The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1959 Page: 18 of 22
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TEXANS IN WASHINGTON
♦ By A. C. Cordon
Winner Of Case Receives
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A Million Dollar Business
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H.D.Chatter
Rep. Walter
Dr. Milton C. Adams
OPTOMETRIST
Office Hours
tent
At Your
8:30 - 5:00
Favorite Stare
335 Miles Avenue
tattled by the Pepsi Colo Bottling Co., Clovis, New Mexico
Phone EM 4-2255
flashing
at
Hereford, Texas
S’''-'*'
£
invited to discover the
• e
Vega, Texas, Man Reports —
tractor
Profitable Yield on Wheat
Using Phillips 66 Ammonia
$
$
i
You’ll never get a better buy!
eum
PHILLIPS
t
f
FARM & HOME SUPPLY
Phone EM 4-2015
III
Powerful Difference in a
Beauty At
Home
Order Your Supply of Phillips 66
Agricultural Ammonia Today!
TRADE NOW AND GET OUR
SPECIAL DEAL
E. B. Black Co.
' Factory Trained Mechanics
Sine 1901
It’s our "thartk you” for the pnvuefle of demonstration
Mak* a date now for your PROOF Demonstration.
• Tile of
all
Class-
es
GET YOUR
RAINCOA
&ee or call us today!
more cotton that classes higher at the gin ...
yields of sorghum grain or ensilage are in-
creased ... profits on wheat and small grains
are increased through higher grain y ields and
improved forage .. . more marketable vege-
tables are harvested.
Phillips 66 Ammonia can be easily applied
either by you or your distributor. See us today
about Phillips 66 Agricultural Ammonia ...
it gives you more nitrogen per dollar than any
other form of fertilizer—a full 82%.
• Carpet
• Felt
Base
(Continued from page 1)
to use; too. it cost $5.00 and we
sure do hate to Jose it.
Comment made to a very new
grandfather: ‘•You haven't told
me about your new grandchild
and I do appreciate it.”
M ws show ywu
,*is new Cltrasonie
watch eleaner and
•■plain its •pera-
►
T
who handles Lubbock Munici-
tor
ACROS*
1 • Either
3 • Ethical
7 • Parent
9 - A part
10 - Usual
11 - Alma
13 - Round room
15 • Poker stake
17 - Start of an
entrance
18 • Tear
21 • Model
23 • Mediterran-
ean island
24 ■ Beverages
25 - Twofold
26 • Weird
29 • Fragment
31 • Powder
32 - Twice
• Cabi-
Linol-
•um
.. -
1,000
SOUND WAVES
PER SECOND
a
you9 re
‘ M6E 2
| CflOSSFORD ♦
h U
V
(Continued from page 1)
ents of that tneory simply
(■hanged their approach and
decided to obtain passage af a
hilt applying only to govern-
ment automobiles.
This would enable them to get
their foot in the door so the
to
1301 Park Ave.
i
HEREFORD RQTAHE, HEREFORD. TEXAS
ASSOCIATED CROWERS. HEREFORD. TEXAS
Eass-o-mUlic drive t
BIG THINGS
HAPPEN
WHEN YOU
TURN
THIS KEY
: Season...
(Continued from page 1)
only aftermsin contest for the
' Buffs this fall.
Finishing touches are lieing
applied to the handsome howl-
like stadium, and it will lie all
set for the first official function
at 4:30 p.m., Sept. 26. That's
when Senator Lyndon Johnson,
I Toney, used in cookies, of-
• a much-mentioned name in the ten adds a chewy quality.
recessed Aug. 21 for a month.
Still to he heard arc National,
TWA and Western.
When the hearing is conclud-
ed CAB Examiner Edward T.
Stodola will review the volumi-
nous records and documents,
then write an "initial decision”
which in effect will be a recom-
mendation to the five - man
board.
Stodola’s report Is unlike-
ly until early next year, Un-
questionably his findings will
be objected to by some of the
applicants. The final decision
by the board, which normally
grants a session for oral ar-
guments by attorneys for the
applicants, is unlikely before
late 1950.
Some 75 cities have been re-
your powder, pat overJt lightly ' presented in the hearings.
Dallas has had two men pre-
repre-
. chair-
man of the Chamber of Com- i
merce aviation committee.
The old Dallas-Fort Worth air-
port feud, not directly involved
I
34 Stamina
35 ■ Railroad
worker
38 • Pleasing
sounds
3Q • Confines
40 - Disrinctivtgarf
42 • Public notice
43 - Particle
44 - Thus
DOWN
1 • Mystic word
2 - To recommit
3 • Notation
4 • Declaim
5 - Concerning
■ A master
7 - Source
F - Boy's nickname
12 - Food fish
13 • Actuality
u
L
T
R
A
S
0
N
I
C
S
Kenneth (Doc) Cowan
Hereford’s Sick
Watch Hospital
Phone EM 4-3321
COWAN
JEWELRY
We use the McKen-
RM Vltrasenie
watch eleaner. One
million vibrations
•f sound per second
wmovrs even mlo-
■•seopie particles of
*rt and old oil ae-
Snally from within
We blind holes and
• revises sf the
watch.
r z >
v Al
I Mg fl
on the face?
A. Bathe the face at least
twice daily with a pure soap
and water, rinsing well with ve- '
ry warm, then cold, water. Try
using lanolin, instead of face
creams, and use as little pow-
der as possible.
new campus, j--•
sth.I. going
SUMMIT. N. J. LB — The Rah-
ey for this program, ’it ha«
authority to sell bonds to raise
more money. But with the in-
terest rate on the bonds limited
by the law to 3 per cent nobody
i wants to buy the bonds. In the
<■
.....
: A - >
rl down Io a trickle from now
until alter W. IMA
Stale is running low on mon- vented the door firom fiying'op-
i- - en on impact, deep dish sleer-
i “ ' ing wheels to lessen in juries to
» a driver in the event of a col-
• lislon. padded cowling and dash-
WALTER ROGERS
Member of Congress
18th District of Texas .
Dan W. Berger, prominent Oldham County
fanner, says: "On 235 acres of wheat. I aver-
aged 43 bushels per acre. This was the first
year I'd used ammonia on wheat. After seeing
what could be done with that application,
I've decided to inject 100 pounds of Phillips
Ammonia pre-plant on my wheat this year.
I'm thoroughly sold on the use of Ammonia.”
Other successful Southwestern farmers have
discovered that they make more profit per
Acre, using Phillips 66 Ammonia. They get
Q. Is there a special trick
that will cause my face powder
to stay on longer than it does
now?
A. After applying a coating of
You’ll be amazed at the big power, comfort and convenience of the new
Case-o-matic Drive tractor. Until you’ve tried it, you can’t appreciate
the POWERFUL difference. You’ll experience a new kind of non-stop
performance ... far greater work-capacity ... operating ease and pre-
cision you never dreamed possible.
4
TRY IT.' In just 1-hour on your farm, you can discover how Case-o-matic
Drive senses increased loads instantly ... automatically increases pull-power up
to 100% without clutching or shifting. Get your PROOF Demonstration today 1
JL *.'
I
# ’J
tories will be erected this fall.
"It was wonderful.” Alburg
But once during the night
14 • To charge
15 • Affected
16 - Rents
>9 - Catcher <4
lampreys
20 • Doctrine
22 • Sheltered
side
23 • .. .cake
27 - Proponent </
geometry
28 Tops
30 - Smokers
32 - Thicket
33 - Facial
expression
36 * Quantities
(abb.)
37 • Biting
3*» - Musical note
41 • Yo*..
the proceedings.
"I'm happy to see this re-
cess so I can get back to
Lubbock for a while,” Colby
said before leaving for home.
“If we stay around here much
longer they’ll be counting ns
in the Washington census.”
Houston has been represen-
ted by Morris Brownlee, aide
to the city's mayor, and by
Joe Foster head of the Chamber
of Commerce Aviation Comm-
ittee.
Austin. ••
(Continued from page I)
Daniel said he saw no need
for the interim legislative ex-
pease money inas much as generg| election in 1960, the vo-
$330,000 had been appropriated
in a separate bill for future leg-
islative expenses.
Legislative leaders rep lied:
that perhaps the slate isn’t sup-
posed to be responsible for hous- j
ing the aged, but the fact is it
has some on its hands. They're
now housed in the 50-year-old
Confederate Homo in Austin. Il
has been labeled a (ire trap.
Legislative expense mo n e y
was to be used to put a new
carpet in the House, refinish
desks and provide offices for
House members. Rep. Bill Heat-
CAN’T BE COWED
ROCKFORD. III. (IF — Fresh-
man Wayne Perkins and senior
highways Joseph Almburg refused to lx*
- - - iniav ucviuems and more cowed in their determination to
part of the A&M system. New of property, is because the be the first students to sleep on
student apartment buildings on | illlt()nU)l)ile mnni|facturers have Rockford College's
--------.1 re-1 They borrowed a tent and
search program seeking and de- sleeping bags to spend a night •
veloping safety measures and in the field where college dormi- way Valley Railroad, only 14
miles long, was founded in 1897
and has made a profit every
year except 1934. Fifteen em-
ployes keep its three diesel loco-
motives running over the all-
freight ling between here and
Roselle Park.
By TEX EASLEY
WASHINGTON. LB
stake in commercial
has been demonstrated by the
role of Texans in the long hear-
ing over transcontinental ser-
vice across the South — the
largest case ever to come be-
for the Civil Aeronautics Board. 1
Nine trunk lines are compet-
ing for the right to fly all or
part of the route. They're spend-;
ing millions to push their ap-'
I plications.
The winner will have a mul-
ti-mlUlon dollar budnesH hand-
ed to it on a platter. Two
carriers may get certificates
—one probably flying a Flor-
ida to California route via
New Orleans, Houston - San
Antonio and El Paso;The o-
thervia Atlanta ■ Birmingham
and Dallas • Fort Worth.
The hearing is in recess un-
til Sept. 21.
At present there are no non-
stop commercial plane flights
coast-to-coast across the south-
ern tier of states, and the trip
from Southeastern states to the
West Coast can be made in one
plane only through an
change of equipment between
connecting airlines.
The case grew out of a re-
quest by the city of Houston
the main campus are in the of- . constantly mninf nine d a
ting.
Texas Veterans I .a nd Pro-
gram will have to lw stopper devises for passenger cars. It
was private enterprise that de-
veloped door locks which pre- [ says.
we had to hold off a herd of
en on impact, deep dish steer- cows by flashing lights
. them."
boards to soften the blow to the
passenger in case of accidents. I
Io name a few.
The engineering of the auto-
mobile, itself, has been the rc-
- suit of wide research in the safe- ■
, '' ■' t ~4 ' *y ,o make a safer car
for the people to travel in. This !
, J i >s a subject on which many .
reams could he written.
Had it not been for the great i
advancements made by the au-
otmobile industry in these ar-'
eas’ 'ht* death toll on our high-
WE SELL and INSTALL
• Inlaid
Linol*
you can sec how much more
it would cost to require heat-
ers and snow tires Io be plac-
ed on cars operated in Miami.
Fla., while ears in Ala s k a
could be required to have not
only the heater and the tires,
but also an air conditioning
system. It the bureaucrat de-
cided that everyone should
have a seal belt, whether he
Wanted it or not, all govern-
ment cars would Is- so equip-
ped.
One fellow observed that he
have accidents and the result- ihe American taxpayer
ant tragedies therefrom. I of gimmicks.
These human errors can only Economically, it could mean
be corrected by proper educa- the beginning of a greater de-
tion. proper observation of the mand for foreign cars, not man-
traffic laws, uniformity in the ufactured in this country. There
traffic laws of the states, and has been considerable alarm a-
by courtesy on the part of ve- bout the tremendous increase
hide drivers. The death toll and in the imports of these foreign-
the incidental losses cannot be made cars. Automobiles in this j
cured by putting the automo- country are already too high
bile manufacturers under the priced, and Io add more to that
edicts of bureaucrats in Wash- price would be an invitation for
ington. To follow such a poli- people to start buying the cheai>-
cy would be an imposition on er foreign-made models.
the American taxpayer and i One Member was heard to oh- j
could cause some serious da- sene that the next thing we
mage to the economy. know, rural mail carriers will
It is estimated that if all and some bureaucrat in Wash-
government cars were requir and some bureaucrat in Waxh-
ed to be eq«dt>ped with sub ington will require all of the
stantially all the devises con- farmers to shorten the posts
templated, regardl ess .of supporting their mailboxes so
where the car was to be used the mail carriers will not have
the additional cost would av- too much difficulty in deliver- i
erage In the vicinity of * him- ing the letters from their low-
dred dollars each. Since the slung automobiles.
government maintains a fleet
ot passenger automobiles of
approximately 225 thousand.
[ noise
jets. He predicted that in
i years commercial planes
I would be going 2,000 per hour.
Delta have offered their argu-l Lubbock has_ had F'd^Crfby,
-- Eastern was abo u t I '— ---------- ---------
without success to intervene in through when the hearing was | Pal Airport matters, here
the Dallas-to-the-West case.
Hearings at which local civ-
ic and business leaders were
given an opportunity to present
their views were held in Hous-
ton and Los Angeles in May
and in Miami in June.
The case then was transfer-
red here for a hearing for the
< advancements made by the
otmobile industry in these
ways may very well have been didn't like seat lielts because
1 doubled or tripled. As the mat- they were too uncomfortable to
ter now stands, only a very sit on. It might also he added
small percentage of the acci- that an electronic devise to dim
dents are caused by defects in the lights of other cars would
I the machine or the highways, be installed on all government
1 The overwhelming percentage of cars even though many are ne-
accidents is the result of human ver used at night. In oth e r
error. Until these are corrected, words, it would he open sea-
we can expect to continue to son for the gadgeteers to sell
have accidents and the result- the American taxpayer a lot
Pepsi-Cola
take home
a case! BUBLm
with a cotton pad moistened in ; Dallas has had two men pre- '
skin freshener then apply a sent nearly every minute, and
second coaling of powder. If this sometimes three’ Representing
second coating tends to cake Dallas have Ix-en George Ter-v.
inter- or fails ,o cling’ >’*’u’11 know U I special attornev for the city.
followed the freshener too quick- and Andrew DeShong, Chamber
ly or too slowly. A little experi- ,,f Commerce official. Dale Mil-
mentation will teach you the cor-1 |cr, Washington representative I
reet timing on this treatment. for the city, has been present ,
and natural appearance. most of the time.
Q. Can you suggest a recipe Fort Worth has been
for „a go.sl "homemade” body sented by Jim Bunnell,
deodorant? 1----- *
A. One effective deodorant is
created by mixing two and
one-half ounces of boric acid, ’
one-half ounce of zinc oxide, and fn the proceedings' nevei-theless
onc-halfi ounce of laic. nas bobl>ed up occasionally.
Q. What is a good external For example. Capt. Eddie
treatment for acne or pimples Rickenbacker, the World War
I ace who heads Eastern Air
Lines, was asked by reporters
about the noise factor of jet
The Hereford Brand, Hereford, Texa», Thur*., Sept. 3, 1959
planes landing at Dallas’ Lxtve
Field.
"I told those fellows over in
Dallas,” chuckled the 69 year
old hero of two World Wars,
"that if I were them I’d try
to get over there and buy Amon
Carter Field.”
In a more serious vem he
said steady progress is being
made in suppression of
irom J
for an examination of its air airline applicants. American ,'
Texas’ , service needs, especially to the Braniff, Capital, Continental and
aviation West Coast.
Houston earlier had sought ments.
ing 50 per cent of the tab. But
......... USDA charges it should have
Texas' YOUTH COUNC1 L. Pak> only 50 per cent of the
with a kitty that jumped from reduced rate.
$7,767,441 for the 1958-59 period) ;
to $10,112,450 for the new bien-
nium. plans Io add both dormi-
tories and personnel to the two
correctional institutions. Gates-
ville School for Boys and Gaines-
ville School for Girls. Some now
construction and personnel al-
so are planned for the homes
tor orphaned children.
TEXAS A&M BOARD OF RE-
GENTS has allotted a substan-
tial portion of the $1,969,666 in- law could be expanded later
crease in ils $14 174 X65 appro- include all cars,
priation for salary increases on The reason more deaths have
t merit basis. All in all, some not occurred on the
1(1 brain Iv s and services are a and more accidents and more cowed in their determination to
ters, may. if they choose, raise
the interest the state can pay
to‘3’-» percent and make possi-
ble the sale of more bonds.
Ot course, if the state has to
pay more interest on ils bonds,
it will have to go up on the
interest it charges veterans -
probably to 4 per cent.
Under the plan, the state buys
land and re-sells it to the vet-
erans on a long-term, low-in-
terest contract. It's the only
"bonus” to Texas veterans. But
it has resulted in the purchase
t, _________: _____„i
ly of Paducah said he felt it Texas land at an average price I
ecutive branch to tell the legis-
lative branch how to finance.
itself.”
Now that all state agencies
know how much money they’ll
have (or the next two years.
| by veterans of 1,997,404 acres of
tvas "unprecedented for toe ex- of ’$69.39 per acre. ” ' |
. , midst of plenteous
rain, State Agriculture Com-
missioner John White has a
problem arising front the IK3
drought.relief program.
White says the U. S. Depart-
governlng boards have been meat of Agriculture plaas lo sue
busy deciding how to make, Texas for some $1G2,G7O which
Hie most of It. | toe USDA claims it overpaid .
STATE HOSPITAL BOARD, i for shipping hay to Texas farm-
with an appropriation that jump- i ers i,n'* ranchers.
ed 8 9 per cent to $83,142,340, White says the federal gov-
plans to spend $4,500.000 for new ' eminent agreed to pay 50 per
buildings. This will include a <*nt of the cost of shipping the
new 300-hcd unit at the Denton hay About that time toe railroad
State School and a new home and truck lines reduced their
for older patients al Denton, a fates 50 per cent for the
new ward building at Terrell drought relief feed shipments.
Slate Hospital, a new recrea- White felt that this would mean
rion building and warehouse al 'fiat the federal government
>he Austin State Hospital and would then pick up the remain-
numerous road building and re- I
novation projects.
! presidential talk, will deliver
| the main address at toe Fall
Convocation, honori ng the
| school's 50 Anniversary.
Many area residents are ex-
J peeled to attend the address
o( Senator Lyndon Johnson, eat
a lunch in or near the stadium,
and remain for the ftsitlKill in-
augural that night.
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The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1959, newspaper, September 3, 1959; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1318402/m1/18/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.