The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 3, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 8, 1935 Page: 1 of 4
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wording to the Pf®81
mment will spend 5 b
rs and employ three
When Urban Lerroux’s club of Old Bucks and Lame Ducks marched from the
people In the streets first laughed, and then grew serious and sad. The 'pro
petitioning lor clothes or at least $1 a week with which to buy them.
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THE TRIBUNE
'For God and Country: Recognizing rights of others, we stand for our own!’
PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND FRIDAY
IV.
Hallettsville, Texas, Tuesday, January 8th, 1935.
Line or Two
'fgressman Miller of Ar-
l would allow a five-bale
tion to farmers who are
of a family. That, ho
,would help the small far-
they would provide a plan
would really reduce the
rcial cotton planter, they
not have to worry about
exemption for the small
will pay every small
er to be interested in
coming events in Wa-
ton regarding the cot-
plan. It has to be
ed within the next few
I can report to
ial benefits to our agri-
population, increased
al activity, and profits
merchants,” the presi-
ld congress.
pared to the time when
elt became the leader,
is material difference in
ons. Some may not like
it is a fact,
nation can not endure half
and half free — and nei-
can it endure with a few
rich and many too poor,
how that, too, has to be
president,
5 billion
and
on gov-
the next
the private capi-
___follow suit, the
ion soon would be
Too much money is
lying Idle.
Mexico today the Catho-
e and worship as did the
Christians in the time of
The Mass, as in the
of then, is celebrated on
ountain side,” relates a
only the Mexican — or
our own — Catholics will
in the footsteps of the
Christians, they need not
about the future of their
and Church.
real danger than
any outside enemy are
Catholics in name only
Catholics by habit in-
of conviction and un-
o 0
Hauptmann claims
guilty of the killing
rgh’s baby, his claim
^ported by circumstan-
nce in the case.
not be easy for Bruno
n to explain the find
in his garage, and his
f 50 thousand dollars
years with ordinary
■t
NUMBER 3.
LINDBERGH IDENTIFIES KIDNAPER’S
VOICE. POINTS HIM MIT IN COURT
Czechoslovakia Plans
for Catholic Congress
Mother Identifies
Baby’s Garments
Prague, Dec. 31. — Catholics of! --
Lindbergh Heard Crash
When Ladder Broke
try in .\e\v Xork the
i>t “Mr. Zero’’ wero
Loss Of Citizenship [25,000 CENSUS WORKERS BEGIN
For Americans Who
Vote in Saar Asked
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. — Can-
cellation -of citire/iship of Americans
who have left the U. S. to vote for
Germany in the Saar plebiscite, is
provided for in a bill introduced in
the house today by Representative
DIckstein, Democrat, New York,
chairmun of the house immigration
committee. Under the bill United
States district attorneys would be di-
rected to enter suit against more
than 5000 naturalized Americans
who ate now' in the Saar district.
Cheese, Beer for
Nervous Babies
MADISON, Wis., Jan. 3. — (AP)
— If your baby shows nervousness
by crying easily, jumping at strange
noises and sleeping badly, give him
a piece of cheese and a sip of beer,
says Dr. H. Curtis Johnson.
A leading child specialist, Dr. John
sonr said American cheese, fresh and
mild, is exceedingly beneficial in
nervous cases. Beer, he added is
rich in vitamin B and the anti-euro-
tic vitamin contained in yeast.
Cheese is rich in vitamin A and a
good preventive for colds in young
and old. the doctor said. “Natural-
ly, all types of nervousness don’t re-
spond to the cheese treatment, but
it’s worth a try, anyhow, a* it can
not do any harm.”
SIX CONVICTED
OF CONSPIRACY
TO FREE NASH
Kansas City. Jan. 4. — Six per-
son* were convicted by a jury in
federal court today of arranging
the delivery plot which cost the
lives of Frank Nash, convict, and
four officers in a blaze of machine
gun fire on the Union Station
Plaza here June 7, 1933.
The verdict was returned to Judge
Merrill E. Otis at 0:80 a. m. (Doc)
Stacci, Chicago night club operator;
Frank B. (Fritz) Mulloy, Karnes
City; Richard Tallman Galatas and
his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Galatas, Hot
Springs, Ark. and Herbert Allen Far
mer and Mrs. Esther Farmer, his
wife, Joplin, Mo.
Mrs. Vivian Mathis, who posed
as the wife of the late Verne C. Mil
ler here, pleaded guilty as the trial
opened. _
ENUMERATION OF NATION’S FARMS
ny Proposes to Trade Her
Products for Egyptian Cotton
tion is being given to a
deal between Germany
whereby Germany will
tlan cotton in exchange
products, chiefly nitro-
r, medicinals and possib-
1 machinery, Houston
the depat tment of corn-
advised Saturday.
cites that Egypt Is
consummate the agree-
means of increasing sales
to Germany and because
nitrogen fertilizer
Egyptian soil require-
nt, as set forth, al-
iping with Germany’s
policy of extending
i, now being ag-
and which are
by the aeareity of fore-
ign exchange and the need for in-
dispensable foreign raw materials,
such as cotton.
An unfavorable aspect of the nro
jected barter deal with Egypt, the
report points out is the fact that
Egyptian cotton i* high in price
compared with American cotton and
is, therefore, suitable for only a
restricted part of the German tex-
tile industry.
The proposed cotton-fertilizer
transaction, according to the report,
is similar to one consummated be-
tween Egypt and Germany two
years ago, under the terms of which
Egypt took 60,000 metric tons, of
German calcium nitrate, valued al
tian cotton «f an equal value.
Washington, D. C., Jan. 2.
proximately 25,000 federal •
employees today began the huge
/nslr nf •nurm*r»tinff the more then I
six million farms and ranches of
the United States in what is pro-
bubly the most important agricul-
tural census in the nation’s history,
according to a statement released by
Director William D. Austin, Bureau
of the Census, Department of Com-
merce. / Plans call for the comp-
letion of the canvass before the end
of January.-
“The fifteenth Decennial Census
Act, approved June 18, 1929, direct-
ed that a mid- decennial Census of
Agriculture is to be taken Jan., 1,
1935, for the calendar 'year 1934”,
Director Austin said. “Reeaui^;/
the tremendous upheaval in the
great basic industry of agriculture,
- Essential Points
censusi
of President's New
Work Plan in Brief
WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.— Essen-
tials in President Roosevelt’s mes-
sage to the Seventy-Fourth con-
gress :
A “new order of things” was pro-
jected, with these three objectives —
“security of a livelihood thru the'
bettor use of the national resources
. . . . security against the major haz-
ards and vicissitudes of life ... sc
cuiily of decent homes.”
olic Congress, which will be held in
this city, June 28 to 30, 1935. The
motto for the congress will be “To
Renew Everything in Christ.”
Archbishop’s Home
in Cuba Bombed
SANTIAGO, Cuba, Jan. 4. —
(INS) — The residence of the Ca-
tholic archbishop of Santiago was
bombed today. _ Considerable dam-
age was done,
Taken to Asylum
Sheriff McElroy left for Terrell,
Texas, Saturday, accompanying
Frank Dolezal, who is to be placed
hi a State Hospital there.
Mr. Dolezal was adjudged insane
in the County Court several months
ago.
John Shimek Passes
Away at Home
On Route No. 4
Yoakum. Jan. K — John Rhjjnck,
aged 78 years passed away at the'amined.
Correlated with this “new nation-
al pollry’’ was a definite program of
“putting people to work” and a flat
that "the federal government must
due to the depression, drought and and shall quit this business of re-
other factor* new farm statistics j lief.”
are urgently needed in connection | The employment program — turn-
with the Government’s vast recovery jing 1,500,000 of unemployables to lo-
program. cal welfare efforts; federal work
“The earliest cooperation of the | giving for the 3,500,000 of non-work-
farmer is necessary to the success, ing employables “pending their ab
FLEMINGTION, N. J.,#Jan. 3. —
(AP) — The Famous sky-riding pa-
rent* of the kidnaped and stair
Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Jr., to-
day told on the witness stand of the
last day they saw their blonde first-
born alive, and of the events sur-
rounding the kidnaping.
Mrs. Anne Morrow Lindbergh, a£
the trial of Bruno Richard Haupt-
mann, for murder of- the child, iden-
tified garments which she put upon
the baby the fateful night of Mar.
1, 1933, and sketched for the jury a
story of domestic happiness, includ-
ing the throwing of a pebble to get
the baby's attention at a nursery
window.
She identified pictures of the baby
and his toys.
Colonel Lindbergh testified he
heard the crash which the state con-
tends was the breaking of the ladder
from his nursery window by Haupt-
mann, the child being instanteously
killed.
Mrc. Lindbergh „uS mii, cross- ex-
home of his son-in-law F.mil Horky.l FJiEMINGTON v J. J*n 4. —
on Route4, Yoakum, at C p. m. FrI- (AP) _ Direct accusation of the
day, Jan. 4, after a short illness, prisoner by the father of the kidnap-
Interment was in the Oak Grove ed and slain Charles Augustus Lind-
Cemetery at 2 p. m. Saturday under bergh Jr., topped swift moving ev-
the direction of the Beck Morturary. ents today in the trial of Bruno Ri-
Mr. Shimek is survived by 3 chard Hauptmann for murder,
daughters: Mrs. Carrie Horky, Ko- Colone, Limlbt h i(,tntified Haupt
erth, Texas; Mrs. Mary Horky, mann,s voicP as tbat of the ,Jn
Route 2, Yoakum; Mrs. Julie Hearkz he hean, in n Blonx cenietery whe.
Route 6, roakum; 7 eons, John he paid over ¥60,000 in a vain hope
Yoakum; 7 sons,
Shimek, Sweet Home; Charlie
Shimek, Karnes City; Willie Shimek,
Shiner; Julius Shimek, Sweet Home;
Frank Shimek Yoakum; Rudolph
Shimek, Yoakum; George Shimek,
Yoakum, and 21 grandchildren.—He-
rald,
of this census, for it is one of the
federal activities designed primarily
for his benefit However, the wel-
fare of agriculture affects all other
industries, directly or indirectly, and
the public generally. The statis- J electrification
sorption in a rising tide of private
employment.”
* * * '
Suggested activities: “Clearance of
slums . . . rural housing . . . rural
tics are necessary not only for the
ordinary transaction of governmental
business, but also for allotment pro-
grams. These programs range
from Hie allocations of the Agricul-
tural Adjustment Administration to
the Federal Emergency Relief and
Farm Credit Administrations. In-
deed, the benefits expected to be
derived from this census are incal-
culable and will have a marked in-
fluence on the future welfare of
agriculture and the country
whole. At the completion of the
canvass every effort will be put
forth to make preliminary tabulation
reports available at the earliest pos-
sible moment.
“Due to the splendid cooperation
of newspapers, farm publications
radio broadcasting stations state
and country farm Agencies and or-
ganizations and educational institu-
tions in disseminating concerning the
importance of this farm census more
that) a million copies of the same
sample schedule have been distri-
buted to farmers. Those who do
not have sample schedules are urg-
ed to write, phone or call at the
farm census headquarters in their
district, procure a copy, study the
questions and have their records
ready when the enumerator calls.The
headquarters for the 14th, census
District of Texas is located at the
office of Mrs. Marion Smith, Bren-
ham, Texas.
“The Bureau desires to call at-
tention to the law which provides
that the individual return made by
each fanner is an absolutely confid-
ential government report and to em-
phasize the fact that no individual
figures will be used for taxation pur
pose* nor given to any tax official.
All enumerators, us well as all Cen-
sus employees, are sworn to sec-
recy and are required to read the
law and the severe penalties esta-
blished for any disclosure of
formation.
reforestation
prevent soil erosion . . . road sy-
stems . . .‘elimination of grade cross
ings . i . enlargement of the suc-
cessful work of the Civilian Conser-
vation Corps.”
* * *
Continuance of the agricultural ad-
justment program with “certain ne-
cessary improvements of methods”
was recommended.
The president discounted any ap-
prehension that our relation* with
as a any nation will be otherwise than
peaceful.”
U. S. Woman Is Freed
From Nazi Jail
WALDMOHR, Germany, Jan. 3.
— (AP) — Miss Elsa Sittell, 81-
year-old New York woman, jailed
for allegedly calling Reichfuehrer
iHitler a Jew, was released toda'y at
the end of 10 days’ imprisonment.
After her release, Mis* Sittell was
spirited away from the prison with
the greatest secrecy.
She was freed without trial. It
was understood one of the conditions
under which she wa* given her li-
berty was that she should not make
the story of her experiences public.
residing in an enumeration district
will know the enumerator personally
ami they will do weli to see that an
accurate report is returned for their
district. With the program now
being carried on by the Governmi
to assist agriculture an inaccural
eqt
ate
report might react to the disadvan-
tage of the farmers in that particu-
lar district.
“The farm schedule is comprised
of 1Q0 questions covering practically
every important ramification of the
agricultural industry. Of course,
very few farmers will be required
to answer all of the questions, only
the ones pertaining to their particu-
in- lar activities. Questions to be ans
Only sworn employeeswered will include farm tenure; farm
of the Census Bureau haw access population; farm acreage, which in-
to the files. Section 9 of the Fif-| eludes all crop land, pasture land
teenth Decennial Census Act pro-j and woodland; total value of the
videa penalties for failure to ans-
wer questions asked by enumerators
or for giving false information.
approximately- SfiWfiQO marks, and "Enumerators are legal residents
Germany was supplied with Egyp- *.......
of the districts which they canvas*.
Some, if not all, of the famere
farm; acreage and yield of each of
tho principal field crop and vege-
tables; number of trees and yield
of the principal fruit* and nuta;
number and value of each claaa of
livestock, and poultry, and ergs”.
rrinecss I.uslmnya of Arducre,
Okln.. Is the only United States in-
dian studying music In Home. She
ts from the Chickasaw tribe, and
bas an excellent contralt* voice.
Ambassador Breckinridge Long Is
■hown with her Just before her
debut over the radio In the Eternal
City.
to ransom his son, and expressed the
belief that Hauptmann was the kid-
naper.
The defense sought to show with
the famous flier on the stand that
the crime was plotted within the
Lindbergh home, by others thaa
members of the family.
Two more witnesse, took the stand
before cou/t adjourned at 4:25 P„
M, until Monday.
Describes Agony
One of the witnesses. Mrs. VJ»i.
Whateley, Lindbergh cook and wife
of the deceased Lindbergh butleiv
related Mrs. Lindbergh’* agony whex
she learned her little son had beex
taken.
Colonel Lindbergh eat Her today i-
dentifisd Hauptmann us the man
whose voice he heard in a Bronx ce-
metery when he paid, thru Dr. John
F. (Jafsie) Comlon, $50,0(0 jn ran.
som in a vain effort to get hack
his kidnaped baby.
“Since that night in St. Raymond1*
Cemetery,” the prosecutor n ked
Lindbergh, “did you hear that same
voice?”
“Yes.”
“Whose was that voice?”
“Mr. Hauptmann’s,” he replied.
Hauptmann, sitting at the defense
counsel table, flushed.
Mrs. Hauptmann puled, trembled
slightly.
“I heard very clearly a voice com-
ing from the cemetery,” the flier
related, “to the best of my belief
calling Doctor Condon.”
“What were the words?”
t a fore'Sn accent, ‘Hey, doc-
“How manv times?"
“I heard that voice once.”
Farmers Meet at La Grange Next
Saturday. Congressman Eagle Writes
A farmers rally is called for next
Saturday at La Grange to discuss
and obtain a better cotton plan this
year, if possible. There are seve-
ral speakers announced, senators
Stone. Sulak, representatives Herzik
and Olsen among them. Also the
Tribune’s editor is scheduled to
speak.
In the meeting held at Hallctts-
ville a week ago four counties were
represented. It is hoped, the La
Grange meeting will have the simi-
lar success in attracting the farm-
ers, from this whole section to get
together and do what they can in
the cotton question.
Tha copy of resolutions adopted
in the Hallettavill* meeting was
forwarded to the members of Texas
delegation In Congress. In his
answer Congressman Eagle writes:
"It is most gratifying to me to
have your Utter and the resolutions
passed by the farmers of the four
counties at their meeting last Satur-
day.
“It is a mighty problem, and I
am giving the best that is in me to
its consideration and hope for its
satisfactory settlement.”
[<wm
Congressman Marvin Jones, chair-
man of the Committee on Agricul-
y i
ture: “Naturally I am glad to have
/My J
the benpfit of the views of the
V*i
people of that section, nnd I expect
to bring them to the attention of
, f . %
this committee at the earliest op-
portunity."
Congressman J. J. Mansfield, our
■’I®
own: "In so far as I am capable
of judging, I believe that your views
•2 iMf
and mine on the farm question are
1
in thorough accord, and 1 will be
glad to use my best efforts with
ylj
tiie Committee on Agriculture to
work out a suitable plan along thoaa
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Malec, Walter. The Tribune (Hallettsville, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 3, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 8, 1935, newspaper, January 8, 1935; Hallettsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1036396/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Friench Simpson Memorial Library.