Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 21, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 7, 1935 Page: 1 of 8
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DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
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VOL. XXXV
NO. 21
wre
DENTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 7, 1935
CREMATIONOF
ALL M
aamd
A 1
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2*. 2 ■
■ •
7
7
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4
ard Time) today that burn-
af
dirTerent somehow or another thia
ing of bodies
„-p
—
5142
I
thin cotton shorts today
pounffortheBFiShe
in the com-
gatton:
iequmruucues.
the hurricane
wrought its
greatest havoc.
prevent crisis.
Two youths, released late Friday
SOLONS CALLED
TO ENACT HUEY
LONG DECREES
2
Hes.
-V
8
2g
... 32
I
Gq.rn
im
-
t
1.
TO 933
transferred from Menard to" Bur-
net.
JI
\
r.zu
:<x
r
Burglary Charge?
Are Not Yet Filed
Little Elm Pupils .
Can Come Here
STORM VICTIMS
IS UNDER WAY
Duggan Funeral
Services Sunday
CONSULAIES IN
ETHIOPIA CLOSED
Trimble Assessed
Five-Year Term
Troops Called in
Pole and Czech
Border Outbreak
Germans Protest
Riol Dismissals
e}
Exo
Move Ordered Upon
Recommendation of
Health Officer.
Dread Chemical Weapons to Aid Italians in War on Undertrained Tribal Foes
tm
,,582
R
„NM
Lindberghs Rest
At Summer Home
Repprted Assurance of
No War During
Conference.
F
FREDERICKSBVRG, Sept 7.-
(P-L. E Trimble. Menard County
rancher, today was under a five-
vear prison sentence for slaying W.
R Tomlinson.
After the Jury returned the verdict
yesterday Trimble's attorneys indi-
cated they would appea the case.
Tomlinson. former Menard coun-
ty commisstone, was stain sues
Menard. H B Opp also was charg-
.0 * ‘
Heat Trick
ST LOUIS-Two negro wo-
men applied for old age pen-
sions. One was 70. the other 75.
The woman who was 70 said
she was the mother of the wo-
man who was 75. She insisted
it was so .
"I was married young." she
explained.
io
si
. Texas Town is Swept by $100,000 Flood
—— . la. _ _ __________
rT*
fa
‘Mi
Lg could be much happler for
ah o"us did we follow the ideas art
The usual heavy downpour of rar
whieh ushered m their first day
Ethiopia depressed not only these
125 Burried in Miami
Here in Miami, graves were dug
in Woodlawn cemetery to hold,the
bodies of 125 World War veterans
brought out of the storm area.
They were killed. with comrades
Wihdrawal Date For
Envoys Set For
Sept. 15.
Action Taken Upon
Order of Mussolini
Fun Associated J>reaa Lensed
United Fraas Barrios
-
—
of Monday i 2
victims had R
the cause is, but business has not
lagged a bit since the schools clos-
ed; we have enjoyed a fine busi-
ness all summer.
c
EIGHT PAGES
that SCW will greet Ats largest at-
tendance in history Usually after
the closing of the summer terms
of the two colleges Denton mer-
chants don’t even attempt to go
hard after business, but it has been
•25
85
‘Hank’ Liked Winner
MEMPHIS Tenn. — Barney
- OldAeld- aselatad -thSL. tatsfirat
dowa and furniture and otherwise
. eingscnqolhousea
Police nirested 12 men whom they
called the ringleaders in the atiaek
which occurred early in the week,
but announced they had no clues
to many others.
A Czecho deputation dispatched
to Praha a demand that measures
be taken against the Poles, wo
form a preponderance of the popu-
lation in certain sections of the dis-
trict
Their request for a garrison was
fulfilled. Eight hundred foot sol-
Bring ye aU the tithes into the
storehouse, that there may be meat
in my house, and prove me now
here with, saith the Lord of boats
if I will not open you the win-
dows of heaven, and pour you out
a blessing, that there shall not be
room enough to receive it.—Ma-
lachi 3; 10.
Precaution Against
Pestilence Outbreak
125 War Veterans To
Be Buried In
Miami.
.7 x"mu
2 k 22 ea
Torrents poured through the business section of Brady, swirling into stores, covering the publo
square, and pounding at the courthouse steps when Brady creek, which runs through the center of town
wenton 8 rampage. This picture shows a flooded downtown street after the water had broken a levee and
torced hundredIsto fre from thetr lowland homes. Damage is estimated at $100,000. A previous flood in
1930, took 2300.000 toll in Brady.
MRS. BURGER MOVES
NORTH LOCUST
Co. Commission
Meeting Monday
So far, little business outside the
regular monthly routine has been
scheduled for the County Commis-
sioners Court. holding its September
meeting here Monday. County
Judge George P. Elbert said Satur-
day. Some diascussion of Highway
24 right-of-way. for which only a
few pieces of porperty have not been
secured, will probably be before the
commission, Elbert said.
//S9
BRITISH LEGATION GUARDS IN
ADDIS ABABA BRING RUMOR OF
g
• d
Ic
-—9
*>. .T
AUSTIN, Sept. 7.— (•—Funeral
services fot Senator Arthur P. Dug-
can of Littlefield, noted for his ctvic
enterprise in the South Plains, will
be held here tomorrow afternoon.
Rev Lawrence Wharton, pastor of
tlie University Presbyterian Church
will conduct the rites Burial will be
here.
Duggan. M. died yesterday df a
sudden heart attack at the Gon-
zales home of Miss Mary Harral. his
sister-in-law, where he went last
wtek to recuperate from an illness.
Numerous state omclals, express-
ing deep regret of his death, prais-
ed the West Texas Senator for out-
standing public service Lieutenant
Governor Walter Woodau appointed
a committee of the Senate to at-
tend the services and pay tribute.
Senator Duggan was active espe-
cially in tax reform legislation As
chairman of a tax survey comn.lt-
tee, he obtained enactment at the
regular session of bills to plug leaks
in exasting taxes to obviate need
of new levies.
He was the sixth president of
the West Texas Chamber of Com-
merce and was active in numerous
civic enterprises in Littlefield, the
South Plains town he founded. He
was prominent in the Masonic lodge
and in ex-students activities of the
University of Texas, of which he
whs a graduate.
immediately rached, -hul County
Judge George P Elbert said no rep-
resentative At that body had spon-
sored the plan before the Commis-
sioners Court.
Elbert said as far as he knew, the
first suggestion to the court was
made by an out-of-town WPA of-
ficial here to discuss other pro-
ject applications, but added the of-'
ficial had probably had the scheme*
Lgss 6a B
•a--
i
While Mussolini girds the pick of Italian youth for battle, young and
ole natiye warriors rally to th. defense of Ethiopia. Note the graybeard,
second fom right
iwefoowthe"enst
out m the following piece of poetry, greate
"I Know Something Good About
You", rather than remembering the
things that might well be forgot
Wouldnt this old world be better,
if the folks we meet would say,
"I know something good about
you."
And then treat us just that way?
Wouldn't It be fine and dandy.
If each handclasp, warm and true
Carried with it this assurance,
"I know something good about
you."
"Those 'liars' are back and Mrs
Worthing returned with them," said
Torn Cole, Pilot Knob, to telling
about the return of his son. Ralph
Cole and Hugh Worthington. from
a fishing trip to the Gulf. "And can
thos two tell 'em—I'll say they
can, and while they brought back
some pretty fair fish. I'm well con-
vinced that they didn't get any
thing like they claimed.’’
Rumor Protectorate
Another rumor was that the ar-
rival of the Indian troops was a pre-
lude .to a British protectorate over
Ethiopia.
British authorities frustrated the
would-be spertators upon the arriv-
al last night of the troops. The cam-
era and films of some photogra-
phers were confiscated. Other pho-
tographers were arrested when they
attempted to take pictures of the
troops.
There was no explanation imme-
diately forthcoming of the secrecy
surrounding the arrival of the sel-
diers, for it had been known for at
least a fortnight they were coming.
Coincident with the arrival at
the Indians, 700 Ethiopian solders
set out for the Italian front.
Reports from London that Dr.
Warqnex C. Martin, Ethiopian mn-
started.
It was after daylight, the sherin u
A' letter from Grady Walker, as-
sistant supervisor of the Works
Progress Administration, thanks
the Record-Chronicle for the pub-
licit given its activities, stating
that the people of the entire coun-
try need more information about
the program and the assistance of
the newspaper in disseminating
this information la sincerely ap-
prec lated.
came Czechoslovakian after me
World War, burst forth again when
Pvltsh nationalists drove through a
NORTH HAVEN, Me., Sept 7.-
Wi—Col Charles A. Lindbergh was
at the summer home of Mrs.
Dwight W Morrow, mother of Mrs.
Lindhergh, today.
He arrived yesterday, presuma-
bly with Mrs. Lindbergh, after a
night through. the West The usual
reticence of the family to discuss
the colonel’s affairs prevailed, and
his arrival was not learned until
today.
WEST TEXAS: Mostly cloudy,
probably local showers in north and
east portions tonight and Sunday:
emoler in the Panhandi, Sunday.
OKLAHOMA. Mostly cloudy, pos-
8 ------ iftly scattered showen tonight and
ed in the sinying. His case was Sunday: coater in northwest portion
* " “ " “ tonight and in'north portion Sun-
day.
liter to Britain, had been admon-
shed hy the British foreign omice
for .an anti-Itallan speech, caused
astonishment today in Etniopian
circles.
These sources said it was unlikely
that the emperor would recall Mar-
Lee Douglass believes that cot-
ton should be grown In the towns
and cities. rather than on farms.
“Why, you know I haven't eeen a
worm nor weevil on my cotton
crop, about four stalks in his gar-
den. and I've been picking ft for
several days. Guess I've got as much
as four pounds, and it's strict mid-
dling. So why shouldn't the cotton
farmers move to town to grow their
cotton and stop worrying about
" worms; meass,"weevtis otcromnr
Depends on Joint Action
Application for WPA funds to-
talling 35,722 to carry out the pro-
ject has been filed by the County
Commissioners Court, but Elbert,
discussing the plan saturday, em-
phasised that the county has no
definite agreement to carry out the
widening and said that action, even
if the funds were granted, would
be dependent on the city commis-
sion's agreeing to work out a dif-
ferent traffic scheme in keeping
with the changed situation, and
doing the job of moving the city
power lines and to on incidental
to the actual widening
The matter has never come to a
vote by- the City Commission, but
in off-the-record discussions the
group has evidenced itself aS divid-
ed. some favoring, others oppos-
ing. the plan.
No definite traffic plan has been
agreed as a working basts after the
widening, but most suggestions con-
cern putting a parking zone down
the center of the widened streets,
with driving lanes between the cars
parked in the center and those at
either curb.
Walks Miles
to Answer
Traffic Charge
----- (By Assclated Press) • * .
LUMBERTON, N. C Burdis
Smith had a summons for driv-
ing his automobile without
lights, brakes or license plates.
So, he had to walk to court—
45 miles.
He said he was pretty tired.
One guess has been about as good
another on recent cotton crops, and
again this year ‘guesser, may be
Estimator John Gerlach. places
Denton County's 1935 crop at 15,-
800 bales. In some years in the past
Gerlach has made pretty clone
guesses, but, last year he missed it
to tar that it might have been
doubtt as to his ever making an-
other estimate on the crop. Has
som one another ‘guess'?
The back to school' movement
starts in many schools over Um
county next Monday and the week
following will see both colleges and
city schools getting under way.
Denton will again be the home-city
of many girls and boys for the next
nine months, and It is belleved
■aid. before the first match was ap-
plied to a pile of oil soaked bodies.
Orders for cremation of bodies
which could not be buried quickly
were issued by Governor Dave
Sholtz on recommendation of state
health authorities as a precaution
against possible outbreak of pes-
tilence.
A priest, a Rabbi and aProtes-
tant minister were flown to Snake
Creek by the coast guard to con-
duct burial services of the dead
there.
Despite instructions to bury as
many of the victims as possible. It
appeared likely that few of the
bodies would be placed in the
ground because of difficulty of dig-
ging graves in the coral rock Keys
,“I think it will be necessary to
burn virtually all the bodies in the
Keys,” said Conrad Van Hyning,
state welfare commissioner
Relief workers. wearied and sick-
ened by sights of horror, proceed-
ed as rapidly as possible to dispose
of the bodies, which Dr. Henry
Hanson, state health officer, said
Were nadvaneedcecompomtesom-
The burned victims will rest in
diets, comprising the eighth reg-
iment. were dispatched to Cieszyn,
in zouthwest Poland, where they
were quartered in vacant factories.
Artillery was sent to Mistek and
Friedek with orders to use whatever
measures might be necessary to
quell otsturbances and to lessen the
tension
Czech attempts to spread the use
of the Czech language among Polish
residents have fanned resentmerb
among the Poles.
No War New
LONDON. Sept 7 —I—Reuters
< British) news agency reported to-
day that Premier Mussoitni of italy
had ensured France that Italy will
not resort to war so long as the
Italo-Ethpplan dopute is undeor
tonsideration, •
No Compromise Seen
ROME, Sept 7 (P—Rdiable
sources here indicated today that
Italy expects from the five-power
committee at Geneva dealing with
the Italo-Ethioplan dispute a com.
promise offer which she will be un-
able to accept.
Rhe feels rarticuiarly, according
to these sources, that the commis-
sion will offer a compromise tend-
ing to inrrease British and French
influence and concessions in Ethi-
opia to the detriment ol Italy.
■ ■ T—-
dda--laacasucehg.minister. cnjoxa the
an complete confidence of his uovern-
went. Halle Selassie sent Martin to
Londom especially to deal with the.
walk is a proposal offered to re-
lieve the problem of downtown
traffic congestion. It appeared Sat-
urday from questioning city and
county ofTtctats.
No active sponsor for the pro-
gram could be found, however. and
officials said they did not know
where the plan first originated.
Both city and county denied in-
232
Gainesville, too, it seems had a
visit this week from some rather
loud koiced newsboys the same as
did Denton. The • Gainesville Reg-
ister says,
A Dallas newspaper sent its
leather lunged shriekers of false ex-
tras to town again Tuesday. keep-
Ing The Register telephones busy.
Fveryone was advised the truth of
the situation—that there was no
■ extra edition of any newspaper on
sale on the streets—only the noon
edition of a Dallas paper that does
not even solicit subscriptions in this
territory.
The barkers shouted "Looks Like
Another World War,” and a few
people, were gullible—others Just
curious The Ethiopian situation
wks the inspiration for the hawk-
" ere, but the story was not even fea-
tured on the front page of the pa-
per they were selling
We wonder how the publishers
expect to profit by such tactics.
power committee- named by the
League of Nations Council to deal
with the Italo-Ethioplan cists, vot-
ed today to send letters to Italy
and Ethiopia requesting them to
abstain from anything which might
render negotiations dimcuua, 8alva:
daro de Madaralaga, chairman of
the committee, told the Associated
Press.
Italy and Ethiopia thus were vir-
tually requested not resort to force.
Wouldn't life be lots more happy
if the gbod that's in us all
Were th only thing about us
That folks bothered to recall?
Wouldn't life be lota mor- happy
if we praised the good we see?
FMr theye's such a lot of goodness
in the worst of you and me.
Wouldnt it be nice to practice
That fine way of thinking too?
You know something good about
n» I
• "I knob something good about
you?"
AL-
“ reported to the Red Cross at
8:15 a. m. (Central Stand-
Armed with liquid fire one of the most terrifying of modern weapons, these well-trained young
Italian soldiers, engaged in’grim war games in tile foothills of the Alps, demonstrate how they wil pour
flames on Ethiopian forces it called to do so
sm*- - Aek Cn-operatien
"M—OmNEVA,seytT(—
Indians who rushed from the troptes
to the frigid atmosphere of the Ethi-
opian plateau, but also the rumor-
mongers who spent a chilly night
sbreading wild reports inspired by
Eritish official secrecy.
Prominent among the rumor was
one that a full battalion of 1200
infantry accompanied the three car-
loads of field artillery and anti-air-
craft troops rushed from Aden over
British Somaliland to Addis Aba-
ba.
It was even reported that Em-
peror Halle Selassie had dispatched
armies in the middle of the night
to far the Indians from the cap-
ital.
The moon-man'. Joe Akin should
be able to give more accurate prog-
nostications on weather when he
returns, as this week he has been
somewhat nearer the subject of his
study—in Amarillo, where it is con-
siderably higher than M Denton.
And, too, he admits that he has
seen some rain up there, along with
cold weather, necessitating an
overepat "We are up here where
we can see all over the world," he
writes, which may mean also that
he has a clear vision of the moon,
which he hasn’t been able to see
here since the change.
■
PRAHA, Czechoslovakia, Sept. 7.
—IPMore than 1,000 infantrymen
and artillerymen patrolled the
Czech-Polish border in the vicinity
of Cieszyn today to prevent new
outbursts of animosity between the
1 oles and Cuechs.
The Jealous which have flared in-
termittently since this territory be-
Just Boards to Him
WICHITA, Kas—The story
goes that the remains of a bar
offered for sale at auction was
one that Carry Nation had at-
tacked with her hatchet in one
of her fampus raids on the old
time saloons shortly after the
turn of century.
But no historical sentiment
prompted Ray Hoeller when he
bid it in for 60 cents. He want-
ed the boards to build a body
for his automobile trailer.
hantgShmvenxpressha acal Z: night’s storm
prise at the continued good busi-
ness. ene said I don’t know what
MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 7—
(AP)—Sheriff D. C. .Cole-
man, directing rescue oper-
ations in the Lower Keys;
Mrs M. E. Burger has moved from
1319 Oakland Avenue to 933 North
Locust Street. /
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
after being held anight and day .. .
by city police as suspects in a se- suggested to him by some Denton
ries of petty burglaries here. had persom
not been charged Saturday morn-
ing. but county officials were told
by city officers they would swear to
complaints during the day,
in addition to a quantity of cig-
arete recovered at the apprenhen-
slnn of the two youthful suspects
and an older man who was also
quizzed, city police by Saturday had
recovered several cots, an electric
fan, and several other small articles
Identified as loot from recent burg-
laries. they reported. -
wguratine ■ tegan Cheseseze oL mome6
Commerce officials comtd-nd be
ride in a speed race as at Wau-
— seon, Ohio. on a bicycle. —
Hewon the race, and a chsm-
pionship, and a lanky enthusi-
ast hoisted him to his shoul-
ders
"Bet you never heard of
Hank carrying anyone else on
his shoulders," Oldfield said.
"Hank ” was Henry Ford, the
automobile manufacturer.
.0 -.5*2
2uuoe--je8
Ah-n .ei....
BATON ROUGE, La, Sept 7.—
(m—— Louisiana legislators were told
informally today to assemble for a
special session tonight at 10 p. m.
to enact more of Senator Huey P.
Long's Statutory decrees into law.
Although both Long and Gov. O.
K. Allen remained silent about the
extra session, it was learned that
everything was set in readiness for
the solon convocation.
The governor reached the state-
house early and was understood to
be directing the draft of the formal
sersion call
The major purpose of the session
was reliably understood to be the
enactment of legislation designed to
help the City of New Orleans in its
financial troubles.
Statehouse circles, however, were
penerally uninformed as to the spe-
cific character of the acts to be
passed.
The session is to be five days tn
length, the minimum possible, like
all other Huey Long extra sessions.
■ nd is to be terminated in time for
the Senattor to depart on a tr-
state speaking tour beginning Sept.
14.
ADDIS ABABA, Sept. 7—(P
One hundred twenty-nine turbaned
Sikhs with curled beards and half-
moon earrings- the 14th Punjab
regiment come from India as Brit-
ish legation guards shivered to
- I
■ + —4
Eea-rE- ■ ■ ——e
—=== - I
—-—=2 I
emggssaga—ee - I
—-en- - - ■
s—e — "
•_____ 4
BERLIN, Sept 7.—•P——The prop-
asanda ministry disclosed today
that Dr. Hans Lather, German am-
bassador at Washington, has been
instructed to protest the dismissal
at New York yesterday at charges
of unlawfut assembly against five
men arrested in the recent steam-
ship Bremen incident.
The proteitCwas decided upon af-
ter a full report of Magistrate
Louis D Erodsky's action bad
reached the foreign office.
New York dispatches relating the
release of the five men superseded
other news in afternoon newspapers
but Magistrate Brodosky’s remarks
in giving his decision were not pub-
lished.
ADDIS ABABA, Sept. 7.
—(AP)—Italian Minister
Vinci today ordered all
Italan consulates in Ethi-
opia withdrawn.
The minister acted on orders re-
ceived from Premier Mussolini. The
date for the withdrawal was 8ept.
15.. —________.2
Diplomatic observers feared clos-
ing the Italian consulates meant
Premier Mussolini was determined
to go to war to settle the Italo-
Ethioplan dispute, despite decisions
of the League of Nations Council at
Geneva
(8
and civilians in great numbers,
when the mad storm slashed the
government relief camps where they
were quartered on Matecumbe Key.
The Red Cross said the number
dead of missing totalled 446.
Even though president Roosevelt,
at Hyde Park, N. Y„ still was re-
luctant to take the step for crema-
tion of the bodies. Governor Sholtz
and Dr. Hanson said it was a ques-
tion of protecting public health,
and that bodies which could not
be burled immediately in the Keys
would be burned
Hanson, as state health officer,
said he would not allow shipment
of bodies from the keys unless they
were in hermetically sealed cas-
kets.
Actual burial of the veterans was
expected to be delayed until late
today or Sunday, W R Smith, sec-
retary to Governor Sholtz, said af-
ter a midnight conference attend-
ed by Federal, state, city, county,
public health and Red Cross offi-
cials "Suitable arrangements must
be made," Smith said
Charges Lack of Warning
Govenor Sholtz announced he
would go to Washington next week
to hand to President Roosevelt a re-
port on casualties, property dam-
age. possible rehabilitation and
charges that adequate warning of
the storm's approach was not given
by the weather bureau.
State Attorney G. A. Worley,
Aubrey Williams, personal repre-
sentative of Harry D. Hopkins, Fed-
eral administrator, and the Amer-
ican Legion launched investigations
into the disaster that overtook the
three veterans camps on the Keys.
Worley after an inquiry exoner-
ated the Florida east coast railway
of charges of unreasonable delay
in sending a train to get the vet-
erans. The storm wrecked the train.
Governor Sholtz said he found
no occasion, on a personal inspec-
tion tour in the death area, to or-
der in additional national guards-
men or to place the area under
military control.
"Except for the relief workers,
all those not dead already have
been moved out," he said
The governor, Dr Hanson and
all others who visited the area de-
scribed conditions there as appall-
ing. Hanson said bacchlus gas pols-
oning was a danger to rescue work-
ers.
,2s.
1356
x 5 - --
Little Elm pupils will be permit-
ted to attend the Denton public
schools, Supt. R. C. Patterson said
Saturday.
Denton and Lewisville have been
designated e -receiving districta,
and pupils for grades not to be
Vaneht at Little Elm may attend
either the Denton or Lewisville
schools without cost, and aranspor-
tation Is to be furnisched by both
districts. Parents are to be permit-
ted to make choice of schools, he
-aid. Denton's bus route wiul start
opereting Monday, Sept. 16, through
Lark Dallas
Patterson also stated that the Na-
va bus route would be extended to
Ion and Naw Hope. The road is to
be graveled over the lengthened
distance. Commissioner Hub Clark
and people of the district co-oper-
ating in the project.
-------
---
sgM9.
- ^,..16,....-..
EAST TEXAS: Clony, total
thewers tonight and Sunday. Light
to fresh eat in southeast winds an
the eonst.
695
Widening Court
Square Streets
Traffic Proposal
BRITISH PROTECTORATE PLAN SSxSS
“283533
Px-k*
}ec-a9r )
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 21, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 7, 1935, newspaper, September 7, 1935; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539376/m1/1/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.