Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 92, Ed. 1 Monday, May 10, 1971 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE TWO BRENHAM BANNER PRESS MONDAY MAY 10, 1971:7 .
5
392174/1
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
. GAIN
25 OFF LABEL’
E YOUR COST A A G
KING SIZE %
LIMIT 1 PL EASE WITH $5.00
ORMORE PURCHASE M
Liquid STARCH SIL VEX 27€
uiquiu OIAR n — HALF GALLON - 3/
‘FAST LITTLE FEAST”
CHEF BOY ARDEE CHEESE
PIZZA MIX
LUNCHEON MEAT 12 oz.
TREAT SA 59°
MARY KITCHEN
CORNED BEEF
HASH 1562 CAN 49°
29 02. : 99
CHEF’S DELIGHT
FOOD
2 LB.
SILD NO. % CAN
Sardines 2 FOR 35°
Cheese _ PKCL 69°
SWEET SUE
CHICKEN AND 24 OZ.
Dumplings Can 55°
LIBBY'S MIXED NO. 303 -
Vegetables Can 21°
HI C
DRINKS
ASSORTED FL AVORS -
46 - OUNCE
CAN
2
Cherry IF I Y VILLAGE PA”K 2Q'
. Ulerly JELLT___18 oz. JAR - 33
H.E.B. CHUNK STYLE
LE GRANDE
5
Cream Style Golden
Paul Harvey-
The Four-Day Work-Week
UNATCORN
NO. ¥2 CAN - ■
$100
FOR . 1
NO. 303 CAN
FOR
Mary Ellen
Bakoy
er Treats •
LEMON POCKET j
ROLLS
REGULAR 35, E
PACKAGE orE
AMERICAN BEAUTY 10 oz.
ELBO-RONE PK O. 21
KOUNTY KIST SWEET
PEAS NO. 303 CAN
SLAB BACON /
i . . HALF or WHOLE Pound -
; SLICED LB. 59, - .........
ALL MEAT FRANKS
L Ranch Country 12 oz. Package ......
FLAVOR PERFECT
GROUND ”
CHUCK 29
* FLAVORFUL-
CHOPPED
SIRLOIN L.B. ‘1.09
BARBECUE SEVEN CUT
STEAK LB. 69
SHOULDER CUT
SWISS ,
STEAKL79
RASP LIT AND------7—
SPICED FOR BARBECUE
FRYERS LB. 39°.
3-L B. PKG. OR MORE
HAMBURGER LB- 63
LEAN SHOULDER _ —
PORK STEAK 4O
POUND-----------T %
GOV. INSPECTED
GRADE "A”
FRYERS POUND 33
RANCH COUNTRY
CANNED 3 LB.
HAMS CAN‘2.89
BALLARD BUTTER TASTIN’
DICCHITC 9Y OUNCE TUBE 19
KRAFT . I P 24 OUNCE SIZE 72
Sandwich SPREAD_______13
BLUE BONNET SOFT .
MARGARINE U OELAEPOUND CARTON 49
LYSOL ———— ---------— ———
LIQUID CLEANSER _ 28 OUNCE 112. 89°
ASSORTED COLORS 40€ 1
AURORA TISSUE _ ROLL LACKA L - 23
RIGHTS RESERVED
Prices Good thru Wed., May 12 in Brenham
Quick Fix Frozen Foods:
MINUTE MAID GRAPEFRUIT AND TANGERINE
JUICE _ J o. CAN 4 for ’1.00
PATIO CHEESE AND BEEF
ENCHILADAS REGULAR SIZE 49°
WESTPAC, A . 20 OUN CE
Stew Vegetables. BAG - 39
CALIFORNIA LARGE LUSCIOUS FRESH PINT BOX EACH
STRAWBERRIES - 3 for ‘1.00
. TEXAS SWEET I
CANTALOUPE- 3 for ‘1.00
VINE RIPEN FINE FLAVOR PINT BOX
Cherry TOMATOES 3 for $1.00
I TEXSUN
- —FROZEN,
ORANGE JUICE
6 - OUNCE CAN
C. $ 1 00
FORM
CALIFORNIA FRESH' CRISP
LETTUCE _
ARGE HEAD EACH 25
CALIFORNIA FANCY’
AVOCADOS _ - 2 Ch__15°
FRESH RED RIPE
WATERMELONS - 200-.10°
TEXAS SHELLED
Blackevo prac 12 02. CELLO oqc
UlaVnCjU TCMO - — BAG — _
HOME GROWN BUNCH
Green ONIONSsuNchE 2 for 19‘
CAMPBELL’S
CHICKEN NOODLE
S O U P
A NO.1 q00
A CANS +00
Ufor 1
DIXIE BELLE
SALTINES POUND BOX 25°
vie
mai
on 1
the
Lor
Idle hours with no place to
go and nothing to do can be ev-
en more boring. Perhaps more
industries first should move
to within reach of the moun-
tains, the woodlands or the
sea.
Britain’s Prince Philip
recently suggested that res-
tiveness among worker der-
ives mostly from boredom,
- ____.. from the monotony of their
When 1 first went to work larger number of persons with jobs that higher pay is but a
at a radio station in Tulsa, no jobs at all, temporary palliative.
Okla, - - a part-time job =------A---.—...---*---------------
after school hours-- I was State Capitol View-
too-young to work under the m - TD • Th • •
government’s child labor Vi Tlle H 9 G H 1 O I eCISION
laws, but I managed to get a NVIILLS JICD 1g WUUIU
special work permit. I have
forgotten the stipulations un- . By ALAN ERWIN
der which those permits .were AUSTIN (Sp) - All the urg-
allowed; it has been a while, ings from supporters that he
Anyway, I got one. run for President in 1972 just
Now in those days almost may have finally made Wilbur
everybody worked a six-day Mills decide to plunge in and
week. Even during the depres- sink or swim.
sion the Biblical formula of The powerful Arkansas de-
“rest on the seventh day” was mocrat, chairman of the Hou-
custom and, in some places, se Ways and Means Committ-
law. ee, addressed the Texas Leg-
Then when unions became islature this past week with
effective in the late Thirties all the signs of a man seek-
I and began agitating for "Sat- ing the nation’s highest office,
urday afternoon off,” the no- Afterwards, Mills received
tion was considered by most glowing praise from Gov.
people to be pretty revolut- Preston Smith, Lt. Gov. Ben
ionary. Barnes and House Speaker
It was not until after World Gus Mutscher. Barnes, in his
BY PAUL HARVEY
Banner Columnist
How would you like to work
just four days a week? Are
you sure? *
number of unemployed.
Thus the ambitious, ener-
getic worker holding two jobs
is likely to be punished with
higher taxes to support the
. Mr
Iat<
and
and
Cai
2
War II that the big cities began introduction of Mills, refer-
to close down onbothSaturday red to him as a potential
and Sunday, mostly due to President of the UnitedStates.
pressure from suburban com- "Federal assumption of all
muters. welfare programs would be
Now there is agitation for a the most meaningful and most
four-day work week, a three- practical alternative to wel-
day weekend. Twenty-seven fare sharing,” Gov. Smith said
companies already have adop- of Mills’ speech later.
ted the short work week. "Congressman Mills is a
The C. A. Norgren Co. of man who approaches the great*
Littleton, Colo., is one of issues of pur nation fromapr-
them. Norgren has pioneered oblem-solving standpoint. It
several previous social and is this approach which offers
industrial innovations. A man- us some degree of hope as we
ufacturer of air-processing face what has been accurate-
systems, this company insti- ly described as a fiscal cri-
tuted a profit-sharing system sis,” Mutscher said.
25 years ago. Barnes, who has visited of-
Norgren was among the first ten this session with Mills in
industries to landscape and Washington, let his introduc-
otherwise beautify its premi-
ses, to wire happy music into
the airy lunchrooms.
Then last August. Norgren
adopted the four-day work-
week.
3 . Each workday has been len-
Igthened one hour.
AP writer Paul Patterson,
X
fare politics -- always a offering a solution which has
touchy and distasteful subject become a headache tothe gov-
to any politician. ernor and other state officials
Any man who could do that who keep the spiraling wel-
little favor for Texas politi- fare roles in Texas and sign
clans would certainly deserve the checks.
the thanks of those politicians
— and perhaps the support of
those same men at the Demo-
cratic convention in 1972 when
a Democratic candidate for
the presidency is chosen.
Muskie, Humphrey, McGo-
vern, Kennedy, Jackson and
Yorty, if you consider his
candidacy serious, have sel-
dom bothered to set foot in
Texas to campaign or offer cy. Would he be willing to
help on such problems as * move, from his throne in Con-
gress to the plain desk with
all its headaches in the Wh-
“Mills for President” but-
tons may be emerging around
the state in the next few weeks
— and Smith, Barnes and Mut-
scher may be printingand we-
- aring them.
One question remains. Mills
would be giving up his chair-
manship of the Ways and Me-
ans Committee should he ch-
oose to run for the presiden-
welfare. Their viability as
candidates in the Lone Star
State is about even -- all
are equally unknown as prob-
lem solvers.
ite House?
Glory of power —it is Mills’
decision. Should he choose
However, Mills, after his ‘the glory of the Presidency,
Friday speech in Austin, may Texas may be one of his most
have gained the upper hand by solid supporters.
Tie Lighter Side--
— Over- Doing
Its Product
BY DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
pharmaceutical industry on
tion speak for itself. Herefer- occasion has been accused of
red to Mills as “above France overdoing its promotion of
and just below Germany” in a products,
list of powerful forces in the According to consumer gr-
world today,- oups and other critics, exces-
Texas’ sudden love affair
patterns, plus slight deviation
in body temperature, breath-
ing rates and pulse beat.
McCalls suggests that jet-
lag is confined to air travelers
whose biological rhythms, kn-
own as the “circadian cycle,”
are upset by rapid crossing of
, _ sive advertising causes us “several time zones. But I’m
with the Arkansas Congress- confused laymen to waste mil-
* man has stemmed from hi: of aataterincunneder,
appealing and welcomed ef- tons of dollars nneces-
forts to solve the individual sary purchases of various
onostrums, palliatives, elix-
irs, balms, restoratives and
herbifuges.======= ==============
in a progress report on this
experiment, concludes that states’ welfare crisis. Any
results are altogether benefi- man who could offer a solu-
cial, ==================.....—=======--tion to thatproblem will fim:
Applications for employm- himself looked on favorably
ent at that company have jum- by every state politician from
ped 300%, Maine to Washington.
So far, 40-hour production Mills proposed that the Fe-
- levels apparently are being deral government take over
maintained on a 37-hour work- the administration of the wel-
week, though the productivity fare program. Under his pro-
study is not yet- complete, posal, the Federal govern-
What do the workers do with ment would pay the first $2,-
their increasedtime off? Some 400 for an unemployable fa-
. use the time for golfing or mily and would assume com-
skiing, Women workers report piete responsibility for the ad - the ailment,
having more time with their ult welfare categories of Old For unless we know we have
children. An executive ispan- Age Assistance, Aid to the 4 certain ailment, we obvious-
e ling his basement. , Blind and Aid to the Perman- ly are not going to the drug
Rocky Mountain residents ently and Totally Disabled up store and buy a remedy for
are likely to be pre-adapted to to $150 a month. it.
the outdoors. For big city wor- As these amounts are the
kers, the shorter workweek istop payments Texas makes,
likely to encourage moonilgh- me Mills proposal would mean
convinced it is far more wide- :
spread than that TDD .—
The syndrome exactly fits
the way I feel at least two days
a week, and I haven’t crossed
========--------—a time zone in months. Un-
To some extern, at least, I told millions* of other stay-at-
believe this censure is unwar- homes also may be suffered’
ranted. For it overlooks the from jet-lag without knowing
important point that medical it
advertising often serves a • Ir your circadian rhythm
double purpose. • 3 is disturbed by crossing time
In many cases, medical ad- zones in a jet, then it is lo-
yertlsing must do more than gical to suppose the same thing
inform us that a remedy is can happen while you are wat-
available; it also must edu- .ching sporting events on tel- .
cate us as to the existence of evision.
Seeing a game on Eastern
Standard Time that actually is
being played three hoursear-
lier in California can' leave
ting. complete Federal takeover of years from now, which is when
The Labor Department the Texas welfare system on Syntex Pharmaceuticals of
guesstimates that the number its present scale with any con- London hopes to produce a pill
of Americans holding down, tribution, no matter how min- for the prevention of “jet-
or, being just that much more lag."
“icing on the cake.” Jet-lag is described in the
The Mills proposal would current issue of McCall’s ma-
thus take Texas state poll- gazine as the feeling you have
tics out of the realm of wel- in the evening "when your
----------- body still thinks it’s morn-
Ing.”
IV The symptoms may include
KWHI PROGRAM SCHEDULE a vague sense of unease, some
you badly disoriented, with
. impaired decision- making and
Consider, for example, the all the rest. L-
passive advert is wee campaign ke-jet-lag pint prebu.se.
that will be needed seven to 10 ly will prevent that. And once
two jobs is greater than the
ictus
1280 AM
org
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wil
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of
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17,
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Kai
er,
* Wel
Live the thrills of
tournament golf!
(NAME OF AGENCY)
Invites you to watch IM
150,000
RemPeR open
June 12 and 13 on
Sports Network TV
This PGA co-sponsored tournament,
one of the country’s finest golf
shows, will be telecast live from
Quail Hollow Country Club in Char-
lotte, N.C.
So for the best in golf, watch the
KEMPER OPEN and for the best in
insurance, look to our agency. Our
Professional Problem Solvers can
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If you have an insurance problem
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SNODGRASS-VAN DYKE
AND ASSOCTS. INS.
115 W. MAIN 836-3671
•<• M NT H»
Eddie Van Dyke
(YOUR INSURANCE PROBLEM SOLVER)
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
6:00 Sign On
6:30 Farm News
7:00 Local News
7:15 Thoughts to Live By
7:20 Weathervane
7:30 News: TSN,Local, Sports
8:00 Spectator (Except Mon:)
8:15 Coffee Time —.——
8:25 Church Bulletin Board
8:35 Hospital Register
9:01 Texas Polka Time 4 (
10:00 Austin County Calling
10:45 What’s Going On Here
11:00 ay by Day with Jesus
11:15 forming Show
12:00 TSN News & Local News
12:25 Livestock Market Report
12:30 School Report
12:35 Music at High Noon
1:00 Trading Post
1:15 Country Jubilee
2:30 Livestock Auction (Mon.)
4:00 1280 Club
.5:00 TSN Sports
5:05 Local News & Sports
5:35 Twilight Serenade
6:00 TSN News
6:15 Spectator
7:30 KWHI FM Music
,10:00 Local News &Sports
11:00 Sign Off
TSN News 5 min. before hour
Local news on the hour '
Sports 15 Min. before hour
Bulletin Board 15 min. after
hour.
106.3 FM • impairment of decision-mak-
ing ability and abnormal sleep
HOW'S YOUR
HEARING?
A most unique free offer
of special interest to those
who hear but do not under-
stand words has been annou-
nced by Beltone. A non-
operating replica of the
smallest Beltone ever made
will be given absolutely free
to anyone answering this ad-
vertisement.
Try it to see how it is worn
in the privacy of your own
home without cost of obli-
gallon of any kind. It’s
yours to keep, free. It wei-
ghs less than a third of an
ounce, and it’s all at ear
level in one unit. No wires
lead from body to head. He-
re is truly new hope for the
hard of hearing.
These models are free while
the limited supply lasts, so
we suggest you write for
yours now. Again, we re-
peat, there is no cost and
certainly no obligation.
BELTONE HEARING AID
SERVICE, 127 E. 7th.
AUSTIN, TEXAS 78701
DELIVERED FRESH DAILY
• IN 16 COUNTIES
NAME......
ADDRESS
TOWN......
its advertising educates us as
to the nature of our ailment,
Syntex should make a fortune.
Today
In History
By United Press International
Today is Monday, May 10,
the 130th day of 1971.
On this day in history:
In 1865 Confederate Pres-
ident Jefferson Davis was
captured as he fled Irwinville,
Ga. He spent the next two
years in prison.
In 1940 Nazi-Germany inv-
aded the lowlands- Belgium,
Luxembourg, and the Nether-
lands - with 89 army divis-
ions.
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We like to make a big hit
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go to bat for them with
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Their security means a lot
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them. Get the profes-
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Holleman-Reed
And Klussmann
Insurance
Agency
LIFE & CASUALTY
“Fratemart nt The mow. Cuwany 8
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act:
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to
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Moser, Charles & O'Shea, William. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 92, Ed. 1 Monday, May 10, 1971, newspaper, May 10, 1971; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1696124/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.