The Harper Herald (Harper, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1955 Page: 2 of 4
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Fags Two "V' Friday, August 26, 1955,
The Harper Herald - - Harper, Texas
THE HARPER HERALD
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
NORMAN J. DIETEL, Publisher and Ediior
MRS. A. C. WENDEL IS AUTHORIZED REPORTER
Harper, Texas Phone No. 16
Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office in Harper, Texas
February 2sth, 1926, under the Act of March 3, 1876
Member Texas Press Assn., National Ediiorial Assn.
SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 PER YEAR
ADVERTISING REGULARLY ENOUGH TO MAKE YOUR BUSINESS STAND
OUT ABOVE THE AVERAGE WILL PAY THE BIGGEST RETURNS
OF ANY INVESTMENT YOU CAN MAKE!
—______________.i______
SII rat WORLD arRCLIG
IV Ut.l0.REIP
Our tendency is to wish for
peace, to hope for peace, but not
necessarily to make peace”, Mrs.
J. F. Tillman, of Lewisburg,
Tenn., told Methodist women re-
cently. “How may we work for
peace today? Where four or five
gather together in a little inter-
racial group in a community to
discover plans to bring about bet-
ter understanding and coopera-
tion—instead of bitterness, hate
and violence—there are the seeds
of peace. In justice there is new
hope for peace. Where letters
express to lawmakers the desire
for long - term Christian legisla-
tion rather than acts of political
expediency or pressure, the power
of a Christian constituency makes
itself felt in the laws of the land.
Wherever we find individuals or
groups working to bring about
better understanding, they are
witnesses of His way. When we
use our influence to support the
U.N. as an agency working for
better understanding as an open
forum of the nations, when we
work at problems of drink in our
communities or give of our time
and energy to help our own
under-privileged groups, we are
witnesses of the Way”.
Methodist enurcnes to serve
Christian congregations in five
industrial cities in the Bengal a-
tea of India are now nearing fin-
al construction. The Rev. Halsey
E. Dewey, for thirty-four years
a missionary in Bengal, reports
that a new church has been com-
pleted at Chanch, a fire-brick-
manufacturing center, and has a
seating capacity of 300 persons.
A church of the same size has
been dedicated at Bokaro, where
there is a large thermo - power
station. Completed also is a
church to serve the Methodist
congregation at Chittaranjan, a.
railway locomotive-building city,
New church buildings are going
up at Gemoh, where there is. a
400-pupil Methodist school; at a
village between Kumardhibi,
where a steel-rolling mill and a
fire-clay works are located; and
at Maithon, site of a hydroelec-
tric plant.
The Rev. Dr. Stanley I Stuber,
Baptist clergyman, and secretary
of the Japanese International
Christian University Foundation,
is on a “pilgrimage” to Roman
Catholic shrines throughout Eu-
rope. He is visiting and studying
in France, Italy, Spain, Portugal
andother countries, visiting such
famous shrines as Lourdes in
France, Fatima in Portugal and
St. Peters in Rome. Dr. Stuber,
author of Primer on Roman Cath-
olicism for Protestants, says his
approach to the shrines is a
sympathetic one and “for the
good of my soul”. Visits will be
paid to the Vatican and St. Fran-
cis’ tomb at Assisi, Italy, as well
as to many Roman Catholic cath-
edrals.
Lutherans in Washington, D.
C., will celebrate the 800th anni-
versary of the establishment of
the Church of Finland with a
special service at Washington
Cathedral on Sunday, Sept. 18.
The Rev. Franklyn Morris, of St.
Paul’s Lutheran Church, Wash-
ington, is chairman of a commit-
tee of the Lutheran Ministerial
Association which is arranging
the capital city’s observance of
the Finnish Church’s anniversary.
Other members include the Rev.
Victor Murtland, pastor of Grave
Lutheran Church, and the Rev.
Clarence Nelson, pastor of Am
gustana Lutheran Church. Dr. T.
A. Kantonen, noted Finno-Amer-
ican theologian, will preach at
the service. A professor at Ham-
ma Divinity School of Wittenberg
College, he was recently awarded
an honorary doctorate of the-
ology by the University of Hel
sinki—the first American so hon-
ored. Participating in the service
will be the Ambassador of Fin-
land, the Hon. Johan Nykopp,
and his staff.
Nine Makah Indian Presbyter-
ian (USA), church members, one
of the largest delegations of lay-
men from any tribe, attended
the recent National Fellowship
of Indian Workers triennial con-
ference. To help finance the
trip to Estes Park, Colorado, the
Women’s Association of the
Board of National Missions-aided
church in Neah Bay, Washing-
ton. gave a fund-raising dinner
and a second dinner to honor the
delegates. Church lay leaders
continue to grow among these
people, the missionaries report.
Soon after the delegates return,
a chapter of the National Council
of Presbyterian Men will be start-
ed.
The Rev. and Mrs. Din Dayal
have been appointed the first
missionaries of the United
Church of Northern India to East
Africa. They are expected to
leave for Nairobi (Kenya) the
end of September, 1955. The Rev.
Din Dayal holds the B. A. degree
of Allahabad University and the
B. D. degree of Serampore Uni-
versity. After research work he
traveled over India, studying the
impact of communism on the life
of the country and of the Christ-
ian church. He has written ex-
tensively on this question. For
two year's he was chaplain of the
agricultural institute, Allahabad.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Ackel of
Beaumont were visiting her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Par-
ker, during the weekend.
--------000-----
Donnie Juenke of Kerrville
visited his grandmother, Mrs.
Adolph Juenke, Sunday after-
noon.
John Deere Quality Implements
TRACTORS, PLANTERS, CULTIVATORS,
BINDERS, MOWERS, RAKES, PLOWS.
Aermoior Mills, Fairbanks Morse Engines.
Gel Our Prices Before You Buy.
Satisfaction Guaranleed!
KKAUSKOPF BROS.
K FREDERICKSBURG, TEXAS
Distributors of
ROBIN HOOD MR
‘The Happy F
WOO
1-i
M
101
HAW
R
Complete Line of Poultry & Dai
iry Feeds
ALWAYS IN THE
l MARKET FOR YOUR GRAINS
LOCHTE STORAGE
AND COMMISSION CO.
Phone 34
Fredericksburg, Texa*
Liberty Is A Christian Heritage
By Cftrleton J. H. Hayes, Former Professor of History,
Columbia University
IN OUR CENTURY, tyrants of
peculiarly menacing character
have arisen within, as well as
outside, the Western world. They
are new Genghiz Khans; and on
an everbroadening front they
have mercilessly assailed the
whole ideal of human freedom.
But the startling setback to
liberty in our generation is due
only In part to the strength and
determination of its acknow-
ledged foes. It
Is due also to a
weakening of de-
votion and effort
on the part of
i t. s traditional
friends.
I WOULD RE-
MIND YOU that
our American
coins still em-
blazon the word' Hayes
“Liberty” and along with it the
legend “In God We Trust,” and
as yet the Supreme Court has
not ruled that a violation of our
constitutional principle of the
separation of church and state.
There has been a long and close
connection between the liberty
we have striven for in our West-
ern Civilization and the Christ-
ian Faith by which our ancestors
were inspired.
Personally, I must confess a
conviction, derived not only from
faith but from historical study,
that wherever Christian ideals
have been generally accepted
and their practice sincerely at-
tempted, there is dynamic liber-
ty ; and that wherever Christian*
ity has been-ignored or rejected,
persecuted or ' «hained to the
state, there is tyranny. Our
liberty and its Christian basis
are indeed inseparable.
THIS WAS significantly recog-
nized by Hitler and has been sys-
tematically acted upon by the
Communist regime in the Krem-
lin and its satraps abroad. They
are' surer of enslaving a nation
if they gag or imprison clergy-
men, close churches and de-
Christianize the youth.
Liberty, in its Christian con-
text, has always been a stimu-
lant to Independent thinking
and an antidote to collective
apathy. We need a rebirth of.
freedom now. I have such deep-
seated faith in the Christian
doctrine of the nature and dig-,
nity of man that I believe he will
rise again in revolt and free him-
self from the despotisms of the
present age.
IN THE PRESENT CRITICAL
AGE, we need faith, not merely
in ourselves or in progress. We
need a renewed faith in God and
in human brotherhood under
God. We need Christian hope,
to temper and supplant our pre-
sent fears and our tendency to
despair about what the present
world is coming to. Above all-
we need the charity of Christ.
Still most pertinent to our civili-
zation is what the Apostle of the
Gentiles wrote nineteen centuries
ago: “Faith, hope, and charity
persist, all three; but the great-
est of them all is charity.”
j" Pauli* Feature Service, Washington IT, ». &
GH.tF.SPIE COUNTY
v conserve
DISTRICT NEWS v
"I conceive ihai the land belongs to a vast family,
of which many are dead, few are living, and count-
less numbers are siill unborn.”
The value that a winter legume
can do for your soil should not
be overlooked. They protect +he
land against erosion. They make
the soil easier to work. They add
organic matter and nitrogen to
the soil. Deep rooted legumes
bring up plant food from lower
depth making it available to shal-
low rooted plants. Most o£, the
cropland in the Gillespie County
Soil Conservation District can be
improved by use of legumes
* * *
Last week terraces were laid
for K. C. Striegler, south of Fred-
ericksburg, Victor Cermin and
Desmond Sagebiel of Eckert, Al-
bert Hartmann west of Freder-
icksburg, Emil Tatsch, 2' miles
east of Harper, and Elsie Wei-
rich, 2 miles west of Fredericks-
burg.
Diversion terraces were laid
out for George Hoiekamp south
of Harper and Albert Hartmann,
west of Fredericksburg.
Practices completed and check-
ed included tank for Sylvester
Crenwelge east of Doss, terrace
for V. C. Duecker east of Freder-
icksburg and a diversion terrace
or Herbort Haas east of Freder-
icksburg.
* * *
Guar, a summer top rooted le-
gume, has shown up very good
in this District this summer.
Kurt Hansen of the Palo Alto
community has had excellent re-
sults. He planted the guar
around the first of May and seed-
ed approximately eight pounds
of seed per acre. It is from waist
to shoulder high now.
* * * >.
Martin Rode of Doss reports
good results with his plantings.
Many other landowners have re-
ported that they are well pleas-
ed with this taprooted summer
legume,
* * *
Emil Tatsch of Harper has a
deferred pasture which has made
outstanding recovery this year,
Many of the better grasses have
come in, gained vigor and are
producing a seed crop. The soil
has improved in that it is able
to make up and hold water. The
erosion has been reduced to a
minimum.
Tatsch plans to work toward
improving all his rangeland by
deferment.
Rev. C. T, Spitz Jr. Is
Final Lutheran Hour
Summer Guest Speaker
“The Abundant Life,” will be
the topic of a sermon to be de-
livered by the Rev. C. Thomas
Spitz Jr., on the August 28
broadcast of The Lutheran Hour.
Pastor Spitz is the final speaker
of three summer guest pastors
on the Gospel broadcast.
He has been affiliated with the
Lutheran Laymen’s League,
sponsor of the broadcast, since
1953. He is director of Pan Amer-
ican Operations for the Lutheran
Hour. Prior to joining The Luth-
eran Hour, Pastor Spitz served a
Lutheran congregation ki Ma-
rengo, Iowa.
In his address on Aug. 28
Pastor Spitz will say that “the
life which Christ brings is lived
in His spirit of purity, in His love
for the Heavenly Father and for
all mankind, in His confidence in
God’s goodness, in His commit-
ment to Heaven’s will, in His
sense of God’s favor confirmed by
a clear conscience, in His victory
over sin and death. This is the
abundant life.”
He will tell his radio audience
on the Mutual network and af-
filiated stations that “Christ
came that you might have life,
that you might have abundant
life today, life with God, life
here and in eternity.”
The Lutheran Hour executive
will say that “the tragedy and
the futility of life of which so
many complain can be overcome
and would be eliminated if only
more attention were given to
the promise of the Savior: T am
come that they might have life,
and that they might have it more
abundantly..’
Hunters Urged
To Hold Fire
Austin—Maximum patrol has
been ordered by the Director of
Law Enforcement for the Texas
Game and Fish Commission to
discourage pre-season hunting.
He said he acted after indica-
tions that “some people are not
aware that severe penalties are
mandatory under the law for per-
sons breaking the game laws”.
The Director said wardens have
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CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENTS
Harper’s Churches Extend A Cordial Welcome
COME TO CHURCH THIS SUNDAY
1)
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ST. ANTHONY’S CHURCH
A. A. Gitter, Pastor
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keep
“Remember that thou
holy the Sabbath Day”.
Sunday, Aug. 28:
Mass at 8 and at 9:30. Servers
meeting.
Next Wednesday night: Square
Dance party. Adults invited.
Friday, First Friday of Sept.:
Mass at 8 at night. Holy Hour.
Saturday, First Saturday.:
Mass and meditation at 8 a. m.
You are always welcome in a
Catholic Church. Walk in any
time. Attend any service,
- ^ -
ST. JAMES LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Dr. W. J. Goerner, Pastor
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenz Deiter and
a friend of Kerrville attended
church services at the Pentecostal
Church in Harper Sunday.
---000--
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Senior of
Sugarland visited relatives here
during the weekend. Billy Gale
Sageser, who visited her aunt,
and uncle, Mr. and Mtrs. Raymond
Cottle, accompanied them home.
--000-
Mrs. Trecy Tobin accompanied
Mrs.. Hardin Tobin to Rock-
springs where she will visit the
Tobins for several weeks.
Visitors in the Richard Manske
home last week were Mr. and
Mrs. S. U. Fant and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Matthews, all of San An-
gelo.
-ooe-
Visitors in the Richard Manske
home over this weekend were Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Beard of San
Angelo,
Mr. and Mrs, Carlos Parker
made a trip to Port Arthur Wed-
nesday and returned Thursday.
--000— —
Mr. and Mrs. Rubin Roeder
and sons spent Sunday with her
mother, Mrs. Henry Moellendorf.
------nob-—-—
Friends here will regret to
reported eases of shooting deer, learn that Roland Tatsch was ser-
white-winged doves, mourning i°usly hurt in a car wreck Sat-
Joe Burkett, of Morris Ranch,
reports that maize and cotton
planted on land which has had
two years of Hubam clover is
making excellent growth. He
stated that crops following Hu-
bam clover look much better
than’those on land where no le-
gume has been planted. Burkett
predicts a good increase in pro-
duction on land where Hubam
clover has been planted.
Mrs. Zelma Hopf, who has
been confined to a hospital in
Fredericksburg, was able to be
moved to the home of her son,
Dean Hopf, and family in Kerr-
ville. We are glad to report
that she is doing nicely.
---000-
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lee of San
Antonio spent Sunday with her
mother, Mrs. John S. Morris, at
Harper.
COMPLETE BUTANE SERVICE
* Tanks * Fuel * Piping
* Furnace Installations
* TAPPAN RANGES
The Modern
Fuel—
Wherever
You Are,
VAPO • BUTANE
Phone 272
CO.
Be Sure, Be Insured!
— FOR YOUR —
Auio - Liability - Fire
INSURANCE
— SEE —
Ghas. W. Barrett
Harper, Texas
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gammen-
thaler and children were Ban An-
tonio visitors Saturday.
-000--
Mrs. Clark Biersehwale and
son of Harlingen spent the week-
end with her parents and other
relatives. Her daughter, Pamela,
visited her grandparents for the
past two Weeks. She will accom-
pany her mother home.
-000---
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Meier en-
tertained a group of friends with
a barbecue dinner Sunday at
their home honoring her parents,
on their birthday anniversaries.
They are here from France, visit-
ing for several weeks.
P"
We Invite All Our Harper
Community Friends To Visit
Us When In Fredericksburg
Travelers Cafe
Alex Mittendorf, Prop,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Deal of San
Antonio were here Saturday to
get her mother, Mrs. Paula Pape,
who spent the week at her home
in Harper,
-000-
H. P. Gartrell and George Kas-
per of Mason were business visit-
ors in Harper Wednesday.
---000-
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Feller
and children of Blanco visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Fel-
ler, one day last week.
-000-
Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Whitworth
and sons of Doole visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Kin-
sey, during the weekend.
--000-
Mrs. Merle Cottle and her cou-
sin’s son, Buddie Slater, of San
Antonio visited relatives and Mrs.
Cottle’s children, Sandra, Mich-
ael, and Donna Sue Cottle, Sun-
day.
--000--
Mr. and Mrs. George Salcher
and son, who have been in Austin
this summer returned to Harper
Saturday, to get ready for school.
-000-
Brown Whitewood is attending
Youth Conference at Trinity Uni-
versity, this week in San Antonio.
-000-
SUBSCRIBE TO THE HERALD
doves and quail.
“The temptations will increase
now as the legal hunting sea-
son approaches”, said the Direc-
tor. “And I just wanted to cau-
tion people hunting before the
legal period that our men are
on the alert”.
The Director said he has been
assured by “countless Justices of
the Peace’” that they will enthus-
iastically cooperat in seeing that
justice is applied. Hunters caught
breaking the game laws face
heavy fines or' jail sentences and
also may loose their hunting
privileges.
He went on to say that all but
a small segment of the hunting
population cooperate and await
the legal seasons, and urged the
predominant majority to cooper-
ate with their local game ward-
ens in pin pointing the com-
paratively few who shoot out of
season.
Several $100 fines were meted
for pre-season shooting accord-
ing to the latest arrest report.
Four men from one small far-
west Texas town were fined for
shooting quail.
“Many of the doves still are
nesting’”, he said, “and potshoot-
ing an adult dove now could
mean the loss of its young”.
urday night near Fredericksburg.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edmund Tatsch of Harper.
Git4 0OV
a Cfuinee
KOX(/
'ATretw cnuxcM -evej^ysuMMy
“Bless the Lord, oh my soul,
and forget not all his benefits”
Sunday, Aug. 28:*.
8:30 a. m. Sunday School and
Bible Class.
9:30 a. m. Divine Worship.
7:30 p. m. Luther League meet-
ing.
A cordial invitation to our ser-
vices.
METHODIST CHURCH
Jessie Long, Pastor
HARPER PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Dr. Paul J. Schwab, Pastor
“O worship the Lord in the
beauty of holiness; Bow down be-
fore Him, His glory proclaim”.
Sunday, Aug. 28:
10 a. m. Sunday School.
11 a. m. Worship Service.
Visitors are always welcome!
Come and worship with us.
&■
HARPER
PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
Carlos Parker, Pastor
“1 was glad when they said un-
to me ‘Let us go into the house
of the Lord’”. Psalms 122:1.....
HARPER
Worship Hours—1st and 3rd
Sundays at 11 a. m.
Sunday, Aug. 28:
10 a. m. Sunday School.
11 a. m. Worship Hour.
LONDON
Worship Hours—2nd and 4th
Sundays at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.
Sunday, Aug. 28:
10 a. m. Sunday School.
11 a. m. Worship Hour.
7 p. m. Youth Fellowship.
8 p. m. Evening Worship Hour.
Everyone is cordially invited to
attend.
&
FOR SALE—several good, used
Band Instruments. Alfred Pehl,
217 W. San Antonio St., Freder-
icksburg, Tex. 8-26pd
FOR SALE—a well improved 320
acres. % mile from pavement.
By owner, A. H. Wendel, Harper,
Texas. 9-16pd
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Klaehn and
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Moellendorf
and son made a trip to Blanco
where the ladies attended a show-
er for their daughter and sister,
Mrs. Billy Jo Petri, the former
Miss Lilia Mae Klaehn,
---000-
Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Maurer
and children of Nazareth are
here to visit his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Maurer.
3*
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
D. W. Brown, Pastor
“Come thou with us, and we
will do thee good”. Num. 10:29.
Sunday, Aug. 28:
10 a. m. Sunday School.
11 a. m. Preaching Service.
7:30 p. m. Training Union.
8:30 p. m. Preaching Service.
The meeting of the Sunbeams,
GA’s, WMS and Brotherhood
will be second and fourth Wed-
nesday nights.
Everyone is invited to attend.
-p--
FOR SALE—Cleaned seed oats.
Victor test 37; Nortex test 37.
Levy Kusenberger, Fredericks-
burg, phone 8203. 9-2pd
FOR SALE — we have 20 thrifty,
oily Billies left, Mrs. O. J,
Camp, Junction, Texas. 9-2pd
FOR SALE—started While Leg-
horn Pullets, for Fall layers.
COMFORT HATCHERY, Com-
fort, Texas. tf
Miss Anita Tatsch of San An-
tonio visited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Edmund Tatsch, and her
brother, Roland.
FOR SALE BY OWNER—Beauti-
ful modern 2 bedroom home in
Kerrville. Insulated, vented
heat, large amount of storage,
beautiful lawn, fenced back yard.
Separate building ideal for work-
shop or apartment. 603 Harper
St., Kerrville, Texas. 8-26pd
Dr. Felix T. Tybor
Optometrist
m
Proieci Your Eyes”
Phone 562W
Palace Theatre Bldg.
ROCKY INN
CHESTER TATSCH, Prop.
HARPER, TEXAS
Short Orders - Regular Lunches - Cold Bottle
and Can Beer - Cold Drinks - Ice Cream
Candies - Tobacco - Hot Coffee, etc.
A CORDIAL WELCOME TO EVERYONE!
TELEVISION
Crosley and Besidix Appliances
LIVESTOCK & POULTRY
AGRICULTURAL INSECTICIDES
FEEDS, REMEDIES & SUPPLIES
Custom Feed Grinding on Thursdays
MAGNOLIA SERVICE STATION
AUTO ACCESSORIES
FLOY BODE CO.
Phone 20 Harper
Bathe Your Way to Health 1
Health and happiness are always in season—and there’s
no better place to give them a boost than Hot Springs!'
.A staff of expert attendants is maintained in the
Majestic Hotel Bath Department. Under their skilled
treatment, you will find glowing health and content-
ment, replace aches, tension and worries . . ./And
remember, our Bath House is operated in accordance
with regulations prescribed by the Nat’l Park Service
of the U. S. Government’s Dep’t of the Interior.
Write for
literature today!
HOTEL & BATHS
i^STlC i
HOT SPRINGS
NATIONAL PARK, ARKANSAS SWIMMING. ETC.
*
H. WELGE LEWIS
Independent Dealer in Gasoline and Oils.
TRACTOR FUEL and HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUEL and OILS.
ASSORTED GREASES.
MANSFIELD TIRES and TUBES
Foe Traetois, Tracks and Cass.
No Better Products at Any Pric§!
P. O. Box 22 Phone No. 22
Fredericksburg - - - Texas
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Dietel, Norman J. The Harper Herald (Harper, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1955, newspaper, August 26, 1955; Harper, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057795/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Harper Library.