The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 94, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1934 Page: 1 of 30
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Daily Herald, Brownsville and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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1st Quarter: Texas 0 Gents 0; Hogs 0 LSU 0; Ponies 7 Oklahoma X. A M. 0; 2nd: Frogs 0 Aggies 0; FordKam 7 St Mar^s j Princeton 7 W. A M. 0; 3rd: Navy 12 Colgate 7»' *- I
Final: Michigan 9 Georgia Tech 2; Yale 37 Brown 0; Army 20 Sewanee 0. fN*____ I
1C ARLY
CiS UNDAY
■ .fORTY-THIRD YEAR—No. >4 ^ rw-nm » _BROWNSVILLE TEXAS SUNDAY OCTOBER >1 1934• • * R A COPY
I Hauptmann Put in Jail in New Jersey
I mm must
FACE TRIAL
FOR JjURDER
extradition Fight Is
Lost By Defe n s e;
Suspect Rushed Out
Of State -
FLEMINGTON. N. J.. Oct. 20.—
P— Bruno Richard Hauptmann
ms a prisoner of the state of
ew Jersey Saturday and within a
lonth he must face trial for the
turder of the Lindbergh baby.
He is lodged in a solitary cell in
>e Hunterdon county jail close by
re courthouse in which he will be
led.
Hauptmann was brought to the
til by New Jersey authorities Frl-
ay night a few hours after he had
ist his fight to prevttit his extra-
ition from New York. The appellate
ivlsion of the New York supreme
)urt denied his appeal and his
unoval to New Jersey was effect-
i forthwith.
To Rash Trial
Gauung at last custody ol the
tan they formally charged less
isn two weeks ago with the kid-
ip-murder the New Jersey au-
torlties made plans to bring the
olid German carpenter to trial
ithin a month.
The first step will be Haupt-
ann s arraignment. Attorney Gen-
■al David T. Wilentx whd accom-
inied Hauptmann here on a quick
ip from New York said it will
t held at the convenience of Sup-
ine Court Justice Thomas W
renchard probably in three or
lur days.
The decision which ended Haupt-
anns fight against extradition
as handed down Friday night by
ve Justices of the appellate divi-
on who upheld Justice Ernest E
Hammer of the Bronx in refus-
tg to grant a writ of habeas
irpus after Governor Lehman of
ew York had signed extradition
ipers
Alibi Is Offered
Before the opinion was handed
>wn James M Fawcett. Haupt-
ann's counsel had sought to in-
oduce evidence to show that i
auptmann was in New York the
ly of the kidnaping and succeed-
ig days.
October 20. 1834.—A meeting at
San Felipe presided over by the
Political Chief of the Brazos
discussing the “wilful and unlaw-
ful proceedings" o! Coahuilans.
boldly recommended and pro-
posed a perpetual dissolution be-
tween Coahuila and Texas. It
was an issue some could not j
consider dispassionately and the
meeting went further than was
originally intended Thoughtful
people seeking restoration of
state government by constitu-
tional means longed for adjust-
ment of the Saltlllo-Monclova
differences and for renewed
functioning of the State and
preferred to leave matters in the
hands of the Committee ap-
pointed at the 1833 Convention.
San Felipe was to Texas what
Jamestown was to the American
Colonies.
October 21 1834.—Stephen F
Austin aided by his friend.
Lorenzo de Zavala had procured
the passage of a decree restoring
f natives of the United States
e right to settle in Texas as
lcmists. It now awaited the
approval of Santa Anna who was
reported to have said he would
"mediate maturely the decree—
1 and if no objections were pre-
tented would give it his sanc-
tion.” Colonists in Texas were
anxious for relatives to join
| them. Very probably they had
little sympathy with Mexicans
particularly those near them.
Far less desirable neighbors once
confronted them when the Mex-
ican Government was seriously
considering a proposal to move
convicts from Vera Cruz to the
Texas colonies and give them
grants of land when free
STATE RESTS
ITS CASE IN
CABBAGE WAR
Shippers Tell Jurors
Of Being Visited By
Delegations Headed
By Defendant
■ .-..
EDINBURG. Oct. 30. i/P>—The
state rested its case Saturday
against A. C. Barnhart charged
with arson in connection with the
burning of Carl Bresett'* vege-
table shipping shed at Alamo last
spring after introducing testimony
of several vegetable shippers who
told of being waited on by a dele-
gation headed by Barnhart and
purporting to be representing grow-
ers of three counties.
John Burkhart Edmund Burk-
hart and C. O. Williams said Barn-
hart headed groups which visited
them to insist that $6 per ton be
paid for cabbage in keeping with a
shippers-growers agreement. Ed-
mund Burkhart and Williams testi-
fied that Barnhart said he was glad
they intended to observe the agree-
ment because an “example is going
to be made ol someone.'*
Don Logan. Alamo vegetable
shipper reported having stopped at
the Bresett shed the night of the
fire **ten he saw a crowd there. He
said a small fire had started on the
platform between the Williams and
Jones shed and the Bresett shed
He attempted to get in touch with
his own shed he said but was un-
able to make a connection.
Logan said he returned immed-
iately and found kerosene had been
poured over two cars of cabbage in
the shed. Some already loaded had
been taken out of the cars placed
on the ground and saturated witn
kerosene.
CHURCH OPENLY
DEFIES HITLER
Protestant Councils Ordered
To Refuse Obedience To
Reichs Authorities
BERLIN Oct. 20. (API— Seces-
sion split the Protestant church
of Germany Saturday with a res-
olution of the congressional synod
claiming 80 per cent of Protes-
tant churchgoers. ordering all
church councils to refuse obed-
ience to reichs church authorities
and to follow the synod's orders
alone.
BERLIN. Oct. 30. uP>—HiLleru.ni
fought Saturday against boiling
Protestant dissension which threat-
ens a schism a« bitter as the refor-
mation-
Adolf Hitler's own ranks are split
The German Christian church
reared by the nazis who sought to
achieve a dream of a single staw-
c on trolled church was cleft oy so
much acrimonious debate that
Chancellor Hitler after months of
delay has summoned reichs churcn
leaders to meet him and his ad-
visors.
At the same time the congression-
al synod which lays claim to 80
per cent of the German Protestant
churchgoers and embraces militant
opposition met here and determin-
esd alter a year and a half of pro-
test* to Shake off the church dic-
tatorship of Reichbishop Ludwig
Mueller and Dr. August Jaeger
Prussian commissioner of Protest-
ant churches.
The oppositions declaration
against the bishop amounted to an
ultimatum.
Opposition leaders now believe
Hitler will repudiate Mueller or
Jaeger or both but this feeling ts
not general. Some observers express-
ed 'S*1 opinion that unless the
schism can be averted. Protestant -
antism in Germany will be plunged
into a long religious conflict
— ■ ■ ■■ — .. 1 — ■ ■ -"— —
U. S. Entrants in London-Melbourne Air Dash
1
jjr Colonel Rotcoe Turner
--' '"--
Clyde Peng born Jacqueline Cochran
Three American planes and their
crews are entered in the grueling
London to Melbourne Australia
air race starting Oct. 20 out of
23 aircraft finally certified by the
Aero club from scores of con*
testants. John Polando and Jack
Wright are manning the controls
of the "Babe Ruth"; Colonel
Roiscoe Turner speed champion
is flying a huge Boeing plane
with Clyde Pangborn; and petite
Jacqueline Cochran disqualified
with one ship will compete in
the perilous cross continental
dash in another plane sponsored
by Pangborn though he is flying
with Turner.
BIRTH CONTROL
GETS APPROVAL
Episcopal Leaders Okeh
Dissemination Of
Information
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. Oct. 20.
—(AV-The House of Bishops of the
Protestant Episcopal church Satur-
day adopted a resolution advocating
passage of laws to permit dissem-
ination of birth control informa-
tion by hospitals reputable physi-
cians and clinics.
The vote after lengthy debate.
was 44 to 38.
The questioh. which arose with
the introduction of the resolution
bv Bishop Arthur Huston of Olym-
pia. Wash. was considered one of
the najor issues at th epresent 51st
triennial general convention of the
church.
The Rev. Paul Matthews. Bishop
of New Jersey and the Rt. Rev.
Thomas Jenkins. Bishop of Nevada
opposed the liberalizing move from
the floor while Bishop Benjamin
Brewster of Maine spoke for It.
“When the people of our parishes
believe that the moral leadership of
the church has gone so far astray
as to endorse a measure which will
corrupt youth and promote pro-
miscuity. they may look elsewhere
for moral guidance.” Bishop Mat-
thews said.
Bishop Brewster said that phy-
sicians who because of state laws
were not permitted to give out birth
control information in hospitals and
clinics “speak privately in their own
offices as freely as they please to
those patients who can afford to
pay the fee.”
“In Nevada” Bishop Jenkins said
“there is no vice which does not
flourish and most of these with the
saction of the law. The morals of
Nevada are the morals of the
frontier
'*1 haven t any patience with men
and women who conspire to defeat
the ends of nature.”
Mrs. Hauptmann To
Move to New Jersey
NEW YORK. Oct. 20.—</P>— Mrs.
Anna Hauptmann intends to move
to New Jersey to be near her hus-
band. Bruno. imprlsoigd in the
Hunterdon county Jail at Fleming -
ton.
She said she would go to New
Jersey as soon as her Infant son is
cured of a cold.
In a prepared statement. Mis.
Hauptmann said she was prepared
to “fight on" because she knew
her husband was innocent of the
Lindbergh slaying.
Fighter Cleared In
Death of Opponent
KIRBYVILLE Oct. 20. UP>—Au-
thorities Saturday said no action
would be taken against Soldier
Hicks professional boxer who Fri-
day night killed Robert Smith
negro amateur fighter with a blow
above th« heart at a ring exhibi-
tion at the Jasper county fair.
Smith seeking to earn a few dol-
lars by staying in the ring with
Hicks was felled by a blow and died
almost instantly. He gasped “I’m
passed out” as he fell to the canvas
—dead.
Fourth Man Charged
In Houston Slaying
HOUSTON. Oct. 20. The
fourth man to be charged with mur-
der In the death of Alton C. Gib-
son. 18. of Houston whose body was
found Tuesday near Fairfield was
arrested Saturday.
He was Joe Curry son oi a Fair-
field farmer near whose ’ lace the
body of the dead youth was found.
He Is about 32 years old.
In a state of decomposition the
body was not finally identified un-
til late Friday when Gibson’s fam-
ily accepted a dentist’s findings
that a filling in a tooth of the dead
man's skull was one the dentist
placed in Gibson’s mouth.
THE WEATHER
Brownsville and the Vahcy; Fair
and continued warm Sunday.
t. (MELLON’S
BROTHER DIES
Banker Philanthropist An<
Industrialist Succumbs
At Age of 88
PITTSBURGH. Oct. 20—uf»)-
James Ross Mellon elder broth e
of Andrew W. Mellon former sec
retary of the treasury died at hi
home early Saturday/ He was 8)
years old.
Mellon a noted banker philan
throplst and Industrialist had beet
critically 111 for several months.
He rose to eminence from i
clerkship in a law office In 1867
later went Into the coal businesi
and established a building suppi;
and real estate business with hi
brother. Thomas Alexander Medon
The brothers completed In 1877 on<
of the country's early railroads tlx
Ligonier Valley. In western Penn
sylvania. In 1888 he entered bank'
Ing a profession in which he haj
been an important figure man]
years.
Mellon maintained a winter hom<
at Palatka. Fla. In 1867 he marriet
Rachel Hughey Larimer daughter
of General William Larimer om
of the founders of Denver Cola
His surviving children are Wil
liam Larimer Mellon chairman o!
the Gulf Oil corporation; Thomai
Mellon and Mrs George S. Has
brouck. Jr.
At the time of his death Mellot
was president of the City Deposi
Bank A Trust company of Pitts
burgh.
Auto Kills Man'
WICHITA Kas.. Oct. 20—(AV-
S pee ding to the scene of an auto
mobile accident. Officer Wlllian
Carter Friday night struck and kill
ed Herbert Grayson. 85 said to tx
a second cousin of Abraham Lin
coin.
AMERICANS IN
THIRD PLACE
IN AIR RACE
Nineteen Fliers Head
Planes For Orient
In Search of New
Records
(By The Associated Press)
Am dusk fell over Europe Satur-
day nineteen filers seeking new
speed records raced on toward the
Orient
Two Dutch teams were well In
the van and the Americans CoL
Roacoe Turner and Clyde Pang-
bom were m third place so far as
the experts at Mildenhall Air-
drome. England could determine.
Americans Third
The whole pack was led out of
Athens by K. D. Parmentier and J.
J. MoU. flying an American (Dou-
glas i plane. One hour and 28 min-
utes behind them leaving Athens
were their feUow countrymen. D.
L. Asjes and G. L. Geysendorfer
(flying a Pander).
Turner and Pangbom. flying
their American (Boeing) plane
pulled into A the nr just 43 minutes
after the Paxmentier ship had
left the port.
The whereabouts of the flying
Mollisons Jim and Amy was not
definite at that time although
Bucharest reported they were be-
lieved to have passed over that
city early in the afternoon.
From the nopoffs the racers
quickly steered different routes.
The speedsters including the two
Americans hit for the nearest
English coastal point near Har-
wich. in the Baghdad btellne.
The handicap contestants head-
ed south crossing the Thames be-
tween London and the estuary.
The first permissible stop Is
! Marseille France.
Have flood Weather
^ The speed craft were out of Eng-
land In 20 minutes before a glo-
rious autumn sunrise shone on the
i handicap entrants who took an
hour to reach the southern coast-
line between the cliffs of Hastings
and Dungenesa.
In the channel the planes flashed
over steamers which take a month
■ to reach Australia counting their
r voyages by weeks instead of hours.
Good weather which featured the
start was forecast all across the
1 continent.
1 The most forlorn sight in the
deserted hangars was the green
machine of Colonel James C. Fitz-
maurice. of Ireland. He withdrew
his machine because he did not
want to make changes required of
him which would reduce his flying
range.
Woman Surrenders
In Man’s Slaying
BROWNWOOD. Oct. 20.—lAV-
County authorities Saturday plan-
ned to change assault with intent
to murder charges U. outright
charges of murder against Mrs. J.
M. Fanner in connection with the
fatal shooting of her husband dairy
> employe.
I Fanner was shot at his home
p three miles south of here Mrs
p Farmer caught a ride into town and
dashed breathlessly into the city
. hall and surrendered to the chief
! of police. She made a statement
i officers said.
( Two M?n Sentenced
For Bank Robbery
LINDEN. Oct. 20.—(A*)— Two
Little Rock. Ark. residents Satur-
day were under lengthy prison
terms for alleged participation in
the robbery' of the First National
• Bank of Atlanta. Tex. last June.
Ovid Mathis was assessed a 30-
i year sentence by a Cass county
■ district court Jury for his part tn
p the 110.000 robbery. Previously. I.
• L <Doc> Southerland had received
a 30-year sentence.
Otto Woods No. 1
Guerra Flowing
Near Discovery
Moncrief and Showers
Is Killed to Drill
Deeper
(OpMtal to The Herald)
MISSION. Oct. JO.— The Ottc
Wood* No. 1 Guerra located 170C
feet north of the discovery well is
Hidalgo county'* new Samfordycc
field became the new area's fourth
producer Saturday morning wher
It began flowing an estimated three
b*. re Is of oil hourly about day-
break.
The well Is the furthest north
to be drilled In the area.
Production was made on a quar-
ter-inch tubing choke under a work-
ing pressure of 750 pounds on the
tubing an£ 1000 pounds on the
easing pressures similar to the
Moncrief and Showers produce!
800 feet to the southeast.
The Moncrief and Showers No. 1
Guerra was killed Saturday morn-
ing after producing from four U
six barrels an hour since It wm
brought In as a producer three
days ago at a total depth of 2781
feet after coring 33 feet of gas and
oil sand.
In the belief that the tremend-
ous pressure of more than 1.00C
pounds on both the casing and
tubing U preventing greater oil
production the owners wtM cod
deeper beginning Sunday In search
for bigger oil pay.
MEXICO BEGINS
CHURCH FIGHT
National Party Okehs Plan
To Drive Catholic
Officials Out
MEXICO D. F Oct. 20. (HV-The
national (administration) party
aimed Saturday to drive high Cath-
olic church officials out of the
country.
A play of action designed to
stamp out all opposition to the rev-
olutionary government and end the
church's influence was prepared by
the party for the approval of Presi-
dent Abelardo Rodrigues.
Program Approved
There was no indication whether
the plan would be accepted In part
or In full by the president who
now is at Tehuacan with General
Plutarco Elias Calles outstanding
political figure behind the govern-
ment.
The plan approved Friday night
unanimously by the chamber ol
deputies includes the following de-
mands.
1. —Immediate expulsion from
Mexico of all Catholic archbishop*
and bishops as enemies of the rev-
olution.
2. —Immediate closing of the Mex-
ico D. F. newspaper La Prensa El
Hombre Libre La Palabra and El
Omega and the suppression in the
near future of Excelsior and El
Uni.ersal leading dallies
Plan ‘Purge'
3. —Formation of armed assault
groups of peasants and workers "to
contest the aggression of student
and Catholic elements. ’
4. —"Purgation* of government
offices of all employes who do not
sympathise with the revolution and
appointment of a public "health
committee” to determine the rev-
olutionary antecedents of those
employes.
Members of the Knights of Co-
lumbus Sisters of Mary and sim-
ilar organizations would be barred
from government jobs.
Capitol Theater To
Present Stage Show
A stage and screen show of
unusual merit Is promised Valley
theatre goers at the Capitol The-
atre Saturday night at the Mklnite
Preview showing of the Cecil B. de
Mllle screen spectacle "Cleopatra.''
More than 20 girls from the Jane
Daugherty Dance Studios will be
presented In a stage prologue
Egyptian Nights’’ preceding the
showing of the screen attraction
•Cleopatra.' Elaborate stage set-
tings. lighting effects and costum-
es nave been created for the stage
prologue and students of Miss
Daugherty will be presented In a
dance ensemble of Egyptian ortgii.
Miss Alice Fitch recently selected
as ‘‘princess" from Brownsville to
the State Fair Pageant at Dallas
will be featured on the stage In the
role of Cleopatra singing Song of
the Nila."
DEATH CAN BE I
DEMANDED FOR I
ENTIRE GROUP I
Suspected Kidnaper’s
Father and Wife In I
On Abduction Says
Indictment I
LOUISVILLE Ky . Oct. 30 4'/— 9
The fugitive Thom a* H Robinson H
Jr.. And his wife and lather were S
Indicted by a special federal grand fflj
Jury here Saturday on char gas H
making possible In event of con vie- H
tlon the death penalty for all three H
in donnection with the kidnaping of In
Mrs Alice Speed Stoll. H
"The same penally under the ■
law may be inflicted upon all ill
three" District Attorney Thoms* pi
J. Sparks said in reply to a qties- ■■
tlon about the Indictments. H
Asked If he intended 40 press for jflH
the extreme penalty for all three. H
he replied: ||l
Depend* on Proof
"That depends upon the proof as jH
to two. but as to Robinson. Jr- 1 ^B
say unhesitatingly that I will do to. ’ H
Charging the actual abduction of flB
the young society woman for whom ^B
$50000 ransom was paid to me ^B
younger Robinson the joint indict- BB
ment accused all three of eonspir* ■
H
It also declared that they did ^B
while Mrs. Stoll "was in their cus- jM
tody beat injure bruise and harm. BB
and aided and abetted each ther ^B
In beating. injuring bruising and
harming" the woman. ^B
The Lindbergh law. as amended. H
provide* the trial Jury may recom- ^B
mend death sentences where such |H
injury is proven The trial )udga ]H
may or may not follow that recom- Ml
mends tlon
Aaka About Bond
Federal District Judge Charles L
Dawson before whom the Joint ui- BB
1 dictmcurt wu* returned after an '■HI
hour and 40 minutes deliberation by ^B
the special grand jury' asked United H|
States District Attorney Thomas J. H
Sparlcs whether young Robinson if lH
caught could be held without bond WM
"I will look into that and advise" H
replied the district attorney. H
• I will hold him without bond. * |j|
it can be done." Judge Dawson HI
said. H
Thomas H. Robinson Sr. fath- M
er of the former insane asylum in- IB
mate and Mr*. Frances Robinson :H
the latter's wife were named in the H
Joint warrant issued ahartly after ■■
Mrs Stolls release upon payment H
1 of the ransom. The elder Robinson ^B
was freed in $25000 bond tn Nash- jH
ville. The wife was held here m H
default of $50000. H
MARKETS
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YOBK
Stock* steady Extreme dullness
continues.
Bond* mixed: Variations slight.
Curb irregular: Changes nar-
row. __
Foreign exchanges quiet: Sterl-
ing higher.
Cotton quiet: Higher staling
exchange: Wall Street buying.
Sugar lower: Hedge selling
Coffee quiet: Commission house
liquidation.
CHICAGO
Wheat lower: Foreign market
weakness. „
Com weak: Sympathy with
wheat.
Cattle nominally steady.
Hog* mostly steady. Top 15.90.
NEW YORK STOCKS
Sales in 100s High Low Clow
A1 ChemADye 6 130 130 130
Am Can 3 102% 102% 102%
Am SU Fdrs 1 13% 13% 13%
Am Sug 3 59 59 59
Am TAT 16 111% 110% 111
Am Tob 1 78% 78% 78%
Anaconda 10 11 10% II
AT A 8F 5 53 52% 53
Baldwin Loc 2 8% 8 8
Bendix 4 12% 12% 12%
Chrysler 20 38 % 35% 38%
Con Oil 12 8 7% 8
Du Pont 8 93 % 92% 93
Gen Asph 3 17 17 17
Gen El 10 18% 18% 18%
Gen Foods 4 31 30% 30%
Gen Mot 21 30 29% 30
Goodyear 4 21% 21% 21%
Insp Cop 1 3% 3% 1%
Int Harvest 3 34 % 33% 14%
Int TAT 4 9% 9% 9%
J Man 4 47% 47% 47%
Kennecott 8 17% 17% 17%
Nat SU 1 36% 36% 36%
Penney 4 66% 66% 06%
Radio 12 6 5% 5%
Sears Roeb 7 41% 40% 40%
Soc-Vac 33 13% 13% 1S%
S Psc 13 18% 18 18%
8td Brands 4 19% 19% 19%
SO NJ 34 40% 40% 40%
St ude baker 4 1% 1% 2%
Tex Corp 10 20 % 20% 20%
US Ind Ale 2 39 38 % 39
US SU 21 33% 33% 33%
Warner 6 4% 4% 4%
WU Tel 2 34 % 34% 34%
West EAM S 32% 32% 32%
Woolworth 8 50 % 50% 80%
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
NEW YORK.—Sales closing price
and net change of the 18 most ac-
tive stocks Saturday:
McCrory Stores 12.900—6% up %.
Nat Dept Stores 11700—3 up %.
United Stores A—6.200—5% up %•
Montg Ward 4.500—28*4 down %.
Hahn Dept St 4.000—6 up %.
Natl Distill 3500-20% up %.
Wilson A 2.900- 20% no.
Int Rapid Tr 2.800—15% up %/
Gen Elec Spl 2.700-12% *> %.
Stan Oil NJ 2.700—40% up %.
Serve! 2500—0% no
City Store* 2.500—1% no
Para Pubilx CUs 2.400—4% dm
%.
K
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Buell, Ralph L. The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 94, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1934, newspaper, October 21, 1934; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1395511/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .