Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 87, No. 11, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 16, 1952 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE 2
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1 ‘A, B, C, D’
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c-
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I
1
Si
1
11
• 9
"R0 •5s
t
Watched
1
-
L
2
e
7,
■
3-
but they were kept in incubator
and closely watched while scoi
Mexican lahour.
. ■ V"
ent labor contract expires next
ordinates have not cracked id
Brenham Banner-Press
complete dinner from her home freezer. She's one of the council’s, top food preservation experts.
r
the
RADIO GUIDE
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
TRUMAN ASKS-
for their
twe
iome freezers.
For Congress Talk
Churchill was met, as he left his
will be ready for House action be-
He will address a joint session
Wage said the nextbamTs to
A large rescue train with Pull-
always has good homemade but-
i *1
inpurance.
See us Now!
rotary rescue units cleared the
ity butter when the clubs work-
-
E D. Moody, Assistant general
ME L SNODGRASS
for nicking crops.
BRENHAM, T
C 61
coun
butter and coffee cream and a
Representing THE TRAVELERS, Hartford
weather, even though it is Sunday I vantage of Mexican labor.
T
1
I
WB-
T
LIMITEDQUANTITY
on
*
I’
A:
a •
/
Punk
s«
1
pend
Reg.
sh
in taxlwsere *i.
FN
LAnh-
fF1
5522
A
R
II
the ban.
mn---s
. A
Lumber
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16)
110
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$
-I*a*
chee
409-a
96
, EM
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gce
suru-
es. But he clearly hinted such.
He said his request eoujd be
State
ichn
QUADRUPLETS
DOING NICELY
lina
73,
ms Ta
soon enough and hard eno
such cases, with resulting
This year, "Mrs. Fischer will be
a poultry demonstrator because
hea
stal
ST
INI
hitchhiker turns out to be a wet-
back. , . 2
"Otherwise all the Mexicans will
be walking," Poage said.
Poage said the bill, which is a
recodification of the entire immi-
gration law and is 162 pages long,
c
“ '.-u'' Ca
modified:
1 The farm operator must supply
the workers’ blankets and sacks
i at Call
le toped
for their own needs.
Mrs. Bill Fischer. Washington
County Home Demonstration
Council chairman for 1952, is a
woman who is well-qualified on
all scores. She is a top cook, a
good food preservation demon-
strator and is active in remodel-
and is paid on the basis of the
average picked by the crew as a
whole regardless of what he him-
self picks.
4. Red tape, which Poage claims
fore the mother had time to get
the hospital.
I
holes and special privileges, and
by some tax rate increases.”
But his proposal seemed fore-
doomed. Congressional tax lead-
ers already have served notice
E
chicken prepared in some delici-
ous manner. Marjorie — as she is
known throughout the dounty —
believes in milking cows and
keeping enough cream for home
use.
Mr. and Mrs. Fischer hav two
young sons, Billy Jo and Doug-
las, who are both ingrade
school.
In addition to carrying on her
club work, feeding her fine fam-
ily and keeping house, Mrs. Fis-
cher also has time to make some
$15950
sota42,.
Games
Rte at
ter bill for
and discove
had got his
»4 ’ 25
11.5
I
1
*
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
5:00 News ' '
5:15 March of Dimas
-eTgHeG
• BEAUTIFUL COIONS
e,:
-
Xe.
k
• /
1,.
s —r
Old Labor Contract
Expires Next
Month
1 Kept In Incubators
And Closely
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
"ec -uwS Back
1
Mr. Truman
his tax progre
he has Urged
AMAZING WASHER BARGAINC
tookatareatuces!
am4-M
Vnzosesrmzrmsex AVE $2595 this WASHING
"a zee ..
month. ■
Poage, after informal talks with
members of the Texas delegation,
farm work. Only seven weeks ago
they returned home from working
as cotton pickers in Texas.
shoe.
up a Mexican on.the highway will
not be guilty of a felony if the
3;30 Sports
3:45 LaGrange Polka 1
4:00 Hillbilly Roundup
4:30 Tune Time
{1
! 1
je
privileges, and by some tax rate
increases," he said.
4
THURSDAY MORNING
6:00 Sign On. Rise and Shim
6:30 Howard Wusterhausen
6:45 News
7:00 Breakfast With The
Hillbillies
7:30 News '
7:45 Coffee Time
8:30 Trade Parade
8:45 Charlie Helmer
9:00 Polka Time '
10:30 Excursions ip. Science
10:00--Trade Parade - _.
10 Sr ________ ~
—3.A worker is paid as a “learn-
er" for the first 48 working hours
POAGE WANTS
TOSTRENGTHEN
WETBACK BILL
(
¥
r
...
wk
is 75. Ni
‘s 63, M
60. Yale
Uh 60, H
oss 106,
“$nn
1
1
they will oppose any further tax
boosts, barring all-out war.__
2 M-fkumaara.su for-s-t,il 1
greater taxes was part of a 12
He con
that a
■
2
Entered • »*o- E
ond clase matter n
. at Post office, V
, Brenham, Texas, ’
und er act ot
March 3 1879. a
PASS INSPEOTION! ? ?
Expert Auto Glass
INSTALLATION
Insurance
Bent .
LOW
GLASS ft MIRRORS
for every purpose.
1701 W. Main Ph. 2005
Bluebonnet Glass
Brenham
we
pa
E i
Pi 11
K It
h 2
6. Li .
Msment of
MAGKI
mans and other aocommodations include:
waited at Colfax, Cal., until the
WASHINGTON, Jan 16 V Rep.
W. R. Poage (D-Tex.) said Wednes-
day the Texas congressional dele,
gesap will support a pending bill
1 to . strengthen penalties against
Mexican wetbacks, U a couple of
changes are made.
' Prompt passage of an anti-wet-
back bill is essential, Poage said,
because President Truman has re-
fused to allow negotiation of a new
its to search a ranch for illegal
Mexicans without a warrant. The
bill is pending in the house judici-
ary committee.
Could Support Changed BUI
"With that provision out,” Poage
said, "nd changes in a few words,
we believe we can support the
bill."
WMf 99Tf moa suets asita-
-
5:30-Songsat Twilights
dheee
#a •.
•owssupe
to be guilty of - violating the im-
migration law. The bill would make
aiding or recruiting wetbacks a
felony punishable by $2,000 fine
or five years in jail, or both. At
present the crime is a misdemean-
or punishable by a $2,000 fine or
five years in jail.
Poage said Texans are not op-
1
-
c ' ■
WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 ( —
British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill arrived here Wednesday
by train from Canada.
Clese ‘Leopheles’
He "urgentiy" recommended
thatCongress make up this $5.3
billtan differ^ « the "mini-
mum" required in new taxation.
“This can be achieved by elim-
inating loopholes and special
Uli-
(Continued from Page 1)
deliverin emont---p e-v.
North Korean premier and com-
m
YOU «w» meke baautilul room* ftem droh
wm2 ELAT-TPME
Nelson, a physician aboard the
train, said "there are medical sup-
plies aboard the train and no one
is in serious condition.^Everybody
• bundled up and comfortable.
Morale is high.”
Four Taken Off
Four men were removed from
the train to Nyack lodge Wednes-
day. five miles from the stranded
train. They told Mrs. Dorothy Du-
four, owner of the lodge. that
"some kind of gas” was making
the passengers sick.
Mrs. Dufour said a California
state highway rescue team, made
up of a "Snogo" (rotary highway
snow plow) and two trucks, passed
the lodge at 4 p.m. Wednesday on
U.S. highway 40. —
rmauur
i -o
i.
*
r 1
»
1
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 16, 1%
------- --- .......HU — ■ WB*......
ay BRANNAN-
p (Continued from Page 1)
If one is interested in finding
new techniques fqr homemaking,
or in improving methods and
products, just get in touch with
members of Home Demonstration
Clubs because they have the lat-
est and newest know-how. The
reason for this is because they
devote at least one day a month
to earning new methods a n’d
11:00 Morning Natinee
11:30 Vocal Valleties ——
11:45 News % ‘
$ •
I *
1
1
[1
I
8
31
■ 1
— AA..A - N
SeXA GULF COAST
"Aeucociads,
-dehhAaae
,1, ....... III ....—
Shikwim-Wiuums hums /
I
/ - • 5 . du .'1 . ■
it on her to take some good subsistence on days when the Mexi-
er and coffee creem end a can cannot work because of bad lots only big ’Operators take ad-
... * <
■
- "Mrs. Ponder, declared. "I sure
want to recommend Dr. Duncan,"
who- delivered the babies. Dr. M. D.
Duncan said, “It was a very easy
, delivery." Both he and the 38-year-
zgeld . methu. -had - exnected - only .
* “twins. ------ ---
Production and Marketingi
ministration “literally forcedI
CCC to tak action. * es
«r stands for United M
.he world’* best coxerage or22
•road’s tiggert news. "
ed with the dairying demonstra-
tion for three years. ----
When Mrs. Fischer goes to an —. monus axy. . ___
all day meeting, one can always 2. Operators must pay $1 a day
eRI
vAn
re; -
.
a wracusc
NASHVILLE, Ark., Jan 16 (P--
"A, B, C. and D," the Murfrees-
boro quadruplets born in a tiny
three-room tarm house, were ”do-
mg very well" Wednesday-at How-
ard County Memorial hospital
here, ,
Attendants said the three boys
and one girl seemed to be thriving.
Agriculture Departi
get a better contract with Mexico. 1*22""
He-said the present ‘contract is‘when he wouldn’t work anyway.
parents of the new quads and of
eight other living children, ex-
pressed their pi ide 15 miles away
at their home nearMurtreeshoro.
The mother has not seen the in-
fants since they arrived during a___________ _
35 minute period Monday night cBanner-Press photo).
The 47-year-old father has been to, -____________________
the ‘hospital to check on the „—c Tir
multiple progeny which arrived be-RFK4I Jr —
chhmana
A
4
i
l
If you don’t see what you warn i. .
—! advertise for it For better result! tracks,
call The Brenham Banner-Press. r
12:00 Polka Speclak
12:15 • Cctu Capets
12:39.News
12!45, George Morgan
1:00 Tommy’s Tunes
3:00 Band Parade
achieved “by eliminating loop- that is one of the major demon-
strations that all women will
work on in the county. I
Of all the demonstrations
which the clubs have carried.
Mrs. Fischer is most proud of
ire in Tokyo issued a
conceding that "there
manager of Southern Pacific who
was directing rescue operations,
said it appeared that rescuers
churning up the rails from Colfax’
on the west side of the mountains,
would be the first to reach the
srteamliner. ---------------,
Moody said present plans call
for the Colfax rescue train to fight
its way to Emigrant Gap, about
six miles from the sleek, yellow-
painted train, and then run a shut-
tle service with snow weasels to
transfer passengers from the
streamliner to the rescue train.
" ________________
FOR WANT ADS CALL 011.
20017
■I w *
g WASHER
. only
ain
I 1
I
products company.
The Home Demonstration Club
work has made much progress
under her leadership during the
past year and many fine, things
have been planned for 1952.
Mrs. Fischer was active in help-
ing to establish a college schol-
arship fupd for a 4-H club girl.
She is goig to work toward mak-
ing this A permanent fund be-
cause Marjorie feels that it is a
fine thing for all home demon-
strtion elub women in the coun-
ty to assist a worthy 4-H club
girls each year to go to college.
This home demonstration lead-
er has given homemaking infor-
mation to unorganized communt
ties and to non-club members.
With all these varied activities,
Mrs. Fischer has time to do
church work and to work with
her Ladies Aid Society.
M.
ing and redecorating her home.
Mrs. Fischer lives just off the
Houston highway south ofRren
ham. She and Mr. Fischer raise
their own chickens and beef cal-
ves, and Mr, Fishen raisesslarge •
dhne
EV t M . ‘ ii
*-252
-guh
t 4 moricu ■ l
may no
®er it
Soon D
mas an
asjum 1
ttler Co
l for the
tub can
iville to
"7
ors/ i'
rS-uld
pin money for her homemaking.
She is a demonstrator for a home
He said the bill also should be
: - -amy-that-arooLAm---
mustfara a wetbck "KHowingy- ' 2
demanded ban on military ain-
field construction during a truce is
unnecessary because the Reds al-
ready "have agreed not to bring
additional planes Into Korea. The
UN disagreed and again demanded
shortages of grain exceeding
million have been found I
spotcheck of private firms
ing grain fr the governme
the five-state area supervise
the Dallas CCC office.
Comptroller General Lin
C. Warren, head, ot the acg
office, said that the misa
and to reduce th spuarow:
ances now made to owners of oil
and gas wells and mines.
The President estimated that
national output would soar to a
new record top of 0350 billion
thia year and that employment
would go to about 62.3 million
Simem-sesT
Watex ***** C*W>M
HOUSTON, Texas am — Dr. B.
F. Gariepy received an office wa-
cial losses to the governmen
The goyerpment accduntin
. fice repprted to the Senate 1
culture group Tuesday th
datnil. at mander-in-chief, a personal mes-
Semsgmapeertu,itme President Pauh
utolEm-Geugger.entsata,st.sheumessmr
her- food preservation program, i
She has a homefrezer locker for
her vegeta _______________________________
12. meatsand- daisy cprducts. She forezwingc,—
churns three times a week and Fe eeid t
amn
V
1
I
. ______ . •FM2EEnsa. ' "
Hsieh Fang argued that the UN- ■
•.••8
The father boasted that he helped
"bring a few more gems to Pike
county.” Pike county has North
America’s only diamond mine.
Ponder said the family would
support the new infants somehow,
although he wasn't greatly worried
about that. The Ponders have been
supporting their already large fam-
ily by farming, a small plot of
ground in this southwest Arkansas
hill country, and by doing itinerant
covered gully 500 feet from the
highway.
Snow fell at about a half an
inch an hour.
Mrs. Dufour said the 100-mile-
an-hour winds which snared
through Donner Summit just over
F
- 5 L
- J
.F0M641
ter on hand. This homemaker
learned to make and store qual- provisions should be eliminated or
Chairman Jamie L Whit
(D-Miss.) said the subcomi
tee’s staff has found evidene
“a tremendous waste of pu
funds."
“The facts are even worse t
the reports which have app
ed in the papers,” he decla
The shortages occur when.
vate firms sel governmento
ed grain which they are I
posed to be holding in ston
Usually, their ldea is to mak
speculative profit a nd rep
the grain befon a beckup.
When a CCC storage eontra
is caught short, the Agricul
Department can demand tha
make good in cash or can I
him into court for prosecut
or both. •
. TThe ist of the. conressu
45TH IN ACTION- On a snow covered knoll somewhereon the
frozen Korean battlefield, tankers of the 45th Inf., Div., (Oklahoma
National Guard) fire 76mm shells into red hunkers across the
contyact until the broad,.flat no man’s land. The Pivision.wentitoactionuspytast
nd™ "TWoria War INEA Telptos,- „ ------..........-S--
7SeatRay
TO AVOID losing your
driver's license and car resistrations
under the new Texas Safety-
I Responsibility Act is to ow the
X vesigbtkind. oh Automobils Liability
sv
11
I1
Stricter price and credit con-
trols:
More foreign aid;
1 Continued rent controls;
Revision of the Taft-Hartley la-
kbor law;
A better farm, roime support
program; ‘
i Improved social security and
unemployment insurance laws.
I “1952 is not going to be an
t easy year for the economy," Mr.
: Truman said. "Americans must
- give up many of the things that
■ we can afford to do without," to
> build our military strength
• against the threat of commun-
ism.
He told the nation not to ex-
pect "business as usual, consum-
er enjoyments as usual, or gov-
ernment programs and services
as usual” for the next two or
three years of intensive rearma-
ment.
. Less For Civilians
For 1952, he foresaw a cut in
automobile production to i e s s
than 4,000,000 new cars, fewer
new housing units, fewer tele-
vision and radio seta but no de-
crease in the supply of food and
clothing.
Total federal spending fov the
present fiscal year is estimated at
about 071 hllign. The new bud-
get will be supmitted to Con-
grew next Monday.
The President’s tax recom-
mendations stemmed from con-
gressional failure to provide the
010 billion in new revenue which
he requested last year. Congress
approved a tax increase yhich
the Council of Economic Advisor*
estimated would yield $54 bil-
lion.
—----------- -------------- a reporter neigan, will- .
Mrs. Bill Fischer, Washington County Home Demonstration Council president, magicafly’pulls a support the wetbaek DiI it one
provision is eliminated. That clause
would give the government author-
of Congress' at 11:30 a.m. cst
Thursday.----- — - —■
of the train, which lay in a snow-
posed to tightening wetback penal-
ties and pinning responsibility on
who recruuts iezaluimmizzants.u33uSog8-8
-"Keeds New Wording 1 --
But he said the bill should be
worded so that a driver who picks
is no question UN aircraft were in
the general area” of the Commu-
nist war prisoner camp on the night
the Reds said it was bombed.
But. the statemenb eddad, s to
impossible to confirm whether Al-
1
i
41
---, T"ua" "mTC"“ "
Your GENERAL ELECTRIC Dealer
Texas Phomu
....... -r t - ----------_______
Department’s Commodity i
Corp- sinee last fall.
"remendous Wastet
yRESCUE-
(Continued from Page 1)
■lie wer
Be off Fri
dould b
| from str
[be a figb
I leadersh
hi ■ 1 ‘i
ry and no
Wasota la
deafe
idway in
4:45 Sleepy Joe s.s0
-2150- News *5, 3-
5:15 Trade Parade
5:30 Songs at Twilight
5:45 Sign Off .
a ; -w'ea- # • --7 ~ —
away.' --
Leonard and Haggal Ponder.
S- 1
point legislative program which
Stricter Controls
2 -
b
T^m' S WhlUh-kd . Publisher ““ mJEiBrd.-Mechanica Supt
F . W ■ si UoR f - - ■■•se***1* *"‛ R •
Publi*b,’li i-very afternoon except Sifurdii' anil Rund>X at 30# E. Main
Street. Brenham, Texas._______ .
n, ourf .tote 19 priationa went unpunish
RADIO STATION AWW
1280 on Dial 1090 Watts
Brenham. Texas Phone 053
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memoma......
h John Re
iota is str
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Edward 1
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Home Demonstration Council
Chairman Practices What She
Learns At Club Meetings
us. 4.,. —j
By JEWELL BALLEW “Imany hours to aevepmgac.
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 87, No. 11, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 16, 1952, newspaper, January 16, 1952; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1570219/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.