Refugio Timely Remarks and Refugio County News (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, December 14, 1934 Page: 2 of 78
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Refugio County Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Dennis M. O’Connor Public Library.
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THE REFUGIO TIMELY REMARKS
Friday, December 14, 1934
r J
News Review of Current
Events the World Over
Davis Warns Japan Against Scrapping Naval Treaty-
p, Peaceful Agreement for Saar Plebiscite—Moley
and Richberg to Industrialists.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
© by Western Newspaper Union.
N. H. Davis
VJORMAN H. DAVIS, American am-
Av bassador-at-large and our chief
representative in the naval limitation
conversations that have been going on
in Loudon, has given
plain warning to Ja-
pan that If that na-
tion insists on scrap-
ping the Washington
naval treaty, security
will be endangered,
suspicion created and
the world forced into
a costly naval con-
struction race. Mr.
Davis was addressing
the American Corre-
spondents’ association
in London, but his words were meant
for all the world to hear, and as his
speech was the first comprehensive
statement of the American position
since the opening of the conversations,
it was regarded as of the greatest im-
portance. He also announced, for the
first time, that President Roosevelt has
proposed “a substantial all-around re-
duction in naval armaments.”
Mr. Davis said that, since no agree-
ment for armament reduction has been
reached, the United States advocates
the continuance of the Washington and
London treaties with their assurance
of “equality of security.” Asserting
that the Washington pact put an end
to a ruinous naval race and established
“a sound basis for peace in the Pacific
and the Far East,” he continued:
“Only by maintenance of the system
of equality of security, with propor-
tionate reductions downward of naval
strength if possible, can there be main-
tained the substantial foundation for
security and peace which has thus been
laid.
“Abandonment now of the principles
involved would lead to conditions of
insecurity, of international suspicion,
and of costly competition, with no real
advantage to any nation.”
Unofficially, it is said that when Ja-
pan gives formal notice that she is de-
nouncing the Washington treaty, prob-
ably on December 20, the United States
will immediately withdraw from the
discussions in London. Officials in
Washington consider that to continue
the conversations would be tantamount
to acquiscence to Japan’s demand for
modification of the ratios on which
the treaty is based.
No more than any other nation does
the United States wish to see the re-
vival of the race in naval construction,
but the government will not tolerate
the decline of our navy to a subordi-
nate place. Recent utterances of cab-
inet members and of congressmen who
especially have to do with naval affairs
make this plain.
In his annual report to the President,
Secretary of the Navy Swanson says
that although the United States may
reduce its naval strength proportion-
ately with other powers, It is imper-
ative that a navy second to none be
maintained. He warns also of the
dangerous shortage of personnel in the
navy, saying that “ships are valueless
unless manned by adequate crews of
trained, experienced officers and men.”
'T'HE government of Jugoslavia has
A decided to expel all the 27,000 Hun-
garians now living in that country.
The process will be gradual but re-
lentless. Already more than 2,000 have
been deported and more are being sent
away daily. Hungary called the action
of Jugoslavia to the attention of the
League of Nations.
OEACEFUL solution of the Saar
plebiscite problem seemed assured
when the council of the League of Na-
tions unanimously and gladly adopted
the report of the Saar committee em-
bodying the Franco-German agreement
for payment for the mines in case the
region votes to return to the reich.
Leading up to this settlement were two
announcements of utmost Importance.
First, Foreign Minister Pierre Lava!
of France promised that French troops
would make no attempt to enter the
Saar territory before or during the
vote on January 13. “I desire to an-
nounce,” said he “that France will not
participate in any international force
which it may be found heeessary to
send into the Saar. We cannot par-
ticipate in such a force because Ger-
many cannot participate.”
Then Capt. Anthony Eden, British
lord privy seal, told the council that
Great Britain would contribute troops to
the proposed international force, pro-
vided Chancellor Hitler of Germany
were willing that such an army should
be sent into the territory. When Ber-
lin was infortned of this, a foreign
office spokesman announced that Hit-
ler’s government would raise no objec-
tions to the plan.
All this was in effect a victory for
the policies of Col. Geoffrey G. Knox,
the league commissioner of the Saar,
for he has long advocated the crea-
tion of an international police force
for the territory.
Delegates of Italy and Czechoslo-
vakia declared their countries would
send troops, and Maxim Litvinov,
Soviet foreign commissar, said he be-
lieved Russia would be willing to sup-
ply a part of the league force.
T"\ ISPATCHES from Warsaw said
the Poles were amazed and
alarmed by the Franco-German agree-
ment because they feared the under-
standing between those two nations
would be extended to include Great
Britain and Italy. The foreign office
hinted that in that case Poland’s re-
lations with Russia might be made
closer. Poland resents being left out
In the cold, for she Is determined to
be recognized as one of the great pow-
ers, and to play her part in the stabil-
ization of peace In Europe.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT returned
* from Warm Springs to his recondi-
tioned executive offices in Washington
with the greater part of his winter
program completed. It will be pre-
sented to congress in his annual mes-
sage on January 3. The major items
have to do with expansion of the pub-
lic works administration to provide
work relief, revision of the NR A and
the AAA, extension of power develop-
ments, social security insurance and low
cost housing, and the paring down of
the budget.
V/f EMBERS of the Mid-Continent Re-
clamation association, represent-
ing 19 states, met in Chicago and per-
fected plans for a soil erosion and
flood control program, to cost $900,000,-
000, which the association will recom-
mend to the federal government with
a request for a survey to determine its
practicability. The plan, which was
developed by A. B. Hulit of Chicago,
involves, the construction of canals and
dams over an area extending from
northern North Dakota through Texas
to control flood waters originating on
the eastern slopes of the Rocky moun-
tains.
INTERESTING statements were made
I to the American Congress of Indus-
try In New York by two of the Presi-
dent’s closest advisers, Raymond Moley
and Donald Richberg,
director of the nation-
al emergency council.
Professor Moley de-
clared there is no
workable substitute
for the present cap-
* ** italistic economic sys-
Donald
Richberg
tern. “Basically,” he
said, “the New Deal
was an effort to save
capitalism and, by
spreading the range
of opportunity under
it, to enable the aver-
age man to regain a measure of con-
trol over the conditions under which
he lived. It seemed to me in 1933, as it
seems to me now, that this effort to
save capitalism was wise and just
“By no stretch of the Imagination
could the vote of November, 1932, have
been interpreted as a mandate for the
abandonment of the capitalistic system.
Finally, even had there been such a
mandate, there was and is no work-
able substitute for our present system.”
Moley expressed much optimism re-
garding business. He told the indus-
trialists, in effect, that they need have
no fear of any radical change in the
present economic and social order, that
industry was needed to stimulate trade,
bring about recovery, and that in the
last analysis it would be the business
men who would distribute the wealth
of the nation.
Mr. Richberg admitted the NRA had
not achieved all its aims in its effort
to bring about industrial self-govern-
ment, but insisted that its fundamental
principles must be preserved in perma-
nent legislation for codes of fair com-
petition.
He warned the manufacturers that
the permanent law must be written in
co-operation with labor and consumers,
as well as private business and gov-
ernment, so that there should be nei-
ther work-consumer regimentation by
business nor business regimentation by
government.
He hinted that if employers consent-
ed to legal restriction in return for in-
creased power under the codes, organ-
ized labor would be called upon to do
likewise in submitting to legislative
control.
Organized labor was soundly berated
by C. L. Bardo, president of the Na-
tional Association of Manufacturers.
He said its contribution to national
recovery had been “the most wide-
spread inauguration of strikes, co-
ercion, Intimidation, and violence that
the United States has ever seen, as
evidenced by strikes in Minneapolis,
Cleveland, textile industries, and the
general strike at San Francisco.”
Bardo pledged the united opposition
of the National Association of Manu-
facturers to the efforts of the Ameri-
can Federation of Labor to obtain
through congress legislation imposing
a 30-hour week on industry, or any
other effort to “fix a rigid and arbi-
trary work week for all industry.”
Industry’s platform for recovery,
which was proposed at a meeting of
the national industrial council, urging
return to the golfi standard, a balanced
budget, and oth&r orthodox economic
measures, was adapted.
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
A Flying Vanderbilt
Communists and Tailors
Was EPIC; Now It’s EPIA
In and Out of Who’s Who
The original Commodore Vanderbilt,
who ran a little boat from. Staten Is-
land to the mainland, then became the
country’s biggest railroad man and
head of the New York Central, would
be Interested to know that his great-
grandson, William K. Vanderbilt, ac-
cording to Mr. Maury Paul, has built
a big airplane for his personal travel.
His branch of the Vanderbilt family
will be independent of railroads, even
of yachts, except for ocean crossings.
Mr. West of the Junior National
Chamber of Commerce says one mil-
lion five hundred thousand Commu-
nists are plotting to overthrow this
government.
The famous “seven tailors of Tooley
street,” beginning their exordium, “We,
the people of England,” also planned to
change things, but they did not. Mr.
West’s one million five hundred thou-
sand Communists will not overthrow
anything, either. Besides, there are
not one million five hundred thousand.
The number of real enrolled Commu-
nists in this country is under thirty
thousand, and there are perhaps one
hundred thousand pale pink Commu-
nists.
If there were one million five hun-
dred thousand there would still be
about one hundred and twenty-two
million Americans of a different color,
determined to change this government
in their way, if at all, and do it slowly.
Have you heard about “EPIA”? It
is a new arrangement of letters in-
vented by Harry L. Hopkins, admin-
istrator of federal emergency relief for
President Roosevelt, and it means “End
Poverty in America.” Your mind hops
back to Mr. Upton Sinclair’s “EPIC,”
which meant “End Foverty in Cali-
fornia,” until the election ended “epic.”
Mr. Hopkins is a powerful man, of
strong will, great energy, and nobody
will “pooh-pooh” his plan to abolish
American poverty. He would spend
public billions on “subsistence home-
steads” and rural rehabilitation pro-
grams, move families from poor lands
to good lands, where they might pros-
per; lend government billions to buy
tools, equip new homesteads, buy live
stock, etc.
The new British “Who’s Who” gives
Hitler two lines. Frances Perkins is not
in the book, although Greta Garbo is
in, and Upton Sinclair, with a full ac-
count of his “EPIC.”
Those left out must console them-
selves with the fact that Leonardo da
Vinci, in all his writing, did not men-
tion Christopher Columbus, and the
duke of St. Simon, in his long memoirs,
makes only one little mention of Vol-
taire, merely because “he was the son
of my father’s notary.”
He was also the father of the French
revolution, which put an end to the im-
portance of French dukes. But St.
Simon could not know that.
Washington says the President, in
a financial imitation of Hamlet, asks
himself just now: “To spend, or not
to spend.” If he proceeds with the
full program of relief, supplying jobs
and food, he must ask congress for
more billions, perhaps nine of them,
$9,000,000,000.
If congress says yes, and the au-
thorities foolishly decide to issue in-
terest-bearing “inflation” bonds, that
will mean paying not $9,000,000,000,
but $18,000,000,000, the original plus
interest.
Senator Huey Long, of Louisiana,
says he has enrolled 1,460,000 Ameri-
cans In his “share-the-wealth” plan.
That seems a small figure for a
plan to divide big fortunes. New
York and Chicago had thriving “share-
the wealth” organizations before Sen-
ator Long started his. Some original
gentlemen with share-the-wealth in-
clinations are in Atlanta penitentiary,
some in a Colorado prison, some on
Alcatraz island, in the bay back of.
San Francisco.
At Tivoli, N. Y., the courtroom
cheered when a jury acquitted a
teacher, thirty-seven years old, for
beating a thirteen-year-old boy with
a rubber hose and allegedly hitting
him with his fist. The man admitted
using the rubber hose, but denied
using his fist.
Had he admitted beating a young
dog with a rubber hose, the court-
room would not have cheered.
Once, reporters tell you, Mrs. Edyt'he
Townsend was rich, a wit, a beauty,
and a lady, who visited at the White
House, and had aristocratic ancestors.
They found her dead, suicide hy gas,
in a small furnished room. She was
fifty-eight years old, and, police said,
“ill, lonely, impoverished, despondent.”
Those four words wipe out all past
grandeur, fine ancestry, recollections
of wealth.
Senator Borah, a sincere, inde-
pendent American, wants the Repub-
lican party to reorganize itself, giving
its “liberals” control.
He would drive out the “reaction-
aries.” If he did that, what and how
many would he have left? Strip the
blubber from a whale, humps from a
two-hump camel, and you have little
whale or camel remaining.
©, King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Trance; Gfrvasleai
ELICLA, I forgot to bring any-
thing for your Uncle Hurry 1”
Father, mother, and daugh-
ter-halfway-through-high-school were in
a huddle in the pantry, with the kid
brother Ripley (“Rip” for short) hov-
ering curiously beyond the door.
“He won’t care, Dad.” The pretty
brunette girl relieved her father of his
bundles. “With his radio act going
over in a big way he can buy anything
he likes. I hope he remembers a wrist
watch with a little diamond is nicer
than a wrist watch with none.”
“Whatever he gives you, Felicia, act
as If it’s what you want most,” her
mother warned. “Horrigan would rath-
er be appreciated than anything else
in the world. He knows I like pretty
negligees. I let him know how I en-
joy his presents.”
“I was trying to land that contract
with Davidson,” the father explained,
“and I spent most of the evening with
him at the McAlpin. When I left there
was barely an hour to shop. I didn’t
dare take a late train, knowing we still
had to decorate.”
“Did you get the new ornaments?”
Mother was pulling at a knobby pack-
age.
“Here, don’t bother that. It’s this
one.” Father tried to take off his muf-
fler while watching the parcels, with
eight-year-old Rip calling, “Aren’t you
even going to say ‘Hello,’ Dad?”
“Sure, son! I was helping Santa
with his pack, that’s all.”
“Santa, hmph 1 Did you get my bl-
cyle?”
“We’ll see! We’ll see!" As he went
upstairs, trailed by boyish impatience,
the words floated back, “I simply for-
got Hurry. There’d have been time if
I’d—”
“Felicia can go to the haberdasher’s
right here,” his wife solved the mat-
ter. “The Important thing is to get
the tree finished and" the gifts spread
under it before Hurry comes. He al-
ways admires my tree. Felicia, buy
v ■ \ •
mmm
mmmm
Hi* Arms Were Full of Holly-Papered
Parcel*.
WNU Service.
him one gift from your father and me,
and one from you and your brother.”
“What would Uncle Hurry like,
mother?”
“M-mm. He has everything he needs,
and he never mentions anything he
wants. Ask the clerk to suggest some-
thing.”
The silver star was aglow, the last
fat Santa Claus clinging to a limb,
Felicia’s purchases had been hastily
wrapped in golden and green tissue,
when the door burst open admitting
Horrigan Carter of “Hurry and Haste”
radio comedy team. His arms were full
of red, green, and holly-papered par-
cels, and behind him came the cheery
chauffeur, his arms full, too.
“Drop ’em, James my lad. Now hur-
ry to that girl of yours and make hay
while the snow falls. Come for me at
eleven. Here, don’t you need a little
extra? It’s Christmas.” Uncle Hurry
put a bill in the man’s hand and
clapped the door shut.
“Felicia, what a lovely tree! You
always have something original, So-
phia. Henry, how’s business? And,”
(looking around) “where’s Rip?”
“Ri-i-ipley!” called Felicia, flinging
open the dining room door.
In the midst of discarded outer
wrappings, a red-faced small boy was
struggling with tissue and ribbons.
“Aw, gee, F’lice. I wanted to tie it
myself. Aw, gee! Why’d you have to
go open the door? I spent all the
money I earned cuttin’ lawns last
summer and shovelin’ snow this week,
an’— Aw, gee, it’s a fine gift. If I
could get it fixed, it would look swell.”
Uncle Hurry jumped to close the
door. "Go ahead, old fellow. We won’t
look.”
“It’s no use. Everybody’s saw.” Rip
came toward them with the gift pro-
truding from its wrappings. It was a
sal&y bowl with a wooden mixing
spoon.
“Who’s it for, Ripley?” mother
asked.
“Uncle Hurry!”
Felicia began to laugh. "What a gift
for Uncle Hurry! Why, Rip. you give
salad bowls to ladies, not men.”
Rip looked disconsolate. “He said
he wanted it. We were passing that
shop where they sell old things and he
said—you did. Uncle Hurry, you said.
‘Jove what a quaint salad bowl I I’d
like that.’ ”
“Of course I did. Next day when 1
went to buy it for my kitchenette they
said it had been put aside for some-
one. It’s great to get it this way!”
“I guess even Santa Claus would
rather what he wanted was given to
him than to buy It for himself,” *aid
Rip wisely.
C, Western Newspaper Union.
PERFORATED ^
DESIGN FOR
QUILT MAKERS
i
fey GRANDMOTHER CLARK
Quilt makers realize the beauty of
a finished quilt depends upon the
patches used, the beauty in the patch-
work design, and, most important,
the quilting. If the quilting design
is not accurately reproduced on the
material it is impossible to quilt
neatly and clearly. Many quilts are
never finished, because the worker
has no pattern or means to transfer
all the quilting lines accurately.
There are several ways of transfer-
ring quilting patterns to cloth, but
the most approved and successful
method is stamping the design
through a perforated pattern, with
stamping powder. This is the sim-
plest and most economical way, and
produces results that make quilting
interesting. Each stamping is the
same, and perfect. These patterns
are already perforated on bond pa-
per, and good for many stampings.
Each stitch is indicated on the lines
of the design, and the stamping can
can be brushed off when quilting is
finished, leaving the work neat and
clean.
Grandmother Clark’s package No.
33A contains perforated patterns of
the designs shown, also stamping
powder and full directions how to
use them. Sizes of patterns are as
follows: A1 Feather Circle, 12
inch; A2 Feather Border, 3 inch;
A3 Motif, 3% inch; B4 Feather Cir-
cle, 9% Inch; B5 Feather Corner, 7
inch; B6 Feather Square, 4 inch.
If you want your quilting to look
right, send 15 cents to our quilt de-
partment and receive all of these,
Lot 33A six perforated patterns by
mail postpaid.
Address—Home Craft Co.—Dept.
“D”—Nineteenth and St. Louis Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo. Enclose a stamped
envelope for reply when writing for
any information.
SCARS LEFT BY COMET ?!
In a joint paper Dr. F. A. Melton'
and Dr. William Schriever of the
University of Oklahoma, reported to*
to the American Association for the
Advancement of Science in conven-
tion at Atlantic City their discovery
that a giant comet apparently hit
the earth in what is now South Caro-
lina a million years or more ago.
Scars of this meeting between the
earth and a comet about 400 miles
in diameter were first observed on
an airplane mosaic map made by
Doctor Melton in 1930. The two sci-
entists have since recorded more
than 1,500 of these scars, which are
elliptical craters, formed in the earth
in that portion of South Carolina
forming the coastal plain bounded
on the south by the Savannah river
and on the north by Cape Lookout.
While some of the craters are two
miles long, they all average more
than half a mile. The Oklahomans
claim they were unmistakably made
by meteors, a whole flock of meteors
such as only a comet’s head could
carry.—Pathfinder Magazine.
MercolizedWax
J(eeps $kin \ountf
Absorb blemishes and discolorations using
Mercolized Wax daily as directed. Invisible
uly t_ ... .........
articles of aged skin are freed and all
ibla ' ' ‘ ■ “
defects such as blackheads, tan, freckles and
large pores disappear. Skin is then beauti-
fully clear, velvety and so soft—face looks
years younger. Mercolized Wax brings out
your hidden beauty. At all leading druggists.
I—Powdered Saxo lit e
I Reduces wrinkles and other ' "
I ply dissolve one ounce Saxo!
I witoh hazel and use daily
500 “SAFETY” SLOGANS. Nice Xmas gift
for schools, autoists, homes, etc. Inspires
poster making. Snappy, Pertinent, Ed
tional. 100. 10c; 250,
tional. 100. 10c; 250, 20c; 500, 30c.
“SAFETY.” 0419 LAKEWOOD, CHICAGO.
Aprons. Ladles, gifts or home use. Satis-
faction guaranteed. Large, small, medium.
Postpaid 2 for $1. Dept. 16. Carrollton, 111.
Daddy’s Cranium
The young hopeful of a suburban
family objected strenuously to hav-
ing his hair washed. He argued It
was unnecessary and a great nui-
sance to his mother as well as him-
self. It was pointed out by his eld-
ers that grown-ups as well as chil-
dren were subjected, to the inconven-
ience.
“Daddy isn’t,” was the quick re-
tort. “He has no hair, only head.”
—New York Sun.
Flying Races Costly.
The loss of birds In pigeon races
for young birds flying their first race
is rather large, approximately one-
third. Only one-sixth or less of the
older pigeons are lost. The number
which do not return to the loft, of
course, varies with the weather, the
loss naturally being greater during a
storm.
^ For 30 Years
k ‘ A Farmers have Smoked
their meat with
ISfFIGARO
Figaro is far superior to old smoke house.
It smoke flavors and protects against loss
from skippers, rancidness, mold; smoke
house shrinkage, and hardening.
Regardless of the curing method used—be
safe—follow with an application of Figaro
for smoke flavor and protection.
(IUfa Advrrtlui)
Buy from your merchant. If he doesn’t
have Figaro, send $1.10 for J2 oz., enough
for 100 lbs. of meat..
FREE Booklet
k |m» umpit KMractioaa dui *9
IMtbU
ym H cuff tfaf Smtt i
you m uiuS, and orar Iso* •
fowl Wriu for it udijh
The Figaro Co.
Dollu, Ttxm
age paid. Cash with order saves
/I 12cCODmoneyorderfee.Choice
' Jr of metal centerexpansionslave
link or genuine leather strap.
link or genuine leather strap.
Accuratedependabletimekeeper.
v Your money bade If not perfectly
satisfied after seven day triad.
BBACKIS’S JEWELERS, Birmingham, Ala.
A TIME SAVER
Prepare biscuit or muffin dough when convenient.
Set in cool place and bake hours later if you wish.
You save time in using
Double Tested — Double Action
KG BAKING POWDER
Same Price Today as 44 Years Ago
2S ounces for 2Se
You can also buy
If P 11 10 ounce can for lOO
A IS ounce can for ISO
MILLLONS OF POUNDS HAVE BEEN USED
BY OUR GOVERNMENT l
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
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Imparts Color
Imparts Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
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Hiscox Chem. Wka.. Patcnogue. N.Y ■
hair soft and fluffy. 50^centej3y^maiu>r at arug-
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Get Doan’s Pills today. For sale by
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Jones, J. L. Refugio Timely Remarks and Refugio County News (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, December 14, 1934, newspaper, December 14, 1934; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1098094/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dennis M. O’Connor Public Library.