Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 63, Ed. 1 Monday, June 1, 1936 Page: 6 of 10
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4-
+ BARBS
*
NEW YORK, June 1— Dis-
covering new talent is Leonard
Sillman’s great mission in life
and every year or so, he is in the
habit of assembling his “finds” in
a' Broadway revue. So, as a post-
script to the theatrical season,
Sillman’s ’New Faces of 1936”
appeared on the Rialto horizon
the other night and, left a fav-
orable, but not an everlasting im-
pression on the premiere crowd.
, For It is a gay intimate song
4rt<t7.<lance show with neither
Ziegftldian frills or Earl Car-
rpHiaylurbelows. Its chief com-
nlaipt * hap pen s to be that while
the talent is fresh, the material
i« not?®*'
Prdmising Personalities
fYoung people, wooing a Broad-
way future, are the main par-
ticipants in “New Faces,” al-
though three or four of the en-
iortainers are not so recent. Im-
•mogene Cocoa, a pint-sized and
lively comedienne, has been well
Iknown to musical show patrons
•for several years. A Harlem belle
“named Billie Haywood who sings
•in a distinctive style, came to
fame when Sillmann discovered
her two years ago.
But the tyros who are brought
to the attention of public, show-
men and movie scouts in this edi-
tion of ‘New Faces”, are promis-
ing personalities. For many years,
the statuesque Marion Martin has
revealed an undraped, Venus-like
’figure to cabaret gapers and al-
lways, she has nursed an histrion-
ic yen. “New Faces” affords her
, <a first opportunity to keep her
Sclothes on publicly and play-act.
< A young lady named Elizabeth
.■Wilde is not only pleasing to the
!eye but an ingratiating, young
actress as well. And among the
pother young people who may
Some day owe their stardom to
Mr. Sillman are Jack and June
Biair and Nancy Noland.
I hardly believe that the songs
of “New Faces” will rock the ra-
dio sets, but they are pleasant
enough on the ear. Irving Berlin,
sfrho sat in the seat next to mine,
seemed to think so, too. Nearly
all of the sketches, of the ‘‘so-
phisticated” kind, lampoon celeb-
rities.
Although not a world-beater by
any means, something tells me
that “New Faces” will still be
around Broadway when the big
musicials, with the well-knowns,
are just starting in the fall.
Federal Players Active
Broadway has had little else
to excite herself about in the en-
tertaipment field during the past
to» weeks. True, the Living
Newspaper Unit of the Federal
Theater project presented an in-
teresting dramatization of the
past year’s events in a flesh and
Blood newsreel entitled “1935”.
But it is my notion that the Liv-
ing Newspaper’s last production,
“Triple A Plowed Under” which
dealt with the farm problem, was
• much better show. The WPA
has also presented a new stage
study of “John Brown” an an-
other about the problems con-
fronting university graduates, en-
titled “Class of ’29”.
In the commercial field, a com
edy entitled “A Private Affair”
descended upon us and caused
one cynic to remark that the pro-
ducer should have observed that
privacy to the extent of not in-
viting an audience.
I 'Before
I German
been
sleep,
obtoir
.What .about honoring the in-
lays, How that we have a Mother
Dky and Poppy Day?
• y , b
■. Before writing their reviews,
E German dramatic critics have
ordered to take a night’s
And they can’t count that
ed during the performance.
SIMPLE JUSTICE
--o
THE STATE’S JOB
K..
f
Some interesting observations have been reported by a
group of English and American law students now studying
the Russian court system with a view to simplifying our
own legal procedure.
The Soviet legal machinery, it appears, is distinguish-
ed for its brevity and directness. Judges, and not the law-
yers, conduct the trials; and precedents just don’t count.
Lawyers are not required, and many litigants conduct
their own cases even in the higher courts. There are no
long statutes; procedure is decidedly simple, and legal
loopholes are practically unknown.
Other features of the Soviet system, of course, are less
tenable, such as that placing all attorneys in a collectivist
unit and thus depriving them of f^es.
But in the main their system does seem to have achiev-
ed one thing—a simplified, direct, and inescapable court
set-up.
The American people have an odd little habit of carry-
ing on earnest public discussions without ever mentioning
one of the most potent issues at stake.
If we presently get into an argument over whether we
should amend the Constitution, it is a fairly safe bet that
one of the primary considerations will be passed over in
silence.
This primary consideration is the politician—the kind
of politician who rates the adjective “petty”. In any dis-
cussion of constitutional change, he is the Ethiopian in the
woodpile. He’s on everybody’s mind, but nobody brings
him into the open.
We are going to hear a good deal about the need of a
constitutional amendment that would give the federal gov-
ernment power to do some of the things which the su-
preme court has recently said that it cannot do. Before he
hears any of the arguments on this proposition, the ordi-
nary American tends to be deeply distrustful of it. And
the reason for his distrust is the politician.
Lay aside, for the moment, the question whether such
amendment is vitally needed, and consider what its first
and most obvious effect would be—namely, to increase
enormously the power of the. federal government. That
naturally would mean a vast increase in the number of gov-
ernment job-holders—a permanent, from-now-on increase,
ours through rain or shine, through sickness or health,
to cherish forever.
Those jobs would be permanent, but the job-holders
wouldn’t. They would be named by and for politicians,
and there would be a housecleaning every time there was a
new administration in Washington.
The bulk of them wouldn’t be much good. They might
know how to carry precinct K in Ward 9 for Congressman
Whoozis, but what they would know about the adminis-
tration of coal mines or the handling of farm surpluses you
could put in your Aunt Minnie’s left eye.
That is the sort of thing that sticks in the average
American’s craw. He thinks of it, subconsciously, when
this constitutional amendment is discussed. He may not
talk about it, but he doesn’t forget it—and he shouldn’t
forget it.
What it comes down to, then, is the simple fact that,
before we can give our federal government new powers and
responsibilities, we must do away with spoils politics. In
itg army, its navy, and its technical services, the govern-
ment employs thousands of men as single-minded, as effi-
cient, and as enthusiastically competent as any in private
industry. The same could be said of all its departments if
the spoils-hunter could be chased out.
Congressman Disney of Oklahoma recently introduced
a bill to set up a great training school for civil appointees
to government jobs. He envisages a government service
ruled by the same high standards that now obtain in the
military forces.
And that, or something very much like it, must be the
prelude to any permanent extension of the government’s
functions.
One must agree with Joseph B. Keenan, assistant
United States attorney general, that federal law should not
be substituted for state law. Keenan punts out that there
is an increasing tendency to let the “feds” do the job.
When there is something wrong with a state law, the thing
to do is to amend it, Keenan believes.
“I don’t think it was right, for example,” Keenan said
recently, “to give Al Capone 10 years in prison for violation
of income tax laws because authorities believed he was re-
sponsible for gang murders for which they could not get
conviction under state laws.”
The suppression of crime is primarily the job of states
and cities. Uncle Sam can’t be asked to do it all
“Manymarried women kre
now teeming the art of public
speaking.’’ We thought that, for
them, it wax just a matter of
opening the wtodowa,
When a Chicagoan on trial said
he knew hla fiancee only as
Blanche, the prosecutor learned
her last name was Wojciechowska.
Enough to make anyone Blanche,
- v
FEAR OF SPOILS HALTS
CHANGE IN BASIC LAW
Advertising,
News
With
Telephone No. 1. Private Exchange Connections With Business,
Circulation and Mechanical Departments.
From Day
To Day In
New York
By George Rote
were
Read the News Want Ada.
Australia has ended—
c
s\-
thefK
Newlyweds Take
Long Desert Trip
SYDNEY, N. S. W. (UP) —
A 7,000-mile honeymoon caravan
tour of
eight months after the bride
bridegroom set out.
The honeymooners
and. Mrs. Francis Birtles, of I
ney, and tn the course of the!—
trip they traveled up the Austra-
lian east coast, across the north
and down the center, through
tropical jungle and sandy desert.
Their cavaran wu fitted with a
"She's all tiftM’l <»\rr Ihcii first quarrel. 1 told her »lMJ'
should lune heard our lirwt hrctttv warn
refrigerator, wireless, a sink with
running water, water tanks and a
portable bath. It was as heat and
fly proof as it was posisble. to
make it.
Eight months’ supplies of gro-
ceries were taken by the couple,
when they started from Sydney.
With rod and gun they kept them-
selves supplied with fish and meat.
The bride had to prepare most
of her cosmetics herself. She in-
vented a face cream which also
proved useful for polishing the ear
which hauled the caravan.
D. R. Harris, President
Geo. W Bowman, General Manager
J. Lawrence Dean, Editor
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
Publishers
Five cents per copy, week days and Sunday. De-
livered by city carrier, 20 cents per week. 60
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6 months $2.7Jk one year $5 00. By mall elsewhere
In Texas and in Louisiana, Arkansas and Okla-
homa—3 months $2.00, 6 months $3 50, one year
$6 00. All other States: 3 months $2.50, 6 months
$4.00, one year $7.50.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered aa second class matter at the Postoffice in Henderson, Tex., under Act of Congress, Mar. 8, 1879
The Dally News carriers are instructed to place
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days, 7:00 a. m. Sunday, should also be reported
to the circulation department. A representative
is In the office each evening until 6:30, and until
9:00 a m. Sunday, to adjust complaints.
ifrttiierHnn Saily Neuw Editorial $agr
Published every afternoon (except Saturday) and Sunday morning.
Office 106 South Marshall.
Your Baby s Health
THE PROGRESS OF THE WORLD
A
STERLING MOTOR OILS
&
kkagcoeK/
DEPENDABLE
BY RODNEY DUTCHER
, _ l upon for the
f ^arrangement
/loot r i t o c T■
/last rites.
been
k
j
1
1
F J
Side Qlances" By Qeo. Clark I
COOK
With Your
CHEAP
NATURAL GAS
PHONE 590
*.
w
GIVE US A
TRIAL
J
SPUNKEY’S
SERVICE STATIONS
Henderson, Jolncrville
and Wright City
„ QU6Erj
DANCE
To Louie Clancy Orchestra
A Torch Singer nightly Except
Sunday
MATTIE’S BALL ROOM
Longview-Kilgore Hlway
BEHIND THE SCENES IN
WASHINGTON
A. CRIM
FUNERAL HOME
HENDERSON
e&m Laundry
' 2
Way
Serv-
ice
F
■ U'XZ
Day or Night
PHONE 262
Ambulance Service
s
During time of be-
reavement, it becomes
necessary that some
one person or group ol
persons be depended
. for the complete
t of the
/last rites. By depend-
/ ing on us, you, too, will
find almost complete
removal of your bur-
den.
Bl
K-‘(
VIM
f.v
I
■■ U , z.alt
w&w ■ / s -"-52
A- /?'/
i ■ < ■
on campaign.
That simply meant a threat to
veep the union right out from
rider its old line executives,
hich would be by far the tough-
it move in the Lewis-Green bat-
e thus far.
ote for Lewii’ Plan
The steel union (Amalgamated
ssociation of Iron, Steel & Tin
torkers) held its convention at
anonsburg, Pa. Delegates proved
be almost unanimous for in-
istrial unionism.
Faced with a vague offer of
organization aid from Green and
a definite offer from Lewis, they
voted for an organization cam-
paign along industrial lines, to
be launched by a joint committee
of^such contributing international
unions as would agree to waive
all claims of jurisdiction in the
steel industry and accept the jur-
isdiction of the Amalgamated.
Since craft unions which make
claims for organized steel work-
ers were believed unwilling to
give such waivers, the way
seemed left open for a joint drive
by the Amalgamated and the nine
unions of the C. I. O.
When the steel union’s execu-
tive board, led by President Mike
Tighe and Secretary “Shorty”
Leonard, indicated a disposition
to dally, Lewis sent Director John
Brophy of 1. O. and Vice Presi-
dent Phil Murray of the mine
workers to force a meeting and
deliver the ultimatum.
Auto Workers Next
Another C. 1. O. drive will be
made to organize automobile
worker^. This probably will pro-
ceed faster than the steel drive
when it gets started, which means
that the first big test of a new
industrial union’s strength is like-
ly to come in the Michigan area.
The automobile industry, as is
true of steel, is well organized
only on the fringes.
The most important feature of
the United Automobile Workers’
meeting at South Bend, Ind., was
a complete repudiation of the rep-
resentatives and desires of Green.
Almost unanimous hostility was
exhibited toward Francis J. Dil-
WASHINGTON, June 1. —
Conflicting and fragmentary re-
ports of developments in the la-
bor field have tended to blur
the important fact that John L.
Lewis and his Committee for
Industrial Organization are march-
ing rapidly along in their cam-
paign for mass organization work-
ers into industrial unions.
Some labor leaders predict a
summer or organization as big as
that which attended creation of
NRA.
Meanwhile, President William
Green and the craft union hier-
archy of the A. F. of L., at bitter
war with the C. I. O., have sus-
tained a succession of defeats.
The most sensational move
came in recent private confer-
ences, when representatives of the
Lewis group told pro-Green exe-
cutives of the steel workers’ union
that if they continued to stall,
following the union convention’s
stand for an industrial union or-
ganization drive, the C. I. O.
would go ahead, anyway, with its
proposed $500,000 steel organiza-
YOlJR
n"’cl’«»'er»he„
the knoW]edfra I
’s right, /
J'our /
at- Il
send II
—t Roosevelt for re-
Green publicly warned
labor to refrain from
taking sides in partisan political
contests.
Almost immediately, at least
half a dozen state federations of
labor formally declared their sup-
port of the Lewis-Berry Hillman
movement and it looked as if
many more were preparing to run
out on Green.
And very shortly Green himself
was asserting that, labor wanted
to continue under the “inspiring
and thrilling leadership” of Roose-
velt.
The Pen..sylvania state federa*
tion put another tack in Green’s
chair when it endorsed the C. I.
O. and the steel drive.
If you like a good fight, you’ll
probably find the A. F. of L.
convention this year considerably
more fun than either the Repub-
lican or Democratic session.
-----------o-----------
Read the News Want Ads.
■’L
-v»i A
fl
*'2^* 'A’
• • • . is r*
have <hat coi
iTaT3 frOni the I
'"at your ]jnpn ,
your suit is riffht k‘
t,e is clean J i eVen
tractive . ’ and
Jaunty* 0^'avs
*o the cles’i-
• • • •
A.
BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN
Editor, Journal of the American
Medical Association, and of
Hygela, the Health Riugazlne
If the formula for the baby is
made up at home, all materials
used, as well as th-, bottles and the
ripples, should he washed thor-
oughly and bulled dally. The top of
the bottle in whici the milk is de-
livered should be washed with boil-
ed water and wiped off with cot-
ton.
The ingredients ”hould be mixed I
and measured in cterll zed vessels.
The bottles into which >hc formula
is poured should <.e washed thor-
oughly and boiled, and thev should
be closed with no.,-absoibent cot-
ton or sterilized I ubber, or cork
stoppers ~—
It is much better to pour the
mixture for the baby’s food into
individual bottles than to keep it
all in one bottle, and measure it
cut into small bottles as needed. • a Ja
The wise moth.T will always £ » A*
make one extra bottle for the 24-j > I
bour period, to provide for acci- eczema.rashescjiatTpq,
dents, such as dropping the bottle) W dryness-quickly checked and
cr contaminating 'c Jn sone way. ' —B __ healinq promoted with —
After the Individual bottles have m II
been filled and stoypered. they may | to* D ■ 1 ■ 11
Le kept in the ice box. , A^^/W***v *
Nipples should be m-:de of thin j -
rubber and should te washed thor- ! -
cughly and boiled before using. All i
nipples may be washed end boiled '
at one time and <ept in a covered j
c’ish ready to put cn bottles as
they are used.
As soon as the feeding Is ended,
bottle and nipple «hould be washed
in cold water The bottles may be i
filled with water and left standing
until ready for preparation the
next day.
Tlie person wh"> is to give the I
feeding should wash her hands ;
thoroughly before handling the
bottles. In picking up .he nipple, I
:t should be touched only at the I
edge and, if possible, not at the )
part that goes into tl.e baby's |
mouth.
Just before feeding, the bottle j
cf milk should be placed in water
heated to about If 0 degrees, Fah-
renheit, which is ’ust a little more
than the temperat.ne o' the body.
Never put a bottle which has been
in the refrigerator into a vessel
containing boiling water or very
tot water, as th; bottle probably
will break.
When the milk s>.em to be warm
enough, a drop or two should be z
tested on the inside ol ine mother’s I
wrist. This part of the skin is very N-
lensitive. and the mother may tell
f.i this manner whether ‘he milk is
warm enough or -s too warm.
The milk should drof from the
hole in the iiipp e in fair-sized
drops and rather regularly. It
should not an o’ t. L’ the drops
come too smell o- toe siowly, ths
bole in the nipple may have to bs
enlarged.
Nowadays there aie a l sorts of
Inventions, hi the v.ay of specially
constructed nipples which are said
t> make num'ng easier and to pre-
sent the baby fro'., swi: '■>wing air.
The baby should thk. just about
.' s long for a' artificial rinsing as
he would fo“ nursing from the
breast.
The same rules riajfG.sallowed,
relative to o-eventing T e baby
from swalloe: ng '‘ir, as were sug-
gested in re1? tion to bie.ns, feed-
ing. __
71 /if
Ion, imposed last year by Green
as the union’s president. The
union voted for industrial union-
ism and for a vigorous fight at the
next A. F. of L. convention to
prevent craft, unions from raiding
its ranks.
Other automobile unions as a
result, are eager to merge with
U. A. W. Negotiations are in
progress, probably to be followed
by a vigorous organization drive
next fall. A $250,000 drive fund
is contemplated.
Other Blown at Green
Green, meanwhile, has
harassed on other fronts.
After creation of a labor move-
ment headed by Lewis, Sidney
Hillman of the clothing workers,
and George Berry of the press-
men to support
election,
organized
MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 1, IMi
RENDER8ON DAILY 1HSW8, HENDEMON, TEXAS
Ml
PAGE SIX
YOU BUY
YOUR
ELECTRICITY
IS THE
BIGGEST BARGAIN
B
I
F
I
Citizens National Bank
Of Henderson
The Appreciative and Dependable Bank
Summer, Fall, Winter or Spring
.. . the banking business goes on . . . goes on today under the posi-
tive protection of capable national protection, guidance and guaran-
tee. And this institution’s services are just the same, day in and
out, always helpfully directed toward the welfare of those who do
business with this bank.
_
J ON-
?!
15
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 63, Ed. 1 Monday, June 1, 1936, newspaper, June 1, 1936; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310134/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.