Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 258, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 25, 1934 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brenham Weekly Banner and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.
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BANNER-PRESS
The Cream of the Crop
Always the Finest Tobacco
and only the Center Leaves
CHEVROLET POLICY
APPRISES BUYER OF
FULL COST OF CAR
at a
any other make of volume car'
iiix that the ultimate cost was consid-
erably above his first expectation.
‘ Needlcsa to say, this new merchan'
dising policy
through the w hoUrltcarted cp-opcra
tion of our !<MXw dealers
Lucky StriL
Lucky Strike presents the
Metropolitan Opera Company
M., Eastern Stindirri
Time, over Red and Blur Networks of
......N BC, LUCK Y STR I KE will brtwdcaM
the Metropolitan Opera C\xnpany ui New
York in the luinpkte Optra,“Aida.*__
I WISH I WAS TWO
BAP LITTLE FOXES
SO I COULD PLAV
Together rough
NO, WHAT N
DO YOU WISH
DORA9
GEE , MA ’■ Po YOU
KNOW WHAT I
_ WI5H *> ___
ing, than at any show since 1928. Wa
arc coming back and the means by
md'-jWhich it is being accomplished is much
sales less important than the fact itself*.
the mildest leaves. And only center leaves
are used in making Luckiei—so round, so
firm—free from loose ends. That’s why every
Lucky draws easily, burns evenly—and is
always mild and smooth. Then, too—"It’s
toasted”- for thrpa,C< protection—for finer
taste.
a king to judge us like all the na
tions. i | T >^-^e throne Of an eirqfire; if your im* - •j
Angrily Samuel agreed, but nomination is warmed by the rise of the
without a warning. Their king would gaunt, homely, country boy Lincoln
be tyrannical, he told them; they'to the White House, then there ir a
Always the finest tobaccos and only the
center leaves are purchased for Lutky
Strike cigarettes. We don’t buy top leaves—
because those are under-developed. And not
the bottom leaves—because those arc in-
ferior in quality. The. center leaves—for
which farmers are paid higher prices—are
CUE^S WHO I SAvV OM THE
BACK OF ME C/> <-TO‘OAY
actual increase in cost to the purchas-
er itctmlw $40. ___1____
o. b." price, throughout the United
States averages 14 per cent above
1933, the delivered costs actually av-
erage only eight percent higher.
“I am confident”, said Mr. Holler,
“that this plan will enable us to de-
liver automobiles all over the country
S NO PORA.YoO CAN’T GO
OUT ’• DON’T Vol) ASK ME.
AGAIN'-YOU’LL JU5T SIT
ON THAT DOOR-STEP ALL
PAY FOR
'------I Hitting
—ny. DurOMY!
lower price to the purchaser than ing in front of his home. Hereafter | that the new policy la fundamentally and responsive public,
jour salesmen are going to quote him right and that we will have the sup
be port of the public»« -soon a» they rec
"the 'spared the unpleasantness of discover- ognize our aims ”, '
and have
Court, on the said
next term _ thereof
yon- ewiarsement
how you have ex-
| ’’After all” he said, “the man who
'buys an automobile wants to know
how much his car will cost him stand- been quick to concur with our opinion
The nation-wide program of Che v-that figure only f^e will thus
rota dealers to deliver cars at
lowest cost to the customer is based
on giving the buyer an honest value
for every dollar spent, Mr. Holler
At the close figures at the New York autombile
-ataman had show and our own local show* is the
< hanged attitude, of people—visitvrt*
and automobile men both. At the
ar nival
it prevailed. There was mure en-
If you arc thrilled by Napoleon, the
penniless young lieutenant leaping to
throne Of
Mr. Holler voiced enthusiasm over
the prospect* of his company for this
year. “We introduced our 1934 mod-
made possible only els early this month”, he said, "at 1<H)
special exhibits all over the^ountry—
They have separate, complete automobile shows
themselves—to.,a most interested
r • .....• ■ • -w.c
L- . > S, .v. 1 ;:■?■>
communities. ■ - • . . -
“We arc going to take the blinders
off the. order blank”, Mr. Holler .stat-
ed- “We are going to let everybody
know exactly hownmcM. ■».. . —------
cost them delivered in front of their
aWWs. We are goin^ to show exactly
what makes up tbeszHfference between
—-u.
the list, or f. o. b. price, and the final
delivered cost.
Mr. Holler announced the new mer-
"Pc*,'z‘ 7 771
fallowing his return from the
New York Automobile Show, where
final arangements on the new policy
we r^“ perfec ted■
As an instance of what the new pro-
cedure means to car buyers, Mr. Hol-
ler pointed out that while list prices
on the company’s new 1934 models
SAMUEL, SAUL AND DAVID, jbattles was spent in the vain effort pointed out.
Finally there was Samuel, stern, un- to destroy David; and the net result
compromising, incorruptible. He was of Saul's was little. "To-morrow”,
not • particularly lovable character, said the ghost of Samuel, appearing
and his powerful one-man rule does grimly before him, “to-morrow shalt
not seem to have left a place for any-thou and thy sons be with me". Saul
—-yes. At least the people saw marched into battle on the morrow
no one capable of carrying on in his knowing that his fate was sealed; and
place, and reminded him brutally that when the final moment of defeat ar-
jns «wee cb»*rcrsaa»#%:’*,~— . --------■ rtrri hr -ailed upsr. htr r-— J‘—--
Behold, thou art-odd, and thy sons to run him through,
walk not in thy ways; now make us
much Vl.'* ' ' i aa<L4we that
ought to have gone into the nation s
of the first week our
booked 70,000 bona tide order
immediate eteiivery.
“The line response of tin- public iti'shows 1 attended almost
terms of orders will insure the day
and night operation of our plant* lor thusia-m, more of a ‘go-forward feel-
many months to come.
“America is coming back—fast
There is no doubt of it. "More
yative even than attendance and
and likable, but he was, a prcy to TuT
len moods and the slave of jealousy.
He was jealous of Jonathan, his son,
and would have slain him but for the
dete"rmined protest ‘he people- Most
of all was he jealous of David,., whit,
. ..wheo -ihe-arnita«g£JsraeJ ycre ;.
ing in. helpless terror before the giani
leadw-m-the »k-
his shepherd's sling, picked up a
smooth stone from the brook and
T -^^ianted-5ta»q«a<wl5*- 4o ihe «iami^Trnv
head. For this victory, ---
claim that followed it.xSaul never for-
gave him.
Saul wgs not without military gen-
ius. He led his people more than
* A-''"
once to victory. Throughout hi* Ca-
reer fight/Tg was constant with the
Amalekites, the Philistines and other
hostile tribes,
won and sometimes the other. But
Detroit, Michigan, January 25. — A*
new automobile merchandising policy
whereby the purchaser will be appris-
ed of the full cost cf bis automobile
delivered in front of his door, rather
than having to re'v on aihliigunus f-
o. b.” prices, was announced here .as
effective immediately in the entire
Chevrolet organization by William E.
Holler, general sales manager of the
------------------- 1'»Urttf fVj IWR
A campaign is now being launched
among dealers and retail salesmen in
all parts. Of-the United States instruct-
ing them in the new polity and appris-
ing them - of the suggested delivered
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Washington County, Greeting:
YOU ARE HEREBY COM-
MANDED. That you summon, by
making Publication of this Citation
in some newspaper published in the
County of Washington if there be a
but 11
not, then in any newspaper published
" in the 21st judicial district: but if
there‘be no newspaper published in
---------------judicial—district, then in a uews-
paper published in the nearest dis-
trict to said 21st judicial district, for
four weeks previous to the return day
hereof, Agnes Abel, whose residence
» is unknown, to be and appear before
Jhe Hon. District Court, at the next
regular term thereof, to lie holden in
the County of Washington at the
Court House thereof, in Brenham,
Texas, on the 5th day of March, A.
-D. 1934. then and there to answer a
m Mtd .CnUTL onjhe
24th day of Jzmrary.-A^'r>. u,^>*i.
a suit numbered on the docket of
... .___Court No.. . 19902,. Jgbciein. Joe RJ
Abel, plaintiff and Agnes Abel de-
A - - .
TCTlu«nt.
The nature of the plaintiffs demand
being as follows, to-wit:
Suit for divorce, alleging that on or
about January 25, 1917, plaintiff and
—-----------defendant were lawfully married ai >
lived together as husband and wife
until February 4. A. D. 1932, when
by reason of the cruel and harsh
rar---- ana uuprop#'- vomiuo ot
<|efendant toward plaintiff, he was
forced and compelled to permanently
abandon her, ainca which time the*
flh have not lived together as husband
’ knd -wife. That defendant has lived- in
adultery. Plaintiff alleges tha< defend-
ant's action and conduct toward him
generally are, of %pch a nature as to
‘ render their further raqs ’ 4? a<
husband and wife insupportable, the
premises considered.
Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment
for divorce, and' for costs of suit, and
for rach Other ond further relief, sp?
cial and general, in law and equity,
that he may be justly entitled to, etc
HEREIN FAIL NOT. !. v
you before said
first day of the
this writ, with
thereon, showing
ecuted the same.
Given under my hand and seal of
said court, at office in Brenham. Tex
as, this the 24th day of January, A
D 1934.
A. J. WENDT,
• Clerk District Court Washington
would-repept their demand. None^tl^^TTi^'W'yott m ’Diivar™'”
less-he acceded to it, and searching
through the tribes he found a clean-
cut young man named Siul who stood
head and shoulders above all the rest.
Him he selected and anointed as Is-
rael’s first king. ... . _ ...
“God save the king", shouted the
people happily—the first time in his-
tory that the cry had been raised—
and indeed it looked as though their
happiness were justified. They had a
brave and handsome monarch whosi
modesty was as striking as his courage.
What now could stop them from com-
plete .success? But Saul’s career is
one of the great tragedies. He might
his people, but he could not” stand"
prosperity, and so little permai^pnt
imprint did he leave that the writer
of Hebrews, in enumerating-the great
characters of the nation, does not even
mention his name. He was modest
V
It . >;
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 258, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 25, 1934, newspaper, January 25, 1934; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1173671/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.