The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 1, 1935 Page: 2 of 4
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Altered as second class mail
matter January 1, 1902
SUBSCRIPTION PRIOR
On. Yeas- ........... $1.50
Six Months .................. .76
Three Months ............ 40
Notice of ch.ich 'Titertaiu-
Renf* where admission is eharg-
•i, card1? of thanks, resolutions
mi respect and all matters not
•firs will be charged far at
regular advertising: rates.
TRYING FOR NAVY EQUALITY
Great Britain's proposal to do
away with naval ratio provisions
tn its efforts to reach an agree-
ment on naval limitation may
show the way to accomplishment
The Japanese have been sensi-
tive about accepting a perma-
nent and defined status of naval
Inferiority We would be. If any
count-y asked ns to accept such
a sta'us We rather gritted at the
idea of agreeing to definite
equality with Great Rri'ain. We
are not beyond understanding
Japan's feelings in the matter,
yet we have born inclined to
think that her dislike for the
ratio Included more than thus re-
sentment. that it included also a
design to overreach, us in naval
building
Even now it is not clear how
we can agree on naval limitation
unless some country will accept
an inferior status. Surely all can
not be on an equal footing. Anri,
almost as surely, the United
States will not agree to a Jap-
anese navy as great as her own.
Under these circumstances
there appears no easy solution
of the problem But the Bri'Lsh
move makes possible a new ap-
proach to h Assuming the Brh •
lsh have further Ideas on the
subject, these should be worthy
of careful consideration.
Of ' r.e thing we can be sure:
The world needs nav:il limitation.
The three great naval powers are
now encaged in spending more
than a billion and a half dollars
In bringing •heir fleets to the
strength jarmit’i,: under the
Washington agreement Two
years ago each was well below
this standard The "’fhvidiual
eovcrnnv - i hundreds
the Christian Science Monitor.
The pineapple Industry packed
12.000.000 cases during the 1934-
1635 season and employed 1,000
additional persons. New building
permits In Honolulu totaled $1,-
256 132 for the first five months
of 1935. against $745,105 for the
same period In 1934.
l»rof. Peter P. Laxarev of the
Moscow Institute of Experiment-
al Medicine recently succeeded In
extending life In lower animals
to as much as four times the
normal span by treatment with
Roentgen rays, according to an
item in a recent issue of the New
York Herald Tribune Professor
I azarev expressed the belief that
man's normal mental life, bar-
ring deleterious influences wear-
ing out his body, should be from
150 to 180 years
An Item in the June issue of
"Fortune" says that each year
about 7 000 000 carats of rough
diamonds are shipped to London
from South Africa, where 97 per
cent of the total production orig-
inates The "Diamond Corp" In
London sells 95 per cent of the
world's diamonds. Eighty per
cent of all diamonds are In Am-
sterdam and Antwerp, and the
United States buys from these
'hree cities about 500 000 carats
of cut diamonds each year, val-
ued at $50,000,000.
The share of government ex-
penditures in national income In
Canada rose from 19 per cent In
1930 to more than 30 per cent in
1932, it was stated In the June
issue of Canadian Business,which
is published in Montreal. During
the last 20 years the Canadian
government .spent $134 for every
$100 of income One person out
of everv 10 in Canada is depend-
ent on a government job Dur-
ing the past four years $400,000 -
000 was spent on relief. While
'ax yield decreased 16 per cent
between 1929 and 1933. ability of
the people to pay decreased 55
per cent.
'ill.
ir. bv rcfraln-
mg fr<in. iii„.
vew l' per- 1
mltted to them
But in recent j
months there has
bn"!! frantic
fear in Japan f'.
■ wiicn 1
the treaty :< rmin i'
1 . w uki find 1
the Uniter! S' ye..-
and Britain I
far ihead . ■ f he
• r i navy
* '' • b* •• r a |
sir - :ear :n B .'
a:.'! in .r.e |
1 : ; c'T
e :ch l;as j
rushed ,u -
e.rin ure.s. 1
which when r •
•ed will leave ,
the thre- i. . u
:. . i.i ivesly ex- j
actly where '•••• ■
when the
absurd rr. ;! i
' !
Between 80 and 90 per cent of
■ he towns and cities in the Unit-
ed States have only one paper
each, according to an article ap-
pearing In a recent Issue of [he
m ignzine. "Tod ly." In the larg-
er cities. 61 chains operate more
than 300 newspapers. There are
37,000,000 copies of newspapers
printed each week day and 27,-
000.000 every Sunday. On an av-
< rage there is a newspaper print-
■ : ' r every L •;» >•: 'he e vjn.
' ry This extensive news service
c- r-'s more than $500,000,000 nn-
wlthout a dictator.” Admlnlstra-
tlon of the nation’* affairs will
be based and guided wholly by
the new constitution setting up
"a strong state government with
clear cut division of duties and
responsibilities.” No man will as-
sume the dictatorship vacated by
the death of Pilsudskl. The PU-
sudskl party. Indeed, will “set an
axaatpla by liquidating Itself.'
The new government plan was
outlined, we are told, by the Pol-
ish premier, Walery Slawek, on
the eve of dissolution of the Pol-
ish parliament and before the
governmental block In that body.
Actual abandonment of dicta-
torship by the young nation be-
girt by dictatorships would be
front page news the world over.
Comparatively little attention
has been attracted by the Polish
prospectus, however — perhaps
because neither the Poles nor
their neighbors take It very seri-
ously. The concept of a strong
government has been so strongly
tied to one-man rule in Central
Europe during recent years that
divorcement of the two Is per-
haps inconceivable to Central
European minds. So It appears
that Poland’s promise of a
"unique experiment" Is heavily
discounted. Perhaps its inspira-
tion may be traced to political
conditions and confusions cre-
ated by Pilsudski's passing There
may be. among the old marshal's
former lieutenants rivalry so ac-
tive and jealousy so intense that
no one of them Ls permitted by
the others to take over the dic-
tatorship. That theory would ex-
plain the experiment and also
would foredoom It. In all proba-
bility. to a brief and troubled
life. Success of the new plan, the
Warsaw dispatch admits, “will
depend at the start upon the
ability of Marshal Pilsudski's po-
litical heirs to co-operate In their
new tasks." Such of his heirs as
may have the dictatorship com-
plex may tire of co-operation
early in the experiment, and try
for dictatorial powers. The pro-
posal of a constitutional and dic-
tatorlcss government for Poland
deserves the applause of all dem-
oeratic folks, taut Its well wishers
abroad probably will reserve their
applause pending actual estab-
lishment of a dietatorless and
I genuinely constitutional regime.
Mora
In this country
unimproved
the rich back In 700 B. O.
Mon than 19,000 communist
agitators and young radicals
have been expelled (ran OOO
camps.
Two-thirds of an drowning* in
the United States occur during
the swimming season—May .June,
July and August.
Most French wines are now
derived from American root
stock.
Charlotte, N. O., has a efty or-
dinance which makes it Illegal
to wash horses on the streets.
No one knows the origin of
chess.
Some unbreakable buttons are
made from blood.
Some people will believe any-
thing.
Cornerstone laying ls an an-
cient custom, dating back to Ur,
the ancient city of the Chaldees,
- Pathfinder.
Air-Conditioned
Touribt Pullman, Standard Pullman
Pullman Lounon and Chain Car ■
Los Angeles
AUGUST 18 Wr
$40 tgS?
Los Angeles or San Diego
$50 to San Francisco ,
On Sale Aug. 17-18, Limited 21 Days.
I
1
~rT
■ 'Mgfrfi
r— VaSg
-■t3l
in.
lnereai
Visit Pacific International Exposition , San Diego.
Lv. Mullen 6:42 A. M„ Aug. 18.
Ar. Los Angeles 9:35 P. M., Aug. 19.
For details and reservations
Ask Your Santa Fe Agent
-4
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1
Special Rates
The Enterprise is able to offer a
special rate on a combination
with the Dallas Semi - Weekly
Farm News.
$1.00
The Okies' newspaper In the
world. • Peking Pan." published in
Peking. China and founded hv
New Orleans Ttmp.s-Pirayune.
the Chinese Emperor Ting-Ku-
ang-Keng, was discontinued ear-
ly this summer, according to an
article in a recent issue of the
Norganblatt of Zagreb. Yugosla-
via For centuries the Peking Pio
rad hern printed on silk. Since
l;l,*9 it had appeared daily. China
’ os a total of 600 publications, of
which the weeklies, due to the
appeal to the Chinese family, are
”t° most important.
Farm News
Mullin Ecterprise $1.50
rur
$2.SO
6
Both One Year For
$2.00
proxtm
tatlvas
nlea op
fore tb
Whei
opened
hid b
found 1
case of
suit tw
charge:
It ls al
sale of
Dodgln
clgaretl
The 1
Browns
merce y
tlon to
trol to
negro t
Brownv
en afte
was re
commui
In extal
turn hei
the trai
tal.
The *
nant bi
Into a
plans a:
city cc
stream
eastern
nlng str
water i
through
Plans d<
city wa
tendent,
council,
flclent 1
to maki
stream
iimitiiiniTiTiinfHiinfflnniiiininrawiiiiiiHBnnHiiiHraniiimiiiraNiiuninBniDimui
Wb< • : • ■
new
be !:«*.,'•
on types .if
face:! with
f:
d. u i. lc.is a
therp will
at d . ■•ereements
v" • . \Ve will be
'he possibility of a
naval race dwarfing the present
one a race !:k>dy to eat out our
subs' , live like ■
and !m
lit W ,u .
That i. " -y v uki have \
new naval km.' n 're.i'y and
why we .*!,<vik! wete(,n*,e British
mo: ' <. 1 • .-! ' Weve- great
the Varl".' '! 1' loom in the
..... '! r';, re:i ele
nng irmy
■if'ia'lng
G*o -k> 'tirunt
thwaite
Miss Bei
Mr. ar
son of 1
fdt a v
brother
and Mrs
tend th<
The 1
ended i
camping
at Cowe
first tim
together
28 years.
Mrs I
message
her^hofl
GOt I It v xil vi mi p
rages war
The y : '!"n
not l" :t
dlvld . il who discovered why the j
colored p. k ... . - ,'x
have append.. .... I' might be
remarked in the same r.u ur.ee-
tlon that the r r, rt ;r ml seim
to have no ton.sili A: least, they
appear never * > b’ advis'd to
hav 'heir tonsils removed A S50
tori ' or tom v Is a luxury :e.-nvcd
for those who have the $.ju Be
that as it may, the old-fa.shlon-
cd farmers who struggled with
boIIworms and boll weeviu with-
out any help from political sour-
ces or scientific assistants must
ha".' had a hard time Some-
times they were so uncertain as
to the extent, of the cotton crop
they raised bread, meat, peas
and potatoes at home. Thp old-
times indeed had no government
to mother them or smother them
with attentions. They were self
dependent and their self de-
pendence somehow taught them
self-reUanoe It was pitiful. —
State Press la Dallas Neva.
— that's just the 1935 way of
saying what Chesterfields have
been saying for years . . .
Chesterfields do about every-
thing a cigarette ought to do.
Chesterfields have TASTE—yes
plenty of it. But not too strong.
And Chesterfields are MILD —
but they’re not insipid or flat.
Chesterfields "go to town
hei
Brownwc
ot paral)
ter. Miss
lmmedla
at her b<
Mr. ar
children,
Nell and
from Oa
relatives,
aide of I
P. A. 8to
Mr. Page
morning.
Dr.R. I
delayed 1
campalgr
church, L
An out
' i week's sc
watermel
tbs Perry
Buy even
Allen, in
R. Allen,
Maurlne
'* urlng
.ower oi
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Patterson, Mrs. R. H. The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 1, 1935, newspaper, August 1, 1935; Mullin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1059876/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Jennie Trent Dew Library.