Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, March 19, 1937 Page: 6 of 16
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4*
FRIDAY AFT
HENDERS&* DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS.
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NEW A
DONATIONS FOR
RED CROSS AID
FUND RECEIVED
FUNERAL FOR LONDON
SCHOOL TEACHER TO
RE HELD SATURDAY
FINGERPRINTS BEING
USED TO DETERMINE
VICTIMS’IDENTITIES
CHILDREN IN LOCAL
HOSPITAL KEEP
UP SPIRITS
SENATE MOVES TO
MAKE SCHOOLS IN
TEXAS MORE SAFE
ROYS PLAY HOOKEY;
SAVED FROM DEATH
Gas Pressure Now
More Easily Measured
Modern Pistol Shots
Are Rated as Best
I
I
I
R. T. MOORE
HEAD COACH
LADY
MENDL
a
. Tate,
BAND , DIRECTOR 8ORY,
—Photo by Price.
Reported Safe After
School Blast
—Photo by Kendall, Overton
though injured Mr. Shaw gave
valuable assistance in directing
the. relief work at the scene of
the blast. , ,.
’ she
done
I am
that
Officers Inclinec
Theory ai
B
azi
At 1 p.
had not < ___
where bodies had been concentrat-
ed.
Approximately 20 bodies were
Mid to be in such condition as to
make identification imposible.
Another 125
Continued from Paje l -
towns within a radius of BO miles
volunteered their services. Indi-
vidual funerals win be conducted
■ Ml
■■■
■ Mi
■ad
M iilBiil
■al
QUIET YOUR
eiy^GA
I »n<l weak
I Favorite
make me
It fave
and this
more rnr
TKOY’feURAN CT
• PRINCIPAL HIGH SCHOOL
■ —Photo by Price.
SIMPSON SETS
FINAL DECREE
FOR DIVORCE
70-Minute Hearing Re-
sults “in Granting of •-
r'
MAN GUNS
| FORGED FROM
FRENCH STEEL
of
following
6 Death notice.
7 Outcasts.
8 Company.
9 Northwest.
10 Deflnite
article,
his horn-*—— Ji sword
■ handle.
MRS. SORY
—Photo by Price.
Rearmament Causes
♦
J ■■ t
Write to Dr. Pierce • <■
I
r -
K£.
.. 25.00
.. 5.00
.. 2.00
. .5.00
.. 10.00
* 50.00
. 5.00
•srintendent W. c. Shaw oi
Slew London School today re-
id the following teachers to
survived, out of more than 35,
mdon explosion : instructor fn
inclpal Troy Duran, C "
is, R. T. Moore, C. A.
e McDavid, Mrs. Homer
4 Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. C. ...
, Della Westbrook. Imogene
■r, 8. F. Wagner, Mrs. Parma-
brothers Ira. Curtis and Mack, all
“r> Mnd ."•> of Henderson; four sisters, Evelyn
NKtaty princtpai, ana nor sun. -■* «•—
tape to Drew, Die. la Fire
JSVELAND (UP) — James
Mail, 45-year-old WPA work-
of Austin, and Marie. Lucille and
Elisabeth, all of Henderson.
ttie Stated Ww, Postoffiee and
depnrttaenta of the
des are as old as the
t, and had their coun-
Oka
3^^311
- ■
M
u
■
Reich Imports 7,793,-
000 Tons in 1936 to
Top Rest of Europe
Billy -------1-----o--
?; New Hospital Opens
Early to Treat Blast
Injured at London
dog-fashion.
19 To eat.
4 to soak flax. 22 His---- waft 56 Tone B.
ambassador
to Turkey
(pl.).’
23 Meriting.
26 Sugar sand.
29 Cow'S, cry.
30 Branch.
31 To stroke
lightly.
34 Courtesy
title.
36 Exit.
37 His depart-
ment deals in
39 Brink.
40 Being.
42 Perishes.
44 Sound.
45 Thought.
46 Sound of
sorrow.
47 Flying (
mammal.
48 God of war.
SO To bring lega'.
suit.
52 Supped.
54 South
Carolina.
Morafield, Billy
Milstead, Anna Mari-
Marsden, Melba
Moore, i’earl
. McMann, Ophelia
Meador, Floyd
Miller, Zeke
McCunn, Lannie
McLaughlin, W. Q.
Munday, Marie Louise
Mills, Sarah Jane
McGooney, Jim
Maxwell, —
Newell, Orville
Nail, Jack . .
•Norton, —
■ iRLV-JkVl
isjHIdM WHISKS
S’diirj UMrjida
a bmh am a
isiirj i:iaHUi»]3§ sas
ii wji»i uaa i:iin*i
anna aaasw =win
iiihm JiakUHwas uaa:
■aiiiwwa iuBHim-
I HSUIdllSQ ■ IBMMiaat-iK
TYLER, Tex., Mar. 19. (UP)—A
new hospital which had announced
Its formal opening for today met
the disaster needs of the New Lon-
don school explosion and opened
its doors hours ahead of schedule.
Cots and bed»«were Installed hur-
riedly to provide accommodations
for 100 injured. Two other Tyler
hospitals were filled to capacity
with 50 other injured. A -
AUSTIN, Tex., Mar. 19 (UP)—
Legislation for both gas and boil-
er safety are before the Texas
Legislature now in session.
Favorable report was voted last
night by a senate committee on
a boiler inspection bill that has
been passed by the House. Also
favorably reported and on today’s
Senate calendar was a boiler in-
spection bill prepared by Sen. Joe
Hill, Henderson.
It would include heating plant
boilers except those in residences.
Th egas safety measure is in the
forti of a concurrent, resolution
authorizing .the State Railroad
Commission to require malodor-
ants so escaping gas will be de-
tected. ,
It has been adopted ‘ by the
House and reported favorably by
Senate committee.
A*- Cabinet Official
HORIZONTAL
1 U. S. cabinet
14?®rr:
15 Feather scarf.
16 Gorses.
117 Enormoqs.
18 Waterfalls.
. 20 Otherwise.
21 SilkWoiTn.
22 Wesriness.
24 Small child.
25 Street.
26 To doze.
27 Father.
28 To eject. , .
1
■■
________ ■■
Superintendent. W. C. Shaw
of the London High school who
A
L
i'p ■
Mt
| Injured Superintendent j
■ i
K. I
Partiallist
of Injured
WASHINGTON (UP). — The
U. S. Bureau of Miries has an-
nounced a new method to deter-
mine to what extent a gas may
be compressed without actually
compressing it.
Devised in the laboratory of
the Amarillo, Texas, helium
plant, the procedure has import-
ant uses in the natural gas and
other industries, the bureau said.
It employs the measurement of
pressures and observation of
temperatures and is simpler than
the measurement of volume by
actual experiment.
'Before industrial advancements
required knowledge of the com-
pressibility of gases, such data
were purely of scientific inter-
est. Compressibility was comput-
ed under the “laws” of the early
scientists Robert Boyle and J. A.
TT. Charles, but no real gas fol-
lowed those laws exactly.
Now the error in computing
compressibility by the laws and
the complexity of the customary
commercial methods have been
eliminated by the new proced-
ure, devised under E. S. Burnett
of the bureau.
The method is expected to be
of particular use in the devenf^
ment of deeper, high-pressure
sources of nattiral gas and of in-
creased pressure in transmission
lines.
.>
I ■
Funeral services for William
Tate, 80, eon of Mr. and Mrs. W.
M. Tats, who was a victim of the
London school explosion, will be
held at 2 30-p. m. Saturday at the
Church Hill Methodist Church
under auspice* of Rocky Moun-
tain Masonic Lodge of Overton.
Mr. Tate had been teaching at the
London school for three years as
77' :a mathematics
science. He received his B.
grea from Stephen F. Austin Stats
and
de-
Gary. Teachers' College In Nacogdoches.
C. R- Survivors include big wife and
daughter. Gwendolyn, 16 months
old: his mother and father, three
$ 50.00
6.00
5.00
2.00 •
5.00
10.00
5.00
50.00
10.00
5.00
10.00
5.00
.5.00
5.00
250.00
vjueouvi vuinu ............. 5.00
Citizens National Bank .; .1100.00
Bennie Wright 1.00
Cash 10.00
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Craw-
ley
Flanagan & Chamber-
Geo.
Clifford Wayland
M. A. Hubbard
K. N. Koonce'
Citizens, Yorktown, Tex-,
as
J. P. McClelland
51 Pattern casts.
52 Pertaining to
wings.
53 Wrens.
55 Born.
56 New York Th
57 He is----of
tressiiry (pl.). 12 Handle.
VERTICAL 13 Consumed.
1 Bees* homes. 18 To drink
2 Card game.
3 Unless.
HF 1
^1
The possibility that
disastrous explosion in t
of the nation might be
of dynamite was belli
gated Friday by Rang!
H. B. Purvis andjSheric
Murray of Henderson.
Fourteen stlcktf of 1
dynamite were found b;
worker In a storeroom
stairs in the south wi
New London school, six
er the tragedy.
The wbrker, W. £.
Tyler, reported his dli
Sheriff McMurray, and
tigatlon was started In
The dynamite was lo
ped in brown paper ar
ful of fulminate caps
tered between the stick
sive.
McMurray was inclln
pedal the Idea that dyn
have caused the explosi
Purvis.
However, an oil field
who Inspected the stick
they had not been pu
anyone familiar with
since the sticks and
carelessly mixe<(.
School officials claim
dynamite had been us
boulders out of the at
McMurray said.
Eye-witnesses to th
commented on the ft
flame . followed the e
30 Venomous "J® Y5r nylTl.?h'
snake.
32 Not the same.
133 Barley
! spikelet.
84 Greater.
35 Witticism.
37 Mother.
38 To make a
mistake.
>40 Half an em.
41 Queer.
43 Perching.
46 Striped
fabric.
AUSTIN, Tex., Mar: 19 (UP)—
Thousands of Texas school chil-
dren had their fingerprints taken
in fun when the/vlslted the Texas
Centennial Exposition in Dallas
last summer.
Scores of the.fingerprints came
from the New London school dis-
trict and today A. L. Ford and
' Eqgene Wells of the Public Safety
Department zent to the morgues
of that region to take prints of
bodies which could not be recog-
nized otherwise.'
They will match the prints
against records made at the Ex-
position and provide identification
of many, they believed. . ------ .
• Luxenburg, Annetta
BY PETER C. RHODES |
United Prose Staff Correspondent I
PARIS, Mar. 19 (UP)—Vast re-
armament programs throughout I
Europe gave French iron mines a U
new lease on life last year, bring- 1
ing production figures to a new I
. - I Cbrmany, I
whose new armaments program is I
74- - causing profound worry through- I
out France, both in governipsnt I
and popular circles. I
EP 7- Although Belgium and Luxem- j
JP bourg, European steel and arma- I
4' ment oertters,- still top the list of I
consumtT® of French iron ore I
fa with a total of 10,110,000 tons, the I
rise in Germanys’ consumption N
777 was the most marked. In 1929 I
Germany Imported 2,663,000 tons I
of iron and fell as low as 712,000
p.'tons In ths depression year of I
K’,,'1982. In 1986 there was si phs- I
Hbk.jKBMnal rise from 5,862,600 tons I
L** V the yew before to 7,793,000 tone. I
('7. Britain Short of Steel
Another country whose con- I
|A' ' sumption has taken a big jump is
Kfr j England. With the new British i
JBfc! armaments program getting into
Stride, ths former iron producer 1
1 of the world already has noted a
■ shocking shortage of steel. Pro-
514*7 duction is still below demand, and
stocks have been reduced to a
minimum. The result is that lm-
Botjbwta from Franco rose from ths I
’ i MW figure of 92,000 tons to 236,-
7 000 tons in the last year. .
Although production in French -----
• iron mines rose almost 2,000,000 was Injured severely by falling
" '/ totisl above last year’s total, it still debris In th'e explosion. Al-
. wks below the peak year of 1929. -
Lsiarho old high was 50,781,000 tons p
P?1. and production last year reached
M only 88,208,600 tons, wrich, how-
m r ! ever, was a post-depression high.
Part of the deficiency In the last
■Wl wear’s production was the result of
^social ooqdltlons, the strike period
Raving brought the mines virtual- L
St ly to a stop. It rose swiftly after
4 < the cloee of the successful strikes.
Ki: In the last three months of the
■ year production was higher than
yjthe first five months of the year,
K before the June strikes.
«-Hour Week in Effort
TY At iresent the 40-hour week Is
HvaMlicable in the mining flskls, al.-
(bough pertpission has been grant-
allowing owners to arrive rt tte
1 new working day by stages. Un-
S til the epd of February mines
H&rtrtked 44 hours, after which they
DmRVP«1 <0 0,8 40-hour level The
*7 . experience of the last months,
nua of the greatest fears
I KS*y Jw<l*hen opposing ths
MINNEAPOLIS (UP). —
"Deadeyy Dicks,” who would
have put to shame the ‘'six-
shooters" of ths Wild West,, are
the 36 members of the Minnea-
polis Pistol and Revolver Club,
according to Dr. P. C. Ware,
club president.
National indoor pistol shot
champions of 1986, the chib
marksmen represent a group of
steady-nerved men, whose daily
occupations range from salesmen
to dentists, Dr. Ware said.
"Most of our men would make
the ‘sixsahooters’ of the cowboy
era turn over in their graves,”
he declared. “We shoot at a
bullseye the size of a nickel at
60 feet and hit it 80 to 90 per
cent of the time. In the old days
the two-gun boys shot at a man-
siaed target which gave them a
chance to get in a telling shot.”
“However,” he hastened tv
add, 'bTe club members are all
good citisena and do their shoot-
ing only as a hobby.”
--o---- . >
Black widow spiders are so
named because the females willing-
nannUf jiaivciw
Hogg, Evangeline, Mrs. (teach-
er)
Hughes, Melba
Harelson, Helen
Hall, D. D.
Hooten, Mary Frances
Hodge, Emma
Hardy, S. J.
Hooten, Ruby Lee
Hal), Billie Sue
Hunt, Lena (teacher)
Herron, Juanita
Hall, Irene
Hausey, Martha Ellen
Hogue', Margaretta
Holland, Bessie
Jordun, Elsie
Jacobs, Maxine
Jones, Helen
Ketchum, William
Kennedy, James
Kelly, Maudie
Lay mon, Ralph
Lloyd, Mary
Lumpkin, John
Lewhue, Mary Ellen
Latham, W. &
La Fars, —
'7 ■■■.*.'■ - -■ ■ .
i b|
Bl ■’
ggM ; j
Norton, —
Nelson, Mrs. J. D. (teacher)
Neil, Ethel
Note, Bill Jr.
• Odom, Evelyn
O’Neill, Raymond
O’Neal, Charles
Peace, W. W.
Peace, Edna
Powell, S. T.
Pearson, Forrest
J. H. Propes (teacher)
Patterson, Marie
Price, Queen (teacher)
Phillips, Cornelia Ruth
Phillips, Virgil
Phillips, Vesta
Petty, James
Power, —
Ragsdale, 0. W.
Roberts, H. D.
Rider, Betty
Rogers, Raridall
Roberts, Ruth -
Reed, Ruby
Rainwater, Aubrey
Rider, Oliver
Kigg, —
. -Ttucher, Ester Gay
Rogers, Maxine i
Rider, Oliver
Smith, Nina
Steines, Geraldine
Stevens, Maudine
Starnes, J. L.
Stubblefield, A. W.
Staggs, Carl
. ^Shoemaker, Robert
Smith, E. J.
Stickland, Jack
Suttle, Floy
Scott, David
Shaw, Jewell
Scagga, Roy
1 Steel, Henry
Sailer, P. M. '
Smith, Naomi
— Stephens, ■=------------
Staggs, Carl
Thiebald, .Margie
Tate, Willie H. (teacher)
Thompson, Lissie (teacher)
Thompson, A. J.
Tjpp, Billy
' Thompson, WaWer. - - -
Tyler, Tom
Watson, Kate (teacher)
Waller, Lewis
Waldrop, W. J.
Wyatt, Marie Ellen
VTalker, Lucille
William, Billy Roam
White, Doris
Warren, Sylva '
Watten, Florence
Wooley, Malcolm
White, Dorthy
Walker, Alvin
Wood, flollett Glenn
Watson, Lillian (teacher)
York, Sally Mae
Young, Mozell
Webb, Mary Joe
Gordon, Joe
Stone, Howard . '*
Wagner, Anna Bell
Gerdes, Allen
McChesney, Robert Donald
McCune, Tony,
T”? -
OVERTON, Texas, March 19
.(LT).—Three hoys playffl truant .. . _
from death terday. whexu the ^. ,-
cei|inc , of the New Londe;-
school crashed down ■■ on their
' empty desks, they revealed to- ■’■■■
day.
Elmer Lee Marsden, Luther
8Ic.Cliu:e- and. Xruman Jinneycutt
Stayed Sway from classes to go •
to a fat stock show.
f; Reporters from all over the I
world iwimtd into the Hender-
.■on “Daily News Office following
the flash of news Of the worst
Eniwedv in years. They stand
/•round awed, speechless and
with no desire to sit down at a
**tppewriter to write a story for
Kweir paper.
“Virgil Beck of Texarkana for-
merly City Editor of Texarkana
papers for about eight years,
W artr free lance writer and South-
ern representative for the New I
Verb News, came into our office |
g- Stout five o’clock this morning
. and aaldr “I’ve covered floods,
A ttain wrecks, storms, tiros, nitro-
jptiyesrin explosions, and even the
g?«»r and nothing has compared
OWith this tragedy.
S Alfred Weeks of the Texar-
,kana Gazette, hollow-eyed hav-
(ng had had practically no sleep
for a week having been cover-
ing the Jefferson murder story
said: “Worst thing in my news-
experience and Pve seen
ieme'*heart-breaking tragedies."
LISTOFSURViVING
TEACHERS GIVEN
J Copyright 1937 by United Pres*.
LONDON, March 18 (UP).—A
I 70- minute hearing in the divorce
1 court today cleared the way for
F the award of a final divorce de-
/ . cree to Mrs. Wallis Warfield
■ Simpson and her intended mar-
riage to the Duke of Windsor.
Sir Donald Somervell, Attor-
ney General, appeared in behalf
of the King’s proctor, and dis-
closed that one “Mr. Stephenson”
had intervened against the
award of a final decree.
He said that Stephensons al-
legations of collusion and conduct
by LMra, Simpson which would
make the award of a final de-
cree inadvisable had been In-
vestigated ar*i found unjusti-
fied.
Than Stephenson himself rose
in the little court room and said
that he was prepared to withdraw
his intervention.
Norman Birkett, chief counsel
for Mrs. Simpson, moved that
Stephenson’s protest be struck
from the court record.
Sir Boyd Merriman, president
of the court, agreed and struck
the protest formally from th<i
records.
As the result, no present ob-
stacle was left in the way of the
award of a final decree to Mrs.
Simpson and. her marriage to
the Duke who gave up the Brit-
ish throne for love of her,
LISfirOEAD IN
OVERTON
OVERTON, Tex., March 19
(UP1— Official but incomplete
list of the dead compiled by the
records cooperation with of-
ficials lot hospitals, morgues, and
neighboring towns, follows:
(All children unless othewlse
indicated,)
Arnold, Louise, a teacher.
Apple, Betty Ruth.
Cox, Perry Lea.’
Coria, Ann Carr.
Curley, Betty.
Curry, Zara Jo*.
Barton, Lilion Lavera.
Boyd, Abetcombie.
Butler, L. R., a teacher.
Bonner, George A-
Brown, Bobble Lee.
• Barrett, -Donald.
Barrett, Junior.
Cummins, Masella.
Ellison, Holly Jo, a teacher.
Eaks, Eugene.
Knight, Earnest.
Kerning. Hazel.
Martin Lafr. • "
7 “ Madder"! .
Daughercy,* jtattwK
Dunean. Sue.
Drake, Nelvie.
Dees, Ellon.
Maxwell, I. J. _
Miller', Uarofd.' -^
Milstead, Anna Marla.
Patterson, Marla.
Patterson, Billie.
Pierson,, Force.
Pierce, Mrs. Arnold.
Griggs, Edwin.
Holloman, Betty.
Hall, Irene.
Holland, Bessie.
Harrelson, Helen.
Hudson, Hershel.
Hudson, Herbert
Jones, Goodel.
James, Helen.
Jones, Fidelia Lee.
Johnson, Geneva.
Jilly, J. W.
Lloyd, Mary.
McClure, Tlnson.
Nell, Jackie.
Neal, Mary Edna.
Nelson, Mrs. J. B.
Oneal, Charles.
Roberts,, R. B.
Rainwater, Aubrey.
Sallee, Robert Henry.
Shaw, Dorothy.
Swift, Lawrence Albert.
Scott, Earl.
Taylor, Charles Rae.
Thompson, Walter. •
Vines, Mary Elizabeth.
Van Hana, Rose.
Thompson, Lizzie Ella, a teach-*
er.
Walker, Inez. ',
Williams, Aubrey.
Williamson, Doris Dean.
York, Dell Maxie.
Teachers Identified
In addition, officials
school Identified the
teachel-s as among the dead:
Waller, Louis.
Hunt Lena.
Gore, Mrs. John.
Hanna, Miss Mabel.
Barnes, Miss Nellie.
Bell, Miss Laura.
Watson, Miss Kittle Mae.
N«al, Miss Ethel.
Ropes, J. H.
“' “ . m. (CST) the Red Crort
encompassed all places
characteristic of dyi
plosions.
The cause favored
ray was that an accu
gas in the basement <
building had been ig
stray spark.
The intensity of th
was awful. Althoug
were killed by the fi
the very force of th
itself, which literally
foundations from un<
million dollar buildii
terrific that many
died in the blast its<
Ira Joe Moore, :
old New, London boy,
* who escaped death,
cally of the horror
the suddenness of lit
"I was in history
I heard the terribk
and the walls started
he Said. "We were
wing of the building,
in my class was kil
doors to the class
blocked and all th
broke. We had to
through the windows
‘ - .ir«erT-— Tri-wrx1
we were crawling; t
the main building
fall. / ' -
“The dust was t<
couldn’t see a thing
minutes, and then w
pull the other stud
tho wreckage. I he!
or six. Some were
were just unconscic
said.
in the part of t
which felt the full
blast, the front, w
some twenty high
rooms and as many
rooms. All were
the time of the exp
3 p. m.
"The finest co-
have ever seen” w
Sheriff McMurray <
universal rallying o
to aid in clearing i
lated community.
Oil companies fr<
East Texas offered i
ment at their dispoi
clearing the mass of
brick, and rubble fl
ing h°Ie that once '
London school. A
hundred workers, nu
had sons or daught
injured, worked ur
clear the building, I
carrying stones off
Small rubbish was
in buckets and tub:
of men handed the
of debris from ha
More than one hu
were hauling the
of concrete and 1
of the hole with
dragging heavy
twisted pieces of st
into the school yard
Boy Scouts, Ame
naires, police, firenr
uty sheriffs from (
derson, Kilgore, anc
boring towns gath
police the stricken
aid in the rescue v
Doctors and nui
ing promptly and
the call of tragedy
A partial list of the injured, in
the New London school dizaster
made by representatives of the
Henderson Daily News follows^
(Seriously Injured)
Edward Brenscom, 13.
Ardis Middleton, 16.
J. Fred Bauer, 11.
Horace Griggs, 17.
Neal Blackford, 17.
Hoyt Wood, 15.
(Less Seriously Injured)
Bil|y Thompson 12.
Winfred Edgards, 13.
• Rglph Laynch, 13.
Johnny Duke, 12.
Mary Lou Upchurch, 12.
Mary Wyche, 15.
Cauline Buffammuss, 16.
Paula Echols, 16.
*"(!nd*t*rminate Injuries)
Alda Phifer.
Grace Lefree.
Albert Brox.
Sam Buntlpg.
Agnes Barton.
Chester CaWser.
Elbon Dee;.
Connie Downs.
Marilla Davidson.
Walter Freeman.
Eddie Couthreoux.
Elsie Jordan.
Morris Luvember.
Maxine Maddry.
Chesley Shaw,
Arthur Shaw.
Ida Ray Smith.
Tullman Turner.
Maye Van Sau.
' Genevieve Elrod.
Jack Warson.
F. P. Eliot.
Florence Sutyle.
H. J. Thompson.
Carl Moore.
Opelia McMinn’.
Strickland.
Billy Williams.
William James.
Billy Clayton.
Johd Patterson.
Ruby Lee Hooten.
Melba Marsdeh. i
MRSICOSEVELT IS
APPALLED AT TRAGEDY
The following has been re-’
coivod by the Rusk County Red
Cross Chapter today as a "love”
offering to be used in relief •
work of victims of the London
school tragedy:
J. ’ H. Montgomery
Mrs. I. P. Windle ...
Mrs. W. H. Coleman
Nolan Watson
Mrs. Lorine Cooper
G. F. Jimmerson ...
B. Williams & Son
Redwine & Arnold
J. H. Spivey
C. F. Hardy
J. F. Wright
C. R. Huffman ....
Mrs. Hugh Wylie ........
W. C. Gibson
John R. Alford
Chester Duran
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAR. 1», 1W ’
——■*——*—■»—W*> . ,4|
Concern Throughout Europe 1
Grouad Burn* 22 Week*
ASHTABULA, O. (UP)—
Seventy-five acres of waste
ground and ruined timberland
lie in the wake of a mysterious
•nd underground fire which burned
near hero 22 weeks before H was
extinguished by rain •»”
Death List
(Continued from Page 1)
Briggs, Hoteice
Basson, Cauleen
Brister, Eloise (teacher)
Bolten, Bryan
Barton, Marvin
Blanton, ^Virginia
Baker, Billy
Buzbee, John Robert
Byron, Onjen
Barton, Lawrence
Butler, L. R.
Beard, Marie
Bell, Laura
Bishop, Blanton
Blackburn, (a girl)
Barnes, Nellie (teacher)
Blackerby
Barber, Alleen .. .
Baucum, Margaret
Barber, Ollie
Barber, Arden
Barber, Carden
Bunling, Naomi
Cooper, Foryest
• Cummings, Marvella
Crim, Annabelle
Childress, Billy
Cole, Helen
Clayton,, Bobby
Cavalier, Jacqueline
Cox, —’
Couley, Jimmy
.Carr, Vai
Collins, Charles R.
Coker, Forrest
Davis, Jack
Davis, Gloria
Davidson, Anna Laura
Davidson, Helen
Davis, June
Dickenson, Wanda
Duncan, Sue
Darsey, Alice
Davidson, Joe Wheeler
Darsey, Adus Franklin
Elrod, Juanita
• Elrod, Geneva
Edwards, Maurice
Echols, 1’oula
------Eaks, Eugene
Franklin, Odus
Fealiy,*> Janies
Francis, ’ (two
O. L. Francis)
Ford,; John A.
.... Foreman, Mary £Uen
Gregg, Horace
1 ‘rtfllif, Alvin
Griggs, Edmond
Gibsoq,* Miselyn
Gary, Pearline ’
Gibson, G. W. .
a music note writing machine, Galbreath, G. L. .
—Mnrr/Emory,- (teacher) ’ ~
Gordon, Alvin
Hall, Junior — , -----
Herron, Juanita
Hasbroch, Charles
Hollaman, Betty
Edward Bronscum, injured 12-
year-old boy at the local hospital
did not say One won} while he re-
ceived treatment® for his head and
body wounds until hie father are-
rived, and, standing at his bedside
asked: 'Well, son, how are you
feeling?" •,
“The nurses aren’t cross with me
»o I guea* I’m feeling fine.”
Another injured boy, Billy
Thompson also about 12 yearf old,
felt "fina.” The nurse was encour-
aged about him, however, she was
surprised when she asked: "Did
you sleep warm last night?"
“Why, I didn’t sleep here last
night." The little child was so
shocked ha didn't know where he
had slept.
Two children were admitted to
the local hospital for emergency
treatment and dismissed. They
were: Eugene Watkins of Over-
ton and Leo Warren, address un-
known.
Jay Fred Bauer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. Bauer of Overton is in
the hospital suffering from frac-
tured skull and fractured leg. One
other patient besides those men-
tioned above is Artis Middleton,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Middle-
ton, Overton Route No. 1 who is
unconscious from a concussion “*•
fractured sknuj
Woca and t
DURANT, Okla., Mar. 19 (UP)
—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt sgld
today , that the schedule of Her
southwestern lecture tour prob-
ably would make It Impossible for
her to visit the scene of the tragic
explosion at th* New London,
Texas, school.
**It js a. terrible tragedy,
said. "Something should b<
to prevent such accidents,
deeply grieved and know
everything possible will be done to
relievo the Injured."
-- --—o--—
Pastor Invents Device
To Write Music Note
LINCOLN, Neb. (UP) .—The
Rev. W. A. Fowler of Hayelock
Methodist church has developed
a music note writing machin.,
mmliarrn rppcmrfTe td a type-
writer.
He believes it will end hand
scoring of orchestrations and du-
plicate copying of music and
original manuscripts.
■ Production was highest in the
Briey and Moselle districts, where
flopped 14,890,000 tons. Longwy
ind Normandie, the next highest
ttodudng areas, ware far behind,
irith slightly more than 1,500,000
tens sach. France’s ifbn centers,
therefore, remain in the north,
uncomfortably close to the Ger-
nan border.
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, March 19, 1937, newspaper, March 19, 1937; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331135/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.