Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [34], No. 175, Ed. 1 Friday, April 28, 1939 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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SW1’
•' SV"
■A*
■
f
)S
TO CLEBURN
VISITORS
►
The Only Daily N«w*i>ap»r Published in Johnaon County
H YEAR, NO. 175
PRICE FIVE
J
The
VISITOR TODAY
K
U
Washington Group
i.h
V
*
ed open
tenicn
slons
Great Britain uiid other Kuro-
. Olflclul mid tongiei-.sioimI quarter*
Meet Students
SAI
11 of
Request of Oil
Wter Ref
lotor
and
dy
Rue! Wal-
•ll
K
At Lion Luncheon
-
lb
all
-
*
-O
erf i sed
papers
United Press Wire Service
OentnU Preea Service
Polish Officials
See Chance For
Negotiations
Lindy ’s Family
Arrives in U. S.
Fine Assessed On
Slot Machine Count
City Council Will
Meet Tonight
their
the
60c Per Month by Carrier
In Otty__
Ison and
Werfnesd
ENROUTE TO U. S.
day;
p ni
>1 iKici pr —
£ .nd Morrison Rites
Saturday 10:15
At Funeral Home
h result, traded
The new oarn-
roosals
fcthat
'I
Danzig Return,
Path To East
Prussia Sought
E.
m.
B.
man. Jr., of San Angelo
Elks To Stress
Americanism
At Convention
n Mound
:plored
:ar
Record Number
Of Farmers In
AAA Program
j COLLEGE STATION. April 28 —
today ' :
* fare
Dr M
chairman
inchidfli a___________
Ventingand Rev A F
Jr., of oan Angeio wno is curr
ly bolding a youth revival at
-First Baptist Church
WELCOME
FATHER
t Texas Generally fair to-
and Saturday Wknnei In
portion Saturday,
it Texas ■ Parfly cloudy to-
and Saturday Xight -showers
itrenje west -portion tonight
■er in north and east central
(M Saturday
K
V?' !
A charge pt exhibiting a slot
machine brought a fine of 1100 and
easts In Justice of "Peace R. L.
Derryberry's court Thursday Narq-
ad in the complaint was Horace
(fonokey> Foster, ,
L
: BAYLOR GROUP
TO EDIT PAPER
j
of I lie
e Citv
kid that the mound
|e Ctxgfo tribe or a
It Indians and that
Iresembled those found along
Besiasippi River
workmen have uncovered
floor levels to houses tn the
> village Bcvtni smaller Iri-
mmuMis have been found
I a three-mile radius. and
Cemeteries had about 60
CARKANA. Tex.. April 28. (U.R)
d. c- --—
mhs is being exfdored on the
liver near here, one of four
its eponsored by the Untver-
*. Texas and Works Progress
listration
F. Jackson, university arche-
said the mound is 190 feet
|4fi feet wide.- and 30 feel
Approximately one-fourth of
ea has been explored Jack-
waa built
tew pre-
r .. v*s served with a
subpoena in a Dallas, hotel egrly
today to apptear before the House
this morning ' to show cause why
be should not be held in contempt
of a House committee Investigating
organisations soliciting contribu-
tions from oltj. age pension seek-
ers
Federal authorities already have
been asked to investigate whether
the Texas Pensions Union of which
Anderson is campaign director was
complying with all postal laws
The organization Ly soliciting 81
contributions for a campaign to de-
mand 830 a month old age pen-
■ H
REUBEN YOUNG
Rettbdn YbUtlrf. great command-
er of the Maccabees is lionor
guest of the North Texas Dis-
trict Association which is hold-
ing a one-day session in Cle-
burne today Young will speak
at the open uuietlngktonight at
the Brown gymnasium.
p Two Hundred
:?d Maccabees In
Cleburne Today
Representatives
Of Colleges To
— peaceful negotiations of European
fl heater Groups i‘ur^Um-e^n ^tax
; 'Indicated that the speech was not
, .... • .. . j - .... , Others, however, thought that It
Lt hn-eshMltiwed Increased danger of
RrlchstBK ;m«!tIllgs with Mrs Bsther Martin. tlon«
'"" ? jrp. and Mrs Amanda Me-
Intirc Fort. Worth, responding ------ ....... __
The afternoon was scheduled to thev felt In danger . v
get undei wgy at 2 p m with re- — -
pbCka .frptn stx divisions The pub- th— , t
Hr Is Invited tn the night session Tor a general peace and diaarm-
which will be held al Brown gym- *“— j
naslUin A prbgram of drills and
Other entertainment will be held
Dhnrlng wtil follow
■Reuben Young will
speaker at the night meeting
Tackle Worth
Ten Grand But
He Can’t Fish
ONLY ON
h Africa.
openis*
eleven*- J
i School-
T. ftbfnJ
e leg .'
County Judge Seroyer today ret “
Celved a mewsage from District 8
WPA officials inviting Johnson
County residents to view tha WPA >
and NYA exhibits in the WHI Rog-
He discussed the mouth ers Coliseum »t Fort Worth Sun- ’ ;
...» visiting hours will'be frosbloS
to t p. m.
ouA
>EOPLE
By BOY BACU8
iverlng the
ses With a
everything
to the Ameflclm Pbultry Journal
FALNB rnut ALARMS C'OSTI.Y
ST LOUIS (UJ8 —It costa the
city of St Louia an average of
$193,000 every year to answer be-
tween 580 and 600 false fire alarms
according to Major Albert Bond
Lambert, chairman of the board of
police commtssionett. The cost of
unawei Ing each alarm fal« or
otherwise, is estimated at M2S
first mjanisad step leading to the I
cvorihi(||. elimination of rabies tn
the United Stales will be taken on
May 3 in the headquarters of The
American Kennel Club at 231 Fourth
Ave whrti tlic special committee
nppolnted by the governing body
‘Of pure-bred dogs wftl hold its first ,
meeting Thia committee was .
.. ’ dehlgntUed by the board of directors
1() ' of the ARC following the reported ,
gw
calves 5
1800. mostly 20 higher;
itcherk 6.80; bulk good but-
c—g 00-
Representilives ot four- Baptist
schools of higher education in
Texas w-iH be Oh the program at the
county-wide rally of high' school
seniors /I' tht» First Bapttat Edu-
cational building tonight at 8
o'clock. Mrs W. J Knnbro will
extend a welcome to the group, , flrnai pioni
Mason Johnson will give the atraiht of
sponse A tiiii from Decatur Bap-
will be made bv Harold Drennan. direction of the anti-trust division
and Mias Fannie Bell at Decatur of the Department of Justice He
Baptist College , said- It. was u forerunner of slm-
for a one-day session Heading the
list of honor. guests was Reuben
Ybupg. great' commander, bf Dal-
las ■
. Tile 19 « m assembly got un-
dei way with Mrs Lena Carpenter
. of Cleburne presiding Mrs F"*
“ n I Clark and Tyson Payne-1 extended
greetings with Young and Mrs. ridor
j Minnie Snoit Burleaon. responding i
| Mrs W. 3. Mkrvel of Cleburne many would not
; prrMtlM over the luncheon'at the military nature,
... Y April 2ft Ajuerieaii Legion hall 4 Mayor Mbon ”'“* " ■
tUP> While Adolf Hiller was ml- atid Mrs. Hartle Morion extended
■fee*' swain. «<«« eurni >v^)»a*«i -<v **•*-•> •»• sgg «>aaa> • XvwawMfgWRPl l ’r’y~•Tr—*■
dUtrllMilihH companies injiuid ovary hm.n, -wudmji mulch IM m
or th» | Germany, tl'm mau wlipao appeal
>e«e chain j.Ior; peace, he was answering, Prcsi-
deff-ndanta: dent RoowveH, was iU'hla .bpd
if Cwnpany, sleeping,
. ... ----------.-"-y; I Mr Rhoseviiir regaMed Hitler's
The Consolidated Theatres, Inc [speech, it Was. said authoritatively,
operating in Oklahoma iu>d Texas; pis a speech billy and in no sense.
The Westex Tiiealre.s. Tnc... <>i>cr-,inii huswei to th" appeal which he
atlng In Texas and New, Mexico, made to HiNcr and Bonito Mu»-
and the R. E Griffith Theatres, '.-.olllit oh April 15 He anticipates
■> T»voe uch now 'u direct reply from both of them
pr excavation projects carried
Mh-i ttie 8181.000 Uhiversity-
[pragram are at Victoria,
Gn, and in Central Texas
| on ttie Texarkana project
last fall. ‘
Lukxxiy si ai ted a controversy i
b «t the University of Texas
it men and women. We are
M in oh. the end of the dis-
bn but the following piece
bn by a oo-ed Who did not
her name, might -toe Inter-
■ to men—and women. . It la
Brily for coltogiates but Cle-
b males will get the general
L The co-ed writes:
KATE MEN
Because they get peeved if you
I believe what they say. and
[think you're dumb if you do.
Because they can't resist mak-
bo«ne crank at the blondlned
beatat the drive-in stand,
■•cause they persist in stand-
bn street corners and atead-
lr eyeing the shrinking violets
wlink by
Because they think stacking
bottles and. smoking smelly
| to <un
Because they- resent women
.wear makeup but .would re-
Iher more if she didn't
Because they save up all their
hr and flien expound it in
I movements on the dance
Bettuise they call their girt-
hs 'dun’ but wouldn't be
with a more intelligent crea-
pean countries, which he* U
I biliignig to United Blates for a
J tour The collection.. Started
by his lather, valued at about
. j SHO.otx). took nearly forty years
GOIJ> MINE TRADED FOR ALE
SYDNEY Auetralta (U.B — An
Australian counterpart of the' B»>-
lical character who sold his heri-
tage for a mews of pottage haa
been reported from the Interior.
TVo men, tired uf mining their
irfld claim without * *
It for a caae of ale. __
era immediately started tunneling
in the opposite direction and un-
covered hdaw depnmu at goid.
Howard Payne College will speak
Mareetle. K^cRae of Mary Hardin.
Baylor, wilt rentier violin soloes
She will be accompanied by Kath-
ryn? Chapman. Miss Lucille Dyer
of Mary Hardin-Baylor will give a
reading. . .
Music Will.fie: furnished by Bay-
lor University
A reading will be pHsented by a
Decatur College rejiresentatlVe' R
1A <\ Moran of Buylor will speak
|r Tl>e trio from Decatur will thtcr-
tain The meeting will be climaxed
by a message of Rev A: D. Foie-
Companies Denied
A group of eight Baylor Uni-
versity journalism students will
?ome to Cleburne Saturday and
publish the Sunday edition ot
the Times-Revlew Those tb
make the trip included Joe Fer-
guson. Wichita Fails, Asa Lee
Galley. Waco; David Scott. San
Diego Cal Moy Crouch Waco;
foe Kendrick, t^aco; «Bammle
Draper. Waco; Mldred Adams
Brownfield; Mandy Lee Smith
Winters: and Professor Frank
Burkhalter, head of the Baylor
journalism department
■ A ■ ____________■.. *.....
Dr. s D Terrel) of Fort Worth
was chief speaker at the regular
weekly luncheon of the Lions Club
today ’ I’- --------*
and face and. relatlhg matters.'
■ T. Knox was program
Gtlesta at the luncheon
Morris Russell. Dr. Albert
----- _.2 — ... Foreman.
Jr., ot San Angelo who is current-
ly bolding a youth revival at the
■,..l ' Edwin
F’.V- - rmatrict
». :
Anderson was served
Be, au.se lljoy laugh at OUT
let-talk. ’ but. hate to - have
I opinions contradicted.
Because they take advantage
pUegiatc styles for men and
round looking sloppy,
■wause (hey say -women talk
nuch. yet ask her, 'What's the
er?" as soon as she does keep
[Because they use technical
f just to make you feel stupid.
[Because they think the only
r remarks are their own
[Because the only person they
[heard of is the first
[Because they are inconsider-
ulawarc of the niceties i ”*
h. egoGstioal. and brutal.--
we women run after them
Because they follow <<act>
like flocks of geese, and stick
necks out like roomers, and
k like bears, and because they
[Because they Use greasy hair,
bid want to- go to sleep on
shoulder.
Because if you act friendly,
[get scared and run. n
rcn'l. they call you "stuck-up."
[Because they all think that-
[glii wants to inarry them.
[Because they art either too
bo put up with, or too sweet
[• true, and they can't. get
[from either extreme.
[Because they have buried
bry except for a'few silly left-
like jumping around to get
te.-C""-"'' ‘ -*--*■
[time they turn a corner.
Because they all think they're
gift to women, when really
are no gift at all. because
n pay for them!
Mostly of all. because women
do (without them.
Rural Schools
Begin Closing
tiie largest Indian mounds ” °
. 4» Kwslvaae « ........... *
Ruiral schools of Johnson County
' began closing today and the 40
common schools will end *' '
terms at intervals during
next month. All will be closed by
May 27 The Pecan Grove school
closed today.
Seventh grade rural graduation,
exercises Will tie held at the Cle-
burne high school auditorium Sat-
urday morning May 27 Ruel Wal-
ker will address the group
bars wU) be gUMte.
HOUffrON April 28 (UP; -A
tltrCe-judge federal'court todgy de-
nied the application of two oil
'cmpanles for an pt'der to enjoin
the Texas Railroad commission
front enforcing its April oil pro-
ration schedules in five gull fields
rr«k. kai__SI______1«S__i.
the Harrison Oil Company anti I lie-
permanent restraining order
quested on April <" ““fr.; ....,
'.railroad commissioners mid other
. . — - ------------ state offlclais 7‘...
chalman of the convention com- [clalriied that the commission's April
"“ttee- productions schedules were unjus-
fo view- at mmversive activities ufled, arbitrary, and discrimi-
and diAscinlnatlon of propaganda natory
in ail channels seeking to Under- rt~, , :
mine and discredit democracy *4^ si—
throughout the world.' he declai- Ivleeting
I 111
MONKEY GETS < ROWIFK ROAM
LONDON. (UJ9 — Hundreds Of J
showwrs watching a monkey hunt !
roared w»h laughter when the
monkey turned the tables on a pc
lice officer The officer retreate
wben Jocko, apparently tired l
being hare, rushed at him shbwin
his teeth and chattering angrU]
Jocko jumped on his shoulder
but instead of biting the offtok
kissed his ckr. <
NEW YORK.
- ■ —• Charles A
sent In the names pf all the tisli-’her two children
^rizvAii T Iritnw utsrl ttsA oniMrvi ufos « ..
Who make and sell tackle began to cham|rf«"n
send me samples an r4rrtr|, ,
"Now I know all the heads of
these companies and they keep
sending me new equipment every
year, .
.The collection completely covers
a good-gifted room and encroaches
upoh the hallways
"The doctors tell me that fishing
Is tot, exciting for my heart," Bea-
man said, "but I hnve to do.some*-
thing And many fishermen come
up to see my collection, and they
tell me about the big one that got
Funeral services will be held at
19 a m Saturday at the Pres-
byterian Church In Millsboro for
Mrs Ola Byars 8elby. who died
today at her home tn HHiabpro
A number of Cleburne anrf
GrandView relatives will attend
services for Mrs Selby Who rm a
mere of the late J. N. Bgar» of
ClAbortie.
CLEBURNE. TEXAS. FRIDAY APRIL 2ft, 1939
. ■ ............ - - i y
Hitler Rejects Roosevelt Message, Makes Deman
I^L-----!?-------- k____£> ' ,..............
Ask Attorney To | BR1NGS famous replicas to u. s.
Regular meeting of the city
council will be held at the council,
chambers tonight at 7 o'clock
The council Is scheduled to re-
ceive the recommendations of J.
R ,<Bob> Junneli for the' police
force which will serve beginning
May 1.
-
; U. ’■ 'art ■ ■ J ■
Cleburne Times-Review
NATURE SENDS GIFT
REGINA. Bask (UJ>—While the
guest of honor at a- party on the
oocaalpn of hia »lst birthday, Ceeil
Kusch, of the Sutherland fann-
, lw district, was enjoying an oys-
ter cocktail. His tongue contacted
a hard object, and upon Inspection
It proved to be a peart.
, COLOR FOOLS CHICKENN
NEW YORK tuft— Poultrymen
haw discovered Ingenious i
. ods of preventing chickans
eating their eggs By oovrri
windows of chicken houses ~
special red material.
within appears colorless, aocotfllng
Funcrel services tar Mrs.
Morrison who died at 10:15 a
today after a short ilhicss will lie
held Saturday morning at 10
o'clock-at the John Frank Cleve-
land Funeral ' Home Dr. Albert
Venting, pastor of the First Bap-
tlst Church of which- Mrs Morri-
son was a member, will officiate
Burtal services will be In Hico at
Ip " Mrs Morrison was born
in Hico She had been a resident
correct side of the street of Cleburne for 20 years.
" ““** Survivors include her husband.
E Morrison., two daughters. Miss-
es Elizabeth and Virginia Morrison, . .
both p! Cleburne, one sister. Mrs urged to pc present at the measul
T. P Evans of. Bowie, and her “ ,h“”
| step-father. R A. Dorsey of Hico
[' Pallbearers Include Phil Warren,
C. C. Woodson, J. B Bright. Dr
|T C. Honea. A H Wigle, and
M W. Petty
Start Contempt
Proceedings
Campaign Directus
Of Pension Union
Is Subpoenaed
AUSTIN. April 28 (U.R). -Mem-
bers of the Texas House of Repre- ,
sentatlves voted today to request ' ]
Edwin Moorhead. Travis ‘County
“iririri attorney, to Institute con- i
tempi proceedings "against Jan An- I J
derson of San Antonio, director of , 1
a campaign for bigger old age pen- 1
slons
CLUB WILL ENTERTAIN
The Cleburne Garden Club will
•ntertahi at 7:30 p. ng. Saturday
with an tris dinner at. Um home
ot Un T. W- Oullan. 808 North
Main Street. Husbands of mem-
Germany Fed Up j
With Conferences -
Hitler Says
BERLIN April 28 (Ufft—Adolf 1
Hiller today rejected Pi evident 1
Roosevelt's peye message caustic- 1
ally mid point by point j
He denounced Oennan treaties J
with Great Britain and Poland . SB
He demanded the return of Dan- .
zig and a derman puth nr row the . 1
Polish Corridor into East Prus- 1
■*' '.
He offered direct negotiations
with any other power. J
In a strongly worded speech to -fl
i the German Reichstag that Was J
packed with defiant threat* and :1
declarations ot peace Hitler cbar-
uetcrized President,Roosevelt's mes- .* j
sage to the dictators aa a breach of ’• 1
good manners. He chided the 1
President tor not solving his own.' "j
domestic problems. - .
All of Germany and a large part "fl
of the world listened as Hitler J
, poke Every form of aetivlty in «
Germany was suspended ■:
Paeilion "Clear"
Hitler laid down his position ' I
dearly He consider., the Polish- M
German treaty of friendship ' J
non-nggreMlon abrogated by the 1
military guarantees of Britain to i
Poland He considers the British I
attitude as- nullified the naval I
treaty undgr which the German I
■■'■’J »»« ,n'<.vu, vi"'': I
the British -.1
Hitler said that Danzig is Ger- ..jj
man and never will be Polish and 1
therefore it must be returned,
Line To Prussia Sought 1'1
He also demanded a Mte line 1
Sue into East Prussia which is cut oft I
-.0.0 fron, lhc Relcn by the Polish Cor- ,; J
rifrtr The road would be a Ger- n
man controlled highway which Ger-
many would not regard as of a I
HlUer said Unit Germany threat- j
eng no nation All of the 31 na- 1
"“.i -mentioned, by President '1
Roosevelt as threatened replied I
"no" when Hitler asked them If . ,1
The German chancellor replied 1
that President Rmsevelt’a propnael * ']
ament conference was futile, Ger- ,.,’ j
many is fed up with round tabled 1
conferences anrf will enter no mort*' ]
| such meetipgs except with an arm- ‘ I
be chief j ed nation behind her I
Proposals To Poland
. Hitler marie concrete j
jAto Poland Tn return hofl
r Germany WHS prepared, tol
*11 of Polish economic n
Danzig, to Insure Poland
harbot in Danzig, to accept the
present boundaries between Ger- ./ *
many and’ Poland as final, and to ■ i
conclude a 25-year non-aggression .
pact with Poland Tn return Hite’ ,
ler asked that Dehzlg be given 5
back as a free state within the>
Raich and that Germany, -in ad- . |
dition to the road through the’ '5
corridor, must have a railway Hhe T.ri
at- her disposal ;
BRITISH SAY TREATY
DENOUNCING ILIkCGAJ.
LONDON. April 28 (UR> The
Gertium charge d'affaires today de-
livered a note to the foreign office
denouncing the Brltlsh-Clerman
naval treaty A British spokesman
said that the government however,
would regard the denunciation as
Illegal because the pact docs not
provide for du-eet or unilateral
termlnktion .
Move Under Way
To Curb Rabies
'.-’i
I (iiiards ( omrnent rtn 1
I Mornifig Speech
■ l’l ‘ ' qM
■ " WAHP-AW, I'nland April 38 (U”1’
■ ’-•High political ctrclCZ expressed
I , byllci today that Aitoll Hitler had *‘•'^1
B 'not definitely rdosed the door to ?
■ | future ncgoUnUoiu between Ger-
B nnuiy and Poland J 3HS*
I Political quarters said that tti
B apiwiired that Poland had no j. |
I- choky except recoknlxe Ute uer-1 [
man . deimneWUofk of the non-
ii)Uk< .V. >011 ii>-aty which >aa sel.ttort> IJ
tiled to run until 1944 II
emphusized. however, that Germany1
end n<>t Poland was abandoning!
[, the agnainriil
Ai'tuwHy official circles ware not'
aurpcteHl hy Hitler's actl<m and 1
.the opinion was expreased tliat the
. door to future iiegotlalionis remain-
Sllil zsTMlI 1 ”
April 28 (U.m—, \ li
Lindbergh and"
arrived today
- y-
1 and eame ashore wtth
an escort of 75 policemen
A nurse carried the younger
Lindbergh child, two-year-old Land, „ .-
aprf Jon. age 6. walked beside hlx *
biot her down the gang plank to the
freight level where an automobile
with New Jersey license plates
awaited them ’, Jraffl
Colonel Lindbergh on a tour of
the country for the army air ser-
vice which has drafted him to ac-
tive duty wks In Dayton. O. -ij
ST LOVIS April 28 (Uftv Amer-
icanism will be the theme of the
.h. 1 T‘th ®ks' grand lodge national
“ convention, expected to attract m>-
n ooumy | proximately 40.000 persons here the
tm n n . ,week (>f ju|y according to
Mayor Bernard F Dtoknwfltn
mine and discredit democracy mjs_ .
Uiroughout the world." he ■ declar- IVI-eeting on l_OUIlty
STSSJS? ’• Fraitlew
"We re right where we .^tM. ’|
Xtyin JXm»UnPx oSsd^ i h.erX?ofC rlbW v^touT^rta
| 91 jilted States Its work wtil
lie the formulating of the most
I practlcal plan for wiping out
traces of the disease
Officers of Rotary
Club Change July 1
r I VC4‘ nw .
New officers of the Rotary Club »way
who were named Thursday will --------—---»*" --
take office July 1 They Inelude, .. ,,
Curtis Smith, president: Herman Ur. 1 errell I alks
Custard Aeg-president; Bob Kll-
!'<*•(■*• **cb°tary ahd J. Lambert I
t/lfl, rtriasurer With John Young. [
i Im (prelate past president, and five
I director* named Thursday, the of-
ficers constitute the board of di-
rectors Those named Include
Superintendent.a Emmett . Brown,
George Patrick. Phil Warren. Dr.
Albert Venting and' Ruel Walker.
«elRy funeral in
HILLSBORO SATURDAY M
tfons-to stimulate rational patriot
t Held in St Louis for. the first County Judge J P
■_) years, the Elks conven- ’'“ley in ccnj.t'.er.tlr." ------------,-
Uon will be the city's largest since I meeting with Kite County officials
*■——— *iL--™-.: 0,1 W’t fong-standing county line
The uwemtolv will controversy . .
— Bascom Giles, .state land com-
87,000,000 structure built five years mlsaloner, met with the group and
-- ' that they work awhile
longer. Johnson County commis-
sioners' will discuss the matter at
.their regular meeting Monday
Johnson commissioners. Judge
Seroyer. County Attorney Lowell
CrOsler ftnd Auditor E L Sh<?lton
made up the delegation which went
to Waxahachie
| Residents Invited
To View Exhibits
The case was the. application by
Abercrombie Oil Company for , a
f (T_
47 naming the,
ssioncrs anri other .——-•
The companies bad I NEW. YORK. April 38 — The
. . . 4 ... 1-. A ■ I I 4 a tn laskWaft* I*..b4 -- - • a. _ a Is. -
productions schedules were unjns-
bklahoma. Texas and New Mexico
Lull pionopollsttc practices th -re-
-------*. ?f trade ■
Charles Dierker. federal district
attorney, filed the injunction at .the
. *1 rilllrlll . Mil MVRlil UH HUM-llHM OH
Decatur nt the Department of Justice
teutft. it (Mot u fntKii'iitiviar
DON STAR WATCH ROG
THINGTON. Conn. (UHl —
law Ogonowski found one
1 raccoon was better than
watchdogs on his dairy
The raccoon, he said, was
Rert and observant
T WORTH April 38 (U.Rk
.4 Livestock Cattle 1400;
1100; mostly steady; titem
•“ yearling* 6 50-10 00;
5 00-7 00; eutters 4t50.
' 00-0 M
mOMy
60-6 80; mixed grades
tacking sows 5 28-5 50
> 3500 steady; fat lamba
MTow> estimated receipt*
.800, Calves 100; bogs 300;
CLEVELAND, O April 38 (U.K)-,
Janies C Beaman, tfo. dims $10,000
worth of. fishing tackle, but ean't
gp fishing
' Gosh ? he said. h dQBt wlst-
fuHy at hi* collection, said to be
(he largest collection of ita kind tn
the country, "I'd give It all away
If my doctor and my heart would
let ine do some real honest-to-
gOodnrts flailing " .,
Scarnati's collection started with
a nervquft breakdown 11 years, ago
My tioctnrs said I would have:
to have a hobby.' he reid. "so T|mh«
erinSn J knew. and. the companies; (rolI1 Prance on the French liner
Wnft milks* mill Wf«ll t unit If hdtoiaiY tn ___a _______ _a_____ ___.1^
It- N COMMENT-ON
SPEEt-H IS GUARDED
WABHINU'fON. April 28
((Hnini'nied hl guarded fashion U>- .
;duyj>n Chancellor Hitler's address: !
j Admmisttntion officials said '1
[(Mitlrtng tor publication but pri-I
{.vHtely some expressed tire view
I that Hitler's stalemcnCs seamed
[ to leave only a slim prospect for
j. Approximately 201) Maccabees
from the North Texas Distriet As-
spclatibn were In Cleburne today navy was limited to 85 percent of
the American Legion thronged it* |
streets tn 1935 ,
be held in Municipal Auditorlutit
flrr nnn nnn l..;i. re.^ I
- n ia K.s.m..,
ago suggested
The U, 8 Marine Band is ex-
pected to play at the convention
Announcement Uiat the buiui
would give several concerts drew
the fire txf the local musicians
union, which later withdrew ita
opposition when the convention
committee mid about 200 union
musicians Will play for parades and
other events.
Two hundred of 8t Louis' most
beautiful girls, to be selected in a.
citywide conteet. will act a* offi- 1
meth- rial greeters during the threc-day
from meeting whtoh also will reatttrq
ritualistic oontesta *- 1
The St, Louis lodge is ninth old-
est <rf the 1.600 Elks kxtae* in the
country.
FAST DRIVERS LOME TIME
KANSAS CITY. Mo <U.P>- ■Police
engaged in a eMripaign to reduce
traffic aocldenta bfr slowing down
traffic, now put "the wait"
drivers who explain they were
speeding because they were late
for work When such an eqguae I*
given th* oar keys are taken arid
the driver U forced to wait 30 or
* 140 uiiMAtfWL4
David Bertnan is shown with -a
replica at Queen Elizabeth's
crown and the ort>, parts Of
tiie exhibition ronslat.vng of
crown jewels and. regalia at .
——x. i a*schibie. .'L.'vk-..-'-:v ’ '
Injunction Suit
Is Filed Against
rri ZN
» '•••S’ j «•»'« WMU weav nirivvil gsvev
‘ ofclAHOMA rrrv a mm sik) strong ka had been adtlctpated
c CJ7X' H*8- *, '.Others, however, thought lhat.lt
L |t1inrtu,nV'Tmt!1 mJ foreshmkwed increased danger of
Injunction suit in federal dUlridt war. SoHnU)r william Borah. R:,
ten1 Of Idaho, the ranking Republican
fc? RomP*n'7 member of the foreign (stations
, . committee .said that Hitler appar-
Hiklahoma Texas and New Mexico believed that he has "ended
all' dlacuaaloiu" with Ute address
liOOSi VELT SI.HKPN
THROUGH ADDRESS
HYDE PARK. N
inpvrsi wMvgv , aaio- u. whs a lorerunnrr oi aim- (bib--while Al
T. H. Young of Docatur will sinfl (liar Injunctions, fo be filed against dressihg the •
i. solo. Dr. Z, T. Huff; dean <>f movie distributing companies in i and every hia.n
other sections of, the country
The suit’ named these
theatre rid > ibl fors aS v
The Grfffifji Amiisemeni Compi
operating in Oklahoma'a»rf’rexas;
operating tn Oklahoma and Texas. |hx a speech only and In
ating in Texas and New. Mexico.] made ' to Hitter and^Bohlto Mu’a-
• •• -- e Griffith Theatres, !.',o[iht oh April 15
Inc . operating tn Texas and New
Mexico
.w'
KOKKINAKI ’
NEW YORK, April 28 (UP)-rTwo
Soviet fliers today winged their
wty, past GreqnkMid tn a Cwn-mb-
torira monoplane speeding to ar- •
rive on the North Amentcan con-
tinent by dusk on a non-stop Mos-
cow to New York flight
The v filers, Brigadier General
.Vladimir Kokknuikl. and his navi-
gator. Major Mtchaii Gordienko.
who left Moscow at 8:19 p m, fast
night reported shortly before noon
that they were ^passing over Cape
FwcWell. on the southern Up of
Greenland.
' Soviet officials at Floyd Bennett
Field said they Into covered two-
thirds of their 4.600'mile flight. If
they maintain their present speed
„ .T they may arrive hero before mid-]
person night.’
More Texas farmers are golng to
paiUcipate tn the AAA farm pro-
gram this year than ever before,
according to reports here from aaa
field workers who have been gath- ,
reing factual data from progpee-
tlve cooperators and who liave °elocle
commenced to check compliance
with the 1939 program _ .... „
Ralph Price, field man at large.
estimated approximately 85 percent [“J; ?° ■egeJ.*1!1 l< r“:ln.
of all Texas farm and ranch famil-
ies will receive benefit payments
for the contribution to the conser-
vation of agricultural resources in
1939
Approximately 95 percent of all
farm land arid about 90 percent
of all active range land in the
state will be tn the Agricultural
Conservation Program of the AAA
this year, he said.
There are about 3 million Helds
of all grades and sizes in' the state,
and each - one must be measured
and classified before the 1939 pay-
ment process can begin To avoid
delay and confusion, producers^
Ing. so they can catch mistakes
and be certain they are corrected
before the program progresses too
. far. ’
Measuring farms has begun , in
South Texas and in other early
planting section* Of the state |
The work is being sped through i
the use of aerial photograph* now
covering approximpately seven-
tenths of the state About 370.-
0Q0 farms have been photographed
from the air, and such maps will
be used this year in 178 counties
A small gadget called a plan-
imeter. which dpes arithmetic in!
Ita head, is used to measure the I
photographed farms f
AAA worker can run the point of
this little instrument around the
picture of a cotton patch as it
appears on the aerial map. and the
planimeter will record the size of
the plot to a tenth of an acre
It's three times as fast and a third
as expensive as running a survey-
or's chain around a field
SYDNEY LOOKS TO FUTURE
SYDNEY. N. 8. W tU.RV—Wil-
fred Hay. chief survey officer of-ism
the postmaster general's depart-1 Heid in
rnent, has completed a survey that time in 40
predicts a 3,000.000. population for ■
Sydney by 1946. Similar forecasts
made three years ago are within
six weeks of tallying with the
city’s population, mail ■ and tele-
phone need* at the present time
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Bacus, Roy. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [34], No. 175, Ed. 1 Friday, April 28, 1939, newspaper, April 28, 1939; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309150/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.