The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 177, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 26, 1923 Page: 1 of 8
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The Fort Worth Press
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FORT WORTH, TEXAS, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1923
1007 COMMERCE
, You
NEFF SUBMITS NINE NEW MEASUR
4
SPOTLIGHT
Viseountess
1
o
Special Session
A.
■
r
..
1
Props.
ker
set-
c
WinC
publication.’*
A
n,
relatives other than Daughterty’s
New York probe into the
before the
King murder because of frlend-
become water-
i
IE
T
MUMMIFYING
toll
.9.
Watson, 33, established
a new
C Rowland, Ad club; Lloyd 1
CivitM dub;
Mrs. J
X
‘(inset) and one of the hildren she hopes
r
"And we don’t hve to
th*
00
GFWA Would Join
year.
00
To Sail Pacific
ide U-Boat
Ho
Taft has bevu asked
Chief Ji
tinue to work
city
da
Afedi
Waltam
in
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la the o
mmi
he !
are
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T064#F49
HOME EDITION
Price Two Cents
ting
’o.
Second Message Broad
Program of Work for 1
HABEAS CORPUS
WRIT IS ASKED
BY YOUNGBLOOD
homeed:
• Price Two
28 PROMOTERS
AREN’T YET IN
U. S. CUSTODY
BULLET WOUND
PROVES FATAL
TO AGEDMAN
FIND MYSTERY
BOX IN SWAMPS
J. PLUVE HANDS
PHONE COMPANY
> CIG REPAIR JOB
SEARCH AUTO;
FIND LOOT OF
. SHOPLIFTERS
DAUGHERTY’S
SON CONFINED
Dallas Women Held, on New
Charges After Abandoned
Car Is Explored
dgg a
5"1
ea-
ket
ese
Hy
! of
cut,
cus-
The hearing on the application
was held Immediately by . Judge
CHEAP ICE WILL
CONTINUE HERE
Presidents of Clubs
stitute It; Two C
Approval. ■. 2a
CIVIC AFFAI
BUREAU T(
COFC BR
cable which had
soaked in places.
The Tuesday
A $20,000 bend for each let-
ter sent out ought to be surti-
cleat to atop the uee of malt*
in violation of federal laws. ___
Ham
n*w
ith
la
•n Fraina
Wive Centa
1
4
teveral of the ompanies, whone,
officer* have signed agreement.
hinaseir. and appear I
committee and testify.
Believe Passengers ,
And Crew Are Lost
Cal
for
By United Press.
SAN ANTONIO, Apr. 26.—A: C.
larly
t all
sea-
best
00
Youth Begs to Die, On.
Gallows With Brother
)O
Wells
Attorney General W. A. Keeling.
Youngblood to Mill in Jail.
another defendant in the
case, is arranging to make
Los Angelos
pounds to 30c
All claim the low price is slow-
ly ruining their business, but with
the sultry season on the threshold.
method tho
it because
sine* been
z‛
m,was
out the counsel of the
certed action would be
A SLEDGE HAM
It would mean a i
mer pounding away 4
tack hammer. The M
all Fort Worth would
any more proposed."
If the bureau is co
it is Hampton’s plan
I/E thank Sir Arthur Conan
/V Doyle for his spiritualistic
Attorney Puts It
Plain to Jurors
Literature About
City Is Inviting
orth
chet
i the
your
39
VOL. 2, NO. 177
"I‛m not familiar with it” or
“I prefer not to say anything” are
answers made by most of the Re-
publican leaders here to questions
about their attitude toward the
court. -
San Antonio Boys .
Danced 112 Hours
Francesca Gugllelmin
to be allowed to stay in
■ 2
A3
Ibra,
, all
00
presidents:
armen Llons
PRIMARIES
AMONG YI
r, ,,
",
‘We Aren’t Selling Any
More Stock Right Now’
Assault to Murder Chargee
Against D. H. Osborne is
Changed to Murder
Weather Forecast
Unsettied Friday. %
George M. Lucas, formerly an
associate of J. W. Carruth. is ex-
pected in Fort Worth within a
day or two from Los Angeles to
make bond Frank L. Moorman.
who would act a* chai
Hampton will appeal first i
P
5
bodies to cloth. By giving a body
treatmeat for an hour and a half
a day for two days. Injecting tor-
maldehyde. bichloride of mercury,
alcohol and glycerine, we chn put
it in a state so that it will not
decompose thruout centuries.
"There is nothing occult in the
art of mummificaton as used in
the days of Rameess Modern em-
balmers undratand th* ancient
And it may stick all summer,
ice men declare.
rie affairs will comprise 1
inaugurated by Hampton
affiliated with, the Fer
Ten jurors were selected
Thursday morning for the
trial of Lula Wilson, charged
with killing her husband. in
criminal district-et.
""This is juet a case of a
negro killing a negro— and
that negro happened to be
her husband.” H. P. Shead,
defense attorney is telling the
talesmen as they go on the
stand. The jury Is being se-
lected from a special venire.
Asks Permit to
Erect Building
(Asonfieti aut
(acturers alash-
foX’ <«e a 100
vision of paradise.
Spirits work in paradise, ac-
cording to Sir Conan, but they
do only the work they like to do.
The one-time writer of editorial*,
for instance. raises radishes and
cabbage. The telephone girl be-,
comes the actress she always
longed to be. The auto mechanic
write his long-dreamed-of novel.
'The hod carrier plays 6 trom-
bone in the band.
And so on down the line, each
to the work he likes best father
than the work which here below
is forced upon him.
Let's hope Doyle is right.
ship with the slain model.
The final papers for committ-
ment probably will be sought in
probate court here today or to-
morrow.
The reason for tie committment
was not announced.
a
They do not ass
ver method has
SPUDDERS.
Bescher, If.
white, b. •
Permisalon to put up a gal-
vanized iron building on Calhoan-
st. between Fifth and Sixth-sts,
he strueture to be 50x100 feet,
has been asked of City Hall by the
A. P. Mitehell Auto Co., Cadillac
dealera. *
REGULATING
♦
Line
erford
।
Store,
1:30 a.
Leave*
Drug
m. and
CotC.
Others now active are t
reau of way* and meana, a
tive bureau, and wholesaler
bora and manutacturers’ I
Formation of an insurance I
soon will bo completed.
committee investigating an alleged
speech of Youngblood before a
civie duh la — ------- ‘ -
world record for marathon danc-
ing today when he quit the floor
at Turner Hall here at 11:30 this
morning with 113 hours to his
credit. Watson was in the beat of
condition, physicians said. follow
ing his long grind. He commenced
at T: 30 p. m. Saturday with seven j
other men and women, none of
whom stayed over 60 hours. Fif
teen musician* worked in relays."
Baby Drowns in
HEARING IN CHICAGO.
A hearing was to be held Thurs-
day in Chicago in removal pro-
ceedings against Nathan H. Sang
and Max Hirech, alleged to have
been stock salesmen for the Gen-
eral Loe Development Interesta.
Purpose of the proceeding* la to
bring Bang and Hirsch here for
trial.
Release of a Philip Goldatein,
who was arreated with Song and
Hirsch in Chicago was ordered. He
proved he waaa’t the Philip Gold-
stein the authorities.were after.
AsKED
WASHINGTON, April 26-
id in hand with
to civic move-
Hero's one war that housewives
will agree doesn’t come under the
famous definition attributed to
He proposes to open the Hous-
ton bureau in connection with
the public service commissioner’s
office there.
Fort Worth ba* no public serv-
ice commissioner—but It has
plenty of need of one. The cen-
tral collection bureau could be
worked either with or without
such an official, however.
mpany
By United Press
TALLAHASSEE. Fla., April 26.
—A cypress box buried in the
swamp land near Clara was be-
lieved today to contain a dead
boy's tale of brutality in Florida’s
convict camp.
The box—unopened on protests
of attorneys—is believed to be te
Hamilton, who is not expected to
act until late* today. The legisla- - - -
tive committee was vepresented by the cheap price I* holding its own.
, - — * ■ A
By United Press
AUSTIN, April 26—4 Application
for a writ of habeas corpus for
the release of Hull Yeungblood, of
San Antonio, sentenced to the
Travis-co jail last night after be-
ing adjudged in contempt of the
joint legislative committee was
filed with District Judge James
R. Hamilton this morning.
Youngblood who refused to be
sworn and testify before the joint
ns i . The auto concern says it will re-
Hands With CofC place the temporary building with
______ * permaneht one at the end of the
This is d
ways of |
you want.
By Unites Presa
LONDON, April 26.—The entire
passenger list and crew of the
Portugese mail boat Mossamedes,
which went aground on Cape
Frio, in Africa is missing in life
boats, according to a Lloyds dis-
patch today. Thore was no sign
of life on board, it was said, and
account* of the manner in which
Tabert was held on the ground by
a boot on bl* neck while he was
whipped, ia aought in connection
with the legislature'* investiga-
tion of the state peonage system.
"It's a secret!"
That's what everybody around
the Rialto theater is shouting to
those who ask:
"Who’s going to marry who to-
night at the show?”
They won't tell. At • p. m.,
tho. strain* of the Lohengrin will
pour forth and there’l be a real
wedding that follows.
Rev. J. Frank Norris will offi-
ciate. When friends go to him
confidentially and asks whozit, he
smile* while he answers:
“It's a secret."
dieted in the Revere Oil Co. case,
is said to be in the federal peril-
tantthFv at Atlanta ana T. If. ’
Ralph Raker • (above) and
George Baker (below).
the cardinal advantage: seen
in the tormaion of 1
night rain put
Republicans of City
Silent on-Court Plan
— --
Fort Worth Republicans aren't
talking much about the world
court issue which now threatens
to cause a big break in the GOP.
That is, they aren't talking "for
By NEA Service
SAN FRANCISCO, April 36.
Francesca Guglielmino, 60,
facet forced return to her native
land of Sicily uniesa she marries
or learns to read and write by
the first of the coming year.
She came to the States last
year to "mother” th* three chit-
s the establishment bf a
l bureau for payment of
tight, telephone and water
For more than 36 hours an
autotomohile remained parked on
Seventh-st lb the downtown dis-
trict. -
Investigating it Thursday morn,
ing. Policeman Jack Davenport
looked under'the seat and found
a number of garments worth per-
haps 3100 and three new purses.
As a result, additional shoplift-
ing charge* were filed against
Mrs. Edna Claytn, 37, and Mrs.
Louise Seaton, 23, both of Dallas.
The two women were arrested late
Tuesday by Detectives Defee and
Little.
Letters addressed to one of
them were found in the automo-
bile when it was searched Thurs-
day morning, police said.
Misdemeanor theft cased had
been filed Wednesday. One woman
was charged with taking some tal-
cum powder and a cape from San-
ger Bros. Some of the clothing
found in the auto bore Sanger
Bros. tags.
Thursday, a felony charge waa
made against Mr*. Clayton, and
twosadditional misdemeanor cases
against Mrs. Seaton.
ByUniteoress
ROME, Ga., April 26.—Ralph
Baker. 15, cried today to die on
the gallows alongside his broth-
er George, 19.
“If George has got to di*. I
must die, too." the ‛ haggard
youth sobbed as be received a
commutation to Ilf* imprison-
ment from Governor Hardwicke,
who at the same time ordered
that George Baker must pay to-
morrow with his life for ’ the
murder of a deputy sheriff. *
Ralph paced his cell for hours •
as be pleaded for the right to
accompany In death th* brother
with whom he has been insep-
arable in life.
Th* father of the boys. • a
broken-down little old man, who
ha* sold all hi* possessions to
fight for hi* sons' lives, kept an
all-night vigil with th* boys.
Then when the slip of paper
came bearing the meseage of
the governor, Georg* held up
bravely, while hi* younger
brother burst into a storm of
protest that his own life had
been spared.
"They are going to hang a
man who never killed anyone."
Ralph said.
Ralph protested that he, in- •
stead of George, fired the shot
which killed Deputy Sheriff J.
W. Norton of Durham, Ga.
TAYOR HOLCON I Houe-
IVI ton supplies -va for the
Frrt Worth City hall.
By United Pres* »’ _
AUSTIN, Texas, April 26.122
his second message to the apto*
session of the legislature Go
Neff today set forth nine additiq
1 al measures for that body to c0
sider.
1 in brief the nine propoM
I were:
Highway legislation; laws to
fating to the classing, labeling
I grading and marketing of fam
I orchard and ranch product*; en
actment of laws providing foi
and regulating primary else
tions; extending oil and gm
permits to land now under con
I ’ trolt the federal receiver np
' pointed by the supreme court 0
the United States; amendins
laws regulating navigation di*
-tricts containing cities of mon
than 100,000 population; a la*
authorising the stats of Texa
k to cooperate with other cottei
A states in what is known so th
4 cotton state* commisaion; loca
l bill*. Brazoria co road law; res
I ulating the fur trade in th
/ state and providing foraita
' thereon.
—---ms ’
‘ART’ SHADED
nil ■ in New York City, one in Oxford.
C. E. Hall, 66, shot thru tbe
chest Wednesday morning by D.
H. Osborne, died at the All Saints
hospital early Thursday morning.
Wednesday, when it was thought
Hall .would die, a charge of mur-
der was filed against Osborne. The
charge was later changed to as-
sault to murder.
Thursday morning after Hall
died Osborne's attorneys, Baskin,
East us and Greines surrendered
him to the district attorney and
the charge was changed to mur-
der. He was permitted to remain
at liberty on the original 37,500
bond.
According to Hall before he
died, he provoked the trouble that
brougtt about the killing. He
made this statement to Assistant
District Attorney Robert Young.
Osborne made a statement ad-
mitting the killing and declared
Hall had threatened him in the
boarding house where both took
their meals.
Clyde Eastus, one of his attor-
neys. said this would be the de-
fense.
— 3 --.*"5-
It'* an easy job to' take wo -
*5
Of the oil promoters indicted
here last Friday for using the
malls to defraud. 28 so far have
not mads bond, a check made
Thursday by Mac Taylor, assistant
U. S. Attorney, shewsd.
Two ot these, however, are be-
hind bars. Robert Matches, In-
General Sherman,
#mee-s
rays: .
CATS.
Concato, cf.'
Sears, 1.
Stellbauer, rt.
Kraft, lb.
If folks don't quit praising the
ancient Egyptians for their art of
mummification and making the
statement that modern undertak-
I *n have never been able to dupli-
cate their skill at embalming. 8.
D. Shannon Jr., of the North Fort
Worth Undertaking Co. is going to
lone hi* temper. .
And so are the other embalm-
er*, predicts Shannon.
"Boran** it'* all bosh." he says.
•Th* modern embalmer for 336
can embalm a body that will to
preserved perpetually, waereas it
coat the families of the ancient
Egyptiana $7,000 to have one of
their loved ones mad* iato a
mummy.
the"qmhers""i xiuvo, tsutl.
Jay F Smith, who was released | winiama EenFrankil
in a fraud case at Wichita Fall* WmMorenRsIAT
Wednesday because the indictment Other zorkanization
wa* faulty, was expected to mnake I win be added
bond in a Fort Worth case against .. inatitutda Ah. hm
him Thursday. He is on* of the- “ Ie
defendants in the Revere indlet
ment.
A." .a___
r.g'
z $5522982
• 6
‘Mother’ and 3 Kiddies
Fear U. S. ‘Kindliness’
knArow
Carnegie Said:
“Save and
Invent
COUPLE TU WED I
AT THE RIALTO
THIS IS VISCOUNTESS MAID-
STONE. wife of the heir to th*
Winchi Ise* and Nottingham
earldom, England. Before her
marriage she was Margaretta
Drexel, American girl.
’ (.
"The civic club presidend
keep us advised of civic
and in turn we could kee
advised of industrial coad
Hampton said.
"A bureau of civic
would eliminate conaidera
plications Instead of,
; elate seeking an imprgren
Fort Worth individually an
WATER PIPE RECEIVED
A oar of water pipe was re-
ceived by the city Thursday, for
short extensions to be ma ■ in Ar-
lington Heights. Another 1# expect-
ed Friday.
By United Presa L
ST. JOSEPH, Mo., April 26 —
Billy Compton, 2. looked into a
10-gallon jar of rainwater at his
home yesterday and raw another
little boy. He climbed In to piny
with the stranger. His mother
found his body.
Y %i wu.. w. w. .
lot of trouble and shoe leather.
rTHIS introduces a comely young
X woman of Orvieto, Italy.
The menfolk were falling for
her charms away back about
1343, the year of the first long-
distance dancing plague.
The young woman ia said to
have continued on toe dancing
floor for 47 days, being sustained
during this orgy by strange foods
and drink* handed to her by ad-
miring friend*.
It is believed that this young
Italian girl wa* the founder and
first president of the Internation-
a) Marathon Dancing Asan.. local
chapters of which have been
founded recently in various cities
of the United State* by those
seking feebly to imitate her feat.
Hearne; Dr. F. M.
rt Arthur; Dr. A. C.
I*, end Dr. T. D. Frez-
to "mother."
dren of her borther, Salvatore
Guglielmino, broker, when th*
kiddi**' mother died. She was
stopped at Bills Island for illit-
eracy, but was admitted tempo-
rarily when friends interceded
for her. "How ran I learn to
read and write so qulekly!" she
asks. In Italian. “I am old. and
can not learn as readily as one
younger. And I hafe no time;
I can not neglect the bambinos.
And I will not marry.”
She has come to love the ch-
drea as if they were her own.
“Everywhere tht country to
known as the great America
that to eo kind to unhappy peo-
plea. Why, then, should Amer-
ic* wibh to make us unhappy?”
Francesca inquires.
NEGRO WOUNDED IN MAND.
Ollie Jaekaon, 35, negro em-
By United Preas.
STAMFORD, Conn.April 26.—
A man identified a* Draper
Daugherty, son of the attorney
general of the United State*, is
confined in Stamford Hall sani-
tarlum here on preliminary com-
mittment paper*.
Dr. F. W. Robertson, superin-
tendent of the hospital, declared
pinion of 1
1 district a
ra this m«
certain pro
In from ee»
ure.
League Success,-
Lord Cecil Says
Lord Robert Cecil,
greatest British expo-
nent of the League of
Nations, came to the
i United States recently
to tell the American
people what the League
has accomplished and
what it hope* to do to
end warfare. For The
Preas and associated
newspapers. Lord Rob-
ert has answered 10 im-
portant questions about ,
the league. One question
and the answer Lord
Robert gives will be
printed daily.
• 2. Is the league mech-
anism now efficient -for
world functioning?
• • •
BYLORD ROBERT CECIL.
A. The machinery of the
league has been used success-
fully in finding solutions for
a considerable number of
problems of general world
importance. A* organs for
joint consultation and co-
operation, the council and the
assembly have been much
more successful than anyone
bad hoped they could be in
the early stages of their de-
velopment. The principal
reason for this, In my view, to
that the whole of.the pro-
ceedings of tbe assembly and
of its committees are held in
public and that full publicity
is given, to various ways, to
the work of the council.
mento," Farmer stated.
Others attending Thursday's
meeting were Mayer *. R. Cock-
rell. Fluence Commisaloner W. B
-------- - Tiler, B Talla-
Frank ozhvie
_________ meetinz of the membel
tentiary at Atlanta, and L.M. each month, each senaion to
White is to jail at Defiance, Ohio, tended by the president
pending trial on charges there. ’ - "--"*"77
Physicians from various Texas
cities will speak Sunday from 13
Fort Worth pulpits preparatory to
the convention of the State Medi-
cal nociety May • to id.
The personnel includes Dr. C.
M. Rosser and Dr. John O. Me-
Reynolds. Dallas; Dr. W. B. Ruse.
Dr. Homer T. Wilson and Dr. L
L.. MoO lasaon. San Antonio; Dr.
Joseph pidy, Brownwood; Dr, B.
L Jnkins, iarendon: Dr. H. W.
Organisation* planning conven-
tions are going to have a hard
time restating th* new folder* just
issued by the CofC. Twenty-five
thousand have been printed under
the direction of Chester Leffler,
convention commissioner of the
Cofc.
In folder form, the new litera-
ture term* Fort Worth "The con-
vention city of the Southwest.”
Figures following show why. Pic-
ture* of the city's principal build-
ing*. swimming pools, lake drlvea,
and an imposing panorama of th*
business district provid the art
work.
A compute liet of hoteis, the-
aters, railroad* and’ industrial
facts is given.
Leffler will use the literature to
seeking conventions.
' 2
j " • w
W3..
5783329358835,%: '
4g-cmeut
Hu, a
ee, ]
This mail, containing money for
stock, also bears a letter from
kenuroucemn etatingthe books
.,05 Jetova ot elty.vananottm se
got "oon
E keep It,. say Zweitel.
_______ , , _ casket ot Martin Tabert. North
RR ==mesmm
* rtend-ni -The dead boy's body, expected
to be mute evidence sustantlating
i . Spuddsn Again
The Spudders Were again
th* guests of th* Cats at th* ’
local ball orchard at 4 p. m.
today.
Here are ths batting ar-
Th* Greater Fort Worth Am*.
mil to affiliate with the Fort
Worth CofC.
At a meeting of directors of the
association Thureday, John O.
Farmer, preaidoat. B. R. Darrah
and C. J. Beader were appointed
to coater with CofC official*.
"Should the Greater Fort
Worth Aaaa. become a bureau of
the CofC, it will undoubtedly con-
ieater:
ANDS.
et
1818
---—J
2000 Fort Worth telephone* tem-
porarily out of commission. Thurs-
day the number still out had been
reduced to 1350. Of these, 700
were on the West Side, 200 on the
South Side, 200 on the Southeast
Side, 150 on the North Side, and
100 on the East Side and in River-
side.
CABLES GET WET.
Water oozing into cables caus-
ed all the trouble. Twenty cable*
were affected. If there'* no mor*
rain, all phone* will be in serviee
by Friday night, Manager Harry
Briekhouse of the Southwestern
■ay*. Repair crew*- ar* working
day and night.
Th* Van Zandt addition trouble
waa the worst. A cable carrying
800 pair* of wire*, laid to a con-
duit under West Seventh-st, had
been completed in March. There
’ was a bad joint at one place, and
water leakage soon "shorted" all
900 lines. •
A section of the huge cable had
f ho be pulled from the corfduit, and
; 4 ut to tour places. That meant the
Miwisting of two tiny wires together
had to be done 7300 times before
the repair work was completed.
Only two linemen can work at
each splice. Two can complete a
900-pair splice, or 1900 spiieings
of individual wires. In about eight
hours.
BAKE THEM OUT.
Splicing was not necessary on
any of the other 19 cables which
' were put out of commission. . in-
stead. the wet section* of these
amallr cables were located, the
lead sheathing cut away, and a
boiling mixture of oil and wax
poured over the wire cor* to dry
it out. Wet placs in th* cables
ar* located by the use of "buz-
zers." .
Fifty long-distance lines to th*
Northwest Taxaa division ward" out
of commission yesterday, including
31 out of Fort Worth, but all
were to service again Thursday. In
moat cases the terra had bran
blown down.
...
Physicians to Speak
From Local Pulpits
Hoffman, Uh. Whiteman, r.
Haley. Sb. Cotter,
Tavener, ■*. ~
Haworth, c.
Stoner, p.
small wires and twist the ends of
them together.
But how would you like the job
of repeating that opecdon 7200
lime*? That was the tok which
telephone company linemen had
Wednesday and Thursday in Van
Zandt addition, in splcing a big
Rev. J. K. Thompson. preeld
of the Rotary club, and Howl
H Marks, bead -of the Saleam
shipp club, have voiced their
proval of a bureau of eiwigatg
in the CofC. to be composed of
president* of Fort Worth civii
luncheon clubs. 2 88
This was announced by lr*M
Hampton, secretary-manager
th* CofC. Thursday. Hemph
who has launched the new bure
will call upon all club pre*Mei
and solicit their asaistance,
said.
UNIFIED EFFORT.
“Unitication of civie eftorf
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Siler, Leon M. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 177, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 26, 1923, newspaper, April 26, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547080/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.