Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 164, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 4, 1939 Page: 2 of 6
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Brenham Banner-PreSs
»
(•
By JULIAN CAPERS, Jr.
c
,Ostroleniio
Nur
[J
4?
a H
■
<■
g: -
be'
0. 50*
4-
X3:
>>
Ci
A
1
er C •
ix
4
;n
t\ 7^,
Leningrad*
Cr*
LOVE LEARNS
SWEDEN
LATVIA
4
the", danger
Pori zig
’■
I
JOO
100
0
a
cause it would be impossible at a
In the middle of January. Breck
it
NOTICE!
; »
r
further notice.
I ■
pg
•RY
r
HIGHEST
line stiltions is taxable under the it..
J-
H
7
e
<7
IT®
>2
, r
■q
IT
.2
rt’fe.'aS
'Ort-
H
1'7
■W
..7
1868
Etta giggled. and coyly waggled
I
■ rated
OS
fl
177
PHONE 111
♦hr*
■tri-BB
“If
11 "H
3
Hold on to Your Emotions—Here We £o!'
TMMRKaBlCTITT
i Welsh».
‘ iuest
fnrcr
iMiang i
Power of Nazi-Soviet Combine On
Display in Eastern Europe
Lake
Ladoga *
r
' NOBODY’S
BUSINESS
0
Biolystok
PER 100
AND UP.
Phone 93
nte. Mr-
ImSdcl' is
. is not in nearly .such good political
"‘—oc as (|)e. legislators are.
Polish sub
escapes
' Scale of Miles
6. ». 1’
lence
ir
who
I ' /*
g-( I
Barnes Sales &
,. Breiih&m, Texas
X
handled in the normal >yay. .
1__________________. -
I EI.KI HOVE
17?
Mcmel^
^PRUSSIA,
wMV.t*/. md at bur Feed., V
Mill on Wednesday, Thurs- 11
i
$5.oe
Burton, Tex.
-U:
Sc.)lc of Miles
1
JS5IA
C>X-»5'
Soviet
planes
cross
border
BARGAP'
BURTON WXT
• ‘ // zr
Russian navy
patrol.
^Tallinn *
Oesell.^7 X
ji5'9a
dm*
Dawton! I’ll brt Mflifr
a special session, and in this stand
he has beei'i warmly supported J>y
pretty, but
named Etta
senior in the high
.'•VvSwS
W|
•'In
BROS. 7
b'orwardinn Co.
could be done about
hated to see his young friend so ,
but -he , knew it '••••••'
useless for a thud party, to try fo [
I stop
It is pointed out that the regular
buying power of ,South America
probably will be somewhat, in-
Dog ‘Smoke Eater’
Gets Fireman’s
Honor Burial
Baltic
Sea
£
? / v # jFx
■\»»Afw Intent***'
TKLKPHONK
thy-'-.“kg's waiting, her money
that*.,flit shew too little promise.
( •
Russia I
' « y‘. ' ~ ? ..
^z” ||
< 'hi is, num
ever kntiw it.
•Mattie Smith
occasion gay
w
few
Tt;.;W'\r"
w®
__JI
"But
keep on .
QUALITY
wife/-’*1’*
if it does, what will be the stated war aims of tin . British
and French ? .
\ , At the end of a; month of the European ’.ver
; the question* Britain and ^France jatuy be expebted
Until such questions'are definitely’:th;.v.Tr<’l. it is dif<HcuR
to piefee the fog that now lies heavy over the European war 81
scene.
1 trtick. had leartied to drag a
j length of hose, climb ladders hnd
cv>y a water bucket.
the legislators are.
FOR FINE FOOD T
Visit ’
■■■ i \ /JK-’Tifel
^ Dancing Every nigKt
Oak Floor-Air Conditioned
FOR GREATER
Egg Production
Um centum. MIN! i:\ltz
rr jpo ’ltrv ToNTr. body
Hl'H.DER A WORM ER Hwlps
to prevent roup and sore head
Sent pontpatd 'on receipt of
7fi Ota. Per Pox if not handled
by your dealer.
hopeless."
Upjohn shook his head
passionately.. He knew, of course, i
about the break between Breck j
jTdftTr yorf' Wtn T-siffm •uit
--
' >f-V : "
’ every* Thursday evenin’g at seven.
j ■ He soon
showed no aptitude for the violin. I
HHii Hppmpil fur mc»rn infninufml in '
)
/
r .
i
t
i i -
I haved in * VMy-si+ty fashion.
He stood this aS long as
I just can't
Mama would be flit'-
Ik-
■nr '■HKsascaa Bv. 1 «w« '•''•wis
AXSWI.K to
rm * im » pt zzt.e
Ontrul Poultry Products
P.O. Bnx San^Antonlo. f>x.
4^^-tha-Xommcixe.l^aii^ that-J spacially Ukc. Hi&h-
+4»ier men. I I guess maybe it's'
because I'm did for my age."
Eart laughed, and suddenly
over and squeezed her
LITHUANIA 1
! - /' Wilno
tk /
Published by Banner-Preaa. Inc., every afternoon except, Sunday at
* Brenham, Texas.
Entered an aecood-claaa matter at .the postoffice at Brenham, Texas,
under the act of March 3, 18J9. «
I
| be expensive, and
strong opposition from the
es
H ______
OS Urgent reqt
69 Roof HpeM
71 Catholic.
73 Ren>mblit
• 75
77
VO '
so**
Russia
granted ’
right to
arm two
islands,
mainland
city as
bases.
3
/WHAT ABOUT
SHIPPING TO
mitral
ports? •
I '
...
What will Britain db now? The Polish war
Restoration of a Polish state is one of the.British
i£S>Ljsss»**'
-:S - - V'“!
aTly’be a! -i---------------- '
• ■ C__l_ -t Li'i.-
130
»
I
II
12
BY BRUCE CATTON .
KF.A Service Slnff <'<>rre»|»ond»«l
UM ASHINGTON-^-At its refular
session in January. Congress I
j probably will be called on to help
the United States take advantage
of its new export trade oppor-
tunity in South America.
The opportunity iSr i m p 1 e
enough. Last year Gerrhany sold
$283,OOQ.OOO worth of goods in
South America. Uncle Sam can
have most of that trade — and
probably a share of British and
French trade too—if he can find
a way to finance it.
Financing it is apt to be tough.
The adminstration has'been study-
ing -Uk--problem and has exam-
ined several suggestions. A high
government official suggests that
Congress probably will be asked to
do one of two things:
Either make more'money avail-
able for financing the trade
through existing machinery, or set
up new machinery, with new
financing, for handling it in a new
way
LESSON
By IRENE LONNEN ERNM
D-if 10H b, U«>i(d P«a*ura 4yadk*$d lee **
, Upjohn said slowly, "but it's
H sad. It needs ar
it somewhere.’’
the break between Brer k I you're not interested
wished something lin! I'm not c ’~
it, for he i mfn'e lessons!"
That gave her
w-as | a( him in dismay.
"Oh, .Mr. Leedy! I
now! Marita v.
iorrs!"
"1 can’t help that."'Breck said
l»IH» tqq—X***/?^
the loneliest
Mr.’ Iqrjolfh
tried to
S firN
» war, David Lloyd George has at last spoken, and whop he
kjtoke he said a moutjhful. <
The little Welshman who was Britain’s Wor|H War pre-',
mier,-and one of the “Bi£ Four" who made the |m;h<*<* of|
* Versailles, has suggested that Britain make clear that it is|
^g««, » not fighting to forct^ack tinder Polish rule the nnvvilluig'
^g people^f another race, nor for restoration <>T a regirfie which
^g had been p "wretched class-government.” had f;Tili>d to pre-
^g pare its people for defense, ano then deseited them when
their “feudal" government tumbled about their ears in
military disaster. . >
Thees are bitter words. Lloyd George.goes further to
^g suggest that the Russian invasion is not as bad as the Ger-
^g man because Russia took over territory largely occupied by
non-Polish peoples. His implication is that even if Germany
should be forced to disgorge the part of Poland it has swal-
lowed. Britain should not ask the same of Russia, and that
even if a Polish state should be re-established, it would look
much different from the one set up in 1920.
■
M According to his book. "The Truth About the .Peace b
M Treaties,"-published last year. Lloyd Ge<>cge is not incon-
M sistent in this stand. No one gave more trouble than the
■ Poles in the Versailles deliberations, he indicated, and-cites
^B repeated ininstances in which the Poles demanded that more
^B territory be included in the new Poland than was justified
^B by populations. France, he said, wanted Poland to be as,
M large as possible for military reasons, and French pressure I
M led to including in Poland “populations'which would be an
M alien and hostile Mement .. . . a source of permanent weak-
fir
rvo
riaiiinn i
ESTONIA^
buried lessons. She was
llts rnther stupid girl
In his spare time, he had . Siiunders '
.Germany hnd Russia agreed1 kq this final partition of Poland. Ger-
many takes the shaded area. Rilssla the rest. The new pui'titloh.<jn»*^A
rhe Jieavy dotted line, wipes ottt-
offtcials earlier, which temporarily gave hussia everything' easF of
the Vistula. The Bug river rather than the Vistula now becomes ffie
chief dividing line. ,
||^- | tamKS. wfif
,i—
li
chain store tax law; Humble con-
tends the operation is exempt,
tigating, before ruling iiuinbie
owes the tax.
but she's buying the violin introduced seriously, except SJR-I'
(jUIments. She'll she'll give 12, have a’ pretty good political
*»kens if you don't, let me alibi.'O'Diiniel, who first fostered.
1 - * • j | *••.» m zv»I .-v »v Icvaz •»,1 F m n Rv rv ri — ’
Bredk tried to remain unmoved, doned it for
Dnwton "^ou ShotiHljhavc thought of that sisled upon that and nothing else,
aiwinne ** «f.lx.-.- -.1 -- _____1 . .T: s s 1
AUSTIN ’ The difficulty with
Gov. W. Lee O’Dan.el's -imbitii us
plan to_iaise SJ.3IM1.000 for the old
foists pensions by public subscrip-
tion was practical, aM well as legal.-
The governop did not’publish the
details of his plan, but presum-
ably^it entailed the borrowing of i
$2,300,000 to take up pension war-1
*' bv svndicate jtjf
•w . -ime ,s" pledge*^
^.UJlO-lMt Iqgisla-
. '"^v3-aL lbt-.ift.tc.
of >2011,0011 a migith in Octplx-r,
’ Atty.'Gen M^n rutrft there ts.no
way' the state's credit could be
■ fund, then, would Iiterafiy»be
g>l' a'
lie Will IJnd Thiun < old
r Inasmuch as practically nobody
in Texas has ■$2.30(h000 except the
special interests which were so
friendly to the Governor's, plan to
finance pensions with a sales tftx
upon—thtjieople .at Jhf_J.eg.ula'
session, to raise the money might
prove an exceedingly difficult
task. It is true that the sum re-
presents only a small fraction of
the actual cash savings which
these specjitl interests have affect-
ed in their tax bill by reason of
the Governor’s insistence upon a
sales tax for pensions, which re-
bABY CHICKSFrom SELECT;D flocks
PRICES
j music. "That's all for tonight."
Etta, on her way home, was
fuming. "The old stiff neck!” she
' muttered, to herself. "I’d like to
slap him! Well, anyway. Mr. Daw-I
ton isn't such a stick! He's nice.” ■
She remembered the first time
'<*»’■ and T. B. Hill of AunfTn,
member of the Industrial Accident
Board.
Rules Humble Owes Tax
Comptroller George Sheppard
has lieen advised by Attorney
General Gerald Mann that Humble
Oil & Refining Co., owes the State
$730,130 in delinquent chain store
axes, arid instructed to collect it.
Suit will be filed by Mann if pay-
ment is not made, which it prob-
ably will not be. Mann contend^ '
Humble's operation of 2501' giiso-
t. CHESTER, Fa: .i n Socks,.,an
English hufinojf that.' answered all
fire alarms in Chester, received it
ajiLn«ricgiBini.vrBiuv. , eeiemonious bunal by the Moya«
■ "no pany. -
The dog was ■ placed ' in a sllk-
, to prevent falling from the -fire —------- -
these tile .
to ansWer stall'd i, inpoautg.■.the symphony si-lmol. She wanted violin lessons.
Estonia grants
Russia 10-year
trade, arms pact.
The Red menace,advances in the Baltic-states. Estonia signs mutuA
assistance phet with Soviet, gives Russia right tq fortify strategil
islands of. Dagoe and Oesel, port of Paldiski. Thus Soviet gains mill!
tary and economic stranglehold on north Baltic, virtual' command, -ol
Gulf of Finland and Bay of Riga. Latvia's chief port. Aaland Island
and Finland. Above map
locates disturbances which led to Russian-Estonian conferences and
i sooner." ■ ,
don't make me stop. I'll
try L -‘^q- honest
, .... scooss Akswt.lt to s Philippine
I suited in defeat of ail tax legisla-
! tion. It is probably true, also, that’
the gratitude of the special in-
terests toward a Governor who has
. seen eye to eye with then) on a
program of no taxation has been
so warmly and frequently express-
ed, that Governor ,O'Daniel .may
think they would, be willing, for
his political sake, to donate
$2,30a000.
But $2,300,000 is a lot of folding
regretted it, for she 1 money. Those who have studied
the operations in Austin, of the
and seemed far more interested in special interests who dislike to
tnaking coy attempts at flirtation PaY taxi’s are unanimously of the
creased, since England and France “fascinate Breck
may be expected to buy more
heavily of South American raw'
, materials, thus making mpre dol-
lar exchange available; and that,
in addition, world commoclity
prices' are up so that the dollar
volume of the South American
trade will increase.
But in -the -main, according to
this viewpoint—which i> strongly
held, in the business advisory
*°Jiib * "____________
?ra<le” smi>
sion of credits, wouli/b'e likely
to bring about an unhealthy boom
which would be followed by an ;
abrupt collapse, with-Uncle Sam reached
holding a lot of worthless notes
In the long run. it is argued.
South America can take only such
his room and. on this reaso”
he had lessons <
■ ■ he.sitaU’d about til-king her on. but
her n^saon
Bruce Uatton In Washington
I business advisors in the Depart-
ment of Commerce.
i A variant of this plan which
■ has been suggested is to make di-
I rect. loans to the leading South
American countries, taking stocks
of their raw materials as security.
It should be explained thaj there
is a good deal of feeling in some
groups here that none of these
proposals would be wise; that the
only sound way to handle the
problem would be to let the South
American nations make the np-
j pvaches and to let all trade be
, Leedy!" she told herself.
Thus, from that . time on. she
made no further attempt to
‘t and concentrated
hyr wiles on Earl. She was So
successful in this quarter that,
frequently, Earl interrupted his
dictation for half hour at a
time just to talk to her. Mann, spent ,tpur mgntlte inves-
”How. old are you, Etta?,rhe
asked one day.
■ "Seventeen." ,,
“Got many boy frienctoJ?’
She lowered her eyes demurply.
alien and hostile Mement .. .
ness and danger.”
The weakness has been sbvijiv the" danger realized.
Now whatn ' . - -
Even more interesting than what Lloyd George said was
- the time he said it, just when Poland as a functioning na-j
tion had ceased to exist. Just what is Lloyd George trying
to tell the British people and the world? He denied that he.
” wanted to relieve Britain of her guarantee to Poland,
though he had been against making it without Russian sup-
' port-
■ ■ « « - | baby
is over.' named after Julie
----------_r ,--- ... war t.,
But what kind of a Polish state? Lloyd George’s letter
strongly suggests that the’ part of Poland taken by Russia
may never Jjr ‘restored: Th is .-would seem an effort to assure
Russia Uvat Britain does not want to figfit her. but only
accomplished nnFy by
war has teally not
C%SSW
BfVVARE OF I
UNRESTRICTEP
r WARFARE
, Baltic
t De iu
\ f E. PRUSSIA
\ *omon
M • Warsaw \ 1
Lodze ■ \ O ' \^>
< i I Lablm V
*V’
. <Tor™^ , )
. - • “A ■ ■ \ _ • ■
\ \J
HUNGARY >7
ment corporation to bay surplus
South American commodities—
coffee wheat and so on—in much ,
the manner that surplus United ; America's ti .ide. which is just
States commodities - are now about its fair percentage Ger-
handled many’s much talked-of trade drive
This scheme admittedly would immIo it* gauss inoslly at Ute ex-
nnd has aroused pci
> ace Un
' /W than in learning how to play. She "Pinion that Gov. O'Daniel will . I
CX// rolled her big blue eyes at him. | fin<1 them extremely warm when A 1)
lA*V / sighed whenever he took hold of he is Carrying the flag for their <
I flv'l ’l''r 'vrlst or a,ni b> ‘Wrect a ^taxation progiam and extremely, A fT^
L«4tA jk, ; faulty position, and altogether be-; fol‘l 1,n<l unappreciative when he
. hu„„,i rn..hi— starts talking about donating —
he j $2.300.(MM» to the old
-could but, finally, one evening he j bo,1y else- These interests have al-lU^ii' *
,™t patience,’ He wka trying to j ways exercised a strikingly effec-
tive control over their generous
"I guess.” Breck said bitterly correctly, but she was so busy bnpuises. and. so far as anyone
i fluttering her eyelids and smiling :'he,e ^‘n hee. they have not weak-
soulfully that She obviously was
paying no attention to what he
com-j was saying.
He turned away angrily. "Etta
hand.
"You're a sweet kid, Etta. If
you weren't still in achool, I might
United States goods ns it is able | ask you for a date myself."
io pay for. if the United States j Etta giggled, and covlv waggled
buys more from South Ameriea it | rt bright-nailed finger at him
— --.can sell nrtore to South America. | . -You're imn kid<mi"
hufbhimfMfie trade may be indi- but .if iCrcfuses to buy more it | t>BWtoni FU ,„
--------- V‘“' rn’-.’C"I* Ve? murh *ini the real reason you don’t ask me!"
considered is to set up a govern- -less it puts up its mvn money flushed and let co of her
Right now Commerce Depart- < , ”* r ... S. and ,et go cf
ment people point out the United band. ‘Welt, lets get on with
States has 38 per cent of South ihese letters.” he said brusquely.
" • ‘ which is just Etta, as she bent her head ovet
I her notebook, inwardly determined
that some day soon she'd get a
date out of hint dcai>ite "Miss
DanieL"
(To be continued)
7nsc of the British, not
'nited States.
akea
si
moment
wind
led
,..<>n
r o« SW
CHAPTER XIV r
Chiistmas came and went,
was a melancholy ci^e for Julie.
Though the arrival; during the
' holidays, of -Ralph's ami Mary's ! “it's because that's the way’l ls-el
little daughter Whdm they
lifted her
ajms. spirits for a while, she soon sank
buck into the lefnargy that had
taken possession of Jier.- and Julie." He
Bieck too, spent u melancholy
the loneliest he had
Ccrmjfiiv ‘ known. Mr.’ tjijolin and downcast.
,^7 r ■■ Mattie Smith tried to make th
/ Any restoration pf Poland-can be accomplished only by occasion gay and festive, but his patch up anything like tbiU
a full-dress war on Germany. Such a W’ar has really not in-ait was tiio hea'y t<> resplmd tu i ■■ ■ ■■ ■
started yet. Will it start soon, and will it^start at-all? And ihe’tr < ttmis at joiiifj'Ytion
After 'the holidays, .lie
b inself deeper than eter in
work.
W‘S“-
1*. Escfptlonai «trok«-
u^Hbbi
»-Color
H-Fit
ti-fri az* io
XI tn oiMTHtian
ZJ Town tn French
pin ne»
U Rten» upwnid
' »' c*"" wlth ,hr,“‘’
37 Symbol Lodium
It Anrwci ‘»bbr i “
n Puri .nbi* ,
30 Not eiipturrd
33 One who elver
' mono
M Stacking*
3S Doctor tebbr i
J?
# -IteinFM H)i»
<5 Food
w -Mkltavor
<1 Inter Me ltd
Call for fi]<
<7 Port of oodi
M Buffis OD»
g sKaolraUd
M Order o! nerba
. IB Frtntar** met hum
M Foundation
V CompaM point
. ■" - M Godded Qf miachiaf
•1 Town In Belgium
M Incite
* Tom Whitehead ...o----------------— ’ Publisher
'Mra. Ruby RobertsonEitltoi,
Wilson (Red) Buehrer. — — - Sports Writei
E. W. Brooke ; . . Cashin
lame* E. Byrd ...... ... Mechanical Supcrintenden'
Subscription Rates Bv carrier one week 15 cents: month A0 cents
year $S "0
By Mail Washington and adjoining counties L3 ftb: Texas $6.00. ou’ I
of Mate $6.00. - ;
K" ’■ ■WBgiiMWKWTP'''--!!.'■■ m
Backs Off and*Looks at the V-
...../'War* Anew- ■
12 Boiled rn
13 Foot aear
18 De.«
20 Pre
23 “
2«
28
29
31
35
TJ J-orce
34 PirrHcU
rrpciiti
Mixed
Oerma,
Set
Moi
rat)
The
• *Bre»t Lito»*k
L » *
\ A...
r lith-
fyxUANIA^
/ ^Kovno^^
i introduced seriously, except SJR-
e 12, have a pretty gcxxl political |
transact low tax, and then aban-
sakrs tax, and iri-
______ -ma-
. .Hank. It has loanable rwourftn
of >100.000.000. but most ot this is
already committal. In tlje spend-
ing-lending bill which was intro-
duced last spring, an added $100.-,
000,000 was asked for the bank
The bank didn't get it. and if it
is now to finance greatly in-
creased trade with South America
it v.-tN have to have more money
If.new machinery is to be creat-
ed,. an entirely n«w method of
'Ivnl'hAirvtf-thp fri
One' plan which has been
i civic worker in his home’comrhuni-
ty, and managed O’Daniel’s cam-
paign in his district last year.
DaVis is the third flour merchant
i tt> be appointed to remunerative
j posts by O’Daniel, the other two
| being Harry Knox, Adjutant Gen-
He had looked up as she entered i
the office and let his eyes travel |
over her from head to toe. It had j
been quite plain that he Was i
. pleased with what he saw. He '
had shown sirtt-e then, too, that he
liked her..
"What do I care.about that Mr.
- Son oi
Bussri
Hoof Mpen
Sh/’rbfftt*
‘. hNHorUn
... Atmbliog-
anchor ring
Female horse
-Brine forth young
- Ood<le*« of discord
DOWN
1 - Children
2 BfvriuRe
3 fxx»k
4- Connect cinxofji
wipch hnt( u-i-jj his uinbitioi) fot » 'However.- she couldn't < "me in
so Lnp’* AW* MCttrcr Smith .had the aTtcliioon, as his other pupils
no piano, .he used the one'in thi did. It s<W''mcd-;th»rt adie waT'—*-
'school mUsic room, working there ing a commercial course in high'
late ne’arly i-L’tv'mght He had ■•Chool and. to gain cxjmi a-nc<-.
bnugtit a second-hand car and had recently started doing steno-1
now dnae,back and forth instead graphic work for Earl I
ot' walking' . • every afternoon after school •
■jNgiii niulil. —1
Mr. Upjohn into his room and. on this reasi.n, sne was flee for music
■ ; his violin, played what he had lessons only- in the evening, he <f‘ee,iV
. Frank Davis, Itasca grocer, whi
l I will " has sold lots^uitf .Gov. O’Daniel’s
Bre'ck'Vighed. 'X)h. all right! flour 'firing the past few years, is:
as a successful business nufly^arta
p MAlij
. . .
r”'1led meat
...KttRCL,
■ ;oired
HiAhnp g
bo Pope
Sudden
Dirmh t isfict
riclamut >o
Ime
OpixiMtr «
ArrHHRCd
open
35 XleanlngieM
repel it ion
3A Mixed nuat
37 German' emperor
40 Set
•43 Mountain pi«M
45 Table land
47 Brniumin
4JT -The iFrenchl
51- Annoy er
53— Hypothetical
54- AinbahMk Jor
S<l Officious
59- TapeMry
60- - Heroic
61- Remote surface
62 Printer s tnea^uf
t 63 -The earth.
V 64 -ngjth
tT CompRAS point
,66 te^rtme
6f< A.xxan* si I it worn'
72 Pronoun
74 Otherwise »
» SO
I -uuu
note of hope, in )(}st
I show her how to hold the .bow
she was so busy
j ened fioticeably jn recent months.
Solons Have Edge
I The Governor has continued to
resist the rising tide of pressure
in the vid-' from old folks and legislators for
..going to give you any ■ ■ ■ .... ,
L.
jolt, she stared the special interests, chiefly be-
cause it would be impossible at a .
special session to submit a cgnsti- -reportedly has been fortified by SAeden
tutiona) amendment that wotfTd ‘ ....
protect the' special interests, as position of islands which Soviet, obtains
' acquired a new pupil for privat.e ■ ... .. . .. . ,, , ' contained in the famous SJR-12.
I can t heljj that. Breck said |t- tyuuniel does nut convene the
(leterminedly. TlI simply tell her i-.vislature. it appears'• the old |’
t>x-.'-“ku's wasting, her money f„lkM llfe simplv out of luck until I
that-.,du shew t<M> little promise." J;inuai v, 19H. members of the .
Tewrs welled up in Etta’s eyes. . House, who passed'every tax bill
f ■
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...
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4,1939 . •
PAGE 2
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Robertson, Ruby. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 164, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 4, 1939, newspaper, October 4, 1939; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1347586/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.