Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 145, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 14, 1932 Page: 2 of 4
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■V ;
Vice-President
f think we are going to have an in-
_ *5.00
cogspiisb • big work.” Such a convsr-
taiL
CHAPEL HILL NEWS
Did You Ever Stop To Think
By EDSON R. WAITE. Shgwnae. Oklahoma
Seale and Mrs. indudeJ many others which should be restrained for «ny cause
conun iBiity
and
CUT FLOWERS
"How do they do it?”
AUTOMOBILES
MISCELLANEOUS
WOkX WANTED
Wilson and chil-
Professional Cards
You will find that Jane is a consistent reader of the advertise-
CLEAR UP YOUR COMPLEXION
Alice Rippenhagen,
Reporter.1
w
By HAM FISHER
FORCED IN
JOE PALOOKA
B-B-BUT
KNOBBY—
*nd the discluaures of
paid .to the Mayor of
huge
New
m.
m
William C. Deming, president of
the Cheyenne {Wyoming) Tnbune-
FOR SALE—Used cars in good con-
btion. See E. P. Davis.—213tf-43tf
GOLLY
TOUSB
KNOW I
Mayor Walker's, resignation under
fire has not affected his popularity
with the avenge New Yorker. New
York people take a cynical view of
political graft The man in the street
Money is but the means
to an end which is the
FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE
All kinds of Furniture repairing, Up-
holstering a specialty. All work call-
ed for and delivered. -Phone 370. O.
H. Fisher.—134tf.
WHITE Girl wants work as house-
keeper, help with house-work or care
of children. Address - Box 44 - Rt. I,
Sealy, Texas. — 145 i it
Matthew's reply that he would "have
to think it over,” and the world would
never have heard his name.
piness of loved ones—as
every thougntful man
knows.
DEVOKE’S
ELECTRIC SHOP
TUA! KEEP OUAH
moufs shot,
Among your friends there’s sure to be at least one smart young mar-
ried couple who are the envy and admiration of all who know them.
Mrs.
Mrs. Caroline
There will
he *Rchburg
jay evening,
7:30 o'clock.
FOR HEALTH,
HAPPINFS® AND—
FOR SALE—Cut flowers and floral
designs. Phone 198. Schubert, Florist,
|206 S. •Austin. St.—237tf.
FOR SALE—Cut flowers and floral
designs. Mrs. Dick Schmid. Phone
396—238tf
CMON
SMOW
___HOW/
CALIFORNIA
HAY PtTCMIN
MAKES MUSCLE
AN' MITT UN
PCNABR
is a “typhoid carrier".
“Typhoid Mary”, as this woman is
SVEPRIGMT UP EMG BCY
ALfbGfTr LADIES AH' GENTS
RIGHT THIS WAY TICKETS
FIFTY CENTS—RIGHT HERE
HCAN MANY
CEDAR HILL 4-H
CLUB MEETING
to try to supply them”.
Whether he makes a business suc-
W1LL BUY—Second hand guns, pis-
tols, cheap. H. V. Durden, Phone
810-W.—140-tf.
more?widely available than they are’
today. And there is no better com-
pa moo, no sounder source of culture,
1 no keener stimulus to the imagination
------, . . . there'* Typhoid Mary
In a little cottage on North Island
in the East River, near ‘New York
lives a woman in her sixties who is
kept in seclusion because she is a
She
amO Avenue. Ap
it seems to me, is carrying sentimen- Ty pg WRITERS FOR_ _.R En^
tality a I----
of common sense.
FOR SALE—Well improved farms
at reasonable prices and suitable
terms. G. A. Kunkel.—278tf-8tf
FURNISHED APARTMENT FOR
RENT—Modern convenience*. Phone
266 or 800.—129-tf.___
feel as it I had swanoweu * .
he said, after he had ^ped KOR RENT—Business house on Al-
amO Avenue. rentaL Al'
fry.Sptv Ft 'Banner-Press,
"m get-
fifteen cents
got an idea
have never
We guarantee Contay Special Bleach
to remove Liver Spots, Freckles,
Pimples or any Discolorations of
face or neck, caused by acid condition
of system. Glissmann Drug Store.—
adv.
m.
m.
General Repairing
Day 123—PHONE—Night 481W
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Womack and|
children of Houston were week-end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. Sterling
Smith and Mrs. C. P. Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. P. D. Terry and lit-
tle son of .Temple were week-end
guests of Mrs. Terry’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. R. Routt.
Mrs. Nettie Weems has returned
from a summer spent in New York
City and is the guest of her mother,
Mrs. A. Lesser and sister. Miss Celia
Winfield before returning to Hous-
ton.
- George
week for
Any amount will Mart a
Bank Account
With an income that ia frankly abbreviated, and with no benevo-
lent Aunt* in the offing, they still have a home that is correct and
comfortable in all its appointments, a home that is admired and copied
by their friends.
HUNTSVILLE BUS
. SCHEDULE.
Arrive
Brenham from Huntsville
9:10 A. M. and 2:55 P. M.
Leave Brenham for Huntsville
1 10:05 A. M. and 4:00 P. M.
AUTO TOP RECOVERING. Re-
pairing, dressing and Seat Covering.
See C. A. Elolf. Phone 761-W. 701
West Main, Burton Highway.—6tf
!4-4t
collection of fishermen
business men and one (
a member of the most hatetf element
in the community. What a crowd!
•Nowhere is there such a startling
example of executive success as the
way in which that organization was
bi ought togetii'y. Take the tax col-
lector. Matthew, as the mos< striking
instance. His occupation caTicd a
heavy weight o' social ostracism but
it was profitable. He was p obably
v. elt-to-do according to the sir pic
standard* of the neighborhood; cer-
tainly he was a busy man and not sub-
ject to impulsive action. His addition
to the group of disciples is told .in a
single sentence:
“And as Jesus passed by, he called
Matthew." *
Amazing. No argument; no plead-
ing. A- smaller leader would have
been compelled to set up the advan-
tages of the bpportunity.(“Of course
audience rushed up 'and exclaimed,
‘Great! I call that the result of gen-
ius’. The speaker replied, ‘I call it
the result of hard work’.
i "That’s the way newspapers are
I made”.
Misses Frederick Turner and* Lena
Broesche were business visitors in
Austin Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Eberhardt, Henn
Eberhardt, Miss Mary Ebehhardt and
H. A. Kiel spent Sunday with
Giesenschlag at Snook,
be English service at
Lutheran church San-
Sept. 18,. beginning at
208 St Charles St.
Brenham, Texas
House Wiring & Motor
■ <■- Bl **
a success of anything. A haphazard
.. ...__ z «-i.---and smB|itown
tax collector—j
and
it. School; Mrs. Fred, !
, N. L. Winfield, intermediate;
i Miss Sadie E. Milton, Primary,
ownership and
the Wyoming
about 500 sub-
--T*-;—.-"4——--—---———rr ——■——---——•—————
, » —- — — ——-xa —— .—.———...»-----------------;—....-----------_ _ •-----.--------. —
Yea, Jane is a remarkable little manager,” will probably be the
young husband’s proud answer. And there is little doubt about it.
in pcrtiiic* to make money for him-
self,
sums
Giddings & Giddings
Banker*
to be an ii
Broadway, and they may envy and as not to
admire “Jimmy” because he plays
that role so successfully.
j It is all very well to talk about get-
ting rid of undesirable public officials
A LEADER OF MEN
In any crowd and under any cir-
cumstances the leader stands out. By
the power of his faith in himself he
commands,, and men instinctively
Obey.
Thia blazing conviction was the
first and greatest element in the suc-
cess of Jesus. The second was his
wonderful power to pick men. and to
recognize hidden capacities in them.
It must have amazed Nicodemus
when he learned the names of the
twelve whom the young teacher had
chosen to be his associates. What a
list- Not single well-known person
ou it. Nobody who had ever made
A B. PENNINGTON W. H. BOULDIN
Pennington & Bouldin
Attomeys-at-Law
BRENHAM, TEXAS
circs, registration and assignment to
classes. The faculty for the coming •
school year consistsof Supt. O. M. |
Brown and principal. Miss M4bel|
Johnson of Kenedy, Texas,
ng arrangements for entertaining the
1 the Bren- .
ham District, which will be held
/ knock him out in
Dvntap KOON’ AN'WE. F CMON
BUYS DOUBLE ICE
CREAM FO' PNM
from sunup to dark—and the funnj^
part of it is that we like it The chil-
dren think it’s wonderful. Our health
is better than ever, we don't owe a
cent, and while we’re not laying up
anything yet, and haven't any’ luxur-
ies, we’ve got al) the fundamentals .... ... ..
of comfortable existence. And what and putting good men in office, but
else does anybody need ”? phe rank and file of the voting popu-
That man has the world by the lation has to be reckoned with, and
the rank an<1 “ neicr 8reat,y in'
teresFed in the reform* government.
BRUCtBARTOH
~ "THT^iUSTtR EXECUTIVE-
Conway Booth left last
El Paso where he will ma-
triculate in the School of Mines. .
Miss Alice Brown has returned
from a two-weeks’ visit to Kfisses
Lynette Stokes and Maxine Strauss in
Bellville.
Mrs. T. Fred
dren have returned to Bryan, having
spent the^,summer with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Winfield. Mrs. Win-
field accompanied her daughter home
for a visit.
Mrs. Robert Chappell,of Navasota
spent Sunday with her brother, Ro-
bert Felder and Mrs. B. C. Chappell.
Bill Ford of Chicago is the guest
of his father, Mr. Everitt Ford.
Joe Routt is attending Blinn Col-
lege in Brenham. Jack Routt, Chip
Routt and Hubert Adams are at-
: tending Brenham High School.
I Miss Mabel Johnson of Kenedy ar-
rived Monday to assume her school
duties for the coming year.
Take a look around that home and you will find no end of well-
ad vertised product*. For Jane IS an efficient little manager. She can’t
afford to take chance* that must only be debited to “Experience.”
When she buys for her home she must get tried and tested and trust-
ed product* which carry an honorable name to guarantee her satis-
faction.
FOR SALE-Mv home, near Milroy
Hospital. J. A. .Heineke, 1107 West
Main St. —l45-6t.-37-2t.
A short congregational meeting
visitor from the Pacific, who is fa-' WBS held at the close of services Sun-
miliar only with the small native oys- jay morning for the purpose of *”"*
ter* out there. It is also a source ng t-----
of amusement to European visitors, Ministers’ Conference of
who have nothing like it. 1--------
It is related of William. M. Thadc- here on Sept. 27 and 28.
honestly believes that every public ery, the famous English author, that
“The circulation and good wiV and
confidence of the community in es-
tablished newspapers are not of a
mushroom growth. They are the re-
sult of years of effort. A newspaper,
for instance, grows in circulation
influence with the
serves. -»
“When the present
management took
State Tribune, it had
scribers and less than eight employ-
es. Today it has nearly 8,000 sub-
scribers, which means that more than
30,000 people read it every day. The
Wyoming Tribune likewise has more
than 40 full-time employes and more
than 40 newsboys. That means that,
at least, 200 people in Cheyenne ,are
supported wholly or in part by their
position swith the Tribune-Leader
and patronize Cheyenne business
men.
“No, a newspaper is not the result
of magic.
“Having listened to an old-fashion-
ed campaign orator, a member of the
Railroad Time Table
SANTA FE
‘ Northbound—
Train No. 18. Due—12:54 a. ro
Train No. 16, Due.-12:39 p. m
Southbound—
Train No. 17, Due—4:48 a.
Train No. 15. Due—2:55 p.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
Eaotbound—
Train NO. 46, Due—2:43 a.
Train No. 42, Due—4:29 p.
Westbound—
Train No. 45, Due—.1.29 a. m.
Train No. 43. Due„10:02 a. m
Wherever she
;servicfc.'—Re has shown good judg- worked, people who ate the-food she
I ment in selecting the books to re- handled came down with typhoid fev-
' print “The Way of All Flesh”, is er. Fifty-seven cases, some of them
; I think, the greatest novel ever writ-' fatal, were traced directly to her!
Hitch “;n the English language. And( Individualists who think nobody
ica he was served with oysters on
the half shell and didn’t know what ppp RTCNT
to do with them. He asked his host —. . ... .rwvm
how to eat them and was told ^at FOR Phone 293.
they should be swallowed whole. |ho“*® g
“I feel as if I had swallowed a live ————— A,
baby”,
the first one down.
OYSTERS
Oyster farmers are expecting a big
ger and better crop than ever this
year. The oy*ter of the Atlantic I
Coast is always a surprise to the
“Only the other day a young and
inexperienced representative of a
Colorado product called upon the
Tribune-Leader and seemed perfectly1
amazed that our rate per inch is
higher than that of the Loveland and
Longmont weekly papers. To him
an .’ad' is an 'ad', rgardfess of circu-
lation, which, as the Tribune-Leader
ha* stated before, would mean that
the New York Times or the Chicago
Tribune, with their hundreds of thou-
sands of readers, should publish a
page ad for thf same price a* the
Cheyenne Tribune. '
The Cedar Hill 4-H Club held a
meeting at the school house Sept. 12
at 2:30 p. m., with Miss Lena Woll-
schlaeger, county home demonstra-
tion agent in charge.■ Miss Wollsch-
laeger checked up on the girls club
histories, and told us where we could
improve them, how to value our work
and fill out our record books. Shtf also
told us about exhibits we. are going
to take to the fair.
Next years club work is being plan-
ned.
Another school year has begun More children than ever went to school
at one time before, will spend the next eight or nine months laying the foun-
dation* for their independent and individual live*. Some of them will learn
a good deal. Some of them will pot learn very much. The one thing that most
children learn in school, and the most important Jhing that any of them learn
is, after all. not what is in the books but how to live.
It has always seethed tp u* that the real life of the child is hi* or her school
life. During these formative year* the child's principal interest centers about
school. It is the one place where he can mingle on equal terms with all of
those around him. For several hours a day he works and plays in the com-
pany of those of hi* own age. He learns, through the necessary discipline of
the school room, to restrain such' natural impulses as tend to disorder, but
he learns from the contacts with other boys not only the wisdom of non-in-
terference wwh the rights of others, but the rmportaort of standing up for
hi* own rights In other words, the most valuable function of the school is to
socialize it* pupils, to help them to learn bow to live in the crowd-
In the old days of big families the children learned those things from their
own brother* and sister*. Families of eight or ten O’- more youngsters are
not so common tn these daysi' snd the discipline of the crowd i» best enforced
and learned in the school atmosphere. And it is becoming more and more es-
sential that our young folk* should go out into'the world with a better un-
derstanding of their place in it.
We think the best schools are the ones tn which the pupils are required
to do mqjt for themselves and have the least done for them by their teachers
and others. All that any system of education can do for any child is to stimu-
late him to use hi* own native intelligence. But outside of the curriculum,
beyond and above the forniat- routine- of the acquisition of knowledge, ''far
more important is the socializing and civilizing influence of constant associ-
ation with other young ones of hi* own age.
FUNDAMENTALS . . for familie* “JIMMY” . . . still popular
I met an old friend the other day
in a little New England village. The
last time I had seen him he was
earning $15,000 a year—and spending
it—in Chicago. The simp broke
him! he lost his job, his home, every- honestly believe* that every public ery, the famous E.ngit*n aumw, i««» pfli fTMUl
thing but what little he eould raise official from the President down is on his first and only vtsrt to Amer- PI ACCILipil
a* a loan on his life insurance. i ’•« n^nnm, fnr him- »•> he was served with oysters on vLtaa^J ■ , —
“I’ve bought a little farm up here”,
he told me. "I’m the luckiest man __ _
in the world, because my wife has York just’ makes the average voter
sound common sense. It was her idea think that he is a pretty smart guy.
for u* to get back to the soil and live jt it probable that Mayor Walker
on next to nothing until things get wil| ran fo|. reeiection, and my belief
better. ‘ at the present time is. that if he doe*
“Were raising a lot of our food, h’e wi|| be reelected. New York is ftfil Some kind-hearted ladies are
wearing out our old clothes working of peop]e whose suppressed desire is.ing to get oyster dealers to use anes- ^qR
Jesus had the born leader’* gift for
seeing powers in men of which they
themselves were often almost uncon-
scious. One day a* he was coming
into a certain town a tremendous
crowd pressed around him. There was
a rich man named Zacchaeu* in town;
small io stature, but with such keen >
business ability that he had got him- ’
self generally disliked. Being curious
to see the distinguished visitor he
had climbed up into a tree. Imagine
hit surprise when Jesus stopped un-
der the tree and commanded him. to
come down saying, “To-day I intend
to eat at your house.” ’ •
The crowd • was stunned.*Some of
/he bolder spirit* took it upon them-
selves to tell Jesus of his social
blunder. He couldn’t afford to make
the mistake of visiting Zacchaeus, they
said. Their protests were without
avail. They saw in Zacchaeus merely
a dishonest Jew; Jesus saw in him a
man of unusual generosity and a fine
sense of justice, who needed only to
have those qualities revealed by some
one who understood.
So with Matthew—dhe crowd saw
only a despised tax-gatherer. Jesus
saw the potential writer of a book
which will live forever.
GOLLY SMOKEY
THAT GRCNVO
J1ST SHOVED
ME UN —
WHAT'LL LOO
“Most people think there is soffit-
, thing mysterious about a newspaper
and the manner in which it is assem-
bled and prepared for the public.
’Perhaps that accdunts for th^t fact
that the average’ person thinks- a
newspaper is a newspaper regardless
of its* news service, where it is pub-
lished or the total of its circulation.
“It is no exaggeration to say that
there are business, men who cannot
understand why an advertisement in
the Denver Post or Cheyenne Tri-
’* bune costs more per inch than an
advertisement in the Pine Bluff*
Post, for instance.
SCHOOL DAYS
FOR REA7r-APar,,nent> c,os5-n11
modern conveniences. See D. C. Will-
iams. -145-3t. --
APARTMENT FOR RENT—Mod-
ern convenience*. Phone 266 or 800.
—125-tf. __________
FOR RENT — Modern furnished or
unfurnished apartments. Gertrude
Free. Ring 892-J. 207 Baber Street
-122-tf.^______
furnished apartment
Phone 45 or 761-J.—-120-tf.
uhfCrntshed APARTMENTS
New and modern brick building in
heart of t»wn; all modern conveni-
ences including steam heat day and
night in winter. Phone 550 or apply
at Banner-Press for information,—tf
BOOKS . . . good friend*
A publisher friend sent me the EXILE
other day, twelve book*. '
tmg these out to sell for
a copy”, he wrote. “I’ve
I that millions of people
The Chapel Hill Public School °P-!had a chance to read the great works, menace to the public health,
ened for the fall term on Monday^ thc great wrjterSi and l’m going herself is in perfect health, but she
morning with Institute meeting. All1
I'upiU were expected to be present on
Tuesday morning for opening exer- ce” n<jt he is doing a valnable known, was a cook.
RENT— House, North Park
krespons'ibly playboy ot thetics before opening the oysters so Street. AU convenances. Hrs. Dur-
give the oyster pain. Tha{, den.-91^ti---------------------------
. ____’ ___________ vuxxn
little beyond the boundary! Royal, Underwood or Smith. Banner-
’ Press. ■
WE'RE
WITH
HURRY UP
FELLA.
F'GRMClOUG
SAKEE.
CHON
PAR.DWEF4.
DAWSGONE IF’ AH '
KNOWS MISTAH JOE.
DYA. THINK
'■«* KIN LST YM p' HERE‘S
LAST TWO ---
YERTRUPK5I
SOUK'S
MAC
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Blake, T. C. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 145, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 14, 1932, newspaper, September 14, 1932; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1174516/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.