Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, April 26, 1937 Page: 4 of 4
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MONDAY, APRIL i«T.
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A.
PERSONALS
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Wagner act requires
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the bill, and will vote
MARKET NEWS
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COTTON
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hands
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CAPITAL JIGSAW
a" matter of cold
have if
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$2.25
Houston Prices Now
in Brenham
Thousands of article* to choose
from. Come and see us.
em-
em-
One yertr ano tbdax middling cot-
ton sold in Brenham. 11.50
him
sent
IIOU
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'TOOSUA’*’
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J. Schleider’s Sons Co., Brenham, Texas
bb-b^**t
THI MAYTAO COMPANY
WESTERN AUTO
Associate Store
BRENHAM, TEXAS
Home Owned and Operated
lead Chaska and Ta*
tai Problems Inaepar-
W. Fmh-Hom. MNfo
| KX CREAM
[■ pint QU*rr
15c 25c
CANDY KITCHEN
The Coldest Drinks at the
I Coolest Place ia Towat
The High School P.-T. A.
Invites Yoh To Attend
A SILVER TEA
Thursdayy April 29
From four to" seven
At O. F. Schoenvogel Residence
BENEFIT OF SENIOR CLASS
■nsswaMMsansnnL.-MnMaHMBnnnaniMM
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4-aa
Q. 1»H. Kim Namrn I*..- . J-'- U o-.Ui ny
• Millions of thoughtful housewives keep their
clothes at home where conditions are known to
be safe and sanitary— where they are given
the careful treatment that clothes, deserve.
Why not wash your clothes, or have them
washed, the fast, easy, careful Maytag way—
in ydur own home? Pure soap and clean
water in the Maytag one-piece, cast-aluminum
tub, assure clean clothes,,washed quickly,
economically, and conveniently. The Maytag
Roller Water Remover will damp-dr)’ them
just as efficiently. Find out why Maytag is the
preferred washer — the
measure of washer value
everywhere.
YOU« MAIS* WKL GLADLY
DtAAorr.THAn and lxpiain
IHS tASY PAYMINT SIAN
fact, the decisions have swung sev-
eral Senator, ((the big battle will
be in the Senate, the House being
’in the bag* for the Administration)
by justice Roberts] lga'n'( ,he P,an’ ,eft ,he. President
with a very bare majority. It is
generally believed that about 30 of
By HOWARD C. MARSHALL
AUSTIN. April 26—(A*)—There is
a picture on display in the first floor
rotunda of the Capitol the state can
have for keep, if it will fork over
13,000.
It depicts the fathers of Texas,
Sam Houston, Thomas J. Rusk and
others, drafiting the Declaration of
Independence in a blacksmith shop
at Old Washington-on-the-Brazo*.
Recently, however, members of
the Senate finance committee emit*
ted auch a groan at mention of the
$3,000 plenty of doubt arose whelk
er the deal ever would he consum
mated.
Brenham middling, 13.25
Houston middling. 13.25
Galveston middling, 13.25
Street price. cotto*. seed, $35.00.
Cotton seed hulls, $14.00.
Cottonseed meal, wholesale, $2.35
Cottonseed meal, retail, $2.50
to •
■
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■ HO
I
■
H
TUESDAY
Robert Young
Aim Sotbrnn
IN m
DANGEROUS
NUMBER
What a joy ride of laughs and
thrills ... as you go off on the
funniest honeymoon of all! A
“blind date" Romeo picks his
girls from the phone book!
It’s a treat!
PARAMOUNT PARA*
* GRAPHIC*
MUSICAL COMEDY
BETTY ROOP
I
■
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m ••
^t. - 7/V.*
. . J _
v«‘. ■ ’
r. '• * W '
SIMON THEATRE
tckdat
Bmg Croeby
Martha Rayo
Bob Burna
IN
WAIKIKI WEDDING
A singy, swingy Hawaiian hul-
labaloo of love, laughs and ly-
rics! Bing and Bob are widd-
ki-wacki-wooing in Glamour-
land! Its the lulu from Hono-
lulu . . the show of the year!
SWING WEDDING
(An outstanding color cartoon)
FOX NEWS
Expert Radrn Service
Wa repair any make or model
No charge for testing radios
Navratfl Music House
Jet*
ndto dealer. FHONEtov
liW
J_____
Candled eggs, 16c.
Infeitile eggs, I7.c
Rhode Island Red and Rarred Ply
mouth Rocks, large fryers, 25c 1b
Common hens, B<
Old looatere, 4c tu 3c
Country , bacon, 13c. <
New Country Lard. 13c.
Butter, 20c to 28c.
Sour cream butter fat. No I, 2.1c.
Sour cream butter fat. No. 2, 21c.
Sweet cream butter fat, 26c.
Sweet cream butterfat delivered at
plant, 30c.
■
I.
V^z
I
A. Knolle entcr-
with a luncheon
L
GOOD LAXATIVE
Many folks get such n-
frsshing relief ’toy taking
Mack-Draught for eonstipa-
Mat thd> prefer it to
Otosr imtives and urge toelr
friends to try it Black*
Draught la made of toe leaves *
and roots of plants. It does
not disturb digestion but
stimulates toe lower bowel so
that constipation la relieved.
■ J. 11 -1U»J . IX. I . I <LJ JI 1'U. ■ . 'B1W. ■ *>■ JB.'.—^-T»*
nore than evtn' attracted considerable attsiUioti, but
waa broken dp without ^eriuus re-
sults • ’ •
A young wo.irui w.'th i ch id tod-
dling at her side st.-ol’ea ti.rcngh th--
vestibule in fj,ont ci ’’ r ill <f the
House of Repre-enta.i. es. Suddenly
^■^oinsget^isss
12......:......
A rumor tint Senator Clint C
Small of Amarillo was conte-uplaruig
chucking his hat into the ring and
for a third time seeking <he gover-
norship brough’ a. prompt denial.
“No, thanks," the Senator • i,<|
when interrogated. “I’ve had enough.
Positively, No"
^Small twice failed to obtain the
'Democratic nomination although ri^-
ed one of the strong candidates in
each instance.
By th* time this « read, th* hear
tags OS the MU to increase the mem-
bership of the Supreme Court will
have bM* Mmpleted. The Senate
Judiciary Committee unanimous It
voted to conclude the takinr of the
testimony on or before April 28.
Thereafter the debate la Congress
will begin—and it is a dead certain-
ty that it will continue for many
weeks. The witnesses appearing be-
fore th* Judiciary Committee have
provided both sides with ammuni-
tion of varying effectiveness. Prac-
tically every possibly phase z of the
questionthas been r>fn<*ftive'ly con-1
sidered. And now the Supreme Court
itself has thrown a bombshell into
the proceedings by the series of re-
lated decisions on the National Labor
Relations Act, generally, called the
Wagner Act. handed down on April
5.
The
plovers to arbitrate with, an
ptoye-chosen body, over any ques-
tion of w*gc», «var« ’and working
conditions. For example, if the ma-
Mrs. Albert Stone and Mrs. Hat- j day with Mr, and Mrs. H. L. Reese,
tie Parke motored to Houston this’
morning to spend ths day.
Sammy Rsibcnstein and Oscar Schu-
bert spent the week-end with friends
in Austin.
Mr* Henry A. Wood has return-
ed from a visit to Galveston and
wss accompanied by her mother and
lister, Mrs. Schapper and Mias Susie
Schapper.
Ernest B. Becker and Beau Wendt
who have positions in Houston, spent
Sunday here with homefolks.
Mr. and Mrs. Kling Becker of
Houston were the guests of Brenhain
datives Sunday.
,Mrs. Henry H. Tucker and Mrs.
Ralph Turned returned to Waco Mon-
day. after spending the' week-end
here.
Mrs. Ben Schmid ^iad as her guests
Sunday: Carey Schmid of Houston,
Mrs. Helen Blue of Independence,
Mrs. Noah Dansby snd Mrs. Rol-
and Dansby of Bryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Thad Wheeler of Harlingen.
Mrs. Harry E. Baxter and a par-
ty of friends from Austin were here
Sunday, and she located the grave of
her grandfather, Dr. Gideon Lince-
■um, Texas patriot, at the old ceme-
tery near Rehburg. His grave will
be marked with a Texas Centennial
monument. ~
Mrs. Edmund Knolle has return-
ed to her home in Hearne after
spending several days here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Reese.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Watwood
are here from Houston to spend the
to
the
Court plan will be beaten in the Sen-
ate.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Byrd and Mrs.
J. M Petty motored to Bastrop
Sunday to attend the grand opening
of the beautiful Bastrop State Park.
Mrs. C. H. McKinney and daugh-
ter, Miss Rosemary, McKinney, Mrs.
Brook Smith, Jr., and Mrs. H. V.
Baker, Jf., and two children, all of
Houston, were gueats of Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Coston Sunday.
Mr and Mrs R W Buehrer
and son, Leroy, and Mr. and Mrs. F
E. Buehrer and daughter, Aline, mo-
tored to Lexington Sunday and spent
the day yith relatives.
Mr. an<f*Mrs. F. C. Winkelmann
Jr., and little daughter, Martha, werit
to Bastrop Sunday to attend the
dedication of Bastrop State Park.
A: E snd Beatrice Stinnett “ '“SI
have returned from Kansas ’ Citv.
where they attended the annual Chil-
dren's Clinic at the Baltimore Hotel.
They motored back through the
beautiful Orarks Mountains region of
Arkansas.
MOTHER’S DAY and MAiFEST SPECIALS
, ......
$10 00 Oil Steam Pcniianeilt Wave-i. now 56.50
S 7,50 Oil Steatp Permanent Wave-, now 54.35
$ 5.00 Oil Steani Permanent Waves.
S 3.50 Oil Steani Permanent Wave-........ ....
$ 2.50 Oil Steatn Permanent W aves, now $1.50
$ L50 Oil Steam Permanent Waves, now $1.00
WERCHAN’S BEAUTY SHCPPE
BRENHAM, TEXAS
Operator. -Mr. ami Mrs. |. H. Barrett. Mis*
Maude Werclian, Miss Mildred Steiritamp.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Striekert
and little daughter, Merle, of llous-
,ton spent Sunday here, and were ac-
companied back to Houston, by his
mother. Mrs. Robert Striekert.
Mrs. R. A. Schuerenberg, Mrs. T.
A. Adams, and . Tom Adame, Jr.,
have returned from San Antonio,
where they attended the Fiesta, in
which Miss Lillian Louise Adams
was lady-in-waiting to the Duehesa
of Port Arthur. While there they
were the gueats of Mr., and Mrs.
Mainpus Roos.
Much hag bet 1 said and wr tten
about "sit down" strikes. Recently a
new form appeared in »he -capital,
Senator E. M, Davis of Brown-
wood esn stand a lot, but some
aS’’” '' ■ ' v'" x x"
- ors”’'in~'tfie ’tK?*fioor *and“sir‘ <bwx --
The mother remonstrated and the
baby, observing the attent «n of
BRIDR COMPLIMENTED
Mr* Waldo
tained Saturday
honoring Mr*. George Hoeffert, the
former Mia* Alice Clay Rout*, who
is now making "her home in Hemp-
stead.
The dining room table wa* attrae-
tively centered with a bowl of yel-
ow calendulas and blue corn flow
rs. The luncheon dithes, which
vere enjoyed by about twelve of
Mr*. Hoeffert’* friends, carried out
i color scheme of yellow.
Mrs. Knolle presented Mrs. lloef-
ert the salad bowl, and the sugar
and cream dishes in her chosen chi-
aa, white Wedgewood.
This ia one of the several parties
that have been given in hmver of
•he new bride.
Guests included Flora Ann Wil-'
Kama, Marjorie Arp. Mrs. Tlemann
I Dippel, Anniebell Kubitra. Mrs. Hen-
fry Wood, Jr, lf^>- Franklin Fisher,
• Mrs. Henry Wehmeyer, Jr, Mary
Edna Carroll, Katharyne Reesa, and
Dorothy Earnest
Get your friend. Bring
your Laundry a
it yourself or
washed here
'• Free Eat* and Drinlia I
First washing half price.
TMe oiler good for oss week
' mdr. stank* Meador, ApR M I
CAS,*c^yY
things, he says, are
he can bear.
Take, for example, J>~ use of the
pet Legislative and legal phr.uing
----. or.” It is his abmonina’ioti.
,. The other day he sent up an am-
endment to a resolution on o(d agt*
w3s elim'patTdn^oFaH
proposal. He wanted it to rjid Ciph-
er "and" or "or" where "an I - er"
occurred.
utKmmuuuumm,
gives
indue-
com-
merce, such as the railroads. There-
fore, no one was especially Surpris-
ed when, more than a month ago,
the Supreme Court held unanimously
that a railroad was bound* by a long
disputed Federal law oonjpelling
collective bargaining. However, in
the paat the Supreme Court has us-,
uslly regarded manufacturing in-
dustries, no matter how large, as
being outside the scope of Congress’
interstate commerce regulatory au-
thority. Therefore, it was generally
believed that the Court would hold
the Wagner Act unconstitutional.
The forecaster* were mistaken. By
a fiveQo-four decision, the Court
het/1 the 'irr constitutional in two
vital cases involving a large steel
company, and the Associated Press.
The A. P. had discharged an em-
ploye who was a member' and an
active partisan of the newspapermen’s
guild. The Nationpl Labor Rela-
tions Board had ordered the A. P.
to reinstate this employe, and pay him
back wages amounting to about $1,-
700, on the grounds that he had been
discharged not because he wss In-
competent, but because he was a
union man. The Supreme Court sus-
tained the Board in a momentous
tkcitieiL read
that held that the transmission of
raa -'silhin^thf interstate com-
merce :
In the steel decision, read by'
Chief Justice Hughes, the Court
majority said, "Employes have at"
clear a right to organize and select
their representatives for lawful pur-
poses as (a corporation) has to or-
ganize its busine* and to select it*
own officer*.” The dec'-iion made
it clear, however, that some industr-
ies may be outside the interstate
commerce category, thu* leaving the
way open for farther cases in the
event unions try to force collective
bargaining on department stores,
restaurants, etc.
Thus one of the most important
New Deal laws wa* upheld by the
court of last resort. Yet many New
Dealer* were at heart unhappy. Rea-
son: Tiie-Court’s action took a great
deal Sway from the prime argu-
ment* used in defense of the reor-
ganization measure.
New Deal partisan.* have said that
the Court ha* refused to face ac-
tualities, ha* unreasonably restricted
the meaning of interstate commerce.
Yet in these decision* the Court
broadened it* interpretation of in-
terstate commerce beyond any pre-
vious precedent, apparently made it
extremely elastic. New Deal parti-
sans have said that the Court is an-
ti-labor—yet here the Court en?
dorse* the legality of a law written
by a pro-labor Senator and lauded
hy every labor leader. New Deal par-
tisan* have eaid that the Court’s
stand on freedom of contract is ab-
surdly out of line with actual con-
ditiou* yet here the Court has rec-
ogmaad that a lone employe cannot
bargain on au equal basie with man-
agement, and ha* sanctioned the use
M the Federal power to aid him in
vriving at a fair agreement.
On the other hand, supporter* of
the Court plan say that If the Court
Sa* changed it* stand by th* vote
■»' one man in a liberal direction. It
-an change it again in a conaerva-
<ve direction—that the decisions thu*
make reorganization all th* more ei*
sential.
Hows(t«F, as
......... ' ' .IL—
jority of worker* in an industry
decide, by vote, that some union is
'to rQMWtt ,hem- tbc management
of gw industry is legally bound to
recognize that union as the sole bar-
gaining agency of it* worker*. No
employe may be discharged be-
cause he join* « union, or work* to
achieve unionisation of an indus-
try. Discrimination against employes
for union activities of any nature is
t Federal offense.
The Constitution dearly
Congress wide power* over
trie* operating in interstate
members of the legislature and oth-
er* upon it, emphasized reshtai.ee b.F
lying down She flatly refused to gt-t
up- ’
“This is^, a *ii down strike," said ”
a gray-hairejj legislator.
"What should I do in a situation
Xhji'".j*sk«ri Xkwwumte*.*- -
^ftieii ■ she solved the situation. *
She picked up the baby and march-
etl away.
‘‘The state and federal hate
held it i* ridiculous to write and
or into law,’’ Davis said. "It, ir jost
a* meaningli
no.” '
Crosfcy - - ’
(Continued from Page 1 )
admonishedr "and the public will <an<| _
never go for a movie like that in
the first place."
A|l of_wh»’’K>l»-jn'nn*«»n*-
di'itrt*''Baftd ginger-
Bing CrSiby, the highest paid croon-
ing picture star in the business, and
the star of "Waikiki Wedding," the
comedy with music showing today at
Simon Theatre which is the latest
romance of the type which ha*
proved so popular in^ America. Which
just goe* to show.
Crosby’* career, unlike that of
many other film star*, was success-
ful from the start. It wa* his fam-
ily's intention to make a lawyer of
and toward that end he wax
to Gonzaga College. He join-
ed the glee club and Uacame- some-
thing of a minor sensation in Spo-
kane, his native city.
Paul Whiteman heard about Bing
and'Al and brought them to Nevr
York where he added a third menP-
her to the team, Harry Barris. This
wa* the beginning of the famous
"Rhythm Boys", who were soon
known from coast to roast. This wag
followed by some minor moving pic-
ture appearance*. His radio career
fallowed. Then Paramount signed
hib to *tar in "The Big Broadcast
of 1936" and he joined the screen's
great.
"Waikiki Wedding," which i* the
latest of the comedies with music, in-
cludes Bob Burn* and Martha Rayc,
who appeared with him in "Rhythm
on the Range,” and who are fre-
quently heard with him on the ra
dio. Beautiful Shirley Roas, star of
“The Big Broadcast of 1937" and
"Hideaway Girl" carries the femin-
ine romantic lead opposite Bing in
this gay tale of love in the Sta’oth
Seas.
REUtr^ll
Will/£|4^?nge h
your clothes ?
against* it.
All the Republicans will vote
against <t. The President’s majority
is not more than five—and is tend-
ing to decrease, according to all un-
prejudiced observers at the Capitol
Thus, it is possible, though the
chances are Mill against it, due
Administration pressure, that
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, April 26, 1937, newspaper, April 26, 1937; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1333901/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.