Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 73, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 21, 1932 Page: 3 of 4
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BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS
FISHING RECORD
NEW
Do you inhale?
I*.:
BILLY'S UNCLE
SUBSCRIBE TO BANNER-PRESJ
i* a* i»»i
/AT OUR OFFICE
VS HE A REAU
EFHC16NCY
expert -
SHOW
HIM
/ VES, X
/ BUT EUE \
U1AS, PXCVCES?
A uokws twae
AGO . buxx !
HUNTSVILLE BUS SCHEDULE
Leave Brenham tor Huntsv<ile:
10:05 A. M. and 4:00 P. M.
Arrive Brenham from HunUville
9:10 A M. and 2:55 P. M.
impurities concealed in every tobacco leaf!
Luckies created that process. Only Luckies
have it!
last year,
amount i
almost
7 10EUU. G.
( VXOWbA VOU N
LW-E. TH' WIDOW
UklK ? - AIN’T SUE
< APEACVk? >
“VUERE'S AN EFFICIENCY
I EXPERT OUTSIDE WANT $
Hvstt you^Bosv r
Washington, D. C., June 21.—-Prob
", and expects to
this year, and he
wholly without
SAX ! - \F X
THAT ujOUAJU Vt> WcX.
A GHORCH
\U a Ara
\eRRU5iEStYl 0^
PANHANDLE PEOPLE
STUFFING LARDERS
SCATTER SUNSHINE
With
ILLNESS
CARHS^,
DEPREDATING WOLVKB
TRAPPED AT ABILENE
row crops, placing the rows wide
apart in order that wheat may he
drilled in this fall. *
CaODBKN love the flavor and
criapneaa of Kellogg’# Whole
Wheat Flakes. Mothers praise
the nourishment of the whole
wheat.
And everybody welcome#
the big value in the big red-
and-green package. At all
grocOrs. Made by Kellogg in
Battle Creek.
such thing as the labor vote as such, leaders,
Members of labor unions are just like gauged
other human beings and they vote
Republican or Democrat, according to
their up-bringing and personal likes
and dislikes.
from $3,500 to $2,500. If he earns
$4,000 in, 19J2 his income tax payable
pext year will be $44 instead of $16.88
which he paid this year.
Almost every state has a gasoline
tax. and everybody is used to paying
it. It runs up to 6 cents a gallon in
some states. But now on top of that
the govei;nmen{ is going' to charge
manufacturers of gasoline one centa
gallon. If your family uses cold cream,
been mentioned as possible Presiden-
tial candidates. It is not unfair to
Govjernor Roosevel to say that he is
les* popular among the leaders of
his party than almost any other man
who stands a chance of nomination,
yet at the same time he still i* the
leading candidate, with the chances
better than even that he will be nomi-
nated. By the same token, party
DO you inhale? This simple question
caught the cigarette trade by surprise!
"Why bring that up?” they asked. "Why
don’t you let well-enough alone?”
But "well-enough** is not enough for
Lucky Strike! The subject of inhaling is
vitally important i.. for every smoker inhales
knowingly or unknowingly. Every smoker
breathes in some part of the smoke he or
she draws out of a cigarette!
Do you inhale? Lucky Strike dares to
raise this vital question ... because Luckies*
wait until fall to
and preserving
observed, “but
that
such
faul
have
tionable howeyer.
Abilene, Texes.— (AP)—-A roving
pair of depredating wolves, which had
been preying upon flocks of sheep,
goats and turkeys in the Buffalo Gap
vicinity for monh*, have been trap-
ped by Porter Runnel*, three-county
trapper, aycl search b now under
I way for a litter of pup*.
Runnels it employed by ranchmen
in Taylor, Callahan and Shackelford
counties. Since the first of the year
he has trapped 23 grown wolves, and
killed 24 pup*.
- What better Jlne for sendk.J.
Greeting Cards than when the
friend or relative is ill, or shut-
in? In' many way*, card# do
more for the person who* ill
than for those who receive them
on so called, “card occa»ions.
You will be surprised at the
great variety, at all prices, to
be found in our stuck.
Check upt Who is 111
now? Send a cheer up card. Buy
a few and have them handy, in
case of sudden heed.
usually
canning
Fendley
man which the Presidential lightning
may possibly strike, and if those
i Rootevelt-instnicted delegates could
As the time* for the Democratic all be sent home and the nomination
Convention approaches there is a very left to the Democratic Senators and
much stronger concentration of scuti- members of Congress, Smith would
married man with - one child
net income of $3,000 has not
had to pay any income tax the last
few years. Next year he will have to
pay the treasury £4. because his per-
many state*.' The danger in this sort
of political promising for vote-getting
purpose*, is that no matter how they
talk, before election, .American peo-
ple have never had the habit oT vot-
ing a* groups or classes. Many a
man in private life, as well as in
public life, talks wet and votes dry.
Tere are always a lot of efforts in
ably what the average man wants to Presidential years to capture the la-
know most about what Congress has votc but ther<. never was any
already completed is: How does it
affect me individually?
| Well, the new tax bill affects ev-
’ cry body. In
manufacturers’
be absorbed by
tice, all taxes
popular mind into an extremely ap- almost an hour, using ordinary tac-
pcaling candidate.
i Whether he is personally nominated
for President again or not, there is no
I doubt that Governor Smith will have
a great deal to do with shaping the
{party platform, and rf he lias his way
I there wil Ibe very little side-stepping
and pussy-footing about it. Mr. Smith
lias a way of telling the world where
he stands, and he is likHvxfo insist
that his party take the-same atQjudt-
Port Isabel, Texas.—(AP)-»-A
fishing record for the Gulf Waters 4n
this section wa« hung up recently- by
Kimmel of Dallas. He landed
snapper which weighed 125
pounds, the largest on record in this.
He fought the big, fish for'^nRWRIBE TO SAWRK8.FUM
promises to the wef* didn't carry very menr in the party against the claim* almo»t certainly be the nominee He
of all but three of the men who have came so close to winning in 19ft that
there is a very Urge element in the
party which would like to see the is-
sue drawn again between Smith and
Hoover, in the belief that Smith has
grown in the popular estimation and
Hoover has been the victim of
u serious setback, whether hi*
or not, that Mr. Smith would
a walkover. It seems very ques-
that he could be
so far as sentiment can be nominated, as it seem* more and more
n Washington, have a more questionable that anyone except Guv-
sincere and genuine admiration for ernor Roosevelt can be named when
Alfred E. Smith than for any other the Democrats meet.
If Roosevelt can be beaten the feel-
ing here is that Newton D. Baker is
the most likely dark horse. He haa.T
the complete respect and confidence a black
of all of the party leaders and it
believed he can be built up In the section
theory, some of the
taxes are supposed to
the trade, but in prac-
are passed on to the
ultimate consumer. There is a tax
on soft drinks, for example, and the
consumer is going to pay it whenever
he .tmys even a bottle of soda pop,
perhaps not by paying more, but may-
be by getting less for his nickel.
Every time anybody buys a watch or
a piece of jewelry or any kind of
sporting goods, he is going to pay
more for them.
Those taxes and many of tl»e ->ther*
are effective as of June 21st of this
year. The average citizen is going to
pay some of them in his monthly elec-
tric light bitt: -which will carry a 3
per cent tax. On every long distance
telephone message posting more than
fifty cents he will pay ten cents or
1 more, according to the distance. Tele-
grams now cost us all five per cent
WEU_ . MMZTHA'E MA SAYS
M.R.% U)ATT WCMkD KAKE. A
DAHDV VOWE. VOW. YOU
'GAUSE. SHE'S A Elfc’LT CUXSE
( UOuE.EK.EE-V’ESZ —ALT X ~~
k KUOW WE’< A GOOD <
^T COOK. VUE )
V '. y
of the farms would average half a
dozen hogs or more, and that the
more progressive farmers were can-
ning both vegetables and meats.
“I saw one farmer with 700 baby
chicks”, Fendley said. “He told me
of plans to can every old roefeter on
the place. His hens will furnish him
with eggs next winter, and his meat
supply wil be greatly enriched by hist
processing methods.
“Another farmer has three acres of
beans. Of course, some of them will
be put on the market. Still another
said he made $300 profit from a flock
of turkeys
double that
will do it
equipment.
“Farmers
begin their
activities”,,
they are at it early this year”.
Fendley said wheat farmers whose
crops were lost by wind,, drouth or
late freezes, were planting the land to
B- A.'-riat-' P-es« I
Amarillo, Texas, June 21.—Pan 1 he
handle farmers already are stuffing *>th.a
their larders as a fortification against
any possibility of another "hard win-
efiarges' More riTarc^drcy <vrTt^- 77^ rit v*
is one cent on every ten cents above
forty cents. If you have a bank ac-
count, every check you write will cost ,
you two cents, w-hich will be t'narged j
against your account by the bank. Be-
FOR HARD WINTERginning °n th< 6,h °f Ju,y every ut
rim U/1I11J Wlnlltfit will cost three cents instead of
-^arm families in this territory wfif
not isK~-”,-~said
Walter H. Fendley, field inspector
for the United -States Seed Lqan of-
fice, after completing a tour that car-
ried1 him to several hundred farms of
the area.
TU£R€ VIAS NT AMALAHT
chair ,in the reception
OFFICE, WAEN HE ( AH64M.
i BUT T HADN’T TURNEDKY
\ BACA BEFORE ME *AS
I SEATED AND A FAT
y—)MAN *JAS ----
K STANDING *5
Hectograph Ink. Hectograph Car-
bon Paper, Refil Composition, Mime-
ograph Duplicator Ink, Mimeograph
Stencils, Correction Fluid, for sale
by Banner Press.
Do you inhale? Remember—more than
20,000 physicians, after Luckies had been
furnished them for tests, basing their opin-
ions on their smoking experience, stated that
Luckies are less irritating to the throat
than other cigarettes!
“It’s toasted"
A K. AMBIUCA
TUNB IN ON LUCKY
STRIKE—60 m-
•U> tht trtrU‘1 *a«r
LtKbSlnLt »mi ftMaru.
nursi TionJaf
Ma SatanLn nmni tnf
N. fl. C emmh.
Fendley said^he found “more and
better gardens" than he had ever seen
in the Panhandle in any other year.
He said almost every farm was tvell
stocked with baby chicks, that most lipstick or other cosmetics, they will
cost 10 per cent more, but toothpastes
and toilet soaps carry only a 5 per
cent tax. .Cameras pay a 10’per cent
tax under the new law-.
The automobile tax of three percent
will make a difference of $30 in a
thousand dollar car. That isn’t going
to hit very many people very hard
this year,—Tires will carry a 2 1-4 per
cent tax, so that if this tax is passed
on, the dealer selling a tire that has
been -priced $10 should not charge
more than twenty-five cents advance.
But there i« also a tax of Tour cents
a pound on tires and inner tubes.
One advantage the Democrats al-
ways have over the Republicans is
that they hold their national conven-
tion a couple of weeks later, and so
have a chance to sense the public’s
reaction to the Republican platform
and nominees. This gives the Demo-
crats a chance to promise more than
the Republicans promised, wherever
they think it is going to get them
votes. That may easily be the case
this year in the matter of the prohi-
bition plank in the respective party
platforms. That is what the Demo-
crats tried in 1928, but their broader
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Blake, T. C. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 73, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 21, 1932, newspaper, June 21, 1932; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1174977/m1/3/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.