Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 164, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 4, 1933 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 26 x 19 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Washington County Fair
Better Than Ever
Bigger And
Firemen’s Park October 11, 12, 13
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS I
W«kly
Abaosbed
October, 19U
BRENHAM. TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1933.
NO. 164.
TWO INJURED WHEN STORES TO CLOSE ■ \SeoentTMii^~W^jT~~
I BOMBING PLANE AT HALF A DAY FOR n \^WeePs
ALT n VAI run H , U T >
THE COUNTY FAIR UOe* Huvana Today Causing
injured
STATE JOB SELLING
ter-
Colon cemetery: The city was free of
and
trained fcon
COAL STRIKE ZONE di“nage rtporud
- tanvas xxirl »!*«•■>«»
who
in
to
miners remained out, despite Orders of
SMALL FLUE FIRE
fire'dipartnrcnt made'a’qwclc
infantrymen
WEATHER
of
liat of paffl admission*.
score:
Austin, Texas, October 4. 64*> —
by righlfield-
[MARKETS
Totals
1
5
for
COTTOM
Totals
by
IS
It should be understood that
'Austin, Texsw, October 4. (ZP)—The
United States Department of Labor
recognizes all state efforts directed'to
re-employment. The act creating the
quarters There are 13 of these field
representatives. Their immediate su-
perior is C. B. Braun, the field super-
visor, who is responsible to the State
At a meeting of directors of the
Brenham Retail Merchants Associa-
Another function of the Texas Re-
habilitation and Relief Commission is
Chicago, Illinois, October 4. (A>)—
The American Legion today selected
hank, and other business institution
of Brenham wiIRobserve this request.
Richmond, Virginia, October 4. bP)
—•The vote from 1J74 of the state’s
I,(WO precinct's in Virginia's election
Fort Sam Houston, Texas, October
4.—Eight new work locations for the
CCC in the Texas District have been
the
had
the
the
at
the math,
the ninth,
the ninth.
h
Z
1
1
0
1 ■
1
I
One year ago today middling
cotton sold in Brenham for 7.00.
mission and the County Boards of
Welfare and Employment is the only
law Texas has making provision for a
state employment service. Conse-
quently, the Department of Labor
recognizes these boards and has ap-
pointed them as county re-employ-
ment boards with the stipulation that
at least one member of the board be
a representative of organized labor.
h
0
z
1
o
0
0
0
V
1
0
1
0
0
This is the sixth article of a
series on the activities of. the
Texas Rehabilitation and Relief
Commission.
him.
his
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
o'
0
V
0
u
was
Pe-
36 BODIES FOUND
1“ AFTER BRUSH FIRE
Fryers, Rhoda Island Rada and
Plymouth Rocha, 10a.
Old roosters, 3c.
Sour cream butterfat, 12c.
Sweet cream butterfat, 15c.
Sweet cream butterfat, delivered at
Mant, 19c.
Butter, 15 cents to 25 cents.
..... 0
I
1
1
0
1
:.... 1
Friday afternoon, thus giving eni|
ees an opportunity to attend the fair.5
which inning
one base sin-
Crowder,
preceded by a ba
n l.rehcd alongside.
The ceremony was kept as simple
TWO WOUNDED
IN PENNSYLVANIA
Good middling, 9.90.
Strict middling, 9J0
Middling, 9.50.
Strict
Low middling, 8.70.
Cottonseed delivered, fl IM
Cottonseed bulls, 85.00.
four hun-
halt em-
plant.
intifc tin
Goslin.
sixth, before
collected but
Giants pounded
In the less populous counties
county relief administrator is
pointed the temporary manager of
re-employment office in addition
his other duties but without extra
pay. His regular salary is paid out
of relief funds allocated to his county
lor that' purpose. .It is intended
eventually to have re-employment set-
ups in all counties.
the
apt
the
to
strike violence at the
One of
a serious
i advised. The new locations arc in the
following Texas counties: Bell. .Wil-
liamson. Bastrop, Nacogdoches, Trin-
ity. Walker, Liberty and Jasper.
The box
Washington
Myer, 2b
Goslin, rf
Manusch, If
Cronin, ss
Schulte, cf
Kuehl, lb
Bluege, 3b
Sewell, c
Crowder, p
Thomas, p
McCall, p
Harris x
Bolton, xx
6 10
^Ration which it leff off last spring
after inquiring into the activities of
J. P. Morgan and company.
Dillon, slight and ruddy faced,
questioned closely by Ferdinand
cora, the committee counsel.
Wickersham Prominent Customer I Hamilton,
That by an investment of $5,100,000
officers
the National
|o One of the injured men was, identified'-|,«e at noon Friday, October 13,
.which will be observed as School Dav
at .the AVaxUuuUon Gqu uty Fair.
‘ amps in the Texas District will l»e
maintained for the second six-months*
period beginning October I. M These
camps will be put into c.ond«t.ioii,tor<
winter hy the' erection of wooden
barracks and the’ construction of a
disabled ex-soldiers.
strengthen
participation in
Unemployed who are gived noor
jobs through the operation of the r«-
enkployment service are being accept-
ed regardless of whether they are
on the relief rolls and they
must be qualified to do the work.
Federal rules regulating employment
are applied
0
1
0
u
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 0
0
oughly the cemetery before Tuesday
night's burial ceremony and during
the brief services held their rifles
ready to prevent disorders. The rest
of the victims were to bd buried later.
Ten;officer» were among those bur-
ied Tuesday night. Four were student
Texas Rehabilitation And T
Relief Commission IForA
I park camps at Blanco, Lampasas.
' Stephenville, Mineral
Wells. Karnack, and Palacios, - would,
not be continued. The - Hamilton
Camp has already bee* abandoned,
and Co. 8B2 which was formerly sta-
EIGHT NEW WORK
LOCATIONS MADE
FOR TEXAS CCC
Giants Pound Senator’s Mound Star
From Box Take Second World Series
Game From American Leaguers 6 -1
The New York Giants of the Na-|the series. This was 5,000 short
Suspension Of All Fighting
To Ru— Of Pta
company. .
The testimony marked the rcopen-
East and West Texas—Partly clou- in« of, the committee's stoHc investi-
Louis Johnson, national command-
er, called upon the Legionnaires to
adopt a policy of veterans’ relief that
would consider the taxpayers as well
as the
, The Legion acted to
regulations against
politics by its officials.
The American Legion committee on
legislation today rejected resolutions
submitted by five states asking for
immediate payment of the bonus.
Great Parade Staged
Like a moving human spectrum,
dazzling in flashing color, awe-inspir-
ing in magnitude the American Le-
gion marched down broad Michigan’
boulevard Tuesday. ’ I
For 10 unbroken hours, 160,000 men'
and women, united in common mem-
ory, strode in meticulous formation ,
between walls of spectators, passed
solidly shoulder to shoulder, and '.
; i
scores' deep on both sides of the four
mile Tines~of rififcS7 ’ ~—7---
There has been nothing like this
parade of the legion at its 15th an-
nual convention, officials declared It y,
likewise was unrivalled in this city's
century of history.
It excelled in numbers, scope and
color, and Chicago spilled out so
many thousands To witness it that
.......k‘* ............ .......... ............ .
■an estimate of the total was diffi-
cult ■ .f ? ’ * ; ' ‘, i ■ ?
an onslaught frpt^Rm tfe. ~
ments as a tropical storm entered cen-
tral Cuba.
SeMfars meantime searched the
home of former President Mario G.
Menocal, who returned to Cuba after
Machado * deposition. One of thrir
number said his arrest had been or-
dered. but they could not find
Machine guns were
house.
A spokesman for
surrendered Monday
ii paper profits made by G General C. R. Howland, has been
Dillon, Reed and Company.
Clarence Dillon, head of the private
appointed banking firm, testified throughout .the
investigators of job selling day, bringing out these highlights:
That his company in one trans-
Representative action before the stock market wash
other
. Reports from Ma-
tanzas said there was no serious dam-
age there. J
Soldiers were deployed aUSul
United States embassy here after
mors were circulated of a plot
bomb it.
Rioting Victims Buried
Havana. Cuba, October 4. (jP)—In
a driving rain whipped by cyclonic
winds, 27 victims of Monday’s battle
carnage were buried fresday night at
Strikeouts—By Schuqutcher 2,
Crowder 2 in 5 2-3 mriing*
Bases on balls—Off Schumacher 3,
off Crowder 2 in 5 2-3 innings.
'’'Double piny—Cronin to
Kuhel.
Wild pifeh- Schumacher,
x—Batted for Bluege in
xx—Batted for Sewell in
xxx—Batted for Davie in
jureil in the mad scramble up- the as possible. After a chaplain had
sides of the can von to escape the spoken brief rites, the 12 bodies were
blazing inferno.' 1 placed in a single grave 21 feet long
commerce.
The Belen Observatory reported a
• and that the entire town will be closed disturbance of .light intensity jjross-*
• ...... iploy-ling Matantas and Havana provinces,!
ees an opportunity to attend the fair. ■ and lnovillg norlffw.rJ loward, ,h<.
. I Florida Straits.
Havana telephone line, were brok-
en. trees were uprooted, and
gram. Work given men on the relief [
rolls is I
ing them to maintain their self re-
spect, the result of their work being
a secondary matter although naturally
of benefit to the community in which
it is done.
Work relief projects ate submitted
to a special department of the Com- Senator Totn Connally, addressing
Ambridge, Renna., October 4W (ZP)—
Three workers were beaten and two
men critically wounded by gunfire in
an outbreak of
Ambridge Steel Plant today,
the workers is feported
. . , condition. '* "
Before work camps can be located
in these counties, it will be nicest ary [ The flare-up occurred
for a reconnaissance of each propped drcd pickets attempted
0 1
0
m an investment' trust fortned in 1924 ““
MEMBERS OF HOUSEwere <ii,ct°*ed u, ,ay ,o invet
ri gators.
Robert Christie, Jr., member of the j
firm, * disclosed the sale of 74,000
shares of the investftient trust stock
at $53, stock which ffrtn memtiers had
paid 20 cents a share for five years
earlier.
Through dizzying columns of fig-
tional League made it two in a row yesterday’s
oifter their American League rivals
this afternoon when they fook the sec-
ond game of the 1933 Worlds Series
by a score of 6 to 1.
The Washington Senator, scored
one in the- third and held this lead
until the hectic sixth when the Giants
scored all their runs. The American
Leaguers scored their only talley on
a powerful circuit clout
er Goose
. In
they
gle.
stellar mound man of the Senators,
from the box and garnered six runs
to put the game on the sTwif. Schu-
macher, for the Giants, pitched the en-
tire nine innings and duplicated Carl
Hubbell's pitcTHhg by allowing the
Senator, five hits.
Ott, star hitter oT yesterday’s game,
was unable to gather' in a Jiit but
scored afte rhe Hid taken his second
walk of the day.
45.000 fans saw the second game of
Austin, Texas, October 4.—Inves-
tigation by a three-member house
committee of all reports, rumors and
charges as .to “selling of state jobs”
was ordered by the house appropria-
tions committee, and the investigators
.were named Tuesday, Resohitionsj .............—•» -—.....- —
were being circulated in the house for.ures and involved stock transactions.' approved by the 'Director of Finer-'
signatures seeking-to broaden the in- the senate banking committee waded Kency Construction U ork at Wash-
vcitigation and requiring that it be Tuesday to a story of many millions mgton, the Texas District Command-
conducted by the entire appropriations of dollars ii
committee.
Chairman W. M. Harnian of the
appropriations committee
as the
charges Representative Gordon Burn*, j
I Huntsville, chairman; Representative acnon oeiore me siocx marxci arasn
'* | Bullock Hyder,of Denton county, afid bought investment trust stocks for 20 j . . -
” Representative H. JR. Stovall of Wax'- cent, a share that were later sold • ramp, site to-be made by an army of- ployees trying to enter the
ahachie. ». i : J | ' lor an average of $55 to $60 a share. Ticer familiar with the requirements of! As the disorder spread
Mr. Bum* sjjid the sub-Committee* That in organizing an investment (the CCC camp., Such reconnais-! Beaver Valley over two-third* oi the
had not determined when it will star? trust in 1924, the company obtained sauce* will be made as rapidly as po*. 75,UO().We*4ern TeHmiylvanid soft coal
Tt * wna:~~TTi«^ tp iity>-ma.y-await the f<X $100,000 stocky t hat was later .vat-^ible.
showdown on the bfoader resolution ned on thc stock exchange~ror'^36;~ U W'av~aPr>> sfaTCtl
requirirtg the inquiry to be made by, 000,000.
21 house members.
Senators who were familiar with
terms of the general resolution draft , the company'was able’to control two
did not believe the senate.will partici-
pate in the action.
1 .-w W • t 1 ’
Dillon, Read And Company -AhnzpoHs; tfaryiaud. October 4 —
j Made $4,000,000 From Sale I (/P)—Two men were fatally
today when an army bombing plane ’tion, with Edwin Hohlt, the president,
from Langley Field crashed into the in the chair, it was decided to ask
Of Investment Trust
Stock /
Washington. D. C., October 4. (/P) *oo<1* twelve miles from Annapolis, all business houses of J^renham to
;—Profits of almost $4,(XX1,WX) 1
members of the firm of -Dillon. Read as lieutenant R W.
’ and C omjiWy ffom the site flT stock-B£Qokcc-
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
■ • --- inc cm
"*C ‘ of ,eve,?’y Violence once m<we, k-
‘"do an hour, swept Havana today, pared-for
It ts expected that every' sjprc 1 suspending,disorder^, shooting.
Los Angeles, California, OcJbber 4.
(?P) -With thirty-six bodies recovered
(rotfT the l.<XX) acre tract in the Min-
eral Wells Canyon, swept by a brush
fire yesterday, county official* report-
ed that the canyon hold* twenty or
. mums.
ary, and officers .quarters hi each. . . . . „ ■
- ,,, , . Police today booked Robert D.
camp. All construction will he in „ . . ’'.s'
Harr, unemployed tnoti«m..picture flro-
____A. -- ... __ _____ ______—
» L L-I-. *• . n .. r r- I niission’s Austin headquarters, E. A. the special session of the Texas leg-
Rehabilitation and Relief Com- - >
' Baugh, Project Engineer. There they islature today, pleaded for united sup-
are inspected and approved, authority port of President Roosevelt's pro-
to proceed being issued in co-opera- gram. He warned that “The present
tion with the field supervisor’s de- program must succeed”.
partment. County , Administrators'
then issue work relief cards to able-
bodied destitute unemployed who are
given sufficient time on the project at
thirty cents an hour to meet their
budget needs. When a man has put
in enough hours on work relief to
have been Credited with the needed
amount of relief to meet the budget
to sustain his family for a month, or
a week, depending upon the basis
used, he gets no more relief until the
next budgeted speriod. This makes it
clear that employment "on work re-
lief is not a job but only a means
advancing relief to individuals. <
The field representatives referred
to.are agents of the -headquarters of-
fice to contact the county relief ad-
ministrations, in . which capacity they
advise with and supervise over the
county administrators It is their du-
ty to iron oat difficulties that arise
in the various counties of pieir dis-
tricts and to maintain a close liaison
rIlf ills.TT.11 suWir II. linehisia
black hearses carried” the bodies
‘through the wind-whipped streets
.... TMfcfaT gr ountis
VIRGINIA HAS BIG
MAJORITY FAVOR
OF PRO. REPEAL
Commander Urges Legion To PRIVATE BANKING
Consider Taxpayers As Well M1LU0NS pRonTi ^11^ FAL^
SoldiersJnKel,i,t rphey
Miami Selected For Next Convention; Resolutions Asking
For Immediate Payment Of Bonus Rejected By
Committee On Legislation.
hotel after a day-long siege of ar-
ru tillery and machine gun fire charged
they were tricked into flying the white
flag when told American marines
were ready to land.
To Save Country
The officer said his companions
wished to save the country from
American intervention.
The army was still trying to check
the number .of Monday's casualties.
An independent check showed 53 dead
and approximately>200 wounded. Es-
timate* ranged a» high-as I (Ml killed.
for the direct purpose of help- CONNALLY PLEADS
>ers ♦»-* nsninfnlH fknir
FOR SUPPORT OF
•I F.D/SPROGRAM
Moore, If
Critz, 2b
Terry, lb
Ott, rf ... ...
Davis, cf
Jackson, 3b
Manchuso, c
Ryan, ss ..
Schumacher, p
O'Doul, xxx
Peel, cf .......
Is concluded, the other charge of the army officer rommaml
(“br er;.. was TiiT-ngThe'canm**" In'TST’new'camps, est*1
airc*h<l he - baar_jeyend. oiJi^oaked
rags in his-^ossesiion. police 'said.
About one hundred men are in hos-
pitals. many having been seriously in-
trusts with a capitalization of $90,-
000,000. _ " -
ThatJJillon, Riad and -Company ,ioned ,f»«re now at Camp Bulli*
received a two mrtTron"doHar“comnrrs- • -tbe jijw.
__; sion for selling $50,000,000 of stock.'’1,’cation' * How *‘f,er October
FORECLOSURE STAY That w wicke^m, » * *he. fji st enrollment period'
____ former United States attorney gen |°^
—AtMhir* Tnsms.--€> ■ ’ ~ -mi■¥,.cXTr.'Z>B»e- Hoover-Taw A- .'X»«l»» wilHir ss.. ’^Skwas ~twT
to a fire alarm shortly be- Governor Ferguson today submitted forcemcnt commission, was among a ’tated. Seventeen of the original 24
fore one o’clock this afternoon, -and to the le«is,a“*r‘ » biU to «ttnd ,he lis‘ of th« prominent customers of the1 .
found a flue fire at the residence of foreclosure moratorium.
Ed Schmid on South Market Street J
The blaze was quickly extinguished
and the damage was very small. Idy tonight >nd Thursday.
yvsferday gave a majority <X'«r,<70
for repeal of the prohibition amend- I
went. ‘ ""
A slightly smallet*Aramber of pre-
cincts gave a majority of 38,950 for
the state liquor control plan
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 164, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 4, 1933, newspaper, October 4, 1933; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1180460/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.