The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 164, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 10, 1928 Page: 2 of 14
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PAG 2-THE FORT WORTH PRESS—APRIL 10, 1928
THE PASSING OF CHAUNCEY DEPEW; FUNERAL CEREMONY AND NOTABLES IN ATTENDANCE
4
Liquor Indictments Keep
d
1
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rd
2
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dt
44
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)
t
ft
-
gm-
The Fort Worth
government '
1 helfum plant will be continued
I h.
31
210
"en
2
NA
1
Convention Seen.
Lay Down Ultimatum to Farm Bloc Demanding Change
in McNary-Haugen Measure
t
s0.
>
Dy Untted Press.
WAWFS FAWIS TWICE
Southern
Senator*
Democratic
delegations to be recognized in tfle
WASHINGTON
$150,000,000 will be made avall-
TIME ;
able for cotton alone.
"T
2. Withdrawal
I farm cotton
the equalization fee.
3
9
involving
7
At Last!
the
Semtnole New
An Electric Clock for the Home
t
170th Infantry Outfit
' 1 —
IF ;
Guard.
FLOOD SUBSIDING
PADLOCK DRIVE ON
Convenient Terms
today. Some priced as low as $19.00.
1
wizard of the Klan.
LUMBERMEN KEGISTER
3:
3
week,
out of danger.
to
«
*
P t 5
A
4
E
“e da
SECOND HELIUM
PLANT PLANNED
There seven
from among
today.
Among those present are C*L
Theodore Roosevelt, a member of
the council for eight years; How-
Aspirin I* prepared from salf-
cylle add, which comes from car-
efell-er Jr.; above him, Nicholas Murray Butler; lower right, Charles Evans Hughes; above him, P. E. Crowley, presi-
dent of the New York Central Railroad. Depew was the chairman of the New York Central Board.
that this work*, even if the writ-
ing has been bleached by chem-
icals, so that the method offers
another way of detecting altered
checks or other document*.
*3
4
r 2
■. 1d
means, and was entirely invisible
to the eye, had altered the fibers
of th? pAf>PF, A fact wnicn was
shown by the ultraviolet photo-
graphs.
Judge Wiison busy
Four line* were assessed
Federal Court by Judge J.
Wiison Tuesday..
in
C.
and A. B. Armstrong, *100 for
possession.
WARDLAW TO OPEN
CAMPA GN AT CENTER
New Si
Pro
in 1923, Barclay testified.
Sensational charges against of-
other than Scout matter*.
The council meeting will end
Thursday.
CISCO FIRE DEATHS
PROBE IS CONTINUED
10 v•
FOUR FINED IN
FEUER AL COURT
OKLAHOMA GUARD
* UNIT TRANSFERRED
-
i
Everyone can own a Telechron on these special terms
which are offered for a limited period. Select your model
SHORTENTERS
JUDGE’S RACE
Bureau Makes Contract
With Amarillo Firm
A second government helium
FROM YOUR LIGHT
SOCKET
OKLAHOMA RACING
COMMISSION NAMED
SCOUT COUNCIL’S
SESSION S OPENED
Commissioner Doran Announces
Campaign Against Lquor
By United Press. . —u
WASHINGTON, April 10. —
Prohibition Commissioner Doran
DETECTS FORGERIES Ily vnitea pros
------ HOLDENVILLE, Okla . Apr. 10.
SINCLAiR USES
PACIFIC "WAD"
I
35
LIQUOR FIRE KILLS MAN
By United Press.
COLORADO, Tex.Aprt 1°k
Monroe Boyd, negro Jan*' E
। three months' tour of the Orient
I last fall will be basis for a lec-
i ture by Dean Walter Williams of-
writing appears transparent on a
----- ---------He has found
Nationa) Officers Attending San
Francisco Meeting
123
2
By United Press.
OKLAHOMA CITY, April 10.
. *3*1
sponsor; Walter W. Head, pres-
dent of the council, and Daniel
4
EUEALIMMLD 1095
MAIN AT SIXTH
Fort Worth
mhowor
■nut aocs
r 2
: 2
I
21
,"e
2 ■ 583: :
Little Damage to He Cauned by
Vermont Dam Break.
L • -
F *
A
flclala of Indiana were made by
the R«T. John F. Strayer, one of
the defendants in the suit.
Strayer charged that officials
' 2
g
&
By Units* Prens.
PERRY, Okla., April ID —Ap-
pointment of a racing commisslon
to have full charge of the race
track barns and racing programs
at the Noble County Fair Associa-
tion race track here has been an-
ihe casket is shown in front of the altar steps. Only a few hundred of the great throng that gathered outside the
church could be admitted to the church, and these included many of the nation's greatest. Lower left is John D. Rock-
2
47
FLAGG MOOR, Derbyshif. day. MeAdoo praised Walsh high-
Eng.. April 10—The Prince of ly a» bls cholee for the presidency.
Wales fall twiea in one race on ———---
WOR
VOL
IS
tijee
mpa,
gj 4
voltages fro
other, it mt
l tain in futu
many times
achieved. V
are produce
of the moot
probably wil
Tl.
—Word has been’ received from
Adjutant General Barrett an-
mt
6
The new company will have a [ Jackson and Joe McClelland. They
full strength of 60 men and will | are to appoint their own chalr-
mean the addition of a *12,000 ; man at their next meeting,
payroll to the city. .....-—*.....
,"o
’ 2
The last rites for Chauncey M. Depew were, as ae na.i rcy...^, of extreme simplicity. Here is shown the inte.iior
of St. Thomas' Church, New York City, where hundreds of nationally prominent persons gathered to honor'the .mem- I
1 ■ .
See Window Display
539
e,
ed guilty to the charge while ; plant la to be established in Am-
Cates claims he was delivering,! arillo, a United Press dispatch
sugar for Brown and knew noth- Tuesday indicated.
ing of the alledged still. Contract haa been signed by
Others to receive fines were j the Bureau of Mines with the
Mabel Lawrence, 1100 for pds-1 Amarillo OU Company fora,
session of liquor; Will H Rodg- . plant at Amarillo for the extree-
ture of so large a sum.
Helium in used as a non-in- '
T IGHT, Heat and Power have for some time been avail-
L able through your,electric wires. Now comes accu-
rate timekeeping with the Telechron electrically-controlled
clock for the home. Think what it means to have a clock
that you never have to wind, regulate, clean or oil! Just
plug into the nearest light socket and forget dock worries
for good."
' Seeks Place in the 96th
District Court .
W. M. Short, former member
of the law firm of Capps, Can-
tey, Hangar, and Short, and now
in private practice of law in
Fort Worth, Tuesday filed for
judge of the 96th district court
with County Democratic Chair-
man E. B. Randle.
In the primary election of
July 26, Short will oppose Judge
Hal Lattimore, who is serving
his second term as a district
judge.
Short has been a reeldent of
Fort Worth 34 years and has,
been practicing law here since
heavily felt in the section which
has recently recovered from the
disastrous storm of April 12.
1927.
WNidcw8
8
F
h 1
c: bolte acid, a product of coal tar.
" !
h I
*HsFPk, April 10.— Regis-
tration of lumbermen for the
42nd annuel convention of the
Lumbermen’ Association of Tex-
at was in full owing at the Rice
Fotei here today. Business sea
s'on a were tn start utter noon
N""" than 1000 delegatos were ory end his deputies ar
expected tor the convention. to be out of danger.
Hendqunrters of win Have Charge of Turf Event*
_ " at County Fair
k §
temporary convention organth-
tion.
Rely on Ruth
[every day in the monthly
Business girls who let painful
perfods interfere with duty have
not learned of Midol. This remark-
able preparation neither hinders
nor hastens the natural systemic
process, but it does stop the pain.
Midol is not a narcotic. It is Just
aa safe as it is direct and certain.
It is only common sense to use it.
You have probably tried other
things for periodic pains, but so
had the many thousands of women
who today bless Midol. It brinpt
complete ease in five to seven min-
uteo. Or prevents pain even start
ing, if taken in time. Every drug-
store hae the trim little aluminum
ease of Midol to tuck In yd purse,
for fifty cent*! — Advertisenent
Ignatius de Loyola founded the
Order of Jesults.
•rd F. Gillette, Chicago, chief
Activities of the Ku Klux Klan ---—------i— —
extended into the University of ... -,a.A. , ■ .Ai,
Pittsburgh and the order made ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT
a gigantic secret service organ!-{
ration in Pennsylvania, it was
testified in federal court today'
at th? trial to oust th? Klan from Alterations in Documents Can Be
ths State. - ! * Revealed by Method.
RoyF. Ba rclay, former exalt- ROME. April 10.—Ultrs-vlolst
ed.cyelopsin.Pittsburshand.star 1 light, the essentlal health-giving
witne n orthede fend , 7 he 1" constituent of sunshine, has a
u the Lad a? the XLcal led new use. It can be used to take
to.th e,stand,at the, open ing.of photographs to reveal alterations
court in documents, reports Prof. Carlo
A member of th. Klan from , Bonacinitothe, Itallan.photo-
the Pitt University lodge partici- graphieumagagine "FivitaFoto
pated in as attempted lynching ;raficaTtalfaban , Heha8 found
_ __ _ a n",., I, that writing on a paper which
ot a.negroat Beaver.ESalle, Pa., had been erased by chemical
initial control of the Democratic^
State Convention here today ap-
parently has been gained by tub1
so-called “administration - Smith-j
----te
-I 'A*1" n1
announced today federal dry|Vt, were beginning to subsld
forces will start a padlock cam- today, Clarence Chase, town
paign against dty liquor law1 sheriff, told the United Press.
-,G
2.
1 ibe High Peak Hunt here today,
but remounted. <
George Beard, national commander.
Col. Roosevelt said hl* busi-
; fl
lii
evidence. A State Department
clerk was ealled to verify that ' 4
Fon “aarch,er6az/ o: '"•""SMITH-REED FORCES ;
19:3. Then L. T. Rule, Pueblo, I VICTORS IN CAUCUS 1
Colo., banker, testified to a *90.- __________
0n0 deposit of Sinclair bonds InControl of Oklahoma Democratic
By United Press,
PITTSBURGH, Pa., April 10.— house was burned.
the court house died .ar' Emi
from burns recetved w/n !'MCI
gallons of alcohol explod,Pr..NE3
county jail last week, onnourE
seven men. Sheriff R.orsit.PN
of deputlel
death.
PITTSBURGH COLLEGE - Two of three suspects arrested
LINKED WITH KU KLUX released.
. ... .—.— . . To date neither of the investi-
Klan Activities Extended to Uni- gations has disclosed evidence to
versity. Witness Says support the theory that the fam-
tee next Tuesday, Chairman Nye
announeed today. By agreement
with government counsel in the
oil prosecutions, the committee
will not go into the Continental
Trading Company deal but will
confine its investigation to other
matters, Nye said.
STORM ON RIO GRANDE
EDINBURGH, Texas, April 10.
Unseasonable cold in the lower
Rio Grande Valley Monday, ac-
companted by hail and rain, dam-
sged the tomato, bean. cotton and
potato crops. A small twister
caused small damage-at Browna
ville.
Lieutenant Carl B. Elelaon, who “scouting" and not "polittes."
—-- -------- Pa-t n—--I He refused to talk of anything
the ELECTRIC TIMEKEEPER
nouncing the transfer to this city
from Seminole of Company L,
179th Infantry of the National
these theories have been submit-
ted to Chairman McNary of the ।
Senate Agriculture Committee by
Simmons and Smith, acting for '
the whole bloc of 16 cotton-pro-
during States, the United Press
learned today. It is indicated 1
McNary may agree to their in-
...................i................. ♦
The amendments
the light, and developed, th.
“The roads are flooded In some
places and the water in the Con-
necticut River is High," Chase1
said, “but there seems to be lit-
tle danger.*'
"The river is higher than it
usually Is in the Spring freshets,
but nowhere near the flood condi-
tions of last November."
Chase reported, as far as he
had heard. there hadbeen no loss
of life or injuries.
P,ea
■ «,. ■
hle admission to the bar in 1999.
He was graduated from old Fort
Worth University, where for five
years he was commandant of ca-
dets.
For six years Short was a mem-
ber of the board of education,
and was its chairman for two
years, before he resigned in
1925.
The announcement of Short to
the first to be made for a dis-
lly was murdered before
Southern Senators Seeking WLEWAS.TQ-RESEMSS.
Protection for Cotton Area xtur Material Gathered Dur-
_»____ ine Hecent Trip seize by officers during
Material gathered during me"
of autocratic
PROPERTY RENDITIONS DUE
Rendition of property for coun-
.taxes must bo completed by
E221.20, Deputy Ansessor Brown
USEP. iced Tuesday. Assessment
225»1 operty by a special squad
J will be finished this
W. I
4252 • - M
country about Rock Springs is gray background,
reported as a result of the Easter
norther. The losses will be
Key, Roy Hank, *600 each for
would be selected
the producers of
GRAND JURY CONVENES
The Tarrant County grand jury
for the spring term of Criminal
District Court convened in regu-
lar session for the first time
Tuesday. The panel will serve
until the adjournment of court in
June.
first "aerial hospital" in the
world have been announced by
the director of the Metehnikoft
Hospital here, Professor Oppel.
The plans involve the construe-
tion of a large platform, hang-
ing from four huge aerostats,
and kept from floating off into
space by a land anchor. This
platform, with glass walls as
shields against the wind, will be
kept aloft at a level suitable for
tubercular patients.
Prof. Oppel explains that the
air which tubercular patients
find in mountains spots exists
right in Leningrad, or any other
city. It is merely a matter of
rising high enough to locate it.
An aerial hospital such as he
propose*, he claims, will be
cheaper and more practicable
than the journeys to strange
place* usually prescribed by phy-
sicians.
Three Witnesses Called
By Teapot Committee
.0 ‘ I This Indication came with the
By Untted Prres, .1a .1 •«_
WASHINGTON April 10 _ announeement that the executive
Three witnesses have been sub- eommittee hart assured me Reed-
poenaed for a special bearing or Smith delegation from 7
the Senate Teapot Dome Commit-1 headed by R L. Davidson, would
- - ■ — 1 be the one of two contesting Tulsa
---
curd. The order for the trans- nounced. The commission is coin-
fer has been sent to Washington , posed of R. J. Huston, M. B.
for confirmation. [ Woodruff, John Young, K. L.
cotton.
The. dispute over the cotton
features has held up final vote
in th* Senate. If McNary agrees
to them with perhaps some minor
changes, a final vote on the bill
will be in proapect tomorrow.
Motorcade From Fort Worth ic
Ber Friend* to Rally
Friends of Louis J. Wardlaw.
1 Fort Worth candidate for Gover-
nor, are planning to motor to
Center Saturday for the opening
of Wardlaw's campaign.
It was stated at Wardlaw's
headquarters Tuenday that 20 or
36 cars would make the trip for
the address and rally.
1
month. In a letter received by
John H. Elliott of Los Angela* to-
Thomas W. Miller. former alien , —
property custodian eonvieted in a | Grand Jury nd < oroner Still In-
New York Court of conspiracy to । vestigatingCase: authority from the proposed gov-
defraud the government while in nytnit-arress 1 erning board so that supplement-
office. > EASTLAN, Texar, April 10.—; ary farm councils would have
Harry N. Blair, New York, for-' A grand jury and a coroner's In- ( veto
-mer eastern treasurer of the Re- quest continued their separate in-
-publlean 1920 presidential cam- vestigations today of the fire
paign. — which destroyed the farm home of
Whiskey, Beer and Wine Included ‘ signals from Captain
o/ dt. i nomas ^.nuren, rr ew i am cuy, wnere nunarcas oj na.iionauy prommeni persons gamcrea to nonor'ine mem- i ' In Selzures Wixin: A’ P° int.Barrow.. -
ory of the philosopher, financier and statesman—a man who was in politics before Abraham Lincoln became President. Arrests for violation of federal r ns. an . 2 8 --.sompen " • B - rane acowaa
" .... i- -hei- i- 4--- -2 .. ---------- -4 Ah------ “h-t -th--” -t-- “h prohibition lews in Texas, totaledjwere preparing at Point Barrow
264 in March, according to a re- ; for a hight aeross the North POle
port fpsued Tuenday.from the of- l “> Spitsbergen, have not been
flee of the 17th district adminis-1 heard from for six days.
trator. . . Their long silence was unae-
There were 236 cases recom- (counted for except for the possi-
mended for prosecution in U. S. ble explanation that their radio
District Courts, the report shows., had broken.
Elghty-five stills, 1035 gallons -----------
violators.
This follows a United States
Supreme Court decision yesterday
which upheld the validity of the
padlock procedure and which Do-
ran called prohbitioh’s greatest
victory this year.
Doran explained the new pad-
lock drive will be speeded up.
He said the padlock process
works well in th* cities, while
sending violator* to jail is the
best method in rural communi-
ties.
11
hl
gA
7™. , ^corporation in th* MIL If he Missouri Uhl versify nt 8 p. m
WASHINGTON, Aril 10. — Taoea it means the bill .will gor Thursday at Texas Christian Unt:
Southern Democratic Senator, door,neqnthe."Eolyersity. His lecture subject will
have laid down an ultimatum to 16 more votes-probably enough be, "The New Far East."
the farm bloc to change the Me-|to pas3 the Senate over the ex- Dean Williams roaderthe trip
Nary-Haugen farm bill so as to1 peeled veto of President Cool- to ths Orient in interest of the
give the lull protection to cotton j idge. • Pan-Pactfie Press Conference. .
Tulsa, producers. i The Southerner* pointed out Dr. Willlams’is known thruout
—•1d Half a "dozen amendments have that Mr. Coolidge in his last veto the world as one of the most ar-
been drawn by the Southerners, message complaining that the dent advocate, of journalism and
ied by Senator Simmons, Demo- *306,000,000 revolving fund then heads the School of Journalism
erat, North Carolina, and Smith, proposed would hardly handle of Missouri University.
The three subpoenaed are:
Jury deciding the case of Har-
ry Wadhams was dismissed after
being unable to reach a verdict.
Wadnats denied respousibility
for a pint of gin and four bot-
tie, of buer, said to have been’
seized at bls Washington Avenue
residence. His wife entered a
plea of guilty to possession of
the liquor and was fined *260.
A jury was hearing the trial
of Ewing Cate, charg", jointly
with C. F. Brown for unlawfully
having property for the manu-
facture of liquor. Brown plead-
• 17 me*
83,
R. N. Jackson near Ciseo last Sat-
urday and burned Jackson, his
wife and their six children to
Democrat, South Carolina, with cotton alone in years of over- .........
two ideas in view; production, they did not believe ArNIAI neniA. .c
1. Increase of the equalization the *250,000,000 revolving fund AERIAL HOSPITAL IS
fee revolving fund from *250,- now proposed would be sufficient; ni ANNEn IN RIICCIA
000,000 to *400,000,000 so that to care for their commodity. j r—HIIEU II* nUd9R
eira nan ana wni h- mad. avan. In addition they wanted safe-. . —.------
guards against the. proposed Tubercnlar Tatlonte Would Be
board handling cotton as It would Aided by Unigue Idea
wheat and corn and other prod-»yEnit4Pranm
nets. Under their amendments, I L E NINGRA D. April 10. —
the board could not act in re-1 Plans for what fa probably the I
veto power over the board inispeet to cotton except-upon in- - -
case of a dispute as to levying of1 dorsement by afmajority of the
---- **— council of seven.
era. *500-for operating a still, tion of helium from natural
L e
sa-
By Unite Press.
BARNET. Vt, April 10.-
Flood waters, caused by th
bursting of the dam at GIImar
ho."
203, 2-
4
Claudius Huston, New York,
assistant to Blair.
SCAREDEFENSE
--'Opening Statements in Oil
Conspiracy Trial Are
Made to Jurors
BOLIVIA REGISTERS QUAKE
By Vnited Prena.
LAPAZ, Bolivia, Apr. 10.—
Earthquake shocks to strong
that they damaged,three seismo-
graphs were registered by instru-
ments here for 15. hours yester-
day. At the same time a slight
earthquake was felt in Lapaz.
It did no damage.
gh g‛FB
"PA
85 STILLS RA DED IN Radlo operators at the army sta.
TEXAS DURING MARCH
thruout the night and today for | dant of the council, and Daniel
the First Natienal Bank of Pu-
eblo May 29, 1922, by M. T.
Everhart, Fall’s son-In-law. This
was seven weeks after Fall
leased the Deme reserve to Sin-
clair.
Rush Smith, L. J. Sullivan, Ru- until the supply of hellum-bear- | triet Judgeship sgalnst a present
fus Shaw, R. P. Rodgers and Mrs. , ing gas in the Petrolia field is ! office-holder. Judge Bruce Young
Pete Fernandes were given 30 1 exhausted. Fort Worth plant is j of 4sth district court also has
days' sentence on pleas of guilty at present the only one of its j filed with Charman Randle,
late Monday. Mrs. Fernanon' j kind operated by the government. ' Candidates who filed with
sentence was suspended for one - Congress last year appropriat- ; Randle Monday included District
year, when it waa pointed out she ed a large sum for, the construc- I Clerk R. E. Neely, County Com-
te the mother of seven children. I tion of a new pipe line from the i missioner Joe F. Sehooler of Pre-
of whiskey, 797 gallons of beer. MeADOO BACKS WALSN
, nine gallons of wine, 69,600 gal-' nr ynited »»••
16ns of mash and 19 autos were LOs ANGELES, April 10—Wi:
peize by officers uring the | liam G. McAdoo, opponent of Al
a I month. i Smith for the Democratic nomina-
The value of property taken, tion four years ago, hopes to
exclusive of liquor, was *19.*55- make speeches for Senator Thom-
as J. Walsh In California this
doza, *100 each for possession;
I Ernest Marsh, Alfred Lovelace, !
Ruby Mills, *50 each for poses- Wikins ana Alde Haven’t Been
Heard From In Six Days
SEWARD, Alaska, Apr. 10—
the youngest being two months' | Nacona field to Fort Worth, but cinct 2, and Blister Mills, for
old. 1 before contract for its construe- ! public weigher of Precinct No. 1.
lines imposed were as follows: ' tion was let It was found that I
Edward Woods, possession and j the new source did not have life
having improper material, *500 enough to warrant the expendi- j
on each count; E. C. Schults, C. L.
By Untted Press.
WASHINGTON, April 10. —
Harty F. Sinclair will rely on a
“Pacific war scar*" to aid in ac-
quitting him of conspiring to de-
fraud th* government of Teapot
Dome naval oil reserve, his coun-
sel Indicated ss trial arguments
opened today.
Albert B. Fall, then Secretary
of Interior, granted him the Tea-
pot Dome lease in 1922 at a
Navy Department suggestion after;
Admiral J. K. Robison of the !
navy general board said there
was "menaee from the East," ac-
eerdius to Sinclair's attorney.
Daniel Thew Wright. •
Robison advocated storing up
huge supplies of battleship fuel
oil for emergencies in which 1
“guns might boom forth against
an Oriental enemy," and he i
wanted a pipe line from the
Wyoming fields, to the East, J
Wright said.
With this in mind, Wright de-|
dared. Fall granted the lease to
Sinclair, who built the pipe line. j
Drove Hard Bargain.
Fall drove as hard s bargain 1
with the oil magnate as he could, 1
Wright said, and at one time Sin- '
dair threatened to wathdraw
from the deal because its terms I
were so strict.
The "war scare" issue had 1
been raised previously but actual
evidence that such a menace ex-
isted bas never been presented.
Wright frankly admitted, on :
Sinclair’s behalf, that the oil man
had paid *2.12,000 to Fall short- '
ly after the Teapot Dome lease ।
wa* signed, but he said this mon- ,
ey was to pay for a third intereat ,
In Fall’s 700,000-acre New Mex-
ico ranch .property.
Bond Payment Cited.
Owen J. Roberts, government
attorney, opened the argument by !.
declaring the $ 233,000 payment '
the most Important item for. the
jury's consideration. He said the I
secrecy attending the transfer of
this money—all in Liberty bonds
—indicated It was not a legiti-
mate business tranaaetlon.
After the opening outlines, the
government began presenting its
9.
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An
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*5-3-
aiethgan as SSSJ; tirm
xt"kna ona Sefm naa an vor:
photographic plate or film for a
time, the plate loses its sensitivi-
ty, where It touches the writing.
Then, if it is briefly exposed ‘to
Reed" factions, caucus develop-
ments indicated.
202
egg 2 eise"ze
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NORTHER KILLS GOATS
"yXUsIN,"Tex., April 10,—Loss
of 25,000 young gosts in the hill
(Cuy 1•
WASHE
highest E
1 odun dE
volts, han
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and his am
at the DE
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tution of
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plying an
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with elecm
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upon a v m
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Relativ
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ularly thir
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and woune
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insulate tl
coil It is
tank of t
pressure <
square inc!
mi nts shot
open tank
pheric pre
the coil st
000.000 vo
Dr. Breit
higher volt
by using I
for the pas
cupled witi
plying to •
voltages al
Th.
The sign
achieveme n
when it is
the ends to
have been
ful attack .
atom. Tiie
a center st
electrons,
solar syster
cleus is the
are planets
electrons is
tration and
small, relat
mote diffici
Sir Erne
British phy
ment with
radium ha
out of lig
such as sot
and thus
of elements
now needed
and that is
Breit's worl
Electrons
from any e
are immen
high voltag
are light in
is needed,
which are s|
are projecte
being beste
from raditti
cles are air
speed that ’
s 11 3,800
Mor
The Carn
eists intend
them anothe
000 or mor
more power:
radium can
ler and wel
be obtained
the speedin
oms from '
have been i
By Increa
ett apparati
possession;. Clarence Groves, flammable gas for balloons and
*250, possession; Irene MeClus- dirigibles.
key. Stephen Hleks. L. B. Har----|
man, Mr. and Mr*. B. J. Cederee*. SISNAI ERAM pALAR "SANFRANCISCO, April 10.--
Mr*. Mary Bates and Juana Men- OlUNAL KVM rULAM The isth annual meeting of the
EXPLORERS AWAITED National Council of the Boy
■ Scout* of America opened here
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 164, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 10, 1928, newspaper, April 10, 1928; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1546048/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.