Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 243, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1964 Page: 2 of 8
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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4,1964
FR]
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foreign born priest after com- I dal,
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than 300 others, who had been
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A
Cow Comfort is
Sawdust Bill
B
i will Convene Friday at 9am
a
COLLEGE STATION — With
Bishop Hines will begin duties
52202
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So governments who slay.
ington, P C , Jan. 27.
I
was slow.
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Safety Sunday
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Yesteryear.
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The Almanac
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80 Years Ago
9
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DON’T W«MY, CMUM.
it
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of mnow.or ice and
many other perils.
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evolves from
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Major Point To
If'atch Carefully
Dec. 4, 1924 — The Pathfind-
ers met at the home of Mr. and
M. C Giraldi, Advertising Manager
James E. Byrd, Production Supt
mate
Texas
kill, steal, and destroy are hear-
ing ’he murmur of the followers.
councils and thousands of law
• enforcement offie lals indicates
that the solutio to this critin
problem lies in the hands of
arrested during th Bay of Pigs
invasion, had left Cuba when
.they were released, so that at
the end of the year there were
cesan Bishop since 1955
The council, the first of its
mt
gdua
such as in the better residential
districts of Havana
Many government supporters
sure they an- ready for the cold-
er weather that lies-ahead:
K
B
S
. ceasom is about "ov-
ictice will save space
leting a mission, in Cuba.
All of the churches in ' Cuba
the church and even have their
children baptized
There is sometimes harrass.
Poor Boy Jim’s
old Doand and
Coin Club
F
222
gent Christian nations. It is still
the cry of some inspite of mil
lions of lives sacrificed to prove
it otherwise, • -
under"
pected
I too
-2
A
By JOHN VIRTUE
United Press International
NNER-PRES3, BRENHAM, TEXAS ,
L.as Well from Over Here!".-
wlghm i. <■ ie —B— emi upt -—-eA- 2285
3.
1,!
ence;
Mia. 1
. 1,
b uo :
N “ 1
Headlines
of
5* K
ramdm
#ments
L. Bridge of Houston.
Many fHend* and ’relatives
gathered at* the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. Pohlmeyer, of
the Wm. Penn- community, on
Monday November 27 ‘ to help
them celebrnt their- 25th wed-
ding anniversary.
Brenham citizens went to the
polls Tuesday to ballot on the
proposition to issue $100,000 in
bonds with which to purchase
the site and develop an airport.
Unofficial reports from the city
hall where the voting was in pro-
gress indicated that the airport
proposal had a lead that amount-
ed almost to a unanimous- vote
for it.
B
“2
2
Mr
1W
A thought for the day: Presi-
dent Washington said: "There
can be no greater error than
to expect or calculate upon real
t V.1di ' , ,9 " *.1 .
Cuba; Priests Needed
By WILL H. WEEREN
“Governments’*
In the beginning, as the pop-
The TSA Holiday S
paign to sponsored
groups Church Safet
under the direction a
Shirey of Beaumont,
president for chureh
. - them Spantoll. The bishop of
The description was, given byHavana, Eduardo Boza Masvi-
,un
-
m in solid sliver,
te refinement
CB
$5
$9
1
Hr yrged all citizens, to join
in a united effort tpawnken the
conscience of every driver and
further urged the pastors of all
churches ro remind their mem
bers of the personal and moral
responsibility “to drive car-
fully; to obey the traffic laws
and to protect the sanetity of
human life in our state."
Campaigns Planned
Tuma reported that the Texns
safety campaign .begins Dec 1 '
and is carried through New
Year’s Approximately 1,000
kits of holiday safety campaign
materials have been mailed to
the various individuals and
groups throughout Texas plun-
ning to participate in the cam-
paign activities News relehses
will be furnished to all Texas
newspapers and spot announce
ments tat holiday safety will be
nt •n rauIo and tete% ISon
stations in the state i
Bi ' 1 5
Churches (
is p
er Thispra
at the feed rack and in the shel '
icy._______ . .
“Sometimes’ on Sunday morn-
mhemsetuen~ther
Mems, 2=-H
' -op
ft ■
LONDON — Beatle drummer
Ringo Starr, in a hospital con-
valescing from a tonsil opera-
tion. asked if the other beatles
will visit him
"Are you kidding? I’m not
married to them "
iner-Press, Inc.
WALTER C. JOHSON
Managing Editor
ROME - Pope Paid VI „
leaving on his journey to India:
lovE..5 a trip of peace and
tion of the church in Cuba? It I Catholic school, expolled 136 Ro-
is not heaven and it is not hell - . ..
ment and even the arrest of
church-goers, but many, priests
feel these are private acts of kind in the 126year history of
zealots and not government pol- ) the Episcopal Diocese dPexs,
""
ades
neies, such as the
______partment of Public
Safety and the Texas Highway
Department
officers to answer an old charge.
The Ewing hebeas corpus case
was on trial all of Saturday
night before Judge McFarland
A very large number of witnes-
ses were examined
We learned last evening that
Mr: Grandison V. Spann would
probably not live through the
night.
U. S. Marshal We learn that
many of the friends of Mr J. H.
Bolt, of this county, will urge
his appointment, by President
Cleveland, to the position of U. ,
S. Marshal for this district.
i A petition has been in circula-
tion for several days asking the
retention in office of the present
Republican postmaster at this
place, and we believe said peti-
tion has been signed by some
Democrats.
DEPENDABLE
2
40 Years Ago
.e c.. — k n 1 — .1. ! 4-5 to elect a new bishop of the
of Cubans have fled into exile. Episcopal Diocese. -
The new bishop will succeed
the Right Reverend John E.,
and even some who profess to Hines who was recently elected
be Communists wil marry in ; to the position of presiding bish-
op of the Protestant Episcopal
was among them. Mure
heartachs to the ow ner There
t«-no place for .boms in the •
modern dai y herd aen.s.
Meekma .
Any herd can lie improved
by culling lowest producers, hard
breeders and heast desirable
cows Feed bing consumed hy
unproduetve dow can be saved
and supplied to. those that will
utpitze it more effiiently and
productiyely for added profits.
Ne ls a good time’to cull those
cows that will not carry their
part of the load during the com-
ing winter months, says the spe-
-cinlist. Carrying "dead weight”
through the winter can only
mean a reduction ih profits.
(UPD Stands for vh’ted Press
International. The World’s Best
coverage of the. World’s biggest
- their lowest point on Sept. 17,
1961, when Premier Fidel Cas-
SW-ST"
NniL
are taking heed, listening with
their ears to the ground, for they
know the dav will come when
the mqrmur will become a cry.
a cry worldwide, ‘Give us
liberty" or ' LeT us keep our
liberty.”
Liberty will fail as other gov-
ernments have failed unless we
learn in time ’that' governments
are founded to regulate the
affairs between" men and
not the affairs "of men. "
it may be another nation's'
way of life their kind of religion,
their way or controlliig their
people, oil or no oil, coal or no
coal. We will do well to keep our
own house clean. Are you
thinking?
remain technically open except
those attached to educational in- !
stitutions taken over by the |
government, but many operate
irregularly because of a short:
age of priests.
Priests can wear their cas
2 - -
}E
4,
N
MPn
5
DRIVERS NOISER
NEW YORK UPI) — A polit-
ical group known as the Affili-
ated Young Democrats which
for some obscure reason con-
ducts annual tests to determine
the decibel count on .car horn
blowing in the city had com-
AUSIIN — Sunday, Dec. 13.
has beer proclnimed "Safety
Sunday" in Texas by Governor
John Connally, it was annount-
ed today -by Quincy V: Turns of
-Houszan, president of the Texas
Safety Association.
In makine the announcement,
the association pro dent prais-
ed Governor Connally fr his
interest in the welfare of the
people of Texas.
"The Governor’s interest , in
•he welfare of the people of
Texas is -evidenced by this ■
action." Tuma said, "ihe pur-
pose of ‘safety Sunde y is to
focus public attention OR the
moral obligations and respong-
bilities of vehicle drivers to *
protect their own lives and the
lives of others ' ‘
“Safety Sunday" is observed
each year durine one Sunday in
December to give further em-.
phasis to the need for accident
prevention during the Christ-
ings someone will set
Cow wmftrt f- a major point
nci TT roFI! meommmpEcha-
seaaon.
Moral Respouibility
in his proclamation. Gover-
nor Connally said - "It is essen-
tial that every Texas driver
realize that safety far himselt. .
his loved ones and his friends.
at the .Christ hurch Cathedral
. in Houston ■ ‛
ter bor 1 - IM atso prevent
- - painful in juries to cowgand-
WASHINGTON — President
Johnson’s instructions to U. S.
* passador to South Viet Nam
dwell Taylor.
‘Consult urgently with the
Vietnamese government
.1, to improve the
its aspectn-datcntn in el
Rock vear TIA holif pobn-
city efforts are coordinatd
with the governor's office and
HAVANA (UP!)—“The situa- ; tro who had been educated in a
beast by huddling in a circle,
(this was before the-cliff dwel-
lers) The strongest fought their
way to the center of the circle
and pushed1 the weak. crippled,
old, and young to the outer edge
it was those on the outer edge,
who paid the price of. weakness,
through death by the flesh-eating
beast
The strong fellow who kept the
center, lived the longest and
naturally got ’he most' exper-
iences and thereby acquired a
knowledge that stood above the
average. Because of his strength
and knowledge he became a self-
appointed leader. The rest fol
lowed: as we do today.
This leader later developed
into a sort of high priest and
finally became king, credited
with divine origin, for ho one
could remember when or where
he ‘was born
At first, he ruled a family,
then a tribe, then a number of
tribes, for he learned there was
strength in numbers.
Then came the city govern-
ments, through the conquest of
other cities and out of these con-
quests developed national gov-
ernments with, unfixed bounda-
ries.
It all began with the strong
'man in the center. the con-
quest for more and more ter-
ritories became a national desire
and the development of life de-
stroying war machines became
the one fixed purpose of the
government 'until theft cry • 4
was “Right is Might "
It became the cry of intelli-
socks on the street, something
they cannot do in Mexico. The _ _ t , f
propaganda value of this is not Mppf f z» Hlprf
lost pn government officials who “ •
tension dairy specialist. Texas •
A&M niversity ’ A dissatis- ~
fled, uncomfert able cow is not
' Q per form .it hr best
Special attention should be
gtven to good feed undadequnte
shelter; remember, contented
cows usually make a more con-
tented dairyman
The spec al. t advises dehorn-
ing now that the normat-fty and
Dec. 4, 1884 - The Cleveland
and Hendricks ball at Frohsinn
Hall takes place tonight. The .
members of the society extend
a cordial invitation to all their
friends to attend. -
Logan Jones; constable; ar-
rested a Negro at Washington
named. Lewis Crowfield, charged
with stealing a mule in Bren-
ham. He turned Crowfield
over to the Washington precinct
Actress-singer Lillian Russell.
wy born on this day in 1861. mas-New Year's holiday
in 1783, George Washington bid.
farewell to his troops at a New
a
the individual driver," the
• — ided
. from the night and the prowling
Mrs. Hoffman Reese with Mis
ses Erette and Martha Reese as
hostesses. After the business —
session was over there was a
good lesson.
Mrs. B. F. Teague will present
her music and exprssion pup-
ils in a recital at the High School
auditorium at 7:30 Friday even
ing.
“The Fighting Coward/' pro-
duced by the man who made
“The Covered Wagon," James
Cruise, and featuring Ernest >
Torrence, Mary Astor, Noah
Beery, Phyllis Haver and Cullen
Landis, to being shown Tor the
first time at the Rex Theatre
today and Friday
Chappell Hill News. Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip Lesser announce
the marriage of their daughter,
Cecelia to Mr. Hyman Born-
stein, on Thursday, the twenty-
seventh of November
Mr. and Mrs. Abie Lesser
have returned from Houston
where they were quietly mar-
tied at the home of Mrs. Les-
ser’s sister, Mrs. Bert Otto,
on Thursday morning, Nov. 27.
.... m-:
ABIA
and tshiaawrad—h
Farm Hal
age. Ir provides
gaoteetsesi ageine
ymm »<< 1114.:,—..' -4-
d--Nd"
bgje
5-2
horn at the slighest provoca-
tion.” It also concluded the rea-
K2ztmcanEzaaa*65E .
do of, claxonphony-fs"nefvos*
. ' tension brought on by traffic
eQr -
as wall ah otbpndtivers and
passengers tel matter of moral
responsibllity, and that useless
infiction of human injury to ah
abuse of God’s moat precious
gift - life itseil."
He noted that 2,729 parson*
ware killed and 161,543 ware in-
jured on Texas streets and high-
way* h 1MB despite an inten-
slv* and continuing campaign
by both official State agencies
and citizen-support groups
"The experience of the Texas
tga raz 2
erate in
4"
—f-*etptamfAe"Nf
• - — wr ., ; |
—— _ --- upun real Department of Public Safety, I
favors from nanon to nation.” the governor’s office, the Texas
Safety Association, local safety
?
208
! AVAuu FOK voU I
NOW!
1 p-emtcen % ,, I
;Badbd.2dneedok:;
■ amedns iMt avrmacne l
| •
g Nattonaly ndvetisea $18.88 ।
I MAZSH’S 1
l mt kain nrenham I
-----—
i • ■ "
ttmuei
fewer than 200 priests on the
island
Some Have Returned
Castro has since allowed
priests, including some Cubans
who studied outside the country,
to enter until now there are
about 240 Three Cuban priests
returned and were ordained in
Cuba this year. A fourth re-
turned after being ordained
elswhere.
Church officials acknowledge
that it to difficult to find youths
interested in religion and the
priesthood when they are taught
dialectical materialism at
School ,.
"We are losing the, weak but
gaining the strong." one priest
- -said._t,,
However, Castro’ recently ‘al-
lowed Catechism to be taught in
certain designated places and
not jus’ in the chute Mes
Why has the church been left
to operate? ,
"You can't take everything
from ’hr people, so you leave
them their religion which can
encourage ’hem," a priest said
“If dhe government had every-
thing to sive the pecple; they
wouldn't necd the church."
63
•13
t
Church in the United States of
America Hines had been Dio-
20 Years Ago
Dee. 4, 1914 — Katherine Phil-
lips' popular songshit-Gonna,
Build a Big Fence Around Tex-
as" will be,featured on the . ?
Huntsville Prison program,
"Thirty Minutes Behind the
Walls.”
Chappell Hill News. Mrs. Le-
roy Fisher and little sons, Char-
lie and Tracy, are visiting. Mrs.
M. E. Fisher-in Rogers
Mr and Mrs. E*O. Routt have
received letters from their son.
Capt. Joe E. Routt, stating he is
somewhere in Holland.
Mrs. Carl E. Niebuhr has re-
turned from Eunice, Louisiana,
where she has been visiting her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. R. Bieber. En route
home she stopped for a short
visit to her son-in-law and
daughter. Dr. and Mrs H.
pq3Ed222nga
Dec.T
point to te robed priests as I --
cro. O( „< worahip i New Diocesan
Attendance Down Slightly
from, pre-revolutionary days Chureh in Houston wHI hold a
The drop is most noticeable in special Counci
those parishes from which a lot 1
iyg.yea ths Problem
- • ’ than ever before and blow the The beginning ef governments
Jande."uhomg"ig‛d. ywmes,"o
narvUta; Will Weeren, Burton: aesa "Dutch" Hohn, Indepnd-
Hoaim0LRnAn oorreapondent Mia* June mcke, Round Top;
mH—-ex
A 18a dfe
I
*
g.
-- "11
.e.
-----—
1 a.-a
York Citytavern shortly before
he resigned as commander-in-
chief of the Continental Army.
In 1918, Presideht ' Woodrote
Wilson sailed for France to at-
tend the peace' conference at
Versailles
1942, President Roosevelt
ordered the liquidation of the
WRA created in 1135 to pro-
vide Nork for the unemployed.
In 946, the United Mine
Workers Union was fined $3.5
million for refusing to call off
a 17-day strike.
The Brenham Bennar Press eras estabushed as the Weekly Southern Ban-
ner — a red hot Democratic journal — on Janvary 1, 1866; enlarged ta e
dany nwspaper January 1. 1076, publtshea tor 45 years by J. G. Rankin,
dean of Texie sourneltam, who was one of the ounders or the Tesar
Pres Ammcinto in 1860, President in IMS. Published every afternoon
except Saturday and Sunday at 223 East Main Street, Brenham, Texas, Tele-
phone OR 9^0._________________________-
gUBBCRIPTION RATX8 Delivered to the home by carrier in Brenham;
ona month, $1,00; one year (10.00; Dy mall to Washington and adjoining
counties $7.00 per year Austin, Erazos, Burieson, Fayette, Grimes, Lee and
Waller counteb), to other sections in Texas (10.00 per year, out of Tease
$i20o per year. AU subncriptions payable in advance Copies that are un-
ideliverd, changes of address, and new subscription orders shula be ad-
drier Id to the Banner-Press, P. O. Box *g5, Brenham, Texas, 77833._______
'NOTICS: Any emronequn reflection upon the character, standing or reputa-
don or any person rum or corporation eppearing in the columns of the
Banner-Press will ho gladly and promptly corrected when the article in
quetion to called to the attention of the management.__________________
THB AMRRICAH CRSKD
I by William Tyler Page \
I belteve in the United States of America as a government at the
people, by the people, for the people; whose just powers are derived from
the cohsent of the governed; a democracy in a republic; a sovereign nation
at many movereign tatee; a perfect union, one and inseparable, etablished
upom those principies of freedom, equality. Justice, and humanity for
which Amarican patriots sacrificed their Uvea and fortunm.
I therefore believe it to my duty to my country to love tt; to support
the ooneuitution; to obey its laws; to respect Ito hag: and to defend it
agatna all msmiev ---
L,q u. ..
.“"k- ' -i-L
100 South St Charles St.
BEENHAM, TEXAS
mm MW
2 SJOr E
: -
.uo.
. sound truck outside the cHW®
agjgg TJ WMt; gsaw
Church-state relations reached
« ''
By Hnited Press International
rA»y । i riday, Dec. 4, the
38gfh day of 1964 with 27 to -fol-
lg. '
"The moon is approaching its
first quarter
The morning stars are Venus
and Mars.
The evening stars arg Jupiter
and Saturn
_ clans matter at Post Orfice
- ■ Act of March 8. 187*.
___OFFICERS — W. N Blanton, 8r..
____of the Board: Ben F Blanton. Prest-
dent and Treaqurer: Carolyn. W. Blanton. Vice-
President and Secretary,.
............................— Office Manager end Bookkeeper
.__________________-----.......... -Reporter-Photographer
______ alasinea Adverttsing h Ctrvulatloo
•....................-..........—Prootreager. Wire Newt
1AS8 ..................... Teletypesetter Operator
.........................................Teletypesetter Operate*
-........Dieplay and Classified AdverttoiM
............................... Advertising Maz-Up
.....................Assistant Advertistn Make-up
.... ...........Pressman. Btareotyper
.......----------........—..... Itertype Operator
Printer
MakeUp
IT. H. Muake, Hermann Klar, Henry Drechsel,
bert Ray Lesch. Rural Agent Monroe Eckermenn.
--------------------------------
..8.262
6-167 732125K
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Blanton, Ben F. & Johnson, Walter C. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 243, Ed. 1 Friday, December 4, 1964, newspaper, December 4, 1964; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1578265/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.