Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 87, No. 88, Ed. 1 Friday, May 2, 1952 Page: 3 of 6
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2. North Atlantic Treaty nations
InSemi-FinalsT uesday
lived there 41 years, with two
amp
ty — at odds with the cominform
rrom page one)
is being Texas League pace for road clubs
IAF Pr
said the Yugoslav arm:
of Russia and her satellites.
mier Marshal Tito said that, if at- l andrum scattered nine hits harm-
FA
conformity to the boat practices
tank provides water for the live-
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off the sudden power splurge of
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nerves was the fact that two Red
me-
DRESS UP YOUR HOME
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urbon
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volved.
Ezu•
PITTS
HOUSEPAINT
ible:
Sufferens trom
M.
MAIFESrr TIME it Drat Up Tint..
8
A coat at SUJNPROOF HOUSE
aimo aarva
anal
Medical Arts Bldg. Phone 7921
Television
pieces of furniture or other mis-
di
erally
in the Banner-Prose. Phone 611
vs. Cedar am,
•-pi
Tzesla-
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e2
dsmahuneaynsabipeundaQke ■
emene
OF PAST WEEK
POT IN REVIEW
«b b
A/ *
fame
SMU Double Victor
in Track Meet
RACKET BROKEN
BYUNITEDPRESS
Th ass
y i
5s
tie Ho
The lead changing four times.
Shreveport finally bested 5 Dal-
215
First
Brown's Prairie community near
Old Washington. The family has
I i i
.ENDED 6222059
HISKEY T
% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS
IELUXECO.,LOUISVILUE,KY,
2 "
-i
D,
EVERY
- May 11 — Burton vs. American,
Logion. Vireman’s park stadium
- We are
y adveru
in the B
ffice not
fore day
eauda
FOR THE RIGHT
JQB, DONE THE
RIGHT WAT AT
THE MIGHT MUCH
Joe Landrum Gets
Fifth Decision
In 5 Starts
WACO, May 2 CP— Southern
Methodist was a double victor in
final track competition before the
annual Southwest Conference meet,
defeating Baylor and Texas Chris-
tian in both varsity and freshmen
divisions.
The Mustang varsity scored 70
points at Waco Thursday to Ba
lor’e «O and TCU’s 24. The SMU
frosh also won with 76 points,
against 54 for Baylor and 24 for
TCU.
Buddy Goode of the Mustang
varsity squad scored a double vic-
tory in the dashes, winning the 100
in 9.7 seconds and the 220 in 21.
Baylor’s Alen Jones won the
same two events in freshmen com-
petition.
Washington County
League Schedule
!
he "critical" oil situa-
ago, fueling stops in
d been almost elimi
d Airlines said cross-
its took on only enough
ago to get them to
enver where supplies
plentiful. Both western
unscheduled stops on
L airliners.
St.eoseph
By UNITED PRESS
Fort Worth continued to set the
iee thus far, now will be seen in
action for the first time next
Tuesday night when they take
stock. The tank ia stocked with
fish. supplied by the state, and
the younger Fahrenkamp said
that if he has a hobby. It is fish-
ing in this tank.
He Is a member of the Wash-
ington County Farm Bureau, and
of Friedens’vangelical and Re-
formed church.
u
Sw #
A- A"""00G"2/2"93m-
injury, but probably more out of
exuberance over national indepen-
rwidespread-Red-syR-
firing, in
it photo a
troops ini
' because
oach can
fgS- Friday, widening- its gap with a
re- Thursday^nigiit^Right-harST^^Joc
immediate bids for repeat titles in
field events Friday.
Kosarek Defends Broad Jump
Eugene Kosarek of Poth (Wilson
county* defended his Class B broad
jump crown which he won last year
with a record-setting leap of 22
feet, 8 1-2 inches. Bobby McBride
of Refugio also returned to bid
for the pole vault title he captured
with another Class B record of 12
fact
Jerry Trenary of Denver City
took the Class A broad jump title
last. year with a leap of 21 feet,
8 inches.
: A fourth 1951 ‘champion, Charles
Hall of Karnes City, returned this
year but will be unable to defend
his last year’s tie for the Class A
ele eroweatnesSity has
eimi-Lmed------- ----- AT
Odessa’ Joe Childress, timed at
9.7 in the 10O-yard dash this year,
paced a field of top sprinters in
Ctass AA. He was expected to meet
his stiffest competition from Aus-
tip’s'Alvin Frieden, clocked at 9.8
seconds this yearJerry Hall of
Palestine, Sonny Cutbirtfi.of Hous-
ton Lamar and Richard Gonzales of
welcomed the appointment of Gen.
Matthew B. Ridgway to succeed
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower as su-
preme commander in Europe.. The
combination of battle-wise Ridgway
with Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, an
organizational genius, as his chief
of staff, was regarded as just about
the strongest team the United
States could field in the effort to
build up Western Europe's defenses
against communism.
3. The Yugoslav Communist par-
Yugoslavia would not join the At-
lantic Pact but would be on the
side of peaceful nations.
BAD NEWS
1. Prime Minister Daniel F. Ma-
lan imported 250 police reinforce-
ments from Capetown as the Union
of South Africa parliament contin-
ued its stormy debate over legisla-
tion which would take away from
the courts their right to rule on
constitutionality of laws. Sentiment
over Malan's fight to ram his "Jim
Ccow" policies into law despite the
courts was at fever pitch but had
not yet really boiled over into
violence. However, it could at any
time.
2. Western Europe was having its
Open Every Night
CLUB ARTESIA
7% miles West ot Brenham.
Highway 290
CHARLIE -CERNYS
ORCHESTRA
Every Saturday Night
May 4 — Jaycees vs. Ameri-
can Legion, Fireman’s park sta-
dium. 3 p.m.
May 6 Salem vs. Mound Hill,
Fireman's park stadium, 8 pm.
May 8 —Burton vs. Cedar Hill
Fireman’s park stadium, 8. p.m.
with two of them coming on sue-
cessive playing dates at the out-
while Burton won over Mound
Hin, 53 Tuesday.
Play conthrues Sunday after-
noon at the local stadium when
Buro sends his team out for its
second straight against American
Legion. The Legionnaires fell to
Cedar HUI. 10-8, last Sunday.
ret of the campaign. These con-
tests will be made up at a later
date near the end of the season.
League rules eall for four of
VI&
y ou
fraCR
UCKY
IGHT
IBON
SKEY
tOOF
atg
IVE;
NDAY
bMz
togra
By LYLE C. WILSON
WASHINGTON, May 2 --The
word around Washington Friday is
that there were irregularities in
raising 1948 Democratic campaign
funds outside the Field of Internal
Revenue regulations already expos-
ed.
Sen. John J. Williams (R-Del.)
has shown that at least • three
wealthy men were permitted to
write off for tax purposes loans
made to the New York state Demo-
eratie committee.
Reported now but not so far con-
PAINT will givepthe brightest
heme in the block.
place Shreveport. The Sports mov-
ed from seventh to fifth Thursday
night. Oklahoma Cityis, four games
out of the lead, in sikth place,
while San Antonio and Tulsa are
give games away from the top.
Thad Del Guercio's two-run home
run for Fort Worth in the sixth
inning. It broke the one-run tie
with Beaumont. Had the Roughs
broken the tie and won the game,
the league lead would be knotted
again. His blow sailed over the left-
Held wall at 335 feet.
y, hollder Braem.
•ur reasonable prkcea will vurely pleane |
MEDICAL ARTS DRUG CO
decide the champion. The top
four clubs at that .time will coax-
prise the tourney bracket
The Brenham Junior Chamber
of Commerce, who organized the
loop but withdrew from running
its affairs in order to enter a
team, will step back into the
picture in August to head the
tournament setup.
ings with Burton, each nine hav-
ing one win. The Ramblers set
down Cedar HUi. 8-3, last week-
1
■ft*
A.atude
-see
Gay Hill Hal
Saturday, May 3
Sponsored by
Cedar Hill Basebah Chib
Everybody cordially
invited.
By PHIL NEWSOM
United Prems Foreign Analyst
The week's balance sheet be-
tween the good and bad news in
hee--apd-emldmssss • - ----»
t foe -duormswuinere
1. Communist May Day celebra-
tions went off .on schedule, but',
except for Tokyo, with little fire-
works. Demonstrations in such po-
tential trouble spots as Paris and
Rome were orderly. East Berlin
Communists could muster only
some 10,000 youths to challenge
West Berlin police. Some 300,000
Ranablers-Legionaires
To Battle Here
At 3 p. m.
Cattle"
•n You.
itrengthened. toxesist, .‘WJ
sfve"pressuire G-Pe-2-
te’nmeg"
manufactur
ot Truss 4
recommend
)
. J
District 27A baseball moves into its seim-final round
next Tuesday with Brenham and Navasota playing host to
conference foes
The Cubs of Coach Bill Thornton will entertain Caidwell’s
Hornets at Fireman’s Part stadium at 3:30 p. m., while the
Rattlers of Coach Joe Newbill take on the Bellville Brahmas
at Martin’s Part.
passenger plane en route from Ber-
lin to Frankfurt, wounding three
persons. The Reds claimed the
plane had strayed from the corri-
dor
3. There were increasing de-
mands for some sort of a four-
power conference ovr a peace
treaty for a unified Germany. The
demands came not only from the
Germans but also from such quar-
ters as the British Labor party. The
demands probably will not delay
imitialing of the agreement bring-
ing West Germany into the family
of West European nations, but
might delay indefinitely its formal
----
D TABLET BOTTLE ONLY'
I
■
1
AUSTIN, May 2 CP-A field of
630 schoolboy track and field stars
began whittling down their number
Friday in a two-day fight for eight
championships of the 42nd annual
Texas Interscholastic League.
Odessa was a heavy favorite to
win its third consecutive Class AA
crown as the cinder carnival got
under way, but faced stiff compe-
tition from Austin and Galena
Park.
Brenham paced the leaders in
Class A and Iraan stood out in
Class B,
. Some Title Decided Friday
The 1952 meet opened at 8:45 a.
m. Titles in the broad jump and,
discus throw in all three high
school conferences- AA, A and B-
-* -- 2HApom*-4en
B Werebingdeecearimey.m-
Preliminaries in seven other ev-
ents in all 3 classes—120- yard
high hurdles, 100-yard dash,,440-
yard dash, 180-yard low hurdles,
220-yard dash, shot puf and high
jump- also were run during, the
first day of the meet.
Remaining finals events were
scheduled for 1:15 p.m. Saturday.
Three returning champions made
and which probably will be forbid-
denhereaftet.
xoricE-Waaeasking that
>RE8S. BRENHAM,
Mound Hill.
Hdjveeeo—-- 0208
Burdvrmain to a knoning*
for first place in league stand-
—Chester Maxson,
is proudly beside.
4871%-pound blue
n off Andros Island
hamas after a 22-
iggle. It tops the
ord for 50-pound
class by 87%
id Fairbank, a fel-
nan, witnessed the
itle. (NEA) - '
DANCE. .
ARTESIA
am Em
And
HIS VERSATILE
ARTESIANS
46M“""2 *2ES
--
iim t
annual- case of jitters. Soviet
ground troops were on, maneuvers
in East Germany and the Soviet
air force was holding exercises
along the route of the neutral air
corridors out of Berlin to West Ger-
San Antonio greeted Indian
- - starter Rudy Payhich with two hits.
approval by the parliaments in- two walks and a double steal He
USED CAR BARGAINS
OLDSMOBILE 88 TUDOR
With hydramatic, radio, heater and other ex-
tras. This car looks and handles like!new,
• and carries our regular used car 1 Q750
guarantee. Only •
FORD 6 Cyl. TUDOR
New paint, reconditioned motor, goodtires,
used car guarantee. A smooth 1 Q0
little Ford, only RUUw
DODGE CUSTOM SEDAN
New paint and upholstery and extra .good
mechanically, with used car . R90
guarantee, only "T••
CHEVROLET V2-Ton PICKUP
New paint, looks and runs like Q04e0
L new, with used car guarantee. Only VV•
sons and seven daughters gi
Ing up there. Fritz Fahrenkoie
said he was born on an adjoin-
e i u •
demonstrators clashed with police Old Washington,
in Tokyo, resulting in death and '-------------a—
the Oklahoma City Indians with a
7 to 4 verdict. The Indians threat-
till'd to come back in the ninth '
inning, lashing out four straight
singles, but Bob Mahoney buckled
down to douse the fire . which '
sprung after he allowed just five
hits in eight innings.
Mystery Fann of Two Weeks Ago
Identified By Fritz Fahrenkamp Eoesponesemtarom-sotttihr
‘ of soil conservation, and' a large
link provides water for the live.
PRETTY POSTURE— Made-
line Castle, 19, is not only pretty,
she's posture-perfect. The Los
Angeles girt has been chosen
“Miss Good Posture of 1952," by
a chiropractic group which
sponsors Good Posture Week.
May 1 to May 7.
grow, the six members to compete in a
tournament playoff in August to
May Day Passes Off
With Relatively
Little Trouble .
arlnesreportedtha StndfngsleaE el
las pitchers 8 to 7, taking full ad-',
vantage of Eagle mound wildness
in the seventh inning, when two
runs were forced in.
Rain in Houston helped the Buffs
move up a notch in the standings
to second place. But their idle foes,
the Tulsa Oilers, didn't fare so well.
They slipped into the cellar, 11 per-
centage points out of seventh place.
They had been in 6th place.
Houston stands a game and a
half out of first place and halt-
ing farm.
The farm consists of 150 acres
of hill top land. Emphasis is
placed on raising beat cattle, of
which there are 35 head. Com
and other feeds are raised for
the cattle, a few hogs for home
use, and for the chickens. A to-
Fictious Fees
Circumvented
Tax Laws
E-*r-at=-ezee--meimneneBegruent-HM,.,
resting at 600 in ‘fourth place." is
* yame Behind Beaumont's Roughs ,
and just a half-game ahead of fifth
it took a long time to do it.
but the Banner-Prem has finally
identified the “mystery farm"
pictured in this newspaper two
weeks ago.
Fritz Fahrenkamp of Old
Washington came by. and Iden-
tified the picture as being that
of the farm of his father, W. C.
Fahrenkamp.
The young Fahrenkamp is sin-
gle and'lives with his parents,
looking after the farm for them.
The Fahrenkamp home is lo-
#e hobon buy
zt*utpiude
■ everything but
was developed in 1948 to obtain
from corporations preisdential
election year campaign funds for
the Democratic party. •
Uned Legal Fee System
The elections laws forbid cor-
porations to make campaign con-
tributions. A legal fee system de-
vice is said to have been used in
1946 to transfer corporation funds
to campaign purposes.
It worked like this, the United
Press was informed:
A fund raiser approached a law-
yer with extensive practice before
government agmcits and suggest-
ed that a large and unearned fee
b accepted from a given corpora-
tion.
The lawyer was advised that he
would be expected to pass the
money on to party officials as a
campaign contribution without dis-
closing its source.
The lawyer wouid ba expected to
report the fee as icome and to
pay income tax on it. The advan-
tage of being the go-between ia
such a transaction was explained
as being the positive identification
of the lawyer as a liberal and un-
commonly friendly contributor to
the party in a bad year.
This particular transaction did
not go throagh.
There is some reason to believe,
however, that the funds which
would have been transferred in
that transaction did finally reach
the Democratic campaign.
Funds Were Dioti United
The United Press was told that
the corporation which was willing
to make the comtribution by way of
a fictitious legal fee did, finally,
distribute the funds among aeveral
lawyers, it was assumed that the
money reached t h et campaign
chest. ‘
If the fees wore actually fictitious
and unearned, such a transaction
doubtless would be held by the
courts to be illegal. Merely a de-
vice to avoid more direct violation
of the law.
No illegal action has been alleged
in the Internal Revenue Bureau rul-
ing that unpaid loans could be writ-
ten off for tax purposes. But it is
a practice which la being vary gen-
Rain forced postponement of
the Washington County League
‛ baseball game between the Sa-
lem Hot Shots and Brenham
Jaycee Ramblers, scheduled for
। Fireman’s park stadium Thun-
L day-night. ' , 1
i Luther Weiss’ Hot, Shota, the
' only team not having seen sry- f
The scores by innings:
Dallas........ 000 203 200-711 1
Shreveport 410 001 20x-8 11 3
Kramer, Varhely «». Mossi (6).
Alberts 7), Kotrany (8) and Ayl-
ward; Willts, Tremel <«> and Liv-
ingston.
Okla City .... 002 000 002 4 '9 2
San Antonio . 303 001 00x--7 9 0
Paynich, Pillar <M and Tate; Ma-
honey and Martin.
Fort Worth .. 100 002 0104 9 1
Beaumont ... 010 000 900—1 9 0
Landrum and Bragan; Radcliffe,
Crowder (0) and MeKelvey.
’ Why not get cash for those old
HONY
1, m.
m "7
—
7981
IB HAHN LEADS HITTERS.-
* District 97 ABaseball
c"riremartpnm"tadur‛
nm 4— vs M•- • AM- m - a "-4 “* V
AU emelnal.
-'•SS svmMheCAMPAICN wi-
marks. Each lost to the other in
MiG jets riddled an Air—France
tacked, Yugoslavia would increase lessly in winning his fifth decision,
its army to 2,000,000 men. He said in five outings this year.
The San Antonio Mission cooled ’
CATS WIDEN
THEIR LEAD IN
TEXAS LEAGUE
_zKlssann leads the two-base-
hir‛dephxenta"h fcy and 8
second in runs-batted-jn with
five. Wilfred Kueeker- pacas that
latter category with six.
Hahn has stolen ten bases, fol-
lowed by Jimmy Niebuhr’s six.
Pitchers’ Records
Klussmann is the top pitcher
with a 5-1 season record. Henry
Rost enjoys a 1-2 mark and Fred
Schwartz has 1-1.
Klussmann has the most
strikeouts, 37 and has buried the
most innings, 36. Rost has work:
ed 32 frames, striking out 30
batters.
The Cub team batting average
ia .219, gathered from seven vic-
tories and four setbacks this sea-
son.
f,MAY2,1952. / .....- L. ; BRENHAM BANNEHJ
nham Favorite At Track Meet
NON-SKID SPOT
PAD TRUSSES
ligtit weigbt avplimeqes hola
ypluroscrely..fegutinE omly
BOETTCHER LUMBER CO.
1718 S. MARKET PHONE 678
BRENHAM, TEXAS
left the game with two out in
the first Inning His infield added
an error to Mission injury.
R. Alberta was called in from
the Dallas bullpen in the seventh
inning. Don Mossi left the game
with the bases full and no one out
Dallas led by a run. Albers
promptly hit Sport Catcher Mickey
Livingston, forcing in the tying run.
By the time he’d retired the side,
Alberts had forced in another run.
issuing a walk to Vinieio Gereia.
A new three-day series begins
for each of the Texas League clubs
Friday, ending the third week of
1952 activity. Dallas is at Beau-
mont, Fort Worth goes to Shreve-
port. Tulsa visits San Antonio and
Oklahoma City plays at Houston.
1016 8. Marti
—u--
District play.
Both Tuesday contests will be
the first of two games series,
with the sabre pairings due like-
ly the latter part at next week.
Rained out tilts earlier in the
campaign account for the extra-
curricular activity, as the loop
was due to end play Tuesday.
There are ngames scheduled
today.
Brahmas Third a
Bellville, coached by Harold
Hartman, is presently in third
spot, owning two wins and as
many setbacks. Mervin Cross’
Hornets are winless in four tries.
Jimmy Hahn continues to pace
Cub battig ‘with an average of
.333. Brenham’s shortstop has
stepped to the plate 33 times,
and stroked out 11 safeties while
scoring 11 runs.
Pitcher Glenn Klussmann is
the only other Brenham batter
hitting over .300. His average is
.313.------
8190=2__
TUCKBEs
This 'mystery, farm’ picture published April 18, has been identified as the Fahrenkamp turn at
4
all —
fitters.
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 87, No. 88, Ed. 1 Friday, May 2, 1952, newspaper, May 2, 1952; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1570296/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.