Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 93, No. 227, Ed. 1 Monday, November 17, 1958 Page: 6 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
MONDAY, NOV. 17,1958
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
PAGE 6
Bn
For WantAdsallGR 63643
VOL.
EMPLOY
MORE B
EARLIE
LOCKET
fUciA
ANOV
GRIFHTH-FARR
GUOD LOOKING!
$
MARKETS
d
this aft-
in the upper Panhandl
ernoon. The snow was plowing at
nd around
last report at Dalhart
Eastland
-
SCHOOLS-
zation.
(Continued from Page 1)
CLOSING COTTON
DRAMATIC/
EXIT LI.
HOUSTON LIVESTOCK
1
0552
39c 1
Mrs. Bertha Prather
I conclude by saying that
1
J
front.
Lettuce 2 - 25c
•aw}M*“ 4 Gm
Other Carole King etylee from 81 1.93
I
9
Szttion
Science Shrinks Piles
New Way Without Surgery
Stops Itch—Relieves Pain
Spots closed steady at 34.75 un-
changed.
Ever;
near i
31.72 31.68
31.83 31.81
If you don’t see what you want
advertise for it. For better results
36.05
36.46
36.17
34.24
31.88
36.10
36.58
36.27
34.37
31.91
(Coat hietorieh and cute published here are from the
filea of Chiropractic officee throughout the United Staiet.
They are related here to show the extent of Chiropractic.
Quantities limited at
this special sale price
COFFEE, 2 lb. can__$1.57
Day Low Price
Memt
gian Au
tributed
Shop i
Hospita
fore Sai
will be
may be
Station.
5
y
Dec.
Mar.
May
July
Oct.
Dec.
Mar.
BUTTERFAT PER POUND
Sour Cream, 44c
Sweer Cream, 49c
-V
-P
N
220210
Leon,
rare
up a
Addit
by Wai
Tuesday
ed into
erking,
•ear Ci
a.m„ t
killed. I
pointed
at 6:40
wiki tui
local h
son Cit;
deer S
Mondas
fred W
day. Ot
include)
whp sh
Apfelba
and Wi
each.
Dec.
Mar.
May
July
Oct.
Dec.
Mar.
BRENHAM COTTON
Strict Middling. 34.50
Low Middling, 26.00
Middling, 34.00
Strict Low Middling, 30.00
schools’ operations are also need-
ed.
The’board members have dis-
Brenh
liest co
States
Hickere
Texas
service
tary ci
John E
ed cou
Hunt c
played
by Mr
told of
said th
terraci
of the <
mission
becausi
county
er the
was he
tioners
farms
(C
RANDOLPH
BUCHMAN
RIDES ALOME
wtoCOLOR
mi am won >■■■«■
Shows 7 & 9 p. m.
HOUSTON (UPI) — (USDA) — Deerfield, but the town’s spanking
Livestock: new fire truck remained in the
W
LOVABUE
UAUGHMWNKGBR
0F7OHMEKR
SERGEANTS’
mans
tonight would plummet as low as
18 degrees there and below freez-
GRADE A MILK
6 62 per cwt. of 4%
7c per point over 4%
W. F. Leonard. Jr., of Dalias, safety
expert with the Southland Corpora-
tion, and Oak Farm Daries points to
one of the signs used in his 30-minute
ly 50 lower; feeder lambs 50-1.00
lower good choice 85-103 lbs., wool-
ed and fall shorn slaughter lambs
20 to mostly 21; medium - good
60-92 lbs., feeder lambs 17-20.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
thanks to our many freinds and
relatives for thei thoughtfulness
and expressions of sympathy be-
fore and after the death of our
beloved mother and grandmoth-
er, Mrs. Emil Muehbrad. •
Especially do we wish to thank
Rev. Theo. Sager for his comfort-
ing words and service, the choir,
the organist, Dr. Southern, Dr.
Steinbach, the nurses at Milroy
Hospital, Mrs. Alwine Wittner, Mrs.
Albert Kroll, Foehner’s Funeral
Home for their services and to
everyone who "sent food, flowers
and other messages of sympathy.
These kind deeds shall "always be
treasured in our memories.
May God bless you.
Her Children and
Grandchildren
ADMIRATION
COFFEE
MARYLAND CLUB
COFFEE
MARYLAND CLUB
Every
CHICAGO PRODUCE
CHICAGO (UPI)—Produce:
Live poultry no tone; 130,000
lbs.
No USDA price changes.
Cheese single daisies and long-
horns 38%-39%; processed loaf 36-
37; Swiss Grade A 47-49; B 45-47;
C 42-44.
Butter steady, 718,000 lbs.; 93
score 58%; 92 score 58; 90 score
57%; 80 score 57.
Eggs tops steady, balance un-
changed; 10,200 cases; white and
mixed large extras 41; mediums
23; standards 37.
lit
SPJ
Ann Arbor, Mich., on May 1, 1888.
and educated at Notre Dame Uni-
versity in South Bend, Ind., Cath-
olic University, Washington, D.C.,
a n d the University of Pennsylva-
nia in Philadelphia.
COLDFRONT-
(Continued from Page 1)
POULTRY
Grade A, 38c
Grade B, 31c
Grade C Eggs, 20c
Pullet Eggs, 21c
Check Eggs, 13c
Geese, 12c
Medium Hens, 10c
Heavy Hens, 12c
Fryers, 20c
Old Roosters, 8c
Guineas, 50c
Ducks, 50c
Turkey Hens, 24c
Turkey Toms, 20c
Pecans, 25c
DR. NORMAN
GABRIEL
505 E. MAIN STREET
Brenham, Texas
For appointments Ph. GR 6-4590
Creating fashion
applause at every turn
... a freedom-loving
panel that swings
forth from the
neckline of its own )
accord. Gold A
printed silk 9
organza over
rayon taffeta presents
a belted-to-fit
WINDSTORMS-
(Continued from Page 1)
, near Eastland, creating a
inland waterspout. It picked
houseboat and turned it over.
Texas.
Highways around Dalhart and
Dumas already were slick with a
coating of ice under the snow and
U.S. Highway 66 was reported
snow - covered all the way from
the Panhandle to California as the
storm moved eastward.
A tornado funnel was sighted in
the Wichita Falls area, but wit-
nesses did not see it touch the
ground.
POPE JOHN-
(Continued from Page 1)
front swept across the state be-
hind the line of thunderstorms and
already an inch of snow covered
the ground at daybreak in the
Panhandle, where up to four
inches was predicted by night-
fall.
The bitter cold front already had
tumbled temperatures to the mid-
208 in the upper Panhandle at Dal-
hart and forecasters said readings
I S
Aw
Pari
day. .
tonigh
Readi
today:
51, Ri
BHS Students Hear Safety Talk
Leonard, G. L. Keahey, principal of
Brenham High School and Arthur
Sternberg, chief of the Brenham Police
Department. Leonard said the two
greatest weapons for combatting traf-
fic accidents are courtesy and good
SPECTATOR-
(Continued from Page 1)
BORDEN’S
HOMOGENIZED MILK
GOOD HEARING!
Others have tried — now
Sonotone has hidden its
latest transistor hearing aid
in light, graceful eyeglasses.
Worn as one unit — nothing
else to wear. Choice of smart
styles for both men and
women. Look your best
while hearing your best.
COME IN, PHONE OR WRITE
FREE DEMONSTRATION
SONOTONE
At The
ST. ANTHONY HOTEL
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19
1 to 5 p. m._______
safety talk before about 500 students
in a Friday morning assembly at Bren-
ham High School. Looking on are, left
to right, Stanley Stumhoffer, Walter
Lueck, Joy Ann Korth and Mary
Kathryn Schulte, all students at BHS;
Every Day Low Price
CHEER - 59’
ConeaKo
JUNIOR •
ATTHTATTG 26.50-27.25; good stocker steer
AI I IIDH.N I - calves 29-32.50; medium 24-28.
• $ •--V- • Hogs 600. Butchers fully steady
(Continued from Page 1) with last Thursday; sows steady
_ to 25 higher; U.S. 1-3 grade 195-
the journalism department of A&M 255 lbs., barrows and gilts 19-19.25;
College. The conference will con- sows mostly 2-3 grade 275-550 lbs.,
tinue through Tuesday, sessions 17-17.75; a few 18.
tinue through Tuesday, sessions Sheep 1,300. Receipts mostly
being held in the A&M Memorialslaughter lambs and feeders; |
Student Center. | trade slow; slaughter lambs moat-
in famous
Mowm ROGERS ★
SILVERPLATE
A Product of The International Silver Company
Hart’s a wonderful opportunity you
can’t afford to miss... beautiful 12 % "
serving tray with classic border,
delicate piercing and chased center.
winds, which toppled some trees.
They blew a barn down.
The wind blew down trees in
Dallas. The wind was down to a
velocity of 45 miles an hour when
it hit Waco in Central Texas and
GIRI
Mr. i
dorf of
of a gii
pital T
weigher
been ni
LEADERS-
(Continued from Page 1)
9—13
$24-95
Four
F
r, .
HAVI
mygunn
ed elgh
night i
apparen
slaying
ago, it
Gunm
and a
murder
ranks c
the 151
Mariam
seven 1
The
wounde
station,
men fl
Altho
positive
there i
els ave
gent le
mejeira
suburbi
urday.
Tender/
VEAL CHOPS u,. 69c
PLACE YOUR ORDERS WITH US FOR DRESS-
ED TURKEYS.
/ . .
Nonfi
Brenhan
slight gi
Thomas
ager, T
mission,
places I
above t
2,840. T
seeking
ties of
tinued t
265 app
One mo
last yc
applicar
other de
claiman
surance
142 actin
pared w
63 one
month 1
placed 1
tional 44
ced wit
Keeping It Legal ’
SOUTH DEERFIELD, Mass.
(UPI) — The alarm rang in South
least two. funnels were reported
sighted, although there was some
doubt as to whether the funnels
or straight, violent winds caused
the damage. -
The wind turned over trailers on
the Iowa Park highway, the Sey-
mour highway and in a trailer
park near Sheppard Air Force
Base, injuring at least eight per-
sons, none seriously.
Mrs. Lahoma Shores, 31, and
her four-year-old son Tommy,
were hurt when the wind over-
turned their trailer on the Sey-
mour highway. A family of five
Was injured at San Angelo when
the wind turned over a trailer in
the darkness.
Heavy damage was reported in
the northwestern part of Burkbur-
nett, in the Wichita Falls area
The wall of an automobile retail-
er’s building was reported down,
the roof was blown from a lumber
company’s building and roofs were
twisted from homes.
An 84-mile-an-hour wind blew
over a C-123 transport and a C-47
transport at Perrin Air Force
Base, near Sherman. It blew two
F-86 jets on their sides.
A shop building at Perrin AFB
lost its roof. A maintenance shack
buckled under the impact of the
wind. Flying glass injured an air-
man slightly.
Twister at Cleburne
Equipment on the Willis Bridge
construction job at Lake Texoma
suffered heavily. The wind blew
a crane into the lake.
At McKinney, in North Central
STARLITE
MONDAY & TUESDAY
Brenham’s First Showing
Texas, the wind unroofed a ware-
house at the Texas Textile Mills
and did considerable damage in
other sections of towns. The South
Side Assembly of God Church lost
its front. McKinney’s damage was
estimated at about $25,000.
Mrs H. H. Herndon, a cashier,
was injured when the wind heav-
ily damaged an office building on
U.S. 75, north of McKinney.
Cleburne reported a twister that
danced through its southern out-
skirts and blew in a 30-by-60-foot
tile building belonging to the Cle
tex Trucking company. A wall
collapsed on one truck, but five
men in the building took refuge
under another truck and escaped
injury.
Roundhouse Damaged
At Gainesville. John Howell. 62,
a dairy farmer, was seriously in-
jured when the wind blew the clay
tile wall of his dairy barn down
upon him.
The wind blew down two large
doors and a section of the wall
of the Santa Fe roundhouse at
Gainesville.
Mrs. H. K. Gore, the police dis-
patcher, said a "small twister"
hit Olney, damaging the high
school and an adjacent grade
school so badly that classes could
not be held in them today.
W. A. Cox, the Olney superin-
tendent of utilities, first sighted
the twister and turned on the town
siren. The wind blew the roofs
from four or five other buildings
in Olney. One was an apartment
house.
Vicious winds heavily damaged
the Texas - Oklahoma fair grounds
at Iowa Park, seven miles west
of Wichita Falls.
The wind ripped a garage away
from a house, blew the roof from
another house and damaged the
fronts of several stores in Iowa
Park.
A twister spun across Lake
practically all sections of Wash-
ng ton County.
The measurements reported
. amounted to as much as 3.1 inches
up to Monday morning.
Brenham’s rainfall thus far this
month totals 3.11 inches through
Monday at 7 a.m., just .66 of an
inch shy of the normal 3.77 inches
for the entire month.
I Rural rainfall reports for the past
I three days included: Raymond En-
I geling. Pleasant Hill. 2.9; Albert
Hafer, 2.25; Wilfred Nordt, Salem,
I 1.5; F. C. Sommer, Bluff, 1.2; F.
I W. Nordt, Wonder Hill, one inch;
Cattle 500. Slaughter cows mod- firehouse and three barns were de-
erately active, fully steady to stroyed. The registration* plates for —------ : — — -
strong; bulls fairly active, steady; the new truck had not arrived yet, call the Banner-Press.
A
\
astonishing statements like “Piles
have ceased to be a problemt"
The secret la a new healing sub-
stance (Bio-Dyne*)— discovery of
a world-famous research institute.
This substance is now available
in suppository or ointment fam
under the name Preparation H.*
At your druggist. Money back
guarantee.
"Reg. U.S. Pat o.
driver attitudes. The subject of his
talk was “To Get There Safely."
(Winkelmann Studio Photo).
itself reported high
■M» PHONE Mil •
TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY
TODAY--
Marion Atomanczyk, Ben Bartay,
W. J. Ehlert and Oscar Schubert.
Local participating scout spon-
sors are St. Mary’s Catholic
Church, Knights of Columbus. St.
Peter’s Episcopal Church, Bren-
ham Presbyterian Church, Bro-
therhood of St. Paul’s Lutheran
Church, Brenham Lions Club,
Brenham Elks Club, and citizens
of Burton.
The Judges Floyd Davidson ,
and W. A. Morrison majority on
the Texas Court of Criminal Ap-
peals, has become notorious for
its nonsensical technical deci-
sions voiding convictions of
criminals. Now they have cone
it again. They hav ■ th. own ou
the conviction of a b -nlar who
broke through the r. A and rob-
bed a store on the grounds that
the state did not show the burg-
lar did not have permission to
rob the store. How silly can
you get!
ern at a nominal price. The
Foundation provided the land for
the Rogers Bedding Mfg. Compa-
ny, and when that plant was
sold to the Cotton Processing Co.
of Texas, the Foundation put up
$2,000 to clinch the deal and
bring this company to Brenham.
Currently, the Foundation is
erecting a fireproof building to
be sold at cost to the Scaly Mat-
tress Co. upon its completion. In
this case, the entire cost of the
building was borrowed. The
Foundation still owns approxi-
mately 31 acres in its industrial
area in the southwest part of the
city. Very little of its funds has
been used for expenses. No sal-
aries are paid, as the Chamber
of Commerce manager acts as
manager of the Foundation. Cur-
rently, a campaign is on to sell
additional memberships to retire
all remaining debt of the organi-
El Paso, where the temperature
dropped to 25 degrees.
The Texas Department of Pub-
lic Safety reported U.S. Highway
80 icing between El Paso and Sier-
ra Blanca and becoming increas-
ingly dangerous. Snow fell within
a 30-mile radius from El Paso
east of Sierra Blanca.
Small craft warnings went up
from Brownsville, on the lower
Texas coast, for winds up to 35
miles an hour.
The tornadoes and windstorm
struck during a violent thunder-
storm and tornado alert for parts
of West and North Central Texas.
Earlier reports of a tornado at
Abilene were later discounted by
the U.S. Weather Bureau, but
damage there was extensive, if
not heavy, from the short - lived
storm.
A family of five suffered minor
injuries when their trailer home
was blown over while they slept
at San Angelo and “several” per-
sons were reported injured in
similar circumstances at Wichita
Falls.
Meanwhile, a Canadian cold
H. F. Muchow tells us his wife
is progressing satisfactorily at
M. D. Anderson hospital in Hous-
ton where she is undergoing
treatment. He said six of his
friends volunteered to donate
blood with which to give her
transfusions, and he expressed
his appreciation for their unsoli-
cited kindness. He said that be-
cause he will have to be rat her
bedside today and tomorrow, he
would be unable to make the col-
lection of garbage as usual on
Tuesday, but that the collections
will be made the same as was
done last week, one day late.
36.10
rS 36.50
36.30
34.36
31.92
“DIDN’T KNOW HOW IT FELT
WITHOUT HEADACHE
I was plagued with a seemingly endless nightmare of
headaches, with the resultant nervousness and sleepless ,
nights. I was becoming more and more discouraged with
each passing day.
Double Trift Bucks at--
LACINA’S
ON THUESDAY WITH $2.50 PURCHASE or Over
Specials Mon. Tus. Wed. /
New York, N.Y. (SpeelaD - For the
first time science has found a new
healing substance with the aston-
ishing ability to shrink hemor-
rhoids, stop itching, and relieve
pain — without surgery.
In case after case, while gently /
relieving psin, actual-reduction7
(shrinkage) took place. /
Most amazing of all—results were
so thorough that sufferers made
--------- . ... । cussed removing the top story of
NEW YORK (UPI)— Cotton the abandoned Alamo school on
closed steady. Germania street and making the
High.. Low. Cose first story into an administration
36 09 buj|diBg. They have also thought of
36.56 remodeling the. basement of the
36.25 Brenham High School building for
34 34 use as storage space.
31.88 it was reported that the base-
31-70 ment of Stephen F. Austin High
______ 31.81 School in Bryan had been remod-
Spots closed nominal at 36.30 un- eled into usable space with suc-
changed. cess. The same might work here.
----„--------- NEW ORLEANS (UPI)—Cotton “Up to now, only possibilities
ing over a wide expanse of West closed steady. have been discussed. But, some-
High Low Close thing has to be done soon. Perhaps
36.08 36.11 the board will be able to work'out
dan 79c
2 GA-
and Eckert's Store. Greenvine,
31.
The widely scattered showers
are expected to continue in the
Brenham area at least through
Monday.
Gug 77c
36.50 36.56 some sort of bond issue and ask
36:17 36.29 the people to pass it.
34.30 34.35 - “Whatever steps we take to
31.90 31.87 solve our problems, those steps
31.67 I will have to be taken very soon,”
31.81 the official reported.
there were no immediate reports
of damage. Central Texas expect-
ed temperatures as low as 38 de-
grees tonight
'A high wind, perhaps a tornado,
tore the roof and a side of the
hangar at the Snyder, Tex., air-
port, damaging 10 private planes.
Record clerk Allen M. Owens of
the police department said they
were damaged “rather extensive-
ly.”
Tornadoes hit in Oklahoma six
miles west of Lawton and three
miles southeast of Walters, in the
same sector. Tornadic winds hit
Blackwell, Okla., scene of one of
the state's most disastrous torna-
does, in 1955, a n d a windstorm
•it Duncan.
A tornado destroyed two
churches in the Seminole county,
Okla., community of Bowlegs and
there were a few injuries. A tor-
nado blew over the Baptist par-
sonage, two garages and two
homes and damaged the Baptist
church in Prairie Hill community
of Jackson county, Okla.
Radio station KWFT at Wichita
Falls lost three of its towers, but
managed to resume broadcasting.
Highways around Dalhart and
Dumas were slick with a coating
of ice under snow and U.S. High-
way 66 was reported snow-covered
from the Panhandle to California.
Temperatures were in the mid-
20s in Dalhart and the weather
bureau said the mercury may
sink to 10 degrees over snow
covered sections of the Panhandle
and Upper South Plains tonight.
The coldest weather of the
season was predicted for the en-
tire state 30-40 degrees in North
Central Texas; in the 30s for South
Central Texas and in the 30s in
East Texas.
The snow was expected to end
stocker cows and bulls fairly ac-
tive fully steady. Utility cows
19.50-21.50; canner and cutter
15.50-18; utility bulls 21.50-23.50,
canner and cutter 17-21.50; com-
mon and medium stock cows 18-21;
few medium stock bulls 19-21.
Calves 1500. Limited supply
slaughter calves fairly active, ful-
ly steady to strong; stockers com-
prised 75 per cent of run and sold
steady to weak. Few lots good
slaughter calves 27-27.25; standard
24.50-26.50; few lots good heifer
• The painful time began m
ten years ago, and since I
that time I had not known I
what it felt like to be with- ■
out a headache. The cycle ft
of he adaches continued, ■
and no amount of doctor- ■
ing helped. 3
A good friend of mine ■
knew how I was suffering ■
and advised me to see a I
Chiropractor. After X-rays g
and my first adjustment I I
felt a great deal of relief, I
I felt free of pain in a few ■
weeks. At first I was ■
checked three times a week, I
and I continue to bemcheck- ■
ed twice a month. Hl
ning for the dinner were complet- stock steers 29-30, with heifer ends
ed by Vice-District Chairman at 26-27; mived lots medium cross-
Charles W. Noble. breeds 24-27; common and me-
Promotion for the dinner was dium mixed breeds 21-25.
handled by Dr. Charles E. South- Hogs 30. Barrows and gilts 25
ern. Rex A. Clinton, Jr., Marvin cents lower, sows steady. Top
Harris, Rev. Sid B. Stevenson, Dn price was 18 for U.S. 2 and 3
W. F. Hasskarl, Jr., and Dr. Joel grade 190-240 lb. barrows and
H. Johnson. gilts; sows 300 lbs. and down 13.25-
Committeemen and parent tick- 16.25.
ets are being handled locally by -----*
Henry Boehm, Henry Appel, Elton FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
Anderson, Adoue Foehner, Roy FORT WORTH (UPI) - (USDA)
Stolz, Dr. H. L. Steinbach. Rev. — Livestock:
NOTICE
is hereby given that applica-
tion was made on the 7th
day of November, 1958, by
the Western Union Telegraph
Company to the Federal Com-
munications Commission to
close the telegraph office lo-
cated at 102 South Park
Street, Brenham, Texas and ,
to provide telegraph service it i
the Hotel St. Anthony which i
hereafter will be the office of :
the Telegraph Company.
If the application is granted,
substituted service will be
available from 8:10 A. M.-5:30 1
P. M. Monday through Sat-
urday and 8:30 AM-10:30 AM
on Sunday through the Hotel
St. Anthony, Comer Market ;
and Main Streets, Brenham,
Texas.
Any member of the public de- '
siring to protest or support the i
closing of this office may com- !
municate in writing with the ; *
Federal Communications Com-
mission Washington 25, D. C.
on or before December 6, 1958.
I am proud to recommend Chiropractic and I tell every-
one about the advantages of Chiropractic.
(Sworn To) . Signed: Mrs. Bertha Prather.
Cattle 2.300, calves 700. Slaugh-
ter steers and heifers steady; oth-
er classes active; cows strong;
some sales 50 higher than Thurs-
day; bulls unchanged; slaughter
calves strong to 50 higher than
Thursday; bulls unchanged;
slaughter calves strong to 50 high-
er than Thursday; standard
slaughter steers 23-24.50; utility ■
commercial bulls 2-23; good
slaughter calves 25-26.50; choice
H. W. Arp, JEWELER
Lb. 75c
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Whitehead, Tom S., Jr. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 93, No. 227, Ed. 1 Monday, November 17, 1958, newspaper, November 17, 1958; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1556864/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.