Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 172, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 10, 1933 Page: 4 of 8
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FACE FOUR
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCT. 10, 198R
BERLIN LETTER
“THE TYPEWRITER LIST OF MARS!”
I
WORLD
...General Manager
■
e^Ti
^/OUN^,
4
&
Turkey Theft Dream True
Do You Know
• *
h# government intends to buy marginal display of
$5.98
*
to
I.WAlTf
-q
»> 'j
Lv -/fl
R.
FALL
$2.49
$298
$3.98
.a.
BUY NOW
a
, i-,
ivwuKFiwqsi
ARK
BETTER
nor
r
mo&tb - i i ------
months (In advance)
months (in advance)
year (la advanoe) _
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
Delivered by carrier in Henderson
47.80
-M-UO
42M
"Swetpruf Bedford Cord or
Blue Corduroy. Poore beet
rldnlg Breeches, for service,
fit and appearance
Whipcord and
Corduroy
p
o
o
L
s
—J
Ptrfotattd
POtPi/x
\ Correctly
MEN’S SUEDE JACKETS
FINE LEATHERS
THAWING DEPOSITS
The New York financial district
places the greatest hope tor currency
expansion in the Roosevelt plan to
try to thaw out deposits In closed
banks. Nothing else would put more
actual money into circulation.
Boys’
Boot
PANTS
Bl ease ot errors or omissions occurring In local
60c
Suit or Drew
Cleaned, Preued
We call for and deliver
Same in
Boys’ Sizes
$4.98
Men’s Washable Horsehide
JACKETS
This coat sold for *12.80 last fall.
While our present stock lasts we
are offering them at this low price
$9.85
If political management were capable
of doing the work of private enterprise,
__ _ I re-
mains that private enterprise has been the
greatest pioneer in development. Now is the
time that private enterprise should be en-
oouraged to promote sales and consumption
•nd not be penalized by short-sighted in jus-
•ft.jr a- * A
r bblsh in the place?
That eight out of every ten fires
could be prevented by promptly
oorrectlng hazardous conditions,
such as disorder, accumulations ot
rubbish and Utter, defective heat-
ing equipment, faulty construction
and the exercise of care, order and
cleanliness ?
$1-49 $29
EXPORTS
Wall Street believes the constantly
declining export figures have decided
the Roosevelt administration definite-
ly against money inflation. Ameri-
can prices rise as the dollar drops,
thus foreign nations are unable to
buy.
4 »•
..*1.50
JI.OU
4S.0U
Men’s Button-Leg Breeches
MADE BY POOL
(By United Press)
EASTON, Conn.—Nicholas Bar-
ney has become a believer in
dreams. Barney, a turkey raiser,
retired after making sure the 150
gobblers he was fattening were all
right. His sleep was troubled,
however, and he dreamed someone
was stealing his birds. When he
awoke he went to the coops, found
them broken open and 58 of the
turkeys missing.
This is the most remarkable value
—a better coat than we had last
year at the some price. Heavy
Champagne Leather.
Men’s
Moleskin
COATS
os old reliable coat
tter than ever. With
■st quality sheep-skin
'ngs. A real value
■■ --S'
nOlXAR,
Pool’s Grey Whip Cord
Shrunk, and fast color, with
the same "Pool” perfect fit-
ting quail*.
V
Goering’s Uniforms.
Premier Hermann Goering is entitled to
wear all these above-described uniforms. The
brown and black uniforms of the party he
is, of course, entitled to wear in his capacity
as party leader; the light-blue aviator’s uni-
form as Reich Minister of Aviation; the
field gray of the Reichswehr in accordance
with his new rank as general of the army.
Now he also may wear the uniform of
a general of police—a rank which he himself
created shortly after assuming power in
Prussia. The uniform is dark-blue with
green stripes down the legs. In donning a
police general’s uniform, Premier Goering,
so the official Prussian government news
agency announced, was complying with the
entreaties of officers and men of the Prus-
sian police force.
LOCAL SPOTS
That C re are spots whera the
real war spirit exists Is recognized.
Military men admit the danger of
localized blood-lettings, but they are
almost unanimous In expressions of
their opinion that they could not now
gain entfugh headway to Involve na-
tion after nation, as In 1914 and sub-
sequent.
A mushroom measuring 18
inches across and weighing eleven
pounds was found at South Bend,
Ind.
farm lands and take them out of cultivation.
The price of this adjustment has not yet
been determined, but it will undoubtedly be
Very high, in view of the fact that the wes-
tern land which is to be reclaimed by irri-
gation will naturally produce several times
M much as the marginal land, that is to say,
the land taken out of cultivation and bought
up by the government. If that be true, it
follows that it will be necessary for the gov-
ernment to buy many times as much mar-
ginal land as the arid land which it brings
into irrigation in order to balance production.
It la all so mystifying If we have too
much land now in cultivation, why spend
millions of dollars putting more land in cul-
tivation? Certainly we have not so many
millions of dollars that we need to devise
pew ways of getting rid of them.—Public
Service Magazine.
K03EL
CLEANERS
“PAY CASH AND SAVE”
Phon* MS S14 West St.
z/'' • /
Uniform Shops.
The sartorial trade is trying to make
the most of the increased demand for uni-
forms, and as a consequence a large number
of shops exclusively selling this new appar-
el have sprung up.
It is, however, not always without dan-
ger to cater to this new uniform-conscious-
ness of the German people, the publishers of
a big fashion magazine found out to their
dismay. They had as a cover of one of their
recent issues a three-color print of a picked
Nazi stormtrooper as companion of a beauti-
ful lady smartly dressed in accordance with
the latest autumn style.
This cover caught the eye of fiery Dr.
of Propa-
. He ob-
-......- - ■ O .......
The other day I heard of a man who
•aid that on account of having to add addi-
tional help and pay higher wages he had cut
)>ig appropriation for newspaper advertising
to average things up a little. Well, he could
not be much of a business man with ideas
like that! Cutting out newspaper advertis-
ing Is just sounding the death knell for a
busine ’
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“The Declaration of Independence tells
the world why we fought the American Rev-
olution, and if that were all it set forth it
might be carefully and reverently set aside
and filed in the archives of history as a
closed incident. But such is not the case. It
announces an ideal not accomplished, but to-
wards which we must constantly strive.
All through this noble Declaration runs the
thought of wrongs to be righted, of justice
to be enthroned. The lesson it teaches is:
If we would establish peace, we must first
establish justice. The peace to which I refer
is npt only freedom from wars from with-
out, but convulsions from within.
There is implanted in the heart of man
a disposition to protest against wrong. God
has made rebels of us all. If we are to avoid
war, ‘that monster which, if we do not des-
troy, will destroy us,’ we must provide peace-
wrongs,
its roots
such
IS HERE
You can easily afford to
stay freshly dressed all
the time with our good
Work and low prices.
BERLIN.—Speaking of uniforms; they
are getting ever more numerous in Berlin
streets. Brown and black uniforms of the
Nazi party differing in color and as to in-
signa in accordance whether the wearer is
a stormtrooper, a picked stormtrooper, or a
member of a factory organization; light blue
uniforms of the newly-founded aviation as-
sociation; dark-blue uniforms of the police.
To these are added a scant sprinkling of the
field-gray of the Reichswehr.
By and large the party uniforms are
snappier and at the same time more of one
pattern than they were seven or eight
months ago.
Tan Shower Proof Duck. The
famous “Swetpruf” quality
Will not shrink, fade or
streak.
------<» —- W..V J V- V)
po>- Joseph Goebbels, Reich Minister <
ganda and Public Enlightenment.
that in order to balance P^uction jected very strongly, pointing out that the
’ a stormtrooper’s picture not only
in the particular incident, but also in general
was not compatable with the sacred stern-
ness and the traditional dignity of the uni-
form worn by tens of thousands of Nazis.”
----------o-------------
things might be different, but the fact
Jleniteraati
SWMtobed every WMk-day afternoon (BMSfS
•MOW) and Sunday morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
D. B. Harris, President
107 SoutS Marshall SUMI
Henderson, Texas
Entered at the post office at Henderson, Texaa
ae second class matter under Act W Congress Masen
F l«7» _____
Georgs Bowman---
other advertisements or of omissions on sched-
id date the publishers do not bold themselves
bio ter damages further than the amount received
tgaas ter suoh advertisements.
GOVERNMENTS FOOLISH SPENDING—
A STUDY FOR CONGRESSMEN
I" _____t
That the majority of all fires are
due to carelessness In allowing
breeding places for fire to exist,
such as rubbish, paper, oily rags,
etc.?
That fully 80 per cent of these
fires are preventable.
That 60 per cent of all fires and
66 per cent of all deaths from fire
occur in dwellings—that the vic-
tims are usually women and chil-
dren?
That the underwriters base the
Insurance key rate of a municipal-
ity on the general hazards that ex-
ist and the fire protection provided
to off-set or counteract the men-
ace?
That a standard of fire protec-
tion has been established?
That cities or towns and conse-
quently the individual citizens, are
penalized in proportion to their de-
ficiencies in meeting the standard
requirements ?
That buildings of the most thor-
ough fire-resistive character are li-
able to have fires among their con-
tents if there is disorder, dirt and
hats What at a Glai^
B, LESLIE E1CHEL
Central Frau Staff Writer
NEW YORK—Postmaster General
JimM A. Farley and Edward J.
Flynn. Democratic boas of the Bronx,
seem, after alt closest politically to
the president.
The hurried but futile trip Frederic
Kernochan, chief justice of the New
York court of special seaions, and
Langdon W. Post, Fualonlst candi-
date for president of New York's
board of aldermen, made to the White
House, boars that out The president
did not see them.
Farley and Flynn suggested that
Joseph V. McKee, former acting
mayor, run for mayor as an Inde-
pendent Democrat In opposition to
Tammany's obviously weak John
Patrick O'Brien, and Florello La
Guardia. Fualonlst La Guardia, life-
long militant progressive, took the
lead In the fight against John F.
Curry and Tammany, when McKee
stepped out of the picture by taking
the presidency of a large trust com-
pany. He, La Guardia, seemed to
have a real chance, backed by Ker-
nochan.
With the Farley-Flynn suggestion
Kernochan and Post aped to Wash-
,2 Ington, spurred by the uproar made
by progressives and Independent
Democrats. But the president It was
indicated, would not take a hand In
any local political situation. Ths two
were denied an audience.
Kernochan Is an old friend of the
president and accompanies him on
yacht tripe Years back, ho and Mrs.
Roosevelt led the cotillion. Post also
is close to tho president Apparently
these friendships "cut no Ice”. Far-
ley la to have bls way and the na-
tional administration will fight Tam-
many. With the Independent Demo-
crat and Fualonlst tickets split
O'Brien might win. But La Guardia’s
once bright chance now is dim. Far-
ley and Flynn probably will displace
John F. Curry as the Democratic
power in New York City.
$4.98^'
•W
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Writer
WASHINGTON, D. C—Predictions
of another World war tn tho wry
early future, unless disarmament,
complete or partial, 1s agreed on at
the ponding International *oonfab In
Paris, are being made now with un-
usual freedom.
Europe’s diplomatic representatives
in this country are circulating them
M widely as they can, without over-
stepping the bounds of propriety, and
of course, pacIfisUo organizations,
both here and undoubtedly abroad
also, are encouraging them as much
as possible.
Tho fact Is, however, that neither
by cool-headed statesmanship here
nor at tho warRir navy departments
Is an outbreak of large-scale hostili-
ties regarded as Immediately likely.
Not Likely Yet
Competent authorities do not dis-
pute that European people are vi-
ciously disposed toward one another—
even more obviously so, perhaps,
than In the years just preceding the
outbreak of the world conflict They
do not deny that this frame of mind
is of a sort to lead into another pro-
digious clash. If permitted to drift
indefinitely. But they do not con-
sider a struggle, of anything to com-
pare with tho last one's proportions,
a reasonable probability short ot a
decade and a half hence, or. at the
earliest, a decade.
This calculation Is based on the
argument that the belligerently-in-
clined countries simply cannot raise
the money today for a prolonged
free-for-all. that their leading men
realize It and that, however ferocious-
ly they may talk, they will balk at
actual fighting until they feel better
prepared to continue It to what they
are fairly certeln would be. for their
respective nationalities, a satisfactory
finish.
Moreover, military strategists do
not think that a generation which
already has experienced one first-
class war can be stirred to the re-
quired degree of enthusiasm for a
second one—not while that genera-
tion Is still sufficiently represented to
make Itself formidably heard In op-
position to a repetition of the per-
formance.
laws or by Intrigue of selfish interests.” —
Governor John Garland Pollard, of Virginia.
——————o---
You would be either for or against your
home town. If you are for it, you Should
boost it. If you are against it, you should
leave it
KM'.- - O-----------
We are not sufficiently well versed in
higher economics to argue some points, but
| |t does »eem that before real prosperity can
be built up there must be more reinforcing
•f foundations with business-like acumen
What is this little game going on between
two departments of the cabinet, an attempt
to prove that house divided against itself can
•tapd?
The Department of the Interior dumps
••other $22,700,000 into the reclamation and
giptivation of between 50,000 and 100,000
•crea of arid land in Wyoming, while the
^Department of Agriculture levies heavy
tpxea on the consumers of the country to
My for taking farm land out of cultivation
fonder the farm relief program.
The Department of Agriculture plan is
based on the proposition that we have too
much land in cultivation The Department
Of the Interior’s plan adds to the excess
The discrepancy is to be adjusted
through the institution of another new j
icy in federal reclamation work. It is ex-
s 1 BUY THESE COATS
NOW AND SAVE
LEATHERETTE
SHEEP LINED
This la a wonderful rough
weather coat, water-proof, with
long heavy sheep-skin lining
$5.98
cal Ingredient.
h. If you have been thinking of your home
town snd the welfare of the people therein,
foow is the time to throw your hat in the
fing and join your Chamber of Commerce.
___ _____ j__
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
__
ful means for men to redress their
We must remember that War has
in the mistakes of Peace. To avoid
mistakes is the supreme task of the hour.
To this end we must enlist soldiers of Peace,
whose efforts, like those of soldiers of war’
must be marked by courage, skill and unre-
mitting toil. In mobilizing such an army,
there can be no compulsion or draft. Every
soldier must be a volunteer. The weapons
of his warfare must be ballots—not bullets.
His objective must be to destroy the wrongs
•- which still cling to the government, whether
K Md • considerable curtailment of the politi- those wrongs be imposed by ill conceived
PILES
Suffer no more! Here’a real relief at last fo<
al! forma of Piles—Blind, Bleeding, Itching ane
Protruding. Paxo Ointment does al! the thins
necessary, in the manner necessary. First, ■
soothes- relieves the soreness
and inflammation. Second, it/
Mais—repairs the torn tissue.!
Third, it absorbs—dries up ex-
cess mticda and reduces the
swollen blood vessels which are
Piles
In other words, Paxo doesn't
merely relieve—it tends to cor-
rect the condition of Piles as a
whole.
The method of application
makes it doubly effective. Spe-
cial Pile Pipe attached to tube
enables you to apply ointment
high up in the rectum w here it
will readj all affected parts.
Thoosaarfs say Paxo is the only
thing that ever gave them real
relief. Thousands say It saved
them the need of an operation.
Get Paso today and suffer no
longer.
Cameron
Drug Store
BY MAU.
M Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas snd Oklahoma
I year (te advance)-----------
• months (In advance) --------------------W-0®
• fiMOUis (in advance) -----------------_-.42.00
Di ALL OTHKB STATER
I • B jre*r (tn advance) ---------
• memtha (in advance) -----
ft MMitha (In advance) -------
E... —
Nonoa
Ar< erronoous reflection upon the character,
■ -*—"— qf reputation of any person, firm or oor-
whlch may appear in the columns of The
in Dally News will bo gladly corrected upon
• brought to the attention ot the manage-
r
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 172, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 10, 1933, newspaper, October 10, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1311829/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.