Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 278, Ed. 1 Monday, February 12, 1934 Page: 4 of 8
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P
M3
A
I
Triple Mirrors
of "this Splendid
Bedroom Suite
Il ‘
MARVIN ECHOLS FURNITURE STORE
114 N. Marshall Phone 619
—-- <
We Deliver Furniture to Any Part
of the
OIL FIELD
1
A
be
of
interpretations
hi
t i m • •
merger
report
mi winner
? »no
* eel ‘
Creor.K.’.'ion
(adv. i
portation of Argentine
Britain — with the
meat magnate
this means that Bn .
is switching to the Empire
out of luck in
Tins combination is
1 Germany to he
disarmament and
In .dvrs have
drawn
a Frei.ch proini.e to cedi*
of North African coast to
Italy in case of any serious trou
hie.
known
house
secret entente has been
formed between Italy, France
and England to bring Germany
I back to the international confer-
ence table.
prepared to force
“reasonable” on
* r ide agreement.
it that Mussolini has bee
in by a French promi.-e
a strip
Don’t let
<dd.
riulsion combines
ir one. Pov or! al
Pleasant to take.
Your own druggist is auUo
to refund to refund your •'
on the spot if your cough < r
is not relieved by
Most Coughs
Demand Creomulsion
th<ni get a strangle
Fignt germs quick I v. Creo-
7 major helps
but I... rmles-.
No narcotics
MERGER
Trade in; idem report a sigmfi
cant move in the recent
o' Vestey's who control the im-
boef to
Australian
William Anglia*.
Securities Act will be eased are
mounting. The grapevine has it
that the report by three mem
hers of the Dickinson Committee
recommending such action was
re.;uo t< d by the government.
The feet that two members of
the Dickinson Committee did not
sign the report doesn’t mean they
were opposed. Lawyer Arthur
Dean abstained because h"
thought his Wall Street connec
'ions would be used against the
in Congress. Trade Com
Landis stayed out
cause he wanted a free hand
int reduce
Hut some of the best
Wall St root underwriting
don’t exnect any large stock
bond flotations for a long
regardless of the Securities Act.
They have reduced their statist!
cal departments — which do
about 90 per cent of the work
in connection with a new Issue
to mere skeletons. The chief sta
tisticians who were laid off can
not he replaced overnight if they
should be needed again.
Experts say
tain js ewit
and Argentina is
British markets.
The rest of South America is
expected to suffer similar trade
change in the fu'ure. The net
result should be a closer trade
bond be'wcin the southern conti
rient and tile l.nitod States.
ENTENTE
entente has
Italy,
LET THE ARMY TRY IT’S HAND
THE STREETS OF PARIS
111
I ouis
JJOWEVER,
SISTERS UNDER THE SKIN
of
Hm l YWOOD ROUND-UP
Penney’s SCOOPS the Market
Yard
in the name of a dead man.
cheap and lousy fraud.”
sum,
common
mem-
re
--........... o---------------
NRA USED CAR PRICES
J.C. PENNEY GO
108 N. Marshall Henderson, Texas
and
15®
ANNOUNCEMENT that the
3
Dr Clendbnlng i
Is extremely •
EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlets
by Dr. Clendening can now be ob-
tained by sendlug 10 cents In coin, for
each, and a self-addressed envelope
stamped with a tbrce-cent stamp,
to Dr. Ixigan Clendening. in care of
this paper. The pamphlets are:
"Indigestion and Constipation,” "Re-
ducing and Gaining.” "Infant Feed-
ing." "Instructions for the Treatment
of Diabetes,” "Feminine Hygiene”
and "The Carp ot the Hair ar<1 Skin "
CRETONNE
for Every
Purpose’
its hour comes.
A little thing can bring it up. In 1789
the French government was unable to bal-
ance its budget. Out of the ensuing delibera-
tions came confusion, and In the confusion
the tocsin was sounded; and the mob swept
up from nowhere, to tear down the Bastille,
roll a king’s head in the dirt, turn raw democ
racy loose on a startled world, set off a fer-
ment that i« still working—and to subside,
finally, only before Napoleon’s famous whiff
of grapeshot.
It rose again in 1830, and again in 1818,
and again in 1871. It has fought with pav-
ing stones and pikes, with clubs and with ri-
gTATISTTCS are usually dry. Their mean-
ing is confused by the mass < ‘ “
Which the reader doesn’t care to expend men-1 several days with severe cold.
the news to his manager. They
ried. Sailing. Love.”
(Copyright, 1931, By United Press)
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 10 (UP)—Cary
Grant and Virginia Cherrill didn’t waste any
money on cable tolls, notifying Hollywood
friends they were married in London.
Grant used only three words in cabling
were: “Mar-
|
JO the Roosevelt Administration probably
goes the credit for being the first to
make a self examination and find fault with
its own politicians. Heretofore it has been
customary for the following administration
to dig up the scandal and publish it about its
predecessor. It was the good old American
custom. But row we find an administration
not only exposing the graft in the preceding
one, but actually singling out the grafters
in its own political organization. All this
was unanticipated by the lobbyists.
Examine the fabrics — the
excellent patterns! — and
you'll see what an extra-
ordinary opportunity Pen-
ney’s quantity buying brings
you! For comforters, slip
-overs, drapes!
r"«
BUI
IS . W
tai energy necessary to assimilate. But hers
are a few that should interest the reader.
The railroads in Texas are paying for
ac-
r|’t ’ recite the entire category of grafts
which politicians have practiced
by j-eason of thoir influence with officials
would be a long story indeed. Outstanding
in the memory of the average young person
is the graft in connection with the building
of the army cantonments during the world
war training period and the munitions con-
tracts, the shipyards, etc. Then came the
Teapot Dome scandal. This list is long, the
I money involved makes a large sum, the
I he
Will Hays, film “czar,” and his wife are
back-tracking to New York. They left last
night, a few hours after Hays was discharg-
of figures ed from a hospital where he was confined I whole thing is distasteful to
''I"’”’1 ,..........„i a..,.......i ; American citizen.
fles. It has ruled all of France and it has
set Europe to shuddering. Because of it the
guillotine has clanked, and soldiers have kill
ed one another in Spain and Italy and on the
plains before Moscow. Forever repressed, it
is forever arising anew.
In the broad Place de Concorde, where
the mob of 1934 battled the troops,
XVI lost his head—and Danton, and Marie
Antoinette, and Charlotte Corday, and many
another. Ano as the barricades went up the
other day, i nd all France rocked with tur-
moil, the spectre of the unaccountable once
more leered at Europe.
The mob of Paris was up again!
to those who have followed I he invest’gation
of air mail contracts. At least the govern
ment will have opjiortunity to definitely ar-j the 1931 levy,
rive at the cost of carrying it.
The cost of operating the air equipment. highway fund.
JAKING the sum of $1,887,875 from the!
Y
IJEFORE the days of NRA, the best auto-
mobile salesman was not always the man,
who could present the advantages of his pro-
duct to the prospect, but was frequently the
man who was the best buyer of the used car.
It was no uncommon thing for a dealer
to accuse his salesmen of making greater ef-
fort selling the prospects’ car to the dealer
than in selling the dealer’s car to the pros-
pect. At any rate, the prospect often bought
his new car from the dealer who would give
him the better price for his used car.
Bur now it’s different. Each dealer has a|
little booklet in which is listed the trade-
in allowance of each model car. He is sup-
posed to use that figure as a maximum. If
the car in question happens to have had a
little extra hard usage, the dealer is supposed
to offer the owner correspondingly less.
The idea is supposed to work as a pro-
tection to the prospect in seeing that he gets
a fair price for his car as well as to work In j
favor of the dealer to see that no competitor!
goes above the bid.
JF the dealer takes the use of his Blue Eagle
seriously he will stick to the prices in the
book. No secret rebates or shady deals are
conscionable under the code.
Provided it works out successfully, It
will remove one of the greatest former evils >
of the automobile selling business, and every
dealer should try his best to live up to it and
avoid the old chaotic way of having to buy
a used car at too high price.
--o------------
RAILROADS HELP FINANCE
HIGHWAYS AND SCHOOLS
The streets of Paris, most beautiful and
romantic to look at in all of Europe, were
taken over last week by a mob—a mob whose
tradition goes back for centuries, a mob
which has changed dynasties, altered the
destinies of nations and changed the course
of world history.
This mob dates ’way back to the middle
ages, when factions of rival claimants to
royal power scuffled and fought along the
muddy alleys of the Seine. It has been re-
pressed over and over again, so that people
have forgotten it, and a visitor to “the most
civilized city in the world” never dreams of
its existence. But it is always there, dark
below the surface, ready to break loose when
A “cheap and lousy fraud” was the
unique way superior judge Lester W. Roth
condemned a deal in which Mrs. Zunilda
Mancini, 77-year-old widow, donated $6,900
for a memorial to the late Rudolph Vanenti-
no.
Roth ordered S. George Ullman, former
executor of the actor’s estate, to refund Mrs.
Mancini $5,400, siding with the widow’s
claims she gave $6,900 only to find the
rial cost $1,500, Ullman countered the
mainder was to have been used toward
founding a Valentino memorial fund.
Thundered Judge Roth:
“A sentimental old lady was exploited
in the name of a dead man. I think it was a,
From the files ot the Hunk County News, Feb., 1901
Mis* Beatrice Florence of Overton is the guest '
of her sister Mrs W. K. Young.
O— 1 ----- |
Lillian Bond, young English act ress who
first camo west to see how wild and wooly it I
was, is rapidly finding out through the eyes
of the camera. Today she signed a new con-
tract and was awarded a role as leading lady
for Tim McCoy in a highway patrol yarn.
“Yea, nickel Is a component of
most white-gold alloy*, but never *
major ope.
"We Imow of one Ciue where a
patient’s wrtat was madq sore alter
a few days’ use of a chromium plat-
ed wrist wtttQh Me had the case
rhodium plated and the ailment
cleared up. to another case the rho-
dium wua almost ax bad uh chro-
mium, while a nicjtel plated case wuu
perfectly comfQrtaEle. From all we
can la«rn, rhodium irritates very few
people; whap we renal) that It la a
member of the platinum rrroup. this
seems natural.
“Returtnhg to whlto-^old: Ln our
own eTperlanoe and that of our cli-
ents, Fe have not found u case of
skin Irritation from (INFLATED
good-quality white gold. All the
cases OF WHICH WE HAD
KNOWLEDGE, camo from white
gold that was CHROMIUM plated.
"This chromium plate Is very thin,
and the layman would probably not
| recognize Its presence.
"A large proportion of the whlte-
*----i_y on market Is plat-
ed. The plating may be of rhodium,
or chromium, of nickel, of tin, of
salaries to reserve
communications throughout the Hying chan-! and says that in the states through
ncls and many other expensive adjuncts to
the delivery of the mail on an operating
schedule.
The facts released as to the enormous
profits made by the manufacturers of the
planes sold to the air mail contractors do in-
dicate that there have been some excess pro
fits.
After giving it a fair trial with army
planes, the government will be in better po-
sition to pass judgment on the fairness
the contracts.
Chromium More Apt Cause
Of Skin Disease Than Nickel
By i.UGAfM CLENDENING, M. D. Id»a ot keeping the record straight.
I AM INFORMED by a represent-
ative of th© Jewelers Technical Ad-
vice company that when I stated In
an article a few weeks ago that
white gold, such
aw Is used on
spectacle frames,
caused an erup-
tion of the skin
from the nickel
It contained, I
might not have
been entirely ac-
curate. I quote
the letter as fol-
lows:
"However.
I believe you are
mistaken In plac-
ing the blame on
nickel. Wo have
evidence that the
culprit la enro-
mlum.
"Chromium plating
common these days, both on expen-
sive and on cheap white-gold Jewel-
ry; also on novelties that are meant
to Imitate platinum or white gold
"Chromium dissolves fairly readily I
| or ru.: ‘ ‘ “7.
1 palladium, or (rarely) platinum.”
U. S. Army
will be given the task of handling the Air the education of 49,593 school children
Mail effective February conies as no surprise, cording to a statement recently issued.
The statement goes further to say that
Texas the. railroads paid $8,326,890 under'
Ironic as it may seem, 22.7
■per cent of this amount went toward the J
Should be fairly well known by the Army, | rpA ?i]m nf X1 aR7 R7S ,rnrri
since it has had hundreds of planes fl.ving
various distances and under all manner of'
conditions. |
taxes paid by the railroads and spending'
it on the highways which are used by the
railroad’s competitors does seem somewhat >
JJOWEVER, as far as the public knows,j ironic.
the army planes have not been flying ac-| yhe above figures are from a statement
cording to any particular schedule, paving jaaued by the publicity department of the
salaries to reserve pilots, maintaining radio. Missouri pacific Lines which goes further
,.i . . . . ________ .______wbjch
that raliroad is operated, the railroads are
paying for the education of 416,531 school
children.
The figures are sufficient, the reader
may form his own conclusions.
-------------o-------------
| gold jewelry
I t»ln
in hydrochloric acid, which Is to bo I
found In perspiration, and the result-
ing chromium salt is irritntlng to the
akin
"(Nickel plated articles have been
used In contact with the skin for a
generation; there have been In-
stances of irritation, but not many.
Chromium plating is comparatively
new; but the instances of irritations
have been numerous ever since it
came into use )
“We hold no brief, as they say.
for either ni< kN or chromium; we
just mention tliese matters with the
—_—™_
we
out
I
k.
un
A
the
untoward
that
the
^-1
tand.
ican industry
SECURITIES
Wall Street’* houes
rir'. .
mg < '
ciiit
ar"
*
1
fra’D’;
it is
good?
♦o these shore-,
up Foinov here as
comes in.
r him
safety I
Ogden |
tant I |
Amer
are i t in to pay for what
out.
Thi
able ' r;
\v i n < I o •••
thing to
how.
w
ide I'lilaiice idea
lm‘ ours hasn’t been
boa t about lately any
'y
duce.
government
laws
11's boing sold •
NOTES
I lf \ y const i in’4'on bill
i :nu uni anie: dmrnt I
nt radors’ profits to
. It was sugge
newspapt r mon
at thou”-ht of rontructors'
profits ;
ger
PF Of ti e pre - :
now hr-
only by sending their own
A wail will go
each snipload
-4 ’ r •
4 -W.-
! *
>?■ -£7'
V
ould knock the old favor- i roll
the I amount
anv- abroad
support in a I
uch industries.
'Ilie stalwart® induced
Mills to backtrack on his
“Protection to all .......
subject to foreign
competition” remains the slogan
of the G.O.P.
will be called upon to pro-
Relations with former
official have not
In cn fully aired bj ni y means.
National City employees
also likely to be que.diom-d.
liable sources state tha’ th. ir lot
n: r fu: c i< n nr. conf! k i* .1 in-
termediaries between mr line and
postal authorities will be examin
ed with a microscope.
the opening they want when
asks thi
trade agreements.
without smashing the
now given to certain
and they
a big way from
ship into jobs. Republicans that no-
| body but Democrats hit the pay-
. i’zxperts here estimate the
of American money so?.t
during the las* two year
, from $.>00,000,000 to $2,000,-
| 000,000 . . . Most of this money
, w.u- in\ esii d in franc; gold
mon-y . _ and now it is hu tlmg
REPUBLICANS
Republican stalwarts held a se
< ret pow wow recently to di: cum-
blast keynoting party stategs
for the coming cainjaign.
'Tin y decided to wait for fur
ther tariff developments. They
expect the President to give them
he :
power to make ■ pccial |
They believe i
protect ion I
American '
ant ici pat e
all
incorporated under Dis- ;
('olunib.a laws largely |
...... .> • id.-:i“y. It's being sold'
at th-- n’niu uit n- an institution to J
get into the R.:;'inn field but will j
be s') <1. a to permit on
trance in all markets.
MAGIC
Here’s where Mr. Roosevelt will
have to apply hh political magic.
Those who have been working
with him on the problem predict
he will offer Congress a new
theory of foreign trade. He will
probably propose to put interna-
tional commerce on an even-Ste-
phen basis wherein, by agree
EXPORTS
Meanwhile plans are Fhoyiinr *o
set up fe leral machinery to un .
jderwrite Anierwan exports.
ort of Federal I'xyort Bnnki
; is to be
trict of
Will) I.'1 (
NEW YORK
Bv james McMullin
AIR MAI!.
Local in u|er
get word that the
ihotlest fireworks
of Senator Rlac'x’-
invest,vat i o n o I
lair mail contract
still ahead. Um-
Led Aircraft inter
osts are wonder-
M< Mull.m’ig w h e n their
lb per j turn will come and what records
ed by two] they will be called upon
who were rueful ’duce. Relations with
have
WASHINGTON
By GEORGE DURNO
TARIFF
President Roose
volt will try hi
toughest net on
the tight rope ot
C o n g r ession. I | n
domination soon
after the 5’e: a*,
disposes of tlw
St. I. a w r o n c e
G«org« Du-no’ireaty.
He will a k for authority to
tinker with the tariff and ;-mange
tindo aj:r emen’s for the good <»t
the land as he sees it.
It’s a tall order, it will probably mdustri
be filled but the Pres.dent ru-.v
wish he hud a rmt un er h m
before he lands on the safety I
platform.
Definite projection of the New
Deal into the field of world
trade has many delicate angle.’.
For one thing, the Blue Eagle’s
flight has been ch-irtel close to
the home nest. NIKA von.am* k
■peeifle proviaion charging the
President with protecting code ad
herent* from untoward foreign
competition.
The minute we «et out to re
capture international markets Mr.
Rooaerelt will have to 'witch to
the more difficult act of riding
twolBoree* out of atop. Foreign
mUcm «M pay far American meat, just enough foreign good*
peri
lll-.l I
1
compar'd to their men I
. . Talk about the pow- I
. . Un. le Sari
5'11 ,C»75 clerical wo. . s
under tic o-'cn’i-e d'“’ai " in
. . . 7.r),4 50 are emp'oyed in Wash-
ington — the largest force since
the Armistice . . . I’he monthly
payroll is 80,414.085 . . . Demo-
crats claim that thousands of Re-
publicans have been smuggled
J*
f,
*
1
>a
1 WBl!!
O.K,6BDDVl
imaduaine
!A
<5
k
\
!<(
Fl
A Al
PuTERfHERH.
PAU IMADE
A MILLION
OUT OF 7HE
AIK CRAFT
scahval’z:
fl
i
iu 4
I
r ’t
MN
r.
1
PAGE FOUR
lirnbprsntt Dailii JfrtttB Ottorial
MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEB. 12, 1934
"Let not your heart be troubled; ye believe in God, believe also in me." John 14:1
7 oduy s text suggeeted by M. L. Vaughn, devoute Bible student of Mt. Enterprise. Tomorrow’s will be suggested by Rev Stewart Clendenin, Pastor of the First Methodist Church at Overton, Texas.
30 YEARS AGO
THE NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
News Behind The News
PR
* • C* r f r—
■B
T
; 'i
J J
0=^-2
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 278, Ed. 1 Monday, February 12, 1934, newspaper, February 12, 1934; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314815/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.