Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 84, Ed. 1 Monday, July 2, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
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Iamy a
OF Fine
Du/ Koo Ever Stop To Think
*
e By EDSON R WAITE, Shawnee, Oklahoma
1.
2.
the losses that
if this measure
ACKER CLEANERS & DYERS
FREE CALL FOR ft DELIVERY
REMEMBER JULY 4TH
Have your Suite, Dreeses and Hate
CLEANED NOW! — -
Phone 10
FOR BETTER DRY CLEANING
Washington, D. Q
COST OF PUBLIC DEBT.
Turn to page 4 for the
have
pay interest, either directly or indi-
which we'and our children writ trave ---------—
”1
jmber . ’he_aetw
’fl>05*I doTiot bell*
FOR RENT
of the picture,
“On
CUT FLOWERS
AUTO TOPS
veniencea, double garage.
Phone 70 or 745W.
—w
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Economic Highlights
Happenings That Affect the Dinner' other hand, various critics said that
r«r. m
BUB a BUD
ANNOUNCEMENTS
reau ever created by the Federal gov-
II MOANS
MOSBM0TS.
raws I iu
12
By HAM FISHER
FIREWORKS
that we
than at
post-war
it has .been alleged that insurance
companies and other mortgagees will
suffer severe’f*tKrough the use of this
Elliott was born in
County, near Burton,
Janes Hammond, publisher of
Memphis (Tenn.) Commercial
TEST QUESTION SERVICE
Newspaper Information Service,
them-
They
auth-
in
at
the
in
It is about to borrow more mil-
lioas on which every property own-
MOW uprs go
to alacka!
woud be sus-
were not sign-
that
cent
FEDERAL RESERVE
BUSINESS REVIEW
MOST ENCOURAGING
It is impossible to enter into a
discussion of business conditions these
days without bringing in the omin-
ous word “strike”. The labor prob-
lem is uppermost in the mind of every
executive — even though his business
has not been directly affected, threats
of a general strike keep him awake
nights.
It is an interesting fact
hear more of strikes now
any time since the great
(out of State >600) in State...............-......
at Brenham, Texas, as second class matter
A Eloif, 701 W. Main, Burton High-
way. Phone 761-W.—*dv58tf
FOR RENT—Business house on Ala-
mo Avenue. Reasonable rent. Apply
at Banner-Press Office.—QO-tf.
the
Ap-
Wash-
where
son, J
the Hills?”
7. What is a pagoda?
8. What does “Erin go Bragh"
mean?
9. Which battleship did Robley
D. Evans command during the Span-
iish-American War?
10. To which 4>ird family does the
macaw belong?
SOMERVILLE COUPLE
TO CELEBRATE THEIR
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY
enemies. He gets things done — but
there are always a great many wound-
FOR SALE—Cut flowers and floral
designs. Phone 198. Schubert, F.orist.
206 S. Austin St—237tf.
every million of 25-year four per cent
->ent bonds will absorb two
of taxpayers’ money at
We cannot *have real recovery if
we stifle industry and__initiative
Minor Cuts and scratches. BROWN’S
LOTION, is highly antiseptic and
quickly promotes healing. Sold in 60c
and 81.00 sires. By Tristram Phar-
year.
Wholesale distribution, the rsv’CW
discloses, was substantially larger than
in April and exceeded that in May,
1933, by a wide margin notwithstand-
ing business in the latter month was
very active. The valuation of trui’d-
----business. It fa both
and important that m at least
200 ACRE FARM FOR SALE —
C^d^iMmrDvrments..6 nulrj wyi.of
the NRA represented the downfall
of democracy, that it meant we were
in for
that it
Vision
Can you answer seven of these test
questions?
answers.
see Rud Windt at Hnhlt's Store. -
43-tf
FOR SHERIFF
H. L. Reese
FOR TAX ASSESSOR-
COLLECTOR
Robt J. Schawe
FOR COUNTY TREASURER:
Mira Sophia Heine
George Knittai
FOR COUNTY SUPT. OF
PUBLIC INS1 RUCTION:
M. H. Ehlert
to pay off in the future. In this con-
oectioo, it is worth observing
■toney borrowed at four per
Somerville, Texas, July 2. — Mr.
and Mrs. W- A. Elliott of Somerville
will celebrate their golden wedding
anniversary here Tuesday. They
industrial situation
District in May.
that month. The rev'ew
a low level and the in-
of defaulting firms was
USV BEEN MCUFlCeF
Hi PUTT I MS THE FOURTH
OV JULY M9TN
A uua..
“Newspaper advertising, next
tbe news columns of the honest press,
Auonwa cay, auoinm
(ACT FIMOtMG TRIP—-HOP
ABOARD AND MS’LL MT
UMMA WAV.
was Nicolo Paganini?
which Tennessee city
battle of Chickamauga
tai will greatly exceed, if they exceed
' at all,
tained
national Problems
Inseparable
from Local
Welfare.
orable business situation have been
fhe un^bward developments fn the
agricultural and livestock industries.
The continuance of the drouth over a
large area in the western half df the'
district and subnormal rainfall in
sonic. other. .sections. have.. retard^!
crop growth. According to the June '
1 report of the Department of Agri-
culture the yields* of small grains will ;
be larger than" the small crop of 1933
that were fought near his
Mrs.?
ington
she and Mr. Elliott met.
V. Elliott of Somerville, and an
adopted daughter, Mt's. Karl Miller!
of Houston, will assist in the celebra-
tion of their golden wedding.
Mrs. Elliott was Miss Sallie A. ■
Blackburn. The minister who offi-1
i
ciated was Rev. J. A .Lincoln, Minis- ■
eral Reserve bank of Dallas released
today, cites “a sharp decline in the
business mortality fate, *a substantial
improvement in merchandise distri-
bution and a gain in building opera-
tions” as constructive features of
business and
the Eleventh
Failures
Roosevelt - -
(Continued from Pagv 1)
FOR DISTRICT CJV"--
A. J. Wendt'
Paul Klingaporn
Recently a birthday party of
ns thrill importance occurred,
saarked the first anniversary of the
NRA — the most extraordinary bu-
Love New Powder
eom-
, the new
French process foce pow-
and smoothest powder
on longer. No flaky or
grime or grit. Pre-
and never smarts
naturally with
Demand MELLO-
FOR RENT
Actual Operation
• the law,
Who
Near
was the
fought?
• 3. What does the word evangeli-
cal mean?
4. What is the popular name for
Roentgen Rays?
5. Where is Wilberforce Univer-
prices — at the expense of the con-
suming public, according to the var-
ious Darrow reports. It became the
executive head of every major indus-l
try, and officers and owners of com-
panies and corporations found
selves hog-tied at every turn,
couldn't make , a move without
orization from Washington.
The powers-that-be in Washington,
as a matter of fact, have recognized
this. The NRA is giving up price-
fixing. It is about to reduce the num-
somuch fortnat:
JOIU U6 OHOURHC
cent. It is beedthmg much less ar-”
bitrary in its actions. In brief, it
looks as if the NRA in the future
will be mainly concerned with wages
and hours and working conditions, as
was its initial purpose.
Most of these changes, which are
D. W. Ellsworth, of the Annalist, I are forecasting that we are bound for
recently wrote that he anticipated an 3 great national head-ache — when
tpward spiral" in pnblic debts. In j the tax bills that all forms of govern-
. ether words, government is about tojment are busy running up now have to
farrow more millions .with the tax-, be paid. We haven’t begun to pay
paying public as the security behind yet — but even under present tax
conditions it is almost impossible to
bring capital into industry. Jobs that
would be provided if business were
*r
a"owcd to grow are lost.
employers finally agreed to meet the ton crop has made fair to good pro-
wage and' hour demands of striking press generally, growth has been slow,
plants are small for this season and
there are some complaints of pre-ma-
ture blooming. The presence of in-
sects over a wide area is potential
danger to the crop. Livestock
(Continued on page 3)
matters, about which situation they
are confused.
Most commentators are of the opin-
ion that the main trouble with the
NRA is that it grew too fast and
tried to cover too much territory. In
the beginning, it was principally’ an
arbiter of working conditions — it
laid down minimum wage and maxi-
murrt liQUrs-of-work rulings. Then it
.began to branch out into very dif-
ferent fields. It made rulings con-
cerning such routine business matters
as size and time of credits. It fixed
recent years advertising has been
giving tis the best in art.
“Society — every class—owes a)
debt to the man behifid intelligent
use of newspaper space to advertise
his product. For the most part he
is trustworthy. Tht d^honesL adver-
tiser is out of the p*ic‘ftfre, or
way out. Through self scrutiny,
through pressure from newspaper ex-
ecutives and through realization that
false, blatant, irresponsible advertis-
Cotton
Farmers
Wanted to try BROWN’S LOTION
for relief of occupational’ Eczema,
Dallas, Texas, July 2: (/P) .— The.
monthly bjjjiness review of the Feu^j
millions of unemployed back to work
if the tax bill makes business profit-
less. We cannot have progress if
| homes and farms by the thousand
are'lost because their owners cannot
meet the taxes on them.
®
TMB WOMK. o* PUTTIMG IbttTMW
WM BEGUU IU MAY tf»> AMOncSlATUC WA4
uMveiutb ou ocrogeu iee6...
walk-outs — yet the number of men
involved in strikes, and the total of
working hours lost, are about the
same as in the past five or six years.
In other words, so far as the statis-
tics show, the strike problem is no
more severe now than it was last year
or the year before, or in booming
1928.
However, the statistics don’t tell
all. In the past, strikes have occurred
because of disagreement over wages
and hours. Present strikes are very
different — the strikers, as a matter
of form, make demands for shorter
hours and higher pay, but those mat-
ters are the least of it. The real rea-
son behind the strikes is the drive for
closed shop industry — the unions
TUt &AMAG6 ESKIMO BBLltVBPS
HIMSACF CSSCtMPSO FROM TUB
'■MIMAL R&PUSBHTEP OU HIS
ifOTSM POLI...
J ing permits issued at—priircipal cities
in May was approximately double
that in either the previous month or
the corresponding month of 1933.
Continuing the review says:
ty*s good. Newspaper advertising is
as good for the individual who reads
it U for tbe business which uses it.
“It is almost inconceivable — a
eotnmnpity without a newspaper and ! ing in the long run just doesn’t pay,
without advertising. Our design for .the advertiser has recognized that he
Ugg—IM—SA—toSSMM
' e»ty of ths ovtrwhelmiAg jnajArliy of
fanners to believe that they will not
out to umlto AmerieM but will fall eouMmbly below ths
per pept closed shop, and, they average. Feed crops are suffering
- business. It fa both *mtwJ~v from the dry weather and reduced evade' the payment of just debts.
yields are indicated ‘ White the Set- r“FurtliihMe. cbattkry to. the.
worthy borrowers. The mere threat
of a use of this machinery will speed
voluntarily conciliation of debts and
the refinancing program of the Farm -------------- -- . , -
....... . , ... land. Dug well with windmill near
Credit Administration. It will pre- house> bored well in pasture. 4-room
vent defjciency judgments — a form house, two small barns. Located in
' German settlement—1 mi. fom Ger-
,man Church; 7 mi. from Clifton; 7
mi. from Valley Mills. Also a 55 acre
tract Cedar Brake, abundance old
and good cedar, 4 mi. from estate,
and 3 mi. from Valley' Mills. For
quick sale at >22.00 an acre. >4,000
will handle deal, balance on easy
terms. Property must be sold to set-
tle estate. Address Will C. Pool, Clif-
ton. Texas.—79-6t.»"
Recovery from depression depends
as much on economical, efficient .and
A CMUtantly increasing number of J reasonable government as on any
ecoSMMBists, publicists and observers ‘ other single factor.
of liability which, in .the judgment of
| many thinking business men, ought
to be abolished entirely.
“The bill is in some respects loose-
ly worded and will require amend-
! ment at the next session of congress,
i Nevertheless, the reasons for signing
it far outweigh the arguments on the
other side".
niiHriramr . . ________
ed feelings when he is finished. His
gieat weakness is lack of tact, plus
amazing sensitiveness. Criticism, no
matter how friendly and well dispos-
ed, invariably angers him.
APARTMENT ->■ Modern unfurn-
ished four room apartment in Ban-
rer-Press Building.-—tf. . -
E^R RENT—Four room duplex. AH
FOR bALE * .
Estate Sale—331 acres, 80 acres in
cultivation, balance good pasture land,
three-fourths of which is good farm
Subject to the action of the demo-
cratic primaries in July.
FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Leslie D. Williams
FOR REPRESENTATIVE
24th DISTRICT’ K
R. A. Fuchs
Dr. R. H. Lenart
C. A. De Ware -
FOR COUNTY JUDGE:
Sam D. W. Low
William Wendt
W. E. Schaer
A. W. Hodda
FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY:
Julian E. Wafafar f
Richard (Dick) Spinn
FOR COUNTY CLERK:
muatiy good English, even good lit-. in the saihe boat. Without advertis-
•ratwre. It is cultural influence. j,n ing for their sail, they are sunk!"
»i'■ ■ ------------------------------------------------------—•-----------------------
-‘i-<5»RBely.-moulded .be.-.snivel- Jm-.4to»dk=dh£=fegffiBr?RS£onsibiJ^ to ybeingr^igqgixedi:._with -great applause
tiein* of one kind and another We' be fair, honest and constructive. I by tbe bulk of industries, may be
know which foods are - healthful, "As for the advertiser, his business' credited to Mr. Roosevelt. The Pre»-
throngh newspaper advertising. Our reflects his advertising wisdom. The ijent jg the commander-in-chief who
homt charm, home healthjdicjtnut about the mouse trap and the | makes the final decisions. The belief
aJaitiNL.ti. fawn...r• d beating’ i .^th.lrx its iq.ventor’s that G«n*ral vonimumg
*ar-advertising. The advertiser has door is full of worms. The mouse-Tson may be supplanted before long— Tidftptfritsg
titvgioged a sense of pleasant taste, trap inventor and the butcher and he is able, energetic, aggressive and
Advertising is good reading. It is'baker and candlestick maker are all -honest, but he has made too many
«. ■ .« . ... • ... . .... . . .
either fascism or communism,
had abrogated every maj^r pro-
of the Constitution.
Neither of these viewpoints is in-
dicative of the stand the American
people will take when they finally
great' express an opinion. They know the
It .NRA has done fine things — such as
eliminating sweat shops and child la-
bor, and giving labor a better break
so far *as wages, hours and working
conditions are concerned. They
Bi^ay “greeting," were of tw.> kww * ha“ 1,^w,se done things
temte On the one hand, NRA ex-lnot 80 good “ such as se,,ing it8e,f
•cMb«s praised the bureau to thelup as a czar over routine business
•hies, aaid that it had started us well
®n the road to recovery, wonld take
•8 all the way before long. On the
says, were
debtedness
the smallest in any mouth during the
past 14 years. The sales of depart-
ment. stores in larger cities reflected j
. , . . „ . . OA a .gain of 10 per cent over April and, ter of the Gospel, Chirm of Christ,
ber of ' in.effect by 70 or 80 per ______2. — - r -I—.
■■ ■■ . . . •-----, ___■___ —-----— r
t A i lur rcnci oiTupaiioiidi
daw:
of debts that are within their capacity
to meet. . . • , • " 1
“I do not subscribe to these fears. ____ ,____ ________ _. _________ _____
“I have sufficient faith in the hon-1"’^’ MONEY BACK GUARAN-
- . TEE on first bpttle.
CHIROPRACTOR
x-RAYi
N eurocalometer- Examine tiona
14 Years in Branham
PHONE 277 30« E. Alamo ,
♦'Furt1ienx!8>e, cbatrtry Xo. the.
lief of many uninformed persons this
is not a general or wholesale mora-
torium privilege. The provisions for
appointment of appraisers under the
bankruptcy act and for the judicial
review of their appraisals furnish ad-
equate checks against the possibility
of unfair appraisals. The actual re-
pugnance with which farmers, like
other right-minded people, regard
bankruptcy will prevent them from
availing themselves of the provisions
of this measure except under the
force of necessity. The bill • is in-
tended-to protect not only the farm-
ers, but their creditors also. »
ton, where th <y *>v«d for a nt
irW. . v _ex.V-K—r ■ >_y ■ T
of years before moving here in
Mr. Elliott, a native of Tennessee, I
spent his boyhood in Mississippi and i
came to Texas in 187’2. Shortly aft- !
er, he became a ratiger under the fa- .
mous Captain McNally, and partici- ■
pated in the capture of outlaws in '» worth remembering that this act
laids -Mg;
tells many interesting stories of those
days and of civil war days and the
battles
home.
workmen—and were turned down, be-
' ’a
cause they wouldn't consent to the
closed shop plan.
As for industrial production, there
is littfe to report. There have been
some slight advances and some slight
recessions, and they about balance
each other. There may be a down-
ward swing soon, due to summer sea-'
sonal influences. Government spend-
ing still confuses the picture, inas-
much as it is impossible to tell how
much of recovery is due to more nor-
mal times, and how much to abnor-
mal stimulation from distribution of
public moncy trom WaahiMton. - *
5^ IAN barker
oEber wordsS
vra-i^^ Palooka
a tiue fi«ht will
— i---
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
PRECINCT NO. 1:
A. W. Hartatack
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
PRECINCT Na >:
Jack Routt i
Falcolm H. Shaver
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
PRECINCT NO. 3:
Loma R. Lohmann
FOR .COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
PRECINCT NO. 4:
T. R. Fincher
Will Prenxler
0F THE peace
PRECINCT NO 3
J- H. Chapp.ll
H. A. Becker
•r°R CONSTABLE, PRECINCT
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 84, Ed. 1 Monday, July 2, 1934, newspaper, July 2, 1934; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1174033/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.