The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, August 23, 1935 Page: 3 of 8
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THE SEALY NEWS, SEALY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1935
THREE
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Election to be held August 24, 1935
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SEALY, TEXAS
LOCAL NEWS
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We invite your banking business.
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HOMETYPNNG
, COURSE ,
The careful young man puts his
money in the bank and some day be-
comes a Business Partner.
Big Men, Rich Men, Busy Men, are
all looking for young men who can fill
important jobs.
The man with the bank account is
the one who gets the job and the first
opportunity to get into the firm.
STOP THAT ITCHING
If you are bothered by the
itching of Athlete’s Foot, Ec-
zema, Itch or Ringworm W. F.
Meyer & Co. will sell you a jar
of Black Hawk Ointment on a
guarantee. Price 50c and $1.00.
I
Mrs. Lillian Ward spent sev-
eral days in Houston early in
the week.
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Joe Cherkas and daughter,
Miss Evelyn, are in Dallas this
week, the former to purchase
merchandise for his store, while
Miss Evelyn is visiting with
her sister, Mrs. Reuben Fried-
man.
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Citizens State Bank :
FOR
The Amendment to the State Constitution repealing
Statewide prohibition, prohibiting the open saloon and
providing for -local option.
AGAINST
The Amendment to the State Constitution repealing
Statewide prohibition, prohibiting the open saloon and
providing for local option.
FOR
The Amendment giving the Legislature the power to
provide a System of Old-Age Assistance not to exceed
Fifteen Dollars ($15) per month per person and to accept
from the Government of the United States financial aid
for old-age assistance.
AGAINST
The Amendment giving the Legislature the power to
provide a System of Old-Age Assistance not to exceed
Fifteen Dollars ($15) per month per person and to accept
from the Government of the United States financial aid
for old-age assistance.
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FOR
The Amendment to the State Constitution authorizing
the Courts to place defendants on probation.
AGAINST
The Amendment to the State Constitution authorizing
the Courts to place defendants on probation.
FOR
The Amendment to Section 1, Article XVII, of ’the
Constitution of Texas, providing that Amendments to the
Constitution may be proposed at Special Sessions of the
Legislature under certain conditions.
AGAINST
The Amendment to Section 1, Article XVII, of the
Constitution of Texas, providing that Amendments to the
Constitution may be proposed at Special Sessions of the
Legislature under certain conditions.
Mrs. Pat Hyman and little
daughter, Carol, of Brownwood
are the guests of Mrs. Amy
Kersten and daughter, Jewel
Kathrine.
C. J. Nastoupil, prescription
pharmacist of the W. F. Meyer
& Co. drug store, ended a ten-
FOR
The Amendment to the Constitution of the State of
Texas abolishing the fee system of compensating all dis-
trict officers, and all county officers in counties having a
population of 20,000 or more; and authorizing the Com-
missioners’ Court to determine whether county officers
and precinct officers in counties containing less than 20,-
000 population may be compensated of a fee basis or on
a salary basis.
AGAINST
The Amendment to the Constitution to the State of
Texas abolishing the fee system of compensating all dis-
trict officers, and all county officers in counties having a
population of 20,000 or more; and authorizing the Com-
missioners’ Court to determine whether county officers
and precinct officers in counties containing less than 20,-
000 population may be comnpensated of a fee basis or on
a salary basis.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Danchak of
Lyons and Mr. and Mrs. Ar-
thur Pieser and two daughters
of Austin visited in the home
of Mrs. Jos. Boehm Monday.
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Maggie Dudley
FOR
The Amendment of Article 1, Section 15, of the State
Constitution by adding to said Section a provision to the
effect that the Legislature may provide for the temporary
commitment of mentally ill persons not charged with a
criminal offense by the County Court without the necessity
of a jury trial.
AGAINST
The Amendment of Article 1, Section 15, of the State
Constitution by adding to said Section a provision to the
effect that the Legislature may provide for the temporary
commitment of mentally ill persons not charged with a
criminal offense by the County Court without the necessity
of a jury trial.
MEVER
SSLDSS
the house. They have
saved me a great many
sick headaches.
Mrs. Jennie Neill,
Coronado, Calif.
------
WFN FACT, he did everybody at our house a favor when he
a installed Electric Water Heating. Now, Mother can keep
me as clemmand fresh as the morning dew, with a minimum of
effort. Because, she always has plenty of water, automatically
heated, when it's bath time, or in-between time.
"Dad feels a lot better, too, since we got Electric Water
Heating. He never gets mad when he shaves. And, he says
it's a lot safer to have an electric heater with a laddie around.
"Mother's always wanted Electric Water Heating, but she’s
more sold than ever because it's so clean and trouble free.
Mother says everybody ought to have Electric Water Heating."
No cash down required; last turn in your water
heating equipment. Balance as low as $3 monthly.
At loft, the Hoipoint Vogue. (
Misses Eleanor and Esther
Sefchik, Mrs. Joe Sefchik and
Mrs. Eugene Sefchik, all of
Nelsonville, were guests in the
home of Mrs. Jos. Boehm last
week end.
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Mrs. Blankenship
388
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FREE 1
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
the public hearing of the an-
nual budget for, the County of
Austin, Texas for the year 1936
will be held in the office of the
County Judge at 2:00 p.m. on
Monday, August 26th, 1935.
W. I. Hill, County Judge,
Austin County, Texas.
TAP DANCING
Taught by J. E. Norman at the
A. H. Moebes Home, Every
TUESDAY
—AND-
FRIDAY
Classes begin each day at 4 p.m.
EACH LESSON, 50c
DR. N I UES’
ANTI-RIM PIUS
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Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Froebel
and Mr. Fred Frimel have just
returned from an automobile
trip to San Antonio, San Mar-
cos, New Braunfels and Austin.
J. L. Stierling, our genial
district clerk, accompanied by
Mrs. Stierling and two grand-
sons, were here from the coun-
ty capital Monday greeting
friends. Mr. Stierling was
formerly a resident of Sealy
and edited The News.
TYPEWRITER
BARGAIN
IRS
659
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Mrs. Tidabat
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PhilGfc
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Mayers
of Wallis were visiting at the
Commercial Hotel. Tuesday af-
ternoon. Mrs. Mayers will be
remembered as Miss Peggy
Earley.
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Mrs. Wm. Moseley was
Houston visitor Monday.
Mrs. Ernest Wilpitz and lit-
tle son, of Brookshire were
business visitors here Tuesday.
Mrs. O. P. Preibisch return-
ed Sunday from New Gulf,
where she was the guest of
Chas. Buller and family. Mrs.
Preibisch, accompanied by Mr.
Buller and children, made a
trip to Sulphur, La., for a visit
with Mr. and Mrs. D. I. Carlin.
While away they also visited in
Lake Charles, De Ridder and
Quincy, Lousiana.
Fewer Aches and Pains
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Why continue to endure it? Try Dr. Miles
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Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills are pleasant to
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Ask your druggist or any of the hundreds of
thousands enthusiastic users. Probably you
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I think all Dr. Miles medicines are wonderful, but
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Mrs. Doc Blankenship, Stamford, Texas
I have used your Anti-Pain Pills only a short
time, but they have given me prompt relief. They
did for me in a week more than any other medi-
cine I had taken for a year. Phil Goller,.
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
I am never without Anti-Pain Pills. I think they
are much better than anything else I have ever
used. Sometimes when I am tired and nervous,
and feel like I would go under, I take two Anti-
Pain Pills and in a sort time I feel like a different
person. Mrs. S. Tidabach,
Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania
Your Anti-Pain Pills have been used in my home
with wonderful results. I recommend them.
Maggie Belle Dudley, Vanceboro, N. C.
Your Anti-Pain Pills helped me a great deal. I
have used them for years. I carry them every-
where in my purse and always keep them in
Mrs. A. H. Brandt and little
daughter, Mary Nell, and niece,
Beatrice Motl were business
visitors here Tuesday.
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THE SEALY NEWS
Dr. Minnie M. Smith and
Mrs. Mattie Morrison spent last
week end visiting in Bellville
and San Antonio.
Negos Agopian, proprietor of
the Red and White. store . in
Brookshire was a business visi-
tor here Tuesday afternoon.
Washington, August 22.—
Two things stimulated the an-
xiety ’of Senators and Repre-
sentatives to get through the
session of' Congress and go
home to inspect their political
fences. One of these was the
result of the bye-election in
Rhode Island last week, when
what was supposed to be a safe
Democratic district in a Demo-
cratic state elected a Republi-
can Congressmen on a strictly
New Deal issue. The other was
the public demand by former
President Hoover for the dis-
closure by President Roosevelt
of his intentions as to amend-
ing the Constitution in order to
further centralize power in
Washington. Those two strictly
political events caused even
more of a turmoil than the re-
jection by the Senate Finance
Committee of the tax bill draft-
ed by the House committee,
and the substitution for it of a
bill which conformed very
closely indeed to the La Fol-
lette plan of spreading the in-
come tax farther in the lower
branches than it has ever
been.
That proved to be a flash in
the pan when it became evident
that Administration leaders
would not go along but it has
complicated the tax bill situa-
tion so that no one can guess
what will happen.
The Rhode Island Upset
The Rhode Island election
brought home to Administra-
tion partisans, who have been
somewhat skeptical about the
tales of rebellion on the At-
lantic Coast, the realization
that there might be something
in those stories. Stripped of
other complications, the Rhode
Island campaign was chiefly on
the issue of the cotton process-
ing tax under the A. A. A.
Rightly or wrongly, voters in
the Rhode Island mill towns
blamed the processing tax for
the shutting down of many
cotton mills. To their opposi-
tion to this phase of the New
Deal was added the vote of the
wealthy Newport residents,
who were becoming nervous
over the President’s avowed
I OPERATES ON
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2323238
8 3 3
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Preibisch
and Mrs. W. W. Preibisch went
to San Antonio Wednesday,
Mr. Preibisch going over to
stand examination to become a
licensed funeral director.
addy DID ME
A FAVOR"
days vacation yesterday. Mr.
Nastoupil and family visited
Halelttsville, Galveston and
Houston during the week.
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desire to impose much heavier
taxes on great estates and in-
heritances.
Politicians, being human, al-
ways try to find a scapegoat on
whom to lay the blame for un-
toward happenings. In this in-
stance the fingers of Demo-
cratic spokesmen are pointing
at Secretary Wallace. The inti-
mation is that Mr. Wallace, in
his public utterances, has laid
altogether too much stress on
the benefits to the western
farmers from the processing
tax, and has been too contemp-
tuous of the tariff on imports,
upon which the industrial East
so largely relies for protection.
The incident, however, has
served to strengthen the be-
lief that a combination of West
and South against the East is
the best political strategy for
the Democratic party. Western
farmers are assumed to be as
unanimously for the processing
tax as the Rhode Island voters
were opposed to it.
Mr. Hoover’s Bid
Mr. Hoover’s challenge to the
Administration on the Consti-
tutional issue is regarded here
as a more definite assumption
of leadership of the opposition
than he had previously taken.
It is interpreted by most
Democrats and a great many
Republicans as a definite bid
on Mr. Hoover’s part for the
Republican nomination in 1936.
There is, of course, a natural
desire on the part of Democrat-
ic politicians to force every
possible Republican candidate
into the open. It is much easier
to thorw bricks at a man than
an entire party. But experienc-
ed political observers are point-
ing out that in the past fifty
years, with one or two excep-
tions, there has been no center-
ing upon any particular candi-
date on the part of whichever
party happened to be in op-
position to the existing Admin-
istration, until well along in
the Spring of election year.
That President Roosevelt will
pick up Mr. Hoover’s challenge
on his “swing around the cir-
cle” next month, and declare he
has no desire to tamper with
the Constitution, is the expec-
tation of his intimates.
It is probably nothing but
irresponsible gossip, but one
hears the suggestion advanced
around Washington that Alice
Roosevelt Longworth would
make a good running mate for
whomever the Republicans
nominate for President. Wheth-
er the country is ready for a
woman in the Vice-Presidency
nobody pretends to say, but
those who suggest President
Franklin Roosevelt’s fifth cous-
in point out that her name on
the ticket might swing a lot of
women voters into line.
FOR
The Amendment to the Constitution of the State of
Texas permitting the furnishing of free text books to
every child of scholastic age attending any school within
this State.
A AGAINST
@ The Amendment to the Constitution of the State of
Texas permitting the furnishing of free text books to
every child of scholastic age attending any school within
this State.
"$*
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Bracewell, E. W. The Sealy News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, August 23, 1935, newspaper, August 23, 1935; Sealy, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1590985/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.