The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 240, Ed. 1 Monday, December 14, 1936 Page: 4 of 4
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W. P. Graham returned Saturday
from Waco where he has been attend-
L. E. Moore and Marshall Lee Ev-
erett were visitors in Austin, Sunday.
■
Mrs. E. L. Huffaker has returned
to her home at Terry, Mont., after
spending dome time here with rela-
tives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Faubion and son,
Jerry, arid Carl Faubion of Marble
Falls, left Monday for Bakersfield,
Calif, where they will visit for sev-
eral days with relatives.
Misses Jewel Cornett and Annette
Roberts were visitors in Georgetown,
Saturday
Mrs. 0. O. Smith and daughter, An-
gelinc. spent the week end in Goldth-
waite in the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. McCullough.
program to put farm tenants on the
land and make them Lwnerx of that
lan<L”
Connally, speaking before a group
of 100 farmers, business men and ag-
ricultural leaders attending a soil con-
servation Held day, advanced a five
point program to attack the farm ten-
ant problem. His program:
“Provide for sale to experienced
and industrious farm tenants farms
of sufficient acreage to support a
Bob Fieseles of the Lampasas Mo-
tor Co. will i spend this week in Dal
Ian on business.
Im-
McAfee
8 .40
-11.00
DAILY LEADER
RATES:
Temple, Dec. • 12.—Senator Tom I
Connally.said here today that the nex‘
Congress will consider a government ,
Herewith my remittance $ ..................to cover subscription to
The Dallas News one’yvar by mail (Daily and Sunday) (Daily Only.)
MISERLY CONVICT LEAVES
WALLS WITH BANK ROLL
13. —• Showing
roughly how many people make how
much, the treasury reported Sunday
that 38 of the nation’s 4,000,000 in-
come taxpayers wrote their 1934 in-
comes in figures of >1,000,000 or more.
The millionaire group compared
with 50 in 1933, 20 in 1932 and 513
i . ■
Pursuant to the provision of Sec-
tion 304 of the Banking Act of 1935,
notice is hereby given by the Peo-
ples National Bank of Lampasas, in
the city of Lampasas, State of Texas,
that the liability imposed upon the
holders of shares of its common stock
by the provision of Section 5151, U.
S. Revised Statues, ax amended, ai^i
Section 23 of the Federal Reserve
Act, as amended, shall cease on July
1, 1937.
By order of the Board of Directors.
G. C. ABNEY, President
The trips into unconsciousness are
not over for the plucky youngster,
for at least three times a year he
must visit Columbus Hospital, while
xjjecialixtx work to repair the injuries
caused by the lye,.
Each time an esophagoscope will be
placed in Wayne’S throat anti the long
tube used to remove scar tissue
growths which slowly close up the
I passage between the boy’s throat and
his stomach.
The treatment, the specialist said,
may edntinue for many gears. At
least they must be applied periodical-
ly until the scar tissue formed by the
lye quits growing.
When he was less than 3 years old
Wayne, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Roszman, ra^ screaming to his* moth-
er, his mouth and throat burned by
several flakes of lye he had picked up.
He was threatened with starvation-,
but after the burns began to heal
was able to take a liquid diet.
After the 70 operations Wayne has
become a normal boy.
** His'mother, who has missed only
one of the 70 hospital visits, says he
can “eat almost anything.”
INFORMS its readers on daily developments in State,
Nation and World. History does not belong to the
Moldering past . . . it’s being made every day and is
reflected faithfully in the pages of The News. You
can occupy a reserved seat in the vast amphitheater
of this great era by joining the large family of readers
of Texas* Leading-Newspaper.
Buster Laxson of Georgetown vis-
ited relatives and friends in Lam-
pasas over the week end.
THE DALLAS NEWS
Dallas, Texas.
Gentlemen: .
For INFORMATION, The News Offers:
Associated Press news service and WIRE-PHOTOS,
seven days a Week,
The news-gathering facilities of The News’ own
Washington,' Austin, Fort Worth and East Texas
bureaus.
I. E. S. table and floor lamps as low
as >2.95.—Texas Power A Light
Company,
MAN IS KILLED
STARTING CAR
“A Pioneer in Southwestern Progress”
com-
misaions and foes' accounted for >8,-
600,456,000, or 57 per cent. Stock divi-
dends were the next inpat hnportant
source, at >1,966,670,>00, dr 18 per
cent, and business profits third at >1,-
716,842,000, or 11 per cent. '
\ With 4,094,420 persons filing income
tax returns, the treasury reported in
its first complete analysis for 1934
that their income totaled >12,796,802,-
i 000, of which the government claim-
ed >51-,400,000. j
Largest contributors to the federal
till were the 102,892 persons in the
>10,000 to >..5,000 income group, while
those paying least had incomes of
>5000 or less.
Taxpayers in the latter category
' numbered 8,670,000, or 89 per cent of
all persons filing returns. Their'tax
payments were set at >34,600,000, or
6,.7 per cent of the total collections.
The top-flight incomes of >1,000,000
and upwards aggregated 57.700,000, of
which the federal till received >32,-
200,000 in taxes. These taxpayers
had less than 1 per cent, of the total
income and paid 6.2 per cent of the
, aggregate taxes.
The identity of those who chalk-
ed up the big incomes was not dis-
closed.
Of the 33 incomes over the million-
dollar level, 21had between >1,000,000
and >1,500,000, four between >1,500,-
000 and >2,000,000, six between >2,-
000,000 and >3,000,000 and >4,-
-000,000 and one >5,000,000 or more.
The gross 1934 income aggregated
>15,092,960,000, but deductions
brought the net figure down. Of the
Regardless of what you need in printing, we are
always glad of an opportunity to figure with you.
There are many forms that you use daily in your
office that can be made right here in our plant
at reasonable prices.
R. F. D
Subscription rate: By mail >7.05 one year Daily and Sunday; >6.95
Daily only. These prices effective only in Slates
of Texas and Oklahoma.
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ON 8-YEAR-OLD BOY
For INTERPRETATION, The News Offers:
A most thorough and forceful editorial page.
John.Knotl\s inimitable cartoons.
Special columns dealing with politics, stage and
screen, sports and State Press review.
“Who Reads The News is Ever Well Posted.”
be removed after the engine was
started. Instead of applying the
brakes, she put her foot on the re-
verM pedal and the car backed into
her husbr.nd, at the rear of the car,
throwing him backward against tim-
bers. His neck was broken,
Mr. Walker wax born in Arkansas
and came to Coleman County 2- years
ago. He is survived by his widow,
three sons, Omar Walker, George
West; Edwin Walker, Dallas; James
Walker, Tulsa, Okla.; and three
daughters, Elizabeth Walker, San
Antonio; Mrs. Elsie Wiswell, Austin,
! and Mrs. Ethel Bridger, Taylor
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Daily and Sunday
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For ENTERTAINMENT, The News Offers
The best comic strips, serial stories.
The beautiful colorgravure Sunday magazine,
“THIS WEEK.”
Marion, Ohio, Dec. 13.—-Parents of
years so tenants may become owners j S-year-old Wayne Roszman chimed
and still meet payment# as well ax I for him today a record for surgical
support their families off the land. ' operations under general anaesthetic.
"Dovetail the program into other j Re has had 70 since his throat wax
fam plans for conservation and scien- j seared by lye more than five years
tlfic cultivation at the'aoil. ,/
“Provide limited supervision to
stimulate diversification and proper
land utilization. f MW9HI
“Offer incentives toward increasing
the value of land^. and making the
farm a home and not a mere wagon
yard.’’ •
Representative Maury Maverick of
San Antonio told the group he “came
to learn something and I have learn-
ed something. I believe that what
we've got to think about now is not
what our forefathers thought about
the Constitution, but how we and our
children are going to eat—we’ve got
to think about .groceries.
Coemnn', Dec. 13.—R. A. Walker,
66, Coleman County pioneer, was in-
stantly killed at his home here to-
day when startftig a car in which he
and Mrs. . Walker were to go to
home of Mrs. Walker’* • brother for
Sunday dinner.
Having difficulty in starting the
car, the back wheel was jacked up
and Mrs. Walker was in the car to
apply the brakes and stop the wheel
from revolving, so that the jack could
HOUSTON—Juan Guerrero’s 10
vears in prison were hot so bad—
from the financial standpoint.
The “miser” of the Blue Ridge
prison farm, his pockets stuffed with
•‘saddle blanket” type greenback that
had-been the basis for a mystery on
the farm, was on a deportation trip
to Mexico Friday night.
The mystery of the miser’s green-
back was solved when be wax re*
leased on a conditional pardon that
specified he must be deported,
migration Inspector Robert
explained it.
“He told me he wanted to
money before . we left.”
said. “Then he got a pick and I ac-
companied him out into the prison
yard.
“There he started digging and soon
uncovered a rusty tin can. Then he
moved to another spot, stuck the
pick in the ground and up came an-
other can. He had half a dozen of
them buried and all of them were
crammed with musty bills, mostly of
the old-fashion large variety.”
Guerrero counted his savings ami
reported he had >225.
There was no mystery about the
source of the money, for fellow-con-
victs said the miser was luck in wag-
ering. The thing the convicts won-
dered about was the hiding place-
Guerrero patted his pocket and ob-
served:
“That will give mme a good
in some business in Mexico,.”
The miser served a 10-year
for murder in Starr County.
THE DAILY CHRONICLE
COMPLETE MARKET AND FINANCIAL REPORTS
Nina Leased News Gathering Wires, Numerous
Features, Timely Photographs and a Page of the
Best Comic*.
THE SUNDAY CHRONICLE
Brings You Up-fo-the-Minute News, Many Spacial
Features, Including Sixteen Pago* of All Color Popu-
lar Comics and an Eight-Pogo Artgravure Section.
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 240, Ed. 1 Monday, December 14, 1936, newspaper, December 14, 1936; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1206498/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.