Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, June 29, 1942 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brenham Weekly Banner and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.
Extracted Text
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MC
MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1942.
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ER
Slight Political Tinge Detected in New Tax Bill •
Drafted by House Ways and Means Cbmmittee
MANY MORE
CONTRIBUTORS
■4
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Mrs.
Mrs.
Otto
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Mrs. Jon
wes
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Paul Wright ._
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BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
---------—-—-----
Working On Him
V AT.
. 9 0
> 0 C /
I
Rd o
Burton Donations
Chas. Overmann' $1; Hy Over-
man 31; John Ludwig $1; Qus
Draeger 31; Hermann Kieke $1;
Ben Garlin 50c; E. O. Dallmeyer
I
a
FT -4.
j>
PMSVIOV1 ruzzu
answiz to
Schwettmann 1.00; Perry Lee Tho-
mas .25; Mrs. W. Willis .75; J.
E. Nunnalee 50; Frank Behrens
1.00; Mrs. Frank Behrens .50;
_____ ________ __, _____Mavis Behrens -50; Mrs. Robert
E. Smith .20; Mrs Oswald i Hueske .50; Mrs. Robert Giesler
Dr. C. A. Bateman 1.00; Kinsey
Sour cream butterfat. No. 2, 32c
Sweet cream butterfat, 40c, (de-
livered to plant).
COTTON
One year ago today middling
eotton sold in Brenham at 13.50.
Two years ago, 9.50
Three years ago, 9.00.
Middling, 18.00.
Cottonseed, street price, RB.
Cottonseed hulls, 312.00.
Cottonseed meal, retail, 12.35.
wholesale, 12.25.
Whole pressed seed, retail, 32.15.
wholesale |2.00.
Fresh eggs, 20c.
Fryers, 17c to 20c.
Hens, 12c to 14o.
Old rooster*, 8c.
Turkey hens, 15c.
Turkey toms, 13c,
Butter, 25c to 30c.
Country lard, 12c.
Country bacon, 12c.
Sour cream butterfat. No. 1, 34c
the NYA? created to relieve the effect? of unemployment?
RAILROAD SOQCDVLB
Will Rogers Jr.
’ Joiris the Army
Ro<
k tf.
.-----PuHiaher j i'
.X----—________,„.E<iit<>r| I >
(
>onth SOc: yeer S5 00 |
A
■ A
■ I
iutynni
4fj0SaB
"waaeertpUoe Rate* Py carrier on* week
By Mall : Waehlnalon and adjoinliur counties: S3JW: Tone fl 00. out of stats >6.00 I
annt’lnssa
iditu^fd ntiui
■■sawis g._,__
■UmClU-i IHHUMfl
ijcnwn dtr.innii an
wnH ticinriH anci
db Huarag ana.^
rdnrauMnki oraraufTi
------
LJwylBBna
the taxpayer. The manufacturers*
sales tax Is something else again
P’lRST take the problem of de-
termining who is a manufac-
turer. Is it the manufacturer of
fishhooks, the man who catches
the fish, the man who manufac-
tures the tin cans in which the
fish is packed, or the man who
packs the fish in the tin cans and
P«m1m on a four-color label? Or
are they all manufacturers and do
you tax them all, plus the man
who prints the labels, the manu-
facturer of the boat used by the
fisherman and the man who made
the wagon to haul the stuff to
market?
If the manufacturers' tax is as-
sessed st the first level, the tax is
passed on to the second and third
manufacturer* and eventually to
the wholesaler, the retailer and
the consumer. It is usually pyra-
mided in such fashion that it
eventually become* a *itable ir.-
cresse in the cost of living, instead
of lust a 2 or 3 per cent tax.
Entered u veeond-
ria*» matter at pnat-
Mnce. Frenham. Tex-
ax. under act of Mar.
». D7?.
Mrs.' Brenning 1.00;
Curry .50;
Mrs. Schoenaman .50; Mrs.
Wisnski .50; Louis Schoenemann
.26; Mrs. L. M. Guggolz .50; L. M.
Guggolz .50; Elmo Van Allman
.50; Mrs. Elmo* Van Allman .50;
Mrs. R. R. Buchanan 1.00; Mrs.
H. Seelhorst .50; Mrs. W. R. Bueh-
rer .50; Mrs. Ed Goeking .50;
Ed Wegner |1; Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Schlottmanh $2; Mrs Olga
Schelke >1; E C. Dickschat $2;
Gus Schultz 50c; Herbert Schulz
50c; Ernest Hahn 50c; Henry
Wagner, Sr„ 50c; Henry Wagner,
Jr., 50c; Ed EhlCrt $1; A. Sander
50c; Wm. Grabarschick 50c; Ida
Krause $1; T. C. Stegmann .50c;
Louis Gaskamp |1; Mrs. Minnie
Klatte 50cj Fritz A. Koehns 50c;
Mrs. Aa.TsnYulte »i; X?rH. Marcus
50c; Gilbert Marcus 50c; Mrs. F.
C. Jeske $1; P. S. Dudley 31; Al-
vin Surlock 50c; H. W. Schroeder
50c ; Paul Gaskamp 50c; Emil Bus-
se 50c; Wm. Welthorn -fl; E. F.
Hohlt 25c; Lonnie Strangmeyer
50c; Mrs. Lonnie Strangmeyer 50c;
Mrs. August Schoenemann 31;
Mr. and Mrs. Theo. Rodenbeck 31;
P. N. Roberts 32; Pierre Roberta
31; Mr, and Mrs. J. T. Embrey 81;
Mrs. Gi. H. Huettlg 50c; Rev. T. . ..
H. Graalmann 31; Mr. and Mrs.
A. J Wendt 31; A. F. Oeick 33;
A. W. Kelly 50c; Erwin Ahrons
50c.
mS1 iM
• £> kfM*
dtswiftai
inlMMt
were employable.
• • • -
J And that is only the immediate problem. If the war goes
oih and Uncle Sam hr_t
on* top of his 1942 quota—
The moral is obvious. We’ve passed out of the era of de-
pression and unemployment. We’ve reached the point where
must reinforce such personnel as is freed by priorities
tragedies with oldsters, the physically handicapped, youths,
wtjrnen who don’t really want to work but can.
♦It is a jobseeker's paradise. So why the WPA, the CCC,
T. A. Low, Jr. 1.00; Edwin Wies-
ner 1.00;
Tss Clay 1.00; Henry Thornhill
.50; Ad. Wehmsyer .50; Ed A.
Gajeske .50; Mr*.and Mrs. Julius
Groza 1.00; Ben Rabner .50 Ernest
Rogers .25; Howard Allison 1.00;
.Mercer-Seidel Funeral Home 2.50;
Kill Ants
When Bee
Brand Insect
Powder hits ants
they die. Try
this killer to-
day. Kill*
roaches, flips,
mosquitoes, bed l
bugs, moths, tee.
%
workmen. We are trying to create a synthetic rubber indus-
try out of whole cloth.
■ Obviously the less than two millions in the ranks of the
unemployed couldn’t supply all these needs even if everyone
were emnlovable. "
7^
L-di
8:51
e . 10:
2:1
5:1
1.00; Mrs Ben Butler, Jr. -50; Mr.
and Mrs. Horten .50; Mrs. Hen-
drickson .25; Mrs H. O. Sanders
50; Mrs. R. F. Gaskamp .50; Hen-
ry Wehmeyer 1.50;
Jas. W. Dever 50c, Miss Pearl
Nowicki 31, Mr. and Mr*. G. Mohr
31, Hays Fletcher 50c, Julius •
Duerr 50c; Reinhardt Blum 50c; 8.
H. Zetik 50c; Mr. and Mrs. Robt.
Boedeker 31 < Franlfc, Stegent 31;
Miss Meta Koehring 50c; Joe Pi-
cone 31; Mrs. Cecilia Washerleaky
5Oc; Hannah Dever 50c; Albert
Hoile 31; Henry Stelter 31; Mr?
and Mrs. Alex Micheli 32; Ernest
Kettler 50c; Mrs Martha Klatte
31; Mrs. C- W. O'Kieff 31: Chaa.
EHermann 31; Willie Koehler 50c;
Tommie Burrell 31; Mrs. 8. A.
Kopycinski 31; Mr. and Mrs. A. A.
Behrens 31; Alvin Behrens 50c;
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Nelnast 32; Miss
Mollie Nelnast 50c; John Schreiner
50c; .Brenham Oil Mill 310; Mr.
and Mrs P. J. Lemm 31; Oscar
and Gladys Hoffmann 31; Mr. and
Mrs. O. E. Weimanrf 32; Frank
Duchinaki 50c; Philip Roberson
50c; J. S. Felder 50c; Clara Fielder
50c; Martin Stegent 50c; Chester
Baranowski 50c; Joe Benkowski
50c; Orange Lathan, Sr., 50c; H.
G. Broesche, 31; 8. C. Towell 31;
Louis H. Steinkamp 50c; F, W.
Petrich 50c; Erwin Pieper 50c;
Erich Feusse 31; Esther Luecke-
meyer 31; Clara Lueckemeyer
50c; John H. Horn 31; Fritz Pape
50c; Chas. Hafer 31; Hermann
Meyer 50c.
Mrs. Mary Bormann 31; Mrs.
Mary Sunderhuse 31; J°* Baca,
Jr. 50c; Mr. R. Warmke 50c; Mr.
Steve Kamas 50c; Roe. Mathis 50c;
Mrs. Hattie Mathis 50c; Jos| Baca
31; A. Borman Est. 50c;
Johnson 31; John Miller 31: Jas«
Allen 50c; Ed Allen 50c; Lonney
Allen 31: Leon Brown 51c: Clar-
ence Watkins 50c; Jubister Dever
50c; Leola Bailey 31; C. H- Bren-
riecke 31: U>uis Hahn 31; Albert
SchaCre* ’ Lee Ahrens 31: F,
Kneschke 31; H. F. Schroeder 75c;
I O. F. Drews 50c; W. S. Hannon
31; Eddie Albers 31; W. M. Jen-
ner 31; Walter Borchgardt 50c;
Theo. Landgraf 50c; Mr. and Mrs.
Chas. H. Loesch 31; Father A. Le
Blanc 31; Ike Bilskl 50c; Mary
Jane Griffin 50c; Mr. and Mr*.
I Henry Khissmann 31; Dr. Her-
t mann Hodde 31; Herbert Mutsoher
50c; Edna Schlottmann 50c; Mrs.
Anna Schlottmann 50c; Mr. and
Mrs. H. F. Bosse 31; Bruno Ogro-
. dowitz 31; W. D. Wllkening 31;
i Otto W. Loesch 50c; Willie Ho-
rak'50c; Arnold 50e; J. H.
Kinnard 50c; Merten Ogrodowicz
3150; Mrs. Lena Patterson 31;
Mrs. Henry Dippel 31; J- L. Zein-
tek 31; Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Blum
31; Miss Edna Ruppert 50c; Mrs.
Lena Ruppert 50c; Mr. and Mrs.
H. H. Fischer 31;'Otto W. Kieke
50c; Mrs. W. L. Tesch 50c; Mrs.
A. C. Watson 50c; Miss Margaret
Wateen 40c; Mrs. H. R. Giesler
50c; Mr. and' Mrs. Christ Msrtins
31; Johnnie Lehmann 50c; Mr and
Mrs. H. G, Simmons 31; Mias Flor-
ence High 32; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Burch 31; Municipal Light A Pow-
er System >10.00; Louis Stammon
31; Olivia H. Scott 50c; Miss Es- .
nt i
.j
BY PETER EDSON
NBA Service Washington Correspondent ’ ’ *'
rPHE punch-drunk Ways and Means Committee of the House has
, practically finished its four months’ fight over writing the new
taw bill, and it’s about time. For the last few weeks the committee has
betn arguing in circles, taking days to make decisions that normally
tape hours. The 20-odd members of the committee
ane tired, and frankly confess they have been get- f
ti» on each others’ nerves. They even write let- ;
teip to each other, to argue, after hours, on debat-
able provisions.
The bill is, of course, one of the biggest ever
Witten and that makes it a sizable undertaking.
The committee hearings fill some 3500 pages of
““'1 type. U you were able to stay awake long
agh to read M pages a night, it would still take’s
six week* just to read the testimony of expert*^
witnesses who appeared in long processions.
Brenham Banner-Press
r
Studio 1.00; Mn. Wallie Schmid
1.00; Blue Bonnet Cafe .50; Texas
State Employment Service 1.00;
Package Store 1.00; M. T .Brad-
ford ;50 Phiffer .10; Eichler .50;
Frank Schleider .25; Sawyer
White 2.00; Day Sampley .50;
Phifer Hotel, and Cafe 1.00; Mr.
and Mrs. B. G Nehrcorn .50; Her-
bert Krua* .50;
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaechle
1.00; A. W. Hodde 1.00; Gus Hein-
eke 2 00; Dr. Lenert 1.00; Tris-
tram's 2.00; Perry Brne. 5.00; Mr.
and Mrs. R. C. Barnes 2.50; First
National Bank 5.00; T. A. Low
2.00; Almot Schlenker 1.00; Will
Seidel 1.00; Red Buehrer .50;
Verbena Blake .25; Joe Bailey
1.00; Dr. R. E. Knolle 1.00; Pete
Kerowicz .50; Mr*. Edna Schatz
.25; Mrs. Martha Ruetz .50; Mrs.
Irma O’Shea .25; Mr. and Mr*.
John Devoke 1.00; New Ybrk
Store 1:00; Mrs. Lonnie Luecke-
meyer .25; Sam Susnitsky .50;
Mrs. Alice Ruetz .50; Mias Mamie
Sohns .50; Alice Rlppenhagen .50;
Roxie Hauck .50; Grace Winkel-
mann .50; Elois Schoenemann .50;
L. H. Polzin (Duke and Ayres)
2.00; Miss Lydia Danhelm .50;
Mrs. A. J. Menk .50; Ed. Duebbe
.50; N. C Stoamer .50; Fred Bred-
tbauer 50; Miaa Josephine Rogge
1.00; Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Grant
2.00; Sam J. Muery .00; Anivia
Eickenhorst 1.00; Lewis Audish
.60; Scott Morris .50; Mr. aad
Mrs. C. M. Megarity .50; Mrs.
Paul Wright .26; Blanch Randle
.15; Mrs. Katie Pie|ier Mrs.
W’Ul Hacker 25; Patdy Jo Beheler
.25; Milton Behler .25; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Tomachefsky 1.00;
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Hcgle 1.00;
W. W. Schoeliman 1 00; Mrs. Leo
■Wiesner .50; Mr .and Mrs. F. M.
Syke* 1.00; Mr. and Mrs/ Otto
T)ertli*.5O; Mary Wallace 1.00; E.
Hermann 1.00;
Mrs. H. C. Buck .50; Mr. and
Mrs. G. G. McNeesd 1.00; Mrs.
Lula V Williams .50; Mrs. Alvin
Wehring .50; Herbert Schultz
.50; Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Burch 1.00;
Mr. and Mrs. David Henaon .50;
Mrs. Irvin Wittner A0; Mrs.
Adolph Remmert .50; Willie
Loesch. Jr. .50; Mrs. Rheinhardt
Meyer .50; Mrs. Frank Lewando-
*ky 1.00; Ike Rozniak .25; Mattie
Bruase, .50; Miss Lillie Klanke
I. 00;
O. E. Kunkel 1.00; Mr. and Mrs.
Carl E. Neibuhr and family 1.00;
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Niebuhr 1.00;
Kieke Bros. Market 1.00; Mrs.
Ervin Steinkamp .50; S. B. Mc-
Cauley 1.00; Mrs. Hy Schulz .50;
Mrs Eric Moerbe .30; Mrs. Charlie
J. Ripple 1.00; Mrs. H. L. Reese
I. 00; Mrs. Vernon Jurrues .50;
Mrs. BuclC.50; Mrs. O. L. Miller
.50; Joaie B. Williams .50; Mrs.
J. 1. ____________ _____ _______
Boecker .50; Mrs. Lettie Wiese- I
pape .50;
Mrs. Margaret Schwarze .50;
Mrs. Albert Gajeske 1.00; Lillian
Walker .50; Meek Brown .10; Mrs.
Herman Schlottntan .50; Mrs. A.
W. Hodde .50; Mr*. J. J. Parks
.50; Mrs. W. H. Wamasch .50;
Mrs Ernest Brandt .10;.Miss Joar-
di* Park .10; Mr*. Fred Buehrer
50; Mrs Annie Azar .19; Mrs.
Frank Allen 1.00; Miss Clarence
Stuckert .50; Rev. George Cook
1.00; .
Mrs. H. C. Hafer 1.00; Mrs. B.
.55; H. C. Loesch .10; Mrs. Will
Morrtss 1.00; Mr .and Mrs. Look
i.00; Mr. Bathe .50: Henry Loesch
.50; Mr. and Mrs. T. Ehlert 1.00;
Mrs. Fred Appel 50; Mrs. Chas.
Wilkins .50; Mildred Pope 1.00;
Mrs. Barret .50; Ruth Mathew*
.50; Mrs. Hugo Brandt .50; “Mrs.
Keachler .50; Schubert'* Florist
1.00; Mrs. H. W. Graber .50; Mrs.
Emma Suter .50; Mrs. Nettle
Fisher 50; Mrs. H. F. Hohlt 1.00;
Mr. Henry -Eldred 1.00; Will
Muery 1.00;
Max Hoffman -1.00; Mrs. Adam
. ’’•rtnteky .50; Mary Rogge .25;
Mrs. Bernardine Kieke .50; Mrs.
Geo. Zeiss LOO; Mrs. A. H._ Howell
1.00; Mrs. Fritz Reue JSO; Mrs.
Malinda Ringener .50; Mrs. J. L.
Buckley .50; Bruce Ledbetter .50;
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Selman 1.00;
Mrs. H. L. Acker 50; Mr and Mrs.
g q1 __________________________
Ajid this wardage doe* not cover the executive
aaaNon* of the committee. Two full weeks, for
I taRance, were spent in arguing about the cor-
porate income tax provisions.
(A« sent to the floor of the House for debate and
passage early in July, it will be a political tax bill.
for this is an election year. The indicated total revenue to be derived
is,tar below Treasury suggestions. That may be changed by Senate
notion, but the House committee has given in to demands to keep
it’ibw.
I ife’HBy griaeipal political aspect of the House bitt ts tha absence of
a . federal sale* tex. Labor and a lot of other consumer pressure
group* didn’t want one and the Treasury and the White House backed
that stand But some of the com-
Mrac* members predic t a federal
Sales tax will be in the bitt writ-
tertnaxt year, and no fooling.
IN place of the sale* tax there
I * Wlll be new excise taxes, the
| good old familiar nuisance taxes
that Crop up in every war emer-
gvnap. Tiling* *ika taxes on chocks
J and maybe texes on soft drinks
These new taxes art. hard and
often costly la collect. There is
? no experience on collecting the
proposed tax on freight and only
1. the experience with social secun-
it ty deduction* to tell how the
g fancy new salary withholding tax
From the Treasury point of
view, however, these difficulties
fc' arc a* nothing when compared
9 with the difficulties of putting
jr ever .a general manufacturers'
feeaeles i ax. This manufacturers'
| sale* LMt lan’t to be confused with
the retail sale* tax now levied by
over M states, giving them a prlp-
■HM aauree <rf income, easily col-
FWMKr at .
Main Street.
X Texas
Mr*. Henry Broesche 1.00; Mrs.
Malinda Rodenbeck .50; Dr. and
Mrs. Robt. A. Hasskarl 2.00; Dr.
Ernest Becker .50; Dr. Waldo
Knolle 2.00; Mr. and Mrs. John
Zernial 1.00;
New York Cafe 1.00; Travis
Long 1.00; Douglas Witcher .50;
Viclor Spinn 1.00; Aline Ziegen-
beirn .50; Carolyn Adam* .50; Ar-
thur Wornasch .50: Elnsfkxurgan
.50: Mr. and Mi
1.00; Bert Hed
Will Rogers Jr. leaves Holly-
wood for Fort Sill, Okla., and
officers’ training school. He’s his
father** son. ail right
No.
No. 15 leaves Brenham 2:01 p. m
’ ‘ ’*----- ------»
Santa Fe* Northbound
No. 16 leaves Brenham 11 >36 a. m
6 leaves Brenham 12:03 a. m
Santa Fe Southbound
Mrs. T. F. Tottenham 1.00; Mrs. [ Mi* and Mrs. G. W. Hoffman 1.00; ther Kieke 50c; Arnie Gregor
Chris Weirterfleld .50: Joe Ed-
_______ ____________wards 1.00; Mrs. Otto Seidel .50;
.25; Mrs. Warnish .25; Miss and | Mrs. O. S.
— Mrs tee -----
i ’
(U. S. Navy Photo from NEA)
’ Sam Chapman, former All-
American halfback at California
and slugging outfielder for
Philadelphia Athletics, enters
Navy Air Corps as flying cadet
after serving as chief specialist
in athletic training division.
Fetty .50; Orville Schroeder .50;’
Elizabeth .Dynes .50: Mrs .S. M.
Bird ii.Wf 'F. Turner ,56-, Mrs.
Katie M. Owens 5.00; Miss Linder-
man 1.00; Mrs» Martha Robertson
Hatt .50; Mr. and Mrs. Ed New-
man .60; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Seeker 1.00; C. Randemann 1.00;
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Fuchs 1.00;
Back to Work
npHE Manpower shortage which close observers have been
JL predicting, is here. Now thnt plant conversion displace-
ments have passed th<*ir peak, we are coming squarely up
againzt the need for finding workers among those millions
who do not really want to work.
There has been a labor bottleneck, of sorts, for months, i
This was in the skilled trades which form the cornerstones
of most production^—men -performing key tasks without
which the unskilled workmen would be useless.
The pinch now at hand goes further than the matter of
trained workers. It involves industry’s ability to obtain
enough employes of any sort, skilled or common laborers, to
carry on the expansion we still have to make in war produc-
tton. -----r—*---— --: ---1—
The National Industrial Conference Board’s survey of em-
ployment arid unemployment as of April shows only a mil-
lion and three quarters theoretically available for hiring.
| Theoretically, because that number includes hundreds of |
thousands who have worked, who want to work, who need i
the income, but who would get in everybody’s way if they
had jobs, and would do more harm than good.
Two years-ago we had slightly more than millions class- *»
ified as unemployed. * The war has put eight and a quarter
millions onto payrolls, including those who went into the
armed forces. Meanwhile normal increases added almost a
million to the labor reservoir.
So today—or to .be exact, two months ago, since we al-
ways are behind in, the compilation of such studies—there
were only 1,753,000 men and women who were theoretically
available for employment, of whom l',151,000 were on the
ex<?lua*v^ of the lat-
ter’s student beneficiaries.
' The Army wants at least a couple of millions more thia
year. The Navy and th£ Marines will take many. Agricul- -
ture needs a couple of millions. Factories which have been
retooling and converting from civilian to war production,
would like to replenish their personnels. New plants, built
or*( building to make armament and munitions, must have
| Crossword Puzzle j
SCSOSS
;; “rfo<*Ln«ou’
|f »re* _
11 PeruiMns to Po<»
jf SrS!
n -^!g*S*wr**toi
*>».***
Il—Borins tool
S-B&s***........
4-
« i
Southern Pacifle Eaatboand
■ m
2.00; Paul Boguseh 1.00: Mrs. J|m
' Little .50; Mrs. Annie Hilmer .50;
Ed. Plaehn 1.00; H. J. Boehm 1.Q0;
Mrs. Louis Beazley 1.00; Miss
Margaret Cotham 1.00; Mias Sue
Moore E00; J. H. Morgan 1.00;
Chas. H. Puck*tt 100: NYA Metal
Shop, employees 1.50; Luther
Young .50; Seelhorst Plumbing
Shop 1.00; .Tony's Place 1.00; Wil-
lie Murskl .Grocery Store 1.00;
Albert Giesecke Tin Shop 1.00;
Duck Inn 1.00; P. W. Finke 1.00;
John Willis .50; Eugene Lange
1.00; Kirk Dillon 1.00; Joe Picone
1.00; Felsclier Bakery 1.00; Dur-
den Plumbing Company 1.00; C.
L. Vogelsang 1.00; Hub. Becker
1.00; Mavis Jo Wright .50; .Bill
Schmid 1.00; T. O. High .50;’Es-
ther Meyer 1.00; Frances Stegent
1.00; Mrs. Theo Chadwick 1.00;
Lillian Hannan 1.00;
Effie Mae Carlisle .50: Bertha
Schwatz 1.00; Mary Ruth Black-
bum .50; Dorothy Thielemann .50;
Mra. L. C. Landua 1.00; Esther
Schultz .60; E. T. Zwernemann
1.00; - C. F. James 1.00; Bill
Schmitt 1.00; Mrs. J. T. Collier
1.00; Paul Klingapom 1.00; Mr*.
Lillian McNtel .25; Mra. O. H.
Fischer 1.00;
Buddy Sykea .60; St. Anthony
Beauty Shoppe .50; Barnhill
Brother* Drug Store No. 3 1.00;
United State* Poet Office 1.00;
Farm Security Administration
1.00; Bdnner-Preas, Inc. 10.00;
It is not bad luck for a black m
cM to cross in front of an auto-il | Vo" 3 ^'yZ/Brert^m 10:45?
ittucce«l. m casing aU the way. lpaveB Brenham 1;40 a m
One use fot culture is that it
makes people perspire instead of . ...
| fieds for results! -
Mr. 31: Chas. Witschorke 31; Cha*.
Neutzler >1; Edmund Hartstack
31; Ed. H. Wickel 31; Melvin
Wickel 50c; W. H. Black 81; Alex
Kieke 61; Ben Finke 31; Mra.
George Foehner 50c; G. J. Siebel
31; Otto K'nipstein 50c; Willie
Knipatein 50c; Fred Heine 81; Mra.
Ed Kieke 31; Mra. H, A. Kiel 31;
Miss Sophie Kiel 50c; Walter
Fisher 50c; Chas. Glare 50c; Mr.
and Mrs. F. Sommerfeldt >1; Mr.
—.---- and Mra. A. H. Sinclair |1; Mr.
Meyer .50; Mra. A. G,_.Wehm*p 1 and Mrs. H. L. Brown 31; Qua
Korthauer 31.
Chapel HUI DonaUens
John Ognowaki |1; Mra. Janie
Ognowski 50c; Mra. Helen Kmiec
31; Mra. F. E. Seale 31;
Walker 50c; Mr. and_____
Ku>wa 31; Wallace Kmiec >2.50;
Willie Kmiec 32.50; Henry Stolar-
aki 11; Theo. Stdaraki 50c; Wal-
lace Gurka 50c; Willie Gurka 60e;
Uilie Johnson 50c; A. J. Zientek
50c; Billie Kopyainaki 31; Mr. and
Mra. Carl Stoiaraki 31
2*50; Second Hand Furniture Store
• *»aae*wra*»w»* » • -..o urcriU, O»l D. maillVI. . A.V*, nun
.50; Charley’s Cafe 1.00; Hauck Huebner. .50; Mra. Johnny Schre-
Barber Shop 1.25; Joswlak Mar- der .50; Mrt. Mattie McNtitt 1.00;
ket 1.00; Horace McNutt 1.00; Mrs. Ruth
Aug. Eber 1.00: W. J. Embrey Plahan .25: Mra. Hy Schulz .50;
i Mra. Ed Kruger .35; Mra. M. D..
Burnett 1.00; Miaa Eldred 2.5;
Mrs. H. R Wendt .25; Mrs Car-
rington 1.00; Mrs. H. A. Luedke
'BARBS :
!. fc, ---------------------------------------------
IT doesn’t do much good wk'-n
* 2you give three ?heer* for whal '
you won’t give «nything else. j.--------------------
• • • No. 5 leaves Brenham 5:03 a.
I The secret of smne men's sue- Souther* Pacific Westbound
cess b a secret Stitt. -No 42 leaves Brenham 5:18 p.
No. 46 leave* Brenham 3:44 a- m. I
S-Markw
*— Listener
j—WeiMli
*—Calm
S Clew wore*
10 P»H
11 Prefla naarei aide
IS Profit
U Jotna to*etnei
tl Comb form:
Muniain
u on (uar*
M De’Irer eaterf*
is Make taBOl *
10 -That map
i> Pronoun
13 Health retort
M Eda* or aktrt
M .fart st to 0*’
11 Symbol tor tarblgm
J* -MMidi*
10 Towe tn Noiiand
to pith pol*
11 Pri*ht*n
43—EkCIa mation of
daiioht
*1- Son or Miao
4S—t««»ntiai eh*—•—
4* —Symbol for
U-Poirr ofi
M-Minrrat *arta
34- aound loudly
&* Mud nouat
St-Far* diw
01 -Lift uo---
U-PO«MMOt
04—Brlatl*
4S-Ora*ni*«n
00— Democrat tabbr I
It •Bnellah aalat*
*Tra. R .D. Giesecke
fedrick 1.00; Rartiel
Peters 1.00; Rex Cleaners 1.00;
Alice Quebe .50; Kerrville Bus
Co.'5.00; Unlisted (unknown) .50.
Total 5289.20. . .
K*’***nt‘al . Henry Furgens . 50; Mrs. Mary
Mrs. Walter Becker, 1.00; Mrs.
T. O. High .50: Mra. Chas. Lamp,
U Herman Furniture Company i,00; Mrs. C. W, Rankin 1.50; Mr*
2?50; Second Hand Furniture Store ' E. £. Mitchmore 50; Mra. Stern-
1,00; Pankonien'g Pliumbing Shop berg, .50; Mrs. Kramert .25; Mrs
.50; Mra. Jessie Schramm 50,
Mra. A. C. Stepan .50; Mra. Jno.
H. King .50; Mr .and Mra. Rudy
Thielemann 2.00; Mr. and Mra.
J. A. Giessel 1.00;, Mrs. Alec
Knoche 1.00; Miss Annette Ray
.50; T. 8. Estes .50; Mrs. J. J.
Marek 100; Mra. Joe Cole 1.00;’
Mr. and Mra F. L. Lange 1.00;
Mr. and Mra. Louis J. Beaumier
I. 50;
Mra. H. H. Drumm 1.00; Mrs.
O. P. Jacob .50; Mr. and Mr*. I.
Hueske 2.45; Mra. J. V. Dietz, Sr.
.50; H. Schulz .76; Zelma Dock-
hart .25;
Mra. Virginia Teague .50; Mra.
George Zink .50; Mra. Kessel .50;
Mra. W. C. Hay .50; C. W. Moore
.50; Mr. and Mrs. Weiss .50; Louis
Quebe v50; Mrs. Ruetz .50; John
Ruetz .50; Annie Kluaeman .25;
W. W. Bailiff .25; Q. Weise .50;
A. Tenia .50; Ed. Kramer 1.00;
Mra. Minnie Neu 1.00; M. H. Nie-
buhr 1.00; Mra. Oohn Miller 50;
Mrs. Bothe 26; Louis Werchan
.50; Mr*. Bam Towell 25;
Mra. H. G. Broesche .50; Mra.
Kaechele .50; Mra. Roger Knolle
O. S. Schulz .50;
Helmus Schwettmann .50;
Leslie Clayton .50; Mrs.
Ringener .25; Mrs. Robert Lange
.18 John H. Boese .50;
Charlie Winkelman Sr. 1.00;
Miss Erna Meyer .50; John and
Jake Meyer .50; A. W. Shannon
1.00; Misses Lena and .Frieda
Dippel .50; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Haack, Jr. 1.00: Mr. and Mrs. D.
M
.50; Mra. Weldon Alsobrook .50;
Mrs. H. B. McDougal 1.00; Roy
Hooker .50; Mrs. Henry gencke
.50; M. M. Saxer .50; Mrs. Boenker
.25; Miss Selma Schramm 1.00;
Mra. Vai Lehmann .50;
Mra. T. H. Dickey .50; Miss
Bernice Gregor .50; Miss Maron-
elle Hoting 1.00; Miss Evelyn Hot-
ing 1.00; Mra. Paul Wittner, Sr.
.50; Mra. Ida Sternberg .50;
Schoenemann .50; Mrs. N; Wilkins
.50; Marion Smitl^.50; Mra. Coun-
tryman •‘.50; Loesch .50; Schmid
b0; A. Lindemann .50; Bournias
L00.
[ Mtn Louise <£nn _< .25;
Miss Henrietta Fridke’rtxi; "rffts.
Gus Moench .50; Mrs. Oscar
Schmidt .50; Mr. and Mra. Fred
-Weiss .50; Mr. and Mra. Henry
Strangmeier, Sr. .50; Mr. and Mra.
Henry Strangmeier, Jr. .50; Mr.
and Mrs. R. P. Sommerfield 2.00;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Boernhouse,
Sr. .50; Mr. and Mra. Wm Boem-
houae, Jr. .25; Mrs. L. *E. Seidel
.50; Mra. Bradford Schoenemann
.50; Mr. and Mra. H. L. Zschappel,
1.00; . ’
Mrs. A. F. Wiede 1.00; Mrs.
Anna Schlenker 1.00; Miss Louise
Reddehasse 1.00; Mrs. Sam
Muery 1.00; Mrs. John Finke .50;
Mrs. Robert Peters -26; Mrs. C.
Eloff .50; Mrs. T. A. Gilbert .50;
Mrs. J. Schramm .50: Mra. W. C.
Dorbitz 1.00; Mrs. M. O. Ginzel
1.00; Mrs. R. V. Hoffmann .50;
Mrs. Frank Kasprowiez .50; Mrs.
Louise Beaumier .50; Wm. Scm-
merfield Sr. .50; Mr. & Mra. Adolf
Spran 1.00: Mra. Edwin Berkel-
back ^0; Mrs. Alvin Borman .50;
Mra. Jack Green 1.00; Mr. & Hrs-
H. F. Kiar .50: Mr .and. Mrs. Wil-
lie Schulte 1.00; Miss Hatie Sprain
.50; Mra. C. B. Schomberg 1.00;
Mra. Buckhorn .25; Mrs. Amelia
Mafek 1.00; Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Ziesmer LOO; Mra. Duebbe .50;
Mra. Paul Kllngspom .15; St.
Mary’s Catholic Church 3.00;
Father Charles Weisnerowski 2 00;
Mrs. Celia Washerlesky .1.00; Mrs.
Clarence H. Luedemann .50; Zelke
.50; Eldridge .50; Ben Kessel .50;
St. Francis Hospital 1.00; Mrs.
H. F. Kolwes 1.00; Miss Gussie
Von Koennerltz 1.00; Miss Clara
Schoedel .50: Mrs. W. C. Muery
.50: Mrs. Wm. Druckhammer .50;
Mr. and MSn. -Chris John 1.00:
Mra. Louis Fisher .50; Mrs. W.
H. Zschappel .50; Mra. W. A. Wei-
mann .50; Miss Viola Fuelberg
.50 XH. Ad Fisher .60; Schomberg
I. 00; Wamasch .25; Schroeder .50;
Dunlaps 1.50; Travis Broesche
.25; Stanley Latham .50; Alvis
Rhames .60; Mra. Alvis Rhames
.50; „ Dole Rhames .50; Bru<!e
Rhames .50;
Billie Zeiss .50; Mra. Billie Zeiss
.50; Willie Herzog .50; Jones Finke
.50; Mr>. JnijAs’ Finke .50; Mra.
Katie E. McAdam .50; Billie Mor-
gan .06; Wilma Morgan .05; Mra.
W. Zeils 1.00; Bittle Zeiss Jr. .25;
Mra. Dan Broesche .15; Mrs. Hy
Grote 1.00; Barbara Ann Zeiss
.35; Owen H. Zeiss .25; Mra. Al-
fred Werchan .50; Mra. Kleberg
Struckmeyer .50; Robert Schleider
.50; Mra. Rosner .50; Mra. Sallis
.50; Lonnie Wieaepape .60; I
and Mrs. Tom Whitehead 1.00;
Mrs. Fred Lueckmeyer :50; A. E.
Stinnett 1.00; Mra. Henty Rost
.60; Mrs. Hilda Hacker .25; Mrs.
Martin K lues man .25; Mrs. Henry
A. Becker .50; Mise Elnora Meier
.50; Mra. W. G. Humphery .25;
Mra Ernest Wehring .50; Mra. E.
Laa* 50; Mra. Myrtle Free .25;
Miss Sophie Bieberatein .50;
T. W. Thomas .50; Gerry Ginn
.25; Burry Ginn .50; Mra. J. A.
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 142, Ed. 1 Monday, June 29, 1942, newspaper, June 29, 1942; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1355058/m1/2/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.