Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 226, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 5, 1961 Page: 3 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Wednesday, July 5, 1961-3
Fet
Contest Shapes Up
JULY
For Church Leader
. tinued for the muted body
A
First Summer
CLEARANCE
"We have considered all aspects
Clearance
Ladies
FLORENCE FOURSOME Italian, American and French
Fashions
REGULAR VALUES TO $5.95
tin
100
?
Sick Girl Goes
Under Tests
REGULAR VALUES
REGULAR VALUES
TO $8.95
TO $19.95
5“ 8
00
unless he was alive and young in
Supporters of Or. Herbster also
was termed "
1
TK
I
|
tried to cut new roads with stor-
PAST LEADERSHIP
the two churches should be con-
mental.
Family Stands By
Spring and Summer
FBI's Most Wanted
• *
FABRICS
44
s
Het
44
REG. 39c TO
REG. 98c TO
00
79c YARD
$1.39 YARD
2.49 YARD
1
YD.
7
6
!
ENTIRE STOCK
LADIES, MEN'S.
Size 3-6X And
GIRLS, & BOYS
SWIM
7-14 Dresses
WEAR
witnesses. I’m ready to sell my
A* 1.
(d
20%
By Demand
Reg. 2.98 Val.
ENTIRE STOCK
OFF
LADIES' SUMMER
A
I
c
HEELS
ENTIRE STOCK!
3
SAL E CONTINUES
LADIES' SUMMER
h
Handbags
1
REG. $3.00 VALUES
REGULAR $7.95
*2.00
2.99 ‘4.99
Plus Tax
REG. $5.00 VALUES
1
Plus Tax
\
I
Hil
i
A
QUALITY MERCHANDISE
$ 4
.1
U
• cash
4 WAYS TO BUY
•up
Hemingway Worst
Used As Yardstick
Great savings now! A host of top summer patterns. 36" to
45 inch widths. Select now Sew at Savings'
array of styles in Cottons, Pima Chiffons, Eyelets,,
Cotton Blends. Plus many others! Juniors, regular and
half sizes! Shop early for best selections!
Let nothing keep you away from this clearance of
Beautiful Fashions! Choose from a summer fresh
Shoes &
Millinery
312 Center
Avenue
Cyisp Patterns with
Many Ideal for
Back-To-School!
noon, a day after the constitution
of the new 2-million-member de-
and 8. He was just like one of the
family. The kids miss him al-
A goto assortment of styles and
colors! Wash and wear cottons,
blends and others! See and buy.
You'll Save Plenty!
then he could have written about
the sudden, brutal switch of Henry
Morgan to murder because some-
He was an artist writing about
people in trouble as he saw them,
without moral judgments. He had
MEN'S
SUMMER
81
$2
$3
HUNDREDS OF
UNADVERTISED
CLEARANCE ITEMS
.lay-away *30 day charge
to 6 months to pay
Regular
$1.98 .
REG. $10.95
VALUES
i
himself to be. the Blooms never-
theless promised Tuesday to aid
him.
Regular
$3.98 .
said its choice had been a "dit
ficult one" in picking Dr. Herbster
DRESS
SLACKS
Regular
$2.98
arm and Sharp’ was tattooed on
it. I couldn’t stand it any more,"
Bloom recounted.
by Police Commissioner Frank N.
Felicetta.
The 5-year-old children who had
ci,
6
YOU MAY STILL BUY ONE PAIR OF SHOES AT
REGULAR PRICE AND GET A SECOND PAIR FOR
ONLY A
MEN'S DRESS
AND WESTERN
STRAW
HATS
house if it will do him any good
Bloom said.
Reg. $1.98
Quality
Reg. $2.98
Quality
Reg. $3.98
Quality
Reg. $4.98
Quality. . .
r by EROwX-
oatage pua SI
Sizes 81 to 3 but not
in every size.
SHOP AND SAVE
50 per menth.
atland Erath
osn $a 95 per
per year
1 to exdlusively
l to it or not
ed herein Ali
4
J •
s
t%
. -e"
I
=
539
young girl with a history of men-
tal illness underwent psychiatric
tests today in the investigation of
the kidnap slaying of Andy Ash-
ley. 3.
Chyrel Lee Jolis, 15, of Buffalo
grasp” of the new church’s prob-
lems. and would provide “a con-
tinuity” of leadership and a "sta-
bilizing influence."
$422
Philadelphia for five years. He
worked for three years as a pin- j
boy in a bowling alley Bloom
CHILDREN'S
SUMMER
SHOES
LADIES'
SUMMER
NIGHT
WEAR
*4.00
$199
In those early days he showed
•one of it. Why should he have? 1
Rossano Brazzi, Olivia de Havilland, George Hamilton and
France’s beautiful and talented Yvette Mimieux.
Thia offeer covers our entire Summer Stock.
Quality Shoes. Values to
$14.95
i
l
REGULAR $1.98
s1.50
h
I
I
I
I
=
I
=
I
very sick girl.” a
"PENNY"
VALUES TO $8.95
7.88
j
$199
When the FBI took Sharp into
custody Monday, Bloom said, he
was babysitting for the three
(
USE YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT
No Lay-A-Way . . . Exchanges Or Refunds . . . Please
ROBINSON'S
REG. $5.95 4 $6.95
*3.00
)
83.00
Dr. Wagner and the Rev. Dr.
Fred Hoskins of New York, the
Congregational Christian chief ex-
ecutive had served as co-presi-
dents of the new church in its for-
mative years.
However, Dr Hoskins removed
himself from r laiwdi ration, an-
nouncing last month he had ac- .
cepted a professorship at Chicago
IE
EATEE* y
5299
“The kids loved him immediate-:
ly. He would take them swim-1
ming on hot days. He would go
with us to the shore," and. said
Mrs. Bloom, he "would do the
Friday shopping for me.
Bloom said agents came to the
bowling alley Monday and asked
him to accompany them to the
home.
“They asked who he was and
he asked ‘Who am I supposed to
be* The agents looked at his
j
/
those middle 1920s when Heming- rallied to the microphones. He is
. way’s work began. "a man of God whose strong faith
LITERARY FRAUDS will sustain and carry us forward
The woods were full of literary in the future as it has in
frauds and second-raters who the past," said the Rev Dr. Vere
7
REG. 3.98
VALUES
REG. $2.98 TO $5.95
*2.00
i
e?
/
33 66c
spoiled a brilliant book. Before possibly deranged, had been in
WHEN TO LEAD
The passing over of Dr. Wag-
ner was “not an adverse judg-
mem on the past,” said the Rex
Dr. Fred Meek. Boston. However,
he supported Dr Herbster, say-
ing he "knows when to lead and
when to follow."
iMMiiimRiwiininiiMimiMiii^^
aa-geaaagca. CLEARANCE
6 J ‛»
cle
VALUES TO $7 95
$5.88
was at the
Anna Little
nked Bang-.
R( $1.49 TO
them when they say they are
rotten and they lose confidence."
MURDER SUSPECT
The man they knew as Bryan
Brenton was. in fact. Kenneth
Holleck Sharp, 29. sought since
1952 on a charge that he shot and
killed a 75-year-old service sta-
tion attendent during a holdup in
Chicago.
reg-eT-TK— i
Bealls
, ies about the world as they saw The contest reflected. in the
it themselves, but Dreiser was background, a question of wheth-
clumsy and Anderson was senti- er the past leadership of either of
great then they say must believe Bloom children, boys aged 2. 4
PHILADELPHIA (AP>
universe. spected figure in ecumenical cir-
But no one can ever really un- cles," the Rev. Mr Garner add-
derstand;—perhaps feel is a bet- ed, noting Dr. Wagner’s leading
ter word—what Hemingway real- role in the National and World
ly meant to American literature Councils of Churches
body was recovered from a park 5
lake on June 25, Chyrel was 1
caught in a telephone booth mak- g
ing a call to Mrs. Francis Ash- =
ley. She told FBI agents who had j
tapped the Ashley phone, that she 2
was trying to console the par- =
ents.
Polce sad they found in ’ the g
girl’s room three sheets of paper g
5
Theodore Schwalm. of Lancast-
er. Pa . backing Dr. Wagner, said
he had the "background and ex-
WASHINGTON (AP> — Ernest
Hemingway's people confronted
death as something not to be post-
poned as Hector in Homer s Iliad
did when he stopped running to
face Achilles, armed but without
hope
Hemingway baid 14 years ago.
long before illness overtook him.
“I must write because if I do
not write a certain amount I do
not enjoy the rest of my life.”
It is a reasonable guess the
pospect of years of individualism
or at least marginal vitality, took
the Joy out of life for him.
This may be too simple for
future analysts seeking the mean-
ing of the shotgun blast which
killed him last Sunday. You can
almost read them now:
That his concern with death,
which dominated all he wrote.
DOWNHILL
It was downhill after that—al-
though for him was up on the
mountain for most of his con-
temporaries—as if he had listened
too much to the critics who
wanted a message, who said be
had no social consciousness.
was taken into custody on a com- g
plaint that she was offering can- g
dy to youngsters.
CAUGHT IN BOOTH r
An hour before Andy’s bound =
been enticed with candy and left g
bound and gagged beside railroad . =
tracks. Monday identified Chyrel =
as their abductor. Police believe -
the same person was responsible g
ip the drowning of Andy.
GIRL RECOGNIZED
"You took me You took me." E
Richard Edgington cripd when he s
saw Chyrel as she was brought =
into a police station Monday. Su- E
san Benedict picked Chyrel out 3
WWMUiiillilbMilimimwilllMW
A CLEARANCE
Rev. Dr. James E Wagner, of
Philadelphia, into the rare. chal-
lenging a nominating ccdmittee’s
choice, the Rev Dr. Ben M
Herbster of Norwood, Ohio. •
BALLOTING TQDAY
The balloting comes this after-
was on the' FBI’s most wanted
list, for a cruel murder. But to
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bloom the fu-
gitive captured in their home
"was just like one of. the family.
Trusted like a brother ”
Still shocked that the odd-jobs
man they took to their hearts was
not the person he represented
PHILADELPHIA i APi
Delegates moved quickly to
elect Maine Supreme Court Judge
Donald W. Webber as moderator,
, the church’s top titular officer,
who serves for two years The
i conflict came on naming the more
powerful, continuing executive.
—
of a police lineuv es the person #
who had left her helpless beside 9
a railroad .right-of-way.
i Felicetta said there was are-E
mote possibility that Chyrel was =
not the killer. However, he added =
that the girl "has tied herself up 8
in an amazing series of circum- =
stances — more than you woult E
need in the average case.”
i Chyrel, one of seven children =
of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jolis, =
was taken to Meyer Memorial =
Hospital. Psychiatric tests that =
could last up to three weeks were =
scheduled.
No charge has been placed and E
Chyrel has admitted nothing. =
Chyrel was questioned three =
times since Andy Ashley was kid- =
napped June 23. The day after the 8
boy was reported missing, she =
gR
M2
l feet.
■ It unites the Congregatienal
• Christian Churches and the Evan-
| I gelical and Reformed Church, the
: first merger in the country of de-
• 1 nominations of different national
2 origins and ecclesiastical struc-
one measuring rod: to write
"trulym" it was his own word.
He knew what happened to
writers who listened to critics. He
talked about them fn "Green Hills
in Africa"—"if they believe the
critics when they say they are
Both presidential candidates
with scribbled notes about the 2
Ashley investigation. e
i JoUs is unemployed. Mrs. Jolis 1
"We are going to’ Chicago as is a cashier in a hospital cafe- j
ny teria. Three of their seven child- g A
l." ren have been placed in foster g 4
" homes. ' E A
Baby Doll Pajamas.
Waltz. Shorty and Long
Gowns.
In Kidnap Case
BUFFALO, N.Y. 'API — A
brisk, two-way contest shaped up
today for the presidency of the
newly constituted Untied Charch
at Christ, Ka highest administra-
tive office
Rank-and-file forces put the
manages.
Laid off when the alley was
converted to automatic pinsetters.
Sharp went to work in a service
station Bloom operated. "I trust-
ed him like a brother.” Bloom
said. "‘Some weekends would have
$400 at the station. We never
missed a thing."
The station closed six months
ago and Sharp moved in with the
Blooms while working at odd
jobs.
were drawn from the E. and R:
wing, a church that Dr. Wagner.
61. has headed for eight years.
, But a nomimating committee by-
one fimfammed him. passed him Tuesday in naming
Now he made Morgan an ex- Dr. Herbster, a parish pastor
ample at the class struggle, a From the noor the ReV. Thom-
rsupisomenatckprawnekt Pa
the Bell Tolls" and then ruined claring that the new church needs
it altogether by making his pro- "the. benefit of his continued dy.
pie talk as people never talked namic leadership and invaluable
His prize-Winning "The -old experience"
Man and the Sea" was simply RESPECTED FIGURE
an allegory about man’s wither- "What is probably most import-
ing struggle against the uncaring ant, he is an established ami re-
i lure
FLORENCE FOUKSOME—Italian, American anu rreneI Enactment of the constitution
film talents converge on Florence, Italy, to film “A Light in climaxed 21 years of preliminary
the Piazza." Principal roles are taken by, left to right. steps
Rossano Brazzi. Olivia de Havilland, George Hamilton and WEBBER MODERATOR
meant he was obsessed with fear
of it and that he sought to buy
time through the years by march-
ing character after character to
inevitable doom as a substitute
for himself.
NO MESSAGE
The literary pigeon-fanciers
perience" to lead the new church.
"His statute is second to none,
not only in the denomination but
in the ecumenical world."
The Rev Samuel Schmiechen,
of St. Paul, declared that Dr
Wagner has "the most intimate
knowledge" and "comprehensive
nomination was declared in ef-jofthe situation," he said.
next Jan 1
The nominating committee
headed by Dr Arthur D. Gray
head of Talladega College, Ala.
He began to have a message ready.”
in "to Have and Have Not.” It The, FBI said Sharp, considered
w bn like cooing or a message
mauled.him. But he was no sooth-
sayer. he used words like rocks,
and, m the beginning he had no
message
Maxwell Geismar’ once wrote
that Hemingway s people "act as
if thought is unthinkable " This
was four He was an artist, writ-
ing about the muscles of the heart,
not the capillaries of the brain.
The muscles got tired as he
grew older. His best work was
his early work: the short stories.
"The Sun Also Rises.” "A Fare-
well to Arms." some parts of
“Death in the Afternoon," some
parts of “To Have and Have
Not.”
- i
=.
By GEORGE W. CORNELL
Associated Press Religion Writer
-
played it cute and safe, wrote Loper, of Berkeley, Calif.
strictly for bucks, suffered from He said Dr. Herbster, as co-
Victorian anemia, or pumped out chairman of an executive council
in the garbage can. charted the church merger. had
There were some honest men "saved our church” by reconei-
writing, like Theodore Dreiser ing disputing factions at one point
and Sherwood Anderson. who when negotiations faltered.
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.
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.
Coppedge, Don L. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 226, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 5, 1961, newspaper, July 5, 1961; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1489101/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.