Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 288, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■JUS ■
PA<
Beautification of
I
Mrs. Frank Jirka
COTTON NOTES
y
■'it:' ;
ifej
Is Touring France
L-A,. V
Manchester reports only a
1
Lack of Funds
I
Y ,0$l
Halts Expansion
>
£ A
Electricity
51
.Y
I
hour’s radio
program
*
1c Stick of Candy
costs less than
a
reduced since 1927
i
COMPARE THE COST NOW WITH I927
AVERAGE OF ALL CITIES SERVED IN TEXAS
t
$4.23
$12.99
•1
Electricity Is Cheap—The More You Cse the Cheaper It Geta
Southwestern Gas and Electric Company
l
A
i..
• »M-,xjMRTaBaMZtaMa0b
'' !
■
6
$8.04
$5.11
38-57.
$6.45
50-27.
Public Square to
Be Completed Soon
30 KWH.
COST
60 KWH.
COST
FIREMEN MADE FIVE
TRIPS TO SQUELCH FIRE
Steady movement of goods
In Worth Street at unchanged
prices’ls necessitating constant
price-fixing by mills in the lo-
cal cotton futures market.
1
I I
1
I
J
100 KWH.
COST
aA*!.-•*} -.Q
.fl
J ** 1
FEB. 21, 1938
r
|k .6 M
Organization To
Help Expand Arts
blended the one right way
to satiefy.
Chesterfields are mild. They
' taste better.
dome to think
11
COST IN 1932
7. REDUCED
MONTHLY
USE f-jy*
COST IN 1927
$3.29
32.37.'
Data lor Five-Room Hous.
H
-
b / IjH
4
is just as near right as we
know how to make it.
Not tasteless or flat, not
too highly flavored for steady
smoking, but with just the
right kinds of tobaccos
blended the one right way
MJ
■
!
I
f fl
■ I 1
i
NEW YORK, Feb. 20 (UP)
—Sales of spot cotton in the
ton designated markets of the
south last week totaled St,125
bales, against 60,273 bales in
the preceding week and 148,-
428 bales a year ago.
, I
of it...
*-W
R___
HU
£5
■T. WflfeZ ” * ‘
KIN LEAVE FOR CERMAK’S BEDSIDE
to date because the British firms
demand cash and the finance de-
partment was undable to reach an
agreement for payment by install-
ments.
The Yarrow shipyards and the
— Jugo-1 French builders Les Chantiers de
■n” pro- la Loire at Nates, are in agree-
. ... __ .... . 3 from
, as are
other French and British build-
ers. Both the above-mentioned
firms have their branch plants in
Jugoslavia, the Chantiers works at
Kraljevica. Both these firms have
been trying for several years ;□
obtain orders for the ships which
' W'
w
■
L
k»...
BHai
3
IhI
[ 1
u
BELGRADE, Feb. 21. -
slavia's “naval expansion'
x_/niy a penny an
penny's worth! News
from all the world . . .
music by great artists
. . . concerts from fine
orchestras . . fun from
great comedians . . all
these brought home
by radio for one cent
an hour.
F H
fc 1 ■ ai
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 21. (UPi
An organization of nationwide
scope has been formed here to en-
courage development of the arts,
science and the world of letters.
The project has earned the in-
dorsement of Dr. Albert Einstein,
German physicist, who is in Amer-
ica consulting with fellow scien-
tists at the California Institute of
Technology. Dr. Einstein publicly
will announce his approval of the
organization when it holds its first
function, Feb. 25.
Efforts will be made to extend
membership into every state in the
union, sponsors say. They plan
on having a nationwide organiza-
tion functioning for a national con-
vention here in July, 1934,
By offering scholarships to de.
serving students, the group pro-
poses to take an active part in pro-
moting and developing the field of
academic learning. Scholarships
will be offered annually in scien-
tific research literature, painting,
sculpturing, music, and other
phases of the arts. Eventually, lo-
cal sponsors plan on establishing
laboratories and other departments
Governor James Rolph, Jr., is a
member of the advisory board.
Others prominently identified with
the movement include Carl La-
emmle, Sr., motion picture produc-
er, and Bishop Charles Edward
Locke.
American cotton men are
concerned about the continued
demand’for foreign growths of
spot cotton at Liverpool in
spite of the low price' of the
American product.
----------_o---- - -----
Photos Find Phonies
Forgeries of famous paintings
have been detected by means of
photography, which reveals the
differences of brushwork and me-
dluma between old and modern
paintings.
planned, but so far have received
little, due to financial difficulties.
--------- o---
Why you no ask me am I in luff
with someone? You moos be
crazy—Lupe Velez, movie star,
when Interviewed in New York.
moderate inquiry for cloth, de-
mand from China being re-
stricted by the Manchurian
crisis. . .
Mrs. Frank Jirka and Mrs. Richey
V. Graham, daughters of Mayor
Anton J. Cermak, of Chicago, are
shown departing from Chicago for
. Miami, where their father lies ser-
1
fl
'• 9
■ 'd
~’V 'r» 11
■rtl : ’-W
MB' *
■
■ 1
■ M
■ _ ,, J
Mrs. Richey V. .Graham
lously wounded from one of the
bullets intended for President-
elect Roosevelt. With them is the
mayor’s granddaughter. Mariella
Jirka i ,
|F1
kJ
io
L
Poverty Caused Bootlsg;ing
WICHITA, Kan. (UP). —The
story of poverty told by Mrs. Bea-
trice N. Smith when she was ar-
rested on a liquor charge touched
the hearts of police officials. She
said she had been selling liquor
to keep her son, 17> and daughter,
15, in school..“It’s a shame,” one
official said, “but the neighbors
complained and we had to' arrest
her.”
I
■vid ___
to
' /' Hi
■ ■
.......
■ ; A ' -A '
f A
• jvS ' '■ wMB
■ 1
Critically injured by Giuseppl Zan-
gara's plot to kill President-elect
Roosevelt was Mrs. Joseph H. Gill
(above) of Miami, wife of the
president of the Florida Power
! and Light Company, who was shot
through the abdomen.
Fair on Wheels
Beautification of the public
square circle is now underway wltn
employes furnished by the Emer-
gency Relief Committee in cooper-
ation with the Lions Club, city and
county officials
n committee of Claude William-
son and Jimmie Hill of the Lions
Club is supervising the work. Sev-
eral days more are expected to b»
consumed in getting the ground in
proper shape for planting the
shrubbery.
The highway signs will appear
on the stone post in the center.
They will be sufficiently hlgb for
the shrubbery to appear beneath
them and at the same ti(ne n°t ob-
struct the view of motorists.
There will be a number of rose
bushes to make more attractive
the circle. Mr. Williamson made
the suggestion at last week's meet-
ing of the Lions Club ard all au-
thorities immediately agreed to
lend every posribls assists nee.
It was pointed out that beaut Vy-
ing the circle that motorists ap-
proaching Hynderson from any di-
ri ction will be greeted by a most
pleasing sight which will certainly
tend to "sell” the city to v’sitors.
It I* expected that a drinking foun-
tt in will be placed at the circle la-
11
1 i
l!'
i
Radio is the world's best buy in entertainment.
It is always at your command . . . you may select
your own program . . . and the cost of an hour s
entertainment is the price of a stick of candy.
hour for radio. And v^hat a
llnles Have Been Kedueed
BORDEAUX, Feb. 21. The
Fair on Wheels started off today
on a three-month tour of France.
Under the auspices of the min-
istries of commerce xm<! public
works, the exposition train will
pass through all the p: inicipal
cities with the ho”e of acquaint-
ing each district thoroughly with
fl-e tra: e of the others and of en
couraging business in general.
This is not the first time that
the plan has been tried. At one
time, when the fish industry was
particularly dull, a Fish Tra.n
toured the nation with beneficial
results. At another time, a Cereal
train puffed and whistled new
health into the giain industry.
The rolling fair consists of 18
Pul na“.s and a resaturant car.
Each car . is divided into small
compartments, where stands have
be n sot up- by representatives of
virtually every major branch of
industry and commerce in France.
The compartments were rented
by the exhibitors, who are sup-1
aiuvia a iiuvti: cApaiioivu ptv- i m Ajuuc m die m
pile , owever, w ree e ec | grart) )las becn brought to a vir-I ment to divide all orders
I tuaL standstill by lack of funds Jugoslavia for warships,
The railroads also will behe-1
fit by the trip, each car having |
been loaned for the fair by a dif- '
ferent railroad company.
----- . - .. n----
Add New Trophy to Collection
ST. LOUIS (UP)—The altitude
aneroid used in the Spirit of St.
Louis by Col. Charles A. Lindbergh
on his solo flight from New York
to Paris in 1927. has been added to
his collection of trophies here. The I
addition was made at Colonel Lind-
bergh's request. ,
If
mH
Xx.'
• < ..
Still managing to smile after stopping one of the bullets intended for
President-elect Roosevelt is Russell Caldwejl of Cocoanut Grove, Fla.,
shown above in his hospital suffering from a slight flesh wound In the
head.
it’s very much the same with
cigarettes.
No cigarette should .ever
be "strong.” That means that
they should never be too rich
or over-seasoned—not harsh
or "bitey.”
The riatfe nf a riirafrrfigtA"■■ i
Good style
is never extreme. If
you look around at
the people who dress
in good taste, you’ll
see that there’s never
anything ’'flashy”
about what they wear.
fiel
free elec-
tricity for lighting and for do?-
trically operating feature exhi-j^ fajluj.e of the nmcnt t0
bits. The railroads also will behe- , obtain cred!ts jn Grea(. Britajn
Jugoslavia at present has one
cruiser building in Great' Britain
which is to cost
$15,056 000, a
construction at Hambuig as a part
reparations payment; and the
Skoda Works are delivering equip-
ment for a new destroyer, the
“Dubrovink” which is to be equip-
ped with 12-inch guns.
! Negotiations have been carried
on for some time for the ordering
of more warships but have failed
v *
I I i
r'T,
‘ t /'
Mj
■ ...a s.?;
s AsAe-s.
' ' I
■
.A. %
L stilt.
Resting comfortably after being wounded in the assass nation plot of Giuseppl Zangura are (left) Wil-
liam Si.’U >tt, New York detective who was aiding to guard President-elect Roosevelt, and Miss Margar- | here for scholarship winners,
et Krui.i (right) of Newark, N. J. They arc shown at a Miami hospital where the injuries were found to
be not serious.
Electric rates have been so
that today a penny is big money when paid for
electricity. Most of your purchases of electric-
ity repres’ents only fractions of a penny.
Every time you turn on the current it is a new
purchase, and almost
all your electricity is
used in fractions of a
penny's worth. The
total purchases of
electricity for an aver-
age family amount to
only ten cents a day.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., (UP).
—Firemen made five separate
runs to the campus of Technical
High School here to extinguish a
fire in a large hollow tree, in the
upper branches of which a large-
number of squirrels were strand-
ed.
On the first trip, the firemen
soaked the trunk thoroughly with
| water after apparently drowning
the blaze, while the squirrels,]
I trapped on their perches, chat-
tered uneasily.
the Jugoslavia general staff has ] Four times more during the
nlnnnnri k.o Co- un,.» ’•“"“’“cd . njgkt, however, the firemen were
e®. called and told that the blaze had
• sprung up again.
Prank-playing students, they
believe, built a fire in the hollow
of the trunk to “smoke out” the
squirrels.
f ' '
___■ ”__
Victims of Assassin’s Shots
I
z •• jj
g, I
Ohesteij
tAe cigarette l/uztb milder
cigarette that tastes better
7
for one
Poet of Ozarks
Returns Hons
—
SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Feb. ttj
Harry Browning, Inc., baa rat
ad to Springfield and the Oi
country.
Browning, a former Drury
lege atudent and poet, obta
much publicity when he aold a
In himself to go to Oxford Uni
city to develop his literary tai
The Ozark poet journeyed Ml
far east as New York and there his
troubles began. It seemed the
British did not want him without
more cash, and that they were not|
interested in his future. 1
Britain seemed more intereatodjwfl
In he fact that Browning did not I
possess $1,000 which was needed^
to develop his talent at Oxford.
Browning remained in New York. L
The poet’3 return here was ui*» ' ;
impressive, and devoid of the fan- 9 I
flare that marked his leave tak- £9
Ing. So unobtrusive was his reap*
pearance that ho had been here ‘
some time before his presence was _ |
known.
He attracted attention here
when he published a book of £
poems, many of them on travel- •’
and wanderlust. At Drury he pro-
voked attention and discussion
when he refused to “hamper my
style” by conforming to convene"
tlon in Writing. ■ '
------o—i—_. ygfl
SIGN ON OFFICE DOOR
STARTLED SENATE HEAD I
AUGUSTA, Me., (UP). —Pree- ”
ident Murchie of the Maine State ;
senate was startled on reaching
his office to find on the door: ®
“President of the Senate—oM
Murichle.”
Inquiry developed that the sign
artist had been working backward
on the name and had been called
away before he had time to finish
the president’s full name, Harold'
Marchie.
-----------
approximately
scholarship yndcr
MJH
C' I
■Ma i
/ ■
h"
.
’
fc; t
MF * ’ * ■ ■ m
A
r r
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 288, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933, newspaper, February 21, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309983/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.