Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 6, 1935 Page: 1 of 12
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EMPEROR EXPRESSES
Broadway’s Loss .
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VOL. 5
HENDERSON, RUSK COUNTY, TEXAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUG. 6, 1935
NO. 120
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BREST
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MAN WHO DROVE TRUCK INTO
INCREASES
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SEC. WALLACE JOINS
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FARMERS IN FIGHT
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wanted
to
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TWO OF SIX INSANE
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Texas Weather
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Si
NO FEAR OF ITALIANS
NOR SUPERIOR ARMY
Candidates Openly Make New Deal
Campaign Issue
WANTED BEFORE
SENATE LOBBY
PROBE SESSION
Plan Is Called Attempt
to Shift [Trend of
Taxes from Pooi^
ZENGE DENIES
ANY KNOWLEDGE
OF BAUER DEATH
Suspected Mutilation
Killer Charged With
Murder
NAZI ANO CATHOLIC
FRIG
DALLAS MAN DIES
OF BURNS RECEIVED
IN SERVICING AUTO
CLEBURNE SHERIFF
TRAILS HI-JACKERS
FEDERAL LABOR BOARD
HEAD GOES TO EL PASO
BOB-TAIL AIRPLANE
LEAVES EL PASO TODAY
the
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Subpoena Servers
Chase Elusive AGE
■ Head in Hotel
,O\
Local Firms to Co-
Operate in Raising
City’s Quota
SENATE FIGHT
CROWD KILLING FOUR SECRETED LOOMS ON MOVE
TO TAX WEALTH
BMW
CHARGES FILED AGAINST
NEQROATNACOGDOCHES
• swept through
•trika bf wari
time ArrtpMU
See BreatRi
East Texas:Partly cloudy to-
night and Wednesday.
West Texas: Partly cloudy to-
night and Wednesday, probably
Showers Jn the extreme western
i portion.
HOPSON EVADES U. S. OFFICERS
—------ 4,-----------------------------;----------------------------------------------------------------------------.---------------------------------:---------------------—
DOUBLE FUNERAL FOR 2 KILLED
IN MARRIAGE MIXUP AT LINDEN
e>----------------—---
know where his daughter and
her husband were. When Parton
refused to tell a quarrel ensued,
and Kaydell, hearing the voices,
came to her father’s aid with a
pistol. The younger Gillespie
then shot the girl, and his father
shot Parton, officers said.
Bradway is just a suburb of Hol-
lywood nowadays. Here's Ethel
Merman, sensational star of the
musical hit "Anything Goes," wav-
ing goodbye to the rlalto, westward
bound to join eddle Cantor In
' And Broad-
to welcome
/T
ienttetwn 3mlti
East Texas’ Fastest Growing Newspaper
(UP,In—Officers today saw little
prospect of mob violence after
J. C. Forney, 25, negro, driver of
a truck which Sunday night struck
and killed four persons on their
way to church, had been secreted
in a jail outside the county.
Mrs. Q. F. King, who suffered
a broken leg as the truck dash
ed into the group, was still in the
hospital today and J. W. Ellis was
recovering from a broken nose.
Those killed in the accident
were Mrs. Newman Ellis, 24, Miss
Jewell King, 25, and C. E. Fred-
erick, 26, all of New Hope, where
the accident occurred, and Mrs.
M. E. Parker, 63, of Houston,
who was visiting relatives here.
Charges of negligent homicide,
or failure to stop and render aid,
ft? ft,; ft. ftag
No mirage of a lost Atlantis is this, rising out of the sea before the eyes of startled voyagers, blit a
real new "city skyline" In the middle of the Pacific ocean. The buildings have been constructed for
the third base of the Pan American Alrwaye on the route from California to China over which the
great Clippers will wing. They stand on Wilkies Island In the Wake group. Other bases have been bull*
1 at Honolulu. In the Midways, and on Guam.
EL PASO, Tex., Aug. 6 (UP)
—Joseph S. Myers, Austin, Fed-
eral Labor Board Conciliator, to-
day was en route to El Paso to
Investigate the threatened El
Paso Electric Co. strike situation.
He was to stop In Fort Worth
for a conference with Dr. Edwin
A. Elliott, Regional Director, who.
helped to settle the electrical
workers' strike here Feb. 28.
i
L
PROVIDENCE, R. I., Aug. 6 (UP)—Rhode Island,
smallest of the states, became the focal point of the nation
today while its citizen chose between a Democratic and a Re-
publican congressional candidate in an election termed a test
of current New Deal sentiment in the industrial east.
.............. <■ it was a special election to fill a
‘ vacancy in the House of Represen-
tatives, but national leaders of
both political parties looked to Its
results as a possible Indication o«
popular trend that might point
the results of next year’s presiden-
tial election.
Candidates were Antonio Prince,
Democrat, tuning on an uncom-
promising New Deal program,
promising to support President
Roosevelt in every particular; and
Charles T. Risk, Republican, run-
ning on an out-and-out anti-New
Deal program.
Political leaders believed the is-
®ue wft* sharply drawn upon prom-
Ises that probably will dominate
the national campaigns of both
parties. Chief issues expounded
during Prince’s and Risk’s cam-
See New Deal on Page 10
DALLAS, Aug. 6 (UP)—Jack
Clay, 31, died today from burns
suffered last night when his
clothes were ignited from a gaso-
line explosion while he was ser-
vicing a car.
Clay, manager of a filling sta-
tion, was putting gasoline in a
car. A torch was burning nearby
where a pit had been dug for a
gasoline tank. Suddenly, after a
slight explosion, the gasoline hose
in Clay’s hand burst into falmes.
CHICAGO, Aug. 6 (UP)—
Mandeville Zenge. protesting
that he is a “good loser’* in
the game of love and knows
nothing about the emascula-
tion and death of Dr. Walter
L. Bauer, his rival, pleaded
not guilty when he was ar-
. raigned in criminal court on
murder charges today.
■ . The case was continued un-
til Aug. 20 on motion of the
stafte.
I Zenge, a gangling Missouri car-
penter, was lad be fora Judge Jui-
, ti F. McCarthy to ansrwtyr chargee jaaktng a new xnqyle.
' he plartned th. teem 18 WllUng
. knife emasculation because he was **
' See Zenge Charged on Page 11
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I'* ' vs
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flf ’
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The light of leva flame, brightly
when eclrltatl bar. atedu
“Ethiopian tradition will be fol-
lowed by the women, who In event,
of war will accompany the army
to prepare food and nurse the
wounded.
Q. What about the reported pro-
ject for an international mandate
over Ethiopia T
A. The League of Nation, on
numerous occasions has rendered
valuable economic and social aid
to members without in any respect
restricting their political inde-
See Ethiopians on Pag. 11
WASHINGTON, Aug. 6
(UP)—The Roosevelt tax-on-
wealth program, heading into
a hot Senate fight, was de-
scribed by a treasury official
today as aiming to reverse a
tendency of recent years
which has placed an increas-
ing tax burden on the poorer
classes.
Robert H. Jackson, counsel for
See Senate Fight on Page 10
Flapper Fanny Says:
BM. u.». r»T orr.
Entire Nation Bound by Constitution to Give
Their All to Preserve Safety and Tradi-
tions of Ancient Kingdom
By EDWARD W. BEATTIE
. United Press Staff Correspondent
(World Copyright, 1935, by United Presg) .
ADDIS ABABA, Aug. 6 (UP)—Emperor Haile Selassto
I in person will lead his Ethiopian warriors into battle
against the Italians in event of war, he declared in an exclu-
sive interview with the United Press.
Th® 48-year-old Emperor, "Llon>------
of Judah," reputed descendant of
King Solomon and the Queen of
Sheba, and ruler of a kingdom
whose origin is loat in the mist, of
antiquity, expressed no terror of
Italy’s formidable mechanised,
modern fighting machine, as he
talked frankly at his Imperial
palace.
"Ethiopian tradition and the
constitution we gave our people,”
he said, "require the Emperor to
be commander-ln-chlef of the
army. bWe neither have Intention
nor desire to avoid the perform-
ance of any part of our sacred
task of defending the liberty of
our territory.”
He refused to reveal the num-
ber of men he expect, to have
available, or the extent of their
equipment.
“No military information can
be diecloaed,” he said.
The bearded monarch, his dark
mystic face solemn and his keen
eye. radiating sincerity, answer-
ed without hesitation all other
Women to Follow Army.
"What role win the women play
in th. war?" he was asked.
NEW DEAL TO GET TEST
TODAY IN RHODE ISLAND
• a \ ft'/
WASHINGTON, Aug. 6
(UP)—Congressional investi-
gators, hot-footing it on the
trail of elusive Howard C.
Hopson, sped up and down the
corridors of a couple of ritzy
hotels today, but failed to
subpoena the Associated Gas
and Electric Co. official to
testify in the lobby inquiry.
It was dapper Bernard B. Rob-
inson of Chicago, who started the
wild goose chase by confessing—
with a smile and a chuckle—that
he had talked to Hopson only last
nifty t at-the Shoreham hotel, i
“It was a new Asperience Tor
me,”-tHn Chicago securities deal*'
er confided, to' the Kjongrefismen
See Senate on Page 11
AMARILUO, Tex., Aug. 6 (UP)—Texas farmers who
are demanding abolition of the protective tariff were
strengthened with new courage today after the address here
last night by Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace,
who added his voice to theirs on the tariff question.
Wallace declared that farmers should organize to hold
the processing tax until the tariff is done away with.
“The only way to do away with
the processing tax is to do away 1
with the tariff,” the agriculture
secretary said. “Until people say
they don’t want the tariff we aim
to hold on to the processing tax."
He pointed out that the bitter-
est opponents of the processing
tax Is the class that reaps benefits
from the high tariffs, saying: "The
big boys should not Dave one set
of rules for themselves and an-
other for us."
Wallace stressed the need for
building a civilization in the Unit-
ed States fin new rules because
the old ones won’t work.
"We must keep our land out of
production until real results are
obtained in breaking down tariffs.
We loaned foreign countries mon-
ey and refused to permit them to
See Sec. Wallace on Page 10
CLEBURNE, Tex., Aug. 6 (UP)
—Sheriff Oran Smith today fol-
lowed slender cljies in an effort
to apprehend three men who rob-
bed Sam Morris and A. B. Har-
ley of Big Spring.
The men stopped Morris and
Harley, employes of the West
Texas Wholesale Drug Co., early
today near Albany, took their
truck containing 142 cases of li-
censed prescription liquor and left
them bound and gagged in a field
near Grandview.
Morris and Harley liberated
themselves and walked to a farm
house at Sandflat, from where
they telephoned Sheriff Smith.
PRISONBOARD
FAVORS SHUT-
IN PEN SYSTEM
Outline of Program b
Sent to Governor: for x J
Executive O. K, zfl
HOUSTON, Tex., Aug. «
......fllyWIWRWRREI
' The Henderson Daily News Carries Full United Wess Is—ail Wire Sarrica, Full NEA Picture Service and Feahaes, Recognized A Sopvtene in Tlasir FieRI-flb News While It
' HAILE SELASSIE AVOWS INTENTION TO PERSONALLY L
CRIPPLED CHILDREN’S WEEK
IN HENDERSON OPENS MONDAY
operation in business circles of
the city this week and that the
committee in charge of thMkMb-
paign has named next'vWMfc
Children's Charity week.
A charity dance given several
day" ago at the Cooper Club
netted a neat sum to be applied
to the fund, but it did not reach
the quota assigned for the city,
and Mr. Cararas says that in a -
gation and rehabilitation of
convicts of the state prison .
system.
An outline of the program Will
be forwarded to Gov. Jamaa V.
Allred for his approval, Chairman gL
W. A. Paddock said. The plan *fl
was adopted yesterday at a special
meeting of the board.
The program calls for hiring •
psychiatrist and a psychologist,
and the erection of a cotton tex-
tile mill, oil mill, can factory
and an additional warehouse at
the prison farm Mt Sugar Land.
Under the segregation plan,
first time offenders, youths and
well-behaved prisoners would be
classified and separated for the
various industries and .farming,
old offenders and incorrigible*
would be sent to Eastham farm on
See Prison Shift on Page IX
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PARIS, Aug. fl. (U1
rioting, with numeroua
ties and at least one I
■■ .‘I the etu
---—__, in the coufl
>r*
>ta«mPkg*tt - ?
uyu. «1
Jtiuuo iv/in p lex.p o
(UP)—An appropriation Of
$166,900 by the Legislature
was favored today by the ■
Texas prison board for segre-
Jerry Cararas, chairman of
the Texas Crippled Children’s
Association in Henderson states
that he is meeting unusual co-
ETHIOPIAN TROOPS AGAINST ITALIAN INVADING ARMIES
, wind-up campaign to be con-
ducted next week he hopes to
clear the whole matter up and
make a final report.
The campaign had been plan-
ned earlier,, but was unavoid-
ably delayed, Mr. Cararas
stated today. 1
Several local business houses
have agreed to a certain per-
See Children’s Week on Pace 10
BERLIN, Aug. 8 (UP)—In-
creasing friction between Nazis
and the Roman Catholic church
was revealed today in incidents re-
ported from widely Beperated parts
of the country.
Nazis reported that Unknown
men invaded a Hitler youth head-
quarters at Sulingen, destroyed
furniture, flags and tablets com-
memorating Hitler youth killed
in political fights, and smeared
on the walls the message:
"We take revenge—the storm
squads.”
It was assumed, in reports of
the incident, that the "storm
squads” were made up of youths
who had belonged td dissolved
Catholic youth organizations.
At Coblenz a member of the
Catholic Union was arrested while
removing Nazi posters which de-
nounced "Political Catholicism.”
The drive against Jews was
marked by an official order that
all Jewish artistic and cultural or-
ganizations must join the new
“Reich Union of Jewish Cultural
Associations.’
• automobile, threatening
them with shotguns, officials as-
serted.
The father then
..“City Skyline” Soars Before Voyagers in Mid-Pacific..
No Fear of Mob Violence Held by Sheriff as
Negro Secreted
NACOGDOCHES, Tex., Aug. 6.$will be filed against the negro to-
day, officers said. Three other
negroes, passengers in the truck,
were placed in jail and question-
ed, but no charges were to be
filed against them, according to
officers.
Father and Daughter Shot to Death Following
Elopement,
LINDEN, Tex., Aug. 6 (UP)— <j>their
Double funeral services were to tiiom
be arranged today for Jack Par-
ton, 40, lumber dealer, and his
daughter, Kaydell, 15, who were
killed yesterday as a result of an
elopement.
Parton died almost immediate-
ly after the shooting and the girl
died last night.
R. P. Gillespie, 45, and his son,
Wallace, 20, surrendered to of-
ficers after the shooting and were
placed in the Cass county jail.
Gillespie believed that Parton had
aided his daughter, Dolly Bell,
17, in her elopment last Saturday
night with Clyde Hammond,
brother-in-law of the man slain,
officers said today.
The two Gillespies hid in the
brush npar the Parton home yes-
terday and when Eugene Ham-
mond, 15, brother of Clyde, and
Parton started to drive away,
the men emerged from ambush
and forced them to get out of
EL PASO, Tex., Aug. 6 (UP)—
John H. Gelse, department of
commerce pilot, left here at 7:80
a. in. (mst) today in his "tail-
less" plane for Midland, Tex.,
where he expected to spend the
night before proceeding to Fort
Worth. Gelse is on route east
from Los Angeles.
CONVICTS CAPTURED
a--.,-.-.. •. ,, ■ ,
MPGANE, Mo., Aug. B (UP)—♦ The pair first wgfl righted t* ft
Two of the six insane convicts I a negro nlghtwatchmaa at a bcri e
who escaped from the State Hoe- factory. He called the hospital '
pi tai at Fulton Saturday lught land 30 guards and attendant*
were reported surrounded tn a were sent into the
woods near here today, | bottom teds.
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 6, 1935, newspaper, August 6, 1935; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1311934/m1/1/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.