Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 138, Ed. 1 Friday, January 22, 1932 Page: 1 of 10
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VOL. XXXI
NO. 138
DENTON. TEXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 22, 1932
10 PAGES
=
REOONTRUOTION
Father Cox Rallies Jobless In Pittsburgh
ILL
HEAVY RAINFALL
ODD BITS OF 3
S
MEASURE READY
By Assoclated Press
59Y5:
WORLD NEWS
FOR SIGNATURE
not
I
Trinity
legalize
82,000,000,000
e4
7
WETS IN HOUSE
Why “Today”? Do
♦ appropriations committee today ♦
U report by Dec 31. 1932, Couzens
TO DEMAND VOTE
and
*3
Loan of Grid Profits
CORSICANA, Jan. 22.— State
J
this session an both
-1.
as could
73 in
I
nounce each day. In today’s paper
it
candidacy of J. D Gentry for Com-
misstoner from Prec’nct No. 2.
ABLY REPORTED
i
■
0
however, that it should
I
t
. . . . - e= —
--
WA
A
e"d
3,
n
Collected in Split
Payments Friday
BRINGS THREAT
OF FLOOD AGAIN
flood stage. Derby and C
were over highways 64
railroad brother
tives that if &
interest in the six-hour day
agreement might be reached
tween contending factions. .
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.-—
The house learned today of plans
by its ant-prohibitionts to resort
from politics and left to the Amer-
ican people themselves to decide A
d eelsion on this question, one way
or another, he said, would "greatly
benefit bustess in this country".
5ej
Ko
%
I?
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.
—(AP)—Only a few pen
scratches are necessary to
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—(P)
Speaker Garner said today "a
fair interpretation of the rules
would seem to permit a vote”
an
se-
where he had gone to visit a girl.
The girl's father was held for in-
vestigation in connection with the
shooting He told officers Mirand's
attentions were unwelcome.
home pro
dering at
Precipitation 1.51
. Inches in Denton
Couzens said he had been inform-
ed the principal point of differ-
ence at the Chicago conferences
was the sex-hour day and there was
a lack of infermation as to the ef-
fect the shorter work day would
have on present conditions.
COPENHAGEN, Denmark—A son
committed suicide upon discover-
in that his father had embezzled
300,000 Kroner ($57,000). A few days
later the father. Judge Holger Han-
seen. became crnscshmce stricken
and ended his own life. The youth
wrote his father he could not live
in shame.
Muskogee County but traffic was
not blocked.
• construction Finance Corpor- ♦
♦ tion ♦
18th Amendment To Stay, Smith
Declares, But Believes It May
Be Changed to Let States Rule
P ... a ...
mother instinct. I guess A man
hog would just have gone of and
left the pigs, but not so the moth-
rr"
A p p r o p r iation For
Corporation to
Be Rushed
Evidence Of Lock-Step Motion
Of Electrons Reported As New
Discovery Of Great Importance
People Driven From
Lowlands Along
LONDON. Jan. 22- Pew from
Paris today. Americans always
make this trip but won't fly at
home. Yet we have 20 lines as
good.
I sure miss Charley Dawes.
• Worth for South Texas The lower-
ed fare is applicable on these trains
thru Denton. as for some time the
Texas a Pacific Railway has had
a 1 3-4 cent per mile fare.
Mhu
Railtouy Wage ‘ ’
Still “In Air*
to study the
pads adopt-
Ccwnmcrce Commistom
feastnlity of the raB.
ing the six-bour.daj
The rresolution was
Streams in County
Reported Rising
Friday
2
8
1
N
Full Associated Press Leased Wire
United Press Service
0
8
79
ule
L2./c.__
g. p
raid reports had come to
chscago conferences bet'
13 r
-3
Heavy in Oklahoma
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 22-~()
aFedabxazis.mnches.ot fi,
today, with water standing on some
highways.
The Arkansas River rose six feet
at its junction with the Grand and
Verdigris near Muskggee but the
stream still was ten tert trog-
Hoover's Approval
May Be Given
By Night
--
Board Appointed to
Administer Fund
would bay more home manufactur-
ed products we could keep our
money at home and be prosperous."
Mrs. Judd Begins
Fight for Freedom
WOUND
ABOUT
TOWN
Says Speculation
in Grain Needed
to Save Losses
corporation to give impetus
to American business. Pres-
ident Hoover may adminis-
ter these to the bill creating
his reconstruction fnance
corporation late today.
The measure received final con-
WASHINarO, . Jan.
The Senate today adopted a reso-
luglon calling on ghe Interstate
NEW YORK — Mayor Walker j
would if he could but he cant He'd
like to appoint John Ringling, cir-
cus owner, to the park commission
and thereby get a good zoo in the
bargain. But Ringling is a resident
of Florida and that squelches the
plan.
• (P,—Chairman Byrns of the •
Charman Couzens of the Iteritete
Commerce committee which earlier
had approved it unanigaously.
The commission wouf be asked
I
Denton County was faced 1
again Friday with threat of ’ ‘
damage from streams over- •
flowing in the lowlands as a
result of an all-night rain
sentiment that should "enough oth-
er states fail to pass the 20 per
cent cotton acreage reduction law
by January 20 to represent three-
fourths of the production of roeton
to the south, delegates from states
which had passed the law should
petition their respective governors
to call special. session of the Leg-
islature for the purpose of repeai-
ing the law."
No Other State in Une
"As you know, not a single oth-
er state has. as yet. enacted any
law in regard to cotton acreage re-
duction since the Jackson confer-
ence," Donnell said. "The laws of
those steles (Hint had prevloutaly
been enacted, have died by Ami-
tation.
"Therefore, In accord with the
resolution adopted at the confer-
ence. I now express the hope that
obtained 'the fink x-ray pictures
proving existence of moving elec-
arons in cold metals countless tiny
particles of the -olid metal which
behaved like particles traveling at
high speeds.
In those pictures, x-rays bounc-
ing from the metal were knocked
off at helter-skelter angles, called
"scattering" At first the scattering
seemed entirely haphazard but Dr
Dumond has found a substance, a
Ceylon graphite, from which the
x-rays bound off with a tendency
to mass In eertain preferred direc-
firms This massing might arise
from striking ngainst speeding
electrons all or nearly all of which
are rotating in the same plane Dr
Dumond say this is what the pre-
liminaries lend hope" of finding.
MF u. aanlitz
WEST TEXAS: Fartty etonfly, ;
cooler in extreme southeast por-
tion tonight; Saturday party
eloudy.
EAST TEXAS: Cloudy, show-
ers tn east and south p net lias,
134
amend the law, so that farmers of
Texas may not bo penalised by be-
ing forced to cut thetr cotton pro-
duction in half that other states
may profit"
Donnel taid he was a strong
supporter of the acreage reduction
Law but did not believe it was fair
to the farmers of Texas that they
be required to make such a great
sacrifice when they may not reap
the reward
**********************2
WASHINGTON, Jan 22 — ♦
12
****************
senate and house of the conference
report reconciling the difference
between their bills
Neither house nor senate requir-
ed a record vote.
Mr Hoover is prepared to sub-
mit immediately to the senate for
confirmation the names of the four
members of the board whom he
must select. He already has picked
Charles Gates Dawss of Chicago to
heed the corporation. .
The house -appsopriattons com-
mittee is prepared to speed through
that branch of congress an appro-
prtation of 8500,000000 "to start the
corporation to functioning
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.(P)
A rotes evidently belonging to
someone w.th a box-office eye
i polled the dignified effect of
the House of Representatives
yesterday.
The season was in one of
those utter’y dull periods when
only a handful of members te-
main on the floor. There was
a moment of quiet. From the
galery floated down
"They are not making ex-
penses here today."
any agreement is made toward dis-
posing of the government's anti- 1
trust suit against the larger radio i
corporations I
__ <
Ta AM Loan Assocations ।
The senate also passed and sent
to the house a bill exempting build- 1
ing and loan assoclatlons from be- 1
ing adjudged bankrupts It puts :
them in the class with municipal ,
insurance, railroad and banking ,
corporations.
1 RECORD-CHRONICLE
Effective Sunday, January 24. the
Texas and Paciie Railway will im-
prove its passenger service between
Fort Worth and Texarkana, via
Denton and Paris. Train No. 32 will
leave Fort Worth at 8 15 a m . in
minutes later than at present, and
arrive at Texarkana 10 minutes la-
ter. Train No 31 will leave Texar-
kana for Fort Worth at 3:15 in-
stead of the present time, 7:15 A.
M. and arrive at Fort Worth at
enough of Dawes to go around
everywhere we need him.
I bet you they call the Lau-
sanne reparations conference
off as we are not there. You
can't rave a picnic lunch un-
less the party carrying the bas-
ket comes.
CHICAGO. - Jan 22--
Talk of wage eats for railroad
workers must go on the side-
track until llabor’s program for
unemployment relief is denite-
ly accepted or rejected, David
H. Robertson said today He maw
ho chance for a quick end of
the parley that began a week
ago today with nine railror(1
presidenta.
--Miranda. 35. died last night of
BEYERLY NOMINATION FAVOB- hunshot wounds received at a resi-
E ABLY REPORTED dence in the Mexican district here
I
Senate Takes Artton
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22—(P-
House agreement to the revised bill
creating the reconstruction corpo-
ration took but a tittle time today.
While waiting to send this legisla-
tion down Pennsylvania Avenue for
President Hoover's signature, the
senate took a hand in two far re-
moved matters.
First, with attention attuned to
the wage negotiations going on in
Chicago betwren railroad unions
and executives. It directed the In-
terstate Commerce Commission to
study practicability of a six-hour
day for workers on the roads.
By reselutjon, the senators anked
Attorney Generlal Mitchejl to let
one of its committees know before
Trinity Threatens Flood
FORT WORTH Jan. 22—
River bottom residents here were
moved out of their homes today as
the Trinity threatened to leave Ite
banks
At 8:30 the river was leas than
three feet from flood stags and rose
seven inches in half an hour West
Fork was out of Its banks in sev-
ers 1 places flooding houses stores
and streets on the north side.
Police Chief Lee dispatched 30
men to the banks of the river. They
had orders to evacuate every fam-
ily from the lowlands.
The river gauge here registered
27.3 feet st 8:30. Flood stage is 30
feet. River observers said the water
was rising rapidly
The trouble is there
sion of the 18th amendment
and on modification of the Vol-
stead Art.
CONGRESS
What congress is doing: -
Fridny.
Senate
Receive* conference report on the
82.000.ooo.ooo reconstruction finance
corporation bill for final approval.
Banking committee acts on Glass
bill to revise nation's banking laws
to give closed-bank depositors re-
lief end curb chain banking and
speculation.
House
Takes final action on reconstruc-
tion corporation bill ,
Considers agriculture appropria-
tion bill
' Tax hearings continue before
ways and means committee.
Wage hills considered by labor
committee.
Short selling bills considered by
agriculture committee.
Interstate commerce committee
considers repeal of the railroad re-
capture clause. •
Legislalure to repeal or amend the
new cotton acreage reductjonlaw.
He called attention to the reso-
lution passed at the Jackagn, Misd
Bnference of represendatives of cot
ton growing stated, which he a*
tended as a delegate appointed 2
Megovermor-- $
The resolution expressed "Ehe
PHOENIX, Arts.. Jan. 22:—(—
Winnie Ruth Judd's counsel start-
ed a court battle today when the
state offered its exhibits of recep-
tacles in which the bodies of Agnes
Anne LeRo and Hedvig Samuelson
were sent from Phoen x to Los An-
geles.
Prompt objection was made by
Paul Schenck and Herman Lewko-
wits when the state brought to the
courtroom in the murder trial the
first of its major physical evidence
- suit case which contained parts
of the body of Miss Samuelson
has been reaching Fort Worth at
1:50 P. M., coming thru Denton
shortly after 12 o'clock This sched-
ule will make connection with train
♦ "2- ♦
EePertodayyodovemnorans.ser Meets Teachers Wages
Ung urged a special session of thS _____
Father Jame
the crowd of 50,5
jobs He recently
You can depend on
WASHINGTON /an 22 —IP-
DALLAS MAN SHOT TO DEATH
DALLAS, Jan 22.-IP-Frank
Charlie Lee was pressing a
shirt.
A young man with a pistol
entered.
"Dp with taut. hands." the
gunman commanded
Charlie’s hands went up. So
did the scorching ho tirov,
which left his hand at the
same instant, striking the rob-
ber in the chest.
The robber fled. howling with
psin.
Charlie resumed his ironing.
"It ought to quit raining," said
the moon prophet Friday morning,
"but. by that, I don't mean to pre-
dict, a cessation of the rain Should
It get considerably colder we might
get some relief from the excessive
rains; otherwise, we may see s con-
tinuatton at the present weather."
This has been heard before in
Denton, but it will do no harm to
hear’ it again It was 'swiped' from
somewhere, "What is wrong with
Texas?" The answer: "Nothing's
wrong with Texas except entirely
too many of us get up in the morn-
ing at the alarm of a Connecticut
clock, button a pair of Ohio sus-
penders to a pair of Chicago pants
Put on a pair of Massachusetts
shoes, wash in a Pittsburgh Un
basin, using Cincinnati soap. and
a cotton towel made in New Hamp-
shire. sit down to a Grand Rapids
table, eat pancakes made from Min-
neapolis flour with Vermont syrup
and Kansas bacon fried in « 81
Louis stove. Buy fruit put up in
California. seasoned with Colorado
sugar Put on a hat made In Phila-
delphia. hitch a Detroit mule fed
on Oklahoma gasoline to an Ohio
plow and work all day on a Texas
farm coveted with a New England
mortgage, send our money to Ohio
for Urea, wondering why Texas
taxes are M 75 per acre while Ohio
farmers pay $1.00 tax and drive on
paved roads, and at night we crawl
under a New Jersey blanket to be
— _ . - - . Once done with the $2,000,000,-
appears the announcement of the 000 federal credit agency the house
which at noon had reached
a total of 1.51 inches at the
State Experiment Station.
Many streams overflowed a week
ago as a result of an extended rein
w th th” ground already water-
soaked. The soil is so wet now that
it can not take up more moisture,
and virtuany all the water runs—
quickly into the streams.
People were being removed from
the lowlands along the Trinity Riv-
er Friday as overflows threatened,
according to reports here, and Red
River at Denison had risen six feet.
Formers rre being further delay-
ed in the’r work by the continued
rains, and it would take several •
weeks of sunshine to dry many
fields in the county so that cultiva-
tion could be begun.
Cooler weather with more rain
to in prospect for Saturday. record-
ing to the bureau forecast Friday.
The minimum temperature here
Friday was 38 degrees, and the
maximum Thursday afternoon was
68.
resubmission of the 18th amend-
ment and on modification of the
Volstead Act
Representative O'Connor (D, N.
YJ. said a petition to discherge the
judiciary committee from consider-
ation of bills for a referendum on
resubmission would be used if nec-
essary.
"And after a vote on resubmi-
slon," he said, "we will have a vote
on modification of the Volstead Act.
We are assured of that. We have
no doubt of the chair's ruling whan
this question to presented."
Earlier in, the session, house lead-
ers bed Indicated only one prohi-
bition vote would be allowed
'O’Connor. however, to a member at
the powerful rules committee.
The judiciary committee has set
Feb. 16 for consideration of the
referendum plan for state option in
liquor control.
CHICAGO Jan 22 —•P-SUH
The 'rumor', well tounded, that
Denton is to have installed a can-
ning factory made bright even Fri-
day morning, which was about as
dark, dreary a morning as any one
coutg Tmagine, But things jus net-
urally looked brighter when this
plece of news came to Roundabout's
altention. While, it to not just ex-
actly definite, from Information
Roundabout got, it seems most cer-
tain that Denton County will be
provided with a better market for
truck and fruit than it has here-
tofore enjoyed. The factory will be
a commercial one, it to understood,
and the Denton man who contem-
plates installing this new industry
for Denton will more than likely
make an inspection trip soon to see
just how such things are done in
other pieces, where successful, and
PzObably to secure the services of
an expert in the business. Round-
about regrets that more detailed
information can't be secured as yet.
but he is of the belief right now
.that Denton Cunty growers of
truck and fruit will be provided the
outlet of a canning factory to be
installed here in time to take care
of this year's crops.
when it was found Oct. 18 in a Loa
Angeles railway station
The state contends both women
were Hlain by Mrs. Judd in Phoenix
Oct 18 Mrs Judd is on trial only
for murder of Mrs LeRot.
In addition to the suitcase, a hat-
box and two trunks were awaiting
submission when argument over
admissibility of the mrst threw the
court Into recess while attorneys
and judge consulted authorities
The bogging down of te state's
hitherto rapid progress came while
the first witness of the day, John
D Washington. negro head porter
st the Phoenix union station. was
on the stand.
Washington rolled his eyea to-
ward Mrs. Judd, seated at the
counsel table. identifying her as a
woman whom he had helped aboard
the Southern Pacific train for Los
Angeles at 8 o'clock the night of
Oct. 18. '
"I put her baggage on the train."
he said “She had s suit case and
a hat box. The hat box had 'A A
M' on it."
2
------- 6
0— —
be taken copler tonight: Sa tardy clomdy.
shwets In soWUrraM and e-
SAN FRANCISCO—Forty one
days H. E. Carson, 2, announ-
ced he would starve' to death
before accepting aims. A doctor
announeed plans to feed the
man forcibly. Carson, not car-
ing for that idea, has decided to
eat of his own free will.
you may see fit to call the Leg- . ___
islature in session to repeal or to Speculation in gram was described
- to a house committee today as es-
kept awake by a bull dog the only
on the place, won-
time where in the
E hell all the money went in this
wonderful state of ours. If we
undecided about, whether to accept
a 10 per cent wage reduction. 800
brotherhoods hnd uniaa leaders
today studied arguments of rail
way presidenta that the industry
-was threatened with further bank-
ruptcies and loss of credit.
The managements made what ap-
parentiy was their final offer when
they promised to do whatever may
be practicable ' to stabilise employ-
ment, refusing moat of the other
labor proposals, including the six-
hour day commission?
Decision Delayed
FRANKLN, Jan 22—LP> Dis-
trict Judge w C. Davis was con-
sidering the constitutionality of the
Texas cotton acreage restriction law
today, having heard testimony on
both sides al e trial concluded yes-
terday.
Davis did not plan to announce
a decision in the test case until
next week. Regardless of the ver-
diet, attorneys intended to carry
the suit through the Court of Civil
Appeals and the Supreme Court.
The statute, passed in Septem-
ber. prohibited the planting to cot-
ton this year of more than 30 per
cent of the aggregate cultivated
land in 1831.
Lawrence Westbrook of Waco,
co-author of the law, yesterday at-
tacked its value in view of the fact
other states had failed to enact
similar measures opponents of the
law contended it was a price fix-
ing rather than .a conservation
iheasur and deprived a farmer of
his property and impaired his con-
tractuai rights without due process
of law.
Mr and Mrs. J. D Duncan, for-
mer McKinney resident*, are new
citizens of Denton, being now dom-
idled st 820 Highland Street They
are members at the First Baptist
Church Mr. Duncan to a cotton
man, buying list cotton only. When
asked as to why they determined
upon Denton as their future home,
he said. "Two reasons, I guess, the
educational facilities offered here,
and too. this is in my business
territory % Roundabout, of course,
become inquisitive as to the chU-
dren, who would be tn school here,
and got the reply "Well we have
seven boys and each one of those
boys has a sister." Two of the Dun-
ban boys will attend High School
and one is In Teachers College
_ URGES REPEAL OF TEXAS COTTON
Ever Make Expenses?
ACREAGE LAW AS NO OTHER STATE
" HAS LIKE RESTRICTIVE MEASURE
ireme east portions, castor to
southeast portion. Light ••
moderate cesterty winds on the
bonst.
NIAGARA FALLS — This
pussy willow weather has set a
record here. For the first tame
in 34 years no ice has formed
below the falls. The huge ice
mountain usually to one at the
chief lures that brings tourists.
But there’s no ice and conse-
quently few visitors.
. Rozee
Six-HurDay,
For Railrqads
to
Mmm
gressionel approval by the adoption
__...____... . . .today aftr little debate by both
8 W M. TWa train heretofore
UI LL I
The weather or sump’n has kept
the politicai pot from boiling as.
during the present week there has
been only one candidate to an-
WASHINGTON, Jan 22—U—
The Senate territories comtm4tee
today favorably reported the nom-
ination of James R. Beverley of
Texas to be governor of Porto Rico.
ABILENE, Jan. 22.--
Teachers at Abilene high schtbol
these days are making few
compiaints about "overempha-
is" at. footgall. ___
The athletic cquneH from a
-denaserrmpaarsexanve
ball games ha* loaned the
school board 88000 to pay sal-
aries of the teachers until last
year’s taxes have been collect-
ed.
The school's tezm, the Abi-
lene Hagies, won the Texas high
school championship, and when
the books were balanced at the
end of 1931 a 818,000 balance
was on hand in the spring the
funds will be used to start con-
struction of a new stadium
- --—a—————-
Case Continued
In County Court
The case of John Needham,
charged with aggravated assault
was continued to the next term of
County Court Friday morning, on
motion of the defendant and be-
cause of the absence of witnerses.
No other cases were on the docket
for Friday Folbowing continuance
of the Needham ease Judge T. B
Davis discharged the jury for the
week.
IV
NEW YORK, Jan. 22.—4-4The
prohibition amendment. Alfred E
Smith-one of its most severe crit-
ics-belleves, to in the constitution
to stay
He told a meeting of the Hotel
Association of New York last night
that in his opinion repeal of the
amendment was impossible.
"I believe, however, that another
amendment can be edded: which
will provide that any state may.
with the approval of the people,
take control of such matters it-
self." he said
"When the 18th amendment was
adopted the people thought that all
you had to do was to forbid some-
thing and that no one would do it.
We have been at It 12 years and
the president's own commission
says prohibition is unenforceable
because it lacks public support.
"There has been no organised
plan to defeat the prohibition law.
We have an opposition without a
plan-we are just 'against' some-
thing." ,
The former governor and 1828
democratic presidential candidate
sald prohibition to a political ques-
tion "They even elect county
clerks on it," he said He suggested.
e. Cox, crusadipg Irish priest of Pitts burgh. Is shown here silhouetted against a part of
that responded to his call for a rally of unemployed In a Pittsburgh stedtum to demand
dapfarmy” ofememployedon Washington.-- _ . _____
"Educated brood toon are the
right kind to have, particularly in
the bottom lands subject to: over-
flow," sadi T. H Hannah. "We had
two sows with pigs, which were in
the overflow field during the recent
high-water, and, naturally, we
thought they had drowned, or at
least tile pigs But we reckoned
without thinking at the 'educated
sows, which know something about
taking care of their young When
we went to the field we found that
— two sows had climbed a straw-
stack. taking thetr pigs with them
They were bedded doom way up in
the slack, and were as comfortable
returned to work on the agricul-
ture supply bill Various members
were kept busy with committee
hearings, one group listening to
protests against resing taxes on
cigarettes
Exemption of husbands of Amer-
ican citizens from the quota re-
strictions of the immigration law
to provided in a bill passed by the
senate and sent to the house.
sential to insurance agains losses.
Seibel Harris, of the grain com-
mittee on national affairs of the
Chicago board at trade, in outlying
the grain trade's reasons for oppos-
ing restrictions on short selling,
toid the agriculture committee
"hedging wont work where there
is no short selling"
Referring to pending Lills which I
would prohibit or restrict short
selling, the Chicagoan festtfted:
"I believe in the efforts the com-
mittee is making to help the far-
mer, but I think the problems can
be worked out better through a
coser co-operation between inter-
esta involved.
"The exchanges are fully aware
of their diittea to the public and do
not intend to avo f them, but we
insist that the strangling of liqut-
da lion would be detrimental to the
market What you want is better
administration: not more legisla-
tion"
Harris said the present ditfer-
ence to domestic advantage be-
tween wheat prices in the United
States and at tverpool was ’due
to speculation here"
with a citizens’ request for the
split tax payment plan for Denton
given the approval of the city com-
missioners. and City Attorney E I.
Key st work Priday drawingup the
necessary ordinance, the city col-
lections were being taken on the
split-payment basis Friday, it was
reported by offichis.
Several payments under the plan
had been made by noon Friday. it
was stated.
Under the plan to be embodied
In the ordinance which commts-
sloners have indicated they will
pass as soon after its being drawn
as possible, taxes due the city may
be paid in taro equal installmenta-
half by Feb 1, the second half by
April 30
if not paid when due under the
new plan, the taxes become delin-
quent and have a 10 per cent pen-
alty and six per cent interest added.
Key said Friday morning he ex-
pected to have the ordinance com-
pleted during the day.
Moral: Don’t Rob
Chinaman While He
Is Ironing Shirt
CHICAGO, .rill 22—(m— A
scene last night tn a Chmese
laundry:
Red River Up
DENISON. Jan 2—m-Heavy
rains on the Red River watershed
caused it to rise over six feet hers
today Creeks were overflowing
The river was expected to reach
its highest stage tomorrow
DENT(
NEW YORK Jah. 22—•Evi-
dence that vast numbers of elec-
irons swing together with concerted
motion in cold, hard metals and
solids is reported in The Physical
Review. thh scientific publication
of American physicist*
The report to a preliminary cn
unfnished work butifthefnei
tests verify the lock-step motion it
is one of the most astounding dis-
coveries of physics. The experi-
ments are under way in the Nor-
man Bridge taboratory of the Cal-
fornia Institute of Technology They
ere dewribed by Dr Jesse W M
Dumond.
The evidence is found with the
new so-called x-ray microscope,
with which recently Dr. Dumond
Overflow Threatens
DALLAS, Jan. 22 —(—Heavy
rains on the Trinity river water-
shed threatened todey to cause the
.river to overflow in the lowlands
near Dallas The river was expect-
ed to reach a stage here at 35 to
37 feet in the next 24 hour* “-"fi
Squatters living in shacks and
tenia in the river bottoms were
warned to evacuate the danger 2
area. High water forced them to u
nfe several deys ago but ths riyer
subs’ded and they were able txe-,-
turn. _ ■
— W I €
. Famiies Maroened
LAWTON. Ok. Jan, 22*
Three famiies, two of them tn des-
titute chicumstances, were me r- L
ed in thetr homes when B g Beaver
creek went out of its banks follow*
ing a heavy rain last night in the
hills stx miles east of Fort SUI.
neer Lawton.
A Mrs. Harry Brooks one of those
marooned, was reported critically
ill and without food Her husband
and four children were with her.
'
ibmis-
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 138, Ed. 1 Friday, January 22, 1932, newspaper, January 22, 1932; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538690/m1/1/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.