Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 197, Ed. 1 Monday, October 4, 1965 Page: 1 of 12
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....___ ■ ._ / ______ --------_____----...................... . ________. ..... ........ *________________-_________c:
Brenham Banner-Press
EslaDiisned 1007
MONDAY, OCTOBER 4,1965
VOLUME 100
BRENHAM, TEXAS
10c Per Copy
Member UPI
r
Pope Speaks Before UN
t
By LOUIS CASSELS
' p)
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pope
R
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it
4
DECA OFFICERS—The officers for the Distributive Education CTub of Amer-
—
1
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II
TOWN
H
way across the street into the , up and extend a fifty-foot fire
hose and turn on the water in
' FAA RULE
mobile station wagon. The accin The next- semi-annual con-
Fortas Takes
vention will take place in Taylor
WASHINGTON
I Aviation A g
e he y
Justice Oath
Fire Prevention
Visits Scheduled
Correction Please
___ north on North Bark. M__struck
non Week. Brenham Fire De-
..
riet ■
g
2., )
eN.3e
3
If
of Mueltersville: ’two sons Rob-
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RAINFALL
1
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eg
Dignitaries
Greet Pope
At Airport
Theo. Hurtig Sr., 76
Dies At Residence
Scholarships Given
Prairie View Cadets
Indian Troops
Attempt Seizure
shaped U.N. Assembly Building
for his historic appearance as
FiRE RACE RESULTS
eAt the semi-annual Volun-
teer Firemen’s Convention in
Belton Sunday. thirteen com-
ELECTED DECA MEMBERS—Distributive Education ' Club members elected
to fill offices for the coming term are, left to right. Barbara Bilski, treasurer;
I a Nelle Neumann, reporter; Loretta Hegefeld, historian; and Fred Henry Hei-
demann, parliamentarian.
Outstanding samples of qual-
ity hay will be on exhibit at the
1965 State Hay Show Friday,'
quest: namely, that of serving. .
Site of this year s event will
be the North Houston Livestock
Auction Company, 801 Rankin
Road, Houston, located just east
of Highway 75 north of the
city limits.
J.-D. Sartwelle, Chairman of
the Agriculture Committee of
the Houston Chamber of Com-
merce, and the Texas A&M Uni-
versity Extension Service, co-
sponsors of the event, invite all
persons interested in hay to
exhibit and attend the show.
A complete chemical analysis
will be run on each entry to de-
termine the actual protein, fi-
ber, estimated digestible pro-
tein, estimated total digestible
nutrients, and estimated net
energy. This analysis will con-
stitue 5ft percent of the score-
card of judging and visual
the sidecut the Oldsmobile at
the intersection. They were ap-
proxtmately $300 in ’damages to
the Ford and $200 in damages to
the Oldsmobile. Shirley
Schwarze was treated for injur-
ies at the Schoenvogel Clinic.
Lucy Conner, a passenger in the
Oldsmobile, was slightly in-
jured.
erf Hurtig of Bleiblerville and
Then W Hurtig of Berlin; four
daughters, Mrs. Henry Wiese-
pape of Wonder Hill, Mrs. Ed-
ward Schroeder of Bleiblerville,
Mrs. Alvin Brinkmeyer of Muel-
lersville and Mrs. Lilburn Meier
of Bleiblerville, 15 grandchil-
dren and nine great grandchil-
dren.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmit Lewis of
Brenham are the parents of a
girl born at the Bohne Mem-
orial Hospital Friday at 12:20
p.m. She weighed nine pounds.
12% ounces.
ai show.
Judging will begin Friday
morning followed by a lunch
and ah" outstanding program
at 1:30 p m, featuring authori-
ties on hay production from
Texas A&M University.
Specialists appearing on the
program will be: Mr. John Box,
Extension Agronomist, Texas
A&M University-MANAGE.
MENT DECISIONS IN PRO-
DUCING QUALITY HAY; and
Dr. R. E. Leighton. Head of the
Department of Dairy Science
Texas A&M University-RE-
CENT RESEARCH WITH SI
LAGFS AND COASTAL PER
MUDA HAY
JUDGING HAY SHOW RR.
SULTS will be Al Novasad, Pas-
ture Specialist Texas ARM Uni-
versity; Phil Nx, Agriculture
Education Specialist Texas A&M
University.
04
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ssan
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BRENHAM
Homeof
e '
-r
m.r
' lama
zh
i eh"g
nco’t.
Natkin* General Assembly in j
the name of ”all mankind."
mg to seize Pakistani territory
ip the Chhamb area of Kash
KARACHI, Pakistan (UPI)—
Pakistani force* inflicted heavy
casualties on Indian troops try-
12 Pages, 2 Sections
----------------
4
The. intersection of North .__
Park St. and Academy St. was
the scene of an accident caused
by faulty brakes at 9:45 am.
Friday. Gwendolyn D. Black-
mon of Houston was going west
in a 1958 Oldsmobile sedan own-
ed by Willie Wjliams and ran a
stop sign at the intersection
when the brakes of the Olds-
mobile failed. A 1958 Ford se-
dan, driven by Shirley Weiss
Schwarze of Brenham, heading
ficult matter*.
We said also, however. and
all here today feel it. that this
moment is also • great one.
Great for m, great for you.
For us: you know well who
(See MANKIND Page $)
1.
-a
No. an
large porch, and has recently been painted gray
with white trim. A white picket fence and a well-
kept yard add to the beauty of the place.
. , , r
South Market St. was the scene
of a rear-end colliaion at 4: IfT
p. m. Friday. Joan Hasskarl,.
driving a 1964 Chevrolet Cor-
vair, was going north on South
Market St. and had stopped for
traffic before attempting a left
turn. Dinah Marie Audish of
Brenham, driving a 1952 Chevro-
let sedan, was also going north
on South Market and failed to
stop in time, hitting the rear of
the Corvair. Joan Hasskarl was
taken to the Brenham Clinic for
• the treatment of Minor injuries
There were no other injuries.
Church to Rockaway. Queens
The plane landed smohl and
.re 668
czka ,a
•,s
2. 245
rae
j
—
ROUND THE^
A LOT OF SWEET POTATO PIE—Alvin (Chick)
Bredthauer holds a potato ha grew. The sweet po-
tato weighed in at five and one fourth pounds at the
Dan Homeyer store in Long Point Friday afternoon.
' T0 . >
Cas-
01e
11 ROOMS FOR $2,500-—IN 19291—This beautiful
old home in Carmine waspurchased in 1929 for
$2,500 by the Herbert Noaks. It has 11 rooms, a
! 1.- is
ica at Brenham High School have been elected for the coming year. Left to right,
they are Robert Smith, president; Billy Blume, honorary president; Judy Wil-
liams, vice-president; and Sandra Cohen, secretary.
- . ' ‘ ? A ENm
Seeks Peace For “Mankind”
State Hay Show
4,
Set Oct. 29
partment Chief E. W. Pnughaupt
and John Rauch. a member of
the Texas Fireman* Training
School at Texas A&M Univer-
sity, are making the round* of
all the schoois of the area and
several civic organizations to
stress the importance of fire
prevention.
On Monday at 10:30 a n. they
visited Brerham High School.
The schedule for Tuesday is
as follows. Junior High School
at 10:20 a.m . Rotary Club at
12 noon. and Lion'* Club at 7
p.m.
On Wednesday the team will
visit the Brenham Elementary
School at 9:30 a m and the
Kiwamis Club al 12 noon.
At 10:30 Thursday Pickard
High will be visited The team
will give their fire prevention
talk at St Mary* School at 2
p m Thursday.
Fire prevention will be the
theme of the meeting of the Io
cal fire department and rural
unit* at the City Hall Tkursday
at •:» p m.
Theodore Hurtig, 76, of the
Mueltersville Community, died
at his residence Sunday at 11
a.m.
Funeral services will be
held at the Salem Lutheran
Church at Salem Tuesday at
2 p.m with Rev. F. T. Saeger
officiating Burial will be in the
Salam Cim»i«ry The Brenham
Memorial Chapel is in charge
of arrangemen t s
Survivors include his widow,
1hy
i$, 18
ABhebra*
A.s , (
In running pictures of each
and every champion and grand
champion of the 1965 Washing-
ton County Fair the; Banner-
Press inadvertently reversed
the placement of two pictures.
The picture over the caption
"Champion Hereford Female"
should have been over the cap-
tion "Junior Show Champion
Hereford Female" and vice ver-
sa. Our apologies to the own-
ers, the exhibitors, and the
champions.
Daily Weather
Report
in The
Brenham
Banner-Press
Established 1866
A Century of Service in
HISTORIC
WASHINGTON COUNTY,
TEXAS
Lieutenant Colonel Arthur N.
Fearing. Professor of Military
Silence at Prairie View announ
ted recently that the two PV-
Cadets will receive two-year
Army ROIC Scholarships They
- are Otis D Evans from Bren-
ham. and Negal F Williams
from Houston
The acholarahip*. authorized
by the recently enacted ROTI
Vitatiration Act of 1964, are Me
first of their kind to be awarded
at Prairie View, Under the
schola rstip agreement the
Army will pay these two Cadet*
$50 per month until graduation
to include the summer months
except for one sig-week sum
mer training period when they
will be paid at the rate of
1147 30 per month in addition,
the Army wil pay all their tui-
tion and laboratory fees a* well
as purchase all necessary text
books The approximate value of
each of the scholarships is
$1400
Cadets Evans and Williams
were selected to receive the
scholarships from among other
qualified Junior Cadets on the
basis of their impressive aca-
demic and military record*
Cadet Evans' is a Soil chemis-
try major and resides with his
parents. Mr and Mrs Thoma*
Evans Sr. in Brenham Cadet
WHliams' parent* Mr and
Mr*. Thweat William* live at "
3014 Rosewood Street, Houston.
He is an Electrical Engineer-
ing major and lives on campus.
A crowd of dignitaries —al-
most all in topcoats except Sen.
Robert F Kennedy (D-N Y.) —
was at Kennedy International
Airport to greet the pontiff. A*
hi* plane taxied to a halt. Car-
Paul V!. speaking to the United pilgrim of peace, the 68-year
“ ‘ old pontiff had conferred pri-
Rainfall reports for the week-
end as received by the County
Agents office include:
John Tappe, Wm. Penn. 9;
Raymond Engeling, Pleasant
Hill, 1.2; Fred Kokemoor, Won-
der Hill, .7; Gus Korthauer,
Long Point 1; Eckert's Store.
Greenvine. 1.1; Walter Lueck
emeyer. Independence, 1%; and
Walter Keim, Long Point, 1.2.
(FAA) has lifted a rule requir-
ing airline pilots 'to wtiar oxy-
gen masks while flying above
35,000 feet. From now on, one
pilot is required to wear a
mask only at altitudes above
41,000 feet — a height at which
the airlines seldom fly.
1221015114
tumst
ssgusim
Fede r’a
TALES 4 —•
49 24 coLE
DALLAS, TEXAS —
taxied to the reception area. ...
Pierre de Meulemeester,
U.N. chief of protocol, was the
first to board. He • introduced
the pontiff to Secretary General
Thant of the United Nations.
The Pope then descended from
the plane on a red carpet to
greet personally a number of
the more than 1,000 in the wel-
coming party, including Mayor
Robert F Wagner, who kneeled
and kissed the papal ring
—it was 44 degrees and • wind
with velocities of 26 to-30 miles
an hour whipped the Pope's red
and white cape as hr made his
first speech as pontiff on Amer-
ican soil. He read therspeech in
English, firmly gripping th
fluttering text. He wore spec
taeles.
Others who shook hands with
the Pope before and after the
speech were Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, Secretary of State
Dean Rusk, Foreign Minister
Amintore Fanfanl of Italy, who
(See GREETS Page 4)
solemnly warned today that
peace is no longer merely de-
sirable but an indispensable
condition of human Survival.
In an unprecedented appea-
rance before the- parliament of
nation*, the gentle-voiced, sad-
eyed pontiff made his own the
word* of the late President
John F. Kennedy:
“Mankind must put an end to
war, or war will put an end to
mankind *
The Pope, who arrived here
earlier today on the first papal
visit to America, told the
world’s statesmen that he came
before them as "bearer of a
message for all mankind "
- "The penpies of the earth
turn to the United Nations as
the last hope of concord and
peace," he said.
Before going tn the domed
path of Gaskamp’s vehicle.. Gat* ---------------------1
ritt was driving a 1959 Old**' - the sortest length of time.
w
kVl
against Kashmiri MnsfemtTht This is Nationnl Fire Preven-
’ voice" speaks for pro-Pakistan t Week. Brenham Fire De-
dinal Cushing of Boston and
Cardinal McIntyre of Loa An.
geles led the delegation onto
the cold, windy runway.
The airport closed for about
18 minutes so that no other
planes could land. The landing
was accompanied by music by
the hand of St. Camilla's
rebels trying to overthrow In.
dian rule in Kashmir
The rebel radio said new
waves of Indian repression
against Moslems in the moun-
tainous regions of Poonch and
Rajaori forced 175,000 persons
to Nee into Azad (free) Kash-
mir. It reported several clashes
between armed rebels and In-
dian troops Sunday in scattered
areas in the Indian part of
Kashmir.
And the Lord said isata Moses
w herefore ertest thou unto met sprak
unto the ehuldren of Israel, that they
go forward.— Exodus 16:1s.
When we today lone eight of our
true goAls in life, we like the chiidren
of Israel bein to quibble and be dis-
gruntied It la then that we need
to fix our eyes on our real goais in
life and "go forward ”
mir. Radio Pakistan reported
today.
The broadcast said Pakistani
troops stopped the Indian a*
sault, which began Thursday,
and reoccupied positions held
prior to the Sept. 23 United Na-
tion* cease-fire.
The radio quoted the clanden-
stine "Voice of Kashmir" as
pleading with the United Na-
tions "w stop Indian tyranny"
panies competed in the fire
race. The results were as
follows: First place, Killeen
Fire Department with 16
second*, second place, Hearne
with 16% seconds; third place,
Rockdale with 18.3 seconds;
fourth place, Brenham with 20
seconds; and fifth place. Bur-
ton with 20% seconds. The
object of the race was to see
which six-man team could hook
vately with President Johnson
in the President’s heavily-
guarded suite on the 35th floor
of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel
The Pope expressed his de
light at being m America,
which he described as “a coun-
try so free, so strorg, so Indus
trious, so full of wonders."
Crowds officially- estimated at
more than 1 million person*
gave the Pope a warm but or-
derly welcome when he drove
through the city on e 24-mile
motorcade tollowing his 9:25
a m. EDT arrival at Kennedy
Airport
An even larger turnout had
been expected, but New York-
er* apparently heeded the re-
peated plea* of Police Commis-
sionr Vincnt Broderick to
stay home and watch the mo-
torcade on television.
"NO AMBITION TO
COMPETE"
+
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
, ‘ Supreme Court opened its 1965-
66 session today and newly
named Justice Abe Fortas took
his place on the bench in a
brief solemn ceremony.
President Johnson was in
New York City to meet Pope
Paul VI and could not follow
the presidential custom of wit-
nessing the swearing-in of his
first appointee to the high
court.
Chief Justice Earl Warren
nted the "brief but distin-
guished" service of Fortas' pre-
decessor, U.N. Ambassador Ar-
thur J. Goldberg. "He pursued
good causes without regard to
whether they were popular or
not," said Warren.
After a session that lasted 22
minutes, the court adjourned
for week-long Conferences on
the huge backlog of cases
which has piled up since the
summer recess began June 7.
cupi, ..Fhe dent occurred at 6:05 p.m. Sat-
eqEsago - d pSapurday, Gaana pas me ■ meosg-anan Ma v.
lam Appn’c’v W ,
inspection by the judges will
constitute 50 percent
Champion and reserve cham-
pions will be selected
from each of the three divisions;
perennial, annual, and legumes.
From this will come the overall
Grand Champion and Reserve
Champion of the State Show,
according to Sherman W. Clark,
Crops Production and Market-,
.ing Division Chairman.--------
fhe Soil Conservation Service
and the Texas Education Agen?
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(UPI)—-The following is an un-
official English translation of
Pope Paul VT's address to the
United Nations:
A* we commence our address
to this unique world audience,
we wish to thank your secreta-
ry general. U. Thant, for the In-
vitation which he extended to
us to visit the United Nation*,
on the occasion of the twentieth
anniversary of the foundation of
this worid institution "for peace
1 and for collaboration between
i the peoples of the entire earth.
RAIN DRIVE CAREFULLY
Mostly eloudy skies and ceol
through Tuesday with • asional
light rain. Low expected tenight
M. High expected Tuesday 7.
Readings for 14 hour perle
ending at 1 a. m. en each date:
Oct. 1. Mat. 70. MM. 58.7a.m.
59; Oct. 8. Max. 65. Min. M. f
a. m. M. Raim22; Oct. 4, Mas.
70, Min. M. 7 a. m. 17. Katai
Qur thanks also to the pre-
ident of the General Assembly,
Mr. Amintore Fanfani,. who
used such kind language in our
regard from the vary day of bid
ejecton,-
we-hank all of you here pre ’ I
sent for your kind welcom-, aad i
we present to each one of you I
our deferential and sincere sa- I
lutation. In friendship you have I
invited us and admitted us to I
this meeting: and it is as a I
friend that we are here today.
We express to you our cordial
personal homage, and we bring
you that of the entire Second
Vatican Ecumenical Council
now meeting in Rome and re- -
presented here by the eminent
cardinals who accompany us I
for this purpose. S ..
In their name and in our own,
to each and every one of you.
honour and greeting!
This encounter. as you al! «n>
derstand, marks a simple and
at the same time a great
moment it is simple, because
you have before you a humble
men; your brother; end among
you all. representatives o
sovereign states, the least-in-
vested. If you wish to think of
him thus, with a minuscle, as it
were symbolic, temporal sover- ।
eignty. only a* much a* la no*
cessary to be free to exercise
his spiritual mission, and to as-
sure all those who deal with
him that he is independent of
every other sovereigoty at this
worid. But he, who now addres
set you. has no temporal power,
nor any ambition to compete
with you in fact, we have nogh-
mg to ask for. no question to
raise; we have only a destre to
express and a permission to re-
quest: namely, thatof serving
you in so ta r as we can. with
disinterest, with humility and
love.
This is our first declaration. J
At you can see, it is so simple
as to seem insignificant to this .
qasembly, which always treats ]
of most important md most dif- ’ ; F
A
ACCIDENTS
Milton Charles Gaskamp of
Brenham applied his brake* to
prevent an accident on north
Park St. Saturday-and went in-
to a skid, crossing the curb and
a lawn on the west side of the
street. Gaskamp, driving 1965
Ford sedan, was traveling north
on Park St. when Edwin Lavyon
Garritt of Long Beach, Calif.,
backed from a private drive-
2
.4
cy are also cooperating in ’ F
irs Anna Marie Wittlif Hurtig what promises to be a most un. •
nf MrSMere +tN eANI DAh i ; 4 q 6
usual, mpressive and education- ■
77 ' •
fl'’
I
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Blanton, Ben F. & Muegge, John T. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 197, Ed. 1 Monday, October 4, 1965, newspaper, October 4, 1965; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1578480/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.