Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. 97, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1931 Page: 3 of 8
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HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
F
AY, JULY 10,1931
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HUNTSVILLE, Texan, uly 10
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ton Police department, and fori ‘450,000 workers will be used In• horne jn Brooklyn.
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In the Month of June That Company Invested
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With the Henderson Daily News Advertising That Cigarette
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Advertising in the News will produce results.
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CONVICTS GIVE
HOUSTON COPS
‘RAZZBERRIES’
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News Want Ads get quick results
BAG CARRIED
ALL CLARA'S
CLOTHESONCE
en
Route to Hollywood Was Not
the Most Encouraging
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big, roomy ‘Maty-Zone* Food
Compartment.
There is a IFeatinghoMae He>
frigerator for every aiaed fawn*
ily, priced as low as $180, f. a.
b. factory. We will deliver to yon
any fFestinghonae Refrigerator
for 10 per eent down • , balance
in 18 equal payments.
Before yon buy any refriger*
• ator, see the Wettinghou— and
get proof of its economy. Co«n>
pare them sise for siae and price
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(Continued.)' .
LUTHERANS ENJOYING ■
BIG GROWTH Di TEXAS
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Tobacco Company advertising one brand of cig-
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ing the ball playing abilities of
some of the Policemen.
“You remember the tall fat one,
the way he swung his bat I bet
he thought he had a billy in his
hand.”
“Yah,” another convict said.
“Ef he had a leather string tied
to his bat he might of hit tha ball.”
UNEMPLOYED SE^K JOBS
AS COTTON PICKERS NOW Her First Trip to Los Angeles
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SAN ANTONIO, Tex., July 10
(UP)—Hundreds of unemployed in
this city today planned trips to
the cotton fields of South Texas
where the harvest of the 1931
crop will be well underway within
three weeks.
Before the season closes 60,000
persons from this city will have
joined tha *inks of cotton pickers,
C. W. Woodman of Fort Worth,
state director of the United States
employment service, estimated
nearly 400,000 pickers will be need-
ed to handle the Texas crop, while
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ran studio stage. It was a silent,
grim place. Thousands of girls
have had the experience and many
have failed because the tenseness
of the moment got them.
But not Clara. She didn't even
know she ought to be worried.
She was too primitive.
“Laugh!” ordered Schulberg.
She did.
“Cry!” he commanded. Tears
drenched her cheeks.
“You win,” he said, and the ca-
reer that was to skyrocket was
started.
Advertising in the News is an investment.
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Advertising in the News MUST BE GOOD to
warrant the expenditure of such a sum of money
in one month.
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news of the^ world I
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OU and I know a down
domestic electric appli-
ances built by JFettinghouse.
And they are all just the last
word in dependability.
“And, do you know what
Frank said when I suggested a
JFetiinghotuo Refrigerator to
, him? He just grinned and asked,
*Why, what do you know, dear,
about JFottinghoute^
“And then, before I waa half-
way through telling him, he arid,
‘Yes, and Jf^oatinghouto en-
gineers have done many other
big things that you probably
never heard of.
“ Tor fifty yean they’ve
been doing the seemingly fan-
poastble » • • harnoeaing great
waterfalls, electrifying great '
railways, giving to radio am-
.. dreamed-of contributions.”
“And so we bought a IFeat-
btghotuo Refrigerator. Isn’t it •
beautiful? And just look at the
GIDDINGS, Tex., July 10 (UP)
—In 25 years the Lutheran Con-
stituency in Texas has grown from
a few hundred church members to
25,000 Rev. C. M. Beyer, Wichita
Falls, President of the Texas Dis-
trict, told the 25th annual conven-
tion of the Missouri Synod of the
Lutheran Cuhrch in convention
here today.
Nearly 250 laymen, ministers
and professors were here for the
second morning session of the 8-
day convention.
Among prominent members of
the Lutheran Church are Dr. F.
Photenhauer of Chicago, president
of the general body; Prof. H. W.
Stoppelwert of St. John’s Luther-
an College at Winfield, Kan.; Rev.
G. N. Neiper of Dallas.
-------------o ;
Wife Sure Hubby Waa Alive
PRESCOTT, Arix., (UP)—Mrs.
Dorothy P. Shelby refused to be
convinced the other day when a
letter arrived from the Federal
Vetfersms' Bureau saying she waa
a widow and asking her to apply
for the insurance. Ward Shelby,
the husband, wasn’t convinced
either. He was by his wife’s aide
when the letter arrived.
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Zoo Identifies Bittern
LAKEWOOD, O., (UP)—An
American bitterp, a species of the
heron family, was a bird of mys-
tery to Lakewood residents until
it was caught and Identified at
Brookside Zoo. The bird, with a
three inch beak and a wing spread
of more than a foot, was seen wan-
dering about the shore of Lake
Erie for weeks before it was fin-
ally captured. The species is rare-
ly found in this part of the coun-
try.
way across the continent And
when anyone complained that <t
was annoying, Clara just answer-
ed:
“Aw, g*wan, you oughta enjoy
music.”
Two hundred miles of the long
journey had not passed before
Clara knew everyone on the train.
She possessed a strange magnet-
ism that attracted men — young,
old, married, single. .
The dining car was a revelation
to Cl»ra. She ordered »o many
salads and desserts *t each meal
that the table would hardly hold
them. Her manager tried to show
her how to use a salad fork.
“That’s nonsense.” Clara said.
“Why dirty up another fork when
one will do for everything?”
Her manager had bought her •
couple of cheap dresses in New
York. They were brightly colored
and delighted Clara. She wore them
out in a day and had to go back to
the greater and skirt.
The arrival of Clara Bow in Los
Angeles, doorway to Hollywood,
was to have been a g*la affair-
But when her woman companion
saw the formidable array of pub-
licity men, cameras and execu-
tives, she knew that she could not
let them see Clara. She looked at
the littlj red head; there she sat
in the faded sweater and the skirt
that once had been fileated. They
slipped out of the station by a rear
route.
B. P. Schulberg, who held Cla-
ra’s contract for his independent
company, telephoned the manager,
and he was in no jovial mood.
“What happened?” he demand-
ed. “I planned a big publicity
break at the station.”
“Come on over to the hotel and
take a look at the girl and you’ll
see,” said the manager.
Schulberg arrived. “Is this the
girl?” he demanded. “Why, she’s
impossible.”
"Give her a test—give it to her
right now,” the woman pleaded.
They took Clara Bow into a bar-
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(Editor’s Note: This is the fourth
of a series of articles on Clara
Bow’s life.)
By DUANE HENNESSY
United Press Staff Correspondent.
HOLLYWOOD, (UP) — When
Clara Bow was 17 she never had
ridden on a train.
She was an untamed, almost
primitive person in those days, a
graduate of a poverty-shadowed
1 u-i— iDMAVivn, Before her
stretched the promise of a career
in the films, a promise that came
spite of the fact the price ^rue
j xi-_ ciara }ja(i a few independent
pictures, behind her and a contract
that was taking her to Hollywood.
AH her belongings were in a paper
mache bag. She wore a sweater
and a skirt that once had been
pleated.
That was the Clara Bow who
met her manager in Grand Central
station in 1925. Her parting with
her father was rather racking in
sentiment. As for the father, Rob-
ert Bow, he had little to say, no
word of caution to give. He trust-
ed blindly as his daughter started
West with the woman she had
chosen as her manager. _
It must not be forgotten that
Clara had a portable phonograph
as well as her suitcase. The phon-
ograph ground out “The Parade
of the Wooden Soldiers” all the
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(UP)—“Raszberries I”
Thus resou led the famous old
Bronx cheer within the walls of
the state prison here as 1150 con-
victs chuckled as they recalled of
the licking they had given the
Houston police force.
The convicts had been “Ya-aa-
hing” ever since their basebail
team defeated that of the Hous-
•nee the police department “heard
itself as others saw it,” as one
person bright-cracked.
The convicts t ' ’
razzberries as soon as the police
leached the prison ground?, when
one convict shouted to a police-
Inan:
“How you gonna catch a thief
when you can’t catch a ball ”
“And look at that big and fat
one. I bet he has made every
fruit stand in town.”
The Police smiled. Some of the
tnen were confined there through
their efforts.
“Let ’em razz,” said one good
natured policeman.
“Yah,” replied a convict, “you
flatfeet are all good fellows. 1
Used to give a cop friend of mine
« drink every time he come on
his beat.”
“I bet whiskey Is shore cheap in
Houston today,” quipped another.
The convicts were still discuss-
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jxOb of Wi»e-Crack* as Flatfeet
Take on Prisoners in Game
of Baseball
VACATION RATES
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Hie Crazy Water Hotel at Mineral’Wells, Texas, an-
nounces very low rates for those who desire a re?l health
Vacation.
fixcellent room with outside exposure, ceiling fans
circulating ice water and private bath as low as $1.50
per day.
Other good rooms as low as $1.00.
You can be a guest of this magnificent Hotel, built
at a cost of approximately a million dollars, as cheap as
you can stay at home.
Come to the Crazy Water Hotel, Mineral Welle
Texas, “Where America Drinks Its Way to Health/*
For further information write or vrire
CRAZY WATER HOTEL COMPANY
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the cotton fields of the United
States before fall.
“in Lr:i_ 2__
started, tossing of cotton is low this year, and the
wages for picking will also be
low, the work still will be a God-
send to the unemployed,” Wood-
man declared.
the name Weotinghotuo hw for
fifty yean been aynonymona
wHi mechanical perfeetion.
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1 bought it becau
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. 97, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1931, newspaper, July 10, 1931; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1330824/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.