Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 221, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 6, 1933 Page: 3 of 20
twenty pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Practical, Useful and Wearable Gift
A
America Has Gone
“Practical Minded”
Henderson’s Best Store Is Amp’y Supplied
With a Complete Department Store Line of
Items.
That Are Wearable Will Be the Trend of This
L Season’s “Giving”, More Than Ever Before J
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Hickok Belts and Suspenders
Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
Devonshire Suits
Florsheim Shoes
Manhattan and Eagle
Better Shirts
Cheney Silk Ties
Varsity Pajamas
Manhattan Pajamas
Stetson Hats
Style Park Hats
Belber Luggage
Elmo Cosmetics
Hender»on*»
Best
Store
East Texas’
Gift
Headquarters
OLD SANTA CLAUS RECOGNIZES
THIS FAMOUS BRANDED MER-
CHANDISE DISTRIBUTED IN
HENDERSON BY PACKMAN’S
Field & Stream Jackets
Interwoven Hose (for men)
Gordon Hose (for ladies)
Beacon Blankets
Sally Frances Negligees
and Finer Underwear
“Red Cross” Shoes (for ladies)
Beacon Gift Blankets
Gossard and Miss Simplicity
Foundation Garments
V. & S. Riding Pants
Butterworth Boots
Finest Eastern Ready-to-Wear
fye&nan'A
A Gin FROM PACKMAN S CARRIES PRESTIGE ,
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PRE-CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
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Starting
at
For Our
$3.95 Suedes
All Suede Shoes in our stock are at a drastic
Reduction . . . Just in time for Christmas wear.
You can secure a wonderful value now by at-
tending this Shoe Event.
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BODY PLANS TO
WHEN ROOSEVELT CARVED TURKEY
PLUG LEAKS IN
NATION'S INCOME
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CONTEST
took
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YES-
ALFORD BROS. MOTOR CO.
was
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Reform Features May
Bring Quarter Bil-
lion Formerly Lost
To U. S. Treasury
granted $10,000 to aid in surfacing
with asphaltic mats approximately
14 5 miles of existing shell surfac-
ed roads in various sections of the
county. The total cost of this pro-
ject Is $36,678 and 20 men will be
given employment for nine months
jazz tunes,
of poison.
ned today
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n on
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x WAIT FOLKS.....YOU
AIN’T SEEN NOTHIN’ YET!!!
You liked It In 1938 . . . you’ll rave about It in 1934
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(Continued from Page One)
the following women were awarded
honors: Dorothy Poo!, Tatum Rt.
3 of the Church Hill community,
first prize; Mrs. Daisy Winfrey or
the Wood Glenn community, sec-
ond; and Mrs. Frank Toone nt the
Wood Glen community was award-
ed third place.
A T’
..<4 X. M JO
went to Allen Turner, Overton Rt.
3; second prize was awarded Mrs.
Hattie Little of the Wood Glen
community and third prize was giv-
en Mrs. Grace Winfrey also of the
Wood Glen neighborhood.
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In Greek Inscriptions and manu-
scripts generally there is no at-
tempt to separate the words, and
in early times no system of punc-
tuation was employed.
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STRANGE DEATE
(Continued from Page One)
York City. It was believed their
passports checked with the regis-
tration.
They remained In their room all
the time. Food, wires, and liquorg
were sent In to them daily. At all
hours the phonograph blared hot
Jt seined the glr1 died
An autopsy was plan-
In the girl’s clothe!
was found a note:
"Do not blame the boy.
not responsible."
The boy was taken to a police
station, mumbling over and over
that the girl was not dead, but
sleeping.
Today he startled his question,
ers by saying that his name was
not Wilson but Elkington and that
the "girl", as she seemed, waa not
his sister, but his mother.
He lapsed again into incoher-
ence. Police said he seemed to b®
suffering from narcotics.
The home made toy contest prov-
ed to be both an interesting and
.beneficial contest. Many of the
toys are on display in the home de-
monstration kitchen in the court
house. They represent all sorts of
toy animals, dolls, etc. and can be
made at practically no cost for ma-
terials and the labor involved fur-
nishes an intercs'lng way of using
the long winter evenings.
First prize in the toy contest^
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Proving himself as adept a host as
lie is guidirtg the destinies of a
nation, President Roosevelt is
snapped as he curved the turkey
nt the annual Thanksgiving din-
AUSTIN, Tex . received a loan
and grant of $400,000 for the in-
stallment of a 7,500 W. W , Turbo-
Generator, with necessary auxiliar-
ies two 30-ton turbine cranes, re-
pairs to the settings of three boil-
ers, construction of a 6,000,000-gal-
lon settling basin and alterations to
the water system treatment build-
ing. Thirty per cent of the cost
of labor and material which totals
approximately $325,000 is a grant.
Work can start at once and 125
men will be given employment for
seven months.
Galveston County, Tex.,
UNGLFGHS
(Continued from Page One)
It should be the standard West-
minister Chimes.
Mr. Crim offered me the job of
straightening the thing out and I
had planned to do it last Saturday
afternoon at 4 p m. The rain al-
tered my plans. Now Christmas is
nearly here.
If he hasn’t changed his mind
and wants it really fixed, we'll de-
clare a clock-fixing day and invite
all the readers of the paper to gang
up on the corner and watch the
spectacle of old Uncle Gus climbing
the corner of the bank building and
putting the tick eradicator oi the
timepiece and make it ring right or
else quit ringing altogether.
By E. W LEWIS,
United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON. Pec. 6 (UP) —
The house ways and means com-
mittee today studied drastic rec-
ommendations for stopping leaks
in federal revenue such as have
been disclosed by the senate
stock market inquiry.
By plugging these
ner for children at the Warm
Springs Foundation, Warm
Springs Ga., where the chief ex-
ecutive is vacationing. Mrs.
Roosevelt is shown at left.
Nine Million Allotted
To Sixty-Six Projects
WASHINGTON. Dec. 6 (UP) —
Public Works Administrator Ickes
announced today $9,182,278 had
been alloted to 66 non-federal pro-
jects in 22 states.
The list, wheih included schools,
hospitals, water and sewer systems,
bridges, street and highway im-
provements. courthouses and mu-
nicipal offeie buildings and n li-
brary, was expected to provide 56,-
318 man-months of quick direct
employment. ,
Thirty of the projects were al-
loted grants of 30 per cent of the
cost of labor and material and 36
were alloted loans and grants of
the full amount of the project
costs.
The allotments included:
Corpus Christi. Tex., lofAi and
grant, ship channel, $200,000.
Matagorda County, Tex ,
and grant, road, $104,500.
Austin, Tex., loan and grant, wa-
ter system, $400,000.
Plainview, Tex., loan ami grant,
sewers, $9,000.
Rosenberg, Tex , Ioan and grant,
water, $35,000.
Galveston, Tex , grant, road im-
provement, $10,000.
*
r would bring in $25,000,000 ac
cording to the ways and means
group.
On the grounds only that "no
gain in revenue could be expect-
ed," the subcommittee refrained
from proposing a federal tax aim-
ed at corporations with ofticial"
, who receive "excessive salaries or
compensation.”
’ "The numerous examples of ex-
• cessive salaries brought to light
during the past year were not
overlooked," the eport to the lull
committee added.
Among tax changes proposed
by the committee were an increase
tax on dividends, higher surtax
rates, a tightening of the capital
■ gams and losses section of the
. present law, and elimination of
credits for foreign income tax pay-
ments.
The committee’s major revenue
proposals however was for a 25
per cent reduction in allowances
to corporations for depreciation
ami depletion in plant and prop-
erty investments. It was estimat-
eu that an increase in revenue
from such a reduction would tie
$8..,000,000 annually.
The proposed tax changes com-
prise only part of the revenue
puzzle, which the house committee
and administration fiscal experts
are busy trying to solve.
On January I, the recovery act
taxes one half cent on gasoline
and five per eent on corporation
dividends a r e automatically
eliminated by repeal.
Public hearings begin Monday
on liquor taxes with the house
ways and means committee and
the senate finance committee sit-
ting jointly.
The house sub-committee which
submitted its partial report on
taxes yesterday is expected to file
the remainder tomorrow.
leaks and
through other changes in the 1932
wnys and means
revenue act the
sub-committee which has been
working on the tax problem, be-
lieves between $235,000,000 to
$270,000,000 will be brought in-
to the treasury.
Members of the sub-committee
predicted the recommendations
would be the basis for the new
revenue bill and that while modi-
fication will probably result, the
main proposals of the group will
be retained.
The sub-committee took the
cut for its proposal for a 35 per
cent tax on undistributed ad-
justed net income of “personal
holding companies” from revela-
tions of the senate inquiry. Mem-
bers of Dillon Read Company and
other New York financial figures
disclosed how they avoided federal
taxes through obtuse holding com-
pany set-ups. The proposed tax
Ma Gives Freedom
To Eleven Convicts
AUSTIN. Dec. 6 (UP)- Eleven..
convicts in the Texas penitentiary
formally secured freedom today
when Gov. Miriam A. Ferguson
tiled two full pardons and nine con-
ditional pardons.
The full pardons were granted
persons convicted of forgery and
chicken theft respectively
Conditional pardons included:
Emmett George, Hanis county,
robbery with firearms and assault
to murder, 12 years; convicted in
June, 1930.
G. A Landryt Jefferson county,
burglary, five years: convicted m
June, 1928.
Leon Enas, Smith county, bur-
glary, two years; convicted in lune,
1933.
(’. S. Bartlett, McLennan county,
robbery with firearms, five years;
convicted in 1931.
Bob Wilkerson, Dallas and Van
Zandt counties, robbery with fire-
arms and robbery, 10 years; con-
victed in September, 1928
Attiey Bridges, Smith county,
burglary, two years; convicted in
June, 1933.
A furlough granted Daniel J.
Dennehy, Galv<‘ston county, con-
victed in 1930 of robbery with fire-
arms and sentenced to 99 years,
was extended GO days.
IMF s
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PAGE THR]
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DEC. 6, 1933
IP.
/
Committee Considers New Federal Revenue Measure
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 221, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 6, 1933, newspaper, December 6, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314758/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.