Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [33], No. 279, Ed. 1 Monday, August 29, 1938 Page: 1 of 6
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Cleburne?
The Only Daily N<
=
by Carrier
fl)AY; AUG729. IW’
PRICE FIVE
in
t
tarting Confli
gain
British Confer With
[
1
¥
FORT WORTH. Aug SB (U.RX--W. Lee O’D*»itel. Democratic noml-
CldSC To...Gia
AUSTIN.
Aug St.
iN
I NEW MANAGER
T
1'
R
!AN
1 CO.
i zed
lervicl
Governor.
be
r
Of t34.4M.134 to state
40
CHERRYVALE Kan* Aug.
Pecan Crop
COLLEGE STATION,
■ a ta
tee1
D
L
Roose -
* o
3^31.
B
it
»
Bt. .*■:
FOHSIL KERNS ARE
ATTRACTING ATTENTION
today that for nine
months startint last
ler
United Preu Wire Service
Central Frees Service
T™ Below Normal
mines
II
Mexican Floods
Washout Many
Highway Bridges
schc
e f ul
ig Exhibition
Sty Park Pool
Pushes Wife From
Car, Shoots Self
Decrease in Motor
Vehicle Fatalities
Drilling Resumed
On Oil Well Test
Hobson To Be
With Burr Store
man
driving count
■b,, i
(«•-
e ter
*
rated
I ... -j
liplt
pms
ble..
LATE
FLASHES
Ambassador To Nazis
•v • ....... . ... ....... .
RKSTRRT SCOPE DP JOI
BOSTON (U.K)-—Policemen
Joke sometimes. But when
eph Sami. 38. let air out
And Mrs L. B Nix
« the week in Fort wo
ig the Texas Baby CL
itlon at the Texas Ho
Jig the convention a I
week's hatchery school foe the I
provement at the baby chick
dustry In Texas will be held. ‘
Nixes will remain for the Instr
lion also
-------------— - ........ . :
ASK.S OUSTER OF PRISON STAFF
fH
ou, The
‘EOPLE
Mr " Ry ROT BAUDS
by
lem
LJ
on a
three
r 1 a re-
employees
I
Demo Committee
To Count Votes
pecan
cent of
Emmett
. hsxT.:
luring tne
Police Guard Is
Placed Around Home
(
I not receiving any moisture.
eunerd today. petrol wagon's tires,
arc urged lo
Two Officials
) CIqibJI o Gxqup
1 Are Defeated
dorsad for alate office was "pretty good." Two reversals were not -
expected to Interfere with lhe governor's program AUSTIN. Aug. 38. <W!H-
"Both Gerald Mann and Jerry Sadler made pledges promteint cil industry today nervously
practically the same things I advocated.” he said. “Both pledged co- '
Top, works
riffct,
■ WNHe a : <
. was launched into the deaths
Of four hunger-striking pris-
......- ”
I mmhhmh|
>urne Times-
(Wished in Johnson County
• .....X*
STOP! THINK! j|
Have You Tried
To Buy It In
instance two highway pa-
reported they came upon
n attempting to change a
% South Texas highway.
- <ly repaired ths
the tire and
«9'
* ■ j I
NSW YORK- I
Stock market operators dumped
holdings today and sent the tn*
dustrial/iverage down nearly 8 ]
points, wiping out more thanJ
$2.0C0,060 tn value of ttfiffai TH6'1
late sell out ended a day of war
scares that unsettled the European I
markets
Training Camp
To Be Discussed
'y ...u >. -A *****
nsw
7
Well Knowrx
Resident of ,
County Dies
Burns hae devoted practl-
ot his life to the teaching
safety and has been do-
flre dive since 1831
nectlon with the perform-
1 be instructions In deep
Ivtng using diving bell
it. fancy and clown dives
hrson, who accompanied
lu-Hwanson carnival to
will attempt to break the
ST swimming distance rec-
i will be 44 and 38 cents
I of the proceeds will go
ark pool fund s *
jed around the pool for
II
ring steam pipe* from the prison; below, left Us
Donovan, John A. Boyle and William MUh.
■wmCtgatlen Warden William Mills denied
any steam dr physical punish-
ment was used on the pris-
oners Photos show workmen ’
i wimliil stekin pipu fl uni the—
prison and .two official* who
srj figuring' in the investiga-
tion talking with Warden Mills,
seen at right. The officials
are William Donovan, left. In-
stitutional inspector of the
Pennsylvania state department
of welfare, and Assistant Dis-
trict Attorney John Boyle of
Philadelphia.
W 9
•we any humor In the
was fined 410
Oil Industr-
Scans Resul
Of Election
GUNBOAT MOVER
AFTER EXPLOMONH
WASHINGTON, Aug 28 <U.»—
The U 8. Gunboat Monocacy to-
day advised the navy department
that It had moved to a point three
mile* below KJUMang ’" WI “““
Yangtie River following an ex-
plosion two submarine
close to the ship
FOREIGNERS ORDERED
FROM GOLF COURKE
SHANGHAI, Aug 38 (U RL Forty
Chinese guerillas armed with ma-
chine guns appeared on a golf
course here today and warned
several down foreigners including
several United States marine offi-
cers to return to the clubhouse.
accused Baker of being
with Mrs Berry. The
warning to Baker came In a note
attached to ft rock thrown through
the window of his home
k the *hM check" operations
woman who has gleaned a
fortune In Texas towns
I woman—about 35 years old
heal appearing—usually ap-
lor a room for herself and
hd and presents a check for
Ir two months rent. The
| range from 830 to 435 She
L the landlady's endorsement
b oheck while her husband
[for her In an automobile,
Lnes with a child. After the
fa cashed at a bank or busi-
Koe the couple leaves town,
who have investigated
such complaints, said
i always tells her vic-
„ aiie and her husband
I build a tourist camp or
beauty parlor In the town.
tlncfe'Epa would say “>polt-
* a strange somethin'.'’ The
this year rravc done some
jr~Things. They gave O**-
) a majority--tn the first If®1 • ouuo-up tor a second icrm
rw_but failed to follow ’KU I--- OTMKlel believed that victory for two-thirds of the men he en-
fes for, other pffiCM. Jta.,1
jt'nsmTng O'Daniel the voters (
the process of turning out
us office holders Coke
moo, twice speaker of the 1
MON1ERREY, Mexico. Aug 38.
(U.R>—Floods produced by eight in-
ches of rain which accompanied I
a tropical hurricane raged through
the streets of Monterrey, destroy-
ed doaens of homes and washed
out highway bridges leadltw in
three directions from the city.
No loss of life was reported.
All bridge washouts were on Im-
portant mghways. The Pan Am-
erican Highway to Mexico City
was closed by the washout of
bridge in Monterrey
Two Conflicts
Seen as Legion
Meeting Opens
lire, inflated the tire
[back on the wheel,
hey drove away one of them
I back and saw a man walk
k a roadside brush clinh
he car with the woman and
ftbay-laughing.
FORT WORTH—
’G. A. ijirryi Sadler, told the
Fort Worth press today that he I
would be the "strictest conserve- 1
tlonlst" on the Texas Railroad
Commission and expressed Edmir- J
atlon Jor Ernest Thompson, present ]
member of the oil regulatory body. |
Sadler said in a long distance
telephone conversation that ha
was leaving Longview for Austin
immediately "to start spine of, the
biggest headlines you ever saw ”
PHILADELPHIA- ‘ : n
Coroner Charles Herach charged
today that Orders to "turn qn the
heat” on four county prisoners
found 1??<Ue!l'' to aeatr^md
have been Issued only by the
prison superintendent or deputy
warden. ’ ‘
number of Twxas * motorists
devised unique eefames In
to avoid repairing punctured
OLYMPIA, Wash., Aug. 38. (U.K)
A police guard today was placed
about the home at Irving E. Baker,
former coast guard officer who
was warned 'if you value the lives
of your children get off the Berry
case.
Baker was kidnaped and beaten
AUg. 13. An attempt was made
to emasculate him. Four men, in-
cluding Dr. K, W. Berry, of Olym-
pia, have been arrested and
charged with the kidnaping and
assault.
Dr Bei
too frlen
was arrested
,“t and
a charge of drunken-
■y afternoon about 4
after a minor auto mishap
comer at Granbury Road
len Rose highway
pt work brought speedy se-
ll the pert of city and
officials who said the driv-
the auto, arrested on the
driving count, did not stop
tg the accident The police
was notified and the call
put on the air. City and
officers simultaneously ar-
the four. * few minutes
I West Henderson and Buf-
fhe three charged with
nness drew 88 fines in Cor-
p Court today The fourth
[as detained in the county
TEN MAROONRD
FISHERMEN SEEN
BROWNWOOD. Aug 39 (U.W—
Pan American Airways today re-
ported Its Mexico City bound
plane ha^P sighted 10 American
fishermen marooned on a Mexi-
can beach where a tropical hurri-
cane moved inland yesterday
The. message said that all ap-
peared safe
The plane's pilot reported he
sighted lite fishermen on the coast
about 100 miles south of Browns-
ville The storm which threatened
for a time to cause serious damage
to Texas coastal cities was blow-
ing itself out today In northeast
t r. I . ..
tviexico. . j»
not-i vwonrv-. X--—
Jack Oaiffe, the comedian, argued
with his wife. Vanlta Varden,
stage actress, all night long on so
many occasions during their two
years of married life that she
twice went to a hospital with ner-
vous breakdowns, she told the
Judge today in obtaining an un-
contetted divorce.
the Temple columnist de-
i; “Imagine an election year
a Terrell a McDonald and
Mien all are beaten! This
unique. situation in Texas
k within Itself."
[ faces, new promise*, new
Ids and maybe some new
of government. All this the
L have chosen via the al-
b ballot. It will make wn
Ming picture to watch
Europe Warns
jLee O’Daniel Plans To
grow of M. U ," charged ' 1 ry"»
fc wi: i Serve Only One Term
cspile the music of the hill- 1 t*—------— ----------- ■ -
band, crossed the goal line I
, nee for governor., announced today that he plans to serve only one
tarm._ ■ ■ ~ ,, -f. ' —■—• ——
"fm going to Austin With blood in my eye to try W do some-
thing.!' ha said.■-'44 doesn't mean a thins ttr the wcrld to me to
gee a build-up for a second term " "
t Texas: Partly cloudy, prob- a
•htRTOrs Rio Grande Valley
bt and Thursday
It Texas: Partly cloudy, prob
diowers aoutheast tonight and •
Wbi. •. ■ ......s
tD YEAR. NO. 279
dng the Water Safety
to be held Tuesday evening
■clock at the City Park
ig pool, will be a sen-
flrv dive by Capt Johnnie
wtema life guard and div-
BANQUET IS PLANNED
The barber and beauty shop
owners and operators banquet will
be held Tuesday night at 8 o'clock
at the American Legion Hall.
Tickets will be 50 cents and those
interested are requested to caU
Mrs Bam Barr at Stella Mae's
Beauty Shop
JAIL NOT “8POON-PROor'
tyARYBVILLE. Oal «J» — «»•
city Jail here was demonstrated
not to be "spoon-proof" when two
hunMrs with a single cheap tea-
spoon dug all the mortar rax from
WRi-iuis a-e Ism* —A* - -- - F-®—-
wwmi wiougn DriWi to enaoie
.JWBSGwHBa
CHERRYVALJC. Kan* . Aug. 38
<U.P>—Raymond E. Perkins, 33. a
smelter worker of Bartlesville,
Okla., committed suicide with a
borrowed rifle after he pushed his
wife to the highway from hi*
speeding automobile, authorities
said today
Mrs. Perkins, who was taken to
a Bartlesville hospital, suffered
bruises and lacerations She did
not learn of her husband's death
until last night '*
Oounty officers said Perkins bor-
rowed a gun to go coon hunting.'
yesterday morning He reached
the farm home of Roy Mullins and
.shot himself about an hour after
he shoved his wife out of the
car.
It was understood that the gov- the Texas Drug Co . of
ammant brought him home to aak ax traveling salesman for 18
him 1 Wtjat was the real mean- “* — •“ »*“
tag. ta bis Judgment ef the gi-
gantic German army maneuvers;
3 Whethei increasing manifesta-
tions of Germany's impatience over
TNf 0t*6TOsWVnt fltiikllon crin-
talned the elements of War or
whether he believed them to be
bluff, backing up diplomatic efforts
to squeeze the maximum of minor-
ity ccncesslonB from the Czechs
Henderson's Instructions, on his
return to Berlin after tomorrows
cabinet meeting—which he Will at-
tend—were expected to include the
statement that Britain felt that
the efforts of Viscount Ruftclman,
It* advisor In the Cgschoslovak
minorities dispute, ware being im-
periled by the bitter German gt-
1-fU-ks on Czechoslovakta. These
attacks are being made by radio,
In newspapers and In speeches
AUSTIN—
Texas today completed payment
834,446.124 to state school dis-
tricts a* state aid for the scholas-
tic year which ends Aug. 31.
AUSTIN. Tex., Aug 20 (U.R>—
TWO ripple* Of possible conflict
were seen today as the 2<ith an-
nual Texas American Legion con-
’ vention began active session
ifi—address by Former Adjutant
General Mark McGee of Fort
Worth asking a law against state
employment of Nazi. Fascist or
Communist sympathizers ^nd
qulrement that state c~- .
hold poll taxes will be supported
by resolutions
vlved speculation
President Garner
state is engaged
maneuvors to break Mr
velt's hold on ' ~
party Rep W D McFarlane,
“my old friend," to Mr Roosevelt,
lost |n the 13th to Ed Gossett,
Wichita Falls lawyer '
4 Col Theodore Roosevelt ell-* Boll . .
dorsed John J. O'Connor. Dem- wheat, cotton, and rice are to be
ocratlc incumbent, for Republican
nomination to congress from New
York's 16th district O'Connor, de-
nounced by Mr ROpsevelt as a
"traitor" to the New Deal, seeks
bfth Democratic and Republican.
nominations
Regular Republican candidate i«
Allen W Dulles New Deal fa-
vorite is James ft. Fay, seeking
Democratic and American Laber
Party nomination Primary day is
Sept, B,
5. California candidates wound
up their campaigns for nomi-
nation in tomorrow’s primary. Mr
Roosevelt inllrectly has supported
the renomination candidacy of Sen
William G. McAdoo
r Arrested
r Mishap
O E McPherson, OT. -prou
resident of Joshua, died »
evening at 7:15 o’clock at his
after a heart attack He had
been confined to hi* bed for the
pest three months. »
Mr Mcheraon. who waa the son
of T B and Lizzie McPherson,
early pioneers of Johnson County,
was born Nov. 3, 1870 in Dallas
County moving to Johnson County
at the age of two years. He was
married to Mis* Rena Anderson In
February. 1864
Mr McPherson had been a
member of the Joshua Baptist.
Church since early manhood and
wm aeUve In ehsisslv IM M'’1
affairs He was In the drug busl-
nsss In Joshua for a number of
year* and wa« later connected with
the Texas Drug Oo , of Dalia*. ■
—— ,B> United Pre**).
Europe staged a dro** rehearsal for war today to warn Adql
Hitler against starting another world conflict. ------ .—
Gnat Britain wm uMtntood to heve wirnwI'TffiK directly J
Un: uu^ible consequences of attack OaechMlovakia Paris hammer*
heme to the Nazi leaders that she would fight if her CRechoslovaki
ally is attacked 8o did Soviet Russia. Yugoslavia and .Rumania.
In every caoitol the *lgn* were*--------———
apparent Cabinet ministers „ met
urgently the stock market dipped,
embassadors hurried home to make
secret reports sOlffiers ifflCMeS
along the frontiers of a frightened
Hr***' :
Nor did the United 8lale* es-
cape danger The V S S Mon-
ocacy with 44 officers and men
aboard was In peril on the Yangtze
River near the Kiueklang sector of
the China war. The little gun-
boat, refused Japanese permission
for normal activities, reported that
Several mines had exploded near
it. ' '
Orest Britain la expected to send j
to Germany tomorrow a direct
- TBSISiUtlon cf the difficulty' it
would hive in remaining neutral (
In' any conflict that might arise
from a German invasion of Czecho- |
Slovakia
The declaration would be made 1
through Fir Neville Henderson, (
British ambassador at Berlin, who (
arrived In London Saturday to ,
receive secret instructions. It was (
riiprrted .today that Chamberlain ,
might back up the declaration with .
a personal letter to Adolf Hitler ;
Henderson Key Man
For the moment, 8ir Neville
Henderson was the key man tn
- Britain ■ H was learned Skat ha
had been ordered home secretly
and had arrived by airplane Sat-
urday
It was
ALAMOGORDO, N. M.. Aug. »•
<U.»—Foeail fems in the Lincoln
national forest near hare are At-
tracting the attention of scientists.
J. Bridge and W. H Haas of the
U. S. geological survey spent sev-
eral • days recently ga thering fos-
sil* and other igiecimens, which
will be taken to the paleobotan-
ical department in Washington
The scientists were most .inter-
ested in ferns and tropical plants
showing hair-like fibers and deli-
cate leaves They were found in
Seats will the leaver Pennsylvania strata of
La Lus. canyon and their estimated
age is 340.600400 years
FRANfl AYDELOTTE
——Jrank Ayitalnttr is ihr new
manager of the Yale and Pal-
ace Theaters Me succeeds
George Umeriek who leaves
this week to take over the
manegement of Griffith Am-
usement Company theaters in
Enid. Oklahoma.
AydatoCte M the age of M is
a veteran in the theater busi- '
ness. He comes to Cleburne
from ihuimklht. Ditto., where -
he served a* manager. Before
that he was manager at Hob-
art.
Officials state that "Frank
Aydclotte 1* one of our most
valuable managers and 1* held
in high esteem by the Com-
pany, and hl* advancement to
the management of the Cle-
burne bouses is ta keeping with
the policy of the Griffith Am-
usement Company to advance
their employee* from the
ranks." Aydetottc ha* also
been as*o4ated with theater* ,
in other Oklahoma town* in
various other capacities.
Mr. and Mrs. Aydeiotte have
one eon, Robert Mckenna. They,
will arrive in Cleburne to-
night. <
. ed tire effect of Saturday's sleg-
_ result* PreeriH apfcials waft
closely connected with \he Ina’S-
try were defeated and Wtt go opt
c: ottice on Dec 31. • I
G. A. "Jerry" Sadler of Louf-
i view war elected a member of tie
I rtilicvd commission defeating V
| V. Terrell, present chairman La*
I Commlssk..ier Wiilism McDonati.
I whose duties Included leaaMi
I state lend for oil devekpmea,
| was beaten by Ba .om Giles, foi-
I mer land office employee. f
I Sadler's election probably wBi
give the chairmanrhip to Lon B.
Aryan minority yarriwr trite ams
outvoted usually by TerreU
Commissioner Ernast O. Thcm'p*<w
McDonald's land office award 8f
leases on. lc a bonus and high roy-
alty was attacked by major Al
companies and by Gov. Allred
Special (JHnmlsston.
Talk at creating a zpectal ooot-
■UsAlon to handle oil and gas prob- |
I lem* was revived. Oov. Allnsd
I however flatly dented buy willing- [
| nes* to call a special session to |
I create a new commission.
Two new Texas congressman
I were nominated. In the 13th dig-
iilCi IlG Vtt xWVX, r nt80
torney. defeated W. D. McFarl
' 'pood friend" of President R<
- evelt: In the second riririri U
ley Beekworth at Gilmer waa n<
mated. it-.
•Late resulU of state races t
ulated by the elecUdh but
were: •
Lieutenant — -------
son 438.168. Brook* 380.81V
I Railroad Conuniiwton. Sadler
463 461; Terrell 378,084.
. Attorney General. Mann.-486.748;
TiT -BHBW:------------------
"Land Commissioner, Giles 437 -
387; McDonald 370,431.
I Judge of Supreme Court. Crltz.
475,712; Davidson. 326,040
Judge of Criminal Appeal*.
Graver. , 430466. Stephens. 361.589.
Returns were from 253 of ’ 244
counties, with 143 complete
»u"d» y ,«>nUnue; *2 ** vlved soeculatlon whetbsr Vice
stated Drilling is now down to
1750 feet and in hard lime cap-
rock, It was reported
n
r &
I Johnson County's
< will probably be 60 per
normal. Superintendent
Brown, local pecan grower,
dieted today. The crop
1 teiiorated one-third du
past two weeks due to the exces-
sive hot weather Honey deW
damage has been great. Mr Brown
said Insect trouble bas been
lee* than in 10 years, he estlmat- .«
ed
The crop Is spotted due to some
sections getting rain and oUiers
Brown pointed out
New East-West
Record Sought
KANSAS CITY. Mo.. Ai«. ,,
<U.R>—Major Alexander De Severeky ‘
trying for a new east-west trans-
continental airspeed record re- '
fueled here today, and immediate -
ly took off on the second leg of '
his trip.
De Seversky left Floyd BetuiMt J
Field, New York, at 5:37 a. m. J
C. T. and left Kansas City at 1
10:23 a. m . It was the fastest
time ever made on a westward |
flight from New York to Kansas ’
City.
ATTEND CONVENTION
Mr. And Mrs L.
spei
was chewing gum today,
ng woman was furnishing
m and all that was necea-
u the Jaw work And since
lather waa cooir that wag
J, much of an effort The
was clove. Even Charlie
found it delightful
A meeting of all Cleburne busi-
JMi • MU. ,"M= STta-iSS
so, b. ship Yellow Jacket foetbell .squad,
will be held Tuesday afternoon
at 4 o’clock at the American Leg-
D G Hobeon. of Shawnee,
Okla , arrived tn Cleburne today
to assume duties as assistant man-
•ager of the local Burr Store Hi*
wife and three children will Join
him later
Mr. Hobson has had 12 yean
experience with national chain
stores.
CLEBURNE. TEXAS. I
; McPherson
Rites Tuesday
At Joshua *
CHICAGO, Aug 20 (U.n- The
National Safety Council reported
■■ “---Mgtaj - - m consecutive
November
there had been a steady increase
to motor vehicle fatalities from
the corresponding month of 1836-
17. The council recorded 23.310
fatalities during the period from
October, 1647, through July this
year, a reduction at 8410.
He was also in the insurance bi
nose ter many years
(Survivor* include his wife;
brothers, Judge O B MuHrig
of Oteburne, W A McFWM
of "Prosbyton. and four (Ml
Mrs T..B, Toler and Mn. J.
Officer of Lot« Beach. 0^
Mrs. 0. B. Lawrence of Sa
Anna. Oal., and Mrs. B. L. T
Gee of Fort Worth.
Funeral service* will I
Tuesday afternoon at 4 —
at the family residence in Joshua
by Dr 8 B Culpepjter, pastor of
the East Henderson Street Baptist
Church, Cleburne Burla! win be
in the new lone Prairie Ceme-
tery
Active pallbearer* wiU be W.
, T. Bradbury. W E. Miller, Dr.
William Ball of Cleburne; Brooks
Thompson of Fort Worth, Ed Bone
and A. R.- Clark of Joatala. j
Haskew-Pierson of Burleson has
charge of arrangements
whether Vice
to his home
in
Member* of the Johnson County
Demociitlc executive committee
will meet Tuesday afternoon at
3 o'clock to make an official can-
vass of vote* cast in Saturday's
primary
A total of 4280 vote* were cast
in Johnson County. Johnson Coun-
ty voters favored three of OT>an-
iel’s endorsees but turned thumbs
down on th* oth'ejr
Ookr Stephenson, elected lieu-
tenant-governor, Bascom Giles.
— <88to*^. land commissioner .and
the proposk* that special provis- commissioner. and Richard Crltz.
. -----—--------elected to the Supreme Court, were
the aspirants who received ma-
I jorittes. in' Johnson Oounty
county prison near Philadel-
phia. Coroner Charles D
Herach said he will ask Gov
George H Earle to replace
every guard and official at the
Institution with Pennsylvania
motor pollpc Herach charged
previously that the prisoner*
were scalded to death
steam being turned on th<
Developments In General Plan
Drive To Retire For ’39 Farm
Anti-New Dealers Program Given
WA8HlNGTO^~Aug 29 (UR. _
President Roosevelt resumed pcr-,7|1(. swnal pi^,, for the 1939
zonal command tooay 01 hl* tfrive I governmental agricultural adjust-
±»- , nonaervathc .Ucmof n'''- Jngnt . ‘ ---- ”
from congress i those now ln ’<
Postmaster General James A
Farley returned to the capital to- ‘ by
day and Roosevelt will arrive ]
tomorrow ■
Late development* included:
T? Mr. 7 / ,7 ‘ . .. ___„
made more emphatic his wish that Texa* representatives' at the
South Carolina Democrats reject meeting were. Geo. Slaughter,
Conservative 8en EJlIson D , Wharton, chairman of the Texas
(Cotton Bd>« Smith In tomorrow » I AgricuHural Conservation Com-,
vital primary . - linlttee. land G. E Gates. Laredo.
3. He announced he would in- a member ol the committee;. E. 1L_
vade Maryland with a Labor Day; Holmgreen, administrative officer
speech which inevitably will oppose in charge of the state AAA office;
the renomination of Conservative 111‘<i Jn<'k Shelton, vice-director
Sen. Millard B.- Tydlng* to the ttlKl thf „Tt,xa“uA'
I told that no new agricultural leg- I
! islatlon. with the exception of pos- i
sible amendments, is expected for
1S39 WkWi machinery and pro-
. tedure already set up to handle
preliminary provisions of the farm act of
u-. Roose- 1938 AAA 1WMqwrs will be en-
the Democratic (Uiieq u, bring the 1939 program
to tanner* without the delay ex-
perienced this year, when) the leg-
islation was enacted by Congress
•to middle February.
depleting allotments for
V*w», <■am mw w
set up in Texas while peanuts
may not be given a special al-
lotment but will likely be consid-
ered In the list of general crops.
Slaughter said
Consideration u being given to
N^JB5,DGK WEDDING SITE.
PURCELl Okla (U.RX-Add ro-
mantie Oklahoma spots: The new
Purcell . Lexington bridge The
Canadian river span, as yet un-
opened to traffic, has been the
site of two weddings within a
mouth
ion l»e made for commercial vege-
table crops.
MARKET
FORT WORTH, Aug 39 (U.B—
i USDA) — Livestock; Cattle 3600;
calve* 3000; unevenly steady; steers
5; yearlings 4.80-8^' fat coW*
4 25-5 78; cutters 3-4; calves 4.34-
Hogs 700; steady; top butchers
8 10; bulk good butchers 8-8.10!
mixed |_ * “ ““
sows 6 80-7,
Sheet) 7800; bid. » lower, no
sales a* « oauook at w
Tomorrows estimated receipts: k>n Hall, it was
Cattle 3600; calves 3600: hbgs All those Inter**
1060: she*p 2000. be present.
J - _ _______' ■ . . ; -t:.
Mt.' • '
This Information was ^relcomed
y more than 100 farmer -state
committeemen, utatc AAA* offi-
[clals, and agricultural workers who
met In Washington,-f>. O., re-
Rooepvelt renewed andl.cently to discuss 1939 plan*
representatives
were. Geo.
Conservation
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Bacus, Roy. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [33], No. 279, Ed. 1 Monday, August 29, 1938, newspaper, August 29, 1938; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1306878/m1/1/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.