The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 89, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 10, 1971 Page: 2 of 16
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MAE WEST JOHN HUSTON
RAQUEL WELCH
MYRA BRECKINRIDGE
AWCETT• ROGER HFRRfcN• CALVIN LOCKHART • JOHNCARRAOiNE
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12.88 15.88
THE BAYTOWN SUN
Sunday,January 10,1971
Fire Destroys Home
Of Channelview Family
BY MURIL HART
CHANNELVIEW (Sp) - A
burned home and destruction
of most of their material pos-
sessions are bitter losses for
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Eastlick
of Channelview and their five
children.
However, the generosity of
friends and neighbors has bol-
stered the family’s courage to
face ordeals resulting from the
Are.
"Peoples
us and we are sb grateful,"
said Mrs. Eastlick. “I wish we
could thank everyone per-
sonally but there is no way to
know all of them."
The Eastlick family lived in transferred to Ben Taub
a rented mobile home in a park Friday,
located at 15110 East Freeway. Quick action by the Channel-
Mrs. Eastlick and the four view Volunteer Fire Depart-
older children were next door, ment prevented other trailers
The baby, 11-month-old Travis, in the park from catching fire,
was asleep at home. Hie according to Mr. and Mrs.
trailers are spaced close to- Byron Mitchell, owners of the
gether and Mrs. Eastlick was mobile home park,
gone only a few minutes when Hie Eastlick trailer was con-
the fire broke out at 2 p.m. sumed in minutes they said.
Tuesday. Several local churches began
Travis received apcond and collecting donations fpr the
•,*V Travis received secom
lRfrl*80^^]dttrd'degreebu.. %Ster20toil01 family. New shoes were pro-
per cent of his face and extre- vided by one church and the
mities but is reported in fair children were outfitted with
condition by a nursing super- clothes,
visor at Ben Taub Hospital in It took some time to locate a
Houston. , [place to live but Mr. and Mrs.
The baby was first taken to Eastlick think they have finally
Tidelands Hospital. He was located an apartment.
No Out IMtf II Without Mil
A man went looking for
America. And couldn't
find it anywhere...
nkSen
COLOR
CANNES FILM FESTIVAL WIN
■Best Film By a New Direct
PLUS HIT HO. 2 - A 30
COLUMBIA PtCTUBtS
SINGLES
1NIH-
FAMILY night
$ 50 Carload
EVERY
MONDAY
NIGHT
SCHOOL
LUNCHES
Howard Eastlick is
[employed painter.
a self
CITY. - -
MONDAY
(Continued From Page J)
Baytown: | weight was worth the, ad-
Breakfast — Tomato juice, ditional money,
egg, buttered toast and milk. In the discussion, Kloesel
Lunch — Beef pot pie or noted that the specifications
baked chicken, blackeyedlfor bids on the patrol carsjhad had been in the u.s. tour
peas, harvard beets, spinach been originally limited to bids at the T he of his death,
(choose two), fruit salad, but- on models with a minimum 119-
tered roll, milk and butter- inch wheel base but that a later
scotch pudding. addendum to the specifications
Barbers HOI: had set a 118-inch standard,
Lunch —Fried chicken with allowing Dodge to bid the
cream gravy, mashed pota- Coronets. He asked if the
toes, peas, cabbage-carrot change might have given
salad, dish of fruit, hot rolls Dodge a “unique advantage.”
and millr Pnlire f!hipf .Tnhn Wilkinson
TEEN-AGERS 8HEILA AND DIANNA McCoy took the Eastlick children under their wing
while their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Eastlick were at Beh Taub Hospital with U-month-
old Travis, tnjnred in the fire that destroyed the family’s mobile home. In the photo, left to
right, with Sheila are Darrin, 2, a twin and Kevin 4. Howard, 5, and the other twin, Donna, 2, are
with Dianna. _
Funeral Notices
G. E. S. De La MAZA
Gonzolo Emilio Sainz De La
Maza, five-year-old son of Mr
and Mrs. Elmilio Sainz De La
Maza of Buenos Aires, Argen-
tina, died Friday in Texas Chil-
dren’s Hospital in Houston.
The boy was brought to
Houston for heart surgery and
had begi in file U.S. four days
)y will be recited at
Sunday at Earthman
Amoral service^ will
19:30 ajn. at Earth-
at 10 ajn. at
itholic Church
I and
i Catl
with butter and milk.
Attend Church
Sunday
ItrllllSOll THtATRt
3ii wtsi mis avt •• - -422 8.111
KIRKDOUGlftS-IMfODfl- IflMCOTN
■ WfMEN OfilB- bURGB) HEM
BRUNSON
* NOW
THROUGH
TUESDAY
man
St. Josh’s
Monday with Msgr. Joseph P.
O’Sullivan officiating.
and milk. | Police Chief John Wilkinson Burial will be in Cedar Crest
t Channelview: said he was probably respon- Cemetery under direction of
Elementary School Lunch - sible for the change and had Earthman Funeral Home.
Chicken and dumplings, suggested it in an effort to get The family was brought to
English peas and carrots, let- more bids. His intent was not Baytown by Mrs. Joseph P.
tuce and spinach salad, sliced go give any bidder an ad- Coffey of 2209 Mockingbird
peachfS, milk and bread. vantage, he said. He said hq. Lane for the funeral arrange-
High School Lunch — Spag- had no reason to doubt the ments. Mrs. Coffey met them
hetti with meat or Weiners with Coronets would b6 acceptable at the hospital
sauerkraut, seasoned spinach, despite their shorter wheel
pickled beets with onions, pine- base,
apple with cheese, corp bread | The police department had
originally intended to buy 11
new police patrol cars but the
total cost would have exceeded
the department’s 1979-71 allo-
cation of $32,500 for new
vehicles. The nine new cars,
plus one of the pick-up trucks,
can be purchased within the
allocation, City Manager Delly
Voelkel said.
Kemp & Tony, the low bid-
llJGAlfGl || der, was awarded the bid for
| the new cabs and chassis. The
11 total price was $25,084.47 for
the two new garbage trucks,
three dump trucks and a flat
bed truck for the garbage de-
partment. The vehicles are
made by International.
Courtesy Ford was given the
bid for two new pick-up trucks
With automatic transmissions
on a bid of $2,335.83 per unit, Clara Mathis, 84, a resident of
plus $97.50 each on the auto- Brookshire, will be held at 1:30
matic transmissions. Cour- p.m. Sunday at First Baptist
tesy’s bid, figured, with the Church in Katy. She died
automatic transmission; w«S Thursday night,
the lowest bid submitted on the Survivors include three sons,
pick-ups except for the Datsun J. D. Mathis of Baytown, Elvy
bid, which did not include auto- Mathis of Katy and Leon
matic transmission. Mathis of Houston. A number
The Datsun bid was opened of grandchildren and great
at the council table after the grandchildren also survive,
city administration sought gui- Burial will be in Mathis
dance on the opening. Voelkel Cemetery in Waller under
said the Datsun bid had arrived direction of Schmidt Funeral
four minutes after the deadline Home of Brookshire.
Only Walt Disney could tell this incredible Jules Verne's Adventure!
Wall I )iKII(‘\___Jl IKSIKMHS
In Mwch'ofti*
®l(ir
1*011 THEATER
430 WEST MAIN 471 3115
NOW SHOWING
NOW SHOWING
THRU TUESDAY
There
was a
crooked
man...
TECHNICOLOR* • PANAVISION"
NOW SHOWING
THRU TUESDAY
STARTS 7:00 P.M. AGAIN 10:40 P.M. ■ ’
£taIm4
«lV«f.U)WMAM
MMI BE?MU »«»•
JAMES
STEWART
RAQUEL
-PUJS-
WELCH
HMMuni
MRS. DORA WILLIAMS
Mrs. Dora Sybil Williams, 78,
of 2204 Bruce, died at 2:40 pjn.
Friday in a Baytown hospital.
A native of Portville, N. Y.,
she moved to Baytown in 1963.
'Survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. Lola Riebe
and Mrs. Minnie Schnell,
Baytown; and Mrs. Marion
Gosdin of Lubbock; two
sisters, Mrs. Raymond Roulo
Sr. of Portville, N. Y:, and Mrs
Fred Merkel of Buffalo.
Nine grandchildren and 19
Rites To Be
>
Sunday For
Mrs. Mathis
Funeral services for Mrs.
Suspect Shot
Attempt Here
A suspect shot while at-
tempting to burglarize the Cor-
ral Club, 7403 Decker Drive, at
3:20a.m. Saturday is in critical
but before the other bids were
opened. The council decided to
open the bid. VH
Kloesel objected,.at the time ^ RilfO'loi’v
the original motion was made 111 uuigioi y
to accept the Datsun bid, to the
fact that the Datsuns were
Japanese-made. “I will not
vote to purchase foreign cars
until Japanese citizens start
paying taxes,” he said and re-
ceived applause from the au- condition at Ben Taub Hospital
dience in the council chamber, in Houston
But Councilman Allen Can- Ennis Adams Roy, owner of
non said he personally drove a the Corral Club, shot the sus-
Datsun. He described it as an pect in the head when he
economical car. He made the caught him trying to break into
motion to accept the Datsun the club. Roy lives at the club
bid, but later also moved to re- location
consider the award after decid- The arresting officers were
ing it would be more appro- Sheriff’s Deputies Tom Duren,
priate to change the specifica- Harold Carpenter and J. T.
tions so that competing bids Harrison. No charges have
could ha obtained. , been filed against the suspect.
great grandchildren also
survive,
The body will be at Paul U.
Lee Funeral Home until noon
Monday when it will be sent to
Guenther Funeral Home
Portville.
Burial will be in Chestnut
Hill Cemetery.
MRS. ELSIE EBERLY
Funeral services for Mrs
Elsie Ebtfly, 66, of Dallas will
be held at 2 pin. Sunday at
Earthman Funeral Chapel.
A former Baytonian, Mrs
Eberly died at 7 p.m. Friday in
a Dallas hospital. She was a
native of Clifton, Tex.
Survivors include a daugh
ter, Mrs. Barney Thames and
tw grandsons, Deric and Rus-
sell Thames, all of Dallas; six
sisters, Mrs. Verna Hulme,
Mrs. Lorene Ansel, Mrs. Ola
Krenick, Mrs. Verda Goss and
Mrs. Jean McAlister, all of
Baytown, and Mrs. Ava Nell
McMillian of Waco; seven
brothers, Herbert Mallory of
Bryan, Ferrel, Earl and Le-
land Mallory of Baytown, Ger-
ald Mallory of Harlingen, Gar-
land Mallory of Dallas and Al-
vin Mallory of Alvin.
Burial will be in Cedar Bay-
ou Methodist Cemetery under
direction of Earthman Funeral
Home.
Pallbearers will be Wayne
Ballot, Jerry Adams, G. D.
Casey, Billy Thames, Dick
Couy and Carl O. Gott. - -
HUMBLE - -
(Continued From Page 1)
was one of the biggest sports |
promotions in the state.
Gregory was one of the]
organizers and the second
president of the Longhorn Hall
of Honor — a hall of fame for
outstanding UT athletes. He is
long-time associate of the
Houston Fat Stock Show andj
Rodeo. ■
As one of the founders of the |
Bluebonnet Bowl, Gregory now |
serves on the executive com-
mittee and has been instru-|
mental in making the annual
Houston event one of the finest |
in the country.
Gregory has always main-[
tained an interest in Robert E.
Lee athletics, and was a fan of
the Baytown Oilers and Bar-
bers Hill Gushers during their
semi-pro baseball domination.
He once • heard then-mer-
chant Morris Frank at a sports
dinner in Tyler, and it resulted
Gregory offering Frank a I
job on the Post sports staff in |
1937.
Gregory always boasted of |
bringing Frank from Lufkin to
Houston, while Frank has been
content to ‘‘apologize” for |
Gregory’s action.
Qrenta-car
COURTESY fORD
1801 DECKER DR 422 8121
CHURCH OF CHRIST
PRUETT AND L0BIT ST.
FAITH vs. BIGOTRY
In our liberal and permissive society, It has become
passe’ in religion to be characterized by a positive faith.
The popular posture is to regard all things as being rela-
tive. To believe anything for certain is to expose oneself to
suspicion of bigotry. The fact is, bigotry has become sort
of a "bogey man” which is used to frighten the hapless be-
liever of anything positive in the realm of religion into a
state of passive acquiescence with regard <b the incur-
sions of modern infidelity.
The following statements were made with reference to
things generally, but are particularly true with reference
to religion in our time. "One of the great dangers, of our
liberalized day is not that we shall be so narrow-minded
webecome thin, but that we shall be so broad-minded we
become shallow. We are tempted mentally to spread our-
selves a mile wide and an inch deep. Seeding to avoid the
intolerance of the bigot, we are inclined to fall Into the
nonchalance of the fool." (Houston Times.)
The disciples of Jesus in New Testament times were
characterized by a positive faith. What they believed, they
believed certainly. So certainly did they believe what they
bel ieved, they were wl 11 Ing to die rather than to rel Inquish
their faith. Their faith changed the world. By duplicating
their faith, so cpn we.
—James W. Adams
Sunday Services: Bible Clams for all Apt 9:45 a.m.
Assembly Worship - , 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. '
Wednesday Bible desses and Wonhip - 7:00 p.m.
★★***★*★★★★★**★
Friendly People And Spiritual Worship
Attend Our Services!
DANCE
Knights of Columbus Hall . .
. ~ 2600 W. Main ~ ™
> * Baytown, Texas
" .
Saturday, January 16th, 9 p.m. Til 1
Music by Harold Use’s Orchestra
from Ellingor, Texas * -
---Somi-fotmal
Sunday Special
11:00 A.M.'TD £30 P.M.
Round Roast of Heavy Beef Aujus^
Stmd with your choice of 2 prden trash vifitebln.
T9
Chocolate Ice Box Pie With Real
■ • • j V
Whipped Cream
CHILDS PLATE -1 MEAT & CHOICE
OF TOO VEGETABLES. 4V9
Print* Dining Rooms Available
Buffet or Seated Service
Wtis
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 89, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 10, 1971, newspaper, January 10, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061955/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.