The La Grange Journal (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 27, 1951 Page: 3 of 8
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THE LA GRANGE JOURNAL
Thursday, Sept. 27, 1861
Co.
7.
and
Box Files. Journal office.
Leopard
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WIN THIS Bl
G-E PRIZE!
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Hostyn Parish
FALL BAZAAR
I
SUNDAY, OCT. 7TH
Bigger and Better Than Ever!
Plum, Texas
DINNER 11:00 A.M.^SUPPER 5 P.M.
IT'S FUN! IT'S EASY!
ADMISSION: ADULTS $1.00, CHILDREN 60c
an
BAZAAR AUCTION AT 4:00 P. M.
MORGAN IMPLEMENT CO.
D-A-N-C-E
Phone 1601F-11
Plum, Texas
Come & Enjoy Our Hospitality!
." ■' t
L
Authorized Dealer
GENERAL ELECTRIC
RANGES
“Hostyn-madc” sausage, fried chicken, and all the
usual good “additions,” served family style in
Hostyn’s newly remodeled and enlarged cool
dining room.
PLENTY OF COLD REFRESHMENTS, CARNIVAL
ATTRACTIONS, AND ENTERTAINMENT FOR
EVERYBODY — YOUNG AND OLD!
Phone 201 — “Since 1918**
MARIE WEBER or LAWRENCE (STINK) WEBER
LA GRANGE, TEXAS
At Night to The Music Of
LICHNOVSKY’S ORCHESTRA
Marty Beautiful Gifts and Merchandise
Donated by Our Friends
.. 44
13
... 3
Kelly’s
10 yard
1
41
0
come
the
That Is Priced RIGHT, See
E. J. KNESEK
FAYETTEVILLE — TEXAS
Jurr coaBBCTLY name the 3 “miss'
fog ingredients’* in the “Dinner of
the Week** and write, in 25 words
or less, why you like the G-E Stra-
tollner Rangel The entrant who cor*
rectly names the 3 “missing ingre-
dients” and writes the statement
that's Judged best wins this beauti-
ful grand prize I
Any eligible contest-
ant who correctly JVRfe
names the missing in-
gredients wins a free
copy of Time Maga-
zine’t famous “TIME READER’S
BOOK OF RECIPES”! B’s cttackr
full of new, tasty, economical dhihee
—sells regularly for $2,501
I
Concert Music During Day By
LICHNOVSKY’S BAND
ARTHUR G THSS
Repraeauttaft
Great Southern and
Lutheran Mutual
Life Ins. Companies
La Orange, Texas
W. A. Morgan & Bros.
Gin
WILLOW SPRINGS
Rgr Mrs. H. H. Schultz
r’
FOR--
Automobile Insurance
— AND —
GIN DAYS
Beginning next week
Wednesday and
Saturday
only
All Kinds of Other Insurance
X
Sco
WEBER INS. AGENCY
BINGO
Every Friday Night
8:00 P. M.
FAYETTEVILLE
St. John’s Recreational Hall
25 Games $1.00; 26th Game
For Big Door Prize
No Admission After
Fourth Game
* Push-butt®" CeiJreW
* TebArCeok tight*’
* ColmdO HeoHng UriM
——-o— -----—-
Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Stein-
mann and son, Weldon Jr., of
Houston visited here Sunday
while on their way to San An-
tonio.
ITS NEW!
$12,000. DREAD DISEASE
POLICY
Covering Polio, Rabies, Cho-
rea, Tetanus, Scarlet Fever, Leu-
kemia, Encephalitis, Tularemia,
Typhus Fever, Small Pox, Spinal
Meningitis and Diphtheria.
COST ONLLY $12 For Family
$6 Individuals
ED. A. GIESE
Kinds Of Good Insurance
Phone 386 — Hermes Bldg.
LA GRANGE, TEXAS
1
In
IL
OCT. 6-21 * DALLAS
--------------------o ■ ■■
THE GAME
IN A J4UTSHELL
LG
9
222
33
1
1
FOOTBALL SCORES
Following are results of high
school football games played In
this area the past week-end:
La Grange 34, Bastrop 12.
Taylor 0, Caldwell 0.
Brenham 15, Cameron 7.
Giddings 42. Elgin 6.
Hearne 18 Navasota 6.
Columbus 19, Sealy 0.
Smithville 19, Eagle Lake 0.
Schulenburg 13, Weimar
Contest Ends Saturday, Sept. 29. So Get Your
Entry Blank and Contest Rules Here — NOW!
----------o
Friedrich Heinsohn
Dies At Beeville
Last Saturday relatives
friends received the sad mes-
sage of the death of Friedrich
Heinsohn of Beeville who passed
away at his home at noon, Sept.
22, at the age of 94.
He was bom near Frelsburg,
Colorado County, a son of Wil-
liam and Meta Heinsohn, was
baptised and confirmed in the
Lutheran Church and received
his education in the local school.
In 1885 he was married to iftary
Schroeder and they acquired a
farm near Willow Springs where
they engaged in farming for ma-
ny years.
Later they sold the farm and
moved to De Witt County, but
stayed only a few years and in
1906 moved to Beeville in Bee
County, where he spent the rest
of his life. His wife preceded
him in death on Oct. 19, 1950.
On Sept. 1, 1950, they had chil-
dren and grandchildren home
for their 65th wedding anni-
versary.
The funeral services were con-
ducted 'at 5 o’clock Sunday
afternoon, Sept. 23, at Hollo-
way Mortuary, Rev. Earl Moeh-
ring of Peace Lutheran Church
officiating. Interment was in
Glenwood Cemetery. Grandsons
of the deceased were pallbearers.
He is survived by three sons,
Walter and Leslie of Odem,
Reimer of Beeville; three daugh-
ters, Mrs. H. J. Campbell, Mrs.
E. I. Crow and Mrs. F. H.
Owings; 16 grandchildren and
16 great-grandchildren..
Relatives from here who at-
tended the last rites were Cla-
rence Heinsohn, Mrs. Lester
Schwecke, Clyde Heinsohn, Mrs.
C. Obermiller, Mr. and Mrs. Os-
car Albrecht of Willow Springs;
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Heinsohn,
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Heinsohn
and sons of Frelsburg.
Humble Sets Five
Grid Broadcasts
Humble Oil & Refining
will follow up its season open-
ing “football broadside*’ last
week-end with action-packed
broadcasts of five more games
played by Southwest Confer-
ence teams on Saturday, Sept.
29. They are:
Texas AAM and Texas Tech
at Dallas, 8 PM. Stations WRR
of Dallas, KTHT of Houston,
KORA of Bryan, KVET of Aus-
tin.
Texas University and Purdue
at Lafayette, Ind., 12:20 PM.
Stations KTBC of Austin, KTR-
H of Houston, KRLD of Dallas,
KABC of San Antonio.
SMU and Ohio State at Co-
lumbus, Ohio, 12:50 PM. Sta-
tions WFAA and WBAP of Dal-
las and Fort Worth, KPRC of
Houston, WOAI of San Antonio.
TCU and Nebraska at Lin-
coln, Neb., 1:50 PM. Stations
KXYZ of Houston, KTSA of
San Antonio, KNOW of Austin.
Rice and Clemson at Hous-
ton, 8:05 PM. Stations KPRC
of Houston, KFDM of Beau-
mont.
Attend Funeral Of
Aged Relative
Fred Heinsohn of Beeville,
aged ninety and the last mem-
ber of an old pioneer family,
passed away at his home and
was buried at Beeville on Sun-
day afternoon, Sept. 23, at 5
PM.
Many years ago the Fred
Heinsohn family resided in this
community.
He is survived by three sons,
Walter, Leslie and Reimer Hein-
sohn; three daughters, Mr$.
Howard (Millie) Campbell, Mrs.
Irl (Hattie) Crow and Mrs.
Floyd (Nora) Owings; a num-
ber of grandchildren and several
great - grandchildren. Several
nieces and nephews reside here.
A number of the relatives
from here attended the funeral.
Rain
It seems as if the rainy sea-
son has set in. This community
received over six inches pre-
viously and this week scatter-
ed showers are being received.
A lot of com is still out in
the fields, while all the cotton
has been picked.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Hein-
sohn and daughters of Houston
were week-end visitors in the
T. D. Heinsohn home.
Fritz Krenek and Mr. and
Mrs. H. H. Schutz were business
visitors in La Grange Monday.
1
29, 1MX
star, mb
bel, who
y«*n ago
“The n
shining - JU , J IBM W-'
Upon your silent graven
Beneath it sleeps the one«B
love,
The one we could not sawt
Although your soul la new A
rest
And free from care and patki
This would seem like heaewB
If we had you back again.
But still we say, His wfll to.
done,
Your soul is with the btaol
And we who grieve for jwa
today
Are the ones who loved job -
best.”
Sadly missed by his
wife and children
■ a
FRELSBURG FEAST
Sts. Peter and Paul Church
at Frelsburg Is holding its an-
nual feast on« Sunday, Sept. 30.
Turkey and chicken will be
served at noon, chicken and
sausage for supper, there will
be brass band music during the
day and dance music at night
by Migl’s — and a grand time
Is assured for all.
[ •
i
STRATOLINER RANG!
7 Retail value $389.95
* gulIMn Pressw" Ceebesl
* Huge TrtpbOv.*’
The La Grange Leopards of
Coaches Charley Jungmichal
and Eddie Burrows were In a
fighting mood Friday night, and
they clipped a fine Bastrop
Bear football club to the tune
of 34 to 12 at Bastrop. The lo-
cals showed marked improve-
ment in this their first victory
of the 1951 season, and at times
looked brilliant, with their fine
back, Weldon Tiedt showing the
way offensively, as well as de-
fensively.
Tiedt threw a 33-yard touch-
down pass to Elwood Moerbe
for the first Leopard touchdown
early in the second quarter, af-
ter Bastrop had hit pay dirt
first in the first period. He
scored three touchodwns him-,
self, two of them being on 79
and 90 yards sprints respective-
ly-
Ralph Rosenberg, Richard
Roberts, and L. C. Leifeste also
looked good in the Leopard
backfield, and Dickie Ehlert did
a good job of quarterbacking.
Defensive standouts for the
Leopards were Weldon Tiedt,
G. Zimmermann, Edward Lidi-
ak, and Elwood Moerbe, while
the entire Leopard squad show-
ed good form, and thus gave a
The Leopards took advantage
of a break later in the second
period, when Tiedt recovered a
fumble on the Bear 12. Rosen-
berg, Ehlert and Tiedt gained
nine yards and on fourth down
Tiedt scampered across to send
the Leopards into the lead for
the first time this season. Rob-
erts passed to Moerbe for the
point and the score was La
Grange 13, Bastrop 6 at the
half.
Midway in the third period
the Leopards took over when
Alana kicked over the goal line.
Roberts gained a yard, and then
Tiedt crashed off tackle, and
went 79 yards for the touch-
down. Roberts added the point,
and the score was 20 to 6 for
the Leopards.
Bastrop covered a
fumble on the Leopard 24 and
five plays later Don Alana hit
center for the Bears’ final tal-
ly of the night.
Tiedt then took
kick-off on his own
line, and ran through the mid-
dle of would be Bastrop tack-
lers, going the entire 90 yards
for a touchdown. Roberts add-
ed the point, and the score was
La Grange 27, Bastrop 12.
La Grange’s final score
the night came in the late stag-
es of the game, when Hatfield
intercepted a Bear forward on
the Bear 41. A double lateral
from Tiedt to Roberts to Eh-
lert netted 19 yards. Rosenberg
then hit right tackle for 8
yards, but Roberts fumbled on
the next play and recovered for
a 10 yard loss; however, a Bas-
trop personal foul penalty set
up a first down on the 1, from
where Ehlert scored, with Rob-
erts converting once more. Fi-
nal score: La Grange 34, Bas-
trop 12.
Leopards Spank Bastrop, 34-12
Weldon Tiedt Paves
Way With TD Paw,
Also Scores Three
warning of what Is to
during the remainder of
season.
Don Alana, Bastrop Bear
tailback who scored both their
tallies was by far the losers’
outstanding man, as he was a
constant threat with his run-
ning, passing, and also showed
up well in the kicking depart-
ment. Pete Taylor of the Bears
also showed up well as a hard
running back.
Bastrop struck first midway
in the first period, when they
took advantage of a Leopard
fumble on the La Grange 27-
yard line. Alan Alana picked up
6 yards, Don Alana gained 3,
and A. D. Harris made it a first
down on the Leopard 11, from
where Don Alana took it over
in two tries. Harris' attempted
kick from placement for the ex-
tra point was no good and the
Bears led 6 to 0.
La Grange’s first tally came
after Don Alana punted out of
bounds on the Leapard 12 yard
line. Rosenberg hit guard for
9 yards, and a center sneak
gained a first down, and two
line plays by Tiedt and Leifeste
gained another first down on
the Leopard 33. Tiedt then
skirted left end for a 34 yard
gain, and a first down on the
Bear 33 yard line. Tiedt then
hit Elwood Moerbe with a long
pass, and Moerbe scored knot-
ting the count. Roberts kick for
point was blocked. Score: 6 to
6. /
4 SON-ol-a-GUN m '51
10,000 FREE Exhibits
PAN-AMERICAN NATIONAL
HEREFORD SHOW
with PARADE of CHAMPIONS
★ GUYS & DOLLS
* ICE CYCLES
SL * THRILLCADE
> * FIREWORKS
[ * FOQTBALL
r * MIDWAY
76 DAYS
of EDUCATION
nri FkJTCD T AIIJ ucklT
Bast.
First downs .................... 9
Yds. gained rushing 155
Yds. gained passing
Passes attempted
Passes completed
Opponents’ pass
intercepted ............. 1
Avg. yards punts 35
Yds. lost penalties ...... 30
Opponents’ fumbles
recovered .............
----------o--------
FREE MILK SHAKES!
Last week Harry Gaertner,
owner of Comer Drug Store, in-
formed the La Grange Leopard
footballers he would give them
free milk shakes after every
game that they win this sea-
son. They started promptly by
bowling over the Bastrop Bears
— and got a shake apiece!
--o---------
WEEKLY AUCTION
SALES REPORT
Following is a report on the
weekly sale held last Friday at
the La Grange Livestock Auc-
tion Co.:
RECEIPTS:
Cattle 639.
Hogs 227.
Sheep 21.
Horses and mules 10.
PRICES PAID:
Butcher Prices
Cows, canner to butcher $12.-
00 to $26.25 cwt.
Calves, cull to choice $15.00
to $35.75 cwt.
Bulls, light to heavy $21.00
to $28.00 cwt.
Stocker Prices.
Cows and calves $105.00 to
$247.50 Hd.
Cows and heifers $115.00 to
$182.00 Hd.
Cows and heifers, $18.00 to
$33.25 cwt.
Steers $23.00 to $34.00 cwt.
Calves $25.00 to $35.75.
Hogs.
Good to choice $20.75 to $22.-
00 cwt.
Lights $19.00 to $20.50 cwt.
Sows $17.00 to $19.25 cwt.
Feeders $16.00 to $18.75 cwt.
Horses and mules, $1.30 to $1.80
cwt.
Sheep.
Lambs $15.00 to $25.00 cwt.
Bucks and ewes $12.25 to
$15.00 Hd. '
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For--
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Priebe, Charles W. The La Grange Journal (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 27, 1951, newspaper, September 27, 1951; La Grange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1349131/m1/3/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.