Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 91, No. 51, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 13, 1956 Page: 2 of 6
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1
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
2
TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1956
Brenham Banner-Press
Dad Vows To Bum Down Slum
If His Rat-Bitten Son Die
‘ 5 ! <e* 3 hjt"- T‘-
S
irt
3653
times on the face and arm.
* EDSON IN WASHINGTON k
Policewomen described the sec-
Last Rites Held
Citics
8
A
• I
€
V
special gifta, or helped us in-any
.1956 marketing year, the pay-
richest Blessing rest upon you.
-- ---- ■ Fu.M 1 ar ■ -sze Ep-
TwenMPASErPEorreyhndFNE. anan-
gram incentive level for both the
man of National Planning Association.
1955 and 1956 marketing years
for payment.
The time of shearing is not a
ington County Agricultural Steb-
payments are to be made at a
percentage rate (the percentage
tin; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Browning,,
Yoakum;. Dr. and Mrs Harold
mfttee, said today. j
Public
Northington, ‘Egypt; Mr. and Mrs.
Holland Porter, Scatio.
I
, r .
paaahenn-
/
43
.X
/
xn *62X • ATa.
= ■ xria 1* 329
means
4
GETAWAY !
4
Ba,.,
KT
Tmemazmgeemmn
sgermpem
order, signed by the Mayor of . let 4 door.
21
2~ , ■ •
F3
j
< .1
032
is hereby ordered that a regular
newspaper . In said City.
and
wgh
SUPER es HOLIDAY coup
dee"
the sme being the First Tues-
THE
IN THE SEcoND COUPLING I
elected from the city at .large,
)
Attest:
Here & There
FOB WANT ADS CALL 3643
O LOS NCE
Farmers, the
basis from 7
alty on short cotton.
n
I
+
—
$0
<
Wool Payments
Offered Now For
by the City Commission of the
City of Brenham, Texas. and1 It'
Walter Meyet, Mrs. J. B. Fergu-
son. Mr. and Mrs. Windel Lea. all
way to lighten our dark hours,
the doctors of Houston and Bren-
ham who tried to help him. nurs-
PLANE CRASH
BLASTS MAN
FROM HOUSE
City, to be designated as Com-
missionersfrom Ward 1.Commis-
sioner from Ward 2, Commission-
Tom B Whitehead -Publisher.
Jar K Ryrd- Mechanical Supt
said City.. attested by the Sity
Secretary of said Gity, shall serve
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Delbert
Ullrich of Carmine are the par.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Charles E. Wiede
County Clerk
Here Monday For
Mrs. Niemeyer
John Cole League. $10.
Walter A. Gaskamp et ux to
O C. Gindorf. First tract, 5.84
voters of said City shall be en-
titled to vote
Said election shall be held and
conducted and the ballots can-
vassed, the results declared in
the same manner as is provided
by the said Special Charter of
the said City ordinances and the
general election laws of the State
* Texas relating to cities and
towns.------;----
Twenty days prior to said, elec-
tion. the City Commission shall
declare the official ballot show-
ing the different candidates ter'
each office and the manner of
voting the same A copy of this
____Payments for the 1955 market-,
ing year, -which ends March 31,
appoint all necessary clerks
therefor;
' Said election shall be held un.
The thumb and little finger of only to that of a human,
one hand virtually were chewed
NORTHERN
STAR
I
ilization.and Conservation Com- factor in the eligibility for pay-
. ments under the new wool pro -
gram except that the wool must
• 2*9
"/% AW?
A piece of the plane landed on am3
top of the house, which was jarred |
on its concrete slab foundation that! i
was cracked in two. Windows and , s
light fixtures where shattered.
Pilot Bails Out Of
Jet Fighter Near
Victoria
water WELL
DRILLING__-
L D. Arrington .a
Ledbetter, Fexas:
Phone Long Distance
Waltermore W. Meyer, Burton;
Chevrolet 2 door sedan:
DEEDS RECORDED
Charles E. Wiede,
/ 4 .
21
and Viola. Giese. Lot 11. block 7,
Walnut Hill Addition,. $10 and
considerations.
Hollis M. Sillavan et ux to
Henry Guelker. 1.28 acres, J. B.
Miller and T. H. Bordon Leagues.
A
Among relatives and friends
who came from a distance Jo at-
tend the obsequies were Mr. and
llf*OF THI SMOOTHNEss
considerations.. E ... . ga
Fritz .Wieghatet ux to Walter
A symposium of views has just been published by NPA. under
• the title of “The Employment Act—Past and Future.” It is edited
by N.P.A. chief economist Gerhard Colm
CARD OF THANKS
Words cannot express our most
heartfelt thanks to all our neigh-
bors. friends, and relatives for
the many kindnesses shown us
during the long lingering illness
and passing of our beloved hus-
band and of our father, Erwin
Sander. Those who visited, sent
was second in danger of infection
Harry Otto Schulz and Miss Co-
rine May Reuter.
Bennie Lee Finley and Elnora
Felder _____
0
(
t
An Ordinance providing for an
election to be held on April 3.
electin.
The Mayor is further authoriz-
ed and directed to have said no-
tice of election published in some
County Clark -
H. O Fisher to Marvin Giese
Full Employment Dreams
Come Close to Realization
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspodent
MH .
NEA Service. Inc . ' L*2E .
_____ .___ and considerations.
REESE B. LOCKETT, Mayor -----------
6
e ,
' A
VISIT THE "ROCKET BOOM" . . . AT YOUR OLDSMOBILE DEALER’S!
"We Interrupt This Program—
LI;
K-
' /0s-
F5
Da
,53
t c:h2a
-5
9
L 15
15
Brenham, Texas, at which elec-
tion there shall be .elected five
commissioners, one of
VICTORIA, Tex — LT—A jet
fighter plane that caught fire at |
12.006 feet Monday crashed near 3
house with such force it blew a ,
man out of his kitchen and his
wife out of her shoes. The pilot
landed in a cemetery.
Capt. John E Gibson. 39 of wi.
mington, Del., bailed out when his
F-100 Super-Sabre jet caught fire
He drifted about six miles before
landing unhurt in Memory Garden
Cemetery near the edge of town.
His plane hit the ground with
such impact that it drove itself out
of sight.
The jet crashed 20 feet from the
back porch of the five-room frame
• house of M-Sgt Ted Poster, 35. sta-
tioned at nearby Foster Air Force
Base. He and his wife were blown
away from their lunch table by the
concussion.
Porter was blonrn through the
kitchen door into the back yard.
His wife was blown out of her
shoes and into the bathroom. Nei-
ther was hurt except for shock.
//i8:
/49
4-
EXA GULF COAST
3, Ae (ciadb. 4
- -"a - ~ - - * --- a
Tom S Whitehead. Jr..—Editor
F w Proske-Cashier
‘----------WIHWRB"
seed, give Northern
ta looks, Oldsmobile’s Starfire styling
is in a class by itself with its original
•ide treatment and trend-setting
"Intagrille Bumper.” This Olds can
be yours at a price that’s amazingly
low. Stop in today and see!
"-adunaspim--"o —- -
WASHINGTON—(NEA)—The tenth anniversary of the Fulem-
" ployment Act of 1946 is now being celebrated
Unemployment—now just under three million—is still regarded
as too high But the irreducibl minimum for unemployment due
to job changes and seasonal layoffs is now put at around 2 per cent
of the labor force. With 69 million in the labor force, unemployment
should be under 1 5 million.
There are too many depressed areas of chronic underemployment.
. - and their_problems have not - been -solved. - ,
But with 63 million U.S workers now on the job relatively full
employment has arrived.
THE DREAMERS OF 1946 were talking about the desirability
of having 60 million jobs in the postwar economy
American Economic Review in 1944 concluded there was little
chance for full employment after the war It said employment would
decline to the levels of 1936 when there were 45 million employed
and nine million unemployed
Commercial and Financial Review in 1945 said that 50 to 55
million jobs at the end of the war would provide a fair measure of
prosperity ' 1 . .
Saturday Evening Post in May of that year carried an article,
"The 60 Million Job Myth ’ It was highly critical of the full em-
ployment goal as government policy
WHAT HAPPENED after the war made all such prophets look
pretty sorry
lived in Austin. Also present, was I cards,
Rev. John Paul Carter, student
chaplain at the University of
Texas. Michael Cole served as
acolyte.
TW
PR]
A
pre
rod
the
ter'
Mh
7
hyt
da’
Gu
Ad
ter
Ha’
Thi
kai
for
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the
I
dis
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en
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an
esl
esl
Ke
Ku
1
poi
in
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Lo
ho
And how you get away! With the ’ criunfthenewL- V -8
flashing "go" that Hydra-Matic made power fee turret. And, when it comes
COTTON SEED | ' at 7:50 e.m.
- —-1 change in the cotton loan 1 at 7:30 a.m. She weighed seven
to one inch staple will mean a pen- potnds, 10 ounces
Mrs. W. A. Welmenn has
turned home after a week’s visit
1
—----EeE=
*. ■» «n.a -T
p- ’
A Victoria newsman said the
plane ' seemed to pull the hole in i
food, beautiful flowers.
ordering said election on the pro-
per time prior thereto, creates an
emergency and public necessity
requiring the Rule of Ordinance
to be read at two separate days
to be suspended, and the ordi-
nance to take effect from and
after the date of its passage and
approval.
p, eg o" Gale Show
HEcaye$Onng"
Records—
1956, for.the purpose of electing
a Mayor* and Four Commission-
ers for the City of Brenham, Tex-
as. and declaring an emergency.
Whereas, under the provisions
of the Charter of the City of Bren-
ham. Texas, adopted by a vote of
( the qualified voters of the City
of Brenham on September 7th. A.
D., 1920. Sections 10 and 11.. Ar-
ticle 3, providing for the holding
of a regular election of the first
Tuesday in April of every even
year for the purpose of ejecting
five Commissioners, one of whom
shall be the Mayor of said city,
ted from -he City at large and
■ four elected from
each of the four wards of the
required to bring the national (___________ — —___
average price received ky produ- Northington,. Wharton; George
not have been shorn prior to Jan eers for the particular marketing *t*m ■ “= ■ "" ■ -
uary 1,1955. The payment under j year up to the* incentive level.)
$10 and considerations. *
Emma Schlottmann et al to
Legal Notice
—FKEETIOTNOTCE
and tour Commissioners, one
each from the four wards, desig-
nated in said Charter;
Said election shall tie held at
the City Hall, being the desig-
nated voting place In th* Qty
of Brenham for voters from all
A. Gaskamp et ux. 5:84 acres.
• f ci • ment will be made in the sum-
Early Shearing mer of 1957.
----- ' ~ The chairman further explain-
Growers who shear early may
Puolished every afternoon Baturdey end Sunday “306 Ma
Street Brenham. Texas.
*> Mail Washngton and ndjoining oounties: 85 50. Texas ss 00. out of State »
subscripuon Rates by Carrier: One month 11 00: Tear 510.00.
four wards, and the following
named persons are heteby ap AODrovad,
pointed Managers of said elec--I Fk'~——-
tion; H C. Hafer, Presiding Judge,
and said Presiding Judge shall
er from Ward 3, and Commis- . - ..
stoner from Ward. 4 - each of 45 the proper notice of said elec;
• whom shall be elected to office tionithe Mayor is authorized and _
- for which he is a candidate by dirested.to cause said notice-of ■
the qualified voters of the chy the election.to be posted
at lrgto be held under and in the C0 Halk apdatome public
Jsaccordancewith the genesaj elec- place in each of the four wards
tion laws of the State of Texas of the said City, for at least thir;
• relating to cities and towns; ty days prior to the date of said
THEREFORE, be it Ordained.
.2303
Employment reached the 60-million goal at the end of 1950, and
it has not been below that figure since Peak employment was 65
million in the fall of 1955. And there are now predictions of 70
E-fn2b2m-*------ LAFB-pid the pilot reported a firelseu ueir 195 wopuse
forsthis goqdrecordis debatable,H “Gnseuran--ih pnbamsem-etcpaymems
tember, A. D., 1920, and the Odis Tomachefsky
amendments thereto, and . the County Judge
constitution- and laws of the Leo Francis Kluth, driving '
State of Texas, relating to cities while intoxicated, plea of guty '
and towns, and duly qualified and fined $50 and costs and thtee
acres; second tract, 17.04 acres,
John Cole League. $10 and con-
siderations.
C. E. Lange and Earle Adair
Lange to .. Brenham Wholesale
Grocery Company, Inc. Lots 1 and
2, block 2, Hurts Addition. $10
elerflon’behe.nAr awppape ■ an mu -uy, ana Herbert Schlottmann. First tract,
th? aon) .hsd nApri: *1956. which notice shall be published 28 1-4 acres; second tract. 10 ac-
ra, in Ar 8- in thTru^f lonce each week for weeks, res; third tract, 2—86-100 acres.
2419 in-the.eitx o the date of the first publication E Allcorn 1-2 League. $10 and
being not less than thirty full a-—"
. prior to th ate of the
W 011 (cc-tr ’ * " ,9
shall be the Mayor of said city, « h..0 , .
- - -- . The fact that is is desirous of
DETROIT, Mich. —UP— The away. The infant’s face was raw
father of a 5-month-old boy who from bites on ms tongue, nose,
was savagely chewed by rats chin and cheek by the rodents
Tuesday vowed to burn his slum which Invaded his crib.
home if the child dies. | Doctors said Nathaniel's condi-
Empress Connors, an unem- tion was "serious" and it-would
ployed furnace man, uttered the be some time before they learned
threat through tears after his son whether infection sets in. A hos-
Nathaniel was bitten more than 20 pital spokesman said a rat's bite
H 222327508488
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is the same, 62 cents, and the of Houston; Mr. and Mrs. Ken
naymente er te he mede et a Morton and Dr. Otto Brandt, Aus-
. r ,
8T .a
will be made sometime this sum- the wool program will bp. made
mer. If the sale ts made in the afW Late established for the
marketing year in which the sale! Mrs. Robertson E. Robertson, Miss.
010’ . es Suzie and Carrie Robertson, Mr.
is made, and Mrs. William Strauss, Miss
Chairman Boeker emphasized ’ Mary Strauss and Fred Strauss,
that it is important for growers Robert H. Baker, Tom Adams,
to get the best market price pos- Ceb Eastland, Mr. and Mrs. John
SUMMING UP, Sonne concludes that: 11 ne proDlems of unem-
ployment are mrageable"— when business and labor and govern-
ment put their best mindsto, work on them.
But thee -e-LSs’ahea Econqmist Alvin H Hansen of
Harvard rounded them up in an N.P.A. dinner talk, observing the
Full Employment Act anniversary.
"During the last 10 years we have invested 300 billion dollars in
producers’ plant and equipment." he said.
“All this is essential for growth and expansion.
"But mere output of material goods is not enough i
-bogptahr zeuth gamagrams, adunf education 4
"Dur slums persist in the midst of 1 400-billion-dollar gross
national product. We have plenty of automobiles but hot enough
roads.
"Ten years from now we can produce a gross national product
of 550 billion dollars Out of this we must increase our public-
investment and social-welfare budgets”
Jetaway features TWO fluid
couplings to give you twice
the smoothnesat The second
coupling fills and spills with
let-like speed to ease you into
every driving range so quietly,
so smoothly the change is
almost imperceptible. Just try
Oldsmobile s Jetaway . , • it‛a
the greatest advance in auto-
matic transmiesions in 17 years!
so famous, plus a new liquid smooth-
ness that’s Jetaway’* alone- Just try
Jetaway*. Pour on the power! You’ll
see the dramatic difference, when
Oldsmobile’s revolutionary transmis-
sion pairs with the Rocket T-350
Engine ... 9.25-to-1 compression big!
Here’s super action with power to
spare. What’s more, in this Olds you
wing along in the solid assurance of
its sure-footed Safety-Ride Chassis
... in the smart luxury of its fashion-
ably tailored interior . . with the
es of Milroy Hospital. Rev. H
Brunotte for his many visits an I
prayers he had. The Brotherhood ’
for their hymns, Ladies Aid for
their shelp, the pallbearers and
the Simank - Buske: Funeral
Home for their service. To all we
say "Thank You" and may God’
.122
. mmdom
mdatse 7 — -
9502862888
SPRG
LANG 'MOTOR COMPANY ^'-
--------
radoptedon the 7th day of Sep- COUNTY CRIMINAL DOCKET
> G H ZEISS, CIty Secretary.
I Adv—4t
Entered M jn*»
onteas matter
at Post otfice,
Brenham. Tex-
an, under at of
March >. 1879.
। ond-floor rear flat as a “filthy
hovel.” They said the dwelling,
■ one of four in the building, was
unpainted and littered with debris.
Mrs. Connors was held for in-.
vestigation of neglect. .w
Connors said he had complained
about rats to the landlord, Ben
Magid, and was given some pow-
der and wood fabric and wire to
plug up the holes.
'We can ahear the rats in the
walls at night,” Connors said.
"They crawl across the floor in
the daytime.
'If my baby dies. I’m going to
burn that place down.”
__Led seven pounds. elght_and
— । I haif ounces.
".N '
bhe.a
The body of Mrs. E. Victor Nie-
। meyer, who died in Lima, Peru,
was brought to Brenham Sunday
from Houston, after arriving
there by plane, and was taken to
the home of her parents. Dr. and
Mrs. W F. Hasskarl.
Funeral services were held
Monday at St. Peter's -Epissopal
Church, followed by burial in the
Hasskarl family lot at Prairie
Lea cemetery.
Officiants were the Rev. Her-
bert J. Beadle, rector of the
church Rev. S. Moylan Bird, re-
tired rector;-and Rev. Sqott Field
Bailey, rector of All Saints church,
Austin, of which Mrs. Niemeyer
was a communicant when she
•485)
./ S. 3 *,
Northern Star No. 11 planting seed is a long staple g, eon43
cotton, 1 1/32 and better, a fast making, bigboll easy withsherdaughtroand e niih-
picking cotton, . good turn out 1350 puns of seed lwFHomdm
cotton. I have plenty of state registered seed at $9.75 j Mr. amna Mrs. wufred New
asnek 3 bG| ——em — * - -----— ------
'If you haven’t' boil
Star a chanve. I have planted it for two years
*---.....: - - BeMMER and SON. -
4
2 %4
house a short distance from the
field.
U e 90
> 2
wee I8
‛,3r
• •
h / "
1
EMgee5e-"
stmmsazrire -
s in jail, drivers license sus ,
pended for six months. " ]
JUSTICE CRIMINAL DOCKET
Justice of the Peace
H. A Becker
Woodrow Waller, disturbing
peace, case pending.
Leo Francis Kluth, no opera-
tor’s license, case pending.
NEW CARS REGISTERED
Henry Appel
County Tax Assessor-Collector
Water Well Service, Brenham,
Chevrolet station wagon.
Benjamin A. Hajovsky, Bren-
ham, Chevrolet 1-2 ton truck.
W. L. Alcorn, Burton, Chevro-
Civilian- employment dropped to a postwar low of 53 million .'after it, unhelievable as that may
in 1945, with only one million unemployed. Next year it was 55 sound He said the nose of the
million employed, with two million unemployed due to heavy mili- plane must have goe 60 -feet into
tary service discharges. the ground."
Col. Joe L. Mason, commander
of th* 450th fighter wing to which
the plane was attached at Foster
AFB. said tl " ’ *
"TT ‛ P-ge*
L“ —. am. J
ed that growers who have not
their 7^5 MHPgwryit. .sible $og dai-
Gson bailed duFananKTW- am veEre.n Payments um‛ over and sell it in the 1956 mar-
less plane headed back for the der the 1955 wool programs, Jesse keting zear ad still be eligible
base, but Crashed near the Porter Boeker, chairman of the Wash- for payment.
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Whitehead, Tom S., Jr. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 91, No. 51, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 13, 1956, newspaper, March 13, 1956; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1566401/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.