The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 78, Ed. 1 Monday, January 1, 1934 Page: 3 of 10
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n
ews and
lews of Outstanding Events
ery
Jan. 1.—In
but without an
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sited States B
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144
70
Roosevelt Stri Our
Uncle Sam of His
Legendary Mask
By C. L. DOUGLAS
Then came the New Year, and
anew era . . . the year One A. R.
(After Roosevelt)-----------
Twelve months ago last night
the church belts chimed, the
whistles blew, the streets were
riotous with merry-makers—1933
opened with a bang—as loud as
.the crash of the bomb that
5 Japanese planes dropped in the
Chinese city of Shankaikwan,
And altho the chimes and
whistles and merry-makers didn’t
know it yet, they were heralding
the approach of a new develop-
ment in government, a new sys-
tem of things under which the
president of the United States
would stretch out from Washing-
ton a hand .which would touch
upon the shoulder of the smallest
among the people of a nation, the
man in our street, the worker in -
our factories, ths housewife in our
1 kitchen, ,
] , Uncle Sam was about to strip
from his face the mask of legen-
dary tradition and reveal himself
j as a human, living force rather
than an awesome, striped-hatted
gentleman in a remote back-
ground.
As the New Year was born in
Fort Worth so was Shirley Sue
Sweet, who arrived at 3836 Ave-
nue K, at the home of her par-
ents. At the courthouse new of-
ficials took office; commissioners
voted to abolish chain gangs on
county roads; 1,000 job seekers
7-went away jobless. -----
Ths P.-T. A. met and protested
display on billboards of half-
1 nude figures; pastors rallied to
fight the race betting bill which
Rep. J. C. Duvall put before the
Legislature; in federal court U.
S. wire tappersread names of
liquor customers... Pretty Boy
Floyd was reported in these parts
twice (but wasn’t)... soup kitch-
— ens did a roaring business.
1 At Austin on Jan. 17 Ma Fer-
guson was inaugurated governor
for her second term, Jim’s fourth.
| She pledged economy, backed a
sales tax, and kicked out Rangers'
■ by the company; this while the
Legislature took up “handle
with' car" bills labeled prospective
, . liquor legalization laws. Jim
.1 Ferguson had a job too,—chasing
office seekers from the capitol.
■1. In Washington, solops whipped
together 3.3 beer and wine bills.
(Just more talk, said Mr. John
... Citizen.) Senator Huey Long
protested to the German Embassy
that he had been served only one
stein of beer on a call when some
people got two; President Hoover
vetoed the Filipino freedom bin.
j. Meanwhile, Japan turned down a
| Chinese, peace offer and threat-
ened to quit the League of Na-
| 1 tions. . .former President Coolidge
. died: so did F. W., Davis, author
1 i of Nick Carter.
j ' Riverside residents of Fort
Worth complained of sewage
— odors and City Manager Fair-
I trace ordered a checkup.
The month tailed out with two
■ important, far-reaching develop-
$ ments—Adolph Hitler became the
i German , chancellor... Pro,feasor
1 Rexford Tugwell, adviser to Pres-
ident-elect Roosevelt, said the
(9)
More than 100 died, many were injured; and loss ran into
millions in the March quake at Long Beach, Calif.
Next day a Press reporter played
one. The local Ministerial Alli-
ance met, demanded official Inves-
tigation. The grand jury met.
beard pastors, ordered gambling
house raids. A police shakeup
followed, with Chief Henry Lee re-
signing and Henry Lewis taking
his place. The Duvall bill hung
fire.
The Japs and Chinese still were
at it, this time on the Jehol front.
Died in New York, former Heavy-
weight Champion Jim Corbett.
Won fame at Daytona Beach, sir
Malcolm Campbell, by driving an
auto 272 miles an hour for a new
record.
Governor W. A. Comstock start-
ed the bank holidays by declaring
an eight-day recess in Michigan.
Repeal lifted its head in the
national Hguse, which voted 289
to 121 to bring the liquor back.
The Texas House laid the ground-
work for a repeal move. The W.
C. T. U. mustered fighting
strength with the arrival of—
MARCH
—the big month of the year.
President Roosevelt took office on
March 4, pledged "action now,”
declared a four-day bank holiday.
Within seven days America found
itself living under a partial per-
sonal dictatorship. The new presi-
dent had taken control of the bud-
get, placed an embargo on gold
exports, had puta $500,000,000
economy bill thru Congress, and
had sponsored a law against
hoarding -. . Mr. Hoover left
Washington to take a rest. The
"New Deal" had arrived . . .
Two days after, the Inaugura-
tion, Mayor Cermak died in Flor-
Ida and Zangara was executed be-
fore tba month ended. Senator
Thomas Walsh, a bridegroom, died
en route to Washington.
Congress acted swiftly to carry
out the Roosevelt program. It
passed the Cullen beer bill, assur-
ing 3.2 brew and wine on April 7.
- The Texas House rejected
the Duvall racing bill. Fort
Worth and the rest of the state
did business on "the cuff" for a
week as banks closed for the pres-
idential moratorium.
Residents of Southern Califor-
nia awoke March 11 to find their
- -government could create a three
Li billion dollar public works fund
and give jobs to many thousands.
i FEBRUARY.
The shortest month furnished
1 many news highspots and provid-
” ed plenty Of issues for argument.
In Miami, Fla., on, Feb. 15.
President-elect Roosevelt made a
‘ speech. ' A small, swart Italian
drew a pistol, pulled the trigger.
Confusion reigned. Mayor Anton
I Cermak of Chicago fell seriously
. wounded. A woman had thrown
herself in front of Mr. Roosevelt.
. stopping a bullet Intended for
him.: Mayor Cermak was given
• blood transfusions; Guiseppe Zan-
gara, the would-be assassin, 80
years.
Hitler told Germany plainly
that he was boss, assumed theta-
torial powers. Von Hindenburg
dissolved the diet.__.
■ ”A depression? asked Henry
- Ford. “No, we are just recover-
ing from the bad years of 1933
to 1929.”
Nevertheless Mr. Roosevelt
went ahead with plans for na-
tional recovery. He outlined a re-
foreatation plan for use when be
’ - took office March 4.
v Representative Duvall went be-
fore the Texas House, argued his
racing bill. He aaid bookie shops
were operating in Fort Worth.
- General Hugh Samuel John-
son visited Fort Worth in the
course of his arduous duties as
head of the President's National
Recovery Program. Fort Worth-
era flocked to hear the man
who represented the thunder-
bolts of the Blue Eagle. He was
nominated by Time, the news-
magazine, as America's Man of
the Year.
In a solitary cell at Leaven-
? worth federal penitentiary, New
Year’s Day came to Harvey
, Bailey, called the nation’s No. 1
bad man. It was" an eventful
‘ 1988 for desperado Bailey,
May: Led wholesale break from
Lansing prison; August: Cap-
tured In Wise County and ac-
, cused of Urschel kidnaping . ..
escaped from Dallas Jail ....
again captured; September:
■ Given life sentence for kidnap-
ing.
homes shaking as 100 temblors
quaked the region. Buildings
crumbled, homes fell—more than
100 died and 4000 were injured.
In Japan 1535 died In quakes,
Fort Worth held the Fat Stock
Show; the city Council Investigat-
ed the police department, Chief
Lewis shaking up the force. Ja-
pan quit the League of Nations,
and to give the month a crashing
finale German Nazis under Hitler
opened a violent attack against
the Jews.
APRIL
—brought “showers" with- a
3.2 alcoholic content. Beer be-
came the “prodigal son” in 19
states on the/7th. In Texas, still
dry, beer runners studied road
maps to wot Louisiana. The state
legislature pissed the Texas beer
bill, validating brew as of Sept.
15 . . if Texans voted it August
26.
Michigan started the repeal pa-
rade, followed by Wisconsin.
Roosevelt continued to wield .the
Big Stick, surprising the nation
with the speed at which he worked.
He asked—development of Muscle
Shoals, mortgage relief for farm-
ers, financial aid for home own-
ers. The Senate voted currency
inflation; the nation went off the
gold standard. Stocks rallied,
soared. Premier Ramsay McDon-
ald came to Washington to visit
Mr. Roosevelt and talk world eco-
nomics. The Senate voted $500,-
000,000 direct relief to states.
The dirigible Akron plunged
Into the Atlantic Ocean—73 died.
Farmers in .Iowa revolted and
rioted; Chicago teachers did like-
wise when their pay failed.
Hitler Nazis opened persecu-
tion of the Jews by confiscating
Prof. Albert Einstein’s cash; Ber-
lin was in turmoil as Nazis attack-
ed Jews, Einstein was labeled a
traitor.T
in Tarrant County, outside au-
ditory filed reports against former
county office holders, alleged nu-
merous fee debts, Fort Worth
held an election, re-named all
councilmen but one, E. T. Renfro,
who was succeeded by J. C. Mar-
tin . . , Riverside residents pro-
Economic Recovery Is
High Spot In
1933 News
Revere, with Rep. Duvall riding
horseback from San Antonio to
Fort Worth .to celebrate passage
of his racing bill. Meanwhile, lo-
cal ministers organised for a fin-
ish fight against betting... the
Waggoners went about improving
Arlington Downs.
The outside Tarrant County au-
ditors found more trouble-
charged a huge waste of county
road funds thru alleged extrava-
gance of former commissioners. ..
Later, former County Clerk Or-
ville Beall was indicted for mis-
application of funds.
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt
came to Texas. She was met in
For Prohibition in
Last Month -
E
Dallas by Amon Carter, who L
gave her breakfast. Jim and MrsAn assassin’s bullet, intended for President-elect Roosevelt,
erguson were at the airport, re- struck down Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago, in Miami.
ception... but didn’t breakfast. ___________________*________________
Fort Worth pastors continued
their fight on beer and gambling Kansas, and suspect in the Kan-
[.. a brewery was started here, sas City massacre, was taken to
Texas drys and wets met in Aus- jail in Dallas.
tin on the same day, June 27, and C. D. Little became sheriff of
drew battle lines for pending Tarrant County. Red Wright hav-
vote. ‘ ing resigned to become U. S.
Aimee McPherson, in Paris, marshal; Texas voted, approved
cabled husband Hutton in Los beer, home rule and a $20,000,
Angeles . of “blessed event”—it 000 relief bond fund. . . . River-
was a mistake. In Kansas City side residents protested sewage
four officers escorting Frank odors.
Nash back to Kansas prison were Revolt swept thru Cuba; Pres-
massacred by gangsters—so was ident Machado flees; U. S. sends
Nash. Escaped, convicts led by warships; rioting in Havana.
Harvey Bailey (to be continued).. On Long Island, an .unknown
Max Baer knocked out Max battler blacked the eye of Huey
Schmeling 1 n > tenth... Austria Long.
outlawed Nazis... Camera KO’ed SEPTEMBER
Sharkey, winning championship Bailey,, the Shannons, the .
′, Britain paid *$10,000,000 to Kellys, etel,held the spotlight, place left vacant by the death in
U. S. on war debt... President Balley escaped the Dallas jail,
Roosevelt started national recov-using a warder’s pistol, was re-
ery program, captured in Oklahoma and was
JULY taken to Oklahoma City to await
—was hot, and a month for trial. With Shannons he- faced
. • the court in test of-nation's new
- - kidnaping law while Kellys, still
at large, sent threats to court-
room. Defendants got life. Kellys
caught in Memphis, brought to Ok-
lahoma to face like terms—and
$73,250 of Urschel ransom money
was found on farmnear Coleman,
Texas.
T. E. Barlow, arrested in Fort
Worth as Communist, died after
a fist fight in the city jail. The
grand jury investigated.
The city dratted a proposed,
$475,000 building program for
next year; school opened, the
circus came, and legal beer began
flowing from the spigots.
recognized. Ma Ferguson an-
nounced she does not choose to
run again. And out in California
a mob lynched the two confessed
kidnap - slayers of Brooke Hart.
Governor Rolph said It was well
done. Others hotly dissented.
General Johnson came to Fort
Worth to talk N.R.A., which was
gaining impetus under the added
stimulus of the newly - created
Civil Works administration, whlcn
In one week's time put 3041 to
work in Fort Worth alone and
provided a payroll of $35,000 for
that period. Riverside reeldents
complained of sewage odors.
Judge Irby Dunklin took the
Lynching madness was climaxed by a double outrage by a
mob which broke Into the jail at San Jose, Calif.
A new storm swept the Texas
Valley. Scores were killed and
injured. .Henry Ford refused to
sign NRA code, but raised wages.
Died—King Feisal of Irak, Dr.
Annie, Besant, Ring Lardner. '
. Married—Jean Harlow to Har-
old Rossen.
Clara Bow’s nose smashed in
fliers.
Post circled
the globe.
Hollywood fight.
Riverside residents’ complained
of the New Deal. Stores were
jammed as Santa Claus arrived.
The Lindberghs came home
from Europe, Africa and points
east.
Officers sneaked up on a house
in Shawnee, Okla., surprised Wil-
bur Underhill, pal of Harvey Bai-
ley, as the desperado was leaving
bed. He went for a pistol, offi-
cers turned loose a machine gun.
Underhill, hit five times, escaped
in his underwear, but was cap-
tured in an alley.
At Miami, Fla., Frances Mar-
sailis and Helen Richey landed
their plane Outdoor Girl, setting
a new endurance flight record for
women—237 hours, 43 minutes.
In New York, it was figured U.
S. stock values gained ten billion
dollars during 1933.
Roumania had a Nazi scare fol-
lowing assassination of its pre-
mier.
Fort Worth rang in 1934.
O. D. Stevens, in the county
jail, faced 1934 accused of
three murders and a $72,000
mall robbery, a
October of Justice T. H. Conner-
of the Civil Appeals Court.,
Died—Robert A. Ellison, mem-
ber of a pioneer family of mer-
chants.
In New York City, LaGuardia
was elected mayor. In Germany,
Hitler asked a new accord ending
the Treaty of Versailles, and in 1
France Camille Chautemps chose |
a new cabinet.
President Roosevelt named Jo-1
seph Choate Jr. the new “liquor
czar." The repeal parade con-
tinued and people said “it won't
be long now.” It wasn’t—for in
DECEMBER
Utah became the 36th state to
ratify repeal, and liquor began
flowing in wet states.
The C.W.A. approved airport
and sewage projects for Fort
Worth, and jobs were increased
in the county to more than 7,300.
Meanwhile, city- councilmen talked
of a municipal power plant, and
the local distributor cut the com-
mercial rate.
| tested sewage odors. ___________________-_____.......... ......
Roofs left house tops as a tor- Roscoe Turner set a coast-to- of sewerage odors.
• nado hit near Everman. The rail- coast mark, Col and Mrs. Lind- -
road commission ordered a shut- bergh started for the Arctic, the j A
down in East Texas oil fields. Italian air fleet visited Chicago, oricebrought a vis t to Fort Worth
Two Lithuanians flew Allan. pricOS. And & visit to r ort W orin
Two LithuAnAS new the Allan- of 25 state and national leaders,
to attend opening of the Arling-
ton Downs racing meet, first un-
der the new law. Among the visi-
tors—-James A. Farley, Will Rog-
ers, Jesse Jones, the Comptroller
pt the Currency O’Conner, ample
Assistants Postmaster General.
Jimmy Walker and Betty Comp-
ton married at Cannes , France.
Jap planes bombed Peiping.
Fort® Worthers gathered fishing
tackle as the season opened on
the first day of — ’ •
MAY
tie to Germany. The Mollisons
also crossed... Russell Boardman
killed. Jimmy Mattern, Fort
Worth flyer, lost in Siberia on
world flight, found safe.
Itwas a month, too, for kid-
' —and the fish bit. Tarrant napings. "Jake the Barber" Fac-
tor was abducted in Chicago and
- . ransom; two
were arrested for Banker Luer
"snatching" in Illinois; Charles
Urschel kidnaped In Oklahoma
and turned over $200,000 for his
county took stock, found itself !’ .
$40,115,000 in debt, groaned, treed for $50,000
New beer flooded Fort Worth,
police raided. The Texas Legisla-
ture voted to submit the home
rule amendment and a $20,000,-
000 relief bond issue to the voters
August 26.
- Rep. Duvall lacked the race:
bill onto an appropriation, meas-
ure and the House passed it; the
governor signed, legalizing legal
j betting in Texas. Rep. Milton
West (no relative of Mhe)’ took
: oath In Washington as congress-
man from 15th Texas District.
In Tarrant, outside auditors
blasted at record of former Asses-
sor J. L. Wright,' said tax values
were grossly unfair, continued
corrosive criticism of other county
offices. The state medical con-
vention met here. Riverside resi-
dents complained of sewage odors.
At Lansing, Kan., 11 convicts
escaped prison. They were led by
Harvey Balley (to be continued.)
In Washington the Roosevelt
program moved on—Congress ap-
proved the recovery bill, the in-
flation and the securities bills;
the president enrolled 274,000
men for forestry work, signed the
inflation and relief measures—
then called on 54 nations to dis-
arm. He blocked payment of cash
to veterans..
Broker's Tip won the Ken-
tucky Derby.
In Chicago—the World’s Fair,
and Sally Rand. C
In India—Gandhi ended an-
other fast. ;........
JUNE. ‘
—brought memories of Paul
release. Elliott Roosevelt and
Ruth Googins wed in Iowa, after
a romance starting in Fort Worth,
Hannah Williams wed Jack Demp-
sey.
In Fort Worth four men. In-
cluding 0. D. Stevens, were ar-
rested on murder .charges after
report of three men missing. A
search started for bodies. They
were found, tied together in a
wire netting, under the East
First Street bridge. In New York,
Alice, widow of Gangster Jack
Diamond: talked too much—she
went on the spot. * Riverside resi-
dents complained of sewage
odors.
In Los Angeles, Hutton, hus-
band of Aimee McPherson, asked
divorce; said he didn't like evan-
gelist's “blessed event” hoax. A
hurricane swept the Texas Gulf
Coast Died. In San Antonio,
George W. Saunders, one of- the
OCTOBER.
They attended banquets, break-
fasts, suppers.
Benders First won the Arling-
ton Inaugural, opening the 21-
day race meet. Mr. and Mrs. Fort
Worth overworked the pari-
mutuel machines, won and lost, or
broke even.
Died—T. H. Conner, justice of
the Court of Civil Appeals.
Germany quit the League of
Nations. A brewery opened in
Fort Worth. Jailor T. L. Manion
and Butcher G. C. Bevill convict-
ed in Dallas for aiding the Bailey
escape.
Also died — Paul Painleve of
France,' Ous Winkler of Chicago
gang fame. Socialist Leader Mor-
ris Hillquit, Rene Adoree . . . and
23 relief roll workers' in a Los
Angeles brush fire.
The Giants won again.
. President Roosevelt invited Lit-
vinoff of Russia to come over and
see him sometime. Mrs. Roose-
velt opened the “1933 Human
Needs drive. / - -
NOVEMBER. 2
Litvinoff came over, talked to
Roosevelt, and Russia was
. William Bryce resigned as
mayor, and Van Zandt Jarvis took
his. place. Bookie shops closed un-
der threat of, prosecution. The
Yuletide buying reflected results
Main and Houston at 12th
Tuesday Begins Our
Birthday
SALE
Mis Simplicity*
GARMENTS
hy GossARD
50 to $189
I = To ===
Two way stretch
girdle ...........
$1.50
MisSimplicty, for average figure.
32 to 44 sizes, made over S5 AW
* $6.50 model .............Pee
Innerbelt, front lace and MisSimplicity
garments, over $7.50 g HQ
models. This sale, special.. P’ewe
last of old trail drivers. -___-===-
In Washington, General Hugh ; HI .
Johnson mustered his legions forEMAEA IEfi
the national recovery as TITOAET n nvo.ine
President Roosevelt called on theEVVFAAL UI Iiaicuu3
housewife to help whip the de- •
pression. The N. R. A. was born mg acucm u
. . and the Fort Worth C. of C.
started mobilising a local commit-
tee on the lines of a war-time
army. The city as well as the I
nation witnessed the beginning of
one of history’s greatest economic
experiments, under the wings of
the Blue Eagle. Texas farmers
began plowing up cotton under
1NI
fro
TROLLED COLDS
USE
OUR
LAY-
AWAY
USE
) OUR
807-409 HOUSTON ST. :_
LAY-
LWAY
January Sale.
—WHERE-PRICES REACH BOTTOM
MORNING SALE 450 SILK DRESSES
Formerly go Mg • • Limit 2 to
$6.85 A I gCustomer
A 01 'New r
OY-ColorsON
UOATS COA
• 4 ng my Everybody’s |
• • 7 / Talking About 1
4 4 4 These
I Tremendous
HAT Values
Others.
Furs, Mink,
Sable, Per-
sian Lamb,
Squirrel, Red
Fox, Lynx,
L %” Choice S3
of the House
Better Coats
Values to
$98.50
Evening
Dresses
stchtl- Dor
soiled from V %
handling. V
You'll Always Do
Better Here —
Compare Our
- Values!
All
- Sizes
No Finer
Coats, to
Our Knowl-
edge, Can be
Found at
This Price.
Finest
Furs
NEW SPRING
Swagger
Suits —
And roLODOA
COATS SUU
special UP 1
ALL WINTER DRESSES ARE
REDUCED TO LESS THAN HALF!
Aimee McPherson — She of
the “mistaken blessed event”
Incident. In Jane she cabled
husband Hutton of the arrival
of an heir in Paris. It was
“all a mistake," it was explain-
ed, July: Hutton sued for
divorce . . . citing the blessed
event hoax. J
the U. S. acreage reduction
planes .
AUGUST
—Started under the sign of the
Blue Eagle. Hundreds got jobs .
in Fort Worth, and * thousands
over the nation, as the President’s
program for shorter hours, more
' pay and re-employment got un-
der way. Industries started
working out codes to be approved
by General Johnson; employers
everywhere signed the Blue Eagle
emergency code to back the Pres-
ident in the unprecedented eco-
nomic step. On August 8 the Fort
Worth Chamber of Commerce
called a meeting of the local NRA
committee toorganize for a war-
time drive; Ellison Harding was
made chairman, H. S. Foster sec-
retary, various boards were ap-
pointed to carry out the plan. , .
In New York, K. Maramapus,
unable to display an eagle in his
tailoring shop, because he had no
window, 1 S -ed on his
chest. , . .
Near Fort Worth, at Paradise,
Texas, Harvey Bailey, Boss and
Mrs. Ora Shannon and a son were
captured as .suspects in the Ur-
schel kidnaping at Oklahoma City.
Mrs. Shannon’s daughter, Kather-
ine. and her husband. Machine
Gun George Kelly, escaped.
Bailey, escaped convict from
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“make their Debut
At An
Astounding
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SPECIAL
Styles and fabrics
are the latest.-Straw ,
cloth, ribbon com-
binations, and film-
ly veils are accents
. in new spring mod-.
_____. els. See them to-
morrow! And sav-
Ings? They’re only
One special lot of
expensive new
hats, speelal-
$1.48
COME
EARLY
Save
on
Style
Every Hat
in the House
Brand New
• Straws - • Crepes • Ribbons
• Combinations • All Colors
........• Including Black and White
JANUARY SALE OF SHOE
75 • Suedes
Styles • Kids
• Satins
C • Combi-
S nations
0A See Our
•’ ■; a wise. Windows
All Sizes
‘ and
Styles
Upcoming Pages
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Sheldon, Seward R. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 78, Ed. 1 Monday, January 1, 1934, newspaper, January 1, 1934; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1684922/m1/3/?q=%22thurber+%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.