Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 252, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 18, 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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15DAY, JAN. IB, 1W4
Railroads 1 urning to Motorized Streamlined Trains
him
gotten
Dal
Railroad Time Fable
CONSTIPATION
SANTA FF.
TRADE MARK REO
BILL PARKER
SUBSCRIBE TO HANNER-PRESS
is.to be the next coach
NERVES
to be re'
Phillie Manager
By CharlesiMcManusJ
DOROTHY DARNIT
CARTBB’*
NORA 1
LEFT OS
“CRAZY QUILT” OF
MONEY OWNED BY
MAN OV WORK
yes we
• oior
SHES UNGRATEFUL
Y-^Sxz .ML--- £C
HER AS ONE OF (~
i THE FAMILY '
I HOPE IT AINT
THE LANDLORD
AT THE DOOR
Harmony at Stake
In the letter Garner asked
lieved of the responsibility,
Kleberg, Thomason, Patman and
others lost counties in the recent re-
OH YOU’RE THE MAIO c
TOOAY EH! I* NORA
OFF TODAY? C-
Gamer Relieved Of Responsi
bility At Own Request In
Interest) Of Harmony
thats the reason
~C-> SHE LEFTS--
Wayne
offer
Fine Fellow
Jade Chevigny 1s~a~sp1endid fellow.
He'i going to have his hands full in-
stalling the Notre Dame System at
We have more to
iety, keener com-
> us in our work,
Dallas, Tex. Jan. !8. (4*)—A "crazy
quilt of cash," believed u> he the oily
ccillcctionof |M*per. cur
kind”m "tfu^THntcd 11 -
history that reads ah
was placed on display
Because of advertising, luxuries and necessities that once would have
been worth a king’s ransom, are yours at little cost Advertising pits
merchant against merchant, artisan against artisan, manufacturer
against manufacturer, for your benefit. This competition brings but
the best there is in everything for your personal benefit.
^measure of a five cent beer, beer
glasses with pewter tops and gold-
encrusted seals from Fleischmann's,
crockery "Tobey" mugs, china mugs
that reveal German folk picture*
where turned to the light, almost for-
gotten small glass decanter* and oth-
Washington, D. C., January 18. (A*)
Postmaster General Farley today
to give Vice Previ-
DETROIT: Two-year-old David
Cruse now has manyhome* fam
which to select one, if the court M
rules. He was found in the home .of
a negren here, to whom hi* mother
had given him last July. The court
now ha* David. Also many appliea-'
tions for his adoption.
I. ■
PHILADELPHIA: Jimmy
Wilson (above) new manager of the
Philadelphia Nationals, is now on
the. job Shaping up his team for the
1934 race. Wilson, former St. Louis
Cardinal catclicr.savs his .te.*m will
finish higher than many now Suspect.
Advertising is the news of ail the looms, all the furnaces, all the lab-
01 atcries, all the shops, all the stores that are working, planning and
building for you. • _ h •
<-d Mr. Morris and said they were
checking up on the table.
Alter much investigation Mr. Flynn
allowed Mr. Morris to keep the tank
but warned, "that will i>c_,tip;Ja»,t,,ojm
* , ~ \1
ever allowed." At intervals after that
sfaTeF service men visited Mr. Morris
o see that the table top was intact
and that some of the bills had nqt
,r<inove1|r .,-»w»ibly to aid . ..iy.
Snd With ’ *■ *
lost like, fictiu
recent!
X -*«««
OUR time is the greatest the world has ever seen
be happy with. We have better thing*, or/*-**- m
forts for cur choosing,~mure convenfefkes to he!
more things that elevate and entertain.
the new districts have been seated
next January.
The situation .came into the open
las week, when Kleberg addressed
direct to Farley a request for the per-
manent appointment of Mrs, Charles
S. Fowler as postmistress of South
San Antonio, despite the fact Such
recommendation would have been
Garner's resposnibility under the new
Why were prominent coaches
gtructed to report to Austin for
Northbound—
Train No. 16, Due__12:S9 p.tn
Train No. 6 Due__12:09a.m
Southbound—
Train No. 15, Due—2.55 f-nt
Train No. 5, Due.-..5:00 a.m
This is the day of better homes, better clothing, better babies, better
health, better everything. Compare any phase of our life with that
of years a^o and you will find that it is better.
L- ... -.5*- ~ :■ ... dfeJk*' — *****
And what is the instrument that has made, and is making these better
thing* possible? Advertising!
. WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE—
’WITHOUT CALOMEL
3 * And Yon Jump vm orwrar
■** th. Mnmimr R*Hb* M Cn
counterfeiting.
After prohibition went .into'
Mr. Morris went ■with General
was transferred to
Ind., and there
the table out to a ctffe
it had been on display
service men again visit-
the turmoil,. . The. committee, coin-,
itafrves ^'afmatt TKleT
public a
'Another time Mr. Morris got in tin
headline* when he accompanied A,
Leo Stevens, noted, balloonist of his
day, Lc Roy M. Taylor- and Sydney
F. Beckwith, on a "daring balloon as-
Here’s a good
way to quiet
“NERVES”-?
A Dr. Miles’
Effervescent
Nervine Tab-
let, a glass of
water, a pleas-
ant, sparkling
drink.
Nerves relax.
You can rest,
sleep, enjoy life.
At your drug
store. 25c and
$1.00.
jot*
BILIOUSNESS
Eg Sour stomack
gas and headache gf
out of the
government
Morri* was
to come to
"The vice-president, my friend of
long standing, assured me in the be-
ginning that hi* |>art in the proposed
arrangement was th< result of a re-
quest made upon him, rather than his
personal interest or desire to assume
this responsibility, that brought about
th proposal to effect such a transfer".
■pbegn'n rnttwtiiig -wt-the ^iwm«»
time made plenty of gm t for himself
In the way of future contacts with
the Texas delegation, arc in my office ! Ser
at this moment”, the vice president uar^,
wrote Farley. • fives..of ihSti-icts' sliall control in the
“They are very much Worried about counties of "their .present existing dis-
tgicts, and the redistricting is not to
of securing the position;
On Thursday,''January 4, this para^prisiirg Repfescn"
graph appeared in a story I wrote berg' and Thomason, made
concerning the coaching situation at letter to the abandonment,
the University of Texas: f +.
‘^There’s room for only one—-that
one, th"b final choice, appears to be,
Jack Chevigny. The under-current
news service has picked up a confi-
dential dispatch and passed it along
that Chevigny will be the Longhorns
You wouldn’t know about many boons of modern life except through
advertising. That is why you are not taking full advantage of the bet-
ter things today if you consistently overlook the advertisements.
Chevigny’s Appointment
There still is an unsolved mystery
hovering oyer the. University of Texas
•ca ‘ 42: Wkny ...last
Saturday was appointed successor" to
the resigned Clyde Littlefield but this
faded to entirely , jjw-
|whirlwind chat almost annihilated
them.
Today Mr. Morri* still Jias’- many
Sic A the old day*. There »
the thirty-two ounce glass,' once the
party left in their balloon
,‘.'Cleveland," from ..X’UUijdiL-. Mas*-.
ami landed at Amenia, N. Y. During
effect **u' •bght they r.an into a severe
l.lec-.;s,K’w storm, encountered a.large flock
4 ducks ami matched wits with a
ALBANY: Mr*. Marguerite
O’Conaell of Albany, N. Y.- 1* the
now clerk of the New York State
Senate, the first 'Oman ever to be
elected to thia office. The job pay*
*M,000 annually. _
TEXAS FAWNAGE
TURMOIL ENDS AS
PLAN IS DROPPEDarrange,nent
■p'-jtgfitur^.abuut $he
siTuat'lai* buf”anx.IStfs“ fti'at* its position
not be confused as meaning it had
turned against the administration,
caucused Saturday and chose Kleberg,
Patman ami Thomason on ilS' tBlfi-'
m ittee.
’ The belief of the setup yvould be!
lion ( .I. „ ' x. 4lpwed.4ci^ie was hel’TgeneralTyiWe
J*011, >■ ’dent Garner postoffice patrc /^S A, 4 , ,
Why did the board of resents wait1 ■ ■ u- . ■ . • m to tfie toiftrovery it engendered.
*\lly mu *ne noaru ot regents "aiJ uew congressional districts tn lexas,
*o low»-4>»L>re.. anmmnewg- ^Tigl^^ArgKlu^TEe
state's house delegation.
The postmaster general’s action was
announced- by a "grievance commit-
terviews concerning their possibilities'tee” of three appointed to try to still
On June 26, 19lN, Franklin P.
Adams, then «s now. a cofuniuist on"
a New Yodt newspapd-. wrote in. bijk.
column, “We don‘t like to »«em to
give free advertising, but Miles Mor-
ris certainly does know how to build
the best mint julep in this burg.”
In one of his places in New York,
Air. Morris startled epicureaas by ad-
vocating «the serving u^ruart mUakr
rat. a disfi he claimed great things
. Miles M, Morris, an old time res
taurant-man of New York who re-
cently <|utt electrical engineering,
owns the novelty which is a collec-
tion of $20,875.10 in paper cilrrcncy
Jtable top.
i he lO.-ceiits is an old tenceent-”shin-
plaster" that long ago passed out “f
general circulation.
All the bills on the table—and there
are a great many representing every
denomination exeppt $10,01)0—arc cor-
ncr» or portions of-©Id-size currency-
that are to^ small to be redeemed. It
took Mr. Morris five years to collect
them through friendly tellers' in New
| York City banks, and they arc fabri-
• ’Ll'"1 '-verv bill.
. --------
looks like it is in perfect condition.
| Mr. Morris conceived
i making a fable out of pag---. »»pndy
jdter he hact nori—? --"^.»-iJux>wing
raway Small pieces of mutilated bills.
! After receiving assurance from the
ihsi*tfl<L.,hfrai<L4>Qtlhe mw4 for 4ha< purp. - Mr. MorrL
agrciFTo take over patronage coulrof
for personal motives,1 but only because
he had been asked by the adminis-
tration to do so.
• He added objections to. the arrange-
fbie^ty sacuny. 4com Jn
xoregrouna is a new Burlington three car tram which can operate at 40% of the expense of a steam locomotive.
Center, is the train introduced by the Great Western and which can travel at 60 miles an hour Upper left; is th*
.Texas and Pacific train now running daily in Texas. It can attain a speed of 78 MPH. r
.-iCT-- -----r , TVS i ■ .............. -■ .C i' ----------------------
ner for dear old Texas alumni. He districting in Texas. They contended,
knows the wolves will bark for his 'however that by air agreement be-
scalp if he fails. But" Jack has cour- ’tween the delegation and Farley last
age, ability and can””take it. If he June they were to be permitted to
doesn’t go over—if he fails to please ^control postoffice patronage over their
—then the football program at the'old districts until representatives for*f|1at |lag |,ccn made
I’niversity of Texas Can be tossed in-
to the ash can. And let's hope Jack
will use a different system in coach-
ing tlian the board of regents in an-
nouncing a new coa«h.
to a photographer to have a picture
made unaware of th* law that for-
bids such a practice. The photograph-
er not only chased
-tudio but n< title#’
and two hours later
notified by.Wnt. J. Flynn
his office at the custom* house. Flynn
later became chief of the secret serv-
---------——-—
ice and then was personal bodyguard
to President Woodrow Wilson.
might arise between th©. Texas mem-
bers of congress and myself.
“For more' than a decade I have
tried to congeal, and have succeeded
jin having as solid a delegation from
Texas as there is in the union. I am
'anxious for that state of affairs to
-continue, therefore, I want to nsk
'you if you won’t relieve me of the
burden of saying anything about the
the proposal that I pass on qualifi-
cations of * postmasters in the new
districts in Texas and, to be frank
with you, Jim, I am worried about it
myself because of. the friction that
where in Texas".
Delegation’s Action z
Farley's acceptance -of the request
wainlnrctnscd simultaneonsty with the
letter, ....... . "...........• ’
the University of Texas. Jacks knows I
' • j
the coaching ropes. He knows he has '
a tfemenddtfr J^ rfrvrtnphfB“a win-
or personal "jealousy”. ,
Kleberg issued a statement during
the day emphasizing his long friend-
ship with Garner was unshaken.
“My position", he said, "has been
saying based on the-tlesire to see the agree-
harmony within the delegation was ; I'^AJ, car-
stake. ried out. This agreement, signed by
“Congressmen Patman, Kleberg anil eai h member of the Texas- delegation
Thomason, a committee representing in aligns, including the two 'lexas
•gridiron mentor when next season
rolls around”.
It is laughable to think that Che-
yigny was surprised. He knew at the
National Association meeting at Chi-
cago three weeks ago that he was go-
ing to be the next coach. He was
never worried when the board of re-
gents called in other coaches for in-
Ter^ietci."* Jack’s only worry "was that
one or two sports writers who knew
that he had the job clinched would
come out with a story that ' . xdefin-
itely Irari been employed to succeed
Littlefield. When -j wrote that story
on January 4, I knew that Chevigny
was the next coach at the University
of Texas but never definitely said so
because it was not the proper time
be recognized until January -1, 193$.
We ask that ^his agreement by re-
the United States ^e$r«t S*rvic«.de-
partmtut. '* .. *•
spectcd by all drpa< t meats and offi-
After the collection of bills had been
completed in PANJ Mr. Morris -took it
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 252, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 18, 1934, newspaper, January 18, 1934; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1174345/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.