Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 110, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 30, 1933 Page: 1 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rusk County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rusk County Library.
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r
mediate result
cov*ry act, a 1
showed today.
OTO
-
I
I
^>1
Dri
(Copyrlgl
Sues Adolphe Menjou
Woodin’* Son Ill
AIMEE POSES FOR
1L
I
Sea Gun Battle on Pago a
Police Patrol Area
Great
See Coal Strike on Page 2
See N. Y. Chinatown on Page 7
See Birth Control on Page 7 *
demand."
•.,A
had
cott as far aa possible ifierchante
duatry and
Negro Slayer Is
Held at Dallas
Husband Dies
Ablaze From
Powder Bums
Federals Arrest
Horse Dopers
Poultry Sales
Show Increase
Pinchot Orders
Militiamen into
Pa. Coal Field
Senator Suggests That States
Prepare for Responsibility
of Adequate Control
far aa
who •
ruler* of
lemocratie
(By United Press)
DALLAS, Texas, July 29.—Clif-
ford Simmons, 22, negro charged
with murder in connection with the
double slaying at Fort Worth, was
held in Dallas County jail today.
He was brought here last night
after formal charges accusing him
of murder had been filed.
See Liquor Traffic on Page 2
Non-Stop World
Flight Planned
Kathryn Carver
Adolphe Menjou
Contending that Adolphe Menjou
had been the cause of three nerv-
ous breakdowns which she has
suffered, Kathryn Carver, film
player, has filed suit in Los An-
geles for divorce from one of the
best dressed stars of the screen.
The Menjous were married in
1928 in Paris.
' J
I
■
cott plea,
the natlom
Uon. Tp*
publication
direct epact
Mrs. pool
C7VKV 8W as** w* mwvsmaw w a. . ■ iw # WI
and others who reject the national th« followli
recovery program to stimulate to- "First of
O’CmmeU Will
Be Freed Soon
rd
Policeman and
• Bandit Killed
In Kansas City
u Officer
Attempt* to Arrest Man
an Robbery Charge
KANSAS CITY, Mo., July 29—
Police Sergeant Morris Blgus was
wounded fatally and an unidenti-
fied bandit was killed here today.
Blgus attempted to arrest the
bandit shortly after the robbery of
a gas company office. The bandit
a* Trouble
I* Renewed Between Rival
Faction* of Oriental*
By H. o. THOMPSON '
United Frees Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, July 29- More
than 2,000,000 American club wo-
tnqp were summoned today by
their national organisation to boy- ‘
Roosevelts on
Way to Calif.
See Shooting on page 2
* -----------—-o-------------
Heart Attack
Fatal to Judge
Woman Not Expected to Live
After Attempt to Save
Hutband’a Life
(By United Press)
OKLAHOMA CITY, July 29.—A
quarrel over an inventory of stock
in a small cafe late today ended in
the fatal shooting of two men and
the serious wounding of a woman.
The dead;
Ci E. Davis, 56, a cafe operator;
W. A. Green. 54, a real estate man.
Mrs. Irene Green, 34, wife of ona
of the victims, was reported dying
at Wesley hospital.
' The shooting ocurred at Green's
downtown office.
Mrs. Green told hospital attend-
ants Davis shot her when she ran
to protect her husband. Witnesses
said Davis first fired at Green and
that Mrs. Green was wounded when
she threw herself into the line of
(By United Press)
HOUSON, Tex., July 29—Judge
Robert Hamilton Ward, former
Texas legislator and special judge
Texas high courts, died early
A heart
F«rThi.M.
(By United States)
AUSTIN, July 29—July hi
Storm Expected
To Hit Florida!
i /
i V .
. * I
(By United Press)
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., July
29—Mystery and anxiety that.fol-
lowed the kidnaping of Charles F.
Urschel increased tonight as a full
week passed with no word from
the machine gun abductors. More
than 160 hours of silent waiting
dragged by, only to bring the
same routine announcement from
the palatial mansion, "we haven’t
heard a thing.”
A check tonight indicated offi-
cers have been as unsuccessful as
the grief-stricken family in mak-
ing progress for the return of the
multi-millionaire oil man. Keeping
their promise with the family,
authorities continued their sus-
pension of all investigative efforts.
Governor Charge* N. Y. Gunmen
Being Imported to Help
Break Coal Strike
(By United Prert)
UNIONTOWN, Pa., July 29—
Three hundred State mllltiatmen
moved into Fayette County today,
armed with machine guns, rifles
and tear gas bomba, and with Gov.
Gifford Pinchot’s orders to protect j
the rights of all citizens in this j
strike-ridden county.
The Governor' dispatched the 1
troops, the first such movement in I
Pennsylvania in 11 years, to pre- I
[serve the rights of picketing, of I
Peaceful assemblage, of collective 1
Bargaining and of private property, 1
which he said were being violated
inlthe struggle between miners to
join 'national unions, and mine op-
erators to keep out the United
Mine'Workers of America.
The troop#— the Second Battal-
ion of the 112th Infantry-arrived '
late today, and left their train at
Brownsville. Crowds of strikers
Judge Ward was born in Vir-
ginia and moved to Galveston
when he
law at nights vrtiile working. Later
he went to Austin to accept a
clerkship in the general land of-
fice, where he laid the foundation
in land laws that helped him later
to become one of the most Widely
known lawyers of the state.
----------O~---------
Urschel Family
Hears No Word
From Kidnapers
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, July 29—Con-
gressional . ? constitutional lawyers
were of the opinion today that
when the 18th amendment is re-
pealed all responsibility for control
of liquor traffic will be left to the
states.
Under terms of the repeal
amendment, which has been rati-
fied by tweni
■ ■■ ti
‘.I
■
of
the secretary of the treasury, is
seriously ill at his home in Tuc-
son, Ariz. He is suffering from
a heart ailment; Mrs. Woodin
mqde a fast trip across the coun-
try by air from the east to be at
her busband’s bedside.
500,000 MEN W
WORK MONDAY
(By United Press)
FORT WORTH, Tex., July 29—
Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Roosevelt
left late today by automobile for
Los Angeles after a six-day honey-
moon here at the home of the
bride’s mother, Mrs. J. B. Goog-
ins.
The young husband, son of the
president, and his bride, the for-
mer Miss Ruth Googins, waved
aside with smiles queries as Jo
where they would stay tonight or
tion would normally be t|**egt*ll< What their address would be in
unless offset by sharp inemswtMl ; . . -
"We want to get away from the
public and live our own lives,"
Roosevelt said. "I don’t know
whether we - have any more pas-
sengers er not”
They slipped quietly and unan-
nounced out of town. They are
making the trip in a large brown
N. Y. Chinatown
Scene of Tong
War Activity
1
AUSTIN, July 29—Total in-
terstate shipments of Texas poul-
try and eggs in June reached 181
cars, a 30 per cent gain over the
101 cars shipped in June, 1932,
the University of Texas Bureau
of Business Research reported to-
day.
The bureau’s report.showed 84
cars of live and dressed poultry,
including turkeys, and 47 cars of
eggs were shipped during the
month, .compared to 64 and 37
cars a year ago. 4
“Marketings of poultry and eggs
during comlhg months Will prob-
ably be influenced considerably
by feed prices which have risen
sharply,” the report forecast
“Should the disparity between
feed prices, in comparison with
poultry and’ egg prices, be pro-
longed over a considerable period
of time, a contraction in produc-
es in succession,
J to Congress only
Htyy taxes on 11-
udf and to protect dry states
gainst wet neighbors.
Senator King, Dem., Utah, out-
Ined to the United Frees the ar-
gument against further federal re-
pohsiblllty. » '
"If the 18th Amdhdment is re-
tealed,’’ King said, "and it un-
loubtedly will be, Congress will
Almee Semple MePl
This dess-up of Almee Semple I 1
McPherson Hutton, taken at Vlr- j 1
ginia Beach, VaM where she has J 1
been staying following her re- | l
turn from Frame, shews bow ^W I ’
MOTHERBRINGING
BACK HOME FOR F
-------------•-------2
Birth Control
.Education Is
Official’s Aim *
By C. C. NICOLET
United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, July 29—Uniform-
ed policemen stood at every comer
of the crooked streets of China-
town, off the Bowery, tonight and
plain clothes men circulated on the
narrow sidewalks and in the res-
taurants, but it might have been
an abandoned district for all the
Chinese activity to be seen.
The tourists buses made their
rounds and the cafes and stores
catering wholly to occidental trade
did a bit of business, but the Chi-
nese themselves moved warily in
the face of a new tong war.
“Those on Leongs—they always
start trouble,” said George How,
Secretary of the Hip Sing Tong,
the only leader of either of the
major'tongs of American China-
town who chose to follow his usu-
ally daily routine despite the mur-
\ - J
\ w
v
William Woodin, Jr.
William H. Woodin, Jr., son
It was made public by
al recovery admlnistra-
circumstances of Its
suggested official if ln-
tton oCthe boycott plan,
rs letter concluded with
ng words; , ,
t all, w. ask that you
o your members the ad- n
Controversy Loom* fa El Paw
a* Health Officer Begin*
Local Campaign
EL PASO, Tex., July 29—A pro-
gram of birth control education as
part of a campaign to lower the lo-
cal death rate, one of the highest
to the country was underway here 1
today under the direction of Dr. T.
J. McCamant, city-county health
officer.
Dr. McCamant said bo would at-
tempt to educate Americans as I
well as Spanish-Americans in birth I
control methods despite legal and
religious objections.
’Til do it If they don’t throw
me In jail,” he said.
"There’s no more reason why X
(By United Press)
ALBANY, N. Y., July 29—The
family of the kidnaped John J.
O'Connell, Jr., reported to- have
withdrawn a “large sum” of mon-
ey from an Albany bank to satis-
fy ranaom demands Of his ab-
ductors, awaited his release hour-
ly tonight.
Reports were current that the
money bad been passed to an in-
termediary in the case and that
liberation of -the H ndaome 24-
year-old National Guard officer
‘teas only a matter of a few
hours." ' ' ,
Th* O’Connell fai
Albany's powerful
machine withdrew the money morq
than a week ago, some r > 'ria
said. The exact amount was not
F
'Vm
By MERRILL E. COMPTON
United Press Staff Correspondent
DALLAS, Tek., July 29—Sen-
ator Morris Sheppard, author of
the 18th Amendment, is going to
begin his campaign in Texas
against repeal of th* prohibition
statute*, in territory admittedly of
wet inclinations.
Prohibition headqusters here
said tonight the tight-lipped little
Texan had cranked up his sound
truck and was en route from
Washington to begin bis speaking
Women Asked to Boy
Not Complying With
_ ------wotninVg club, m, boy-d,,,
‘ A. and,
favor th<
(By United Press)
CHICAGO, July 29—The Feder-
al government arreeted seven men
today, one a veterinary surgeon,
as it moved to crush what was
termed a widespread nardotic ring
engaged In “doping” race horses.
Cocaine and heroin allegedly
were used frequently to "hop up”
unknown horses and bring them
across the finish line In the money
and at long odds.
The arrests were made after ex-
tensive investigation by, H. J. An-
sljnger, commissioner of narcotics .
at Washington and Ralph H. 'OyP
er, local head of the narcotic bu-
reau. Oyler said the most recent
violation of narcotic and - racing
laws came yesterday when Timor-
ous, which won the second race at
Arlington track yesterday,
been "doped.”;
----—o- ..
MATTERN IS BACK
PEMBINA, N. D„ July 29.—
Jimmy Mattern, world flyer, with
T. M. (Pat) Reid, pilot, took off at
, 8:80 a. m. (C8T) en route to To-
ronto, Ont. They had been forced
*•
(By United Press)
DETROIT, July 29—Plans for a
three-day non-stop refueling flight
around the world were revealed to-
day by Major’Bennett H. Griffin,
/ Oklahoma City pilot who flew the
Atlantic last yew with James J.
Mattern.
Griffin hopes to try the flight
next February or March. Mattern,
now in Canada on the way home
from his second attempt at a
round-the-world f light, will join In
the attempt, Griffin said.
(By United Prasa)
MIAMI, Fla., July 29— Flori-
dians on the lower east coast of
the state, North of here, prepared
tonight for the poisibility of a
hurricane early Sunday a* a tropi-
cal disturbance moved west north-
westward from Great Baco Is-
land, Bahamas.
Latest official reports were that
the storm would strike from 20 to
50 miles north of West Palm
Beach at a sparsely settled area
with no large towns, indicating
probably slight damage.
The storm passed over — -
Abaco this afternoon With’ an 84
mile wind. No lives were reported
lost, and property damage was
slight. The barometer at Abaco
dropped to 29.60.
Little precaution was taken by
Miamians. Only a few boarded up
their homes, aa apprehension here
passed with the report that the
storm was headed north of here.
THE WEATHER
(By United Press)
East Texas — Partly cloudy in
north, thundershowers in south
portion.
West Texas — Partly cloudy;
p robably local thundershowers In
extreme southwest portion.
MORRIS SHEPPARD SAYS TOUR WILL
MAKE TEXAS GO DRY NEXT MONTH
By MERRILL E. COMPTON ♦tour in East Texas. „ w« «
In 1917, when Texas voted for
prohibition, East Texas showed
predominate dry strength. Since,
oil has been discovered and thou-
sands of families have moved Into
that section, of the state. It, Is this
influx, of persons,’sa> leadepi of
the wet cause her*,'that ,wjll turn
the tide at th* August 2fi election
when Texas votes on ths legaliza-
tion of 8.2 per cent beer and op
See Sheppard on Pag* 7
Cafe Man Suicides After
Fatally Wounding Couple
- - - I ■ ■■■■» ■ »■ ■* , ■ .1. —■ I
Liquor Traffic
Control to Be
Left to States
on '
today at his home here.
Ha was 80 years old.
attack caused his death.
Judge Ward was born In
1 XUUVCU VM r- -
I
tier i
started oT
Ji
th*
- brothers an
c of robberj
,r HENDERSON. RUSK COUNTY, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 80. 1988
PHONE Na 1
VOL. 8 •
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 110, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 30, 1933, newspaper, July 30, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1311767/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.