The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 364, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 16, 1936 Page: 1 of 4
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The Ennis Daily News
ENNIS
FOUR pages TODAY.
VOL. XLII No. 364.
Dallas Taxi Owners
Threaten To Use
3 Campaign Tours
8:
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J
Strike Breakers
Covering Country
§2233332323233323222:
S
Proud of Scoop
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M
including five of
028
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i
da
Luther A. Johnson.
wait for the attack, expecting the
2
13
New Deal Labor Regulations Act is
1
l®
Declared Invalid By Appeals Court
&
■ a ;
A.
Ship Fell In Bay
a
Wit hthe energy of
Rushed to Jail
To Get His Bonus
$2,900 Added to
were
special train to the Texas Centen-
4
Everglades, but there was no dam-
The Weather
at Leavenworth. B. O. Davis, who I
at El Reno, Okla., reformatory.
t
his automobile and
later a shoplifter - stole a $25 fish-
ing reel from his store.
visit in Dallas where they
Negro Confesses
Assaulting Girl
Austin, Texas, June 16 — W. H.
Richardson, member of the Texas
-
-
Much Liquor And
Gambling Device
Order Ennis Day
Railroad Tickets
Without Delay
this
the1
co-
Blister On Foot
Killed Woman
Schumann Heink
Bonus Paid On
Her Birthday
County Ticket
To Be Voted
On July 25
Associate Justice, Court of Civil
Appeals:
James P. Alexander.
Criminal District Attorney:
Lynn B. Griffith.
District Clerk:
Dave Edmundson.
L. Alvis Vandygriff.
County Judge:
Lawrence L. Barber.
W. D. Colvin.
C. C. Randle.
County Clerk;
Frank C. Erwin.
Vernon Lemens. i
Will M. Martin.
W. M. Tidwell.
Representative for Congress, Dis-
trict No. 6:
James' O. Burleson.
Noble Cook.
chieftain, Ti Chui Hop.' Ti was ly-
ing wounded .in the hospital after
a recent gun battle with the police
of Amby.
Neither Dr. C. H. Holleman of
R .E. Sparkman.
James South.
M. T. Hawkins.
Representative, Place No.
C. C. Williams.
H. R. Stovall.
Dallas H. Tidwell.
Leland M Johnson.
considered by his neighbors ,
good hog raiser.
The two pigs fed by Billie
Missionaries Use
Machine Guns
In Defense
Died On Day Was
Armenian Tried
To Sell Morgan
Statue, Is Held
W. A. (Walter) Heine.
Hillyer Estes.
Wirt L. Baucom.
C. C, Lanier.
J. E. (Joe) Roy.
Treasurer:
Miss Brevard Templeton.
County Democratic Chairman of
Executive Committee:
Felix Atwood.
Commissioner, Precinct No. 1:
M. D. Rutherford.
C. S. Shankle.
Commissioner, Precinct No. 2:
A. C. Joly.
O. R. Colvin.
Justice Precinct No. 1:
J. R. Spence.
Justice of Peace, Precinct No. 3:
E. E. Glover.
Constable, Precinct No. 2:
Lon Flippen.’
L. H. Wester.
Constable, Precinct No. 3:
Hugh Fitzgerald.
K. G. McElroy.
A. A. (Buddy) Parma.
MacDonald Wants
To Place Teeth
In Sanctions
Smiling with Purser P. F. Armour, Ann Harding, movie star, is shown
iust before disembarking at Liverpool with her daughter, Jane, after
successful flight from warrants of her ex-husband, Harry Bannister,
charging Anh with the abduction of Jane. The British nearly mobbed’
her when she landed.
FIVE FREED FROM JAIL
TO GET THEIR BONUS
THIEVES VISIT SAFETY
BOARD MEMBERS TWICE
THREE ARE SENTENCED
ON NARCOTIC ACT
4-H Club Boy
Beat His Dad
Feeding Pigs
Billie Hudson of the Sardis 4-H
Club fed out two pigs of a litter of
nine, while his father fed out the
s 3
Gloria Lee Hoyt, 11, publisher of a
one-page weekly at Mountain Lakes,
N. J., scored a scoop on the coun-
try’s great papers with the first
personal letter from Gov. Alfred
M. Landon, following his nomina-
tion, thanking her for endorsing hit
campaign.
Waco, Texas, June 16.—Pleading
guilty Monday in United States
District Court to violation of the
Harrison antinarcotic act, Justice
Markum was given fifteen months
at Leavenworth. Lee Gross pleaded
guilty to a similar charge. He was
fined $5 and given fifteen months
.............. 8888888
0l i "‘3
The paper is to be full of interesting news stories
and feature articles concerning Ennis and the railroads
county agent.
Billie used modern feeding prac-
tices, while his father fed as he
normally does, and Mr. Hudson is
round trip from Ennis, is only 70c
for adults; and children 35c. The
train will leave Ennis at 1 p. m.
and will leave Dallas at 11 p. m.
to return. The special will stop
within three bocks of the Centen-
nial grounds, which is within easy
walking distance.
brought the total in the conscience
fund, which was started during,
the administration of James Madi-
son, to $626,053.
San Antonio, Texas, June 16.—
Spence Endorses News
Railroad Edition
“MAY I express my persnoal appreciation and-the
appreciation of the employees of the Southern Pacific
Railroad for your fine gesture of friendship in issuing
a special edition Monday, July 13, in honor of Railroad
Week," T. M. Spence, superintendent of the Dallas and
Austin divisions, said to Ennis News officials today.
(onecln-, F -- I Woodford Thornton, 40, assistant
•VE-3LIUIIL• I UllU county probation officer and a
Seeks Mandamus
To Get Name On
Primary Ballot
file a petition for mandamus to
corapel Myron G. Blalock, chair-
man and.Vann M. Kennedy, secre-
Washington, June 16.—Secretary
of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau
exhibited Monday seven crisp new
bills, representing $2,900, which he
said was the latest contribution to
the treasury’s conscience fund.
Mr. and Mrs. W. K, McLaurin
of Vicksburg, Miss., are guests in
the homes of relatives and friends
in Ennis and Waxahachie.
sold at the age of five months and
twenty days and weighed 213
pounds each, bringing nine cents
per pound. The ether seven fed by
his father weighed abcqt 105
pounds at that time and were not
ready for the market.
The two pigs showed a net gain
of $9 each after paying market
price for the pigs and also paying
entire feed bill. The mates were
not worth as much at the time
he sold hit wb pigs as the profit
Her own money and her once gold-
en voice both were given lavishly
to help “my beloved soldier boys.”
Her seventy-fifth anniversary will
be one to remember, she said.
“I’ve had so many,” she laugh-,
ed. “So very many. But just now/
it seems my life is just beginning.”
It thrilled her to know that
thousands of her adopted children
were happy today, to have a small
army of children and grandchil-
dren at her home and to realize
Ghees. ,
Judge -Rawlins was sent here
after Judge Ben F. Dent of Crock-
ett, regular jurist, had asked to be
excused because cf his health.
I
Cardiff, Wales, June 16.—A strong
plea for putting teeth in sanctions
machinery of the League of Na-
tions was made Monday by Ramsay
MacDonald, who openly aligned
himself with the prosanctions bloc
of the British cabinet.
In a speech to the thirty-first
International Peace Conference, the
former premier, now lord president
of the council, assumed the leader-
ship of cabinet opposition to stand
taken by Neville Chamberlain, chan
cellor of the exchequer. Continu-
ance of sanctions against Italy,
Chamberlain said last week, would
be the very mid-summer of mad-
ness.
League Must Tackle Problem.-
Hittin gat detractors of the
league in a pointed counter attack
on the hue and cry raised by some
sections of the press for the resig-
nation of Foreign Secretary Anth-
ony Eden and withdrawal of Great
32 -n.‛-© --- h
pirates would seek to rescue their George B. Butler.
' Dr. Tom Wh.ce.
Representative, Place Ne, 1:
A. L. (Dutch) Shires,
E. B. Creech.
O. C. (Slim) Venable.
William Noll W. Sewell.
--- The postmark, apparently inten-
Those who want tickets for the toinally blurred, appeared to be Mt.
amination revealed the child had
been attacked. The case will be
referred to the Robertson county
grand jury When it meets July 6,
he said.
plane crashed Sunday near Buck
Sansom Park, northwest of Meach-
am Field, will be held Tuesday.
On her breast will be pinned the
gold wings she received when she
became an amateur pilot a year
ago; in her hand will be her gog-
gles and on her left wrist a gold
band with aviator’s insignia.
The girl had to her credit forty
eight flying hours and was working
toward the 200 hours and her com-
mercial pilot’s license. Experienced
pilots believed she stalled her ship
200 feet off the ground and crash-
ed before she could nose over and
pick up enough speed to zoom to
horizontal position.
She was the daughter of Whitt
Allred Campaign
To Be Opened At
Waxa. June 30
county and are to be commended
for their work.
World War veteran, looked for-
ward to receiving his bonus bonds
at his home Monday afternoon.
During the morning apparently in
good health, he helped dismantle
a building at the County School
for Boys at Southton, but became
ill at noon.
Later the school superintendent
started to take Thornton to a hos-
pital. Thornton collapsed on the
way and was dead on arrival, a vic-
tim of a heart attack.
Austin, Texas, June 16.—John
O. Douglas of Houston asked the
fired a shotgun at the negro while
he was in custody of the officers,
but he was net wounded. ... , .
Sheriff Hill said a medical ex- i rtify im.
dbnasnass
office Monday
a woman
Trial In Murder
Of Family Goes
Gunn, bookeeping teacher at
local high school.
the violators,
drunkness.
The sheriff’s
that she is just embarking n, room. He chatted freely with of-
new career in the Xies 2^? and did not appear worried.
I He has been held since he led of-
ficers on March 14 to a grave con-
taining the bodies of the four Mc-
a blister on her foot, was buried
Sunday at her home in St. Jo,
Montague county.
-
1
Order in which the names of can
didates which will appear on the
democratic primary election ballot
for July 25, was determined Mon-
day afternoon at a meeting of the
democratic (executive committee
held, in the county court room in
Waxahachie.
The committee also confirmed
the appointment of election judges !
for the primaries1.
Below is a copy of the county
ticket, (and precinct for this end
of the county), as the names ap-
pear on the ballot:
L. W. (Pete) Harris.
State Senator, District No. 12:
remaining seven, according to a re-
Supreme Court Monday leave to port by J. W. Wilson, assistant
I
as a
name as a candidate for attorney
general. Douglas wants to run
X
2:
Girl Flier Takes
Gold Wings With
Her To Grave
Fort Worth, Texas, June 16.—
8888
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Tax Assessor and Collector:
E. A. Orr.
J. G. (Jim) Oliver.
f Sheriff:
is quite a wallop. It s the first
ruling cn an order sought by the
labor relations beard and the court
here is considered libera!."
Basis of the opinion was that
production, and transportation are
two separate enterprise?; that it
is up to states to regulate produc-
tion .and to the federal govern-
ment to regulate interstate com-
l merce.
heard on a broadcasting program
celebrating her birthday.
But what she said she enjoyed
most of all was the newspaper
headlines, not about herself but
about the delivery of the bonus.
ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY TEXAS TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 16, 1936
888888888888888888888853388
old white girl,, according to Sheriff
H. P. Hill, was held for safe keep-
ing in an unannounced jail Monday
as precaution against mob action.
The negro was arrested Friday
after the child told her family of
the attack which occurred two_
weeks ago. A sister of the victim against Attorney General William
- - - • ; McCraw. Because he had not com-
plied with legal requirements for
filing, the committee refused to
Over to Sept
Athens, Texas, June 16.—George
Patton, accused of the deaths of
four members of the J. W. McGhee
family, was taken back to his cell
Monday after Judge John A. Raw-
lins of Dallas granted a defense
motio to continue the case until
the September term. Defense At-
torney Richard Sigler presented a
doctor’s certificate showing that
Mrs. Patton, the principal defense
witness', soon will become a mother
and couid not testify.
Patton was kept under heavy
guard while in the crowded court
"Freedom” Starring Ann Harding Officers Secure
the opportunity to receive and
cash their bonus bonds. One of the
men released was serving out a
$100 fine. The release was ordered
immediately after the conclusion
of the afternoon session of court.
mand. j a
The governor considered opening
his drive woith a speech at his
birthplace, West Middlesex, Pa.,
shortly after the fcrmal notifica-
notification ceremony—as yet un-
scheduled— and closing in Madison
Square Garden, New York, a short
time before the election.
The tentaive planned called next
for Landen to swing, into New Ydk
state and New England after his
Pennsylvania opening, back to the
Midwestern farm, country and, then
to the Pacific coast.
tary of the state democratic exec-
utive committee to certify his
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Amoy, China, June 16.— An
American doctor and nurse, be-
sieged in their seaside hospital by
a pirate band, directed a machine
gun defense Monday in which five
were slain.
Dead were three pirat. s and two
policemen, the latter part of the
aefending force which had lain in
( Chief Nurse Jean Neinheiss of Hol-
land, Mich., was hurt. The hos-
pital, belonging to the board of
foreign mis'sicns of the Reformed
Church of America, with headquar-
ters at New York, was not damag-
ed.
I The pirates, armed with pistols
and machine guns, slipped along-
side the darkened hospital in a I
sailing junk. Concealed in strategic
points were the police with ma-
chine guns.
As the pirates swarmed from
their boat and dashed for the hos-
pital, the guns clattered furiously
but briefly. The attackers fled in
a panic for their junk, leaving
their dead on the shore. They es-
caped to sea. Ti, the outlaw chief-
tain, later was taken from the hos-
pital.
Hollywood, Cal., June 16.—Mme.
Emetine Schumann-Heink celebrat
ed her seventy-fifth birthday with
tears of joy Monday, not so much
for herself, but because “my boys
are .getting their money today.’’
She took it as a personal compli-
ment that the federal government
should select her birthday to de-
liver the bonus to the World War
Veterans. For nearly twenty years
the soldiers have been as close to
her heart as her own children.
Gainesville, Texas, June 16.—Mrs.
Margaret L. Bedner, 47, who died ____
here of an infection growing out of i pleaded guilty to counterfeiting,
drew a $5 fine and fifteen months
888.:
An acute situation arose at Bon-
ita Springs, twenty miles south of
Fort Myers, when the Imperial
river rose and backed water from
one to ten feet deep over the
streets. Four hundred residents
and 100 tourists took refuge in the
school house and on apartment
building.
Automobile traffic between Miami
and Fort Myers was halted, streets
were flooded at Fort Myers and
He will close at Wichita Falls, his
home, on the night of July 24,
preceding the election the next day.
“I intend to give an accounting
of my stewardship after the nation-
al democratic convention at Phil-
adelphia,” he said.
At Philadelphia; the governor
will place the name of Vice Presi-
dent John N. Garner in nomina-
tion fop re-election. He is a dele-
gate-at-large from Texas.
New York, June 16.—Detectives
and postoffice inspectors arrested
Gregor Aharon, 52, late Monday
on a charge of sending threatening
letters to J. P. Morgan, the finan-
cier, and others, among them E-
sel Ford.
i Aharon, Turkey-born Armenian,
has been a dealer in antiques in
this country since 1908.
The complaint said he offered
Morgan a statue he asserted was
modeled by Michael Angelo,, and
demanded $1,000,000 for it.
They said he asset ted he was well
acquainted with Pope Pius XI and
had been received by him.
, , ------------- J Misses Esther McNeill and Con-
Mrs. Elmer Gatewood of Wichita stance Colvin have returned from
Falls is a guest in the home of , a visit in Dallas where they at-
her mother, Mrs. Cora Ransom, tended the Centennial.
half her age, she held open house
and Holly wood’s movie colony took
brief moments to stop at her home
and wish her well. She also was
New Orleans, La., June 16.—
The Wagner-Connery labor re-
lations act, President Roose-
velt’s new deal for the work-
ing man, was declared uncon-
stitutional Monday by the ;
United States Fifth Circuit
Court of Appeals,
Bluntly, in a two , and one-
half page opinion, the court
1 ruled: “The constitution dies
not vest in the federal govern-
ment the power to regulate the
Topeka, Kan., June 16—A cam-
plan embracing three tours about
the country for Gov. Alf M. Landon
was high on the agenda today as
the republican presidential nomi-
nee opened a council dcor to Col.
Frank Knox, his running mate, and
a s'core of the party’s high com-
Britain from Geneva, McDonald
said:
“Stand by the league! If we are
going to. have peace in this world
it must be peace formed by a com-
bination of the nations of the
world. The league must tackle the
problem of the aggressor. The Kel -
logg pact did not prove adequate
and we must consider the idea em-
bodied in Article 16 of the league
covenant.”
Nightmare cf Uncertainty,
ENNIS
•‘Where Railroads an*
Cottonfields Meet’
A. T. Turner, who is assistinglin । Dallas Texas, June, 16.—Corpor-
the sale of tickets states that passes ption u ge Fran k ? Brien Monday
are not good on the special A released five World War veterans
number of railroad employees have from the city jail to allow them
already purchased tickets'.
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In a series of raids that netted
large quantities of beer, whiskey,
gin and slot machines, county law
enforcement officers under the
leadership of Deputy Sheriff J. L.
Cariker Saturday, inaugurated a
determined drive to rid Ellis coun-
ty of bootleggers and. gambling de-
vices.
On Saturday the officers raided
an alleged bootlegging establish-
ment on East Main Street in Waxa |
hachie and confiscated a large
amount of liquors, and on Sunday
came to Ennis where a truck load
of wet goods was taken. A total of
twenty charges were filed against
“Where Railroads and
Cottonfields Meet”
Austin, Texas, June 16.—Gov.
James V. Allred has announced he
will formally open his campaign
for re-election with an address at
Waxahachie on the night of June
30.
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day to decide whether drivers’
wages should be raised from 25 to
33 1-3 per cent of fares. But its
chairman, Dan Rogers, who threw
up his hands and cried, “What’s'
the use?” didn’t expect the strik-
ers to abide by its decision, what-
ever it might be.
Tough on Visitors.
The strike forced Centennial
visitors who arrived on trains and
buses to walk or ride street cars to
hotels and the exposition grounds.
388883883 333 38388 3
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“The railroad men of Ennis are grateful for
goodwill gesture of the News, and we are sure that
merchants of Ennis will give the News their ful
operation,” Mr. Spence continued.
Chicago, the superintendent, nor
Public Utility Safety Commission, Wilson Vandygriff, has returned
which supervises law enforcement, from Waxahachie where he has
was visited twice by thieves over been with his brother. Alvis Vandy-
the week end. griff, who is seriously ill at his
, An electric fan was' taken from home in Waxahachie following a
. / . ..n —d a short time heart attack Thursday night. His
condition is reported to be' some
better today. "
morning had the appearance of a
wholesale liquor warehouse, with
every available inch taken up with
stacks of beer, gin, whiskey and
slot and marble machines. Total
value of the evidence confiscated
will run into hundreds of dollars,
Sheriff Fearis said.
Sheriff Fearis declared that the
officers are only getting started
and that, because the county only
recently expressed itself as being
opposed to the sale of all intoxi-
cants, the campaign would not
sputter out in a few days, but
would continue until the last vio-
lator was arrested and the county
as dry as humanly possible to make
it.
Officers who aided Deputy Car-
iker in the raids included Chief
of Police Clarke of Ennis and two
of his men, and Deputy Sheriffs
Bill Rogers, Earl Muirhead and
Ernest Carroll.
Dallas, Texas, June 16.—Dis-
gusted because their drivers
violated an agreement to arbi-
trate a wage dispute, Dallas
taxicab officials indicated Tues-
day noon that they would give
500 striking drivers one more
chance to return to work at the
existing rate of pay and if this |
plan fails, imprt “cabbies” to
break the strike.
The new walkout which inconven-
ienced citizens and hundreds of
Centennial visitors, was ordered at
midnight Monday. It followed an-
other five-day strike, which was'
ended two weeks ago when drivers
and companies agreed to the ap-
pointment of an arbitration board
to settle their differences.
The board, which included two
representatives of the drivers, was )
meeting Monday night when the
drivers’ union voted' to strike. It
will convene again at 3 p. m. Tues-
83322223
83
fa
. - Airy and Wilmington.
nial on Ennis Day, Tuesday, June The reason for the return of the
23, should notify the Chamber of money was not given. It consisted
Comerceat once. Call 320 and state < of two $1,000 bills, and one $51)0,
how many tickets are wanted. The and four 100 bills. The addition
Ruling Significant.
Special significance was at-
tached to the decision because it
was the first rendered in an action
Instituted by the- board in an ef-
fort to enforce its rulings. Other
Circuit Court rulings had been on
injunction actions brought by em-.
ployer interests' contesting the
board’s authority.
The opinion was concurred in by
all three of the Appellate Judges-
Rufus E. Fester, Samuel H. Sibley
and Joseph C. Hutcheson. It was 1
the same . court that upheld the
constitutionality of Tennessee Val-
ley Authority a year ago.
Refusing to be quoted one labor
board official said: “The decision
was in each of the two pigs be-
longing to Billie.
Similar records are being made ; a86;
by other 4-H Club boys' over the
*0—
33238
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5339236083* 22- -***7**92 **3*:**2232*
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Franklin, Texas, June 16.—Joe
Jones, 63, negro who has confessed
criminally assaulting a .13-year-
appealed to the Supreme
Court.
Generally fair and continued
warm weather tonight and Wed-
nesday; minimum temperature to •
night about 78 degrees, maximum
this afternoon and Wednesday, 100
degrees, light Southerly'winds.
3 Aviators Killed
Funeral services' for Miss Reba Dee _ . _ . _
Gunn, 17, who was killed when her n Hnpiea efopm
Jacksonville, Fla., June 16,—"mhree
Coast Guard fliers on storm patrol
duty were killed Monday in a
blustry, -tropical disturbance which
isolated, several south Florida com-
mu ities by floods'.
The Coast Guardsmen, Lieut.
Charles Martin Perrott, pilot; Ra-
dioman Walter O. Morris, and Me-
chanic William D. Eubanks, died
when their plane plunged into
Tampa Bay near St. Petersburg.
The storm, of slight intensity,
passed from west to east aercss the
। extreme southern tip of the penisu-
lar and went out over the Atlantic
Ocean. ,
No Damage from Wind.
The season’s first disturbance
I brought deluges, forcing streams
out of their banks', flooding high-
ways and streets of lower West
Coast towns. No wind damage was
reported..
Late in the day the weather bu-
reau ordered down remaining storm
warnings in the state. The advisory
said the disturbance had continued
to move east' southeast, with the
central apparently about 75 to ICO
miles east southeast cf Miami, at-
tended by a . considerable area of
squally weather.
Automobile Traffic Halted.
The advisory said the future
course was' uncertain, but probably
east or northeast. Caution was ad-
vised for smaller vessels off the
Southeast Florida coast and over
the North Bahama Islands.
MacDonald advised the appoint-
ment of a commission to study Ar-
ticle 16, which deals with sancticns,
“So we may not be called on in a
sudden crisis to deal with the prob-
lem of sanctions and how to handle
an aggressor.”
“The world has reached the time
which is regarded by every thought-
ful being as a parting of the ways,”
MacDonald warned. “We are going
back to a world without the league?
Madness! Not even midsummer
madness. , ■
“A world without the league
would be a nightmare of uncer-
tainty,, a nightmare of arms rat-
tling, of steel creaking, of moving
cannon. One nation can destroy but
it requires a combination of na-
tions to build up, to unite, to main-
tain peace.”
relation as such as employer
and employee in produciion or
manufacture.”
It was the last major enter-
prise of the new deal left on
the statute bosks that applied
to labor, and the decision came
in the face of labor unrest,
particularly in tenant farms of
the south and in coal mines.
The case was brought to
court by the National Labor
Relations Board, seeking an or-
der to compel Jones & Laughlin
Steel Corporation of Aliquippa,
Pa., to reinstate several em-
ployees it had discharged, al-
legedly for union activities.
National Labor Relations
Baard officials in Washington
indicated the decision will be
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The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 364, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 16, 1936, newspaper, June 16, 1936; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1518571/m1/1/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.