Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 103, Ed. 1 Friday, February 11, 1955 Page: 7 of 10
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BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Friday, February 11, IMS 7
Legislature in Recess
■
lovers, despite the cold weather
0
this week.
i-
it
tempt to set off anti-American
" -1
■
i
I
MARKETS
1954.
and College Station 22, Del Rio 24.
a.m.
Sunday in Brady Hospital.
Wean
2 2
o, "Thouqhtulned
New York City received its first
ating station in Pearl Street.
50c
not theirs.
ended Friday.
A
HARRY COCHRAN
i
7
E
DIAL 7040
1.0
G
DuMon
yet you save 3 ways!
1
2
EK’oo pure
21
; N
i
d Corporatlon ... wWi 4* lergeet M-be producer efemnena mds
Featured at SAFEWAY
04
4
1
9
-
e
-i
Coffee
Former Rail Agent
At Rochelle Dies
February is NATIONAL
TIE CLEANING TIME
RICHER COFFEE
INSTANTLY m
Sanitone Dry Cleaning
Can re-new your old Ties
a la
con-
sday
Iday,
the story was intended only for
consumption by the sister to try
to get her to take the child.
Besides that, she said, her hus-
band is not in Japan but is work-
Woman Admits She
Concocted Story
About Twin Trouble
SAN ANTONIO, Feb 11 UP—
A 33-year-old mother admitted Fri-
day she concocted a story that she
sent one of her two-month-old twins
to California and the other to a
sister’s house because she didn't
have travel papers to take them
with her on her way to join her
husband in Japan.
The truth, she said, is that there
d at
gelo.
First
ill be
ition,
gelo
dgar
the
tempted marria
without a good-
tabi such mari
null and void."
WMEN YOU BUY IT, you pay less
than for other top quality instant
coffees and much less than for
regular coffee.
whN YOU MAKI IT, you UM less
because Edwards is 100% pure
coffee - rich coffee from choicest
coffee beans, "Deep Roasted."
WHIN YOU SERvE it there’s not a
drop of waste. You make exactly
what you want-when you want it
trim
ylor.
Col-
stu-
Die-
Weather—
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
19. San Angelo 20, Lufkin 21. Waco
wood
ele-
t 18
held
An-
within this state
h attempt to ob-
license shall be
nks said persons
ft
ALL CIVILIANS EVACUATED—Chinese Nationalist civilians wend their way along hillside on Tachen
Island toward evacuation point as tending craft, background, ferry refugees from beach to waiting
ships. All civilians have been evacuated from the invasion-threatened island and removal of troops
is expected to be completed by end of week.—(NEA Radiophoto).
Ft
APPLIANCE COMPANY
1305 MAIN AVE.
- Special to The Bulletin
BRADY, Feb. 11—Funeral ser-
THE ULTRA VISTA
STUDEBAKER
Studebaker ...so much better made...worth more when you traded
BALL & BALL MOTOR CO.
300 N. BROADWAY
Every Brown County Book Shelf
Should Contain A Copy Of
From The Memories Of Men
Have You Bought Yours?
One Dollar At Your Book Store
Or Magazine Stand
lawmakers were b
pose of a few more
UNVEILED—Bell Aircraft unveiled its revolutionary convertiplane,
the XV-3, at dedication ceremonies at its Fort Worth plant Thurs-
day. Over-sized propellers in vertical position, bottom, lifts plane
in helicopter style, then tilt forward, top, into conventional position
for forward flight.—(NEA Telephoto).
F
was passed by voice vote ana
routed to the upper chamber for
consideration.
Rep Stanley Banka Jr., of San
Antonio, sponsor of the measure,
said more than 30 states have such
a law. He called common-law mar-
riages "an obsolete device Ip ear
modern society."
The bin provides that “any at-
ing on a construction project at
Temple, Tex., 145 miles from San
Antonio.
But the story got out because a
woman taxicab driver whom the
mother called to take the baby to
the sister’s house got the address
wrong and took her to a bouse on
Colorado street instead of Salado
street
The people who live at the ad-
dress on Colorado street had never
heard of the woman or her baby
and called authorities.
The woman is Mrs. Leonor Qui-
roz Enriquez, 33. She told author-
ities that it is her sister who is
named Mrs. Alberto Duran, the
name police thought was hers, aft-
er reading her scrawled note to
the sister.
The taxicab driver, Mrs. Ruby
James, 35, turned the baby over
to welfare authorities after the peo-
night than it was Thursday night;
except in the Panhandle and South
Plains. But all the state will wari
up Saturday.
the cold front roared into Texas
Wednesday night and Thursday
with 50-mile-an-hour winds clocked 1
New York Giants. Both served
their first year in the NFL during
Seminary Senior To Preach
At First Presbyterian
. Jim Henderson, a senior student
at the Presbyterian Theological
Seminary in Austin, will preach at
services 11 a.m. Sunday in the First
AMBULANCE
• careful
i • comfortable i
L ■ considerate j
LONDON burton!
2 6 1 2d
„2sst I
EDUARDS
Northwestern Assistants Quit
EVANSTON, fit. Feb. H—UP—
Lou Saban, Northwestern Univer-
sity’s new football coach who suc-
ceeded Bob Voigts, hos disclosed
that two of Voigts’ aides have told
him they will seek other jobs. John
Kovatch, end coach, an I Bob Reih-
sen, line coach, are the two men
who are leaving the staff. Voigts
was forced to resign under "pres-
sure" from alumni groups.
-=-2
.HI,1 —A—
Mr. Guarrera is a regular per-
former at the Metropolitan Opera
FORT WORTH, Feb. 11 —UP—
Produce:
Poultry: Light fowl 12. heavy
fowl 16, roosters 8, light fryers 15.
heavy fryers 25.
Eggs: Medium 35, large 40.
entering into common-law mar-
riages are evading such laws as
those requiring blood tests before
being wed.
Meanwhile, the House approved
-bi
L
PS’, n
o
- --
—' . 1e3
-L‘A®
He was a railroad agent in
Rochelle for many years.
I A
&
EVANS
DRY CLEANING CO.
| 303 Fisk Phone 8499
fl
in New York. He has appeared
on numerous radio and television
S*a 4*
“vaa
-4A
would be so bitter over much of
West Texas that they must protect
their cattle.
Tito Returns From
India, Burma Visit
RIJEKA, Yugoslavia, Feb. 11-
UP—President Tito returned Fri-
day from a visit to India and
Burma and declared Yugoslavia
“will never join” a bloc that tries
to solve problems by force.
Tito told the Yugoslav people
“we will never join with any of
those who believe that internation-
al problems can be solved only
through the use of armaments.”
However, he added that Yugo-
slavia would not join the western
bloc either although his govern-
ment will continue its “present
policy of peace and co-operation
with the countries of the West.”
at Amarillo and Childress, 43 at
Dalhart and 38 at Fort Worth.
The high winds raised dust to go
along with the cold and windy
weather, and the weather bureau
warned stockmen that the cold
Non-Secret Data
He based his calculations on
•on-secret data and predicted that
official facts—which he thinks will
be released soon by the Atomic
Energy Commission—will show his
estimates are “conservative.”
Neutralization of America's in-
dustrial potential actually could be
before they went into weekend
adjournment.
The House approved and sent on
their way numerous bills Thursday
But the lower chamber also killed
one measure.
A bill proposing abolition of
common-law marriages in Texas
'Foreign Agitators'
Rounded Up During
Nixon Mexico Visit
MEXICO CITY, Feb 11 UP—At
least eight suspected "foreign agi-
tators" were rounded up by police
who feared demonstrations or
sabotage during U.S. Vice Presi-
dent Richard M. Nixon’s current
good-will visit in Mexico.
A Mexico'City newspaper report-
ed that a total of 14 persons were
jailed. -
The arrests Thursday of the
Puerto Rican Nationalists. Cubans
and Chileans was “purely precau-
tionary.” police said. The eight
men will be released Saturday
after Nixon leaves for Guatemala.
Mexican authorities said they
feared the “agitators” might at-
overwhelmingly a bill cutting an-
nual license fees for buses, but
defeated a measure calling for
sanitary wrapping of dr
straws.
The tetter was defeated
after some lawmakers cha
would create a monopoly
brings yon television's biggest dollar value!
• -,xv
eme
Austin and El Paso 25. Houston 27,
Beaumont 28, Galveston and Vic- w. „ e.5 .------ —
toria 30, Alice 32. Corpus Christi Ficesweresheld.Monday afternoon
and Laredo 33. Raymondville and forgClarence Albert Woodford, 73,
Weslaco 34 and Edinburg 38. of Rochelle who died at 12:30 a.m.
A little rain was reported over
the state Thursday—.02 inch at
Woodford was born March 8.
1881, in Missouri.
Survivors are a son, Jack of
Miami, Tex.; and two daughters.
Mrs. Pauline Haddow of San
Diego, Calif., and Mrs. Jame
Moseley of Rochelle; and a sister,
Mrs. Eva Gates of Maywood,
Calif.
Brown County 4 H
Boys To Compete
In Houston Judging
A group of Brown County 4-H
Club boys left this afternoon for
Houston to compete Saturday in
judging contests being held in
conjunction with the Houston Fat
Stock Show.
Brown County will be represent-
ed in the Houston contest* by
grass judging, livestock judging
and dairy judging teams.
Included on the grass judging
team are Davis Sheila barger of
Brownwood, Joe Oden and Martin
Stacy of Brookesmith.
Members of the livestock judg-
ing team are Dwayne Grooms,
Brownwood. Bobby Nichols and
Edwin Nichols of Bangs.
Composing the dairy team are
Roy Hughes of Blanket. Jerry
Godfrey of Early, and Billy Good-
son and John Naaron of Brown-
wood.
Jimmy Mullis of Brookesmith
also accompanied the group to
compete in the calf scramble.
Assistant County Agent Carl
James and Robert Kemp, assistant
agent-in-training, will supervise
the group. Also accompanying
the contestants were Perry Mullis,
Perry Mullis Jr. and Charles
Mullis, all of Brookesmith. -
The entire group will attend a
banquet in Houston Saturday
night and return home Sunday.
EP By the cup or
B by the pot...
b_4
“U/Pn
the size of Maryland —10,000
square miles, atomic scientist
Ralph E. Lapp said Friday.
And a "small-scale” attack with
28 bombs would "atomize" an
area from Indiana to New York
containing 50 million Americans
and two-thirds of the nation’s in-
dustrial potential, Lapp said.
New calculations, Lapp said,
forced him to raise his estimate
of a single bomb's "fall-out area”
from 4,000 square miles, the same
danger zone estimated by Califor-
nia civil defense authorities. ’
Lapp gave his frightening esti-
mate in an extensive study , of
hydrogen bomb effects written for
the Bulletin of the Atomic Scien-
tists.
Lost 67 Pounds
With Barcentrate
Mn. Jim Andrews, Box 441, chi.
dress, Texas, wrote us as fohlows:
"Since taking Barcentrate, I fad bet-
ter than I have in 10 years. I re-
duced from 263 pounds to IM and I
- shall continue to take Barcentrate
until my weight corresponds with mg
height and health chart." Peggy Gar-
ner, 337 Milton Drive, E Paso,
Texas, states that she lost 12 pounds
taking Barcentrate and that bag
weight is now just the way she wante
it to be. If the very first botdleso
Barcentrate, doesn’t show you the
way to take off ugly fat, return the
empty bottle for your money back.
At #l Texas druggists.
-------------------- There was a little light snow In
pie on Colorado street said it was West Texas Thursday, but it had
After Action on Bills
gle hydrogen bomb would spread
radio-active death over an area
FORT WORTH, Feb. 11—UP —
USDA—Cattle 100. Steady. Load
good and choice beef steers 24.50.
Load good yearlings 20.50. Few
canner and cutter cows 5 - 10.50.
Other grades and classes scarce.
» Calves 25. Not enough offered to
| test quotations.
Hogs 50. Butchers steady. Sows
I scarce. Choice 190-250 lbs. 17.25-
17.75. One lot overfat razorback
„ 14.50.
Sheep none. Nothing offered.
d.
E
—a’
Wm. B. Cayce, 86,
Claimed by Death
Spectas to Th. Bull, tin
SAN SABA, Feb. 11—Funeral
services for William Brice Cayce,
86, were conducted at 3 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 9. from the
Church of Christ in San Saba.
He died at 2 p.m. Tuesday in
San Saba.
Surviving are six children, Mrs.
F. W. Farley and Mrs. R. C. Felts,
both of San Saba, Mrs. E. E.
Perry of Englewood. Colo., W. R.
Cayce of Fort Worth, R. D. Cayce
of Texas City and J. A. Cayce of
Dallas; 21 grandchildren and 34
great-grandchildren.
A native of Franklin, Tenn., he
was born May 26. 1868. He came
to San Saba to make his home in
March, 1931.
Burial was in the City Ceme-
tery.
Services were held in Wilkerson
Funeral Home, Brady, and burial
was in the Rochelle Cemetery.
। Audubon Screen Tour
Program To Be Given
At HPC Monday Night
"Paul Bunyan Country," a fas-
cinating motion picture program
portraying the region made famous
by Paul Bunyan legends, will be
shown in Mims Auditorium on the
Howard Payne College campus at
8 p.m. Monday.
This lecture-movie program is
the fourth in this year's series of
Audubon Screen Tours brought to
Brownwood.
■Paul Bunyan country is really
the state of Minnesota—land of
rivers, lakes, forests, cool swamps,
and geological formations.
The program is being brough
here by Walter J. Breckenridge,
director of the Minnesota Museum
of Natural History. There is no
admission charge.
Football Giants Sign Two
NEW YORK, Feb. 11—UP—
Bobby Epps, a fullback from Pitts-
burgh University, and Russ Car-
roccio, a guard from Virginia Uni-
versity, have signed 1955 National
Football League contracts with the
Diseover the far greater dollar value you get in the new DuMont Super-
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SEE SO MUCH ,.. SO MUCH BETTER!
shows, and has become a favorite
guest star with the opera com-
panies in Philadelphia, San Fran-
cisco. and New Orleans.
The Brownwood audience call-
ed Mr. Guarrera back for four
encore numbers. He closed his
program with a favorite baritone
selection, "Old Man River."
In addition to his rich voice and
a thorough mastery of music, the
artist displayed a great deal of
dramatic versatility.
before the freezes.
Even if the cold does not dam-
age citrus trees, forecasters feared
it might harm tomatoes, corn, cab-
bage, lettuce and whatever cotton
is already out of the ground
Forecasters said it will continue electricity supply in September'
cold all through Friday and may ) 1882 when Edison opened a gener-
even be slightly colder Friday 1 — ----- ■ — - —
Laredo Man Admits
Guilt in Faking
Immigration Papers
LAREDO, Tex., Feb. 11—UP—A
prominent Laredo businessman
pleaded guilty to a charge of
working with the manager of the
Retail Merchants Association to
provide fake immigration docu-
ments to Mexicans.
The businessman, Armanlo Gu-
tierrez, wa^indicted by a federal
grand juryteThursday along with
Miss Amanda Krueger, who is
manager of the merchants associ-
ation, and Teodulo R. Santos, a
Mexican.
Miss Krueger, however, pleaded
innocent, and Federal Judge
James V. Allred set her trial for
Feb. 24. Santos has not been ar-
rested. Allred said he will sentence
Gutierrez later in this court term.
The indictments charged that
Gutierrez forged the names of
American employers and notaries
public to letters supposedly offer-
ing the Mexicans jobs. They also
charge that Miss Krueger wrote
false letters of credit on the mer-
chants association stationery in the
name of the supposed prospective
employers.
The indictments charge that Gu-
tierrez then sold the fake docu-
ments to Santos and two other
Mexicans, Lizardo Hernandez Gar-
cia and Antonio Vallejo Serna,
who were not indieted.
The three Mexicans, the indict-
ments charge, then sold the
forgeries to Mexicans wanting to
come to the United States.
Foreigners seeking admission to
the United States must prove they
will not become public charges if
they are allowed to enter. The in-
dictments charge that the Mexi-
cans who ultimately bought the
documents presented them to the
American consulate in Monterrey.
U.S. Attorney Brian Odem said
the indictments are on single
counts of conspiracy which carry
a maximum penalty of a $10,000
fine and or 10 years imprisonment.
Authorities became suspicious
when the faked affidavits and visas
were presented at the Laredo en-
try port. Albert E. Walker of the
U.S. Immigration Border Patrol at
Laredo investigated the case,
Odem said.
Presbyterian Church. His sermon
subject is "Perspective Brings
Joy.”
accomplished with fewer than 28 tempt to set °a, anti-American
bombs, he said, but “Soviet mili- demonstrations designed to embar-
tary planners probably would be rass Nixon. Some of the eight are
reluctant to abandon the tradition-1 suspected Communist agents, po-
al use of an explosive as a blast hce saW , ,,
Among those known to be held
Bomb—
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
burn resembled a man she saw
the night before the slaying.
Stokes said Thursday the grand
jury, if it indicted anyone, might
name more than one person.
Stokes Says “No”
Asked if that meant someone not
yet mentioned in the case might
be indicted, Stokes said flatly,
"no.”
The grand jury kept a continuous
parade of witnesses going Thurs-
day, with the appearance of
Weaver and Washburn a surprise
to newsmen.
Weaver was not subpenaed, but
appeared suddenly in the court-
house. It was learned later that
Stokes had telephoned him at the
Cactus Hotel.
Weaver went before the jury at
3:47 p.m. and came out at 5:15
p.m. When he came out, Washburn
was sitting in the anteroom, but
Weaver acted surprised when
newsmen asked if he saw his for-
mer son-in-law.
“Was he in there?” Weaver
asked. Then he took off his glasses
and added, “my eyesight's pretty
good.”
He refused to say more about
Washburn, but volunteered that
"the case looks much better.”
Mims Auditorium, attracted a good
turnout of Brownwood music
manufacturer of such wrappers in
Texas. It would have made it
mandatory to have straws individ-
ually wrapped. ,
The bus license fee reduction,
sponsored by Rep. Jack Bryan of
Buffalo, would cost the state about
$260,000 annually in revenue. The
bill, which drew Ore from some
members Wednesday, was ap-
proved 116-17 Thursday.
It revised fees downward from
67.5 cents per 100-pounds for buses
weighing 1,000 to 6,000 pounds, to
$2 per 100-pounds for weights at
31,000 pounds and over.
Also approved Thursday and sent
to the governor for hl* signature
was a measure validating bonds
issued for an international bridge
on the Rio Grande at Laredo, to
replace one swept away by floods
last summer.
Other bills approved Included
one for appointment of probation
and parole officers in Dallas and
Tarrant counties, one setting out
procedures for discharge of non-
resident patients and students In
the state hospital system, and an-
other prohibiting aw in m in g.
wading or boating in Rolov
Pass in Galveston county.
------------------C
Six Cases Filed on
Cheeky DWI Charges
Six cases have been filed in
Brown County court this week,
three on charges of swindling un-
der $50 and three on charges ot
driving while intoxicated.
Swindling charges have been fil-
ed against one local woman and
two local men. The met. were
charged Wednesday, and the wo-
man was charged Thursday.
All three cases of DWI were filed
Wednesday against local men.
A term of county court la due to
open Tuesday morning with Judge
William O. Breedlove presiding.
The king cobra is one of the dead-
liest of snakes. Its bite can be #-
tal within a few hours.
O’Neal, Reynaldo Trilla and Juan
Antonio Rodriguez, also Puerto
Ricans.
Arrests were made following a
raid on the home of Mrs. Albizu
Campos, who lives in exile in Mex-
ican City.
The newspaper Ultimas Noticias
said • a total of 14 persons were
jailed, ineluding nine Puerto
Ricans, three Cubans, one Peruvi-
an and a Venezuelan, but the
newspaper identified none of them.
5 Ties
bay sand"ve" aMentown,SLaDp yutimaseNgtietas aso xaportedeths
s“These drops would take advan- pistols" and large quantities of
tage of prevailing winds to spread Communist propaganda.
an “unseen mist of radio-activity’ ---------------
.....: , :
- ' -cta
9
--T 1A83
Possible H-Bomb OK MUSIC ASSOCIATION CONCLUDES
Effects Told by
r | e . •• • one of America’s most popular
Famar \rientie ! baritones now traveling the Civie
Q CU JUUl b Music Association circuit, gave a
---1*1- brilliant and amusing performance
CHICAGO, Feb. 11—UP—A sin- here Thursday night
The program, presented In
agent."
Therefore, he said, they prob-
ably would drop bombs on Wash-
were Juan Juarbe y Juarbe,
identified as a top lieutenant of
Puerto Rican Nationalist leader
Pedro Albizu eCampos; Luis
ington, Baltimore, Philadelphia,
New York, Boston, Chicago, Mil-
waukee. St. Louis, Indianapolis,
Louisville, Cincinnati, Columbus,
Pittsburgh, Detroit, Cleveland,
Akron, Buffalo and Syracuse.
To Maximize Fall-Out
“Then to maximize fall-out and
strike at a myriad of smaller tar-
gets. bombs would be dropped. . .
west of Chicago, over South Bend,
over Grand Rapids, over -Ft.
Wayne, near Elmira, west of
Washington, west of New York,
Longview and Lufkin, .01 inch of:
snow at Amarillo and a trace of
snow at Dalhart.
_________________ The 1949 and 1951 freezes in the
is only one child, a girl, who is Valley killed 8 million citrus trees
four days old, not two months, and and the industry is still producing
‘ less than half as many oranges
and grapefruit a year as it did
television
Beaumont, a “few sprinkles” at
".A:
over an L-shaped pattern bracket-
ing much of Indiana, Ohio, Michi-
gan, New York and Pennsylvania.
Lapp warned that the entire
concept of civil defense must be
revised.
For example. he saidaelaborate
fire-fighting defenses are useless
since no one could enter into an
H-bombed area safely for two
days.
"Confronted with the over
whelming magnitude of the fall-out
hazard, the Federal Civil Defense
Administration must feel that it
has been admitted to . the ante-
room to heR,” Lapp said.
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AUSTIN, Feb U—UP—Texa*
teteteteor Dion of StudeboherR
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 103, Ed. 1 Friday, February 11, 1955, newspaper, February 11, 1955; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1492123/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.