Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 166, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 22, 1951 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brenham Weekly Banner and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
gust
—-
-PRESS,
[ .
*
'I
>
result!.
able spirit that marts It possible
JUST BOAR SUDS
— terms
in Beautiful
R
■__________________________________________
SEIDEL BROS.
—
r
(t
(
'1
[AM. TEXAS
I
/
Or®
• £
IS!
1
I,
31
*
■x
50
LAY AT
II
GARAGE MAN
• BARBS
ii
rtment
o
>
!«>
mink OPMIATOW
■?
Com tn May for. good fast on a truck Mat fit, yovr job. „a90MEM*ttftlUiaC
CONTtNSNTAL #«■ COMPANY
BRENHAM.
ALAMO & DOUGLAS STB.
kids are home.
•naw?URGNTfi
IMatea
NIAYYBUTY
Fm ki
\\eoMS
I *JTJ
A a cd
Rice Grid Work
To Open Sept. 1
Kilgore Rangerettes
To Perforin At
Rice-Clemson Game
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTING
ALASKA WOULD KEEP
TIMBER RESOURCES
GALVESTON. Aug. 21 <VJ?» —
Some 400 Gajveston city employ-
ee
The goat-tucker, or nightjar, la
a bird around which several old
legends have been woven, The
ancient* believed it sucked goats
at night, that the goats immedi-
ately ';dried up" and lost their
sight.
We
you
TEXAS
LEAGUE
whAI
Housework is called one of the
most hazardous of feminine oc-
cupations. Especially when the
SULLIVAN. Ind. <U.P) —Barbara
Page washed her golf shoes with
ordinary laundry soap. She did
not g« ’all the soap out. When
she played a round of golf over
a wet course, she had to explain
to her partner that she wasn’t
foaming at the feet . . . just soap
suds.
■ i ■
FIRST FROM UN-Just re-
released by the secretary-general
of the United Nations in New
“Brffaoe me, tWs '50,000 Mdee-
Nb Wear’ «»®ry » all
writes I
Man, <—
cars uaiiu
( AskMe About
NW”}
■/I
b
K A: \
Why pay an enormous
price for your
Termite Control
Seo
I. D. BROWN * BON
EXTERMINATORS
2624 Gorman Avs.
WACO. TEXAS
Reasonable prices
If desired.
Waco Phone 2-1941
Brenham Phone 3214
tv
NOTICE
WILLIE’S CAFE
Will be open on Sunday’s
at 1:15 p. m. Serving
Coldest Keg and
Bottle Beer in town.
>» E
s*-
MAR MATCHED
--
St Joseph aspirin
WORLD'S LARGEST SEILER AT*!?T
THE GREAT NEW
FORD TRACTOR
ford engineered for faster
[arming. Also Proof-meter.
Only $1495.00
lY, AUGUST 22,1951
[RACKET FOR
SITKA, Alaska <U.R> — Billions
Of board feet of southeast Alas-
ka’s valuable- spruce and hem-
lock timber may possibly be
hauled away to feed hungry saws
and pulpwood grinders in Cana-
da and Puget Sound.
They Wlrf not be if Alaskans
have their way about it.
Individuals, chambers of com-
merce and other organizations
are protesting a proposed change
in U. S. forest service regulations
that would permit the export of
unmantrfactured Alaskan timber.
Most Alaskan’3 feel that if the
export ban Is lifted, ft will mean
the end of their hopes for pulp
mills and other timber process-
ing plants in the territory.
West Coast timber processors
are running out of raw material
for their mills and they have cast
a hungry eye toward the vast
virgin timber tracts of Alaska.
Foresters estimate there are 85,-
000,000.000 board feet of mer-
chantable timber in the 16,000,-
000-acre Tongass National Forest,
which covers much of southeast
Alaska.
AV
ft
. r
rmmboi
it^LsatrtdL.
Too much card-playing can
bring on heart attpcke, sags, a
doctor. But how can a man get
out of playing with hi. Wife?
• * •
Classes for waiters and waitres-
it matters but little what your
classified ad will get the-desired
needs may be, a Banner - Press
results.
ol me unnea ciation. in new . -------------------
Yo^k are these photograph, of
/
Banner . Press Classifhd ads
get results.
NMHRHBHHHHHHHMHHHBB*-,.'*. - ....
CATCHINC ”THI KANSAS CITY SPIRIT’’-Amid ths mud
and muck of the flodd-ruined Kansas City industrial district, famed
artist Norman Rockwell sketches scenes of recovery. Rockwell -
toured the flood-ravaged areas to make sketches for a painting of
"the Kansas City spirit.” The work will be hl. contribution .to
the city, dramatizing tts remarkable recovery and the unqyench-
HOUSTON, Aug. 22 (Spl.) —
Activity will begin picking up
very soon around Rice liistiute's
athletic plant where during the
summer the office staff has been
busy handling the early football
ticket requests.
Head coach and athletic direc-
tor Jess Neely returns in a few
i ■ u iii riag.nan, ziii/AJlld,
fast of several stops he has made
as a lecturer on gridiron tech-
nique and all-star games' coach.
The sixty-plus candidates for
the Owl varsity are due in Fri-
day. Aug. 3T, for the ahnual com-
plete physical exam prior to the
opening of practice on Septem-1
ber 1. , i.
Apk any owner, si
- TUJKa^. JOwtan
you switch to Dodge. You get balanced
weight distribution, which permits you
to haul bigger payloads. And to haul at
^"1 got the story on
SQOOOMiles-NoWear
and changed to New Conoco Super Motor Oil
** •» ssya W. A. filtoy, A. Z-jjR
Traveling SaUim.n
' Fan worth t.«o, JR
*■ A »
ter
BY HAL COCHRAN
cpHE American girl is pensive
1 before marriage and VP<n‘.
sive afterwards. • *•
400 Galveston City
Employees Striking
For ^Better /Cages
LlcrfriNG FIXTURES
ELECTRICAL REPAIRS
BA BIO BKPAIBN
A. Hcott Ka.llr, Trrh.leUn
DICK KILGORE
1104 South Austin
Telephones 675, 618, 2336
Otto Batdorf 3112
Win. Muery 2234
“I do a lot of intermittent and
long-trip driving," says Mr. Riley.
*‘I never cease to be amazed at
how clean new Conoco Super
drains out of my engine.’
all the players have been" with
the outfit since it first started
play, with the exception of two
who joined up just this season.
Melvin Kroll, a good all-round
performer, lead s-the Greenvine
lineup in batting with a .600
mark. Another hefty hitter is out-
fielder Raymond Brauner.
Other members are Haold Wes-
neski, catcher and pitcher; Roy
Bernhausen and John Januszew-
ski, first base; George Athardt,
and Orvie Lee Luedemann, out-
fielders; Ruben Schats, second
base; Johnny Andrefczak and El-’
wood Alchardt, pitchers. Utility days from Flagstaff, Arizona,
men are Franklin Eckert, Gilbert ^QOt
Althardt, Willie Januszewskl,
Herbert Swan, Ben Bernhausen
I and Charlie Berry.
It matters but little wtiat your
leeds may be, a Banner . -Press
'lasslfied ad will get the desired
results.
••After uting many adoerUted
Unuide, WS hsvs standardized on
Conoco Supflr,” writes Sherman L.
Snyder, Mfe
Mont. "We find that we g«t better
mileaam. ano operating coata on our
am and t rucks are much less.
IS
NOTICE
WE HAVE INSTALLED A COTTON SEED STERI-
LIZER IN OUR GIN, SO THAT COTTON FROM ANY
COUNTY THAT IS QUARANTINED TOR PINK
BOlzL WORM MAY RE GINNED AT OUR GIN. SO—
BRING YOUR COTTON TO US
We have all the Cleaner*, Drier*, and necemiary equlp-
h«Hed cotton aad maJfe yeu < ,
-■ good MHnt|»le. -
"■ guarantee the name friendly and cheerful service
.. have received through 48 years of association
’with nil, and hope tn continue to nerve you In the name
old way.
(RAUH FOR Tournament Teams --
JAYCEEPLAY Wesley And Greenvine Name
released Rosters For K Play Here
two of eight designs selected for
the first UN postage stamps to be
issued this Fall. The UN build-
ing design, top, made by Mex-
ican artist Lean Helguera, will
be used for IH-cent and 50-cent
.denominations. The "Peace, Jus-
lice, Security" stamp, below, de-
■ signed by Netherlands artist
‘ J. F. Doeve, will be two-cent
and. one-dollar stamps.
HOUSTON, Aug. 22 <5£l.» —
When a great professional foot-
ball team plays (and whips) a
collection of the nation’s top col-
lege players in a game, y«t the
most excitable comments about
the occasion by the large throng
ot sjiorte writers on hand is about
the spectacular halftime show,
you can figure -the interlude per-
formance was terrific.
Such was the case in Chicago
at the recent Ali ptar game
where those glamorous Kilgore
Rangerettes did a king-sized job
of show stealing.
Houstonians and South Texans
get a eho»uy» aoo Liu* uulluoally
famous Rangerettes from Kilgora
”**P.thBy.piy on their
malftime demonstration of beau-
ty and talent at the Rice Owls’
opening' grid game the night of
September 29 against Clemson’s
Orange Bowl champion Tigers in
Rice’s 70,000 seat new stadium
in Houston.
Bill Rives, sports editor of the
Dallas News, quoted Arch Ward,
sports editor of the Chicago Trib-
une (sponsors of the All-Star
game), after the con-
test that the Rangerettes and the
Kilgore band put on the liveliest
- intermission football sho.w fee
had ever seen — writers from
other sectors of the country at
the All-Star classic also had
great praise for the gals from
East Texas, who have appeared
at the Rose Bowl. Sugar Bowl,
and recently signed to appear at
the Cotton Bowl game the next
three years after their appear-
ance there last January.
NOTICE
Special Entertainment
WASHINGTON COUNTY ROPING CLUB
FAIR GROUNDS
SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 8 P. HI.
ROPING—BRONC RIDING—BARREL RACE-
NO REGULAR FRIDAY ROPING THIS WEEK
Free will offering.
see will b* opened tn sn Illinois
school in the fell. Will the class
please come to orders'
• • •
Many people who know the
least at least make the moot of It-
Schroeder & Meyer Service Station
mwZT-T- • BRENHAM, TKXA8
•TfONE tMt _ _
—; ' ' ..uB-JE------——/. , • -i -r-----—
anner • Press Classified ads
res"1fa.
. Banner ..Press Classified ada J RBR
--
100 TABLET BOTTLE ONLY 49c ■Ml
Washington County
Tractor Co.-
’hone 561 Brenham, Tex.
4------------ ■ --
-
TRUCKS
MWwMstmI
I SUMO MIVI
| Available nn H-,
■nd 1-ton models!
You’ll reduce upkeep
— get more tire mileage—protect your
loud—drive more eui.ilv and aafely' Iu>t
ua demonatrata this Dodg*
UWaM.fmkHM'i "Mb
WWMb —A “Job~liated" truck to sb-
* <4 the factory to At ■ specific
to asv* you money. A’wry unit
that SUPPORTS the load-tteana,^.
axles, sprtac., wh-to, tire., .nd otteni -
—is engineered rifiht Jo provide the
etrength and capacity needed. Etwy
_ uml that MOVES the Zood-engine,
cluOeh, tranmntoaion, propeller shaft,
rear axle and others—to engineered
right to meet a particular operating
condition.
saw wM bine pariwu.
"V* M <•»
__________j
weight distribution, which permit* you
to haul bigger pay loads. And to haul at
low coat, you have the right engine for
plenty of power.
iniNFRYOUR
... , ’ giessjL
—
tide '50,000 Mihe—
___i___11 as^w san
!ggg“ *WVS V are — — —«r--->
saner, easier toAvork on,
lees wear.’’
___—
A couple of the clubs compet-
ing in the Junior Chamber of
Commerce baseball tournament,
which opens at Fireman’s Park
stadium Saturday night, have
sent in their rosters.
._,E>pmit Schultz, manager of the
their first game" will be Julian
Antkowiak, catcher, Alex Mes-
A’hwitz, piu^er, Marvin Hertel,
nrst base, Oscar Kruger, second
base, Herbert Bender, third base
and Otto Flentge, shortstop.
In the outfield will be Alvin
Brinkmeyer, Milton Thielemann
and Henry Bender.
Schultz says that should Mes-
chwitz falter in his first outing,
then John Antkowiak will be
around for relief duty. Other hur-
lers are Bubba Brau and Wilburn
Neutzler. „ , ‘
Utility men on the Wesley
team are Leec^vy. Winkiemann
and Bill Ponfick.
From Greenvine, manager
pm V. Holohaj^
Id War II, prior tol
Ind enemy line*. {Z
li, one of thoie tqw
of the at eused;{tan
I Giannino, Elkhart!
pn; Egt- Arthur CM
bn Partisan. The3
i written at the ju
After a punishing 50,000-mile road
teat, with proper drains and regular
care, engines lubricated with new
Conoco Suiter Motor Oil showed no
wear of any consequence: in fact, an
average of less tlrnn one one-thou-
sandth inch on cylinders and crank-
shafts. AND gasoline mileage fortlie
last 5,000 miles was actually B9.77%
a. good ns for the first 5.000!
It matters out itttle what your
.*%' .[ needs may be, a Banner . Press
fa,J J-’ clAsaifled ad will get the desired
£Mi
A -er-
(U.P> stands for United Press
have gone on strike for bet-1 the world’s best coverage of the
f -wagMa.Xhel’: .Woti,W^‘Mel>A-Jagy*’—
a partial paralysis of municipal
operations in Galveston, The on-
ly workers remaining on the job
are employes of the water, police
and fire departments.
The Municipal Wwflhfa 6^5.
1150 is a-king $.30 a v <• r a K .- ---*“
monthly wage boosts for "its
I members. The strike was voted
after negotiations broke down
last night.
..... r. . t
Yashiiifftoii Cfiuntv optometrist
OLASSDS FITTED
-BUS KXAMDfHQ . —
Brenham, Ttaas
aseball Tournament
To Begin Here On
Saturday
khe complete bracket for play
the Brenham Junior Chamber
I Commerce baseball tourna-
Lnt has been released by Dr. _ ___
[ f. HaMkarl.-Jsw ckn’.wnan-®* Waetey.-team,-says.'htaTnelip
L> sports and youth welfare ,u~‘- ----- ■■■ ■
taimttee.
Mje tournev wffl -
ky night af Fireman's f'arK’sfa"- ’
tom- At 8;15 w^th Mound Hill
frtling Wesley in the initial
kt rounder. Sunday afternoon
[1:15 Woodrow Free’s team is
meet Greenvine and immedi-
lely following. Wm. Penn and
war Hili take the diamond.
First round competition will be
fopleted Sunday night at 8:15
[th a fracas putting Burton
[alnst the Salem Hot Shots.
Second rounders are scheduled
[ Shfurday Mght, September 1
8:15. and Sunday afternoon,
ptember 2 at 2 o’clock. The fi-J A - - - -
ds will be reeled off that night.’•Po ^ermann reports that
Trophies will be awarded by
e Jaycees to the winner and
nnerup clubs. There will be no
[mission charge to tourney bat-
>s. but a free will offering will
taken up during each contest.
Sortie of the top amateur talent
Washington County will be in
tion during th? two weekends
play. Salem and Mound Hill
e generally regarded as the top
lbs, but play should be close
roughout, and most anyone
uld emerge as the champion.
MW whh
In a Dodge "Job-
Rated" truck you get all theae proved
dependability featurea: Lightweight
piatona, two fuel fllteta, baavy-duly
radiator, twin earburetion and oxhauat
ayatem on high-tonnage modela. Cycle-
bond brake lining., and others.
secuttve victory over the Eagles.
, As matters now stand, Houston
ha« a full 13 game lead over the
rest of the Texas League pack.
All other first-division teams
lost last night.
Fort W.prlh defeated the sec-
ond-place San Antonio Missions.
2 1. in 10 innings. And Beaumont
fell by an identical 2-1 acore at
FTHHv * ~ une hiSQMO
ing game. In It, ©klahoma City
Hosect out Bnfew^Sf4k7.’
runs in the last of the ninth were
the margin, of victory.
The schedule regains un-
changed tonight. Houston is fit I
Dallas, San Antonio .at Fort
Worth, Beaumont at Tulsa. antL j
Shreveport at Oklahoma City.
swatch to
9006E
SAVE with « MfiMMHpm'lMi
•BBfiR9- When you awitch to Dodge
"Job-Rated” trucks, you get flashing
performance with top economy - made “
posaible by powerful engine, with high
comprewrion ratioa! For example, D.xlge
"Job-Rated” Mi-, and 1-ton pick-
upe, paneto and stakes give you new, _______
higher 74 to 1 rompreroan ratio.*""ZZe
SAVI wM Imr >
Satisfied owners agree that whan you
buy a Dodge “Job-Rated” truck, ybu
get year, and years of iow-coet hauling
You enjoy ths par—adMn-
tagae pr n4tit‘ util ills
plated top ring and exhaust valve seat
inserta-p/M new moistureproof igni-
tion and new 45-ampere generator.
’NL .- ■ t!
DALLAS. Aug. 22 (CD —Thw’B [
no stopping the Houston Buffa-
loes in their terrific drive for the
Texas League pennant.
The Buffs defeated Dallas, 4-0,
’ last night for theif second con- j
I
^W^wNN'" iL....... ■ ■ w
MIDGET BIG LEAftuER—Signed by Brownie owner •Bill Veeck
for only one purpose, Eddie Caedel, 26, 3 foot 1 inch midget draws
a walk as he comes to bat as a pinch hitter during the Detroit
Tigers-St. Louis game. Umpire Ed Hurley, watches the fourth high
pitch plunk into the glove of Tiger catcher Bob Swift. (NEA Tele-
photo).
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 166, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 22, 1951, newspaper, August 22, 1951; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1334883/m1/3/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.