Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 11, 1931 Page: 2 of 4
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I'M* of the
determined l»v »Ult»twun* of
of the toll Of th* pwl public <is
l ha* not kn rcfWtod advretoljr ni
the cwintrjr, »hlrh during the fIrnt
_____mm the brat rarer wfwrwncod. wllh
of the same praital a year ago." «J» i report
MtitUtlKd
Jpfltvsf. tie diftawet III fiw of IMS I* only M w
wnt and tht* •hght' inkerw margin may yet be ivtr |
, during the final quartttr * t .
’’iUgaitU— of whether a new (mint in the death rate »
reoched. the lMl health record, to date, la in many I
the m«d remarkable for all year*. In the >'tr*t
it b ilmont tpbtHfvMi th*t th«» UptM State* inii
could eipmence <uch rxrcilent hraltti In a y**r of
business depression awl wideapread unmldoyment
are condition* which lead u* to eq|«ert an increas'd
i toll caper tall) among industrial waKe«arncrs tml
dependent*, the very group whu suffer mofl from .he
^ JT of unfafoWtlle erdhbhrtr cohdltlona
**Arli". the Vear’a remarkable record ha* been made
in apile of a had beginning. In January, there waa widaapfUli,
prevalence Of taflimua and the death rata from that
VKi from pneumonia rtiae sharply. So also did thr
from the principal chronic di*wasc*; namely, heart
diabetes, cgrebral hemorrhage and nephritis, aa
*
V
he aerottd auarter,' however. a*dUtin* t rhaute for the
with two ox-
^rank a* an
second quarter, however, a'distinct
I -*» observed The April death rate.
Ion*. WA* the low, set ever roistered for that month. In
J a lew minimum mortality rate for thnf month was -e-
Jed. and the scowl quarter established n new low figure
ie Is that the cumulative
rate now stands less than I |ie» cent higher than ,he
■us minimum Indeed, union*; the insured living west
I loeky Mount aids, and among Canadian policyholders,
for the first nine month*, ha* tain the ta>st health
Fan men'll" .. i
The insurance company’s statistician* re|«.rt a further
line of 7*s per cent in the tuberruloei* death rate, polatinc
that “such improvement i* all the more remarkable in A
when unfavorable, economic condition* would lead us ,o
a ri*e in the mortality from tuberculosis,
iphtheria is reported to have declined to a new mini-
while the rate for typhoid fever, diarrheal complaints
tidilicos has also declined. A small tncreaai-
in Uie mortally from haert disease, and if this ’a
‘*ff*CillJbelh* 'tod* ***"**"* h‘Kh P0inl 10 th* dc*th -rotod rflumtamn t la Up™
I There is*^ rise reported in the pneumonia death rate. wb^jjJjj^tiw e^^h-
is unusual in a year with high mortality from in-
i mortality record for cancer ia reported as the moat
first nine months of 1MI. No
„ .. or TRi-Tectted rise nf fit jht •mi
Me as great as that has been observed in any previous
The mortality from diabetes ha* increased almost 12
has compared with the correswaidlng period of lO.ui
Oifirfiaesise hasTncrcaaed continuously
1>H; but the change from one year to the next has
in 1M1 than ever before experienced among .hoi
d icy holders of this insurance company,
increased death rates are shown for suicide md
There have been fewer deaths from all types of
combined, but the statintiar* anticipate that more
fatalities will be ro|Kirteel this year than ever
This increase in armed . force
Sa* been mere rapid than the
111 Uhl day* of public scriMa fetters were written to
hqr news; Alness, marriage and inheritance wert. and 1uir^ .iLu7 iianiui Jo**
I are. expressed for the illiterate at a price. Correspond-
i—that is, conversation at a distance between two people
ah.they might be talkng togrther—-used to ta> limit***!
fortunate in education Aid wealth. Hut for just
a century the world has known cheap postage tml
iJ t*ffuefttion. * ”*
Now that everyone can write, few want to. Postcards vi
^“5227 x'lr “■ z:-
* wm * "l** * •»**’• waa si a a* * lit* t
t by the writer or enjoyed by the recipient The de-
for personal stationery and writing |iaper wanes snd
te of the sh«*ets shrinks. People are writing fewer
the old days grandmother couldn’t write much, but *io~*r
r had been to an arademy and could: the nference
thst at the academy mother had discovered that ihe
in this world had achieved letter-writing as they had
rd other luxuries of custom and prestige. It wa* fett
higher sorial level had lieen reached. "
TaTWitttpteri
no expectation that Wsured minds are eotre-
with one '
WMKtJ
IGlVt HIM
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UlWWTSi
<tum
■m
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I
MsTiisiirffw
Kit Ah run r)n*l:
CVM*. • e>. «>» trmUwa **.
all> Sue ftaiasS
■epk*m 1 rhtiht aee
(Mifu'l *»*• S**«*
«• S*1* ismi ***** *** '“1
Mi ****** *** wpis **4 sm* ,
tJMn •• aivrfMMM »• »* «•*<wot
4*Ww*. IWS 1 *«* f*
AHtmt Mi M MM «H* •o.'i B*r>
mU. -A *1. -*«-*.*.» *•• ***
Mk M«Mm> fswiM* fmmtwUk
••*Oif *•* »••*» mkmtnm
rMl* If **». «»*• •* **WUa •** *•«
pmm !• e *ww«*e 4rtm* Mi
lott her l»*l Prwv «*M mm tv*
JBSmS^rna"»»
to* 4W*m sm *m m» *ow tajH
«M< Act op*#*"*** rt** "
si*. 1*4 ■••** »«f* • «I«* m*«
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IkMP ie Mi Mma Mm
rsw ***••* •** *••
nnWI »m. mi on tab W sfcs, Um*» pmOadr Mr. OartaS *a4
SggSfiByjjas sstasvs^g
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hi. .rr-wnu h.4 M»n la n* *>.H
sa* Uwt lh*r »»rr a lb. ts-l
JvowoooS S^Wumari
smsuL
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hTiTiS^i —S~»» *•
StomS Swk mm*. WSra wpM Mm
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•*• t sKai m. ahnuM ha VP
ttSgSSBSt^
arm n.; s6» pat afc a—* swaiii
-Mi pdh wm m Mm *k*» *»
MOlSn I «-* ewrrtM *
MILITARY FORCES
TODAY GREATER |
■THAN EARLY 1914
AS OTHER
EDITORS SEE rr
NOVEL WAYS FOR
■DEPRESSION END
(C«-tim*ed fma'Pag* I)
whirr. foNnwii tM mfi
-■“r" * -:****»■■
V.or.o War. Hare U»*e
taen rraUval. The answer t*
fwais. in rfhe stitisliral meordi at
the worhfs war offleet and adnu
H (k in lisa quiet, pre-war
- *a tia'fiKal r*ar HUOu.
kutau tha LV-rd Stale* |*e-
aesaed an army nf 74,fi*S men. It*
shore* «err guantrd by IP) ships
of wm. Some M.M7 aailnr* and
mariat* manned the** ship* and
protected American latereat*
abroad.
Now, 20 year* later, and |3
year* after the rleae of a “war
to end warn" tha United Ktato*
auptmrtu ISjbmu iiO^tOof-
''mail, ndoAtog tne Piiii-
Ippire Scouts. TMra an approxi
mately 2*1
LKAON IN COTTON
( Aa* ia Alan Iran)
•tarrewi TWB'ttriBBTnrF
anmunt nf c«4t.>n its liant* hare
pledged (lir«n*.1va* to withbolJ]
COME TO FRONT
WASIIINliTON. Nm. II IUB-
The iismnniir drpreiwinn has
fmm the mark t a* a part of the j rolled around to the stag* where
nnith-wide cotton rrJIef elan, j idea* of all aorta, some of them
The** bank* hare rigned plnljres I fannliar to * part generation, are
to fipanre holding of 150,000 bifr*
a* a part of the 2,000,000 qurU
laahMg geaUeman. When yoa at
him you imnnhluiHr Anew that he
I was a ama at amaa Nl* tray hair
aamattod back from bit tampha to I
la rarefat a«tnr* at tb# bento. Ma
Mae eyea ctaae mi HHiaWagr Ma
lb—si, uiiiHy inw—d am kgt. i
rail mffMied that be wm a man wtw
had earn had u> worry concerning
IN trtrtaHlf* m flnanrea.
Mranor* Durand, hia wife, waa
coolly d—rrent She wm a wnall
womaa. aorvaua and irrliatM. con.
aianlly on Ihe alert tor aomithln;|
that may poontUy annoy her. and
oaunliy Bndina H. Her hair would
have been whit# were It no* for a
«ruin beauty ohep oaeelallrt who
eorli -weeh rarefotlr a«
rmy hair, oq <lwt «l*ry
swmi her
bring brought forth afresh by rag
an young spa*tk>s of the Ae4 gen
east ton.
ia Mid the holding movement c^^n^wT^kH' T'hU
be a -ueress. If *o, the lmnkers| »hi*kers, took an extra pull on
are ronfiik-nt that the price of at* his pipe ami devoured with avid
ton vill be hiked and that tint* intercut recent new# dispatches
Will be plenty of Chrirtma* “* ^-----
swse.il.. M'DOWSJL gets
■ LARGER QUARTERS
Henry George.
SMITH AND R0O8BVKLT Tha idealistic young man who
(HrauBHint Rut rr prior) bombarded a part age with, hia
Mayor Coimak. af Chkapo want rolomlm tu arguments for 'a laid
at ai| ta aaah PM paraarn. Last
yw*« tha population had rhwn tol
Itt^MdS paraana. An mripll
■fins of ms,'
t man to oarh
511
The‘Untied Stoles ho* no» lieeti
400 Rare Volumes
Her latant trouble had been hrougKt
ta her »ln a Ntwr from America, and
which Buttered from her hand now
;M oh* sat there bartde her husband
la the ctiitl November «lr.
•I DU you. Chert**. I simply can-
not understand If aha was toying,
-after hH Uwt w* did f*r Bruce.*
TM* wm not the flrot Urn* Chart**
Durand had Mard that rtatoment sad
iling tired, of )t MftJRd
wmewhat roughly.
■*rm uat a—pai «fta— S—h* hr
■raid. "He's capahte of Uklng carol
M himoelt I thtnh If* fool lab to
* chaos home )u.l because some worn-
. m writ— you a ■ letter to the affect
running* I
out JZ
thlng hb* that *hen he *»» m en|.
trge It.n • round w.th tto wroug
>41 m—s." a
r Durand urwtned her .for ihe
tenth nine iMt they prohntdy would
Knd when lb*y arrived hedte that
the what# Ih-na ••* a mteUke. Ml
tlMf WM tAMWi IM
(hmsAunI Mfb Hf fouM nw Nwtbff,
seem »# perouadr M* wife that aarh
would he the ear*
*| haow that Hath would not writ*
in* unleu n «nv *pmMhtna nafty
important. She know* hew t worry
gh* knew i—t wa war* taking tbl*
Nb
>*C-
he night* i
SM PPartmiety I
and i«u the eve
•hteh he
k,Mi dpp
S at the «
MR ftoyttui
• HP • W PfeWHri* fl|ASk>
Of pours* he dids t want It^
idhrry s thief, if tht* a rt mm
but he Bad liard tin tla»*e
tara. It* hue* whai •
tiouru* *h* had when < s. ^
op toatapne. He tUu h*v*
etaggemtad gramly |i« ,
eptir* »nu
for htnuwlf prior to resetting i
iiu.ion* u Rleanor* was tl«n
IDurtn* the roue** *4 ih, >r%w|
UWdt frt—d* with a men it.«
Verb, A Snanrter ah* he dnrt
la Ma groat —PPlitan, ••• ny
Thu* ll * a, ,u*x I
_ d been of
<i tmjSSMf
rg^Sgrtoiftoii
Nr fhiroad did not answer. Tto
twa had cone over tto metier m**y
tiors mmt
i«lr
*^.rtm Kgggg!
MWt to* why Untc* could net to
mar* assawnsH af' bar arh- to
haaw harf—aipdhahM-bSPsart.
Mr Dumnd hrg*» »• wonder atout
Ma awa a*rv*A Ha w—dared I
whether they wdaM ha aSla to hrtd
up andtr tto ronstanl reminder of
Drum's mropaS*. ** Wmnoro called
it all tto way from Krone* u CM-I
■■There wm *mroely a motnenl
itat rs—aam wamrt hrtagmrn ap. -
■chart#* Durand loved hi* nephew
dearly. When Id* toother. Den Du-
rand aad Me fmH. mil* nf*. Sybi
had toon tragically hilled In aa auto-
H Bruce, then a tiny twhy and
Ihroutbt him ap *» Hmugh to worn
M* own. Eleanor* had triad to to B
good mother to nroc*. Chart** Da-
rood knew that But there aro eom*
worn** wh* m'orally da net make
—ad mm— SI—8—l>|p«l<lMl
rnlTT*'111" ' * "
tto manner eh* thonght a boy should I
to reared. Had It not. beweror, been
tor Chart- Isterrruing ooartsatly
and Smtly. Brum would ham had a
sorry tlmo of It
■charteilTuroad. oao of ibawmlfh-
tort — IS. PM— «— •<—Mb
homely man at heart with aa under-
rtooding nalura H* doplorod aortal
Ilf* although he wm part of It There
were n# Dittos that bedlrttoed
wa* able la hroah away r^l
M 4f*HdW tliMl f|t
eliflwi with thte Htw T<*Wr »ssi>i
only really aorthwhSd* part
enure lrtt> * —
Eleanoie romtdalned *1
•to had torn nmlrcirt by hurt, i
and Chart** Ttol neither *r \
cared whrthmarnotrt-h.de.,
oue breakdown end during the 1
pan of ihe trip she actually
herself to remain in i*d w i
ih* *ad «f tto touroey aha
worked tomtit Uito a aut* ■
M—M—Mi— - ■
, tha to— imm trip from New 1
la CMtaga SIS aw help ■
tor Drum1* uaprtactpled arum* i
toart have tmot rota*,
•srajs«- 55!
whtrtred away In a la.lclh io ^
too
Drum were hem* If be mere. —|
ne torn tto rouroxe in tell them t
truth about tto whole th.resf |
would show torn llulh's letter ■
tried to get out of telling thm» j
truth. ■
Mr. Durond winced “IVmTl
about that, neanore* he
tor. “you should know itrare mb.
enough to retrtlw that h* «ftt wSP|
tb* truth about Ito whale matfrr. I
have more faith In him. much ■
j hove in any Biaicijunu i
by Mr* Hay** with all doe i
of couror. to your friend-
ed her «h«J
m,l# haiiifhiily hits tud
faith In Hulh Hayes Kur
ah* knew that ito Haym I
hern robbed, so that couHnl to a I
^13 !• know i bo §g§
She hoped that Bruce would he I
■j— they arrived, although
_____ l that ha would o* Mart
penrtve platinum watch tol l tor t
8h* *
poertf he woilUTbf out e
Tha tort rolled up to the <
the browaatape maartoa that ami
net of Charts* Duroad'l
rd.
(TO BB OOBTIKVm
._«. ww. to-“•
Amgrican ship* of sdrtam dwaocrala-Mayor Walker,* pgr tat an ail land value* —
----- John F. Curry of Tammany Hall v^g „f a nrw taxation »ya-
_____"•J^nsgar Frank Haguadim task siasp Uha Bsaa-tetpi pro-.
Navy's Cily-Mr. Cormak -Id: “1 ca^t ^ They claimed such a tax
xop anything to this tafe abnutjj JT|d yield between #1^00,000/)00
• tyT'ZZ. •wno.uoo/«o A year.
Maybe tto whole affrtr ha. — . / IsfM^j by Hoover
exaggerated hf minor politician. PraakiMt Rom.r rewdved them
listened to them, but that's
Jot M rtccptical about nnothaf j
*lnyVj,(*hlishment
of tto W-me-
^ . talk staMald. Many jt grand-
Given State School father -w far bayand the tint*
npT u wm
hundred rare Tbxu took*, were
purchased earlier In tto year by
Or.- L H. Hubbard, pmoidoat of
IVk— State Cottage for Woman,
am now being catalogued prior to
■ madikta ptacomoni on tto libra
shelves of tbia college.
will
above tto pro-
H,rover mtl-
^,rtp—t »nd this, charge
85,000,000,000 each year for ar m'd (tinue for many y*ars.
MM—> j Nearly a half ndlMon mal—d
Thffte-n ydhrs after tto war tto and doconatd vatornns hn»#
-r-n,......t —— -•—- —Hons am planning for a G—• treated at gomntment
brother* in Washington state have married five Ri*afm*m*»t c<mf*ntoe to
' it is one of thbnc tangled *kt*inn in which a small "wet at Geneva in 19*2. Ttoro
to be his own uncle, we give it tip now. ^ r «dli nttcmid to put figures
----—■ Into tto space, left In a draft
treaty of disarmament, drawn up
and
Jaf his nowopapar to glknpse a
militant yougf ' who
i.tormerl through the country in
IXOC appealing to ,restoration of
silver as a basis of currency on
a “10 to 1" ratio with gold. Wil-
liam Jenningn llryan, likewise, is
living again. ........*—
Though unaWr^fc-gtWr;’ fly
__.headway for yearn, then. Awn
11,000,000,000 yar ymr it Mag the ones have come hack with tut-1
nounced today tto change of loca-
tion of hia store to larger quarters
ia tto Bedded building. Tto (tore
witt ha ready to> serve customer-
Thursday morning. ' •
- m* ttUdPaifatt—ttm mmt n»
mad* beeaum of (to need of mote
space to accomodate hia fast-
gfoBMt1 ——ia. Nat katttstadl
by dipraaaion, Mr. MeDowall hat
not MTiisN talk acart him bat I
has continued hia hustling tusi—
[and has today gna of the largest
food stales in tto Tri-Citi**.
Not many join ago to started
hi# find buainsM venture in Bay-1
town with -a- pan— stand. He
stayed on' tto Job an^11—ststtl
s4|unre, hia busioess as-
sociates said in explaining his suc-
Tto nw McDowell’s stare
will have a formal opoalng in tto
Asm,
Ilf
:atres
TEXAN
Tto parventage of screen villains
«vl.o or* socially popular ia greater
that- i»ny Oltor tyto of actor or
4ittns|S-' • '
Tl:is I* tto rather general (relief
;n Hollywood. 1. FrHxi Ridge-,
Henderaoa. -Jlodisereel'V
at tto Nu-GulftMator t dsy.
DELXE T tf.
.Universal’* l-g*tora!ded com
edy “Ex-Bad Boy", opens an «n-
gagomcnl of two days At tto Dc
Use theater today, and fujly livea
ui> to ail tto complimentary re-
port* which have preceded it. tha
pkture is Mtrraly a comedy ge*
“a The exeellent cast of “Kx-Bod
Boy" is tosded by Robert Arm
strong and Jean Arffeur, and also
include a Ceofqe Brtob* Isda tone, rrany
Jason Hobart- and other screen Jimmy -sduto*
fsvoriteo, and toe been directed in
an effective manner by Vtai Moort.
ARCADIA
William Haims, as the
grafter, J. Rufus Wallingfo
showing at tto Aresdia
where “N<W Adventures ufJ
Rich-Quick Wallingford",
rd, by the famous
Map—stasias.’
Tto iltlpltaiio Hairs *
through a aarMe of smaiinXJ
aided by Jtmmf "Schn0*
rente as a comic chauffeur, 1
Kreeet Torrance in the ml" \
saxophone-blowing Wsckic
toil* Hyams is the Jdrein;.
..........|To Texas Group
lij n world turned topsy-turvy,
is oo predicting whsl may
n. No one today is willing to
tht end of. the war. Thous- say—not even the so-called el-
ands still are in these institutioM-
Against this dark
the statesmen of the world a re
working with an enthusiasm sol-
■sasMi'kafMo
of internatic
1 maUe^ st tto^ Gmm Croak. Tex**.
■ .jgptv
—- _ | tatives are beginning to hymn tto
General Manager virtues of "limitation" rather Lto
Zt N,M /’redaction."
^ 1 Milltoo* lor Wiwid War
I Tto treasuries of tto
-- are pouring nut millions of
Ian each month to pay for a
------that
eMU»t to foretold. Tto 1
ard had come to be air
iMm
IS year* ago.
t haa cost tto
world still .,imJ forth
iSaTST.
jH—Naq wdsdaiJrt'wnmMp—«»*—
When England went off tto
gold standard, R started a chain
of events, the final result of
gvW
almost
Other countries followed
IngUnd in suspending tto stand-
rd, and stHl others took
umsures to protect their supplies.
In such a situation, many t!
e* of older vintage than the hi-
standard and tto air
be
SAN BENITO, Nov. 11 lUJ!)
—Frog leg* have brought re-
lief to the unemployed situa-
tion in tto Rfo Hondo com-
munity, 9 miles north of tore.
Unemployment among boys
in that community haa toon
virtually eliminated at a re-
mit of a thriving business in
frog legs managed by Paul
AftoJtat. ——--. -
Frog legs are shippad in
trucks to markets snd restau-
rants throughout the valley
and aa far as Corpus Christ!.
More than $400 was paid in
October to catchers who sup-
plied frog legs to Affoltor.
One family is said to be en-
tirely supported by tto money
paid for frog legs. Tto frogs
abound along Irrigation canals
HOUSTON, Nov. li
F. Meyer, Jr., was reelected 1
dent of the Houston
Bank when dirtetors hfld
Prent”, took her role too seriously monthly meeting here fur
for that. .. ' 1 George D. Meyer waa nsmrt'
-In living her eharaeteriiatlon In'the cxe
which she is hated by th- east, rhe I
»»»»»! 111 'Wt .-H’Dl l "ftv. urayv enacting the menace in l*ara-
p___if | mount’s “The Mad Parade", show-
P.rog HuiltUlg v | lBf aM Thursday, the Send-
Give* EmployiDOSKt »»«inine "AM Quire on tbs Wealem
HOUSTON BANK.
CHIEFS NAI"
stayed to herself all during the
production.
'Hire M>< I—ds" —Hattutah
Evelyn Brent, Irene Rich, Louia*
Faxinds, Lilyan Taahtnaii • and
h( liapa
■NH
Other offienra ctoeen arei
vin Rouff, active vke
W. Fincher, active vice
it; Dr. J. Allen Kyi*, vice 1
lit; George L. H. Koehler.'
—F. P.' Storlin
NU-GUI.F 'president; J. Milton How
Rear Admiral Byrd, during hl»| president; Frank K. Mey
recent lecture tour, va* entertained} president,
on the art during the filming ofj T. M. McDonald, cashier;
"Indistreat”, Gloria Swanson’a 1st- Hahn, aaaiatant cashier;
est United Artiste picture, at ttolpratahl, assistant cashier;
•- “-M— - f( SrtfrtrtiErtMN
Right with
;
United Artiste studios in Holly
wood.
I Having become so accustomed to
the suh-tero temperatures of the
■ ;ic, where the filming of pie-;
presents a diatinetly dlffsr-j
ent problem, the Admiral almost;
wilted when he praed taiefly l*“»
Larrabee, as
Pennington,
nt
QUAIL IN ARKANSAS
LITTLE ROCK, Ark.,
iERI—From all
Sjrnmk will
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Matherne, Robert. Tri-Cities Sun (Goose Creek, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 11, 1931, newspaper, November 11, 1931; Goose Creek, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021186/m1/2/: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.