Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 99, Ed. 1 Monday, February 7, 1955 Page: 3 of 8
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Ireland Seeks End of
North - South Partition
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BONUS EVENT FOR NEW MEMBERS
division between East and West."
Allow Consolidation
Britain should realise this inevi-
Sheriff's deputies found the three
Y
4
FRANK GUARRERA
3
At the time, members of the
Barring a new international crisis.
destroy, and poison.
fragments and dust sifting down
Doctors
Dial 2682 for Appointment
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August,
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ZZTANINUL
House Exchange Big
Event For Families
Eisenhower's First
Words as President
Still Hold Interest
California Scoops
U.S. Govt, on Details
Of K Power To Kill
Larde
Ml
m unity
rectors
7:30 in
t Com-
eham-
cham-
nes.
)00 en-
of the
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ince at
nnoun-
equip*
from
AAUW
Frank Guarrera, Metropolitan Baritone,
Will Sing at HPC Auditorium Thursday
CHICAGO, Feb. 7—UP— Bur-
ly burglars looted a plumbing
firm yesterday of 4.000 lead in-
gots. four coils of copper tub-
ing and two coils of lead pipe.
Total weight—4,000 pounds.
The Whole Family Will Enjoy
AN EXTRA ROOM
ELLIS & ELLIS
OPTOMETRISTS
when someone forgot to lock the
bank's door.
Ever lingers in my heart
The sweetest valentine of all
My mother."
and the third was on duty as head
cashier.
ph of
eputy
ddress
> Rev.
Grand
uncil,
in its
North Atlantic alliance so long as
the question of her own svoereign-
ty "hangs like a baneful spectre
over our foreign policy.”
I
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HIS
d
lit
Garza
tented
nwood
Solum-
11 was
rith >1
of the country under the Irish flag
—"she should not allow the British
The largest antlered creature on
earth, an Alaskan bull moose. may
weigh 1,800 pounds, stand nearly
eight feet high at the shoulders,
and carry antlers six feet across, ,
the National Georgraphic Society
says.
son a region of 4.000 square miles
or larger, the report said.
No need to be crowded and cramped in your home. Let us
show you how easy and inexpensive it is to add a room.
You get Cameron dependability—87 years of "know how"
—and the right price. Terms.
. zbod woz&zwzz
RESORT HOTEL
never recognize nor reconcile her-
self with permanent British rule
in the six counties of Northern
Ireland. •
"We can no more yield forever
There were no injuries.
The shrimper was listed as the
DB. and was stationed at Aransas
Pass A Coast Guard spokesman
said it was valued at $36,000. The
fire apparently started in the gear
locker room below decks, one of the
crewmen said.
agement ia signs of increasing co-
operation between the republic and
the six northern countries. As t-
ample he cited the electrificatioa
projects on the Erne River, fish-
eries control in the Foyle estuary
and joint control of the great
northern railway linking Dublin
with Belfast, principal city ofjhe
British-ruled north.
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world against the menace of Com-
munist expansion.” he said.
Opposed to Communism
Cosgrave said no state in the
free world was more opposed to
communism than Ireland.
C Valles, SLP,
Mexico
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APPLIANCE COMPANY
1305 MAIN AVE.
1
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.cil,
Priees Are Right At
WM. CAMERON & CO
BUILDING MATERIALS AND $ERVICES
E
. tie
. 80s
z0e
to partition of our country,” he
‘ "than Germany can to her
This “new and important anti-
personnel effect" of thd H-bomb,
7
Three Taken From
Burning Shrimper
GALVESTON, Feb. 7—VP—Three
crewmen were rescued from their
burning shrimper Sunday night and
the craft sank later about three
miles off Galveston’s west beach
the U. S. Coast Guard reported.
The crewmen were identified as
Capt. Joseph Cardinale and Floyd
Schion and Cullen Bowman, all of
Aransas Pass.
The crewmen were taken from
the burning shrimper about 7 p m.
Sunday by a seismograph vesset.
“I guess I just put a little too
much mustard on them hambur- A "rLuae nawe?
gers,” Rankin said. R anree •UY5
7
cE
_2
unttr) by Mr. Arnold to printed with widely-spaced pattern
• roses and green stems. Roses rise over the brim; there’s a
' ■ ' r silk seart. Sally Victor’s Dutch bonnet (upper right)
leetion at Anely planted sheer white hairbraid touched
Meiee City 297
fr.....A.”
nsggedne?e
assailant i cult for Ireland to consider mem-
bership in the anti-Communist
NEW HOMES AT
THE RIGHT PRICE
Is a Cameron-builr
home you get quality
of materials and con-
seructio that assure
full value. See out
many plana
•t-ma-cem-t--
Mmendne
£
E
8
13
I )
I
I
I
o
0
with pale blue velvet baby ribbon. Landslide cloche of lemon
yellow felt by John Frederics is striped with bands of shiny
straw in the same color (lower left). Breton of yellow silk rose
petals (lower center) is Walter Florell design, has cutaway back
covered by a single, full-blown rose of silk and xelvet. Patty
shell hat in clear red straw (lower right) by Gustavo is accented
with band and back buttons of matching red velvet. Back flare
is accomplished by fluted straw to set oil this tiny breton.
. A
riding country between Thomas-
ville and Tallahassee, Fla. The
Duke of Wndsor was hunting re-
I
led by
Bell,
2503
•moon
s. She
ollow-
*
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I
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I
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DuHaut Bituuru eau-e. IU1B HM%N
"playing bank ” One had his feet tability, he said, and take the first
on the president s desk, another j opportunity to allow consolidation
was at the chief loan officer’s desk
(
C3
Mr. Eisenhower will spend this
‘ .T
g
‘guided tours; nationally famous Naci-
miento" grotto; superb food; magnificent
and specious landscaped tropical gardens,
unusual cave nightclub, and full hotel
services. Located a few miles from Valles
on the Tampico road. Try it for overnight
or a fully, completely relaxing vacation.
All privileges and food included in reason-
able daily rates.
$49.95 for 7 DAYS
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 7—UP—
"“nmza!
has access to some of the world’s
foremost authorities on radiation
and other atomic bomb effects.
They are the scientists working in
the University of California radia-
tion laboratory at Berkeley.
The California report was Issued
last Dec. 23 but has just recently
come under study here. It assumes
that Russia can dueliver atomic
weapons ranging in power up to
20 million tons TNT equivalent
There have been unofficial reports
that the Atomic Energy Commis-
sion tested a weapon of that mag-
nitude at Bikini last year.
Given such a bomb, "severe to
total damage or destruction is
probable out to a minimum of 7-11
miles" from the detonation point,
the California report said. Lesser
damage from blast and fire could
occur out to 40 miles away.
The March 1 H-bomb explosion
at Bikini last year spread radio-
active fallout more than 100 miles
from the test site, but neither the
AEC nor any other federal agency
so far has published an authorita-
tive report on this or other effects
of the superbomb.
O
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O
kl
2 0
Touting Texas
AUSTIN. Tex —UP—A bill was
introduced in the current session
of the Texas legislature to put the
slogan "Tremendous Texas” on
automobile license plates.
White House police to lay a special
path of sand and gravel across
west Executive avenue -so Mr.
Eisenhower would not slip as he
crossed from his office to the old
State Department building where
he holds his news conferences.
LOS ANGELES, Feb 7—UP—
Three-hundred pound Dick Rankin.
39, lost a bet he could eat 25 ham-
way north stopped off at the White
House to tell the chief executive
Hotel Taninul is within con-
venient driving distance of the
border. Its facilities include
hotel-owned hot mineral baths,
excellent fishing and hunting;
horseback riding, tennis, and
Three 13-year-old financers took
over the Security-First National said
Bank branch at east Los Angeles | dryi‘
1 time from Washington. The White
House points out that the two hour
limitation °was not meant to be
precise, but "about.” The flying
time in the chief executive’s Air
Force plane probably will not be
much more than two hours.
Cosgrave said Ireland would
&
-
"I
burgers and drink a
F
RACINE. Wis.. Feb. 7—UP—The
Peter Tishuk and George Pias
families were still neighbors Mon-
day. But there was a difference.
They were living in each other's
houses.
What's more, both families were
perfectly happy about it.
One of the homes was too
eramped for the Pias family The
Tishuk's house was too big. So
they simply swapped homesteads.
The big switch took place Sun-
day as the Tishuks moved their
three young children out of their
bright yellow, two-bedroom bunga-
low. .
Four doors up the street, Mr.
and Mrs. Pias were moving out
of their two-floc.. three-bedroom
house, ably assisted by their two
sons.
Two giant vans donated by the
Merchant Delivery Moving Co. ma-
neuvered back and forth on the
narrow street near the shores of
Lake Michigan to complege the ex-
change.
The two families passed each
other, walking the 150 feet to their
new homes.
Pias, a retired barkeeper now
working for the Racine Journal
Times, said it was “the most ex-
citing day of my life—the women
are happy.”
Television repairman Ti s h u k
echoed “it's a fine thing. Now we
won’t have to move into the living
room.”
examining all previous disaster
planning.”
Authoritative sources here said
Monday that the report's basic
“assumption" is in substantial
agreement with still secret data on
superbomb effects brought back
from the Pacific proving ground
after last spring's H-bomb test se-
ries.
DuMontQeatflelevision
Dieover the far greater dollar value you get in the new DuMont Super-
Lumemized Ketone Tube and Quality-Controlled Chassis! See and hear
famous Da Mott quality! Then choose a DuMont HI-R Telenet* at new,
much lower prices!
SEE SO MUCH ... SO MUCH BETTER!
problem to be another one of too
little and too late."
The interview was held in Cos-
grave's executive offices in the
ministry of external affairs, a
stately Dublin mansion built by
Lord Iveagh of the Guinness for-
tuns and later bequeathed to the
Irish republic. Cosgrave, a vigor-
ous man of medium height whose
dignity belies his age of only 35
years, spoke with great feeling in
There's a leek of "more hat" this spring to balance the slim
Ham ef ready-te-wear. Blue shantung straw proflie hat (upper
toft) by Sally Victor has abstract pattern of grosgrain ribbon
bands Im severai shades of blue. Skimmer of white silk (upper
Drilling Program in
3 States Announced-
DALLAS, Feb. 7—UP—Drilling
is expected to get underway before
November of this year in an oil
and gaa exploration program cov-
ering nearly 500,000 acres In New
Mexico, Colorado and Utah under
a joint program announced Subday
by oil and gas firms.
The two concerns are Three
States Natural Gas Co. and Rey-
nolds Mining Corp. Reynolds will
drill 10 wildcat wells on eight
major undeveloped Three States
lease blocks In the Rocky Moun-
tain area before Nov. 1.
Reynolds also holds the option
to continue exploration and devel-
opment on another dozen lease
blocks in 1956 and 1957.
The agreement is designed pri-
marilv to exploit properties with
natural gas potentials “for inclu-
s on in new pipelines developing
in the region,” the announcement
said.
~n A. McGuire, president of
Three States, said his firm at pres-
en was delivering gas from fields
in the San Juan area and the Clear
Creekfield in Utah.
He said tat only undeveloped
properties were included in the
agreement with Reynolds, a sub-
sidiary of Reynolds Metals Corp,
of Richmond, Va. The firm main-
tains an oil and gas division in
Houston, and already has estab-
lished production on the Texas
Gulf Coast and in the Permian
Basin of West Texas.
McGuire said Three States was
contributing more than 350,000
acres to the joint venture. Other
firms contributing the remaining
130,000 acres Include Hancock-
Utah, Ltd.: Western Natural Gas
Co • San Jacinto Oil Co. of Hous-
ton; J. H. Whitney & Co., New
Vnk: Albuqueraue Associated of
Albuquerque, N.M.; and the estate
i. aui B. English of Farmington,
N.M., and Durango, Colo.
from the explosion cloud—can poi- cently on an estate near the Hum-
----- phrey establishment and on his
By MERRIMAN SMITH
WASHINGTON, Feb. 7—UP—
Backstairs at the White House
When President Eisenhower
made his inaugural address in
1953, he had no idea that within
two years the text of his remarks
would be selling for $3.50.
A Worcester, Mass., pbulisher,
Achille J. St. Onge, has brought
out a limited edition of the Eisen-
hower inaugural address in the
form of a miniature book measur-
ing 1 3-4 by 2 1-2 inches.
line grace on stage, Mr. Guarrera
has made more frequent ap-
pearances in the last six years
than any other baritone.
His program here will include
operatic excerpts and a variety
of songs in English, French and
Italian.
form, record and personal per-
formance’ of Harry S. Truman. Mr.
Truman, however, rejected Harri-
man as a likely loser that year.
This time it could be different.
None of the foregoing eliminates
Adlai E. Stevenson from next
1 year’s political picture. He was the
1 1952 Democratic nominee and still
' has a strong hold on the party. But
if Stevenson wants next year's
nomination, he will have to fight
for it. And he is not in as good
a position as are Harriman and
numerous other office holders to
make a good fight.
Stevenson is practicing law In
Illinois. His name will be before
the people occasionally. The gov-
ernor of New York enjoys constant
national publicity regardless of
person or party. That is a great
asset, and some other federal and
state officials possess it, too.
The people of Thomasville, Ga.
were right in their hunch that Mr.
Eisenhower would visit them short-
ly. When the President was in
Augusta last week, there were re-
ports from Thomasville that he
might go there soon for a weekend
of quail hunting on the plantation
of Treasury Secretary George M.
Humphrey.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 7—UP-
brings you Revision's biggest dollar valiR
Handicapping Harriman is - a "To her, whose love and tender-
background of wealth, corporate ness
FoT2
■ A
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s
y
discussing what he described “as
buttermilk. After gettinKaonittiethenghtaqfonhsnish people to live
more than halfway through the । He said there was some encour-
feast Rankin gave up. ------------------------.----------
the California study added, "pre-
sents an urgent reason for re-
Cough Is Your
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Guaranteed to please you or money re-
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CREOMULSION
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Troubled with GETTIIG UP NIGHTS
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Tiredness, LOSS Of VIGOR
If you are a vietim of these symp-
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traced to Glandular inflammation.
Glandular Inflammation is a coo*
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that give temporary relief will not
remove the causes of your troubles.
Neglect of Glandular Inflamma-
tion often leads to premature
senility, and incurable malignancy.
The past year men from 1,000
communities nave been successfully
treated here at the Excelsior In-
stitute. They have found soothing
relief and a new zest in life.
The Excelsior Institute, devoted
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Tour Uto. No obligato. Address
Excelsior Institute, Dept H511.
Excelsior Springs, Missouri
PROF. Walter G. Whitman
(above) of Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology, who once
directed secret experiments on'
use of nuclear power for air-
craft. has been named secre-
tary general for the United Na-
tions atoms-tor-Peace confer-
ence. The conference will be
held in Geneva, Switzerland, in
s Di-
lls of
ladies
is in
Cole-
n An-
it 5:30
Irown-
mem-
1 their
s.
1 Club
Lee
ondes.
Order's
am of
St. Onge had the book bound in
London. He felt that the Presi-
dent’s inaugural speech and the
prayer preceding it were the most
powerful words Mr. Eisenhower
probably would ever utter.
The Worcester publisher reports
that among his best customers
have been members of the White
House staff. Press Secretary
James C. Hagerty keeps one of
the little volumes on his desk at
all times.
. -U
3 . 5
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By A. L. BRADFORD
DUBLIN. Feb. 1—UP—Lam
Cosgrave, Irish minister for exter-
I nal atfatrs, called on Britain Mon-
day to end the north-south partition
of Ireland as one of the greatest
possible acts of statesmanship”
toward strengthening the free
world against the dangers of com-
munism.
i in an exclusive Interview with
! the United Press, Cosgrave said
unification of the six British con-
trolled countries of Northern Ire-
land with the Irish republic "would
not only begin a period at real and
sincere friendship between Eng-
land and Ireland, but allow Ire-
land. with her strong racial at-
tachments to the United States, to
become a new and important link
1 between America and England.”
"This would be one of the great-
est possible acts of statesmanship
toward reinforcing the Western
New members joining the
Brownwood Civic Music Associa-
tion by Thursday, may attend the
last concert of this season as a
bonus, association officials have
announced.
Frank Guarrera Metropolitan
baritone, will appear in Mims
Auditorium Thursday at 8 p.m.
In order to be admitted to this
concert, new members may mail
their dues for next season to the
Brownwood Civic Music Associa-
tion, Box 704, Brownwood, not
later than Wednesday, Feb. 9.
Four concerts during the next
season are assured. Adult mem-
berships are $6 for the season and
student memberships are $3.
Since his spectacular rise to
fame following his winning of
the Metropolitan Auditions of the
Airin 1948. Mr. Guarrera has be-
come one of America’s most popu-
lar baritones, with frequent ap-
pearances as guest star in opera
companies from - coast to coast
and in concert, radio and tele-
vision performances.
While still in high school, Mr.
Guarrera won a scholarship at
Curtis -Institute of Music in
Philadelphia, where he studied
with Richard Bonelli and Mme.
Euphemie Gregory. At the time
of his graduation from Curtis he I
already had contracts for ap-1
pearances at La Scala in Milan
unden Tossanini.andMtropofan Californiaa has scooped the federal white tarr"were‘unaware
A ™ MetoPomn, r“«r ss that such ■ trip was in the—
Possessed of a natural acting ■ •
ability and an easy way, mascu-
it did so in a state civil defense next weekend at Humphrey’s hand-
study reporting among other things some plantation.
। that H-bomb “fallout" can spread The Humphrey place is a few
death and sickness for hundreds miles south of Thomasville and in
of miles beyond the super weap- the heart of the plush shooting and
on’s explosive reach.
This fallout—radioactive atomic
> k
wer4
p ho"
of thet
annual
id Fatl
d the
nale, a
that the hunting was never better.
The trip to Thomasville will not
stretch/ Mr. Eisenhower’s flexible
and sel imposed travel limitation
of nd more than two hours flying
. „ The recent snowy and icy weath-
These sources pointed out that I er here made it necessary for the
the California civil defense ofice---— - -
connections, an ineffective plat-
form presence and a lack of much
experience in the rough and tumble
of political campaigning. And
there is another handicap Harri-
man was the 1954 Democratic pres-
idential choice of the young turks
of the party, FDR Jr., his brother.
James, the late ex-Sen. Blair
Moody, Gov. . Mennen (Soapy)
Wiliams qf Michigan, and others.
And it was they in Harriman’s
behalf who tried in the Democratic
national convention that year to
toss out of the hall the delegations
of Virginia, Louisiana and South
Carolina. They couldn’t do it, but
they tried, and there are southern
Democrats who will never forgive
them or Harriman for that.
Tagging Harriman as a winter
book favorite is in deference to
the mighty political prestige of the
state of which he is governor and
in recognition of the fact that he
• probably would be an all-out new
■ deal-fair deal candidate. The Dem-
’ ocrats probably will want such a
J man. He was the only 1954 aspirant
’ who ran 100 per cent on the plat-
Harriman Hailed
'Favorite' For
1956 Nomination
WASHINGTON. Feb 7—UP—
In what you might call the pre-
winter book on next year’s Demo-
cratic presidential candidates, the
New York entry is more and more
touted a favorite.
Gov. Averell Harriman of New
York often is so regarded despite
some of the blistertag handicap-
ping whch is certain to hurt his
pace The word from Albany is
that the first Democratic governor
of the state following Thomas E
Dewey’s long Republican reign is
aware of his opportunity.
Harriman, likewise, is working
to improve it. It was no mere GOING OVERSEAS — Sgt. Al-
chance that he named Tammany fred J. Brennan, former mechan-
boss Carmine Desapio as his sec- le with Weatherby Motor Co.,
retary of state Desapio is ma- will leave Camp Kilmer, N. J.,
neuverng to do for Harriman next soon for Army service in Ger-
year what James A. Farlev did many. His wife, the former
in 1932 for Franklin D Roosevelt Georgia Blanton. and three
If he brings it off. Tammany Hali children live at Apt. 129. Sunset,
will rise to heights of glory, pa- Terrace. His mother, Mrs. J. C.
tronage and prosperity undreamed Out', lives st Abilene. Brennsn
of up to now. The Hall had been entered the service last October,
doing badly, or worse, through all ,
the years since bss Charles Fti^i AIn Aen-re
Murphy died in 1925 or there- TABLOID NOTES
Along came Desapio, at last, rn nA A 11 n UimrC communism than Ireland. the GSM-1, and brought'to shore,
after long years of uninspired K N II P W K% "The Irish government has no —
leadership, to clean up the hall ■ I IVI l U.l • VV-l-- relations with any of the Commu-
considerably. buck young Frankln LOS ANGELES, Feb. 7—UP— nist states nor does it propose to
D. Roosevelt Jr. out of the 1954 Druggist Basil Clark nursed a sore enter in such relation!,” he de-
gubernatorial nomination, and put head Monday from a love tap clared.
Harriman up there in Albany given him by a sentimental bandit. But, he added firmly, it is diffi-
where the young man had wanted Clark reported his a.u.....
to go. Desapio has a good presl- slugged him with a gun, stole $35
dential nominee prospect on his from the cash register nd fled
hands now, and he loves it. | with a valentine inscribed:
"If You Are Interested In West Tex-
anna. You Need This Book to Make
Tear History Compplete," Says Ham-
ilton Wright, Reviewing FROM TNT
MEMORIS OF MEN; ia The Abllene
Reporter-News.
One Dollar, at Tear Book Store or
Magazine Stan!
DALLAS, Feb. 7— UP— A
man walked np to bakery
truck driver F. B. Welch. 28
asked for pastry and took
of Welch’s dough.
Police said the man stepped
np to Weleh's truck Saturday,
asked for an apple pie,
punched him in the nose, took
$200 and fled.
"WSh..,
l"
A
:3,3•
I BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Monday, February T, 1959---S
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WTEL fANINUL
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 99, Ed. 1 Monday, February 7, 1955, newspaper, February 7, 1955; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1492119/m1/3/?q=%22southwestern+exposition%22: accessed June 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.