The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 25, 1935 Page: 4 of 4
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BETTER JUPGMBiT
Is more than just cutting down on expenditures. It s building for the
future... There are houses in this section where a coal of FAIN I
would add Years of Life and Service. Paint now and add to the ap-
pearance of your property and save your buildings.
HARDWARE. SCREEM8 DlfiHI
LOOK OVER YOUR FARM MACHINERY and cat your
Repair Parts.
SCREENS
are Health and Comfort needs.
DISHES, See Onr Uite FIRST!
4'
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J« H. RANDOLPH CO»f Lumber, Shingles, Building Hardware and Undertakers’ Supplies
....... «4|
IN FASHION NOW
(By H 6.1
If there Ls any one thing that
out be said about the new spring
Kmt.x it Ls that their lines know
uo uniformity regardless of
what your particular type may
be. there is sure to be a hat tha’
will bring out your points.
Just a glance at the offering,
kn millinery being shown in the
■mart shops makes one wonder
tf there Ls a wearable hat in the
whole display but the wise wo-
man will not be content with a
mere glance, but will devote
axnc time to trying on the new-
er models,
You can't imagine just how
smart the straight - brimmed
sailors ear. be with the new suits
and tailored things For the more
Wm in me type, the poke bonnets
will be more becoming Then
thrre arc Breton sailors.worn far
buck on the head, the pill boxes
anti turbans whutii mount to
sharp points
Ti.rrt re hats equally us
srnn.. an- i.\.. at >re becoming to
the uverais ‘ woman, winch have
medium-. :zrd brims which have
.1 sweeping am dipping over the
rign; eye
Wluie tore ire any number of
rer"1!: s'y.'.s. iheir's one favor-
ite which is .- ill with us '.he be-
ret. K-ft doeskin in colors tha*
will : with anything y. a wear,
b*rc.-> m pure whi.e or pigskin
both, boast cm >mp;v:iylug acres-
si . .. which make them the
choice of many smart women
So v. tied are '.lie s.yies the
fabrics and the colors tint the
sr-lec : n of a becoming h»t
should h/- c Ley for every woman
■o —
NOTH’* \MI COMMENTS
By Hugo
V' er in individual becomes a
part Lear, ins re (.son is in part,
impaired
The g:ea; lesson m life ls to
le , " i value of temperance
In all 'hm.gs
Children are the best assets of
any community: why not devel-
op them fully
Inliu'.ion may be ahead If it
i> we hope to ride the crest and
then leave the raft
Our i,w:i idea ls t ii.it the coun-
try ran afford .some inflation,but
w* are against running wild.
Adver'users who buy advertis-
ing wisely are to tie found in the
columns ,f -his newspaper
Rci begin conversations with.
■«5lrl you hear etc’’" and ladies
beRin 'he's a nice girl, but —
F»c. of the matter ls that the
young ladl-s of Ootdthwalte are
Retting prettier every spring
he: s not get ihe idea that the
era Ls approaching when we can
gel something for nothing
Driving automobiles and drink-
ing liquor are dangerous to oth-
ers as well as the man In the car
Going to church may not be
necessary, but it as least put, a
man in company that is better
than the average
Correct this sentence: “I don't
wmnl yrm to do that for me be-
cause you have already done too
1905 is winging along and we
hnv* a lot to do if we are going
Rs keep up with our New Year
MAenUons
A marble shaft ought to be
magged to the man who was so
talsreated in his Job that he for-
■K. to go to dinner.
NEWS IN BRIEF
Government expenditures dur-
ing the current financial year
passed the five and a half billion
dollar mark Saturday with the
deficit trailing by three billions.
Atiorney General McCraw has
filed suit in the district court at
Austin against W A. Tunstlll
and sixty-three other defend-
ants to recover for the benefit
of the public school fund three
tracts in Upton county, totaling
991 acres alleged to be- vacant
public school land.
Commissioners of Texas 254
counties are headed for a salary
increase If a bill passed by the
.senate Friday Ls acceptable to
the house and governor. Under
the bill passed by the senate.the
salary schedule would be based
on property valuation of the in-
dividual counties. In general, it
would restore salary cuts made
by the las! legislature..
The Texas legislature voted to
submit to the people a consti-
tutional amendment allowing the
confinement of Insane persona
m asylums and psychopathic
hospitals for a period of 90 days
c.T.hout the necessity of a jury
trial. The amendment would not
apply to those charged with a
criminal offense. The senate
adopted the resolution 17 to 1
Assurance that the public
works administration will give
sympathetic consideration to the
application for funds to build the
proposed natural gas pipe line
north from the Texas Panhandle
was given by Public Works Ad-
mi.aitnitor Ickes to Governor
Ail ed of Texas and Major Paul
'V.ikefc'!d the governor's person-
« re n es'ui'arive. It Is proposed
to pip" gas from the Texas Pan-
handle field to the cities of the
'■Tt'.h and East.
"Two silly girls seeking public-
ity " the dean of women at the
University of Utah, said Satur-
day of co-ed leaders In the move
ment for nude bathing privi-
leges for women The two girls
had penned a protest to a camp-
us publication calling on other
women students to assert their
rights and obtain privileges here-
tofore reserved for men only
Their protest had to do with
regulations requiring women stu-
dents to wear swimming suits in
the university pool (
Bruno Richard Hauptmann's
counsel charges Col Charles A
Lindbergh's dally presence at the
Remington trial "unduly influ-
enced" the Jury, which saw in
him "a bereaved father for whose
sorrow the world demanded a
sacrifice." Hhe allegation was
one of 143 'manifest errors' de-
fense counsel filed the clerk of
the court of errors and appeals,
the highest tribunal of New Jer-
sey. which on June 20. will bear
Hauptmann's appeal from con-
viction of the Lindbergh baby
kldnap-murder
A report from Prague says that
Zdenek Plvmec, 29, unemployed
clerk, traveled from Prague to
Jugo-Slavla with two wives and
neither wife had any Idea of the
other's existence until they
roaobed their iWtlnetton Whin
one caught sight of her husband
buying chocolate from a slot ma-
chine for the child at the other
the remit was a trial for
bigamy and fraud In Prague.
During the case It was disclosed
CONFIDENT-COURAGEOUS
LIFE
By J. E P.
Every day the news dispatches
convey the stories of men and
women who have lost their grip.
These suicides have not been
confident of their ability to
eventually overcome their hand-
icaps or difficulties.
One of our readers recently
wrote and asked how he could
attain the confident-courageous
attitude toward life. He also
wished to know how he could
gain more personal power.
The recipe Ls simple although
a thousand pages would not ex-
haust a detailed elaboratlon.Tlie
difficulty comes in following it.
Having confidence In one's
source is often an aid to gaining
confidence in one's powers. The
finest flowering of many relig-
ious systems of thought is the
idea that the soul of man Ls of
the same essence as the Infinite
Creator. Those who need to gain
confidence in their inherent
powers would do well to think of
this several times a day. They
should read all they can sup-
porting this idea
When they have firmly fixed in
the mind who and what they are
they will very often find that ihe
cringing, tearful attitude has
been crowded out In much the
:ame manner as light pushes
back darkness. Having gained
an Inner confidence a man may
still lack the force to express It
outwardly, courageously.
In similar mental mood a man
may be confident In his own
mind that he can lift two hun-
dred pounds of sand. However,
when he has actually done It he
isn'v afraid to tackle any two-
hundred pound sack of sand, no
mutter who is looking Then he
confirmed courageous- con-
fidence. But, how can he get tc
do i‘ ’ Easy! By practicing at ev-
ery opportunity on twenty-five
pounds of sand and then fifty
r.::d then an hundred and then
an hundred and fifty and final-
ly on the two hundred. If he
nevei masters the two hundred
he will come much nearer doing
so than as though he had not
followed this method.
The same method will do much
in '.lie matter of developing un-
tried confidence into conflrmed-
courageou a-confidence. One
should begin the developing
process by doing and saying the
things of which he Is only a Ut-
ile bit timid.
The confident-courageous at-
titude, like muscle power, devel-
ops through use.
---0----
TRADING AT HOME
There are any number of peo-
ple living In this town who laugh
at the idea that it Is best to buy
at home. They take the position
that It does no matter where
they spend their money If they
get their money’s worth. They
subscribe to the doctrine that the
only obligation they owe the
home town Is to get what they
can out of It.
Our idea of trading at home
does not include buying goods
from merchants who attempt
exorbitant profits. It doss not
necessitate the acceptance of
worn, dirty or bedraggled goods
from old time merchants who
think that It Is up to the com-
munity to keep them in business.
It only means giving the local
merchant a chance and then, to
bay If he can reasonably meet
other competition.
The local merchants, on their
LATER MAT
TOO LATE
New England's call for action
to save the Ufe of Its cotton tex-
tile Industry grows daily more
urgent. With still move mills re-
ported "closed for an Indefinite
period" — at Adams, North Ad-
ams and WUUamstown — facts,
not words, show the serious na-
ture of the emergency and show
It with incontrovertible force.
The growing loss of work and
wages gives the New England
delegation the strongest possible
case to support the Industry's
plea for remedial action at
Washington. Surely a president,
who declares that Increase of em-
ployment throughout the land is
his major purpose, can not sit
idly by and .see many thousands
of workers deprived of their Jobs
as a direct result of the admin-
istration's own policies.
If Mr. Roosevelt has any doubt
that the AAA’s cotton processing
taxes have far overshot their
mark, and are causing more
harm than good, let him look to
the testimony of Henry P. Ken-
dall, the trusted chairman of an
unusually competent advisory
committee In the department of
commerce. Speaking from his
wide knowledge of mill condi-
tions both In the north and the
south, Mr. Kendall says that
,'the whole Industry Is facing
bankruptcy.” In fact, so far as
the processing taxes are con-
cerned, the present outcry is In
no way sectional or limited. Tex-
tile manufacturers In every part
of the country are agreed that
the AAA's sales tax of $21 a bale
has not only caused a serious de-
crease of popular purchase and
comsumptlon of cotton goods,but
also has eaten deep Into the
working capital of many mills.
Since the manufacturers must
pay the tax soon after the bales
of raw cotton are opened In
their plants, and then wait for
the public to buy, an Inordinate
share of the burden of financ-
ing his heavy tax ls thrown on
the Industry.
With such an outlook facing
the planters, and with the cot-
ton textile manufacturers uni-
versally In trouble, surely the
president and congress must find
means to save the situation be-
fore It ls too late. Not even the
AAA Ls so sacrosanct an agency
of the new deal that dogmatic
defense of Its policies can be al-
lowed to defeat the basic pur-
poses of the new deal Itself. —
Boston Transcript.
must maintain, at all times, the
confidence of the community.
The average cltlsen should,we
take It. have pleasure In Inc teas
lng the total volume of local
business. Out of this sum Is tak-
en the prosperity of all of us.
The larger it Is the bigger the
average share. Every cltlsen that
spends his dollars at home help*
that much in w«b>h the bwL-
ness of the community bigger.
He helps the town expand, put
on new growth and support new
e^*rprt*ea—AloOregw IfliTor.
Somethin* Good
end New!
EAST TEXAS GAS
Try it end be
CONVINCED!
15c per f*Hoo
Mr*. Gledar* Eaten
FOR WAR'
Under the provisions of the
Universal Draft Act being spon-
sored by the American Legion,
the entire citizenship of the na-
tion would be drafted In time of
war. Not only would the govern-
ment draft able bodied men be-
tween the ages of 18 to 45 to
serve In the army, but the gov-
ernment would draft labor, cap-
ital and Industry to serve where
and when needed. The munition
plants would be taken over by
the government and munition
workers and technicians and
executives would serve for the
same wages paid the army. Ev-
ery other war necessity would
be mobilized for government and
war service. The entire country
would be put on a war footing
at once and the chances for war
profiteering would disappear. It
ls extremely doubtful if the
measure will ever pass any con-
gress, however. It ls too honest
* mm
fnjjffsT i
warns l» be a t
part of organised labor to <
i la uni-
versal and the capitalists want
more In one second and the lab-
orer more a day than tha fight-
ing man win receive in a mouth.
If the legion would make the
passage of the law tha major ob-
jective of the national organiaa-
tlon it might be pa—a over tha
objection of selfish interests by
an aroused public opinion. Tho
passage of the law would do
more to prevent our
Involved In a war than all the
treaties signed, by full draawd
diplomats In the history of tha
world. The Interests In this coun-
try seeking to cash in on blood
would be blocked and tha effic-
iency of the measure would do
much to discourage other coun-
tries from seeking an armed con-
flict.—Forrest City. Iowa, Sum-
mit.
FEDERAL TIRES FEDERAL TUBES
CONOCO GAS AND OIL
We strive to Merit your trade
KITTLE FILLING STATION
WELCOME EXTENDED YOU
Good, Nutritious Food, well selected stock of Freeh, New
Groceries adds to your Health. Specialties for school lunches.
Fruits well selected. Prompt Delivery
ICE ICE
We Want Your Produce
CHANCELLOR’S GROCERY
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GIFTS FOR HOME
VISIT US FOR TOUR FURNITURE
A New Line of Modem Designs
OVER STOCKED! SEE OUK COMPLETE SUITES FOR
Bed Room. Dining Room and Living Room. Each Suite
$39 and up.
CEDAR CHESTS
LOVELY FELT BASE MIOR „____________$09
QUALITY AND PRICES ALWAYS RIGHT
Texas Furniture and Rug Company
195 West Broadway Brownwood, Texas
i
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Patterson, Mrs. R. H. The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 25, 1935, newspaper, April 25, 1935; Mullin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1060463/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Jennie Trent Dew Library.