Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 121, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 7, 1935 Page: 5 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 20 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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motor !
inside your
223s doe< not lessen thl*
1
CONOCO
J3ERM PROCESSED
PAtAMttt BAll —-
MOTOR OIL
sTSqyX'
■VI7TITH heats of 225° to 425ff in your
▼V motor, you must have oil that main*
tains high film strength under extreme tem-
peratures to get safe lubrication. Otherwise,
the lubricating film ruptures and the bear-
ings and cylinders suffer damaging wear.
Plain mineral oils have little film strength
and oils over-refined by new cleansing pro- .
cesses have even less. As motor beat goes
up, these oils rapidly lose film strength.
It’s an absolute certainty that you'll get
better motor protection with Conoco Germ
Processed Motor Oil. Timken machine tests
prove that it has 2 to 4 times greater film
strength than any plain mineral oil and that
eral oil showed 45% more wear than
those lubricated with Conoco Germ
Processed, the first alloyed oil.
You’ll be certain your motor is safely lub-
ricated even at high temperatures if you say
“O. K.—Drain’’ and fill with Germ Pro-
cessed, the oil with the “Hidden Quart*
that never drains away!
That’s why you need Germ Processed Oil
for safe lubrication—it maintains
heat frbove
advantage.
More ^roo/—auperviaed road testa
were made in identical cars fitted with
the new alloy metal bearings used
in many 1935 cars. The bearings lub-
ricated with a high-quality plain min-
high film strength under extreme heat!
7.
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CONOCO
In hot weather, your
crankcase “runs a tem-
perature” over 225°.
When you drive at 50
miles an hour, your wrist
pin bearings heat up
to 350°.
The heat of your cylin-
der walls ranges from
350°to425°in Summer
weather.
ray
in
Your connecting rod
bearings, at a speed of
50 miles an hour, reach
a heat of 2 50°.
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he
INENTAL Oil
num
IT’S BLAZING
—
3
PLAN TO ASSIST
BOYS ATTENDING
A & M COLLEGE
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NEW
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COLORS
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79'
Least
$1.00
PAIR
CONGRESS TODAY
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Across Street from
First National Bank
You’ll Like
Our Services
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ABSOLUTELY
RINGLESS
near
Pat
County Agent Hopes
to See Large Group
Go from Here
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FINISHING TOUCHES
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The Colors are:
Grey Dusk—
Javatan—
Ali-Baba—-
Tea Dance—
Distingue—
Tropica—
And Others.
His eyes downcast, objjou^ly tired under long hours ot questioning,
Mandeville Zenge is shown, right, as he stubbornly denied to Chicago
police any knowledge of tfie mutilation operation which killed his
successful rival for the hand of Louise Schaffer, pretty Kirksville,
Mo., nurse. Dr. Harry R. Hoffman, left, ot the Cook county criminal
court behavior clinic, watches the prisoner intently.
AM\all
jM!
‘ .K fall
head cotton ginners’ tax.
The ginners association also is
seeking to have the court order
revenue collectors to issue bale
tags to all ginners who post the
requited bond qualifying them to
comply with terms of the Bank-
head act.
The fight began when the gin-
ners obtained an injunction July'
19, in federal court at Sherman re-
straining collection of the ginners’
processing tax.
Precipitates Fights
Judge Randolph Bryant granted
Details of a plan by which boys
of limited means *nay attend A.
& M. College have been received
by the Rusk county home demon-
stration and farm agents, and it
is hoped that a group can be ar-
ranged here to attend this year,
according to Assistant County
Agent J R. Emmons.
Mr. Emmons asks that all boys
interested in the- following plan
get in touch with the county
agent’s office:
To .Home Demonstration
Agents, County Agents, and Vo-
cational Agricultural Teachers:
The A. and M.' cooperative self-
help student project plan is no
longer a nexperiment, but a work-
able means under proper super-
vision, of getting a college edu-
cation for boys of limited means,
v.ho would otherwise be denied
such opportunity. Three years ago
we had one group with ten boys,
last year 10 groups with 130 boys,
and this year 22 groups with 238
boys. Most of these 22 groups will
be back again next year, accord-
ing to present plans. We have re-
ceived many inquiries about
groups from other localities. Our
experience has shown us that if
these groups are to succeed, they
must have some direction from
such agricultural leaders as you.
In order for the group to be
most successful, plans should be
carefully made a good while
ahead of time. Maintenance, tnat
is room, board, utilities, matron,
and laundry, in the cooperative
groups this year has varies from
$7.50 per month to $15.00 per
month. This has depended largely
on the amount of house rent paid,
amount of food brought, and the
local management.
Houses Near Compile
Houses are located near Col-
lege and in Bryan Most of the
b >ys who live in Bryan arrange
for an old ford or Chevrolet truck
for transportation. Since nouse
rent is much cheaper in Bryan
than at College, the average cost
for a boy who lives in Bryan and
has to pay around $1.00 a month
for transportation is no higher
than for the boy who lives at
College The cost is less for the
groups in Bryan than for those
at College.
Rent for these houses varies
from $10.00 to $50.00 per month.
They will house anywhere from 8
♦o 22 boys. Some are furnished,
some partly furnished, and some
unfurnished. Groups that rent un-
furnished or partially furnished
houses should get together and
pick up through a furniture
shower, or some other way, odds
and ends of furniture necessary.
All expenses as maintenance,
books, clothes, Incidentals run
from $150 to $275 per boy per
year. In some instances work
can be obtained to defray part
of this expense.
A supervisor of the right type
if, very necessary for the suciess
cf thse.s groups.
The boys in our groups this
year have made good scholastic
records as a whole. It has been
a pleasure for--us to work with
the interested citizens back home
trying to encourage these boys in
j coming to college. If you are
| planning to send a group to col-
| 1< ge next fall, we wish to assure
it will be a real pelasTire for us
to work with you and wish that
you would let us know your plan
as soon as possible.
Senate:
Considers copyright bill.
Lobby committee will
former Secretary of War
Hurley.
House:
Considers private calendar.
ROUNTREE
, Dyer* .. Hstter#
Approximately two-ttirds of
the counties in the United States
are practically free from bovine
tuberculosis. Prevention work has
been progressing at the rate of
more than ^1,500,000 tests month-
ly since it was begun in 1917,
/ /
Worth at
The finishing up work on J.
E. Arnold’s two-story building
should bo completed and the struc-
ture made ready for occupancy by
I Aug. 20, according to Mr. Arnold.
I The painters are now on the job
I and they are expected to be the
last through with their work.
. Doors are yet to lie installed.
The roof has been completed and
only very little plastering remains
to be done.
I »-------------------------------♦
Tdepaiftment store?
I
the Injunction. *
As a counter move, AAA offi-
cials in Washington ordered rev-
enue collectors to refuse to issue
bale tags, signifying-the tape has
been paid or that an exemption
certificate has been issued, indi-
cating the producer has not ex-
ceeded his production quota.
Refusal to issue tags would tic
up two-thirds of the Texas cotton
crop, authoritios estimated, and
virtually disrupt the gin business
The agricultural association, in-
censed by efforts to wreck the
Bankhead farm program, met at
Bryan last Friday and voted to ob-
tain signatures of ginners on affi.
davits signifying they did not au-
thorize filing of the Sherman suit,
and that they wished relief from
Its provisions.
Rebuttal of the ginners associ-
ation then took the form of a pe-
tition to Judge T. M. Kennerly of
Houston, requesting that the rev-
enue colectors not be allowed to
circulate the affidavits and that
they be required to issue the bale
tags.
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ledges where Pate and the Massa-
chusetts girl are trapped.
They will start tp climb down
on the ropes shortly after dawn,
it was estimated they will be lit-
tle more than half way by noon,
so slow is their task.
The rescue from above is the
only one possible. 1’ark veterans
said that the couple could not be
reached from the valley floor.
There are seven motifs so you can
have a towel for each day of the
week. And what a welcome addi-
tion they would be to any hope
chest!
Pattern 1027 comes to you with
a transfer pattern of seven motifs
averaging 4 1-2x8 inches; color
suggestions; material require-
ments: illustrations of*all stitches
needed.
Send 10 cents in stamps or coin
(coin preferred) for this pattern
to the Henderson Daily News,
Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave-
nue, New York, N. Y.
------------o--
Murals Adorn Jewish Church
CHICAGO, (UP)—Ten murals
representing the Ten Command-
ments, the firkt ever to appear
within a Jewish church, will adorn 1
\ ^-iX^ TOWELS AND LINENS
PATTERN 1027
Still life portraits of luscious
fruits! Can’t you imagine them in
their natural colors decorating
your kitchen towels and those in-
formal linens? They’ll make a
lovely luncheon set or do won-
ders for the breakfast nook.
They’re embroidered entirely in
cross stitch—8 to the inch, too—
so they’ll be done in no time.
MOUNTAIN PEAK
understand-
the
TATE’S
GROCERY & MARKET
Bronze Gas
East Main Street
■!—
Germ Processed
Motor Oil
Yosemite Rangers Will
Attempt Rescue of
Pair Today
YOSEMITE. Cal., Aug 7 —
(UP)—Two Yosemite park visi-
tors hovered on the brink of swift
and sudden death today on nar-
row ledges 200 feet apart on the
steep sides of Half Dome, tower-
ing peak on the western side of
Yosemite National Park.
Trapped when they lost their
way trying to descend, from a
climb to the mountain summit,
Miss Elizabeth Lorimer, 23, Chi-
copee, Mass., and Robert Pate,
.35, Inglewood, Cal., clung des-
perately to their precarious holds
on the face of the peak.
Each was on a natural bench,
narrow but safe as long as they
remained still. Miss Lorimer was
200 feet above Pate, with whom
she set out yesterday in an ad-
venturous climb over sharp and
rocky trails which would have
daunted more experienced moun-
tain climbers.
A bright fire burned through
the night on the floor of Yose-
mite Valley, 2200 feet below them,
to give them courage while tney
waited for rescue.
Four park rangers, veterans
of the service, climbed slowly up
the mountain on the rescue mis-
sion. But they can not get to the
trapped pair before late this after-
noon.
Certain death awaited Miss
Lorimer and Pate should they
lose their holds. The girl appeared
fresh and strong despite her ex-
periences but there was some
doubt about Pate’s condition.
Their cries for help and signal
fires they had lighted drew at-
tention to their plight at 6 p. m.
yesterday. None knew h&w long
they had been struggling to find
a path down the mountain before
calling for aid.
Their greatest danger was shock
—realization of their position arid
a consequent relaxation which
might drop them tumbling hun-
dreds of feet over the Talus
slopes. The air was compara-
tively mild, although toward dawn
it usually becomes quite chilly.
They wore only comparatively
light clothing and had no heavy
coats, so far as could be ascer-
tained at the camps from which
they had started their climb.
Light Signal Fires
Apparently they had a few
matches, for brush fires they
lighted in the meagre vegetation
called attention to their plight
last night. But there fcas not
enough wood to keep them warm.
Rangers went immediately to
Mirror Lake and called to them
through megaphones. Mirror
Lake formed a resounding board
for their replies. They told ' of
their positions, although Pate’s
responses were somewhat garbled.
Apparently he is slightly deaf, for
ho had difficulty, in understand-
ing what was said.
The men on the valley floor
told them to stay still and wait
for rescue.
At midnight Miss Lorimer’s
mother talked to her daughter
through a megaphone.
“Are you all righgt?”
mother called.
“Yes,” came the reply which
resounded against the sides of
the mountains fringing the lake.
“Stay where you are, you’re
sure to be rescued,” Mrs. Lorimer
said.
Reicue Long Time Away
Rescue, though, was a long time
away. Fatigue may overtake the
couple before it arrives.
Rangers Jerry Mernin, Roy
Chisholm and Jerry Jackson and
CCC Foreman Bob Russell rode
sturdy-footed mountain horses up
the Vernal and Nevada Falls trails
to the point selected for their res-
cue attempt. «
Russell is a park “old-timer,”
said to know every rock on Half
Dome’s granite face. Chisholm
was with Father Hubbard, “the
padre of the glaciers,” in the
Jesuit priest’s exploration of
Alaskan volcanoes.
They carried long double ropes,
on which to lower themselves
down the face of the mountain
from a point 1,000 feet above the
ATTACK TARIFF
r
r
Pure Silk
TISSUE
CHIFFON
HOSE
<3
To Fight Application
For Injunction by
Tex Ginners
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BROWNWOOD, Tex., Aug. 7
(UP)—A« attorney for the Texas
Agricultural Association, which
plans a legal assault on the tariff
former Gov. Dan Moody will make
his first court appearance Thurs-
day at a federal court hearing in
Houston.
H. G. Lucas of Brownwood,
president of the association, yes-
terday announced the appointment
of Moody.
At the hearing members will
fight against an application for an
injunction sought by the Texas
Ginners’ Association, to restrain
Frank Scofield, internal revenue
collector at San Antonio, and W.
A Thomas, Dallas collector, from
distributing affidavits to cotton
ginners. certifying opposition to
the ginners’ association move to
invalidate collection of the Bank-
ON DANGEROUS
BY FARMERS TO
I- • '
Clings to Denial in Fiend Killing.
2 JIRE TRAPPED
MOODY NAMED
“Fruit* in Season” Make Gay Laura Wheeler
Designs
-
»1*5
■■J
r~
■I
No. 620 Hose
2-thread,
Extra Sheer
$1.50 Value >
No. 510 Hose
$1.35 Value
3-thread
Sheer Ringless
CHIFFON HOSE
Slightly Irregular
$1.00 Value
REED’S
DEPARTMENT STORE
-WBBBB MOST PBOPtK TBADV*
1
11
79c
M»»t Art Jarratt
Aug. 8th. at
JAY’S CAFE
the wallt of a nawly completed
synagogue here. Jewish laws for-
bid the use of images, and the
Injunction has been strictly en-
forced through the ages.
Sale of Fine
HOSIERY
■w’fivsaip'
........I
.....
RENDBRSON DAILT NEWS, HENDERSON. TEXAS
■ * ■ -
WEDNESDAY AFTERN’N, AUG. 7, 1985
best equipment
and
T omorrow N ight
Art Jarrett
Plays the
Cooper Club
You still have time to get your
things cleaned carefully and cor-
rectly if you send them to us to-
day.
Our cleaning methods are the
finest we can find anyplace. You
can depend on us to always have
the latest
available.
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 121, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 7, 1935, newspaper, August 7, 1935; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1311935/m1/5/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.