The Giddings News (Giddings, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 6, 1931 Page: 4 of 8
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THE GIDDINGS NEWS
PAGE FOUR
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THE GREAT AMERICAN H0AAE
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Subscription (per year) $1.50
Entered in 'he Post Office at
Second '
C. M, Bishop, Editor and Mgr.
Giddings, Texas, Nov.6,1931
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with teeth in it.* Texas was the
good. What have they given us I first, state to lead in many laws,
who ind'it seems its legislation is
the
rier and evade the law
will not try to regain his f
lently
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Just as I Am
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iness conditions show signs of
improvement. He says fall buy-
ing will do much to stimulate
THE BLAME ’N
THE SPANKING
without telegraph s
pose you lived, in
and a (bath xiiessa
to be a stimulant to business.
Day by day 'there are signs
Here is another discrimination.'
The wot st of it all is the way
the people are suffering for the
want of railroad service because |__
ri the place of these men
re out of jobs because
’NHE ATE HALF
OF IT ’N I GT
KLEIN IS MORE HOPEFUL ’
Julius KTThr assTsTant score- ‘
OH WELL,
THAT CAN
BE FIXED--
TOO GO BACK
‛N EAT THE
OTHER HAlF
OF THE CAKE-.-
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MA WENT H
BAKED A CAKE
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THE GIDDINGS NEWS
Published by
The Giddings News Publ. Co.
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COMMON CARRIERS AND
CONTRACT CARRIERS
I
(Continued from page 1»
are being deprived of their full
rights on the highway '
Citizens are also being de-;
prived of their rights in moving,
i ommodities because the trucks
Lordknowsthat I have lot of f ... _
Yes, many inperfections.
I violate the.Bible Laws,
In several directions.
Q)*
1 a"h
GEE!THERE ARE
THE TWINS OVER
THERE AUD IT LOOKS
TO ME AG THOUGH
THE ARE (AAD
I AT EACH OTHER, )
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-
I ll be content if just a.few,
Unto my faults are blinded,
• And see in me the side chat’s true.
If just a few are minded,
--o—-
FLOCKS AND HERDS
But yet despite these flaws in me,
Despite each sinful fetter,
I pray that some will try to see
in me, the thing -that’# better.
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But I d not ask that ALL would seek
Pofindmzarmorepniciz,
And see not ways in which I'm weak.
And to my faults be thoughtless—
To stand by me for what lam,.
For all I may be masking— .
And see the good, and not the sham
That'e -’1,1 wof be asking.
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of the farms of the county, cot-
wallowing" in fat
in many instances
business. His arguments sound the trucks have so crippled the
reasonable. railroads that they cannot pro- -
Many merchants have com- vide" the good service which
to
,3
: car-' beast will be well cared for.
Fat cattle, fat hogs. large
common carrier is doomed to a droves of turkeys which ap-
hort life, if the prediction of neared to be in prime condition.
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hose points. Why letthe trueks sitting pretty and will enter the
lick out the bright spots and w lot er monhs with a firm grasp
gnore othel service? of the situation ahead, and with
prices.-eed"themto"tPeirycatn Cepmni
and also use the seed for fertil-make them
been so few this year that there
was hardly any < < tton seed bus-
ne M or < lidding Many far
mots say they will keep their
-- ■
V
sey cows
were seen
as a
Truck service which.i trying a determination that man and
o disguise as a
A gi,)
to be J hn ny-e n 4 he-
blazing the way in this law,
also. .
- / H'Lto/ FELLAHS,
F 1 YOU'RE HOT
tax returns
~<
up for the shortage in the corn? which limits their buying power
crop and help fatten hogs as at pre -H nt. because the recent
well as the turkeys, while large advant in the-i stton prices will
stacks of fodder and other ne t help the average farmer of
roughness are-the backbnel of this < unty But sithibe
winter feeding. The sales of lines which prevall on the most
cotton seed by t he farmers have
-% • 2gr UE >
has landed ‘ Al •
jat. Attempts- to
out have landed
tary of commerce, thinks bus- Di-mtr-Hwc—as—wet—ns Paige.
Ex-President Coolidge stayed
that the secret of successful
agriculture lay in the flocks and
herds. If this be true, then the
editor says Lee County bids fair
to ride the storm of depression
with high colors. A short trip
through the country Sunday,
away front the highways and
through the harm lands, con-
vinces him that Lee County is
- o>—.....
Johnny Trrio; Chieago gang
h ad* r before Capone, says he
The many Lee County citizens
Aho have been cut off of rail-
road work is sufficient in itself
e was sent
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plained that the extreme warm they formerly gave. Forwi-
weather has interfered . with stance telegraph statiols at
, . , .. Paige, Lincoln, Lexington and
seasonal buying, and their com- Ledbetter have been closed.
do not operate over all high- ’
ways. For instance, you do not
Just Thinkin
e- hij Charles S. Kinn ison^. |
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HIS VAULT,
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buying, all of which will prove you from some of the 4 ities?
; Wouldn't that be serious?
to convince any reasonable-
. d p. : son u k "" -
are doing more injury than
ipremacy. lb
as they were found to be. He ‘ wan
.yas plea antly Nurprised and j t
plaint is well based. But itisaThere is a vast territory from
fact that people cannot refrain .the pine y woods in Bastrop
—from bu ring forever. Now- that ' n t y ■ t h- mrgh to l xin g
cooler weather has arrived, and 1‘‘ East Yegua whish is
, , , without telegraph sexyice. Sup-
the autumnal season ns advanc- pose you livedi in that section
—ing, there -is- sure tobe more
$ P‛
4F.3se
e-E
-* ‘,0533."
— - AND LET
Hibi TAKE THE
\ BLAME
meet trucks in going from Gid-,
dings to Caldwell. Why? If
Trucks are good for a part of thej
stte, why not good for all parts i
of the state? Don't the Dime
Boxjprople buy and sell goods?
Then, make the trucks serve
of improvemerit. In fact, while
progress may seem slow, view-
— ed from day to day, there—is
progress in many ways, arid
this can be realised as one
looks back over a longer period.
We hear much about getting
back to normal conditions, but
there are few, indeed if any.
persons who know exactly what
normal conditions will be. If
any one has the idea it will be
a time of abnormally high pri-
ces in all lines, he is likely to
be mistaken. That would not
be a normal condition. Busi-
ness, to be healthful, must not
be above normal nor below
normal. Too many people,
when referring to norma! con-
ditions, mean times of high
prices for what they- have to
sell and low- prices for what
they have to buy. This condi-
tion will not exist. Such per-
sons are doomed to disappoint-
ment.
It is a .safe prediction that
when normal conditions, what-
ever they may be, are reached
they will not be satisfactory to
some folks. More than that,it
is extremely doubtful if what
will prove to be normlcy will
be recognized when it arrives.
izer Th> y claim < ttqn set d Is mar 1 ple in other. ,
the best fertilizer yet, and far lions.
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better than t he conmercial X a-
l let y bet ause it Hops not burn
the crops.
- Really, the • litor felt better
after the trip. He thought that
conditions would not be as good
V
.6
FIGHTING AGAIN,
\ ARE YOU ?
trucks have taken the shipping
away from the railroads.
The law does not permit two
railroads to parallel each other.
Then how can a truck line be -
licensed- to operate between
Austin and Houston alongside
the railroad track? Why can’t
we have truck service between
Giddings and La Grange? The
Giddings News makes many
shipments to La Grange each
• ear, and has to use the rail-
roads ca< h time because there
is no truck serviee between
Giddings, Texas, as
class matter.
$
460
S88)
ton is not the only cash crop.
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Failure to make out income
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All these attest the fact that now ‘ . County is living
stock will enter the winter In up to its record as shown in the
good condition, far hi tter than county fairs held last month it
was • xpocte l f in the extend- is unf ttunat that Let County
ed drought the past several farmers had to re eive the low- .
months. Acorns ar. to make • p: ■ • for their <■ ' n
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his editor means anything. Thej large flocks .of poultry, and Jer-
tate says the trucks must be 1
regulated,, and only the V. S.
Supreme Court can now stop
thestatefromenforcingalaw - TURN ABOUT!
3s
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A2mnq6c/ S,
v EOOTGALs A moug) Pw-E-ELL NOT THE FIRS,,
GAME, ISN'T T WILLIE/ / GAME, PEGGY---FLAHERT/,U
07JA WIN q / \ GANG- IsT EDOED US OUT Y
—Dr —i . < ) T06. BOT BOY DD WE BEAT* ,
‘EM TERRIBUL iAT SECOND GAME:J
131012: /
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Bishop, C. M. The Giddings News (Giddings, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 6, 1931, newspaper, November 6, 1931; Giddings, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1597647/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Giddings Public Library and Cultural Center.