Jim Hogg County Enterprise (Hebbronville, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 15, 1935 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
JIM HOGG COUNTY' ENTERPRISE
Thursday, August 15, 1935
Gill
By Ed war
Pickard
’© Wiowtn Ktuipaper Union
Share-the-Wealth Measure
la Passed by the House
TTIOLENTLY attacked from all sides
* and nowhere defended with en-
thusiasm. the President's new share-
tbe-wealth tax bill nevertheless was
put through the house
because of the great
administration major-
ity and also because
the congressmen are
tired out and eager to
go home. Represent-
ative Treadway. Re-
publican, of Massa-
chusetts, made a last
effort against the
measure with a reso-
lution to send It back
to committee, but this
was easily defeated.
As passed by the house, the bill Is
not uulte what the President asked
•an. Barbour
for. Briefly summarized, It Increases
taxes on Individual Incomes over $50,-
000, substitutes a graduated corpor-
ation-income tax for the present flat
levy, puts new taxes on Inheritances
and gifts In addition to those already
borne by estates and gifts, Imposes
new taxes of 5 to 20 per cent on “ex-
cess" profits of corporations.
It Is designed to raise revenue esti-
mated at between $250,000,000 and
$270,000,000. Its warmest friends
couldn't explain how this would do
much In the way of bringing about
what the President calls “wider dis-
tribution of wealth," or In the way of
balancing the budget.
The measure was handed on to the
•enate with dubious prospects. It was
expected the senate finance committee
would study It for about a week, and
In the meanwhile the conservative Re-
publicans and not a few Democrats
were preparing to fight It. Senator
W. W. Barbour of New Jersey, Repub-
lican, fired an opening gun with a
statement In which he said: “Votes,
and votes alone, are the objective of
this half-baked measure."
Declaring the bill “has no relation
to Snaking Income meet outgo, but Is
Intended to accomplish some weird
social objective," Barbour continued:
"What this bill actually attempts Is
to climb upon that hard-ridden steed,
"Share-the-Wealth.” and ride him away
while the demagogues who have
pressed him sorely in the past are look-
ing In the other direction.
“The bill should be laid away until
the next session of congress when the
budget for the ensuing year will be
presented. Then, In the light of care-
fully appropriated federal moneys, we
can determine how much revenue will
be needed to operate.
“Taxes can be levied deliberately as
• true revenue measure. Any other
program Is not good business and Is
not good government"
One change made by the house
•gainst the President’s wishes Involved
corporations’ gifts to charities. Mr.
Roosevelt was firmly against letting
corporations deduct from their taxable
Income any gifts to charity. Just as
firmly the house voted to let them
deduct up to 5 per cent of their In-
comes.
O’Mahoney Has a Scheme to
Revive Objectives of NRA
XTOT to be dismayed by the death
^ of NRA, Senator J. C. O’Ma-
boney of Wyoming thinks the objec-
tives of that contraption, high labor
standards and fair competition, can be
realized, and for that purpose he has
drawn up a measure for the regulation
of all national commerce by licensing
business.
The senator, who Is a lawyer, care-
fully avoided the phrase "interstate
commerce.” He proposed to define
“commerce among the states" In the
language of the lending decisions of
the Supreme court
Japanese Emperor "Insulted"
By an American Caricature
JAPANESE consider their emperor a
sacred personage, and consequently
there was deep resentment In the Island
empire when Vanity Fair, an Ameri-
can magazine, printed
a caricature of Hlro-
hlto. That Issue of
the magazine was
banned In Japan be-
cause the picture was
“considered Insulting
to the Japanese Im-
perial house and If
circulated In Japan
might disturb public
peace." More than
that Ambassador Ill-
rosi Salto Interrupted
his vacation in New
England and hurried to Washington to
prepare a report on the affair and re-
ceive Instructions from Tokyo. There
was uncertainty as to whether he would
make a formal protest or merely take
up the matter directly with the maga-
zine's editors.
One State department spokesman
•aid Japanese officials realized that
tbe American government had no con-
trol over tbe press, but cable dis-
patches said Japanese newspapers crit-
icized their embassy here for alleged
failure to see that "such Indignities''
were not published.
. The dispatches also reported that
Ambassader
Salto
the Japanese home and foreign office
officials characterized the caricature as
"terrible.” It showed the emperor pull-
ing an old-fashioned Jlnrlksha In which
reposed the Nobel peace prize.
Frank Crownlnshield, editor of Van-
ity Fair, said this caricature, like the
many others run In the magazine, was
meant to be merely Jocose.
Huge Sum Is Allotted for
American Business Census
^EARLY $8,000,000—$7,784,000, to
’ be exact—has been allotted from
the work relief funds by President
Roosevelt for a census of American
business. The census bureau asked
and received this after It had been
allotted $293,000 for a survey of retail ,
trade. The business work Is to be-
gin at once, and the canvass will
start on January 2. According to this
official announcement, It will cover “all
business activities with the exception
of agriculture and manufacturing In-
dustries, and will furnish Information
of Importance to the federal govern-
ment, to business and to labor.” The
headquarters will be In Philadelphia.
The aim of the census, the officials
sold, “is to secure basic Information
relating to the number of operating
units, employment, pay rolls, receipts
and other business data for all bust- 1
ness enterprises.”
Necessarily, the census will give
temporary employment to a large num-
ber of canvassers.
Rexford G. Tugwell, head of the re-
settlement administration, asked for j
a second allotment to develop unpro-
ductive land withdrawn from cultiva-
tion. lie wanted $10,381,310 for eight
tracts In seven states, and estimated |
that their development as hunting,
fishing and camping preserves would
provide 6,731 Jobs lasting from 15 to
23 days. These projects are In Illi-
nois, Indiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, ;
New York, Georgia and Connecticut.
League Delays Settlement
of Italo-Ethiopian Quarrel
/"''APT. ANTHONY EDEN, British
VA minister for League of Nations af-
fairs, was exceedingly busy in Geneva
a way to avert war
between Italy and
Ethiopia. He was
aided and abetted by
Premier Laval of ,
France and together
they evolved a plan
for procedure by the
league council which
appeared promising,
until It was communi-
cated to Premier Mus- j
sol ini. Then Baron ;
Alolsl, Italian dele-
gate, announced the {
Eden Laval formula
was “entirely unacceptable.” However,
hope was not abandoned for there was
a chance that modifications could be
made that would satisfy the demands
of the Italians.
The league council finally, In a brief
public session, set aside Ethiopia's de-
mand for immediate action and agreed
to undertake a general examination
of the whole matter a month hence.
It provided for resumption of arbi-
tration of the clash at Ualual, stipu-
lating that the arbitrators should not
attempt to puss on the ownership of
the territory on which the clash oc- I
curred—which Is the root of the mat-
ter.
The arbitrators must finish their
work or abandon It before September
1. The two disputants are to report
the result to the council by Septem-
ber 4.
Emperor Halle Selassie met his
chieftains In council at Addis Ababa
and they told him It might be now too
late to prevent war for their tens of
thousands of fighters were eager for
hostilities to begin and could hardly
be restrained. The emperor, how-
ever, sought to hold the chiefs back.
British Parliament Gives
India a New Government
BEATER freedom for the 350,000,- I
vJ 000 Inhabitants of India under a
new form of government Is provided
by the India bill finally enacted by
the British parliament and approved by
the king. The measure was the bulk-
iest ever passed by parliament, and
its preparation took eight years.
The law sets up an all-India feder-
ated parliament, linked with eleven |
British Indian states with their own
subordinate legislatures and such na-
tive states as decide to come in.- It
separates Burma and Assam from India j
and gives them also a large measure of
self-government.
Pensions of Spanish War
Veterans Are Now Restored
PASSAGE of the bill to restore $46,-
t 000.000 of Spanish war veterans'
pensions was completed when the sen-
ate accepted the house measure, the
only opposing vote being cast by Sen-
ator Hastings of Delaware. This nulli-
fies the various adjustments made by
the President for the purpose of econ-
omy to carry out the party pledge of a
reduction of at least 25 per cent In the
coat of administration of the federal
govern menu
trying to find
Anthony
Edtn
Germany Asks Punishment
of Attackers on the Bremen
/GERMANY’S diplomatic note con
YJ cernlng the Communist attack on
the liner Bremen in the port of New
York took the form of a request that
the offenders be punished but asked
f.«■ no apology. Acting Secretary ot
State William Phillips, In hls reply
handed to the German charge d'Af-
falres. Dr. Rudolf I.eitner, told briefly
the efforts of the New York police to
guurd the vessel and to subdue the
mob, and pointed out that some of
those who took part In the attack
were arrested. The German note said
the Incident constituted an Insult to
Germany.
In hls press conference President
Roosevelt declined to comment on the
affair. Asked about the protest of
Jewish organizations against the Ger-
man government’s religious attitude,
the President Intimated that the ad-
ministration's view was fully expressed
by Mr. Phillips’ reply In which he ex-
pressed sympathy for anyone who was
denied religious liberty.
Goebbels Insists on War
on All “Enemies” of Nazidom
NOTWITHSTANDING warnings by
Dr. HJalmar Schacht and other
sane Germans, some of t|je Nazi lead-
ers Insist on pushing to further ex-
tremes the war on
Jews and Catholics.
For Instance, Paul Jo-
seph Goebbels, minis-
ter of propaganda, in
a speech at Essen an-
nounced drastic ac-
tion against all “en-
emies” of the Nazi
state—Jews, Catholics,
the foreign press and
the Stalheim war vet-
erans. He predicted
these important de-
1. Suppression of the Catholic press
and Intensification of the Nazi cam-
paign against all Catholic opponents
of the third relch.
2. Nationwide dissolution of the
Stahlhelm.
3. An official ban in near future on
marriages between Jews and Aryans.
Goebbels linked closely the foreign
press and the Jews.
“We have suffered the arrogance of
the Jews with the patience of a sheep
during the last two years,” he said.
“That the foreign press take up the
defense of the Jews proves merely
Judah's Internationalism."
Paul Goebbels
velopments:
Death of Frederick Gillette,
Former Speaker of the House
FREDERICK H. GILLETT, who rep-
" resented Massachusetts In the house
for many years, for six years was
speaker, and thereafter served as Unit-
ed States senator, died In Springfield,
Mass., at the age of eighty-three. Able,
dignified and unfailingly courteous, Mr.
Glllett was highly esteemed by hls fel-
low congressmen, whatever their party
affiliation. In hls home town he was
known as a politician who said little
and did much.
Frank H. Hitchcock, publisher of the
Dally Citizen of Tucson, Ariz., suc-
cumbed to pneumonia after several
months of 111 health. Prominent in
Republican party politics all hls ma-
ture life, Mr. Hitchcock managed
Taft's Presidential campaign in 1908
both before and after the convention
and was postmaster general In the
Taft cabinet. For years he was ac-
tively Interested in the progress of
aviation.
Secretary Swanson Tells
Plans for New Naval Bases
J APAN will probably have another
** cause for complaint against the
United States. Secretary of the Navy
Swanson has announced that strongly
fortified naval bases
will be established In
the Pacific ocean up-
on the expiration of
the naval * limitation
treaties on January 1,
1937. He said he con-
sidered the creation of
naval stepping stones
In the Pacific aD
Inevitable result of the
treaties’ expiration. He
revealed that the navy
long has given consid-
eration to Pacific fortification problems
and that Impetus had been given to
the study since Japan's abrogation of
the naval treaties.
The necessity for adequate bases In
the Pacific was demonstrated forcibly
last May during the annual fleet ma-
neuvers off Hawaii and the Aleutian
Islands. According to reports, the
navy high command in a report of the
lessons learned In the exercises strong-
ly recommended an Aleutian Islands
base.
The United States naval bases are
few and far between as against those
of Japan and Great Britain, which He
along the principal courses of English
and Japanese traffic lines.
Sec’y Swanson
Law la Enacted That Injures
Promotion for Many Officers
/CONGRESS has passed and the Pres
ident has signed a bill which as
sures promotion In the near future for
about 6,000 army officers. It acceler-
ates the advancement of commissioned
officers below the grade of colonel and
takes effect September 1.
The act Increases the number of
colonels by 158, the number of lleuten
ant colonels by 364, and the number
of majors by 890. More than 1,000
second lieutenants will be advanced
Immediately to the rank of first lieu-
tenant and 1,709 first lieutenants will
become captains. In all, 4.918 officers
will receive Immediate promotion.
WASHINGTON/S
DIGEST/
y/atu>nu(cJ&ptcA
by WILLIAM BRUCKART
WASHINGTON/D.C.
NATIONAL PRE55 BLDG.
Washington.—One of the oldest and
perhaps the most constant of all com-
plaints about the
Too Much federal government
Red Tape "* Washington has
been the tendency
toward bureaucratic control. Bureau-
cratic control, simmered down, Is red
tape; It is attempted management of
even personnl affairs by a government-
al agency and it is naturally and obvi-
ously repulsive to the averuge Ameri-
can. It was a condition thoroughly to
be criticized In Mr. Hoover's adminis-
tration when there were boards, bu-
reaus, and commissions everywhere.
It is even worse now, I believe, with
all of the New Deal’s alphabetic soup
agencies sca'tered hither and yon In
execution of various New Deal experi-
ments and theories.
All of ttiis constitutes a prelude to
what api>eurs to me to be a most fla-
grant attempt by bureaucrats to man-
age private affairs. I refer to an or-
der Issued the other day by the fed-
eral communications commission under
which it has asserted a Jurisdiction
which I cannot believe congress ever
Intended It should have. Further, the
asserted Jurisdiction which the com-
mission is seeking to exercise goes far
beyond nnythlng which might be made
the basis of complaint solely because
It is bureaucratic. It has reached into
the field of commercial enterprise In
a manner which, without a doubt, will
have the effect of covering invention
and experiment In industry with a de-
structive frost bite—if the commission
Is allowed to get away with it.
The facts involved are these: The
American Telephone and Telegraph
company, which Is spending millions of
dollars annually In scientific research
to Improve our system of communica-
tions such as the telephone, the tele-
graph, *and the radio, lately has per-
fected what Is technically known as
the coaxial cable. This cable is revo-
lutionary. It holds the possibility of
transmission of 240 telephonic conver-
sations simultaneously over a single
pair of wires. It is not commercially
complete in all of its phases. Like ev-
ery organization of sound Judgment,
the A. T. & T. wants to iron out weak-
nesses and imperfections through a pe-
riod of experimental operation.
• • •
Here Is where the federal communi-
cations commission enters the picture.
As a courtesy, pure-
FCC Enter a ;y. the A. T. & T.
Picture submitted Its plan
for experimentation
to the communications agency, saying
as It did so that the commission did
not have Jurisdiction but that in the
development of such a revolutionary
Invention the corporation was advising
the commission of its plans and sug-
gested that If the commission thought
it had Jurisdiction It could issue an
experimental license covering the work.
In all of this It is to be remembered
that the communications commission
has Jurisdiction over rates, regulations,
and practices of the wire, telephone
and radio companies.
It seems that some bright young men
in the communications commission im-
mediately conceived the Idea of hav-
ing that group take Jurisdiction when
legal authorities tell me there is noth-
ing in the law giving them that au-
thority. The story I get around the
commission lobbies Is that the A. T. A
T. would not have objected to having
the commission exercise what it be-
lieved its right to be in granting a
license for the experiment but when
the order emerged from the secret
chamber of the commission, it carried
in it ■ provision which said that the
commission could withdraw its ap-
proval and nullify the permission
granted on 10 days' notice as it saw
fit
Suffice to say that this provision to-
gether with several other technical
phases of the circumstances was
enough to arouse the Ire of the busi-
ness men concerned. They are not only
disgusted. They are downright sore.
It is one of those things that poll-
tlclans, undertrained in science, ap
tempt to do that cause practical peo-
ple to lose faith In their government
• • •
If It were simply a fight between the
A. T. A T. and the commission that is
involved, the situa-
Fight of tlon would hold no
Vital Interest Interest at all for
me as a Washington
writer. But. ns I said above, It goes
much further. 1 am told that some of-
ficials of the A. T. A T. are so dis-
satisfied with the attitude of the com-
mission in this instance that they are
eady. even anxious, to withdraw their
ippllcatlon and decline to proceed
vlth this experiment which ultimately
s going to mean enormous changes In
telephonic and telegraphic contact be-
tween cities located great distances
apart. The A. T. A T. engineers have
been working on this problem some six
or seven years. They proposed to
build 100 miles of cable by connecting
New York and Philadelphia. It had
very little of the commercial in It.
they wanted to try out transmission
of television Images for rebroadenst by
radio. They wanted to perfect further
the transmission of photographs by
sire and they were desirous as well of
determining whether they had dlscov- j
ered all of the potentialities of the new j
invention. All of the expenses—some
six hundred thousand dollars—was to
be paid from surplus funds of the cor- I
poratlon.
It takes no stretch of the lmaglna- i
tlon to realize that If the A. T. A T.
backed away from the program It has ;
laid out and refused to spend more |
money in perfecting its Invention and
declined to attempt to put it into com- !
mercial use for the benefit of the coun-
try as a whole, the country, that is
you and I, would suffer. We would be
denied advantages developed by science
and made available virtually us a nu
tlonal benefit.
I do not know’ what the end will be.
It is not at a stage wherein a forecast
Is possible. But the principle of the
commission's action, whether it be put
forward under Democratic or Republl- ,
can administration, remains exactly the
same. It should not be tolerated and
If the communications commission per-
sists In its efforts to expand its con- I
trol, its usefulness certainly is at an
end. Hitherto, the communications ;
commission has had a very satlsfac- j
tory relationship with business. I have
heard doiens of executives from com-
munications corporations say they were
willing to forgive and generally over-
look Ignorance piled up In the com-
mission by political appointments in
several spots. They wanted to co-
operate but it is the opinion of more
than Just myself among Washington
observers that this sort of thing does
not contribute to good government
• • •
Duck hunters will have only 30 days
for shooting this fall in accordance
with the most rigid
Now, aa to regulations in the
Duck Hunting history of Ameri-
can game hunting.
This is the result ot a determination
by the federal government under an
act of congress to give migratory wild
fowl an opportunity to increase In
numbers. In explaining the govern-
ment's action which was made the sub-
ject of a proclamation by President
Roosevelt, J. N. (Ding) Darling, chief
of the biological survey and an inter-
nationally known cartoonist, declared
that unless the shooting of ducks and
other wild fowl Is restricted It Is only
a question of time until none of them
remain.
It is assumed thnt hunters will be
interested first in the period during j
which they may shoot ducks, geese,
brant, or Jacksnipe. The season will
open In northern states October 21 and
will close November 19. In the south-
ern states the season will run from
November 20 to December 19.
For the information of hunters there
Is set out below the states included In
the northern area where hunting may
be dene between October 21 and No-
vember 19:
Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont,
Massachusetts. Rhode Islnnd, Connecti-
cut, New York, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illi-
nois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Mis-
souri, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Nebraska, Kansas, Montana, Wyoming,
Colorado, Idaho, Utah, Washington,
Oregon, and Nevada.
The southern states listed and In
which hunting may occur from No-
vember to December 19 follows:
New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland,
Virginia, North Carolina, South Caro-
lina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Missis-
sippi, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas,
Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mex-
ico, Arizona, and California.
Regulations Issued by the biological
survey, according to Mr. Darling, are
based on the necessity of having a net
annual Increase of migratory birds left
over at the end of each shooting
season until the present depleted popu-
lation of waterfowl is restored to
something like normal. This year's
rigid restrictions, he explained, follow
a period of approximately thirty-five
years during which the kill of wild
fowl has exceeded the increase from
breeding.
To give an Idea of how thoroughly
the wild fowl are to be protected, the
new regulations prohibit shooting over
what is known as baited water or land
—that is, land or water on which feed
has been scattered as an Inducement
for the birds to stop their flight. An-
other thing ruled out In this effort to
protect the water fowl is the live de-
coy. This has always been the most
effective method for luring wild fowl
from the air. None will be allowed
hereafter.
The regulations restrict shooting to
the hours between 7 a. m. and 4 p. m„
a course taken in order to permit birds
In flight an opportunity to feed with-
out being subjected to pot shots. Auto-
matic and repeating shot guns will
be restricted to a limit of three shells
for their chambers and no shot guns
larger than a No. 10 gauge will be per-
mitted.
Mr. Darling who has gained a repu-
tation as an enthusiast for game con-
servation, relinquished hls work as a
cartoonist in order to carry oat hls
Ideals. It has taken him some months
to work out a program but he feels
bis efforts have been worth while.
• Western Newspaper Union.
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Why So Many Men?
Bitterness in Berlin
Frank H. Hitchcock Dead
The Snake Has Rights
• Why does Mussolini need so many
men for little Abyssinia? If be at-
tacks, he will go
through the air
with bombs, poison
gas or both. He
certainly will not
march hundreds of
thousands of men
through swamps,
and over hot sand.
He now has 925,000
men under arm3,
with 340,000 Fas-
cist militia ready to
be called, plus 200,-
000 others, born two
years before the
big war started.
Artbnr Brisbane js 8„methlng else
present or expected, back of all this
man power? Even if Japan should
come In, that would only mean a more
complicated air war.
Berlin reports Increased bitterness
in the war against the Catholic church,
with official posters, eight feet high,
printed In red, scattered through the
city, attacking alleged Catholic oppo-
sition to Nazi rule.
The posters speak of the "grafting
Center (Catholic) party, working hand
In hand with Bolshevism,” and declare
that -Catholics, “the eternal enemies
of the relch, wish to destroy the unity
of Germany.” The posters are be-
lieved to Indicate new and more bitter
attacks on Catholic organizations.
Many Americans will learn with
sincere regret of the death of Frank H.
Hitchcock, postmaster general In Pres-
ident's Taft's cabinet and at the time
of hls death publisher of the Tucson
Dally Citizen.
Frank Hitchcock, typical. Intelligent
American, will be remembered as
first to appreciate the airplane’s Im-
portance in connection with distribu-
tion of mail. Twenty-four years ago,
when flying was new, he flew, taking
a pouch of mall with him, and advo-
cated Immediate use of planes over
"Impassable stretches of country.”
At Thomasville, N. C., Rev. Campbell
Holmes, “Holy Roller” preacher, al-
lowed a rattlesnake to bite him as he
preached, “Just to show you that God
will take care of me.” There was ex-
citement and admiration In the congre-
gation. Next day hls arm was badly
swollen, he was violently ill, death
threatened, but the “Holy Roller”
preacher refused medical attention.
The reverend gentleman perhaps for-
got thnt the same great Power that
gave him his beautiful faith also gave
the rattlesnake its powerful poison.
Each creature has Its gifts, not safely
Ignored.
Did you buy bonds In the big war
excitement, when little ladies, seated
on elephants, sang patriotic songs and
begged you to give “till It hurt's”?
One hundred and eighty-five million
dollars' worth of government bonds
are mislaid somewhere, perhaps hid-
den In old trunks, in desks, safe-de-
posit boxes, by those now dead. The
government would like to get these
past-due bonds and pay for them.
On the edge of the Sacramento river
In California, a lady, thirty years old,
appeared with a suitcase. While eight
youths looked on, she undressed, then
danced for some time on the edge of
the water, finally plunged in, crying,
“I'm not coming back,” and sank in
midstream. That death-preceding dance
is new In suicide.
One out of every three married cou-
ples in the United States Is childless,
news not complimentary to the child-
less families. Exceptions are cases in
which nature refuses to send children.
You would not value a chain of steel
with every third link broken, or a
chain of heredity with every third link
missing. This "childless family” news
should make this country revise stupid
laws against immigration, shutting out
men and women willing to have chil-
dren, and work for them.
Madame Evelyn, who reads the stars,
the future, the crystal globe and the
lines in your hand on the New Jersey
beach, read the "lines” for a 200-pound
customer, then sighed and said: "1
see only trouble ahead of you."
The client also sighed, and he, says
Madame Evelyn, stood up and said:
“ ‘You are an excellent fortune teller,
and here’s the l>eginning of the trou-
ble,’ and socked me on the Jaw, knock-
ing me out of my chair."
Americans interested in cotton pro-
duction and wondering how long our
export figures will stand up will want
to know that Japanees cotton buyers
have "folded up,” as one Texas cotton
grower put It; have moved out of Tex-
as, apparently giving up all ides of
buying cotton there.
The late Nathan Straus used to say:
“If a German loses one of his relatives,
he feels badly. If he loses money, he
goes to bed sick."
German trade and Industry wUl “go
to bed sick” If It persists In its present
attitude toward those that promota
business and pros)>erlty in every coun-
try where Jews are treated fairly.
C Kins Feature* Syndicate. Inc,
WSV Service.
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Jim Hogg County Enterprise (Hebbronville, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 15, 1935, newspaper, August 15, 1935; Hebbronville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth993965/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .