla
booklet "Win At Bridge." 1#
4
get your copy, simply send
EX
name, address with sip cod® *
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Try Your Word Power
r----NEA FEATURE ----
.i-
OS, Dept. A Radio CUy 8ta-
lh;: hi
tion, New York, N.Y., INIS.
i
the
Answer-to Previous Puitlo
III
516
QUICK QUIZ—IZ.
Q—When was thl Peace
Cdrps created?
A—March 1,1961, by execu-
live order.
Things of All Sorts
SMi!
capture _______
two hours the visit to FBI
headquarters in Washington ot a
St. Paul, Minn., tourist. The man
recognized Mors*, a neighbor,
in a display of the Ten Most
Wanted fugitives.
^current dean of the Top
is Edward Howard Mapa,
a self - styled beatqlk who is
accused of killing hit wife and
four • month - old daughter. A
former re*
Greenwich
eluded the FBI for more than
four Mrs- * '
Others in die select group in-'
&
M
ACROSS 6THiove»
! Arbors — .. _
ulZlT 10 liloUl? dears'
i w "arr"
lailish ford, oppellotlon
»TXnTo“rmh 2' Symbol for
20Toon i(ornun tapta(um
22 Greek letter
24 Saint, i*b >
25 Toothed *hecl
26 Chert rnttle
27 Ireland
2* Merit
30 Shield ivar)
31 Klch fabric
34 Winter apple,
t P V ¥
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fit
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Q—Which is the oldest tax-
supported library in the
United States?
A—The Peterborough,
N. H., public library, set up in
1833.
The
N
Ten
mm
prefix) .
21 Anatomical
37 Scalier. I, hay 49 (’.unlock calc li
?0 School Homo
C -
44 Kpiillc <ab I
47 Boon a
contpaninns
48 Allowance
for wan. i
ident ot
Village
New York’Z
, Maps has
51 Containers
52 Twofold
51 Poker Make
54 Require
5* Harem room
51 Ro>’> nickname
69 Three time,
icomb. form!
(0
a
23 Unit of
, electricity
25 Larger
2* Make rewl
•*" .12 AuricW
33 In a line ,
3.1 Story ot
he role deodo
36 Unmounted
36 Ship, berth
40 fc’dge
41 R,enovato
41 Hl.|h wrought
40 An lbory
44 Kind of tide
47 Pint * isb > •
, 50 Pro,t, a,t coke
82 Mate tibne
nsckn.ua*
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Q—What Quaker school- .
master first developed
atomic theory?
A—John Dalton, an English ; -
chemist, who was a Quaker
schoolmaster, in 1803.
Q—The renowned sculptor „
and painter, M. Buonarroti,
is be tter known-by what
name?
, A—Michelangelo.
(Ntwiasotr lotorarlM AuoelatiM)
Prloe fixing and wage lawa . ■. 2
nia not now. Th* Roman goita*^*^
ernment enacted similar laws
more than 1,600 year* ago—and
death was th* panalty for vio-
lators -
i0G
the
UtP
chida:
%
nig in lit
i
Alson Thomas Wahrlich, a
schizophrenic sadist wanted for
kidnapping. The pint • sized, 30-
yearold Wahrlich ii a convicted
sex fiend who preys Upon young
girls. He carries a pistol and
surgical scalpel with him tt all
time*. ’
John William Clouier, an es-
wp#i Bwn a Fiorlda montal
hospital who has sent ihriiten-
ing letters to various official* ,
boasting that he will never be
taken alive. An expert pistol
shot, douser is also proficient in
Karate and Judo. The blond •
haired fugitive uses a beard,
wig, and mustache as part of
hia rliaonifaj*
T
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55 Small »p*< >' W
57 Brin* >nlo
harmony
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Bible Verse
^yiui Mmm
DOWN
1 Singing vok-a
2 Mountain
mm
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"The administration wonts businessmen to hold down profitf -
again—if this keeps up, we'll go out of business!"
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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/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.