Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1933 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Navasota Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Navasota Public Library.
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IN MEMORY OF
A 9'tiend
Subscribe To The Ekni iner
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everybody’s getting
nni amnrHno’ q vorv
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Report Of Condition Of The
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First National Bank
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RECAPITULATION
ASSETS
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run ■
123 537 52
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TOT.'.!
LIABILITIES
in
WALTER WOODUL
TOTAL
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COTTON MARKET ’
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Two Brothers Reach
Parting Ways Today
n REVIEW OF
BI1INESS'
*1
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Surplus Fund Earned
Undivided Profits
Circulation
Deposits
kiurciice Thoma*, Jr.
Laurence Thomas. Jr , age X years, i
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BOXlHif. 39
$431,845 11
90.000 00
13.500.06
2,001.00
33,000.06
13.317.00
401.90
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Indians Cancelled Debts
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Rev. R.
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PARADE
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dusty scars. Ask
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Inter-nat’l Car too* (.’•», N.Y.— By B. Link |
11 11 1 ___________________ t
I
I
SOCIETY
as express- I ■
r. E. Black-
Loans and Discounts .
United States Bonds to Secure Circulation
Federal Deserve Bank Stock .
Corporate Stock
Banking House. Furniture and Fixtures
Other Real Estate . ... ........
Other Assets
United States, and Other Bonds - —
County end City Scrip, County
Vouchers & State Warrants _.
Bills of Exchange and Notes secun d by Cotton
A; Stock Exchange .Securities . ...
Cash On Hand and In Ranks
NEW PRESIDENT
OF STATE SENATE
s---—0-----
WHEELER, WQOLHEY ADD EDDIE
QUILLAN TO TEAim iiiU.\u
NEW LAUGHS IN ALL STAR
COMEDY
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$ 34,128 64
pd City School
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OUTSTANDING MKET1NG
OE READING CLUB HELD
The Womtn'i Reading Club met in
I regular session Wednesday afternoon
will be dHar-1
< I
* Ry HENRY McLEMORE
*** '■?*', <UP Staff Correspondent*
J New York, Jan. 12 (UP)
i
hey! x
(JJOCU-D YOV
SootJER
LOSE A
y CouPlE OF!
I fingers thaZ
l "Yx/^r f“ fd/fX
j
I
k
E^-
I at the home of Mrs. L. A. Millican
i Since deciding Upon meeting in the
bomeq there has been a noticeable ip-
i crease in attendance. Onft thta occa-
A
.“THAT LITTLE CAME”
$
y
lasgjtyy?
NM-Yi
in ;l living ly>rd
th ■ wot d of man
JawNB
=*-^4 2
gl
*
' Hot-t> oh There ,-y.
YOO PLACED OUT
or Turn. —'
Going To
Qaise Thb bet
. A Q.Et> ONE •
h
7'tW^." M
with dpeed and strength to burn. It E^ain market which in turn stimuiat-
was only when he stood still long en- et* the stock market. TL__ 2__
’ *1 for you to catch a glimpse of L “o foundation for the reports, but
v , I
shear.
Mrs. Blackshear's paper was fol-
lowed by a reading from Lainer by
Miss Mary Alda Hurt, entitled “My
Spring.”
The program was closed with a
round table on “Patriotic Poems of
the Period". Thi§ tvas one of the
outstanding meetings as well as one
of the best programs of the club year
lu
Ji
^3
At .Miller’s Theatre Saturday.
The cowboy who used to whoop it
ip on Satilrifciy nights rend go roaring
th: ou.h town to the staccato accom-
panii >T.t of j 1 ,-tol /hot:: is taerely a
is
"TV
z:ja
The president, Miss Julia D Owen
Nom
The game '
ANO <2.UlT
CUMMIN' THIN&S
up. ----- |
c wtOrs, ----1
ANDV. 1
CHIRP. A
of both companies. Needless to say,
such merger appears logical and makes
a good yarn. If one othinks of the
practical side, however, he would dis-
card the report without considering
it. Merger of these companies would
result in a complete monopoly of the
film industry Ip the United States.
Even a perren with no law experien-
ce whatsoever, would know that anti-
trust laws would not permit such con-
dition no matter how the point was
stretched.
Discovering the cause of the market
movements recently has brought out
some amusing incidents. Two days
ago, the U. S. Steele Corporation is-
sued its unfilled tonnage statement as
of December 31. It showed a decrease
of 161 tons from the November 30
total, a smaller de'cline than had been
anticipated. One commentator explain-
ed the rise that followed shortly after
the unfilled order total had been made ,
public by stating the Bears jumped
to the conclusion the last three ciphers
were omitted as they are in the week-
ly federal reserve reports. A decline of
161,(XX) tons naturally would be bear-
ish; The commentator said they sold
steel short, and when they disetivered
their error scrambled to cover with
the result the market spurted sharply.
Probably he didn't notice the uprush
in wher.’ that occurred just about that
time.
X JAJHJARY 11, loss
—..................1 .............
e*cb om handling bar sublet wall,
bolding th* attention of bar listener*
from start to finish
Jan. 26th will ba the date of the next
club meeting at the home o“ Mis* Ju-
lia D. Owan.
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\ano nwxerrv whmout
LraaAsow iceo. agpOAiT- ,--‘
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———
..The modern day puncher wears
shirts with purple and yellow squares
and carries a gun filled with blank
cartridges.
The range he rides surrounds dude
ranches where tired business men
rough it to the accompaniment of
jazz music and the cadonced cooing
of r< d headed Show girls.
B
i
I
EM
UJE'tE OCT OE K(Nt>
UIELL. 'ivuR r.ALa i .......-
CHANGES (MATTERS STAYS
SO i'll 'LAY' and/ H^NbS OFF,
WTHORAtU THE
end’s rSAu>'
^THU: B6T OPITH J
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Denver, Colo. (UP) ■— Two broth
ers, business partners for nearly a de-
cade, reached the parting of the ways
today.
Glenn Smeeman was scheduled to
return to the Colorado state peniten-
tiary at Canon City to serve the un-
finished portion of a three year sent-
ence for grand larceny. He had been
a fugitive for 15 years.
George A. Smeeman prepared to go
back to Cleveland to carry on the
$75,000 musi<? publishing business
which he and his brother built up
from $1.80 and six borrowed chairs.
It was not revealed until last night
the two men were brothers. Glenn was
known 4n Cleveland as Harry Stan-
ley. George was known as George A.
Bronson.
Gov.- Edwin C. Johnson yesterday
refused to grant ,Glenn’s request for a
90 day parole from his unfinished
sentence. George also pleaded with
the governor but Johnson sai d the |
state constitution made no provision |
for such a parole and Glenn was turn.- !
cd to Warden Roy Best of the pri- ■
son
< i1 fed away
I «:>. His will,
l.< Uh -till
< .pined.
■ ■ and wi
Austin.—Senator Walter F. Wood-
1 W of JHouston, one of Texas’ lead-
ing attorneys and a member of the
i Senate for the past four years, Tues-
, day was-elected President Pro Tem- '
pore of the Senate.
Leaving home at the age of fif-
teen, Senator Woodul taught school
' in Oklahoma, worked in a restau-
rant in Wichita, Kansas, to learn
shorthand and later worked his way
through the University of Texas.
1
however,
that while he liked the chhnces of the
Cards, Cubs and Pirates, he wouldn’t
bet on them.
“Ball clubs that look great on paper
have a way of going haywire in the
season, and vice versa", he explained.
“Garry Hermann of Cincinnati had it
right when he said, ‘the trouble with
the Reds is that they're too far ahead
in January and too far behind
July!” .,
' What the' Cards planned to do with
Hornsby, Frisch didn't know. He said
they might use him at second base,
hoping the Rajah had one more good
year in his system. Frankie was asked
if he had heard anything about Horns-
by replacing Gabby Street as manager.
“Not a thing”.
What would he think of such’ a
- move?
“Well, that’s none of my business. I
like Street and I like Hornsby, Rog-
er’s only fault, if you can cal it that,
is that he loves to win too well. And
when you love to win too,well, you’re
bound to run into trouble. To me, he's
an alright guy who knows his base-
ball.”
Frankie said he though Pepper Mar-
tin’s collapse last year was due to
sickness and too much praise after
his work in the 1931 world series.
"Praise is tough for a veteran”,
Frisch said. "It’s ruinous sometimes to
to a rookie.”
Dizzy Dean, in Frisch's opinion, is
a pitcher who has “everything".
We asked him who he thought was
the best ballplayer in the national
league.
"As if you didn’t know ”, he replied.
"That wild, wild man from Philadel-
phia, Chuck Klein. He can do every-
thing. And do it right.”
.—----o------
Air Lines Involved
In Competitive War
By ELJ<ER Q. WALZER
UP Financial Editor)
New York, Jan. 12 (UP) — Wall
Frankie Street is discussing in all seriousness ____
Frlach 4aa playing handball. Watch possibility of war between Japan and sion 20 answered to roll call,
tnar him rip and tear about‘the court, Russia. Rumors to that effect cir- .The president, Miss Julia 1
you’d swear he was the variest rookie, nutated freely and helped put up the ca9ed the. meeting to order promptly
' ifreed and strength to burn. It 'crain market which in turn stimulate -• ’ -■-■—>• - . u ...
was only when’he stood still long en- ‘‘d the stock maiket. Thus far there
tor y°u to catch a glimpse of h no foundation for the reports, but
VvOtWtylld spot on the back of his head if a conflict chould ensue, stock m«r
ft ®i»t you realized the Fordham flash het traders anticipate immediate ad-
getting along in years, was one
’of baseball's real veterans.
JFfankie is 35 now. 1
viuices in commodities with a corres-
i pondingly good effect on stocks. Mean-
Been in the busi- while, there are also many adherents
n«M 20 years. Yet, sitting there all of inflationary measures to force com- ’
Wrapped up in towpls, Jhe man experts mbdities up. The theory seems to. be
\ Thought No^iNG or
----- _ — ’
(.LHAT’S IN lipy I
STAYS IN. f nC'
-OFF.// Sooner
read The / lose a
RuceSj/Z Co ‘ “
‘ X Tl-"-
_ VTwose cHipj
P’ 1 -',6
■ ♦
V' i’ a m!
New York, Jan 12 (UP) — A bullish
consumption report is expected today
from the New York cotton exchange
service.
Predictions that the domestic allot- |
I me nt plan advanced in the congress
| will be defeated have improved spe-
culative sentiment in Jhe cotton mar ■ m-aes
1 ket
, First hands in the south show no'
disposition to let go of stored cotton
, ’ ‘5; .■ ?' bi..-is is firmer
imy time this season
Cotton exports for
' .'•‘•5 b i..
Mill
torf than last
duction Is ex
Ju
1
l-ZZ -' i I—.
1.
.
» ' ..
He saw military service on the
Mexican border and served as a cap-
tain in the World War. Later serv-
ed as a Major of the cavalry in the
National Guard, and as a colonel
on the personal staffs of Governors I
Hobby and Moody. ■
Senator Woodul organized the
Houston Comnftinity Chest in 1922.
the first chest to be organized in the
South; haS been active in civic work,
president of the Houston Salesman-
ship Club and the founder of its
Annual Gridiron Dinner, a state-
wide event. He aprved as directof
of the Houston Bar Association. For
several years he was assistant gen-
eral solicitor of the Internatlonal-
Oreat Northern Railroad and during
the reorganization thereof at the age
of twenty-nine . he was president of
the company.
In addition to being active in law
and politics Senator Woodul is Trus-
tee of the Sugar Land Industries
and as such is interested in refin-
ing sugar and other manufacturing,
merchandising, intensive farming qf
thirty thousand acres of rich bot-
tom lands devoted to all produce
crops, cotton, corn, rice, cattle and
some three thousand acres of po-
tatoes. The Industries also have oil
and railroad holdings.
Senator Woodul had the distinc-
tion of being state manager of the
Oarner for President Campaign and
was in charge of the Oarner Head-
quarters at Chicago preceding the
National Convention.
He is forty yean old. married and
has one boy.
. .2 -2 . ■
• — r- i *
at 3 O'clock. There vzai: p. short bus!
nets session during which tipie • re-
ports front tlie treasurer were given
and o’thc'r matters pertaining to the nie^’o,y now.
busiiuss oi ihe club were attended to
after which the program leader, Mrs,
Millican took charge, the subject be
I ing, “Poetry”.
The, t>rst number was given by Mr>
I J. A. Carner, “Life and Nature''As
Expressed in the Poetry of. Paul
I Hamilton Hayne”.
| Henry’Timrod’s “The Gulf Stream
[ Figure in Ethnogenesis’’, by Mrs. Ro
| bert Jones of Anderson.
It was promptly | "Laincr’s musical genius
—■ 1 * —*
months, died in the Sun Houstaa I
pi lai at Huntsville December M, 1
He wm the only child of his par*
Mr and Mr*. Laurence Thomas
Bedias.
The child's home going, caused hgf
j meningitis, came after the short Bl.
i nefs of one week. They who khg*
him best, loved him most His play-
miss him too And the entire
immunity grieve in sympathy for the
devot'd parents and loved ones.
than at i ''-l,inu ’he home you will find,
lisinv f.iith
i:;i; .1! \ To n
tie season to
p,iin. f 4.370
a year ago at this time.
•• consuming mote raw cot
year and increased pro
- ’ ' ■ ‘ ) all
New York, Jan. 12 (UP) — Rival
transcontinental air lines today were
i a competitive war to re-
duce the flying time between the east
And west coasts.
Br. ” '“Transcontinental and Western Air.
Inc., ordered 15 low wing Northrop
monoplanes which they hope will carry
’Ifcssengers. mail, and express from
New York to Los Angeles in 16 hour*.
United Air Lines announced it would
, place in service this month the first
f ' Of a fleet of 60 two engined Boeing
[J.. monoplanes which will fly from New
* . York to San Francisco in 23 hours or j
■ less
ByZ" Express. Inc., flying Lockheeds
J&'i ■ but carrying express only, has main-
E& tained an 18 hours service since its
service was inaugurated several weeks
' >sfibhnel Charles A. Lindbergh, chair-
sfc man of Transcontinental's technical
committee, will supervise construction
fly of the 1* hew liner*. They will be
■HU powered with 700 horsepower Wright
motor* and carry a load of 2,000
MR. pounds, Including eight passengers.
Kk *4 ?Tlle first plane will be ready by March
H^»'but th* 16-hour service will not be
■igvMaswmtrated until summer. It 1* ex-
pcctod that the west-east trip, be-
Of prevailing westerly winds,
fafc>i>g|l donsume 18 hours.
Transcontinental now operates a 24
OUr night mail and passenger **r-
KSImmK ths' ooaSts. Its success
■fljiwMd *mw service.
The new planes are being construct.
Parker. Ariz. (UP) To adjust mu-
tual financial difficulties, merchants
of Parker and Indians of the Colorado
River Indian Agency cancelled each
others' debts. The merchants owed
the government some $30,000 on be
half of the Indians and the Indians
owed the merchants a similar amount.
AwtrUaMMrti!
dirinis p<*i*a**i A____________
roar dra«si*t far tb*Nd-snd-r«Uosvtaba 40c. "
Unguentine
h«0MS>O*
rr mc. undsove* I I
« Ruebo.Jek ] I
■4
i.
IE': -
■
jKliMLY.*- i
■
B
Se't. involved in
L’ duce the flj
experts ‘ mbdities Up. The theory seems to. be
rsis with the great second baseman that farm products must advance re-!
of aU time talked of the coming sea- gardiess of the effect of the country
- st^n .vvith the enthusiasm of a young- The oft-repeated rumor of Du Pont
ster about to make his first trip south , negotiating to take over Eastman Ko-
wUh a big league club. Frankie talk-i dak Company has again appeared in |
of salary cuts, the Pirates: Hornsby, print in New York.
the Cubs, Chuck Klein, Dizzy Dean, and categorically denied by officials | ed in his poetry” by Mrs. W. E. Black-I
the Yankees and a dozen other sub-
jects pertaining to baseball.
Frisch experts a salary cut "because
ii ’ * ; 'em”. But he’s
not expecting a very big one. Told that
Sam Breadon, discussing his 1933 sal-
ary said, Frisch got $18,000 last year
and played $6,500 bAH”, Frankie laugh-
ed.
“Yoy don't think Mr. Breadn plans
to cut pay that much, do you?” he
asked, I’M probably try bricklaying,
hfice work, bricklaying. Keeps you out
in the open”.
Frisch thinks the 1933 national race
will be between the Cards, the Pirates
and the Cubs. And when he tells you
that “man for man we're good as the
Cubs, and our left-handers oughta
stop the Pirates cold”, you gain the
impression that Frainkie feels that
1933 will see the redbirds of the Mis-
sissippi regain the glory that
theirs in 1931.’
Frankie made it clear,
Ksf,-'. • ■
Senator Walter F. Woodul of
Houston who was recently elect-
ed President Pro Tempore of
the State Senate.
...
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Navasota Daily Examiner (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 12, 1933, newspaper, January 12, 1933; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1373206/m1/3/?q=war: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.