The Cleveland Advocate (Cleveland, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 65, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 11, 1982 Page: 2 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cleveland Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Austin Memorial Library.
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Page2 Section A, CLEVELAND ADVOCATE, Wed . August 11, 1982
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Calendar of events
Cont.-from front page
Splendora
Cont. from front page
CENTER BAPTIST CHURCH
REVIVAL
AUG.8--I5: A revival is in
progress at Center Baptist
Church at Thicket with ser-.
vices nightly at 7:30 Rev
Charles Bonner is the evang
elist, with special singing Pas-
tor Emmett Pugh invites, ever-
yone to attend Center Baptist
is located 32 miles east on
Highway 105 For more infor-
mation call 592-3840.
RIFFE FAMILY TO APPEAR
AUG. 15: The Riffe Family
will appear Sunday, Aug 15, at
the North Cleveland Baptist
Church starting at 6 p m. The
ADULT VACATION BIBLE
SCHOOL
AUGUST 9-13: Dolen Ba public is invited,
ptist Church will hold an Adult
Vacation Bible School August
9-13. starting at 7 pm They
will be studying the Prophe-
cies. rs. Lois McShan will be
the teacher Everybody ts in-
vited.
eVaNG.ELISTU CRUSADE
AUG 9-13: An •evangeli-
stic crusade wi.ll be held at the
Macedonia Assembly of God in
Cleveland Aug 9.13 with the
Rev Jim Snyder family. For
more information, call
• 592 3151 .
PEP SQUAD PLANS CAR
WASH SATURDAY
AUGUST 14: The Cleve-
land High School Pep Squad will
hold a car wash Saturday at the
parking lot of First Bank & Trust
from 9a m until 4 p m Cars will
. be $5 and trucks $6 The pro-
ceeds will go U)-help furnish
uniforms for the pep squad
DAVIS HILL ’ BAPTISJ
PLANS RE\ IV AL
AUGUST 15-22: Davis
Hill Baptist Church, located
off Highway 321, will conduct a
revival August 15-22 at 7:30
nightly The evangelist will be
the Rev. Roy Vaughn, pastor
of Concord Baptist Church in
Rye Singing will be the prea:
cher's son, Earl Vaughn, with
Royce Vaughn the pianist Th?
pastor. Rev. George Haryden,
invites all faiths to attend the
revival
VACATION BIBLE S( 11001.
AT SOUTHLINE
AUGUST 9-13: .Southline
Baptist Chbrch in Cleveland
will hold its Vacation Bible
School August 9 through 13
from 6:30 to & p m The ages
run from nursery through a
dult Registration will be Mon-
day night at 6:30., The Rev
George Decker, pastor, invites
everyone to attend.
KINDERGARTEN TESTING
AUG. 16-17-184 Kinder-
garten screening tests of
Splendora schools will be held
August 16. 17,. 18 and 9 a m
until 2 p m at the Splendora
Elementary School,. If -your
child will be attending kinder -
garten he must have his test-
ing before he will-be assigned
to a class.
Vacation bible school
AUGUST (M3: Bethel
Baptist Church, located on
Highway 321, will hold its
Vacation Bible School August
9-13 at 10 a m until 14:30.
Participants will register on
opening day . ,
Pl.t M GROVE ASSEMBLY.
OF GOD REVIVAL
AUG. 16-21: Plum Grove
Assembly of God is having a
revival August 16-21 with the
Rev. Milton "Red” Williams of
Livingston as the evangelist
Everyone is invited and come
expecting to be blessed
MOTHER S DAY Oi l
AUG. 12: Thelast day for
Mother’s Day Out registration
is Thursday. Aug. 12. at the
First Baptist Church gym. in
Cleveland
SCHOOL REGISTRATION
AUGUST 12-13: ’ School
registration for Coldspring-
Oakhurst IDS registration is
Aug. 12 from. f to 4 p m. and Aug
13 from 8 to 11 a m. Classes
begin Monday. Aug 16 at « am
RIVER OAKS
REVIVAL NEARS
AUG, 23-27: River Oaks
Baptist Church of Porter will
have a revival at Stancil Prk in
Cleveland Monday-Friday,
Aug. 23-#7, at 7:30 p.m. Evan-
gelist Mitchell Bell will preach
and Don and Richard Kirtley
and the Bell Singers will pre-
sent the musical message. For
more information; call 354-8356
or 354-8939.
BLOOD PRESSURE LESSONS,
■CrtiiL from front page
Cold, from front page
or group acting as a political W
entity is legally bound to file
with the- county clerk the
name, address and telephone
number of the campaign treas-
urer.
the first units in the area He
has worked for the post office
25 years, eight as superjnten rfb
dent
First one completed is at
Rive^K’reek Village off the
Coldspring Highway There •
are 30 rural mailboxes on the
highway 28 of them in use
which will go out of use today
Mail will be delivered today.at-,
the NBU installed about 100
yards off the road
The residents liked the
idea and they furnished the
concrete foundation which is
all that is required The post
office installed the boxes and
there are 47 locked boxes
ready for use The other box is
to deposit letters you wish to
be mailed
A box af the post office of
a similar size would cost $28 a
year. The NBU is free for life.
LESLIE YVONNE BRUM-
LEY--1981 graduate of
Cleveland High School will
graduate from Lamar Uni
versify Aug. 13.. Brumley
made the Dean s List all
four semesters She is the
daughter of Came and
Frances Brumley of Cleve
land.
18 th
Coiit. from
front page
buckle.
The 9-year-old and under
boys and girls will compete in
just one event. Pee Wee barrel
racing, clover’ leaf pattern,1
and the winners, from first
through sixth place, will re-
ceive ribbons.
Tarkington
sure they are valid. She then
has 20-30 days to present the
petition to the commissioners
court, who Will approve or
disapprove the request for a
special elect ion.
The group forming to
-fight the passage of the beer
sale issue has not yet filed for
the designation of a campaign
treasurer. Catchings said. In
order to advertise, for or a-
gains.t an issue, an individual
Liberty
Postmaster Martin said
the response in Splendora has
been very good and expects to
have his supply of 20 units gone
shortly and predicts he’ll dou-
ble this within six months.
"I wish the interested
people would write me in care
of the post office as I’m getting
so many phone calls I can
hardly keep up with my regu-
lar work,” he explained.
Postmaster Mittelsfedt
said he.has started putting out
the units in the Clear River
postal area and will probably
have at least a hundred erect-;
ed within a short period of
time. He expects that figure to
double in six months
The postmasters say New
Caney has installed a NBU at
their latest shopping center
and Humble has them scatter-
ed throughout the city as they
have been working on it for
almost a year
Middelstedt said the units
could be installed in new a-
partment complexes, mobile
home parks, shopping centers
and in existing multiple unit
locations where they are re
quested He asked that anyone
planning to build a multiple-
unit complex including subdi-
visions, to contact him in the
planning stage so the postal
service can help plan for the
NBU’s.
Rural carriers are paid
for the number of stops they
make, the postmasters ex-
plained.. The NBU’s can cut
these stops dramatically, thus
saving money.
Joe GUynes, superinten-
dent of postal operations at the
Cleveland Post Office, is the
man who is putting together
Kolarv Governor
THE (LEVELAND
ESTABLISHED 1919
COW POKES
By Ac* Raid
Marian Owen
CLASSIFIED \DS
RECEPTIONIST
MAINTENANCE
ice ki#
A Ml service Bonk
SUGAR
I
Fredia Cox
Francis Mims
112.80
110.00
mey melt
IN YOUR
MOUTH!
Annual subscription price...
Senior citizen rate..........
Out of Liberty. Montgomery
and San Jacinto counties....
(TR( IT.ATION
Staff:
BUSINESS OFFICE
Staff:
Represented nationally by
Texas Press Association
and U.S. Suburban Press
A kernel of
corn must be heated
to 400 degrees F
before it will pop’.
Lois Burns
Mary Mize, Kelly Spann
TEXAN
FRI.-SAT.
LATE SHOW
11:00 ONLY
“With the interest bein' what It Is, It’s plumb
ridiculous for you to ask me ter payment
on the principal I”
TOPS ANNUAL
GARAGE SALE
AUG. 12-13: Splendora
TOPS Texas No. 874 will have its
annual garage sale Thursday
and Friday, Aug 12-13, from 9
a m 3 p.m in Splendora Follow
the signs from Highway 59 at
Patton Village, or FM 2090 at
• Tram Road The garage sale
will be rescheduled if rained out.
as they were having jnexpert-
enced help learning their du-
ties.
Corley said they had one-
man units five days but added
an extra person on Friday and
Saturdays. He said they had 11
paid deputies assigned to Dis-
trict 3 (northeast Montgome-
ry) and to his knowledge they
worked well with the cities
At the end of the meeting
Constable Charles Hayden of
Precinct 4 said both depart-
ments should work together
and he would help to see that
they did.
Chief Ford said that any
charge or complaint against
one of his officers would be
investigated by Montgomery
County Chief Deputy Joe Little
and two of his men “provided
the plaintiff made a formal
statement that is notarized
PUBLISHER Ken Kirby
MANAGING EDITOR Russ Melvin
News staff: (hip Perkins. Fran Rice
__
RETAIL ADVERTISING Marlene Kerr.
Sales staff . Billye Barrow. Robert Smeeton
TEXAN THEATRE
Starts Friday 7:00 & 8:45 PM
...........—VAC Audited -----------—
Published ever^ Wednesday and Saturday in
Cleveland. Texas by Advocate Publishing. Inc.
Entered and postage paid at the post office in
Cleveland, Texas 77327 as Second Class mail.
SCREENING
AUGUST 19: Lessons on
how to take blood pressure will
be hel Aug. 19 from 10 a m. iThtil
noon at the Austin Memorial
Library. Tom and Mary Wool-
dridge. RN instructors will be in
charge Everyone is invited
They will also hold a blood
pressure screening from 1 to 3
p.m.
hour all over the country and
she thought if they went over
53, “give them a ticket."
• New resident Wanda Val-
lance said they had been living
in Splendora just four months
but they thought they had a
wonderful police force
“We had a break-in and
were bothered by trespassers
and the police came by and
handled the problem.” she
said
Mr Vallance said he
worked for a trucking firm in
Houston and said four of their
drivers were given tickets for
First Bank & Trust
P.O. Bax 1487-Cleveland, Texas 77327
WmFPIC 5t2-4Ul
and signed." ‘
“I will not take action on
rumors or hearsay but if a
sworn statement is verified,
then I personally will arrest
that officer and take him to ■
Conroe," Ford declared
....... Nadine Farley
. .Catherine Smith Clay
Postmaster: Please send address changes or
undellverable copies to Cleveland Advocate,
P. O. Box IS28, Cleveland. Texas 77327.
»!.■ 592-2626
443-7225
speed limit was 55 miles per speeding by the Splendora po-
■ n .l. lice department He added the
four truckers admitted doing
up To 80 miles an hour.
■Montgomery County
Sheriff Joe Corley spoke on
cooperation between the sher-
iff’s department and Splen-
dora and said they had always
had good relations and hoped
they would continue. He did
admit they had a shortage of
manpower and did the best
they could.
The sheriff appeared be-
cause of a complaint from one
of the Splendora dispatchers
who said she had trouble with
a Montgomery dispatcher one
night. The sheriff said it was
possible it happened but be-
lieved things would be better
COMPOSITION Dawn Aultman
Staff: Beth McGibney. Laura Wise
to speak
Barney Lockhard Morris,
Rotary Governor of District
591 will visit with the Cleve-
land Rotary Club Tuesday ,
night and Wednesday noon at
the Cleveland Country Club.
Barney is a native Texan,
born in Houston and resides ih
Orange
He graduated from Wash-
ington University, St. Louis.
He is a certified public accoun-
tant of Missouri and Tejcas,
and for years was a manager
for the international account-
ing firm of Price Waterhouse a
and Co., S Louis office. Dur-
ing World War II he served as
a Navy combat intelligence
officer in the Pacific Ocean
area.
Barney served for many
years as associate and general
manager for the late Orange
industrialist, Edgar W. Brown,
Jr., and later as manager of
his estate. He is now in pratice
in Orange as a certified public
accountant.
Barney has served^as a
director and president of the
Greater Orange Area Cham- £
ber of Commerce and as a
director and president of the
East Texas Chamber of Com- ' W
. merce.
He is a member of the
First United Methodist Church
in Orange and has served as
chairman of the official board,
and on the board of trustees.
Barney brings to his Rot-
ary duties a broad background
in business and finance, bank-
ing and shipbuilding, and
church and community ser-
vice.
For a complete list of
entries and the nights they will
compete, see Sports, Page IB
Pep s(|ii<i<l
e<ir mash
The Cleveland High
School Pep Squad wil) hold a
car wash Saturday. Aug. 14,
from 9 a.m until 4 p.m. in
the parking lot of First Bank
and Trust on Houston St
The prices are $5 for
cars and $6 for trucks.
Proceeds from the car
wash will be to buy uni-
forms for the pep squad
orations with little or no exper-
ience and with a bad track
record in hazardous waste
landfills These sites would
serve as waste dumps for
refinery and chemical manu-
facturing plants outside our
county---the Houston Ship Cha-
nnel Industry complex and the
Golden Triangle, area; Recog-
nized scientists state there are
no guarantees that the pro-
posed landfill technique can be
safe The proposed clay liners
will eventually disintegrate
and steel drums will rust.
The EPA agency has est-
ablished only a 30 year moni-
toring program for a hazard-
ous waste landfill problem that
will go on forever, Harris said.
Scientist say there is no way to
prevent chemical seepage into
our underground and surface
water supplies Most of us will
not be here 30 years from now
but we don't believe most
people favor poisoning their
grandchildren.
The proposed 1000 -acre
hazardous waste-site two
miles outside Dayton lies be-
tween two drainage facilities
which drain into the . "Big
Ditch" which supplies the Da-
yton Canal with the excess
flowing into the Trinity River
Industrial \^ater -System that ,
supplies municipal, industrial
and agricultural water to Lib-
erty, Chambers and Harris
counties.
The proposed 580 acre
hazardous waste site three
miles outside Devers is located ‘
in the Pine Island watershed.
A low land, often flooded, feeds
into Willow Creek, LNVA Can-
al and the Neches River. These
provide drinking water for
thousands of people including
Beaumont
Now is the right time to
stop hazardous waste landfills
in Liberty county.
SUch seepage will destroy
all fish, waterfowl and animals
as well as soak into, country’s
greatest natural resource, wa -
ter. which has been stored for
centuries in aquifers, which
we are depleting some 21 ’
billion gallons more per day
than soaks in.
These people of Liberty
County who . are taking this
•stand against hazardous waste
landfills in Liberty County
include Joe Harris, chairman j
of the executive committee;
GOV. Bill Daniel; Gene Touch- k
stone and Dr. Ricky Myers’’
who have undertaken the lead-
ership to raise $600,000 from
citizens of Liberty County
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Melvin, Russ. The Cleveland Advocate (Cleveland, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 65, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 11, 1982, newspaper, August 11, 1982; Cleveland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1189990/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Austin Memorial Library.