Anonymous ID: 92e8b1 Oct. 19, 2023, 4:20 a.m. No.19762308   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19761917 pb

Strange coincidence that the name "Halper" and "matrix" are in the same sentence in Q post 1935 but isn't referring to Jan or Matrix.

 

"…raise troubling questions about Halper, who was believed to have worked with the CIA and part of the matrix of players…" Q post #1935

 

So what events took place in 1935? A lot of interesting things!

 

1935

January–March

 

January 16 – The FBI kills the Barker Gang, including Ma Barker, in a shootout.

February 22 – Airplanes are banned from flying over the White House.

 

April–June

 

April 14 – Dust Bowl: The great Black Sunday dust storm (made famous by Woody Guthrie in his "dust bowl ballads") hits hardest in eastern New Mexico and Colorado, and western Oklahoma.

May 6 – New Deal: Executive Order 7034 creates the Works Progress Administration (WPA).

May 27 – Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States (the "Sick Chicken Case"): The Supreme Court of the United States declares that the National Industrial Recovery Act, a major component of the New Deal, is unconstitutional.

May 30 - June 2 – 1935 Republican River flood (called "Nebraska's Deadliest Flood")

June – National Youth Administration established.[4]

June 10 – Alcoholics Anonymous is founded in Akron, Ohio by Bill W. (William G. Wilson) and Dr. Dr. Bob (Smith).

June 12–13 – Senator Huey Long of Louisiana makes the longest speech on Senate record, taking 151⁄2 hours and containing 150,000 words.[5]

 

July–September

 

July 5 – The National Labor Relations Act becomes law.

July 24 – The Dust Bowl heat wave reaches its peak, sending temperatures in Chicago to a record-high 109 °F (43 °C)

July 27 – Federal Writers' Project is established.

August 2 – The USS Philadelphia (1776) is raised from Lake Champlain.

August 14 – U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act into law.

August 31 – As part of United States non-interventionism in the face of growing tensions in Europe, the first of the Neutrality Acts of 1930s is passed.

September 2 – Labor Day Hurricane of 1935: The strongest hurricane ever to strike the United States makes landfall in the Upper Florida Keys killing 423. It is rated as a Category 5 storm with 185 mph winds.

September 8

Carl Weiss fatally wounds Huey Long, U.S. Senator from Louisiana ("The Kingfish"), in a shooting at the Louisiana Capitol Building in Baton Rouge.

Busby Berkeley is involved in three-car accident which kills three people and injures five, leading to charges of second-degree murder.

September 23 – The Cleveland Torso Murderer begins a 3-year series of killings and beheadings around the Kingsbury Run district of Cleveland, Ohio; the perpetrator is never identified.

September 30 – U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicates Hoover Dam.

 

October–December

 

October 7 - The Detroit Tigers defeat the Chicago Cubs, 4 games to 2, to win their first World Series Title.

October 18 – The 6.5 Ms  Helena earthquake affected the capital of Montana with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe), causing widespread damage and two deaths. A high intensity aftershock claimed an additional two lives on October 31.

November 15 – Historical Records Survey begins under the Works Progress Administration.[6] The then U.S. colony of the Philippines (Now independent) becomes a Commonwealth with Manuel Quezon as its president.[7]

November 22 – The China Clipper takes off from Alameda, California to deliver the first airmail cargo across the Pacific Ocean; the aircraft reaches its destination, Manila, and delivers over 110,000 pieces of mail.

November 30 – The British-made film Scrooge, the first all-talking film version of Charles Dickens' classic A Christmas Carol, opens in the U.S. after its British release. Seymour Hicks plays Scrooge, a role he has played onstage hundreds of times. The film is criticized by some for not showing all of the ghosts physically, and quickly fades into obscurity. Widespread interest does not surface until the film is shown on television in the 1980s, in very shabby-looking prints. It is eventually restored on DVD.

December 9 – Newspaper editor Walter Liggett is killed in a gangland murder plot in Minneapolis.

December 17 – Douglas DST, prototype of the Douglas DC-3 airliner, first flies. More than 16,000 of the model will eventually be produced.

December 26 – Shenandoah National Park is established within the Virginia.

 

Undated

 

The house Fallingwater in southwestern Pennsylvania, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, is completed.

4 million members of trade unions in the U.S.

Sacramento Credit Union is founded in California.

 

Sauce: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1935_in_the_United_States

(many items removed to be light enough for poasting)