The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 112, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1971 Page: 2 of 22
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THE BAYTOWN SUN
Friday, February 5, l»71
People's Lobby May
Be Organized In Texas
AUSTIN (Spl - Ramsey I u.S. Rep. Bob Eckhardt and
dark, former U.S. attorney state Sen. Barbara Jordan of
general, will make the key note Jnoustop and Sute Sen
•*tdre*.austat«w** —j (Bernal of San Antonio
of people interested in u*Clark originally from Texas
a People’* Lobby in Austin
Sunday.
The conference is an or-
ganisational meeting called by
and who was U.S. attorney
general under President John-
son, will address the luncheon
session. The meeting will start Thursday in a hospital here. A
Funeral
Notices
MRS. EDNA WESTBRdflk
Ftnwal services will be held
J<* at 2 pun Saturday at Cedar
Bayou United Methodist
Church for Mrs. Julia Edna
Busch Westbrook, 88, of 3307
Highway U6.
Mrs. Westbrook died
KIDDIE SHOW
SATURDAY
MORNING
Box Office
Open*
IJA.M
Show
Start!
ie»A.M
• CAXTOONS
2 COMEDIES
PLUS THIS
FEATURE
THE FOUR CLOWNS
LAUREL & HARDY
CHARLEY CHASE
BUSTER KEATON
10 -50c PIECES
GIVEN AWAYI
CONTEST ON STAGE
JACKPOT DRAWING
at 10 am. at the Villa Capri
Motel and will conclude with
the luncheon session at 1 pm
Eckhardt described the
organization as an issue-
oriented group “We want
everyone in the state who is
willing to work for progressive
legislation at all levels of
government to attend this
meeting,” Eckhardt said.
“Too often we have seen
good legislation fail because
people were not organized be-
hind a bill,” Eckhardt con-
tinued. “Special interest
groups are actively supporting
or blocking legislation. It is
time that bills of general in-
terest get the support they
need. It is all part of making
government at all levels more
responsible to the people."
Former U.S. Sen. Ralph
Yarborbugh and many mem-
bers of the Texas Senate and
House of Representatives are
expected to attend the meeting
Also expected are represents- vtlu,WI ---„----
tives of organized labor, min- direction of Earthman Funeral
ority groups, liberal organiza- Home
tions and
groups.
environmental
pioneer resident of the Cedar
Bayou area, she held the long-
?st continuous membership in
1 he Cedar Bayou Methodist
Church. She joined the church
in 1896. In 1969 she was among,
members honored during the
125th anniversary of the church
for being in the church 50 years
w longer.
She is survived by her two
daughters, Mrs. A. A. Leslie
and Mrs. Glenella Diebel, both
of Baytown; a brother, W. T.
Busch of Baytown; a sister
Mrs. Cora Fayle of Baytown
She also is survived by her
granddaughter, Mrs. Billy
Wheaton of Baytown and
grandson, Dr. Donny Rae
Diebel of San Francisco,
Calif.; and her great-grand-
daughter, Pud Wheaton
Baytown.
The Rev. E. J. Davis and the
Rev. Roy Felder will officiate
in funeral services. Interment
will be at Cedar Bayou Metho-
dist Church Cemetery, under
EDWARD K. MILLS II, left, has beea appointed executive
assistant to the chairman of the board of Humble Oil aad
Refining Co. Mills will replace C. A. Laagner. right, who has
accepted a position with Standard OU Co. as senior advisor,
personnel aad administration, producing department Mills
has been the coordinator of research and analysis la the Public
Relations Department
Noon Stock Quotes
(Courtesy of Citizens Notional Bank and Underwood,
Neuhaas and Cosnpnay)
In Washington, D.C. between
October 1,1969 and January 13,
1970 some 261 cases of measles
were reported.
Pallbearers will be E. C.
Porter, Alsey Newton, Foylette
Fayle, Eddie Kelley. Ross
Cathriner and Dr. Percy
Fhile. _
NOW SHOWING
THRU TUESDAY
Get with the cats
who know where it’s at!
A WRR-FECTLY
WONDERFUL
NEW CARTOON
FEATURE
1
L v
r ^ v
rn
I », auf W VIST! tXltnfcufisx Ct . MC.
w
1S70 Mit Owe, CrtMMtxm
PLUS THIS 2H0 ftAIBIC
WAIT DISNEY
MB, CAN I
BBKKBW THE CAR?
^•NMMMwisngtccwrnct «t
Baytonian Is
Injured
Rick Idoux, 19, of 115
Lakewood Drive, was released
from Gulf Coast Hospital
emergency room early Friday
after being treated for injuries
in a car wreck.
Police said that Idoux was
traveling on Baker Road near
the Bayway Drive intersection
when his car struck a mail box
and then a tree.
In another accident investi-
gated by police, an right-year-
old boy narrowly escaped
injury when struck by a car at
Georgia and Virginia at 8:10
a.m. Thursday. Police said
Jimmy Garcia, 3129 Illinois,
driven by -—r—---—_ _
deaux, 3122 Nebraska, who was the bond rejection
traveling south on Georgia
WATER ARGUMENT - -
Allis Chalmers ......
Arlan's Dept Store ...
American TAT ......
Anaconda
Armco ’T7r^TTTT.T:^
Ashland .............
Atlantic Richfield ....
Bendix ..............
Bethlehem Steel ......
Carrier Corp
Celanese
Chrysler Corp .......
Columbia Gas .......
Delta Airlines ........
Diamond-Shamrock
Dow Chemical .......
Dresser Ind ..........
DuPont ..............
El Paso Natural Gas ,.
Ethyl .................
Extendicare
Ford
Foremost McKesson
Gen Electric .......
General Motors _______
(Continued From Page 1)
paign to inform citizens.
One citizen suggested that
the board issue warren ts to be
bought by citizens to finance
improvements and said re-
tirees in Highlands were afraid
the district could not pay for a
large bond issue.
A W. Hamm, a Highlands
realtor, said patrons were un-
happy about people on the
water and sewer lines who are
not within the district and
would not have to pay their fair
share of a bond program.
Other citizens object to in-
dustries and trailer residents
not being required to pay their
part of costs and to having to
foot the bill for line extensions
to new development areas
Hargrove said he felt the
the people to formulate some
definite policy and put aside
small problems involving only
part of the district problems.
These problems, Harman said,
can be handled at regular
water board meetings, but the
confrontation with the Texas
Water Quality Board is press-
ing.
The nearest the group ever
got to a decision was that more
publicity was needed.
A proposal by W. E. Erwin
that the patrons agree to sup-
port “any fair and equitable
bond program" received no
vocal support.
MOON-
Continued From Page One)
FUNDS -
General TAT ..........
General Tire..........
Georgia Pacific........
Getty Oil
Sm Gillette
Gordon’s Jewelry .....
Greyhound Corp ......
Gulf OU ...;...........
Gulf States Utilities ...
Gulf West Ind..........
Halliburton ...........
Harvey Aluminum .....
Hospital Affiliates .....
Houston Light A Power
Inland Steel .....
Interlake-Steel ........
IBM ...................
Jones A Laughlin Steel
Kerr McGee .......
Beach GtyTo
Elect Three
Aldermen
JACK TAYLOR
J5*» Kraft Foods
SS. Kresge 624
Ling-Temco-Vought .... 124
McDonald Douglas _____ 304
Magnavox 414
Marathon OU ........... 36‘,
19%
534
534
31
324
Jack Taylor
Honored For
30’ At ER&E
••V
Microdot
MobU OU
Pepsi Cola
I Continued From Page 1) \ Phillips petro
state to say “ready.” RCA ...
Spur 56, including the bridge Raytheon
over Cedar Bayou, can ad- Roan Select Trust
vance to near construction Schlumberger
stage, Syphrett said, if finds Sears ...^\
are available. He reiterated Shell
that the state had received in- Sperry Rand.........32
formal assurance that a verti- Standard OU of Calif. >. 524
cal height of 52 fe^t for the Standard OU of Ind. lM
Cedar Bayou brid§(f*°uld gri Standard OU of N.J.....704
formal and final approval: Standard OU of Ohio 814
The same report dime front Stauffer Chemical ..... 414
Ranft about completion of toil Sun OU .............t ■ 50
four-lane segment of Highway Syntax ..... .....464
146 from near the Baytown Taft Broadcasting ..... 33
Tunnel to near Holiday Inn. Technicolor ............ 134
He said the state is working Teledyne .......■ 29
on plans to widen M0 from the Tennaoo ...... ........ XPk
8 mm Mill IWW tfMBW -•» . . - •m
610 intersection to the San Ja- Texaco ...... .........334
. ♦»*.,_ , onto Bridge and work could Texas Eastern 414
s-St**——■ a
Transam erica ..... 174
Administration Travelers’ Ins...........314
uuim uni uoti iaise signal, u u occurred out- .
large, but people would vote for ing the descent to the moon, it ^Nixon____
I
wiviiuvu CHI U1C 5 gUIUOIICC LUUt|ftUCl W vt -
that would cover costs of# new der engine firings that would
treatment plait and improve- have taken the craft away from
ment of the collection system, the moon and aborted the land-
Other voters seemed un- “>g.
happy because the water board Mission Control came up with
had raised water rates iust be- a sriution in which the comput-
fore making the fourth bond er was told to ignore the false
proposal readings. This meant Shepard
■ .and Mitchell had to work fu-
Dropping interest rates and
dollar loan was made from the united Aircraft ........ 364
highway fund for other uses. Upjohn Drug ........... 47
The brightest report of the u.s. Steel ............... 324
meeting came when Ranft said westinghouse .......... 72
he believed the Spur 330 Xerox .................*7%
< Decker Drive) and I-IO inter- ^ i^us Avg. ...... 873.63
change at the Sap Jacinto Riv- Indus. Change
er likely will be finishechmthe (dowl)) ...........47
next three or four moth* and
Jack L. Taylor was honored
by friends and coworkers on
his 30th anniversary with Esso
Research and Engineering
Co.'s Analytical Research Lab-
oratory.
A research technician, Jack
.w engaged in computer
ooperations, programming,
and high resolution mass spec-
trometry. In this capacity, he is
actively involved in the de-
taUed analysis of complex mix-
tures derived from petroleum
and coal.
A graduate of Abilene High
School in Abilene, where he
was elected to the National
Honor Society and was active
on the basketball court, Jack
attended Hardin-Simmons
University and Texas AAM be-
fore joining Humble in 1941.
’ Jack and his wife Josephine
live at 106 Red Bud Lane. They
have two daughters add three
grandsons, Jackie, who lives in
Lufkin with her husband, Bill
Taylor, and sons, Charlie and
Steve, and Barbara who lives
in Huntsville with her husband,
Ed Ricks, and son, Nathan.
The anniversary party was
held Jan. 14.
BEACH CITY (Sp) - Beach
City will elect three aldermen
in its annual city election to be
held April 3.
Terms of Bethel Standley,
Travis Reed and R. J.
McGaffey are expiring.
Standley *s completing the
im expired term as alderman
left vacant when Jimmy
McClellan was elected mayor
in the 1970 election. McGaffey
has served two terms is aider-
man and Reed Is completing
his first term.
U9
St. Joseph
’ay Band w
Solo and
Saturday.
Mrs. Ruth Hoover, city
secretary, said no candidates
lhave yet filed for office.
Deadline for filing is March 3.
Applications may be made at
Mrs. Hoover’s office, 8418
Ocean Drive.
Holdover aldermen are A. J.
Crawley and Tom H. Bayliss
REBEL INN
futurist
RANEY'S B-B-Q
CUSTOM C00KINC
OPEN I AM. Til 2 AM.
2702 MARKET
427 3514
run v mururniK *
MILT LUNCHEONS m*.
I MkMWI (Mity wmi cMc* S 3 Tr**n vtfctallM, MW
— t— ----- ----- - - they started down toward the
year or two and provision of
sewer treatment facilities for - -
Harris County Fresh Water
sent from earth.
ran into the right end of a car Stgtply District 1-B on Jones w ^ 4 a news conference
Josephine Thibo- Road were cited as reasons for - ......-
Jerry Griffin, a flight control-
r, said at a news conference
after the landing, “It was not so
------, easy to get us down to the sur
Harman and Hargrove urgea face of ^ proyen,
NOW SHOWING
THRU TUESDAY
Behind every "successful" man is an
understanding woman...or two...or three!
-UOVEMY...WKE'
*i LOVE MY... WIFE”
« A DAV>0 l WOWtXWoducwo
m A UAWU L ATT" rroouctor
ELLIOTT GOULD "I LOVE MY...WIFE”
I Bos Office Opens (.*00 I
rFeatures At 6:45- 10:40 I
NOW SHOWING
- ENOS T0WITE—'
“CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB"
"El C0N0ON"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
I DRINK
Y«VR
'I2"ai,a«sa8sf”
Jim- GAOSS *f*e<«s
CANDCF BERGtN-PFfER STRAUSS
SOLDIER BLUE
’ IfCHNCDlOff^ BRUNSON
Mik*0F»8AS>Y RFIFASE “
Plus Seconds* Hit At 9:00 Onij
"BARBARELLA” - JmFomU
We cranked tq> a solution which
is truly astounding. The Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology
experts pitched in and in four
hours did a fantastic job of get-
ting us around a very serious
problem."
Griffin said the solution was
found with only 10 minutes to
spare.
The problem posed no physi
cal danger to the astronauts.
Theabortwouldhavedirected
them back up toward the Apollo
14 command ship, the Kitty
Hawk, in which Stuart A. Roosa
rode in lonely orbif waiting for
the return of his fellow crew
men Saturday afternoon. *
The two men became the fifth
aid sixth Americans to carry
their nation’s flag to the moon
as they steered their lunar craft
in to a narrow valley surrounded
by high ridges, craters and
mammoth boulders.
Ahead lay 334 hours on the
surface and two moonwalks—
the first scheduled for -five
hours after landing, the second
set fpr Saturday morning.
TTte aatewiaute are there in
the name of science, hoping the
Weak region will yield secrets of
the birth of the moon and per-
haps the earth and solar sys-
the Four Comers traffic bottle- Party
neck eliminated . _
Ranft Mid the tint <x>ntr»et THE CENTHAl, little league
b. seoaid and third pro* Mr k « • •£
jects will soon have final ap- Saturday- ParposeoftJte ^th-
Suval. Here again, he said, the enng is to get the field in 1
hold-up will be money. shape -1
mm rath, cam trM. amt tr M* MfM 11 M»Mi' Wn Ul.
, Ml) SAfvtcAlRtM MlcMry «•*«
ll—MWitHMSIrMlMUr
TAKE OUT SERVICE■
Try MT tM M* anla tt CMtt* WcMry iimM MrM«M M*. f«*».
Hb. UMM. Mm rn* rmtt hM, mm mm, m» m mt
m. MK*i mtmcm mw* < S*M ky IIM mM w M »• W*rl
ui ■ M I»w IwlMHi, ntoral 4u« mi path*.
NwPto ' ‘
DANCE
CROSBY AMERICAN LEGION
CROSBY, TEXAS
Feb. 6th........ Clarence Baca
Feb. 13th .... .....The Dovers
Feb. 20th. ......... Gil Baca
Feb. 27th . Marshall & his Deputies
L tern.
I
r
a professional man
you should know...
The scene that greeted them
was the shadowed effect of
dawn on the moon. The sun’s
ray? slanted in from the west,
painting long black shadows of
the hills and rocks that rose as
high as 8,000 feet above the
landing ate.
TICKETS TO EVERYWHERE!
Wherever in the world you wont to go . we con orronge it We
WneiCVCT in ItIV vrvtiu yvv mnti yv . . "v w* —*
have connections . . . with ail of the airlines, ship lines, bus lines,
nuve w..mw.., wT ----- • -— ""—*
jQiltoods anr way you want to ge< tHe>e Choose a planned
tour or plan a tour of your awn Whatever arrangements you
desire . . let us help Before you know it, you'll be on your way
CITIZENS TRAVEL AGENCY
Citium National Bank (Idg. ' Baytown, Texas • 427-7301, Ext. 37)
BACK BY POPULAR
DEMAND
The Romantic
LYDIA MENDOZA
The Vocatl
students at C
School are
building that
concession si
making exhi
grounds. T
building restr
The Cham
Farmers of A
be April 1-3.
STUDEh
The CHS S
5 now open.
It has pn
dances and th
eating lunch I
cor
Craig Spive;
Annual Boys’
Second plat
Grant with Dt
Donald Carn
third place.
Other contet
Strang, Mik<
Caries, Johm
Kim Holland.
SPANI
Spanish Clu
selling class pi
KEY
Keyette Clu
selling Valenti
” b0*-
v r ' The money
various servic
x VALE
To raise m
ment in the sti
urnalism am
e selling Va
l Singing Vali
purchased for
I .....
Open 9:31
Nith h*t jolden guitar and camplaU M«ic*« carttmt. Ljdu Mndn a
l iKordM( star aad am daiight
MNE IN OW PATIO -; SERVING TOUR FAVORITE AUTHENTIC MUICAN
FOOD AND TOUN FAVORITE COLO BEVERACE. 9
GONZALEZ
MinUSXMSIN
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
SINCE 1945
the doctor of optometry
associated with TSO
March 26 Is
Date For CD
Sheltejr Class
aiKScmii m«5,oau»
in Baytown.
Dr. B. L. (Bob) Warlord
He is one of the many experienced Doctors of
Optometry who practice in TSO offices through-
out the state. You should get to know him.
.* ■
iw
March 26 is the date of the
Civil Defense belter Uving
training course to be taught at
the Emergency Operations
Center at city hall.
305 W. Texas The EQC is located in the
basement of city hall. Fletcher
Hickerson, director of Civil De-
fense, says a maximum of 30
persons will be trained in the
course. Instructor will be Herb
Zimmerman, principal at San
Jacinto Elementary School.
Letters will be sent to
organizations urging partici-
pation.
PRIM0S DANCE
SATURDAY FEB. 6
Knights of Columbus Hall
MUSIC BT
"Little Ricky and
Los Pares”
9 p m • 1 A. M.
THIS WEEKEND V
DINE WITH m. SGOniES
FOR THE FINEST IN STEAKS, SEAFOOD,
ORBAR^qUE
PH, 427-2839
TREAT YOUR FAMILY TO
AN INEXPENSIVE MEAL
WITH REAL TASTE AP-
PEAL THE FOOD IS GOOD
AND FRESH WITH A SE-
LECTION THAT WILL
PLEASE ANYONE.
TREAT YOUR FAMILY TONIGHT!
‘
MRS. SCOTTIE’S
1641 MARKET ST. ROAD
r"
I- -i
> Model 4Bi
Permacolo
'.4
Rabit Ear i
Omnifoam
5 Ft. RCA I
10 Ft. RCA
30 Ft. Tell
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 112, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1971, newspaper, February 5, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061159/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.