The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. [30], No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1932 Page: 4 of 4
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PRFP ARE NOW
„E YOUR BUILDINGS ,N
PAINTS IN ALL COLORS FOR EVERY NEED—GUARANTEED TO BE STANDARD—
Lumber, Grain and UndertakeiV Supplies
J. H. RANDOLPH
^BniinnusBiiiiiiiiiieiiiiHiiiinsiiniiiii
: ~ .-,r
CALIFORNIA S
PRIMARY ELECTION
! • : • - It of ?!.•• Til- 'day |'M
\ •ti"M m t'itliforum
. . Mii'Riilurlv gratifyimr
• • . | I. ■ Ul :,»s of tin lllltioll
« , ,i • g,\. ' tifin ii -••ii.i
t.»ri.iI n min- f «:i" i' miilmilit ■ j
w»llv p ,polar aim'll" tin' rank j
.mil ! i! >' "f tli.it West rn si at*', |
-4-, ij.ai'ii .'.ah that in tlm j
n«11k' of ilia I' ". I’. "Ii.'ir tin*
vnii' was l.iolly .split between
t'lse Ill'll.la!'s, resulting III til.'
ti n In t'w 1! p'llili.'iins of
r I'lia II: I'lllll "'ll" 1' 0"' l'l'”il'''
• • I a small plurality.
'Hi. fo’thriulit amI aggressive
pr rs'ini I it v "f William (i. Mr
.VI.in has not partr.'iilraly .n
- j»'a . ".I Inin to sunn' v . t ions ot
» ho party, yet his v l«r> thus sty If
■f . a 'ii pa i i;ii i ng is exavtly "hat
rite I i.'iii,rat ir ,>,'o,itn/at ion
Hi,,*,Is in a stat*' whit'll is inde-
(» )ii|,uii in i olitimt! ion a in I
I ia hi, to r* spon, I " it Ii . nt lillsi-
,o», to a I. ail r " In, rati catch
tin, popular fanny Tin' fad
»>i,P tlm i-iriii.T m'.'rotary of tlm
t r,-a so tv has a national rvputa-
rion as an administrator anil
• •Mu'titi\'c of I,iirh calibre will no
its.id,t infill..nee many Rep+ddi-
fun i,,' * s m i alifot-tiia next
Viiv mlmr Especially among
>Vi at j,.-not cssive cl.uii.uit of tlm
4’, it I’, which has always t.»I
lowed 11 )ra in #L»htisoti. I hat
onoip it was which engini.....cl
tVv* holt to,. tVoodrow \ViI'■ ti
tfix ten years ago. tifiiuf iiiif
>,1n, it the defeat of t'harlcs I.
Hughes in the most )i•.11\ eon
tested national election ot re-
i-v-fit political history
T)ie a ggVessi ve yoiino Salt
F raneis 'o state senator, Tallant
Ttllibs, seems to hill', "oil the
Republican senatorial noinina-
fton Ills s,ha-ess is (jnalitied
h v tlm fact that I rut.'d States
Senator Samuel Short ridge,
t*'iiu'l'essioan .1", l rail of |,os
Aug. Irs, and tin former Texan,
del, tt I* t I i >l>) Schiller, to-
•refit'* have a vote which far
exceeds his Short t'iillte as
si'ti ilnr has heen eotlsist.'tlTly
•try until recently, when he in
vtvirseil ivsti Inn i.ssioti "f tlm
etfrliteent h amendment. frail
anil Schuler, hotli from the
■vnithern end of the state, are
militant prohibit lolllsts Wheth-
er th'-i* folio" ini' "an he in-
• Iimed lo support a San Fran-
vts, an v, ho is wet, against Me
\iloo, who has always been a
• Irv and who n «■ advocates re
submission. is somethin!' tmtie
s• .11 for see at the present time.
Tlte I a tge majority accorded
.MeAdoo in the Democratic pri-
• nary would indicate that the
I. -s Angeles eandidate for tlm
.■senate "dll fa* e well in his sec-
tion of the state next Nov* m-
b**r I loost, n ('hroniele
" We have the phenomenon
•>F freedom of speech going
hand in han I with a definite
taboo upon action. Fr.-. dotn
of speech stimulates, even as do
virgin books, but it does not
satisfy.’’—James W. Poling
C. C. BAKER, IR.
Dental Surgery
Office over Trent Bank
Open every Tuesday and
Saturday and aa much time on
other days as patronage
requires
OOLDTHWAITX, TEXAS
SHAVE
SHAMPOOt-
HAIRCUTS
By aa
• 4SU
ELECTION RETURNS
Official return*
mittee.
Names of Candidates
mn
iif
is
r
pm
I
E
For County Agent 135 151
Against Co Agent 116 135 1
For Governor.
R S STERLING '.58 214
Miriam Ferguson '137 124
R R. Com 6 Years
C V TERRELL 169 197
LEE SATTKRWHITE 111131
R R Com 4 Years
W GREG HATCHER 137 173
ERNEST THOMPSON 140 145
Assoc Jus Sup. Ct '
WM PIERSON I S2 95
J E HICKMAN 180 223
Con at Large Place 1
PINK PARRISH 129 154
GEO. B. TERRELL 152 167*
Con at Large Place 2
JOE BAILEY. Jr 129 126
CYCLONE DAVIS 153 201
Con.at Large Place 3
STERLING STRONG 139 189
JOE BURKETT 1146 137
Representative
OFO W ROLLINS dl79 195
J R EANF.S 115 140
Com Precinct No 2
J M GEESI.IN
J A HAMILTON
Com. Precinct No 3
R F SWINDLE
I McCURRY
4 41 43 44
17 102 26 27
I t
2 86 5 34
20 80 64 62
32' 29
31! 44
58< 29
81 43
25 28
39 48
30 55
26 16 156
71 23 172
27 0122
84 50 254
47 15196
40 21 143
54 16 188
32 20 135
40 15 131
42 19 200
28 14 130
58 24 205
36 26 143
57 13 207
28 5 132
63 35 226
17 259
26 115
20 12 55
41 28 160
' 1 ,
11 19
38 229
13 852
19 1048
8 - 826
27 1378
I
19 1121
10 775
16 1050
13 798
8 672
20 1176
6 791
23 1071
19 26 13
9 14 19
3 11
70 89
874
1070
819
1125
1214
852
215
297
15 251
36 3
NEWS ODDITIES
In*i'.-tx. it has been estimated,
■ ■.it .4r_,IUI0<UMM) to $411,000,000
worth of apples every year.
In Iteriiu ther. is a “inanu-
■wnpt laundry" where rejection
^cais are . rased and cleaned.
John Sli. ve of Hobart, Aus-
tralia, voted in an election held
on his 104th birthday.
A fo\ terrier that fell Into an
abandoned coal pit at Wrex-
ham. England, swam about '20
hours before if was rescued.
Otic thousand tnosipiitoes,
stored in specially constructed
boxes, recently wet' sent from
Trinidad to England for ma-
larial tests.
Miss Myrtle Evans of Swan-
sea. Wales, climbed a sixty-
foot chimney to rescue a eat
after several men refused to
make the attempt
erected on the orchestra floor
of this (i.000-seat theater.
Residents of a block in Kan-
sas Ctiy, Mo. might have be-
lieved they w e r e seeing
“double" until some one start-
ed counting Five pairs of
twins, Aolu 2*7 to 0 years old.
all of different families, have
heen found in the block.
Miss lAanees Emherson of
Columbia, Mo,, has been grad-
uated at 19 front tlm I'niver-
sitv of Missouri with the degree
of doctor of philosophy. She
received her bachelor of arts
when she was 17 and her master
of aVts when 18.
Three years ago a famih of
four appealed to Jam. s S. Tay-
lor of Willesden, England, “or
a night’s shelter. Now Mr.
Tai l r has appealed to the po-
lice to g< t them out of his
house. He was advised to go
to court.
SAFETY
Sfx jobless ex-hiishands at
Muskegon. Mich., are said to
have tak'n Charles W. Wilks’
advice to pay their alimony
with vegetables. 4
James Alexander of Aber-
deen, Scotland, was sentenced
to prison for making entries of
fictitious births in order to
draw 'milefits f• '>in government
funds.
The baby of Piet flringe was
carried off by a gorilla from
the father’s farm, 100 miles
north of Johannesburg, South
Africa. It has been given up
for lost.
Albert (lemon, 5, of New
Yca-k, lit a match to see if there
was gasoline in his automobile
tank. Thefe was. ' He was
treated at the Morrisania Hos-
pital and sent home.
made recently when • Glasgow ‘Andrew B—ham had the
Suit broker rang 116 I vlflfl----f ind tint whMuw ia
A novel way to earn $1,500
has been accepted hv the Rev.
Harold F. Davidson, rector of
ytiffkey (pronounced Stew-
kev), England, recently con-
victed of immorality in kisaing
voting girls Mr. Davidson
will fast for ten days in a bar-
rel to earn a prize of that
amount offered by a local
showman. If he gains the
money, he declared he will use
it in an appeal to set aside his
conviction.
The report of the death of
Lora Johnson, 17, of Water Val-
ley, Mian., proved, like that of
Mark Twain’a, somewhat exag-
gerated. Laid ont neatly in a
caaket with her relatives group-
ed in a weeping mass about her.
Miss Johnson suddenly sat bolt
upright and annonneed she had
been in heaven but had returned
to earth “to heal the sick and
help mankind. Dr. H. B. Oli-
vier said she waa Buffering
from numerqpi mental dfaor-
•jdeti.* ti* t T_
A]
will be Watched wit I
eat aa favorable ont*
establish Aflat* 1 *
,<r2sxr£ i
Governors of 29 states and
the Commissioners of the Itist-
riet ef Columbia initiated a con-
verted program of automobile
accident prevention on August
1st. wlien simultaneously they
issued proclamations or public
statements to the citizens of
their respective common-
wealths, calling upon them to
pratieipate in a general move-
ment to safeguard life and limb
upon streets and highways.
The -oelamations, messages
anil statements of the Gover-
nors in general commend the
activities of the press and 4he
many clubs, societies and or-
ganizations which are eooptvat-
ing Hint spreading street and
highway safety principles. They
appeal to all citizens, whether
driving or walking, to assume
and exercise a sense of person-
el responsibility in making use
of the nation’s str.ets and high-
ways. Cooperation with pro-
) - ■ officials in local communi-
ties and with state authorities
was i.Vped as an important ele-
ment.
\pproximately 80,000,000 perr
sons were reached by the
proclamations anil statements.
T’o-se comprise more than 65
per cent of the nation’s total
p- pnlation. They include 70
tv r cent of the total of 34,000
draths occurred.
It is onlv by joint action of
every individual and agency
cor "err*.vj that the nation call
successfully combat the ravages
of the misused automobile.
IYoperly handled the motor ear
is a safe, conveniont, expedi-
tions form of transportation.
IT milled improperly, it ia tl*
most destructive weapon <tf
modern life. Greater care op
th ■ part of all peraona can e: ’•
feet a reduction in the loss «}f
lives which reached
34.000 laat year. With aearly n
million persons hi Jared.
Resulta Will be Watched with
gwflt interest aa I_
oeme may estabH*
ae j» aaffty
and make
ORLY f*W OLD COINS I
orras YOU A HOPE
OF LABO* REWARD For]
How valuable arc old coins
A study of the dealers’ lists
will surprise you, first bv th.
smallness of the premium at
tached to most coins of veu
erable age, and second, hv ilv
small number of coins of mod-
ern issue that command any tv.
spectably sized premium at all
The value of any coin. ..f
course, depends not only upon
its vartt*- but upon its physival
condition, says Popular M.
chanies Magazine. A bright
uncirculated coin gets a top-
notch price, and this value !. '■
sens progressively with 1 h.-
wear it undergoes, but if you
do happen to have a rarv coin
of considerable age, don’t . lentt
it — for that automatically
halves its value. As regards
the small value of some coins
of great age, the ilealiVs off. r
for example, less than $1 in
premium for a half-cent coin ,|
in 1704. or the large eopp»r
cent of 1800. And a silver dol-
lar of 1794. or a Urge copper
cent of the same year, coni.
mauds a premium of only a f-u
cents.
The only common coin
comparatively Accent isstiati.e
that is quite valuable is the 1911
“Liberty Head” nickel I t
can exchange it for a fine, . on;
plete outfit of clothes any time
Another common roin of gr t
value is the 1894 “8’’ min m!
ver dime, which is valued a'
sexeral hundred dollars Ti "
1876 “CO” mint twenty .-.-nt
piece can btly you a fair ........ I
hand -Ford ear.
When t
K rimer, j
oM liniH
• ’..I" to |
and not I
her. the I
meant it|
week, I
eating t
raw wk
them
would |
cow ill
I will I
Mulln
Science is still trying t<> find
out when afld where farming
was first attempted in ancient
America.
- INSURANT
See Me For
FIRE, TORNADO,
BONDS or LIFE INSl
R. H. Patti
Insurance Age
Mullin
SfioeMw
. j
fr'-
VERY *f«£j
offff osr |
•MAZint value of d
sc«lr »»i( ,b'
nil yoor cboict 01
-< r.~"; \VTi
PMlIrr !•••“
Lit*. >
rtsSifi
Bar****
j! saw
ojrt )
I m ,
Big:
The
stir at
Lot
th'* ‘»I
(Ar>"' e
nceab
Atigat
The
ley a
..i'ii V f
were
nrv * w
IF H
fiad pn-
home
L#, b«;
, ginned
they 1
Rv
fur
Utop
arfte
fa.rket
f roin
Lgt fed
and
[areraned
L, $3.50
past
R.
Ln led
Thu
Ur conn
d'.n
Lgv Sat-
;|ssl
Fpolling
and
Lor Rnss
S*'p
\
kaanrh*'
.-nt
de-
| to the
[571 last
|Wcdnet-
I of high
anr hr
t line Ah
[finishing
(putting
• has
(Other of |
| fire losses
2.-45." h-'ti j
, on D d1
[to the T ,
I oeetipi.d |
I family. |
gints " **
st ci* r j
jfhe rotin- |
| Utw la*t
lenan! of
| ike sii i r
. «eer is
[hr I Jin*'
mn to !>■
,) pound',
i bond r' *1
llesid "
a milk coif.
IWIS Ilf P"
1 each year
i ready n
i got be fa*
I irewinc.su
LUnr put
•it out as
,al and
,lVW"lf.
j Hildageno,
ikfin v is 11
iDeWnlf.
irk.
r reunion
I of r)un''a
lit the Fat
I and i vl v
si.
f!Ce\i Y >
| visiting I
a. H. Hu
Kwmmnn"
iov makii
. He is
ll’nivcrsi
Iflrnding t
| with
i in sell
t
ay
t
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Patterson, R. H. The Mullin Enterprise. (Mullin, Tex.), Vol. [30], No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1932, newspaper, September 8, 1932; Mullin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1060798/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Jennie Trent Dew Library.