The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 54, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 8, 1934 Page: 4 of 4
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The Lampasas Daily Leader
J. H. ABNEY & SON
Herbert J. Abney, Publisher
Entered at the postoffice at Lampasas
March 7, 1904, as second-class i&pil,
THE LAMPASAS DAILY LEADER
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
(Payable in Advance)
One month ......................................$ .40
Three months ....i..............................$1.00
One year ..........................................$4.00
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Leader is authorized to make
the following political announcements,
subject to the primary election in
July:
For Sheriff, Aa’sr. & Tax Collector:
A. R. HARVEY (re-eiection)
JNO. B. DAVIS.
FRED MASON.
R. E. (Bob) POOLE
J. B. (Barney) PRESTON.
For County Judge:
J. J. MONTGOMERY.
J. C. ABNEY.
J. TOM HIGGINS (re-election)
For District Attorney:
JIM K. EVETTS, of Belton.
HENRY TAYLOR (re-election).
For County Treasurer:
MRS. HARRY EASTERS.
MRS. JOHN B. TAYLOR.
For Commissioner, Precinct No. 1:
HOSEA BAILEY (re-election).
I. N. HART
AARON (Pete) CUMMINS.
For Public Weigher in Lampasas:
R. E. (Bob) LANDRUM.
For District Clerk:
S. A. WORD (re-electionl
For County Attorney:
J. J. BYRNE.
J. SYLVESTER LEWIS.
For Congress, 21st District:
C. L. SOUTH of Coleman.
E. E. (Pat) MURPHY .
of San Angelo
CULBERSON DEAL of San Angelc
For County Clerk:
D. N. CORNETT (re-election).
TO OUR READERS
The Leader is always glad to ’
print news items, letters and oth- *
er news of interest contributed *
- 41
by our friends and readers, but
the name of the sender must al- *
ways be given, not for publica- *
tion, but in order that we may ’
know who sent it. Please re- ’
member this, and when sending *
us any kind of news, just put *
your name on it somewhere. *
Tharfks! ,
Leader’is Job Printing —TVt Tf
Clyde Hetherly is in Dallas this
week to attend a merchandise sales-
manship school.
Mrs. R. E. Landrum is home from
Beaumont where she has been visit-
ing relatives. She was accompanied
home by Miss Alma Sale who will
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Landrum.
Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Harwell left
Tuesday morning for Brownwood
where Mrs. Harwell will enter a hos-
pital for treatment.
Mrs. Mark Nash and little son and
Mrs. Frank Mace spent Monday in
Austin.
R. A. Blucher left Tuesday after-
noon for Burnet and Llano where he
will be on business for the Texas
Power & Light Co. He will also go
to Junction where he will meet his
father and mother for a few hours
visit.
The first beans out of a spring
garden were reported by J. C. Wim-
berly, Tuesday. These beans were
planted early in March and were
ready for the table May 8.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mackey of
Temple were visitors here Tuesday
and Mr. Mackey was looking after
business interests.
Daily Leader 3 Months for $1.00
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ROBLES AGAIN ASKS ! for a night flight, but the plane cies in the far east.
POLICE TO STAY OUT j would hold only four and Mrs. j Here are figures gathered from au-
-- i Wright and Miss Carr decided to thoritative sources showing how the
TUCSON, Ariz., May 6.—A plea to niake a trip later. [ rearmament spirit has been mani-
law enforcement officers and the pub-: The two young women left behind fested: •
lie to stay in the background so that ! stood in the hangar and watched ! France during the last three years
he may be able to carry out nego- j the plane rise from the ground. Mrs.! has increased her fighting force by
tiations for the return of June Robles, j Wright was unable to estimate the 65,000 by employing civilians to per-
his 6 year old kidnaped granddaugh- altitude reached, but said the plane ^ form work formerly done by soldiei's,
ter, was reiterated today by Berna- circled the field twice, then started, and is considering pushing up the
be Robles, reputedly wealthy retir- down as though to make a landing, figure by 125,000 more through a
ed cattleman. i “We thought they had just decided lengthening of the period of conscript
Robles said he felt certain he could to land in the field, and did not get service.
spring Chief Justice Charles Evans 1 been recently occupied.
Hughes promulgated new rules of The arrest of the unidentified kid-
federal court procedure designed to : naper and the detention of Mrs. Eva
get criminals to jail an,d keep them i Coleman, negro proprietress of a Ft.
there, in answer to criticism that; Muachua cafe, followed a week of
crime flourishes because the courts
grind slowly and not exceedingly well.
When a criminal is convicted of a
federal offense, sentence must be im-
posed at once, with a bare allowance
of time for the authorities to look up
his record.'
All motions for a new trial or ar-
worried at all, for I had been up Germany, in open rebellion against rest of judgment must be made in
with Bob lots of times and knew he treaty restrictions, has increased her three days after conviction, and no-
was a good pilot. army and navy budget for 1934 from tice of appeal filed in five days after
“We waited around for a long time. $268,000,000 to about $358,000,000, such motions are decided. Moves for
I suppose it was about 2 o’clock when and her aviation budget from $28,- retrial on the ground of new evidence,
said the elderly man. “I do not1 we got into the car and started driv- 000,000 to $84,000,000. She also has a valuable legal trick, must be made
know. We have no assurance.” j ing around looking for them. I was allotted $100,000,000 to the Nazi storm in 60 days after final judgment. While
Robles would make no comment worried by that time. I suppose we troopers, whom Chancellor Adolph this maneuvering is going on, the
on the report that a retired army sur- j niust have driven around about two Hitler' has said he would be willing criminal must remain in jail unless
geon, for many years a resident of hours, but we could not find any to disarm under an agreement with the trial judge thinks he has raised
Tucson, had been named as interme- , trace of them in the dark. j France. a meritorious question in his appeal.
Circuit courts of appeal, generally
slow moving, hereafter will give the
right of way to criminal cases.
make a contact with the kidnaper or
kidnapers if he were left alone to
carry out the negotiations.
“When I say I think June is alive,
I am merely expressing an opinion,”
unsuccessful efforts by June’s wealthy
family to contact the kidnapers.
Mrs. Coleman first entered the case
a week ago when she reported a man
and a small girl ate in her restau-
rant. Descriptions of the girl tallied
with June’t, but later the negress re-
pudiated her statement.
A secret investigation resulted in
an alleged statement by Mrs. Cole-
man that she was paid to spread a
false report. The arrest of the man
was consummated quickly.
diary to carry on negotiations be-
tween the Robles family and the ab-
ductors.
FOUR MIDNIGHT AERIAL
JOY-RIDERS KILLED
HOUSTON, May 6.—Sunday’s sun
disclosed a new air tragedy—a trag-
edy that claimed the lives of four j the much-feared armament race is in
France.
✓'Russia has increased her armies
in the last two years from 562,000
to about 678,000, most of the new
strength going to the east.
NATIONS ARE BUILDING Japan, in January, 1934, had m-
N t\V ARMED FORCES ^^*^ased her land, naval and air for—!
At daybreak the two young wo-
men went to Gehring’s home and got
his help.
SUSPECT HELD IN KIDNAPING
_ ces by 100,000 to a total of 456,000
GENEVA, May 6.—Alarming signs *n thiee yeais.
Italy m two years has increased
midnight aerial joy riders Saturday full swing the world over are seen be* fo*'ces by 43’00/)’ J"
night about a mile from the Houston ' by statesmen in recent developments ai^ 1 ^”„„a „°Ug,
airport
The dead: Bob Glyn, about 31, air-1 jor power.
plane pilot and mechanic; Miss Gladys I From the nerve centers of the world 10U°.1 a n_imls ia lve economies
- - 1 . .. .. Ihe king oi Italy in opening parlia-
TUCSON, Ariz., May 7.—Federal
agents dramatically .re-entered the
kidnaping of 6 year old June Robles
today with a manhunt on both sides
, , , , , of the Mexican border, aided by the
. ,, ~ . , n her armaments budget shows a re- , . „ , .
m the capitals of virtually every ma- s . .... alleged confession of a suspect in the
• , , duction tor 1934, the saving will be
Wood, about 20; Fred Burnett,
garage employe
22, airport caretaker. | armament—air, water and land—is
Mrs. Lottie Wright, sister of Fred being strengthened.
Burnett, and Miss Eva Carr, after i Under a placid surface in England,
an all night search alone in the coun- ! there is concern over the future;
try around the airport for a trace France has announced new precau-
of the disappeared plane, roused F.j tions, despite her present great mili-
The suspect was held incommunica-
0; Fred Burnett, 23, i come reports the nations are buck- , c do while a force of agents rushed to
; Leroy Grandy, about ling on more armor; that every branch men ce(- aie( a ls<<coun iy as a hideaway near Santa Ana, in the
no intention of being “caught nap-
ping.”
Poland has pushed her army up
from 280,000 to 341,000.
Tfye only two nations in Europe
which show a decrease in army
Mexican State of Sonora, only to find
an empty shack' where they hoped to
find the missing Tucson heiress and
possibly a member of the kidnap
gang.
The suspect was arrested near the
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N. Gehring, a farmer, living near the tary power; the Russian Bear is fix- . , a?C 1ta. border army post at Fort Huachua.
airport, shortly after daybreak, and j iug new stikes in his mighty claws; ’ . _ 1 , 1 .ma 6 01 Agents were reported to have drawn
with him found the wrecked plane Germany is in rebellion against the fnt.naa ^ aS6 S6a, from him an alleged admission that
he participated in the abduction of
June last April 25, and that an ac-
complice was holding the child on the
other side of the border.
Immediately a swarm of federal,
state and county officers, using air-
Swift im- planes, automobiles and other equip-
and its cargo of broken human bodies, fetters of the Versailles treaty; Ja-
The two young women were almost pan is increasing her armaments; the
hysterical after ^the long- night of United States is looking after her
searching and waiting in -the dark- naval and air forces, and Italy talks
ness. i of modernization and enlargement of
The cause of the crash had not her fighting forces,
been determined. j In this international center * the
and air forces.
SUPREME COURT PRO-
MULGATES NEW COURT
PROCEDURE RULES
i
WASHINGTON, May 7,
Mrs. Wright, Miss Carr and the condition is ascribed by expert ob- prisonment of kidnapers, racketeers, ment, rushed across the border and
four victims of the crash. went out servers principally to two things: the and extortionists, captured under new located the shack. They returned a
to the airport, where Glyn and Gran- faildre of France and Germany to federal laws was promised by the few hours later with the dishearten-
dy lived, about 10 ,p. m. yesterday, she reach an armaments agreement, and supreme court today. ing word that the shack not only was
said. The party decided to go up. uncertainties regaining Japan’s poli- Acting under authority granted last empty but bore no evidence it had
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 54, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 8, 1934, newspaper, May 8, 1934; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth897561/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lampasas Public Library.