Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 238, Ed. 1 Friday, December 21, 1934 Page: 9 of 16
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MX'-.
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
A
UNCLE GUS
(Continued From Page One)
))
I
1
&> ■
71
IS
huge*
1
i
to
should
-o
(UP)
EEE
by
Hundred* of Beautifully Patterned
9
y
Company,
said
Two Groups
496
WILSON TAKES RAP
and
98c
Answers in next issue.
on
I 4
L<]
HICKOK BELT SETS
JJ
(live A Man Something to Weer
X
OPEN NIGHTS
Over Alford Bros.
PHONE 208
Wit iwirtwi HW 'W* >
•hopping in’Henderson today.
J
__
•V‘.
■■
4
Real Quality
Tie*
DOLE RELIEF SYSTEM
IS FROWNED UPON
ALLEGED BURGLARS FREE
UNDER $750 BOND EACH
» PHONE
S 265 «
» 731
COUNTY RELIEF OFFICES
TO OBSERVE HOLIDAYS
transport
cause u 1
per hour at
top speed of
government
were
men
more
had
than
been
i
»
I
FW / rT*‘ - — .....
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DEC. 21, 1934
administration to continue in
MOS. •
HERBERT
HOOVER
FIRST 1
WOMAN
GRADUATE
IN
GEOLOGY,
less.
WINDOW
GLASS
FIRST
DRAWN
. BY
' WILLIAM
CLARK.
1657
Hartol
independ-
-----------------o j I.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
Allen Bros. Drugs
Phone* 265—731
I
»
98c and $1.95
In Attractive Novelty Gift Packing*
Genuine Hickok silver plate initialed buckles.
Cowhide belts in black and brown.
4
I 1
i jg
1
■>
I
MILNER FLORIST f
John
Alvin
der,
Dodson.
A/
Fourth District Court, except for
emergencies pertaining to injunc-
tions, has adjourned for the year.
And will not convene again until
Jan. 5, 1935, when a new term will
open.
itS
premises where sold.”
Mrs Sam Bogard and Mrs. Alga
Shappard of Mt. Enterprise are
Bi
— Doaena to select
jer from — all out for
® quick, easy selection
Ht at 49c.
s* 4
&
. .........
Caught Eegle in Bare Hands
BANF, Alta. (UP)—Harry Lo-
der. a tourist, caught an eagle with
his bare hands while it was in full
flight near here. Loder was trav-
eling along a highway when a
golden eagle few by the window
rf his automobile. Reachin out he
caught it by the neck and pulled
it into his car. He turned It over
to the Banff Zoo.
Lawyer Indicted
• In Kidnap Case
-wo. \]
Murka,
JF.
mo., Worth Petroleum
!j DeGuerin, D. C. Plow-
Tyler Pipe Line Co., are
SEAMEN
(Continued from Page One)
The seamen contended their
chances of finding Jobs would be
lessened if they were taken away
from the waterfront.
The men have been housed near
the ship channel on $5 70 a week
provided by the Federal Govern-
ment. The new plan was to move
them to Camp Ranger where they
would be given food and shelter
and 30 hours of work a week at
three cents an hour.
When hunting jobs, they said,
they must report at the United
Shipping Board office and be
call from 7 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Pat J. Doyle and Jack Hermes,
spokesmen for the seamen, told
transient officials tat there "is not
a Red among us. This conference
was planned with no thought of
violence or trouble.”
Signs expressing opposition to
the wage of three cents an hour
were carried by the seamen as they
started on the march from the ship
channel area, but were taken away
by officers.
J. G. Sowell, transient bureau of-
ficial, said he would refer the mat-
ter to Washington, but the men
must stay at the camp. Transpor-
tation to and from the water front
woud be provided, he said.
5 per cent of year’s wages
extra day’s pay to each
Gay, bright, snap-
py new patterns —
all silk materials —
jjfi full Mik '"’’’d ln
JL our outstanding 98c
“ group!
is
Henderson
Electric Company and her purse
contained notes belonging to the
firm valued at about $625. About
S15 in cash was also taken. She
was in the room at the time and
saw the hand and believes the thief
,s a negro.
At 111 West Elk. a burglar
broke into the apartment of W. P.
Howard and tok her purse contain-
ing 40 cents while she was out of
the room. At the Freeze apart-
ments. 305 South Main, the thief ,
had his hand through the window
of Clyde Houser’s apartment,
when Mrs. Houser’s screams fright-
ened him away. Her purse laying
nearby but the intruder failed to
get his hands on it before she saw
him at the window.
--o—•------
Brazil abolished slavery in 1888.
’t was the last country in the wes-
tern hemisphere to pass abolition
lav;s. . ,
I
I
s
s
is
nace by a roaring tire in
hold, the coastwise freighter
tario,
nor D ........
day after a
firemen were
volunteer* were
smoke and fume*.
1
s
The largest gold nugget ever re-
corded weighed between 2250 and
2500 troy ounces. It was named
“Welcome Stranger" by its discov-
lerer, who found it is a shallow rut
|nea. Moligul, Victoria, Austrr.Ua,
on Feb. 5, 1867.
WlUdnaon, Jesse Roberson, Eula
Shawver, Roy Shawver, Mrs Fain
McComas, Nannie Gass, L. E.
Capps, L. R. Capps, Lena Cannon,
ip, JHUDU
A. Wll-
i, Clemmle
R L. Dod-
Thomas
Arnold
Pauline
Spain,
Callender,
Callen-
Ed d 1 e
Jess
INITIALED
HANDKERCHIEFS
A man will appreciate a box of
these. Three in box.
Solid Whites and Colored Borders
29Cand 49c Box
I GiftT
I
I
i
EL PASO, Dec. 21 (UP) -
Arthur C. Wilson, desert slayer
of Mrs .Irene DeBolt, Cleveland,
O., widow, today accepted the life
sentence given him by a jury last
week.
The sentence was imposed by
Judge W. D. Howe while Wilson
was lying on his sick bed in the
hospital ward of the county jail
here.
KENNAMER
(Continued from Page 9)
! mer thwarted Gorrell’s plan to ex-
520, 000 from Miss 'Wilcox’s
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To the Sheriff or any Constable
of Rusk County—Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to
summon Oil Production Co., Inc.,
Petroleum Marketing Co., Unity
Petroleum Corp., Pugh & Hickman
Drilling Co., The Bay Co., Scher-
merhorn Oil Co., Schermerhorn-
Ardmore Co., Mr M. R. Wooley, I
M. R. Wooley, Tommie W. Tlpps, I
Henry Tlpps, M. C. Deguerln, M.
Hayworth, Individually and as
trustee, J. A. Humphrey, Sam
Warr, Walker Wilson, Lee Gibson,
Sam Warren, individually and as
trustee, Mrs. M. M. Simons, H. S. 1
Moss, M. E. Rogers, 8. H Shelton,
E E. Thrash. Mrs. Alice Mae Kist- I
ler, Mrs. Otis Phillips, D.W. George I
L Ray Dawson, S V. DeGuerin, I
Thomas B. Freeman, Individually I
and as trustee, Ross Finston, Al- I
bert Finston nd Jesse Flnston, in- I
divldually and as executors of the I
estate of Mark Finston, S. B- I
Dobbs, Frank J. Allen, M. F. I
Tempest, J. F. Marion, William O.
Mihlick, Lessie Ashby, V. S. Joiner, I
Ross A. Brewer, Walter H. Gant, I
Mrs. L. A. Harmon, Dudley I
Wooley, Murke Oil & Royalty Co., I
J. F Marion Oil Co.. Worth Petro-
leum Co., Maude DeGuerin, D. C. |
Plowman and Tyler Pipe Line Co., I
by making publication ot this |
Citation once in each week for four I
successive weeks previous to the I
return day hereof, in some news- I
paper published In your county, to
appear nt the next regular term of
the District Court of Rusk County,
tn be holden at the Court House
therof, in Henderson, on the first
Monday in January, A. D. 1935, the
same being the 7th day of January,
A D. 1935, then and there to I
answer an Amended petition filed
in said court on tho'6th day of
December, A. D. 1934,. In a suit,
numbered on the docket of said
Court No. 10252, wheren F. A.
Wood, G. A Wood, J. 8. Wood. E.
J Baker, T. M. Baker. Marne Dod-
son, J. Hugh Dodson, Jr., Carrie
Dodson. Allie Spain, Wm. T. Rob-
erson. A. P. Roberson, Mrs. Ida
Ellen Roberson, Ed Roberson, Rob-
ert Roberson, Maggie Roberson,
1 Ernest Roberson, Wilma Roberson,
i Ellie Mar Cameron, Ollie Cameron,
. Geneva Cameron, Tom Cameron,
1 Tishte Terry. Wm. terry, Mrs W.
R. (EU*a> Hendley. Mrs. Nancy
ATTEND OUR g
Christmas Flower Show |
S K ■
Federal Indictment has been re-
turned against James C. Math-
ers, prominent Oklahoma crim-
inal lawyer, above, on charges
ot "illegal participation in tho
division ot the ransom money”
paid for the release of the kid-
naped Charles Urschel, Okla-
homa oil millionaire. Mathers
defended Harvey Bailey, who
was given a life term for the
abduction.
tort
father.
Holly Anderson, county attorney,
"O’Day’s story is interesting
but we first must find physical
facts to back it up, and until these
I are found I will make no further
" "foments on the matter.”
H. B. Maddux, city criminologist,
raid O’Day’s story was "a lot of
hot air.”
"O’Day is just trying to crash in
on the front page with a story that
will not stand up,” Maddux said.
MINORS
(Continued from Page One)
He said the law should be
amended to read: "No female or
any male unijpr 21 years of age
shall be employed to work in any
establishment where beer is sold
by retail to be consumed on the
her
On
rio, was beached near Cover-
>r’s Island in Boston harbor to-
nine-hour battle. Five
injured and many
overcome
WHO FIR
IN AMERICA •
By Joseph Nathan Kane
Author of "Famous First Facts
Who built the first warships
for the United States?
When was tho first waffle
iron patent issued?
What railroad put the first
electric lighted train in Serv-
ice?
W GIFTS W
FOR ALL WK
'i AT YOUR rwr
WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 (UP)
The suggestion of business lead-
ers that the dole replace work-
relief in caring for 18,000,000
needy was rejected today by ad-
ministration spokesmen.
"I don’t see how anybody could
have made a suggestion worse for
the American people,” Harry L.
Hopkins, relief administrator
said.
The suggestion was
representatatives of
pany,
and an
employee.
Bird & Son Company bonus to
2,000 employees, averaging $100
each.
Clopay Corporation, $10,000 in
bonuses to 350 employees. U«rto!
Products Corporation,
ent oil distributors, 21st annual
cash distribution to employees—
percentage pf ealary fcased on
years of service—and a life in-
surance policy to each employee.
Aetna Fire Insurance Com-
pany, 50 per cent of pay received
in November to each of 500 em-
ployees.
Haggar Company, clothing
manufacturers of Dallas, Texas.,
bonus to 506 employees, totaling
$1 1,500.
At Nashville, Tenn., four com-
panies, employing 3,375 persons,
gave bonuses totaling $31,100.
DISTRICT COURT AD JOURNS
Odle Cannon, Mary Bishop, Elish
Bishop, John Dodaon, L.
Hams, G. W. Williams,
Dodson, J. L. Dodson,
son, Charles 8. Dodaon,
Dodson, Abbie Stanley,
Stanley, Jesse Dodson,
Hall, Lennie Spain. J.
Dodson, T 'se
Callender, Lena
Alvin Callender,
_____~, Bettie Dodson,
Dodson, Wylie Dodson, Dora Rob-
erson are PLAINTIFFS and Gult
Production Co., H imble Oil & Re-
fining Oo., Arkansas Fuel oil Com-
pany, Arkansas Pipe Line Co.,
Hunt Production Co., Panola Pipe
Uno Co., Max Rubin, Nat Wise-
man, Rubin and Wiseman, Ameri-
can Liberty Oil Co., Desoto Crude
Oil Purchasing Corp., Cordova-
Union Oil Corp, McMahon Royal-
ties Co, Phllmack Oil Co, Atlantic
Oil Producing Co,. Cranflll-Reyn-
olds Co., or General Crude Oil Co.,
Golding-Murchinson Oil Co., Beard
& Hammond Oil Co., Fort Worth
National Bank, Lubax Oil Co., Sa-
bine Royalty Corp., Fred J. Adams
Oil Co., Kirby Petroleum Co., Gulf
Pipe Line Co., Mrs. Adella R.
Wooley, M. D. Wooley, C. M. Join-
er, individually and as trustee, W.
D. Tucker, S. E. Gray, R. A. Mot-
ley, Maxie Wilson, G. P. Birdwell,
Bernice Florey, W. E. Florey, J. H.
Silvey, B. W. Cash, Orrie Cash,
L. O. McMillan, H. H. Weinert,
Max Gutman, Mrs. Miriam Straus,
Jack Hyman, Royal H. Brin, Mrs.
Leia R. Gutman, I. Zesner, J. J.
Callaway, Albert M. Griffith, J. W.
McDavid, Mrs. J. W. McDavid, H.
L. Hunt, Otis hllllps, W P. Keel-
ing, Viola Keeling, Charles Neu-
bert, Will Thompson, E. C. Laster,
Inc., Frank L. Oberthler, H. W.
Reed, J. Wood Glass, Clifford
Stone, individually and as trustee.
Unity Petroleum Corp., Elmer Ren-
fro, individually and as trustee,
Mrs. S. A. Plowman, Mrs. Ora
Plowman Turner, D. C. Turner,
H. W. Plowman, J. M. Plowman,
S. J. Plowman, B. C. Plowman,
B. E. Plowman. Noonie Gilstrap,
C. H. Gilstrap, Jessie Green,
J R. Green, Willie Baker,
W. L. Baker, Sophie S. Kramer,
Elliott M. Lande, Nathan Kal-
vin, I. Jacobs, Mrs. Ely Str.-.us,
H. G. Bertenshaw, Afton Thrash,
E. P. Thrash, L. P. Thrash, Mary
Thrash, R. R. Hobson, J. S. Slack,
Conway Stroud, F M. Hood, O. A.
Allen, J. R. Simpson, Marie Bealle
Hodges, Ernest Hodges, Edwin
Bealle, Louise Bealle Propes, D. G.
Propes, Joiner Oil Corporation,
Ranier-Wheells Corporation, The
North Central Texas OH Co., of
£ - — - -
i
i
i
BONUSES
(Continued from Page One)
houses announced thus far gen-
erally are about two weeks salary,
announced a bonus ranging from
two to six weeks salary, depend-
ent upon length of serv|ce.
The New York Cocoa exchange
announced a week’s bonus to all
employes while members of the
New York Curb exchange are
giving their annual Christmas
party to children of lower Man-
hattan. Santa Claus will distribute
a sweater and a pair of shoes
each to about 2,500 children.
The Douglas Aircraft Com-
pany, Inc., today announced a pay
increase of five per cent to 2,000
employes effective December 31.
Christmas distributions include:
Schaeffer Pen Company of Ft.
Madison, Iowa, bonus to 1,000
employees which will total about
$40,000.
Mesta Machine Company, a
month’s bonus to all employees
who were on the payroll Jan. 1,
and other employees payment
proportionate to their service.
Eastman Kodak Company re-
sumed the employees redistribu-
tion for the first time in several
years. _ . „ _
DOG FLIGHT
(Continued from Page One)
burst” and chartered Miss Can-
ning’s plane.
She took off at dawn Wednesday
from Cambridge, stopped at Rich-
mond, Charlotte, Atlanta and Bir-
mingham. New Orleans is the next
stop. It probably will be here only
a few hours and will then take off
for Abilene by way of Dallas and
Houston.
J
• . J
made by
the United
States Chamber of Commerce and
the National Manufacturers’ As-
sociation meeting at White Sul-
phur Springs, W. Va.
The joint conference urged the
dole as the cheapest method of
taking care of the nation’s needy.
“As far as I can find out,”
Hopkins said in regard to tho
conference proposal, "they think
the only use for government mon-
ey is to lend it to railroads.”
kidnaper was
traced through the cab driver. The
rriHANKS to the Boy Scouta.
I They voted last night to donate ,
their dues to the Goodfellow’s Fund '
and the fund was thus enriched
by $2.10.
For the most part, this Good-
fellows Fund has come from folks
like the Boy Scouts who like to do
good turns.
You have probably noticed a few
names missing from the donations
column and wondered if they were
under t|ie head of "cash”.. They
are not; Those “cash” donations
were from good fellows you all
know, but who didn't want any-
one to think they were advertising.
MUNITIONS
(Continued from Page One)
and I am anxious to keep out.
"My statement at the directors’
meeting was not that the people
should support the president, but
that the people should not attack
the president without knowing
what they are talking about.
"At the time, I resented the
action of the United States Cham-
ber of Commerce calling upon
the president for a sound money
nolicv in language that would
orally are aoout two weens salary, l’ V " » , .
OnA™,. C.,1 M. L.«b 4^.
“You haven’t much to do,” he
told Carpenter, “And I know of
no one that could better take the
lead in trying to induce the du
Pont and General Motors groups,
followed by other big industries,
to definitely organize to protect
society from the suffering which
it is bound to endure if we allow
communistic elements to lead the
people to believe that all busi-
ness men are crooks, not to be
trusted and that no one
be allowed to get rich.”
FAKE MOTHER
(Continued from Page One)
Posing as a church social work-
er, Mrs. Marsh called at the Rob-
bins home late Wednesday and met
the mother. She returned yester-
day, and asked to hold the Infant,
Mrs. Robbins said. A minute later
she dashed out of the house and
entered a taxicab.
Identity of the
Hammond Bag & Paper Com- babv was f<^in(j w|th Mrs. Marsh I
— r- ......... "f vpn,’H Wfllrei' in her,room.
Mrs. Marsh had posed as an ex-
pectant mother more than two
months, police learned.
So elaborately were her plans
carried out that even the landlady
in her rooming house was fooled
by the deception. An intricate sys-
tem of pads used in carrying out
the hoax was found In her room,
police said.
Texaa. Continental Supply Co., .
Consolidated Drilling Co., Interna- 1
tlonal-Stacy C''*,p, United Gas
Public Service Co., Max Agress,
Hammond Oil Co., S. D. Hunter,
A. F. Lanier, individually and us i
trustee, Overton Refining Co.. Wes
Ray Drilling Co., *nc., N. Hobson
Wheelis. W. C. Woolf, Home-State
Royalty Corp, D. C. Turner, Witte-
more Oil Properties, Wiesman OU
Corp., Restal 'rilling Co., Inc.,
Lawrence Orlow, Al. R. Reed, A. T.
Pullman, J. R. Dukes, E. J. Ken-
dall, Jr., J. S. Crocker, S. B. Beas-
ley, J. S. Minahan, Mack Huff,
8 A. McCluney, Simon Lebow, I.
Nadel, Bessie Lavenberg. Arthur
Lavenberg, Cecelia Rubin. Nat
Friedman, Mrs. Anna Zeff, M. Sei-
gel, A. N. Crottenberg, F. E. Mc-
Neil, Sam H. Baird, R: R. Weiner,
J. H West, OU Production Co., Inc.,
Petroleum Marketing Co., Unity
Petroleum Corp., Pugh & Hickman
Drilling Co., The Bay Company,
Schermerhorn Oil Co., Schermer-
horn-Ardmore Co., Mrs. M. rt.
Wooley, M. R. Wooley, Tommie V.
Tlpps, Henry Tlpps, M. C. DeGuer-
in, M. Hayworth, Ind. and on tr„ J.
A. Humphrey, 8—i Warr, Walker
Wilson, Lee Gibson, Sam Warren
ind. * tr. Mrs. M. M. Simons. H. 8.
Moss, M. E Rogers, S H. Shelton,
E. E. Thrash, Mrs. Alice Mae ivlct-
I ler, Mrs. Otis Phillips, D. W.
George, L. Ray Dawsen, S. V. De-
Guerin, Thos. B. Freeman, ind. &
tr., Ross Flnston, Albert Finston,
TODAY
(Continued from Page One)
Armory Burns
TOLEDO, 0., Dec, 21 (UP)—
A spectacular fire, punctuated by
explosions of ammunition, de-
stroyed Toledo’s 43-year-old Ar-
mory today. The building was
destroyed, and $100,000 worth of
------military supplies
believed ruined. Two fire-
were injured.
Ship Fire
BOSTON, Dec. 21
Transformed into a floating fur-
by a roaring fire in
FIGHT FOR LOWER UTILITY RATES
WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 (UP)
__President Roosevelt has “just
begun to fight” for lower utility
rates, administration leaders said
today as'they pushed forward
with a federal program backed by
millions of dollars of PWA mon-
ey.
Secretary of the Interior Har-
old L. Ickes, who as PWA ad-
ministrator holds the purse strings
in the war agaiz^t excessive util-
ity rates, emei/ged today as the
spearhead of the administration’s
attack.
Ickes announced
$260,000,000 already —•
advanced from PWA funds for
construction of federal and mu-
nicipal plants and indicated there
wap "plenty more where that
came from.” Applications for
more loans are under consider-
ation.
Under plans announced by
Ickes federal loans will be used
to batter down utility rates to a
"fair level.” The policy of the
PWA ,he said, will be “to refuse
1 financial aid to municipal plants
where private utility rates are
1 reasonable.”
“We haven’t begun to touch the
1 market for power,” Ickes said in
contradiction of the industry’s
’ contention that this country
’ over-supplied with power.
The announcement that
amounts were being expended for
municipal plants and on federal
power projects was the adminis-
tration’s answer to an attack by
private utilities on the Tennessee
Valley development project.
The administration plans
push its potver development pro-
gram through to completion,
leaders said. It has under way
now, or will start shortly, five
major power developments to cost
$146,250,000.
^’RGLAR
(Continued from Page 9)
able nearby. Miss Crenshaw
bookkeeper for the
In accordance with directions re-
ceived from Austin today the local
relief office will be closed Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday In observ-
ance of the Christmas holidays.
One case worker will remain on
duty on Monday and Wednesday to
care for emergencies only. The oi-
lices will be dosed to all cases on
r The ^rehabilitation department
will be closed all three days.
FLYING HOTEL
(Continued from Page One)
there is only a furrow ploughed by
Roval Air Force tractors in 1918
and the only Inhabitants are oc-
casional wandering Bedouins
Aboard the plane were three
passengers- D. W. Berctty. man-
aging director of the Aneta press
agency and one of the most Promi-
nent newspapermen in Java, Ou'-Ch
East Indies; Prof Waller and D.
Kort. Captain W. M. Beekman was
in command, with J. Van Steen-
bergen co-pilot. H. ,R. Waalewijn
engineer and C. Van Zadelhoff,
wireless operator.
Europeans nicknamed the huge
„.t "the flying hotel" be-
of its equipment and because
it represented the last word in
comfort, and engineering accom-
plishment.
Its soundproofing, engineers
claimed, made it “quieter than a
pullman.” It was equipped with air
brakes, and Is steam heated.
Thermostatic air control changes
the air in the cabin every three
minutes end it Is complete with
electrical appliances, Including
cooking facilities.
The cabin, with deeply upholst-
ered, reversible chair, Is almost 24
1-2 feet long; 5 1-2 feet wide and
more than 6 feet high. There is
ample room for the 14 passengers.
It is trimmed in rich woods.
The “flying hotel” Is a low wing
monoplane powered with two
weight cyclone engines of 700
horsepower each. It has a cruising
speed of 200 miles per hour
12.000 feet, and a
219.
Ample fuel tanks permit It to
fly 1,200 m les without refueling.
It is said to be th" fastest multi-
motored transport plane in the
A’crld, and is manned by a crew of
Todays
Ahnanac:
rwciTitH’r Zl?
16ZO- Pi*l^na ms land
at Massachusetts;
look around Cor
'Plyruou.th- Rock*
I rwsKA (^Vw)
iSW'Benjamin Bis-
i raeh*. £arl of Bea-
ccmsFiekl, English
Statesman and
novelist? bp^n.
19 Cieor^e Ari i ss
makes him famous-
WILLIAM AND MAI2Y PIRST
COLLEGE 1O-TFACH
POLITICAL ECONOMY.
' —
’ Ax.wers to Previous Questions
Ti IRS. HOOVER, then Ml«» Lou
I’-* Henry, completed tbe course
In geology at Leland Stanford,
Jr University, three years before
former President Hoover ob-
tained his degree. Although
Clark’s process was not entirely
practical, it was the basis otthe
big Industry to follow. William
and Mary, at Williamsburg. Va
began the course In Political
Economy >u 1734..
Jceee Flnston. Ind * as executOH,
Mark Flnston, 8. B. Dobbe, Frank
J Allen, M F. Tempest, J. F.
Marion, William O. Mehllck, Lessie
Ashby, V. 8 Joiner. Rom A. Brew*
er, Wftltei H. Gant, Mrs. L. A.
Harmon. Dudley Wooley,
Oil * Royalty Company,
Maroin Oil Co.. Worth Pi
Co., Maude L—----
man anu T,. , .
DEFENDANTS said amended peti-
tion alleging cause of action for
the title ai.d possession of and
da mages to the following describe
ed property, to-’ It:
Three Hundred Sixty-nlne (369)
acres of land, more or less, being
Block number five of the Francisco
Cordova League Grant in Rusk
County, Texas nd being the same
land which was conveyed by J. M.
Bullock to Augustine Wood by
deed, the fourth day of January,
1854, recorded in Volume one,
page flfty-qlght (58) of the deed
records of Rusk ' ounty, Texas.
Herein fail not, but have befora
said Court, at its eforesaid regular
term, this writ ith your return
I thereon, showing how you have
executed the ne.
Given under my hand and the
seal of said court at office in
Henderson, this the 6th day of
December, A. D. 1934.
W. M. Armstrong, Clerk.
District Court, Rusk County, Tex.
By Donald 1 "key. Deputy.
, Dec. 7-14-21-28.
Examining trial was held in Jus-
tice of the Peace J. A. Ward's
court this morning for two negroes
charged with burglary and theft
and their bonda were set at $750
in each of the two cases. Norris
Stinson and Leon Van were arrest-
ed by Deputy Sheriff Henry Farley
yesterday afternoon with clothes
stolen from a house In the negro
sectinon of town. When arrested
the negroes were walking on the
Tyler highway about four miles
from Henderson and Stinson had
the stolen property under his arm,
it is alleged.
The clothes stolen belonged to
three negro youths, Jake Alexan-
der, Harris Muckelroy and Ollie
Miller, consisting of five men’s
suits, three shirts, an oVercoat,
ties, gloves, a scarf and a pair of
shoes.
WARLESS .
(Continued from Page One)
war It is quite a different thing
to read of tvar far away and to
have it in your own Street.
“Nlnteen years ago this Christ-
mas, I was on the high seas re-
turning from Europe. The world
was at war. The ocean was covered
by ships of war. I had gone to
Europe because there seemed some
hope of doing something to stop
the war.
"I found that this was not pos-
sible for anyone to do at that
time. Others tried to do it later
but failed, too. So, seeing there
was nothing to be done that way
I was returning home.
"I failed in what I wanted to
do in Europe, but I learned some-
thing that most of the world is
just now finding out through the
munitions investigation by con-
gress, which I hope you are read-
ing
■‘I learned that war was a profit-
making business, and that there
are men in the world who stir up
wars for profit. It is a terrible
thing to think of. War is a man-
made affair ... It is not natural.
It never settles anything.
"The Christmas message, you
will remember. Is 'peace on earth,’
and some day it will come true.
You may be the first generation
to live in a warless world.”
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 238, Ed. 1 Friday, December 21, 1934, newspaper, December 21, 1934; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1301153/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.