The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 153, Ed. 1 Monday, April 3, 1972 Page: 3 of 20
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Up With
\ •• v- - m-
:00 A.M.-4P.il. x
N FRIED STEArat
pottton. buttered carrotts aid
w&".
- ’- - -
r Specials
P.M.-J.-30 P.M.
S.D.A. CHOICE $|49
ice of 2 gardenfresh wpttbles.
ming Rooms Available
or Seated Service
10 Market St.
54LE
AUTOMATIC---------
AS DRYER
urn are rusf-lesistarrt
g4ife
tircycle timer and
ievel and *
MASSEY JOimBA BANK
(Ci^iwio rw pm i(
the Teas Railroad Commit
tiaa, b*tie dfed befare taking
office
The old Massey-family home Manny and Mrs. Join Cask of
•till **nds It Is located bear
Johnny and Jack’s
market on Hghway 148. just
H»ry worked from IIS until south of Iteciir £.
1932 for Humble Ofl and Retin-
ue Co m Baytaan. He re-
sted in US and went to aork
to then County Clerk Albert
Townsend’s office, bolding the
post two years. In UM. be got a
jobwittHo^onNaturaliirtBe
"COSTOffbiUing and account-
« tog section to the Houston of-
> fice, where he remained until
S US when he was transferred
J to Baytown.
* On May 15,1940, Hprry was
g named district manager. In
J 1937, the company office was
* moved to a Texas Avenue loca-
J tion, where it remained until
* 1951. Then it was moved to the
9 ‘ building now occunied bv Gen-
Beatrice Dixon, an East
Texas nstive, and now lives in
Arkansn.
Harry also has three sisters —------
■nd dne hrother, LW. (StoeHonr community
Baytown; Mrs. Virgie Woods qf
Clovis, NJL, and Mrs. Join
of New York
bridge. Before moving there in
1911, the Masseys lived
Messey-Tompkins Road.
Harry's mother died when be
was six years old and his father_____________ . „.
i remarriedJiixjtepmother, to eat. I eiu most hippy totie yesterday
“Beyten has been good is LONDON (AP)-The march
«ne,u Harry said as be gafe- of time-progress and pU
ered his office belongings, that- is stirring up a large
“end 1 am going to continue to segment of • Britain’s
work tor the community’s in-|population who worn about
Texas Couple Produces f
Stained Glass Windows
g pSceH8Uv«glass. Any 8>ven commission, . , jj M ^ r
£ Street. The offices have been ^ .fola ^Sjob is'S^ve'lostop
p^16’ **of them
people who want the together m ..preser.
S their presentlrcationi 621 aep300*81^ of ^ t°geth'
: ling, since 1959. when the buildJer-the>’ also share a career, with
_ ting, since 1959, when the build-
5 mg was coraplejed.
and an unusual one at that.
ological ‘dig" is Coming into
its:own and Britain’s Depart-
ment of the Environment has
.....been learning how involved
M. PASO, IK «W — A raaUag > window erf stauwd Xi’L.mm.m
^ PjV0* simple as it may seem in this
■g was oompieiea. -------— — -—■
J Harry was born on March 6, They deslKn and Product tomer then
w 1907. He attended elementary stained 8lass wirtdows- . 1»tots for development ot a historv-ridden land
school at Cedar Bayou and and Nancy Griffins are series of rough sketches of how "JggJf ^
both artists. He received a de- thejimshed product wffi ap- V(£f“ h ^pa'aTe
characters as Hadrian and St.
Patrick.
B graduated from old Gooseuuuiarusus- ™ receivea a ue- .
• creek High School in 1925 He &ree 1" architectural art and pear. Either Nancy or Fred
-“-JJ •*- - - rfo'iD" frnm rr“''“0 T“'h l,nl- may be responsible forthe.ul'
mate'design which they subm
degree,in the architectural.de- to the client in the form of a anvnne „an ,
dSL^rVraSat Sma"'SCale *** rendering' UtoversityJias a team of young
tote and were married at the Acceptance of the design archaeologists working a*
H sends ffie Griffins toUie draw-lively to step to before the
S courees. - SSESMS assssas
I ristst?®
b4
.1he.|igte.iiaad, thmilvsri
* attended Massey Business Col- desi8n from Texas Tech Uni-; ___,__________
* lege in Houston, graduated to versity and she received an art mate design which they submit ‘ abou, as f r .
* 1926, and received a business ti^eem the architectural, de- tothe client in the form of a 1 1 aD0Ul as »r apart as
2 • administration diploma from
* New York’s La Salle Extension
;g*v University ’ill 1928 afta? com
* pleting ' correspondence
“courses. ,r— ------------—w-
. In 1942 Harry married tbe d«w or panel, anting tet as ^0 known historical site.^.
former Miss Jean Lucille! be6®n wh®n ^red * fath«r a pattern, they cif each piece are worried* about those they
Herbsleb, who was named of g*35? from ^ger sheets of miss for iack of advance :-
p" formation. „ , -
‘Miss San Antonio’ in 1936.
was working at the Style
aiBpprlrrBaylbwnTffienthey
is.
were married. They have one
daughter, Mrs. George Jenkins
of Houston, and two grandchil-
4ren, George R. Jenkins, 9, nnd
Jennifer Jenkins, 5. - ■ ;
Harry gives Jean credit
his successes and blames him-
self for his failures, which havi
been few. She has also .con
tributed her share,to commu
nity endeavors over the years, ....... .
including work in Various the design-is good.
drives «nrl rhurrh aptivitipc Dncnd nn
the basics for that window.
either Nancy or Fred uses the ot new motorway revealed 124
ii, , . . . , soldering iron and solder to unknown remnants of the past
- . “.™ined g'9“’‘l s ,the de' weld together the ends/of the although only two archaeology
t sign that counts Fred says;; ^ ^ ^ ..... C sites had been thought to be in-
. “Vnu pan maira GAmothino .. j t 1A« n ...
dryer features
ivefs, and
ig times.’
NOW
s199“
NOW' ’ • .S
$16565
dist Men’s Club.
The community service _
Harry enjoyed most was being of
president of the Chamber of-
Commerce and as chairman of
the City of Baytown’s first
planning commission. He
served three consecuiive years
(1957-59) as chamber president
and as chairman of the" plan-
ning commission from the time
- it was created by the city coun-
cil to 1957.
tun . i, i , ,■
§y. .* • , ^|.
WATER HEATER
tank.
ure li-rniiing device;
peraiion with IP
TV, $701°
al terms.
for LP Gas
Iquipment
Farm&
Home I
Service
asked me to design it,” ex-
plaintd F¥ed,-t%arifrento
-yaLK? r™i," *“*'■ “*
the de«gn ts good. the glass-touching-lead areas than 10 survlve‘ /
Based on that premise the ^eg ,ass JJ with an of things the histo-
coupto ts trying to establish acetone mixture and „ u to nans worry about often con-
------------—...........a is designed specifically for a su™ ' __- For instance, landowner Da-
been a member of the church’s certain space and not just co- Depending on the size of a vid Steele bought up pome land
official board andlhe Metho- pied from old stained glass commission, the work may near Daventry in the riiiddle of.
j:„. «..u windows. take up to a year. Several England and brought in bull-
‘ Design, however, is only one projects are always to progress dozers to create a hotel and
if the factors that goes into “•—‘~u- ------
window. The ideas of the ciis-
dozing job is expensive. To stop
the people, majy
banded together in
vation” societies, is not
at the studio.
sports center.
i one Banavtnto in 3K A D. only
to by kidnaped to Ireland when
......... ...____ ____, father than
assocuted now.with the Bank tomorrow. ^ __________
of Baytown, which has and will Giant motorways are under T* was 15 and thence to become
continue to make s fine cootri- construction. Ibey totringe si *
tuition to the financial health of plots the. Angles and Saxons
once peopled, They threaten
the sectors the Romans built
British Historical Sites
... ' ' ' ~ 7.......
Threatened By New Roads
A bulldoter uncovered some
Roman pots and coins. The ex-
perts said it was one of several
Roman' fenM called Banna-
what he is today-the patron
saifit of that troubled land.
But the experts say they an
not sure if Steele's Bannaventa
is St. Patrick’s. Nevertheless,
Steele wants to preserve the
site and turn it into a shrine
The idea would be to outdo
Shakespeare’s! StratfonLon-
Avon as a tourist attraction
and a raecca tor every Irish-
man in the world. The venture
-porated into ........
motorways-because it could be.
The Romans built straight and
•Ax-..' . r V
Fooling around with Watting
Street now. either to improve
the road or dig up the past,
means trouble from one side or
. Then there is Hainan's Wall. }!
The Roman einperor built this
75-mile long barrier, between
12^126 AJ). tint as a seriesof
ptill is up in the air. ________________B.......
' In ancient ixmdon, is left today remains a tourist
bulldozers are constantly attraction. Thy purists are
turning up reties df the Roman
times when the to wiiwas called
Londinium. To desecrate the
‘Roman Wall".is like shooting
the queen.
From London all the way to
Crewe on the border of Wales is
detached forts and then Unking AIRPLaHE Wash Ual siptonr PwM'M^jveaierMf iy U J. Mail iM KheAtW ror
them tip. The idea was to keep this weekend. The airplane wash wQl be it Huauphrey Airport, afed p«t membert will wash a
the Scots from ulluding What single-engine plane fot.110 and a multi-engine tor $20 to $25, Here, memberX Linda Wnllnce,
i< loft tnHflv fomoirw n in,.rirf Byron Ernst, Robert Sutphln and Rosanna Coronado polish up their washing skills. Proceeds
Iron dir wash will be usqlto sygd a post representative to Washington next month for t|» na-
tional Explorers Congress. Hours for the wash are lOi.m.To 5 p m. Saturday and 11 a-ra, to 5
p.m. Sunday. (SunPhotoByLIndaCassltyl
-jtnpjAning because the
British;: electric power system
requires a series of high pylons
along; the “wall" to xmeet
today’s problems,
Attend Church
Keep Up With SPUR'lS The Sun
Do You Want:
(1) Improved'Streets?
(2) Conversion to surface water?
lltTnilEoveff dfainap^seferlpr
(4) A return to the true city manager form of government?
• i
F
'"-"l
r,-
r-
1
" -j
■ J
(5) immediate help4or Brownwood and other low lying
areis? • • '
Then
Vote For J. Milton Stewart
V * . • ' .
, CITY COUNCIL DIST. 4
; . Pel Ad Paid for by luends of 1 Mitlon S»e<nrt. Ean»stme Slowarl, Chowmon
ROOM AIR CONDITIONER
The commission was dis-
solved af. completing a long
study of ti lily’s capital im-
provement needs, which led to
passage of the first bond issue
since consolidation of the Tri-
Cities in 1948.
Prior to assuming the cham-
ber presidency, Harry served
as vice president and as a
member of the board of direc-
tors. Baytown Jaycees honored
him as “Senior Citizen” in 1956
. ' for “outstanding community
service.”
Harry never fought or held
political office. He prefers
voluntarycommuriityservke.
He has been active in the Bay-
town Lions and Rotary Clubs
. and served two years as presi-f
dent of the South Texas Fajr
and Rodeo Association
He has also served as chair-
man and vice chairman of
.; Baytown's Advisory Board and
chairman and co-chairman of
Chamber of Commerce mem-
bership drives. He is a charter
member of Goose Creek Coun
try Club, an affiliate member
of the Bay Area ”',’>rd of Real-
tors and the Dow.,town Mer-
chants Association.
COUNCIli * *
(Continued From Page 1)
Tuesday, replacing’Mrs. Ted
Kloesel.
Precinct 165 at Travis Ele-
/ mentary counts some 2,600 eli-
gible voters, with J. Rodger
A i Read as ejection judge.
Woodrow Lewis, election
judge for Precinct .246 at Carv-
r er-Jones School, estimates 375
voters. '
Wayne McClurg heads the
largest box at Bowie where
some 3,500 people are eligible
to vote in Prednct 249.
Voters who. registered by
March 4 here are eligible to
participate to the election, ac-
cording to a new residency
rule. A federal district judge
■'overturned a requirement that
voters must live to the state
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•*' ’248"
220 VOLT
w? ’258”
>278"
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WITH THERMOSTAT , \
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.*>’248”
.-’278"
y- ■
REPO' and TRADE-INS
KELVINATOR. 5000 BTU : .
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UISOII’S
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90 DAYS *
EASY CREDIT TERMS
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593.0
*138°°
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 153, Ed. 1 Monday, April 3, 1972, newspaper, April 3, 1972; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104909/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.