Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 39, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 3, 1939 Page: 1 of 10
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V.
EAST TEXAS’
WEATHER
GREATEST
NEWSPAPER
—PRICE FIVE CENTS
HENDERSON, RUSK COUNTY, TEXAS WEDNESDAY AFTERN’N, MAY 3. 1939
VOL
9—NO. 39
a
J,
TO BE SUBMITTED
t<.
Poland Mobilizes Her Famed Cavalry
TO PUBLIC VOTE
I
!
, v;
k *
rd
I
S’<K
I
I
If
I
four Scandinavian
nations
I
the Galapagos islands of Ecuador
I,
See NO. J on Page fl
See NO. 5 on Page fl
I
I
I
See NO. 4 on Page •
See NO. 1 on Page S
TO MODERNIZE
BATTLESHIPS
Mention ’Doches Man
For Highway Position
Latest News.
FLASHES
The girl ant* the second bandit
then assisted the wounded man
to the automobile. He fainted on
each 18-month period.
estimated .complete modernization
of the five battleships would cost
1
-'1
\
■
I
BRITAIN TO ACCEPT PROMISES
.___'________________________________________________________________________________________________- -------- ------------------------------------------
House Refuses To Kill Sales-Natural Resource Tax Measure
BILL SEEMS LIKELY
Red” Dress
U. S. and Britain
Informed Thorough
Reorganization Is
To Be Expected
ed for the bullet. The other bandit
stood by with the gun trained on
Hirschfeld's back. During the op-
eration the girl packed and loaded
belongings into an automobile.
After the operation, Hirschfeld
placed the bullet on the table.
“Gimme that,” the wounddd
man said. "I want to give it back
stood near by. The wounded man , to the guy that gave it to me.”
U. S. Considers Establishing
Naval and Air Bases in MexicoM
____________________________ - * ------------------------
NEW YORK. (UP) — John
Barrymore filed a suit in Supreme
Court this afternoon demanding
an accounting of Joint funds from
Ills estranged wife, Elaine Barrie.
HOLLYWOOD. (UP) — Friends
said today George Palmer Put-
nam, husband of the late Amelia
Earhart who was lost on a South
Pacific flight two years ago, win
marry Mrs. Jearv-Marie Consigmy
James of Beverly Hills, Cal., In
June.
Putnam said that “I will neither
confirm nor deny the report.*
— o
Newspaperman, War
Vet, Dies at Corpus
Galapagos Islands Also Mentioned as
Location to Fortify Pacific Approaches
♦_______________________
SEEK LEADER
Maryland, in 1910; and West Vir-
ginia. in 1923. Since all are in the
’ Pacific area Du Bose said the
AUSTIN. Tex. (UP) — An opin-i work probably would be done at
ion from Atty. Gen. Gerald C. the Puget Sound Navy Yard.
Mann to John L. Crosthwaitc. Dal-
las county auditor, today advised
that the Dallas county commis-
siners court may set the salaries
of precinct officers at a reason-
able amount not to exceed $4,000
a year. Salaries up to $4,500 had
been claimed.
AUSTIN. Tex. (UP) — George
P. Barron of Yoakum and Mom
Adams of Nacogdoches were ad-
ded today to the list of. likely
nominees for the post of State
Highway Commissioner which
Gov. W. Lee O‘Daniel has tried
unsuccessfully to fill three times.
A delegation urging the selec-
tion of Barron visited Governor
O'Daniel yesterday. He is brother
of former House Speaker W. S.
Barron of Bryan.
Dr. W. B. Veasey of Huntsville
has been given a favorable re-
port by the senate committee on
nominations for membership on
the State Board of Health. Gov-
ernor O’Daniel recommended him
yesterday.
Soviet authorities hope to give
Russian women something of
Western smartness with such
dresses as this, now being de-
signed in Moscow’s Model Gown
House. The dress Is white crepe-
de-chjne, with appliqued print.
BUCHAREST, Rumania (UP)—
Great Britain’s negotiations for •
new economic agreement with Ru-
mania as part of the antl-aggrea-
slon front guarantees were under-
stood today to have reached •
deadlock.
Rumania was said to have refus-
ed to accent a 8 per cent Interest
rate on a five-year contract for ra-
ps v me nt of a proposed $25,000,000
Ioan with which the government
Sh
I
EAST AND WEST TEXAS —
Partly cloudy tCftight and
Thursday.
LONDON. (UP)—Edward Con-
nell, 22, salesman, and William
Brown, 22, a barman, were convict-
ed today of causing an explosion
that damaged the Hammerstein
Bridge on March 29.
Both defendants, as “soldiers of
the Irish Republican Army,” refus-
ed to plead at the trial.. Connell
was sentenced' to 20 years and
Brown to ’10 years penal servitude.
GRENADA, Miss., (UP) —Wit-
nesses believed today that the
sudden striking of an air pocket
at an altitude of 100 feet caused
the crash of the new Cessna mono-
plane owned by the Memphis Com-
mercial Appeal here late yester-
day, killing the three occupants.
The dead:
George Stokes, 34, veteran Com-
mercial-Appeal pilot and photo-
grapher.
Ted Northington, 31. Commer-
cial-Appeal reporter formerly of
Clarksville, Tenn.
John Crump, 28. son of E. H.
Crump. Memphis political boss,
»» and member of the Crump Realty
0 Firm at Memphis.
The plane was attempting to
land when It crashed into a
ditch at the edge of the airport
and burst into flames. All three
victims were burned beyond recog-
nition in view of 500 persons
fic coast — today as authorities
abandoned the theory that the
“brains” of the death ring already
was in custody and concentrated
on efforts to trap the “big shot.”
“We have tbout discarded the
theory that Herman Petrillo and
Cesare Valenti are the big shots,”
said Captain James Kelly of the
homicide squad. “We believe Pe-
trillo can tell us who the real big
CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (UP)
—Porter Oakes. 42, newspaper
man and World War veteran, died
here yesterday of a heart attack.
A former oil man in the Texas
Panhandle, Oakes had been in the
newspaper business here several
years and when he died, waa
managing editor of the Corpus
Christi Chronicle.
During the World War, he was
a major assigned to the Whits
House Staff President Wllsab
bases several hundred miles from
the canal—considered by them the
most vital link in President
Roosevelt’s plan for hemispheri-
cal defense.
I The War Department created
Monday a separate military de-
partment in the Caribbean area,
with headquarters at San Juan,
Puerto Rico. It was described as
a first step toward securing the
canal against attack from the
Atlantic ocean.
Mr. Roosevelt said last night
aboard his train enroute to the
capital that possibility of attack
from the air had made necessary
expansion of defenses in the Carib-
bean. He said the War Depart-
ment’s order was based on a study
extended over a period of several
years.
In earlier days, he said. Guan-
tanamo Bay or San Juan, Puerto
Rico could’ be protected against
raiding ships by well-placed guns
on headlands. Development of the
airplane, he added, now makes the
maintenance of bases more pre-
carious.
Creation of the Puerto Rican
military department, it was said,
foreshadows establishment of pow-
erful air and naval bases on Puer-
to Rico and the Virgin Islands,
and the practical closing of sea
passage through the West Indies
in time of war.
The plan :.ow being considered
for the Pacific side of the canal
would establish a fottified air
and naval base at Acapulco, deep
water, natural port on the Pacific
coast of Mexico, approximately
half-way between San Diego and
the canal, and at least an air ter-
minus on the Galapagos Islands.
The Mexican government al-
ready has indicated its willingness
to consider some arrangement for
the use of Acapulco harbor by the
MIAMI. Fla. (UP) — John
Howard Dingwall, aultan of a
“trailer harem.” faced five years
in a federal penitentiary today for
rewarding the high magazine sales
girl of his crew each night by
making her his bed partner.
An all-male district court Jury
took 17 minutes to convict Ding-
wall of transporting five northern
girls to Florida for immoral pur-
poses.
Judge Robert T. Ervin aaid his
sentence was the maximum. He
set appeal bond at $10,000. De-
fense Attorney Elmore Cohen said
he would file a motion for a new
trial.
1
A. J|
zation” of the International Set-
tlement at Shanghai.
The Japanese demands were
conveyed to Joseph C. Grew, Unit-
ed States Ambassador, and Sir
Robert L. Caigie, British Envoy,
by Renzo Sawada, vice-minister
for foreign affairs.
The vice minister demanded a
"revamping” of the Shanghai
land regulations- a step which
might lead to abolition of the set-
tlement in '. hich the British have
investments running into hundreds
of millions of dollars.
The Ambassadors called at the
foreign office separately, at Sa-
wada’s request, and were given
answers to representations they
presented two months ago relative
to incidents in and around the
Shanghai settlement in which Ja-
pan, Britain'and the United States
all are interested.
Sawada said that it is obvious,
in view of the changed situation in
China, that the whole set-up at
Shanghai needs to be re-examined
and pointed out that criticism of
the present complicated arrange-
ment generally are “justified.”
The criticisms cited hy the Vice-
Minister included assertions that:
1. The British dominate all im-
portant posts In the municipal
council, the settlement’s general
government.
2. The British hold a majority
of all offices at the disposal of the
council.
3. The present control of the
settlement tends to the continu-
ation of power of a Britlsh.con-
trolled “oligarchy.”
4. Japanese groups in the set-
tlement deserve a larger repre-
sentation in all settlement affairs
‘‘because of our enormous hold-
ings in the Shanghai area.”
Sawada said that the present
Shanghai land regulations, which
Emergency Operation Performed On
Wounded Bandit With Razor Blade
for office on something besides an
offer to give them more than the
other fellow. This is not offered
in a spirit of frivolity. I think It
is what a majority of the people
of Texas honestly feel.”
Keith said that Governor O’Dan-
iel pointed out in his Inaugural
address the difference between
paying the state's obligations and
in letting old age pensions “de-
generate into a political racket.”
Keith also declared that the
■its of Texas constitutions in
tne x9th century foresaw the pos-
sibility of an endowed electorate
and prohibited voting by paupers
supported at public expense.
Rep. Roy I. Tennant Jr. of Long-
view commended Keith for "his
courageous speech.”
“If we were to vote on this with
a secret ballot,” Tennant said, “I
believe it would go one "ay. But
since it will be a record vote, it
will go the other way."
Tennant said that al! "pressure
groups" should be disenfranchised
if old age pensioners are. He
mentioned the interests that main-
tain "lobbyists’’ in Austin and
school teachers.
Anti-sales tax members and op-
ponents of putting such, tax legis-
lation into the constitution leveled
a barrage of criticism against the
resolution. The House adopted a
provision by Rep. Bryan Brad,
bury of Abilene for recurring elec-
tions on the taxes levied. The first
election would be this summer. If
that carried, another election
would be held In November, 1942,
nnd a third one in November,
1948, if the taxes Still were in
force. After that, elections would
be called every 10 years.
Bradbury said that such a safe-
guard is necessary to prevent one-
third of the membership in either
House or Senate from blocking
submission of a constitutional
amendment to repeal the taxes.
He warned that the federal gov-
ernment might change its social
security statutes and necessitate
changes in Texas’ state benefits.
“A detailed tax law in the con-
stitution might cause a burden
that we cannot remove," Brad-
bury said. “We ought to give the
people the same opportunity to
vote the taxes out as to vote them would buy arms from Britain,
in. None can foresee what condi-
tions we may have in the future."
The House defeated proposals
to call elections every two years
if petitioned by 10 per cent of the
electorate nnd to have automatic
re-submission of (,bc constitutional
amendment every four years so
long as it is in force.
Rep. S. J. Isaucks of El Paso
called the amendments for recur-
ring elections “the best arguments
that we have against writing this
tax bill into the constitution.”
"These amendments are offered
by men who arc thinking ahead,"
Tsaacks said. "They are afraid of
what might happen in the future,
as well they might he. This prop-
osition is sponsored by the Gover-
nor, a majority of the Senate, a
Hl HOBART C. MONTEE '
(Copyright By United Press)
WASHINGTON. (UP) — High
war and navy officials are study- I
ing plans to establish American ■
air and naval bases in Mexico and >
the Galapagos islands of Ecuador
i so as to fortify the Pacific ap- i
As European developments point to the Polish corridor as a highly possible theater of war, and mili-
tary experts agree that cavalry would regain its oldtime importance in fighting on the Polish plains,
Warsaw continues to mobilize troops against possible invasion. Pictured above are squadrons of Pol-
ish lancers massed near the Polish corridor.
result of' bases, it was indicated.
It was understood that officials
are considering many possible ar-
langements for use of the har-
bors desired. It was emphasized
that there would be no question
of the nations losing sovereignty
of the land or water involved.
It was pointed out that Guan-
tanamo Bay, Cuba—the only naval ------ ----— — ----- -—
base of this country not on its ' shot is, and that ultimately he
own land — is leased from Cuba ’ will give us his name. And we
at an annual rental of $2,000. Such believe that when we get to the
a payment would be considered top and the bottom of the mystery,
nominal in return for development our prediction of 100 deaths will
of a harbor and its defenses. be justified.”
Both army and navy officials i County Detective Louis Sachs
long have desired air and naval ] was en route to the west coast,
I but authorities kept secret his ex-
1 act destination and object of the
trip. It was reported, however,
that he was to investigate large
life insurance policies that the
syndicate obtained and rumors
that the ring also did a “mail-
order” business.
Meantime, police surgeons were
td examine several of the women
held on charges of administering
the fatal “witches' brew” of arsen-
ic to their husbands.
Morris (Louis the Rabbi) Bol-
ber of Brooklyn, N. Y., who sur-
rendered Monday, described how
victims were killed by poisoning,
drowning or other means in Phila-
delphia and in other states, au-
thorities said.
“Bolber’s st^Xflment has thrown
new light on many murders of
which we had not known, not only
in Philadelphia, but in other states
as well," said District Attorney
Charles F. Kelley in announcing
that the “faith healer” had made
good a promise to disclose "in-
formation of great importance.”
Sultan of Trailer
Harem Given 5 Years
(UP)—w. *
rower. Mi. died in * hospital today
from Injuries received when he was
hit by a train.
In the hospital bed next to him
was Bert Densmor, driver of a
which was hit by a tratfn twa
weeks ago.
Farther away In the same roonl
was W. C. Vanhouten, 1, also suf-
fering from injuries received in ■
collision between a car and a train
in which his mother, Mrs.. Veva
Maines, was killed.
See NO. 3 on Page fl
--------------o.............. ~.............. ,
Mann Says Court Can »’.t, in 1921 Colorado, in 1929; the
• I IkX ,»»<•, 1 •»»» rl In 1(110- \A/ouf
Set Precinct Salaries
^^Htohl
police, but the man with the gun
threatened him.
For the next 25 minutes the
bandit lay still—without an anaes-
Thc department plans to spend
SI,326,000 on the Tennessee, $1,-
241,000 .on the California, $1,316,-
000 on the Colorado, $1,311,000 on
the Maryland, and $1,466,000 on
the West Virginia, besides the
standing authorization Du Bose
said.
Du Bose declined to detail the
planned work, explaining he did
I (••««♦ 4 V» ■ »■» 1r -14- strrvt«1«l l>n ,uian
... policy to advertise what we are
, doing.”
The vessels are the Tennessee,
commissioned in 1920; the Califor-
(UP)—-The St. Louis
Star-Times, in a dispatch from
Kansas City said today that Otto
Higgins, who recently resigned
under fire us Kansas City’s police
director, admitted he saw and talk-
ed to Edward L. Schneider, one of
the government’s key witnesses in
the T. ,1. Pendergast Income tax
eases, on Monday morning, shortly
before Schneider disappeared..
CHAMBERLAIN JAPS DEMAND
WILL ACCEPT SETTLEMENT
HITLER OFFER BE REVAMPEB
Powers Struggle
Vainly to Draw
Soviet Russia
In “Peace Front’
'Thanks, Doc.” She and her
companions drove away.
Hirschfeld reported the case to
police immediately. They said the
girl and bandit registered at the
I rooming house a month ago as I,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson." They had J
not been able to make further
id* ntification but said the ban-
dits "absolutely” were the ones
who attempted the tavern holdup
. as one of the holdup men had
thetic — while the physician prob- f been wounded in the gun battle.
BY JQE ALEX MORRIS
United Press Foreign Editor
Great Britain offered today to
take Adolf Hitler up on his peace
promises.
Prime Minister Neville Cham,
berlain told the House of Com-
■ inons that Britain was ready to
consider giving Germany recipro-
cal assurances of non-aggression,
such as Hitler refused to give in
blanket form to President Roose-
velt but which he offered to ne-
gotiate with individual nations.
Again Chamberlain denied any de-
sire or intention of encircling Ger-
many.
The Prime Minister's statement
assumed greater importance in
view of the fact that Britain, push-
ed by France, was struggling with
great difficulties in attempting
—vainly so far—to bring Soviet
Russia into the European anti-
aggrossion front on terms agree-
able to the western powers.
Hitler strengthened his northern
flank by proposing neutrality
agreements with the Scandinavian
nations?
After a three-hour British cabl-
meeting, counter-proposals
were dispatched to the British
Ambassador at Moscow to be tak-
en up with Soviet Foreign Com-
missar Maxim Litvinov. The chief
British difficulty at the moment
is a desire to avoid any agreement
with Russia which- would antago-
nize Japan, Portugal, or other na-
tions that fear Communism and
might be pushed further into the
totalitarian camp.
The tempo of developments In-
creased.
Germany’s approach to the tra-
ditionally neutral Scandinavian
and Baltic Sea nations was a plan
to assure their neutrality in
event of war and thus achieve two
important objectives:
1. Protect the Reich’s vital nor.
them flank.
2. Maintain communication lines
with Scandinavia which supplies
such war materials as iron to Ger-
many.
In return, Germany would agree
to fortification of the Aaland Is-
lands in the Baltic Sea by Finland
and Sweden.
The Nazis also renewed their
newspaper barrage against Poland
in advance of the speech which
Polish Foreign Minister Josef
Beck will make to Parliament on
Friday, presumably rejecting or
making counter proposals to
Adolf Hitler’s demand for return
of Danzig to the Reich and for a
motor highway across the Polish
corridor.
Whether the Nazis were prepar-
ing for a quick thrust at Poland
or merely seeking to warn Beck
against any drastic action—such
as declaration of a Polish protec-
torate over Danzig—in his Friday
speech remained to be determined,
but the German tactics were simi-
lar to those used in the past
against Czechoslovakia.
In Warsaw, the Poles celebrat-
ed a national holiday—anniversary
of the first Democratic constitu-
tion of 1791—but in no way re-
CHICAGO. (UP) Dr. Sig-*domen. The bullet had lodged near^said:
und Hirschfeld stood at the the base of the spine. "T1
"I'd like to help you," Hirsch- I
feld said. "But I have no instru- .
ments.”
The wounded man picked up a
razor blade from the tr.ble.
“Here use this," he said.
Hirschfeld proteated, he
TOKYO. (UP) Japan in-
formed Great Britain and the
United States tonight that she de-
mands a ‘‘thoroughgoing reorgani-
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP)—Tha
delegates setting up the structure
of the new unified Methodist
Church today compromise*} on the
views and established a single
board of education but divided it
into twe
The northern delegates had de-
manded two boards, one to hand)*
religion In the local churches and
a second to handle education in
schools and colleges. The southern
delegates, however, Insisted on a
single board for the enttm o^srai
tional program.
WASHINGTON.. (UP) — Tha
National Advisory Committee fof
Aeronautics has decided to ask
President Roosevelt to recommend
establishment of five new aeronau*
tics research centers, it was learn*
ed today.
This decision was reached after
hearing Col. Charles A. Lindbergh
nt an executive session.
AUSTIN, Tex, (UP)—The Texas House of Representa-
tives refused today to kill the sales-natural resource tax
constitutional amendment for financing social security.
The vote against striking out*,
the resolving clause of the substi-
tute for the resolution passed by
the Senate was 90 to 55. A simi-
lar test yesterday showed 83 to 46
against defeating the measure.
One hundred favorable House
votes are needed to submit the
proposition to the electorate.
Before the House recessed for
lunch, Rep. Joe Keith of Sherman
had presented an amendment to
take away the authority to vote
from persons who receive old age
assistance. A substitute offered
by Rep. Jchn A. Kerr Jr. of La-
Grange would disenfranchise any
person supported in whole or in
part by tax money. Neither was
voted upon before recess.
" “It’s time for something to be
done to relieve this state,” Keith
mund
point of a gun in s dimly-lighted
rooming house today and per-
formed an emergency operation
with a razor blade on a bandit.
The man was wounded last
night in a gun battle in which one
man was killed and two police-
men were wounded so seriously
they may die.
He was summoned to a small
third-floor apartment several
hours after two band1*8, attempt-
ing to hold up a .north side tavern,
Eight students of Henderson
High and Junior High school
will leave tomorrow for the an-
nual State meet at Austin where
thousands of Texas students an-1
nually gather to compete for
athletic and literary honors.
Two tennis players—James i
Earley ami Johnny Bateman
will wear . ' 1 1
the state net meet as a
their clean sweep of the county,
district and regional tourneys.
The Henderson team will step in-
to one of. the nation's fastest
high school tennis fields in com-
peting with the seven other re-
gional winners.
press representative—two
the high school apd the
WASHINGTON. (UP) - The
House Naval Affairs Committee
today favorably reported a bill au-
thorizing expenditure of $6,660,000
to modernize and recondition five
25,000-ton battleships.
The hill was reported unanim-
otisly after the committee heard
have been in effect since 1866, are [testimony of Rear Admiral W. G.
“out-moded.” Du Bose, chief of naval construc-
"The Japanese government can- tion.
not overlook the fact," he said, i The authorized expenditures are
"that the International Settlement in addition to the standing author-
has been a base for the opera- I Nation of $450.OOP per vessel for
tions of anti-Japanese terrorists, en<h 18-month period. Du Bose
“It is incumbent upon the na- 1
tions concerned to control terror-
ism, anti-Japanese propaganda, jioo.000,000.
and all other malignant acts." p;; ncc: ;
Sawada’s move followed a state- ;
ment by the commanders of Jn-' ••not, think it would be wise nation-
panese armed forces in Shanghai at
Policemen Edwin McIntyre, 42,
and Phil Kelly, 38, were in the
1 tavern when the bandits entered.
' They were off duty and in plain
' clothes. "This is a. stockup," the
bandits shouted. McIntyre and
Kelly grabbed their guns and
started to fire. The bandits re-
turned the fire.
Alex Ferguson, 55, the under-
taker, seater at the policemen's
table slumped over dead at the
first blast from the bandit's guns.
pet ing
' Six'
from — -- t
others' from Junior High—will
also leave for their annual com-
petition with the top school re-
porters and editors in the State.
Miss Evelyn Teller and Jerry
McCarty, high school students,
£ will compete in the several con-
test at the Texas State High
School Press conference rally.
Miss Teller will make a speech
(title to be selected at the
meet,) and the both will attend
various dinners, banquets and
conferences.
The junior high staff mem-
bers, Hugh Landrum, Billy Joe
Rettig, Emma Lou Chamberlain
and Anna Lois. Gibson, will al-
so compete with Texas students.
The group will attend confer-
ences and other meetings. From
the four junior high representa-
tives will be chosen an editor for
the paper, The Broadcaster, for
next year, Principal R. C. Lee
announced today.
The group will be accompan-
ied by Principal Earl W. Adams
of the high school, and Mrs.
Fletcher Hargrove, junior high
sponsor.' They are expected to
return Saturday night.
--o ■----
Newsmen Killed When
Monoplane Crashes
.. ....JU. ...... COPENHAGEN, Denmark. — I
said. “It's time for people to run <KJP)—The foreign ministers oi
--------- ... ... . <«••!!■ natlona were
understood tonight to be planning
a meeting at Stockholm Tuesday to
weigh Adolf Hitler’s proposal for
reciprocal non-aggression pacts.
I proaches to the Panama Canal, it
! was learned today.
Those officials may ask the PHILADELPHIA. (UP) — In-
state Department soon to sound vestigation of the monster mur-
‘ out Mexico and Ecuador on the der-for-ins'trance syndicate spread
lohnnv Bateman I possibility of negotiating treaties to other states—even to the Paci-
hi'gh school’ colors in authorizing establishment of such
m 1 riczsa »4 sirnc indioatnrl
MURDER PLOT
the
had shot and killed an undertaker
and wounded the policemen.
The rooming house is only a
few blocks from the tavern. A
man opened the door in answer
to Hirschfeld’s knock and covered
him with a gun. A wounded man
lay on a bed. An attractive blonde
u. 'Th. u'nunderl man
looked up and said:
"Go to work, Doc.”
Hirschfeld mkde a hasty exam-
ination and found that the bandit the way downstairs. On the street
had been shot through ths ab- th* girl turned to Hirschfeld and
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 39, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 3, 1939, newspaper, May 3, 1939; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331611/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.