McAllen Daily Monitor (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 178, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 26, 1935 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 30 x 24 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Thursday,
-
m
■
c
K‘
Hfe .
je-
ws :.:
K
% -
w;
Mb .
m
1
Tg|; -
i
1
It *■
HP
Kt - i
» j
Technical
FACTORS RULE
"
News is Encouraging
But Traders Seek To
Readjust Commit-
ments. . *
NBW YORK. S*pt. 26— iff)—
While there were scattered firm
spot* in todays stock market, a
numter of ths-4eod«r* stepped back
into the rear price* ranks,
Retreating tendencies were attri-
buted mainly to technical factors.
Domestic happenings wete more
encouraging than otherwise and the
European outloek was no more dis-
concerting that -it has been for ehe
past several days. Trading verged
oh drill ness during the greater part
of the session.
* Definite trends is grains, cotton
and several other commodities
were lacking. Foreign exchanges,
for the most part, were quiet al-
though, the guilder again pointed
lower. *Bonds were irregular In a
fractional range.
Among shares that Improved
moderately In the face of sagging
movements elsewhere in the list
were Anwstcan Telephone, Western
Union. th 8. Gypsum. American
Woolen preferred, and Du Pont. A
loss of 2 points was registered by-
American Can and Case. U. S.
-Steel, Westinghosse. Howv Sound.
AIHed ahem leal and Union Paci-
fic yielded a point or so each.
Authorization by a New York
federal court of an additional grand
Jury, to investigate the alleged man-
ipulation of stock of the Associat-
ed Gas A Electric Co., did not
seem to particularly disturb the
utilities. • *! -4
» - - ——-— *-*•-nee to the ad-
In the recently
rials, bad been
market aifalysta
secondary reaction, held
reasonable bounds, was not
lly unwelcome to those who
their eyes on the long-term
trend.
, Although Speculative forces were
, . not disposed to get excited over ttfie
v>—situation abroad, pending more
reassuring developments comment-
ators generally were forecasting in-
tervals of irregularity in the equi-
ties division. *
, »*■ u
Italians met in a compact body.
Inckto-cd in their number were
members of 'the delegation and
other promlfterw. fascists. They
strolled up to the bar in the lea-
gues glass-roofed lobby, ordered
drinks, stood stiffly in a circle, an 1
raised bheir glasses high in a toast.
Then, after downing the drink:*,
they ostentatiously matched down
the steps and out from the build-
ing.
As on the occasion of the recent
dramatic walkout.by Baron Pom-
poo Aloisi, their chief delegate,
from a council meeting, the other
delegates and spectators were left/
in the dark as to the; meaning of
this new gesture*.; , •
It was not immediately indicate
ed whether this meant the delega-
tion's final departure or was mere-
ly a repetition of the previous ges-
ture by Aloisi.
A spokesman for the Italian de-
legation. however, later explained
that the second version was cor-
rect—namely, that "Italy will not
sit In the same table with Ethio-
pia.” This time, moreover, the act
was a little stronger, since the
Italians had walked all the way
out of the building.
McAllen daily monitor
OBtem
' NEW ORLEANS; Sept. 2«—<#)—
on
s THIS? STEPPING ON EGGS?—It’s merely Francis L.
Notre Dame right half, ready to fend off a tackier as he
gets into practice for the grid year at South Bend, Ind. He is
a brother Of Elmer Layden, Notre Dame coach, and hails from
Davenport, Iowa.
steers 9.00 few loads steers and
yearlings 7.75 8.50; sort feds down-
ward to <5.50 and below; most
grass steers 4.50 5.50 beef cows
3.75 5.25; Weighty sausage bulls
,.4.00-50; good fat calves 5.50-6.5flf;
common- kinds 3.74.4.75. (
Slfeep 400 few sales of all cla.«S-'
es steady;fat Iambs 8.00-25; wooled
fat yearling;* 6.50 down; aged
wooled we> lers 4.25-50; feeder
lambs 7.60-25. . '
JR
< hold
I '*
I
Hedge prensure bn nil
months brought declines ranging
prom. 4 to 4 points In the early
fading In cotton here toddy.
At the opening call all options
^ritb the exception of Oct. were f
qr » points toty**- during the
SAt trading hour little buying ap- “
pea red and the market sold
point by pub*.
At the end of the first bout Dec.
selling at lt.48, March aflO.-
and May ■* •!•.«*. Oct. was
olding one point above its pre-
vious close »t lb,%t.
There W*re no Notice*" Issued
here for the CJct. option today.
Increased hsdging and scattered
liquidation continued during the
morning as prices held n few points
below previous closing levels..
Further rains in Texas, conaid
yed detrimental at this time,
brought some speculative bhying
into the market and managed
beep the undertone *aleady.
' Oct. lost' its early gain and drop-
ped to' 10.$5, while Dec. at 10.50.
March at 1C.5* and May at 19.71
showed minor recessions.
Poultry.
CHICAGO. Sept. 26—(A*)—Poul-
try. live, 30 trucks, easy; hens le«s
than 4% lbs. 17*4; 1 1-2 lbs up
20; Leghorn hens 14 *1-2: Ro- k
springs 16*4-20*4. colored 16-1S;
Rock broilers 20. colored 20. Bare-
backs 13-14: Leghorn chickensf 16:
roosters 15; turkeys 14-1.8; white
acUvo ducks 4% lbs, up 16; small |4.
‘oolored ducks 14: geese 14.
" PoUUoo, i
CHICAGO. Sept. 26—</P)— (l*. S.
Dept. Agr.)—‘Potatoes, 98, on track
38f. total U. S. shipments 492; best
Is slightly stronger, other
.. stock about steady. Idaho Rupee's
■' V" 9. No. L 1.49-75; U. 8. No. 2.
Showing decay .95; Triumphs U.
». ifoi 1, washed, 1.25; showing
decay .80.-1.05: Wisconsin Cobblers
few sales U. H. No. 1, .82^4: Min-
nesota Cobblers U. S. No. 1, few
leg .77%; North Dakota-Cobblers
V. 8.' No. 1, B2*H-S5; Triumphs U.
8. No. 1, .85; Red River Ohio* U.
8. No. 1. .85; Michigan Green
Mopntains*. U. S. No. 1,’ few sales
.95. • -
Product*
CHfCAGO. Sept. 26-^^—Butr
ter, 11,6^1, steady, prices unchan/
ged. E» gs*'"1T?t6, easy, prices un
changed.
Direct
Z7"
m _.
. —- -iSR
/ -
NEW OREANS, Sept. 2«—IK1—
Cotton futures closed steady at net
dncRnea of 6 to 8 points.
- High Low
J
10.50 10.45
19.52 10*46
I
\ I
Lfm
|
§1^
I
2f——Ap-
ry>;
I -
i
i
1 #
Oct
Dec -
Jap. '
March
May
JuJj?
NEW ORLEANS. Sept. 26—<«—
Spot cotton‘closed steady. 7 points
down- P*lep T,***- L°w middling
9.96; middling 10.71; good raiddl-
ldt 11.16; receipt* 13.985;, stock
; L -
\ U MM
-T'lv.-t\ •
^CHICAGO,
proximate ly 2 cents n bushel sud-
den Jump in corn price* late today
resulted from official 'forecast* V
froet tdhight in seven states.
Particular anxiety to double dan-
ger of serious damage to the na-
tion’s cofn crop was aroused. The
fact was stressed that much of the
corn crop Is later than ‘ usual, and
lbp.t a klUlnfc Croat now would be
a good deal earlier than ordinary-
*Corn closed strong, 7-8 1 7-8
aJ>ove yesterday’s finish, Dec. 59
5-8 &4, wheat 5-8 off to 1.4 up,
Doc. 98 1_8 1.4, and oats unchan-
ged to 1-8 lower, with provisions
al 17 to 32 cents setback reflect-
ing declines of, hog prices. »
Cash Grain
CHICAGO. Sept. 26—l**)—Cash
Wheat; No. 1 hard 1.18 1-2 19 1-2;
sample grade mixed 86 1 -t; corn
No. 2 yellow 8* 86 1-4; No. 6 yel-
low 84 84 1-4; oats No. I white
2* 9-4; *Jo. 4 white 27 1-2 28 1-4.
(Continu-id From Page One)
tj. Tv _
Italy and Ethiopia.
► Some said they 'saw in Laval’s
speech a particular indication tha*
Great Britain fill stand by France
in the event of an complications.
growing out of any attempt to des- cast thelr^j unanimous vote.
troy the independence of Austria.
The council probably, will meet
again tomorrow to discuss Emperl
or Haile Selassie's request that a
commission of neutral observers
be sent to the Ethiopian frontiers
to follbw the situation and to fore-
stall any military clashes. '
Some-/observers said they saw
in the speeches of both Anthony
Eden of Great Britain and Maxim
Litvinoff of, Russia ! an indication
that conversations pn the "sane-,
tions” which might be employed
against Italy will be vigorously
pursued.' • • '
Eden said in his speech that
while the council's report was be-
ing drafted, ‘‘the governments will
thave an opportunity to consider
whether, and if s0 how, anything
further can be done to safeguard
peace.”
Litvinoff was deemed to have
made an even clearer allusion to
sanctions tvhen he said no doubt
coujd be entertained regarding the
response his government, would
give to “any proposals which the
council may make for tbe safe-
guarding of the peace of Africa as
well as other continents -and for
maintaining league covenant.”
•In connection with this angle,
league officials stated that * the
council has the power tG put into
Its recommendatlonf if it wishes,
suggestions for economic and fin-
anc-ial sanctions and: other general
m-'a^ures of restrain against a na-
tion whieh^ launches- war after ra+
jecting the recommendtations.
The president of the council En-
-eiq.ue Ruiz Guinazu of Argentina,
/* presented the recomjnendation for
procedure under article XV to
‘‘make and publish” a report bn the
case and recommendations—viola-
tions of which, if adopted unani-
mously, wduld be cpnsidered an act
of war against all leitgue members,
under article XVI, leading to sanc-
tions. ■)
The Italians caused1 a brief whirl
of excitement, jusf before the
council's public meeting was open-
ed, by their ,walkout.
, - As Anthony Eden of Orgeat Bri-
tain, Premier Laval of France,
Maxim Litvinoff of Russia, and oth
era went/to the bouhcil chamber to
the
LONDON, Sept. 26—(dh—Greit
Britain brought its defensive meas-
ures nearer home today, to teach
-London residents how to act in the
event war should bring bombers
over the city.
Seven thousand men and women
already we're trained for emer-
gency duty. Plans were pushed
forward for-instructing fathers an i
mothers in the East End how to
protect their families from the ef
fects of gas attacks. •
The program followed the elab-
orate air raid rehearsals in Medi-
terranean possessions, with th**
Italo-Ethiopian crisis apparently
close to the breaking point.
Toynbee Hall, in the crowded
commercial mad area near the
London docks, will be cbhverted
into a temperary first aid station
Saturday, when members of the
volunteer St. John Ambulance
brigade will give a demonstration.
Eight London units of the ter-
ritorial ; array, recently returned
from their annual camp exercises,
arranged to turn to anti-aircraft
work.
Fleet concentrations continued
unabated, with a program disclos-
ed for massing of the entire Med-
iterranean fleet in Greek waters
near the Italian naval concentra
tions. .
Dtridawji to safeguard the railroad
front* A^dh* Ababa to sjBjihoutt'
French Somaliland, and • to assist
in preservation of order, j
French authorities also were giv-
en the right to bring some df these
troojfs to Addis Ababa in the event
of danger.
The‘King of Kings at first ex-
pressed an inclination to deny the
French request, because he had
refused a similar right to the Ital-
ians, but he yielded to French in*
sistence, , I
Government officials expressed
fear that the action might embit
ter the Italians. They argued, how-
ever, that Italy, if if were in thd
position of a belligerent, would npt
need such protection in any event
which compelled complete Italian
evacuation.
France wtil be the first country
to bring white troops to Ethiopia.
i
Campaign
of Roose-
Defeat Him
Broke
Pro
velt
Says Teptas Leacejr.*
President Packs
Rods and Reels
Pot A> Vacation
WASHINGTON. Sept. 26
President Roosevelt had his fav-
orite fishing rtels and rods packqjl
today for a belated vacation trip
to the Pacific coast. o
Before heading across the coun-j
try tonight on a direct route to the
California-International expositio
at San Diego and to tthe Pacific
Ocean, Mr. Roosevelt arranged last)
minute talks with government offi*
dais. The bituminous coal strlkd
was believed to be due for primary-
consideration 'today.
Thee president is taking almos;
his entire secretarial staff to the
ooast. He also invited the works
relief leaders. Harry L. Hopk*nS
and Secretary Ickes. to go with him
on the first stage® of the Jo,urne.v.
He will be gone from the capital
for almost a month, with most of
the tlrpe to be spent at‘sea in aj
fishing-cruise through tihe Panamd,
canal. There he Intends to spend
a few days making a htlnute in-
spection of this American defense.
The first planned stop on the
western trip will be at Boulder
Canyon dam. nearing Completion
on the Colorado riv®r. At that point
.there is every chanoe the president
will discuss his power views.
ROME. Sept. 26—(A*)—The walk-
out of the Italian delegation at
Geneva before the league of na-
tions council unanimously adopted
a resolution to proceed under ar-
ticle 15 of|the covenant in the
Italo-Ethiopian deliberations, was
declared today b^ a government
spokesman to be “without signi-
ficance.” 1
He added that the covenant re-
quires that any controversy be-
tween members shall be consider-
ed by' the council in the absence
of the involved parties. The Italian
delegation, he said, may be call-
ed in later.
(The courcil decision authorized
it to ‘‘make and publish" a rfeport
on the Italo-Ethiopian conflict and
make recommendations. Violation
of these recommendations if adop-
ted unanimously, would be\ con-
sidered an net of war against all
league members, under article 16,
i loading1; to sanctions) t___
I Italy cancelled today the sailing
’ of some 10,000 troops? drawing up
to embark for Libya to guard the'
frontier bordering on Egypt.
With an expressed sense of re-
lief that tension with Great Brl*
tain had passed, Italian govern-1-
ment officiils awaited league
nations developments.
Robertsons Return
From Brazil Trip
Sao PaiRo, Brazil, where they join
ed Mr. Albertson last February.
Mr. Albertson accompanied them
as far as Houston,' expecting to
Join Mrs. Albertson ftiere in the
next day or two-’'
Mr. Albertson is associated, witji
tbe Anderson-Olayton Co. of Hous-
ton. while Mrs. Albertson is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R.
Moore, w,ell known McAllen resid-
ents.
t>udgetT\poni faring the cjountry
to an An^tiian family which ha*
to watch j its) expenses; he: hasn’t
done that! Hie pledged the govern-
ment to a'sodpd money policy; now
we are o^f t^e gold standard.”
H« actiop throughout the coun-.
try to ndw jle,al policies, Creager
said, will assure republican sue
House—
bounced |int4jj the republiegn col-
umn in f92S and added that on
three occLsi-ins republicans almost
had attaLnei victory either j in
state or M'i^nal ra|ces. A repeti-
tion of tlje If 2 8 swing “is entirely
possible,”; he said.
Creagetj declined to discuss per-
sonalities i either in Texa* i»r na-
tional politics. He said he felt there
was no neejd to commit hAn*df
“this early jin the game” ' on his
personal choice for president and
added he was advising his friends
both in Texas and other states to
keep an opeit* mind.
ation Order
i • •
om
Allowables
4 .(Continued From Page One)
i ft U * “
highway construction. The bond
fund now receives 25 per cent.
■ Senato leaders, pleading for a
return to the state affairs commit-
tee of tbe bill by Senator Cliht
Small of Amarillo strictly defining
a saloon, promised sharp revisions
tn their measure providing a li-
censing system. The committe-j
recommended tfhe small bill, nine
to eight.
Senator W. K. Ho-pkins, co-au-
of thor of the license bill, said the
i wet block had “no thought of
the Pant
for num
Government sources I insisted, I bringing out the bill without ma-
however, that clarification of the J terial and sharp amendments to
relations between Britain and Italy ,du,y restrict and eliminate obnox
in no way affected Itafy’s East provisions.
African program. j
ADDIS ABABA. Sept. 26—(A>)—
Emperor Haale Selassie granted
permission to France today to sta-
tion 180 French white troops at
HOW?IT BEGAN jggg«r
€
"FORT WORTH; Tex., Sept. 26-
UP)—(USDA) — Hogs 699; early
truck sales steady; packer market
10-25 lower than early market;
better grades dt 189-2f9 lb truck
bogs 19.75-11.19; good under-
weights averaging 150-175 lbs
9.50-10.66; packing sows steady to
weak 9.00-25.
Cattle 2.400' calves 900; fully
ahuuty mi practically all classes;
1st choice experimental station
yearlings 19.00; lead t-year-oM fed
■■ . ' r
Golden Wedding
THIS CUSTOM BEGAN ANOEN'
GERHANV WHEN A COUPLE
WAS PRESENTED WITH A GOLD
WREATH ON THEIR 50th WEDDING
ANNIVERSARY AS A SYMBOL OF
ENDURING DEVOTION AND IN AL-
LUSION TO THE APPROACHING
GOLDEN AUTUMN OF THEIR
LIVES /-fles. Geoftet
£hg£ltcx» AMw Salem, N.P.
Hopkinp contended Small
bill was unworkable. /Wen from
the standpoint of those who esc
■pouse it,” and would prohibit salf
of beer -for consumption on th^
premises. He predicted its passage
would “preclude an opportunity
work out a reasonable b^ll.”
Small warned “there can be ncj
common meeting grourtd” if t*b«j
motion to recommit was designed
to obtain a definition p4rmlttliis|
I sale by the drink. He charged the
license bill “does nothing more
than open up a type of liquor
vending that was outlawed years'
ago.”
“This bill would thwart the will
of the people in amending the con-i
stjtution,” charged Senator T. J.
Holbrook of Galveston, “and It
j would produce a condition bvj
which they could hot have liquor."
I putting liquor traffic “right back
into ttfw hands of bootleggers.
He contended the people inter-
preted the ban against ah "open
saloon” a* prohibiting “the saloon
as, they knew it before prohibi-
tion.” 1
W,
RRWW
r*
Heavy Snowstorms
Brin6 Good Sprinc Crops
THIS BELIEF, ONCE A SUPERSTjTIONf ...
IS A TACT. A HEAVY FALL OF SNOW
PROTECTS THE SOWN GRAIN AND
MELTING SLOWLY, NOURIBI ES THE
' SEED INSTEAD OF WASH IN1' rr AWAY
AS WITH A HEAVY RAIN* ,
T ( >.t •. *
V’
e ins
StbSImu*. to
Hurricane—
c (Continued From Tage One)
14 ? ’ J . ( ——4 Vf- — i ;;
ported the disturbance in the East-
ern Caribbean was dissipating.
Meteorologist 'Dunn said the
western hur: .c ane center was mov-
ing about four miles an hour or
less over a small area and the bu-
reau has not yet fully determined
the angle of its recurve in course
since last night.
The meteorologist placed the
center about 475 miles southeast
of the Yucatan channel and ap-
proximately 650 miles south of
Miami, Fla.
The home df General William
Moutrie. noted Civil War figure
and the first South Carolinian to
plant cotton, has been torn down
to make way for th- -new Santee
canal.
When a Seventh Day Adventist
Sunday, F. P. Vaught of Knoxville
was recently fined for working on
rwrote the judge who Imposed the
fine and offered a duck as a prize
tD any person who could quote
scripture which designates Sunday
as the Sabbatih' day.
*
j
i
i
m
ArfcTlk Tex., Sept. T6--<4y —
•The railnoad nom mission's first
order prorating sour gas ptoduc-
tlon has Hi Ion a new law, today
set an : linkable of 36(t,000.0(p)
cubic fe«t dally t°r October.
Prorat on j of sweet ga^j became
effective Aug. 1 under t>!ve conser-
vation act but restrictions pn sour
gas writ Injoperative until Oct. l.
Cold-weatper needs caused in-
creases ip sfriet gas allowables for
andle field, source of fuel
?rops mid-western states.
Allowable production in tPe west
field wad boosted 20.000,000 cubic
f<et to 340.000. 060 feet, and In the
East fiejd by 1,000,000 feet to 95,-
000,000 cubic fpet- -
Maximum production of gas per-
mitted td one barrel of oil in the
'Parihandle upas reduced frqm 12.-fi
000 to 1 oL000 cubic fefet.
—-*
White and Negro Boys
Fight Over Joe-Max
j n-- -| •
CINCIXNATI. Sept. 26—(4>) —
Poiicei rushed squads to thje Oyler
Junior high ^cihool today, as .white
youiths apd njegro students i fought,
some of them said, over thje result
of tht Joie liouis-Max Baelr fight.
No arrests Were made. John Dow-
ner. principal of the school, assert-
ed “as far as' I know, the children
of the school were r.ot responsible
for the trouble. Classes are pro-
ceeding as usual.
But he adCd. (however, that h*
had signed permits to allow par-f
|ent* of 38 white children io keep {
their children at home for the day, s
and polled sifuggling to disp rr-fe»
the throng oh the viaduct advised
the 100 negro students of thel’
» hool to return home and remAin
away from school until next Mon- (J
day. _ I
Woman Jumps From1
$an Antonio Building:
WASHI>GT)0^. Sept. 26^4-^—
R. B. "Crezger, Texas republican
'national comtnitteerpan, predated
today thatj "itrbken catfipaign pro-
mises’’ ' Wouldf defect » President
Roosevelt j next year and eject a
repub liraf.
Creager, a power ini republican
party affair* for ye^ffp. said bny
man the rerjubllcans chose i would
be electe^’ ‘ ihevitably’'' unless the
party ma le * serious blunder in
.campaign activities.
President Rooqevelt declared he
agreed with and would stand pat
on the platform declarations of bis
k>a.rty co tveption in Chicago,”
Creager sfild. “Now, that platform
called for a minium «|6 per cent
reduction Jn government expenses.
Instead of that, we find them mul-
plied four fold.” * DALLAS, Tjpxss, S pt. 26—(AVr
talked, about a balanced Sam .Kim|' chJ<>-f of the c^r.
JvliI for Contempt Awtralil ^ Abe,
igar-
ette tax division of the state comp-
troller's office, Was adjudged ip
conteniipt of courr’k^lay for alleg-
edly. interfering wWh transporta-
tion and sa>e of non-tax' paid cigar-
ettes in interstate Commerce. ,
District Judge Sa^.h T. Hughes
on July 19 had enfered an ord"sr
restraining ComptMiler Gebrge
cesses at the polls next fall. He said Sh ppard and his agents from in-
he believed republicans would join , terfering with »he Interstate co»-
succesafnfly with constitutional and , nieree cigarette bus.ness of the In-
states’ right/democrats in many ter*tate Tobacco company, whicji
states to del eat P.oosevelt.
His owjn state, Virginia, North
Carolina jind Florida he said were
likely fields fjor such a union.
Creager! t'ecalled' that Texas
is headed by Julius
Dallas.
Klugsb rg applied for a con-
tempt order against Kimberlin'af-
ter he and his aides allegedly siee-
ed a shipment of cigarettes
transit near Waco Sept.'20. He was
cited to afppear in court hers to-
day.
John Poue, Jr., assistant attor-
ney general;, Willard McLaughlin,
district attorney: and his assistant,
Frank M. Wilson, also were cited
to appear and show da use why
they should not refrain and desist
from prosecuting a suit at Waco
for forfeiture of 140 cartons of
stized cigarettes and a confiscated
automobile. \
Judge Hughes dismissed tihe pro-
ceedings an to Pope. McLaughlin
and Wilson but sentenced Kimber-r
lit} to three days in jail.
Pope. McLaughlin and Wilson
immediately took steps to
KJlmberlln’s release from jai
through application for a writ of
habeas corpus to the supreme coiiri
of*Texas. * ■*• •• t «- •
Judge Hughes agreed to hold up
the commitment s -nding Kimberlin
to Jail until the supreme court apl-
iplicatlon was drawn! 1 •,
Tyo are Held For
Robbing a Store
j
Accused sor robbing the , Alien
store, located one-half mile nbr(b
tof the Bentsen nursery on Taylor
road, two Latin-Am -ricant* were •
being held in Edihburg toda^v.
i Tlhc men, Diel Guerra ami Ra-
mon Perez are , alleged to have
stolen $9 from Alien yesterday
Preview Saturday
algo
Sunday * Monday
mm
SO NEW—irS A YEAft Al
:_*_ I
HDM
fee#*'*
J'l*
r 1
i 1
1*1
Filtndom’a NEW wonder show! Yc
waited seven yean for it... a king’* 1
som to produce! So crammed with glogi.
| v y ous music, to packed with fun, ro»
t malice, spectacle, so teeming whig
start of screen, stage and radio, k MR
ajaew standard for acreen muajcahj
IVilYTHINO IH. !«?>'
ONI OIANT 1MOWI ..M ■
!L
1
r 1
J. . I > 1/
DALLAS^ Tjsxas, Sept. 26—(A*)—i
Mrs. J. EJ AV’hlte, 38, j plunged to
her death j from a seventh-floo-
,window ofjthe Medical Arts'build-
ing here today.
Justice 6f me Peace El John
Baldwin b?ld|the woman cojnmit-
ted suicidie.* Hj4r home was in Dal-
las. I j ] 1 _ /
Mrs. Wh, te, who wax *«ild to have
been in ill health, had gone to the
office of Dr. L. S. Thomson, ac-
companied] by another Woman,
Shortly' after she arrived at the
office, boijee jivere told, she went
to a re£t i^oom. Police found her
purse tin fcho window sill of this
room.
Her tfushsnd, J. K. White, is an
enfployo of fixe Shell Oil company
at Houitogj, police learned.
J’
i
•
trill, &
JACK BENNY
ELEANOR PQWELL
ROBERT TAYLOR
Heading Cast of ,15
<• - Stortl 200 Girls!
Song hitsi
“Broadway
i Rhythm” '
“On A Sunday
Afternoon"
“You Are My
Lucky Star"
“Sin* Before.
. Breakfa "
I ‘ 4
The
cently
a $50
panyingj
due the
jyjgr Qt Lexington. !Ky., re-
foelved a letter coiiitaining
11. (The money, an accom-
!$e said, was long past
ilji. No name was given.
■1 n41
CM»
Extra
‘Buddy’s Lost World”—A Color ^Cartoou |
Paramount’s Latest News
Tomorrow & Saturday
it
-
M.
f.
. ‘id
. Wfc
mmm
mmam
• -
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Kling, A. R. McAllen Daily Monitor (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 178, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 26, 1935, newspaper, September 26, 1935; McAllen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1142990/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting McAllen Public Library.