The Celina Record (Celina, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1935 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Celina Record and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Celina Area Historical Association.
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Chains of some kind are hung on
everyone.
Don’t
Guess But
Know
Whether the “Pain”
Remedy You Use
is SAFE?
THE CELINA (TEXAS) RECORD
Washington.—About this time every
fall, the President calls the director
• u ... of the budget to the
in Muddle White House and
on Budget ttiey £° into a huddle
about the finances of
the government, about the needs for
money of the various governmental
Don’t Entrust Your
Own or Your Family’s
Well - Being to Unknown
Preparations
tTHE person to ask whether the
x preparation you or your family
are taking for the relief of headaches
is SAFE to use regularly is your
family doctor. Ask him particularly
about Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN.
He will tell you that before the
discovery of Bayer Aspirin most
pain remedies were advised
against by physicians as bad for the
stomach and, often, for the heart.
Which is food for thought if you
seek quick, safe relief.
Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin
among the fastest methods yd dis-
covered for the relief of headaches
and the pains of rheumatism, neu-
ntis and neuralgia. And the experi-
ence of millions of users has proved
it safe for the average person to use
regularly. In your own interest re-
member this.
You can get Genuine Bayer
Aspirin at any drug store — simply
/°rits full name,
BAYER ASPIRIN. Make it a
point to do this — and see that you
get what you want
Bayer Aspirin
EM
We Listen
“When money talks it is In th<
form of a raoney-Jngue.”
COMMON
COLDS,
Relieve the distressing
symptoms by applying
Mentholatum in nostrils
and rubbing on chest.
ISi
« you prefer nose drops, or
throat spray, call for the
HEW MEHTHOLATUM LIQUID
in handy bottle with dropper
Right Is Right
He can't be wrong whose life 1*
In the right—Anon.
agencies who must pay their employees
and the other expenses to which they
are put and in addition they discuss
general questions of policy. It is, as I
said, an annual affair that presages a
new tempo in the movement of ac-
tivities in Washington because it oc-
curs some weeks in advance of the
reconvening of congress. Congress, un-
der the Constitution, must appropriate
the money which is spent by ail
branches of government.
Well, the annual huddle has Just
been held by President Roosevelt and
Daniel W. Bell, acting director of the
bureau of the budget, and Mr. Bell has
gone back to his office In the treasury
with Instructions to begin formulation
of budget estimates for submission to
congress.
Of course, budget making goes on
throughout the year. The huge staff of
experts and accountants who work un-
der Mr. Bell’s direction are busy the
year ’round examining the proposed re-
quirements of the various agencies and
arriving at conclusions as to what
their needs reasonably should be. The
White House conference, therefore,
represents the second step because
those were the figures that formed the
basis of the discussion between the
President and his budget director.
How Cardui Helps
Women to Build Up
Cardui stimulates the appetite and
improves digestion, helping women
to get more strength from the food they
eat. As nourishment is improved, strength
is built up, certain functional pains go
away and women praise Cardui for helping
w° ?0od • • -Mrs. C. E.
Kathff, of Hinton, W. Va., writes: “After
the birth of my last baby, I did not seem
to ?et my strength back. I took Cardui
again and was soon sound and well. I have
given it to my daughters and recommend it
aj ^i, * h ' ,’D,0Usands of women
testify Cardui benefited them. If it does nob
benefit YOU, consult a physician.
. Miserable
with backache?
VWHEN kidneys function badly and
vvyou suffer a nagging backache,
with dimness, burning, scanty or too
frequent urination and getting up at
night; when you feel tired, nervous,
all upset... use Doan’s Pills.
Doan’s are especially for poorlv
working kidneys. Millions of boxes
are used every year. They are recom-
mended the country over. Ask your
neighbor!
In drafting the budget for submission
to the next session of congress, the ad-
ministration is con-
rroblems fronted with a vari-
to Solve ety of problems, not
the least of which Is
the political phase. It is to bo remem-
bered that the budget now under con-
sideration covers money that will be
appropriated for use after July 1, 1936,
and the succeeding 12 month period.’
Therefore, half of the Presidential
campaign next year, Indeed, the heat-
ed part of that campaign, will take
place after governmental agencies have
begun to use the new appropriations.
It is easy to see, therefore, that poli-
tics can hardly be kept out of the
forthcoming budget In some form or
other even though every President says
politics does not Influence budget mak-
ing. Nevertheless, New Deal spending
and future taxation constitute ques-
tions which the President, cannot over-
look and Is not overlooking because
those things are vita] to every man,
woman and child in the nation.
It seems to he pretty well settled
now that the Republicans are going
to make spending and taxation their
major ammunition against Mr. Roose-
velt and his New Deal. In fact, it
seems reasonably sure that the Re-
publican slogan will be “Throw the
Spendthrifts Out.” That being the case,
Mr. Roosevelt obviously must have in
the back of his head considerable con-
cern over the current budget making.
Knowing “Danny” Bell as I have
known him for nearly 20 years, dur-
ing which time he has grown up In
the treasury service. T think it ought
to be said In his favor that politics
is farthest from his thoughts. He Is as
nearly a human figuring machine as
any man I have known in my Wash-
ington career except possibly the man
tinder whom he was trained, namely,
the late Robert Hand. His chief con
cern is and always has been a deter-
mination to have accurate statistics,
accurate conclusions and recommenda-
tions based as nearly as may be upon
Bound judgment.
But Irf saying these things about
Mr. Bell I am not saying that budge-
tary plans are not subject to manipu-
lation. It has been true in previous
administrations and it Is true in this
one. The vast totals of figures with
their minima of explanations are never
easy to understand. This is one way
of saying that they can be made to
conceal a great deal more than they
reveal.
thought Is inevitable. Mr. Roosevelt
and his brain trusters have contended
and will continue to contend that fed-
eral spending in the volume that has
taken place was the only means by
which the nation could be carried over
this period of depression. On the other
hand there will be the vicious attacks
of Republican campaigners, the shots
by such men as Lewis Douglas, former
director of the bureau of the budget,
who broke with Mr. Roosevelt over
“reckless spending,” %nd all of those
groups of which the Liberty League Is
typical. These have plenty of cam-
paign material, and you can make sure
that they will use it.
My experience as an observer of pol-
itics and government prompts me to
say that there is nothing that strikes
the heart of the average taxpayer
quite so fundamentally as displays of
waste with the accompaniment of fore-
casts o' greater taxation. Thus, if the
New Deal opposition goes ahead on the
course that appears to be charted for
them—actually it is made to order for
them—they can cause the administra-
tion many anxious moments. I say this,
knowing full well, that the administra-
tion has much argument on its side and
that it is equipped with the finest lay-
out of machinery for influencing pub-
lic opinion that any administration ever
has had. It has at its command all of
the machinery used in crop production
control, the thousands of persons on
the federal pay roll and the millions
who believe Mr. Roosevelt is earnestly
seeking to make this a better country
in which to live. It is, therefore, no
small task for the New Deal opposi-
tion if It is to succeed even in turning
the New Deal strength in the house of
representatives to anything near an
even distribution of the seats.
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
CUNDAY |
Ochool Lesson
By REV. p. B. FITZ WATER. D. D..
Member of Faculty, Moody Bible
Institute of Chicago,
ffi Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for November 17
THE RETURN FROM CAPTIVITY
LESSON TEXT—Ezra Psalm
l*6:l-6.
GOLDEN TEXT—The Lord hath done
great things for ns, whereof we are
glad. Psalm 126:3.
PRIMARY TOPIC—A New Song.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Coining Home Re-
joicing.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR
TOPIC—Making a Fresh Start.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT
rOPIC—Thanksgiving for God’s Care.
Your Best Flare
Forward in Simple,
All-Occasion Frock
The Return Predicted (Jer. 29:1-
New Deal
WNU-L
46—3.1
Wrtfo tor
*REE SAMPLE
GARFIELD TEA CO.
Dept. 55
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cleanse
InternaElf
ard feel the difference!
Why let constipation
hold you hack? Foe!
your best, look your
host —cleans© inter-
nailythe easytea-cup
way. GARFIELD TEA Is
not a miracle worker,
but a week of this
“Internal beauty treat-
ment” will astonish
you. Begin tonight.
(At your drug store)
S
Garfield Tea
I mentioned the Issues of spending
and taxation. The American Liberty
c ,. League which has
spending, consistently warned
Taxation about the possibility
of future heavy taxa-
tion has not been silent sdnee the Pres-
ident some weeks ago made public a
pre-budgetary summation. The League
insists that while present tax rates
soon will provide enough money to
meet what the President terms as “or-
dinary” expenditures of the govern-
ment., the rates are insufficient to meet
the spending which Mr. Roosevelt calls
extraordinary in that it covers relief.
Flirt her, the League, in a statement the
other day, asserted its belief that the
present tax level was high enough to
meet “legitimate relief if present un-
sound spending policies are aban-
doned.” Rut it is emphasized by the
league that even “if unsound spending
policies are abandoned,” the present
tax levels are insufficient to make pos-
sible any appreciable retirement of the
gigantic debt that has been built up
through the New Deal relief program.
So it is easy to see that a head-on
collision between two schools of
Apparently, New Deal opposition
will be concentrated as much In the
congressional dis-
tricts as against the
Opposition President himself.
The reasons are sim-
ple. First, the senate is going to re-
main Democratic whether Mr. Roose-
velt is re-elected or defeated. Only
one-third of the 96 senators come up
for re-election next year and the bulk
of these are from normally Democratic
states. Unless a cataclysm follows the
Democratic party, the senate majority
for the Democrats will continue to be
ample.
Such is not the case in the house of
representatives where the entire mem-
bership must seek election every two
years. There are in the house member-
ship probably as many as 75 Demo-
crats who can be called pure political
accidents. That is, they were elected
from districts which are normally Re-
publican during the landslide that
swept Mr. Roosevelt into office. A con-
siderable number of these naturally
will be retired by the voters just as
a considerable number of Republicans
were retired after they had held house
seats in the early 1920’s by virtue of
election in the Harding landslide. Con-
sequently, changes may be expected In
the house New Deal strength. In con-
centrating the fight in congressional
districts, the New Deal opposition is
battling for position. If the New Deal
majority in the house can be whittled
I down, it will then become impossible
I for the President to drive through his
program of legislation as he has done
in the last three sessions. From the
Republican standpoint, this would be
important since it would place Mr.
Roosevelt in much the same position
that President Hoover found himself in
the last half of his administration when
he had an adverse congress on his
hands. No political leader likes that
situation.
When the New Deal opposition
Jumps onto the questions of spending
and taxation, therefore, and when it
goes back to^ ,s3 grass roots of con-
gressional districts, it takes no stretch
of the imagination oo see that a real
political fight lies ahead. Develop-
ments between now and the nominat-
ing conventions next June may change
the general perspective.
While several of the federal courts,
including the Supreme court of the
IV z, • . United States, are
vy as tun gt on considering questions
on Rights revolving around
President Roosevelt's
program for development of Muscle
Shoals in the Tennessee river as an
electrical power project, government
owned, a newly discovered letter writ-
ten by President George Washington
takes on unusual interest. It seems
that even in 1791, there was argument
about the development of Muscle
Shoals. 1 he letter, which was addressed
to the attorney general of the United
States at that time, called attention
to the efforts being made by individuals
to effect trades with Indians and sug-
gested the necessity for federal laws
that would afford some protection for
the Indians in their dealings with the
white men. It will be remembered, of
course, that the Tennessee river val-
ley in those days was populated by
Indians but the problem that existed
tiien exists today, namely, protection
of the rights of the individual.
® Western Newspaper Union.
1.
14).
It seems that false prophets were
flourishing in Babylon telling the peo-
ple that they would speedil.v be re-
stored to their own land. To coun-
teract this the Lord moved Jeremiah
to send this letter to the captives in
Babylon (vv. 8, 9). In this letter he
advised them to settle down and
quietly pursue their regular callings
of life and not to be led astray by the
false prophets (vv. 6, 7).
1. The length of the captivity (v.
30). Their coming back was to be
“after seventy years.” From Daniel
9:2 it is clear that seventy years
means a definite time. It dates from
the time when the first company was
taken captive, among which Daniel
was found.
2. Recovered by God (vv. 10-14).
God’s purpose In the captivity was to
cure them of their idolatrous practices.
He assured them that when his pur-
pose jyas accomplished he would visit
them and convince them of his good
purpose toward them. Their captivity
he would turn away, gather them from
all the nations, and bring them into
their own land.
II. The Predicted Captivity Fulfilled
(Ezra 1:1-6).
1, The proclamation of Cyrus (vv.
1-4).
a. This was not by accident, but
that the word of the Lord might be
fulfilled (v. 1). What God has prom-
ised he will do; he never forgets.
b. By diviue initiation (v. ]). “The
Lord stirred up the spirit of Cyrus.”
How this was done we do not know.
Possibily Daniel brought to his atten-
tion the prophecy of Isaiah and Jere-
miah (Isa. 44:28; Jer. 25:12). Every
fmpnlse to do good in ail men is caused
by the Lord. It may have been that
Cyrus only saw his own action as a
piece of statecraft—the creation of a
buffer nation between his kingdom
and that of Egypt.
c. The content of his proclamation
(vv. 2-4).
(1) “The Lord God of heaven hath
charged me to build him a bouse in
Jerusalem” (v. 2). This makes clear
that he had some impression of God’s
hand upon him.
(2) Appeal to Jewish patriotism (v.
3). He invokes upon such as possess
the national religious feeling, the
blessing of God, and commands them
to go and build the house of the Lord
God.
(3) Lend assistance (v. 4). Many of
the Jews were established in business
and therefore were not free to go.
Many, no doubt, had lost their nation-
al spirit and therefore did not desire
to go. All such were to lend friendly
assistance in silver, gold, and beasts.
2. The response to Cyrus’ proclama-
tion (vv. 5, 6). The chief of the fa-
thers of Judah and Benjamin and the
priests and Levites presented them-
selves as willing and ready to go.
The company which returned was
largely made up of representatives of
Judah and Benjamin.
3. The royal favor (vv. 7-13). Cyrus
brought forth the vessels of the house
of the Lord which Nebuchadnezzar
had carried away from Jerusalem and
put into the house of his gods. Now
to have 5,400 of these vessels returned
to their owners and sent back to Jeru-
salem to be put to their original use,
met a nearty response by the Jews.
III. The Gladness and Rejoicing of
the Returning Exiles (Ps. 126:1-6).
1. The proclamation of Cyras as a
dream (v. 3). They recognized that
their going back was through the favor
of the Lord.
2. Their laughter and singing (rv.
2, 3). They not only recognized this
as the favor of the Lord npon them,
but testified thereof in the hearing of
the heathen round abont them.
3. Their prayer for prosperity In the
land (v. 4). They were not only going
back with the consciousness of the
good hand of the Lord upon them, but
were trusting him for fruitfulness of
the land.
4. Sowing In tears (vv. 5. 6). The
seed which they were to sow in the
land was so precious that they seemed
to have hesitated as to sowing, and
HONOR DEAD BY
BURNING MONEY
Village in Indo-China Does
Thriving Business Sup-
plying Funerals.
Tlie world depression has not
dimmed in the slightest degree the
prosperity of the little village of
Langbuol, in French Indo-China, the
Inhabitants of which continue to turn
out paper money by the ton to be
burned at funerals so the deceased
will have plenty of money in
next world.
Dard Hunter, one of the leading
authorities in this country on the
art of papermaking, would’not how-
ever, recommend the same panacea
for the United States prosperity, he
said on his return after a four
months’ journey to the Far East.
Mr. Hunter, whose contributions
to the art of papermaking have won
him the title of “the modern Guten-
berg ’ and the gold medal of the
American Institute of Graphic Arts,
went to Longbuoi because he had
heard that its inhabitants were oper-
ating the oldest paper mill in the
world. He reported that the Lang-
buoi villagers were carrying on the
craft of papermaking which their an-
cestors first began on the same site
about 700 years ago.
“Their papermaking methods are
very primitive and crude,” Mr. Hun-
ter explained. “Apparently, they
have not changed in any marked
degree since the invention of paper
away back in 150 A. D. The product
turned out by the villagers of Lang-
buoi is pretty terrible stuff. How-
ever, they are satisfied with It and
don t seem to be able to turn out
enough of the spirit money, for
which there Is a great demand
through Indo-China.”
About 400 men, women and chil-
dren live in Lapgbuoi, which Is a
thatch ed-roof settlement along
mud trail on the edge of the Jungle I one!
,v "~.A
There’s many a “flare” in the fash-
ion sky this fall, aud no smart skirt
will dare sally forth without at least
GT1B T'Jl ? O ill) A »• IV) 1 _______• ■»
fifteen miles north of Hanoi’ AH
the inhabitants work on some phase
of papermaking. But the best crafts-
manship and the chief energies of
the villagers are devoted to the pro-
duction of spirit money.
has flares both back and front, thus
assuring its wearer plenty of style
interest. The drop-shoulder yoke
points twice in front, once in back,
to the bodice and puffed sleeves
which gather round it. Utterly charm-
zens, vi ho, it is believed, will have eltx crepes with plenty of surface in-
no great need of large funds In terest from which to choose—or If
heaven. A special brand of spirit you’re out to be very practical select
money, artfully decorated with lav- a sheer wool.
'Sfh |nustrati0ns of Is burned Pattern 2397 is available in sizes
at the funeral of the “aristocrats” .12, 14. 16, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34 36 38 and
Indo-China. The “aristocratic” 40. Size 16 takes 3% yards 39 inch
sPirit ™°ney is In high de- fabric. Illustrated step-by-step sew-
m nations. It burns with a heavy, ing instructions included
aerid smoke, which floats lazily to- Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) In
ward the blue skies, but eventually coins or stamps (coins preferred) for
manages to reach the departed aris-1 this pattern. Write plainly name, ad-
tocrat in heaven, according to the
firm belief of the Indo-Chinese
priests.
The paper mills of Langbuol are
probably the most remote and lnae
cesgible In the world, Mr. Flunter
said. In spite of this, Langbuol is
the chief source of paper for all In-
do-China. The daily output aver-
ages about 100 reams of 500 sheets
each—almost all of
of spirit money.
Bamboo
dress and style number. BE SURE
TO STATE SIZE.
Address orders to the Sewing cir-
cle Pattern Dept., 243 West Seven-
teenth St., New York City.
Hippo Charges Auto
Giving a savage snort a hippo-
potamus charged an automobile from
" roadside wood between Victoria
fibers, plentiful In the
near-by Jungles, are the source of
Langbuoi’s paper. The bamboo Is
cut and then boiled In lime. Then
It is washed in a stream meander-
ing through the village and beaten
by hand until It becomes pulp. The
pulp is placed next in a wooden vat
containing water. When a screen
of bamboo reeds is dipped In this
vat the bamboo fibers cling to the
screen. These fibers are removed
and made into the famous
buoi paper.
Two cases filled with Langbuol
spirit money were among Mr. Hun-
ter’s luggage. Some of this money
will be used to Illustrate a boob—
his fifteenth—which Mr. Hunter will
write on the origin and history of
papermaking. The rest will go to
the Smithsonian Institution
other museums.
which consists | Falls and Livingstone, Rhodesia, re-
cently. The beast badly damaged the
car. The woman passenger suffered
a broken kneecap and her husband
and daughter were bruised. The
hippo’s shoulder was badly injured
and the animal limped back to the
woods.
Lang-
and
yet they recognized that joy would
follow their sorrow as they brought
with them the sheaves of the harvest.
Monotony
Whether we are rich or poor, we all
have to fight against monotony—doing
the same thing over and over untfl it
loses interest.
We can fight monotony with variety
and one way to do this is by making
a wise use of leisure. If we wish to
avoid the feeling that we are merely
machines, we must become interested
in many things.
Eavesdropping cn the
“Monticello Party Line”
The Monticello Party Line Is an
unusual new radio program, recently
begun on a series of middle-western
and southern stations, it is unique
in that all of the action takes place
over the party line—and the listener
is simply “eavesdropping” on the fun,
rhe daily’ activities, the occasional
troubles that keep the people of
Monticello busy on the line.
The setting of the program is a
real community, Monticello, Illinois—
the home town of Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin, sponsor of the show.—
Adv.
Worth the While
Knowledge Involves great perils,
but it is better than inoculated
ignorance.
It always works i
Jnst do what hospitals do, and the
doctors insist on. Use a good liquid
laxative, and aid Nature to restore
ffleffecL regularily withoutstrainot
A liquid can always be taken in
gradually reduced doses. Reduced
dosage is the real secret of relief from
constipation.
Ask a doctor about this. Ask your
druggist how very popular Dr. Cald-
well s Syrup Pepsin has become. It
gives the right kind of help, and right
amount of help. Taking a little less
each time, gives the bowels a chance
to act of their own accord, until they
are moving regularly and thoroughly
without any help at all.
Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin eon-
tains senna and cascara—both natural
laxatives that form no habit. The ac-
tion is gent e, but sure. It will relieve
any sluggishness or bilious condition
due to constipation without upset.
Patience
Patience Is bitter, but its fruit sweet.
—Rousseau.
c/jove/y cMffi
Reward of constant care
With Cnticnra Soap and Csstlcora
Ointment. Let these gentle emollients
be your beauty aide. At night Lathe freely
with hot water and Cuticnra Soap. If snv
signs of pimples, blotches, red, rough skin
appear, anoint with Cuticura Ointment.
Daily care will help to keep the skin clear
and attractive,
©ICUfiS _ So°P 25c.
V/ H Ointment 2Sr end SQt*,
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Andrews, C. C. The Celina Record (Celina, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 14, 1935, newspaper, November 14, 1935; Celina, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth773201/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Celina Area Historical Association.