Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 170, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 1, 1938 Page: 3 of 10
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DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
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VOL XXXVII
NO. 170
GOERING WARNS EUROPE
(
Back to Gttod Earth Under Rising Sun
n
MIGHTYAIRFORCEREADYTO
—A-
PROTECT GERMAN MILLIONS
f Ere
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Two Notes Are
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(Wept over Chinese homesteads in the fierce fighting around Shanghai, the far-
are returning to their bits of the Good Earth under shadow of the
t
ul eyes of Japanese soldiers.
Amarillo Man
Badly Hurt by
No Public Hearings Now
by an
",
amaediakarnumhidcoermpoohopet -
w
ught some
He mentioned the tax law as one
landed in a tree fifty feet away
now outstanding, to be purchased by
completed congresstonal action on
ceiling and roof
Another car in the garage was
Doughton (D-NC) formally Intro- chinese army at 100,000 turned in
Windows of nearby buildings were
on power
A?
He received permtssion to file a vast area to the north and east
8. E Fish. Mr Kecks attorney.
report on the legislation at any
said, will have all day tomorrow to
continuously by
to route
unese armed forces remamea -
I
A
I
where were
i
I
MAN
iUi
Ing." the physician said. "He is ]
March Comes in
the Denton County Teachers As-
MARCH
Bernard Harneh
at S
a
THUR.FRLGAt.
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$
TO DRAFT WAGE-HOUR BILL
IN EFFORT TO REACH ACCORD
Chinese Flee
Before Jap Hordes
Hit at Chinese
Communist Enemy
County Teachers
Name Delegates
lo Denton Meet
Big
Paper
Profits
at
he
I-
3.
EABT
night I
physical handicaps and restitant
unemployment constitutes a seri-
The 18 delegates and nine alter-
nate delegates to represent Denton
County at the business besstons of
the North Texas district convention
of the Texas State Teachers As-
SEEK TO FIND WORK FOR
MOMO IDLE EX-SERVICE MEN
e amerted hom-
• ofTenstves else-
in check.
When the Japanese ana
men fled to the safety
past, thousands of the i
Rising Sun and the
particularly worried, as his sport
is still available
a third anniversary celel
Germany's new air force,
as air minister created.
liminary to the opening of the trial
tomorrow
slon was ready for House considera-
tion The farm and housing pro-
grams already are law
Those who will serve with Ram-
speck on the wage-hour sub-com-
death
"He slept six and one-half hours
and seemed much better this morn-
heard the explosion, which rocked
j the fashionable neighborhood, and
rushed to the scene
He lifted Mr Keck off the garage
floor Mrs Keck. still tn bed, was
severely jarred by the explosion
She rushed out to the garage
A policeman who saw both the
sociatiom.
These delegates were chosen by
a popular vote of paid-up mem-
bers of the association last week.
—
Told to Try to Work Out Satisfactory Measure;
No Public Hearings Now But Congressmen
to Be Consulted. ‘2
at the Yellow River.
The Chinese retreat was bombed
to amend MB empowering president
to revamp Federal agencies.
ssion-
order
JOO of
ice by
i tercet
in for redemption April 1
order at the County Com
ens Court passed Monday. I
the county may liquidate 1
the debt and refund the be
new bonds bearing a lower
rate.
The $19,000 balance to
funded will be handled
Callihan * Jackson of Delk
firm who succesafully bid
tasue, and it ariil be refu
l-
Ignorance Is Bliss
POCATELLO. Idaho— "Some
boys are playing soccer with
some sticks." a quiet-loving com-
plainant phoned police
officers found the sticks—25
of them—were dynamite The
boys said they found them
EIGHT RAGES
Dead Wrong
ALTOONA. Pa —Firemen who
5
ough
bond
r the
■d m
, - — - • ment, one phase of the program,
he International Settlement But now that the tidal wave of war has rolled on ’ was before the Senate Tax revi-
badly wrecked, with all glass broken,
the tires blownout and- the hood
thrown from the car.
Windows Shattered
March Comes in
Like Lion; Snow and
Gales in Northeast
the 9260.000.000 emergency relief ap-
propriation. sending it to the white
House The funds were to be used
during the next four months
Shortly thereafter Chairman
Denton certainly looked like one
of the "white spots" of the business
world Saturday afternoon and night.
The streets and sidewalks were
crowded with throngs of people and
merchants advise that trade was
active in every line. It was one at
those days when you noticed the
large numbers of packages being
carried to waiting automobMes. The
whole of Texas is one of the na-
tion’s whitest spots in the business
charts and Denton seems to be right
in the big middle of the white
area.
“There will not be public hear- but the authorities had considered
Ings because we cant undertake the supposition that a decimal point
them at this time." Chairman Ram- had been intended after the thira
speck said "We are going to con- figure.
"We tingle with eagerness to show
we are invincible," Goering said at
Relief Bill Pamed
WASHINGTON, March 1. —(-
Enal House approval sent to the
White House today a $250,000,000
emergency relief appropriation for
the next four months
-----=
DENTON, TEXAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 1,-1938
The age at a rattlesnake is not
computed by the number of his rat-
ties. A rattler may grow two to four
buttons a year.
God hath made man upright; but
they have sought out many inven-
lions.—EcclesiasUs 7-29.
Man is a restless thing; stn vain
and wild. Lives beyond sixty, nor
outgrows the chM—Watts.
AGRARIANS QUIT LAND WHEN
SOLDIERS APPEAR
MEXICO CITY, March 1—(—
Scores of Agrarian squatters who
laid out a city on a haclehda near
the village at La Piedad deserted
it today when Federal soldiers ap-
peered. They had "seibed" the ha-
clenda sundaydemanding govem-
ment exprn,w latten of the "land.
study the report.
Role" Conaidered
Leaders. meanwhile, discussed to-
day the advtsabtiity of recommend-
lng a gag rule” to hasten a vote
lde--e
--68
The "shameful pre ng of Versailles
he said, broke and abolished the
Fatherland's former 4tr fleet but
now the German eagle's wings are
spread again.
Facing an audience composed
largely of aviators, Goering de-
clared: a
"And so, my comrades. we have
all helped lay the foundations of
that force which no longer per-
mits Germany to be exposed to
Impotence and violation of her na-
tional rights
“And if the Fuehrer (Adolf Hit-
ler) in his Reichstag speech (at
Feb 30. affirming the Reich's re-
solve to protect German minori-
ties in neighboring states) present-
ed the proud record of achieve-
ment and used these proud words,
that we no longer can tolerate the
mal-treatment with impunity of
ten millions of Germans on our
borders, then you members of the
air force knew that it need be. you
must go the limit to make good
these words of the Fuehrer."
"I regret the fact that you quail
hunters couldn't get any of the
birds for planting," said Charlie
Skiles, "as I would have liked to had
a few of them placed on my farm
to restock the very few that are
left. I recall days In Denton Coun-
ty when there were literally thous-
ands of quail, but In recent years
ahere are comparatively few."
CONGRESS
(By Associated Press
Today:
Eager to Show Nation Invincible, Field Marshal
Says; 10,000,000 Germans in Austria and
Czechoslovakia.
»
\
Associated Press Leased Wire
thmea
—-T
NEW YORK, March 1I—The
March lion roared in today on a
W-mBe gale which gave the
Northeastern States their most bit-
ter weather of the winter
Snow blanketed much of upstate
New York and New England. Tem-
peratures dropped toward aero and
newlow marks for March 1 in many
The weather Bureau promised
quickmoderationr today.
In the Senate, foes of the gov-
ernment reorganization bill express-
ed conndence they could effect im-
portant modincations.
warmer to the mnterior tonlgM ami
Wednendny and ew the upprens-
WEST TEXAS: Moeuy eiawty #-
night and Wednemday, prebabty rate
v
Jack Fry, son of Curtis Fry of
Fort Worth and grandson of Jack
Fry of Denton, nas been awarded
the Fort Worth Optimist Club
three-year college course He will
take his first two years in Texas
Christian University and complete
his work in the University Law
Department The award pays all tui-
tion fees and a part of his expenses
during the three years.
ELECTRA. March 1—(P)—8. A
Wise, 70. died yesterday shortly af-
ter he was found unconsclous from
a kick over the heart by a mule
Funeral services Were to be held at
Vernon today
seeking
ever, ch/
The Denton ounty chapter of
Texas-Exes will hold their annual
banquet Wednesday night at Mar.
quis Hall, Teachers College, and
President Floyd Stovall, phone
1274-w should be advised as to
whether or not you wi attend. A
large group of former Texas Uni-
versity students is expected.
Bill McCraw. present Attorney
General of Texas and candidate
for Governor, advises the Thvesti-
gating committee "that it can go
Jack as far as it wishes, even to
the dmawnen-f ebte naw—''
orf the old Oriental Hotel corner.”
The Investigating Committee called
for th« bank statements of both
Mr and Mrs. McCraw while they
were in Washington, and they wired
the committee and their banks to
W T. (Tom) Morris and some of ' private,army of Prince Ernst Ru-
the other fancy-anglers have put diger. voncStarhembertney would
up their rods and reels for the next The blackshirts said they would
. mnon on bas confine themselves at present to
two months, as the season on DM55 ( mie1 actaf
and white perch closed with the , "enersetic political action,
passlug of February But the non- i British Protest
game fhh won t get a rest Bill ( Shanghai Shooting
SHANGHAI, March 1 —IP—-BT-
ish sentries guarding the Interna-
SHANGHAI. March 1—(—Ja-
pans air force struck fercely today
at Chinese communist forces, Ja-
pan. bitterest ememles, while indi-
cations developed the Japanese
army Waa preparing to invade a new
“It's quite different here to what
It Is in South Texas," said John
Button, who has returned from
Charlotte Southwest of San An-
tonio. "Down there the corn is up
and looks fine. They've had good
rains and warm weather."
is no relapse
"General Pershing had a very
good night. " Dr Davison's first bul-
letin o fthe day reported, adding to
the feeling of optimism evident
at the sanatorium since the war- l
.0.53
s3ai
NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y, MarcW
some pet tax scheme
The bill provides for broad modi-
fcations of the undistributed profits
and capital gains taxes, which have
been criticized widely as a deter-
rent to business, and for tmposition
of a special surtax on large corpora-
tions controlled by a family or a
few individuals
The tax bill is one of several ma-
jor administration proposals on
which Congress will vote this
month.
rier drew back from the brink of ; made the same demand. In keeping
I with Soviet custom and as a pre-
124
•UN,
—T
Austrian fatherland front circles
reported meanwhile that Premier
Benito Mussolini of Italy had sent
a special envoy to Chancellor Kurt
Schuschnigg with the assurance
Anti-trust—Senate eommittee be-
gins hearings n M hr Fedenai
licensing at oorporaitena.
Yestedny:
Senate pamed $1,402,000,000 trea-
sury-postottiee appropriatem HR
Bernard BarwA. at Senate hear-
tag, urgea revision at tax estem.
.nl.
k
Apprsprtatteas H
.stair on interior a
ply MB.
duced the administration's tax re- flight through Southern Biiaoal
pealed off viaion bill on behalf of the House Province today, leaving the Jap-
ways and means committee. ansae in control at virtually all the
which the House pamed the revenue I While the Shans dsfsnas* were
act in 1934, would prevent any crumbling, 1
member from attemptng to insert : ever, that J
Bonds Calledin
Refunding flan
roctatigmtobe held herMarh1
Sbanqr,nnaunman 0
the Denton CmmE Tearherx As- sure probably wifollowtheeAg
bill to the House floor.
pie we ask that Soviet Justice Im-
pose the highest degree of pun-
ishment Those‘ bandits should be
executed without exception "
Nation-wide workers' meetings
1.—(—An investigator in the kid-
naping of 12-year-old Peter Le-
| vine dhsclosed today that two notes
were left w the abductors and that
wut.. pontttw. p.. both apparently were written on a
doiph cpwEvgsotdn (Epn, cheapnertatpewrer to thesor
Tmomas (R-^’ Weich gucanb TFatenhtesom“mezSheshidun
og-wi. Mrs Norton saanth, numerals in the ransom commum-
Iki . • A . I as ex-officio member of the com- cation, were 80. placed that it wy
Blast in Auto mittee, she would attend the sub- posstble. khdnarers.had itend
VLI ill -M• |committee‘s discussion ed to demand. Rot 9*0.000 a* pry
v1ouiy reported, but only IWO
’There were five zeros, he added.
game inn wont get 4 -E D.,
Moore, carp-angler de luxe, hasn't
been giving much time to his chief
sport, but it is likely that with
some fine, warm spring days he'll
be getting back on the creek banks.
M. L. Portwood, catfish angler, isn't
Come A Rain
GRAND ISLAND. Nob,— The %
burglar who took three pipe
wrenches had an invitation to
come again, Archie Ball told
police.
The thief dropped his watch
while maneuvering around on
the back porch of the Ball
home, and the watch, Balt setd,
was worth much more than the
wrenches
With Japanese intantry rapidly
approaching th. Yellow Rivm,
forming Shanal’s western and south-
ern Wider. Japanese planes recon-
nottered over Tumgkwan, gateway
to •—' ' ------- —
And so March came in like a
lamb Tuesday wasn't as promising
a day as Monday. but the wind was
not blowing hard and the clouds
were not very threatening during
the morning, despite the Weather
man's prediction of rain. Accord-
ing to those who believe tn signs,
the tame entrance of this month
means an yroariows departure.
debate will begin Thursday, covers the South Shana def—to with
Heflin to Seek
Place in Congress
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., March L—
(P—The last minute entry of
former Senator J. Thomas Heflin as
a candidate for a ongresssional seat
added asst today to coming Demo-
cratic primartes in Alabama. Pri-
maries will be held May 3 and June
Beaten by Lister Hill for the Sen-
ate in January. Heflin had recover-
ed from the illness which kept him
abed during closing, weeks of his
senatorial, race. He will oppose Rap.
Joe Starnes. Ountherwvile, in the
Look Who’s Here
CANON CITY, Colo —Not mi-
til he was half Shaved in the
Colorado penitentiary barber
shop did W J Ryan. Denver
detective, notice the barber was
"Lefty" Johnson, with whom
he traded bullets while John-
■on was fleeing a restaurant
holdup
Johnson was captured later
Ryan went through with the
si lave.
BERLIN, March 1.—(AP)—Field Marshal General Her-
mann wilhelm Goering warned Europe today that Germany’*
mighty air force was poised in readiness to protect not only
the reich itself but also “ten millions of Germans in our bor-
deffl.” There are about 10,000,000 Germans in Austria, Ger-
many’s southern neighbor where nazlism was a burning issue
today, and in Czechoslovakia.
A * gc,-ss
akt7g5*-2
3206**
~ n । . I MOSCOW, March 1—IP—Rus-
I en P ers h ID O’ ; sia’s "ice floe scientists" today join-
V-n* a vis 11116 edin a growing public demand for
0*111 • i the death of 21 former Soviet lead-
St ill I Hl nrov Tl o ' ers who are to go on trial tomorrow
—P- • v 18 accused at plotting against the Sta-
TUCSON. Artz.. March 1—(- | lin regime.
Gen John J Pershing. refreshed by Their leader. Commander Ivan
hours of natural sleep, continued Papanin, wns quoted thus In a ra-
his improvement today and Dr , dl° message from the ice breaker
IRoland Davison Raid recovery Yermak, one of the vessels which
"seems quite probable" if he con- j speed to rescue the scientists from
tinues his present pace and there their camp on an Arctic flor
“Together with the whole pro-
e h -0,0-
7 M;e l- ■■
Mmwgonmrmttemheeperee
day is the sixth anniversary of the
kidnaping of the Lindbergh baby | How vuustancuzg, w oe purcszasca
—a crime that brought the Federal i Road District No 3. Denton District,
government into the war against , as an investment, out of that road
abductors. i district's available surplus
The blue-eyed son of Col and I Study Jail Condition
Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh was The court also approved request
stolen from his crib in Hopewell, or the county clerk, for services of
N. J, on March 1, 1932, and later a deputy during the first two weeks ,
was found dead in the nearbv hills in March, and asked an estimate
Bruno Hauptmann convicted at l of the 0061 of constructing an en-
the crime, died in New Jersey's ; trance cage to the negro cell at the
electric chair protesting inno- county jail
cence. : Under the present conditions,
The nation-wide clamor that where the jaller must unlock and
followed the crime resulted in en- I enter the cell containing the negro
shattered and inulation
transmisston lines was
for yards
He was not expected to recover, heard Bernard M. Baruch, friend oxouEeN "Iut
The motor pt the large Keck car and bustness advisor to President oPen. mmurauonaI .
was ripped afart, the heavy crank- ! Roosevelt cal tar a clearer gov- . 0..“-menaavanihedu mVsterinu
shaft broken and the pistons shat- 1 erment dehnilon at monopoly. last Thurndax..A.xw.nouEs se.
tered like ground glass. Part of the Baruch said he did mot urge to-
was vaiting to ride to town with report on the legislation at any
the explosion victim Mr Pish . tme before.midntsht. Members, he
the Yellow River fanning the
boundary.
Conquest at that area will give
the Japanese control at nearty all
the xaL terrtitory north and east
of the Yellow River
T uesday Sixth
Anniversary of
WASHINGTON, March 1.—(AP)—Chairman Norton
I (D-NJ) of the House Labor Committee appointed a seven-
I man subcommittee today to draft a new wage-hour bill. Re-
E presen tative Ramspeck (D-Ga), appointed subcommittee
3 chairman, said his group would meet tomorrow “without any
f preconceived ideas” to “see whether we can work out a bill
I j that will be satisfactory.”
-1 A previous wage-hour bill was ===================
province. Chenst, the communist ■----- - . 1 =
32 meauasgs $22,000 Road
8outhiwestem Shansi headquarters
of General Chu Teh, the commun-
ist commander- in-chter who has
directed the most effective oppost-
tion to the invaders in Shansi.
--Ff.....r -#
nici e
M- —
Wf - -i
along the gigantic, U-formed Ye-
lows course through mid-China.
Japanese military accounts to-
tional Settlement and foreigners
nearby were endangered, the British
military charged today, by a Jap-
anese sentry who shot dead a flee-
ing Chinese
The shooting. British army au-
thorities said, was at Keswick Road
within the British defense sector
of the settlement.
The incident provoked sharp ten-
sion and barriers were let down
along the great western road bound-
ary of the British sector during a
half-hour of bitter dispute The
British Indicated they were consid-
ering a strong protest to Uie Jap-
anese command.
type, patterned after one under Japanese in Shensi Province.
on the complicated tax revislon bul. night said the Chinese were "total
The 334-pege measure, on which ty demoralized" and abandoning
Aba Order Investmen
aoThnscourhigidonrrdorodsiapri
house funding and refunding bonds
For the first time in many moons,
there was no new moon in Febru-
ary which made it perfectly sate
to look over the left shoulder. The
last lunar moon, according to as-
tronomers. began January 31. and
because the lunar month is 29 days.
12 hours and 44 minutes, the next
new moon will occur March 2. It is
expected that fifteen years will
elapse before a recurrence of no
new moon in February
merdsathehedAutipnannarmoanuspoe Undbargh Kidnap
Hee stood by for instant action . *
iHkPd-nama*nedram
Weathei
AMARILIO, March 1.—(P—1Louts
A. Keck. Amarillo automobile deal-
er, was gravely. Injured this morn-
ing when his car exploded as he
stepped on the starter.
Officers raid there was no doubt
that the blast was caused by a
planted bomb, and Tex Thomton,
widely known explostves expert,
said he believed nitro-gtycerin was
used, possibly inside the motor.
Keck remained in a semi-consci-
ouz condition today. Flesh was
SHANGHAI, March 1. —4
Parts of the inside of the motor that should be changed,
were left sticking In the shattered Across the Capitol, the House
fer informally with any members of this source declined to be quoted
Congress who want to talk to us." by name but was regarded as whob-
He said the committee hoped to ly authoritative
be ready to report back to the full Ths harried father, a New York
commtttee. within, two weeks. "Our lawyer, kept * constant vigil at a
subcommittee will not be commit- telephon, hoping the abductors
ted except to_try to would contact him. A reltabie source
solve this problem," he added indicated he had raised the entire
blown from nas face, chert ana waefrsumhearanrvunrzsemnte,ebute s60.h0000demanded tor sate retum
legs His lungs were badly injured. Seriate unemployment committee Opeter"Xorecochoua achool taw with
fully conscious. While all danger
is not yet passed, If the Improve-
ment of the last 24 hours con-
tinues and there is no relapse, his
recovery seems quite probable"
"That." Dr Davison explained
in an informal statement, “Is the
doctor's way of saying he is very
well satisfied with his patient.”
In contrast to the close vigil
maintained in recent days. General
Pershings sick room was without
lights last night after he drop-
ped into heavy slumber.
Outstanding Road District No 2 I
and | bonds. Roanoke District, totaling |
st cMrt. indicating a drive into1 822,000, were called to ne birought
that province was imminent.
Shensi Uss just wart at Shansi.
KILLED WHEN KICKED
BY MI LE
actment of the drastic national an- prisoners each time he brings food,
ti-kidnap law ; there is always possible danger of
Until the disappearance at 12- ' an attack on the deputy, commis-
year-old Peter Levine in New Ro- ! sloners commented The commts-
chelle, N. Y . las’. Thursday. Fed- ! sinners visited the jail during the
era! a ten ts listed only two remain- afternoon to study the situation
Ing unsolved kidnapings hi the Unit- and afterward called for the esti-
ed States mate.
They were the abduction and ----------------
murder of Charles Mattson. 10. of Domond Donth
Tacoma. Wash., Dec. 28, 1936 and -euu •eI
the disappearance of Arthur Fried
32. contractor, from his White I Or Hill11 ft I 1O1
Plains, N Y, home. Dec 4, 1937 ■ ------
---- By Assoctated Press ----
RICHMOND Va —Mayor J.
Fulmer Bright gave back tl.-
000.000—and never lost a penny.
The state treasurer gave him
a check for clipped interest cou-
pons on state bonds owned by
the mayor. As Bright was about
to deposit the check, however,
he was startled to see it was
for $1,000,105.
He withheld the deposit and
returned to his office, where he
found many anxious inquiries
already had come from the trea-
surer's office.
Hie check should have read
9105. It was a machine error.
"Consistent advertising and at-
fective salesmanship are twin aids
that retailers must have this year
to show profit*," said Perry B. Ar-
nold of Los Angeles who is in Dal-
las to conduct a two-day sales ciin-
le He says that modern salesman-
ship is not up to the standards of
thirty years ago. Mrs. Arnold who 1
is with him will talk on the wom-
an's viewpoint in sales psychology
and he will address the Dallas
Advertising League luncheon Tues-
day.
Unmplos
eontinues I
tog
eom. 1^, wev. boc w r v\tte 1 lieutenant governor of Styria prov-
eemeofrrdsksbacceptlaince. called the H“r confer-
hat from any one who had a letter ’ ^ce at this, provincial metropo-
that bore an earlier date than the 1 1s which has been a hot bed of
one he had. The letter was written ! ,cc.. .. .u.
January .11. 1831 Since that time.' The.Pascist.leaders met while
u. pre ha been called uoon bv : Nazi headquarters was in a con-
Mrisrpseopi demanaing the "hat. > tinuous state o' preparedness for
On. leteerPcame from Lawrence- | action. Eighty thorsand Nazis.were
vne.nalMranitie aaysuwant ' t0 acton un tonmtArettpova
the proposition, but that if any j incesgor Styria, Carinthia and up-
wurthedemanasscomestea himtneP wait declosed that the Heim-
last instance. He will send a blue wehr did not plan immediate rc-
( vival of military features of its
oonne 1 ’_____ | organization, which once was the
. -
Forty-three years is a long time
to.go without seeing his brother,
Mr ps young s man.as Ray Lakey
but that's the lapse of time between
#etr last visit. Ray’s brother from
aontana arrived in Denton Satur-
-day and they've been busy talking
cabout boyhood days since.
It would be bad enough to steal
a chair or a bench from some one's
porch or house, but it is certainly
worse to go into a cemetery and
carry off benches that have been
placed there for the convenience
of the bereaved But that is what
happened at the Odd Fellows' ceme-
tery here this week when some one
carted off a cement bench from one
of the lots
HOUSE COMMITTEE NAMED
pedal ly because of commercial and
industrial reluctance to employ
older men."
Hines said the American Legion.
Veterans of Foreign Wars, and dis-
abled American veterans, had
agreed to help complete registers
of the unemployed: An appeal to
industry by President Roosevelt, he
■aid. might follow
Looking backward to March 2.
1923. When President Harding ap-
pointed him director of the veter -
bureau, Hines listed three
achievements since then as out-
standing; Fstablishment of region-
al offices, hospitalization for vet-
erans of all wars, and consolida-
tion in 1910 of the pension bureau,
veterans bureau and national homes
service.
The administrator said sentiment
for a breed pension program prob-
ably would have a direct connection
with the admin bitrations succens
turn over such information. It ( thatTtaly. as in the past upholds
seems that Mrs. McCraw's account j thecindependencesofsAustria: go,
was some sixty dollars in the red. mCountnBarthoidastuergkh 5 '
____ mer Heimwenr member and now
। velt’s program. Reorganization of
| the executive branch" of govem-
To Eight Nazi Menace
GRAZ Austria, March L—40-
Veterans of Austria's disbanded Fas-
cist Army, the Helmwehr. decided
today to revive their organisation
to meet what they regarded as a
Nazi menace to Austria's inde-
pendence
Remwehr Blackshirt leaders
sent back to the labor committee
by the House at the special session
of Congress last year — - y i
toAprointneentcg"ntbsusutormrmit Reported Left by
another item of President Roose- i n a v-a
Boys Kidnapers
auto that had collided with a
tram took him to the morgue.
He was dead, they sajd.
But Bland roused from a
coma—and was rushed to a hos-
pital
Physicians treated him for
bruises and sent him home
, blowhupinthetamoADPaxme
1 CAS"shet today wt ruchldartnt miht D m “OFdercsuniess amend- rapidly tightening ring at JApanese
er import than the explosion which ments were restricted. --------- troops. . . _______
claimed the life of Mrs. A. D .1, The "Eng rule." ir adopted, would The .mam China, force. .Japenene
Payne and left her son maimed for limit general debate to 12 hours, said, fled across the Yellow
i life waive all parliamentary objections into Shensi Province to the .
The Amarillo Globe-News, through i to the legislation, and ban any and west, main stronghold- at OUs
its publisher. Gene Howe, has port- i amendments except those offered neme communist troops it/
ed a 8500 reward for anformationNy the committee on ways and, One Japartaee column reportedly
wod m thetperamnee apasaonvre- 1. Committeemen said a rule of that Pao, ftret town to be raptured by
sponsible for the blast
Mrs Keck said that her husband
had "only one bitter enemy."
In nndmg employment for Joblers
rtw problem, am'veteram.----- ,"------
Def "gates include: Miss Dixie
Boyd, Harold Brenhoitz, Joe L
Burks. Mrs. Ercel Eppright, R. J.
Garner, B B Harrie. Jack John-
son. C. D. Judd. H. B. Masters. J.
C Matthews, Mrs. Phoebe Mizell.
G A. Odam, R. L Proffer. Miss
Anna Powell, Miss Ruby Smith, H
V. Stanton, R J Turrentine and
Miss Epsle Young, all of Denton.
Alternate delegatee are Andrew
Ashburn, Miss Jessie H. Humphreys.
A. S. Lang. Miss Jewel Lockhead.
Roy L McPherson, all of Denton,
and J L. Owens of Pllot Point. Lee
Toothaker of Bolivar and Mrs. El-
la Kelley of Denton.
bonds bearing 31-4 per cent lhterest
instead of the present I pergent
ROUND
ABOUT
TOWN
WASHINGTON, March 1 — (P—
The veterans administration under-
took today the task of finding Jota
for 300,000 unemployed ex-service
men.
Approxmately a half million
questionnatres went into the malls,
addressed to veterans who have re-
ported themselves without work.
They were asked to fill m the cards,
detailing the type of work for which
they are fitted, and return them
to the United States employment
service by March 11.
Brigadier General Frank T.
Hines, who will complete 15 years’
service as veterans administrator
tonight, said in an interview he
considered 1938 a "critical" year for
former soldiers
"The average age of World War
veterans already is between 46 and
46." he said
"Inereasig age with natural
Naval Hs»» committee begtms
secret consideratlon of defense pro-
program.
Turn Hearn committee dlncus-
m “gag" rate far debating lax biu.
£ ,
k
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 170, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 1, 1938, newspaper, March 1, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540144/m1/3/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.