Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 90, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1934 Page: 3 of 4
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BURTON BULLDOGS
rolled to
OPENING
LONG’S
not
BEER GARDEN
TUESDAY NIGHT
ORCHESTRA FROM 8:00 TO 10:30
FREE PRETZELS WITH BEER
HAMBURGERS
SANDWICHES
bors
FIRST
THE SELF-STARTER
K N E E 'ACTIO N
FIRST with the SLIDING
GEAR TRANSMISSION
ress
FIRST with
MODERN DYNAMIC LINES
CHEVROLET
FIRST with
NO DRAFT VENTILATION
Schawe Motor Co
BRENHAM, TEXAS
PHONE 849
am
am
am
goods® sc
«-<ew vOw
WE
CAN
ONLY
MAKB
OUR
YOU,
SQUEXAY
NEED
MAKIS
HIT
SQUEAKY
GOOD C 04 END
OC GOOD tkitstC
5KNT K/IR -TO
a 22-year record of engineering prog-
that makes Chevrolet the best riding
whras would no more think
house without Dr.
Pein Pills than with-
th«lr U>t run
protective element* of many food*.
It’* wonderful for children. Serve
Kraft Velveet*—in aandwichee, in
cooked dishea . .. often!
careers ot
to be
if a man has a superior mind
educated it is no particular handl-
to him on the road- to the White
f he understands the game of
trail JUJU— I.RiM
fourth M»d W#«ky
the sixth.
The box score:
Wesley—
R. Draehn. cf
L. Wessinger, is
A. Jerries, If ...
E. Siebel, 3b .......
G.' Bormann, lb
G. Priesmeyer.t 2b
E. Krcuge.'rf .........
Meier. p
I). Klaus, p ...........,
H Klaus c .......
cap
House
politics and plays it according to the
rules.
The Burton Jr. Bulldogs took a
game of baseball from Wesley, Sun-
day afternon by a score of 6 - 4
D. Klans, the starting pitcher for
Wesley «was surprised with four runs
in the first inning.
The meeting will t»c
Governor W. I. Myers
Credit Administration,
Brennan, 1 ntermediate
Commisioner, and S.
Production Credit
who left Washington
No. 15 Leave Brenham 2.55
Southern Pacific
No. 43 Leave Brenham 10.09
No. 45 Leave Brenham 1.29
No. 46.Leave Brenham 3.35
No. 42 Leave Brenham 4.35 pm
—«woat■ ■
(polfithdo. New Mpdoo, Oklahoma,
Attention will be given to the pro-
gram of the newly organized prodac
LONG’S SERVICE STATION
On EAST HIGHWAY
Louis Raspuzzi by his life
lie to' the false and wicked
that tells us that America is
er the land of opportunity
Americans cannot mak
the world unless they
and supported by the
not circumstance but
enabled
ciiic states. Besii
as and Washing!
ta 'conferenc
ficial
time 6
the homely coun
“not yet dry be
T-sEQE, AQT'ST
I GisiZs-s/vCO
vOoca cjooe <rsj rvO
>rs, ZX M'NuTS', VOkJ
My friend and neighbor, Louis Ras-
puzzi, died the other day at 48. He
had been in America only 19 'years.
When he arrived from his native Italy
at the age of 29, he had nothing but
his pocket a strong
cheerful willingness
powerful strain of
died almost
gave the
doctrine
no iong-
and that
; their way in
afe subsidized
hits. Glass-
es, II Klaus
■STolTrr base?
■.—** -Kl-w*.
< '.fassmann.
Klatts 2. by
represented at the regional
Credit Adftiinis-
being held at
Dwight P. Re-
the Federal In-
started their first rally ii
with a few hits and an er
over with three runs. Bur.
PRESIDENTS—and college.
To offset the attacks upon the
“brain trust” the Federal Office of
Education has compiled a list to show
» f
that nineteen Presidents have been
college graduates, six college presi-
dents and four' college professors. I
don't know what that is supposed to
prove, unless that on the whole the
Pxttjii.de uki. YjfjAtes V ^jit
been pretty smart-mem —
What these facts do not make clear
is that all of these men became Presi-
dent, not because they were educated
in the formal sense but because they
had proved, by years of practical
politics, that they understood the
popular mind and were men to be
held public office of a lesser degree
before going to the White House,
most of them having climbed up from
the lower rungs of the political lad-
' a—-1 rTiry shiFT'Mid rn.u, nad riever
been elected to office • before t^ey
were elected to the Presidency, but
each day a reccrd of many years of
public administrative service in ap-
pntn t ive off ic e. —
About the only thing th,
the 32 Presidents proves seem
that
well
but
many of the
men with whpm Mr.
himself
rfe net? yet sufficiently experienced in
the ways of the world to be sale
guides for the nation
trouble like'this. In
try phrase, they are
hind the ears.”
Understanding is
thaii knowledge
the vagaries and limitation* of humat
nature may be as briliant as Einstein
but people never have confidence it
him as a leader of men.
Kltick, the first man
second and Schatz was walked. Schatz
stole second and third with much
ease and M Guelker singled, scoring
Schatz. H. Kunkel went out but
Glassman got a hit scoring Guelker
Knipstein got a hit scoring Glassnjan.
Weinert came through with a double
scoring. Knipstein struck rplled out
for the third out.
tior. credit associations for extending
credit as the permanent short term
financing units ot the F. C. A, dis-
cussing the orderly liquidation < f the
loans now held by. the regional agri-. - ■-■>
cultural credit corporations and the I SUBSCRIBE TO *ANNB*raM
a few dollars
pair of hand
to work and
rugged honesty. When h
a whole town turned out for his fu-
neral.Ia.thci>e nineteen ycajs io
America Louis had carved out an in-
dependence for himself from a few
mountain acres of land, reared a
family of two sons and two daughters
and sent them all through high school
and won himself‘a reputation that
was county-wide, for independence,
integrity, straightforwardness, cheer-
Summer is lockjaw
many die of it as formerly, since so
many have been taught the danger of
a soil-infected injury. In Cuba and
other densely-populated tropical re-
gions, the natives tear to walk on
the ground without sandals of some
sort to protect them from lockjaw.
i more important
pecially in politics.
not understand
UNDERSTANDING—masses
Most of the outcry against
^’resident's "Brain Trust” is
against trained intelligence
against the belief that
bright young
Roosevelt has surrounded
part; uf lha pioduction ffedif cor-
porations in bringing thia about, ad-
vice from Washington states.
Similar meetings are to be held at
Berkeley, California, and at Spokane,
Washington, during the next six
u eeks.
TOTAL
Summary—Two base
inarm, Weinert 2.-D. KI
Three base hit: Schatz
H Kunkel. Guelker.
Schatz 4. Walked by
Glassmann 1. Hit by pitcher: Klaus
2, Meier 2. Hits off oil Klaus: 5 in
4 innings, ff Meier 4 in 5 innings,
off Glassmann 8 in 9 innings Stunk
out by Klaus 1, Meier 6 Glassmann
6. Losing pitchet : Klam Umpire: O
Glassmann. •
Santa F'e
No. 6 Leave Brenham 12.06 am
No. 16 Leave Brenham 12.39 pm
No. 5 Leave BrenLam 4.44 am
pm
CHARACTER—and education
I have been reading the addresses
to their graduating classes of a doz-
en or so university presidents.
— a. T recall it.
those teachers put the main emphasis
on character. Brains are less import-
ance that honesty, integrity, charity
and unselfishness. President Conant
of Harvard told his graduates, and
TEXAS HAS TWO
DELEGATES AT
FARM COUNCIL
Now Glassman pitching for Burton
I put.the batteries out iii order. In the'
second Burton again was out to
score. Kluck went mft and .Schatx
came through with a nifty triple to
right but
les ago
stacles I
confront
name erratic?' that those earlier
pioileers brchight. And tliat sort'of
character can ystill suceed as greatly
as it ever did
front I --x-
the Wiehi
will be attended by of-
production credit corpora-
regional agricultural cor-
of the eighth and ninth dis-
tricts, covering South Dakota, \\ y
oniHtg, Nebraska. ' Iowa, Kansas
state. It was
haracter that
the pioneers of three centur-
to succeed in the -face of ob-
far greater than those that
I any American today. Louis
new jvprld
This delicious cheese food is
DIGESTIBLE AS MILK
ITSELF! -
Year after year, it’a be«;n the same
story: Chevrolet FIRST with the
NEWEST and BEST! Chevrolet leading-other# follow-
ing. Chevrolet out in front with the latest proved ad-
vancements. Self-starter! Sliding gear transmission!
Streamlined design! It tma (Jtetiralct ajigressit'enenit
and progressiveness that forced all low-priced cars
eventually toadopi theseandother major improve-
ments. And now, this year, comes the dimlit 6f
rolet’s engineering leadership: the Knee-Action ride.!
TOTAL
Burton.—
Kluck, c
. Schatz, 2b
. Guelker, ss
. Kunkel, 3b .
. Glassmann, i
Knipstein, rf,
. Wei nor t, 1b
Struck, cf
Kunkel, If
Schultz, rf
-hi u. ii
th»i w»i about th« way rti reil ol
th?m spoke.
Intellect has been overplayed in
the .ggblic mind, Dr. Conant said. It
is important, but not all-important,
loo much emphasis on intellect leads
too many young tnen to try to shine
in professions for which they are not
fitted.
The purpose of college education,
as 1 have alwi^s understood it, is not
to train men to make more money
than the other fettow but to tive a"
better and happier life, in whatever
Fine of work he follows.
❖ ❖
attended by
:>f the Farm
George M.
Credit • Bank
M. Garwood,
Commissioner,
J.uly 7, to hold
| a series of conferences with F; C? A
offices iii the Western and Pa-
1 exas is
conference of Farm
(ration officials, now
Wichiti, Kansas, by
ordan, president of
termediate Credit Bank of. Houston
and Tully C. Garner, present of the
Production Credit Corporation ol
Houston.
This newest of motoring sensation# is a marvel of
smooth, easy, gentle motion. No other ride in the world
can even compare with it. It makes Chevrolet far and
away the beat riding ear in the low-price field.
Have you noticed how America has taken to the Knee-
Action ride? In the 6 months, demand for ('herrolet
rnrt \ent prodnrrinn nr the kif/hett total attained by any
automobile during
AiHKVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT. MICHIGAN
t om/Hue C.htvrssUl'e low Jr/owveJ prtcra anti erMV G M .< .C... ter me
A Gmwrul Moftsrt ¥ alue
LOCKJAW—from the soil
What killed Louis Raspuzzi in* the
prime of lite was that deadly, soil-
borne infection, tetanus, which we
commonly call lockjaw. There
plate ip which human being
lived in which, the, tetapps ger
---- ..
not be found. .All YnSV protect; ’’the
barefoot boy from its deadly infection
is the fact that nature has provided
the sole of the foot with such a tougl
thick, almost horny skin that few
things can penetrate
bteak in the skin that
tact with the soil is a
of danger.
CHEVROLET
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 90, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1934, newspaper, July 10, 1934; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1173263/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.