The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 20, 1983 Page: 5 of 86
eighty six pages : ill. ; page 18 x 12 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Baptist Church:
The History of the Primitive
Baptist Church was written by
Elder Alvie L. Davidson, a
Primitive Baptist minister, and
the Story appeared in the
January-February, 1983 issue of
. ideas about locating you
Primitive Baptist Church
gn/*£kcf'Ay*C
PATRICIA H. RICH; 5603 Glen-
the periodical, The Genealogical wood Road; Bethesda, Md. 20817:
Helper to be found in Baytown’s “The name of my grandmother’s
’BHSSHSR* ,» Sfe ET.M&
order to have success in resear- Rockcastle County, Ky., appears
ching your ancestors who were in a 1955 obituary. But his name
members of this church, a was not listed in the obituary of
knowledge of the history and his brother who died in 1966. So I
background of the church is assume that he (Henry G. Bur-
necessary. The church had its ton) died between 1955 and 1966.
beginnings in Europe, and I checked out street directories
mk
1950. lUMMi hid' in the' 1960 (
tory^so I assume he died in 19
I did hot receive an answer. I
would like to know when he died,
whom he married, and the names
of any descendants. Thank you
for your help.”
A telephone call to-the City of
Houston Offices determined that
a copy of a death certificate may
be obtained by giving all of the
known tasqpition about the
deceased, such as his full name,
age, (date and place of birth, name
of parents, place of residence at
the time of death, and the date of
death. However, if only the year
of his death is known, then the ci-
ty staff can research that one
m.
*-
_________
Vital Statistics; P.O. Box 14600;
Texas 77021. Their
'tytftt-0208.
Of course, there is the possibili-
ty that your great-uncle could
have moved away or died some
place other than in Houston. In
this case, the City of Houston,
would not have any record of his
destoww* , .
Marriage records are recorded
in the county in which the mar-
riage took plhce. If the marriage
took place in Houston, the record
of the marriage will be in the
records of the Harris County
Clerk’s office. The mailing ad-
Fellows Achieves Eagle Scout Rank
John Albert Fellows, a member
of Boy Scout Troop 883, has
become an Eagle Scout — the
highest rank in scouting.
John has been active in
scouting for about nine years,
progressing up the ranks from
cub scouting. One year, his Boy
Scout troop took first place honors
at the Astrohall Scout Show with a
village train display which was
built by the troop and electrically
wired by John.
On scout campoutS, the troop
first year as a Boy Scout.
John’s Eagle project which he
reports was planned with
assistance from the Rev. Mikel
McClain of Trinity Episcopal
Church was to distribute
Christmas gifts and household
items to a newly arrived Viet-
namese family.
During the four years he attend-
ed Ross. S. Sterling High School,
John played football. He was also
guitarist for the Sterling Jazz
is majoring in electrical engineer-
ing.
Recently while home on spring
break, John was in charge of
music for the Sterling Twirp
Dance and the Star Ball. His rock
band, Hero, performed July 4 at
Bicentennial Park.
John has many hobbies in-
cluding swimming, snow skiing
and building stage lighting or
other bank equipment.
He is the son of Mr;, and Mrs.
M
JOHN ALBERT FELLOWS
Kendall’s Farm Scene
v, w.v Band when they won state honors. ..r — —
called on John’s culinary talents He was a member of the National Albert Fellows. John’s father has
and elected him cook. Honor Society, the Key Club and served as scout district commis-
The young man accomplished president of the French Club. sioner since 1978. His older
another unusual feat when he John is presently a freshman at brother Robert is also an Eagle
completed his 50-mile hike his Texas A&M University where he Scout. „
U.S., Soviets To.Discuss Grain Agreement
ByDQNKENDALL is expected to buy rose to an estimated Argentina,” the shipper to the Soviets is to expire again
AP Farm Writer much less grain from 180 million metric report said. in 1982-83,” the report Sept. 30.
WASHINGTON other countries than tons from 160 million llTh TTnit(vi t said. No negotiations for
(AP) - Represen- the record levels im- in 1981. Also, good A a new agreement are
tatives of the United to* 'EH ^
rasssssr ss&m **«if
rent long-term grain of jgrain in the inter- Union apparenUy has far the8 largest grain bushe?s of wheat or meeBng ,..la*®r l,h's
sszlet zaztss esyss* ms—
Dih.nmOTrsaUw“tte titowi^Mpercent’from SST1? ment? the Soviet
meeting will beheld a record 46 million heavily on one or two. . the United state? one of tw0 re<luired Un*on 1S commltte<]
March 24-25. A tons imported in 1981- “So far during the “d Areenttaa eaS each year under a to buy a minimum of
similar consultation 82. 1982-83 marketing f h ahnut fi milHon long-term 8rain S mdlion metric tons
was held here last One reason for the year, Canada is the agreement between of wheat and com an-
- But argdhtfffi' Sk'pSo, Site "* ■" ' ::
ment analysts said while still far below U.S.S.R., followed by “could still become been extended twice
the Soviet Union still Moscow’s target — the United States and the largest grain for a year at a time,
77251.
SOUTHEAST TEXAS
Genealogical and Historical
Society will host its 11th annual
conference from 8:30 a.m. until
3:30 p.m. April 9 in the Communi-
% Room at Parkdale Mall in
Beaumont. The featured speaker
.will be Rita Binkley Worthy of
Atlanta, Ga., whose topic is
“Geneal(igic?^j8,ese.arch in
Georgia.” The pre-registration
fees, before April 2, will be $10.
for a single, and $17.50 for mar-
ried couples. Mail checks to:
Genealogical Conference,
Southeast Texas Genealogical
and Historical Society; P.O. Box
the Cl;
U.S.A., Inc.; Route 3-Box -B;
Albuquerque, N.M. 87105: The an-
nual general meeting of the socie-
ty will be held on April 22-24 at the
Sheraton Old Town Hotel, 800 Rio
Grande Boulevard, Albuquerque,
N.M. 87102. Ms. Bell says if you
t^vMgpLeod or R you now of
any MacLeods, of all spellings
please let them know about the
meeting)
Please send questions, queries,
and comments to: Catherine
Cravey Sims; P.O. Box 7241;
Baytown Texas 77522 _
Is the IRS taking you
for a rough ride?
Individual Retirement Accounts allow you to deposit up
to $2,000.00 a year and shelter that amount from your
current years income tax.
Congress has extended the time for making IRA deposits to coincide
with the Federal Income Tax filing in April, giving you an additional
3)4 months to make IRA deposits for the year of 1982!
So if the IRS is taking you for a rough ride, start an IRA account to-
day and your deposits and compounded interest will be "Tax Free"
till your retirement.
FUST _
AMERICAN ip
BANK
MEMBER FD1
May We Recommend
the &unbap Special?
Treat yourself to full course
advertising every Sunday. Any
ad appearing in The Baytown
Sun may be picked up for that
weak and included in The
Baytown Sunday Shopper* for
only $2.08 net per column
inch. That's a tasty deal you
don't want to pass up.
•Over 25,000 circulation. The Baytown
Sunday Shopper is o full-siie section ap-
pearing inside The Baytown Sun every Sun-
day, delivered to all subscribers of The
Baytown Sun plus every non-subscriber's
home in the Baytown city limits.
Pap
CALL 422-8302 EXT. 235-239
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 20, 1983, newspaper, March 20, 1983; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1063789/m1/5/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.