Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 18, 1927 Page: 2 of 4
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TUESDAY,
HAGENBECK-WALLACE CIRCUS
seen in
best
in a
own
fraiiee
TWO-HANDED: DOUBLL-MINDED
it not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth.
parts of us the con-
and
TOILET
and
ARTICLES
AFRAIB TO EAT
THE FASCINATING CLERK
such
Giesecke Brothers Co.
Plumbers
Note to Reader
one similar one in
is located at Long
Texa
Ones had
mud.
la the so
batted 1.000
pastes just
While the
4»pe bucket!
Saturday afJ
contents on I
the section, I
Pictures,
were
•outhweit f<
critics, for J
'ng newspaj
Press box J
*poll of th
P*r cent pil
Pass, howd
the score wl
®- He kicl
•here waj tl
would havel
The guess I
U-6, and tl
"'ho had | I
i°rtn show J
I
k>r is mi|< I
on the Big Joy
THE BULWARK Of
THE HOME
Tristram Pharmacy
Fred Heineke, Prop.
zoology will find the
ith-.the Hh-
DR. FRED GR
.J DENTIST
- And
his heart-
I, am reminded of -the 'ini
physician that he had but a few hours to live.
U nd heroic reply.*
We may not achieve our dream, but our* willingness to accept every
of fate is the one gteat evident fact of our immortal life.
We don’t have to be noble. Just simple, honest and sincere. It’s
to let God look after the noble business of our frame, anyway. •
Do your work today and be kind- Leave no hurts behind, as scars
sensitive heart-
By MANUEL;CAMARA
(United Prefs Staff Correspondent)
liartfjes do not permit them to exist
out of their native eleipents', will .be
found in the big double menagerie-
sweater
from
flight
Francis’ Shows to Brenham.
Free parking space on the lots ad-
joining the show grounds have been
Amusements At
The Movies
And Theatre
TEN COLLEGE STARS
MAKE FILM
Over three thousand show fans
were on hand last night at the Open-
ing of -the John Francis Shows- and
Office Phooe471
Residence Phone 485
Sunday Appointment!
Copyright 1926 Georgt Mattnew Adams
It’s your Bank Book. ■
man who deposits
in fair weather need
fear stormy times, »
when he is out of empi
ment or laid up with in
ness. Open an accoun
day at
Giddings & Gidfc
bankers
“Steak or chops, hot cakes or rolls, coffe or milk,” was the choice given
us. One of the party, very alert mentally, but with high blood pressure—
she had always been a good liver—said she would take steak and chops. I
gasped, and when the double meat order came, 1 slipped one dish away from
her. I did not intend that she should commit apoplexy right under my eyes.
She emphatically disclaimed having ordered steak and said that her order
was cake: and chops. But the six of us and the waitress had heard her un-
mistakably say “steak and chops.” ’
Only first cIam work turned out on *n7 I
to our care. Estimates cheerfully furnished
material ••• and -satisfaction jjiaranleed
RipplingRhumos
MW Vfolt Mason
Hedda
others.
Are you one of those unfortunates
who suffer with pains in your mus-
cles and joints, commonly called
rheumatism, making you miserable,
less efficient, interfering with your
working hours, ruining your sleep?
You may have tried many things
without relief. Why not try S.S.S ?
For more than 100 years it has been
giving relief in thousands of cases,
as testified to in unsolicited letters
of gratitude.
“I suffered from rheumatism for
a good many years. At times mv
joints would swell so, I couldn’t
walk. » I tried almost everything.
Went to Hot Springs .... then
----- — ■UU OH
feet from and after its passage
lPPir°v?kVlis the 3rd da7 of
A. A. Hacker, lhj
G. \V.’ Hoffmann, City Setty.
36 viiiv efliitir*-.’ con-
ducted liy„ first ^National
and more- 13000 students'
considered. .
breakfast table in
their orders to the
plete
mats
with
bious or tropical animals whose pecu
In these modern days we are giving up the idea that good and evil spirits
take a hand in our affairs. But we cannot blink the fact that each of us is
two persons under one hat, and that on many an awkward occasion the one
slips something over on the other. We call these two
scious and the subconscious.
The following incident occurred one morning at the
Yosemite Park, when our party of seven were giving
waitress-
ORDINANCE
An Ordinance prohibiting the oper-
ition skating rinks, tent shows, tent
■theatres, carnivals, medicine shows,
"lying jenny, minstrels.- or any other
amusement device that causes un-
usurfl noises, etc., in the residential
section of the city, and declaring the
same to be a public nuistance, pre-
scribing a penalty for violation, and
tire’butyne morals, hdaffh, peace and
general welfare creates an emergency
and public necessity that the rules be
suspended, and that this ordinance
ake effect from and after its pas-
thc winter
thousands of dollars
purchasing rare birds,
and making the
in every detail,
mentioned
posable omission of some amphi
Swink, Okla.—In describing
q T8Ut?OT^d indigestion,
S. T. Strain, of this place, says:
1 have been a user of Black-
Ijoubl.. I raffed
bloafang and a tight feeling’
?eUaCdSf8^n --e
Byrd,
landed
to go to
reach the lights and formal luncheons
of a big city.
jW- helpn5,““k„SS^
fy mb recommend it,
"There were times when I hist did
sysifffs* t° “i !-*
able Sd T1 T* JU,t mi*r-
finally decided to try S.S.S. I took
a course.. In a short time the rheu-
matic pains entirely left me. I am
now in perfect health, and want to
add that I have tried all kinds of
medicines but I think S.S.S. is the
best.” Earl C. Campbell, 115 West
Main Street, Johnson City, Tenn.
S.S.S. is purely vegetable. It is
extracted from the fresh roots of
medicinal plants and herbs and gives
to Nature what she needs in build-
ing you up so that your system
throws off the cause.
S.S.S. is sold at all good drug
stores in two sizes. The larger size
is more economical.
c.W
CITY of Bl^O
. That the op?S
•ng and manage’ "l
theatre, t * °
KODAK FINISHING ia something we all J
know where the beat result, can be obtained. . . j
DECIDE FOR YOURSELF. Service and
MOTTO.
Rye Bread is wholesome, ftourish-
;ng and tasty too- Serve it to the
grQwn folks and the children each
day and you will find health is im-
proving. The best Rye Bread is Attest
made at Wittbecker’s Bakery and sold
by leading grocers.—Ad vl72-6tf
Bloating Spells, from Indigestii
Put an Oklahoma Man in a
Miserable Fix, But He
Found Relief.
I called upon a business man today and he was .too busy with his
affairs to give me five minutes for my message. I had driven nearly 200
miles in order that I might meet him. I didn’t want his business so much
as I wanted his. frame of mind. I left with the feeling that I had called up-
on a man who had a big business and a little mind. 'At first I was disap-
pointed—then I smiled to myself out on the street and s^ d that I would
accept his appraisal of business values and pass' on to the next man The
next man will probably be a small business man with-a big mind.
One fact remains—we cannot have everything that we want, and we
will not want everything that we can' have.
These words carry to us an injunction to modesty, lest we feel over
righteous when we do good. But they also give us a little hint that we
might keep a secret from ourselves I That would mean a double personality—
■one par ;.^j^us that .could JHA yafflething jeross when the other part was off
guard. If it is a good deed, we are likely to say: “My better angel prompted
me to do that-’’ If it is something embarrassing, we cry out: “Wnat ever
made me do that! It was not like me at all.” Paul said: When 1 wou d <lo
good evil is present with me.”
TODAY’S TALK
By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAM2
Author ot “YOU CAN,” “TAKE IT," “UP."
LEARN BARBER1NG. Earn while
earning. Free Catalogue." Mojer Bar-
’er College, 712 Franklin Ave. Hous-
on. Texas.—Adv.lOO-556tp.
AMERICAN LEGION
CARNIVAL IS OPEN arranged for and will be well illumin-
PAD A DIP H7DDV ated American Legion boys tak
MIK A D1u HELIX. ing care of the parking.
IT PAYS TO LOOK
ELITE BARBER I
They play students and- football
players in support of Richard Barthel-
mess, the star. Other pi embers of the
cast include Barbara Kent, Dorothy
Revier, Alberta Vaughn, Jamqs Brad-
bury, Jr., -Eugene Strong,
Hopper, Brooks Benedict and
“The Drop Kick” is a gay college
Story’of today. It was directed by
Millard Webb and produced by Ray
Rockett. I
with often nagging backache,
drowsy headaches and dizzi-
ness. A common warning of
. sluggish kidney action is scanty
or burning secretions. Assist
the kidneys witfi Doan's Pills.
Doan's have been used since
1885. Are recommended the
country over. “Ask yout
neighbor!
RHEUMATISM
May be relieved by rational treatment—
it can not be rubbed away.
Now of course it was not “a little devil,” but her own subconscious that
slipped in the word steak instead of cakes, for she d d like plenty of meat.
But her conscious mind simply did not hear herself say the word. In this
case the right hand would not have approved what the left hand was doing,
so it was kept in the dark.
But we are not likely to be thus caught off guard doing good, unless by
some sudden fit of generosity, or some wave of magnanimity, or some en-
thusiasm of self-denial that would spend itself in a single effort- For divid-
ing ourselves into two opposing personalities—left hand and right hand-
means that there has been a conflict of desires, a fear of disapproval, a need
for hiding one’s questionable move-
Being good arouses no such conflict. Instead, we feel like the child in
Stevenson’s charming verse, “And I am tappy lor I <..MW that I'Ve
been good. ’ So let us with becoming modesty turn our gaze away when our
right hand is about to do good; but at the same time recognize that we are
easily hoodwinked when our left hand has up its sleeve some dark trick of
. »« ' • - - » .,
; ■ ‘ ■' .;•••:»>* ,■ ■ •.
The conscious mind needs to be a little more alert in its job of keeping
in touch with the subconscious, unless the two are in agreement—as they
really should be.
In tomorrow's article we shall show how the subconscious is likely to
bungle the job unless you keep it posted as to what you expect of it.
Tomorrow—Subconscious Meddling.
This organization lived up to its ad-
vance notices and every visitor to the
J big Joy Zone voted it the largest,
cleanest and - most beautiful out-door
exposition that has ever pa d Brbn-
Tiani a visit. Mr. Harrison Hvman, , ,, ‘-ri
‘"z zone be ln fun operation tonight
Post Commander of the Leg on here , - -. .- . . . .
K and a cordial invitation is extended
and Dr. Shell, who- were instrumental, by the American Legion boys to the
in bringing the big show here were people of Brenham and the vicinity
ljnj>tfin£Lan, _<
ization of the magnitude of the John success of the season.
Stimulant Diuretic to-theKianeyi
jptcr- lClilburnCQ..Ml g.Chem. .Buffalo. N.Y^
RUtH elder sarT
FOR PARIS ABOARD
rin. Dwellings. Furniture
Brick Buddings, Frame Buildings,
Mercantile Stocks’- Call phone 268.
Aug. Brockschmidt, Age'nt, Home In-
,dav. ,w nK0a>.a».-Ad,
For Men, Women and Childi
Main Street jc E. STOKES,
When Hagenbeck-Wallace comes
to Brenham on Friday, Oct- 21 one
of the most interesting exhibits in the
menagerie will be Barney, IL This
quadrumana possesses the intelligence
of a four and one-half year old child,'
and performs a series of unusual
stunts and feats.
: - Tha‘ i‘ shall^J^
1 Person. firn» or cor^*11*1
4‘e, show, run, or
medicine show'. tiy'.“x*.
s^^Wual
The lucky ten,. whozwin be
“The Drop Kick,” are: Johti Wesrt-
Q. ^npx\
Yale; Richard Clendenin, O^hfornia}
Thomas Denton and Leland S- Wil-
cox, Michigan; John Stambaugh, Chi-
cago; Edward Karges and ‘Warner
Smoot, Northwesterit; D. C. Cassidy,
Georgia Tech., and John ’ Morris,
Purdue. .
Ten members of tl}e catft « '
Natiqnat’f “The Drop Kick” now at
Simon Theatre, have never appeafed
'in pictures before. / *
Tonight .will see the opening of the
new attraction recently purchased hy1^
Mr- Francis, the Law and Out-law
Show. This' attraction is rated as be-
JHJ’Jl^UXPxah.l£...Si’UUWlt. .’•PPy...R^ut^fiuhL^.Rflsitiv^ly
be heard on all pities relative as..to the e<iucational exhibition "ever
merits and cleanliness of the various carried By an outdopr amusement of-
attract ons. ganization. It cost over fifteen th'ous-
alfti uuliai^ i
and there is. only
operation and that
Beach,. Calif.
•igent’
dwmuts, auyanH^'^-^Wa
denned. r,r .
ions of section-2 hereof ,A »
derstood by th k r ” ’ Wiitii
J-y* violation th^'j’""
We ami tlrat th, -^stpuai
ants, agents and ,3t*n‘Fi
.. erson firm (,r <OrDorPa. XWs d
J«‘ both the taX
d"d Hie owner tuer'L i
hall • be guilty u Pr°sec®
“Ull be fined^n^^
than J en ■ ($1().OO) tuf*8®
Two HutX^V
and each d.Yvs rL,- M
such nuisance herrin g «
tute a ..p’rXf^ '
The City of^reX*’
.firm or corpS “JJ
therein, -.hall have th. -l
mulativc remedy, of aDD^‘ ‘t'1
by injunction or Other’Si
-ceding to prevent the SLJ
•pcration of any nu san« he±
It fined, without regard to the m
ues provided for. violation
, Secdoh S.
The fact that the protection d
public morals, health, peace and.
era! wehare of the citizens rlJ
nuisances herein defined is n<«.
and creates an emergency and nJ
" "Tt takes.’manjf *of
willingness to accept.
t Wt pjam. we <Ireah;~Srt burfrt; and much of-ow planning, drfamiftg and A.........
building seemingly comes to naught. We feel a douch of waste and futility
in our heart, and we muse ip.wonder-
Y®ry far without learning this most valuable ! .
lesson in life—to acc^t*®ff^Arft-aW’
on to the next thing-at Hand- Sonfthow If’SSi leSsotrthxt 'is .the: inheritaaes,
of us all-r-bpm with the birth of the soul itself.
rnJhy ’apnan-has- died with the secret, knowledge of ac^eptaqce in
though ’the worldtjook him for a failure.
of a? greetjjRiblic man who iVas told by his
♦ , ■ r . -
I accept,” wAs nis simple
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
Published r>y the* Brenham Banner Publishing Company, every afternoon
except Sunday, at corner Main and Market. Streets. Brenham/ Texas.
Uwto Hohlt ......................... Sre*uen'
Theo Schirmacher Vice President
Schuerenberg Zstkiappel Secretary-Treasurer
T. C. Blake ”77"2....:: Manager
Ruby Robertson ♦ E"*‘^
By Mail or Carrier, one year ...., -* -
EnterazLjt--B»sjoffice at Brenham. Texas, as second class matter
1^. ----------aw *>>■.»>■ «-^wr w t St ■ Tjiii»a1~-^w-ry
Horta, Azores Island, Oct? ’18.1—
Ruth Elder and George Haldeman
sailed aboard the Portuguese steamer
Lima for Lisbon mid -Paris dt 4 a.'m
ttiday. " -" '
Miss Elder went aboard the steam-
er late last night, intending to sleep
through the ship's’ preparation for It:
departure at dawn.
She was escorted to the ship by a
big crowd, . surrounded by foreign
colonists -who entertained her during
her surprise visit, and was cheered
heartily as she went aboard.
Miss Elder was clad in the flying
suit of knickerbockers and
she wore when she ascended
Roosevelt Field -4ast Week for a
to Paris- - .
To help keep her curls in
Miss Eltfer wore the.cap she borrow-
ed from- the commander of the Dutch
tanker Barcndrecht. She had kept if
as a memento of her rescue at sea-
Horta, ‘Azores Islands, Oct. 18.—
jrjj® g- -her Brr swed-vRri&nfceck Est-
her flying? uniform of knickerbockers
and sweater, jtist out of the wash,
Ruth Elder prepared today for Paris.
aboard the little steamer Lima, the
first ship out of Horta, that was to
sail at dawn today with Miss Elder
at;d George Haldeman. He was her
cO-pilot in their transatlantic flight’
that ended in mid-b’ea, and came so
near ending both their lives.
Miss Elder said last night, as she
and Haldeman probably would fly
from Lisbon to Paris and remain at
the French capital for two weeks. I
That showed that "she has not much |
hope of getting a fast boat to France
or England when the Lima reaches
Funchal, Madeira, next Monday; but
that she expected to stay on the ship
until it reached Lisbon October 26.
It is an ending like that which
marked the flight of Harry Hawker,
pioneer of transocean flyers. Hawker
als<o landed at sea near a small steam-
er that did not even-1 carry wireless-
It took a week for the ship to get to
port and tell the world Hawker
Commander Mackenzie Grieve,
companion, were alive.
Lindbergh, Chamberla:
Brock and Schlee all
Europe and had not f<
BOW or “ny other an'
.causes unusual i10t^« *
. I electric organs or ins’tr^
•. .. .it-it cruwlf.* *
resident al senT’’c<*«
hereby found and £
general and publie nd
pf First same Is hereby prohS“^.
UMWVUt. ,
Famous
iter and
BRENHAM BaNNER-PRESS
Slowing Up?
Waste Poisons in the Blood Mahe
■ One Tired and Inefficient.-
DO you rise lame and stiff?
Drag through the day,
listless and depressed? EvC-
ning find you all worn out?
Haveyou given any thought
to your kidneys?
, . Sluggish kidneys allow waste
.ttyiajp iii the blood
Joe Jimp, who worked for Hoot & Hayes, was famous for his win-
ning ways;.he was polite as he could be, his smile was marvelous to
see; his patience answered every test, and he could spring the quip
and jest; and customers who journeyed there, to buy curl papers for
their hair, seemed anxious that this graceful Joe .hould wait on them
and lake their dough. Joe got the notion in his dome that wheresoever
he might roam he’d carry all thia trade along, in which conclusion he
was wrong. So independent he became, hi. bo«e. wearied of hi.
game, and he wa. fired by Hiram HooU ndtold by Reuben Haye, to
. . —.. ; A though* «id cpstqmers
would cme, and. warmed up by hi. smile, .gain,' blw in tfieir treasured
irn men. And Slick A Slum had vision, fair of crowd, of buyers
milling there, attracted by Joe’s smiling face, his beck, and bows and
princely grace. But all the worth-while, moneyed jay^ .till bought
their good, of Hoot ft Haye., who’d been for long year, in the town,
and had acquired a high renown. Men like to deal with pleawnt clerk,
when they are buying duck, or dirltw. but firit of aU wam
W^.tHey *re bUyin< ha‘* °r h00d‘ 11 ** h*ve confidence
in Hoot, if Haye, enjoy, a high repute, no smiling clerk can U«d them
off to paaronize other toff. And it f.U upon . day Slick „id
to Joseph. “Go your way; you taid you’d bring u. lot. of trade .nd
we have ^en your promitt fad. " And Slum obttrvwl. “Her. >. your
hM; mw. chaw yoorttlff Skedaddle! ScatF
P'ayer , r
term “residt-iltla|
fhy sect’oTi
have their. restieHce «
teet of*sanie;' or »‘ti»
SccU«n i
They are college boys, chosen in a
Students of
big douijJe ziretja^-
turn gcnbeck-Wallace Circus of more than
| unusual/ interest this year, as during
mbtftrrS'*Ybousands and
were spent in
beasts’ and rep-
large zoo poni-
Most all ani-
natural history,
the count
ser rather r
Thedfordi
BLACK
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 18, 1927, newspaper, October 18, 1927; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1179973/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.