The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 304, Ed. 1 Monday, June 18, 1934 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Daily Herald, Brownsville and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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Hitler Ally Startles World by Boldly Criticizing Nazi Regime
RESTORATION
OF MONARCHY
IS ADVOCATED
BERLIN. June 18 «V-'The bold-
est public criticism of the Nazi
regime which has come from any-
one in authority since Chancellor
Hitler’s assumption of power in
January. 1933 was made Sunday |
by Franz Von Papen. vice chan- I
cellor.
Omitted by Press
The sensational character of his
remarks delivered before students
of Marburg University is best illus-
trate 1 by the fact that no Berlin
newspapers printed even an excerpt.
Von Papen in guarded language
pleaded for the reestablishment of
the monarchy.
Notice was served by the govern-
ment-controlled German news bu-
reau upon its subscribers that the
speech must not be published in
Germany.
Von Papen a Hitler “right-hand
man.” challenged e Nazi regime s
claims that it must Impose its will
in the realm of religion and severe-
ly criticized muzzling of the pre&s.
He took issue with the nation-
wide campaign of Dr. Joseph Goeb-
bels. minister of propaganda an-
other of Hitler’s leading advisors
against “grousers and croakers."
Flays ’Experiments’
Von Papen warned against rad-
ical socialist experiments asserting
they held the possibility of a new
class war.
Excessive use of slogans and the
belief that the people might be
united by terrorism were denounced
by the vice chancellor who also
serves as minister of air.
He criticized the attempt to have
one political party rule Germany
instead of making the new Ger-
many “the real people’s state.”
FLEET LEAVES
GOTHAM BEHIND
NEW YORK. June 18. (4»>—The
old town won t be the same Mon-
day night. The fleet's leaving.
Searchlight* that have sent pow-
erful rays dancing „ i the sky along
the Hudson each night since May
31. great guns that have pointed
at Manhattan and the Jersey
shores and thousands of sailors
who have had New York in the hol-
low of their hands for 18 gay days
are heading out to sea.
The storeship Arctic was the first
to go slipmng from her navy yard
berth shortly after dawn. Next on
the schedule of departure were the
aircraft carriers Lexington and
t Saratoga with half a dozen tugs
4 ready toTase them from their Hud-
aon river piers. The battleships
and destroyers were to follow about
noon.
The fleet which was reviewed by
Pres. Roosevelt when it arrived in
proud procession May 31. is not
leaving as a unit. Following tac-
tical exercises at sea during the
nc:t few days ships of the fleet
will scatter to various ports along
the Atlantic to pass July 4. Most
of the craft will spend the sum-
mer in Atlantic waters returning
to the Pacific in September.
The Pennsylvania and four de-
stroyers will go at once however
to Bremerton. Wash. where the
battleship will be overhauled at the
Puget Sound navy yard.
NOTICE OF TRI STEE S SALE
THE STATE OF TEXAS >
COUNTY OF CAMERON I
Whereas on the 1st day of March.
1928 Winston B Harwood and Aug-
usta H. Harwood his wife executed
acknowledged and delivered to A.
A. Highbarger. trustee their deed of
trust conveying the following de-
scribed property being situated in
the county of Cameron. State of
Texas to-wit:
All of Block Seventy-Six (76) in
Subdivision "A” Harlingen Land
and Water Company Subdivision as
per plat recorded in Volume 1 at
page 21 of the Map and plat records
of Cameron County. Texas con-
taining 49 acres more or less.
Said deed of trust being given for
the purpose of securing Nelson
Mortgage Co a corporation of
Kansas City Missouri in payment
of note described as follows: One
note for $2500.00 due March 1.
1933. payable to Nelson Mortgage
Company with interest from date
ms therein specified payable semi-
annually signed by Winston B.
Harwood and Augusta H. Harwood
his wife which said deed of trust
is recorded in Volume 60. pages 353-
356 of Deed of Trust Records of
Cameron County. Texas and to
which said deed of trust and the
record thereof reference is here
made for a full description of said
land and note and the terms and
provisions of said trust; and
Whereas. Phoenix Mutual Life
Insurance Co. of Hartford Con-
necticut is now the owner and hold-
er of said note and deed of trust
lien and default having been made
in payment of principal of $2500.00
due March 1. 1933. together with ui-
terest thereon from March 1.
1932. Phoenix Mutual Life Insur-
ance Company has. in accordance
with the terms and provisions of
said deed of trust appointed and
substituted the undersigned in writ-
ing as substitute trustee and has
requested the undersigned to exec-
ute said trust by making sale of
said land and applying the pro-
ceeds of said sale as therein provid-
ed.
Now. therefore. I L N Rice sub-
ititute trustee will offer for sale
letween the hours of 10 o'clock a.
n. and 4 oclock p. m. at public
auction to the highest bidder for
cash on the first Tuesday in July.
1934. same being the 3rd day of said
nonth. at the courthouse door in
Cameron county. Texas the prop-
erty above described
Witness my hand this 8th day of
June. A D. 1934.
L. N. RICE. Substitute Trustee.
6-ll-18-25-3t-4795
NAVY SILK ALPACA HAS WHITE TOP
I ...LXJ-
(Courtesy Good Housekeeping) \
. .. a js it_
This dress of navy silk alpaca
with white top and box jacket
!us.three*quarters sleeves and one
navy and one white flower at tne
neckline. The hat ia a white
pique sailor from Lily Dache.
- ----1
Culinary Artists Bemoan
Fact Roosevelts Will Be
Absent Almost All Summer
WASHINGTON. Junt 18. i /Pi—
The summer days just ahead
don't look so good to the steward
and housekeeper at the White
House. Artists both they rue the
prospect that the Roosevelts won t
be around to appreciate the food.
The steward is H. F. Nesbitt and
the house keeper is his wife. Mrs.
Nesbitt looked up Monday from her
desk on which there were 20 cook
books.
"They're both connoisseurs the
president and Mrs. Roosevelt' she
said. "It is a pleasure to prepare
for persons who understand good
foods."
Nesbitt twtoo t«plains "were not
politicians just friends of the
Roosevelts coroe down to look after
them") displayed the ham closet
he built for “the boss" in a cen-
tury-old milk house.
They proudly showed spic-and-
span kitchens. The Roosevelts
though they live simply choosmg
cheese and crackers instead of rich
desserts when there is no company
ha\> a flair for good foods. Cup-
boards are stocked like a grocery
store; regrigerator rooms filled.
Congress certainly encourages
them in it. All during the session
the finest of foods pride of some
particular state pour into the
White House.
"We’ve had mangoes from Flor-
ida and persimmons from Califor-
nia.” Mrs. Nesbitt said "frog-legs
from Florida. cantaloupes from
the middle west. Prize applas. Prize
peaches cherries pears prize beef.
"Ducks quail—and smoked wild
turkeys a special delicacy. Moun-
tain sheep moose caribou venison.
Brook trout.
"Oysters clams. A Nova 8cotia
salmon that weighed 40 pounds—a
beautiful fish. Terrapin.”
From his stock. Nesbitt says he
can find the food to meet almost
any emergency.
"Remember that Abyssinian roy-
alty that came <Ras Gesta Dem-
tu>?” he queried. "He wouldn't eat.
Well I thought of these—figs from
his own country—try one."
When th* fig appeared to please
Mr. Nesbitt winked "well—he ate
those all right!”
"See this French dressing—four
generations have been making
that. And the labels on this honey:
From Vice Pres. John N. Gamer
for Mrs. Roosevelt'.”
Bnnes from the Great Salt Lake
In Utah contain as a rule some-
what more than 20 per cent solids
and of this about three-fourths is
common salt.
' THE WEATHER I
■ II- — ■ — — ■ 1-IT »
East Texas (east of 100th meri-
dian*: Partly cloudy Monday night;
Tuesday generally fair.
Light to moderate northerly winds
on the coast.
RIVER BULLETIN
There will be no material change
in the river during the next 24 to
36 hours.
Flood Present 24-Hi. 24-Hi
Stag- Stage Chang Rain
Laredo 27 -03 0.0 .00
Rio Grande 21 2.0 -0.3 .00
Mercedes 21 5.4 -04 .00
Brownsville 18 5.0 -0.2 .00
TIDE TABLE
High and low tide at Port Isabel
Tuesday under normal meteor- !
ologicai conditions:
High . 8 58 a. m. 9:46 p. m
Low . 1:44 a. m. 4:05 p. m.
MISCELLANEOUS DATA
Sunset Monday . 7:24
Sunrise Tuesday . 5:38
WEATHER SUMMARY
Barometric pressure was mod-
erately high over the immediate
northwest Monday morning '30.16
at Amarillo Texas and 30 14 at
Dodge City. Kan ». and moderately]
low from Arizona northward into j
Canada and moderately low also
over the Ohio Valley and the low-
er Great Lakes the latter being
what is left of the disturbance that
moved inland over the Louisiana
coast Saturday noon. Moderate to
heavy rams occurred over most of
the states between the Mississippi
river and the Appalachian moun-
tains in connection with northeast-
ward movement of the tropical
"low” while generally fair weather
was tlie rule over the balance of the
country. Temperatures were rather
high in Texas Sunday and Monday
morning.
Brownsville 8 a. m. <EST* sea-
level pressure 29.97 Inches.
BlILETI!*
(First figures lowest temperature last
night; second highest yesterday; third
wind velocity at 8 a. m.; fourth pree-
mt-tton in last 24 hot»r»>
Abilene . 68 96 .. .02
Amarillo . 64 82 .. .00
Atlanta . 68 88 14 .42
Austin . 72 102 .. .14
BROWNSVILLE .. 75 92 .. .00
Brvtlle Airport .... 73 93 .. .00
Chicago . 60 76 .. .20
Cleveland . 72 84 18 .01
Corpus Christi .... 78 88 .. .00
Dallas . 76 98 .. .00
Del Rio. 74 100 .. .00
Denver . 60 74 .. .00
Dodge City . 56 78 .. .00
El Paso . 76 96 14 .00
Fort Smith . 72 96 .. .00
Houston . 78 100 .. .00
Jacksonville . 76 90 12 .78
Kansas City. 64 86 .. .00
Los Angeles. 60 72 .. 00
Louisville . 70 88 14 .46
Memphis . 70 78 .. 86
Miami . 78 90 .. .00
Minneapolis . 60 72 14 .04
New Orleans . 78 90 .. .16
North Platte . 52 78 .. .00
Oklahoma City .... 64 88 .. .00
Palestine . 76 96 .. .00
Pensacola . 80 82 16 .00
Phoenix . 74 102 .. 00
St LoOis . 68 94 10 1.70
Salt Lake City .... 64 88 10 .00
San Antonio . 72 102 12 .18
Santa Fe. 60 78 .. .00
She. dan . 48 84 .. .00
Shreveport . 78 98 12 .00
Tr pa . 78 88 10 .00
Vick burg . 72 90 .. .00
Wf'l'ington . 68 82 .. .00
Willistsn . 50 78 .. .00
Wilmington . 76 90 12 .00
U. S. PROTESTS
GERMAN DEBT
MORATORIUM
WASHINGTON. June 18 —A
formal protest against the German
moratorium on foreign debt pay-
ments has been directed by the
state department.
The department said Monday it
had instructed Ambassador Wil-
liam E Dodd at Berlin to inform
th* German government that the
U. S expresses strong regTet that
new hardships have been brought
upon American creditors holding
German obligations.
Is Formal Proirat
The department made the fol-
lowing announcement:
"The secretary of state on June
16 instructed the American am-
bassador at Berlin to protest for-
mally an denergetlcally to the
minister of foreign affairs against
the recent summary independent
action of Germany with respect to
her external debts.
“The ambassador was Instructed
to state that this action by Ger-
many affects the government of
the U. S. and its nationals and that
the government of the U. S. takes
occasion to express its strongest re-
gret that new losses are thereby
Imposed upon American citizens
and that debtor-creditor relations
have been further impaired.
Protest Discrimination
"The ambassador was further in-
structed to state to the German
government in regard to the ques-
tion of discrimination against
American investors that the gov-
ernment of the U S. would disap-
prove developments under which
its investors received poorer treat-
ment than investors of other coun-
tries.
"The government of the U. S
would be called upon to protest any
such discrimination
"The spectacle of having not only
to accept losses but to perceive pay-
ments to investors of other nation-
alities at their expense would
arouse a sense of mistreatment
among numerous American inves-
tors.'’
| -
PALMER SAW
CLYDE’S RITES
DALLAS June 18.—<*>.— Joe
Palmer former Texas convict told
fellow prisoners in the county Jail
Sunday night that he attended
funeral services here late last
month for Clyde Barrow southwest
killer because he was grateful to
him.
•'Barrow' was a friend to me.” he
said "if to no one else. And. he
wasn't a coward. He tried a dozen
times in my presence to get Bon-
nie to consent to let him give up
in a trade for her liberty. He want-
ed to give up and take the rap
the chair if necessary to save her.
Everytime she'd say no. and: when
you go down. I'll go with you"'
Clyde and Bonnie were killed in
Louisiana May 23 when they ran
into six officers in Louisiana.
Palmer escaped from the Eastham
prison farm in south Texas last
Jan. 16 in an early morning deliv-
ery effected by Clyde. He roamed
about the country and last week
was accused of kidnaping three men
from Davenport. Ia. He was arrest-
ed in Missouri and waived extradi-
tion to Texas.
Bud Russell. Texas penitentiary
agent arrived in Dallas with Palm-
er Sunday night and continued on
to Huntsville Monday. There he
will face trial for the slaying of
Major Crowson. a guard killed :n
the Eastham break. Raymond Ham-
ilton. Texas bank robber was sen-
tenced to death last we.*k lor the
same slaying. Hamilton. Palmer
and two other convicts were freed
in the raid on Eastham farm.
Palmer stoutly denied that he
had told St. Joseph. Mo. officers
he had killed several persons in
the southwest.
The petroleum production of Tri-
| nidad is steadilv increasing.
.- . —■
This Curious World Ferguson |
■---■■
plumbing is not
A MOOERN ACCOMPLISHMENT/
THIRTEEN HUNDRED FEET
OF COPPER. PIPE PLUMBING
WAS INSTALLED IN THE PYRAMID
TEMPlE OF ABUSlR EGYPT
ABOUT 3000 YEARS 8.C.
e 1»34 iv WCA Mtyq me
■ ■ » mi :> 1 "■ —J
IN ANCIENT DAYS
MIGRATING BIROS
CROSSED THE
MEDITERRANEAN
IN SUCH NUMBERS
THAT THEY SANK
SAILING VESSELS
BY SETTLING «
ON THEM TO
REST THEIR WINGS.
PLATINUM
IS FOUNP IN IRON
meteorites...
3UT IN VERY
SMAuL
QUANTITIES !
_
Flashes
-<y~
I_ Life _
(By The Associated Press)
Goo Play *
CHICAGO— "You're DUUnger"
said Leo Barauskos. 11 raising
the revolver everyone thought
was unloaded.
There was a loud report. Leo
dropped the weapon. The victim
Leonard Phillips 10 howled:
"I'm shot."
A doctor examined Leonard
from head to foot and found him
intact. The revolver had contain-
ed a blank.
Uncle Sam's Bargain C winter
PITTSBURGH — The govern-
ment’s “cut rate" offer on natur-
alization fees is being snapped up
by thirty Pittsburghers.
W. W. Wiggins divisional di-
rector of naturalization and im-
migration in western Pennsylvania
says 154 persons applied for "first
papers’’ in the first 15 days of June
—a 50 per cent gain over the
preceding month.
Congressional action reducing
citizenship-paper charges went
into effect April 19.
• • •
Bird Shot
CONCORDIA Kas —Lee Shrouf
Concordia golfer has discovered
there is more than one way of
shooting a birdie on a golf course.
One of his tee shots collided
with a turtle dove in mid-air
clipping off the bird's head.
An ostrich egg was put away in a
desk drawer in Somaliland. Africa
and forgotten and several weeks
later hatched out a healthy young
ostrich.
OPEN HEARING
IS DEMANDED
BY FOULOIS
WASHINGTON. June 18.—OP)—
M»J. Oen. Benjan^n D. Foulola ac-
cused of gross misconduct by a
house Investigating oommittee
fought Monday against removal os
chief of the army air corps.
The investigating committee of
eight members recommended for-
mally to Secretary of War Dern
that Foulola be dismissed "without
delay."
Flays Secret Meeting
Striking back at the committee
for its secret hearings Foulois
challenged his accusers to a meet-
ing in open court.
"I consider that the accusations
are most unfair and unjust” he
said in a statement "and I am
ready and willing at any time to
meet my accusers in open court."
The committee's report to be
sent to Pres. Roosevelt th»s week
charged the general—in commard
of the air corps since 1931—with
“dishonesty.” "gross misconduct"
“incompetency” and "mismanage-
ment.”
Two outstanding points in the
report dealt with the purchase of
planes and the army’s /went task
of flying the air mall an episode
marked by a tragic Hat of deaths.
Has No Fear’
Foulois declared "it is to be
regretted" that the committee "has
conducted its hearings in secret
rather than in open session in !
order that all the facts and 11 the
testimony could be made available
to the public."
"I have no fear” he slid "of the
ultimate outcome of any fair and
Impartial Investigation of my acts
or my service In connection with
my administration of the armv air
corps especially when all th« lacts
and conditions surrounding army
air corps are fully known.*
The Victoria and Albert Museum
in London has acquired a beauti-
fully carved of the Virgin
and Child apparently made from a
walrus tusk m the 12th century. It
was found in a store.
HAPPPY
———-
Happy while he loves Dorothy
Dell Victor McLaglen. in Para-
mount's “Wharf Angel.” showing
Tuesday and Wednesday at the
Queen theatre Brownsville does
not suspect that her heart belongs
to another man.
PUBLIC WORKS
FUND TRIMMED
BY CONGRESS
WASHINGTON. June <*V-
Many communities counting on
Public Works administration money
lor construction projects laced dis-
appointment Monday.
Congress has decided to givs the
work relief agency not more than
$500000000 to carry on. It can get
another $250000000 by rolling its
RFC municipal securities.
Of the total $50000.000 already Is
earmarked for projects now under
construction snd federal projects
will take another slice.
Applications for new non-federal
work call for spending $3^00.0-!0.000.
Officials estimate that less than
one of ten eligible projects can re-
ceive any PWA cash. They are go-
ing ahead with plans tor spending
the money they will have and hope
to put more thousands of unem-
ployed to work as soon as oosaiok.
It was pointed rut that tlv* PWA
may not get even as much as $500-
000.000. since the legislation making
It available would permit the pres-
ident to allocate to public works as
little as he saw fit and the RFC
money could be used only lor loans
—not grants
In the federal building schedule
$4000 000 Is to go for naval con-
struction. $65 000.000 for post offices
and $45 000000 as second year al-
lot menu for large federal projects
already under construction.
Of the remaining funds officials
said such projects as sewers schools
water works and others of un-
questionable social value would
reertv* preference
■■.. .» .—
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Irradiated Pet Milk—enriched w ith vitamin
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m. A %
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Buell, Ralph L. The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 304, Ed. 1 Monday, June 18, 1934, newspaper, June 18, 1934; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1395215/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .