The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1965 Page: 1 of 12
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VOL 4), NO. 1* .
IAYT0WN, TEXAS, 77111
Tea
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TTIlty, llWTflHvW V| IfH
TREPHONE NUMBER; M74J0J
T
County Attorney Ponders Abatement Suits Against Polluters
By WANDA ORTON
OHiniy Attorney Joe Reiweber
dumber of Commerce ni
concurred with Kings remarks.
him to tak« thli action became
spokesman (or the troup which
IMrM Mher Wooster Chamber
donee In preparation lor Mint? a member, and (our Baytown city
luit at abatement against an In. eouncilmen Le
tfetiy or Industries that pollute King asked that the county at-
the Moulton Ship Channel and tomey examine the pollution
bay area waters • evidaaee collected by Dr. Wal-
A delegation of.ll Baytonlana ter A Qu<i>edr;hix, director of
Tliuraday appeared before Mar- pollution control lor Harrli Coun-
ria County Commissioners Court ty «nd then tile a lull of abate-
requesting that the commission-1 ment In a court of equity agaimt
er, ask th* county attorney to an Indmlry or Industries guilty
. take thli action. at pullutlng the channel
Richard King of the Woosterl Commlialoner V. V. Ramaey
County and Harri, COun-
tlw «wi aria."
ol the Woo-
national program an pollution In
HarHi
ty and
Mated the oBy of Baytown la
partmeM.
Dr. ramgut pri
Ila>tuniaae tor thetr
la studying water pollution evt-
tlclal
Atlanta, Ga, In the near future
the amount of tlahtMlied . . . I
Ramaey reminded Lyon* that
aonai 1 and 2 In
Other
heartily agree with three people
the motion wa( to "requeet" the
action Inatead of "tmtruer tl*
a itatement made recently by
and am anxtoua to •** the com-
Sen. Crlaa Cole that the 1161 wa-
mluloncn take action I make
hi* department
San Jacinto monument and la
I llama, W. P, Smith, BUI Marth.
OrvlUg HBiiBl
the motion that we aik Reiweb-
er to look at thit."
Cummiaaloner E. A. (Squatty)
Lyons, (mined out the commle-
»timer, court could not Inetruct
Dr ramgut rrmnrked that
lion control from local authority
>n King,
Commlialoner Kyle Chapman.
The vote wa, unanimous
Chunty Judge BUI Elliott re-
marked that water pollution waa
one of the moat arriuu. prob-
lems faced In the nation today
He waa granted permission by
Tills wa« the bUI that created
the Texaa State Water Pollution
Board which grant* permits to
Industrie* to pollute the water-
Zone 2 la bum the San Jacinto
monument to Morgen * point
Richard King, a member <rf
pollution
Ictand tor H ’
After
milter of the Nonster Chamber
of Commerce, wa* spokesman
Reaweber to file suit but only
down to Raytown with every
for the Baytown delegation. King
could request him to I yon* ex-
rain they haw," Braswell com-
Andy Braswell, a Baytown
plained they could not order
brought to trial
Smith adDr.La ramgut.
dty councilman told tha corn-
lion problem that not only of-
PORT PURCHASES LONG REACH DOCKS
t
Details Of
Sale Set Out
At Noon Meet
Always A Spo
Victory Over Tors
Must For Ganders
s
How does Baytown
look from the air? See
aerial photograph on
Page 5.
SUN
Spots
I
y:
It
% J*
Ry IVO HARTMAN
By JOE WIinTINOTON
enter tlte contest with key pen
sonnet missing.
The Ganders have lost amaz-
ing offensive guard and defen-
sive tackle Dennis Williams and
quarterback and star comerbark
Klchaid Oliver lor Friday's
game
Due to a dislocated elbow Wil-
liams is not counted on heavily
to return to action this season,
while Oliver will wait out the
Ball High game and possibly see
(Bee (iANDRKM, Pag, It)
Cookbooks Arrive
BAYTOWN COUNCIL for Re-
tarded Children ha* received a
new shipment of French Acadian
cookbooks The books are sell-
ing tor $1.95. Interested persona
may |4iune the Opportunity
Scltool, 582-9290, or Mrs. Wai-
ter Iaiflin, 583-3063,
Haw sport* Editor
HOUSTON (Ip) -
Why Is it that everytlme the
Ganders play the Ball High Tori
the game could be the differ-
ence between life, and death?
Many Baytown fan* are prob-
ably asking themselves this very
question as Swede Lee s Gold-
en Tors prepare to bring their
Golden Tornado to Ganderland
at 7:30 p.m. Friday .
Friday that I
had bought
'
K 2»
Ilf
V
AhUdBk
vmi
A/
ton Interests
Rummoqe Sal*
BUSINESS AND Prafeuion- Wjff,
ol Women's Chib will have a
rummage sale from 9m m, to 5 V
p.m. Friday and Saturday at ‘
3417 Market.
Revived Service*
REVIVAL SERVICES will be
held at 7 ;30 p.m. Friday, Satur-
day and Sunday at Tri - City
Beach Baptist Church, with the
Rev. Mike Toby, Houston Bap-
tist College etudent, preaching.
Song leader will be Mike Harris.
PASADENA (Hp)
— Tfce
mm
at the port.
stage t« act for another U-tA
The purchase price was $6,-
••Per game her* at 1M p.m.
Saturday.
The combatant* are Ham
Raytoim'* pass minded Texans
and Rrasnaport'a stubboni aad
■•defeated t/x porters
A skipper wta would Just
about ellaek the crown for
Braiooport. A Rayburn win
would throw the district race
500,000.
Anderson. Clayton A Cb. hoa
Two Baytonians
On New Panel To
Study Pollution
■
a
Mlfc '■-*s
►4—Wr
*■ *
' *
Jaatlae (haavla Boadreaax of
through Anderson, Clayton's
t
Raytown, who died Wedoes
i r — "lirUf IT
day at the age at 1M, wUI be
Co. Tha Navigation District hag
Sid Brady and Jack Walker,
employee In Esso Research and
Engineering Co * Baytown Ra-
te a r c h and Development Di-
vision, have been appointed by
State Sen. Cris, Col, of Houston
to serve on a new pollution study
committee which will be organiz-
ed a* the Texaa Water Resour-
ce* Foundation at a meeting set
for Dec. 8.
Serving on the committee with
Brady and Walker will be an-
other Baytown man whose ap-
I(ointment waa previously an-
nounced. He la E. V. (Gene)
Muller, chairman of the Public
Affairs Committee of the Woos-
ter Chamber of Commerce.
The purpose of the new group
will be to study poUution prob-
lems In the Harris, Galveston,
Brazoria and Chambers County
area. It will then act as a lia-
ison between the public and the
Texas Wgter PoUution Control
Board.
Brady and Walker are w e 11
known In Baytown for their ef-
forts toward keeping area wa;
ten clean. Walker, as a repre^
sentative of the Bayshorc Rod,
Reel and Gun Club, has worked
in the Interest of sportsmen to
improve water conditions in ad-
jacent bays, while Brady has
conducted research work In de-
veloping Humble Oil A Refining
Co.'s clean water program at
the Baytown Refinery.
Brady also made another con-
tribution to anti - pollution ef-
forts recently by serving on a
Workshop on Water PoUution
held in Denver, Colo. The work
shop, sponsored by the Manu-
facturing Chemists Association,
dealt with Industrial waste treat-
ment and water poUution. It of-
fered Industrial personnel an op-
portunity to profit from the wide
experience and seasoned Judg-
ment of the technical specialist)
making up the panel.
■t • a.m. Hatardsy at Pouf
tola » three-way tie providing
-0. Lae Chapel and at t:M
ties to Gulf-Atlantic Waratmm
High Friday Bight.
Baytowa (ana will be pulll ng
Co. for (lv» years at on annual
ITS WET, BUT THE GAME IS ON
Catholic Omrrh. Rosary will
lie read at 7:M p-m, Friday
at the fuipoM home. She waa fr from the Exporyn, but na-
the mother of Mr*. D. W. At- I ly If the (lander* take Roll.
pha of 1M0 Maryland, with j —----------——
whom she nude her home for The Ganders have been more
than luckless against the Tori
every time the game means
something In the past.
Right now the.sltuation is defi-
nitely at that point, with the
Qanders having to win their re-
maining two games to even have
the slightest chance to go win-
dow - shopping over Nederland
way
Both the Ganders and the Tors
rental of $450,000 The transfer I
Gulf Coast Meet
for Rayburn to win n squeak
will be completed by late Decem-
ber.
NEITHER RAIN NOR high wafer ran hamper the footbal
game Friday night between Robert E. Lee and Galveston
Rail High. The feld la drenched, but the game will be played.
Rlggest problem faring the athletic department to where to
park the fan*. Athletle Director Dan HUllworth suggests
that the parking lota around the high school be turd. There
THE CANDY Stripers of GuU
Coast Hospital will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at the hospital, to
be Joined at 7:30 p.m. by the
Pink Ladies volunteer group for
a program presented by Fred
Sonnier, anesthetist at Gulf
Coast.
the high school arrow the prnct ee
a# you won’t have U walk In the mud.
There will mtoo be parking at the sdiwJntotratios bulld'nf aad
along the afreets surrounding the atadlam.
(Baytown Bun Photo)
to n paved walk f
Port Commissioner R. H.
Pruett of Baytown said: "Tito
field* to tke atadl
moet flexible uw of the com-
the past to years.
hlru-d facilities In the future will
certataiy develop ■ bettor ability
by the port to serve the shipping
imbUc.”
Walter A. Ashe,
Resident Here
Since 1927, Dies
Rain Totals 2.20 Inches Here
en. W D. Haden. W. N. Bins-
* * *
Woothor and Ticks
ton, and E. H. Hendon*and
One of the heaviest rains In Friday morning were city crewsiwrre at James and Sixth: on
recent years virtually paralyzed
raffle In Baytown Friday morn-
ing, resulting In floods over the
•mire area
From 3 a.m. to 9 a.m. Friday
a total of 2.20 inches of rain
was recorded by a rain gauge
at Esso Research and Engi-
neering Co. here. This amount
included 1.75 inches during a
cloudburst from 8 to 8:40 a.m.
The busiest (»eople in town
lous parts of the area, Cambcm
Commission Chairman Telkpeaa
also commended the move as a
"tremendous atop Itrwird hr
working out of the public works Baker Road; and Wade Road,
department Because of the! . .w__ .
large amount of rain at one) ^0/* lca^ln* *" **vc™'
time, drainage ditches would “h«»UFrklay. including the
Hit carry the load. City crews Hubert E. Lee vocational btlild-
werc busy unstopping storm*0* where the storm sewer
(ewers and removing debris hacked into the building; Bay-
from gutters An employe In the ,owo Junior Hl*h: Hor*c‘‘ Mann
public works department report- '*unlor High. The liberal arts
ed the worst flooded area was building at Lee College also had
in Craigmont. leakage.
Employes in the school dis- Ei O. Cambem, district man
Diet's maintenance and trans- ager of General Telephone Co.,
[xirtatlon department also had reported "no appreciable trou-
their share of rain problems hie" with telephones going out
Friday_______________________________ during the rain. There were only
Three sehoool buses stal'ed In 100 reports of telephone outage
the rain for ■ short time. These and these were scattered in var-1 (See RAINFALL, Page it)
-ayl.
Lt. James Taylor of the Police
Department said only one car
wreck occurred during the de-
luge and this was a minor acct-l—
MOSTLY CLOUDY and mild
Funeral services for Walter
Avery Ashe, 73, of 1207 Dale,
will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday
at First Presbyterian Church,
with the Rev. Burnette W. Dow-
ler officiating.
Burial will be In Cedar Crest
Cemetery, under direction of
Paul U. Lee Funeral Home.
Ashe died at If) 40 a.m. Thurs-
day in a hospital in Baytown.
A resident in Baytown since
1927, he was a native of Climax
Springs, Mo. He retired Nov. 10,
1956, from Humble Oil and Re-
fining Co.'s Baytown Refinery
where he was an operator.
Ashe was an elder In First
Presbyterian Church.
He is survived by his widow,
Mrs. Laura Jean Ash of Bay-
town; two daughters, Mrs. Doro-
thca.mil of Baytown and Mra|
the aluminum industry which
began when Olin Mnthieson
t'orp. raised prices tael week.
The administration has
railed meetings In Washington
to revise the price actions.
The Alcoa . Increase U some-
what lower than the Increaae
by Olln Mathieaon and other
smaller aluminum producers.
through Saturday with raia ex.
the Port of Houston.”
peeled to end Friday after-
noon. Temperature range ex-
pected Friday, *4 71 degree*.
Aluminum To
Cost More
lent.
Our World
today
Cars were stalled, however,
over the entire city and many
cars stalled right In front of th<
liolice station on South Main.
* Cars could be seen Inchinr
along main thoroughfares from
8 to 9 a m. Friday during heav-
iest flooding. Several car* wore
stalled on the low spots tot fnx-
Drive and a drainage ditch
HATt'RDAY Gulvestoa tides
will be tow at X:SI a.m. aad
high at X:I0 a.m. and t:M
NEW YORK (AP> _ Aluml
num Co. of America, the nn-
•Ip^’s No. I domestic alumi-
num producer, today boosted
price*. The action came de-
•pile what has been Interpret
ed aa opposition from Presi-
dent Johnson's administration.
Alcoa raised the price of
basic Ingots a half - cent n
pound to tS cento and the
price of fabricated metal by
p.in.
From AP Wire*
• Narking through a small
Arouhd^
--ITT own.
hide la n wall of
rwo Boys, 18, Charged
In Houston Murder
ij •
fatly remove a live grenade
from a Vietnamese farmer's
bark.
HOUSTON (AP)—Two 18-year-
olds were In county jail today
charged with murder in the Oct.
28 stabbing of a Houston fire-
man.
The youths, arrested and
charged Thursday night, are
Kenneth Herd and Johnny day-
man. Both came here recently
from Dallas.
They are accused of killing
James Green, 40, a father of
eight who also worked part
time as a cab driver. The body
was found near his cab in early
morning.
Police said robbery apparent-
ly wa* the motive although $33
was found in Green’s pockets.
-.a
• A hrlhuplcr ndltaioa hi
,
S**ath Viet Nam's central high-
kill* Seven Aiw-riraa*.
on average of a rent a pound.
■
■M
Alcoa’* price move follows a
M fp
m May , 1
Haata'a helper for Amarieaa
Marian Kilpatrick of Midland;
three stepchildren, Mrs Ada
Jane Hamman and Lloyd E.
Johnson, both qf Baytown, and
Harry E. Johnson of Honolulu.
Hawaii; a brother, Dan S. Ashe
of Shawnee. Okla.; a sister. Mrs.
W. C. McManus of Labbock. Al-
so surviving are 10 grandchil-
dren and three great - grand-
children.
fighting men la Viet Nam aa
the ( hrintiuu* seonna ap.
MRS. FELTON Underwood of
2102 Colby Drive has returned
home from Bayshore Hospital In
Pasadena after a nine-day stay
... Mr. and Mrs. R. E. De-
Bruhl of Baytown are home from
Shreveport where they attended
the birthday of his father, J. L.
DeBruhl, who was 101. The cele-
brant, who liveg In a nursing
home, was given a party by the
Eastern Star and appeared on
TV . . . Sheryl Robinson of 407
Gaillard celebrates her 18th
blrthdayThursday ... A Gander
football player and his girl friend
will be clowns at the Saturday
night carnival at Stephen F. Aus-
imeto a surST-
cal patient at Gulfway General
Hospital
daughter
Tomek. She now Is at home and
doing well.
Dan Elkins sends out a meet
Ing reminder notice ... Ccn
Muller describes the wonderiu
fishing that used to be out it.
Crystal Bay) , . i Sun Staffer
Bee Landrum returns next week
after hig vacation . . . Many
apologies to Mike Fink for get-
ting chopped out of the Madri-
gal Singers photo.
-
'
. »
• The nation’* jaiiles* rate
dips aa /eight • year law
Labor Department waa trying
- M
O President Johnson estate
' i
’Sack' Collins Is
freed In Houston
Optimists Honor Them -
J—,
Ex-Baytown Banker
»ftigpUte
Spotlight Is On Community's Youth
m
HOUSTO NIAP) - Clarence
(Sack) Collins, 29, one of four
persons charged in a 1959 klll-
for-pay slaying, went free
Thursday.
His conviction and 99-yoar
prison sentence were reversed
June 1* by the 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals. It ruled a
statement introduced as evl-
lence was obtained by coercion.
Collins had been held in the
county jail since the ruling ol
the appellate court. .
Dlst. Atty, Frank Briscoe had
until Saturday to seek a new
trial or dismiss the murder
change that resulted from the
Nov. 16, 1959, death of Mrs.
Wilma Selby.
Briscoe chose to dismiss
charges because "of insufficient
evidence."
Joeeph Selby, 57, husband of
the . slain woman, and Maggie
Morgan, a fortune teller, also
Baytown’s spotlight will be
on youth and the organizations
hat work with young people
Nov. 8-14 during the Optimist
sponsored Youth Appreciation
Week.
Mayor Seaborn Cravoy has
made it "adAcial" in a procla-
mation that Joins the Baytown
observance with similar observ-
ances throughout the U.S. and
Canada coordinated by Optimist
International'! 2,300 daba.
Included in the plant — and
raditional in Baytown -- will
be the banquet Monday night by
he Optiftists. The Baytown or-
ganization will honor several
other Baytown clubs that devote
much time and effort to youth
selection of tite. representative
teenage boy and girl from Rob-
ert E. Lee High School.
Lester Alford, district chair-
man of the event, lists the ob-
jective of Youth Appreciation
Week as:
To recognize the accomplish-
ments of youth In the home,
school, church and community.
To promote a more ac-
tive participation by families In
family affairs. '
To encourage organizations
and other groups to publicly
show their respect for yotltft.
To encourage newspapers to
devote more space to the news
of the 95 per cent of youth who
are good citizens.
To encourage radio and tele-
vision stations to recognize youth
through special as well as reg-
ular programs.
To encourage national maga-1
zlnes to recognize the accom-
plishments and contributions of
youth.
To provide the proper environ-
ment and recreational and so-
cial activities for youth.
To encourage parents to reded,
ioate themselves to the responsi-
bilities of parenthood.
To Illustrate the great influ-
ence religion has on the lives of
youth and to encourage their ac-
tive participation in religious ac-
tivities. *
To encourage a greater Inter-
change of ideas between adults
and youth leading to a broader
understanding of each other's
pnJblems.
Reagan P. Mangum, Paste-
tfena builder and tormer Bay-
town banker, died suddenly at
nis home In Pasadena TttorriUy
night of a heart attack.
Mangum was an employe of
Citizens National Bank before
World War II, He left the bank
to enter the service and elected
not to return. „
Among hig
listers, Mrs.
Mrs, W. C. Sanders, and a niece,
Mrs. Robert Strickland, all of
tin
" BMtCT
Houston, is the
Mr. and Mrs. Gus
survivors are two 1
W. T. Under and
Ba
aytown
Funeral service! will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday at Colonial
Funeral Horn* In Pasadena.
YOUTH APPRECIATION WEEK IS PR
N. V. McWiiliemt, left, md Dr. Bob Warlord of Optimists wffli Mayor Seaborn Cnvey
GANDERS
BEAT GOLDEN
TORNADOES
CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK
PEOPLES STATE
~ BANK
MiMeia r.o.t.c.
Let Di Finance Toar
1966 New Car
At 4%
SAVE
WE HAVE BEEN
MAKING 4% AUTO
LOANS for 4 YEARS!
HARRIS COUNTY
FEDERAL '
Eye It Try It
- BUY rri
THAD FELTON
W
Car Wash
rRE-MED CLl/B of Robert E.
Lee High School will have a car
wash from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Satur-
day at Grace Methodiat Church.
IN THE
ROUND
1
«♦
Aaaeta Over
$26,000,000.00
■ nxAs
1M4
Msaiiar F.0/I.&
are serving prison terms.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1965, newspaper, November 5, 1965; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145302/m1/1/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.