Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 71, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 21, 1939 Page: 1 of 6
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7
N
ilo Register
NUMBER 71 •
(TEN PAGES)
i
dh
Is Claim
NEW YORK, Oct. 21 (AP).— !doed British freighter Heronspool.
If
when the waves heeled the ship i
fl
BERLIN, Oct. 21 (AP).-
Ml
known today that Germany
■.
j
FINGERPRINTS OF WAR IN GERMANY
• •
ll
19
I.
,,
is
—A
7
t
»
£
-2
1
I
* 4
was
hold on French soil near Luxem-
w ho was
edhme
•a
"e 5
CIO Rejects Firm’s
@
4
I
t
their lives in the sinking of two
omobile when it reached a grade
I
Officials said that 61 aparently
$17,000,000,000 — 67 per
corps of nurses
McKenzie, reached port.
lire and
The union
has asked "joint time studies" ot
was
"Neither I nor any other union
■«
in effect becomes a closed shop."
three-
■
ey said the outlook was
Wage - hour experts contended. I
"promising."
25 Years Ago
The Weather
I
■
carry
and then trying to
fierce tigStingut Tpres.
one."
R4
4
4
♦
III
4
2
IS
Germany
Accepts
Challenge
ienate Leaders
lonsider Move
o Limit Debate
Treasury Gold
Hoards Two-Thirds
Of World Reserve
Streamlining
Wage-Hour Law
Is Considered
caught by a howling hurricane aft-
er rescuing the crew of the torpe-
Adolf Hitler Says
Allies Must Make
Next Peace Move
40 YEARS OF SERVIOE
/ TO GAINESVILLE AND
COOKE OOUNTY IS THIS
NEWSPAPERS REORD
Flying Hearse Is
Lost in Alaska
Statute to Be Year
Old Tuesday; Wage
Minimum Moves Up
and a
ing on
• $17,000,000,000 Now
Held in Vaults and
Federal Reserve Banks
seemed auspicious because of the
withdrawal of French troops.
tions, said the union representa-
tives rejected the proposal with
the statement: "everything else is
British steamers in the 1
Tuesday. authorities estim
day as they checked the st
some 300 survivors landed I
night by a rescue ship. 1
fair next
ment." I
kshire
ity of
i were
a half
Span-
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (AP».
The treasury’s gold hoard today
Newspaper Denies
Soviet Government
To Lose by Agreement
i
vas unhurt. His car had a broken
jxjnt wheel and several dents in the
ear. where the heavy steel of the
beomotive had poked it.
tlantic
led to-
ries of
ire last
• :
Japan has 17,000 mjles of coast-
line.
about 500 million passengers a
year.
26 Persons Injured in Storm at Turkey in
Sea,Removed From U.S, Liner Today War Orbit,
.XLIX
There are 550 species of the
acacia tree.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (AP).
After nearly a year’s experience
with the complicated mechanism
of the wage-hour law, some offi-
cials said today that it needed
r
gs
i! Labor Dilemma
Keeping 57,500
I Idle, Unsettled
pany of California.
Meanwhile, the exposition which
started with the hope 20,000.000
persons would pay to see it, and
which has garnered high praise
from visitors the world over for its
scope and beauty, was registering
attendances still under 10.000.000.
over to the starboard. Tables. MOSCOW, Oct. 21 (AP).--
chairs. smoking stands and pot- The government newspaper
tery slithered across the floor, pin- Izvestia today assailed the
ning passengers against the wall, new British-French - Turkish
from going to some erly party.
• “ ------ • crash a later
It
i
deposited or invested in this coun-
try, or used to pay for American
’ Federal Court Issues
Order Restraining Any
Suits to Collect
earljer searches
The plane had on board the body
of Mrs. P. M. Hern, Sr., Skagway
piemeed who died here Thursday.
East Tegas-i Partly cloudy to-
night and Sunday.
S.X.
Boston Police Commissioner to Give
Hallowe’en Party for 100,000 ‘Kids
in reaching a recommendation and
putting it into effect.
The textile industry committee
(Continued on Page Four)
$
Their Idiosyneracles,
Their Joya and Borrows
000.000 worth of yellow metal
buried in vaults at Fort Knox. Ky.,
and various federal reserve banks
and mints.
Practically all of the gold, how-
ever. is pledged to the federal re-
serve banks, which have long since
given the treasury cash in ex-
change for the pledge. The fed-
(Continued on Page Five)
i
George said. “it became clear that
Hitler had no intention of doing
justice and that he meant to cling
with greedy tenacity to his con-
were w
ror were
any. of
Lals suf-
re. All
Jor East
negotiator said that,” Thomas re-
torted today.
Weckler said the rejection
“shows .clearly that the union’s
। talk about speed-up is a smoke
I screen set up to disguise its de-
- M
se
sa
. 1
By The Associated Press
Oct 21. 1914 —Marianne, and
IN
It. 21
B lOSt
Ma
ee-—.
GAINESVILLE. COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS. SATURDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 1939
■ । —.M —— ---
IPING IN LUCK
(MOUNT PLEASANT, la. —Rob-
rt Wilson is certain Lady Luck
las clinging to a spare tire of his
BOSTON, Oct 21 (AP).—If the
goblins and pixies want to catch
up with metropolitan Boston kids
on Hallowe’en night, they will have
to Invade—police stations.
. Because Police Commissioner
Joseph F. Timilty—with an eye to
safeguarding the city’s gates,
lamps, window panes and doorbells
—is planning to play host to about
100,000 boys and girls at parties
to be held in district stations,
schools and halls.
Lieutenant William . J. Carey,
who is playing an Elsa Maxwell
role in rounding out details for
some '60 separate shindigs, said.
"We hope to cut down the Hallow-
e’en damage still more than last
year when, with only 15 parties for
40,000, the night’s destruction was
cut 50 per cent."
Carey insists that "there are
\
67 Persons Are Killed
ccc. . . . ■ : I , .... । bling furniture and heaving decks
Official nazi. sources let it be when the 13,869-ton liner was
the union would have a formal
" ■
A
I
Ma".
or*
e 881
People
United States railroads
A
A.m1''
First, the management would
set rates after "studies on the ba-
sis of fairness, efficiency of op-
erations. and reasonable working
capacities of normal operators "
“If any employe or group of em-
ployes claim that the rate of pro-
duction on their‘job is too fast,
and the foreman is unable to ad-
just the matter, the job will be ex-
amined again, and. tf found to be
unfair, will be adjusted," the pro-
Undaunted by developments. a
group of business men promoters
went ahead today with their efforts
to raise $1,650,000 to re-open the
loophole, attacks on the treaty
were bitter.
Franz von Papen, German am-
bassador to Turkey, who returned
yesterday from Ankara, has deliv-
ered a report on the’ pact to Hit-
ler.
Uoyd George Replies
CARNARVON, Wales, Oct. 21
said, however.
> month-old grandson also lives
with her
Mrs. Davis .would use the
$5,000 to buy a farm, com-
menting that “my husband is
a good farmer and we would
all be happy together ’’
Until last week Mrs. Davis’
husband was employed two
days a week at 91.50 daily by
the city health department. He
now has a WPA job paying
around $60 a month, she said.
She explained her husband
"doesn’t want me to sacrifice
myself like this,” but added he
had agreed to the eye-sale pro-
posal.
Twenty-six persons were removed
on stretchers from the United
States liner President Harding to-
day when the storm-battered ves-
sel arrived after one of the most
tempestuous and dramtic voyages
in modern maritime annals.
Eyes were blackened, bones frac-
tured. and bodies bruised by turn-
Souvenirs of the French thrust into German territory, this wrecked automobile and these battered
houses, were seen “somewhere in Germany," according to French sources. Germans claimed the complete
withdrawal of French troops from nazi soil.
By WILLIAM M'GAF
BORDEAUX, France,
(AP).—At least 67 pers
The war has nearly stopped gold
shipments here temporarily, but
fear of it was largely responsible
for the present size of Uncle
Sam's gold stocks.
Before the war started, scared
Europeans sent gold here almost
as fast as they could in order to
get it to a place of safety, and al-
ready this year about $2,900,000-
000 worth hah come into this
country.
This includes. nowever. more
than $1,000,000,000 worth which
various foreign governments have
deposited in their own names in
the New York Federal Reserve
bank for safekeeping and conven-
World’s Fair at
San Francisco Is
$4,606,900 in Debt
In Sinking of British
Steamer in Atlantic!
1
! and concessions on
Federal Judge Harold Louder-
back issued a temporary restrain-
(French reports
failure to act "in good faith."
The proposal, answering uni
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 21 (AP) demands for a voic in controlling
The world’s fair on Treasure Island I the' pace of work on assembly
did a brisk business at the same old lines called for a contract provi-
stands today, hut it was operating i sion compelling plant managements
under a federal court restraining to readjust production speeds in
order preventing anyone fromi event of their being found "un-
suing to collect $4,606,900 in Un- [ fair.”
DETRIOT, Oct. 21 (AP). A Ths
labor dilemma keeping 57.500 auto
factory workers idle still detied
solution today, 216thr day of the
Chrysler corportion-CIO impasse,
•and’peace parleys were in another
weekend recess.
Rejection by the CIO’s United
Automobile Workers of a corpora-
tion proppsal for governing of pro-
ductin speeds left the “speed up-
sow’ down" issue unchanged, and
Chrysler charged the union with
A
- t
CHA TTANOOGA. Tenn
Oct. 21 (AP).—A mother of
five children waited today for
a, person willing to pay 95,000
for the cornea of one of her'
eyes.
"We are tired of this busi-
ness of being-on relief,” said
middle-aged Mrs. Grace Davis
in explaining why she would
sell the sight of an eye.
Speaking without emotion as
she stood barefoot in her cot-
tage door, Mrs. Davis said
“this is a great sacrifice but I
would gladly make it for my.
children who have not had a
chance."
Mrs Davis said.
- - ---- •
I
Gainestille
—■■ 1 i....................
With the general minimum mov-i
ing up from 25 to 30 cents an hour
on October 24 for all covered in-
dustries. only in the cases of tex-
tiles and hosiery have industry
committee wage orders been pro-
mulgated to provide workers with
base pay rates above the 30-cent
level.
In the hosiery industry, a mini-
mum pay rate of 321 cents an
hour for 30,000 employes in the
seamless branch, and 40 cents an
hour] for the full-fashioned branch,
went into effect September 18. A
3212 cent base pay rate for 175,-
000 textile industry workers be-
comes effective October 24 by spe-
cial order.
Altogether, 73 passengers and
crew members were injured in the
storm, all except the 26 most
seriously hurt, were aole to walk
by the time the ship docked.
A cabin boy, Paul (Red) John-
son, was washed overboard and
lost when a mountainous wave
broke over the deck.
The hurricane, which had eluded
meteorologists as a result of war-
time restrictions on weather re-
ports from ships at sea, struck the
The storm yesterday caused ’
"under new manage- I thousands of dollars loss and re-
Restriction Probably
I To Be Put to a Test
j Next Monday Morning
I ■ I
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (AP).—
rhe senate leadership considered
loday a move to limit debate and
4 hts assure a vote on the neutral-
Hity revision bill late next week.
H The restriction probably will be
put to a test Monday after the
ithree-weeks-old general floor de-
bate ends and balloting on amend-
iments begins.
A Unanimous consent is required
to invoke a limitation. Senators
dark (D.-Mo.) and Nye (R.-N. D.).
iopponents of the administration’s
iproposal to repeal the arms em-
bargo, have opposed such a move
i the past, but the whole opposi-
tion group intended to confer dur-
ing the day to decide what attitude
it would take if a curtailment mo-
tion were made. Senator McNary
of Oregon, the Republican leader,
indicated he would not object to a
Moderate limitation, as did some
other Republican opponents of em-
II
struck quest, we could quit the conference
I with a clear conscince that we had
done our best to obtain an honor-
able peace."
He once more argued vigorously
that Soviet Russia was the key to
the whole problem. He solemnly
warned that Russian collaboration
with Germany might well prolong
the war because it had greatly di-
minished the chances of an effec-
tive blockade of Germany.
Proposal to Govern
1 Production Speed
A-rsiand production rates.
Treasure Island. Hgrman L. Weckler. vice presi-
denr in charge of Chrysler opera-
the survivors were carrit,
ship on stretchers ,
Survivors said the Yorls
merchandise already shipped.
The treasury has its 917,000- which they identified
mending a minimum wage had
Pilots thought it possible Book- glowed down the functions of the
walter might have landed on one syster. In some instances, notably
of several beaches which serve as | textiles, labor ws reported to
ennergens, andt5 ligshtepresn teachave complainef about the delay
streamlining as much as strict en-
forcement to make it more effec-
tive for workers in the low wage
brackets
They pointed particularly to
those provisions of the act which
. , authorize establishment of Indus'
(APDavid Hloyd.George told try committees to lift the mini-
his Welsh constituents today that, mum wage floor as rapidly as
his advocacy of a general world Sible toward the 40-cents-an-hour
•e - • -- - ,
convoy of 19 other vest
the guard of British war2l
hirted up. They collected more
W <41 and put a guard around it.
i It went up in smoke, too. The
. 11 iments gathered a third supply—
a il put a lot of gyards around it.
ras traveling. I passed .----- .
The train buzaped the car several cent of all the governmental and
lines before both stopped Wilson I central bank gold reserves in the
‘ ‘ " * world.
gards as the challenge of
Great Britain and France.
Adolf Hitler made a peace of-
fer once, it was said in sources
close to the foreign office, and if
the hatchet is to be buried now the
initiative must come from the
other side. •
Both DNB. official German news
agency, and spokesmen in high
places cautioned against assum-
ing on the basis of the Thursday
war communique that Germany
was making conciliatory gestures
toward France.
The communique said that the
German army , had refrained from
stepping across the French border
at a moment when conditions
two vessels between 3 andi4 p. m.,
and immediately charfed its
course to go to the rescu6
The Mandalay. firs to be
reached, was breaking in wo when
E (Continued on Page Two)
the City of Mandalay veere in a
1i under I
ips, but I
CTIQN OF TURKEY ASSAILED IN MOSCOW
. ' ■ ■ - ■ JW ■■ ■ — - ’..I I.. ■ ■ . ■ — • — ■ • - ■■ •— -
As an integral part of the wage-
IINEAI Alaska. Oct 21 (Ap,hour congress authorized the
-UMEA-rAAska,-. "A ’ appointment of industry commit-
Search for a flying hearsec long.tees composed of management. la-
overdue between Juneau and 5Kag- . . , ... * ” .l‛nq
way. began at dawn today as itbor and the public to recommend
failed to report at either city. minimumtpay rates up.to the 40-
Pilot Verne Bookwaiter and Me-' cents- an-hour level without wait-
chanic Merritt Boyle took off here ing for the graduated scale to take
at 3:15 p. m. yesterday for a flight effect,
which normally requires 55 min-
WEATHER
ainesville and Vicinity — To-
it and Sunday, partly cloudy.
on their route, reported hearing upon the committees by congress
’the sound of motors 15 minutes to make extensive surveys of the
later, but no other trace has been economic and competitive ‛condi-
found of the tri-motored ship, tions of an industry before recom-
which carried no radio. - - -
#
B
Tom Mooney is shown in a Pittsburgh hospital bed after Mt 1
removed from a downtown hotel. Dr. Abraam Steinburg said M Doney
was being treated for hemorrhages of a gastric ulcer which caused him
to cancel a speaking tour. Nurse Nora McConnell is beside Mgoney, that the Germans had won a toe-
~ , mutual assistance pact, as-
serting it "drew Turkey into
’ | the orbit of war.”
In his first comment on the pact .
| which came after failure of Soviet
j Russia and Turkey to negotiate a
similar agreement. Izvestia said
I the tri-power treaty was an "un-
necessary wedge between Russia
I and Germany, also to draw the So-
viet into a combination which is
chiefly directed against Germany
and eventual enemies of England •
and France in the Mediterranean
j (presumably Italy).
Denying Russia would lose from
such an allance. Izvestia said, the
Soviet state maintained "freedom
of action which cannot be said
about Turkey Turkey has as-
sumed responsibility which cannot
fail to be respected on Turkish pol-
icy within the nearest future."
Izvestia said the treaty creates
a new balance of power in the
Mediterranean.
By The Associated Press)
Sri FED— BY A WHISKER
1 FW YORK — Pre-Christmas
E99d will led Magistrate Joseph De
A i rea to spare Robert Evans, 54.
W l । has long white hair and a
wP te beard. from a jail sentence.
One Death, Heavy
Loss in Storm
HOUSTON, Oct. 21 YAP).—
Houston today checked the damage
from a storm that struck here with
an inch of rain and a 36-mile wind.
I1 JRNED UP
IDENVER- For two nights run-
nri police have been called to
Best Third Avenue and Santa Fe
give to finu a slingshot artist who
A breaking windows.
Fach time police were peppered
mth rocks but found no culprit.
ADDING INSULT TO INJURY
|WENONA. Ill.—Gust Falk has a
Modulate for the title of “nerviest
mon,"
Falk’s car was stolen recently.
Naw he has a letter, ostensibly
fom the thief, saying the car had
wen sold to a John A. Miller of
Williams, Ariz., and asking that
te certificate, of title be sent to
te latter.
the postscript said: "Have the
rtificate changed to this man’s
amne. I cannot collect without it."
Attorneys explained that the,, ,
bankruptcy section—Chapter 11— posed clause went on. The man-,
could be invoked only when the agement of each plant is author-
debtor was threatened with in Vol- ized to settle such matters
u.ntary bankruptcy proceedings R.J Thomas union president,
against it I said the proposal was rejected on
84 . « , a« the ground it failed to specify that
No estimate of the value ofast - * -- - • -
sets3 was: contained in the federalpart ‘n setting rates,
court petition, but they were 18te4 i *
at length, as the various buildings
suited in one death. Edwin Miller,
Jr., negro boy, was killed when he
came in contact with a high volt-
age wire blown into the street.
The blow came on the heels of
a heavy fog which halted air traf-
fic. ’ .
erossing just ahead of a freight
U on.
The 18-year-old Iowa Wesleyan
9 llege student didn’t see the train
j i [time to stop, so he swerved the
dar in the same direction the train
The cornea - is the trans-
parent window in front of the
pupil of th® eye. An operation
sometimes will restore sight to
persons with corneas scarred
in accidents.
Mrs. Davis’ offer was dis-
closed at a meeting of the
American College of Surgeons
in Philadelphia in a letter ad-
dressed to Howard W. Blakes-
lee. science editor of Associ- .
ated Press. She also offered to
sell some skin for plastic
surgery "for so much accord-
ing to amount taken.”
Beseeching Blakeslee to “see
if there isn’t some one who
wants to buy sight, Mrs. Davis
wrote:
. “I want to sell the cornea of
one of my eyes: and some skin
for plastic surgery. My eyes
are dark brown and in very
good condition. I’ve never had
any trouble with them. I am
free of social disease. I am a
woman of 39 and in good
health. I want to sell one of my
eyes for 95,000 ..."
Her children range in age
from four to 19. Two of them
are in a state school because
she is unable to care for them.
g Te." "
• -‛umm
omsbssgg,g0 aecoa.
has accepted what she re-
utes. Residents of Shelter Island, however, that the duty imposed
' “8
■ owik । mini*
Mother of 5'
Offers Eye
For $5,000
_______pardoned in January after serving more than 20 y^rs in
prison in connection with the San Francisco Preparedness day bombing
in 1916. j
:: -- g
. Ie/
—a
’ Friday Club Going Strong
COLUMBIA, MO. (UP). — The
Thank God It’s Friday Club of the
University of Missouri has started
its sixth year. Organized by Geo.
Hilton, a Detroit student in the
school of journalism, the club
meets Friday nights to celebrate
the end of another school week.
ience in paying for American - •------ — -------
goods The remainder of the for- became separated from 13
eign gold was sold the treasury j one day out from Gibraite
for American dollars which were i Yorkshire Torpedoed «■
The 10,000-ton Yorksh.
the first to go down, torpedoed,
passengers said, by a ^Atmanne
........ I ajerman.
The City of Mandalay ws L----
a short time later.
The westbound Indeendence
Hall received SOS calls, from the
Magistrate De Andrea said he
dd ' Evans accused of panhan-
tag because he looked so much
Banta Claus and thought it a
mie for him to spend the Yule-
■ in jail
QSTAL PARTING
ELIZABETH CITY, N. C — A
■Ive of North Carolina, now liv-
JE in New York, apparently has
‘Q idea that the Tar Heel State
An the mail’ order divorce busi-
ll letter to Clerk' of Court N. El-
M Aydlett asked that theswriter,
ormer resident here, be sent a
INorce from his wife by return
K
■ I —’
41 HET UP
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M — High
thdol students gathered a big pile
■ wood for a football bonfire. It
had gone down with the Y
and six or seven with the
Mandalay. The two vess
sunk by a submarine withi
hour about 500 miles off ti
’ ish coast.
Tales of hardship and ter
told by the survivors. 1
whom were taken to hospj
fering severely from expo
those rescued were English
Indians en route to Englas
Long lines of ambulant j
--• r
some sections of Boston vhere you
an find 100.000 youngsters in
'very 100 yards, but eden so. the
department is going to isue tickets
to accommodate kids y commu-
nities just outside.the Boston area.
With uniformed cops a masters
of ceremonies, the youngsters will
enjoy movies, a stage Fshow, and
music by WPA orchestras as they
munch on cookies and Rpughnuts,
and drink milk. $'
They also will duck for apples
and play other Halloween games.
“The captains in the Warious pre-
cincts," said Lieute nnt Carey,
“are going to stage tMeir parties
at one and the same me-—seven
to half past ten. $
“That will prevent the children
paid debts.
The exposition board of man-
agers filed proceeding^ in federal
court yesterday under a special
section of the emergency bank-
ruptcy laws—a sektion dealing par-
ticularly with unsecured creditors.
It issued a brief statement saying
the move was made to insure “an
orderly and equitable liquidation of
its affairs."
___TOM MOONEY IN HOSPITAL
uurtanenle
bourg.)
Hope to Deal With France
This was interpreted in some
neutral and enemy newspapers, it
was said, as a sign that Germany
hoped, by hestitating to launch an
impressive offensive, to deal with
France.
Informed sources, however, said
Germany contemplates no conces-
sion to France and, the French-
British-Turkish mutual assistance
treaty notwithstanding, the Ger-
man attitude is unchanged.
Commentators and the DNB de-
clared that the German high com-
mand was not weakening and that
to interpret the army’s reserve as
such was “absurd.”
“England and France have re-
jected the fuehrer’s outstretched
hand," DNB said. "They threw
down the gauntlet and Germany
picked it up.”
Nazis previously had described
Turkey as "Britain’s stooge,” de-
claring she had chosen a “dan-
gerous route” by entering the
agreement with Britain and
France.
Although German political lead-
ers professed to see Turkey’s res-
ervation against being drawn into
war against Soviet Russia as a
the dock when tne rescue ship, the
American freighter Independence settlement had been viciously mis-1
Hall, commandd by Captal D. J.
’ Seores of
iet off the
line approximately 800 miles east i
of Boston Tuesday night.
Passengers said most of the in
juries were caused by one huge'
wave propelled by a 110-mile. an I
hour wind. Some said it was 100
feet high. .
Most of those seriously injured [
were in the smoking room aft ,
9
,14
ing order permitting the fair to
continue operating up to its an-
nounced-closing date of October suberdinate to., . , a cosed lun-
under the present management and . shop,
prohibiting filing any collection — -P' - ------lL
suits against it.
Principal debts listed were about
$226,000 to each of six banks:
$677,000 to the Pacific Gas and
Electric company which furnished
power for the costly lighting ef- .
fects, and the Standard Oil com mand for a union shop — which
... ,c ..2 a,., goal envisioned by congress for all
represented and further that you 5. u.. ..2. h.0 it an
-aslaseepmmmmi •
ister, maintained that he was en- ing a general minimum Wage ad-
tirely consistent in declaring for vancing gradually, from 25 to 40
_ i "no surrender”, to Germany, yet cents an hour, will be a year old
Gut I simultaneously showing a willing-1 Tuesday In on two cases x-
convoyiness to attempt a conference set- tiles and hosiery, has the industry
tlement of the European war. (committee system resulted thus
If in such a conference, Lloyd far in establishing minimum wages
higher than the general minimum.
j bargo repeal.
-1 | Senator Barkley of Kentucky,
the Democratic leader, said he ‘
‘would rather get by without a de-
| bate limitation," but that "we
might be able to .work out an
agreement."
i ! Senator Reynolds (D.-N. C.)
. i wanted the floor today for a long
speech He was expected to be the
37th of the 96 senators to take a
Fi (Continued on Page Two)
{
Losses Revealed as •
300 Survivors Land
In Bordeaux, Franc
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 71, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 21, 1939, newspaper, October 21, 1939; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469658/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.