The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 212, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 27, 1966 Page: 20 of 25
twenty five 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:
.
'
m
Wtdntiday, April 27, 1966_H»
Letter '
To The
r
'Scry Jo*
re
# Editorials And Features •
L,.
Flow.
4*’
Flavors T<
Pick From
4
Mrs.
'*
5426
Editor
Mm
;$mk
.....
OOMt
p
tbby.
- City Suffering From
Acute Lack Of Parks
I -Saw
Bay-
4i
To The Editor
The Baytown Sun
Dear Sir:
,.Several months ago in our
neighborhood, my small ton
was bitten by a dog that had
not been vaccinated. This inci-
dent has caused a great deal of
anxiety on my part and others.
I feel something should be
said and done about it. Upon
talking to the dog owner, I
found I wag faced with a situa-
tion which was to cause a lot of
stress for two days — stress
that wouldn’t have been neces-
sary had It been handled prof).
* erly in the first place, a
. The owner was only politely
concerned about my child be-
ing bitten by her family pet,
and hastened to assure me that
she would never let her own
children play with the dog if she
thought it was rabid.
I called the humane society
and this is one of the reasons
I am prompted to write this let-
|| By HENRY
Progress U wonderful,
* wouldn't lift a finger to stop h,
but there can be no denying that
progress makes some parts of
living harder, even as it makes
« things easier.
Consider, for example, the
purchase of a suit of clothes
tor summer. It used to be a
simple affair, tor "there were
only one or two kinds of light
suits available.
Most of us settled for a seer-
~ sucker; that unbelievable mate-
rial which looks gorgeous for
the first five minutes you have
it on, then takes on the appear-
ance of a tired, second-hand
dishrag with buttons and lapels.
Now, at the latest count,
there are 6,432 materials from
which lightweight summer suits
are made. And, according to the
claims, each is best, each is
lightest, ycli is most resistant
to wrinkles, rust and wear.
Space prevento listing all the
materials and combinations of
materials which now go into
summer suits. There is acri-
lon, dacrilon, vetaion,
backrilon, getllon and
of others. Nylon; pylon, rayon,
stayon. jackllon are others.
Some can be washed by sim-
ply turning on a fire hydrant
and holding them under the
stream. Others are easily
• cleaned by having the owner
stand bare-headed in a light
ram.
Others can be washed in a
teacup. Some never lose a
crease, others spring back into
shape like a downed boxer, and
some-would be unhappy if ever
placed on a hanger. ~
With such a wide choice, a
man now has to plan weeks >»
ahead to buy a suit. He must
set aside a day — two would be
better — tor the job.
He must try on hundreds of
suits, else he never would know
whether a blend of air and coal
rv~m - tar V more becoming to him
Wesley Songer, president of ^ 8 «“»**■ ft8t 8
Ingraham, admitted the senator third wool, a third cumulus
had obtained "several" clocks «J»d 8 third processed
from the company hut claimed P*rch oant,
Dodd paid wholesale prices torv .*■ ■"aw?. ™n
all but one. This had been a *1* to make a final choice for
my summer Sunday suit. My
head is in a whirl, I simply can
a.m.,
i/
! S»w
Bay-
WK
..
■Mmml8
s. i
L* '
■
.
* 'BaytoVn, Uke many other dties, is opment, adequate park facilities are a
suffering from an acute lack of public must. .... „ tr „
parks. Better park and recreational A city which loses all its green’1s a
faniiifino k ja u city in too big of a hurry. Aside from
fac hties have long been needed here. >.c its basic usefulness -- that of recrea-
With the prospective growth Bay- tion--parks add much to a city’s beau-
town is expected to *enjoy in the next-------fovaad- homeliness;
few years, this pressing situation will A joint city-school parks stydy is
become more monumental. underway in Baytown, and it is hoped
If statistics mean anything, Baytown this coniniittee cap come up with the
in the bottom bracket where parks fns^er- of 0UF school-owned
are concerned. The national average land would fill our need. It isthere.lt
for park and recreational, facilities is paid for. There is no reason, through
calls for one acre per 100 people. In th® cooperation of our school board
Baytown we have .06 pf an acre per 100 and city council, why it shouldn’t be
people. This Jeaves us short 446.3 acres, ' us?#„ „ i ' . '■ : . .
according to the city’s master plan. . “ ,a balanced parks system is to be
That’s not 10 years from now. It’s developed neighborhood type parks
right now •_________________________ —should not be overlooked. Those who
w„ hav‘ .nl,,;07o „ " are knowledgeable jn long range city
to serve the entire city” ThlfactSe a^^hoi^eeS^XZjy8
' is divided into Danubina Park, Milner
ssas s£,25 .Sftgrss tst s
■ Inland Park, the only central or city f|omfS( there are goi^ t^i peopTe!
r M i v . , . and there should be parks. A place
\ ,In March of 196o Baytonians defeat- where youngsters and oldsters alike
54.® and recreation proposal 3,* can romp and have fun.^-r———^-1---
175 to 3,096 m the capital improvement r Parks induce family outings. And
bond election The proposal called for that’s one thing this nation does not
spending $241,000, which would have have enough of. If more activities in*
-v -- bought two 20-acre sites and furnished voived the entire family, many of our'
the 29-acre city haH and community social pressures and problems could be
. . center tract with .park and playgroundeliminated. —
T equipment. . ; /... ■ .. , Development of an adequate parks
Industrial, commercial and residen- system is a major obligation of any
tial development/is the backbone of community. Areas for active and pas-
any city’s growth. Baytown is on the sive recreation are indispensible for
threshhold of a real boom in all three a wholesome, full community environ-
f. categories. But for “complete” devei- ment. '
p.ra.,
Wheel
p.m.,
lat?
/
■■v
:hlight
ay 19
(jeek
tie of
ss tor
X1 the
is
V!
4
3
[i/
&
m
*8
will
1
■d the
ter.
Pat-
They sent a representative al-
most immediately, but it was a
mere formality. He may as well v
have been checking a weather
report for all the interest he
showed. Upon my request he
went to the dog owners' home
only to find no one there. He as-
sured me he would call them
later.
I called them myself at 10:30
p.m. to try again to persuade
them to take the dog to a veteri-
narian and found they had
never heard from the humane
department.
I then called the humane de-
partment and was told that
since it had been near his quit-' _
ting time when he had talked to
me, he had decided to wait un-
Milli-
n
Vj
d col-
) Ha-
%
nacrUon,
hundreds
'
itV
ed to
"v -M
Mrs.
I De»tr
|nn
here
K
KIT
McNutt SyWWu. Ik,
iS
Washington Merry
r.
Bearers Of Gifts Beat
Path To Dodd's Door
A
]
ers.
Fortunately, the dog wasn’t ~
rabid. Due to constant pressure
and the- owners’ foresight, they
placed the dog under supervised
observation after two days. I _ .. „
' mentioned stress. The humane . By DREW PEARSON phire ring- Shortly thereafter,
socie&t did.not do their job In and JACK ANDERSON she lost the stone out of the ring.
iaSS proved indifferent • WASHINGTON v Ever« since . ^ask^PWMr.^ , new
to the situation. The representa- _ Harry Truman rfecepted i deep sapphire, which he got
• - tive informed me there had freeze there has been njuch.dis- Sen- Dodd tried to have Par-
been no rabid dogs, in Baytown cussion of gifts to public offi- ser appointed UrS, ambassador
since the 1950’s and evidently -c .cials, but generally the discus- to Belgium, later U.S; ambas-
this was sufficient for him. sion has been one-sided. sador to Uixembourg. Parser
From a casual glance at my It’ has been about Democratic W8s more, successful in supply-
son’s back,, he deducted the Presidents, not Republicans; and ing sapphires than Dodd was in
marks to be scratches rather about members of the executive securing either .one of two am-
than bites, which was exactly branch of government not con- bassadorial appointments,
backwards. gressmen. ■ FOOTWEAR — Most of the
■ Mso. he told me he was, pow- , to*
By FULTON LEWIS JR. -rate figures. Subsequent ipvesti- qf..the vote in Calh- * f to .4o .anything since the
- Art*.* to* oeieentm that QuieT" erine May’s Washington district ^8if i were" to take°hk word Truman ^ 8 MUwaukee con-
*. erty officials reacted predict- actually understated the Feder- ana 45 cem nf the vote in tn, <» r h.7* t, r! T tractor in 1946, through HST’s
• V" ably last month when House at funds dished out to Peyton’s n tor it, I would have believed a military aide, Gen. Hany
^ . ^Republicans questioned the use firm. - Ed Gurney s Florida baliwick. rep sentative that not only did Vaughan. More recently, a ster-
of the Kanawha Hotel for a Boutin claimed that the OEO Seven out-ol-elght voters in „0 notXTw^oveS eo set valued al[around13800 was
“ ........Women s Job Corps 'Center in . had spent oniy $187.0000 reno- Gurney’s Hth :-GM!gtmionai )t govern given to President Johnson by
. Charleston, W. Va. vating the hotel. Cold figures District (Orlando, Cape Kenne- Ordinance No 338 of the Citv an insurance salesman through HAIRDRYERS - Mrs, Dodd
Rep. Albert H. Quie (R.- supplied by the Bureau of the dy, Cocoa Beach) now voice dis- Baytown states in Section TE, 8 then Senate secretary, Bobby Q^ral EtoctHi^or^a
Minn.) discovered that the run- Budget disclosed that 3345,000 approvai of the AdministraUon. "Dogs must be vaccinal rt ^ ,, ^ „ h. , mTmZ men^ he dry!
down hotel was owned by An- ha* been spent refurbishing the Gn specific issue th the age of tw0 months, re-va- flfts bec8me sub^ect er* arrived she liked them Z>
gu* Peyto^ a prominent West Kanawha., - .7, . the far on Poverty (b^W), cinated at 12 month* and an- of Senate inquiries and tremen- tert ^ foHto?
Virginia Democrat who is the Boutin said further that the repeal of Taft - Hartley section nually thereafter.” This is stat- dous national interest. The ^]f gnd one to a frjend
- Kanawha Hotel offered "The 14b (5-1), and increased trade ' ed again in Section H. nws was splashed all over the,. TELEVKION SET
meree. An arrangement enter- very best deal that could be with the Soviet Union (3-1). Section six: Rabies Notice: f Pages' , . , was gjven to the senator-bv
ed into by’Sargent Shriver's Of- BOtten ’’ He said that facilities . „ „ , „ 'If-a doe has bitten anv riersnn -Milch greater immunity has ’Las given 10 me senator oy
■He. Of Economic Onoortunitv g?“en’ saw mat tacuines Voters in Mrs. May’s, Fourth J ^ been Iriven to vifts to members Florence Lowe, an executive of
flee or economic upportunny at four other hotels “were very Congressional District (Yakima the owner of said dog shall noti- oeen given to guts to memDers Metromedia TV stations at the
guaranteed the Kanawha Hotel carefullv looked at” and found wnpessicmai uistnct uakima, . „ Health ’Office* of Congress. Almost never do ™etromeai;a tv stations at tne
Co. an annual income of 394,- waning Walla Walla) demand a reduc- J ™ ?ty Health Officer they investigate themselves. «me DoddwasinvesUgatingvio-
800 althoueh the hotel is worth wanung’ tion m foreign aid (by ' .an(: sMch aog snail be confined wowever toe law aDDlies to lence on television, Dodd there-
no more than SZZOOO Investigation by Quie indicates postponement of Great Society *? ^etci^,doet {or a ^ thZ Z’ well as to Stive after gava Mrs. Lowe’s son a
that this is not so. Officials-of welfare program* (5-1), and a ~t° u °i, ea,S,! 10 days’ ?r ’ officials and the courts have J°b on his subcommittee staff,
the four hotels denied categori- full - scale probe of the anti- a* ruled that gifts must be count- also ordered bis. aides to stop ,
mirn had exores^cnv P^rty program (10-1). . s'hall'teconhneTat fveb ed a? Smi^LtioTif the reel- . investigation of Metro-
in leasing their facilities. In erina^ hos.Pital torthe same £ ^TSo^drSw ic- ""wALL-TOWALL - This; rich
fact, the principal stockholder AmeS tr^Ps to combal the hme at the expense teen amili^ blue carpeti’ng ih^^ Dodd’s^^^ coun-
eml^toe ’S£3L t^reSiontloito "The health of- ‘XT®?^y piace at North Stonington,
been interested m renUng to the. Viet Nam Three out of four section seven lhe health of- f vacations Conn:, came from New London
OEO but was never approach- Voters.nGurney’s disfrict, Z- - -// l ^ .....A /' . - -
Dodd'has ^boasted to aide! that
thin ‘ tratl'on take more decisive steps °fWhat 3"“' these law, it tions "tor any services rendered ** carPeti"« cost h'm ing- *
to the OEO for much less than to ^ ^ war What^good jn re]atfong t0 any proced. He arranged a presrtentlal par-
By a mafrgin of 4-1, Gurney’s Red! conscientious representa- ing, contract, claim contfover- d°"eat rp^st
ssarsiSKW
’ presumably military and indus- ruling .of. leaving the dog with
feal targets. And by 5-1, they the dog owners for observation. NEITHER PRESIDENT Tru- column, insisted that Dodd had
indorse a blockade of the vital fo truth, Wis law can be manip- man nor President Johnson gave
North Vietnamese port of Hai- ulated to protect the dog rather any service for their celebrated
phone. than the injured party.- gifts. This has not always been
. For example, Who suffers of me?1,bers 01 Congress,
should some children release Unquestionably the most notor-
the dog from his back yard ious gif{ - taker has been Sen.
wWleTndeVpbseiyation? TOere Tom D^o d d, D - Conn., and a
would be no chance of; this in check - up on his gifts shows
a pound or vet hospital. What *at he has sometimes rendered
will it take for something to be service. Incidentally, we do not
done about If? belleve the great maJ°rlty of
A dead child or even one that other senators engage in this
has to take the painful rabies practice. Here is part of the
shots because of incompetents ■ G°dd record : , • •
will be a tragic beginning. SAPPHIRE RING -4- Edgar
f 7 Mrs. R. B. Morgan Jr. Parser, New York diamond
1601 Alabama
Fulton Lewis Speaks-
pany'g new plant in Bristol*
Arrangement/ Makes
4'
gift
Hotel Money-Makers
SILVERWARE - Ralph Ber- ,
tinni, recently retired president »°f decide between a mixture of -
of International Silver, acknow- fern and acetate, and a light
ledged the company had replat- Sray that has as its ingredients
HSiSi SSawafs
OLDSMOBILE — We reported a brick when not worn. They
earlier that Dunbar Associates both can be washed in a running
supplied Dodd with an air-con- stream and ten minutes later
ditioned Olds in 1964. A new an- look a* if they had just come
gle has now developed, namely out of the showcase,
a brand new 1966 Olds has been They are resistant to mulber-
delivered to the senator. It is ry stains, cigarette burns, hot
still registered in the company’s fondue and buttermilk,
name. Dodd has secured govern- Wearing them, you are at ;
ment contracts for Dunbar As- home in church, theatre, dog
sociates. show, rowboat or on skis.
U
-
the tariff was cut on the impor-
tation of foreign footwear, Sen.
Dodd vigorously opposed the
cut
■“e
This *
utyr Sagtmim &mt
Fred Hartman .......
James H. Hale .......
Preston Pendergrass ,
Beulah Mae Jackson ..
Bill Hartman .........
Ann B. Pritchett .................................
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
......... Editor and Publisher
............. General Manager
......:...... Managing Editor
.. Assistant To The Publisher
... Assistant To The Publisher
“In addition to the 40 per cent
guaranteed annual profit," Quie
said, “more than 3225,000 in Fe-
deral funds to renovate the
building and these improve-
ments would accrue to the K4-
, nawha Hotel Co."
Bernard Boutin,. OEO’s deputy
John Wadley .
Paul Butman .
Corrie Laughlin
Entered as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas, 77521 Post
Office under the Act of Congress of March S, 1*79.
"* and*^ndays 6y ’rife hriryuiwirt^MMC* »
at 1301 Memorial Drive in Baytown, Texas.
Retail Manager
National Manager
P. O. Box *08, Baytown 77520
Rates
119.20 per Year*
Subscription
By Carrier 31.50 Month.
Mall rate* on requart
Represented Nationally By
Newspaper Representatives, Inc.
rant or tbs associated
Tto Anoclstsd PTSMli «HU«1 «*ftlst*Wjr to th» on lor rapuUleatlon of
say news dlepstchee credited to It or not otherwise credited' la this paper sad
local news at spontaneous ortfia published herein. Rights of repuSliccUou at
all other antler herein are also tees reed.
the 394,800 rental on the Kana-
wha. . -7': ■ ■ ’
Bible Verse
Texas
TWO GOP Congressmen have
COMETH THIS blessedness then
upon the circumcision only, ..or polled their constituents and
upon the .uncircumcision also? found them in profound ^is-
for iw say that faith was agreement with Administration
reckoned to Abraham tor right- programs. Less than two years
eousness. Romans 4:9 ’ ago, Lyndon Johnson received
i
paid the wholesale price for the .
carpeting. Asked how the pay-
ment was made, Symon replied
“by personal check.” When Sy-
mon was told there wag no rec-
ord in Dodd’s accounting of a
check to Symdn, he shouted, “It
Is none of your G— d— busi*
ness!" and hung up the phone.
CLOCKS t- The senator, a col-
lector of clocks, has a large'
number in his North Stonington
home from the Ingraham Qo.,
which sent him a catalogue and
told him to take his pick. Dodd
arranged a 31,000,000 area de-
velopment loan for the com -
■
4
' l
SOUTH VIETNAMESE authori-
ties last week deported six
American leftist* who had as-
sailed U.S. policy and announ-
ced plans to picket the. U.S.
Embassy in Saigon. Leader of
the delegation was the Rev. A.
J. Muste, an octogenarian paci-
fist who has long fronted for
the Communists, according to
FBI Director J. .Edgar Hoover.
One of the six Americans was
William Davidon, chairman of
the Haverford College physics
department. Davidon has an-
nounced his Intention not to pay
Federal Income taxes in protest
U.S; policy in South
Know Your Bridge
—-- By B. Jay BECKER-
Daily Crossword Puzzle /
--KING FEATURE-
i
!'
rounds' of dubi, discarding a
diamond when East ruffs the
third club with the queen. East
must now be sure to return a
low diamond, not the king—for.
if he leads the king, the suit
gets blocked and South makes
the contract
Actually, East has all th# In-
formation he needs to justify a
fow diamond return. He knows
that South started with precise-
ly two spades, five hearts, two
dubs and, therefore, four dia-
monds. East’s only hope of de-
feating the contract lies in his
partner’s having the ace of dia-
monds and in cashing three dia-
mond tricks in a hurry. Accord-
ingly, he returns the diamond
deuce.
' South dealer.
Neither side vulnerable.
A R Tig LrtAjQ ■ S
M A M
23. Greek
letter
25. Half
an em
27. Asurite
29. Ra-
4. Stud
horses
5. Guards
6. Land
ACROSS
”1. Tumbler
6. Afloat
11. Eagles
- nest ...
12. Rascal
13. Memorise
14. Trades
-— 15. Articles-qf
value
17. Tastes
•1 slightly
18. Perches
20. One of the
leagues:
A
A
NORTH
♦ AK
V A J82
#964
+ AKJ10
’ NJ
A
I
T
■
/;
A
measures
7. Wolf
whistles
of a
—sort—-—-
8. Once more
? 9. Furnished
10. One of <
Hitlers
henchmen
16 Railroad
stop: abbr. 39. Entitles
19. Conjecture 40. One of a
famous
couple
NC
I
P
I
1 K 0 T
5Mna
T5
»r
dium:
dealer, gave Mrs. Dodd a sap-
EAST
WEST
sym
f If
;
31: To-
ward j
34. Japa-
nese
outcast
37. Fine line
of a letter
" #>8742
# Q10 6 3 ”
T Q 10 9
# K Q 7 2
*72
SOUTH
aaaaa aaaau
aassa aaaa
#6
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
: ‘ "•• • • ■ ■ ■* ■ - ;«r ■■
6y RUTH RAMSEY
Control Press Writer
# A10
*98653
TnMtr’i Ameer
against
Viet Nam.
43. Town
dwellers of
Turkestan
44. Cowi
45. Biblical
name
41. Denomina- 47. Eye in-
flammation
*95
paign he forced the surrender
of Gen. Robert E. Lee at Ap-
pomattox Court House, ending
the Civil War.
Twice elected president,
though both terms were tainted
with scandal, graft and corrup-
tion, Grant retired, made a
world tour, and lost his for-
tune. Aided by Mark Twain he
wrote hla "Personal Memoirs,’’
finishing the manuscript only a
few days before he died of
throat cancer.
Others bom this day are in-
ventor Samuel F. B. Morse,
chemist Philip Abeison, writer
Ludwig Bemelmans, Hungarian
patriot Louis Kossuth, base-
ball’s Enos Slaughter.
... j.'?,,.
BORN TODAY
.Union Civil War general and
18th president of the U.S.,
Ulysses Simpson Grant was
bom at Point Pleasant, Ohio in
1822. The son of a farmer, he
graduated
from We at
Point in 1843,
served in the
Mexican War
and retired
from the Army
in 1854.
H e failed,
thereafter, in
various civil-
ian occupa-
tions, and
when the Civil
War broke
0 u t, rejoined
Illinois Volunteers. After cap- thief. — Ahou
turing Forte Henry and Donel-
son, he was promoted to ma- f .
Jor general. He woo the Battle
r.nm.ri „„ i„i„ a A’ nduTat^T favorable day. ^defMt^be Cohfederat4i| 2. Horn of plenty.
paMenger railroad on Julj 4, ........ rtna*)’ Tni'i »T Cm3. The Louv.r, .
______ Todav’* will be command of all the Union ar- 4. Crete.
(Nmswtr t»t«rpfi»« AnMietiM) waa.. TIT» mi(t< xfter a year-long cam- 6. U.S.S. Panay.
THE ANSWER, QUICK!
1. Who wai John Dewey?
2. What la the literal meaning
of cornucopia?
3. In what museum is the
“Winged Victory of Samoth-
race”?
4. What Mediterranean teland
was t pre-Hellenic seat of a
high civilisation?
5. Name the U.S. Navy gun-
boat sunk in the Yangtze River
by the Japanese prior to World
Warn.
K?843
J85 3
!
abbr
21. Butt
24. Back of ,
the neck
26. American
moth
28. Harden
SOTEnroll
32. Close to
33. Man's
nicknsme
35. Poem
36. Part of
"to he”
38. Stupefy '
40. Anthroppids
42. Where
QUICK QUIZ
Q—What two nations make
up Tanzania?
A—Tanganyika and Zanzi-
Q4
21. Narrow
inlet
The bidding:
South Weet North East
22. Exact
opposite
tion
i
Pass Pass
The burden of defense then
Peso 4«
Opening lead—four of spades.
This hand was played In the
Intercollegiate Par Tournament
in 1963. North-South were ex-
pected to arrive at four hearts
and East-West were expected
to ,defeat the contract. The di-
rected opening lead was the
1
i- js U
rr~H1*
1#
shifts to West, who must be
careful not to win the
with the ten after declarer {days
low. Winning the trick with the
bar
:
r
Ys
Q—What is the origin of
the expression, “Sow your
wild oats"?
A—Wild oats are a weed
similar in appearance to oats
but completely worthless
a youngster "sowing his wild
oats’" is wasting his time on
fruitless activities, just as a
man would if he were to plant
a field of wild oats.
:
To
ace may seem unnatural, since
the trick can be won with the
W
ten, but it is the right
neverthelee*. West also Is
position to assess the situation
accurately. ’
He knows that South started
with five hearts, two clubs, awl
of the
ft
i
wmM4mw/Mw//A
So
IT HAPPENED TODAY
On this day la 1941, Athens,
Greece, fell to German Invaders.
\
■\ i
four of spades by Weot
■V ■«
[27
Declarer wins the spade in
dummy, plays a heart to the
king followed by a heart to the
ace, West showing out and dis-
many are
cold but few
are frozen
46. Drills
48, With full
49. Manifesto
" 50. kind of
i
(from East’s play t
four diamonda. He
)
3
IT'S IEIN SAID
WATCH YOU*IANOUAOI
mwmmmmmmmj
mm\
{
qm rf L-J o 4k« . . —
' pyreif wumi
GNOfflS — (NG-sis)'—BOun;|Ute
a knowledge of spiritual things;
mystical knowledge.
diamond tricks can be won
right away, the contract will be
' He therefore takes the
For whatever It is worth, this
discard tells East that West
started with precisely five
spades, and, hence, that declarer
Declarer now lead* three
w. ' - Y* frt9.laurir.se
en to
r
r
service inaugurated
railroads?
Ameri-
4»
roof
can
HOM'D YOU MAKE OUT?
2
A—The Baltimore and Ohio
RUhfbid published the first
.
51. Southpaw
52. CSiemicaJ
compound ■ 1
ms-- WTHEfcatea SiiteS Eass .aste
' 1. Festive
2. Dregs
3. Macaws
YOUKIUnM
dut
1. A
±
V.
Ta
mm m
tm
■
w.
5r
mm
-
:
•v-
.
. _ .
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. 43, No. 212, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 27, 1966, newspaper, April 27, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145306/m1/20/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.