The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 6, 1964 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: New Ulm Enterprise and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nesbitt Memorial Library.
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THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE. NEW ULM. TEXAS. Thursday, February 6, 1<X>4
THE NEW ULM ENTERPRISE
TEXAS
7%
WATER STUDY
TOURIST PLAN UNVEILED
to
$3.50
PISEK NEWS
By Elmond Kulhanek
W.
Mrs.
on
SHORT SNORTS
Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr named
■
X.
••The
them.
d
IVV
V
to
M
d
DIVERSION PAYMENTS
C.
as must be owned by Texans.
act
MO FIRM PROBE URGED
other
I
to
in years past.
BRACERO PROGRAM
CONNALLY IN CIRCULATION
Governor Connally returned
to
I
X
5
COMMITTEE ON HIGHER
EDUCATION
Texas State Library last week
an
One year in the State of Texas $3.00; Outside
MR. AND MRS. A. E. GAY. Owners and Publishers
39. Great
quantities
(colloq.)
40. Fragrance
41. Hebrew dry
measure
(pl. I
42. Quoted
43. Weaver s
reed
PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY
Entered as second-class matter, Oct. 20, 1910. at the
Post Offce at New Ulm, Texas, under the act of March
3. 1879.
af-
suit
M
v
J
,31*1
3 30
7 jj
Ms;
7 a Si
7 1
jTT
"I Tn
blJ.
The $279,416 in improvements
at Falcon will include a boat ramp,
parking area, paved road, 24 shel-
A pilot plan designed
more foreim visitors to
display in
a century-old
26. Donkey
28 Crowds
' 31. Marks of
infamy
34. Continent
(abbr.)
| 35 Spanish
priest
20 A re- |
mainder
21. Over-
head
train
24. Russian
cavalry
man Hp
25 Biblical ■£
city
26 Vipers
27. Stems
28. Exclama-
tion
29. Outer layer
of tooth
30 Lettuce with
dressing
CARD OF THANKS and IN MEMORIAMS, 5c per line Minimum
charge $1.25. Address all communications .ind make .ill mon es payable
to The New Ulm Enterprise, New Ulm. Texas.
phase-out has been in effa.t in Tex-
as for the past two years.
Henry LeBUnc of the commis-
sion's farm labor division reports
that 38,000 bracero* worked on
Texas crops in August, 1961; 12,
917 in August, l»62j and 12,008
ir August, 19oJ
32. Loonhkc
hi rd
33. Untidy
37. An
Iroquoian
38 Kick (dial )
Jones emphasized this
cnly section of the 1965
fee ted by his ruling in
brought by three out-of-state firms.
The companies whose subrid- j
iarios operate in at least eight Texas
cities charged the in-state require-
ment violated state and federal due
process and equal protection guar-
antees.
Company of Charlotte, N. C., join-
ed by a number of other out-of-
state firms, instigated the suit.
Their subsidiaries operate n Hous-
ton, Dallas, San Antonio, Fort
Worth, El Paso, Waco, Texarkana
and Arlington.
Regxilatory Loan Commissioner
Frank Miskell refused licenses to
PARK IMPROVEMENTS
STARTED
The U. S. Congress has extended
the bracero program for another
year — through 1964 — as a
compromise between the close-out
or phase-out argument by states
where the contract laborers from
Mexico are employed. However,
figures from the Texas Employ-
ment Commission indicate that a
Governor Connally, at
brary’s request, turned
A welcomed 1.60 inches ot rain
fell hero Thursday of last week.
Mr and Mrs Jerry Machu of
Houston spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Krenek, Jr.
Mi. and Mrs. John Poncik and
• sons of Galseston spent the week-
J
F
3*
though blind since birth, he had I
succesful careers in business, pol- i
itics and government administra- 1
tion.
Dr. Walter H. Fischer is new
president of the State Board of
Chiropractic Examinert; Dr. Har-
vey II. Kennedy of Longview, vice
presidents and Dr. Charles E.
( ourtion of San Angelo, secretary. *
AFL-CIO President Hank Brown
•ays chat Texas labor leaders will
decide February I) at Arlington
who they will support in the May
primaries.
tav.— Editor Enterprise
The governor’s office will be
located in the old State Agriculture
on the Cap-
durmg extensive
lemodeling and enlargement of the
the per- executive .uite. „ OJd timM
UT Bureau of Business Research
report: new construction in
ek and son.
on February 25; ded-
York World's |
on February 26;
end with Mr. and Mrs. Ad Kulhan-
tendents that 5,000 copies of the
booklet on oneof the state's most
vital problems are available
request for use as resource ma-
teria! in junior and senior high
i schools.
r ACROSS
1. Cats and
dogs
5. Boy s
nickname
(poss.)
9 Chairman’s
mallet
10. Camper s
shelter
11. Sports area
12. Transcau-
casian
people
14 Fixes
15 Palm
cockatoo
16 Half an cm
17. A US.
president
19. Thorough-
fa re
22 Confeder-
ate general
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputa-
tion of any firm, corporation or individual published in these column*,
will be cheerfully corrected upon it being brought to the attention
of the Publisher. We will ilso appreciate the giving of any news items
of any visitors, parties, etc., that may occur at your home. Your co-
operation will help The Enterprise •’your newsy paper." Contributions
for publication MUST be signed by the contributors.
Judge Hawthorne Phillips of Har-
*’ i as his first assistant. He
a • • <•«-xwv/4 c A I Kort Hamfnn
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gaudiano,
Mrs. Grace Murphy and Mrs. An-
nie Krenek, all of Houston spent
weekend with relatives here
The Governor's Committee on
1 Education Beyond the High Schoo!
reports
i archaic)
1965 24 Hint
dropped $1 1,200,000 but expendi-
tures for additions, alterrationt
and repairs increased by $17.- i
800,000 for a net gain of $5,600,-
000 over 1962.
State Supreme Court held the
Railroad Commission can't with- 36. Calyx leaf
hold future drilling permits from
1 operators of slanted oil wells who
want to straighten their wells. Al-
most 1,000 slanted wells have been
shut in since 1962.
Lon E. Alsup, 65, retired after
22 years as director of The Texas
State Commission for the Blind. Al-
AUST1N, Tex. — A cont rever-
sal section of the new Texas Reg-
ulatory Loan Act. passed last year
after 56 years of legislature wrang-
ling over loan control has bee.i de-
clared unconstitutional.
District Judge Herman Jones of is well ahead of schedule,
Austin he!J invalid the provision Dr A. B. Martin executive director,
that at least 51 percent of stock made up of leiding industrialists
in lending firms operating in Tex- ; —mde up of leding industrialists
I und educators — set an April date
for preliminary reports for the
the
recommendations due Gov. John
Ccnnally in August. Studies on ed-
ucation in public and private col-
I leges and universities, and profes-
sional and technological needs hive
advanced so well that subcommittees
and their consultants have been
discharged, Martin said, and the
April date has been moved back
'to February 19.
American Investment Company, :
a DeJew a re Corporation; Industrial
Finance and Thrift Corporation of
Louixian.; and Conoid,ted Credit | Taaaday’l ground.brealu«>g ere-
monies of Falcon State Park in Za-
pata and Starr Counties near Za-
pata launched a three-park im-
provement program which will
cose $1,041,966.
.CROSSWORD
1 44 Part of 18. Close to
a ship
DOWN
1. Father or
mother
2. Level
3. Serve
4 Gashed
5. Oil of
rose
petals
6 Goatee,
for one
7. Necessi-
tated
8 English
author
9. Sports
13 Wise
program to boost travel in Toxa.
by globe-trotters from other land,.
COURT RULES ON LAND
In a 5-4 decision, the State Su- |ct bo|e, in tbe bjvk ______ ____
preme Court overruled lower courts rigbt 51MVC. A|,o placed in the ar-
I a new trial in a dis- chive, is the bood-stained shirt
Conrlly wore on
I ahead.
Sen. Ralph Yarbrough presented Edgar has notified school superin-
sponsoring the projected «Ke Library a certified State De-
| program in cooperation with Cham- partment copy of the El Chamizal
lingen as his first assistant. He
succeeds Albert Jones of Houston
the German, will e.tabh.h gu.de- w,igl>, ,uit hr WJ, WCJring whcn who had accepted temporary ap-
line, for a continuing long-range b, w„ ,erinu,h wounded in Dal- !»'"’■»•»«•
la,. He was the first Texas gover- ..Tb, Fv„ of Texas” now is
nor to be the victim of an assasri- public property. The University of
ration attempt. The suit bears bul- I Texas’ copvright expired
, front and j
bets of Commerce and interested I treaty signed by President John-
private citizens. No public funds »cn on December 20 — defining
are involved. • the boundry along the Texas-Chi-
The tourists, of coure., will pay ,u!*hu* *nd El P**oJuar« borders,
their own wav. although some will The »"•»* r‘*«d »" d,‘pUy in al
benefit from hospitaity in Texas ca®9» ended
homes. First visitors will get special boundary dispute.
low plane fare and at-cost prices' Governor Connally, at the Li-
all around. , brary’s request, turned over to
It is hoped the initial visit by |he Jrchivet tbe b|ack> |igbt.
the Germans will establish guide- we;gbt gu;t be was
Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr has
called on State Bank Commissioner
J. M. Falkner to continue investi-
gation of a collapsed Ca^fornia
money order firm. American Secur- parts of the state. He urged cotton
ity Currency Limited was doing growers to protect their future al-
business in 517 Texas grocery and lotments by releasing unused per-
drug stores. mits before the February 4 dead-
Thousands of Texans reportedly line,
were caught with worthless paper
on their hands when the firm went
into bankruptcy. Carr recommends
getting all facts on its history and
| status plus full details of an al- |
leged sale of accounts to another
company also licensed by the com-
I mission.
and directed a new trial in a dis-
pute over oil income on 10,000
acres of Winkler County land.
Suit, brought by Southland Roy- ,j|b
alty Company against Pan Ameri-
can Corporation to recover a por-
tion of proceeds from nunerals
produced, involves interpretation
of a 5 9-year-old lease.
Germany Sunday to test the pro-
gram.
They hope to encourage 40 or
50 German citizens to make a 16- obtained an historic treaty and
day red carpet tour of Texas* lead- historic suit of clothes. Both are
ing cities and historic spots from certain to be viewed by thousands
October 15 through November 2. • in years
Texas Tourist Development A- . F
gency is
duty at his office in the Capitol
last week, for the first time since
he was wounded in Dallas on No-
vembor 22 by the assassin of Pres-
ident Kennedy.
Connally announced a traveling
and speaking schedule which in-
to UP! and AP man-
J tort, '0 tent campsites with water,
cook ng gri'Is. tables, throe reet-
roems with showers and laundry
units, anger’s resideico and con-
cession building*
Similar improvements are plan-
ned for Dam "B’* Park near Jasper
in East Texas and Lake Whitney (eluded visits
State Park in Central Texas, ac- aging editors' convention here; a
cording to J. Weldon Watson, Boy Scout report ceremony in tbe
Parks and Wildlife Department ex- Capitol; Abilene's B-52 day ^cele-
ecutive director. bration on February 15; the Lare-
do Washington Birthday festival on
on Jan-
uary 50, and couldn't be renewed.
Traffic death toll for 196) was
the bood-stained shirt 1 2,793, largest in history by far.
the tragic Novem- j according to the Department of
ber day, and his black and gold Public Safety. Figure is an increase
...a tie. I of 2g2 over 1962.— Applicants for
' drivers license watch this one, they
' failed me on this last week, some
Ag*',‘. Comm. John C. White requirement for license 1 should
says Texas farmers should not court
on cotton land diversion payment
plans, er ha* been rumored.
White says Texas farmers should Department quarters
go head and release their unwant- itol's first floor,
ed cotton allotments back to their
local ASC committee* so
mits can be reassigned
the weekend with
and at Frelsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Huebel
and sons of Columbus spent Sun-
day with Mrs. Vlasta Haltmann
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Anton Wavra were
I February 22; the Paper Industry
bring Salesmen's Association meeting in
Texas was New York
announced by Governor Connally. ion of the New-
Sen. Walter Richter of Gonzales, I a‘r Texas exhibit
the governor’s representative, and probably a visit with President
Walter Mover of San Antonio, who Johnson in Washington on the way
originated the plan,, took off for to Texas.
LIBRARY ADDITIONS
Texans in the future mav get i
very thirsty if they don’t plan a- :
head to catch and save more wat-
er. This conclusion and other in-
formation about water, including
i the fact that since 1890 Texas,
has been using up its water re-
sources at a rate I I times fster ,
than its population growth, has i
l>een spelled out for students.
The water story has been pub- I
t-shed in a 40-page illustrated
booklet, "How Can We Meet Our
, Water Needs?" prepared by the
Texas Society of Professional En-
gineers and printed by the Texas
■ Education Agency.
Education Commissioner J.
ESS »j Also c i arin r
YOU CAN GET
RELIEF FROM
HEADACHE PAIN
SKNBACK gives you FAST relief
from pains of headache, neuralgia,
neuritis, and minor pains of arthritis,
rheumatism Because STANBACK
contains several medically approved
and prescribed ingredients for fast
relief, you can take STANBACK with
confidence. Satisfaction_guaranteed!
Test
STANBACK
against any
preparation
you've ever
used
10c 25< 69c 98c
visitors in the Adolph Kulhanek
home Tuesday evening of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Malovsky and
family ot Houston apent Sunday
with Mi. and Mrs. Sylvester Pav-
licek.
Mr and Mrs ELmer Eckermann
and family and Wil’iam Evanicky
spent iast Sunday in Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Knublik
and family visited Friday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Pav-
licek and family.
Mrs. Victor Moeller and daugh-
ter and Mrs. Hubert Suchadoll
were La Grange visitors Thursday-
Mr and Mrs I oust Hennekc of
Frelsburg visited wiih Mr and Mrs
Adolpl* Kulhanek Iasi Thuraday
evening.
QpWOEtt)
I Ojic* f t
FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIALS
Gladiola Flour, 25 lb. $1.89; 10 lb. 89c; 5 lb. 49c
r
lb. 29c
Nabisco Premium Crackers
HomiiiyI
UNCLE WILLIAM Pork and Beans,
9c
can
Morton’s Potato Chips, 29c bag for.....
23c
2 cans
UNCLE WILLIAM Sliced Beets,
2 cans
25c
Golden Treat Sweet Potatoes
2>c
can
UNCLE WILLIAM Sweet Peas, ... 2 cans 39c
Washburn’s Blackeye Peas .... 1 Lb. bag .
17 c
Edgar Heinsohn
Pound
HOLLANDALE OLEO
15c
[
H r v^co^RemembeJ
1
T
—
r
Nutrena
I
UNCLE WILLIAM Butter Beans,
Uncle William Mixed Vegetables,
?
Nutrena 20 percent Range Cubes
Book Your Season’s Needs NOW
CHECK
WITH
winter
— to
EQOD STORES
Frclsbitrg, Ph. PE 2-4081
Phone PErshing 2-4081
SEE US NOW
FOR LOW BOOKING PRICES
ON NUTRENA FEED
It paid to book Nutrena feed again last year.
proved stability.
Phorphorus in the form
most available to digestive
systems of cattle.
'Firm cubes hold together
in rough weather — are easy
to feed—and save waste be-
cause of minimum fines.
*A11 the protein, vitam’ns
and minerals known to be
needed to balance
range or roughage
help stop calf losses and
breeding trouble caused by
nutritional deficiencies.
'^Vitamin A and D with im-
PRICES GUARANTEED AGAINST INCREASE
IF YOU BOOK NOW!
COCA-COLAand SPRITE
6 bottle ctn.
plus deposits
As
E
Edgar Heinsohn
New Ulm. Rt. 2 FRELSBURG.
1
2 cans
I
. lb. 13c
25c
35c
GREEN PEAS Washburn,s whole
TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
i
SyTATE CAPITAL
i N Sideliqhh
t/ern Sanford
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 6, 1964, newspaper, February 6, 1964; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1227838/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.