The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 311, Ed. 1 Friday, August 19, 1966 Page: 1 of 14
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.Mierofllm SiilGc & Sorvico
~..... 0. Box 6066
®j)t Paptoton #un
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J-4-
The Sun Invites
MB, OR MRS, P. W. KING
•-. ; . MS Long Dr.
to the Brunson Theater. This coupoi
Good Through Aug. 26
for two ticket* when presented
at the Brunson box office.
The movie now showing '!*
“THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING,
THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING"
I
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAPER
0
1
Serving BAY-TEX—The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
r
Ten Cents Per Copy
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 582-8302
Friday, August 19, 1966
BAYTOWN. TEXAS, 77520
VOL 43, NO. 311
"i;
LC REGENTS APPROVE 2-CENT TAX HIKE
Rate Boosted *
To 19 Cents
Per Hundred
T
100,000th
Guest Tours
Plant Here
$58 Billions - - - V
Senate OKs Record
Peace Defense Budget
,7W,
___ .'
i
O-r,
o
<1
J:.
IA* ./
Property owners in th« Lee
College district will pay two
cents, per TWO valuation more
in taxes next year as a result
'of board of - regents action
Thur'-d.v night . .
The regents approver's 1966-
67. budget calling for total" ex-
penditures of |2',M7,5<fi,5G and
.set, a .tax rale of 19 cents per
flOO/valuation to bring in the
revenue I.asf year’s tax rate
was 17 cents per HOP valuation.
Richard G. Grimes of Leban-
on, Pa, is the 100,000th visitor
to Humble’s Baytown Refinery
and Enjay Chemical Co.’s Bay-
town plant.
His number came up as a
of 46 visitors assembled
:k
4-
guided missile, frigate. The
House didn't apifftve the de-
stroyers and the defense depart-
ment asked neither project*........
Affproved 154 million above-
Pentagon requests to keep the
Army’s Reserve a„nd National
Guard forces at’manpower lev-
els:. previously .authorized by
Congress,, , - - - .....‘
in fiscal 1953, which contrasted
with a postwar low of $117 bil-
lion in 1949. ' •
In passing the bill, the Sen-
Added $153 million to build
two gas-turbino-powered guided-
misejlg destroyers and detained
$150.5 million vote<f by the
House, for a nucleaiv.powered
WASHINGTON. (AP) - The
Senate has approved,, .a -repofd
$58-billion "peacetime” Defense
Department x budget through
June 30, 1967. V,
Students, Note
NEW STUDENTS in the school
district who have noftenrolled
and plan to attend Robert E.
Lee-High School should come
to the guidance office at REL
between 8:30 a.m. and ,11:30
a.m.-,or 1,;30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
before Aug. 31.
i*
v
V-
group
at the Community; Building for
the regular , Friday afternoon
*
ate
During three days of debate,
the senators added two provi-
sions: one empowering /Presi-
dent Johnson to call up individ-
ual roemebers of the military
ft
tour
Grimes was accompanied by
hig wife and two eliildren.
mmfsfraYKV '’nia
corned Grimes and presented
souvenir gifts to commemorate
the occasion.
The gifts -included a variety
of plastic products made from
petrochemicals.
Mrs. Grimes was given a
brightly colored parasol. Its fab-
and molded on® - piece "liv-
ing-hinge’’ frame were made
Enjay’s polyolefin unit in Bay-
town.
The C-rimes children, Lori, 11,
and Brad, 8r were presented toy
stuffed tigers. Gifts for the-fam-
ily also included 100 gallons of
Enco Extra gasoline tor the re-
turn vacation trip via Tulsa,
DesMoines, Chicago and Akron.
Grimes and iiis famlly were
visiting Chelsey Bridgewater in
Houston, two men served
together in the U. S. Navy. Both
families came to Baytown for
the Friday afternoon tour.
—Visitors from tire 50 states,
District of Columbia, and 73 for-
eign countries have toured the
Baytown plants since free,
guided fours were inaugurated
in July, 1848. The tour includes
a thirty - minute orientation and
demonstration of refinery meth-
ods in the Community Building,
week lor prop-
r
isthe*eco
erty owners here. Monday night,
the school board approve^ a tax
increase of seven cents per
$100 valuation.
An additional two cents in col-
lege district taxes means that
a property owner whose house
has a market value of $10,000
would pay 80 cents more in
taxes_next. year.......Property is
carried on the tax rolls at 40
per cent of market value.
Five and one-half cents of the
I
Tighten Parole -
Carr Urges Tougher
Penalty For Murder
SATURDAY Will be work day at
the Baytown Youth Fairgrounds-,
according to Roy Baker, presi-
dent. Bakgr urges workers to
show up at 8 a.m. in work
clothes, prepared to stay all
day. Lunch will be served.
Saturday Dance
ALEX4BE AN and Maurice
Beard will be masters of cere-
monies at the 8 p.m. Saturday
dance of the^Bayshore Wagon
Wheel Square Dance Club at
Knights of Pythias Hall. Hosts
will be Mr. and Mrs. Jim Taht.
Elks Gathering
THE BAYTOWN.ELKS will hold
their annual family day Satur-
day at the Elks Lodge on Mark-
et. The get - together is open
only to Elks members and their
Immediate families. Barbecue
will be served at noon and later
any of the funds for purchase of
the Navy’s version of'the con-
troversial F111B aircraft the
TFX plane.
The measure includes several
items not requested by the
Johnson administration, such as
money tor a new nuclear-pow-
ered missile frigate.
—In passing the bill 86-<L Thura-
day the Senate increased ad-
ministration requests by $525
million but still was $42? million
under the total.. already ap-
proved by the House.
These and other differences
between the two bills must be
reconciled by a conference com-
mittee.
The $58-plus-billion package is
the largest ever voted when the
’
ric
■
p - i
- AUSTIN fAP) — At ty,; -Gen: other-states- ’1
Waggoner- Carr has proposed
that murder with malice be
punished by either death or life
in prison. -........ ...........•-----
Testifying Thursday before
an interim House committee on
Democratic candidate for U.S.
senator, also recommended
tougher parole laws.
"The punishment for murder
with -malice provides a possible , r _ ,
nf .tan wars ” be hie for parole after serving one-
fourth of their sentences, includ-
ing bonus time of 30 days per
month served for good behavior.
A perswrltentenced to life might
become eligible for.- parole in
714, years. ,.
Carr’s recommendations in-
cluded:
--Allowing police to arrest a
person found in a suspicious
place and under circumstances
which reasonably indicate the
Individual has committed or is
about to commit a felony or
breach of the peace.
—Require persons at the scene
of a crime to furnish their iden-
tity to investigating officers.
—Make the display of fire- , „ , . . ■ ..
arms ih "a manner calculated v- Here i« the calendar for the
to disturb any person or per- school year h» Baytown
sons" punishable by a $1<X)., to School
$500 fine and 10 days to six ITRST SESSION
months in Jail. S«P‘- L registration on or be-
Prohibit sale of firearms to ^2^1, first day of
minors not accompanied by par- 1
ent, guardian or persons acting . i - n hnHdav
in the place of parents. g*” mi at
-Prohibit possession of fire-
•as.,s!fet3sa!£
—Double ithe minimum and
maximum punishments for sev-
eraL-erimM^when committed -
>. ith firearms, including assault
with inetnt to rape of rob, at-
tempted burglary, maiming,
false imprisonment, kidnaping,
abduction, burglary or theft.
—Punish assault with Intent to
murder when committed with a
firearm or explosive with two
to 10’ year* in prisori when com-
mitted without malice and five
to 50 years when committed with
slice. This would more than
double the present penalty
r
Carr recommended the mini-
nan punishment for murder
with malice be raised from the
present two years- to at .least
five-years.-.................—----------------—
The attorney general said per-
sons convicted of felonies should
serve at least one-third calendar
time of their sentences before
being considered for paroler
Present law makes them eligi-
Grimes became the 100,000th plant tour visi- .....
tor- Ondhe toftdtthe h®Mt^: his daug|ter, , GqUe^^^stawturtiS^^
Lori, and Mrs. Grimes.............................. 1................... marked for debt service and
13.5 cents for maintenance ana
operation.
Total anticipated expenditure
for ; 1966-67 of $2,587,545.50 is
M2,056.79 more than the total
for 1965-66, $2,545,488.71.
I Operating expenditures are
estimated at $1,177,593; interest
and sinking fund, $148,252.50;
and- building fund, $1,261,700.
YOl)N(4 BRAD GRIMES accepts a tiger
from Prank G. Turpin, Humble administra-
tive manager, who presented gifts to all
members tof the Grimes family after Richard
t. ,
IUY!
Fire Razes Home On
Tri-City Beach Road
IT
of war. The record of $81 billion said
was set in fiscal ,1945, in the
closing ‘days of World War II.
The’ peak for theurricriawd [murder with
Korean War was $50-plus billion Texas with' the majority of 34
I recommend a punish-
ment ot life imprisonment or
death for the commission of
I
forms of entertainment for all
ages throughout the day. Exalt-
ed Ruler Calvin F. Rutherford
made the announcement. ,
Degree Candidates
FRANCES MAE CARR of 319
Williams, Philip Max Dodd of
1505 Thompson, and Mark Allen
Jackson of Atlantic Road are
among more than 450 candidates
for bachelor degrees at the Uni-
versity of Texas College of Arts
and Sciences in the Aug. 27
summer commencement exer-
cises. .
in Mrs. Crosby’s house while
their home, a three - bedroom
two - story house, was being
built nearby.
The Crosby house was located
about nine miles east of Bay-
town on Tri - City Beach Road,
about R quarter of a mile west
of Crawley's Bfching Camp. The
house was about a hundred
yards offTri - City Beach Road
on Trinity Bay.
Firemen said sparks from
trash burned earlier in the day
apparently blew up on the roof
and caused the fire. Trash had
lieen burned in front of a. sea
wall about 50 feet from the
house. There were still live em- *•
bers in the trash pile when news- _
men arrived on the scene about Gentry said the company has
10:30 p.m. made early payment each year
for at least 20 years.'
who prepared the budget anti-
cipates a balance rf$4T4.?Q5JS5
in these three funds on Aug. 31,
1967. However, most of this will
be in bond money for comple-
tion of the college’s building pro-
gram.
In other action, the regents
voted to ask Humble Oil and
RefiningCo., which pays about
(0 per cent of the dktrict’s
taxes, for early payment of,
taxes which are due by Jan. 31,
could do was save a shed, a
garage and a two • story house
nearby," he said,
Firemen fought the blaze for
about two hours,
Mrs; Crosby could not give »
full estimate of losses Thursday
night. __
Merchant was the only person
in the house at the time the
fire was discovered. Mrs. Qtoir
by, Mr. and Mrs. C!ar<yice Haz
lett (her, sister's famfly)
their New Mexico guests had
gone to Houston to shop and at-
tend a baseball game/Iny the
Astrodome.
Mr. and Mrs, Hazle^— he is
former chief of police at Earth.
Tex.,—had only recently* moved
back here from Earth. T h e I r
furniture ’ and belongings Were
■MNSMMMMMBMMMMHmi
* A three - bedroom home and
all itg contents on Tri - City
Beach Road were destroyed by
fire about 10 p.m, Thursday.
The $20,000 home belonging
to Mrs. Opal Crosby had recent-.
been redecorated, including
installation of new aluminum
siding at a cost of $1,400.
In addition to the loss of Mrs.
Crosby’s furniture, the furpiture
belonging to her sister’s farriily
was also tost in the fire. Cloth-
ing belonging to Mrs. Crosby,
her father, her sister’s family
and tour visitors from -New
Mexico was also destroyed.
Sam Merchant, Mrs. Crosby's
father, said he* had gone to
sleep after listening to the' news
on the radio. He said he was
awakened by smoke about 10
p.m, Vance H. McBride, Bay-
town Fire ‘•Department captain,
said a call came into his de-
partment about the fire at 9:56
p.m. —r— ----——■
Merchant, who has been re-
tired from Humble Oil and Re-
fining Co., about five years,
1
4
i
Calendar For
School Year
and
1967
Humble will be asked to pay
$50,000 on each of these date*:
Sept, 1, Oct 1, Nov, 1 and Dec.
★ ★ ★
College President George
Weather
SCATTERED daytime thun.
dershowera with temperature
range expected, 76-92 degree*.
Thursday’s range waa 74-M
degree*, with a 79-degree
reading at 9 a.m. Friday at
the 8ua weather atation.
GALVESTON TIDES Saturday
will_be high at 12:42 a.m.,
6:48 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 6:24
p.m.
*2
t:
Viet
Cong
Are Proving
Too Elusive
A News
Digest
CONNIE MAGOURIK
JOHN J. COATES
ma« holiday*.
Jan. 3, firat day of claaae*
SECOND SESSION ____
Jan. 23 begins second half of jqqp” after being awakened.
. .. .. . He said a couple of boys
Jan. 27* faculty meeting at whom he ^ not know came
2:45 P-m. • running up about the time he
March M, W and made it out of the house’to tell
holidays. 'Mm they would call the police
March .«. realty « ,nd fire department. . .
2:45 pjn. - , • . McBride iafiT. three fire ,
April 21, San Jacinto Day holl- | truc^s orte each from Baytown.
Tri-City Beach and Barbers Hill
answered the call. "The house
was gone when firemen arriv-
ed,’’ McBride said. "All we
Coates Heads East Harris
Community Chest Drive
11
year.
m
'A
SAIGON, South Viet Nam
(AFl — White American troops
searched with little luck for the
v-
GROUND
John J. Coates, manager of national agencies also serve
Enjay's Baytown Plant,-.-has Baytown residents,
been named general chairman Local Red feather agencies
of the Baytown and East Har- iniiude tht Health League,
ris County Community Chest Thrift Exchange, Crippled Chil-
campaign to be held in October, dren Treatment Center, ' Wei-
Assistant general—campaign fare League, Boy Scouts, Girl
chairmah Will be C. W. (Con- Sicouts, YMCA, Baytown Oppor-
nie) Magourik, vice president at tunity School and Workshop,
Citizens National Bank anti (3iild Care ,Centers and the
Trust Co. - American Red Cross’.
Coateg announced a Baytown ,Coatcs and Magourik have al-
and East Harris County goal so announced chairmen of va-
of $205,029 for this year's Red rious phases of the Baytown
Feather drive. This amount was Red Feather campaign for this
determined by the budget com- year,
mittee after extensive study of * Chairmen in the Industrial Di-
next year’s needs of the 25 Red vision of the drive are Tom Gal-
Feather agencies - which serve phin, Gulf; Marilyn Under, Hu-
this area, Last year’s goal was her; Roy Elms, United Carbon;
$197,145, R, E, Payne, Humble; C. -JR.
Ten Baytown agencies are( Crist, Enjay; G. (Dutch) Kretz-
schcduled to receive a total cf schmar, Humble's Goose Creek
$172,307, or about 84 per cent, Production and Max Mosesman,
of the proposed budget, The re- Esso Research
maining 15 county, state and (See COATES, Page 2)
m
rl;
elusive Communist enemy, Aua-
From AP Wires
tralian add South Vietnamese
troops fought pitched battle* ■ ^
Thursday with the Viet Cong
and killed 324, military spokes-
men said today. i..
The Ausaies killed 193 Viet
Cong during a four-hour engage-
ment in a drenching monaoon
downpour 42 mile* southeast of
Saigon. It wa* their biggest bat-
'XAND AWAY WE GO!
Kt—n
day.
• Mrs. Esperanza del Valle • The De GauIIe govern
Vasques la reported In good meat has told U. S. diplomat*
condition after removal of an Mat It will not allow Ameri-
artificial heart pomp that has can military force* back im
helped keep her alive for IS French aoU daring peacetime,
dim since heart aorgery.
May 25. last day of classes.
—'J'r.li
May 28, faculty work day.
:
St. Mark s To Hold Musical Program
• Gov. and Mrs. Nrison
o striking machinist, vole taduMer are expecting their
W. A. READ delivers news
stories and pictures . . . Mr.
and Mrs. Fritz Lanham and
children plan a weekend trip to
Six Flags . , . Diana Alford is
home from college.
Velma Ansley comments on a
tetter . . . Gary Fuller offers
to buy the coffee but winds up
eperiding the money for candy
instead ■ • . Baytown Sun pho-
tographer Clay Nolen is under-
going a series of allergy tests
at Gulf Coast Hospital.
Mrs, C. L, Watson proves
helpful again ... Stella Herring
worka in her yard in the cool
of the morning ... Lois Scott
conspicuous by her absence
from the downtown scene ...
R. C. Stephenson takes time out
for some book checking.
Sam Bramlett returns a phone
call . , . Commissioner V. V.
Ramsey provides some informa-
tion ... Ben Shtrey makes a
quick trip to the bus station for
a package , , . Dr. Herbert
tic of the war
The Vietnamese claimed 131
enemy dead in three encoun-
*
today on ending their walkout second child,
that has grounded five air-
town, Tex., where she is ma-
joring in voice. Helen is a grad-
uate of Southwestern with a mu-
sic education major.
“We are scheduling the con-
certs at 3 p.m. to make it pos-
sible for people from other
churches to attend. Of course,
there w 111 be no admission
charge," Day said.
The programs will not be set
Of a regular basis, but will be
presented as musicians are
available, according to Bruce
Day, music director of the
church.
"The music presented on
these programs will not be the
kind of music ordinarily heard
in church — It will he of* the
more difficult type vroch lends
itself to concert better tfti
IcesiA Day aaid. ,
Sunday’s prograrr
rented in the churc
will consist of canta
oratorios by Handel
and a major work
Neida is a senior/at
western University
St, Mark's Methodist Church
will begin a series of Sunday
afternoon musiea 1 programs
Sunday with Neida Day and Hel-
en Medley presenting a voice
and organ concert.
The Commission on Worship
of the church has voted to spon-
sor the program of sacred mu-
sic at 3 p.m. each Sunday for
! the public.
v
ters.
A
fiaaa tar aU weaka.
In the air war over the North,
American fliers bagged their
Communist MIG in a chur-
air battle 25 mile* north of
Hanoi, a spokesman reported.
Air Force jets ran into MIGs on
two other occasions Thursday
but no further leases were re-
ported for either aide.
A missile launhing pad near
Hanoi was destroyed and two
others damaged in other air ac-
tivity, the spokesman said.
On the ground, U.S. forces
n-i>orted little contact with the
enemy.
The Australians, supported by
New Zealand and American ar-
tillery units at well as their
own, reported moderate casual-
ties, an indication they were hit
ONIAL
K BED
er( ON forbidden by a feder-
• President Johnson today ^ ^ nlckel , cmo-
begins a “non-political” three- ^
day whirlwind speech making
trip through five northeast through which construcUon
states and Canada.
18th
s
Kennedy Spnce Center gate
■ SPACE
ad
Engineering
Mpaipi
ED IN A
'Bama Salons Back Wallace
APLE
City OKs Sewage Plant Plans
be pre-
lv Bach,
RTS TO
EDS OR
LE BEDS
ry,
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)- statewide television and radioi is our witness, we are going to
Alabama legislators in over- apdtence, was Interrupted by see that our children have those
whelming numbers stood applause and loud rebel yells1 rights and freedom*."
shoulder to shoulder with Gov. from the jam-packed House He charged that federal offl-
George Wallace in his new chamber 14 times. . rials have threatened, intimi-
showdown today over school Moving quickly to get the ad- dated and sought to blackmail
integration. But there,Was *ome mlni,Nation bill on its way to a People by forcing com-
dUsent. 4,, final votp, the House Ways and pliance with the school guide-
\ Fifty-six of the 106 member* Means Committee and Senate fines, but said Alabama has
of the Alabama House and 24 of Finance Committee called a Krown tired of coercion and
tl* 35 state senat6rs joined aa joint meeting for 9 a.m. Tues- w»nl* it stopped,
co-sponsors of legislation to for- day to start public hearings. Despite the evident strong
hid school* to comply with fed- Wallace angrily denounced as ,uPP°rt within the legislature,
eral desegregation guidelines a blueprint ot socialism the de- "i^ngs. Rep.
and allocating state funds to re- segregation guidelines laid D0"*1*1 Collins of Birmingham,
itjnbirse local school boards for (W.,, last soring bv the U.S. one of ,ix Republican members,
any federal funds tort. Department of Health, Educa- called ,he h)11 "a political htppo-
Wallace, one of the South's flon and Welfare. He said they drotTto paid'for at graft expense
beat known symbols of legrega- have the "unqualified, 100 per by Alabama taxpayers.
cent support of the Communist |
party U.S.A.’’
He told hig listener* that fed-
eral authorities "can no
buy our freedom's and
with our own money
freedoms and rights belong to
us and our children and as God
H
By BILL HARTMAN
Plans for the east ^district
sewage treatment plant were ap-
proved Thursday by city coun-
cil and the city’s engineering
firm, Turner Collie and Braden,
wa* authorized to go out for
had sewer service before.
Atso lncluded are lateral llnei
for the central and west district
The east district plant, accord,
ing to the city's long-range
schedule, ia to be completed in
July, 1967. If all the financing
pieces fall Into place, connect-
ing of tbe Woodlawn and Cedar
Bayou plants to the east dis-
trict plant ia also scheduled in
July, 1967.
The lateral sewer* In the Mc-
Kinney Road. Massey-Tompkina U. ,S. Steel officials have Jn-
Road sections are to be com- vited Baytown Chamber of Com-
pleted-In August, 1967. jlfirtdC
In other Thursday action
city accepted the tow bid from
Tantlllo Construction Co. of $25,-
623.50 for installing water lines
in the Oak Addition street im-
provement program.
Other bidders were Jo* Ctel* fives there to lee what Impact
fins Construction Co. for $27,- a •
146.25 and Baythorep Construe- Ity,
tion Co. for $27,310.75
Council, in a 2 to 1 vote, ap-
proved sending a council rep-
resentative on tbe East Texas
Chamber of Commerce tour
which will visit Chicago, Cleve-
land, Pittsburgh and New York
Oouncilmen Raymond Donnel-
ly and Patrick Ball voted for
the, motion and Don Hullum
voted against It. Clem Massey
abstained. Councilman Albert
Fanestlel and Mayor Seaborn
Cravey were not there to vote.
irt.
MLY
in George-
9"
MM Mothers Club
Hos Money To loan
The scholarship loan
hard
bids
The fighting involving the
Vietnamese government troop*
took place In Quang Tri, Long
An and Tay Nlnh province!.
Government casualties were
reported light.
U.S. Navy, Air Force and
Marin* pilots flew ’97 mission*
over' North Viet Nam Thursday,
including attacks against eight
The east district plant will be
id Guard Rail
built at th# «a nitary land "*fm
Duke operates on t fait ached-
near Ferry Road in Cedar Bay-
ou, Bids are due at 41 p.m. on
Sept. 15.
The engineer! were also auth-
orized to proceed With plant tor
the remaining sanitary sewer
improvements. This includes in-
terceptor linn which will con-
nect the Woodlawn and Cedar
Bayou plants Into the new east
district plant.
It also includes east district
lateral aewera, which will pro-
vide service in the areas around
Masaey-Tompklna Road and Mc-
Kinney Road which have not
uls . . . W. L. (Dub) Ward, a
pattern at Sarfi-Jaclnto Hospital
since last Saturday, has been
dismissed and li at horn*.
Elizabeth Higgins checks post-
•l hihHH
poses for pictures.
fund
maintained by the
Texas A4M Mothe
some fund* availa
"I |
was made
Wtnntrtc-
club th's tionist resistance, asked the leg-
islature to enact the bill,
laid that In a strongly worded speech
Thursday night, he told the fed-
eral government in effect,
“Keep your money and you
bed know what you can do with it.”
The speech, broadcast to a
are Baytown
qualify
. Brenda Cooper
7
wa tm
the tour
This
LA
oil storage depots
..the
city official, to
for a day and visit the steel
plant In Gary, Ind., and to spend
toortog the Pltu-
burgh plant to study
Friday by .Mrs,
ham. president of
New Phone Number
582-8121
ALL DEPARTMENTS
THAD FELTON
Help us serve you better!
Alwev* use YOUR
Personeliwd Chech end
5.85%
••
year
Mr*.
- IARN
CITIZENS NATIONAL
Baytown persons wishing to con-
tribute to this fund through me-
morials will be welcomed Mr*.
ay be ‘reac
and viiit with city repreaenta-
DepooH Slips
First National Bank I
P.O.I.O. I
Stems* F,O.I.O,
SINC*
10H
at 582-2815.
t
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12-3115
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 311, Ed. 1 Friday, August 19, 1966, newspaper, August 19, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1144898/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.