Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 201, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 16, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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well you .
HAVEN'T/
AND IF YOU
KEEP THIS UP.
I'LL BREAK OUV
ENGAGEMENT,
r......
’ THIS BEIN' IN UOVE IS
THEN APPENDEECITUS.
ANYTHING TCHUCK TH'
BUSINESS -• ------ ,
BUT LCANT. r? _
HOLY CATS- J
' I GOT OVER
AHUNOGPD AN'
FIFTY GRANO TIED
UP, HONEY, AN'
THAT'S PLENTY.
I OUGHTA HAVE
SOMETHIN' T'SAi'.
LISTIN HONEY-
YA GOTTA
STAY IN
AN' STUDY,
r ARE YOU Uj
'COMPARING K
ME TDADUMB
PRIZEFIGHTER?
DO YOU THINK
1‘LL TAKE YOUR
ORDERS
,AND I SAID WE'RE ■
GOING PLACES. DON'T ■
WORRY ABOUT MY PART. I
WHEN THE SHOW OPENS, I'LL I
r-mv---:—i panic ,
I x ,«.^x ~T THEM . I
f YA KNOW-IN TRAININ'FER
A FIGHT A GUY STICKS
tnothin' BUT STRICT RULES.
AN' THIS IS LIKE A FIGHT, .
KINOX. WHY JOE NEVER I
GIVES ME A ARGUMENT— I
n I TELL HIM TOO -A
SOMETHIN' AN---- JF L
OH DonT LET
THAT WORRY
\YOU DEAR.
Vi i ll Look I
feRW GOSH-
ikl ee
*c*’*t!L
OU! iblvo •
ttoT. I thought ro
J0JT GiT V* DRErt
MDJL
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER !«, 1B33
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
By DWIG
, __I
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
SCHOOL DAYS
Kdwin Hohlt
their prosperous era.
recent effort of the rail
The most
EDITORIAL
CLOUDS
SILVER LINING TO THE
CLASSIFIED COLUMN 1
FOR RENT
r-'-ic ftrnfctflii-fli./ rct^rg imareI1l *
Ren-
in
Did You Ever Stop To Think
FOR SALE
By EDSON R WAITE, Shawnee, Oklahoma
which will bring *1i0t~ only the best’ reckoned with any d-'j^as a candidate
AUTO TOPS
for State office.
there's never a catch or scratch.
"When recovery 3
ream
and the adver
any other one
LOST
| CAPITOL WHIRLIGIG i
11 — «_JL.. W. BARKY-2 IJ
c: —<JM„. .„■- _ • ~ '^•>4------.... * ■
SUBSCRIBE TO BANNER-PRESS
last the life of
—iMita aarf 4rawara
renewed to
By HAM FISHER
THE HEAD MAN?
JOE PALOOKA
ay Charles McM
S FAST
ATM. FRBMT
■w w ■'
EVERY
SEASON
100 ROOMS AT $8.00
115 ROOMS AT $1.50
text-books in
the Bible we
beautifully ex-
of Cor]
1919. or be-
of running
Governor-
I'D GIVE
WHOLE
i
varying phrase-
intd the common-
nearly every mod-
way,
about
FOR SALE—Share in Brenham Gun
A Rod Club. Phone 203.—2013tp
returns to him, ut -also to the- people
at large
able, after more than nineteen hundred
years, to transform individuals, com-
munities and nations.
the
and
If.
FIVE ROOM H^USE FOR RENT
—Modern conveniences. West Maia.
'eVnhnne 575-W.—171-tf.
FOR,SALE—Cut flowers and floral
dasigns. Phone 198. Schubert, Florist,
206 S- Austin St.—j?37tf.
Henry' C. MacArthur, editor of .The
Stocktor^ (Calif). Independent, says:
ed great trust in the newspaper, and
has evinced its faith in the printed
s
page by popularizing NAR through
the press. It is-up to the advertiser
to maintain this faith through support
your own skin, and snaps back
just as smoothly. That’s because
Hanks is knit and cut two ways
— to the trunk-measure aa well
as the chest t
^5 Buttonholes,
«'</ cuffs and seams
the; first eight
showed an in-
of
•Special'* round-trip and stop-over
ticket arrangements were made in the
hope of enticing weekenders and oth-
ers from competing transportation
13 MT" OoNB IT
Otft VffVaT
Austin, Tex., Nov. IS. (4*)—Texas
rail lines are not waiting for business
to come to them. They are going
after it in a big way.
in 1918 or
was talk
Miller" for
BLUB BIRD BEAUTY
PARLOR
Phon® 70
Austyi, Tex., Nov. 16. (4*)—Lest
you forget: Before he became power-
ful in shaping action in the Texas leg-
islature and identified with other in-
terests, Roy Millfr of Houston and
Corpus Christi yvas regarded a< po-
tential timber for high State office.
by _ marked
as against
British «m-
the United
LOST—Sunday night, a large black
cat. Call Banner-Press—199-3tp.
FOR SALE—Cut flowers and floral
designs. Mrs. Dick Schmid. Phone
’96 —21«tf.
BUY — SELL — TRADE — RENT
GUNS—Hugh Durden. Phone 810-W.
—140-tf-
'filler always has been powerful in
Washington. He had had to spend
mudh of his time there. He was ;
prime mover in the development of
Texas waterways, especially intfa-
coastal canals. He devoted much of
plished, the newspaper
tiser. behind the -paper will have had
more part in it than
thing.”
FOR RENT—Five room house, new-
Iv papered, all modern, conveniences.
Phone 8<H. Arthur Free.—191-tf.
4 Finally, we hive the story of the
most successful life ever lived on this
planet, a life that changed the course
of human thought and that still is
- - . m ,»—■ ---- -----
his time to that work and was success-
ful with it.
Miller is a former newspaper man.
having started as a reporter on the o
Houston Post. He went from there to
Corpus Christi where, in time, he was
elected mayor. He was a popular o
ficial and attracted State-wide notice
While he was mayor
Christi—back
fore — there
“Young Roy
FOR RENT—Modern apartment
«Wf 343—186-tf.
That gossip has been
some extent since Miller’s connection
in Texas with the Roosevelt cam
paign. He was an organizer and en-
thusiastic worker for F. D.’s election.
looms large. But it isn’t much in the
light of the long uphill pull of the
railroads back to normal. They had
been on the down grade so. long that
they still have much ground to cover
before they get anywhere near the
earnings of
all
human .nature. For in
have profound thought
pressed; we have the nature of boys
and girls, of men and women, 'more
accurately charted than in the work of
any modern novelist or playwright.
tion and Christmas’ g L^Tt Ts* a r>o<T~
that evirybody buys and concerning
which almost everybcly is ready to
• *4>ge >n debate .t the drop ofiai
hat. Yet how many read it? Hotv
many know what it really contains?
1. A bird's eye view of the develop-
ment of civilization. The story begins,
with the origin of the earth and for
the first eleven chapters it deals with
the human race as unit. Coming on
down to the time when races were
grouped and nations arose, it traces
the development of a particular peq;
pie, the Hebrews—their beginning as
notnadic shepherds, their conquest
and settlement of a home, and their
emergence into national life; their
wvfrM CAsm*/»a >•
illuatrutS.
Newspaper advertising offers the
ed themselves by their bootstraps
from a long period of steadily declin-
ing net revenues, and are definitely
x>n the upgrade. For
months of 1933, they
crease in net operating revenues
approximately 85 per cent.
To the average citizen this figure
of the greatest dramas, one of the
finest love-stories. Und a collection of
proverb- which in
ology have entered
sense philosophy of
ern nation.
3. The best of
f) Btodk-op tor'‘a
warm Winter
with Wonder-
wear. P. H.
Hanea Knitting
Con Winston-
Salem, N. C.
careei
well be said to be just begin-
should he .choose to lay asid
work and go in for it in-“a bi.
From what they are saying
Roy Miller he may have to be
Miller is an eloquent speaker, a hak
lellow-well-met, and probably ha
fewer enemies than any as active i.
public life as he has been over ths
past two decades. He still is young
and vigorous. His political
might
ning,
other
“THE HOLY -BIBLE’
Here is a book, or more properly a
w.
collection of books, which is beyond
comparison the world’s ' best yUk?
grip the public fancy f"(*
a- few weeks or months and then dis-
appear, hut the Bible stands continu-
ously at the te<p of the list.
American ft esses are turning out
text-tc/oks and literature of every sort
And Biblet, cords of Bibles,, laterally
cords of them. Nearly every, home
has at least one copy. Millions of
STOMACH and COUGH
f“Our son (picture left)
was in a dragged-out condi-
tion, his atotnach bothered
him and he did not seem to
.have any strength. He
1 coughed frequently too,"
? Mid Mrs Rachel Smith of
2119 Howard SL, Spring-
field, Mo “We gave the boy
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery and it built him
right up, he gained strength, and the aggra-
vating cough disappeared." AU dnigglsta.
Write to Dr. Pierce s Clinic, Buffalo. N. Y.
New sise, tablets 50c, liquid $100. Largs
aise. tabs or Uouid. 51.IS "Wall. O«, r-
activities in local manufacturing irv
dustrics producing goe>ds to fit the
requirements of their own countries.
Other reports,- from Geneva, indicate
similar forward movements in busi-
ness conditions among several of the
smaller European States, especially
those to the north.
The. hopeful tone of the letter is
due to the belief that, when prosperity
he Jn any one country e/pecialTy,'blft'
will he world-wide because' <>f
clrtSe interrelationship of trade
finance throughout the nations,
then there is a slow hut rather
eral movement in the direction of the
revival of business, it is the silver
’ining to the stormclouds.
In the United States there is, to be
sure, much uncertainty in respect to
immediate results, but there is also a
more confident feeling, rather preval-
ent .and a sort of assurance that the
next six months will show a distinct
improvement- in conditions.— Dallas
u..- ■
’155^
upward movement, also, is marked
among the British Dominions. In Jap-
an war activities aad inflation have
greatly increased business. In' the
United Stafes there is improvement
but one characterized
changes, up and down,
stable conditions in the
pire. Fluctuations
States are partly due to the uncertain-
ty of .the NR A program and the
changing prices of commodities and
the dollar under the experimentation
of the New Deal. Many parts of La-
tin-America report a pronounced im-
provement. largely due to increased ! News.
A review of business conditions
throughout the world is given in a
Monthly Letter, 'issue'd by the Royal
Bank of Canada Its conefusion is.that
the general trend of business has
turned upward and that possibly the
r
turning point away from world de-
pression has really come.
In Great Britain it notes a rapid
improvement in business,H partly due
BRUCtBARTON
J » ^r/Zez of aiTH LEMASTER EXECUTIVE”
______ President
Vice-President
........ Manager
By Mail or Carrier, one year (out of State $6.00) in State .............. >4.90
Entered at Poatoffice at Brenham, Texas, as second class matter
"NERVES
Here’s a good
way to quiet
“NERVES”— 9 .
A Dr. Miler’
E ff e r v e s c e n £
TJervina Tab-
let, a glass of
water, a pleas-
ant, sparkling “ " y”
drink. Mm B flHfl
Nerves relax.
You can rest,
sleep, enjoy life.
At your drug
store. 25c and
$1.00.
fic was a reduction in passenger rates.
The one-way coach fare *,
e<t from 3.6 cents per mile to two'
cent*. One-way fares, good on all
classes of equipment, *were ,lowtred
from 3.6 to three cents per mile. The
surcharge for sleeper and-parlor cars
50 per Tent of .the regular pullman
charge—was abolished
CAPITOL
CHATTER
COMB your fingers through the
downy fluff inside Hanes Won-
derwear. Raffle it up and
smooth it down. Think of the
shivers and shakes ahead . . .
think of plowing through enow
•H day. Then, imagine HANES
huttUr
and snugging across your chest t
No matter how much you
bend and reach in Hanks,
FOR RENT—Five-room home, all
'■onveniences- 507 West Academy
St,reet. See Henry Eckhardt.—186-tf.
FURNISHED HOME for rent, can
lie made into two apartments- Phone
9017. Mrs. John Niederauer.—196-tf.
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished house,
conveniently located. Call 1005. —
198-6tp,
APARTMENTS
and Solomon; their overthrow
captivity, and •the reestablishment of
therr vuri«^a,. rttk-vjrx wocuh*- - ;
wTfh vey-y limited authority' In the
matter of government, a century
later. Tin- recital brings us finally in-
to- definite touch with the civilizations
of Greece and Rome. Certainly no one
ran claim* to know .hif^pry who has
not read and understood it.
Hdend >r uRdes-JUoga JJamdl®n,.>' successful advertising medium for
and people that "have SomethiAR to sell.
Results,’ of course, are obtained from
other mediums, but long experience
with the newspaper revefffa-the-fttlser-
tiser gets more for his money out oi
the newspaper than from any other
source.
“The federal government has plac-
agencies to the rails.
The cuts Were made voluntarily and
were approved by the Texas railroad
commission. t
Railroads also have taken advan-
tage of two other avenues to improve
their condition. One is increased ad->
vertising of their facilities. The sec-
ond is reduction of operating costs
under a law passed by the legislature
^^Ijdvmg-the lines permission to reduce
j (ranch line service to traffic require-
ments. ®
Experiments also are being conduct-
ed by the roads in new transportation
facilities ..with the double objective of
reducing fc, . _ ..along travef
faster and more comfortable.
AUTO TOPS and Seat Covers—C.
A. Elolf, 701 W. Main, Burton High-
wnv, fj,Plionfc 761-W.—58tf.
MISCELLANEOUS
2 Some of the greatest literature
of all ages. Here, to mention only a
the grnare^t.of nil poems, one
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Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 201, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 16, 1933, newspaper, November 16, 1933; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1180080/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.