Harrison Times (Newspaper) - August 10, 1933, Harrison, Arkansas 3 mm FIFTY-SEVENTH 6. AUGUST 10, 1933. HOME TOWN Today Flying Hitler's Our Blue Eagle Mussolini's New 1933) By ARTHUR The two French and Maurice who flew Long Island on Saturday on their way to or and the world's long distance flew over Paris early Sunday only seven minutes behind the mark set by Colonel And the French prepared for a 70-hour, 7,000 mile carried the heaviest load ever lifted frolm the ground by a B You cap not imagine the enthusiasm of the Frenchmen gathered at Le Bourget flying the spot where Lindbergh when they saw their own carrying the French flying low over the to drop a then roaring on to beat the world's long-distance nonstop set by Frenchmen in Wonderful people the and their which knows what airships will in future has the greatest lighting on * Future days glancing through Hitler's book Mein Kampf will find in it explanation of the Hitler For instance Hitler education must be so planned as to give the the conviction that he is unquestionably superior the youths of other His physical training must give him the feeling that his nation is V * The Spartans had that but they died although they trained boys to waylay miserable unarmed slaves their way to in the early and murder them with Yous cannot make boys or men superior by telling theim they are The kaiser and his officers tried and their soldiers kept as they marched through Belgium in five But they are not in Paris The Germans are a very great in But to be pushed into another war is what they do NOT There is however another not afflicted with any Frederick the Great and that Hitler shows when the chancellor talks of and acts to correct it. He is able to boast that he has restored 2,000,000 idle Germans to their he promises to keep down unemployment through the and to abolish unemployment next If he keeps that last Germany will follow whatever his mistakes in other * In many different ways the world deals with with her has not an idle man or Russian labor organizations are part of the Italy puts men to where and when the forbids takes away the right of workers and employers to since the has had the least serious employment problem of all the Every Frenchman has a relation who owns French and he works on the land if city work is Even we have at last eluded that the greatest of problems is the government's and have our N R A Blue May it work better than all the state houses will convene next monday ' Sixteen Including Beer And Wine Measure Listed For Little Aug. 9.-Listing 16 separate items for legislative including legalization of light wines and Governor Futrell Tuesday night issued a formal call for a special session of the general assembly to convene at 10 a. Governor Futrell said he considered as the most important of the proposed pieces of legislation that of co-ordinating state laws with the national recovery act so as to make it possible for the state to take advantage of every recovery benefit offered by the federal A surprise item in the call was that providing for continuation of the state highway audit issuance of short term notes to pay and for payment in cash of old highway department vouchers under in Eleven were placed ahead of that of legalization of More than two-thirds of the membership of are pledged in advance to support a % and beer and to limit the session's expenses to general assembly should pass all the proposed legislation by Wednesday of next Governor Futrell the remainder of the time to debate the beer which I consider the only controversial question in the MACHADO REGIME CRACKS WHEN HAVANA STRIKES Mass Meeting To Consider Projects Information On Sewer And Hospital Loans Will Be 1 taxes will pay for cotton cut The early downfall of President Gerardo Machado of Cuba was forecast by observers as strikes throughout Havana reached the proportions of a major political Havana virtually was paralyzed as laborers of all classes joined transportation workers in what began as a bus strike and developed into a mass tion against the Machado Above is a general view of Havana and the Cuban capital with picture of President John B. Silaz Dies At Home Widely Known Railroad Man Succumbs Tuesday To In this Mussolini helps solve the employment problem and benefits Italy for all tilme to Our government is working along similar luies in the Tennessee valley * a Mussolini who has a low opinion of self has said in the last analysis can only Perhaps this government will show him that President Roosevelt's kind of with General Johnson and Lawyer in action can do more than Robert born August eleventh one hundred years tl would be surprised to know how Lake City and East John B. aged 57, one of the best known railroad men in Arkansas and widely known throughout the country as an operating died at his home in Harrison Tuesday at 5:50 p. m. Until his resignation July 1 he had been general superintendent of the Missouri and North Arkansas railroad for the last six Mr. Silaz was born in and began his railroad career at the age of 17 at Wash. He became a telegraph operator and was dispatcher and chief dispatcher on various railroads in the West before coming to Ar For several years he was chief dispatcher for the Rock Island in Little Rock and went from that position to the Cotton Belt as assistant superintendent with headquarters in Pine During the World war Mr. Silaz was general superintendent in charge of troop train movements to and from Camp Pike on all roads entering Little After the war he went to arizona votes for dry repeal Three to One Wet Sentiment Indicated In Returns Of little interest exists today in the questions that he discussed so savagely in his denunciations of Christian Men no longer argue about Joshua making the sun stand in or about the whale swallowing Mental fashions new have changed the direction of the atom which such as its revolving around the trillions of times in a or 2,000,000 star cities as as our milky one of them located 300 million light years from our solar If the known universe is so big that traveling 186,000 miles a would need 600,000,000 years to cross what is the use of arguing about old * The most interesting thing about Ingersoll is the fact that his father was a devout who hated and denounced human while telling his congregation that the creator of the universe sentenced millions of beings created by to the horrid slavery of hell fire through all To young that seemed Mussolini conquered the Pontine that have plagued Rome with fever succeeding where all others had failed in one thousand years of Now Mussolini lays the stone of a new be built on reclaimed marshes that were once The Italian ruler works quickly and expects to have his city for 50,000 people ready next Not since Alexander the Great have cities been thus built to Alexander did not live to out his most interesting city which involved carving a stone mountain into a statute of with a highway running his outstretched and a While America and some other countries TALK about France practices after the war of 1870 calculated that France could pay ah indemnity of five billion one billion He was surprised when largely of the peasant subscribed the five billion indemnity fourteen times Paris reports that French thrift in of and gold and silver hoarding still reaching the huge total of thirty five billion Billions of the hoardings are in gold hidden away in and largely United States gold which was imported into France by the hundreds of millions of while France forbade the distribution of French gold coin as soon as we have stop French collecting of American god as soon as we have ern as general superintendent and resigned that position to come to the Missouri and North Arkansas six years Mr. Silaz had just returned from a motor trip to the Century of Progress Exposition and sections of the North when he was stricken with appendicitis two weeks He underwent an operation and apparently was well on the way to recovery when complications arose about a week He had grown steadily worse for the last three or four Mr. Silaz was a having taken all degrees in both the York and Scottish and a year ago was made a life member of India Shrine temple in Oklahoma He is survived by his two George B. of Pine Bluff and John B. Jr. of a Miss Marguerite Silaz of his Mrs. Mary Silaz of three Fred and Francis Silaz of and Sam Silaz of and four Mrs. Paul Mrs. Henry Mrs. W. A. Price and Miss May all of Mrs. Webb was here when Mr. Silaz Funeral services will be conducted at the home at 10 o'clock Thursday morning by the Rev. H. J. of Eureka S. E. G. K. George Following the services at the the body will be taken to Conway where burial will be in the Road to Memory cemetery in charge of the Aug. 9.-Arizona's ratification of the Twenty-first amendment prohibition seemed assured night when returns from 249 of the 444 precincts showed 26,017 for repeal and 8,224 In the same number of Mrs. Isabella Greenway had nearly a lead over her nearest opponent for the Democratic nomination for Mrs. Greenway had 60.108; Harlow Phoenix 5,569, and William 3,759. Gov. B. B. Moeur joined thousands of other Arizonans yesterday in voting to make this state the 21st to ratify am personally the governor said after he cast his I supported the mandate of President Roosevelt and the This state's prohibition enforcement laws were removed from the statutes by a vote of more than 2 to 1 last Security Bank Moves Again Institution Returns To Its Original Location On Stephenson Ave. The Security Bank was moved today from the Kirby building to its former location in the bank building on the southwest corner of the Sale of the bank building and fixtures to the Seem ity Bank was completed in July as one of the final transactions made by W. P. liquidating agent for the Peoples Savings The Security Bank previously had purchased the Citizens Bank but later sold it to W. H. Bank supplies were removed this morning to the new quarters and the money and lock boxes were moved soon after banking hours under heavy The bank will be open for business in its new quarters Thursday J. M. vice president and cashier announced The interior of the bank building has been redecorated and - Preparations are being made by Chamber of Commerce and Council Committees to to a mass meeting at the courthouse Thursday night all information available on proposals to seek federal loans to finance construction of a municipal hospital and a new sewer system in The mass scheduled for 7:30 p. was called at the suggestion of the City Council after the hospital and sewer projects had been discussed at the council meeting Monday and Mayor Worthington had appointed a special committee to work with Chamber of Commerce committees in gathering data on the The Chamber of Commerce committees Sewer M. L. J. Cooper and Rex Hospital Roy W. and John R. New The City Council Com is composed of N. V. Bryan Roy Baker and Milton A joint meeting of the three committees has been called for noon Thursday to assemble the various data The information thus compiled will be presented to the mass at which general discussion of the proposed applications for loans will be In a telephone conversation Wednesday Hayley M. secretary of the Public Works Administration Advisory Board for at his office in Little Rock said it was his opinion that a loan for a sewer if could be made to absorb the outstanding indebtedness of the present sewer system in thus relieving property of sewer taxes and placing all beneficiaries of the sewer system on a parity in the matter of service Proponents of the two projects emphasize that if loans are ob they will be secured by liens on the projects and not on property All property owners in Harrison are urged to attend Thursday night's mass Funds for Growers Who Plow Up Fields Will Reflect ni Price of co be will they be paid for That question doubtless occurs to you as you read of cotton farmers plowing up 30 percent of their is the per The answer is the federal processing and the detailed story of how that is going into effect is a matter of interest alike to the the retailer and the buying On August 1 every wholesaler was required to count and weigh every article made wholly or partly of and to pay thereon a of approximately 4 1-2 cents a Tax Schedule Under this schedule a 3-pound bolt of comfort cotton pays a tax of about 13 1-2 a yard of bed 2 1-4 a yard of cheese from 1-4 to 1-2 depending upon the weight and a man's winter union suit about 11 1-2 a child's knitted union suit about 9 a yard of oilcloth about 3-4 for a cotton a man's shirt about 3 The retail stores have all of August in which to sell cotton products without the consumer feeling the effects of the processing To Add to Prices After August 31, every retailer will add the equivalent of the tax to retail Store owners here say they will be that time to pay the tax on all cotton goods in their excepting only shipments which have been taxed through the Thousands of Wage Are Drawn Into NRA all dry agents are discharged 600 Employes But Majority Retained In New CORRECTLY SPEAKING means lowly or Colloquial when used to mean or publishers offer code Minimum Hours And Wages of Press Is An impresario is an organizer of public especially the manager of an operatic or concert heliotrope are minor In monkeys and apes the number of pairs of ribs varies from eleven in some species to fifteen in Denver Suffers Its Worst Flood COUNTRY CLUB NOTES Harrison Country Club officials announce they have the golf course open to all Rotarians and Lions until August 31. This was done on account of the tournament arranged between the two which is to open immediately and close by August 31. The secretary of each club is to furnish the tournament committee a list of their and will make a chart showing how the game will be This chart will be at induced this Aug. 9.-Preparing for the abolition at midnight tonight of the Prohibition the government yesterday sent to all dry administrators and clerks an official notice of John S. expected to head the prohibition unit in new Division of Investigation being established in the Justice that about 1,200 of the 1,800 employees let go would be rehired He said that although material in enforcement activities was many of the administrators might not be reemployed and will be made all along the line in the interest of The first savings of the general re-organization of federal to take effect August 10, were estimated at the Budget Bureau yesterday to be around instead of upward of estimated originally by the Modifications of the principally the unifying of federal purchasing agencies into a procurement division of the and disbursing offices in a disbursing were charged with cutting into the expected These two steps were counted on for annual reductions of between and but their consummation has been postponed to allow until December 31-ror earlier if permit careful realignment of the buying and spending functions now scattered in about 3,000 units through all de and Each month's operation without the unified agencies was described Aug. 9.-An offer to operate under President Roosevelt's blanket re-employment agreement presented yesterday to the National Recovery Administration by the nation's newspaper Shortly Hugh S. the industrial said at a press conference that he had not seen the proposed code and did not know when he would consider it. The agreement was drawn up by a committee representing the American Newspaper Publishers the Southern Newspaper Publishers the Inland Press the New England Press Association and other organizations of publishers of daily A statement by the committee said the country at large had kept its employment and pay rolls on the level of the newspaper industry there would have been no need for any codes at The proposed said Howard president of American newspaper Publishers for a shortening of for minimum wages higher than provided in the blanket for the maintenance of existing and reservation of constitutional right of a free which cannot be Jay application of a licensing system or the use of injunctions to suppress a our opinion in the highest possible it supports president's Davis added in a letter to the Aug. 9.-Hundred* of thousands of additional wage and * Jj retail coal i and metal were drawn within the wage and hour regulations of the National Re- ij covery Marking the beginning of the j renewed effort of Hugh S. j recovery to blanket the country with ments reaching every he approved modifications of President Roosevelt's re-employment ments for five additional It became known that the J ful weapon of publishing names will be used against violators of the codes and Mrs. Johnson as Chairman | Decision to make known in every community those who display the blue eagle of the NRA without fulfilling its terms was revealed with the appointment of Mrs. Hugh S. Johnson as chairman of the Complaint Committee of the Consumers Advisory Board headed by Mrs. Mary Mrs. Johnson ' | will be charged with enforcing the regulations that her husband has laid No disciplinary action is planned from Washington immediately This will be left for the time being to the force of i opinion in each the time is as Johnson phrases complaints will be received by Mrs. the alleged violator will be given an opportunity for and if this is not satisfactory his * will be published in Johnson emphasized to newspaper si men that this would not be boycott but a plea to the nation to patronize those stores which are with the administration by raising purchasing power spreading - am going to start out after I i think the time is right to try and people to buy he should be done in support of this movement and not Johnson added that the ment probably would not buy ducts in the future from that won't live up to the Here you see what actually happened when a cloudburst caused the worst flood in the history of and part of the damage it left in its At top is a remarkable picture showing a huge wave sweeping right through the meaning a failure to achieve a business district when of dani gave This photo taken near the county Lower picture shows the damage resulting when one carried along by the roaring crashed into another bridge near Curtis Two persons lost Livestock Market Livestock markets were weak to lower August 7, at the Union Stockyards in as well as at all outside Hogs were 10 to 20c lower Monday at were 25c off at the cattle market was slow to weak as pared with a week and the lamb market was weak 25c lower at practical bulk of the good lambs offered for sale Monday sold at the top Among shippers from W. M. with ' John 10 40 top Edgar 4 G. V. 2 Many other prominent stockmen of the Harrison community also were on the Union market Highest prices paid for produce in Harrison markets 8c, butter fat 13c, heavy hens 6c, hens 4c,, heavy broilers 7c, light broilers 4c. HOPEWELL Miss Mae of ' spent Saturday with her Misses and Brown returned Sunday to the School of the Ozarks to enter Cecil Murphy spent the week with Carl Edwards of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mulford the last of the week at the Logan Jane Kendall returned Sunday from a two weeks visit to relatives in Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Cox and three children of. Mrs. Johnny Cox and son of California and Mrs. Ruth Langston of Oklahoma are visiting at the home of their Mrs. Isabelle Cox and their Mrs. D. H. Sneeringer and Rev. Lafferty filled his appointment here Sunday and Sunday their lives in the cloudburst He was a luncheon a million of G. V the evening with MARKET REPORT Mrs. B. J. Goss and ' Mr. and Mrs. W. M. and son were Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mrs. Lex Capps is her Mr. and Mrs. Sharpe of - Hugh Murphy visited evening with sister and Mr. and Mrs. E. R. HIGHLAND Hobert Aubrey is very ill. Austin Reubell has been gone for some time has returned Mrs. J. A. Brimmage and Kathleen have returned from visit to i Miss Fay Webb who visiting at the R. R. Harris has to Newton