The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 234, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 6, 1972 Page: 2 of 16
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THE BAYTOWN SUN J j
5rr'i£&
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■Ai'-.. C-- -AA
■ ■■
L&~ .ssfe
•, Thursday, July6,1973 . . > :V
Noon Stock Quotes
KISSING
and KILLING! ^
fMtai' jJKl; -c :-
IM IIM
11:45
(Courtesy ofCittzeui National Bank and Cnairwood,
* .:;- . rf4Nanl»M,wid Company »
Allis Chalmers 12% Qeorgia-Piacific
Arlan’s Dept Store 4% Getty Ml
"..y
BARBARA HERSHEYas
PLUS AT 10:15
"BLOODY MAMA
Ethyl Corp
Extendicare . . .
Ford ........
Foremost McKesson
Gen Elec...........
Gen
i Gen Tire
.. 74%
AT&T ............. 42%|Gillette'y48%
Anaconda .........-•...17% Gordon’SjJeweiry 26%
Armco '-r ",20% Greyhound ‘.....t:\18%
Ashland ....... 27% Gulf Gil 24%
Atlantic Richfield 55% Gulf States Util.........,18
Bendix ..............«... 45% Gulf West Ind...........: 37%
Beth Steel............... 28% Halliburton ......».100%
Carrier Corp.....43% Hospital Affiliates....... 22%
CeTanese . ..,','rr.’..... 46% Ht&P .............?..... 44
ChryslerGorp............ 32% Inland Steel ............,. 34
Columbia Gas .4.........28% Interlake Steel ...... 29%
Dart Industries ...... 56 IBM ........—
Delta Air ..............‘ 52% Jones & Laugh ...........
Diamond Shamrock --------18% Kerr-McGee .... .. 53
DowChem ............. 92 KraftFoods............. 41%
Dhesser Ind 36% S. S. Kresge-........ ?......129%
DuPont _________,....'...166 Iing-Temco-Vought .... 13%
El Paso Nat Gas 17. MbDbnnell-Douglas ...A 40
•25% Magnavox ........ 33*
. 21% Marathon Oil30%
» 64% Martin Marietta Alum ... 20%
. 23%Microdot ..... 21%
. 67% MobileOU**.. . ........... 58%
74% Monsanto :.......... 51%.
27% Nat Distillers^'-'tr’. . . 20%
27 Occidental Petro" ....... 10%
Penn Central R. R. ...... 4%
.404
16%
Pepsi Col;
85%
Phillips Pet ... 28% 0f the eye and eye surgery
Df1 A „ ______t ____ f
KIDDIE SHOW
SATURDAY
MORNING
NOW
SHOWING
THE NEWEST
AND BIGGEST
YET!
.'36%
Box Off Ice
Opens
9:30 A.M
snow
Starts
10:00 A.M
SEATS
RCA
Raytheon
Roan Select Tr .......... 5%
Schlumberger...........209%
Sears ................113
Shell ................. 46
Sperry-Rand ............ 43%
Stan Cal.........................62%
Stan Ind ................ 69%
Stan N J ,..............• 75
Stan Oil Ohio............68
Stauffer Chem ..........39
THE REVOLT!
OF THE APES!
8 CARTOONS
1 COMEDY
Sun Oil.................. 43
Syntex.....—...... — 90%
Taft Broadcast..........49%
Technicolor ...........22%
Teledyne /:............; 21%
Tenneco — 23%
Texaco ................. 33
Texas Eastern ..........48%
fr;-. ■
k *
DR. M. J. ARISCO
New Doctor
Opens Office
In Baytown
Dr. Martin Joseph Arisco,
M. D. and opthalmologist,
opened an office Thursday- '
721E. Texas jn Black's Profes-
sional-Building.
He will specialize in diseases
A native of Port Arthur, Dr.
37% Arisco is a graduate of Lamar
University in Beaumont and
has his medical degree, from
University of Tekas Galveston
Medical Branch. He interned
at Good Samaritan Hospital in
Dayton, Ohio. His eye spe-
cialty training was done at the
Medical University' of South
Carolina at Charleston.
After three .years in the Uj>.
8:30
11:30
PLUS
10:19
-
Air Force stationed at Keesler
AFB in Biloxi, Miss., Dr. Aris-
co is opening his first practice
in Baytown. Relatives, Roy
and Frances Kirkland of 410
William, encouraged him to|t
come here.
Dr. Arisco and his wife, Wil-
PIUS THIS FEATURE —;i Texas Gulf Sul----------------12% lifted, Jive at fill Shadyla wn 1
•THE RAILWAY
CHILDREN
Shoreacres. They ’ have two
daughters,'Amy, 5, and Jenni
fer. 3.
10~50c PIECES
GIVEN AWAY
2oth Century-fo.i presents
Walkabout
COLOR BV DELUXE® "3E"
CONTEST ON STAGE
JACKPOT DRAWING
From the Master ol Shockl
A Shocking Masterpiece!
1:00
2:55
4:50
7:00
9:00,
/
A deadly new twist
from the anginal Hitchcock'
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
FRENZY"
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE • TECHNICOLOR*
Rl~:: ■
1:10-3:10-5:15 7:15-9:20
Going down his own rood...
ISTEVE MCQUEEN
“■—nn nmiin'
BONNER
“Tell’em Junior sent you”
=3
Pvt
I
Unit Plaza U
BAT PLAZA* SHOPPING COfTBl 422-5552
scat
BEST PICTURE
BEST DIRECTOR
WINNER N.Y.FILM CRITICS AWARDS
Transamerica ..........18%
Traveler's Ins .........38%
Union Carbide ..........46%
Union Oil of Cal .........29%
^BarbersMU
US Steel ...... 30
Walgreen’s ......‘...... 19%
Westinghouse. ......... 52%
WoolwortUK ........37%
Xerox ...... . . . .153%
Dow Indus. Avg-----------947.02
Dow Indus. Change
- Up: 1.
School Tax
* *
Board Meets
MONT BELVIEU (Sp)
The board of equalization for
-.Xl — 4:—
-*. ♦•••
nr t
Our1
■ - -
-
" "L '
■.
’ r .
• -■ ••
+ SAIGON* — Fourteen
Americans were reported
killed in the Indochina war
last week and lour more
Were listed as missing Jn ac-
tion, the U.S. Command re-
ported today.
From AjP. Wires
+ WASHINGTON -* Sen. -
Mike Gravel-announced to-
day he would sefek the Demo- •
cratic vice-rpesidentlal
nomination at the Demo-
cratic convention^ in Miami
Beach next Week.
+ .WASHINGTON 4. Ah
increase in loans for automo-
biles and other cSnsumer
products sparkdd a record
. rise In consumer credit diir-
tag’ May, the Federal Re-
serve Board reports.
f SILVER SPRING, Md.
TOO MUCH IsIGHT- * : ‘
READING,‘England (AP)
For years everything ran
smoothly at a horticultural re-
search -department in-
Berkshire where the staff
studied the effect of light on -
plants and flowers, . -
...SuGaiben a street light was
* George C. Wallace, par- piit outaMe the greenhouses, ft
tfally paralyzed but stjU
seeking the presidency , ends
a 53-day hospital stay Friday
and fifes to the Detaocratic
National Convention wheal
he w ill disclose his plans fd
the future.
+~NEW DELHi - GS; bright light.
Ambassador Kenneth B.
Crobbe showing a Keating announced today
winning stroke in the 1929 that he will resign before the
Republican National Con;
vention next month to work
for the re-election of Presi-
silting MlumL
Nixmr.
+ WASHINGTON - The
hited States and mainland
China may ring up a total of
$200 million in .trade during
1972, highlighted by a pro-
posed $150-million deal for
Boeing 707 jet aircraft.
series of'ekfieriments to help
commercial producers grow
round-the-year crops was in
jeopardy. . .
The gardep is rosy again,
hqjyever. Research head Allan
Canham designed a tailor-
made lamp shade for thej ,
nn mm
m
Lunch from our ij3
jJelicious Salad Bar p
/ 7 30 until 1:00
only
990
THE WOMEN’S PUMPER Team of t
at the state convention in .Galveston,
"lOseconarmmeh’s teanratsosta:
to trophies, plaques and a new lire ho
captain, and Judy Kester, Chris Bushl
George I
WASHINGTON CAP) - To
George W. Romney, struggling
tp be President Nixon’s fix-it
man for the cities, the prob-
lefns he faoes are not jilst for thi
5001 N. MAIN
NOW OPEN
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
THE
tough, they "are the most com-
plex on the face of the globe.”
: Testifying to their in.
tractability, 'the secretary of
• Housing and Urban' Develbp-
mefit has. seen remedies be-
come problems and well-in-
tentioned strategies ..backfire
in controversy,
Romney admits to little suc-
cess in his match with the
C. a PITTS WITH RICK SUMLIN
PLAYING EVERY NIGHT
EXCEPT TUESDAY TIL ONE
WEDNESDAY NITE
BEER BUST NITE
am:
HOT PANTS CONTEST
THURSDAY NITE
IS
LADIES NITE
Rites Set For
Resident Of
Old River: 76
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thurs-
day for,commerflal and indus-
trial hearings on the proposed
1973 budget of $1,056,000.
The meeting will be held at
Barbers Hill High School.
Members of the board are
Billy Gene Lawrence, Hoyce
WATER • -
(Continued From Page 1)
was no dry spell that summer.
Even dark, clouds, without
rain, can help, to decrease
water consumption, city offi-
cials have discovered, through
MONT BELVIEU (Sp) -
Ervin Tilton, 76, of Old River
Community died Wednesday in
a Baytown hospital.
He is survived by a daugh-
ter, Mrs. Dotty Macejewski; a
son-in-law, Jimmy
Macejewski, and a grandson,
Ronnie Macejewski all of.™^
Mont Belvieu; two brothers,
Addison Tilton and Amos Til
ton, both of Old River.
A number of nieces and
nephews also survive.
Services will be at 2 p.m.
Friday at Sterling Funeral
Home witn Issac Jones of Cove
Church (if Christ and the Rev.
Bobby King of Old River Bap-
tist Church officiating:
Burial will be in Magnolia
Cemetery in Dayton -
Pallbearers will be Ivee Til-
ton, Maurice Durdin, Joe
Couch, Tom Wright, 'Archie
Macejewski and Melvin Dou-
cett.
Johnson and Harlan Schaeffei
with Lewin E. Barber, Vernon
Lawrence and Norris Thomas
as alternates.
The budget, calling for more
than six per cent above last
year’s budget of $976,490, is not
of daily amounts of hospital.
Why is Baytown having to to Baytown two years ago as
expected to require a tax in- we^s' c*^' ^as no* drilled a
_ . _... new we|| |n more than a dec-
crease, Supt. B. L» t (Bill)
SUIT--
(Continued From Page 1)
prior to his negotiations with
Tipco. Hutto says he
<S25> mi no shown a “statement of finan-
%al condition’’ by Zelman
keuhn reflecting
■er share for 1H
$12.50 per share foe Tipco stock
in March of 1969. The cqotrart.
Hutto says, was, executed
abo^it Sept.30,19W.
Baytonian Is .
Life Master
In Bridge
Jack Furbee of Baytown has
made Life Master, the honor
coming at the Regional Dupli-
cate Bridge Tournament ,_
Austin.
Furbee got his final points
during the Swiss Team Ses-
sion. His teammates were his
wife, Ruth, and Mrs. Ethel
Cohen and Mrs. Grace Johnson
of Pasadena.
The First Life Master ever in
Baytown was Mrs.’ljili Puder-
late husband Bill in
the high bridge honor.
Other Life Masters from
Baytown ereMrs.HJ. Davis,
Mm,A F, Ewtorli, Mm, gft
Alspaugh, Mrs. Fred Hart-
man, Mrs. Jack Furbee, Mrs.
A. F. Smith Jr..and Mrs. Edgar
Neville.
Furbee and his wife had a
bridge studio in the Gray
■iliaf.Wi.'Mi
EM
The kind of tour de force of the in-
tellect and imagination that marks
Kubrick at a true ganlua of tha
cinema... -Pml O. Zlmmrmn, Newsweek
• Future 130-1:05
5:30 7:20 9:19 "
Where “WILLAR0'
ended...
rrrtrT^rxn
Building from 1962 until 1986,
and taught many Baytonians
the art of duplicate bridge dur
ing that time. ‘ |
■In '63, Furbee and other
Baytonjaqs atafri tfia Sm
bridge tournament ever held in
Baytown at Holiday Dm.
ITAMUEY KUBRKKt
W n f#
.m |
v r*
*
HD
‘fight it so close” this summer
with its water supply?
Most simply answered, Bay-
town does not have enough
But the reason for not drill-
ing a new well is more compli-
cated, entangled with the city's
long-range plans fora surface
water supply. For several
years the city has talked of
converting its water well sys-
where water would be trans-
system. The two possible
sources of this surface water
are San Jacinto River through
the San Jacinto River
Authority and Trinity River
Water Authority (City of Hous-
ton!. -
Because pumping water
from beneath the ground
causes land subsidence - and
-^Baytown's fond--definitely is
ibsiding - ’drilling'another
water well was delayed as long
as possible.
But the city has reached the
point of drill acothefwell or go
Funeral Notices |
SATURDAY MITE
ONLY
THE PURPLE- HAZE REVUE
cities are still going downhill.”
he said.
Among the problems, com-
plexities and ironies of his 3%
years at HUD:
—Romney, the production
man of Rambler 'anto fame:
-succeeded in driving goverrt-
.ment-subsidized housing starts
to record levels. But along the
road to landmark production of
nearh oOO.OOO assisted units
last year, he harvested a crop
—Ro
tralize
Demo<
allege;
hands
protec
inheri
progsa
budget
dollars
might
sharini
”A g
most d
countr;
l "The -Boland
the Hoi
commi
dollars"
'■■a :
dinaril;
niitme
who's 1
admini:
M. Fra
the Nai
“His
are bet
CLAUDE BROWNING
Claude M. Browning, 69, of
405% W, Sterling, died at 8:45 day at Baytown hospital
a.m. Wednesday in a Baytown
A native of Houston, he came
an assistant at the Paul U. lee
Funeral Home.
He was a member of Kade
Rothwell Masonic Lodge,
Donnelly, 84, of Route 3, Bay-
town, died at 8:30 a.m. Thurs
Mrs. Donnelly, a native of
Erath County, came to Bay-
town in 1893. She was the
widow of the late Barney Don
nelly.
She is survived by a daugh-
ter, Mrs. Annie DeBruhl; two
sisters, Mrs. Donie Holladay
Houston Shrine Club and and Mrs. Mpry-Campeau; a
Grace Methodist Church.
He is survived by a-daughs a grandson, Austin DeBruhl
ter, Mrs. Ernest Hilton of and his wife, Norma Jean, all
Tomball and seven grandchil-
dren and 21 great grandchil-
dren.
Services will be at 10 a.m.
Friday at Paul U. tee Funeral
Home Chapel with Dr. Lamar
tern to a surface water supply Clark of First Methodist
Church in LaMarque and Dr?
ferred here through a canal Robert B. Moore Jr. of Grace
Methodist Church officiating.
Kade Rothwell Masonic
Ix>dge will have charge of
services at the grave.
Burial will be in Forest Park
through the Coastal Industrial T^wndale Cemetery in Hous-
ton.
Masons will be pallbearers.
Without water, wiOilhe surface
water supply still ta the.nego-
tlation stage. ... ' .
Next Wednesday. 4lie city
officials will open bids for a
new water jmU to be con-
structed near Decker Drive In
connection with a new 16-inch
water main to-be installed in
the bond program. The well
itself is to be funded with bond
money from the 1870 capital
improvements program.
l’omykal. H
MRS. NANCY DONNELLY
Mrs. Nancy Ellen Proctor
Equalisation
son-in-law, R. E. DeBruhl and
of Baytown.
Two 'great grandchildren,
four great-great grandchildren
and* a number of nieces and
nephews also survive.
Services*will be at 5 p.m.
Friday at CedaHBayou Metho-
dist Ghurch with the Rev. Roy
Feldef officiating.
Burial will be in Cedar
Bayou Methodist Cemetery
under direction of Paul U» Lee
Funeral Home.
Pallbearers will be nephews.
In lieu of other remember-
ances the family requests do-
nations be made to a memorial
fund at Cedar Bayou Methodist
Church.
COUNTRY CLUB BEVERAGE
"WE SELL" DISCOUNT i WHOLESALE
DECKER DR. - CRAJGM0NT
424-8721
Specials FrL and Sat, July 7 & 8'
Party Ice t Glasswares Low Case Prices
COUNTRY CLUB
VODKA
80 pr.
4-5 Qt
2"
BUDWEISER
MALT LIQUOR
6 Pk. ' 1 X
12 oz. Cans I
Full
JIM BEAM
499
86 Pr.
SMIRNOFF SILVER
VODKA
Full
Qt 90.4 Pr.
499
PASS PORT SCOTCH
4-5 Qt
86 Pr.
90 Pr.
4-5 Qt
GILBY'S GIN
369
' SEAGRAMS V.0.
56’
86 Pr.
4-5 Qt
BACARDI RUM
4" 80 Pr.
EZRA BROOKS
WHISKEY
4-5 Qt
86 Pr.
PARTY ICE
BEST BUY IN TOWN
10 lb. 25*
18 Lb. 45*
Meeting Set In
Mont Belvieu
MONT BELVIEU (Sp)
The M6nt Belvieu City CouncU
will sit as a board of equalize* Tod I. Gesslin
tlon for the proposed $178,000
city budget at 2 p.m. Friday at
Barbers Hill High School.
The tentative budget is
&S9Rr?fiS ;r:
the city’s history, ,, MK"a tl*c,ronics
Council members compris-
JmdrJ
in ths whok
is only ■ “drop in the bucket"
believe.
And when surface water
does become i reality here, the
well water* will be kept oh a
supplemental jwsis
Wotorcycle Theft
• *
JAMES E. HARDING of 2032
Georgia, Apartment 4, told
Baytown police his mdtorcycle
was stolen between 4 and 5
a ro lNedneactay from in I
Rcgsn Furniture
Leggett Drug
Dr.,Robert E. Hill
w
Frants Pontiac Company Highlands
Baytowj Noon Optimist Club
Baytowii Youth Fair *
Tommys Auto Ssnrice
"3C" Ca *
Norris long Tiuco
J. N. Chastain D.V.M.
'•Vi'’
We want to express our
.sipcere appreciation to the
Inw-contributors Igr
their loyalty, and generosity
diPit
7 BXftOWN
ROUGH RIDERS
And the success of our
June 10th Horse Show
Or. R. 0. News D.V.M. ; ........ - - -
LynchbJh Feed Store • Tri City Extarminiting Co. % Ludtki Feed
Mr. I Mrs. Jamas L Hayden Goose Cftek Feed I Firm Supply Pine Tree Stables
Citizens of Tent Sitings and Loin 1st Nattenel Bask ; (Ksmuhes VeMnari
Aswc,. —: Gulf Coast Doctors Assft Dunkin Donuts
Gnyco Mobile Homes Inc Baytrorn Feed k Supply Mrs. Paul a Las
Gulf Coast Pharmacy “tfr Staretts Hardwara <• ‘ Dali Lingo
Gray Hal Pharmacy iAdarsm Shoe And Saddle m. b Strata d v m
Juanitas Beauty Shop We Kocurek Horseshoer Busby. Buich Inc, •
'rfjkTirjrTi vSwest SbKIm^
Stile Bank ‘ "lakewodtf Pharmacy’ jimmy’s* Garage
':
of. speculation scandals that
have left thousands of the in-
ner-city poor with shoddy, gov-
ernment-insured houses sold at
large profit- by real-estate
operators,
-Romney, long-time civil
rights leader' of liberal
Republicans, assumed office
determined to open additional
suburban housing to low-
income city sweilers. But,
following a storm) triil run of
his plans at Warren, Mich., the
President stripped Romney of
any power to make economic
integration a condition of
receiving federal aid.
—Romney, art enthusiast for
solving urban problems at
-tocill governmental levels, saw
the White.}touse pull the teeth
from another plan that seeks to
induce the suburbs as well as
the cities to join in attacking
tnneraty ills. Succeed? Nrlm
100 years,” said one housing
specialist oj what’s now left of
the plan.
Reuss,
bet of tl
on hous
my lad
cal resl
House.’
The
particu
Romnej
the stri
turn n.
into br
strappei
But so
they see
(ration.1
foreign
‘of dome
The
been a g
in the c:
these t
areas ol
have
solution;
Facto
stimuiat
ministra
roll off
Texas Star To
Big State Gara;
.
t -
The Baytown Sun.
Working on the premise that
• junjt is a matter of opinion,"
the citizens of Canton produce
* - the "grandaddy of flea mar.
kets" on the first Sunday and
’ TVloWKy ofeachmontff. Suanne
In oth
Parmelei
tale of th
whothril
Articles about the state's
greatest: garage sale," a for-
mer train depot that evolved
into a museum, and a carped-
- ter who began m«kiog'##$ii4s«|pko<
' J90o:s. :
will provide varied reading in Faulk, Ko
next Sunday’s Texas Star, a
. regular.
scrumptt
Bapkscoi
cTats' te
truct."
W‘
' »'i 11IK1
.
Copejand writes alxiut this in-
novative idea that sometimes
swells Canton's population as
much as m times on its Trades
Another group of innovators,
residents of Hondo have prov-
ed that modern life does not
have to lead to an obliteration
of history. Burnis l-awrence
captures history for the taking
in this article about the con-
uorei/in i\f A 7'!-VPaF-4llfl
Vtl niwtl '« " I
* ,* depot into a museum,
ft took a lot, of imagination,
but a fovmer San Antonio car-
penter found a new direction
for his life after polio denied
2^ _____
termination, and a closely-knit UrTnrfM
, family steered Bob Brelten to- ^ ^
SANDRA
daughter
Bob C. He
celebrates
day Thur
-
■-
-■'A A.,.
1
; ' .
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 234, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 6, 1972, newspaper, July 6, 1972; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104207/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.