Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1937 Page: 2 of 8
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PACK 2
Weirs Heripir of Current Events
CROP CONTROL MEASURE
Features of New Bill Prepared for Congress . .
Italy Adheres to Anti-Red Agreement
IV. PidauiA
"LITTLE FLOWER" WINS
Florello La Guardia, who licked
Tammany and was re-elected may-
or of New York, in a striking pose
as he addressed voters.
Farm Measure Ready
VOLUNTARY crop conlroi for
’ wheat, corn, rice and cotton;
and compulsory limitation of tobac-
co production, are provided for in
the new farm measure drafted by
the house committee on agriculture
for action in the extraordinary ses-
sion of congress.
Secretary Wallace's “ever normal
granary" plan is included in the
bill. The measure also provides
for “tariff equalizing taxes" which
would be actually a revival of the
processing taxes which the Supreme
court declared unconstitutional.
These taxes would be applied only
to wheat, cotton and rice—3 cents
a pound on cotton. 20 cents a bushel
on wheat and *4 cent a pound on
rice.
The policy of congress is declared
to be to maintain "so far as prac-
ticable both parity of prices paid to
farmers for all agricultural com-
modities marketed by them for do-
mestic consumption and export and
parity income for farmers market-
ing such commodities.”
Benefit payments would be made
only to producers taking part in the
general program, and would be
based on (1) the use of land, (2)
changes in the use of land, and (3)
the percentage of normal produc
tion going into domestic con-
sumption. Also no benefit payment
In excess of $10,000 would be paid
any one producer
For the protection of consumers
the bill provides that when prices of
the respective commodities exceed
parity by 10 per cent the secretary
at agriculture shall call outstanding
commodity loans, thus releasing
stored commodities and in this way
preventing excessive prices.
Italy Joins Anti-Reds
lkAUSSOLINI has given the dem-
IV1 ocratic governments of Europe
something else to worry about, for
Italy has joined Germany and Japan
in their agreement
to combat commu-
nism, and no one
knows how far this
alliance will go or
just what are its in-
tentions. The three
“charter members”
of the pact—that
status was given
Italy—hope that all
other fascist minded
nations, including
Poland, Portugal,
Hungary and some "onRibbentrop
of the South American republic^,
will adhere to the agreement. /
Political observers saw the pros-
pect of a world divided into three
camps—fascist, communist and
democratic.
Emerging as one of the probable
chief leaders of this united front is
Joachim von Ribbentrop, German
ambassador to Great Britain. Hitler
sent him to Rome to sign the new
pact, and it is expected that the
headquarters of the alliance will be
in Berlin.
Officials in Rome stated the pact
was not directed against any coun-
try and said Russia might have all
the communism it wants so long as
she keeps it at home. But they in-
timated the military forces of the
signatories were ready to back up
the agreement. Vlrginlo Gayda, au-
SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'S WEEK
® Western Newspaper Union.
Uie pact which bothers Great Britain
is that the three allied nations may
make a great clamor for restora-
tion to Germany of her lost col-
onies.
Hitler, Mussolini and Premier Ko-
noye of Japan exchanged felicita-
tions on the signing of the agree-
ment.
Duke May Come In February
V/T AYBE the duke and duchess of
Windsor will come to the Unit-
ed States after all. It was said in
Paris by one of their associates they
had decided tentatively to make the
trip in February, believing that
by that time they could carry out
their plan without criticism.
The sudden cancellation of the
trip was primarily due to the harsh
criticism of organized labor because
it was to be managed by Charles E.
Bedaux, whose speed-up system is
abhorrent to labor. That gentle-
man promptly withdrew from the
tour arrangements and President
Green of tire A. F. of L. thereupon
said American labor would "extend
a sincere and cordial welcome to the
duke and duchess and co-operate in
their proposed investigations."
Should Edward and Wally come
over in February, perhaps Mrs.
Roosevelt will find it possible to
arrange her lecture dates so as to
be present at the luncheon the Pres-
ident will give for the visitors.
Joachim
, the
vV‘w
liti
thoritative commentator, said that
2,000,000 tons of warships and 200,-
000,000 persons are now at the dis-
posal of the anti-communist front.
In Berlin the mouthpiece of the
foreign office asserted the pact has
the backing of 200,000,000 people
“who are not prepared for any po-
cal reasons to allow the primary
necessity for fighting bolshevism to
drop into the background."
There was a belief in European
capitals that there were secret mili-
tary clauses in the agreement, and
this suspicion was intensified by
the fact that German warships
joined Italian warships in target
practice off the Italian naval base
of Gaeta.
One of the possible implications of
Our Navy Grows Rapidly
QECRETARY OF THE NAVY
^ CLAUDE A. SWANSON re-
ported to the President that the navy
is stronger than at any time since
war days and is
moving steadily up
to the full strength
permitted by the
treaties abrogated
by Japan. It will not
go beyond the limi-
tations in those
pacts unless other
nations do so.
Under its big re-
, placement program
~ - the department has
Sec. Swanson un<jer construction
two new battleships and has appro-
priations for 85 other warships.
These include three aircraft car-
riers, one heavy cruiser, nine light
cruisers, fifty-five destroyers and
seventeen submarines.
Five years ago the total num-
ber of under age vessels was 101 of
728,050 tons, with twenty-three ves-
sels of 122,500 tons under construe
tion. Today the navy has 113 ves-
sels of 869,230 tons under age, and
eighty-seven vessels of 335,565 tons
under construction.
Shanghai Falls to Japs
STUBBORN defense of Shanghai
by the Chinese came to an end
when the Japanese troops made
their way across Soochow creek and
occupied the entire city. The de-
fenders retired westward and pre-
pared to block the way of the in-
vader* toward Nanking.
China Won't Negotiate
EN. CHIANG KAI-SHEK, dicta- |
tor of China, issued a formal
© New York Post.—WNU Service.
This Game Called
Football Has Many
Confusing Angles
'T'HIS game called football:
* Notre Dame and Marquette tied
for three consecutive games from
1909 to 1911. In 1912 the Irish won
69 to 0.
Year after year Pittsburgh has
one of the nation’s superior teams.
But it has been seventeen years
since the Panthers have had an un-
defeated team, nineteen years since
they have had an undefeated and un-
tied team, and twenty-seven years
since they have had an undefaated,
untied and unscored upon team.
So you're a football expert, eh?
Then:
1.—Name the coach at Iowa uni-
versity.
2— What Is the “Coffin Corner”?
3— What time out is permitted be-
tween the first and second quarters
of a game, between the third and
fourth quarters, between the second
and third quarters?
4— What college team is nick-
named "The Friars”?
5— Name the “Four Horsemen"
and what they arc doing now.
Sure, you knew them all along,
but here are the answers, anyhow:
1— Irl Tubbs of William Jewell
college.
2— The angle formed by the side
line and the goal line.
3— One minute between the first
and second periods and the third
and fourth periods. Fifteen min-
utes between the halves.
4— Providence college of Provi-
dence, R. I.
5— Elmer Layden, head coach at
Notre Dame; Jim Crowley, head
coach at Fordham; Harry Stuhldre-
her, head coach at Wisconsin; Don
Miller, practicing law.
From a Pennsylvania gentleman
who so often makes this weekly
football piece so easy to write:
"Football is some game! It lasts
but three months, yet symbolizes
college activity for the whole year.
It’s just an amateur sport, yet puts
hundreds of boys through colleges,
supplies employment to thousands
and provides a good living for hun-
dreds of coaches. It supports the
athletic programs for other games,
yet is played by but twenty-five to
fifty boys per school. It builds sta-
diums, but pays no cash to the
participants (theoretically, at least)
"Its 'All-America' teams are
dominated by foreign-sounding
names. It’s the roughest game in
America, but girls love It. It's wit-
nessed by millions each week, yet
only a few hundred really under-
stand it. It reaches its apex
in the picking of ‘All-America’ teams
when every bonest fan knows one
team can’t honor all the best play-
ers.
"Football is some game!—for con-
tradiction.’*
ALE football trainer Frank Wnn>
I die gets n higher salary than cl-
liter Ducky Pond or Greasy Neale,
the head coaches . . . Tennessee’s
football admirers still arc squawk-
ing something awful about the offi-
ciating during that Alabama defeat
. . . Although lie has little time
for baseball now, Jordan Oliver, the
young Staten island giant who plays
so much tackle for Villanova, was
being watched by big league scouts
while still In high school . . . Ralph
Wolfe, Ohio State center and cap-
tain, played 436 minutes out of a
possible 480 last year . . . Ohio
State, by the way, cleaned up a cool
40 G’s on that trip to California
even though losing to U. S. C.
Although six more eminent foot-
ball universities were after him and
his dad was willing, young John Me-
Laughry, who is most of the Brown
team, refused to listen. "I can solve
at least part of your problems, Pop,
and my place is here.” classmates
quote him as having told Coach
Tuss McLaughry . . . During the
five years their teams have clashed
Mylin-coached Lafayette outfit
never has lost to one coached by Pop
Warner.
WHO’S NEWS
THIS WEEK...
By Lemuel F. Parton
ASK ME O
ANOTHER ;
A Quiz With Answers
Offering Information
on Various Subjects
Ills polo friends say the duke of
Windsor is In heller standing with
British bigwigs than the press indi-
cates. Say lie really is making those
trips, including the one to the United
States, for propaganda purposes.
Sort of a hands across the sea ges-
ture from a popular guy In rase our
cousins need help later on, you
know . . . Jockey Willie Obert, who
still Is riding around Rockingham
park, is forty-seven years old and
weighs 105 pounds . . . Retired
Jockey Silvio Coucci is so busy play-
ing golf that he doesn’t even visit
the tracks nowadays . . , Eastern
horsemen are changing their minds
about racing at Santa Anita this
winter. They put the blame on Cali-
fornia's insistence upon displaying
its native son spirit . . . Debaters
of the pari-mutuels vs. books propo-
sition are noting that Jim Butler’s
Laurel, Maryland, pari - mutucl
course is for sale while business
continues brisk at liis bookmakiup
Empire City.
Pro Golfers Relax as
Pro Football Fans
T^EW YORK.—Gen. Sadao Araki,
^ a gentle little man, who
War Lord Is
Partial to
Cloisonne
Gloomy Gil Had Ace
statement opposing direct negotia-
tions with Japan for settlement ot
the Far Eastern conflict.
He reaffirmed China's determina- I Record at NaVV
tion to continue the struggle until '
'justice is re-established in this part
of the world," and expressed opti-
mism concerning the military situa
tion.
Success of the Brussels conference
was endangered by the presence
there of Soviet Russia. Japanese
circles said they believed Japan was
ready to exchange information con-
cerning the conflict in China with
signatories of the nine power treaty
of 1922, but not with nonsignatories
like Russia.
Resident's Eirthday
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT has
I authorized the use of his fifty-fifth
birthday. January 30, for the promo-
tion of the nation-wide fight on in-
fantile paralysis. As in previous
years, the day will be celebrated
in many cities with balls. This time
the funds raised thus will not be
handed over to local agencies but
will all go to the National Founda-
tion for Infantile Paralysis which
was created recently by Mr. Roose-
velt. The President has approved
the appointment of a committee
headed by Keith Morgan of New
York to arrange for the celebra-
tions.
—*—
New Attack on Black
A LBEHT LEVITT made a new ef-
Is. tort to obtain Justice Hugo L.
Black’s removal from the Supreme
court, shortly before the court it-
self had opportunity to decide
whether to hear another test of
Black's eligibility.
Levitt asked President Roosevelt
to start quo warranto proceedings
against Black. This Jin effect would
require Black to shojw by what right
he held the position;
When Gil Dobie was coaching at
Navy, the Middies defeated Ursi-
nus, 12 to 0, in
1918 Next year they
slapped a 121 to 0
■i score on Colby . . .
t Columbia went
| twenty • one years
| without getting a
5 man on the All-
{ American. From the
| lime Richard S.
| Smith was named at
fullback in 1903 un-
til Wally Koppisch
Gil Dobie got the halfback call
in 1924 ... The ball
wasn’t equipped with handles forty
years ago, either. In 1896 Penn’s
great guard, Willy Woodruff, fum-
oled five times within Lafayette’s
10-yard line, and Penn lost, 6 to 4.
There has been considerable mis-
understanding of the Graham plan
by which the president of the Uni-
versity of North Carolina has been
seeking to remove some of the
hypocrisy from college sports. Per-
haps a letter from a member of the
North Carolina faculty best explains
the university head's aims:
'President Graham is anxious to
see to It that scholarships and other
help to athletes shall be granted on
the same terms as those on which
similar favors arc granted to other
students. Under the Graham plan
the student is required to submit a
sworn statement of all monies and
other help received by him together
with the names of the donors. I
might add in passing that since the
application of this plan to our local
athletic situation, there has been no
great falling oil in our athletic
standing."
After a strenuous summer of golf,
Pros Jimmy Thomson and Horton
Smith are seeking
| relaxation by watch-
ing big-time football
| games . . . Ohio
State misses Frank
Cumiskey, the end
now starring for
B r o o k 1 y n’s pro
Dodgers. Against
Michigan, last fall,
he made three con-
secutive tackles to
i&:>~ hold the foe on the
Horton Smith one-yard line. Then.
later, caught a for-
ward pass for the first touchdown
. . . Peter Bradley, Princeton miler
who came so fast last summer, is
running cross country to toughen his
legs. He believes he can do 4:10 on
the boards this winter and that he
may get under 4:06 before June . . .
His friends are hoping Paul Runyan
soon will learn all there is to know
about rhumba-ing and so resume his
proper place as one of the nation's
top pro golfers.
Credit the good old Dodgers with
a big assist in keeping Pie Tray-
nor’s Pittsburgh managerial job for
him. The team's late season spurt
earned Pie another chance. Players
Insist the main reason for the spurt
was the spark plug playing of
Catcher Ray Berres, who was
hauled in from Louisville where
Brooklyn had traded him for Gibby
Brack . . . Keep an eye on Maxie
Farber, the young Ghetto light-
weight who has been coming along
so nicely . . . The boys claim Jesse
James, Hollywood Greek grappler,
came near giving Danno O’Malioney
the ''business” the other night . . .
Murray Brazen of the Dusek offices
is trying to organize a team or
wrestlers to play pro football.
Joe DiMaggio's Ma has become
an ardent baseball fan. Had an in-
terpreter translate the World Series
reports into Italian so that she could
appreciate them properly . . . Quip
by Rogers Hornsby after hearing
Michigan State had defeated the
Missouri eleven, 2 to 0: "They sure
must use the dead bail in that
league, too.” . . . One of the rail-
roads estimates it lost $25,000 worth
of business when the Giants, instead
of the Cubs, won the National league
pennant . . . Bob Feller confides
that his off-season desire is to catch
up on his sleep. "I'm sure tired,”
the famed youngster tells reporters
Best minor league managing
job of the year was done by former
Dodger Jake Flowers who, in his
first try as a pilot, won the Eastern
Shore league pennant for Salisbury.
Harry Balogli, the fight announc-
er, started as a jewelry salesman
and made his announcing debut at
Grupps gym . , . Frank Doc Bag-
ley, the famed handler of boxers,
is doing nicely after an operation
performed on an abscessed left eye
Ralph Chong, the boxer, do-
nates part of each purse to Chinese
war sufferers . . . The Louis-Farr
movies were a worse flop than the
fight.
International leaguers doubt that
Second Baseman Gordon is ready
replace Tony Lazzeri in the
Yankee infield next season. They
whisper that the Yankees really are
whooping it up for the kid in the
h jpe that they can peddle him to
Brooklyn for a fancy price.
re-
cites poetry and
arranges flowers
beautifully and
treasures delicate
cloisonne and
jade, thinks Japan should polish off
Russia, as well as China, while she's
in the mood to branch out. The for-
mer minister of war, on the side-
lines for the last year, is again in
the power line-up, close to Premier
Konbye and a member of his new
advisory council.
He is an ascetic, abstemious in
all things, living on a birdseed diet,
and, since directing the Manchurian
outreach in 1932, has counselled de-
corum and seemly behavior in the
expropriation of China. When he
found it expedient to defy the
League of Nations in 1932, he did it
in a nice way.
He seems to want capitalism with-
out any capitalists. A great many
industrialists were killed in his con-
quest of Manchuria. His peasant
origin accounts for that. The army
Is largely recruited from the peas-
ant classes—including its officers—
and it has a romantic feudal hang-
over which makes it suspect and
dislike industrialists.
Pan-Asia is the general's main
idea, and from many sources there
has come evidence
that it is also the
principal objective
in Japan's drive.
Shrewd observers
of the Far East have told tills writer
that all Japan's major policies are
directed to this end and that cer-
tain Chinese generals, dealing un-
der the table with Japan, also have
this in mind.
"Hodo" and "bushido" are the
general’s two favorite conjure words
—signifying "the way of the emper-
or," and^ "the way of the warrior."
Arranging his flowers, or presid-
ing at the tea ceremonial, he de-
plores war and bloodshed and con-
quest. They are all dreadful and
the world would be so much better
if everyone would behave nicely, I
but, as long as they don't, Japan
has to go all the way through.
The general is angry when he is
called a fascist or militarist. He
follows rigid discipline in his life in
his little cottage on the outskirts of
Tokyo, and wears a plain khaki uni-
form with almost no medals or dec-
orations.
Graduating from the military col-
lege, he wanted to go into the navy,
but was diverted to the army by
the Russo-Japanese war. He likes
to do everything in a nice way.
They say that once, when he had to
drown a batch of kittens, he warmed
the water so they wouldn't experi-
ence a cold shock.
Gen. Arahi’s
Big Idea
Is Pan-Asia
1. How much of the earth's sur-
face is water?
2. What is the average length of
a rural mail route in the United
States?
3. Did Luther Burank have
any of his plants patented?
4. What is the opposite of a de
facto government?
5. What is the total area of the
United States and all of its posses-
sions?
6. In Greek mythology, who had
dominion over the winds?
7. Is shellac a synthetic prep-
aration?
8. Who is able to sing the high-
est notes?
Answers
1. The superficial area of the
earth is li)G,950,000 square miles,
of which 139,440,000 square miles
are water and 57,510,000 are land.
2. The average length is 35
miles. The longest route is Route
No. 1, Brawley, Calif., which is
94.28 miles in length.
3. The scientist received nine
plant patents posthumously.
4. De jure government is one
existing by legal right or interna-
tional agreement. De facto gov-
ernment is a power governing ir-
respective of its legal authority.
5. The land and water area of
the United Stales is 3,738,395
square miles.
6. Aeolus.
7. Shellac is secreted by an in-
sect. While repeated experiments
have been made to make it syn-
thetically, none lias been success-
ful.
8. Miss Erna Sack, coloratura
soprano of the Dresden Opera
company, sings consistently within
the register above high C and is
able to take the C above high C.
INI FEELING
FINE THIS
MORNING
-FREE FROM
THAT THROBBING-
HEADACHE
AND READY FOR
A GOOD DAY’S
WORK.
Four Strands of
String Make Rug
A durable scatter rug in cotton
—quick to do, inexpensive, sturdy,
colorful. It’s made of four strands
worked together forming a stout
"thread.” Made in three colors,
you can have gay rugs for Winter
—rugs that will fit the coloring of
your rooms exactly. Crochet the
All people who suffer occasionally
from headaches ought to know
this way to quick relief.
At the first sign of such pain,
take two Bayer Aspirin tablets
with a half glass of water. Some-
times if the pain is more severe, a
second dose is necessary later, ac-
cording to directions.
If headaches keep coming back
we advise you to see your own
physician. He will look for the
cause in order to correct it.
The price now is only 15^ for
twelve tablets or two fu'l dozen
for 25 cents — virtually, only a
cent apiece.
PIX years ago, the British govern-
ed ment benched Sir Charles Au-
gustus Tegart, after he had been
dealing misery to terrorists in Bcl-
gan for 30 years.
Expert Goes Now they send
to Tame him in again
T.*,kAral.
Arabs, who are messing up not only
Palestine, but certainly delicately
balanced equations of foreign poli-
cy, at a time when Brlttania is
extremely touchy about such dis-
turbances.
Sir Charles is a parson’s son and
he married a parson's daughter. A
quiet man, soft-spoken and delib-
erate, never ferocious, he carried
through one of the toughest police
jobs in the world. He joined the
Indian police force in 1901.
He was as ruthless as an install-
ment collector in running down his
man. Those were years of plots
and conspiracies, and as he rose in
office his function took on broader
aspects of allaying or overcoming
social disturbance and he disclosed
sagacity and skill in this wider
reach to police power. All this
brought him the king's police med-
al in 1911, and he has received many
other decorations and honors.
He was knighted in 1926 and since
1932 has been a member of the coun-
cil of India. He
was educated at
the Portora Royal
school at Enniskil-
len and Trinity
The latter awarded
medallions one at a time, some
plain, some figured, and join them
for this stunning diamond design.
In pattern 5927 you will find com-
plete instructions and charts for
making the medallions shown; an
illustration of them and of the
stitches used; material require-
ments; a photograph of the medal-
lion; color suggestions.
To obtain this pattern, send 15
cents in stamps or coins (coins
preferred) to The Sewing Circle,
Household Arts Dept., 259 W.
Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y.
virtually 1 cent a tablet
Reward of Innocence
Mirth and cheerfulness are but
the due reward of innocence of
life.—Sir T. Moore.
Give some thought
to the Laxative you take
Constipation Is not to be trifled
with. When you need a laxative;
you need a good one.
Black-Draught Is purely vegeta-
ble, reliable. It does not upset the
stomach but nets on the lower bowel,
relieving constipation.
When you need n laxative take
purely vegetable
BLACK-DRAUGHT
A GOOD LAXATIVE
HERE’S BIG BEN
NEW TWO-WAY WINNER IN
SMOKING TOBACCO
UNION MAM
Knighthood
Was Reward
to Tegart
college, Dublin.
him an honorary LL.D. in 1933.
Sending Sir Charles to Palestine
Is taken as an Indication that Britain
is warming up a more aggressive
policy in the Near East, after quite
a spell of stalling and shadow-box-
ing. He is especially skilled in
rooting out conspiracies. The word
from Palestine is that the Arabs
are not altogether self-starters in
the present outbreak of terrorism
and it is indicated that a thorough
job of sleuthing will precede the
necessary renovating and the later
political adjustments. William G.
A. Ormsby-Gore, secretary of state
for the colonies, promises “to take
the most vigorous measures to com-
bat terrorism."
<£) Consolidated News Features.
WNU Service.
2 ounces of choice hurley... and a
valuable coupon in every tin
TNTRODUClNa a pipe tobacco
X that gives you marvelous pre-
miums plus real smoking enjoy-
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mildest, mellowest burleys grown
in the Blue Grass country—
crimp-cut to bum slow and cool
—and kept fresh by an air-tight
Cellophane seal. And—there’s a
Big Ben coupon in every tin, good
for valuable premiums... pipes,
playing cards, watches, knives,
flashlights. Try Big Ben I Look for
the big red tin with the thorough-
bred horse onit.You’ll like the to-
bacco—and the premiums too—
the big c/o u ble value f or every man
who smokes union-made Big Ben I
Charms in 200 B, C.
Syria has yielded Roman beads
from graves and good luck charms,
worn as amulets—a custom from
200 B. C. to 400 A. D.
PREMIUMS
Sir Robert
CO coupon*.
IngeraoU
watch.
75 coupons.
Remington
26 coupons.
Evercady
flashlight.
86 coupon*.
)
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Mrs. J. W. Dismukes and Sons. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1937, newspaper, November 18, 1937; Palacios, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth727097/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palacios Library.