The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1933 Page: 2 of 8
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THE WEST NEWS
News Review of Current
Events the World Over
Budget Director Douglas Passing on Public orks Proj-
ects; Industrial Codes, More Jobs and Higher V* ages;
Prohibition Repeal Vi ins Again.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
CECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
10KES, In his capacity as public
works administrator, has been so be-
set by the demands of bureaus and
politicians for hi*
slices of the *3.300,-
000,000 at his dis-
posal that he was
constrained to Issue
a warning that the
program with Its huge
fund was not a grab
bag. Then, after con-
sultation with Ids ad-
visory board, he de-
cided that all projects
must be sent to the
budget bureau for
radical paring down.
Thus Lewis IV. Douglas, director of
the budget, emerged as the man re-
lied on to cut out the unwise, unes-
sential and grnft-tainted schemes and
to submit for board action only the
worthy projects. Politicians had been
slipping Into the lists proposals for
construction of post offices, but Sec-
retary Ickes had forbidden their In-
clusion and in this was supported by
President Roosevelt. Ickes Insists
that each project provide a maximum
of work, that It perform a necessary
social service, and that It not be a
recurring Item belonging properly in
an annual appropriation bill
Lewis W.
Douglas
r-IVE MILLION business men of the
I* United States are asked by Presi-
dent Roosevelt to accept voluntarily
what Is called the “President's Re-
employment Agreement" which Is de-
signed to restore employment and
raise purchasing power through In-
creased wages. Every business and
trade and every conceivable type of
worker are included in this pact, which
Is the master code that Gen. Hugh S.
Johnson, national recovery adminis-
trator, and his aids worked out.
The employers are asked to adopt
for five months, beginning August 1,
minimum wage and maximum hour
scales for their workers, to agree not
to levy “profiteering prices,” to abol-
ish child labor, and to obey various
other regulations.
The hours of work fixed are 40 per
week for the so-called white collar
truipiuyoea .uu So boms fot inuUSti ial
workers.
Tbe wages proposed are 40 cents
an hour for Industrial workers, or
$14 per week, except in cases where
employees in the same class of work
were paid less than that rate on July
15. 1929. ami then the 1929 rate is
to be applied, hut In no case shall
It be less than 30 cents an hour.
For the white collar workers, the
wage scales are fixed according to
populations of the cities in which they
work. In cities of more than 500.000
lopulation. the minimum rate is set
. t *15 per week: in cities between
250.000 and 500,000, the rate is *14.50;
between 2.500 and 250.0<10 at $14. In
towns of less than 2,500 population,
all wages shall he increased by 20
per cent, except that the-maxi mum re-
quired shall not be more than *12 per
week.
If regular Industry codes are signed
before or during tbe five month pe-
riod, they will supersede the emerg-
ency ones. Employers are given until
September 1 to come under the plan,
and If they have not signed at that
date, the President made known that
he will exert the powers he possesses
under the national industrial recov-
ery act and compel industries to ac-
cept codes which he will lay down
arbitrarily.
ADMINISTRATOR JOHNSON, ac-
xa cording to Washington correspond-
ents, Is constructing a big propaganda
agency on behalf of the Industrial con-
trol administration. He has called on
anch veterans in the game as Charles
MIchelson, publicity man for the Dem-
ocratic national committee; Frank R.
Wilson. Charles F. Horner and others
who were leaders In the Liberty loan
drives; Bruce McNamee. William V.
Lawson. Heher Blankenhorn. and vari-
ous other skilled publicity men. Pri-
marily, It was Indicated, the new or-
ganization Is Intended to win favor
for the proposed •■master" code men-
tioned above.
T"a EPAKTMENT of I-abor surveys
•J reported by Secretary Francea
Perkins, show that during June 400.-
000 workers returned to Jobs In fac-
tories of the United States, and 100.-
000 others found work In nonmanu-
farturlng Industries and In agricul-
ture. Railroads and other Industries
not Included In the surveys, said Sec-
retary Perkins, showed a “significant
Increase'' In employment.-
Gains of 7 per cent In factory em-
ployment and 10.8 per cent In factory
pay rolls made June the third con-
secutive month in which both employ
ment and earnings have increased.
Secretary Perkins accompanied the
report, however, with a warning
against overoptlmlsm and specula-
tive production. A gain In a month
normally marked by a seasonal de-
cline waa “heartening.” she declared,
but she pointed to tbe long climb still
ahesd before tbe country can regain
»*>• 1926 level taken as the base by
the bureau In figuring Its employment
and pay roll Indices.
q ENSATIONAL breaks In the prices
J of all grains, accompanied hy sim-
ilar swift declines in the prices of
stocks, led to action by the big grain
exchanges. The Chicago Board of
Trade stopped future trading for at
least a day and issued this rule:
"Effective until further notice, there
shall be no trading during any day
at prices more than 8 cents above or
below the average closing price of
the preceding business day In wheat
or rye. or 5 cents in corn, or 4 cents
in oats.”
Like action was taken hy other
boards of trade, all of them curbing
trading in privileges.
'T'WO states, in the past regarded ns
* being dry as the proverbial bone, and
the first In the “solid south” to vote on
tiie question, of ratifying the prohibi-
tion repeal amendment, were won quite
easily by the wets. Alabama went on
record as favoring repeal by a vote of
nearly two to one, and Arkansas voted
about tiiree to one for repeal. Then
came Tennessee, and though returns
hum ihe mountain regions were slow,
the repeallsts were assured of another
victory. Oregon followed, and her
vote, in support of repeal, meant that
twenty states were in that column,
with none yet opposing.
Postmaster General Farley, who was
Interesting himself especially In the
votes in southern states, said he was
convinced that the Eighteenth amend-
ment would be out of the_ Constitution
before Christmas, and from the way
things are going he may well be right.
Although only thirty-five states have
either voted or arranged to vote on
repeal hy November 7. notion Is pend-
ing in several others which may bring
the total number voting to more than
the required thirty-six.
/'"’HEAT Interest was shown through-
AJ out the country in the marital af-
fairs of Elliott Roosevelt, seeend son
of the President. The young man's
wife, Mrs. Elizabeth
Dormer Roosevelt, ob-
tained a divorce from
him at Minden, Nev„
on a cross bill charg-
nF Ing mental cruelty
which was uncon-
■ tested, and he Imme-
V ; (Lately took an air-
w. plane to Chicago
where he met Miss
Iiuth Googlns of Fort
Worth, Texas, and her
mother. Rumors that
Elliott and Ruth were
soon to be married were only half-
heartedly denied. To the Chicago re-
porters Mr. Roosevelt said he was
there to meet his sister, Mrs. Curtis
Dali, and to visit the Century of Prog-
ress exposition.
"I’m not going to gpend any time
answering anything personal,” he
warned. "If I’m asked, ‘Is it so?’ I’ll
say nothing until I get ready to an-
nounce it. I’ll certainly let all of you
know if I ever decide to marry again.”
Miss Googlns first met the Presi-
dent's son at Fort Worth in March
while he was a guest of the South-
western exposition.
Skat
Elliott
Roosevelt
r> EN. ITALO BALBO and his 95
vJ companions on the mass flight
from Italy to Chicago left the World's
fair city after several days of contin-
uous entertainment that was limited
only by the endurance of the aviators.
They flew directly to New York and
after a rest were conveyed In army
planes to Washington to pay their re-
spects to President Roosevelt. Balbo's
plans called for return to Italy by way
of Newfoundland, going to either
Ireland or the Azores, depending on
the weather.
Italy and Premier Mussolini may
well be proud of this exploit of their
flyers, and all must be highly gratified
hy the honors heaped on Balbo.
'T'HERE was mourning In America
A and Lithuania when it was learned
that Capt. Stephen Darius and Stan-
ley Glrenas of Chicago had crashed
and perished in eastern Germany on
their flight to Kaunas, the Lithuanian
capital Tbe bodies were found in a
forest and were taken to Kaunas,
where the government gave them a
state burial.
A S THE rather futile world eco-
nomic conference In London drew
toward Its close It was announced that
a subcommittee had adopted part of
Senator Key Pittman’s resolution for
the rehabilitation of silver, agreeing
upon increased nse of the metal In
subsidiary coinage. The questions of
regulating the world output of silver
and of its use ss a part of the Cen-
tral hank's metal coverage were post-
poned. Senator Pittman said he was
quite satisfied.
“What It means,” he said, “Is this:
All governments agree to cease de-
basement or melting of silver coins,
except India and Spain, and they
agree to limit the amount they will
sell. We shall get back to where sil-
ver was before the World war."
Samuel
Untermysr
O EPRKSENTATIVES of about thlr-
N ty of the principal countries
met In Amsterdam, Holland, at the
call of Samuel Unteruiyer, New
York attorney, for the
purpose of extending
the boycott against
German goods and of
appealing to the
League of Nations
against the alleged
antl-Jewish atrocities
perpetrated by the
Nazis In Germany.
Explaining the con-
ference and lta pur-
poses, Mr. Unteruiyer
said that a boycott
already was started
in many countries but that Its effects
had been cushioned by a decision to
use up German stocks already on
hand. With exhaustion of these
stocks, he said, Gorman manufactur-
ers will begin to feel the full force of
worldwide sentiment against repres-
sion of the Jews.
The appeal to the League of Na-
tions probably will be based on two
counts—violation of the labor clauses
of the treaty of Versailles In exclud-
ing Jews from German labor unions
and persecution of the Jews as a mi-
nority people.
Unteruiyer said he was working In
close collaboration with the British
Jewish committee headed by Lord
Melchctt.
Walter F.
Meier
CHANCELLOR HITLER In his ef-
A-* forts to speed up industrial recov-
ery In Germany has created an organi-
zation known as the general council
for Industry, which Is to assist the
government with Its advice and prac-
tical experience in solving the unem-
ployment problem. Among the Indus-
trial lenders who consented to serve
on this council are: I>r. Otto Fischer,
president of the Central Association of
German Bankers; Dr. Albert Voegler,
director general of the United Steel
Trust: Dr. Fritz Th.vssen, Klitneland
coal and Iron producer; Karl Fried-
rich von Siemens, head o0the electri-
cal company which bears his name;
Baron Kurt von Schroeder, president
of the German Chamber of Commerce
und a noted banker of Cologne: Vin-
cent Krogmann, mayor of Hamburg and
one of the German delegates to the
economic conference at London: Dr.
Krupp von Bohlen und Halbuch, head
of the Krupp firm, and Dr. Robert Ley.
The problem for the Germans is
acute, for the unemployed there num-
ber about five million men, and Ger-
man exports for the first six months
of the year showed an alarming de-
crease. The government Is promul-
gating new laws designed to help busi-
ness men who give increased employ-
ment. Citizens who give contracts for
repairs and Improvements to their
buildings will be entitled to a 10 per
cent reduction in their Income and cor-
poration taxes If the increased bill for
wages equals the rest of the materials.
Newly-formed business undertakings
will go tax-free If they deal In new
manufacturing processes or bring to
the market original products, provided
that no competition is given to exist-
ing firms.
\ A EMBERS of the Benevolent and
1V1 protective Order of Elks, meet-
ing in convention In Milwaukee, re-
ceived a message of good will from
President Roosevelt,
nnd elected Walter
F. Meier of Seattle
their grand exalted
ruler. Mr. Meier is a
graduate of the Uni-
verslty of Nebraska, a
former corporation
counsel of Seattle, and
is the author of a book
called "The Heart of
Elkdom.” Gov. Das+d
Seholtz of Florida put
him in nomination,
and was himself elect-
ed grand esteemed leading knight.
Judge James Fitzgerald of Omaha was
chosen grand esteemed loyal knight;
Leland O'Callaghan of Louisville,
grand tiler, and E. L. Safford of Santa
Fe, grand Inner guard.
As the last act of his regime, be-
fore yielding place to the new grand
exalted ruler, Floyd E. Thompson of
Moline, 111., named Circuit Judge Clay-
ton F. Van Pelt of Fond du Lac, IVis.,
to a five year term In the grand forum
of the national lodge, the supreme
court of the order.
II.BERT N. HAUGEN, who repre-
VJ sented Iowa In congress continu-
ously for 34 years and was retired by
the Democratic landslide last fall, died
at his home In Northwood after an
Illness or several months. He was
born of Norwegian parentage In Wis-
consin 74 years ago. Always prom-
inent ns an advocate of the farmer,
Mr. Haugen In late years was chair-
man of the house committee on agri-
culture and had much to do with
formulating all farm legislation up
to the advent of the Roosevelt admin-
istration.
IF THE orders of the Third Inter-
1 nationale are obeyed there will be
a lot of "red’’ disturbance on August
1, which Moscow will celebrate as
anti-war day. Communist agitators re-
cently arrested In Riga, Tallin and
Helsingfors possessed copies of a gen-
eral letter of Instructions addressed
to Communist parties abroad from the
executive committee of the Comintern.
The letter ordered a one day strike,
street demonstrations and general dis-
orders on the day named. Large num-
bers of Reds serving time in Baltic
prisons have been ordered to go on a
hunger strike on August 1 and to pre-
sent demands for prison reforms, one
of which is for permission to have
radios enabling them to listen to Mos-
cow programs. ,
« llU. Wwtvrs Xnrspsgw Ustas.
National Topics Interpreted
__by William Bmckart
Washington.—Cotton farmers of the
United States, or s sufficient number
of them In sixteen
Effect of states, have just glv-
United Action™ * demonstration
of what can be done
hy unified action. We have Just seen
them sign contracts voluntarily under
which they have agreed with their
government to destroy certain portions
of their growing cotton crop ns a con-
certed effort to force prices higher
that their Industry may live.
As a result of this action, more thnn
9,000,000 acres of growing cotton will
be plowed under. That means approx-
imately 8,500,000 bales from the po-
tential crop will never be allowed to
attain maturity. It will never be on
the market; It will never be used for
clothing or other fabrication; It Is out
of the economic life. Whether such a
course Is good or whether it Is con-
j trary to the laws to which all hitmans
i must respond. Is another question,
i The fact Is that we who live have seen
a government and a people take a step
I that history must record as epochal.
The farmers are going to he paid for
that portion of the crop which they
destroy. 1 have the exclusive Infor-
mation that the average amount to be
paid theqi will be close to $150. A
great many will receive more because
they are Inrger producers nnd some
will get less, but there are thousands
of them who will receive around that
sum In cash. All will receive the addi-
tional benefit of a higher price for that
portion of the crop which grows on to
harvest
• • •
I nm told privately, and I think It
Is an interesting fact, that the bulk
of the contracts offered to the secre-
tary of agriculture under the cotton
plan carried estimates by the farm-
ers that are proving to be conserva-
tive.
The government, through the De-
partment of Agriculture, Is arranging
the scale of payments so that It will
figure out from *7 to $20 per acre.
If a farmer's land Is producing this
year an estimated 100 pounds of cot-
ton and not more than 124 pounds, he
will receive $7 for each acre plpwed
under. From that basis of production,
the payments range upward to $20 an
acre where the production Is calcu-
lated at 275 pounds to the acre or
more.
In addition to the plan of payment I
have been describing, there Is an op-
tion plan under which the farmer is
given an option on cotton which the
government heretofore has acquired in
the various farm relief programs. The
purpose of the present plan, of course.
Is to force the price higher. The cot-
ton which the government holds, there-
fore, can nnd will be sold sometime
for more money than it was worth
when the government bought It An
option is given the farmer by which
he cun become the titular owner of
this government cotton in an amount
equal to the amount he agrees to de-
stroy out of thi$ year's crop. He can
get this profit instead of the cash
payment available otherwise.
The option plan Is based upon pay-
ments ranging from $0 to $12 per crop
acre, and the government makes no
payment on destroyed crops where the
estimate showed a potential produc-
tion of less than 100 pounds to the
acre. That is true regarding pay-
menu under the cash plan. Which
brings to the fore the real reason there
is payment at all. The government
considers that tbe farmer Is entitled
to a return on his land and the pay-
ments, whether in cash or optional
holding of old cotton, and gets what
amounts to a rental to let It lie Idle
Insofar as the cotton crop is con-
cerned. He can use It for potatoes
or something else, Just so it Is not
cotton.
• • •
But from whence is the money com-
ing to make these payments and how
Is the government
Where Money going to stand such
Comes From 8 trM>emious drain
in order to make
good on its promises to the cotton
farmer and to the wheat farmer who
likewise Is soon to sign agreements
not to plant so much acreage this fall
or next spring?
The processing tax Is the answer.
The government will collect from the
miller 4.2 cents In a tax on every
pound of cotton that goes Into mills
for manufacture Into the thousands
of uses for which cotton is available.
It will collect 30 cents a bushel on
every bushel of wheat that enters a
mill from which to obtain funds for
paying the wheat farmers ground rent-
al if they withhold a certain portion
of their acreage from planting in the
next crop year.
It seems Intricate to most of us, but
the Department of Agriculture experts
suy it Is simple, this method of cal-
culating what the farmer is to re-
ceive, whether cotton or wheat. They
explained It to me thus: a cotton farm-
er has been growing an average of
150 pounds of cotton to the acre dur-
ing the last live years and he estimates
that his prospective crop this year will
be Just about the same. His payment
Is figured on that basis. Tbe wheat
farmer has been producing a stated
amount each year and be contem-
plates the same acreage next year.
His crop over a period of years can
be and la averaged op and be gets paid
accordingly. The total reduction of
acreage In whatever crop is figured
out here on reports from farm agents
in the various counties nnd the total
cost to the government Is arrived at
The totnl average sales over many
years Is a matter of record. That Is,
the records show how much the millers
of wheat have handled nnd how much
has been exported and the cotton pro-
ducers’ records also are available.
The processing tax then becomes a
matter of a percentage. It Is simpli-
fied to the point whore the calcula-
tion must be made on the difference
In the total average value of the crops
from 1924 to 1920 nnd the current
prices. pklJ
• • «
M, L. Wilson, the man who Is man-
aging the wheat program for the De-
partment of Agriculture Is Just ns op-
timistic about the wheat plan for forc-
ing prices higher as Secretary Wal-
lace and George N. Peek, farm adjust-
ment administrator, are about the cot-
ton plan which now has been effectu-
ated. Mr. Wilson told me after a re-
cent tour of three weeks through the
800-odd wheat counties of the nation
that 90 to 95 per cent of the wheat
farmers are going with the government
on the plan. That means signed con-
tracts just as the cotton farmers
signed contracts ngreeing to stand
together in unified action that reason-
able profits may be realized from
farming operations.
• « •
There Is going to be a shorter crop
of wheat this year than is usual.
The Department of
Short Wheat Agriculture estl-
Croo mates It will be
" around 490,000,000
bushels, whereas. It usually runs
around 650,000,000 to 700,000,000. Ac-
cording to Mr. Wilson, the wheat
farmers recognize that this year's
short crop and higher prices will be
followed by Inrger acreage In the
plantings of winter wheat this fail
nnd the spring wheat next spring. On
the basis of acreage now growing, fall
and spring whent together, the next
j tar’s crop easily could go as high as
S00.000.000 bushels. Just figure what
thnt would mean on the basis of w'^ t
consumption of nround 650,000,000 a
year. Tbe carry over would break the
price down to the level where it would
be on the same basis as other stock
feed and it would be disastrous. So
Mr. Wilson says the wheat farmers
are coming through in good shape ns
fast as they can be told what the plan
means to them.
• • •
There are two other phases of the
crop program that must be remem-
bered, according to the authorities.
One of them Is the necessity for pa-
tience, particularly as regards the
working out of the wheat programs.
It will he slower than that effecting
cotton. The other matter Is less gen-
eral but more pointed: the tnat’er of
attempts at self-policing the Industry
Involved. I mean to call attention to
the age-old practice of "taking the law
into our own hands.” That Is not go-
ing to be countenanced by the govern-
ment in any way, shnpe or form, for
a law violator is a law violator, says
the Department of Justice, and his
punishment will not be made easier
simply because he thinks he Is enforc-
ing a farm law and he happens to be
a farmer.
In this matter of patience, I be-
lieve I state the view of the Wash-
ington observers as a whole that
the various farm plans, as well as the
plans affecting Industry otherwise,
should have a chance to show their
worth. It Is patent that nothing will
help unless the programs designed to
extend such aid are given time to ma-
ture. Unless they mature, the re-
sults are worth nothing to anybody.
Hence, the belief of most of us that
the nation must be patient.
• • •
As regards the self-policing prob-
lem. The Department of Agriculture
the other day re-
Co-operation "c el v ed Information
It Sought ,hat 8 **lf'aPPoln,‘
* ed crew of Individ-
uals was going about certain sections
of North Carolina telling some of the
farmers that either they would sign
up contracts to reduce their cotton
acreage or "we will pufl It up by the
roots.” The threat to pull up the crop
was accompanied hy another kind of a
threat. Agriculture Department (oiks
do not want that kind of help in put-
ting over the program. They want It
to be voluntary co-operation, a sincere
and serious effort to accomplish some-
thing by united action.
On the other hand, I am told, the
agents In the various counties are ac-
cessible to nearly every farmer, and
the department Is willing to know of
any unfair practices. That Is part of
tbe Idea of co-operation. If a farmer
signs a contract and falls to live up to
his agreement, obviously he Is hurting
his own community and to that extent
damaging the chances of succeea for
the whole program.
But the point of distinction is that.
If there are unfair acts on the part of
Individuals or groups, tbe government
can and will correct them. It la not
up to the self-appointed police, say the
authorities in the Department of Jus-
tice.
C. ISIS, WMtn Xswspapec Union.
How I Broke Into
• The Movies fl
Copyright by Hel C. Mermen ||
By HOOT GIBSON
T AM sorry that I cannot relate a
1 tale of hardships and privation, but
my entry Into motion pictures was ac-
complished with comparative ease-
after I decided to work In them.
I can’t exactly say that I broke Into-
the movies. It all seemed to happen
systematically. The movies seemed
like an opportunity, and when they
opened their doors to me, 1 rode In.
I’m a native of Nebraska, was born
In the small but ambitious town of
Tekamnh, which was smaller then »han
it Is now, but it was large enough to
please me when I started life under
the less fantastic name of Edward—
nnd it gnve me my education. My
education completed, I began to wan-
der, and Inasmuch as the only thing
I knew anything about was ranch
work, I wandered to different rnnelies.
I have been riding horses as far
hack as I can remember and I was as
much at home in the saddle as on the
ground. Being nn adventurous youth
I began to try various difficult and
daring feats of horsemanship, and
after plenty of hard work and bumps,
I got so I could handle a horse well
enough to get a Job wrangling cattle,
which I did for several years.
I found the task of pursuing cattle
over large and dusty prairies quite an
unexciting employment. So when I
met up with a traveling Wild West
show I was overjoyed at the oppor-
tunity of Joining It as one of the star
trick and stunt riders. It was known
then as Dick Stanley's Congress of
Rough Riders.
In 1912, I entered the annual Pendle-
ton (Ore.) round-up as one of the
175 contesting riders. When the du*
had settled on the rodeo I found my-
self holding the all-around cowboy
championship.
It was a tongn Job, and I worked
hard to get It, but I kept right on rid-
ing, for I left with the American dele-
gation of cow-punchers for Australia
where I rode in the foreign meets for
seven months.
About this time motion pictures were
Just beginning to show some signs of
development and after reaching this
country again I found myself talking
with motion picture producers. They
happened to have a field for western
pictures so I started directing “pro-
gram” or short length westerns.
I might have continued on this un-
pretentious status for the rest of my
career hut seeing the opportunities In
the acting end of the game, 1 decided
to get into the grease paint nnd see
what would develop. I had directed
about 40 pictures and had a. fair knowl-
edge of what the Industry wanted In
the line of western productions.
I have always had what some peo-
ple call a sense of humor and I war
ed to use It to advantage If possible,
saw trenmndon* possibilities In mni
i Ing westerns that went off the beati
I path of melodramatic action plctur<
I wanted to Intersperse the exagger
: ed action of my pictures with come,
and human touches. I found s dire
tor and together we conspired to i!
| comedy and human touches. The r
suit was a better and more popult
brand of pictures.
I know of no other business whei
merit Is rewarded as It Is In tl
movies—hut merit must be aided t
labor, and plenty of It.
WNU Sffrvlcs
Joan Needs No Glycerine
Drops to Simulate Teai
In the sad business of weeping b
fore the camera Joan Rlondell hi
It all over her more sober slstei
of the cinema. They resort to glyce
lne drops, stinging lotions for tl
eyes and even, at times, to the to
ly onion to generate their screen teai
All except Miss Blondell.
Joan will use none of these subti
fuges. When the time comes for I
to cry In a picture she Just cries, a
the glycerine bottle, the campli
spray and the restaurant onion a
never called upon to double for rr
emotion.
Ad Ifpmsdists Succsss
Miss Fay Wray started her film c
reer In 1028. She sprang Into Imni
dlate prominence with her first appeu
ance and counts among her many ot
er successful vehicles, "Finger Points
“Not Exactly Gentlemen," “Conqiif
Ing Horde,” “Captain Thunder,” ”La\
yer's Secrets," “Unholy Garden” “Tl
Vampire Bat” and “King Kong" ,
}
V
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The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1933, newspaper, July 28, 1933; West, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth590307/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting West Public Library.