Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 191, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1938 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rusk County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rusk County Library.
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D
TWO
Courthouse
Latest News
Records
FLASHES
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UP) —
w'
Henderson,
Si
Henderson,
*
as-
4
; •■'pH
w.
? I
i7, up
4
f
come.
-o-
I
ger, removal of disabilities.
held
I
t
Sa
r I-
survived by h”r
Notice
husband, W. B. White; four sis-1
A Hallowe’en carnival will, be
in employment
Claude
1939 Oldsmo- signing of the legislative bill
es-
to
in
o
Selected Stocks
®H3
I
4
GOO
Markets at a Glance
Party
I
' <
i
r
New York Cotton
*■
Fort Worth Grain
I
I
Cotton
FLORSHEIM
o-
3 yellow
Fort Worth Product
■ !
New Orleans Cotton
>
NOTHING HAS BEEN CHANGED BUT THE PRICE1
Chicago Grain
i
•
Fort Worth Livestock
i
REED'S DEPARTMENT STORE
>
New York Curbs
M
T
“Where Most People Trade
503 W
GUAF
I ____5
j
I
...1
Kept Cool
Amidst Fire
Hallowe’en Carnival
Set for Chapman
BARGE OPERATION
ON TRINITY RIVER y
STORIES
IN STAMPS
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Herman Smith and Ruby Sub-
«S
at youi
849
848
829
816
792
859
838
835
819
806
781
846
850
849
831
816
794
861
839
837
821
807
783
849
Wolaver-Dohoney
local dealer for
attributable to the present
flict between Japan and China
o ---—--
Land Washed Away,
Reappears, Is Claimed
was
was
838
.... 836
821
808
786
847
Spots closed
b-7'’
ence.
“And we affirm our faith that,
Jan.
March
May .
July .
Oct. ..
Dec. ..
“utilit;
gram I
power
Cit>s Sen- 8 7-8.
Elec Bd & Sh 14 3-8.
Ford M Ltd 4.
Gulf Oil Pa 39 3-4.
Lone Star Gas 10.
Nig Hud Pwr 8 5-8,
I
Chauffeur
(Continued From Page 1)
n
Leaders
(Continued From Page 1)
Japs
(Continued From Page 11
• • • • • •
• Mg*-
• ltd
Scout Drive
: ed frutn Page 1»
. *
rL '1
PAT MORELAND IS
RENAMED TO TEXAS
UNEMPLOYMENT JOB
For nearly 50 years footwear values have been
judged by the quality that’s built into Flnraheim
Shoes ... and today—as always—you get the
same fine leathers and workmanship, the same
fit and finish, the same longer wear for which
Florsheims are famous. In short, nothing hue
been changed but the price.
BRISBANE. Australia
The owner of a
on
JARRELL BROTHERS
SURRENDER AFTER
JOHNSON CO. SLAYING PROMISED TODAY
ing their Industry during the three
day session.
Delegates
DISTRICT COURT FILINGS |
Ex parte: Edward Ross Ballen-I
I Canton before the Japanese
NEW AUTO REGISTRATIONS
Mrs. Fannie Shaw, Overton R-l,
i expecting to weigh several of the
i most serious problems, confront-
tary of the Republican Program
Committee and has severed his
affiliations with the party Nation-
al committee it was learned today.
ALLREDSENDS GRAPEFRUIT
AUSTIN. Tex. (UP) — A box
of Texas grapefruit will be Gov.
James V. Allred's contribution to
a New England Thanksgiving Dav
banquet to be held at Plymouth.
Mass., by the National Thanks-
giving Observance Committee.
BY UNITED PRESS
Stocks irregular ,and moderate-
ly active. \
Bonds irregularly higher; U. 8
Governments irregular.
Curb stocks Irregularly higher.
Foreign exchange lower.
Cotton steady.
Wheat up 1-8 to off 1-8 cent;
oom ofF'3-8 to 1-2.
Ill
COUNTY' COURT FILINGS
(Criminal)
Dit Gray, theft, a misdemeanor.
C. W. Evans, swindling by worth-
less check.
Willie Harper, aggravated
sault.
f 1
moststyles^
points on profit-taking.
Rumors that the Government
son will announce a billion dollar
—ty National defense” pro-
brought the buying into the
r ■ and light shares and the
•lectrical parts issues.
Westinghouse Electric jumped
Gives ¥>u ^4 new lowprice
Jor the same fagfi yualiiv
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) —
A. C. and Sam Jarrell, Johnson
County Farmers charged with the Trinity River this year was j
slaying yesterday of W. R. (Bill) ised today after 700 citizens
Robertson, 37, surrendered today the river’s watershed had dii
to Tarrant county officers.
The two are brothers of W. D.
(Buddy) Jarrel, for whose am-
bush shooting last April Robert-
son was charged with murder.
Sam Jarrell, 30, told Tarrant
county officers that he fired the
shots that killed Robertson as he
worked at a corn shelter outside
venus, Johnson county. Jarrel said
Robertson had threatened his life
after the younger brother, W. D.
Jarrel was slain.
A. C. Jarrell, 33, declared that
he accompanied his brother to
Venus, but did not shoot Robert-
son. Sam Jarrel lives near Burle-
son and A. C. Jarrell ne&r Rhome.
The two surrendered to Sheriff
A. B. Carter voluntarily at their
attorney’s office. Jonson County
officers were notified and the
Jarrels will be transferred to Cle-
burne later today. ,
------------------o ■
K J
JKb
■
■ '
F s
Chrysler sedan.
W. R. Mathyer,
Dodge sedan.
Lee Williamson,
Chevrolet sedan.
J
nto welcomed the hundreds of del- : The man, arrested as be step-
egntes after Mhhishop A. J. p^d off a j,llg from Phoenix, ans-
Droessaerts opened the meeting werpd tfie description of E. F.
W. H. Franklin
s money was
he had an idea. He would
He
and
the
'MID-CONTINENT OIL
AND GAS MEN MEET
AT SAN ANTONIO
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UP) —
' Members of the Texas Mid-Conti-
j nent Oil and Gas Association be-
whatever choice of way of life a
people makes, that choice must
not threaten the world with the
disaster of war. The impact of
such disaster cannot be confined.
I It releases a floodtide of evil |
emotions fatal to civilized living.
That statement applies not to
the Western Hemisphere alone
but to the who’e of Eurone and
Asia and Africa and the islands
of the sea.”
Mr. Roosevelt said that
United States had <
contended that no Nation would
accent disarmament while neigh-
bors armed and that we w’11 arm
unless there is general disarma-
ment. Ordinary rules of common
sense require that, he said, until
weapons capab'e of aggression
generally are abandoned.
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) —
No cotton sales. Middling closed
here today at 8.34.
STOCKS RALLY
IN BELATED
BUYINGTODAY
NEW YORK. (UP).—Related
buying In utility and electrical
equipment shares brought a gen-
eral rally into stocks today after i
prices had lost most of an early i
rise of fractions to more than 2
AUSTIN, Tex. (UP) — Gov.
James V. Allred today re-appolnt-
ed Patrick D. Moreland, Member
of the Texas Unemployment com-
> re-ap-
Oontmued From Page 1
Opera Company, where she made
her debut aa Sophie In Massenet's
“Werther” In 1809.
EL PASO, Tex? (UP)—Jimmy
Zinn, former big-league baseball
pitcher who managed the El Paso
Texans to the championship of
the Arizona-Texas baseball league
during the past season, was re-
leased today. ..The Texans are a
class D farm club of the New
York Yankees.
El Paso club officials said Zinn
order that the Western Hemis-
phere may work out its own in-
terrelated salvation in the light
own interrelated experi-
as tin ideal of life, teen. Roy B. cannon, Runts ^in-
prepared to meet ; mons, Preston Allison, E. R. Trot-
ion of i ter- Larry Rice, and G. F. Mat-
1 thews. —~
FORT WORTH, Texas. (UP).
—Produce;
Poultry: Fryers 11-17; hens fl-
13; turkeys 9-13.
Eggs: No. 1 candled 6.00-6.90
per case. Butterfat 20.
r.
NEW E
Gears .
handy cc
mg whei
team. N
but a stu
unit of t
is clear
-------j a piece of jewelry,
picked out a $2,500 ruby
j:----;.J for which
pawn broker lent him $75.
in
9^
Efi . ...
J
EL PASO. Tex. (UP)—Sheriff’s
officers today arrested a man
they sought to connect with the
withdrew from
Chest program.
Many of the workers in
! Courageous Helen Kuzak, above,
19-yeqr-old business girl from .
Cleveland, O., roused 26 young
women from their sleep and led
them to safety when a fire broke
out in the Clare Club, Baltimore,
Md., residence club. Friends
hailed Helen as a heroine for
her coolness in the face of the
emergency.
Communist.”
Dies said he would write a re-
ply later to Solicitor General
Robert H. Jackson, who took ex-
ception to Dies’ criticism of Jack-
son’s brief to the Supreme Court
in the Strecker deportation case.
lery.
JUSTICE COURT
R. E. Thomas, overloading. Ar-
, rested by Highway Patrolman O.
M. Gilliland.
George T. Anthony, operating1
car with fictitious license.
Vannte Menefee, tresspassing;
fined $23 and costs.
CHICAGO. (UP). — Wheat
prices fluctuated in a narrow
range around previous closing
levels in a light trade on the
Chicago Board of Trade today,
failing to reflect weakness in
foreign markets.
At the close wheat was up 1-8
to off 1-8 cent, corn off 3-8 to
1-2 cent, and oats unchanged to
1-8 cent lower.
con-
and even under the most favorable rate
spending by another $150,000,-
i 000 in the next fiscal year.
He said the United States had
no interest in war and coveted
. good relations
with our neighbors.
“We in the United States,” he
said, “do not seek to impose on
any other people either our way
of life or our National form of
Government. But we are deter-
mined to maintain and protect
that way of life and that form
of Government for ourselves.
And we are determined to use
ART MIX WEDS
LITTLE ROCK, Aik. (UP) —
Art Mix, veteran actor of West-
ern films and brother of Tom Mix,
was married last night to Miss
Camalia Taylor, Jackson, Tenn.
Mix is 50 and th* bride is 29. His
home is at Bozeman, Mont.
APPOINTEDTO LORDSHIP
LONDON, (UP) — Earl Stan-
hope has been appointed First
Lord of the Admiralty and Earl
De La Warr President of the
Board of Education, It was an-
nounced today.
-----------o-----------
COP’S DAUGHTER KILLED
NEW YORK. (UP) — Edith I
Menger, five-year-old daughter of
Patrolman Harry Menger, was ac-
cidentally shot and killed today
whiie she and her brother, three-
year-old Harry, Jr., were playing
with the policeman's, service re-
volver. ,
Jan
March ....
May
July ...„
Oct.
Dec. .......
Spots closed
dling 8.71, salea 3632 bates.
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) —
Cash grain:
Wheat 1 hard 77 1-2-8- 1-2.
Corn 2 white 58 1-2-59 1-2; 2
I yelk w 58 1-2-59 1-2.
Outs 2 red 36-37; 3 red 35-36.
Barley No. 2 50-51; No. 3 49-
2. Discontinuance of monopolis-
tic or preferential Japanese pro-
jects which would deprive Ameri-
can Nationals in China of oppor-
tunity ’ to under! ake legitimate
trade or industry.
3. Discontinuance in China of
Japanese interference with Amer-
ican property and other rights, in-
cluding censorship of mail and
telegrams and restrictions upon
residence and travel by Americans
and upon American trade and
shipping.
The note charged "unwarrant-
ed” restrictions by Japanese mili-
tary authorities upon Americans
In China, despite treaty rights
and repeated Japanese assur-
ances. It contended that Ameri-
cans had been deprived of free
opportunity and excludea from
fields suddenly reserved for Ja-
panese. It said American inter-
ests were suffering1 also in J4pan
itself from "Industrial, trade, ex-
change and other controls which
the Japanese government has Im-
posed incident to its military op-
eratlons in China.” And it re-
minded Japan that the United
States had made no effort to
handicap Japanese Nationals sim-
ilarly in the United States or else-
vfhere.
"American Nationals and their
interests,” the note said, “have
suffered serious losses in the Far
NEW ORLEANS. (UP)—Cot-
ton futures closed steady:
Open High Low Close
849
849
831
818
796
860
NEW YORK. (UP)
futures closed steady:
Open High Low Close
839 "** —
838
822
811
787
849
unchanged, mid-
dling 8.80, sales 500 bates.
819
851
833
820
798
862
unchanged, mid-
J 50.
Milo 2 yellow 87-89;
84-86.
I- Kaffir 2 white 86-88; 3 white
83-85.
CHICAGO. (UP)—Cash grain:
Wheat sample grade red 59.
sample grade hard 55)4, 2 mixed
66’3.
Corn 1 yellow 46 - 46|, 2 yellow
46 - 46i. 5 vellow 43 - 44, 1 white
46J -. 46|, 5 white 44}, sample
grade 41 J.
New corn 3 mixed 43}. 4 mixed
41}. 2 yellow 46, 3 yellow 44, 4
yellow 41 - 42}. 5 yellow 39} •
40). 3 white 42} - 43}.
Oats sample grade 27}. 2 white
27, 3 white 26. 4 white 23.
Rye No. 2 45.
4
1
NEW YORK. (UP).—Cotton
futures fluctuated in a narrow
range today with final prices 1
point higher to 5 points lower.
Prices dipped to small losses
Just before the close on hedge
selling. And New Orleans and
local liquidation. Sufficient de-
mand appeared towards the close
to lift near months to around the
day's levels, but distant lagtrad.
Spot was quoted nominally nt
8.80 cents a pound, unchanged.
J®*).
gan their annual convention today,
THE HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER IT, IMS
seek a divorce within the next
two weeks from George Olsen,
band leader and night club owner.
Miss Shutta,. one of Ziegfeld’s
stars, was married, to Olsen in
1926. He is her second husband.
--------- -------o--
GOP SECRETARY RESIGNS
CHICAGO. (UP) — William
ters, Mrs. W. W. Hurd, Canton;
Mrs. George Bosworth. Houston;
Mrs. Henry Tipps, Dallas: Mrs.
Mattie Evans, Brachfield; two
brbthers, Frank and Claude
Penkerton of Brachfield. , tainment at the affair.
SINGER SEEKS DIVORCE
NEW YORK. (UP) — Ethel
Funeral services were
from the Maple« Grove-church at
3 o’clock this afternoon for Mr .
Bettie White, 73, with the Rev.
J. C. Irby of Newsome, Texas,
and the Rev. W. R. Harber of
Longview, officiating. Interment
will follow in the Maple. Grove
cemetery under the direction of
the A. Crim Funeral Home.
Mrs: White passed away late
Wednesday afternoon at tb-e
family home in the Brachfield
community. She was born Ort.
5, 1865 and 50 years of her mar-
ried life was spent in the com-
munity in which she died. She
was esteemed and loved for her
snlendid Christian ch" aeter in
the community in which she lived
and served so long.
Deceased is s-----’
BY UNITED PRESS
Allied Stocks 12 B-8 '
Am Can 104.
Am Cry Sug Pf 76.
Am Pwr X Lt 7 3-8.
Am Rad & SS 18 1 8.
Am Smelt 55.
A T & T 148 1-2.
Anaconda 38 5-8
Armour of Til 6 1-8.
Asso Dg Pf 72.
a Vuburn Auto 4 3-8.
Avn Corp 5 1-2.
Barnsdall 17 7-8.
Bendix Avn 23 3-4.
Beth Steel 68 1-4.
Butler Bros 8 3-4.
Byers. Am 13 7-8.
Canada Di'V 17 1-2.
Chrysler 83 3-4.
Comw X- Sou 2 1-2.
Cons. Oil 9. .
Elec Auto Lite 32 1-2.
Elec St Bat 34 1-4.
Firestone (Pf) 96 3-4.
. Foster Wheel 28 3-8.
Freeport Sul 27 3-4.
Gen Elec 47.
Gen Foods 38.
. Gen Mot 50 1-2.
Gillette SR 9.
oodvear 32 5-8.
Graham Paige I 3-4.
Gt Nor Ore 14 1-8.
Gt West Sug 29 1-8.
Houston Oil 8.
Hudson Mot 9 3-8
Ind Rayon 26 1-2.
Int Harv 63 1-2.
Int T & T 9 3-1. ■
Johns Manv 101.
Kroner G & B 19 3-4
Liq Carb 18 1-4.
Marshall Field 13 3-4
Mont Ward 51 1-4.
Nat Dairv 14 1-8.
Ohio Oil 10 5-8.
Packard 5 7-8.
Penney. J C 82 1-2.
Phelps Dodge 44.
Phillips Pot 39 1-4.
Pure Oil 11.
Purity ' Bak 13 1-2.
Radio 8 3-4.
Sears 76.
Shell Un Oil 15 3-8.
Socony Vac 13 7-8.
Sou Pac 19 3-4.
S O Ind 29 1-2.
S O N J 53.
Studebaker 8 5-8.
Swift & Co 18 7-8
Texas Corp 43 1-2.
Tex G Sul 32 7-8.
Tex Pac C X- O 10.
Un Elliot 63 3-4.
Un Ca-b 87.
TTn Avn Corp 36 3-4.
Unit Corp 4 1-4.
U. S. Gypsum 107.
U S Ind Ale 27 7-8.
U S Steel 65 3-8.
Vanadium 24 1-8. ,
West Elec 121 1-4.
Worthington 24.
. indicated that the
Mexican oil import and produc-
tion situations, surplus domestic
reserves, and other "thorns in the |
of American operators I
> had been given an out-right re-
| tease and that a cheaper-salaried
I playing manager would be sought
I for the 1939 season.
Zinn’s release came after a visit
1 of Bill Essick, New York Yankee
scout.
Dictators
Continued From Page 1
treaties. It means a deliberate
avoidance of policies which arouse
fear and distress. It means the
self-restraint to refuse strident
ambitions which are sure to breed
insecurity and intolerance and
thereby weaken the prospect pf
that economic and moral recov-
ery the world so sadly needs.”
Mr. Roosevelt accompanied his
pledge to arm with an offer to
disarm but he refused to check
American preparedness in return
for mere promises from other
Nations. His speech further in-1
dicated the upward trend of arm-
causes directly aments expenditures. The New
Dea] has been re-arming the Na-
tion at a $ 1,000,000,000-a-year
and probably will boost the
conditions an early rehabilitation
of American enterprise in China 1
and of American trade with China j
cannot be expected.
"The American government : nothing except
therefore, finds it all the more
difficult to reconcile itself to a
situation in which'American Na-j
tlonals must contend with con-
tinulng unwarranted interference
with their rights at the hands of !
ths Japanese authorities in China !
and with Japanese actions and
policies which operate to deprive
American trade and enterprise of
equality of opportunity in China.' every endeavor in our power in
Niaufoou Island in the South
Seas receives its mall in tin cars.
Passing steamers throw the can- of its
ned mall overboard and a native
awima out after it |
Honors U. S. Constitution
CTRIFE and revolution were
tearing at the heart of Haiti
when Columbus first landed there
on Dec. 6, 1492, and the tiny island
has been swept with rebellion al-
most continuously since.
Successively, it has bden ruled
by Spanish, French, and English.
Thousands of its people have been
exploited in past centuries in the
quest for gold. In the late 1600s
France established the colony of
Saint Dominique, based upon ( .
slavery and irrigation. It proved $100 fine and costs,
highly profitable. Sugar, cotton,
coffee and indigo were raised.
I Many mulattos became property
owners and two years after the
i American constitution had been
' adopted, 1789, political rights were
granted these natives.
Immediately the whites pro-
tested, and there followed an in-
terminable struggle. The British
and the Spanish intervened, rulers |
; were installed-and deposed in the
island government. At length, on -
Jan. 1, 1804, independence was I
declared and the Indian name
Haiti taken for the state. But in-
dependence brought no peace.
Revolution followed revolution.
In 1821 the Spanish portion of the
island proclaimed its indepen-
dence In 1843 the Dominican Re-
public was formed and there have
since been the two countries on
the one islaild.
Only after the intervention of
the United States was compara-
tive peace restored to the nation,
1 in 1915. But even then strife has
continued to sweep the country in-
termittently. Haiti on the stamp
shown here honors the 150th anni-
versary of the adoption-of the
U. S. Constitution in 1787
(Copyright, ISJS, N I-; a S..rvic<, inc,,
umbla Gas and Radio Corporation. ;
New highs were made by U. S. 1
■teel, Bethlehem, Douglas. Glenn |
Martin United Aircraft, American
Water Works, Engineers Public
Service, Commonwealth & South-
am issues, Southern Railway, Mc-
Tntyre Porcupine and Internation-
al paper issues.
Chrysler and General Motors
registered small losses near the
elose.
Demand for the railroad division
sent the group up fractions to
more than 2 points, the best in :
Union Pacific. New York Cen-
tral featured In activity, reaching
80 8-4 up nearly a point. The car-
riers eased with the remainder of
the list but most of them held part
of their advance.
Net operating income of the na-
tion’s railroads for thia month is
wtpected to exceed September
which now is estimated to aggre-
gate >53,000,000, the highest for
any month since October 1937.
traders were awaiting the re-
port of the President’s fact flnd-
Cg committee on railroad wages,
the deadline of which is midnight
Saturday. Rumor*, were heard the
report would be favorable to the
roads and that Induced buying for
a time.
take the case of jewels and two
pieces of luggage in the trunk
of the limousine to the Stam Regis
Hotel.
Fleming drove away and sud-
denly remembered that it
his alimony day and he
practically broke. His payment
was $75. He thought a couple of
drinks might make him feel bet-
ter. So he parked the limousine
and had a few. Some other men
—he thinks there were .four-
joined him but he doesn’t remenu
ber where, or even ' where hriHf
started drinking.
He remembered leaving the car
in a parking lot, taking the
j 8119,050 worth of jewels from
1 the case and putting them in his
pocket where they would be
“safe,” and setting out for more
drinks.
By the time his
gone
pawn
picked out a
' diamond ring,
! pawn b**"kcr ' ... .
Soon he becart to realize what
I he had done and decided to sober
, up. He boarded a subway Tues-
; day evening to mediate. He rode
I all that night, all day yesterday.
For diversion he read newspaper
accounts about nolice looking for
him in eight “ States.
At midnight last night he de-
cided to surrender.
Each year enough carbon dio.vJk
Ide to make 160,000.000 tons
“dry ice” is produced by the burn-
ing of gasoline in automobiles. .
sides” of American
would be discussed.
State Comptroller George H. ]
Sheppard addressed the morning
session, analyzing the gross pro-
duction tax and other levies paid
{ by the petroleum industry in
Texas.
President Charles P. Magaha of
the association rendered his an-
nual report. He discussed oil in
its relation to the economic life I
of the nation. ••’“57 »• »«•
\ attempted ‘rescue” of a girl from ,
Mayor C. K. Quin of San Anto- a convent near Phoenix. Artz. 1
/srsVM a* 4 I—— t- . . _ J JS _ _a_« 1
-• —j The man, arrested as he stop-
... , ■ ,,, n’eet*n# wered tfie description of E.
r> )Pvoca lon* Y'* Franklin Schneider, said to be a former sall-
0 /' as 1 f!RPon<led to Quins wel- or> whom Phoenix police are snek-
' Ing. The man denied he was
i Schneider. He carried a black-
I jack.
Funeral Held for
Mrs. Bettie White
wj
| was Generalissimo Chinag himself
who ordered the Chinese evacua-
i tion not only of Hankow but of
as-
he
Yu
of
which
— . ..—_ —., to
withdraw his Army intact with-
FORT WORTH, Texas. (UP).
(USDA).—Livestock:
Cattle 8,500j calves S.6«'O; at
mostly steady; steers 5.00-8.50;
yearlings 5.00-9.50; fat cows at
4.25-5.50; — Cutters 2.75-4.00;
calves 4.00-*T.50.
Hogg 900; mostly steady; top
butchers 8 10; bulk good butchers
7.95-8.10; mixed grades 7.40 to
7.90; packing sows 6.75-7,25,
Sheep 8,000; steady to 25 high-
er; fat lambs 6.50-7.00.
Tomorrow’s estimated receipts:
Cattle 2,300: calves 1,500 j hogs
800; sheep 8,500,
COUNTY COURT FILINGS
(Civil)
C. W. Curtis, rec., vs. J.
Maddox, suit on account.
L. G. White, pollution. Defend-
ant pleads guilty and assessed
tn a few minutes from 117 3-4 1
to 121 1-4, up 3 1-4 points net
and General Electric, which wa^
selling around 45 near thelclose,
swept forward to finish at 47.
1 1-4. Utilities wiped out early
losses ranging to almost a point
and replaced them with fraction-
al gains. Other sections of the
list cut down or erased losses
sustained in the mid-session sell-
out.
Steels mounted to new highs
along with aviation Issues. In the
early afternoon the rails assumed
leadership. At one time the while '
list registered gains of fractions 1
to 2 points. Then prices turned
down from the highs with many
issues registering losses.
Trading exceeded yesterday's
total of 1,700,000 shares deapite
a dip in Packard turnover. The
latter continued active after open-
ing on a block of 10,000 shares at
5 3-4. It wys the most heavily
traded stock on the boyd and it
reached 6 up 3-8 and a new high.
Tjirge volume also was noted in
Internal Paper, International Hy-
dro-Elecerlct, Curtiss Wright,
Commonwealth X- Southern. Col-
sault. It was asserted that
personally instructed Gen.
Han-Mout, military leader
Kwangtung province of
Canton is the principal city,
■ F 1 4 I ( 4 I > ■ a —. 4 .... . ’ ** 4- m m a
out fighting.
Gen. Yu was instructed, it was
said, to take up new lines in the
interior, similar to the new de-
fense lines which Chiang’s own
I Central China Army' is beginning
. ,. to take up southwest of Hankow,
that the ----!-------o------------
consistently I
1 Dies Inquiry
| O' > "■•<> run. Page 1
insist on your doing so at this
time.”
Excerpts quoted from* Martin’s
' speeches included:
”1 am not red baiting when I
say that the Communist Party
has put forth every possible ef-
lort that they could put forth to
capture the entire labor move-
ment of this country. The cap-
ture of the United Automobile
V\ orkerg . . . was the first goal
and the most important goal of
1 ■ the Communist Party.
"1 know that Lee Pressman
(CIO attorney) is a stooge for i
the Communist Party. I know I
that John Brophy is and I know I
that the editor of the CIO News
in Washington, Len Dexauc, is a
Cnnimimiat
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP) —
Regular^ barge operation on the
prom-
j from
the river’s watershed had discuss-
ed the long-sought project of im-
proving it from Fort Worth to
the gulf.
State Rep. Price Daniel of Lib-
erty said that his town had pro-
vided $6,000 to pay for clearing
the channel of snages on a 38-mlle
course to Anahuac. The work will
be completed this year,and regular
barge operation begun, Daniel
said.
War and Agriculture Depart-
ment officials met with State lead-
ers last night at a banquet spon-
sored by the Trinity Improvement
Association.
Major-Gen. Julian L. Schley,
chief of the army engineeritMT^
Corps, said that surveys were un-^
der way now to determine if navi- 7
gation is possible on a commer-
cial basis for the entire distance.
Irrigation and conservation are
other factors to be considered, he
said. Army and agriculture de-
partment crews are cooperating In
the work.
Identifying
Motor Co., as
Oldsmobile in the firm’s signa-
ture under the advertisement an-
nouncing the new
Wednesday, the street address I
and telephone number was r ‘
included. Correct street address c. R. Milter,
is 209 North Main street, and ---:---
number is 1068.
-o-
held at the Chapman High Schoo! i
Friday night, starting at 7:30 “that
o’clock, it was announced here Nations is nusu.u WuCsS wi-,
ritories or new controls are cov-
r eted by some. We are entitled. I
Proceeds of the carnival will go , think, to greater reassurance
to the athletic and playground
----- ------- i fund of the school.
Shutta, singer, said today she will j
armament race
up. He boarded
_. the
Scout drive will be working in the
Community Chest campaign
November.
The nisn will meet again this
afternoon to make the final check.
Among those who attended the
increasing our own military and noonday luncheon were Paul Rog-
naval establishments. For while ; crS* Clixf Hale, Joe H. Langhorn,
(UP). »we refuse to accept as a perma-1 Poss Jarvis, J. L. Horner, Al
? l«v.J 4.U - 4,1 . _ T T. Wunt T-T C’hftR-
Stradbl'Oke Island which dis- and reject it as an ideal of life, tean. Roy B. Cannon, Rufus Em-
we must be 1
insists with success any applicatii
. — , peared ■ force against us.”
Main Beach Point, and that he
greater
"The kind of proof which can
be given, for example, by actual
discussions, leading to actual dis-
armament. Not otherwise can we
be relieved of the necessity of
establishments. For while crS* Clui' Hale, Joe H. Langhorn,
*c.*cpt Ross Jarvis, J. L. Horner, A'
parcel of land nent necessity the idea of force, Tennessee. J. L. Hunt. H. Chas-
1 appeared several months
Hard, veteran Washington news- a result oi erosion now
paperman, has resigned as secre-
I pensatlon commission. The re-ap-
1 pojntment gives Moreland a six-
year term on the board. Moreland
a former carpenter and minister
and a poet, was secretary to Gov-
ernor Allred when the commission
was created.
Allred cited the record of the
commission in announcing the re-
appointment. Both labor and man-
agement have nraised its admin-
istration, he s4ro, and In contrast
to other states it has had little
criticism. Since payments began
Inst January benefit payments
have totaled $7,500,000 and av-
erage monthly placement of per-
sons in employment has been I
r 30,000.
The reappointment was an-
nounced on the anniversary of the
bile which appeared in the News tabllsl.ing the commission.
Wednesday, the street address Qther members are ChairmmU
not Director Orville S. Carpenter and
209 North Main street, and
the telephone
ago as
a result of erosion
that his property has reappeared ■ force against
on Main Beach Point, and that he ' —
intends to reclaim it.
, His principal difficulty i8 the
fact that his shifting land has
dur.'ii up in a different parish
from the one where it was orig-
•nally located and he may have
dil'fa ultj in establishing his title.
larger area than does the Com-
l munity Chest and because the
“We will insist,” he continued. Scout program grows larger each
° ---- 1 ■■■"t an armament race amon? year, it was thought advisable to
•- — announced here Nations is absurd unless new ter-, withdrew from the Community
today. There will be free enter- |
1 ini UK, io taiur ruewnui
than can be given by words.
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 191, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1938, newspaper, October 27, 1938; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331452/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.