The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1936 Page: 3 of 4
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S
i
»
■i '
Announcements
Flood Waters Of Heart Attack
election,
Then Dam Broke
(
iir practice on
o9
ix Stadium.
lete"prepa-
series that
rains and swollen streams. :
The huge tank at the lake used
of $4,040,234."
Are Cancelled Many Arrested
fluid over the countryside. Fire-
it was sprinkling Sunday night.
a :
The T. & N. O. bridge over Cot-
cumstances, I am opposed to the
Dallas, Texas, Sept. 29.—Accord-
diversion of highway revenue for
municipality, reverted to its dry
The cancellation affects one lo- were expected late Monday night
Hillsboro Had
Shanghai Harbor
Auto Fractures Skull.
Three-Week Drive.
•. i
and federal narcotic agents
men
MneColorado '
11#89511
. ■
L8 •
the nation.
mhe
far
have escaped the net.
Back to
SCHOOL!
I
y
To False Alarm
Protect Their
•-)
Commissioner of
soon. asserting there was no cause
PROPER LIGHT
2
K
was claimed to be one who supplied
V-megsa-3
Shootin
investigators found there
!
Fort Worth Busy.
MHs. WHALEY FUNERAL
RITES SOLEMNIZED
A
i
l
adaa
al
)
N8
2 900*X!
Gets Five Years
In Traffic Death
In Nation-Wide
Narcotic Drive
cannot be lured by food or live
decoys.
Claim Lindbergh
Baby is Still
Alive In Dallas
The following announcements are
nominees of the Democratic Party,
Kilgore, Sept. 29.—A shore wave
police broadcasting network that
will link together five East Texas
the crisis which now exists in old
age assistance, I am firmly con-
“There’s no necessity for anyone
going there or elsewhere with the
The roundup of narcotic addicts
and .peddlers began three weeks
Eight had been arrested on feder-
al charges at Galveston. Thirteen
were held in San Antonio on fed-
eral and eight on state charges.
Hillsboro, Texas, 1 Sept. 29.—Hill
county residents began taking stock
of damages in this section after a
5 Etex Counties
Install Radio
that because of the special session
of the legislature it was improbable
that he would be able to speak in
the democratic national campaign.
'The situation Sunday was revers-
ed. After 14.5 inches of rain be-
tween Saturday morning and Sun-
h
Police did not
the telephone ii
festation has been discovered.
' J. E: McDonald, secretary of the
Black-Draught (powder) about thir-
teen years, taking it for biliousness.
Black-Draught acts well and I am
Fer Tax Assessor-CrUcctor.
J. G. (JIM) OLIVER.
See the Better Sight Lamps on Display
at various stores . . . or the nearest
store of—
Gam
9
g
For Congress, Sixth Distret—
LUTHER A. JOHNSON.
at Waco and Austin. Five were ar-
rested at Temple.
A man captured at San Angelo
cal beer distributor .and fourteen
beer and wine retailcrs.
The dealers were repesented by
F. F. Beadle, Houston attorney’
)
i
Houston Heights
Liquor Licenses
Col. Mark O. Kimberling, state
police superintendent, said no one
from his department was enroute
to Texas with fingerprints of the
baby. Conklin, said he knew of no
official sent to Texas.
to protect
Priceless Eyesight
*
• :
For County Judge—
C. C. RANDLE.
W. D. COLVIN
For State Senator—Twelfth District
VERNON LEMENS.
For Representative—PLace No. l
WILLIAM N. W. SEWELL.
Dallas Officer
Injured Going
For Sheriff-—
HILLYER ESTES.
JOE E. ROY.
For District Clerk-
L, ALVIS VANDYGRIFF.
£
* -AA-o ~
%
PIMN
Fe8
Dallas Literary
Leader Is Dead
area, that ducks were eating their |
fund to borrow $3,000,000 of .high-
way funds to meet immediate pen-
sion needs surprised many observ-
ers.
School days are here again, with busy
months of study ahead for the eyes of
young people.
Especially during the school months
should the eyes of children be protected
against eye strain caused by glare, sharp
shadows, insufficient or improper light- i
ing. Poor lighting is the principal cause
of one out of every five grade school
children having defective eyesight.
Austin, Texas, Sept. 30.— Gover- ;
nor James V. Allred said Tuesday '
a nation wide drive against
I
i
E-,eg
Sen and Alexander, who were j
Little rivers at record peaks. One
Christian Federation Pacific area
possession. The shooting period is
7 a. m. to 4 p. m. For geese and
7,
state when prohibition was re- | the D.
pealed. It has since been annexed I part of
But defective eye-sight can be pre-
vented, to a large extent, by the use of i
correct quantity and quality of light for
study and other close eye work. Make
sure that your child is not studying
under improper lighting conditions.
Have one of our lighting representatives
call, with a Sight Meter, and measure
the lighting in your room, and explain
to you where and in what quantity addi-
tional light is needed. No obligations
for this service.
। a hearing Wednesday at Harlingen
i to determine whether a noncotton
i liquor board Monday cancelled the
i license of fifteen dealers in Hous-
ton Heights on grounds the area
was dry.
The board, after a healing based
its ruling on an opinion'of the at-
torney general and a Houston dis-
trict court, which held the Heights
ing to dispatches received here
New Jersey officials said Monday
The reports will show that Dal-
las is the headquarters for more
than 1,000 addicts and peddlers,
bw the name of
mant who re-
i on Elm near
room. In the party of San Angelo
visitors were Joe Sanger, M. C.
Dale and Miss Willie Mae Haley.
a
1
Li!
January, 1886. That was- belore
her marriage and she was then
Miss May Dickson. She has con-
tinuously been president of Mie or-
ganization, one of the first wo-
men’s clubs in Texas and one of
the oldest Shakespeare clubs sin
Ralph 'Gant. Frost, has been nam-
ed business manager of theTrin-
including seven or eight wholesale
dealers, higher-ups, who so
ing in large numbers. . Unusually Japanese and Chinese elements in
AV1xr -divl of (wild dec. Tucker ■ Shanghai. Japanese took over pa-
'Suit’s from’ droliht’condi-) to of the Chinese Chapel district
World’s Series 4 Legislators
Begin Wednesday I Are Delayed By Died In Boston
I .
/3 Die In Crash
a blood transfusion in an effort to
save her life. A sister, Mrs/Erma
Balch of Big Spring, an hour after
Mrs. Hanson died.
With a group of friends, Mrs.
Hanson came to Fort Worth Friday
to attend the Frontier Centennial.
The friends explained that she shot
herself accidentally while cleaning
John C. Alexander, will be speak-
ers at a joint meeting of-the Y.
M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. at Trin-
। ity University Wednesday. ’
may make application at the old
Ellis county jail for enrollment in
the CCC camp, according to Miss'
Mattie Middleton, supervisor of the
Ellis County Family Welfare As-
sociation.
Applications are being made now
at the county welfare office. For-
mer enrollees who have been dis-
charged from the camp for one
year, are entitled to re-enter the
CCC camp,
! ways were damaged badly by the
j flood, and- crops were ruined.
• - .■ (
permanent ' track, but other trains were able
i to reach the city. Highways were
of Black-Draught for their children.
The grown folks stick to the pow- ।
dered BNck -Draught; the youngsters
____ j were behind bars in the city and I
i area, once voted dry as a separate ! county jails Monday night as police j
[ and government agents assigned to ; other purposes, but in the face of
| the Dallas area concluded their i
r “
Dallas, Texas, Sept. 29.—Thirty-
five narcotic addicts and peddlers
1)
! Former Fort Worth
George D. Snow
Arrested For
Ennis Robberies
George Dewey Snow of Houston
was arrested and .placed in the
Hillsboro, Texas, Sept. 30.—M. L.
Smith, Waco insurance man, is in
the local sanitarium with a frac-,
tured skull as the result of a col-
lision twelve miles south of Hills-
boro near Abbot Monday night.
Sues for Divorce
60 Cats Too Many
.Says Irate Hubby
Trenton, N. Jl. Sept. 30.—J. Fred
Bellois, war veteran, said Tuesday
he could stand a gas attack but
not his wife’s sixty pedigreed cats.
He asked for a divorce because he
was tired of playing second fiddle
to the cats, which he called a det-
riment to breathing and general
health.
which wholesale drug distribution.
More arrests in Dallas proper
I and the report of activities' here
were telegraphed to Washington
where the Federal Narcotic Bureau
was a clearing house for reports
from thoughout the nation.
Foreign Students
Speak At Trinity
Waxahachie, ■ Texas, Sept. 28.-
Two students from colleges in In-
dia and Australia, Moni Sen and
15.5
was obtained. The bronze lamps in
front of the library were given by
the Shakespeare Club.
Funeral services for Mrs. Exall
will be held at 10:30 a. m. Wed-
nesday at the home, with burial in
Oakland cemetery.
A- native of McKinney, Collin
county, Mrs. Exall lived at various
places, including. Clarksville and
Galveston, early in life she came
to Dallas in 1883. Here she was
married to Col Henry Exall, promi-
nent early day Texan, who died in
1913.
teacher in Wolf Flat school, was’,
killed more than a year ago, the
defendant was assessed five years.
Motion was made for a new trial.
Cullough, chief narcotic agent as-
signed to the Dallas area, said
nine of the prisoners were mem-
bers of a Mount Pleasant gang that
sprang up like a mushroom after
the East Texas' oil boom and has I
W i f ]
_ E(
7==4094=
g
(2
subject to the general
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 1936:
i li
Eyes with' 1 -
EnrollmentsTo
Join CCC Camp
Being Received
C *
All youths who are members of
WPA families and unemployable
Trinity Publication Staff Chosen.
Waxahachie, Texas, Sept'. 28.—
tions, .causing-, searcity offpod and . and’ much of the Hongkew section
waler. Pbssihilitylef aniely win- of- the'- International Settlement,
ter was another reason given for These forces were decreased Sun-
the migration. day, however, and. resteelement po-
“Ducks are inhabiting the coastal ' lice were allowed to resume their
aeas in considerable numbers, far duties in the Hongkew district.
Some legislators had expressed
hope they could consider altering
the pension law but Allred empha-
sized the session was convened to'
provide “further necessary revenue
for old age assistance' to persons
entitled to same under the pro-
i visions of the present law.”
The proposal for the pension
Collins, Kerens', editor in chief, 1 Mrs. Whaley was a native of Hill
always pleased with the results. I to run'the affairs of the university county and had lived in Millord
wanted a good reliable laxative for I newspaper, and Miss Gbark, who for the past twenty years.
my children. I have found Syrup oe was a staff member of the Trin- j She is survived by her husband
Black-Draught to be just that.’ , itonian last year, will worlt with and three children, Zelma Whaley,
, 'Forrest Still, Waxahachie, who is ' Mrs. George Eevertt, Mrs. John-
BLACK-DRAUGHT editor of the Mirage. I nie Perryman, all of Milford.
governor said. “Under normal cir- general level of industrial and util- j tonwood creek, between Jiba and
pumstenee, t „„ ppred the ity taxes, and transfer of the , Kemp, was cut with a section of
and gas pipe line companies, sub-
inheritance I
division superintendent, as 3,245
grains of heroin at Houston. Twen-
$430,383 now in the
New York, Sept. 29.—The calm-
est spot in baseball mad New York
Monday was the Polo Grounds and
the Yankee Stadium where the
Giants and Yankees worked out on
their home diamonds for the last
time before they meet in the first
game of the World Series Wednes-
day.
j to hold most of the city water
The governor I ecommended the , supply became full Saturday night
following additional measures lo . and early Sunday the spillway
enlarge the available pension fund. • broke, sending the recently precious
Increased franchise taxes on oil
Fort Worth, Texas, Sept. 28.—
Mrs. Doris Webb Hanson, 25, San
Angelo divorcee, died in a hospital
Saturday from a pistol wound she
said she inflicted accidentally Fri-
day in her hotel room here.
Mrs. Hanson was placed in an
" • i lands,
fiscal year ‘there was f nnt im
• | WaOHCQ VUkU kill Ul I1ISIlVVCYD All
ci ease in gasoline tax collections j direction were under water,
over the preceding twelve months i
! Hiway Overpass i
Near Midlothian
Opening Monday
With an elaborate program be-
ing planned, a huge celebration;
will be staged on the new railroad
overpass on Highway 34, near Mid-
lothian on.. Monday night at 8
o’clock, itisFannounced by County
K with the
Afrounds and
larger than usual,” he said.- “The ,
teal, which always leads the rest, , Ai.yA
has been here since the first of —alA •UIWUII
August. They arrive, as a rule the I .. . g
first week of September. I Commsson Met
“Two weeks ago I received com- 1
plaints of farmers in the Panhandle ' At armnoen
pension- fund.. ,
' j closed for a time .Saturday night
As an example of the type o or early.. Sunday, but traffic was
luxuries he proposed to tax,. Allied resumed sunday night, though in
moving pictuie showS, places cars had to drive through
thletie Contests an several inches of water. Some high-
Austin, Texas', -Sept. 30.—The
maximum of secrecy and results
were announced Monday night
with permission of H. J. Anslinger,
Commissioner of the Federal Nar-
cotic Bureau at Washington, who
Monday night was leceiving tele-
graphic reports from throughout
the nation.
TEXAS POWERS LIGHT
Elecz.Ec202C0MPANY
ported a
Haskell. I
es of theft were filed in connection,
with the attempted looting of the
Gulf wholesale warehouse in En-
nis.
The arrest was made following a
week’s investigation when on last
Tuesday night, Constable Hillyer
Estes frightened a man who had
assembled a quantity of merchan-
dise at the Gulf Station in North
Ennis, who made his escape. How-
The accident occurred at Main
and Haskell; Policeman Smith was
taken to Parkland Hospital where
lie was found to have suffered a
head injury and possibly internal
injuries. \ /
Admiral Sims will be buried with
full naval honors, on Thursday in
■ the Arlington National Cemetery in
! Washington, ■
.!' 'Mrs. Hopkins said the exact hour
j would be arranged Tuesday in a
j conference with naval officials.
Shanghai, Sept. 28—Eight Japa-
nese warships arrived here Monday
with marine reinforcements for,
the local Japanee defense forces
, in Shanghai. The eight destroyers,
i i _______ i,
17.InchSnow
The two, clubs 5
rival fields Tue
Yankees at the Po
stopped by floodwater. Numerous suffered the fatal heart attack
legislator's had difficulty reaching Sunday but lingered until Mon-
the capital because of the heavy day.
GOOD LIGHT
acts like a
Magnifying Glass
- . ‘g
Laxative combination
solks know,is trustworthy
s The confidence apusands of par-
Ants have in’good, od reliable, pow-
dered Thedford’s Black-Draught has
prompted themito get the new Syrup
Lindle and John Roberts frustrat-
ed another attempt to rob the
Gulf station. A man escaped after
having assembled twenty-two cases
of merchandise in an attempt at
robbery. Officers again secured the
license plate number, which was
from Walker county. A phone mes-
sage from the sheriff’s department
to Walker county officials revealed
that the automobile license num-
ber from that county was purchas-
ed by G. D. Snow.
An investigation made by the
sheriff’s department in the arrest
of Snow found a number of auto-
mobile license plates from various
places and among them was the
Galveston license plate, which was
noted on the car by Constable Hill-
yer Estes last week.
Try Texaco Station,
Monday night another attempt-
at robbery was made in Ennis-and
this time it was the Texaco sta-
tion, located near the Gulf sta-
tion. Officers are of the opinion
that attempted robbery was made
by Snow, who is out on bond.
Monday night’s robbery was frus-
trated by City Officers Obie Free-
man and Troy Swafford, who
found ten cases of merchandise
near the station. The burglar es-
caped.
and running over Agent Daniel
Robertson as he fled last week at
Stephenville. Two others were ar-
rested.
by the city of Houston,
never voted dry.
For County Commissioner.
Precinct No. 1.—
C. S. SECANKLE.
Folt Worth, Texas, Sept. 29 —
ment of r’dio-equipped cars orEthe Federal and city officers arrested
j sheriffs office of- each county. The ! nearly three dozen persons on nar
| transmitter is owned by Gregg | cotic charges Monday, about half
county and will be maintained in I ° whom are women.
Longview permanently. .
149 Arrested in Texas.
San Antonio, Texas, Sept. '29.—
With reports still coming in from
all parts of Texas at a late hour
Monday, 149 arrests and seizure of
over 25,900 grains of narcotics had
been reported here to twelfth divi-
sion headquarters for federal; nar-
cotic enforcement, in connection'
with a nation-wide crusade.
The biggest individual Texas seiz-
ure in the crusade up to midafter-
noon was reported by J. J. Biggins,
Commissioner Walter Stephenson. ;
The $1060,000 structure will be
Ellis county - jail where he was re-
leased on $1,009 bond after charg- ’
MM
vinced that thy general . welfare, _ _ ---
and particularly that of our ased mentioned, " _
citizens dining the coming months, 1 theaters, "athletic
is of greater importance to the similar' forms of amusement.
Austin, Texas, Sept. 29.—The
067
pebEj
lost. Rail service en-the—‘exes,Gam#h
Central Division of the Katy-E sdidiEsturd
ever officei’s secured the license
plate, which bore a Galveston
number.
The investigation was conducted
by the sheriff’s department, as-
sisted by City of Ennis officers and
Constable Estes.
Another Robbery Frustrated.
Last Friday night Officers M. G. i
Swafford, Opie Freeman, Claud
oxygen tent fifteen minutes before I
she died, and she had been given ' ducks were announced by Tucker i
as follows: ' .... ..... i
Except for wood, ruddy, buffle- - or regulated zone should be estab-
head, canvasback and redhead, on lished in - Starr, Cameron and Hi-
which there' is no open season, open calgo counties, where a slight in-
season on coot, geese, brant and -......
jacksnipe is ■ from Nov.' 26 to Dec.
25. ’ commission and
Bag limit is ten on all kinds of Agriculture, expressed confidence
ducks'with not more than ten in the infestation will be cleared up
go
banks. Many hundred-bales, of.un-„
picked cotton in the lowlands iwece J. Tueker, ecretaryofthe State,
crops.” ।
Federal and state regulations on pink bollworm commission will hold
regulated zne would cause little
inconvenience.
Worms were found in gin trash
recently in the Rio Grande Valley
area by, federal and state inspect-
l ors. Presence of the worms was
; attributed to the proximity to Mat-
amoras, Mexico, and a heavily in-,
tested area. - ;
Angelo Woman 3
Died In Cowtown
Of Pistol Wound
Funeral services for Mrs. W. H.
Whaley of Milford, 57, who died i families included in the ages of 17
probably will pyefer it when they itonian. student weekly, and Dor- ■ at her home, in that city Thursday and 18 yeais, and unmarried
outgrow their childish love of sweots, j °Biv Clarl. Fori Davis, business - afternoon, were held at Milfoid
Mrs. C. W. Adams, of Murray, Ky., ' manager of the Mirage, cusrht f First Baptist Church Friday after-
writes: “I 'have used Thedford’s i annual. Will McPherson, business ; noon at 3:3 Oo’clock with the Rev.
manager of Trinity University an- j R. Campbell officiating,
nounced. Gant teams with George
men, Highway Department work-
stantial increase in inheritance - ers and CCC boys built a make-
tax, general increase in franchise 'shift dam which they said will hold
taxes, revision of tax laws to pie- i unless another heavy rain falls.
“This recommendation I make as vent evasion, stricter provisions for j
a matter of emergency and not as . collection of delinquent taxes,
a matter of permanent policy.” the higher beer tax, an 'increase'in the
the Giants at the JA
These drills will 46
rations for a sub”
ShpibvaMoFxthe"Ssaocspeze
Club formed by Mrs'. Mary-tEak- aiding Plain Clothes Detective Dick
- - - • — Gardner and. Fred Erler of the po-
state than any highway program i
which might necessitate the imme- I..
... .., > Kaufman, Texas, Sept. 28.—
diate expenditure of the funds be- i ‘..2 1 .
„ .. ... .2 ' Kaufman citizens were complain-
fore they could be replanished. . m . +, 1 . .
„ , . ing Thursday because the city lake
Provide for a Return. - ' . ‘ ,, , ,.
a,. .... . . had run dry for the second time
“This legislature, or any future 1, . 1 y 1 , „
011 "C in thirty years and they were forc-
legislature, may well -provide for a ' , . . m .1, .
- mlc 1 1 1 ed to buv water from Terrell and
return of the highway funds when - , ‘ M
.1, . , , 1 so on short rations. The pipes were
the old age assistance program has 7 .10.1 _____
, .11 , ii turned on only for three one-hour
been adequately and permanently . 1 ,
c ' periods each day.
financed, ! ;
“This legislature last year appro- ;
priated three million dollars out of ■
the general land fund for the j day night the city lake was over-
Texas Centennial; and that Cen- i flowing, the south spillway had
tennial, more than any other fac- broken under the crush of the wa-
tor, has contributed to the cash ters, creeks' had overflowed and
balance which /the highway und r wele standing fencehigh in farm-
now enjoys. At the close of the lands, a railroad bridge had been
A net in- j washed out and highways in every
Austin, Texas, Sept. 23.—Floods . --
kept at least four members' of the 1 Boston, Mass., Sept. 29.—Admiral
Texas legislature away, from the William S. Sims, war-time com-
opening day session. ....... ! mander of the American fleet in
Senator H. Grady Woodruff of European waters, died of a heart
Decatur and Representatives H. P. attack at a daughter’s home Mon-
I Jackson of El Paso, J. F. Lindseyt day. He was 77 years old.
| of Anson and A. B. Tarwater of/. The retired naval officer, who
Plainview were excused because would have been 78 Oct. 15, under-
of high water. ; went an operation in June and ap-
fer alarm. With co-operation of
brant, the bag limit is i'dur and not I growers and ginners, he said, a
more than four in possession with
was claimed to be one who supplied Memphis, Texas, Sept. 28.—In contain but three shells. The birds
narcotics to a peddler accused [the trial of Ralph McCullough here'
of shoting Agent Richard Harvin as the result of an automobile ac-
- cident in which G. H. Baten,
• Af£e Seven were arrested at Wichita
* OF UliECCMS ! Falls on federal charges and twen-
ty-two on state charges with others |
i The absence of several others had peared to be regaining his health,
not been accounted for and it was - Mrs. Robert Hopkins, the daughter,
possible some of them had been ' at1 whose home he died, said he
ago, with a corps of undercover
Dallas, Texas, Sept. 29.—Answer-
ing an unfounded report of a
shooting Motorcycle Policeman
George W. Smith was injured crit-
ically Monday afternoon when his
motorcycle collided with an auto-
mobile driven by Csptain Lee Mil-
ler of the ‘state highway patrol.
Fort Worth highway one of the
most-modern in the state, it was 1 _yegAsMda o
said. Eerm-emzu a
SNAW
QNE
SCF
OR
GLC
The dead were tentatively iden-
tified as Mr. and Mrs. Ben T. Elk-
ins of San Francisco, and C. H.
Chidlow, passengers and pilot
aboard an El Paso bound Varney
Airlines plane, which crashed on
a ranch twenty-six miles east of
Walsenburg- in Southern Colorado.
conference at Mills College in Aug-
ust, have prolonged their stay in
this country to visit student groups
from California to New York. Sen
is a postgraduate student from St.
Stephen’s College, Delhi, and sec-
retary of the student Christian
movement in Helhi. He is' going
to Birmingham, Eng., as India’s
ambassador to the quadrennial
conference of the British S. C. M.
in January, 1937, Alexander is a
post graduate from Ormond Col-
lege,-University of Mlbourne,Vic-
toria; Australia, 5059 - ' • • "*
no formal investigation was' being
made by New Jersey of reports the
. Lindbergh b. by is still alive in
.Dallas,, lur
William Conklin, press aide to
Gov. Hofman, 'said a Dallas
newspapermen called the governor
by telephone ' on Saturday and
told him of the reports current
here.
“It was in line with frequent
tips given to this office,” Conklin
said.
ty-seven Houston arrests were made her small caliber’ pistol in her
land Trezevant in the parlors ofi
i the bid Grand Windsor /Hotelfi in
i I
AIM Is Unable ! Eight Japanese
Inch Rain To Campaign For Destroyers Reach
Much Damage . National Ticket
Mrs. Exall was the first president;
of the Dallas' Federation of Wo-
men’s Clubs, organized in 1896, to
get a library for Dallas. The wo-
men collected $11,000 and upon ap-
plication from Mrs. Exall to An-
drew Carnegie, a gift of $50,009
tween Whitnsy and Aquilla was i„o — --p. —,— —
stopped due to washouts'. ■ 1 -■ »> early ^r^vM of wild dc
-----.——L 12 said, result’s from drolg
Austin, Texas, Sept. 29.—Gover-
nor Allred urged a luxury tax,
‘substantial and reasonable” in-
creases in the levies of natural re-
sources and division of $3,000,000
of highway funds in his message
Monday to the* special session of
the Texas legislature.
The governor said official esti-
mates of the tremendous amount
of money which would be required
to pay old age pensions were
“astounding.”
The session was called to raise
revenue for pensions and to con-
sider Texas participation in the
federal unemployment insurance
program.
Record Publisher
Seems Near Death
Durham, N. C., Sept. 30.—W. H.
Bagley of Fort Worth, Texas, a
brother-in-law of United States
Ambassador to Mexico Josephus
Daniels, was in the Duke Hospital
here Tuesday and attaches said
his condition was critical. He for-
merly was publisher of the old Fort
Worth Record.
Bagley came here from a Little
Rock,’ Ark., hospital. He was re-
ported suffering with a heart ail-
ment.
Nr yg V Fifteen narcotic peddler's were
Mrs. Henry MXAI charged before the united States
• J Commissioner at Tyler. V. C. Mc-
lice narcotic . squad; ■ ■ 1-
Raids were conducted with A
Dallas, Texas, Sept. 29.—Mrs. J nourished virtually unmolested for
Henry Exall, fifty years president [ four ysars.
of the Dallas Shakespeare. Club, j The Mount Pleasant gang is a
finperorints ’ gimggm, said “if I founder and third president of the ! thing of the past,” McCullough
Wone / to Dallas Woman’s club and the M said, "for we have ample cases of
anyone 28 A nn upunts to behind the establish-' against at least four of the
compara With the Lindbergh baby’s j n8 spiiit Denind me esaDun . (
he can send them here and we ment of the Dallas Public Library, < 8"l8;
will do it/” ' ‘ died at 8:50 p. m. Monday-at her
home, 4808 Lakeside. - E ;
The dean of pioneers in Dallas
counties, Gregg, Smith, Harrison,
Rusk and Upshur, and better en-
able them to apprehend criminals,
is now being hooked up in Sheriff
Will H. Hayes’ office in Longview.
I The five counties will share oper-
ating expenses of the station equal-
ly. g i =
Licensed radio operators will • be
on duty at the station, every hour
of the day and will direct move-
not only has the big town agog,
after a thirteen-year interval in
thi rivalry, but which promises to
shatter box office records for base-
ball’s championship affair.
The Yankees followed the Giants
Monday in announcing a sellout
of all reserved scats.' This means
•mnore than half the capacity of
each park already has been sold at
the rate of $5.59 or $6.60 per ticket
for the six games.
m ¥ A • ' from Sasebo naval base, carried
15U0KS AIFIV112 ' 200 marines in addition to the reg-
; ' mt igse —l ‛ ular crews.
0‛M-eAWAAli Dissatisfaction with foreign and
ill i"AE3 hiLoes Chinese authorities for asserted
Ae wlit i rNl 1 '■ to protect Japanese lives
air'I cvinlel I yp was. expressed Sunday'by Japanese
i . •- •-* -- - Consular authorities, and Japanese
. 117 137 l_L— u. il ' officials announced their determi-
Austin, Texas; 11 Sept. 728.11 wild ntlon to take action wherever nec-
ducks are arriving i Tekas, Will, essary to protect their nationals.
oiqie,‘ The slaying of a Japanese ma-
aieio rinerand wounding of two others
‛om- la'st week created tension between
i 15.55 rainfall for a seventy-two-
hour ending Monday at 7:30 a. m.
Train service from Hillsboro over
the M.-K.-T. to the north was
stopped on both the Fort Worth
and Dallas divisions when part of
two of the railroads dumps were;
washed away' north of the eity.
Sixty feet of concrete slab ' oil
Highway 2 north of the city oppo-
site the ■ Katy Lake spillway were
washed away. Bridges on . lateral
roads in Hill county were swept
away when creeks went, out of itheir I
formally opened to traffic during
the observance. ;
While arrangements for the
evening are incomplete, it is .known
that several prominent speakers
will address the crowd, and that'
music for the affair will be fur-;
nished by the Waxahachie High
School band, and the 144th Infan-
try Band of Midlothian.
Completion of the structure is
one of the first steps toward the
gca] of making the Waxahachie-
shooting hours the ■ same as for
ducks. Bag limit for coot and jack-
snipe is fifteen, shooting period for
coot is 7 a. m. to 4 p. m. and
for jacksnipe from 7 a. m. to
sunset.
Tucker said fowls can be killed
only with shotguns, which may
Waco Officer .
Kills Cafe Man
Waco, Texas, Sept. 28.—A verdict
of justifiable homicide was re-
turned by Justice Claude Segrest
after an inquest in the death
early Sunday, of J. W. Brown, 26,
shot and killed at his- care.
Brown was shot in the head and
left arm. Radio Car Patrolman O
E. Judd fired the fatal shot, Se-
grest said,-witnesses testified, when
Brown drew a gun on Juads part-
ner, Patrolman J. B. Leutwyler, as
the latter ,attempted, to remove an
alleged drunken man from the
cafe.
Coming here nine weeks ago from
Aquilla, Brown was a native of
South Carolina. Funeral services
will be held Tuesday afternoon. He
is survived by his wife, two daugh-
ters, four sons and three- brothers.
had been no disturbance at the
address named.
:: । Admiral W S Sims Allred U rges Lukury And ’ Natural L i Kaufman Lake
Resources Tax
Hike For Pensions Filled Up Sunday
3. J
f.i
1 •
; Denver, Colo., Sept. 29.—A Sep-
tember snow storm the worst in
Colorado's, hafory, sept three. per-
sons crashing to th. ir death in an
airplane Monday, and caused un-
told damage; to trees and' power
lines in Eastern Colorado.
Seventeen inches of snow fell
here.
• i
. |
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The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1936, newspaper, October 1, 1936; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1409790/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.