Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 71, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1937 Page: 1 of 10
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1
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
======
vol. xxxvn
DENTON TEXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 5, 1937
NO. 71
TEN PAGES
Associated Press Leased Wire
War’s Tide Turns Settlement into No Man's Land
PRESIDENT FAVORS RE-UNION
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CHAPRI
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poonrK
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Drive Chinese
OCTOBER SHOWS
LARGEST POSTAL
(5), anchored in the Whangpoo which have supported the land attack.
f
-
RECEIPTS EVER
its kind in the navy and when
said today C. I.
Informed
i
more correspondence due to the tn-
Fail to Agree
I
Witnesses Tell of
■
1
M. P. Financing
The memorandum said "the com-
’ l
HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Bor-
der. Nov 5.—(P,—Spa
insur-
The binl, designed to
nine
The conference balloted
222
o.
ner-
11
-
63
ndamceaenna
•ane44-
-
1
Turkeys Moving
In Volume Now
State Deficit Note
Above 15 Millions
Vnification of
T wo Branches of
Methodism Leads
Wage-Hour Bill
Revision Predicted
Roosevelt Becomes
Most Travelled of
All U. S. Presidents
From Villages on
Soochow Creek
WINDSORS TO DISREGARD LABOR
PROTESTS ON VISIT FEATURES
AUTO DRIVER'S EAR QUICKER
THAN EYE, DRIVING TESTS SHOW
President Warns
Stock Speculator
OF LABOR FACTIONS. BUT IS
NOT AIDING NEGOTIATIONS
HITLER REQUESTED BY BOTH
JAPS AND CHINESE TO ACT
AS MEDIATOR IN DISPUTE
Not To Reduce Pension Grants
Unless Revenues Slump or Banks
Force Repayment of Loan to Fund
Franco Claims
More Advances
Bituminous Coal
Commission Confers
Dental
Bill
Saved
pel last week,
nese to move I
Windsor had
nitely waved i
the west along Soochow Oreek, the Chinese "dug in" to halt the Japanese advance southward, directed at
cutting the Chinese off from Shanghai From a ware house in shell-tom Chapel (3) a Chinese "Lost Battal-
Retreat of Chinese troops west
placed Shanghai's International
and hour standards
gaged in interstate
permit a federal
mum wages as '
studying to be radio men. We are
attending the only radio school of
'point a contemplated committee of
conciliation until they obtained from
Japan an answer on the projected
rd to fix mtni-
as 40 cents an
1
-
noRT
stanon
tion win be put to a vote at the
quadrennial conference in Birming-
ham, Ala.. next May.
I
The Demonstration High School
football team of Teachers College
lost their first game of the season
to a Junior College. Terrell Military
College. Thursday night in a hotly
contested game, 18 to 14. Such a
score of a high school team against
a Junior College team gave stiU
further evidence that the Demon-
stration boys have a mighty fne,
fighting aggregation
JAPANGSE DRIVE SOUTH
AGAINST STRonG
CHINESE UN*
CHINESE HALT
JADANESE ADVANCE
AFTER RETREATING
FROM CHAPS!
‘NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 5 —()
—With ballots in from 27 out of 43
conferences. unification advocates
in the Methodist Episcopal Church.
South. held today a seven-to-one
lead over those opposing the union.
In the 37 conferences having vot-
ed on the question, 4823 churchman
favored uniting all branches of the
church in this country, with 666 in
Would Name Leaders
WASHINGTON, Nov 5—-An
posts (4) also drew British
reeled shells of Japanese w
W — ■-
pointed out that Japan, a nine-
power pact signatory who refused to
come to Brussels, had left the door
open for the friendly offices of pow-
ers with interests in the Far East.
The University of Pavla. Italy,
was founded in 825 .
sttively and den-
i" the suggestion
rove wage
workers en-
i. would
Mother, to son wandering about
the room, "What are you looking
for?"
Son; “Nothing."
■ Mother: "Youl find it in the box
where the candy was."
slon of the membership of the com-
mittee of conciliation had left to
controversial debate.
Delegations to the conference,
which is seeking amicable settle-
Informal Invitation Disclosed as Brussels Con-
ference Fails to Agree; Jap Troops Advance
Again.
$4 PER CAPITA
FUND RELEASED
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.—(AP)—President Roosevelt
told a press conference today he had always favored re-union
of the American Federation of Labor and the Committee for
Industrial Organization.
His first word of the preamble
Ito the United States constitution
to “we."
WASHINGTON. Nov. 5 — () —
President Roosevelt took the unusual
step today of calling in the entire
Bituminous Coal Commission, ap-
parently to discuss the difficulties
which have split the seven members
into two factions.
No details accompanied the White
House announcement of the meet-
ing, set for 13:13 p. m., Eastern
Standard Time.
Dissension over personnel appoint-
ments and other management poli-
cies have divided the commission.
Statement Made at Press Conference; Super-
Committee to Manage Labor Unions Asked
By C. I. O. Leader*.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.-0—
House labor legislators forecast to-
day the administration's wage-hour
bill would be revised substantially
before it reaches the House floor.
Representatives Thomas (D-Tex
and Keller (D-ID. first members
of the labor committee to return for
the special sebston, predicted their
group would recall the bill from ths
rules committee, which kept it bot-
tied up last sesaion. + >
Both men said they believed the
bill, which has passed the Senate,
could be improved.
Thomas urged elimination of some
of the exemptions now in the meas-
ure.
times to select its remaining clergy
delegates. who included: J. W. Mills
of Beaumont, A T. Walker ot
HuttsviHe, 8. a McKenney of
Houston, E J Harris of Qalveston.
Lay delegates chosen ineluded H.
L. Lowman of Goose Creek. Earl
Hui for of Huntsville
M—L .a—— ......i xi?s
The President gave his comment
in reply to the final question put
at his first press interview since re-
turning to Washington after a 12-
day stay at Hyde Park His state-
ment came a few hours before
peace committees of the A. F ol
L. and C. I. O were to resume their
sessions.
Asked if the administration had
been taking an active part in try-
ing to get the warring labor fac-
1100,000 Gift for
Baptist Seminary
15
West Oak Paving
Dispute Settled
Controversy over paving the ex-
treme end of West Oak Street has
been settled and the paving will
proceed along its original planned
procedure. Mayor J. L. Wright said
Friday. The mayor was a mem?
ber of a committee named by the
City Commission to confer with A.
(The abdicated king and Wallis
Warfield, formerly of Baltimore
were married at Bedaux' French
chateau)
Postal receipts here were larger
‘ October than in any month
through here we will be
at it. Loren Dukes and 1
gan are still at the trail
■ley, property owner who n-
lly had objected to paving
/
/
lgueeE
! (
Jape Not Wining
TOKYO. Nov. S.—(P—A Japanese
foreign office source declared today
that Japan was "unable to accept
any mediation whatsoever" in her
conflict with China
He made the statement when ask-
ed to comment on reports from Ber-
lin that Chancellor Adolf Htler had
been asked to act as mediator in the
hostilities. Despite his assertion, it
was learned that Japanese and Ger-
man diplomats recently had con-
ferred with each other.
"Japan does not recede from her
original contention that peace is
possible only through direct nego-
tiations between Japan and China,
and then only if China changes her
attitude," the source said.
---- By Associated Press 44
MILAN, O—J, L Sheperd, 62,
postmaster, figured he needed
some teeth so* be went to a
dentist to be fitted for plates.
An examination revealed he was
sprouting a brand new set of
molars
--------- ' . s
Fisherman’s Luck ;
BUFFALO, N Y—The "fish-
erman" is working here again.
Last winter police received nu-
merous reports that punea had
disappeared while parties were
in progress. Often a window was
found open, a fishing pole out-
side. Than the robberies stop-
ped.
But today, a party guest re-
ported the loss of a purse. Po-
lice found an open window-
and on the grass a fishing ple.
BRUSSELS. Nov. 5.—)—Con- of this year totaled 48,56401, $616.40
ferees on the Chinese-Japanese con- more than the 87937.81 collected
niet failed today to reach an agree- during October last year. This Is a
ment on the wording of a peace 7,75 per cent increase over last
(By Associated Press)
While the rest of the world talked vaguely of an armis-
tice in the Orient, it developed today that Chancellor Adolf
Hitler of Germany had received informal requests to act as
the mediator from both China and Japan.
bted the Japs-
men across the
during
in ths
growth of the system's capital struc- i P Reuther, manager of the crude
ture. ' oil department of Shell Corpora-
The investigators asked Benjamin tion to officials of the company, tell-
J. Buttenwieser, partner in Kuhn, ing of a meeting of major oil com-
Loeb and Co., and his staff to dis- pany representatives in the office
cuss the relationship of that New i of Edward J Bullock official of the
York banking house to the Missouri standard Oil Company of Indiana.
Pacific's financial policies from 1917 . in Chicago
to 1930. 1 — - ----
MADISON, Wis., Nov. 5.—(—
Prosecutors in the federal govern- .
ment’s gasoline price-fixing case be-
gan reading more letters and tele-
grams to the Jury today from more
Gs
tons together, he replied not that
ad when get he knew of.
AUSTIN. Nov. 5.—(-The deficit
in the state's general fund soared
past the 315,000,000 mark today.
State Treasurer Charley Lockhart
reported it was $15,747,888, com-
pared to $14,431,283 on October 30.
the date of the last report.
Lockhart called for payment all
general fund warrants through last
April S. The new call number was
134,124.
The latest deficit in the Confed-
erate pension fund was $4,947,212.
crease in both colleges attendance,
he stated. The recelpte for October
1 Standard OU of New Jersey Chys-
ler, Santa Fe Bethlehem Steel.
' United States Rubber, J. I. Osse. Du-
Pont. Eastman Kodak and other
leading issues responded quickly to
the upswing.
Urge Memorials
for 90th Division
' . - a_
TULSA, Okla., Nov. 5.—(—-1Me-
morials at Austin and Oklahoma
City to the men of the Texas-Ok-
lahoma 90th World War Division
were given consideration today at
the annual three-day convention of
the division association
Under plans advanced tentative-
ly the monuments would cost about
$25,000 each and funds from vari-
ous association sources and private
donations are being gathered
M H Watts of Tulsa, president
of the association, said a seven-
man memorial commission proba-
bly would be appointed, composed
of three men from Texas, three
from Oklahoma and the new asso-
ciation president acting ex-omcio.
&,
FF
5-
Messages Read
- to Oil Case Jury
gents claimed advances today in two
sectors of the Aragon front
Their daily communique report-
ed capture of new positions in up-
per Aragon near Bablnanlgo and
Villamayor
A government communique re-
ported fighting along the arago-
za-Heruel Railway in the extreme
southern part of Aragon.
(In Madrid the government de-
fense ministry reported two French
merchant vessels were attacked
yesterday off the Eastern Spanish
coast but both escaped uhder the
protection of French destroyers.
(An early message from Barcelo-
na—later corrected--said the La
Corse had been sunk).
r ARMAMELDSY
L- a*A*«f*r
m anrarmamonz
2 UTTLeMtHT
Nov. 5.—(.John P.
Wallace, board of control membet,
testified today that penston grants
would not have to be cut unlebs
revenues slumped or a group M
banks forced payment of a $1827,-
000 loan.
His reply to rumors that many
thousands would be dropped from
the rolls was that “ths board has
no information to indicate any ma-
terial change in the case load."
Wallace was a witness before the
House departmental investigating
committee.
The board of control member dia
not take into consideration repay-
ment of any of the loan except the
$300,000 which will be paid between
" than 13 tons of documents and rec-
WASHINGTON Nov. 5 — •2 — ords obtained by the government
Senate investigators, reconstructing from fles of 23 oil companies be-
the turbulent financial history of the ing tried on charges of conspiring
Missouri Pacific railroad, called to raise and peg gasoline prices in
bankers and railroad officials to the 1935 and 1936
witness stand today to describe the One was a memorandum from A
New Orleans, Texas and Mexico
Railroad stock by the Missouri Pa-
cific
Committee exhibits showed that
in 1934 Missouri Pacific acquired 51
per cent of the New Orleans, Texas
and Mexico voting stock from Blair
and Company and W A. Harriman
and Company of New York at $120
a shore
Buttenwieser testified Kuhn, Loeb
and Company received $192,000 for
its "advice" and assistance in ne-
gotiating the purchase.
Committee Investigators asserted
the market value of the stock at
that time Was about $100 a share,
but Buttenwieser replied that the
figure mentioned by the investiga-
tors would have applied only to
small blocks of stock and not to the
purchase of controlling interest
AUSTIN. Nov. 5. — (P) — L. A.
Woods, state superintendent of edu-
cation, announced today a $4 per
capita apportionment of the avail-
able school fund was being released
to depository banks.
The apportionment aggregated
$6,266,608, based upon 1,566,608 scho-
lastics.
The department stated more than
500 independent school districts
would not receive the warrants be-
cause they had not qualified by fil-
ing an approved depository bond for
the biennium 1937-1938 Presidents
of school boards were notified July
1 that new bonds were required on
Sept 1.
“I don't particularly relish circu-
lars being thrown in our yard nor
put in the screen door, but when it
comes to an out-of-town firm bring-
ing their circulars to my house,
well. I just don’t like the idea at
all," said a Denton housewife. "In
the first place Denton people should
buy all their needs where possible
right’here from their home-town
merchants and friends I haven't
heard of any out-of-town merchant
helping us with our charity mat-
ters. our schools, our churches, civic
matters or helping in any of the
things that go to make of Denton
a better town."
,1
to omission of China's complaints London gold price focused fnan-
against Japan, in the present draft clal atteuan on American mone-
which includes references to Japan's tary policy
complaints against China. i Ths gole spre early In the day
Spaak’s draft. submitted to the was fixed m London at the equly-
conference today, emphasised that alemt o $3494 an ounce and later
the Brussels conference, under the was .AraTwAi to 335.10 10 cents
nineaPohelaPort toeprotegtctnAs an ounce hieher
tlonsasahownbythezpresenceof Amaebcnpsh“condonss"fees"mSar-
B United States delegation • ket in two vears
• The . proposed communication dola “haresprecipitated an ear
ly rally on the stock market. Hone-
stake Mining was up more than $3
and others were fractionally to M or
more higher. United States Steel -
Buttenwieser described his firm's 1 mittee . agreed that a continuous
participation In the purchase of purchasing program is necessary. It
was agreed that the most effective
method would be for individual ma-
jor purchasers to arrange with in-
dividual small refiners to keep their
material off the market."
The memorandum did not name
the companies represented at the
meeting.
The government alleges a program
of buying the output of small re-
along his holdings on that street
After discussing the situation,
Owsley withdrew all objections on
an agreement his property would
not be damaged through dredging
out a roadside ditch in creating
a shoulder for the street. Wright
mid.
If no more interest is taken in the
coming charter election than was
evidenced at the mass meeting call-
ed and held Thursday night in the
City auditorium, the election may
near go by default. There were
few people at the meeting to hear
the matter discussed. Dr Robert
T. Day presided at the meeting and
talks were made by him. Commis-
sioner Lee Johnson, City Attorney
Ed Key and B W McKenzie
The election will be held Novem-
ber 33.
leather
: tut mum •
Correlation of
AU Agencies of
Church Urged
■mUMKAMK. Ark„ Nov 5—( .
—During Ba six-mon th Alders-Gate
commemoration. Bishop A. Frank
Smith said today. the Methodist
Episcopal Church. South. must de-
monstrate its ability to operate effi-
ciently.
The Aldersgate observance run-
ning from December through May
M will honor John Wesley, founder
of Methodism who was converted
in Aldersgate Street, London. two
hundred years ago.
Bishop Smith told the Texas Con-
terence of the church the “time has
come for correlation of all agen-
cies of the church to demonstrate
its efficiency. From December until
May the sole thought ot the church
will be on this theme at bringing
together our hearts and heads.3
gnd south from Chapel. after heavy fighting around North Station (),
Settlement in new peril as the "No Man's Land" of the war. Drawn up to
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5—(—
Franklin D. Roosevelt has become
the nation's most traveled Presi-
dent.
His arrival from Hyde Park, N. Y..
last night ended the eighth 600-mile
round trip to his mother's estate
this year and raised his aggregate
travel mileage since he became chief
executive to 114,006
This barely passed the 114X100
miles covered bv William Howard
Taft from 1909 to 1913.
O. L. Fowler, manager of the
Denton Chamber of Commerce, and
Bob Edwards are in Dallas to at-
tend a meeting of the Central
Committee of the Kessler Plan As-
soclation, which is an organisation
planning a five year program of
free service for the towns and trade
territory in this section of Texas in
an effort to bring normal growth
to the town and development of
trade territory for all the smaller
towns.
- .
to attempt to force repayment.
Wallace’s statement was baaed on
an estimate that proceeds of exist-
ing revenues would continue as good
as they were in October, when they
were about $120,000 above the pre-
' yigs average. c-
appeal to be sent to Japan. They year's recipta
adjourned until tomorrow, . . ■ .......
" “Sir" “ Gains Pared on
Stock Markets
After Big Spurt
merbcafebnescnurzbapamsecysona
treaty, were preparing written leisurely drift today after a flurry
amendments this afternoon to the of excitement touched off by a jump
The nine-power treaty conferees
at Brussels adjourned until tomor-
row. falling to agree on the word-
ing of a peace appeal to Japan.
Germany prepared to enter the
pact between Italy and Japan
against Communism, but German
diplomats did not believe this would
prejudice Hitler’s possible role at
mediator of the Far Eastern strug-
gle as Germany and Chinese rela-
tions were also considered friendly.
At Shanghai, rich trade metropo-
lis of the Orient, Japanese troops
swept farther in the drive to en-
circle the city, capturing four vil-
lages on the fringe of the Interna-
tional settlement.
Great Britain appealed to both
sides of Spain's civil war for ap-
proval of the non-intervention plan
What’* Wrong Here?
POCATELLO, Idaho—Coeds
ton" was evacuated. after heavy losses. Japanese precipitated a anew "Incident” by invading Settlement
boundaries (3) held by U. S. marthes, to capture a Chi nese junk Japanese machine-gunning of British out-
“itic fire Latest danger to inhabitants of the Settlement was from misdi-
The moon-man and B M Hol-
Hngsworth can say that their proph-
ecy of a rain by Thursday came out
all right, as it did rain Thursday
nlgth around 11 o'clock. But it
cant be said that it was one of
those million dollar kind.
On Wagon
DENVER—O M. Rundahl fell
off the wagon and saw more
snakes than he cares to think
about.
The fanner's left leg was brok-
en when his team shied at a
snake and toppled him from
the wagon. He crawled half a «
mile through snake-Infested
prairie to a highway, where he
was found and rushed to a hos-
pital.
"There were a lot of snakes
around?' said Rundahl, but he
realized “If I ddnt get help I
would bleed to death."
, FORT WORTH, Nov 5.—(—
Property valued at more than $100,-
000 has been willed the Southwest-
i era Baptist Theological Seminary
here by a New Mexico oil man. Dr.
: L. A. Scarborough president an-
onunced today.
i The bequest was made by The-
i odore Anderson, 81, of monument.
N M . and includes eight producing
i oil wells and 450 acres of land on
which other wells are to be drilled.
WASHINGTON, Nov 5.—(-
President Roosevelt said today that
the more dangerous stock specula-
tion becomes the less people ought
to go in for it.
The president made his comment
on stock market activities when
asked at a press conference tf he
planned to take any steps to make
stock speculation less dangerous.
He said there were two ways of
looking at that—the more danger-
ous it is, the less people ought
to Indulge in speculation.
He added if It were not dangerous
everybody would make money.
Asked if he considered the market
dangerous, the President said that
question did not make sense.
creek on a line two miles west of
RuMron village.
Heavy rains greatly curtailed
Japanese air bombardments.
Japanese forces opened their 13th
week at Shanghai warfare today
with an offensive designed to drive
Chinese south of their new de-
feme lines along Soochow Creek.
The Japanese push started along
a one-mile front after 10 days of
preparatlon and skirmishes which
followed the Chinese retreat from
the Chapel section north of the
International Settlement. Chinese
faced the advancing Japanese from
lines nearly a mile south of the
creek.
During the night, Japanese were
believed to have pushed south-
ward. A prolonged artillery bom-
bardment ushered in the drive
The Japanese objective apparent-
ly was the Hungjao airdrome
fineries was a part of the con-
spiracy
W. L. and H. C. Kiepper, Den-
ton boys stationed at San Diego,
California, where they are studying
radio in the United States Navy,
write the following intn eating let-
ter to Roundabout:
“I thought that I would write
and let you know how much my
brother and I are enjoying the dally
paper which we are getting sent
out here
"We have been getting it for
about a week now and even if the
news is about three days old when
it gets here we sti like to read
about what is going on In our old
home town. We read every wort
from the front to the back—even
the advertisements which we also
enjoy, especially the M-8ystem add
because I spent four years working
there.
"This Navy is a swell place and
the home town is well represented
out here. My brother and myself
are here at the destroyer base
Friday, second day of the Thanks-
giving turkey market, the Denton
turnover reached a good volume,
buyers reported, though they made
no estimate of the day's probable
total receipts.
Pickers were needed at the local
dressing plant as it opened Fri-
day and E. A. Nall, manager, esti-
mated he would have demand for
pickers virtually every day during
the dressing season that -lasts to
Nov. 13
First carload of dressed birds
may move Saturday Opening ship-
ments of live Weight birds, by
truck, went out Thursday eve-
ning from here.
Quotations remained unchanged
Friday since the opening bids post-
ed Thursday. No 1 fowls were quot-
ed 14 cents delivered to market.
13 cents on the farm; old hens
and toms were quoted three cents
lower; No. 3 birds five cents un-
der No. 1 quality.
SHANGHAI, Nov. 5.—(—Japa-
nese troops, in a surprise attack,
today drore Chinese defenders from
four villages an the South bank of
Soochow Creak.
This actiom, the first deciatveien-
gagement in the Shanghai fighting
since Chinee troops evacuated ha-
BLOOMINOTON, Ind., Nov. 5-
(P—The ear of an automobile driv-
er is quicker than his eye in re-
sponding to a safety warning.
An auto horn, or a pollceman's
whistle, puts the dHivefsfootonthe
brake faster than the sight of a red
light.
These findings in safe driving
were announced today at Indiana
Untverstty. They were the first tests
to compare a driver's reaction time
to sound and sight
Seven hundred drivers were test-
ed Each one cat in the driver’s
ssat. With one foot pressing the ac-
celerator half way to the floor. The
time required to lift thia foot to the
brake and press the pedal all the
way down was taken.
PARIS. Nov. S—(P—The duke
and duchess of Windsor today dis-
regarded an American labor protest
against "slumming parties professing
to help and study labor" and pro-
ceeded with plans to sail on the’
liner Bremen tomorrow for a United
States tour.
A representative of the duke said
no change of arrangements had been
made or contemplated. 1
(The Baltimore Federation of La-
bor Wednesday night "condemned"
the former British monarch for
planning to tour America with
______ ______ - _ opposition.
now and Jan. 1. He said the banks j After completion of a conference
so far had cooperated to the fullest voting about December 30, the ques-
extent and he did not expect them — - • -
history of the Denton port
office, it was announced Friday
morning This is attributed to bet:
for withdrawing foreign soldters. terjwrtness conditions here. B. W.
Meanwhile, Franco’s troops pounded MeKenzea postmaster, said.
the eastern front and reported two There has peen more direct:
advances in Areson. "" cdverth&g tn the city and
W
tion. Gentle to
and will be home on leave next
month when they finish the train-
ing period. James Clark of Little 1
Elm is up in an electrical ■
school and will get his leave Christ- ]
mas.
"I got a letter from my buddy. L.
F Rowlett, who is in China with the
Marines. He joined the Marines
about a week after I came out here
in the Navy. I will send you a part
of his letter as it should make good
news as it is the real stuff from
the front lines by one of the home
town boys.
"‘Dear Klep,
“ ‘How is every thing on the State
side?
“ We are having hell and high (
water over here. You should have ,
seen the air raid last night. A Jap ।
plane came over the Chinese lines
His guns jammed and the Chinks
got him with the anti-aircraft gum.
The poor devil died a horrible
death: he was standing up trying ,
to clear his gum. but did not make
it.
" ‘We can see the big shells
breaking and bear the gum fire.
"‘I saw the Chinese blow up
Ichang Road Bridge. They shot at
it all afternoon before they got it.
The Chinks or the Japs cant hit a
abuda with a tew Addle- —,
■ -Money "goes three times as far
"over here as it does in the States
That makes my pay pretty high
which is worth some after all.
" ‘Well, I do not know much to
say so will sign off till next time.
Your best pal.
Lon.’ ”
at the University of Idaho,
Southern branch, are having
kisshess Satas sad liking ik
The reason: Male students
began a whisker growing con-
test.
—
4
-
The signal to put on the brake
was either a red light directly in,
front, or an automobile horn. The
signals were given with the car
standing still. All groups, whether
men or women, young or old, re-
sponded more quickly to the horn
than to the light
The average advantage of the oar
over the eye was one-hundredth of
a second.
Men were a little faster than wo-
men in responding to either tight
er horn.
Braking time decreased moder-
ately with the age of the subject
Persons with the higher mental
ratings were quicker than any
other class
Charles E Bedaux as his guide,
terming Bedaux an “arch-enemy of
labor.” The resolution contained the
“slumming party” reference
(Bedaux. an industrial engineer,
is Inventar of a work system which
labor men call the stretch-out"
Last night tn New York Bedaux said
he had telephoned the duke offer-
ing to withdraw as guide, but that
peace appeal. Preliminary discus-
EAST TEXAB: Parity cleudy
exeept showers near lowest eras*,
cosier tenight; Saturday partly
etoady, warmer in northweat per-
Cherty to easterty winds on the enest.
WEST TEXAS: Partly clendy.
reeler in north and eart peril—
tonight; Satarny parity steady,
warmer In north poren
OKLAHOMA: Falr, cooler la mouth
portien tonight: aSturday fair, war-
mer.
Me that sacriniceth unto any god,
save the Lord only, ba shall be ut-
tarty destroyed—Exodus 33-38.
They that deny God, destroy
man's nobility, for clearly man is
of kin to the beasts by his body,
and if he be not a kin to God by
his spirit, he is a base and ignoble
creature Bacon
f ROUND
I ABOUT
TOWN
draft of the peace appeal submitted in the open market pruce 0 6
by the Belgian foreign minister,’in London
Paul H . Speak. ( Exceptifor gold -«heres, :whicn
Tomorrow conferees hope to reach held around ths best levels; eanv
agreement on the final text. Brit- gains running from a few cents
lab delegates said "hopeful progress" to more than 83 were pared down
was made today. later. Some commodities aiso mi-
The Chinese delegation objected lled moderately as the rise in the
O members at the labor peace con-
ferenc had suggested to A. F. of
L representatives creation at a
- super-C<iiiiii*tti)" of 25 to direct
the whole American labor move-
ment.
This specific proposal for ending
the bitter fight between the two
workers’ organizations became
known only shortly after President
Roosevelt had told a press confer-
ence he always had favored re-
union of the American Federation
of Labor and the committee for in-
dustrial organization.
The proposed committee was de-
scribed as an executive council, pre-
sumably to be composed of repre-
sentatives of each organization
The labor peace conference,
membership, struck at the funda-
mental issue between the A. F.
of L. and the C. L O. today by
agreeing to discuss which indus-
tries aould have broad industrial
unions.
Observers interested in ending the
mo-year dispute between these
factions of organized labor called
the dectalon a hopeful sign Nego-
tlators for both sides indicated for
the first time that there had been
some actual progress.
The dispute has grown ever since
John L. Lewis an dhts C. I. O. asso-
ciates set out to organize single
unions for such industries as steel,
automobiles and rubber after the
A. F of L insisted that highly skilled
workers everything should join the
union of their crafts.
CHINESE
NATIVE
---a CITY
_______
-week as short as
hour and A
40 hours It also would ban prod-
ucts of child labor from inter-state
trade
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 71, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1937, newspaper, November 5, 1937; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540048/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.