Gainesville Weekly Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 29, 1937 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Gainesville Register and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Cooke County Library.
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6
’ I
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d
NUMBER 31
)
(Eight Pa;
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS. THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1937
VOL LVII.
*
King is Move to Expand
From US
In Auto
4
Is Shot
Mishaps
8933
. 1
Family Visits Belfast
!
, j
4
2 8,3
1
2
crowded streets, a gas main explo-
S’ a
/a)
when help arrived and said he
been asleep in the truck when th
1 and Rep. Wesley Disney ( D.-Okla.)
the dynamiting of
railroad
Permission Be Granted if
of Scientific Value
Fear for Safety
China War Zone
and hour bill today as delegating
New Pension Bill
other at the northeastern edge
tsin, base of the Japanese army
for Prevention of Spread
of Japanese Invasion
bankment into'a field.
16;
TEXARKANA, Texas, July 28
Elmer
Accident Near Marietta
Act
dustrial production.
the basis of his employment
on
President Roosevelt’s assertion waged by Japan in North China.
mobile overturned six mil
newly established strike zone in
‘But,” he declared, "actual hos-
Her Job
tries.
His Job
Is (Easyf
Q
Americans only as "Whitehouse,
r
dren.
MAJOR SMITH
oldest active "officer in the navy
or
*
ed.)
rels more
NEW YORK, July 28 (AP).—A
rels more than the bureau’s July
have on
informed persons
it because it. is too near,
tion
the end of the peak gasoline con-
»
1
Q
e
z
Attack Launched on
Wage and Hour Bill
By Sen. Vandenberg
Greeted Court Bill Likely
By Riots To Extend Session
Farm Price Bill
To Be Postponed
General Motors
Earnings Sliced
Measure Refuse Accept
High Court mendment
NEWS PICTURES THAN
ALL OTHER COUNTY PAPERS
conspiring with communist influ- -
ences to destroy southern Indus-
natory states to work together on
a sound program which all of them
Mamas, and sometimes papas,
who think it is correct and hot
stuff, to let their 4-year-old off-
pital where the quartet was taken
It is believed the accident was
that the National Labor Relations
Board is impartial coincided today
with senate debate over creating
Newsman Says He Incensed
Officers by Asking Dis-
position of Case
tragedy occurred. He died sh
atfer reaching the Archer City
Victims of Auto - Truck
Crash Burned to Death;
Man Hurt Near Marietta
WASHINGTON, July 28 (AP).
Secretary Roper today indicated
the bureau of air commerce would
grant the application of Jimmie
Mattern for a penhit to fly across
said.
President Defends Board
United States Neutrality
Act May Be Invoked if
Hostilities Continue
CLEVELAND, July 28 ((AP).—
Uniformed city police patrolled a
blown up at Yangtsun, severing
Japanese communications between
Tientsin and the battle area.
Japanese high command at Tien-
WASHINGTON, July 28 (AP).
i Senator Vandenberg (R. - Mich.)
it had no other information about
them presently.
abandoned hope of an amicable set-
tlement of the situation.
head-on collision. The truck, drive
by Moffett, had left a refinery in
Wichita Falls about midnight am
was headed toward Fort Wort]
where Moffett and a brother, V. A
operated a filling station.
The light sedan, occupied b
Brumley and Beck, was travelin
toward Wichita Falls.
and Chicasaw Indians in Oklahoma
for the benefit of the Indians.
&
i
I
By JAMES A. MILLS
TOKYO, July 28 (AP)— Alarmed
at the peril of some 1,300 Ameri-
- (
83: 338438
Mattern Likely
: To Obtain Permit
{To Fly Over Pole
Three Americans
In Fatal Crash
Premier Prince Fumimaro Kon-
- . I oye, to the wild cheers of the House
Grew requested Hirota | to exer- of Representatives, interrupted a
else great care that the American session of parliament to declare
embassy in Peiping did not fall in Japan's intention to take force-
WASHINGTON, July 28 (AP).
Chairman Jones (D.-Texas) of the
house agriculture committee, an-
nounced today that congressional
action on farm price stabilization
reled with her husband before the
latter’s death.
Aguirre, arrested in Niland yes-
terday. confessed he killed Con-
treras, Walrath said. The expect-
ant mother was detained as a ma-
terial witness.
recommendation and up approxi-
mately 16,000 barrels daily from
the previous week’s output.
Ernest O. Thompson, member of
the State Railroad Commission
court case. Fultun and witnesses
said the reporter was preparing
to dine in a cafe when a deputy
approached him, snatched off his
sumption period. .
Texas production will be cut will accept."
. sion a half mile away boomed
through a wide area of Belfast.
The king and queen heard the
explosion, but no change was made
in the coronation program. An es-
timated million persons jammed
/. the streets to see the sovereigns
on their nine-hour visit. :
Today's terrorism began with
Terrorists Fire Buildings, Looks Good Acta Bad I Senate Foes of Original
Toss Bombs as Royall __________________
g
•a
• WASHINGTON, July 28 (API-
Representative McFarlane, Texas,
today introduced a bill to provide
$66 66 monthly pensions for work-
KI "I
Br a
v "08
• T
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36% 5 3303. 3933 383. 3
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II ‛
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g2885 88 2
Grew’s action came as Japan
i formally declared its intention to
resort to arms to punish China for
1
WEATHER
Gainesville and Vicinity — To-
night, partly cloudy, continued
warm; Thursday partly cloudy
Today noon, 99; low last night,
75; high, yesterday, 96; for year,
hih, 103; low, 16.
Warning Given
Texas Employers
Te
h
fl
fl
•3
■
V.
AMSTERDAM, July 28 (AP.—
Fifteen persons, three of them
identified by airline attaches as
Americans, died today in the flam-
ing plunge of a Netherlands air-
‛iner at Hal, Belgium.
AUSTIN, July 28.—In a state-
ment issued by Orville S. Carpen-
ter, Chairman-Lirector of the
Texas Unemployment Compensa-
tion Commission, warned employ-
ers against assuming incorrectly
that they are not liable for con-
tributions for 1937 because they
have recently reduced, their pay-
rolls to less than eight persons.
In other words. Carpenter said,
From other person#, Mr. Roose- ,
velt said, have come assertions
THE LOW DOWN
----------from----------
HICKORY GROVE
coronation visit, were driving to
the Belfast city hall through
Hirota today to prevent spread of
the undeclared warfare being
MBS. LANGFORD
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP).—It’s an
4 easy job being an air mail guard.
And Mrs. Ruth Langford, probably
the only woman air mail driver in
the U. S. enjoys her work.
Eight times every day Mrs.
Langford and her husband carry
the mail between the Houston
poet office and the municipal air-
Mrs. Langford’s hand is always
। near the holster on the airport-
poet office trips.
Is she afraid? “Of course not.
Where did she learn to shoot?
In Georgia—“knocking squirrels
• out of trees.”
(By Associated Press)
Japan and China fought unde-
clared war on North China’s land .
and seacoast today.
Chinese mortar fire kept Jap-
anese munitions ships from enter-
ing the mouth of China’ Hia Ho;
Japanese cutters fought back, ex-
tending Nippon’s punitive expedi-
tion from the embattled environs
of Peiping, once the dragon capi-
tal, to Tangku on the sea.
An American marine in isolated
and besieged Peiping was wounded,
apparently accidentally by rifle
fire from Japanese guns.
Chinese reports of battle victory,
almost envariably denied by Jap-
anese, rolled in from dawn to dark
aviation? In motors: "They just
don’t seem to fall anymore."
Since he calls his job tough, has
he had narrow escapes? No: "Ive
never had to bail out. I‛ve been in-
only two accidents, the last one in
1914.”
that the board was biased in fa-
vor of industry.
In reply to a query, Mr. Roose-
velt said he did not know whether
the Wagner labor relations act
could be strengthened by inserting
And when you!
see this kind of,
youngster when •
he or she is 16, and who was al-
lowed to grow up without a halter,
they are mostly makin’ trouble for
their ma and pa, but then it is too
late. And when they were around
four and pokin’ hair pins in the
i clock, and maybe lookin’ cute to
mama, they are now talkin’ back
at 16 and tellin’ her what is what
and it is not so cute.
ler. Brannan’s father, N. Q. Brah-
nan. and V. A. Moffett were noti-
fied at Fort Worth and corrobo-
rated the identification upon their
arrival.
legislation, had been postponed
definitely under the next session.
Jones’ announcement came'after
he met with Speaker Bankhead
and other party leaders of the
house.
PM
record in 1936, his liability auto-
matically continues through 1937
regardless of the number of per-
sons he npw employs.
operations.
The newspaper Asahi reported
from Peiping that two American I MIAMI, Fla. (AP).—It’s still a
soldiers of the embassy guard had tough job being a military pilot. So
been wounded while on patrol duty, says •Major Bernard L. Smith, 52,
(Chinese dispatches said one —•csut ■
American soldier had been wound- marine corps.
Curry, 17, and Frank Stevens, 18,
died almost instantly in the crash.
All lived here.
The airliner.
the attack upon the measure. 1 cans in besieged Peiping, U. S. Am-
"Good intentions and high mo- J bassador Joseph C. Grew appealed
tives alone are not enough,’’ be to Japanese Foreign Minister Koki
I against Japan.
Explanation Asked 1 y 1 * T )
The ambassador called on Hi- G I (AAoh
rota this morning and requested an, “ • -°8- •
explanation of the situation in the
The Texas Unemployment Com-
pensation Act provides that "an
employing unit shall cease to be
an employer subject to this Act
spectacles and raised a stool above only as of the first day of Janu-
him ary of such year a written appli-
wheels in pew places. And when we
wake up, we will find that things
they been doin’ are not so cute, and
also won’t work, and we should
have put our foot down sooner, for
out there on the front porch, the
tax collector will be huntin’ our
door bell.
Yours with the low down,
... < JO SERRA.
lives and property were not en- unanimously approved a $30,000,-
dangered. 000 war appropriation.
Hirota assured the American A spokesman for the Chinese
diplomat the Japanese army would central, government at Nanking
, leave nothing undone to protect declared a formal declaration of
I Americans and other foreigners war is impossible since the Kel-
and added that Japan had not yet 1088_pact. . .
the war zone and that American ful action. The legislators then
than that recommend-1 Michigan have been the principal crude stocks are adequate.
«... -- tr-a-a etetee “affendare" latelv in nercentage Officials of the producing states
which are members of the Inter-
SS —
8888882330088882 ■ - 399
r i
July 28 (AP).—Terrorists shat-
tered the peace of Belfast and Ul-
ster's Free State border with
bombs, arson and gunfire today in '
hostile greeting to King George
VI and Queen Elizabeth. ;
Police blamed the outbreak on
Irish Republicans
While the king and queen, on a
ed for Texas by the United States “offenders" lately in percentage
Bureau of Mines. The bureau’s I of production above the Bureau
recommendation for the nation of Mines estimates. Their output state Oil Compact expressed con-
was 3,462,001 barrels. I last week was estimated to be fidence congress would ratify ex-
The’national oil flow last week ; more than ten per cent greater 1 tension of the pact for two more
was estimated at around 3.580,000 . than the bureau's July recom- 1 years before its adjournment,
barrels a day, some 150,000 bar-' mendation. I The Senate mines and mineral
-ele mn-a +hen tha hapanir’s Inlv Thompson would give no opin- i committee approved the extension
ion as to what effect the Texas with Senator Marvel M. Logan of
" is
i7
A Aki fl
A MP fl
La J
identified the
The deputies said Fultun was
“resisting and officer.”
Henry Humphreys, managing
i editor and general manager of the
Gazette, conferred with Lincoln,
Sheriff Brooks and Justice of the
Peace Fred Hoffman concerning
the case.
in North China, denied the Chi-
nese reports and asserted that
Peiping’s defenders had been
hurled back on the city's walls.
Both canitals made declara-
tions of open hostilities.
Japan formally declared its in-
tention to resort to arms to pun-
ish China, charging repeated acts
of provocation against Japan.
Appropriation Voted
Jeanne Lasley,
The bodies were partially identi- , , _
fied by papers found on them by Secretary Roper Says I hat
Archer County1 Sheriff Dutch Gos- n n F ■ 1
"Look at the instrument board,"
he says. "It’s all one man can do
to keep up with the instruments."
Major Smith, who commands
the marine aviation unit at Opa-
Locka, got his first flying orders
May 21, 1912. He was “naval avia-
tor No. 6”-—only five men received
flying । orders from the navy be-
fore he came along.
The greatest development in
at Stake, Republican
Lawmaker Wamns Senate Of Americans in
i t ’
E
NEW YORK, July 28 (AP).—A And down there in Wash., D. C.,
$22,000,000 drop in General Motors they been lettin” the young heads
Corporation s net earnings during have full rein, and they are takin
the June quarter was ascribed in the clocks apart and puttin’ the
part to labor troubles today by
Chairman Alfred P. Sloan, Jr.
639 932 383 ■ • 392
N 538 3i N3388 •• 34
"a
dh. • -t
"h. V
h"hu. e,,.4
I 2 )
*Th.A
was under consideration.
Attack at Dawn
The Japanese attacked Peiping's
environs at dawn, after expiration
of their final ultimatum demand-
ing withdrawal of Chinese divi-
sions from the Peiping area.
A withering Japanese aerial at-
tack shattered the Chinese lines
Chinese commanders declared their
troops recovered, however, and
; captured Fangtai. Japanese field
headouarters west of Peiping, and
Langfang, important railroad cen-
ter midway between Peiping and
Tientsin.
repeated acts of provocation
of Marietta early today. “
Dr. Walter Hardy, Ardmore phy-
sician, said both of Byerly’s hands
were paralysed. He gave the sports
promoter a slight chance to re-
cover.
T. G. Wolfe, Oklahoma City, By-
erly's companion, escaped injury.
He said he and Byerly were re-
turning from a business trip to
Dallas. He said the automobile was
forced off the highway by a truck.
"V.
Sh^^^^ dnytust
last Sunday night. ' anAreadim
TMrs.Contreras,isaid Deputy w. a Bok by maybe
W. Walrath, named Francisco I some bachelor, on
Aguirresasthe father of her un- how to raise chil-
born child and asserted he quar-
bridge ten minutes after passage
• of a crowded excursion train bound
- for Belfast. The span was partly
| wrecked.
2 Roving bands of incendiarists
and dynamiters destroyed British
* eustoms houses along this side of
the border. Gasoline was splashed
over at least a dozen of the small
wooden buildings and then fired.
• ' At one point several were blown
up while an armed band held police
at bay. _
Authorities attributed the out-
breaks of “Republican extremists”
and carefully kept word of them
from their majesties.
• , The border situation was regard-
ed as tense since authorities
feared reprisals might folw the
' outrages.
. i
UNDECLARED SINO-JAP WAR SPREADING
Move to Exband ’ Seven Die OKLAHOMANS HAVE HOPES FOR RIVER PROJECT Marine
TALIHINA, Okla., July 28 (AP)
“A U.S. Highway 271 meeting will
be held at Lake Clifton in Le Flore him
county Sunday afternoon. J. H Bystanders, they said, grabbed
Cruthis, president announced tfce officer. His companion then
j Towns expected to be represented threw the reporter to the floor
include Paris, Texas, and choked him while the other
1 ' ---- deputy kicked him, they said.
matter at his press conference, said
the bureau lacked authority to
। withhold permits when the pro-
posed flights met technical and
* McFarlane Offers To Face Charges
Ai
\.o, A
k
They reported also that Nan-
yuan Chinese garrison town taken
by the Japanese, was recaptured
and that a railroad bridge was
steel workers and Republic Steel from both capital and labor, the I
Corp. opened the latest court bat- president said, is an indication it '
tie in the CIO’s steel industry cam- has been fair to everyone. He made
paign for bargaining contracts. | known his views at a press confer- |
Enforcing a proclamation Issued ence a day after Rep. Rankin (D.-
by Eliot Ness, city safety director, Miss.) had accused the board of I
the officers moved pickets 500
Compact Commission, maintained
Texas production next month
would not be greatly out of line
with demand. He said consump-
ers deprived of employment (AP).—District Attorney
through the mechanization of in- * Lincoln said charges would be
€ duatry, the money to be rasied bv filed today against a Bowie coun-1 ..._____ _______
a tax on horse power used in in- ty deputy sheriff in connection if an employer was subject to the
with an affray involving two dep- Unemployment Compensation i-:
Senator Thomas, Oklahoma, in- uties and Wensel Fultun. Texar- .....-- *
• troduced a bill to authorize the kana Gazette reporter.
reservation of mineral rights in fu- Fultun said he incensed the of-
ture sales of land of the Choctaw ficers lst night by inquiring the
disposition of a certain justice
cation for termination of cover-
age, and the Commission finds
that there were no twenty differ-
ent days, each day being in a dif-
ferent week within the preceding
calendar year, within which such
employing unit employed eight or
more individuals in employment
subject to this Act.”
WASHINGTON, July 28 (AP).
Senate foes of the original Roose-
velt court bill said today a proposal
by Senator Minton (D.-Ind.) to ex-
pand the newly drafted lower court
reorganization bill, threatened a
contest which might prolong the
congressional session.
Minton reiterated today his de
termination to ask the senate to
amend the substitute, court bill to
require two-thirds decision by the
Supreme Court to invalidate acts
of congress.
Senator Wheeler (D.-Mont.)
leader of the faction which forced
elimination of the supreme court
phases of the Roosevelt bill, quick-
ly announced his opposition to the
move and said it would be "a viola-
tion of our understanding” with1
Vice President Garner and other
administration spokesmen.
Wheeler referred to the agree-
■ ment under which the Roosevelt
bill was dropped last week and the
judiciary committee ordered to
draft a substitute dealing only with
the lower courts.
“It will probably start the fight
all over again and we thought we
had settled it,” Wheeler said.
Soon after Minton had spoken, it
became known President Roosevelt
had summoned house and senate
leaders to the White House for a
conference late in the afternoon on
the subject.
e “The matter looks hopeful,” Sen. Elmer Thomas (D.-Okla.) said after conferring with the president
.v on the proposed Grand River Dam in eastern Oklahoma. Shown, left to right, are George Schaefer and | President Roosevelt watched de-
Y Jack L. Rorschach of Vinita, Okla., Clay Babb of Grove, Okla., Senator Thomas, Owen L Butler of Grove, , velopments closely from Washing-
8 | ton. The question of application
of America’s new neutrality act
■
S’ de’ usn
)j,gEid
..... g kj,
511/0
35
9 <
i
‘ other conditions.
Accident Near Marietta । r____________
ARDMORE, Okla., July 28 (AP) yr-.e I n 1-
G M Byerly well known Okla- Uniformed Police
homa City sports promoter, suf- A c
fered a broken neck when an auto On Strike Duty
Sloan indicated price increases
were being considered because of
rising costs.
Sloan reported the corporation’s
net earnings for the June quarter
were $65,731,000, or $1.48 a com-
mon share, compared with $88,108,-
372, or $2.00 a share. in the June
1 quarter last year.
------- - ----- c.oc provisions to make unions more
pan ApPaintedemoratkerscihese I responsiblein keeptng agreementa.
curity Board. Oscar M. Powell, He said, however, he believes the
Canton and Goldbloom," and said I regional director here, announced act is not one-sided, and expressed
-- ‘ - - • today. He succeeds F. H. McCar-the opinion many employers have
I thy who will return here. ‘ (Continued on Page Two)
j 1 — ; -■ ■
Oil Industry Anxious Over the
Market Reaction to Output Hike
(Continued oi Page Two)
8 ■ 1i7{
1 ,1 Ia
F\A-
"h.
1 Illicit Love Seen
As Murder Motive
American Industry System
WICHITA FALLS, Texas, July
28 (AP).—Four men met flaming
death about 1:30 o’clock this morn-
ing when a light sedan carrying
two oil field workers collided with
a loaded gasoline truck and burn-
ed, 10 miles south of Windthorst
on highway 66.
The dead:
Charles Moffitt, 25 Fort 11
Worth; Elvis C. Brannan, 18, Fort*
Worth; E. E. Brumley, oil field
driller at Bryson, and a fourth 1
man tentatively identified as L.
Beck, oil field worker.
Moffitt, Beck and Brumley were
believed to have been killed in-
stantly. Brannan was conscious
AUSTIN, July 28 (AP). — The tion of petroleum products was tack again this fall if the com-
oil industry is awaiting with some higher in August than in any mission follows its policy of recent
anxiety the market reaction to other month, yet the Texas allow- years. C. V. Terrell, commission
Texas’ production of approximate- able on August 1 would be less : chairman, said refiners using Tex-
ly 1,506,000 barrels a day after | than four per cent larger than as oil would be requested to test-
next Saturday. j that on July 31. 1 ify at the next monthly proration
This amount was 100,000 bar-: California, New Mexico and hearing concerning whether their
BELFAST. Northern Ireland,
I h - • I I ’ i \ dj ! | 1 ’ - ■
ainesbille Weekln Register
AND MESSENGER V
THE DAILY AND WEEKLY
REGISTER PUBLISH MORE
yards from Republic’s Corrigan-
McKinney Works.
Ness issued the mandate follow-
ing Monday night’s riotous clash
between strikers and non-striking
Republic employes, in which one
man was killed and at least 80 in-
jured.
SAN ANTONIO, uly 28 (AP).
David S. Pruitt, San Antonio, has
1
P ii
")
newly established strike zone in an additional board to fix wage
the mill dotted Guyanoga river val-1 and hour standards.
ley today as counsel for striking, criticism of the labor board
J •% EBA
3 ( /
, —)
, A
#ag
Three Students Killed
OKLAHOMA CITY, July 28,,0p
(AP).—Three high school students the North Pole to Moscow, criticized the Black-Connery wage
were killed last night when thir He said, however, three govern- r • - — t nd-c — Hiqntigc
car figured in a collision with an- ment agencies would investigate, to “five men the authority to de- i r c AmL--AAr A-n,l,
t. —.J_______ ccjaof what of value might result from cide for themselves the proper - massanor PPms
the city and plunged down an en- the flight before any permit is is- minimum wage and maximum £— D------*i— af f-----1
sued. 4. 1 hours per week, in the vast ahd
Norothy The secretary, discussing the diversified Industries of the com- i
--rt- matter at his nress conferenre said pany.”
"The American system of indus-
try may be at stake." Vandenberg
warned the senate in launching
"9 i
AT
- , g0-3,
4 hi 4 1
1
Peiping area, where heavy fighting
started just before dawn. «
A foreign office spokesman said
Grew had joined with the British
ambassador in an appeal to the
government not to let the situation
get out of hand. c
At the same time the Domei
(Japanese) news agency reported
Lawrence Salisbury, secretary of
the American embassy in Peiping,
had presented a joint American,
British, French and Italian memo-
randum to the Japanese embassy
asking that the legation quarter
not be used as a base for military
Here’s Georgia’s No. 1 badman,
despite his handsome appearance.
He is Thomas (Smoky) Wofford,
song-composing desperado who led
a band of Zive convicts in a daring
chain-gang escape. Wofford, 22,
was under sentence for robbery
and kidnaping.
’ 1 ——- ————— ■ - ——-
News Reporter is
Attacked; Deputy
increase for next month would Kentucky, the group’s chairman,
the crude oil price. Some observing that compacts such' as
inrormea persons thought, how- the* oil agreement “preserve the
ever, a price rise would not havej rights of each separate state and
and chairman of the Interstate Oil come,’ regardless of the produc- at the same time enable the sig-
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Gainesville Weekly Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 29, 1937, newspaper, July 29, 1937; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1458888/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.