Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 280, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1956 Page: 3 of 8
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SOVIET PEACE TALKS FAIL
Almost Yolunteer For Cemetery
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN Thursday, Sept 6, 1956-—3
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BROWN "N SERVE ROLLS—BROWN "N SERVE STICKS
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MRS. HOWARD'S BAKERY
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS
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$1 down holds items to $20 up to Dec. 15
Japan May Get New Prime
Minister, Foreign Officer
DRIVE ACROSS AUSTRIAN ALP LOOKS
BETTER THAN GEORGIA WATERMELONS
! (UP-
this port
• United
SPENCER, N. M—Brakeman
Charles Kincaid, aboard the Santa
Fe Chief when it collided with a
mail train, describing his experl-
States and 47 other co
gotiated with Japan at
cisco in 1951.
Russia did not subscribe to the
peace treaty which the United
cause Russia refused to restore to
Japan the little islands of Kuna-
shir! and Etorofu off the coast of
22-ge.Alum.Uwas5
different pema! Sole
no*. 1.29 Bake p«t
Rustproof alum. Um
cover os cookie sheet.
1.19 AngelBakel Pon
22 go. seamlessolumi-
num. Remov. bottom.
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darted on
dell Ship,
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William-
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Reg-19WeterPei
Durable 22-ge elum-
mum. 10-qt dim
around for a new prime minister
and a new foreign minister before
EVE
HRAN
xt
Suede in a soft leather that
has a nap on one side. It to made
by holding the flesh side at the
tanned hide against a buffing
wheel, which raises the nap.
IS
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Separate Japanese-Russian nego-
tiations were started on June 1.
1955, in London. They dragged on
until last March without result.
Shigemitsu resumed the negotia-
tions in Moscow on July 31
The dispute over Kumashiri and
Etorofu islands remained the big
stumbling block.
The two islands are at the south-
ern end of the Kurile Islands chain
" .
rot J
ence in the crash:
"I didn’t remember anything
else until I woke up sitting on the
ground outside the train. I must
have been thrown through a win-
dow or a hole torn in the car."
The bewhisk
ed of killing
hot rain
and fire
hin there
i hose. A
or explos-
he flames
area
mage was
memerton
up at the
nd about
a victim
a of any
h several
moke and
where the members of the court
had their country homes. close
enough to Frans Josef in Bad
Ischl to pay him homage. but
far enough away to escape his
censure for their romantic trif-
Ung.
Frans Jeeef had but one real
love—hunting—and this area pro-
vidos the finest game in Europe.
M
OWED
television, I came to the conclu-
sion it wasn’t a convention, it was
a coronation."
Reg 1.29 Dish Pen
12-qt. size-oluminum
Dozen of other une:
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to section
■front on
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By UNITED PRESS
WASHINGTON- President El-
senhower renewing his plea for
moderation in the school segrega-
tion disputes:
"We hear the people that are
adamant and are so filled with
prejudice that they can't keep still
—they even resort to violence; and
the same way on the other side
of the thing, the people who want
to have the whole matter settled
today.”
■ I
hk
It is Mrs. Howard's Bread
"THE TOAST OF THE TOWN"
e of the
meat was
to. includ-
a time, a
stewed .to
residental
adjoining
jobs of both Premier Ichiro
Hatoyama and Foreign Minister
Mamoru Shigemitsu are threat-
ened because of the recent col-
lapse of peace treaty negotiations
with Russia.
‘Mtosamslndnstderimg wheth-
er to stake his own post by going
to Moscow to try to get toe Soviet
government to change its mind.
If he goes, and falls in his mis-
"80 MILES FRESHER"
i A WHOPGERMELON—This 161-pound watermelon tar out-
! weichs "Miss Hope," Mary Ann Hall. It was grown by Oscar
D. Middlebrooks, of Little Rock, Ark. In 1930, he set a record
with a 164-pounder, and outdid himself with a 195-pounder in
I 1935. A 91,000 prize is awarded each year for the biggest melon.
i Oscar's entry is still in the lead. ____
“2
848
SARR
ts
HOLLYWOOD—Film star John
Wayne deploring the shooting abil-
ity of big game hunter Richard
Weldy in wounding Robert Harri-
son. publisher of Confidential Mag-
azine:
".. .I think he's a nice enough
fellow and I hope he’s not in trou-
ble, but I deplore toe fact he’s
such a poor shot.”
12.95Pop-UpTocster • A ao
Perfect color control. If] 00
Re-heats said toast. IV
Maher's Price 29.95m m M
10-cup Auto. Copper I A 00
inside, chrome outside. IT
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2om
y,
o U. S.
Such a common thin* as unwise eating
or drinking may be a souree of mild, bui
annoying biadder irritations-making or
feel restless, tense, and uncomfortabie. Ant
to orer-eserUon. strata or emotioal up-et,
er adaiqe — Joue mise27-4om" watt-
try De n g Pills,
Doan”s Pills have throe outstanding ad.
vantages-act in three ways for yourspeedy
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stops. I don’t ever want to leave
Bad Ischl. Let me tell you bow
pretty it is. It has a little ceme-
tery. high on a hill above the
river, that is such an entranc-
ing spot that both the General
and I have agreed that it is the
one cemetery we would live tn
voluntarily—well. almost volun-
tarily.
From where I am writing I can
look out on the river, and also
1.39 Kitehen Tools go
5loinl.es steel with > I
block bokelite hdles. lea.
Shigemitsu is likely to be forced
out anyway. He conducted the
treaty negotiations in Moscow
which broke down on August 22
N
^A///
reed passes through St Gngen
on Wolfgang See, whose name is
almost as big as it is. It was
'here that Mozart's mother was
born, and a plaque bearing her
picture identies the small white
house.
Then there to St. Wolfgang it-
self, its celebrated White Horse
in his lifetime. Nothing was
safe from his rifle, be it deer,
chamois. elk. or hare
The Traun's waters are re-
nowned for trout, abounding in
rainbow, brown, and what is
known locally, as Lach Kreutzer,
or salmon trout. In addition,
there are graylings up to six
pounds.
Mary and I are the guests in
39 Salud Bewle a am
Smooth-finish hard- * > 1
wood, individual ate*, for |
SAN FRANCISCO- Democratic
presidential nominee Adlai E. Ste-
vensom describing the recent Re-
publican National Convention:
"After listening to that thing on
which Russia occupied at the end
of World War II. The Kuriles ex-
tend from Russia's Kamchatka
peninsula to Japan. Russia holds
that Kunashiri and Etorofu are
part of the chain. Japan says they
are not, that they go with Hok-
kaido.
The little islands are of an great
importance, though they are valu-
able fishing bases and have some
sulphur mines.
Japan's demand for them to
partly a matter of national pride.
But toe failure of Hatoyama and
Shigemitsu to get them has
strengthened long-standing opposi-
tion to them.
Want Younger Men
There has been talkemong Jap-
anese politicians for months of get-
ting some younger blood into the
prime ministry and the foreign
ministry.
Hatoyama to 73 and partly par-
alyzed. Shigemitsu is 69. He lost
a leg in 1932 when a Korean threw
a bomb onto a platform in Shang-
hai. China, during a celebration
by Japanese of Emperor Hirohi-
to's birthday.
Hatoyama and Shigemitsu were
members of the Liberal Party un-
der Premier Shigeru Yoshida.
They broke with him and formed
the new Japan Democratic Party
in November, 1954. Next month
Hatoyama succeeded Yoshida as
premier. The Liberal and Demo-
cratic parties were merged.
The Liberal-Democratic Party
holds 300 of the 467 seats in the
House of Representatives. But
younger men in the party want
Hatoyama to get out, and they are
even more determined to get rid
of Shigemitsu.
’ It will not be surprising if Hato-
yama resigns next month.
d Monarch boast- Vienna, and practice my waltz
,000 head at game -
«
T,
For miles the road follows the
wanderings at the Traun River
as it rushes along, polishing the
stones at its bed to jewel bright-
ness. Trout jump Birds dart
across you path, and occasion-
ally the road winds through
leafy woods that ring to toe axes
of the woodchopper*.
Bad Ischl to a fairy book vil-
lage. The Traun flows through
it, and its banks are lined with
high-gabled houses. toy churches,
and the quaintest, queerest little
shops. It smells at toe water,
the forests, and the town bakery,
world renowned for its sweets.
The old Hotel Austria, now a
faded yellow. somehow manages
to look as proud as tt did in the
days when Emperor Franz Josef
danced there with his bride-to-be.
Before reaching Bad Ischl the
. Inn still open to travellers, and
a little further an to Strobl.
So M.*-*W*' '
"ouswares
, pec. 15
40 $20 ’* P5
Be 88'
By CHARLES M. MCCANN . sion, he undoubtedly will have to
United Press Matt Carr.....lent resign
Japan to likely to be looking - . —.....
»4*P
157b
Bad Ischl at Brig. General and
Mrs Arthur J. McChrystal, who
have a home on the Traun. The
General, retired, to married to
Gretel Hubner, daughter of Hana
Hubner, the Canrad Hilton at
Austria, and whose hotels ex-
tend from Salzburg to Capri.
The General, a San Francisco
boy by birth, to as hospitable as
his lovely wife,'and it to a
privilege and a joy to see a
part of Austria with them. Mary
and I met them in Salzburger-
Cobenzl. and they graciously of-
fered to drive us to Vienna, via
Bad Ischl
As much as I want to see
kitchen to earning too meat trag-
rant odor I have ever emdDed.
I asked General McChrystal «hat
it waa and he called across to
Mrs. Putz. She said R was
goulash soup mi wurst. Ana ,
I'm cutting this abort to ge
have some!
< Distributed by McNaught
Syndicate. Ipe.)
795
cupt Amorted Wytec 1
By HENRY McLEMORE
BAD ISCHL, Austria—I used
to think that for pure scenery
nothing would surpass the drive
from Statesboro to Savannah in
watermelon time.
I was wrong. The drive I took
today, from Salzburg to this little
village nestled in the Austrian
Alps, has it beaten by a country
mile it must be just shout the
loveliest thirty-mile stretch of
country in the world. -
The eyes feast on beauty every
inch of the way—it’s everywhere.
Look upward and there are the
peaks, forest-carpeted to the
timberline. gray and gaunt
above. Look downward, and
boats balloon their sales on icy-
green lakes. And all about are
chalets, their gardens and win-
dow boxes alive with flowers;
lush, rolling meadows dotted
with fat cattle, their bells tink-
/ y
F , ed,
Ac.,,
WASHINGTON- Senate Repub-
lican Leader William F. Knowland
of California replying to Adlai Ste-
venson's call for an end to the
military draft:
"The Democratic candidate’s
speech ... to a blatant attempt to
get votes."
covet.
SCRATCH-ME-NOT
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Apply ITCH-ME-NOT. to M IS
minutes, if you have to scratch pear
itch, your 40c tack at any drug atota
Um tnatant-drying ITCH-M*-WOT day
or night for me—a. ringworm, meeci
bftes, foot Ml other —rtoia Mat,
Wow at Peerless Drug.
7.59 Saucepan Sat du
2 2-ga. alum. Holes for <1
bangihg. %, 1, 2-qt. ।
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Rog. 1.19 Bowl Set t
2. 3-qt. mixing bowis • I (
in mirror aluminum. I J
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complet Kno "araluce"tQ 50-pe
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455 after -uummra 94
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czuonia—.
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 280, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1956, newspaper, September 6, 1956; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1488222/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.