The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962 Page: 5 of 20
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Carrier Here Against CC
‘eight Service Stand
A Baytown freight carrier Fri- It certainty does not help the
issued a statement opposing
wn Chamber of Commercf
to have
permanent
for Houst
au-
Houst on
freight earners to serve Baytown.
The carriers previously were
able to serve Baytown since it
was within the legal distance of
the Houston city limits. In un an-
nexation trade with Pasadena,
Houston pulled its city limbs back J)fve menhf1'
on the Baytown side, and Baytown
became outside the legal distance
Houston carriers could serve.
Since that time the carriers
have been operating on tempor-
ary permits from the Interstate
Commerce Commission.
Here is a statement from Sam
Carrol], who delivers freight for
Southern Pacific:
"Truck lines operating into Bay.
town on temporary permits are
what we call outlaws or strag-
glers. Why does the Chamber of
Commerce want these lines to op-
erate here? Does the Chamber of
Commerce actually know wbat
they are doing? Have they stu-
died this situation thoroughly
growth of Baytown, but it does
take food from our childr
"The three old reliable,____
lines — Southern Pacific, Wright
Motor Freight and Missouri Pa-
cific — that have saved Baytown
so faithfully and so long, can and
always will take care of Bay-
town’s freight service as we have
in the past. These three carriers
JOKES x| RD
[Ljnus.
Four
torn*
die any and ail freight service for
Baytown. Why let the straggler
lines operate here? They will wily
hurt our wages and employment
They do not a$pnd any money
here. They unload their. freight,
collect charges and cany our
money away.
“We sincerely hope that no one
will sign the petition that is be-.v
ing circulated here, and we are | '
going to fight this thing all the
way through.
"We, fee employes of these
three companies, live here, own
our homes, pay city taxes, pa-
tronize local merchants, send our
children to Baytown School, sup-
port Baytown activities and
ploy Baytown men.”
CEDAR BAYOU
ARCHEL
Band Try-Outs
Set At Crosby
For Saturday
Try-outs for the
Band, spoil
Friday, Novambar 30, 1962
.
Scott j
LKUM8LE)
V
Baytown Refinery
xBaytown,
*V,
•~\ \
Bosch I. ,'* ^
'Roseland
Pk.
All-District
nsored by fee Inter-
League, will be held i
x J,
High School who will audition for
the All District Band indude:
Sharon Martin, Ginny Bethea,
Nancy Oiler and Cathy Legier,
flute; Kitty Kana. Billy King, Ka-
tina King, Merikay Mullinix andI
Stanley Henson, clarinets; Sue
White, Bebo Huwaler, Charles
Schickman and Linda finer, cor-
Terry Orr, Virginia Chaplin
Glenda Preuss, French
horn; Raymond Campbell and
John Marder, trombone; Robert
Hartzog and Harvey Day, bari-||
tone; Larry Davis, snare drum; [
Lou Lumpkin, tympani; Bill Boyd,
bass; Cheryl Whitten, bass clari-
net; Harriett Johnson, oboe;; I
Butch Diebel, alto saxophone;; I
Ricky Young, tenor saxophone; I
Qyde Brandon, baritone *axo-||
jtoone; Libby Comeaux and Patsy
Parrish, bassoon.
al REL Band last year had 20
l' members in fee All-District Band.
Baytown Oibnan
Testifies At State
BAYTOWN’S NEWLY-ANNEXED AREAS SHOWN BY DIAGONAL LINES
Untfl 5:30 P.M.
Unfit Christmas
f* D I II • wiriwnns ncntTMvmun; arm* snvnn sr uiaounai
JUL JIU Council Annexes New Territory
road Commission will begin study |
soon of two days of testimony t
fee
For Boys and Girls
b Ages 5 to 15
men
DISCOVERIES
Each Lab Kit Age Marked
BocthMSn -
experiments
reveal 1
scientific
secrets.
Young minds
grow eager tp
laam mom.
Choose from:
fiactramegMticFqKa
Growing Crystals
Solar Spectrum ■*
Rocks of the Earth
RMMlwHiwWM
(Continued From Face l)
Field to Jefferson County ' ; I There would be advantages for
The hearing ended Sunday
with fpstimnny from iBiw said- He listed them as:
er, legislative representative ft* thpfoSlJ™
hpemumbs
y uu UK I to the entire area; it will provide
Walker said he ^ited 800 small I a consolidated basis forfuture
tract owners to the field and he promotion, growth and develop-
wants to protect their mineral I ment of the Baytown area; con-
“ftshf fo,r feeir_ neigh-jtrol over future subdivision con-
bore rights to develop feeir min-1 struction would be improved; an-
erals to fee fullest extent nexation appears timely since sev-
Asked whether he was everleral years have elapsed since the
offered a chance to enter a [first reading annexation, and since
pooling agreement wife otherlit would preclude the possibility
operators, Gray said he offered of new legislation jeopardizing the
to pool wife Peterson Henderson I planned consolidation of this
Oil Co. “and they didn’t take It” area wife Baytown; and it ap-
Peterson Henderson. Pan Amer- Pear* inevitable that ultimate^
ican Petroleum Corp., Michel outlying areas will be incraporat-
Halbouty of Houston and Mere- either into Houston, mdepend-
dife & Co requested foe hearing ently, or into Baytown, and it ap-
aftef fee state supreme court I Pears mutually advantageous and
invalidated fee field’s "one-third, timdjMor it to be into Baytown
two-thirds” allocation rule. This ®w-
based production one-third on Mayra; Clayton defended fee an-
field production percentage and nexation committee from charges
two-third on acreage. I from the audience that fee annex-
The applicants requested action was designed solely to get
formula tesed on net^re-feet taxes from fee new areas He
of gas pay and on sand thickness ^ere were never three
maps or else on fee net of pay P^P'e more interested, to w
sand in each well multiplied by [community. _ I assure you Ajey
armapt ^Ihave no selfish motives.” Clayton
Small Hart nnman, aw M* said he had the same goals
Small tract owners did not seek L ttnvtrvum tho mpmhprs of
mission in the coundl meeting, he than referring them to fee coun-
to™.,,, N , *
the new areas.’Be said he ‘ “ |....................
however, that toe council
failed to spend enough time con- made, but this move is planned
vindng the residents of the new at a later date.
accrue to them und to the city* Mwicnti/iaii/m a# tha nnT1, nrnilt
obS'tofee^mSon^ctiM ^ M**
objected to the aimraation* action a year or more
were C, E. Moore, Gene McDan- I .. , , .7
id, G. M. Cunningham, Bill Daw- Resld“ts °*th,e new,.are®s
strom, E. ™ 5ms G. S. ,g™onJhe ^
Tharp and Jack Smalting. McDan- “g-
ntTWcttfo Sfflf 1*ir Baytown as the members of
hm cranmittee, but did not agree
before the field is deleted
Chemistry of Matter
SarmiMting Seeds
Growing Shrimp
matherne's
207-211 West Peareo
sag
Dallas Financier Will
HeN> Build Big Theater
NEW YORK (AP)-A Dallas frl
naheief wilF have 1 major cole
in building a rauRimillion dollar
theater-restaurant at the 1964-65
New York World Fair.
He is Angus Wynne Jr., presi-
dent of tire Graft Southwest Crap,
an' creator erf Six Flags Overel
Texas. Wynne and Compass Pro|
ductions Inc. of New York
, "My program is- to expand our
forces and facilities first,” Clay-
ton said. “We ail know that some-;
day those areas will be part of
Baytown, but I do not think we
are ready yet”
Srn Spots —■
to voting against
avey said^rtjM
' now,
fee motion,
won’t try to ex-
auu uava kuuauuig. uxyxjcutr /W 1
iel, a developer in Country Club e*ty taxes until Oct, 1,
Oaks, later told the coundl be
had changed bis mind.
The main objections voiced
were that the people of the new
areas had not been allowed a
straw vote on whether they want-
ed to be annexed; taxes and _ „ _
water rates were cheapo1 out- (Oontomed From Page I)
side the dty; services that the » . . l;
feity would provide are now pro- Santa Loses Tire
vided adequately by fee county; NOT EVEN Santa Claus is iim
many people moved into fee areas mune from thieves. He reported
to get out of the City of Bay- from K-Mart Shragrfng Center Fri-
ody0ninterinto ^ morning ftat» «re was miss-
tax revenue. tog from his sleigh — pardon, his
After fee annexation ordinance car. Police are investigating,
was passed at 8:37 p.m. Thurs- .. , „
day, an immediate audit of fee BHEA Meeting Set
S bytfeTSuff1te BAYTOWN HOME Economics As- j
and (Tumbles, certified public sodatkm will meet at 7:JO p.m- * ....... ,_PEHRMEEH
accountants, w«e to begin fee Monday to fee tonne al Mrs. E. nation of another tool of sd-
aajife Friday . C. May, 210 Lakewood Drive. ^ ^ v, . j
1Members are to bring a batch ot h*-<b°Ught ^
districts will continue in fedr jobs
for fee present It was pointed cookies or candy and the recipe.
out that fee number of employes ■■. I."*!. _■..... ~
will probably be reduced when rtOliaay resnvOT
some of the functions of fee dty BAYTOWN LULACS Saturday
ai& ^ Water distncts “* con' night will sponsor a holidiy fes-
Sp2fire patrol of fee new area «vai at fee LULAC Hall on Baker,
was not ordered immediately, but featuring a variety of games, a
fee Baytown Police Department cafce walk, a football film, Mexi-
will now begin answering emer- cajj ^ jjg soj^ along wife
and will last until 11 p.m. Pro-
ceeds will be used for youth ac-
tivities, John Contreras Jr„ presi-
.....— ... ——=— -dent, announced.
(Courtesy MerriB Lynch, Pierce, Femur end Smith)
(In Guff Building) Course Fiinshed
-teas: 1 H -
Noon Call Stock Quotes
NOW OPEN
Rom Vacation It Remodeling
on The Bayshore!
U.S. CHOICE STEAKS AND THE
FINEST SEAFOOD ON THE COAST
WALTER
end ERNA
ZEISIG'S
Morgen'* Point
La Porte
Allis-Chalmers ............. 15%
Aluminium Ltd.............. 23
Amer Cyan ................ 46%
NeWs
Newp Net
Olin-Math
Pfizer
Am Photo Copy ,-13% Nat Dist ....................
Amer Tel & Td............-U4% "
Am Visco ................... 59
Anaconda Cop .............. “
Amoco
At Tp ft SF .................
Baxter Lab .eeeeee*eeeeeeMe 24%
Celanese * e>«*e• 37
Gdotsx "a* e*• e •* eeee •••?• NO SftlG
Chrysler ......ie«tyeM*«*» 70%
Cities Service ea*eeee
• roeeeeeeeaeeeee* 35%
§
Creole .....
Delta Air L *eMeM»«m*t<t«
Diamond Aik
Dow Chem ................. 58%
Du Pont...................-232%
Eastman Kodak.............107%
El Paso............... 16%
Fort .............. <5%
Foremost Dairies ........... 9%
Freeport Sulp ........ 23%
When Dining Out Next Away From
THE TOWER
Wo Invite You to Compare Them With Our:
• Service
• Food
• Price
We Think You'll Agree... We Stand Alonel
evist delicious
onu T Open Trout Sandwich 39c
. • AMERICAN
; EXPRESS
: CARDS
■m .....-
:
Monsanto
Nat Dairy Prod
.ptyittfk :#r»rrte ,
Phillips Pet eeee#••eeee
Pure
ffiav
jsaieway
•••••••eee
IS
Gen Motors .......
^|Oen ................ 22%
TirT-................... 22%
1 Gillette S&f ••eoeeeee#*oaaoa*,S3%
Pwvwluwir Tiro .............. 33%
1 Greyhound ........
Gulf Oil...........
dill* States ITtil ...
....... 38%
Gnstin-Bae .................20%
HLAFo.........
IBM ..............
.........49%
Int’l Nickel........
«%
Int’l Min ..........
Ikerr-McGee .....
Libby McN .......
.........37%:
......... n%
|Louis Land ........
EAT WITH US EACH SUNDAY!
We’ll Donate* 10% of the Amount
of Your Cheek to fee Church of
. Your Choice.
2 HwmJMr
mmm — mmtmmmmrn'mm
^^ 6. In
FI 7 „ to exp
cOhe 1 ower |
V
DECKER DRIVE
PHONE M2-90M
Industry
(Continued From Page 1)
try Club Oaks, Sec. 4, for develop-
ment.
7. Passed a resolution com
mending retiring Gov. Price Dan-
iel for his years of public service
in Texas government and to the
U.S. Senate,
8. Instructed the city manager
to explore fee possibility of find-
new location for fee Bay
Opportunity
to move from its present
site.
9. Approved a suggestion by
Mayor Al Clayton that city
city cm-
42%
New Orj Cotton
Houston Gas Company
CORPUS CHRISIT (AP) -
Houston Natural Gas Corp. has
sold its facilities serving home-
owners here to the city ot Corpus
Christ! for 14,622,513.
Houston Natural retained its in-
dustrial customers and will sup-
ply the city natural gas under a
contract expiring in 1966.
About 14,000 customers of the
firm will be served by the city
system, which already had an es-
timated 34.00Q customers.
wiii oc iinanmi
over a 10-year period wife reve-
nues from the newly purchased
system.' ,v _
Penneyb
60* ANNIVERSARY
. anytime COUNT
ON PENNEVS TO BXCHANOB
IT ... at any of our stores coast-
20-Shopping
Days Till
CHRISTMAS
%
ir! United-
1 (Continued From Page 1)
l carbon Hack and robber at feell
center.
R. W. French, United Carbon
president, said the center brings
together, at one place, technical |;
and. personnel who pre-
NOW! Penney^
cuts prices
on famous
Big Mqc setsj.
vKHisly had been scattered at vari-|i
ous plants in the Southwest.
One of fee advanced types of I
equipment at the new center is a ||
peratares upon various materials. I
The center also has a recording
chrranatograph, used for separat-
ing complex organic mixtures I
and autranatic hectographs, used |
in identifying unknown organic
compounds by their absorption of
infrared, visible, or ultra-violet ||
^^t-plant operations at feel!
crater supplement those for car-
bon black at Aransas Pass, and |
for synthetic rubber and coating
latices at Baytown.
industrialists touring
'__were-jshowm a
-model of a new carbon black
3W cotton twfll
pants NOW
269 matching
shirts NOW
United Carbon, a leader in fee i
production and marketing of car-II
bon black, Jg also o^ major pro-
ducer of synthetic rubber, latex
nd masterbatche*. |
The Houston firm operates sev-
en carbon black plants in the U.S.,
as well as plants to Australia,
France, fee United Kingdom and
Venezuela. Another plant-is to be
built soon near Bombay, India.
At the dinner marking the
opening of fee center, Gen. Georj
F. Donet, president of the Ame. ,
ican Research and Development I,
Corp., called the new center "the
Sates was drifting toward the
loss of vitality in private enter-
prise because of fee lack of cre-
ative training. j
“We must work toward fee en-
vironment to give our research j
and development people .the'op-1]
COMPARE! COUNT THE QUALITY EXTRAS M ONE
OF AMERICA'S TOP MATCHED SET VALUES!
• Finest first quality fabrics from top mills!
• No seconds, no imperfections! All sets perfect!
e All carefully cut over Pewoey's own paRSmil
• AH made lo Pemwy't owa exocring staadarM
o Setapropcrt>aBedtoBt...graduoted Harare ihwl
e All tailored for oction^ree movement!
• SonforixodP, vet-dyad, mochiBa wailiahtel
SHIRTS ere e 6 ounce weight wHh long tails.
2-button adjustable cuffs-Sixes 14 to 17.
PANTS are a rugged 8</2 ounce weight with
heavy duty bran zipper. Sizes 29 to 44.
SAVE!
HEAVY COHON
WORK SOCKS
portunity to create/’
other executives, "when
you run across somebody who has
knows what things
fee feeling he-----------
will be lie 20 years from .....
find a use for him.” , .
Chib Done* At LC
LEE COLLEGE Curtain Club will I
have a dance for all college and
high school students from 7:30
to 11:30 p.m. Friday to the LC
Student Union. Tickets are 7sj|
cents stage and 50 cents per cou-
-..............49% mond H. Iightfoot, Crosby, com-
57% pleted a physics course conducted
24% by the U.S. Armed Forces Insti-
47% tute while serving with the U.S,
_____-............ 33% Army Training Center at Ft. Sll,
Otis Elev.................... 54% Okla.
Pancoastal (M No Sale -
Parke-Davis ............ 2b% Robbery-Beating
BAYTOWN ' Poiire Friday wrae{('
.......4j>u seating a man and woman fa coh-
___—r- S -42= nection with the heating , and rob-
**«= R
______hki/a he had bera to a tar wife fee
sheiT33% ««p>e ** ^
Sinclair • • • #••• *•##•••#••##• • 35%
Socony-Mofe .................. 56
C/iti Papifip
Stan tod ....................47%
Stan N J
Stan Ohio
near the city limits on TtbCify
Beach Road and beat and robbed
2854 him of ?30. Fifty stitches were
taken in Smith’s lip and cheek
Handel's 'Messiah1
HANDEL’S "MESSIAH” will be
presented by the Community
Chorus at 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 9,
23% at St. Marks Methodist Church.
16% The choir is sponsored by a.
Marks and First Presbyterian
Church.
Car Wash
ROBERT E. Lee Spanish dub
will sponsor a car wash from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at Coker’s
Hasty Transfer and Storage, South
Main at Pearce. Cost is 31.25 a
car. •
Bear Den
CEDAR BAYOU Bear Den will
be open from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Cedar Bayou Jun-
ior High gym.
......150%
up 1 dn 4 Saturday at the
Planning
Your
Accepting
Reservation!
* For After
December 3rd
• BANQUETS
• SALES MEETINGS
• CHRISTMAS PARTIES
• DANCE
• WEDDING RECEPTIONS
• COMPANY MEETINGS
• PRIVATE PARTIES
Call:
Holiday Inn
583-7481
3 > '1
sizes 10 to IS
Cushion sole slack, sock-
cotton with nylon re
forced heel and toe for<
greatest strength. Ma-
chine washable.
CUSHION
INSOLE SERVICE
OXFORDS
Shoes feature sturdy
resistant soles, heels!
to high auaRty standards
...welt construction,
oN
Built
Sanitized®!
men’s sizes
COMB#tOLD FEET
vviw Bvm vvMr immi
INSULATED BOOTS
Insulated oil * tanned cow.
hides boast Neoprene soles,
Redwood brown.
ployes be given a “long wr
off for Christmas — from Friday
through Tuesday, except emergen-1 ter point duplicate bridge game
BrMgo Gcmt
BRIDGE
■E Studio will have a mas-
Don’t Miss m Big Saturday Night
DAN
American Legion. Hal
Crosby, Texas
SATURDAY, DEC. 1st.
HAPPY COUNTRY BOYS
Last Dane* ‘Til CftrittyMB •
PUBLIC INVITED
Men's
2-Piece
Insulated
Underwear
88
For the outdoor i
Ion shell and nyh
adjustable waisto
ition of Dacron®
m 'n cotton
md. Warm wah
star fiberfil! h
CHARGE IT! * buy
. *
.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 85, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962, newspaper, November 30, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1101263/m1/5/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.