Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 219, Ed. 1 Monday, December 4, 1933 Page: 2 of 8
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, DEC. 4, 1933
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON. TEXAS
r^GE TWO
Welles Back in Cuba
Palace Starts Tuesday
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day
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FIRST DRINK
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DIAMONDS
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Gifts
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LIKE THESE LAST ALWAYS
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Meridian,
Fitchett,
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H'm' LOOKS LIKE EYEQlTvAtMG TUACT'S FOU
is me amt for. bovs. Gosva'. i D\OM'-r
I TtAes
LOTS O TUROGTU
IT'D FOO
TO vAA'dF.. -
terday.
night.
left lung and lodged
heart.
JEWELRY
STORE
Give something beauti-
ful, something perma-
nent, a diamond ring, a
bracelet, a necklace.
PUT UP A SMALL
DEPOSIT NOW
ARE SURE TO
ADVANCE NEXT
»nre*fr
Vlznry
her
County
at
by
and
to
cot-
for
and
V’OOR.
BODOT
AV4O
DO»WE.
They
HELP so
badly.
YMOUGER
VJHAT
W\R. HUM.
DECISION
WILL HE. '
LETS ALL
OF US
GUESS
MDSEE.
mo \s
CORRECT/
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assault
planned
screen.
, on
I trger jig-saw.
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xt
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up.
“Soft enough, to be sure, for the money lenders, who
comfortably in their easy chairs and rake in their gains
R
A.3. /
/
A
Stewart of Little Rock,
i ela
couple will live. Mr. and
Parker are now at home at
South McKihney street.
It’s Not Always Easy for Santa Claus
■SAY' areWt you FOPfiETTlUG BETW
yiere thinking of? jes' relabvabefl
Tviat please . kjo\m them, come. Om.
YJE l L GO tXTsMhj Avd look
'ROomo the stores.
VIS'LL EURO SOKlP'd
FRENCH WOMEN MAY FIGHT
TAXES TO WIN FRANCHISE
PARIS, (UP)—‘‘No vote, no
taxes," may be the threat of fem-
inists if the Senate remains ob-
durate to their petition for fran-
chise, according to M. Louis Mar-
tin, who frequently has tried to
induce the Senate to grant votes
to women.
Sumner Wellee
Under police and military escort.
Sumner Welles, American ambas-
•sador to Cuba, is pictured nearing
the American embassy in Havana
upon his return to the Cuban cap-
ital after his visit to the United
States for a conference with Pres-
ident Roosevelt. Welles, who is
to be succeeded in the Cuban post
by Jefferson Caffrey, will finish
up his work and return to Wash-
ington as an assistant secretary
of state.
OUT AVT2.ET.EK1T FOR
Ik '
are not paid the bankers
sit
like croupiers in a great gambling house, where everything
is safely fixed in favor of the bank.
“The money lenders are the Shvlocks who want the
last letter of their bonds, and Mr. Roosevelt—a wise young
Judge, a Daniel come to judgment—is trying to save the
country from their clutches.
“You remember Mr. Morgan’s little presents to people
in public life, and how gratefully they were received and
with what promises of services in return.
“Now the bankers are calling their henchmen to ren-
der the promised service, and the henchmen are responding
with loyalty to the banks and disloyalty to the public,
figlit is on to establish the dead dollar, the
the dollar of depression.”
Copyright, 1>M, by
EFERSON ALS
Mr. and Mrs W. M Armatinog
where
the annual con-
51 asonic Lodge
Mr Armstrong Is
the local
■
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bi.
f /
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"'•s
______By LES FORGRAVE
YEAH,BUT MOT FOR3ETH.
GEExNMILLtKEWS.' YJE'NE
LOOKED EX|EQ.‘>KMEQE: AM
MAME.M'T POUMO ATT-MMG •
Y1ELL jes’ mane to go __
HOKAE AKO DO SOWS )
TH1MKIMG
---\*---7 GON‘ TO BE \
' I HARO TO DO 1
The
scarce dollar.
BIG SISTER ___________
LOOK AT THAT, MAM YJE UANE FOOR
DOLLARS SANEO UP'. CAM BOX A>
PRETTY MICE CVARAS’bAUS PRESENT
FOR BETH VRTH TWAT. '———
YJE NMGV4T GET HE<Z.
5OKAE N'Ce BOOKS-
HI iJW
tied without changing hi» voice in-
flection:
■‘ . . . and the resolution reducing
Col. Waite s salary Is hereby ap-
proved."
Not* Mi
When Henry Morgenthau Jr., the
new Treasury boss, talks with a
large group In his office he invari-
ably stands and moves nervously
backward ami forward on a small
area of carpet . . . The same gen-
tleman refuses to look at the oil
portraits of historic ex-Secretaries
that hang along his office wall, be-
cause, he says, he might realize
what an important job he's in and
get flustered . . . The . newspaper
men made official one title when
they datelined their stories out of
Warm Springs, Ga. recently, ' The
Little White House" . . . Miss Lou-
ise Hackmeister, the President's
personal telephone operator, con
sistent I y answered her switchboard
during the recent stay there with:
“Little White House."
‘‘At a time like this,” he says,
“when new taxes are looming in
the offing, this matter is of vital
importance.” If the vote goes
against him, M. Martin maintains
that he will fall hack on an
amendment giving women the
right to vote at municipal instead
of Parliamentary elections.
WHIRLIGIG
(Continued from Page One)
In working hours with an accoin-
panylpg Increase in wages. This is
designed to give the workman a
break with the machine.
Administration economists can't
forget that in the boom year of
1929 the country should have been
on a 34-hour week if it wanted to
Check unemployment.
4» the New Dealers see it the
Ifickor in the Industrial Conference
Boatd chart is that in Oct. 1932,
average work hours were 36 5 as
Compared with 36 2 this year.
Wages in 1932 were 47 cents as
against 54 cents this year.
Washington is more than hope-
ful the country is headed in the
right direction. Look for further
reduction in hours without sacri-
fice in wages if it's humanly possi-
ble.
(Continued from Page One)
on the night the Volstead blight
came upon the land. But along
about 10:30 p. m , I got so busy
tanking up that I forgot about my
noble aspiration. I must have
fainted. All I remember is that my
elbow was stiff the next-day’.’
Decasseres used to make the
round with James Gibbon Huneker,
H. L. Mencken, and several ethers
known for their conviviality. They
frequented all the best-known
spots, and gained great repute as
epicures.
In his resolve to take the first
legal drink Tuesday, Decasseres
sought a rapid way of finding out
the moment prohibition actually
achieves extinction. His arrange-
ments will be elaborate. The flash
announcing that Utah has formally
voted for repeal will speed over a
NEW YORK
By Jaine-H McMullin
Dollar
The rank and tile of the sound
money men thought they were get-
ting somewhere when the R. F. C.
held its gold price steady for five
days in a row. The inside leaders
didn't kid themselves.
These leaders attributed Un-
truce solely to the government’s
wish to let the Sprague and Ache-
son dust-clouds settle before giv-
ing the dollar another downhill
shove. Most of them feel at heart
they are licked and count on a fur-
ther gradual depreciation of the
dollar at least to 55 cents and pos-
sibly to 50 then domestic revalu-
ation along the lines set forth re-
cently in this column. The scale-
down will probably be accelerated
between December 15th and Janu-
ary 1st after the mld-month financ-
ing is out of tile way.
The sound money campaign will
continue as a matter of "public ed-
ucation" retaining the ultimate
objective of Wall Street's return to
power but It's a matter of going
through Hie motions so far as im-
mediate results are concerned.
I tllltles
National Power and Light's de-
cision to continue functioning In
Knoxville in the teeth of prospec-
tive municipal competition has
more to it than meets the eye.
'I lie private utility will operate
at a loss and acknowledges it In
advance. But they'll meet the pub-
lic p.ant's rates and will concen-
trate on trying to prove tiiat they
< an go- more efficient service. It
will lie a rear guard notion but an
extremely Important one for the
future of tile private utilities They
simply cannot afford to lose by de-
lator
| Local untility men whisper of a
devious legal proceeding which has
long been planned but never l- ied
National Power's earnings will of
course be cut by municipal compe-
tition and some lawyers think there
will be grounds for suit on the fa-
mous "deprivation of property
without due process of law’’ clause
that has been such a help to cor-
I porntions Unfair competition be
I'.'iiso of the absence of taxes would
I e stressed.
yell when the smoke of the mone-
tary battle clears. Impartial ob-
servers predict the result will be
modification of certain codes —
but in no case the abandonment of
the principle.
Organized labor is well aware
that the storm is brewing and
will be the government’s staunch-
est ally. The Federation has no
intention of yielding an inch of
tlie ground it has captured. La-
bor's weight is expected to be de-
cisive.
J
of us
m'nd.
“Those here and abroad who know about finance de-
clare that Mr. Roosevelt is on the right track.”
Hearst asserted the bankers and the money-lending
classes like dear dollars for four reasons:
“First, because they have them.
“Second, because dear dollars buy more for them.
“Third, because when loans are paid the bankers get
the dear dollars of depression in place of the cheap dollars
they loaned in times of prosperity.
“Fourth, because if the loans
get the property.
“Pretty soft for the bankers, say you.
“Yes, say I, but not so soft for the enterprising classes
who borrow to build up industry and to employ labor and
to increase the productive wealth of the Nation.
"Not so soft for those valuable, creative classes, when
in times of depression they have to pay twice the value of
what they borrowed or else lose the properties they have
built
on NR A is
behind the
Dr. Spra-
>t will be pieces
Energetic
being nuvle to lino up
HOW WOMEN
CAN WIN MEN
AND MEN WIN
The Favor of Other Men
Unless two pinta of bile juice How daily
from your liver into your bowels, your
food decays in your bowels. This poisons
your whole body. Movements get hard and
constipated. You get yellow tongue, yel-
low akin, pimples, dull eyes, bad breath,
bad taste, gas, dlszlness. headache. You
have become an ugly-looking, foul-smell-
ing, «our-thinkln|r person. You have lost
your personal charm. Everybody wants
to run ftpm
But don’t take salts^mineral waters,
oils, laxative pills, laxative candies or
chewing gums and expect them to get rid
of this poison that destroys your personal
charm. They can t do it, for thev only
move out the tail end of your bowels and
that doesn’t take away enough of the de-
cayed poison. Cosmetics won t help at all.
Only a free flow of your bile juice w.H
stop this decay poison in your bowels. The
one mild vegetable medicine which starts
a free flow of your bile Juice is Carter’H
Little Livwr Pills. No calomel (mercury)
in Carter a. Only fine, mild vegetable
extracts. If you would bring back your
personal charm to win mea, start taking
Carter's Little Liver Pills according to
directions today. 25^ at drug stores.
Refuse ’’something just as good”, for It
may gripe, Iooms teeth or scald >RA,
reetuno. Aik for Carter’s Little
Liver J’ilii by narne gnd get what
you ask for. (ft 1$88, C.M.Co.
— ----——o--------
Read News Want Ads and save.
MOTORCYCLE COP IS
KILLED IN ACCIDENT
AUSTIN, Dec. 4 (UP) — James
R. Cummings, 31, city motor po-
lice ofifeer, was killed here early
today in a collisipn with an auto-
mobile as he was answering an
emergency call. The accident oc-
curred at a street intersection a
few blocks from city hospital but
Cummings died before he could
be taken there. Ono side of his
body was badly crushed.
o---------
Election Colt Mayor $15
WESTFIELD, Mass, (UP)
cost only $15 for Mayor Raymond
H. Cowing to win re-nominnlion
according to his expense
filed with the city clerk.
A vigorous
now being 1
.-ound money
gue’s attacks
of n I
effo .8
small businesses for a tremendous
special wire into the Manhattan
bar-room where the epoch-making
highball is to be taken.
The wire will be near the bar,
I immediately next to Decasseres,
' and will lead directly into the New
York offices of tlie United Press.
When tlie "flash” comes eastward
from Utah that it is legal to assail
the stomach with grog, it will be
.clayed in split seconds to the bar.
The author of “Sinoza’’ will or-
der his drink, snatch up the glass
and gulp. A cheer, no doubt, will
go up, and the news will flash back
along the same wire that Decas-
seres lays claim to taking the first
legal drink
To keep the record straight, a
stop-watch will be held on Decas-
seres, and a detailed report will be
furnished on how the first drink
was consumed.
"After it is all over,” Decasseres
said today. ‘I shall return to my
i home and my literary work, ready
' to die when satan calls. I shall
have filled my Immortal soul with
ineffeable joy. I might add that
between now and Tuesday after-
noon, I am on a strict diet, for I
have cherished this ambition for
some years, I kneel tonight in
solemn prayer, hopeful that the
wire brings me the Utah bulletin
in time, and that my hand does not
fall me.”
Hag wns rehoisted it had become
tlie Soviet emblem. The camp
was immediately dissolved.
Boycott
Mercantile sources say that
some of the large stores are so
determined to boycott German im-
ports that they are giving long-
time advance orders to guarantee
American manufacture:I the cost
of importing special machinery to
duplicate German goods. British
manufacturers too arc hopeful
of picking up some of this wind-
fall of trade.
Sidelight*
American Rolling Mills turned
over its radio time to l.itvmoff
on his farewell appearance . . .
They could use some Russian bus-
iness .... Tlie Passamaquoduy
power development is likely to be
announced soon . . . Dexter Looper
finally got his hearing and it. went
over well ... Wall .Street nomi-
nates Will Rogers for back-pedal
ling champion of the unnerse
because of his abrupt reversal or
money matters.
(Copyright McClure
Syndicate)
LETTERS1 ’
i to santa claus i
The Daily News' annual “Letters
I to Santa ClauB” feature begins to-
The first missive was receiv-
ed this morning and other* are ex-
pected to start pouring
Christmas Day approaches.
'1 he letters may be mailed
brought to the News office. They
must be written by children—none
w 111 be printed If written by grown-
ups. The letter received today was
not signed, no doubt by mistake,
and children are asked to remem-
ber to sign their names.
Following is the request of one
Henderson child for thia Christ-
mas:
Ruby Gibson I* Bride
Of Mack Parker
Miss Ruby Gibson, daughter ot
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Gibson, „ was
united in marriage yesterday to
Mack Parker of Mexm. 1'he cere-
mony was performed at the home
of the bride’s sister, Mrs. John
Fitchett, 205 North Mar hall.
Rev. R. E. Hooker, pastor of the
(First Presbyterian Church,
dated.
The wedding was attended
a small group of
close friends of the couple.
Mrs. Parker has for the past
year been a nurse at the Hender-
son Hospital.
training at the Angelina
Hospital in Lufkin and at the
Jefferson Davis Hospital, Houston
where she finished.
Mr. Parker is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Parker ot Lufkin,
is employed by the Texas Pipe-
line Company in Mexia, where the
Mr. and Mrs.
307
U.M W.
Steel—and some coal—-execu-
tives are secretly gloating at the
defeat suffered by the United
Mine Workers in tlie selection of
representatives by the miners of
the H. C. Frick Coke Company.
The U.M.W. was so confident of
victory that it did little campaign-
ing. The management was not
so slow and had something very
much on the q.t—to do with the
result.
Society
Dougl«*-Y*te* Wedding
la Announced
Announcement was made yester-
day of the marriage of Miss Mil
dred Yates and Lester Dougl is
last Nir. ember 7 in ( arthage. The
ceremony was performed at the
Methodi st parsonage by Rev. ('.
L. Williams.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. W P. Yale-, she was
graduated from Henderson High
School in 1932.
Mr. Douglas, me .-on of Mr. and
Mrs. H. I,. Douglas, of Hou .ton,
but formerly of tins city, also
finished Henderson High last year.
He is employed in an abstract
company at Conroe.
The couple will
home in Houston.
I.
4
What could be nicer? Than beautiful June Knight singing, dancing
delightfully in Paramount's musical-comedy, “Take a Chance."
Mutiny
The first mutiny in a
itnry camp occurred on November
lith near Dortmund m tlie Ruhr
district. Storm troopers rebelled
against the severe drilling, hauled
down tl’.o Nazi Um”, replaced the
white circle and swa tika with
the hammer and sickle. When the
Brains
Be careful In the future how' you
refer to that now-famous group of
professors helping to run the gov
•rament.
Ernest Lindley, official biograph-
er of the administration, in his lat-
est book, “The Roosevelt Revolu-
tion,” carefully calls them “the
brains trust.
And when Ernest makes “brains"
plural rest assured it has the
stamp of official endorsement.
Outs
American recognition of Russia
may well hand the Soviets one
prize package in the near future
they cheerfully could do without.
During all the 16 years of non-
recognltion Uncle Sam has piled
up a swelling quota af undesirable
Russians They range from crim-
inals with known records to "ti-
tled” refugees who have a penchant
for marrying rich and foolish
Amejdcan women.
Because Washington was having
no traffic officially with Moscow
they couldn't be deported.
Look out now. Several federal
agencies are having a quiet check
of their records made. It's quite
likley there will be a Russian emi-
gration from these shores soon.
MacDON YLI>
Our London obi Severs report to
the State Department Primo
Minister Ramsav MacDonald's
back Is getting close to the w 11
They send word he is thinking
of a National Party
If he succeeds our hide predict
an Indi n< ndent Con,'ervritive I arty
Would be nnisteri d to battle it
Fither wav the” snv It looks ns
If MneDonald and Baldwin were on
the way out
Kt 'ding
Se'rotarv of Tr' -ior T<a and
h'q n,..., »„ V t.|
fe-tnr. Col. I'mrv M Waite. Pave
an ennaront'v Wen nf.--ti.,, f,,,.
each other that crops out in reugli
ki'”'ne.
T~’tatle-'f as abvava to n
of the Public Works Ad
'**"d out o" t w '” in fast
ftme, t-’-cs f other
* dav on f'n c’> s’ ■ > wi’hnut |
n'T'*—-fl”a fo na, ■•’a
Waite V’br one of tlie late onn,
ftlon< with several cabinet offkera
Ae rnrr>A Tn’roq vvb ■» WRR
BWdllif pi\;vioua minute.'!, contln-
lr^
WwT”
Bi
Mr-. H. T. Jones spent
in Dallas.
Mrs. Matthews Lyle
today to her hunie m
Miss., after a two month’s visit
with her sister, Mrs. (). B. Craw-
She accompanied her hus-
band and sister-in-law, Mrs. Sarah
James, who . pent several days
here.
Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Benja McCord and
Pascall went to Palestine Sunday.
They accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Mack Parker this far on their
way to Mexia.
Miss Annie Dee Beall returned
to her home in Mt. Selman after
spending Thanksgiving holidays
with her parents, Mr. and
Wascom Beall.
Mrs. A. M. Sale and daughter,
Arvie, and Mrs. S. A. Bozeman and
children have returned from
Haynesville, La , where they spent
the Thanksgiving holidays.
Dear Santa: Will you please
send me a doll and a table and
chairs and a wagon and a toy
house and a cowboy suit and an
airplane and a football suit and a
vlctrola and one record and a bed
room suit and a toy car and a
trunk and a toy clock.
The News urges that kiddles not
wait until the last few days before
Christmas to send their letters in,
but to write them n*w. Last year
nearly 1,000 were printed and fully
this many are expected this Christ-
mas
Send your letters to this office
NOW.
SHYLOCK
(Continued from Page One)
money of hard men.
“He is trying to make money easier for the average
citizen, easier to get, easier to earn, easier to save, easier
to spend.
“He is trying to give our people the easier money
hich foreign nations have already given their people.
The President, Hearst continued, is trying to make it
possible for American products to compete in world mar-
kets and to protect American markets from a flood of for-
eign goods.
“He is trying to give our American people easy money
so that they can and will buy more freely from the stores
and so the store* will order from the factories and so that
both the stores and the factories will employ more labor.
"He is trying to end unemployment and to give all
comfort and contentment, prosperity and peace of
.. -.1......
Public Work.
Insiders understand that Major
LaGuardia’s closest hackers hope
to have New York City get a
$250,000,000 loan from R.E.C. to
reconstruct its sewage system.
It would eliminate incinerators
yet keep New Jersey benches
dean.
The setup would be like the
fusion campaign well dressed
with Democrats but run by Repub-
licans. If it clicks what a help
to LaGuardia’s reemployment cam-
paign it will be I
Airplane
Aviation insiders report a new
airplane that flaps its wings like
a gull. Changes in the angling
of the wings during flight are con-
trolled by mechanish within the
wings thcmselxes, and this new
invention is expected ■ to revolu-
tionize plane construction.
Cotton
Plans to revive the cotton spin
ning industry have been complet-
ed by the Trade Committee of the
Master Cotton Spinners’ federa-
tion. The bank.; an* ready to help
the industry in obtaining new
power to force the scrapping ot
superfluous machinery and
bring about the merging of
ton mills. That will make
better control of production
price”.
will leave soon for VVaeo,
they will attend
venlion of the
Grand Chapter
Worshipful Master of
chapter
Mibs Martha Paxson Watkins re- |
turncl yesterday to Stephen E |
Austin, Nacogdoches, after spend-
ing the Thanksgiving holidays with
her parents, Dr and Mrs. J. E
Wat kins.
Miss Lois Mae Strong has return-
ed from a visit In Homer, La.
Miss fay Sullivan spent yester-
day with relatives in Jacksonville
and Palestine
Stone Wells attended the Baylor-
Rice football game in Waco Satur-
day
W C
wrts tho guest of Henderson
tives yesterday and today
\. L. Marwil returned yester-
day from ,i visit with his daughter,
Mrs. J. Deutser, in Port Arthur.
He was met at Lufkin by his son
Leo Murwil.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Surber, ot
Houston were guests yesterday of
the latter'.’, sister, Mrs. Arra Gib-
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Robbie Beall
Nacogdoches spent Sunday
Mrs. Wascom Beall.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hicks and
yesterday
Politician’s Grandson
Shot While Hunting
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Dee. 4
(UP)—David Smith, 10, grand-
son of l ynch David-on, well-
known Houston politician, was in
a critical condition here today
with a .22*’.liber bullet near Ids
heart. The boy was accidently
shot while hunting on the David-
son ranch near Uvalde, late yes-
He was rushed here last
The bullet penetrated the
near the
<
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 219, Ed. 1 Monday, December 4, 1933, newspaper, December 4, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314756/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.