Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 4, Ed. 1 Monday, August 19, 1929 Page: 1 of 8
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DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
TOWN
1
NO. 4
8 PAGES
ZEPPELIN LANDS SAFELY AT
/
a
19 —
L-
ig mat-
arid
,k
COTTON NOW
LOC OF FLIGHT
IS GENERAL
1
J
traveled approximately 6.500
Tokyo
appearance
over
Irichsliaf -
market
Hiram
Frank
q.rrn*-1
------ 1*4 wir I1UU0C tHiCWi-
Cotten quotations Monday were I er with Joseph Mercier. M. nrigXe-
/
Aboard the Zeppelin were 60 per-
at Mukden
chequer.
it
WASHINGTON.
19
A.Ug
Representatives of
to
('ream
Max
I
ters on the Chinese Eastern Rail-
ed
1 I
were
5 00
Ft. Worth Good
Reduction of the present rate on
1
n
Dies in Dallas
Hickory
;06 Smoot-
|tkm should not be granted-
> • '**■ ■1 • *• * •'
kWVTftirt
I
I - A
i*’’)
bJl
i
TF
Eg
Bp ■ .
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I
VOL. XXIX
CHINA ORDERS
ES
ashing for
J
I
Endurance Plane
Reaches W isconsin
Dragging East
River for B o d y I
of Texas Woman
Will Party to
Be Here Friday
Ifethei Dry Is
Ifet Matter for
Court to Decide
(hie Killed, 6 2
Hurt in Rioting
TOKIO, COMPLETING SECOND
LAP OF ROUND-WORLD TRIP
gistered
erience,
ROUND
’ABOUT
by the
lake our
sing our
f this
Mon-
r>w, Sal*
of these
ttruggist.
♦ nine; Bertha, eight; paul, six +
, Dead In the +
♦ bedroom Every gas jet in the +
him at pliance with custom whereby the
conduct him | Party to power
rw-t-t’1 factual train rat
way to the river
The note read;
"I’m leaving on
made
own
out time
pmake it.
and add
ay.
TO HEAR SHOP
REMOVAL PLEA
ON SEPT. 17
LOSSIEMOUTH. Scotland.
Dawes i
H-
per
were
vice-
AuUi-
wu
I
i
f
said
be
101
n
ture and the
through it.
The dead are:
Samuel J
Evan-
Dali Strange.
' 3
11
I 1
/
f
r
J
■ ■
|
■
4
K ■
p-
el
j
a
ala atyni
mittdu I
■topping.
ttcrmil^
>pics of the
the Her? i1
is more
Guardsmen t o
Quell Riots i n
Marion S t rike
Record-Chronicle
l ull Leased Hire
Associated Press
Report Is liegun
100 Hours Required From Friedrichshafen;
Probably Will Leave Thursday for Los An-
geles, Third Lap of Tour.
GRADE OF STAPLE EX
CELLENT; PRO DUC-
TION EXPECTED TO BE
SHORT THIS YEAP
19 —Definite re- 19—Ambassador Dawes arrived 1
ports of minor clashes between Rus- here al 10 30 a nl to rPsunle his
j naval disarmament
^xritK nrlrtln tninlcfo
i Donald The premier met
1 to
arrested
sent
disarmament j
British
premier The Herald today said al-
Archer, 17;
Martin Kapp. Frank Harty,
Matthews
Great Britain.
over in detail the compromise offer > man
of th? first four to Phillip Snow-
aen. British Chancellor of the Ex-
seeking to increase his
government's share of the German
1
‘ 1
d
“Chicago is not near so bad’ as
Its reputation," said Harry McCray,
of Chicago, who is here the guest
of his brother. W J McCray and
family I have lived there twenty-
six years and during that time I
have never seen a single hold-up
nor a murder Of course. In a city so
large as Chicago there are natur
ally hold-ups and murders, but I
doubt, considering size, that Chica-
go has more crime than other cit-
ies.”
Radio's Best
Tueaday’a Five Beat
Copyright, 1979. by United Press
WEAF NBC network 7 :00 CST
—Everrady hour.
WABC NBC Network 5:00 CST
—Old Gold hour.
WEAF NBC Network
6CST—Roads of the Sky.
WABC CBS 3:00 CST—Fada
Salon orchestra.
- won Newark only 7:30 CST
—I.eiaohn Stadium concert.
By Associated Press
Around the world lef: of the Graf
Zeppelin
(All time is eastern standard)
Wednesday, Aug. 7
10:40 p. m. -Left I^akehurSt, N.
‘ .1
*11
ine guns and field guns
agencyjZd* Governor Chang Hsueh gfg; cents,
~ r- - - . -T ) per ton
Hoover Accepts
Elihu Root Plan
for World Court
~ ------—
10 HATH IN
NG HOUSE:
i
ARKANSAS
MERGER OF PICTURE PRODUC-
ERS REPORTED
LOS ANOELE8K. Aug. 19- The
Examiner today said a merger of
Warner Brothers Motion Picture
corporation, with Paramount Fam-
ous Laaky woEld be completed with
In the 1
ner. west
organisation as its authority.
Tile third visit of the farmers to
the farmers of Denton County will
lake place Friday, August 23rd Far-
mers who would like to make the
trip are urged to be at tite west
door of the Court House at 8 ociock
Friday morning with lunch ready
to take the ride The Chamber of
Commerce will furnish transporta
VIENNA Aug 19 One person
was killed and 62 were wounded 12
Al
; '-M
; r|
A.i< 19 Wheth
is :i matter for
1 expected t<:
af lernoon
• -f a 533-poun :
1.510 poun !
..lay mo- i'
>r 17 66 cents
Black and Hiten. formerly of
Palestine, have bought the City
Cafe. East Side Square and they
expect to improve and redecorate
the building, work having already
been started Mr Hiten has been
here for some months, but Mr and
Mrs. C W. Black have moved here
this week and both families are liv-
ing at 401 West Hickory Street. Mr
and Mrs Black belong to the
Methodist Church: Mr and Mrs
Hiten to the Baptist Both men are
experienced restaurant men havtng
been in that business for several
years "Denton appeals to us as be-
ing a most attractive city; we chose
it to live in and were here now to
make our homes "
1 glum and Italy hope
Mr. Snowden
Friday fitted very nearly his
for a
her home here for the Eastern me-
tropolis two weeks ago.
Although the nature of her vis-
it was not disclosed, friends pres-
umed it was in interest of the pub-
lication of songs slie had composed I
About four years ago Mrs. Edwards
was a prominent Texas radio enter-
tainer, having taken for herself the
name of Miss Magnolia Blosson
JF omen Flyers
W i n Point t o
P a s s Calexico
(felCAGO
er dry is wt-1
eoijft dec sion
X>me» on ■ phoned the Des
plages Street pohcee station
that "this fellow dry is all wet "
and detectives went over to Al-
bert Dry’s Pl ice Ther ■ were
insinuations that It was a beer
fla:.
"I’m a dn " said Drv. "And
this is a Drv place Anyone wlu>
-ay- differentIv is all wet ’
"Dry up aid the detective
dryly, "and come with us for
a dryve “
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19 —Preai-
dent Hoover’s formal acceptance of
the Elihu Root formula for Ameri-
can adherence to the world court Hi Texas Railway Company to move ita
ready for publication, the United'
a^hpaia learned today. Mr. Hoover haa
.^Mdrtl .to requeat Senate approval
of the Root plan ax a substitute for
the. Senate reeervatlona which for
1 three yeara has prevented the Unl-
I ted States from becoming ■ court
repair shops and offices of the di-
vision superintendent and train dis-
patcher from Smithville to Waco
for Sept. 17. SmithvUle citizens are
protesting the move and will come
to Austin with atrong representa-
tions to show reason why the peti-
TOWN IS AFIKi:
I
LLOYDMINSTER. Sask . Aug 19
—Fire whidh started early today |
was swapping-this -town’s business
area, and before eight A M_ had
destroyed*^a dozen buildings, in-
cluding two banks The water sup
ply was short and the pressure
Inadequate. Two hotels were bulg-
ed, but the guests escaped.
1
T
"1
HEARING ON NEW TRIAL FOR
SNOOK POSTPONED
COLUMBUS. O Aug 19 Judge
Henry L. Hacrlett continued today's
hearing on a motion for a new
trial for Dr. James H. Snook until
tomorrow. A motion for a continu-
ance was filed by defense attor-
neys who claimed they had been
given sufficient time to prepare.
"What will I do now for some-
thing to whittle on." asked a man
Monday morning. "For yeara I iiave
• seen Denton men whittle on the
light poles that have only' recently
given way to more ornamental
pole* I guess I will have to get
a file or a hack saw as the iron
poles are not very good whittling ’’
The City has taken down the wood-
en light poles which have adorn
cd' the square for a good many
years: in fact they have been there
so tong that no one seems to have
the exact date R. H. Evers, who
was one of ths owners of the Den-
ton Power & Light Co. prior to the
purchase by the city, is not posi-
tive as to whether or not these
^>oiss were placed there by Uwte
■ompany or by the «Hy Home vt
^hem were nearly cut through when
taken down
West Texas: OeneraEy fair
tonight and Tuesday.
East Texas: Partly dondy to-
night and Tnraday. Light ts
moderate easterly to sswtheriy
winds on the eesst
Oklahoma: Generally fair to-
night and Tnsstay.
Art anas*: Partly eioedy to-
night* and Taeeday.
Louisiana: Generally fair bat
with partly etondy ea the eeast
tonight aagl Tnasday. tight to
moderate nertheast to east wind
sn ths esast.
M D Jones ranch southwest of
Sanger and from there to the Good-
view community and on to the Trin-
ity Farm near Slidell Then home
MORE MEN TO
^■|IZE
100,000 N A L
MANCHUW TROOPS ♦ hP, four lhlla„n
Niels Hans ♦
TO FRONT; SAYS CRI- I
SIS SERIOUS. '-Wl>
At the meeting of the Denton
County Farm Club Saturday night
the question of the Farmers auc-
tion was brought up and a commit-
tee to secure the place for storing
the articles to be auctioned was
appointed The auction will be held
in the near future and everything
in the way of implements, furni-
ture. tool* or material of any kind
will be offered for sale ax auction
without charge Live stock will be
included if the farmers desire. Any
one wishing to place an article in
the sale will see Otis Fowler. Jack
Skiles or Loafer.
Tiksg wstare
Maxtaaid ywtarday---
Minimum today —
*MMNtor*Ms0ag
war "
“ *“ 1 a. m. Mhy — n par
MADISON. Wis . Aug 19 — The
endurance plane. "Spokane Sun
God," piloted by Lieut. Nick Marner
and Art Walker, circled over Madi-
son at 11:10 a m . tod^y. dropped a
note, and headed for Minneapolis
where it will refuel.
DALLAS. Au'i 19 The Den-
ton Record-Clxronicle today
advanced Into Metropolitan
daily field when it extended its
membership in the Associated
Press to include a full leased
wlr*1 rep >rt
With the full leased wire ser-
vic". the Denton pap?r will be
m portion to provide its readers
with prompt news of the world
and a state news report contri-
buted through the Associated
Pre. s by its 70 fellow members
111 Texas and more than than
thr e hundred part time cor-
r spendents scattered over the
Vast state
Dawes Resumes
Parley on Naval
Disarmament Cut
SAN BERARDINO, Calif , Aug
Ifl.-r-Elghteen of the nineteen fliers
entered in ths first women’s Na-
tional Air Derby from Santa Mon-
ica, Calif , to Cleveland, who balk-
ed at continuing the flight from
here today because of their objec-
tion to landing at Calexico, Calif.,
won their point when race offici-
tounced they would be per-
to pass that point without
T|>e Record-Chronicle received a
telegram of congratulations Mon-
day from Joe Leonard of the
Gainesville Register upon this
newspaper s entrance into the leas-
ed wire field, the Associated Press
printer on leased wire having been
put in operation Monday
sation between London and Lossie-
mouth last Friday.
There was no indication as to
the phase of disarmament and na-
val reduction into which the two
men expected to enter During the
last two months, since the Ambas-
sador's last visit to Tjossiemouth
little has been said over the disar-
mament conversation between the I
American and British officials be-
yond statements that there was sat-
isfactory progress
.SASKATCHEWAN H. H. Davenport
irr’zkirzMf >0 jyjmfD .
AUSTIN. Aug 19 The Railroad
Commission today set the hearttig
on petition of the Miasouri-Kansas-
F W Leming, receiver of the
First Naltona! Bank has been
tranaferrd by the Comptroller's
Department to Alabama He said
Monday morning **I don't know
exactly when I will leave Denton,
but I have been transferred to the
Alabama division and expect - to
leave soon Mr. Rogers, receiver of
the Ex< har>| e National Bank, has
been appointed to take over my
work here Mr Iznslng has been
in Denton for nearly a year and
said "I have formed acquaintances
and friendships while in Denton
and I ,«hall always think back with
much pleasure to my residence here
Denton people have been very kind
to me and I appreciate their cour-
tesy much "
today to^ go . prummond Hay was . the only wo-
the exception of a
troops responded with rifle and
machine gun Are ""
withdrew after two hours Chinese j highlands, spending in all only
few hours with Mr. Macdonald
j The ambassador left here with
| no advance notice last night for
! Lossiemouth where Mr Macdonald
| expected to meet him at the train
and escort him to the hillocks, the I
little square stone house where the' wool wastes, cotton textiles, agri-
prime minister seeks relaxation , cultural products.
whenever opportunity occurs. The Reduction of the present rate on
daily mail said the visit was ar-1 automobiles and trucks and buses
ranged during a telephone conver-1" ‘
tee
naval disarmament conversations j from the committed room after a
with prime minister Ramsay Mac-1 month of public hearings in com-
WHERE TRACERY E\I)EI> HOU HAY CRI ISE
T._ -
today with its submission to the
Democratic committeemen for their
consideration
Debate on the bill was to hace
begun today in the Senate under
the two month's recess agreement
reached June 19. but the finance
f.roup was delayed in its work and
will require another week or more
■ to rewrite the administration pro-
j visions Actual debate will not start
Aug . j until Sept 4
Meanwhile. Democratic commit-
members, who were »excluded
a
sians and Chinese were received
today from the Manchurian bor-
der, but there was no confimia
tion of official reports on Saturday 1 statton platform
that 10.000 Red Army troops had ,o home, the “Hillocks.'
invaded Manchuria
Consular reports from Harbin |
and from Manchuli stated that on |
Friday a force of 700 Red cavalry- I
men .<
Second Visit
IONDON. Aug ID.—,
THE HAGUK, Aar 11»,
oriUve announcement
nude tonight that British sol-
diers will begin leaving the
Rhineland on September first.
With the exception of a
knickknack or two, including a bust
of Baron Ehrenfeld there was no
freight, other than 50.000 pieces of
mall, the revenue from which will
bring the Zeppelin nearly as many
• ’N
4 and George, five months,
aped in the House t«ieth- j
331 j or Uw rtilidren.
G. 0. P. House
1 T ' (X 0*11 KT to their search for
1 arin Dill Now —.......-
Before Democrats
Aug 19 —
i -n were
♦ ROYAL OAK Mich Aug 19 ♦
♦ —Hans Pfte Niel .on ot Royal ♦
♦ Oak killed his wife and tour ♦
♦ children with gas fumes ahd ♦
♦ took his own lif? with poison +
> after s"tt.ng file to his house ♦
♦ here today Firemen who broke + |
; ♦ into the flaming house iound + (
♦ Mrs. Magdeline Nielson, and + ‘
full AsMM'latrd Frrss Leased Wire
UNITKI) PRENN SERVICE
...........“I
France. Bel- , dollars,
to convince I
their offer made | To Resume Trip Thursday
The Graf Zeppelin probably will
return to the Spa ' start on the third lap of its round-
r Thursday, taking
approximately four days for the
trip to Los Angeles The trip com-
pleted today, while representing its
longest traversed distance, did not
represent the Graf's greatest flying
time, Its first westward crossing of
the Atlantic, completed in October
15. 1928. took 111 hours and 38 min-
utes to travel approximately 6,300
miles.
A brief customs examination was
Compromise in
Debt Payments
to Be Studied
relaxation | cultural products,
curs. The Reduction of tt
ar-
Grim evidence of tragedy, this mas projecting ab >ve the water was all that remained visible of an
xcusion steamer which sank aftei a <1 Uision with a tug m the harbor at Ostend Belgium Ten lives were
<■' t and many persons were injured wh n the excursion craft, cut almost in two, >wdily went down Scores
<>1 iiassengers. grouped in the landward 1 e ot the vessel to wave larewi 11 to friends on shore, were swept into
the lifeboats
Kiot al Marioi
MARION. N C. Aug. 19 —One man
rss badly beaten, and several oth-
ers sustained bruises, wnci 1,600
sinkers at the CUnchlf?rl Cotton
14 11 here today prevented 40 non-
uu.on men from return! 1*7 to work
in the mill.
I IIUW
1 criNis
OUS.”
The brigades will be assigned /o
duty on the northern frontier, fiix
brigades will be drawn from Feng-
teln Province, two from Kirin, and
the remaining two from Heilung-1
king, said an official announce-
ment published by Kuotnin, offici-
al Chinese news agency
General Ho Chen Chun, personal
representative of President Chiang
Kai Shek, was said to be en route
from Peiping to Mukden with or-
ders from the Nationalist govern-
ment to assume command of the
entire military forces in Manchu-
ria after confering with governor
Chiang-Hsueh Liang
The official Kuomin agency also
carried a Mukden, dispatch which
said the government felt that while
Russians along the frontier "were
carrying on surreptitious acts which
were a menace to peace and order
and possibly might cause hostili-
ties between Chinese and Soviet
troops." Chang Hsueh Liang there-
fore has ordered border forces to
round up all white Russians.
ASHEVILLE. N C .
A’.'eviile National guarfis
otdried mobilized today for duly
,'.t Marlon. N C.. where 1.600 strik-
ers at the Clinchfield Cotton Mills
refused to permit 400 non-union
n?*r to go to work The troops were
< .lied out by N A. Townsend, rep-
lervntattve ot Governor O.
Ga.tner a. the scene.
H H. Davenport of Denton died
at a Dallas hospital at T:M Mon-
day morning according to word re-
ceived here. The body will be
brought to Denton, and funeral
services will be held at 10:90 Tues-
day morning at the First Methodist
Church. »
of the lighter type. The House did
not chantre this duty.
Restoration to the free list of
shingles and cedar lumber, ,which
the House made dutiable, and the
transfer to the free list of manga
nese ore and logs, existing rates on
which were not disturbed by the
House.
Increases in the House leather
duties and retention of the propos-
ed duties on hides and shoes all
of which are nftw admitted free ex-
cept a few kinds of leather
■■California for imagination. Ari-
zona for irrigation, New Mexico for
starvation, but Texas for civiliza-
tion." said B E Drake who has Just
returned from a three weeks auto
trip to the Pacific coast Mr and
Mrs Drake and J B Drake and
Miss Bob E Drake returned Satur-
day from a trip which took them
Hunt several of the western stales
works alone in the
j actual traiff rate-making, win com-
pare the committee rates with those
I approved by the House and lay
Ambassador plans for the long floor contests
. . ■ I Dawes is on his second visit to talk ahead.
supported by artillery attack I naval reduction and
ed teh Chinese military headquarwith Ramsay Macdonald.
GEORGE LEE KILLED IN AUTO
ACCIDEltT SUNDAY
DALLAS. Aug. 19—Funeral ser-
vices tor George W Ize. 68. who
died Sunday morning in a local
hospital as the result of an auto-
mobile accident on Maple Avenue
earlier in the day. will be held
Monday at 3 p. m from the resi-
dence of his son, W S. Les.
a deep conviction
President's secretary I demands cannot be met
Also in the valise was a letter ad- |
dressed to Mrs W C. Edwards. 10?
Brandon Street. Beaumont, and a
clipping indicating Mrs. Edwards
had charge of a children's hour ov-
er station KFDM at Beaumont.
Left Two Weeks Ago
BEAUMONT, Aug 19 Mrs W.C
Edwards, for whose body the East |
river in New York was dragged, left 1
. seriously. In fighting last night and
| today between members of the So-
cialist. Schutzbund and the Anti-
Socialist Heimwehr nt Saint Loren-
zen
Tire Heimwehr. armed with a ma-
chine gun and with Snipers firing
from the tower of the town hall,
exacted the greatest toll, killing one
Socialist and injuring those twelve
whose wounds were regarded a.s
grave Other casualties were divid-
ed between tile two factions
The Socialists, participating in a *
party banquet, were taken by sur- j
prise, believing the Hetmwer mem- ,
clash Chinese officials
twelve Soviet workmen and
them to Harbin
A Harbin dispatch said tele-
graph lines to Progranichnaya had
I been cut and accused Russians of
sabotage The dispatch also said
three men were killed when the en-
gineers’ quarters near the railroad
station there were bombed Chinese
alleged it was the work of Russians
carrying on the work of Sabotage
The Chinese also reported a man
was killed by guards when he at-
tempted to dynamite the Sungari
bridge near here this morning.
( lashes Confirmed ‘
PEIPING Aug
A good rain now probably w.m':d
■ C -
I House had been opened
SHANGHAI, Aug. 19.— >■♦■♦<•♦»»»■».» 11»
The Chinese Nationalist gov- , -------- —
ernment has ordered inobili- 1 a ■ > .■ oan
zation of 10 additional brig- 1_R | UL|J I M I ||L
adea of Manchurian troops Mrl | lILll I El U wa 1
....... .... |U‘Uli,‘K 100,000 men atid I . .
tion and the vl*it will include the , now views ‘‘the Sino-Russian ■■ll | | gill Mil 111 ,l1'' waU*r without a chance of rea< hing
as increasingly seri-1 |jU I I Uli IlHW ~ 1 ■' -1!'*5*'.I --i
SIX BU
■
■ sO
: w -'M
DENTON, TEXAS, MONJAY AITERNOON, AUGUST 19, 1929
Man Kills Wif<>.\
Emir Children anti J >■
iCtnnniils S it i c itl<
Reduction of the House tariff cn
Cuban raw sugar from 2 40 cents a
pound to 220 cents The uresent
; rate Is I 76 cents
Elimination of the three-cent in-
crease voted by the House in the
duty on- raw wool, leaving 14 at 31
1 cents a pound.
Increases in the House duties on
mother'’"
In a valise which police located
in the Pennsylvania station through
a baggage check Inclosed with the
note, were found two letters of in-
troduction for Miss Lolo Enloe of
Beaumont. Tex , to New York song
publishers The letters, referring to
Mlsa, Enloe as a song writer, were
written on stationery of the office
of Vice-President Curtis and
signed by a brother of the
President's secretary
Chineae Reinforcen^nts Arrive
TOKYO Aug 19.—Rengo News
dispatches from Manchuli. Man-
cuhrta, today said the first of the
large Chinese reinforcement ar-
mies which are being rushed to the
western Manchurian border had,
arrived there, equipped with moch- i pound
LITTLE ROCK. Art.. Aug 19.—
'.'fix persons wero burned to death
and several others injured or buy
<d in u fire in a rooming house
here t jday.
Explosion of a gas cooking stove
. tarted the fire which trapped the
victims in their upatairs rooms The
Hous? was a 14-room frame struc-
blaze spread rapidly
Two More l.»|»
Ahead of the Graf Zeppelin lay
two more laps before completion of
its world tour, from Tokyo to Los
) Angeles—which as the Gral flies
i should be about 5,470 miles—and
! from Los Angeles to Lakehurst. 2,-
' 500 miles or 7.970 miles total.
' The average speed of the Zeppe-
1 lin from Friedrichshafen to Tokio
. was just in excess of 84 miles an
! hour This, when tt la considered
I that but three the dirtgtbles five
1 motor* were kept running during
I most of the trip, was exceptionAUy
good and about 15 nines per hour
in ascess of what Dr. Hugo Ecken
er. the Zeppelin's toaster, had es-
NEW YORK Aug ' 19 -Police!
were dragging the east river tixlav |
’ a young Texas I
matron who disappeared shortly
after she had appealed to vice-Pres- :
Ident Curtis to help her enter a ca-
reer as a r<mg writer
A woman believed to be Mrs W
C. Edwards of Beaumont. Tex . on
Tb? I Saturday night walked up to a ht-
' House tariff bill, carrying hundreds I tie girl near the Brooklyn Bridge Reparations
of rate changes approved by R< - j handed her a note and asked the I Represcnti
publican members of the Senate fi-
nance committee, moved another
Stalling"- “,nw I a 560- '■
i pound bale cf cot:nn ?.! rnn.iy morn
ing
M M Snulre1 g T'ed two bal.’s
Satu-day rflemocn and sold one
of the bales for 17 50 cents per
'4 -W -
, - ir TV
Hii UW'
... 4-4^ -
• 4* J
acBv _______
bers to be holding a demonstration ,
at Thoerl They claimed to have!
been unarmed and to have attend-1
ed the feast unprepared for trou- j
ble
The fighting was the result of)
the Socialists scheduling a speaker
who was distasteful to Heimwehr
members
il
Saturday, Aug. 10:
7:30 a m —Landed at Friedrich
shafen, completing first lap of the
round the-world flight, 4,200 miles
in 55 hours. 24 minutes
Wednesday. Aug 14
10:34 p. m —Left F
en
Thursday. Aug. 15:,
4 30 a m— Paaoed over Berlin.
2 30 p m—Crossed the Soviet
frontier near Dwinsk, (Duenaburg,
Latvia >.
Friday, Aug 16
3 30 a in Passed over Vyatka,
600 miles east of Moscow
10 30 a. m.—Dropped postcard* at
Ktzel, tn the Urals, uh the Siberian
| border
Saturday. Aug 17:
7:40 a. m.—First direct message to
Tokio gave position as 750 miles
west of Yakutsk
Sunday. Aug IB:
1 a. m.—(Approximate)—Reached
eastern coast Of Asia at port of
Ajan on the Sea of Okhotsk.
11 a. m.—Crosstd Raisso-Jspanasa
frontier at BsChalien. following the
Gulf of Tartary South
6 p m—Passed over Mororan
Hokkaido. Japan.
11:30 p. m.—Passed over Shlog-
ama, Rikusen Prefecture.
Monday, Aug 19
1:60 a m —Sighted over Kasima-
gaura. Naval airdrome
2:35 a. m. —Flew over Tokio.
4 27 a. m—Landed at Kasumi-
gaura airport, completing trip of
6,500 miles in 101 hours, 53 min-
utes.
About 150 business men of Fort
Worth are scheduled to be here
Friday evening on a good will tour,
according to C. O. Cotton of the
Fort Worth Association of Com-
merce, here to make arrangements
for the party
Otis Fowler, manager of the Den-
ton Chamber of Commerce,
Monday that the party would
entertained about 7 o'clock at City
Park and that a program for the
occasion probably would be an-
nounced Tuesday or Wednesday
TOKYO. Aug. 19.—The Graf Zeppelin, giant liner
Of the air, landed at Kaaumigaura airport, 40 miles north-
east of Tokyo, at 6:27 p. nt. today (1:27 a. m. Pacific
standard time) completing the most perilous trip of its
globe circling journey, the flight of nearly 7,000 miles
from Friedrichshafen, Germany, in approximately 102
hours.
The dirigible, fresh from a Jaunt |
of 6,432 miles across Eastern Eu-
rop?. Siberian Tundra and Asiatic
Mountain land, arrived over this
city at 4 35 P M. (2:35 A M ESTi
1 just one minute more than 100 hours
from tune it left Friedrichshafen,
1 Germany, 'flhursday 4 34 A M
<10 34 P M Wednesday EST>
1 Atter ap|>earing over Tokyo and
Yokthaina the Graf hastened back
I to Kasumigaura. naval air port, and
1 at 6 27 P M in the cool of the set-
ting sun was grounded It had been
I In the air 101 hours 53 minutes and
j had traveled approximately 6.500
| miles
) Tiie appearance over Tokyo
marked unofficially at least, end of
1 the second lap of the Zeppelin's
j round the world tour which began
at Lakehurst. N J . 10 40 P M EST.
' Wednesday, August 7, with the first
j lap completed Saturday Aug 10 at
j 7 03 a. m. with landitt; at Fried-
richshafen The 4,200 miles was
covered in 55 hours and 24 mln-
1 utes.
i
With cotton picking gen-
eral in all parts of the coun-
ty, the.two gms here are < v
pected to be in full epera-
tioli by the middle o
week, operators sa!J
. <lay.
Two bales <>f cotton ’’ re ■ .nned
Monday and two v t-- ginned Sat-
urday with more’<■
be receivtd Mo-J
, Will Gastor
bulee of lint '
s ed cotton
’ sold the b le
pound
C V
Yield short
According to farmers nhrt have
ginned cotton here, production Is >
till? yeio
' Farmers estimate they v.:I! father
, .1 1-8 to 11 bale p : a<i" a,
though some o; the yields will lie
tn fi»c
I Pr. tk ..
timated ft wobld make.
THE HAGUE Aug 19 Repre- | Aboard the Zeppelin were 60 per-
sentatlves of five creditor powers, sons, 40 crew and officers and 20
France. Italy, Belgium. Japan and | passengers of whom Lady Grace
Great Britain, met today to go Drummond Hnv was the onlv wo-
Fal) temperatures did not last
long Saturday's high stood at 99
and Sunday brought two degrees
ligiher with a maximum of 101.
Sunday nigl« wks very pleasant
with a low of 73. Continued warm
weather is expected for tonight and
Tuesday; rain has been forgotten
so far as the local weather bureau
Is concerned
Important Changes
Anu>ng tmfportant changes n
rates approved by the finance ma-
wray east of Manchuli but the Chi- ■ so that when he had concluded his jority are
nese troops responded with rifle and , conversations with the premier he i — ’
The Russians I would make a tour of the Scottish
YC4I1FV hinrhlonrlc its r» 11
WlUlUIrW KIWI IWU uuuin. VIUUVCW
military casualties were six killed
while two Chinese civilians
wounded by shell fire.
The consular reports also con-
firmed newp of several minor
clashes on the Eastern frontier near
Sulfenho in which infantry, artil-
lery and aircraft took part
Six lieatha in Concord
CONCORD N H . Aug 19 —Num-
ber of victims of the fire which
, twrpt the ixome of Marshall French
truck driver, last Friday night to-
day stood »t six
French himself was the sixth to 1
d e He expired at a hospital where
Ins 18 month-old daughter, Esther
last of his four children had died.
The other three. Charles, 5 Mar-
shall Jr , < “ ~“
were trapped in the House tateth?
Mukden dispatch to the same Lint cotton. 17 60 crBte; eotton in bor's boy. who was helping to care
atency said Governor Chang Hsueh ^.d g«) cents; cotton seed * ’ ’
Liang had appointed General Wang
Shu Chang commander of the Man-J
cuhrta forces at present erg route to
the Siberian border and had sum-1,
moned a military council to meet I b-'. very \ho'4
Tire Manchuli report said calm fro,n
had been restored in that area af-
ter the Soviet raid on Daiainor. al- [better,
though the town itself wax desert -1
ed and Manchuli in panic after the: help late cc’ton bt't'thn earh <
ton will not b greatly benefited
is thoir.ht
The grad'-of the cotton 1.:
cellent, however, all that has been
tinned grading good middling thus
far
a long journey;
will you please send this stuff to my demands ....
I percentages of division of tile rep- ! the-world tour
arations payments
Pending wlmtevcr change (the
ineetin; might make in the attitude
of either clique concerned, the Brit-
ish and the delegations from the
other lour nations remained firm
in their positions, that is. that
Great Britain considers It useless
to go ahead with the conference un-
less her demands are met and from 1
the other, a deep conviction the I
I made before the 20 passenger, all
. of whom were well and In good
) spirits, left the hanger Crowds of
I Japanese Breeted each person cor-
I dially.
A formal reception at the airport
-F/. . • I followed. Dr. Sckener and Admiral
If it II ^OCiallStS t TaJ'ak‘ir*be' Minister of the Navy,
| exchanging felicitations, despite in-
terruptions frogi the cheering of the
immense crowds
Visitors Entertained
Police and military cordons were
cordially broken by curious ones,
anxious to Ret a nearer view of the
visitors who had descended from
the air In a spectacle never before
seen in the Orient
Refreshments, consisting of dried
chestnuts, dried cuttlefish and sakl
were served in accordance with tra-
ditional Japanese ceremony in
greeting visitors. Sakl is the Jap-
anese national alcoholic beverage
and is distilled from rice
The officers and crew or the Graf
were entertained at Geisha dinner
as guests of the commandant of
Kasumlgaura naval airjwrt, relax-
ng from thee strain of the gi/at
flight from Friedrichshafen by ob-
servinl: the dancing of graceful
Geisha girls. The passengers pre-
j pared to leave for Tokyo by special
train
■ step in its long legislative journey >
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 4, Ed. 1 Monday, August 19, 1929, newspaper, August 19, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335794/m1/1/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.