The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 5, 1966 Page: 1 of 15
fifteen pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
rl-__;__X___-___________
" ■'i
t
I
r'V • r ■
ms I
4/
'■a
\
m s
.
<*■
I
Es0P'-
4*.
'M
% *Mn”
’/ V •H^V’ . ■'■'
•'t
ti
m ■
}
%
•■• ;*r
■'X
The S$in Invitee
' MRS. JACK R. SAMWAY
1204 N. Commerce
to the Brunson Theater. This coupon
Good Through 8ept li
for two tickets'when presented
#{theBniliso8boi office.' t
The movie now showing Is
“MODESTY BLAISE”
/*£•
tag ■
■r-bi-y
/*
. Microfilm jSaiee 4 Serv^j^
♦ v‘
| I fclM Texan 75206
YOUR HOME
*
newspaper
I
-l.
*:i;
t\
.4
Serving BAY-TEX—-The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas 1
~M#n Cenh Pgr Copy
“ TELEPHONE NUMBER: 582-8302
Monday, September 5, 1966
" VOL. 44, NO. 13
BAYTOWN, TEXAS, 77520
■v
■ m
lit
4'i
■'i
\
I
-■4
P
Late Count
LBJ Tells Laborites
To Be More Patient
South Texas District Gets Two
i-
Si#
MOM
Houston Bar Is' sponsoring the
event.
Speakers will include W. 0
the U.S. Southerrt District of Shafer, president of the' State ,
Texas at Iff a.nr. Wednesday Bar of- Texas, Iieon Jaworski - I
i. and honored at a reception and representing the Judiciary Com- || 1
J2 luncheon at the conclusion oi mittee of the American Bar As- |
the ceremonies. sociation and Judges Seals and M
Singleton. The prayer will be of- H
I e r e d by Dr. Hyman Judah ; ■
Schachtel, rabbi of Congrega- |
lion Beth Israel.
Chris J. Robinson Jr., accojn- ^
panied by Mabel Edith Cliver,
will sing. - •■ |||;
All the Federal Southern Dis- a
trict Judges will attend, as will gH
U.S, Circuit Court of Appeals, ■
Judges Jbhn R. Brown of H
Houston arid Homer Thornberry "
of Austin, retired Judge Joe
Estes of Dallas, chief justice of
the Northern District of Texas;
Adrain Spears, chief justice of
the. western district, from San
Antonio* Joe C. Fisher, an East-
ern District federal judge from
jasper; ■ Associate Justice Jack
Pope of Austin; Texas Supreme
Court Justices Joe Greenhill and
Fuel C. Walker of Austin.
Congressmen Bob Casey of
The reception and luncheon Houston, Jack Brooks of Beau-
honoring Judges Singleton and mont and Jake Pickle'will at-
Seals will take place at the Em- tend.
erald Room of the Shamrock- Sens. Ralph Yarborough and
■John Tower have received in-
Wednesday, with Arthur P. Ter- vitations, but if is not yet known
veil, president of the Houston whether they will be able to at-
tend.
i
■MM HOUSTON (Sp) — John V,
WH' Singleton Jr. and Woodrow Seals
A will be sworn in as judges of
A:
tv-
i
—He promised to fight in 1967
for repeal of Section 14B of the
taft-HarUey Act; which author-----------
izes states to outlaw the union
shop contracts that require all
eligible employes to join the ,
union.
In a Labor Day address
prepared for a union-sponsored
memorial service at Cobo Hall
for. Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, r
D-Mlch., Johnson said he did
not want to varnish rough facts
about Inflation—"a pickpocket.'*
BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (API
— President -. Jphnaon cam-
paigned in, Michigan today by
bluntly telling organized labor
on its own holiday that "it can't
make all the gains it wants —
all at,once-.”" \ ' " ' J
After volunteering this anti-
inflation warning in Detroit,
citadel of the United Auto Work-
ers Union, Johnson flew to Bat-
tle Creek to help mark the 100th
birthday of a sanitarium found-
ed by the late cereal king, Will
Keith Kellogg, and his brother,
Dr. Joljn Harvey Kellogg.
In remarks prepared for his
Battle Creek audience, Johnson
touched on another aspect of
inflation — the rising price of
health care. ‘
He said: "Government does
share a lively concern for the
progress of medical care and
the cost of medical care. And so
long as I am In office, we will
make every effort to ensure the
greatest possible progress at the
lowest cost to the individual.”
Returns are not yet in from a
federal study of medical costs
which Johnson recently ordered.
The Pitadent’s talk about
"responsibility" in medical
science did not match for di-
rectness, however, his words to
the organized workingman.
Johnson, starting his first ad-
mittedly political trip of the
campaign season, coupled a
blunt call for labor union re-
straint in wage demands with
these promises ;
—He pledged he would not
forget the goal of a guaranteed
annual wage..
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A succession of traffic crashes
involving cars crowded witty
holiday celebrants sent the 78-
hour Labor Day weekend traffic
toll toward what the National
Safety Council said looked like a
"pretty definite*' record; — r -
One collision in Michigan to-
day killed eight. Another In
Florida killed seven.» Four were
killed'Sunday night in a Colora-
do collision. The grimmest 'acd*
dent'occurred Saturday when
three cars collided west of Nor-
walk on the rain-slickencd Ohio
Turnpike, killing nine,
The death toll reached 500.
The Michigan accident was an
almost head-on crash of two
cars on U.S. 12 near Coldwater.
Both cars carried five persons
and the two survivors were in-
jured.
The crash on U.S. 19 a few
miles north of Gearwater, Fla.,
kilted three boys, and four girls,
all in their teens, and injured
three others.
"Unless there's some radical
improvement," "said a safety
council spokesman, "it will be
near the top of our estimate —
630 deaths. This, of course,
would far surpass the record of
563. .
"At this point, it looks pretty
definite," he adde.
For comparison, 505 persons
died on a recent non-holiday
weekend.
Two multiple - fatality acci-
dents Saturday took 11 lives. A
collision in Jacksonville, 111.,
killed four members of one
family and two other persons
and injured two others critical
ly. A head-on clash near Wag-
ner, S.D., resulted to five deaths
and four injuries.
The 78-hour holiday began at 6
p.m. local time Friday. It ends
tonight at midnight local time.
Halfway through, 279 persons
had died in traffic, compared to rain.
225 at the midway point during
the 1965 weekend.
The safety council points to
the past as it warns that tired
drivers mean more accidents
during the last half of the holi-
day. "•
The Associated Press sur-
veyed nationwide traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 19, to
midnight Monday, Aug. 2, to
provide a comparison with the
holiday toil. It found 505 persons
died in traffic, 19 died in boating
accidents and 41 drowned. ■ ■
i
t
i SMMBttt
Judges, lawyers and public, of-
ficials and their wives from all
ever Texas will attend the
three events.
* Chief Southern Judge Ben C.
Connally will act as presiding
judge and swear in the new fed-
eral judges in Courtroom No. 6
in the'U.S, Courthouse: All,oth-
er Southern District judges will
attend. They are Allen B. Han-
tnml i, ■VBrir^rtiM j* ‘ nay, James Noel, Joe Ingraham,
JOHN V. SINGLETON J*~ and RenaHo Gam. '
Judge. Hannay will make bio-
graphical remarks on the two
new federal judges,
Rev. Jack W. Schbultz, 'St.
Stephens Methodist Church, will
deliver the invocation and the
Rev.. Thomas W. Sumners, Rec-
tor of St, John the5 Divine Epis-
copal Church, will make the
closing prayer.
Governor Here
■- DXSTRICT GGV. Clyde Coleman
will be' at the Baytown Rotay
Club assembly at 7 p.m. Tues-
day in the Citizens National
Bank conference rqpm.
Budget Study
BAYTOWN CITY Council will
resume budget studies at 6:30
p.m. Tuesday at city hall. ■
r
Honor, Society
MISS SANDRA* Tafski, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J, Tar-
Brownwood Picnic
BROWNWOQD OVIC Ansoela- ski, 2417 Missouri,in Baytown
----fion. will .hold a. picnic 'dinner wil[ be initiated into Psi Chi na-
from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Saturday tkmal'pa^SfioS^Dinfiimor'
at the city park on Milner Drive. Sept. 11. Mis* Tarshi 1* a Jun-
All residents of Brownwood are ior at Mount St. Scholastic* Col-
in vi ted. G)st of the picnic is in- lege In Atchison, Kan.
eluded in the membership fee.
' Memberships Will be sold at the
picnic.
«■
WOODROW SEALS
Back Roll-Back
Next War
Greta Grows
As Scientists
Ends Trairifng
CADET GERALD A. Teel of
Highlands has completed Air
Force summer reserve training
at Little Rock AFB, Ark. He is
he Son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H.
Teel of Highlands..
In
b
Receives Award
T-SGT. ARMANDQ Rios, son of
Mrs. Rita G. Rios of 315 .Gran-
ville, Baytown, has been award-
ed the Bronze. Star for meritori-
ous achievement in Viet Nam.
Rios is a former REL student.
Explorers Meet
AL EXPLORERS of the East
Harris County District are
asked to meet at 7:30 p.m
Tuesday in the Fellowship Hall
at St. Mark’s Methodist Oiurch
Bowling Action
PLAY IN THE G>ffeebreakei
Bowling League will begin at 9
a.m. Wednesday. :
The East Harris County Dem-
ocrats organization has sent a
telegram to President Lyndon
Johnson urging a roll-back of
interest rates..
Irving St. John, chairman,
said the following telegram waa
sent to the President after the
group met at Holiday Inn and
discussed Interest 'ft.tes: , '
"East Harris County Demo-
crats, representing thousands of
Loyal Democrats, strongly
urges that you take whatever
steps are necessary to rollback ...
high interest rates, which are
stifling the prosperity of our
citizens."
The telegram wa* signed, for *
the organization by Chairman
St. John.
.....'-T
It
Tuesday Meeting
BAYTOWN GARDEN Club will
meet at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday at
Grace Methodist Fellowship
Hall.
PARIS (API - A French
business magazine reports that
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert
S. McNamara acknowledges
some possibility of war with
Communist China as a result of
fighting in Viet Nam but feels
that the danger is of Chinese
making.
McNamara’s response to
questions is reported by the
French magazine Enterprise,
which goes on sale Tuesday.
Asked about the risk of war
between the United States alid
China, McNamara is quoted as
saying:
"We have done everything
. humanly possible— both mill-
’ tary and diplomatically
make it unmistakably clear that
there 1* no justification for
Communist China to involve
itself In the war in Viet Nam.
Just as our policy in Viet Nam
is based upon a disavowal of
any intervention to destroy the
Hanoi reghne or to seize its ter-
ritory, our policy rests eqqally
— if not more so — upon a re-
jection of any actions against
China.
When asked about the need
for additional military effort in
Viet Nam, McNamara replied,
“No one can prognosticate what
one week to precise force levels will be
to* study the needed, but I assure you all that
is required will be provided."
MIAMI, Fla. (API - Greta,
the season's seventh tropical
storm, was expected to grow to Hilton starting at‘11:30 a.m. on
hurricane intensity today as
scientists considered whether to
try to seed her angry winds into Bar Association, presiding. The
submission. .....
Although she was still small
and no immediate danger to
land, forecasters predicted Gre-
ta wouM increase in ate and
power as she ranged over the
Warm waters of the South
Atlantic.
Officials of Project Stormfu-
ry, the tropical storm "seeding”
; agency, were expected to decide
during the day whether to sprin-
kle Greta With silver iodide.
Her location and probable
track made Greta a candidate
for the process which is de-
signed to convert a storm’s de-
structive force into harmless
Appears In Ploy
BAYTONIAN RAY McFerren is
appearing in the Houston Music
Theatre's production "How To
ucceed in Business Without
Really Trying," stalring Rudy
Vallee.
Whites BayQnet
Giiard Maintains
Peace In Cicero
StereoStolen
JIMMY SAMWA.Y reported to
Baytown police that H50 worth
of stereo tape equipment was
stolen from his car sometime
between 8:20 p.m. and midnight
Friday while fie was sttendbit
a dance at the Bayshore Rod,
‘ Reel and Gun Gub.
★ * *
Weather And Tides v
P''
!• _l
• m.
Posters Go Up
hi Baytown
.i
,a
Guardsmen who had been or-
dered out to bait rioting on the
West Side Negro section are
down-to about 300 men, all on
standby basis. Police have re-
sumed patroling the streets.
In Milwaukee, an estimated
225 persons, mostly whites and
including clergymen and nuns,
took up a protest against the
allegedly discriminatory mem-
bership requirements in the
Fraternal Order of Eagles. The
marchers picketed the Eagles
club Sunday although the civil
rights group which started the
protest had agreed to halt the
demonstrations for
allow club officials
issues involved.
By THE ASSOCIATED PBESS
National Guardsmen and
police used bayonet-tipped rifles
and billy clubs to maintain or-
der Sunday as marchers for
open housing invaded the all-
white community of Gcero on
Chicago's West Side.
Six whites were bayoneted,
none seriously, and others were
beaten with police nightsticks as
the officers, battled o keep the
192 nfarchers, mostly Negroes,
and the heckling whites apart.
In contrast to previous,
marches on various Chicago
neighborhoods, this demonstra-
tion — organized by the Con-
gress of Racial Equality — saw
the‘Negroes firing back at the
whites the ro^s and bottles
hrown at them.
CORE called for the march
after Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr., head of the Southern Chris-
tian Leadership Conference,
a planned demonstra-
tion In Cicero after Chicago offi-
cials agreed to a far-reaching
program to promote open
housing.
Some 2,300 National Guards-
men, with orders to shoot to kill
if fired upon, joined approxi-
mately^ 700 city, oounty and
state police in escorting the
marchers lttto Cicero. In addi-
tion to keeping the whites away
from the demonstrators, the
officers and Guardsmen kept
the Negro marchers from
breaking out of line to reach the
hfridini. -
Elsewhere on the racial
a * t ;
■
to
*0
Small Chinese Boat I
The Baytown Optimist Club
will kick off its "Wanted Alive”
campaign on Monday, Sept. 12,
according to Lester Alford, club
president.
"Wanted Alive" posters will
go up all over Baytown on that
date, Alford said. "These post-
ers will serve to remind the
motorist of his responsibilities
to the children of our commu-
nity,” he said.
The following message is
printed on the posters:
"Wanted Alive! Name: A
Child. Age: Tender- years.
Height: Growing. Hair: Usually
unruly. Eyes: fruiting. Distin-
guishing marks: Always a
ready smile. Modus Operand):
Often steps off sidewalks with*
out looking, sometimes careless
at Intersections. Dangerous:
May be riding a bicycle. Any
motorist observing this child
must grant it safe passage. RE-
WARD: ONE LIFE SAVED."
The cost of printing the post-
ers was paid by Optimist Bob
Beverly and Jim Carter.
SP
SAIGON, South Viet Nam to a Navy communique of that |
(AP) — Red China charged to- day.
day U.S. planes attacked and The communique said earrier-
satik a small Chinese vessel, based planes sank a North Viet- , ,
damaged another and killed namese patrol boat and possibly
nine crewmen in the Gulf of damaged two others In the Gulf I
Tonkin in a "provocative and
grave incident,"
Radio Peking said die attack
was made a week ago. Spokes-
man for the U.S. Military Com-
mand and and the 7th Fleet re
fused comment except , to refer
:
r,v. •
Early today, Cireta was cen-
tered about 385 miles northeast
of San Juan, P.R., and a little
over 1,200 miles east southeast
of Miami.
She was thrashing north-
westward at 10 mile* per hour
with top 55-mite-an-hour winds
in squalls near the center. Gales
extended 150 miles from center.
Greta developed Sunday
northeast of the Leeward Is-
lands, the eastern boundary of
the Caribbean Sea.
I
PARTLY CLOUDY and hot
with temperatures to range
from 74-93 degrees. Sunday’*
range wa# 75-85 degrees, with
an 80-degree reading at I a.m.
Monday at the Sun weather
about 70 miles southeast of Hal- ',
phong. Later a briefing officer
said another Vietnamese boat
wag sunk.
In Washington a Pentagon
spokesman declined comment
on the Red Chinese broadcast. ;
Radio Peking said the Chinese ,
vessels were failing on a non-
mal course when attacked.
"This is one of a repeated ser-
ies of war provocative steps *: . . t j
committed by the Americas fll * f!
imperialists,” it added.
In the air war, the VS. Com- gi
mand announced that North p
Vietnamese ground fire shot
down three U.S. fighter-bomb-
ers in raids near Hanoi Sunday
and another plane was knocked
down farther south today.
Only one of the five pilots was M
rescued, a spokesman said. The
aircraft losses brought the num-1 f
ber of U.S. planes reported shot I -
down over North Viet Nam to
,,r
■
station. Rainfall gauged over
the weekend waa .09 Inch.
i §
:
GALVESTON TIDES Tuesday
will be high at 2:M s.m.,
8:43 a.m., t:l$ p.m.; and
11:34 p.m.
\i
Right On Schedule--
Farm Wage Marchers Reach Austin
Up the hill for dinner at the
school cafeteria.
Their arrival in Austin was
right on schedule as the march-
ers strolled along, protected
from the hot sun by thick, black
rain clouds and possibly buoyed
by the knowledge some proba-
bly would Ije getting higher
.?£
m
AROUND
Nation Pays Tribute To
Its Work Force Today
I?
I
pos
Labor and church leaders
on the steps of the pink, granite
capitol. w
And they were up front Sun-
day when the marchers, swelled
(torn 75 to 300 In one day, made
a short, final leg of their long
journey on foot into Austin's
southern city limits and stopped
at St. Edward’s, a Roman Cath-
olic school on gently sloping
hills just off UJ5. 81.
There they filed inside a
white, frame dhapel for a 55-
minute mass by Father Sherrill
Smith, San Antonio, and trudged
AUSTIN, Tex. (API—With a
prayer for protection and a feel-
ing things finally may be break-
ing their way, the Rio Grande
Valley farm marchers were
ready Monday to. finish what
they started—a two-month-old
hike for a $1.25 minmium hour-
ly wage. ‘
Climaxing a 400-mlle trek
from the Valley to Austin Sun-
day, the marchers spent the
night at St. Edward’s Universi-
ty, resting for more walking
and a rally Labor Day in the
state capital. .
fi-
I
i'-s
(
equal share in the greatness oi
America.
— Flags
>, bands
WASHINGTON (AP)
wave, workers parade,
blare and speakers laud labor's "Every segment of American
role In American life as the na- life — labor, government, busi-
tion observes Labor Day today, ness, the public at large — has
The holiday dates back to a special stake in extending our
1882. when workers staged the prosperity to those it has eluded
first Labor Day pariUe in New for too longi" Johnson said in
York CltjerR hag been a legal his Labor Day message,
holiday since 1894. Vice President Hubert H.
This year’s observance comes Humphrey and Secretary of I.a-
amtd record employment and a bor W. Willard Wirtz steered
growing discontent over iiflla- clear of controversial economic
issues in their Labor Day mes-
sages, confining themselves to
praising labor’s role in seeking
a better life for all Americans.
In the background of the La-
bor Day celebration hung the
earlier, It had announced the strong possibility of a major
cost of living had reached a strike in the telephone industry,
following hard on the heels of
the recent crippling airlines
walkout that spurred new talk
of antistrike legislation.
defended the right to strike os "In recent weeks and months,
vital to democracy and said In a
holiday statement labor is not to
blame for rising prices.
President Johnson said Labor
Day Is a time to focus on new
ways to assure eYery citizen an
“A
Nis
rixj
JOHN BUSCH should go by the
... place where he had breakfast
Labor Day and pick up his
glasses^ . . Paul (Pogo) Lenten
stops long enough to have an
early breakfast . . . Bob Bev-
erly sleeps late on a holiday.
Cecil Morse looks cool In Ber-
mudas . , . R, L. Parter spots
a Hawaiian shirt on a hot morn-
ing . . . Irving St. John finds
a friend is out of pocket When
he c*lli J . . Vince Romberg
says it is hard to get by on six
hours’ sleep . . . Blair Mann of-
fer* a guest iced tea for re-
freshment ... Rufus Honeycutt
enjoys a good joke.
Mrs. Bessie Brown returns
from Waco where she attend-
> ed a meeting .. , Herbert Her-
bert directs traffic ... Brenda
Cooper home after visiting par-
ents in DeQueen, Ark. . . .
Searcy Galing and family in
Baytown tor a few days before
leaving for South Carolina.
, Richard 'ColI art} Matherne
likes his nap better than hU
party . . , Bob Warford and
family enjoys an afternoon at
the beach in Galveston . . .
Johnny Moore reports on his
trip to camp . Morton Mc-
' Phail helps round up ushers. .
Mm. E. H. Davis, who
___ has been in St. Joseph’s Hoaplt-
\ al in Houston, has returned to
. r*p hams at (Of Jfapbwood
• , Drive. ■
Mrs. David Rogers gets her
private pilot’* license — after
she flew all the way from Flori-
, ,, da alone.
wages soon.
Paced by their mascot, a bur-
ro named "H 25," the marchers
moved from Salado Creek—a
couple of miles from the city
limits—Into Austin, laughing,
chatting and waving flags.
361.
While American jets pounded
2? 30
oil depots, missile sites and Otto
er target* in the North Vietnam*-vii-..
heartland, government;'
troop* in South Viet Nam re-
ported wiping out nearly half of ' ’ 5
a 600-man elite Communist
force in a three-day operation in j '
the sweltering swamplands of . .
foe Mekong Delta 120 miles
southwest of Saigon. Hm: •
fighting broke a lOday lull
ground action In the south.
As the allies braced (or in-
ese
tlonary pressures.
The government announced
last week that 76.4 million
Americans were at work in An-
gust, a carryover of July’s
recordbreaking figure: A week
•|fey
scene:
» v
The violence that troubled
Dayton, Ohio, alst week appears
over, police officials reported in
saying they oould foresee 00
difficulty in providing security
for President Johnson's visit
today.
The nearly 1,000 National
Miss America Candidates
Head Into Hectic Week
JA,QAS ISS PER
LOONEY FRINGE
record high.
Labor's top spokesman,
George Meany, president of the
13 - million • member AFL-CIO
Our World
creased Communist
terrorism
in advance of the national elec-
tion next Sunday, 5,500 South
Korean troops arrived aboard j
three US. transports at the cen-
To tell the truth, I heard differ-
ent stories about Northerners.
posing for photograph-
ers at a hotel pool, .movie actor
James Darren—vacationing here
—strolled over to the contest-
ATLANTIC CITY, NJ.—(AP)
—She’s 19 years old, stacks 36-
24-35 measurements on a 123-
pound, 5-foot-6 frame and has
brown hair and blue eyes.
And she can draw a whistle of
appreciation from any man. ants.
That Is the composite picture .SaM Miss Texas, Susan Logan
of the 50 contestants who regia- pf San Angelo, an aspiring
ter today for the opening of the Jt la a funny Afeellng
39th Miss America Pageant. «ne to be In the spotlight and to
. The girls will spend a hectic J„ame* DtrrS on the **+
ture, and angering questions f^g^ .h/ancI fauTother
fftola te*tants are listed on the P™*
S ^ K *ram at 5 feet 9>Suaan “
of spectators asking for their .,rm reauy a an inch taller
autographs. than that”
“Imagine, somebody asking Alaska, the largest state In
me for my autograph ” said the nation, has the smallest girl
Miss Tennessee, Vicki Hurd of entered She Is Nancy Wellman.
Kingsport, after she signed slips ,31, 0/ Fairbanks, who Vi feet i
of paper for three visitors. and weighs 101 pounds. She has
a 34-22-34 figure.
midnight Saturday one of
down the
Heart Pump
Patient To
Return Home
While
tome of the basic precepts of
free trade-unionism have been
challenged," Meany said in an
obvious reference to the airline*
fttror.,,
"Anyone who says he believes
in the right to strike must ac-
cept the fact that strikes will
sometimes occur,” he said.
Congress was considering leg.
islation to end the airlines strike
when the AFL-CIO Internationa]
Association of Machinists set-
tled with five airlines. There are
signs that new legislation to
deal with strikes may come up
In the next session of Congress.
Turning to economics, Meany
said It was a difficult subject for
most Americans to understand
except when It comes to "the
family budget”
~"H» llld labor wtt unfairly
catching the blame for rlalng
prices.
Government figures show that
unit labor costs have long re-
mained stable while profits
have been climbing at record
rates, he said. /
fi
From AP Wires
tra| coast port of Nha Trang.
They bolstered the six-nation
allied force, exluslve of the
more than 700,000 Vietnam**
troops, to 341,000 men.
Mishaps Plagued air opera-
i
• Two young men, Robert
flarri, 31, and Oeorga Sajeako
10, both of Chicago, are
charged with 18 count# each
ac-
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)-Meth-
odist Hospital was expected to
announce today a definite date
for’the discharge of its success-
ful artificial heart pump pa-
tient. Mrs. Esperanza del Vile
Vasquez.
Late last week the hospital
said the 37-year-old Mexico City
beautician probably would be
released today or Tesday but
said an exact discharge date
was pending.
Today marks the fourth week
Mrs. Vasques, the only
survivor of surgery fog a Me-
chanical heart pump, uhtier-'
went the operation. The tempo-
rary assistant heart wasyre-
moved. 10 days a^U; It was at-
of attempted murder follow-
for
Literature Panel
To Meet Tuesday
.
A U.S. twin-engine Army Car-
ibou transport plane crashed
%
wounded II persons,
into a Vietnamese vUlage Sun-
day shortly after taking off
from Dong Tra airfield abort *
250 mile# northeast of Saigon.
Four villagers were klUed and
20 to 25 other persons were in-
jured, tncudinf! three U.S.
• The World Journal Tri-
«
buae, lac. reaches contract
The Baytown Citizens Commit-
tee or Decent Literature win
cet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the K of C Hall, 2800 West
' i
A charter of Incorporation as
i non . profit corporation has
settlement* with the laet of Ns
£
ertft unions and plana to atari
publishing Its afternoon New
York newspaper next Monday.
Main.
A few hours later, a Zunl
rocket accidentally disharged
as it was being loaded onto a
U.S. Marine jet at Da Nang, and
hurtled Into a nearby Vietnam-
• Ben. Threaten B. Moriah
assails the Senate Democratic
since
tary of State; - “ ■
A proposed set of by-laws wjll
be presented for adoption,
manent officer* will be elected.
The nominating committee will
present a set of nominees. Nomi-
nation# for officers will also be
accepted from the. floor..
Death” will be shown.
The pubUe is invited to at-
tend th« Tuesday meeting.
> '
the resident by proposing a
air-
Per-
commltment In Earope,
field.
Mias Mississippi,
ertson of Hattiesb
Robbie Rob-
urg, had an-
surprise in store for her.
t just amazed at how
Final Clearance
IALI
Everything Goes
A
At
[0/
“Thanh for
other i
"I’m
the 50 girl* will walk
runway of Convention Hall and
be In
In its Sunday medical advi-
sory, Methodist said Mrs. Vas
■
uced to the nation .u
: V' M),
... V* V.'-
up by wag
i» a profit
simple.”
- 0
SMntw r.o.l.ft
St Net
Inflation, pure and In good 1
. , 4 |lng her activities.
and was
- ■ : .. V
■x ■
;■
»
. V;.v •;, > A'
'• * . .
\
V
• \
*
f
I
||
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 13, Ed. 1 Monday, September 5, 1966, newspaper, September 5, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145237/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.