Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 95, No. 16, Ed. 1 Monday, January 25, 1960 Page: 4 of 6
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BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
PAGE 4
AUSTIN (UFO—An application
SCHWABISEH HALL, Germany
.MB Imelda Wesson of Houston,
12c
lington couple and a Fort Worth all, authorities disclosed Sunday
Brazoria county
tain; Mesdames Leon Thiel. William
Mit- Constellatior g
r.egene
Mutscher,
chamore,Herbert
John and b&fst ahfe on Ihe Montego
Grabow, A. F. Wiede, M. C. Hahn,
Robt. Rosenbaum, Thomas Swy-
-gmem
- T
Cotton
and his 4-year-old daughter.
Cruz said the victims had been
dead since Thursday.
Hospital News
Spots closed nominal’ at 33.05,
Robert Appel Jr., A. V. Jaeger,
unchanged.
Bill Crane, Abie Lesser, - Jr.
1
MEMPHIS (UPI)—T. J. White
: NEW FORK (UPD) —Asys
swarmed around the insuragent
field Woods, Carl Schlottmann,
Newton Boeker,
Oct.
closed steady at 31.50.
unchanged
around steady; high standard and
stood outside the barriers. Army
one with water
school system so that preventive
Federal Ju d g e Marion Boyd steps against .juvenile crime can
to return the $1,399, but said it
could keep the $90.
GF
c
I
Mrs. Frank Kasprowicz, Cap- Lee Scott.
A&M College at the January 23
WITH THE BRIGHT RRED
MUFFLER
C
Association
$
at Houston.
LACINA'S
)
GRADE A MED. WHITE
0
EGGS
9
ADMITTED ASSETS
Cash in Banks
$ 469,740.17
1
$2,023,221.60 —
• and Autos
$ 27,371.38
* $4,275,774.40
Total Assets
25
300
3
AND
cons
threw the gauntlet in the face of
Police found a note in his coat
up
1
the settlers in Algeria and told which mentioned Bridey Murphy
Insurance in Force •
(We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantity)
■1
1
V,
t
\
\
44
I
■
3^77*7
Statement of Condition and Operation for the
, 12 Months Period, Jan. 1,1959 to Jan. 1,1960
VA MEETING-
(Continued from Page 1)
IIABILXTIES AND NET WORTH
Claims Pending and Unpaid 19,545.63
(Continued from page 1)
lotments, we urge cotton farmers
everywhere to plan their full al-
lotments, or release to their coun-
Two Brenhamites
Are A&M Grads
COLLEGE STATION (Spl)—Two
students from Brenham received
Silver Hill, Leila Cain Captain.
Post Oak Addition, Ozell Sharp,
Captain; Z. Henderson, Annie
Family Of Five Is
Found Dead In Bed
Grade A Urge. 31C
Grade B, 34c .
Pullet Eggs, 15c
38,210,04
87.964.67
fenberger. Gene Iange, and Cecil
Burch. • ...
quents and 45.9 per cent correct
in tagging potential trouble - mak-
ers, officials said.
Mayor Robert F. Wagner indi-
cated the system would be adopt-
'Hahn, Jr., Willie Loesch, A. E.
Stinnett and Misses Dot L i n dsey,
and Sandra Huenerberg.
aboard managed to claw their
way to safety.
graduation exercises.
They are Edward Al Krueger, in-
dustrial engineering; and Richard
John O’Malley, mechanical engi-
neering.
Krueger, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin L. Krueger, was commis-
sioned a second lieutenant in the
United States Army and will enter
the .service on April 18.
Meanwhile, he is employed as a
technical supervisor for the South-
Strict Middling, 32.00
Low Middling, 25.50
Middling. 31.00
Strick Low Middling. 28.25
High Low Close
33.04 32.99 33.04
33.15 33.12 33.14
32.78 32.00 32,76
31.13 31403 31.10
31.00 31.31 3L07
31.54 31.45 31.47
31.07 31.17 31.63
Sunny Heights, Mrs. J. M. Webb,
Captain; F. M. Wells, Marie E.
Harris.
"Watrous ville, A. M. Henderson,
Local Chapters
NON ADMITTED ASSETS
Office Furniture, Fixtures
Current Accounts Payable
Income Tax Due
Net Worth
MON
C
BUTTERFAT FER POUND
Sweet cream, 50c
1 A
CHICAGO PRODUCE
CHICAGO (UPI)— Produce:
High Low Close
33.11 a.1F 33.13 "
32.73 32.73 32.75
31.00 31.08 31.09
31.10 31.10 31.05
31.56 31.56 31.50
31.68
Regina Leeonavicius, 20, and her brother. Thomas,
17, smile in the American Consulate, Moscow, Russia.
They were granted visas to join their parents—whom
they have not seen since World War II—in Chicago
them to yield to Paris policy or
to forced into doing so.
Check Ei
Geese, 1
Hens, to
$4,275,77440
. 234
36,400
TEXAS
CABBAGE
and a dream of death in a car
wreck.
NEW YORK (UPD—
closed steady.
Total Liabilities and
Net Worth
TENDER VEAL ROUND
STEAK
into trouble, They were 94.6 per
cent right in predicting non-delin-
Mar.
May
Spots
HOUSTON LIVESTOCK
5 f247eeee 39T HS-LS BJ 1127a
HOUSTON (UPD—Livestock:
US. & Other Bonds (Cost) 3,602,488.14
(Market Value)
----t$3,446,191.58)---------------------
GRADE AMU
6.37 per cwt 4%
7c per point over 4%
America *B
6 v'
7 V,
GIANT SIZE
SUPERSUDS 59c
| ficer, Livingston G. Bassett, super-
visory adjudicator, and Miles Was-
son, contact officer, all of Houston
Regional Office.
। The Veterans Affairs Commis-
sion of Texas will be represented
' in the discussions by J. H. Mitchell,
regional supervisor and Paul S.
Hale, service officer. Department
of Texas, American Legion by .Wil-
son C. Turner, service officer and
Department of Texas, VFW by Rob-
ert O, Pugh, service officer, all on
duty at Houston VA Regional Of-
fice.
Mar. e w
May •
Jul.
Woman Uninjured
In Crash Is Killed
When Hit By Car
Mar.
May
Jul.
Oct.
Dec.
Mar.
May
7
$
ham, medical.
Mrs. Finney Clay, Jr.,Brenham,
surgical.
Mrs. Sophia Mynar, Fayetteville,
medical.
. Bill Addison, Caldwell, medical.
Virgil Keneaster, Chappell Hill,
medical.
Olvin Van Ness, Brenham, med-
ical.
Mrs. Max Neinast, Burton, sur-
O’Malley, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. O’Malley of Route 3,
Brenham has accepted a position
with the Lone Star Gas Co. at Wa-
co.
FULL SIZE OR THREEQUARTER SIZE IRON OR
WOOD BEDS FROM $5 UP.
Rockers—-Platform Rockers—Recliners—Studio Couches
-‘Sofa Beds. MUST MAKE ROOM NOW!
USE YOUR CREDIT AT—
hadn’t shown up for work. They
apparently had been asphyxiated.
The victims were Eduardo Ve-
lasquez. 22-year-old deliveryman;
u> 89c
5‘
Equpment Purchases 18,221.02
50,000.00 Cash on Hand Jan. 1, 1960 469,740.17
to “return to national order." J
Information Minister Roger !
Frey refused to answer any ques:
lions about the communique. The
key part of it said:---------------'
"The President of the republic
and the government are deter- ]
mined to maintain the Algerian
policy 'that they have adopted,
and to assure the return as quick-
ly as possible of public order.” (
Will Follow Policy ,
The communique did not spe-
cifically say so, but it meant that
De Gaulle and Premier Michel
LARGE SIZE
SUPERSUDS
COMPLETE
SUPER-MARKET
HOME CENTER
SNACK BAR
Texas today was on file with Sec-
retary of State Zollie Steakley.
Steakley said he would rule on
the application, filed by an Ar-
many.
The exercise was designed to de- •
termine the effectiveness of partic- •
ipating units in exchanging ideas
and problem solutions under realis-
tic combat conditions.
The 24-year-old soldier, a mem-
ber of the artillery's Headquarter
Battery in Schwabisch. Hall, enter-
ed the Army in August 1964 and
arrived overseas last February on
this tour of duty.
Ask Charter For
Nudism Group
Certificate of Deposit
Accrued Interest on
Securities
Home Office Land & Bldg.
Longhorns 414-42; processed loaf (AHTNC) — Army Sgt. William A.
38-39; Swiss Grade A 49-50, Grade Januszewski, son of Joe Janusze- •
B 47-48, Grade C 45-46. -L — e ce him
Hogs 600; barrows and gilts
strong to 25 higher; sows steady; —
No. 1-3 grade 190-250 lb. butchers
12.75-13.50; No. 2-3 grade 270-450
wski, 806 S. Park St., Brenham,
participated with the 36th Artillery
in a field training exercise in Ger-
tern to spot potential juvenile de-
linquents when they are less than
six years old was pronounced
highly effective by city officials.
They said the City Youth Board
SPEARS-
(Continued from page 1)
f MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT ‘ ,
A ge 10 oz jar S1 49
0 Coffee 6
UNCLE WILLIAMS
FRESH GROUND A
Hamburger MEAT 39c
Man Reported As
Crash Victim Not
On Big Airliner
IDAHO RUSSET, mesh bag
L5c POTATOES KU 59c
Sour Cream, 45c
22-"
Doz. 39c
1-Sn
. 11
i Sw
t-Or
eh
co
then asked federal court to order
his money returned.
White argued that it was an
emergency and he used the pas-
ture in question because it was
Then state " soil bank officials quent but 37 were likely to get
levied a $1,366 civil penalty. White
rebelled, He paid under protest.
%. No other USDA price quota-
tions today.
Cheese: Single daisies 41-42;
low good mixed slaughter year- medical,
lings 23-24; slaughter calves fully ■
steady; high standard and good For Want Ads Call GR 6-3643
24-25. --------------------------------------
$299,170,634.00
, ! । in..........Ui
tain; Mesdames Charlie Schroe-
der, R. H. Loesch, Elton Galle,
Lonnie Tiemann, Raymond Glenz;
DOUBLE Thrift Bucks
On Tuesday With $2.50 Purchase Or Over at
Help! Help! Help!
Gigantic USED
Dinette SALE
e 2
city to reinforce the garrisons al-
ready there. Major intersections
were under heavy guard and rolls Thursday ordered the government
Fryers, 20c
" Old Roosters, 5c
Guiaaas, Me
Ducks, 13c
Turkey Haas, 34c
Turkey Toms, 22c
the release - redistribution of .acre-
age allotments mean in dollars, it .
is pointed out that, in 1959, approx-
imately 4,600 released acres were
redistributed in one county and of
these, approximately 3,900 acres
were actually planted. These13,900
acres produced—in 'round figures-
about 3,000 bales of cotton, which
mean $450,000 in added economy to
the county as a whole. New cotton
legislation makes it mandatory that ■
a farmer use at least 75 per cent
of his allotment this year in order
to-preserve his base. However, in-
asmuchas the revamped cotton
law embodies. so many factors and
also, the fact that each individual
farmer’s case is separate and apart
from every other one, .farmers are
urgently requested to go to their
ASC office for a full review of .
their acreage structure.
Bay Airport runway Thursday
__________... ______ ___ morning when its landing gear .
gert, E. P. LaFleur, Franklin Ef- buckled. Nine of the 46 persons
( ■'
veston and advanced to state com-
credit card, but the car rental
firm in El Paso reported it stolen
Washington County Service Offi-
rer Adolph Wiede will attend to-
gether with county service officers
from adjoining counties.
This is the second of seven such
meetings planned in the 30-county
Houston VA Region. Meetings are
scheduled in February at Lufkin.
El Campo, Beaumont, Orange,
Huntsville and in Houston. 1
car driven
lDeputy_Sher
. mam.______
up the issue,"
The Avianca
Wellman. Fred Winkelman,
.. Henry C. Wehring, H. M. Carter,
James H. Atkinson. George Burch
- and Miss Delores tCarter.
be taken.
The Glueck technique, stresses
fiv questions about a child:
1. How much affection from
his mother?
2. How much affection from his
father?
3. Is he supervised effectively
by his mother? % •
4. Is discipline from his father
too strict or lax?
5 is the family cohesive?
In perfecting their system, the
Gluecks spent more than 10 years
studying boys from slum areas :of
Boston.
s V * ‘ ...... .
Germania Mutual Aid
authorities said.
Airlines Super-
sidded.overbeed
Mrs. Ide Jacob. Captain;
Eugene Felsher, C. H. Eichler,
Al Rhames. Leroy Hoerman, John
Spreen, Roy Wiese, Jr., 1. H.
Bartz.
Mrs. Eddie Landgraf, Captain;
Mesdames Otto Lehrmann, Gus-
sie Stelter, Leroy Boenker, Roger
El l erm an, Leo Arndt, Eddie
Grabarchick, R. E. Makowsky.
Mrs. Leroy Lehrmann, Captain;
Mesdames Elton Anderson, Alvin
Mrs. Steve Murski, Brenham,
When a lightning - struck tree
fell and broke a fence surround-
inc the pasture where his cows
were. grazing. White moved the
animals to another pasture he had
idled under the federal soil bank
plan. .
County authorities assessed the
Saltillo, Tenn., farmer $90 and
ordered him to reseed the pasture,
because soil bank land is not sup-
posed to be used in any way.
White paid up and reseeded.
Milroy: ■ -1
Valgene Ziesemer, Brenham, sur-
gical. .
Allan Faldyn, La grange, sur-
pens ,
Mrs. Roland Kokemoor, Captain
Mesdames Marvin Harris, Wal-
ter •Leck, Alvin Lorenz, Gus
Roehling, Jimmy Hahn and Melvin
Perry.
Mrs. Clifford Parsons, Captain;
Mrs. Stanley Sonnier, Co-captain;
Mesdames J. E. Lambert, Thos.
A. Davidson, Weldon Alsobrook,
Frank JoeHein- Ehlert,MelvioH-- R
of them helped to tear up more
paving stones to add to the de-
fense works.
De Gaulle announced last Sept.
16 he would let Algeria decide
its own future by vote four years
after peace is restored. But the
European settiers, outnumbered
nine to one by the Moslems, fear
the result will tear Algeria away
from France. 'They want none of
that.
A surrender ultimatum was ex-
pected. The settlers showed no
sign of surrender.
Heavy contingents of riot police
Debre were determined to go
through with the policy of "self-
determination” for Algeria.
of barbed wire' protected the gov-
ernment headquarters.
The settlers were entrenched
only- a short distance ■ away. .
Disturbances erupted again to-
day in Oran where a - group of
rioters attempted Sunday to seize
the prefecture building.
The Oran demonstrators stop-
ped several city buses, punctured
their tires and pushed them across
the streets to block them off.
Fight Pitched Battle
They included hundreds of stu-
dents and middle-aged Europeans
who formed a mob of 20,000 Sun-
day and fought a pitched battle
with riot police. An unofficial
-4 v
i
i-f.
15-A
16-$
18-No
l»-Po
. DICK TRACY
TERECO.
Recappins
Vuleaalaljg
Balancing
Batteries
Total Admitted Assets $4,248,403.02
____. Wright, "Minnie Bradley, Hattie
Studhalter', J. S. Dukes, Robert Mae Flowers. •
V NEW ORLEANS! (UPI)—Cotton gieal
dosed steady.* ” • •. Miss Betty - Grabew, -Brenham;
ty ASC committees any acreage
thes-ie-gGDg O be -- -2
Such Acreage may then, in turn, be
, headed by the city militia, threw
- up paving stone barricades and
formed a. fortress against riot pol-
f ice jeeps and trucks.
I Exactly how the battle started
I was not known. Police said the
■ settlers cut loose first with a
■ tommygun from their massed
ranks. The settlers blamed the
■ mobile guards and the republican
security police which are special
■ security forces and not connect-
, ed with the army.
The main battle was led by the
riot police. They charged down
a broad flight of steps from the
forum to the barricades, hurling
tear gas bombs. Later they fired
troops were streaming toward the the only other
available.
spent nearly eight years testing Dec
the predictions of two experts
Wm. • Tockhorn, Pad Wehmeyer. 1
Joe Cole, Lonnie Horstman, Ed ’
Bernhardt.
Mrs. Ray Berry, Captain; Mes- 1
dames Robert Kolkhorst, Her-
man Borghardt.
Mrs. Wilburn Beaumier, Captain; '
Mrs. Waldo Mueller, Co-Captain; 1
Mesdames Louis Werchan, 1
Victor Arlitt, C. A. Seward, 1
Harold Wehmeyer. Leslie Clayton, 1
Melvin -Ehlert, Dennis Schom- 1
burg, Jr., Arthur F. Wehman, 1
Eugene Tison, John Kay, Arleigh
Appel. I
Mrs. H. L. Dennis, Chairman 1
P. T. A.: Camptown - Mrs. L. V.
Williams, Captain; Josephine Tar- 1
ver, Elnora McLean, Stora Fos- 1
. . . _ Live poultry: 14,000 lbs. White
baeealeureatedegreesfrem Fexas Rock fryers 23; roasters 2832-29- -
A D. KA I AIlena rat +ke FomuoNI, . __ - __-_ -
ta-na - * * Miartitetuaeota
The rebels were holding several
city blocks centered on the Uni-
versity of Algiers and they issued
defiant statements which said "we
will hold on to the end.” They
chanted "Massu to power” and
"De Gaulle to the gallows.”
Cooper, Frances Wilson, Lois Per-
ry. Mabel Edmond. *
Randle 'Addition, Eva Harris,
Captain; W. Hubert, Rosa Lee
24-La
M-Mt
ini
es-pe
29-Ra
1-K
33-Pr
me
se-se
6-Se
».«- Pn
40-W
42-Ch
45 Fn
47-Sle
49-Fi
50-Sa
52-Dr
54-Sv
55-S»
56- Sh
9 r,
611De
83* Re
65-no
66-Cn
Heinman said he was driving
about 50 miles an hour when Miss
Wesson suddenly appeared in
front of his car. He said he didn't
have time to stop before his'car
■The—communique,—in—eff
check of hospitals showed 20 dead,
ten of them police, and 169 wound-
ed in the fighting.
The army thus far was aloof
to the settiers’ appeals -to join
them in an uprising which would
bring the downfall of De Gaulle
and end what they fear will be
a surrender to the Moslem reb-
els who have been battling the
army for five years.
Gen. Maurice Challe, supreme
military commander in Algeria,
warned in a broadcast that "the
uprising shall not triumph against
the French army.” De Gaulle
broadcast appeals to the settlers
GIMON’S™™"
FUL
To servi
ci unts.
soliciting
profits u
ed territ
Thin is
the man
a substa
We fina
have 1.
Six spar
$2,737.50
which if
Pease C
you hav
are able
have t
write bl
< lude y<
sonal in
•I Hann
Hgs 30; barrows and gilts 25
ed for wide use in the city's higher; sows steady; -No. 2-3
, v. every family will mak a general
' contribution to the drive.
The workers include:
. Mrs. E. G. Iorgov, Captain;
Mesdames W A. Me Means, Wal-
ter Arnold. Maurice Nance, Alli-
r son Clark, Marcus Williams, Jr.,
- Robert A.WinkelmanpHerbe rt
W. Fsholf, Willie Kmg,
Cl. ewees, William Buske.
Mrs. Oscar Meyer,C a p t a i n ;
Mesdames L. C. Bosse, Robbie
Barnes, Andrew Murski. Jesse
Schramm, Otto Wehring, Jr., Rex,
Clinton, Jr.
Mrs. H. J. Boehm. Captain;
Mesdames Eugene Hohlt, Odis
Tomachefsky, L. J. Lacina, Roy
Price, H. C. Burnham, Leon Janc-
zak. Elvis Jaster, Monroe Wittner,
- W. W. Wilkening.
Mrs. Marie Cohen. Captain;-
Mesdames Walter Graeber," Chas.
Haack, Jr., Hugh Holland, Leon-
ard Roeske, Elro Kunkel. Nona
Miller Henry Bender. Ben Ken-
jura.
Farmer Wins Point System Is Devised
in Soil Bank Case To Spot Delinquents
At An Early Age
Fred ' Ruemke, redoubt this afternoon to-waa
the strange spectacle. Hundreds
Justice of the Peace Manuel given to farmers who will plant ,
•• ■ ■ -■ it,” he said. To show just what
rifles, light machineguns and even
mortars — with a non-explosive western Bell Telephone Company
head — into their midst. at Houston.
John ROsner, Elizabeth Hunt,„Alex
Martin, Wm. Burleson, .Jimmy Fletcher, Hattie M. Bailey.
I
to “return to national order” and
stop spilling each other’s blood.
The settlers have called for a
general strike to show their anger
against De Gaulle who fired Maj.
Gen. Jacques Massu, the para-
troop hero who led the May 13,
1958 uprising which topped the
Fourth Republic. That revpit
brought De Gaulle to power.
Militia Aids Rebels
- Most of the casualties occurred
in a bitter half-hour of fighting
that started at dusk when youths
and middle aged settlers. spear-
30 SUITES TO BE SACRIFICED
CHROME PAINTED— VARNISHED
5 Pc. Suites from . $12.95
7 Pc. Suites from . $19.95
_ WHILE THEY LAST:
. - 89’
medical.
—St—Jude:---- - — . -
Mrs. Emma Schlottmann, Bren-
Mrs. C. E. Linnstaedter, Captain;
Mesdames H e r b e r t Kluck,Gar-
the crash.
"Some engine trouble” had
been experienced ‘ on its flight
from New York Monday, the im-
vestigation committee headed by
Jamaica’s director of civil avia-
tion, Kenneth Paton Jones, re-
ported.
W
2
I
6
' HOUSTON (FD- Miss Shan foupharterrmasorparatiodismor, t
---- K.luta. - • ..c F- H-T- 1 . . .
FOR SA
tun picku
new. 5,00
S. B. ye
FOR SAI
tor in g<
Lonnie Si
Brenham
6-3914-1
MARKETS
11 ■ ........... I. „
night.
Dead in his place was Mario
Campusano.' a friend who had
borrowed Ruiz’s passport in order
to return from New York to Bo-
gotoa. Colombia, to attend to
pressing business. Both were Co-
lombian citizens.
Ruiz was en route from the
United States to Bogota to "clear
man, by Saturday.
W. R. Campbell of Arlington
was listed as registered agent for
the proposed corporation to be
known as 'Texas Naturist Asso-
ciation." ,
Campbell, his wife Anna F.
Campbell, and Alfred O. Wupper-
man of Fort Worth were pro-
posed as director*.
E FOR RI
E house. G
11 ton alot
Ei and four
K- call GR
I for re
I house or
Chas..W,
8-ff
,. I
~ New s
’ ous colo
Nursery.
Home-
barg-t..
way. Sti
Just r
Spring i
. suit and
shirts. g
Gurka
(Former
FEE SI
month
For y<
porches,
miscella
GR 6-47
RAI
Am TEXAS US. NO. 1 RUBY RED
yR APEFRUIT EmLge -
KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI) -
Jaime' Ruiz, who was listed as
one of the 37 victims of last
week's Montego’ Bay airline
crash. was not on the plane at
MONDAY, JAN. 25,19CT
I «rr ’ I.! T—.
w HL januszeewski 444
Germany Training
Cattle 300, calves 800; slow, gical.
lb. sows 10-H.
Sheep 4,400; slaughter lambs
slow, weak to 50 lower; choice
and prime wooled show lambs
18.50; medium-good feeder lambs
16-17.50.
1,076.47
11,070.95
4,244,081.35
LAREDO, Tex. (UPI)-An of --------------
free manager found five members onnmvn A rAnn
vestigate why the father-husband'
ities. Repairs, Supplies,
Office Exp. 10,357.10
Reimburses, Expenses, Ad-
justers. Inspections it Loss
Adjustments 6,848.74
Miss Wallace Klussmann, Cap- Captain; Gladys Hogan, L. V.
-BARRICADES- wo pom-yetsn
• (Continued from Page 1) * ‘
, Butter: Steady. 962,000 lbs. 93
score 57%; 93 score 57%: 90
score 57: 89 score 56%;: cariota:
M score 57%; 89 score 56%.
Eggs: Steady. 14,500 cases.
White and mixed large extras 37;
mediums and standards 25; dirt-
ies 22%; checks 31. '
-Wateh- ™ mi MAN
who wes involved in a minor ac-
• a short time later when she was
struck by a car driven by a dep-
uty sheriff
The accident-occurred near Ar
cola, just south of Houston
/ Highway patrolmen said Miss
" Wesson and her Sister, Mrs. Mary
Licata, 35, also of Houston were
driving around and their car
struck a railroad signal post
Miss Wesson had started walk
• ing down the highway to look for
help when she was struck by a
from the Harvard University law
school, Drs. Sheldon and Eleanor
Glueck.
Of 223, six-year-olds studied in
1952, the Gluecks said 186 had
little probability of turning delin-
____________
MOTHERS-
(Continued from Page-1)
RECEIPTS DISBURSEMENTS
Membership Dues $ 8,305.00 Fire Losses $ 295,942.02
Assessment on New Storm Loss 161,603.35
Enrollments *. 79,188.88 Hail Losses" 90,472.81
Annual Assessment Levy 1038,573.37 Lightning Losses — ----- 13,839.80
Securities Matured or Sold 323,299.24 Salaries:and Retainer Fees 67,378.24
Interest on Securities Owned 116,630.76 TaxfsdPues, Insurance and 16 100 64
Sundry Receipts 221.22 Directors & Dist. Meeting
Cash on Hand Jan. 1,1959 457,003.13 Exp. and Annual Minutes 9,558.38
---Bonds Purchased & Accruals 849,663.62
- $2,023,221.60 Assessment Refunds 13,495.71
Operation Expenses, (Util-
ter. Willie Bee Conner.
Baptist Hill. Mrs. S. I. Al-
corn, Captain; Z. Johnson, Pearl
Spencer.
Wilkins Addition, Vera Harris.
Captain; Marie Mays, Gussie M.
DE GAULLE STANDS BY
HIS ALGERIAN POLICY
PARIS (UPI) - President
Charles de Gaulle told embattled
French "c o l o n s" barricaded in
the streets of Algiers today that
he stood by his policy of self-
determination for Algeria.
A government communique said
orders already had been issued to
the armed forces in Algeria on
how to deal with the French set-
tlers’ rebellion against De
1— G«unrr*poiity. ---------------
The communique was ■ issued
after a two hour and 15 minute
—— Cabinet meeting called after ' re-
ports from "Algiers indicated the
European settlers were not going
___ in yield to Dy Gaulle’s summons
grade 190-240 lb. butchers 12.50;
sows 300 lbs., down 8-10.
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH (UPI)— Live-
stock:
Cattie 2,200, calves 600; trading
slow; slaughter classes fully
steady; standard and good
slaughter steers 20.75-22.50; choice
slaughter heifers 26.25; good
choice slaughter calves 23-24.
---- difficulties for three days before
■f when he didn’t return it on time.
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Whitehead, Tom S., Jr. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 95, No. 16, Ed. 1 Monday, January 25, 1960, newspaper, January 25, 1960; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1556910/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.