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The Baytown Sun from Baytown, Texas • Page 2

Publication:
The Baytown Suni
Location:
Baytown, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VtgtMM Thunday, June 7, 1962 Houston City Council a sewer service charge and proves four-hour discussion. Sewer service charge on 5-3 vote. K. H. Anderson, Sweden's con- sal ta Houston, and hto wife entertain civic, trade and port officials and members of consular corps at a reception at their home, QUO Bryn Mawr Lone, Houston.

Two summer training Institutes tor high school teachers being held at the University of Houston. They are an institute for high school teachers of mathematics and a counseling and guidance training institute. Gas E. Shelton convicted of murder In the tdUiag ot his girl friend and given seven years in the pentitenfiary. The verdict given seven in Criminal District Judge ArnoJd H.

Kridhamer's court. Vaughn M- Bryant, director ot international relations for the Fort of Houston, to make an intensive tour of European countries next month, to solicit on behalf the Port of Houston and the Navigation District. District Attorney Teds New Data In McClelland Probe HOUSTON (Sp) New information in the probe by District Attorney Frank Briscoe concerning the operations of the Probate Court and Judge Clem McClelland, revealed that McClelland and a real estate investment syndicate have jointly registered a Cadillac sedan. The officers of the syndicate Terra Grande, have all been subpoenaed by Briscoe to appear June 14 before a court of inquiry to be conducted by Justice of the Peace W. C.

Ragan. McClelland says the 1559 Cadillac was purchased for the use of the officers of the investment company arid added that he is not an officer of the company or a stockholder, but be hold an option to purchase stock. Briscoe said all the Terra Grande officers have acted as attorneys, administrators or appraisers Jn probate matters under McClelland's jurisdiction. SPECIAL for FRIDAY REG49c OPEN TROUT 39c BROWN'S CHICKEN SHACK E. Texas Hwy.

1M NOW SHOWING THRU SATURDAY THE BIGGEST 2-FOR-1 COMBINATION FAMILY OFTHEYEARrT A BMtt NEW CARTOON FHnjRBTEl We Students 60c FTV 35C Homicide H. V. Hickman announces the death of John Edward Nyjmrd, whose decompowsd body found Jy- In," partly uwWe railway culvert in Houston, MMOU to have been a wicide. Four new "dded to Houston Attorney Frank Briscoe's "most list They are Francis Theodore Barnes, 18; Elmer Jack Boney, of Baytown, 25; Kenneth Jumper, 31, and Felix G. SUva, 31.

and for the flwt runway at the Jetro Intercontinental Airport approved by Houston City Council. Houston's summer school enrollment 14 per cent over last year's as 17.M5 register first day. Members of the Texat Academy of General Practice will hold a seminar on psychiatry in Houston with three Texat apec- ialistg upeakers. Foster Parker, vice president of Brown and Boot, waa named the new president of Junior Achievement of Houston, Inc. He fncceeds Charles W.

Alcorn. Linda BlrdweU, 3, la 3tth traffic fatality In Houston. Car ine was riding In was Involved In an accident on the 9900 block of Homestead Boad. Three other of her family nertous- ly Injured. George L.

Martin, principal of Ball High School in hired principal ot South Houston High School in a split vote by the Pasadena School Board. W. H. (Bill) Brmwley, deputy postmaster general, will be the main speaker at the dedication of the new fU million Houston port office at 12:30 p.m. Friday.

Expansion fund campaign ot the II Young Women's Christian Association passes the halfway mark with and contributions totaling million. They have a million goal. Harry Lewty, new British consul, arrives In Houston and is staying at the Warwick Hotel. He replaces Henry (Pat) Nib- loch, recently appointed British charge d'affaires at Port au- Prince, Haiti. Joe Foindexter, present Position 1 councilman flics for election for vacated position 4.

Pautdeoder declined to seek reelection in Position 1 when William H. Bcusc, a former councilman, flted lor that post The reverse freedom rides for Negroes to the North criticised by speaker at the Annual Conference of the Methodist Church In Houston. Houston City Council refuses to adopt ordinance giving contract to Los Angeles firm to operate gift concession at the Houston International Airport. Dr. John Reckless, British psychiatrist, who will become a U.

S. cltiien next year, tells more than MO Houston Chamber of Commerce members he sincerely feels putting medical care for the under government sponsored Social Security will lead to a lower level of medical care. Houston City Council votes unanimously to ncccpt the offer ot a new million auditorium for the performing arts. Stock Quotes (Courtesy, MwriH Lynch, Pierce, Fenntr and Smith Uleg Ludlum Mlis-Chalmers Uuminium Ltd taier Cyan Un Photo Copy Tel Tel 109, toi Visco Inaconda Cop jmco tt Tp SF -23 Baxter Lab 22 Jeth Steel Jelotex Chrysler Ities Serv Gas reole -34 telta AirL tomondAlk )ow Chem JuPont Eastman Kodak El Paso ord 86 oremost Dairies reeport Sulp en Electric Jen Tele en Tire eorgia Pac illetteSaf 37 oodyear Tire reyhound ulf Oil ulf State Util ustin-Bac 28 Land FO 4 Int'l Harv 51 jit'l Min No Sale ut'l Nickel ones Laugh err-McGee Libby McN 12 iggett and Myers Lockheed 41 Louis Land rtonsanto Pan Am Defends Tennis Crown Noon Call EVER HAPPEN TO YOU? Klof 1J62. World rithU ntvnd.

Janet Leigh Separation Is Talk Of Hollywood Tat Dairy Prod 58 atDist 26 ewp News hioOil 39 lin-Math ttis Elev ancoastalOil Pfizer arke-Davis Morrij 74 Phillips Petr Pure Oil Dutch Safeway By BOB THOMAS Af Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD knew it 1 vas going to be rough, but I iidn't think it would be this ough." This was Janet Leigh talking ibout the bustup of her marriage Tony Curtis. What she had to say gives testimony to the diffi- culty'of making marriage work in Hollywood and especially of of healing one that has suffered break. "It should be a matter between Tony and me," she comfented, Shell indair Socony-Mob Sou Pacific 24 perry-Rand Calif tanlnd itan i 51 tan Ohio 52 Stanley-Warner Stude-Packard 7 Sun Oil 46 Sunray-Mid Cont 35 Tennessee Gas 'exas Co 52 'CMS Eastern 16 'exas Gulf Prod Gulf Sulp 13 7 Tidewater Timken 'rans Am Corp Union Carbide 95 Un Oil of Calif United Airlines United Carbon Upjohn Druj; U. S. Steel Westinghouse Xerox 1H New Orl Cotton Up 7 Dn II Common Market Is Becoming Big News By SAM DAW80N AP BiMiraH News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)-The Common Market's impact on the rest of the world is suddenly mushrooming all over the front pages.

A small trade war is threatened between the trading bloc and the United States over carpet and glass tarifs on our part and certain chemicals, paints and textiles on the Part of the six European nations. Australia, New Zealand, Canada, India, are protesting the possible loss to them if Britain joins the Common Market at the expense of abandoning preferential treatment for nations of the British Commonwealth. Even the Communist countries are debating in Moscow today how to counteract the growing power of the Common Market in Western Europe trade. that is crippling their The impact is felt on political as well as trade policies, on domestic as well as foreign programs. The U.

S. Congress is deep in a tarif debate. The central question: how beat the United can deal with the Common Market threat or take advantage of its promise of expanded trade if we cooperate. Involved are such things as the drain of our gold supply, our wage and price policies as they afect our export prospects, and the division of powers between the President and the Congress. The British government may face a political crisis as opposing parties take sides, even split amongst themselves, on the commonwealth problem.

Soviet policies may well be affected. Much of the Common Market inroads involve trade with the satellites rather than with Russia itself. The Soviet Union has been selling crude oil and certain types of steel to Western Europe ai prices well below what its satellites must pay. In all parts of the world, including the Common Market itself, the current problems are fluid. It is this uncertainty as to the final direction that upsets business and politicians most.

For the Common Market isn't a complete thing yet by any means. Quarrels over treatment of agricultural products still divide the six Italy, West Germany, Belgium, Th Netherlands and Luxembourg. And still very much in doubt is what progress they may make towards some form of political as well as trade unity. Age-old national and- racial differences are proving hard to surmount. Also the glamorous progress of the Common Market toward industrial prosperity in the last few years may well be slowing down.

The growth rate isn't as great now as a couple of years ago. Wages, and particularly fringe benefits, are rising, and in time this could impair some of the price advantage that Common Market goods have had in world trade. But for all its unsolved problems and the uncertainties about its final form, the Common Market is a very solid fact today. The current danger is that failure to come to terms with it on tariffs, import quotas and currency or other trade barriers could divide the Western world into war- ling trade European group, the United States and perhaps its Western Hemisphere nations, a Far Eastern bloc. It's this danger that spices the political debates on both sides of the Atlantic, both sides of the Pacific, and perhaps within the walls of the Kremlin.

Pipe Line Firm Promotes Higgs Kenneth E. Higgs has been promoted to Station Foreman 'A', Baytown, with Service Pipe lane Co. according to J. H. Keyes manager.

The promotion was effective May 20. Higgs has been a resident of Baytown two years. He lives with his wife, Jean, and three children, Donald, Terry Ann and Christine Sue, at 2805 Kettering Drive. He has been employed by Service, operator and part owner of the Bayou Pipe Line System, 21 years. SAM'S STRIP IT TOOK OVEP AM1LUOUVEN2S TO flASVE OUT THIS CAVERU DECKER NOW SHOWING HOLDOVER! KANSAS CITY (AP) Par American College of Texas, it team bolstered by foreign aid opened defense oi its national ten nis championship today against other small colleges.

Top-seeded in the singles of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics tournament is Pan-Am's Jerry Wortelboer of Buenos Aires. The second seed is Don Russell ot Melbourne, Australia, also a Pan Am player. Wortelboer and Russell are seeded first in the doubes. Strongest challengers to Pan American appear to be Pepperdine of Los Angeles, St Ambrose of Iowa and Bellarmine of Ken- Underwriters To Hear Banker Talk Don E. Sproul, trust officer the Houston Bank and Trust Co.

will be guest speaker at the las summer meeting of the Baytown 2iapter of the National Associa don of Life Underwriters at noo Friday at the Tower. Sproul graduated from the Un versity of Cincinnati receiving degrees in Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws and was admitted to the Ohio Bar in 1941 and the Texas Bar in 1960. He was a private corporation lawyer, served four years as a special agent of the FBI, was a professor of business and law subjects and practiced law in Dayton, 0., more than 10 years. For the past three-and-a-half years he has been employed as trust officer at the Houston Bank and Trust Co. Sproul is a member of numerous organizations In Houston.

Memo (Continued From Page 1) much about going to college. You bought more about graduating from high school and getting a ob and that's what you did, with the exception of the brief it studying at Lee time you College in After you graduated from REL, you applied through a classified ad to a Baytown concrete firm a job without letting anyone tnow about it, not even your Mom. The company called you to report for work without bothering with an interview. You worked there until Richard got out of service. One of your hobbies when you were a youngster was sewing.

You made doll clothes and later "graduated" to larger sizes for yourself. You still make some of your own clothes and you're quite an expert in needlecraft. You use your sewing machine to make decorative items for the house. As an example of your ability with the needle and the sewing machine, the other day you made a sure womenfolk know what that don't); embossed jars and hamburgers for a patio table Richard bought for you. Your home has a part of you in it because you helped design it, having worked closely with the architect.

Everything is just as you pictured it in your mind long before you met Richard and de cided to get married. You had hashed over the plans many times in your mind and on paper between home chores while you wore still in high school. Another domestic chore you en joy (although it isn't a chore to you) is cooking. Before you were old enough to do more than lick ie big spoon that stirred the ake batter, you used to sit on ie kitchen cabinet and watcl our Mom, who is also a dandj Sticklers Going To Spokane Meet Mr and Mn. W.

J. (Bill) Strickler will leave Saturday for Spokane, to attend the Associated Credit Bureaus of American International conference June 22-30. Strickler is a national director from Texas and serves on the marketing committee and institute committee. This year will complete his sixth year as a national jfficer. He plans to retire from offices at a national level and devote more time to local and state cred it Bureaus of Texas and is pas president of the Retail Merchants Association of Texas.

Mr. and Mrs. Strickler will return to Baytown about July 6 They will visit the credit bureaus in El Paso, Phoenix, Fresno Victoria British Columbia Colorado Springs and Pueblo, Colo Masaqfk Statue Tom Down By Communists VIENNA, Austria (AP) Th last remaining statue of Thoma Masaryk has been removed from Communist Czechoslovakia, th country he helped to found, diplomatic sources reported. Masaryk became the Czechoslovak republic's first president in 1H8. The statue at Lanzhot was at end of 1961.

xok. Right, Cecil? One favorite dishes is hrimp. You have learned to pre- are it in many appetizing ways and your friends who have tastec think you could make some noney off your recipes. You are a devoted churchgoe and are affiliated with Second Baptist in Highlands where you erve as pianist. You have been ilaying the piano since you were jig enough to reach the key ward, and the folks who sing tc music on Sundays think 5 wonderful.

The folks who work with yoi Bumble's Research and De- 'elopment Center also think you'r a fine person, and your immedi ite supervisor doesn't know wha he would do without you. can't find anything when you'r not on the job and he can't seem get any work out of the way He objected strenuously when the made you a job offer at a citj council meeting the other nigh as the city manager's secretary You worked in a Baytown doc tor's office before going to wor at the refinery and you loved ev ery minute of it mainly because you like people and ar meticulous when it comes to tails. Since you were born in Baytown and your folks later moved Highlands, that gives us a claim on you as a native daughter. but it isn't Everybody wants to ut in their two cents. Everybody as a different gtory.

I'm astounded by some of the things I bear us. I can't seem to convince that we separated for the easons we gave at the time." When Curtis moved out of the family home March 17, the pair announced they had been having roblems for some time and hoped work them out They declared other parties were involved. The rumor factory took no heed, ossips reported that Frank Sinatra was the new No. 1 man In life. Someone printed re- ently that they would wed.

I haven't even seen Frank for vo months," she commented. It's ridiculous. I've been linked with men I've scarcely met" As for Curtis, the rumors con- entrate on Christine Kaufman, iis young leading lady in "Taras 3ulba." She is now in Europe making a film while he is work- ng here. 'I made a ipecial trip to New York to talk to the fan magazines," Janet continued. "I wanted them to hear my side of the tory so they would get it straight, "hey printed what I told them, all ight, but they also included ev- rything piece of gossip they could get their hands on." Oddly, Janet shows little bitter- 3ss about her experiences since ie break.

It's more of a wonderment "I didn't realize what going through a separation in this town would be like," she said. "I was ivorced before (from college weetheart Stanley Reames in 1948). But I didn't have much of a name then, and there wasn't much fuss." She said she has tried to maintain as normal an existence as possible. One thing she has tried avoid is the splitting up of riends into two factions, often happens in marital splits. I see no reason why our riends have to take one side or another," she remarked.

"They can see Tony one night and me another night." Janet has been escorted to a ew filmland events by an old beau, Arthur Loew himself separated from Tyrone Power's widow. But her schedule has left ittle time for dating. She went directly from "The Manchurian Candidate" (opposite Sinatra) to to "Bye Bye Birdie," for which she has some strenuous dance routines. "Then I may do a picture in Durope in October," she said. 'But if Tony and I are back together by then, I won't go." Iy Mort Jerry Dumas (MS PROFESSOR PHUMBU Yotei HEVJ WHAT KIND OF ANSWER IS NOTHING OH THIS I XDOESN'T TIMES WHEM HIS MIND ISA PERFECT NUBBIN iy Jim Burnett George Crondol MOUTONGOOP NOW, PONT SET ANP DON'T YOU fVTANYFROSSINYOUR AU.RICHT,VOU CO BUT STAY OUT OP Bears, Rangers Split On 41 Runs By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver and Dallas-Fort Worth split a pair of high scoring American Association games Wednesday night as the Bears took the opener 12-10 and the Texas club the nightcap 16-3.

Indianapolis edged Oklahoma 3ty 4-3 and Louisville dropped Dniaha 5-1. Dallas-Fort Worth 10 runs in the first four innings but scored 12 in the sixth inning, when 16 Denver batters faced three Ranger pitchers. George Wilson started the big inning with a two-run homer. It ended with Gates Brown's three-run homer. In the second game the Texans pounded out 20 hits and scored eight runs in the third inning.

PIANO SALE! A Carload of Brand-New Wurlitztr kJA ftJQUFV DOWN SPINET PIANOS PM1E1 Wurlltier Planet are sold than those of any other name I a reeuonl It'i the finest Bteno built! Full standard Um, Kioto, beautiful finish. 557 With Tradi Op 175 a Week! Yts, payments LESS than rent wt carry our own nattt. NOBODY SELLS PIANOS or ORGANS For Lb. an 222 E. Texas Baytown Mays Phone 5829314 1EETLE BAILEY Mart Waflctr MAYBE THEY STOLE THEIR IDEAS FROM BETTER TOYS THAN WE HE'S TO FIND OUT FIPST THE RUSSIANS AHEAP OF HIM, ANP NOW CAPE CANAVERAL I CANT BLAME THE 66NERAL IS PISCOURA6EC? WITH OUR ROCKET PROGRAM BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH Golf Tournament DEADLINE for entries in the Scramble Tournament at the Goose Creek Country dub will be 5 p.m.

Saturday. The tournament, held for members of the club, will begin at 12 noon Sunday. There is a 51 entry fee. ftrtffled PuWic Ac- ten uTtHtd to the Texas of OPS convention Jane 17 at flic Rice jp Houston. TEEN DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT 8 tM.

VOLUNTEER FIRE STATION NO. 1 LEE MOVE 1 NAZM ST. IATTOWN MUSIC IT TK PERRY HATES COMO ADMISSION S1.M MY DADBURN LOLLY-POP THAR VE BE, LEETLE FELLER THANKY, DOCTOR BUT AIN'T VE FER60T SOMETH1N 1 DOCTOR? DOCTOR WILLVEWROP'UP MYSORE FIN6ER? MICK MADFORD.

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About The Baytown Sun Archive

Pages Available:
175,303
Years Available:
1949-1987