Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 190, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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The Weather-
i
)
Member of the United Press, the Greatest World-Wide News Service.
BRgNHAM, TEXAS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12,1941
: NO. 190
DIE IN BRITISH
I
PLANE CRASH
7
GET-AWAY MADE
>« ■
LM
FLYING SON
to
< >
NAZIS STALLED
TEN DAYS LATE .
C-. .1
1R
i •
•j
ha
t
, Ukraine today but appeared stall*
*.
z
ED
BAND CONCERT 2 MORE CALLS
co.
Civil Aeronautics
*-
Class At Blinn Is
♦
AUTOWORKER
interested
lege office at an early date. Only
I
"121
GIVEN HITLER
Schmidt.
Morris of Longview.
trio.
Definite Contentment In Austin
Sought To Re or u i t
A VYl x » W« 1 1 » <1 FA O IPoK* *
Follows Departure Of O’Daniels
March.”
Alsl IOI» M ill LLE DIEM
Trombone
Troin ■
held
•*SHS
the city cemetery .
R
registration act
and Grey Patrol,"
J *
A
”7"
w
J
4
Mrs. Schapper, 81,
Dies In Galveston
And Buried There
Republican House
Leader Advocates
Draft Extension
PROGRAM TO
ASSIST 20,000
B
Ifftibi
BRENJAM the City
of
Hospitality.
Stolz Pays 6 Cents
Per Pound Above
Market Price
Mailed To New
Registrants
W. W. Heard Of Near
Washington Brings
' In First Bale
Dallas Man Among
22 Killed Near
London
Berlin Admits R e d s
Fight Strongly
At Smolensk
many classifications Change
as a registrant's stiUn changes.
Merchandise St o 1 e n J
Worth Thousands
Of Dollars
Americans For
Nazi Plants
sens
Drug
and decided improvement over any
atory Huey Long ever tok! about
Iziuiae
acconipanl-
inner
•ang-
y-old
yard,
clous
Hid
roc lai
soatad
Gel
t S
i n
•r y
g I
' J'
ills
tily
I er
li.il
ngs
»ro-
KI’
l.ll-
lo
for
Transom Over Front
Balcony Broken
For Entrance
Page Two).
‘ding
ring-
l: i \
lark-
epen-
dany
epen-
many
I
■
i
Brenham Banner-Press
J
I'' ]
I
!
BURGLARS GET
’' n'AMONDS AND
S’ FINE WATCHES 1
Partly^loudy in south portion;
scattered thundershowers in north;
cooler northwest portion tonight;
Wednesday considerable cloudi-
ness, scattered thundershowers in '
north and extreme east portions;
cooler in north.
Rev. F. E. King, pastor of the
Presbyterian church, was rcinem-
Work Jobs Enable
Youth To Stay
In School
■'Afc. ...ii ..
By HARRY^BENGE ( ROZIER.
AUSTIN. Aug. 12 There is a
definite sort of contentment in
Austin, scat of Texas’ govern-
ment. this summer. Austin, that
all of a sudden sprung a city sky-
"Mi latfy's
De- I
11*
-7,3
I VOLUME 76
I BRONENKANT JEWELRY STORE ROBB!
W...
I SPECTATOR
I SCHOOL PARLEY
■ ----V---- ‘
’■ ’ ‘ TUITION TALKED
I ----V----
| NINE DISTRICTS
■ ----V----
Mrs. Schapper frequently visited
Brenham as the guest of her
daughter, Mrs. Zclia Wood, and
son, Seth Schapper. who formerly
resided here. Frank W. Wood went
■». to Galveston today to attend the
funeral.
. - r, ' T=e-
^Continued on
•wJif ' ? 1
GALVESTON, Aug. 12.—Mrs.
Mollie McDaniel Schapper, 81.
resident of Galveston fob 45 years
and widow of the late Charles E.
Schapper, .died , at her residence,
1801 Avenue G, at noon Monday.
She was a charter member of
the First Methodist Church here.
--V--—
The Chamber of Commerce
delegation emphasized they were
not attempting to meddle in af-
.. fairs, of the county board, nor
to raid the enrollment of- the two
other high schools in the county,
at William Penn and Burton.
•; G.B 5 {
•St. Pau)> Luther League will
Houston, and three brothers, Philip have its regular meeting this eve-
Schulle of Danger, Oscar Schulie ning al ?:3O at the church. AH
WASHINGTON, Aug. 12—Rep.-Walter G. Andrews of
New York, ranking republican member of the military affairs
committee, gave support today to the administration’s mil-
itary service extension measure by declaring it was necessary
in view of the critical international situation.
Andrews supported the measure during concluding debate
as administration leaders prepared to bring it to a final vote
before night. The extension still faced substantial opposition,
but leaders hoped to obtain at least 18 months extension of
the one-year terms of selectees, national guardsmen, and
reservists. /,,
&
A committee from the Bren-
ham .Chamber of Commerce met
with the County Board of Edu-
cation at the office of the coun-
ty school superintendent Tues-
day morning and discussed ways
and means of enabling more
rural school children to take ad-
vantage of the facilities offered
by Brenham High -School, after
they have finished the grades
available in their home districts.
Specifically, the committee said
they had in mind the vocational
agriculture instruction available
at Brenham High School, al-
though, of course, they were
also interested in having all
Washington County boys and
girls go as far in school as it is
possible for them to go.
—--V———
Present at the meeting were
Mrs. M. H. Ehiert, acting coun-
ty school superintendent; Dan
Matthews, E. F. Kruse, O, -C.
Gindorf and Mike Mohr, fhem-
berS.of the county board; and
Jack EHwooil, M. B. Holleman,
Buddy Fisher, and Tom White-
bead of the Chamber of Com-
—merce.—t------
i- - - z: . .__1*
; Frank J. Janko
Leaves $1,00 To
Rev. F. E. King
1 Dalbey.
Vocal solo, "Somewhere a Voice
Ih Calling.” Tate Mias
bered in the will of the late Frank Weghorst with ’ band
ment.
Waltz, "Danube Waves,” Ivano-
-.....- -
|
^Wro/brafts barcons T AMERICANS
ed a little bit out of his element
but his technique wus as perfect
as ever.
The Pajama Farewell BroadcaM
The atory of hia pajama broad-
cast over the radio from Beaumont
’Ahejj he. w«|. abvuV'tq leave the
r-UL4»'- idHiiff ■ af the throaty
pathos he felt at leaving the boun-
daries of tly» stale he had discov--’
ered in 1921 and now loves better
than mother ever loved a child. It
was an improvement, a markedly 8urvey activity, clerical work, de*
the time he received an ambassa- a-,,d improvement of school equip-
nient and properties.
W Schapper of Baltimore, Peyton
A Schapper of Galveston and Seth
O. Schapper of Houston: three
daughters, Miss Susie Schapper
and Mrs. George A. Freeman, both
of GalVcston, and Mrs. Henry A.
Wood of Houston; nine grandchil-
dren and other relatives.
Funeral services _W<X£.
By UNITED PRESS.
The London air ministry an-
nounced that 22 passengers in-
cluding seven Americans were kill-
ed Sunday when a trans-Atlantic
plane crashed into h hillside short-
i ly after taking off Irom a British
air field-
The victims included Capt. H.
S R. Duty of Dallas, Texas.
i Germany claimed a break
I through to the Black Sea in the
Fjljl
T ■
fH*' <
JB K
Preparations for the continu-
ation of the class in Civil Aero-
nautics in Blinn
completed. The field has
leased for another year, all mini-
mum -requirements for the air-
port have been met, ami every-
thing will be ready for the class to
start about the middle of Septem-
ber.
Young men
ten will‘be accepted in the class. J Gibson of Longview, president of
Written and physical examinations the Texas County Judges’ and
will be given to determine who the Commissioners’ Association, Judge
ten shall be, says President C. F. ’ Jake Loy of Sherman, and Curtis
seeking to. find some means
whereby high school advantages
can be made available to boys
and girls of rural school dis-
tricts who do not continue their
education after the grade
schools. They pointed out that
the state will pay the tuition
of such students who wish to at-
tend high school, and will pay
their transportation to Brenham
High School, provided the home
districts have a tax of 50 cents
on the $100. Burton is the only
school district in the county
with such a tax, and it main-
tains its own high school.
----V
However. Mrs. Ehiert said
nine of the 35 school districts in
the county have been paying tu-
ition of their children who want-
ed to attend high school, and
have provided their own buses..
These schools are Stone. Won-
der Hill. Pleasant Hill, Mill
Creek, Klump, Wesley, Indepen-
dence, Armstrong and Union
Grove. "These districts paid
high school tuition during the
past scholastic year," Mrs. Eh-
iert said. "This does not mean
that districts not listed’ refused
to pay tuition or that they have
not at sometime over a period of
years paid high school tuition.
Neither is this statement an in-
dication of which districts will
(Continued on page FOUR)
Siam OkTai ijffra Drama
Musical Program To Questionnaires Are
Be Presented On
Public Square
AUSTIN, Aug. 12.-During the
19-41-42 school year the National
Youth Administration Student
Work Program will enable approx-
imately twenty thousand Texas
young people between the ages of
16 and 24. inclusive, to stay in
school, according to J. C. Kellum,
State N Y A administrator.
Allocations have been made to
the 254 counties and directly to
schools in cities having populations
of 25,000 or more. Many of the
county placement committees al-
ready have met, and their recom-
mendations for allotments of NyA
Student Work jobs to schools, now^
are being received in this office-
During the 1940-41 Sfhbol year
the NYA College and Graduate]
and School Work Programs assist-
ed 7.500 youth, who otherwise
could not have continued their edu-
cations, in 85 Texas colleges and
-------Surviving—•ra-threa-spna, Cail Unc Uke jagged tomhlike jiLruc- °f, .T1** Untt^d,.^ta^ei!l He had no, universities and twenty thousand
— _ . :. - — ----- Ti •.t- z ■ - - ■ fiddle bxr.d hl— zr.l r.a ex- students irt 3,580 BFCWdary Sduri-
pressed regrets for, that He seem” tjon’af institutions. '
Kellam said boys and girls who]
desire these Student Work jobs
should apply directly to the Head
of the school, or poUqge they wish
to attend. Work that will be useful
to both the students and to the in-
stitutlons will be prbvIfTeO‘Or>')'r»>j
ecta designed and supervised by
'the officials of the schools. Such
work will include research and
Director F. J. Navratll announ- |
ccs that the next of the series of | ’
nation.' summer night concerts by the ,1
Brenham Concert Band will be
presented on the court house I ,
square
Saxaphone duct.
Pleasure." Holmes, Chalies
Weese and Bobby Schrocdy.
Select Mx-» "ClArtg, Hing,
i Boom," Mythical Musical Revile,
White.
Overture, "Mazepa,”' Mahl.
Intermission.
March, "HoetrHUser’s
Chambers.
pverture. "Huoler aiul Hermit.
AUSTIN. Aug. 12. (VPI—Gov.
Coke R. Stevenson said today he
I will confer Friday with officials
should favoring allocation of the $2,000.-
makc their application in the col- j ooo road bond surplus to counties.
He will meet with Merritt 8.
- M
1 ' ‘ 'i;
Washington County’s first bale
of new cotton for the 1941 season
was marketed in Brenham early
Tuesday morning, and was pur-
chased by R'. W. Stolz, local cot-
ton buyer, from the grower, W. W.
Heard, who raised it on his planta-
tion in the Graball conununity.
The cotton was brought to Bren-
ham late Monday afternoon but
was not sold until Tuesday morn-
ing. i
Stolz paid 2l_ cents per pound ■
Thunderbolt, first falcon drafted by U. S. Army, perches majes-
tically on hand of Lieut. Thomas MacClure at Fort Monmouth,
N. J. Thundtrbdlt Sin? falcons to follow will be trained to inter-
cept carrier pigeons.
STEVENSON TO NYA STUDENT-
T up .CONFERUPON
Io Be Continued
ROAD SURPLUS
College have been | Qovern 0 F C a 1 1 S I M
Judges’ Group
For Advice
Bale Of 1941 Cotton Ginned Jn Washington County
COTTON RAISED
ON PLANTATION
NEAR GRABALL
1 t . j
Warden Jess Dunn of Oklahoma State- Prison, two convicts and a
"counly jailer Wcte fMlh In S blrtiKiy bid for liberty toy fror longterm made a r4>ui>d atoUU trap- tn tha—
knun hrm Uvinr prisoners who shot the wardsn. held as a hostage, when Ulami ekwwMi'■> s<*na <d the burglary. Tiw outside
” s ------ ----- ,U- U 1. ...... loor tq the stairway leading to of-
f.ces in the Graber bjfilding above
tin Bronenknnt store was entered
tn st. Dr. Fred Graber.. one of the
owners of the building, states that
the outside door was locked but
physical deficiency.
All questionnaires have -been
mailed to those persons who regis-
tered on July I. and they ftre
whediiled to be inducted ill the
army in the future with the old 1
-.’registrants as their names fill in
[line
All registrants arc reminded ■
that (unite to report
changes and other things pcrtain-
Altic.l Sj-hulle. 11, sou Of Mr.l '"'k without registering as a oer-
’"'^Rsw.-Litz SuhUlB’^nT-rzii-k |snun av.-nt in violation of the 19K
hart, died at his home there and, registration act
was buried in the city cemetery ’ • , “ !
National," Monday He leaves hia parents; LUTHER LEAGUE MEETING
one sister, Mrs. M R. Gieaecke of.
J. Janko, who bequeathed $!()<> to
his pastor, leaving the remainder ,.o.,w-
of h(| property to his brother, vici.
Peter A. Janko, and two Sisters, j Trombone duct, "Mose Trom
rJanko.,! ho»a •’ m,u»* >Wqit>>oij.t ■
The Will (>f Mr Janko has been F aod Kugcnc. Stull, jr
admitted to probate in the county [ "The Blue e"-1 G—’” n-tarf»>»
court on the awdrn testimony of, Dalbey.
D. Nelson L. Schiller, one of the Overture, "Grand
subscribing witnesses. Miss Fran- Losey. ’ . .
cis Janko was appointed executrix, j Prior to the band concert Mrs
and F. H. Bosse, Tiemann H. Dip-1 Kate McAdam will present the ,
pel, and F. J. Kubitza appointed | following students in a piano and of Luling, and Herbert Schulie of, members are urged to attend the
appraisers. | J Continued on Page Two) Maxwell. | meeting
DETROIT. Aug 12. ’•BI J
address today held \uuusl Baecker, 1
, . t...... j ’’2. Detroit automobile worker, on
ing to each case constitute-a viola- ,’'1 charge of aiding and abetting
lion Of the Selective Service law. ] the German government by srtlicit-
S’.tch things must be done even 1 ihK skilled American craftsmen to
gistrant has rrcalved I work in NsZl fu-toiie- , ’
his classification. Baccker was infested art er •
No classificntioii is permanent ’"*-year mviHtigaCivn.Jfl /tmh ]
•vid many elanMifiratimix cliangr ethers haw Nm n '* ‘
I handed in ('h'wland and Mduaii- ,. .1
ker
.Rar<*krr charged with. Ink* jM
AT IHiMF IN L<H KMART I ,nR fr"'” :ln «tl«' he of the J
I German consul general in New .'.J
Mr. ' Tork Without registering as a Gar-
In near McAlester, Oklahoma. Principals in the break are: Warden
Dunn, center; upper left. Claude Beavers who was serving a life prison
term; upper right. Bill Anderson under 27^rear sentence in critical
condition from gun wounds; lower left, Hiram Prather, threw down ;
his gun and begged for mercy also s.’i vm;; a life Sentence; lower ;>lv ,;,ltsi<l.' do r ' v as locked'but
right. Roy McGee, serving 15-yekrs whs killed by officers. Governor U,U)(| easily be entered Passage |
Phillips, investigating -the break praiaefl W. E? Alexander a deputy through Dr. Graber’s office and
sheriff, for j»ingle-han<’led)y killing two of the fugitives, critically that of Odis Tomachefsky led to
wounding another and capturing the fourth. (NEA Telephotos) the broken transom a/ui balcony.--*8
then to the Jewelry store. -After
making a heavy haul the burglars 4
escaped through a rear window,
which w a.^ left open.
Many A'rtleles Taken • J
Numerous articles that were on ‘1
-4wjtUv in th" *li.-w wiFuisw -w«ra—4
taken, and several shelves in a -4
.“how case in the store were prae-. 4
tiddly swept clean < >ffleers or-
dered that no one enter the store
prior, to ai rival e( the insurance 3
representative II is said that the !
stolen g0<Mk< were not frtUursd- J
Sheriff Tieinan H. Ilippel had
lei'll called out of the city at about
6 oo a. in. but returned before s
noon. He, Deputy Sheriff H C. 4
Buck ami Chief of Police Arthur '
Sternberg are working on the case, -j
hihI hope to secure sufficient evi- a
dfnec to make some arrests.
A finger print expert was 3
summoned from Austin to assist in
investigation of (he burglary, the
largest that has occurred in Bren- 1
’ ham in some ye,
"Waltzing in the
Kuhn. Misses Evelyn,
Frances and 'Corre Williams, with
It was understood that Amcri- accompaniment
can built flying fortresses soon
would lie used in.bight raids on
Berlin.
Diamond rings, w.atihes, and a
large amount of other expensive z
Jewelry were stolen (fom the Bro-
nenkant Jewelry Store Monday -'J|
night and the lairglars made a sue- - J
eessful get-away, leaving practl- 1
gaily n<> clues. Value of the stolen ,3
merchandise could not be estimat- 9
ed prior to a' check-up, but will .
pr bably run to several thousand J
dollars. "1
The burglary was discovered by
City Policeman Albert Seeker at !
about 4:00 Tuesday morning. He J
Immediately notified Mr. and Mrs. J
Oscar Brcnenkant. who are in 1
charge of the store during the ab- -3
seme of the owners, Mr. and Mrs, 3
Al> in Suter, who were spending a 1
short VHcation in San Antonie. A 4
pl "Hr call annum ned them home
and they i-.» mediately returned to J
Brenham. <
Roumi About Tour
Entrance was effected through |
the Uaiwmu above the i>alcony in |
front of the store. The intruders
Two more calls were received
today by the Washington County
. ,.. ,u„, Local Board for selecteea, it* was
concerts by the
’ announced.
Concert Band will be Call No. 23 was tor seven white
, on the court house I men to be sent to the Induction
square at 8:15 Thursday evening. , atrftion at Houston on September
Thousands arc expected to attend 20. and two negros are to be fur-
1 - - •• /at the Fort Sam ham in some years He and local
! Houston inducti’on station on Sep- officers rrr<- bu.-iv probing various
I tember 22 ! an8,e« J* lh,‘ rcblwry
Fojir whites will be sent.to the
tures that turned oirt to be office
buildings where people worked,'
has been a pleasant town down
through the years. Sam Houston
found it a livable place; Stephen
F. Austin is said to have cast long-
ing eyes Toward it before his un-
timely death made residence here
rune... - I J a ilevout wish that, could ruik. be
Tuesday afternoon, with burial Tn eohsu.’--T
" * As kite as Sunday. United
States Senator W. Lee O'Daniel
mourned a little for "the happy
years in the Governor's Mansion”
whop he Intoned Into a phono-
graphic reproducing machine for
reproduction over Texas radio sta-
tions in the morning
One could sense anxiety in the
for the bale, which weighed 518
pounds. It was ginned frccTiy H.
C. Buck’s gin at Old Washington
and the "gtH gave "the grower a !
premium of $5.iM>. The Farmers
Warehouse of Brenham weight'd
thi cotton free and also—paid -a
j.iemium of $5.00.
The cotton was mounted on n
large truck decorated with flags
aiio paraded through the streets.
A negro orchestra rode on the
truck with the cotton and dis-
coursed lively music.
They said .they were merely- - -Brenham’s first bale was ten
days later this year than last. In
1940 the first bale was brought to
Brenham August 2 by Albert
Kmiec of Chapel Hill, who has
raised many first bales, and was
purchased by the Baines Cotton
Company, buyer of most of the
county's first bales, for 15U ecats
a pound, a premium of •> cents
above the market price.
Selling for about 6 cents above
the market price, together. with
prcrriiunis, the new b;(le netted the
grower 4 large profit.
ed on the Leningrad front and re-
pertedty suffered li setbiiek in the
Smolensk sector, along the road to
MoScnw. ~ t?-
Berlin admitted that the Rus-j”
sians were fighting strongly as
their, main forces gave ground be-
fore the German thrust to the sea,
presumably east of Odessa and
south of Kiev.
The Germans
to encircle and isolate the Rus-
sians south of Kiev along the Bug-
Dnieper River front. If they are
successful they wifi be 275 miles
inside pre-war Russia and will
take control of the Ukraine com-
munications system.
Intensive air opcratidns were re-
ported by both sides Including
raids on Berlin and Moscow.
Darlan Neizes Power
Al Vichy pro-AXis Vice-Premier
Francois Darlan took over full
control of French home and cm-
pr flVFN ARF PFCFIVFD
and thus making him one of th. WILL DE U i V Ell A1\E ItEvEl V El/
strongest rulers in French history I
HERE THURSDAY FOR SELECTEES
Darlan ami Gen. Maxime Wey-1
gand, proconsul in North Africa.
Wcygand was reported to have
demanded minimum French collab-i
oration with Germany, as against
a reported Darlan policy of full I
collaboration.
Marshal Henri Petain yi as au-1
thorized to announce social and
economic reforms such as wage in-1
creases to the French
Questions of- French colonial bases
needed and sought by the Axis re-
Diained open but Vichy was offi-
cially pledged to defend them
against any aggressor.
Japan warned the United States
unofficially that she opposes ship-
ments of American war supplies
across the Pacific to Vladivostok. ]
Speedy delivery of 800 "blitz bug- [
gies” to the Duttoh Eaxt Indies'
was indicated by the presence of
American military observers iti
Bandoeng.
British bombers made the hcav-'
lest daylight raid of the war on
the German industrial area of Co-
logne and made night attacks on
Germany and Holland in co-ordi-
nation with Russian raids orf East-
ern Germany and Berlin.
the
'aco,
slty;
iton.
lylor
ston,
ven-
Fort
Wi-rt-ksa
w.
■tary
con-
ic IIS-
Bap *
Ray.
ct 4. '
Gus
,y.
voto,
rroll,
’o<mI,
ater,
ram .
!Vel -
UTiU
.Durugli .the
classification, i* |* 1 ni.iix ill tw»»-yei
i.inv <■ Lissific.itinns < h mec 1
tohCi^oX. the KanfiSu who captured
Texas (and the first one *in his-
tory who ever did) as somewhat in
the fashion of the Rover Boys he
described, and with becoming mod-
esty, his descent- upon the Senate
txf fJxx* TTnitnrl Qfolou VIa ko/1 n/x '
fiddle bancTWnji him and Tie," ex- "students in 3.585 secondkfy edui
from all "parts of Washington and I nished the army
nearby counties.
Plenty of seats will be provided tember 22.
and the public is invited to conic I\,Vi vrhiten »„■ ....
out and hear the program of fine I induction station at Hcsistcpi <cfl*
' band music and special selections. | Thursday. They arc Walter Grae
The program follows: , bcr, Elwood Fisher. B. F. Teague ,
'"We're (A11 Americans,” "Ail and Heibcrt Gaskamp. Engcm , 111^1 TA 1 KI 1 I Tk
True Blue,” Mangan. Buckley, who wait also schedlile<l U LI 11 I IM /I I < |
March, ”121 Field Artillery.' to leave with this group, was re- 11 Li U If 1 X v /* 1 If
Boyer. • | jectcd last week at Fort Sam ;
* Grand medley, "Supcrba,” Dal- ' Houston where he attempted to
bey. »• - 1 enlist in the regular hrmy due to
Vocal
Clouds.”
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 190, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 12, 1941, newspaper, August 12, 1941; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1354807/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.