Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, April 28, 1939 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.
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■s' ri %r fffr rah aifti -■ ■
' '■ ■'■> '* ,i i • '•"■
,;,i>;: y ■;■ -■-
Trie Rt'iHU'ter's publica
i fully corrccted upon be
attention of the publishers
SWEETWATER, TEXAS,
PAGE FOUR
FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939
on Thursday «V. tm
ixjtiIZZSF ays? fjSt
George Bennitt and Russell Bennltt, Pub*
But th* tongue can no man tame; it is an un•
evilp full of deadly poitOn.—Jades 3;8.
A wound from a tongue is worse thun a wound
front a sword; for the latter affects only the body,
the former the spirit.—Pythagoras.
Behind The Scene In Washington
CITIES LOOK AHEAD TO
NOSE COUNTING IN 1940
Cities over the naiion uiv liecomin.-r census minded.
There is a reason, 1940 lie-; ahead a the year when
noses are to be counted. Once in ten years communities
have their populations officially enumerated- What the
count turns out to be has a direct bearing on whether
they are going forward in point of growth or standing
still. To increase in population is almost the axiom of
progress commercially.
RIany cities this year will examine their boun-
dary lines and if necessary will stretch them to in-
clude any populous territory that is not now in-
cluded. It is only natural that cities should want
to get the full benefit of all people living in the
city and nearby if at all possible. In many cities
boundaries do not include population that lives
: within the practical city limits.
Next y -ar's cen.-'us figures' will' ha watched careful-
ly for in I he avt -v-s cf commerce they are considered
to point to trends upward or downward. Cities that
were 10.000 in 1930 and are 15,000 in 1940 must be
recogn'- :d as going forward rapidly. Those that were
20,000 in 1930 and will be 30.000 in 1940 loom up even
larger. There are definite der.iarkations made by those
who el:r 1 large enter: rises between cities that con-
j&tently gain in population and those that stand still.
Capital is invested only v.i.re there is opportunity for
growth and returns. Cor,: us figures in 1940 will have
much to do with dire ting the development in the
decade that looks forward to 1950.
Sweetwater along v.iih other West Texas cities
will want to put it • best foot forward next year
I counting task is underway,
ti ll < : r population at right
ark. It will be worth a great
top this figure to start down
i 1950. That is a goal worth
BY BRUCE CATTON
WASHINGTON —What is
believed to be the first ef-
fort to use the power of
the federal government to
defend an editor against in-
timidation will come to trial
in Mobile, Ala., on May 1.
if the government is up-
held in this ease, a historic
precedent of vast impor-
tance to the cause of free-
dom of the press will be
established.
The action is being
brought under Section 51 of
Title 18 of the United States
Code. This is a little-used
stauite passed after the Civ-
il War as a weapon against
the Kit Klux Klan. it rro-
vides severe penalties for
tho-e who "conspire to in-
jure, oppress, threaten or
intimidate any citizen in the
free exercise or enjoyment
of any right or privilege
secured to him by the Con-
stitution or laws of the Unit-
ed States."
Central figure in the case
is Henry P. Ewald, former-
ly editor of the Mobile Reg-
ister and Mobile Press. For
some time he had been ex-
posing gambling, lotteries
and so on, and had been
crusading to induce city,
county and state officials to
put a stop to such activi-
ties.
Sometime in February, ac-
cording to the indictment,
en attempt was made to
ilei:.ce him. The indictment
savs that he was enticed
when
Estimates
around She
deal c . r
the road to
strivhv : for.
IIS
es have
Rival Parties
In China Fail
To Bury Past
into a house of assignation
and there | holographed un-
der compromising circum-
, stances. Later, it is charged,
the photograph was used to
force him to give up his
job and leave tjie city.
All of which, says the in-
dictment, infringed on his
right of freedom of the
press "in freely and lawful-
ly expressing h.i m s elf
through the medium of the
press by means of writing
and printing, or writing and
causing to be printed."
Named in the indictment
are Bart B. Chamberlain,
Jr., assistant state solicitor
for Mobile county: Sam B.
Powe, named as a profes-
sional gambler; George E.
McKenzie, Peter V. Crolieh
and John Powe.
The action was brought
l.y [' S. District Attorney
Francis H. Inge, who stumbl-
ed across it more or less by
accident. News of the in-
dictment had leaked out,
and Inge was informed
that one of the parties to
it was a man on probation
from a federal sentence. He
investigated and found that
to be untrue; but in his in-
vestigation he learned the
details of the alleged plot
to drive Ewald out of town
and thereby silence the an-
ti-gambling campaign, and
decided to seek an indict-
ment under the old anti-
klan law. Details leading to
the indictment were gath-
ered by operatives of the
Ward Week Sale
Ends Saturday
Federal Bureau of Investi-
gation.
This statute under which
Inge acted is intensely in-
teresting to the Civil Lib-
erties Unit of the U. S. de-
partment of justice. To a
layman, the statute seems
broad enough to make al-
most any sort of action pos-
sible. In practice, however,
it may he severely limit-
ed. For the right to free-
dom of the press is not a
right guaranteed to the in-
dividual directly; what the
Constitution says is that
"Congress shall make no
law . . . abridging the
freedom of speech, or of
the press ..."
It may be that the court
will hold that a conspiracy
by individuals to deprive an
editor of this right is not a
violation of this statute.
In this case, however, a
local law enforcement offi-
cial—-the assistant state soli-
citor for Mobile county — is
named as a party to the
conspiracy. For this reason
it may be argued that the
machinery of the state was
used to deprive Ewald of
his rights, and that conse-
quently the statute in ques-
tion does apply.
Incidentally, if there was
s"h a conspiracy, it failed
( i s object as far as the
a ti-gambling crusade was
( ncerncd. Ewald did give
u his job. but Publisher
Kalph Chandler carried the
campaign along anyway.
Champion Woman
Has Operation
By A. H. Smith
CHAMPION — Mrs. J. L. Haw-
kins, who underwent major
surgery in the Young hospital,
Roscoe, is recovering.
Mrs. Inez Cope and daughter,
who visited Mr. and Mrs. J. M.
Meador have returned to their
home in Mitchell county.
Comanche visitor recently in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Hunter was V. M. Hunter.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Daugherty wore Mr.
and Mrs. E. M. Hawkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Blackwell
and sons, Jan and Jean, visit-
ed relatives in Robert Lee and at-
tended the 50th anniversary of
the organization of Coke county
Mr. Blackwell is a former re>i-
dent of the county.
Leaving Monday, Mr. and Mrs.
E. M. Hawkins and Levvis Ran-
kins are to live in Wasco, Calif.
Sheriff Tom Wade of Swec-t-
water visited in the community
with Horace Cook Thursday.
Ira Barrett has moved to the
Woods huidling and has opened
an ice house.
M. A. Thrailkill is home af-
ter a long illness in the Sweet-
water and Roscoe hospitals.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Linz en-
tertained the young people of
the community with a party
Thursday night.
Movie Scrapbook
By BIO Porter
Trade M r*
Coiven
ima:
h
LIFE IS WASTED IIEIIINIi
PRISON WALLS FOR THIS MAX
*"*" A more utfefTy was'cd lit*-, i!
Scrivens it would be hard
This man spent 44 pi'
gray walls of the South Cure
in 1924 under a suspended
been so long accustomed to
not fac° the world- JIc
. He died the other da
same wall-; that bound.
; hut. of Henry
8 years behind the
i penitentiary. Freed
rtence, Scrivens had
o prison life that he could
ted to be locked up again.
the
t!
of a heart attack, inside the
the only world in which he
really fel: at
The humb!:
complish'd.
No matte
such men
and sa -.
hands."
But th. S.-.
themselves <
Therein I
home.
it of fr<
men ca
ok back at things ac-
ow ill the
yrkl h
an
:re
lace
of the
warded them,
of the earth
! labor of my
un:
lion
have cheated
life offers.
A FAVORITE FRUIT
HORIZONTAL
1 Pictured fruit
5 It grow?; on
tree of the
genus .
9 Wan.
10 Trivia'..
11 In eager
desire.
12 To feign
13 Delays.
36 Unit of work
18 Transposed.
19 Provided.
21 Measure of
area.
22 Herb.
25 Plot of
ground.
27 To rectify.
31 To rove idly.
32 Its open-
in spring.
34 Blue grass.
35 Larval stage.
37 Principal
actor.
38 It has a
edible flesh.
39 It is round or
in shape.
41 Senior.
iiMIATGTET, ,, I
■'OXIr-SES
Answer to Previous Puzzle 17 Metric weight
23 Young sheep.
24 Land right.
25 Plural (abbr.)
26 Russian
emperors.
22 Roof finial.
23 Neither.
30 Mill pond..
32 Os.
33 Either.
36 To eat
greedily.
38 To hesitate.
40 Bwrbed spear.
42 Form of "I."
44 To encounter.
46 Instrument.
47 Fluid rock.
48 To eject.
49 To delete.
50 Tea.
51 Odd.
52 Vestment.
54 Occupant of
Eden.
58 Type standard
HONG KONG — IUP1 —Seeds |
of hatred sown during C°reralis-1
simo Chiang Kai-shek's long
years of campaigning against j
the oomjnunists still bear fruit,
in the form of occasional dis-1
rut.es between the Kuomintang j
and the Red leaders of
northwest.
Leaders and members of
two parties are still in agree-
ment on their fundamental aim
—to resist Japanese invasion, the
so-called "rules" for which were
laid down in the United Front
platform formed after release
of Chiang Kai-shek by his kid-
napers in December. 1936.
Kuomintang and Central
Army officials base their chief
criticism on the alleged failure
of the communists and the Eigh-
th Route Army to "cooperate"
with the Central government.
They say iho Communist fight-
ers shroud their activity in too
much secrecy, and decline to re-
veal what happens to the trc-ot
•.nrnunition and war muter: ils
which the Communists receive.
Politically the two parties are
as far apart as ever. The Reg-
ional government — which
rules a 400-square-mile area in
Kansu. Ninghsia and Shensi pro-
vinces with headquarters at Ye-
F. H. Boyle, manager of the
Montgomery, VW.rd store, an-,
nounee that Saturday would
-mark the close of the semi-an- I
nual Ward Week sale. I.J said ]
that the large number of shop-
pers who attended the .-alo dur-
ing the past o day had made it
one of the most successful in the
store's history.
ill.1 attributed much of the
success of the sale to a combi-
nation of the low prices brought
about by months of planning
and mass buying .and the ef-
fectiveness of the newspaper as
an advertising medium.
(Continued from Page 2)
pushed across five runs in her
half of the stanza, which added
to one tally in the first sliced
( ff part of the scot ins assets
oi N-ian, which had collected
a run in each of the first two
innings to add to the nine in
the third..
Apparently aroused by Nol-
nine-run activity in the
third. Cowen staged a run-get-
ting spree of her own in the
fourth when eight runs crossed
the plate before the side could
be retired.
The box score:
.1. P. Cowen Alt. 15. H.
permit the Communists to hold
dual party membership and the
Red social reform program.
Communist leaders have promis-
ed to refrain from forming sec-
ret party cells in the Kuomin-
tang, not to attempt to influ-
ence members concerning their
social program, if they were
permitted to join the Kuomin-
Rotan p
Jenkins cf .
Schlueter If
Peterson c .
Watts 3b ..
Ewing lh
Harris 2b ..
Bolton rss . .
Dunn ss
Belt rf .
Puckett rf .
•1
nan-
in C
-is unaffi
uingking
jctionately known
the
her re
Tax Holiday Opposed
The Kuomintang objects
the cessation of all taxes in
regional area, the division
land without any revenue
the government from a pos>
~n]o or at
1:
in
:re
to
the
of
to
ihle
least heavy taxation
idowners, and to the
The Communist social reform
program consists of immediate
and long-term aims. It envisages
division of the land among the
poor, lowered taxes, better work-
ing conditions and higher wages
for industrial employes. The I ™_errv
long term program is based on
abolition of private property.
Many of the more conserva-
tive Kuomintang members be-
lieve that the Communist, nar- !
ty is taking advantage of the
war to press its program in |
North China. They charir■ the|
Communists have not confined |
their propaganda to anti-Jap-
anese activities, but are edit
Totals
I'liilip Xolan
Mitchell cf
Thompson cf
Padelock rss .
Brown 2b
Huddleston <■
MeGIothlin 2!>
37
Alt.
1
1
0
2
1
0
Hi
15.
0
0
1
2<i
H.
0
1
Montgomery
Lincoln 3b
Murrill p .
Scott If
Totals
Reds
rf
38
2 2
1 1
2 3
II 21
Both teams went scoreless in
the 10th, but Gus Suhr's homer
in the 11th again gave the Pir-
ates the lead. The Cards opened
their half of the 11th when
Moore singled and took second
on Mace Brown's wild pitch.
Padgett doubled agaihst the right
field wall, scoring Moore. Pep-
per Martin, walked and when
Young booted Frank's easy rol-
ler. Padgett came in with the de-
cisive run.
Wet grounds postponed Brook-
lyn at New York.
Pie Traynor's last-place Pir-
ates suffered their seventh
straight defeat, losing to St.
Louis, 6-5, in 11 innings.
Three Tied For 3rd
In the American league, Chi-
cago and St. Louis advanced to
a three-way tie for third place
with idle Boston, while Cleve-
land dropped to sixth.
St. Louis beat Cleveland, 4-2,
behind Johnny Marcum's seven-
hit pitching. Marcum yielded
only five scattered safeties until
the ninth when Jeff Heath blast-
ed a home run over the right
field wall with Earl Averill on
base, for the Indians' two runs.
Connie Mack's Athletics had
sole command of the cellar af-
ter losing 0-3 to Washington's
seventh - place Senators.
Chicago's White Sox nosed
out Detroit. 2-1, when Hank
Steinbacher's single in the 13th
drove in Mjke Kreevich with
the winning run. Kreevich open-
ed the inning with a single, his
fourth hit in six tries. He advan-
ced to second on Silvestri's
grounder to Greenberg. Kree-
vich stole third and went home
on Steinbacher's single. The
game was forced into overtime
when Owen's single scored
Kreevich in the seventh to tie
the count at 1-all. In the Tigers'
half of the seventh, Charley
Gehringer accounted for De-
troit's lone ta 1 ley with a home
run.
BY PAUL HARRISON
HOLLYWOOD — All over
the lot: Scene-stealers are busy
in Movietown. On the set of
"Stanley and Livingston", Spen
cer Tracy and Walter Brennan
are carrying on a larcenous feud
worth watching. Each is a two-
time Academy Award winner,
so they know how it's done.
Their sharp criticisms of each
other are mostly in fun, for
talking with them sei arately
you find that each considers the
other Hollywood's best actor.
"That was a pretty good per-
formance in the last scene", i'ra-
cy will say. "But I thought I
noticed a slight lisp. Are your
phony teeth bothering you?"
"Yes, my son," Brennrn will
admit. "I almost dropped 'cm in
surprise when 1 noticed the v.av
ye>u were hamnic'ri. up tnct
scene with your Comal mug-
ging. Can't you ever i lay it
straight?"
Whispering Lareeriists
Director Henry King has to
referee these bouts, and he has
his hands full. Other day, when
the two actors had a lot of e!ia-
log, Tracy began one of his iav-
orite scene-stealing tricks-
dropping his voice to a lower
register than Brennan's.
On the next line, Brennan
dropped below Tracy. The lat-
ter went down another notch,
and Brennan's voice sounded as
if it were coming from his shoe-
era", on the "What a Life" set,
Jackie Cooper and Betty Field
entered the office of a high
school principal and approached
the desk diffidently.
The action was perfect, but
just as Cooper began to speak
the sound engineer yelled, "Hold
it_we're reloading". He had run
out of film.
After a few minutes the action
began again and lasted through
Cooper's first line. "Hold it,"
interrupted the cameraman, Vic-
tor Milner. "Those extras be-
hind the set rhow through a
crack i. the door."
Director Reed slamir.?d down
his s-ript and paced impatient-
ly while the extras were herd-
ed out of sight. "Camera", he
barked, and the actors began
again. This time it was Lupe
Jones, the script clerk, who call-
ed "Hold it".
"What's wrong now?
ed Reed. "Can't I get
cooperation around here?"
"You left your script open on
the desk right in the middle of
the scene", said the observant
Miss Jones sweetly.
o
Second Quess
■>" fum-
any
(Continued from Page 2)
dalist competition, qualifying
tops. King stopped the camera ■ u,jty10uf the necessity of a
and barked: "What is this —-'.tournament round.
whist ering contest?"
During a dramatic speech by
Tracy, Brennan is likey to div-
ert the attention of future aud-
iences by scratching an imag-
inary flea. And when Brennan
speaks, 'Tracy will whip out a
handkerchief and mop his br.nv
with flourishes. Brennan has
suggested that he try a mata-
dor's cape.
Pilfering Pooch
A mongrel pup named Corkie
lias been stealing scenes in "It
Could Hap: en to You." He was
supposed to tag at the heels of
Gloria Stuart as she served
breakfast to Stuart Erwin. Cor-
kie followed her all right but
with a visible elroop. as if he
were bored by the whole busi-
ness.
Director A1 Werker said to
Henry East, the trainer: "You
gotta do something to pep up
that dog." '
"The trouble is that this
part's much too easy for Corkie",
ref lied East. "He can't •get in-
terested in it. Now if you'll let
me make it a little tougher—"
So East told Corkie to jump
on a chair every time Miss
Stuart went to the stove, and
to jump down and hide under
the table every time she ap-
proached it. This worked fine:
almost too well. Corkie was full
j of animation and stole the
scene.
"Just like any experienced ac-
| tor," sighed Erwin. "Always
| trying to build up his role."
I'lieo-Operalive
Why directors go crazy: Ted
| Reed is a fast shooter who hates
| delays. When he called "Cam-
pre-
* * *
Our third guess is lliat
John 'I'll 1)1), Joe Klrod, Ce-
cil Vo.ss, J. Ii. Waddell, K.
('. Condra. and Hubert Pol-
lard wiil go to Austin next
weekend for the state meet
instead of this weekend as
we had been previously ad-
vised. The date of the state
meet, we discover is May
5 and <i, not April 28 and 2!h
* * *
The third, third-guess is rela-
tive to the game here Sunday
between the Fort D. A. Russell
Soldiers and the Sweetwater
Swatters. O. O. Hollingsworth
this morning received a tele-
gram from D. Bookil, manager
of headquarters battery team
reading:
"Due to unforseen circum-
stances in our military training
we will be unable to play in
Sweetwater Sunelay. Regret hav-
ing to cancel game and hope to
be able to play you some other
time."
♦ * *
We will blame Hitler for
this postponement. He is
being blamed for most every-
thing else.
* * *
County Clerk L. W. Scott to-
day announced that the $1.10 ar-
tificial lure licenses required by
the state for the right to in-
veigle the bass out of Lakes
Sweetwater and Trammell with
artificial bugs are available at
his office. Also, the $2 licenses
required of artificial bait deal-
ers are available. Scott hopes to
have pamphlets outlining the
19.39 game laws available by to-
morrow or Monday.
THIS,CURIOUS WORLD
By William
Ferguson
;d.
42 Mother.
43 Ray.
45 Bombard
50 A small
variety of
this fruit.
53 Lawyer's
charge.
55 Domesticated
56 Pea pod.
57 High bodily
temperature.
59 Sinful.
60 Light yellow. , "
61 It grows in 14It>'iboad.
the zone. 15 Fodder vats
VERTICAL
1 Armadillo.
2 Book part.
3 Scheme
4 Envoy.
5 Parent.
6 Data.
7 Shoe string.
8 Extremist,
10 Unopened
flower.
tjfe
operation of the salt, wells which
has also reduced the govern-
ment's revenue from that area.
Most common criticism by the
Communists of the Kuomintang
is that the Central government
has failed to carry out Dr. Sun :
Yat-sen's three people's princi-
ples—Democracy, Socialism and
Nationalism. Every Communist
leader expresses the opinion
tha' 'China's hope of salvation"
lies in the nation becoming mire
democratic.
Gen. Mao Tse-tung. China's ;
"Lenin", has told the United
Press that This question is one !
the Kuomintang must answer j
and also should be solved by the
people throughout China with j
the aid of the other democracies. \
China must be a democracy to j
maintain its resistance and the
Kuorintang must be reorganiz
cd to become a democratic par-
ty."
The recent establishment of
the Supreme National Defense
Council as the highest organ in
war-time China to co-ordinate
party, military and government ;
activities was a decided setback j
to the Communist hopes. Al- :
though Chu Teh and Tao Tse- j
tung were included in the Coun- j
cil. the 11 standing members
who form the presidium are j
all Kuomintang leaders.
Dual Affiliation Denied
Two other causes of unrest,
between the two parties are the
ing the masses in the
of Communism.
—o
It, is estimateel that le
'iie-third of the words
standard English dictionary arc
purely English origin.
iles
h- n
anv
(Continued from Page 2)
! load changed hands four times,
j The game was forced into extra
| innings in the ninth when John-
ny Mize doubled to left, and
I Buster Adams, who ran for
1 him, scored on Terry Moore's
double, to tie the count at 4-4.
Teachcrs
*It COPH. IW BY m* CI ICI. INC
"I want a straw hat this time. It'll make a mouthful
(Continued from Page 2)
Duke, 120-yard hurdles; Nick
Vukmanic, Perm State, javelin
and Richard Gansem, Columbia,
pole vault.
North Texas Teachers with
the Itidcout twins, Wayne
and lllainc, will defend the
distance medley champion-
ship it won last, year in
world's record time, and
also will go after the four
mile title which Indiana,
with Mel Trntt, last of the
four milei's who sat world
record in t!>37, running an-
chor, will defend.
Woodruff will anchor the Pitts-
burgh relay teams which last
year sot a new world spring
medley record, broke the 800-
yard relay-carnival record and
came close to setting a new
standard in winning the one
mile relay. Manhattan, victor in
i the two mile championship race
last year and the year before,
| will try to make it three in a
row against such teams as In-
diana. Cornr.'i, Fordham, Michi-
gan, N. Y. U., Pittsburgh. Tem-
ple, Penn State, Yale and Colum-
bia.
Toriay will see the quarter-mile
relay, the 120-yard high hurdles,
the .3.000 meter steeplechase,
the 100-meter hurdles, the spring
college medley relay champion-
shit) of America, the shot put.
and discus throw championships
decided during a 28-event pro-
m. Forty-eight events are
i n * ivo «r ' |
SOAC SCIENTISTS SAY:
DIN05AURS DISAPPEARED
FROM THE EARTH WHEN
AAAAAAAALS CAME ALON6,
BECAUSE THE LATTER AT£
/fUl -f-+U/V\Af\J
■H-Eyspzrr
AVERAGES SO TO SO
BEATS PER MINUTE,
BUT IT AAAV DROP
AS LOW AS 16, OR.
SPEED UP TO MORE
THAM ZOO.
(ML-
WAS THE
author of:
F~//SST /A/ IA<A/£,
/A/ /=>,E4CF, /=-//S5-7~
//V 77Y£T /y£>4,/?725- OFr
H/S QOU/V7TZyM£:/\/"P
ANSWER: Henry "Light-Horse Harry" Lee, father of Robert K..
Lee. The words were part of a resolution of sorrow prepared bv
him after the death of George Washington, and they were rend lit
the House of Representatives on Dec. 19, 1790, by John Marshall.
5/
'tis
•FMDA1
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, April 28, 1939, newspaper, April 28, 1939; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth282104/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.