Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 332, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 14, 1928 Page: 2 of 44
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—
r
T
. 4
-TRANSFUSIONS
AGAIN DISPLAY
BY ARKANSAS GREATOFFENSE
I
2
the hurricane without
all
irough our yard."a >
anap and
ROBBED STORES
played this year.
WINDS AND DAMAGE
(Continued From Page J, Col 1)
FAMOUS BEAUTY
)
«
(By The Asaocinted Press
Arkanas .
the finnl five
, in an address here, Shuler, touring
to Walker for
CONTRACT.
$154,
IN MURDER TRIAL
FAIR DONATIONS
I’
BENEFICIAL RAINS
25
BOTH PARTIES
The Latest in Flying Craft
DUS
TflU. S. FOR
550
men
I
ue
MM
Jake Hanna, fleet Centenary,,
r
lved up to adwanee notics and. was
-
8
04
BRYAN MAN SENTE
-.-1
tgtea,mew
Football Results
a, Timberlake (sub for
the hy
Keefe) 1, (end m).
sen-
W,T.C.C.MEET
of
A Beaumont: Orange 0; Beau-
here today, • to 6. It was the first
D.
T&,
wateh
4 Worshiptul Masten died
faeton will
1
ae
*
5ve;
F
taiuk
J
A
Ilill
H,‘8
,H:i
rJ
RUNNING AIDS
GENT VICTORY
MASONS TO CONDUCT
HART FUNERAL TODAY:
CONTRACTOR FLIES
TO BIG SPRING FOR
GREENVILLE OFFICERS
FEAR MOB VIOLENCE
SMITH-EMPOWERED
NEGRO STORY FALSE,
DEMOCRAT ASSERTS
.$1,820
M.7M
The reindeer were rounded
Eskimos and were transpor
Grubbs and Griffith drove the ball
over for a touchdown. Griffith made
Anny ncoring-Touchdownst Piper
8, Carinn (Mb for Cele) 1, Harris
CADETS SWEEP TO
VICTORY SATURDAY
. 12 • 20 6—44
. • • 0 0—0
DANIEL BAKER GRID
MACHINE WINS TILT
RA
INI
downs-Beavera, Mille; point* altar
touchdown* -Dale (1) placements.
Officials: R. C. Meeks (Bt. Louis)
or fight and exhibited mo
class than any team the
M'LAIN STARS AS
IOWA IS WINNER
OVER CHICAGO U.
ARCHITECT ACCUSES ACTRESS
OF FORCIBLY ENTERING
Foists after
(piacementa).
“It seemed at tho
was being blown
which resulted in the first survey
showing th* widespread of th* storm
and th* destruetlos of th* hemes of
•boat 5,000,000 persona
St
i
TEXAS AGGIES DEFEATED IT
CENTENARY, THUS KEEP.
ING RATING HIGH
nlc
elosing period.
A penalty railing back a 74-yard
pant by Zarafonetis placed the Ag-
gie* in a bad position, •• the second
kick fell far abort. The Cento passed
and ran to th* Aggies' five-yurd line.
After being thrown for two consec-
UNDERWENT TWO OPERATIONS
IN ONE DAY; SUGGEST
NATIONAL AWARD
—
M the
Mt len
day* of Duke slater, Gordon Leek*
and Aubrey Devine.
BUCKET HI TOPPUNG
TOUTED TEAM
A
been sent
(Continued from Pag* 1; Column 6.)
project of proven merit and of great
potential value. — t
Th* total subseribed to date la
$8,465. f
The subscriptions yesterday in-
eluded Badger Oil company, $50;
Amarillo Hardware company, »100,
and Fred DeCoster $10.
PROUD PRINCETON
LOSES GRID CLASH
1M
M
20
25
1M
18
1M
21
PATHFINDER IF SEAS'
IS HONORED IN VIRGINIA
Total ................
Previously neknowledged
I
COLLEGE* 11 TO 0, IN
Hi FORT WoRir
Eper) Will
*
4
Army ....
Providence
■ AE —. - ■ »»
_(CoatiuMd From Page 1, Cot. 2)
IM and there will be am.
Foom for any other, who wish
•_J. . _ . is his stamina nd blood-making
DALLAS, Oet.10-wt‛Grndy,qualities that he is the picture of
, negro. charged with criminal at- i health. Recently ha underwent two
Ajtipisdje
ig
(By The Ameeieted Pres)
BROWNWOOD. Oct. 13.-Daniel
Baker college defeated McMurry col-
leg* J8 to • here today, MeMurry’s
first defeat in two years of Texas
Intercollegiate athletic association
competition.
Dillard, halfback for Daniel Baker,
•cored both of his team’* touchdowns.
Honora for th* most sensational play
•f the day went to Johnson, Hillbilly
end who intercepted a McMurry pans
and ran M yard* before he was forced
out of bound*. Th* play pat the ball
on the B-yard Uno and pared th* way
for the first touchdown of the game.
SAN ANGELO, Toxa*. Oct. 13. -
ouett ShouM, former assistant see-
rotary to the treasury under Wilson
and now one of the five member* of
the advisory committee to the Demo-
cratic National committee, today te!-
•graphed the Son Angelo Standard:
Times denouncing as false a statement
made there by the Rev. Bob Shuler.
Panhandle Maaie Co.......... 21
Amarillo Clearing House A**‘n. 1.000
MEMPHIS MAN TO
APPEAL SENTENCE
Tho next touchdown came quick. T.
C. U. made a short kiekoft Md re-
cevered the ball on the Auhtih col-
hnsee
o
.‘1.9
era
Despite their defeat by a Texaa
Christian University team that was
playing its leeooet football of the
season, the Kangaroos put up a hard-
ards. Grubbs passed
ia extra point.
irple has
They made nine
(Continued from Page 1, Col 3)
regarding Maacla Shoals and the M.
Lawrenee waterway.
ml . .
BA
GAL
receivin
more t
mH ot
charge
oped b
the 8d
5
(
,7.
At Albuqaevque: Untversiey of N.
M, 6; New Mexico Military Im. T.
At Alpine, Tea.: Sal Rees Teacher*
88: New Mexico A. t k, 1
At Snver City: New Mexico State
Tenchers College •; Hurley U.
At Portland. second game: Oregon
State 44; Pacific University *.
At Phoenix: Arizona 13, Pemaao
Mult and • five-year suspended
tenee was given to him.
MASONS-NOTICA
Thore will be a called meetin
able to approach closer than thia
point at any time in the game. After
Arkansas' second touchdown the ball
remained near the center of the field
until the final whistle.
Arkansas' Une largely was respon-
sible for the vietory as it stopped
Baylor’s smashes consistently and
gore the Porker backfield consistent
protection on the offenaive.
auze
to western Burep* WiaTe. g
O*
i
i-66
vi
PITTSBURGH LOSES
vtsuNasrpap 21. The
Golden Panthers of the University of
Pittsburgh, ehamplons of the east
test year, fell befre the veteran
JA -a
Ar -422
iphy are eaid to eonati-
opartment of selence, the
phy of too sea.
charta letaed today by
phie office of the navy ■
As the last of the states complete
their tegistration, prospect* 'Uy a
record-breaking turnout of both
Md woman on November 6 grow
better every day. Great proportion-
ate inereases in the registration lists
"m ..
Issued v
Los Angeles Methodist minister, that
Governor Alfred E. Smith ever ap-
pointed a negro as head of the civil
service commission of New York ' ]
a,,",
.""7,03
injury whoa
1 of San Juen n
so many who heard her then may be
assured of looming many new things.
Beauty Not External.
Most women think of beauty aa aa
external thing but Madame Chernoff
has an entirely different view of the
matter. According to her the “akin
deep" definition is entirely and vie-
lonely wyong. She does not, however
regard the eare of the skin, the hair,
attention to facial trentments Md
make-up as ■■important. but, instead,
stresses thee things as essential,
even giving practical demonstrations
in the course of her lecture. But she
goes much further than that to lay
emphapis upon beauty of mind and
surroundings as aa aid to beauty of
form and feature. She gives an en-
tirely now viewpoint to a subject
that began with Eve and Adam’s first
glimpse of her In the Garden of Edon.
The stage at the auditorium, will
be elaborately decorated la keeping
with Madams Cheroff’s ideal.
Women who,attend the lecture are
urged to bring pencils and notepaper.
. (n, Unitet Ptema)
PARIS, Det. 18c—Two hundred and
slaty-fear persons who have never •
met one another owe their lives to
Raymond Bries, employe la the Paris
fruit market, known to Parisians as
“savtor of his fellowmen" because of
his heroism in submitting to blood-
transfusion operations.
The operations here cost Bries ex-
v*pEd
AFTERMARRYING CHILO
(Bp The Aseooiotod Pymna}
{ Bryan, Tea, Oct. 18,—Because he
married a i2-year-old girl last
March, Howard Burroughs of Bryan
today wm eonvieted of eriminal ag-
ab M i
u,s.LB
-an
as 09bohgnkb.
Masonic lodge No. 781 of Amarillo ,
will conduet the funeral services thia r •
afternoon for Hall W. Hart, who died
at Northwest Toxae hospital Wednen- .,
day. it was announced late last eight.
The services trill be held from tee
N. B. Griggs A Boas chapel at d
e'elock, Rev. L. N. Btuekey efficiat-
he body has been in state at the
Griggs chapel since Wednenday await,
Ing arrlui el Mr. Hart's father m< 2
brother, J.M. Hart of Florence, Ale,
and Wiilard Hart of Little Rech, Art,
wordhipfuj Master D. W. "
the Amarillo' Manonie lodge l ...______
all Maeter Masons who could aualet
in the ceremony to meet et 8 o’elok
this etternoon et the Mhsonle temple.
Burial will be in Memorial Perl
eemetery. .
REBNJEEfl ARE BROUGHT
are reported alike from the crowded
wards of New Tort City and the
aparsely-eteled rural counties of
New Mexieo. In IBM, the first year
of nation-wide woman suffrage, the
total vote for president wee twenty-
six milliona. In 1M4 it was twent-
nine millions. Some politteai ob-
mervers now predict a vote of forty
millions in IBM.
I Baylor . .
I Bearing:
point the Fraga started a driving at-
tach that swept the thia rad line
backwards nearly the length of the
field. Off techie rushes made three
consecutive first downs and placed
the ball on the Austin eollege M-yard
line. Toler broke through the lino
for 18 yards. There tho march on
running plays was stopped, but Rob-
arts pasaed to Martin for th* last 9
yards needed to make a touchdown.
Teter circled left Md for the extra
rexAEKAkA,"oeeia."Tpsetting
heav odds. Arkansas defeated Bay-
lor to here today ia the openiag
game of the Southwestern conference,
aad took the top rung of the con-
ferenee standing for at least a week.
The Baylor team, accompanied by
a squad of rooter* and a band, was
a heavy favorite before the game,
bet the Boor* failed to get under way
la the first querter. Arkansas scored
in the second aad again in the third
and the Baylor eleven wai unable to
get within scoring distance there-
after.
A blazing sun boat down on the
field Md both teem* punted fre-
quently in the first quarter, but in
the aecond period the Portion opened
a series of line end off tackle plays
from the center of the field. Beav-
ere carried the bell on aimoat every
play until the ten-yard line wao
reached. Here a abort laterial pen,
Beavers to Miller, found the Baylor
defense off balance. Del* kicked th*
extra point.
Neither team scored in th* third
quarter but Arkansas continued her
line smashing tacties and carried the
ball to Baylor’s four-yard line just
as tho period closed. Beavers smashed
through the Bear line for the neces-
sary yardage on the first pley of
the final period and Dale again added
the oxtrn point.
Baylor's most dangerous bid oc-
curred after Arkansas’ first toueh-
down. Two panes were successful
for good gains Md Washam, who
•tarred ia the Arkansas-Baylor game
last year, swept 20 yard* around end
operations far trensfusion ia one
day, one at 11 o’eloek in the morning
and the other at 4 in the afternoon.
“Bries' bleed is particularly adapt-
able to transfusion," declares Dr. Bo.
cart, well known Parisian surgeon
who "discovered" this physical won-
dor. “It ba* been marvelous to see
the vigor which, by bin willing ageri-
flee, he has imparted to frail, ea-
feebled people. Rich folks «nd poor
have received a aew lean of life
from him."
During last July, Bries submitted
to 81 transfusions. .For each opera-
tioa ha had to ash time off (ram his
wort, which occupies him from Sam.
to midday.
The Paris newspaper justly re-
marks that Bries is probably unique
in the world and the suggestion has
been made that hia sacrifices should
be rewarded by the bestowal of the
Legion of Honor.
RVSBL WATOat TIMB , g.g
LemnKEAD,"DttiE"Rusia 2,
going to have her first watch tacter
next year. Tinto baa. ever been an ,
element of email coasidamUM «‛
thin vast alow moving land, end 1
few--*
Right after that Austin put on a
counter offensive that earried the
ball to the T. C. U. fifteen yard line
Mr. and Mrs. Emsloy F. Pjeslar, pictured here, ore jointly charged with
murder In the""poison powr" plots in North Carolina. The pair are
alleged to have caused the death of L. M. Lockamy, Nn. Preslar’s flrat
husband, made use ef hi* inourance end gone into another state to merry
twenty-three doys after the funeral. ,
British Trades Union Congress
Hails Era of Industrial Peace
(By The t me rioted Pros*)
RICHMOND. Vo, Oct. 18— Matthew
Fontaine Maury, “pathfinder ft the
seas," I* honored in a national me-
mortal to be unveiled bora in the late
autumn
. Representing an expenditure of
$60,000 provided by the Matthew
"Fontaine Maury ansociatioy, the mon-
ament deplete Commander Maury
seated in a reminiseent attitude, lis-
jtening to the voice of the storm.
IAbove hi* figure there is a group of
iA figures which support the globe.
They represent a storm on land and
y. sea, embraeing a nymbolization of the
3 worid and its natural elements.
1 Born near Fredericksburg, Va.,
January 14, 1804, Commodore Maury
erowded.' many noteworthy necom-
and Paul Armil, aad a fighting line,
•tamped Bur Ingwersens eleven aa
---------- --------- -------- a factor to be considered in the big
utive losses the Genta turned to th*, -ton race for th* first time since the
leg* 40-yard line. On th* third play,
Grubbs passed 24 yards to Morgan,
who ran another 15 through a clear
field far six points. Griffith place
kicked a field goal for the last point.
iBp Unitea From) * '
BAN JUAN, P.B.,Oet, .-For?
Rico, eyclone-torn and almoat ruined
financially, fa displaying splendid ,
fortitude, currying an relief measures r
•till necessary nearly a month after o
the San Felipe storm and preparing
to febulld. . "07 ' M .
That tribute to the spirit ft th* s<i
islanders of thio United States pee*
session was paid by Mana Lae, well-t
known in the United States as a poet, ,
in a United Press interview. In pri- % .
veto Ufa Mum Lee de Munos Marn, •
wife of a prominent parte Rican, (be 9 .
and her two children went through n
(Continued from Page 1; Column 8.)
•ho in in the city, for her to grant
personal interviews.
Madame Chern of fs lecturs never
the entire field ef beauty culture,
even dipping Into the poychological
phaso of this question, so absorbing
•e for as women are concerned. New
idoaa in attaining beauty, health and
charm /rill be disclosed daring her
appearanees. The lecture* she will
give next week will be entirely dif-
Ito The Amociated Preo)
LONDON, Oct 18,—With British
“reds" routed at the 60th Trades
Unon congress, which recently ad-
jotrned at Swanson, Wales, an era of
industrial peace, good will and co-
operation ia believed to be dawning
in this Inad which still suffers eco:
nomle Ills from the great general
strike of 1926.
Henceforth John Bull, In the role
of the well-fed fairy prosperous but
somewhat worried employer—partie-
ualrly harried since the world war-
end “Old Bill" and "AIf," his easy-
going bat capable hired help, declare
they are going to be friends, not ene-
mies.
Momentous decisions for the fo-
ture of British organised labor were
mode at Swansea. Both labor leaders
and industrialists are busy effecting
them.
Oae of the first tasks isthe estab-
lishment of a national induetrial
council and jelnt conciliation board
to investigate threatened disputes.
Thus will be created the machinery
for direct negotiation* between em-
ployers and trades unionists In an
effort to prevent strikes and lockouts.
If these efforts are successful
Great Britain never will see another
such upheaval as that ef May, 1884.
which was lile short of bleedloss
civil war. For the Trades Valon con-
grass and its affiliated unions, which
control a force of Marly four million
organised workers, ere now committed
to the principle of eonciliation and
negotiation.
Thia does not mean that British
trades nnions have surrendered the
right to strike. Nor is the lockout
denied employers. These weapons are
to be preserved as last resorts, bet
they have been sheathed.
The Swanses congress, 640 dele-
gates representing 3,874,842 trades
unionists, approved by an overwhelm-
lag majority the action of the council
of the trades union organization in
entering upon the so-called “Mond
eonversations." These were round
table discussions between leading
British industrialists, employers and
trades union leaders.
The move was inaugurated by Lord
Melchett, whe until raised to the
British peerage a few months ago
wss Sir Alfred Mond. He is one of
the greatest industrial magnates In
the country, a former cabinet mem-
ber and zenerally recognised as a
genius in public affairs and busi-
nesk
Ashed to ratify the action of their
leaders in meeting the employers
an dtentatively adopting a policy of
industrial cooperation, the Swansea
eongresa did so by a card vote of
3,075,000 against 566,000. The mi-
nority, headed by A. J. Cook, radical
laador of the coal miners, held eat
for an alllance with “the enemy.’’
The congress rejected a proposal
to seek for common ground with the
Third International of Moocow. The
same basie Imho, presented in var-
lees forma, waa similarly denounced.
Member* of the "Minority Move-
ment," the Communist fringe of the
British labor movemeat, are to be
denied future attendance. The T. U.
G declined to take over a Uber col-
lege fettered by Marxian complexes.
• (By The Amceisted Pram)
SEATTLE.Wart , OcL 13. Santau
Claus did hl* Chratmas ihepping.A
early this year. Aa a reialt thousand* s
ef children throughout Aha United
State* will be thrilled during the .
holiday season by displays ef reel-
reindeer drawn alelghs. ..
Some 888 of the antlered animeln is
were brought to Seattle st tbs me ■
of summer from the Kuskokwim wivee
country in the Alaskan interior and
were pestered near hers to await b.
Santa Clan eall. The herd will Be i -
distributed among all the nation’ 7%
largest cities to serve as Beata Clans
teams before Christmas.
(to The Amociated Fite'
PRINCETON, N. J, Det. 13.—The
fighting football Cavaliers ef the
University of Virginia held proud
Prineeton to a eco rales* tie before
aa mstonished crowd of soma 12,000
ia Palmer stadium this afternoon.
Battling bravely, cheeking tke
Tigers spring again and again whoa
it seemed that Princeton was sure
te seore, this gallant band of boys
from "Ole Virginny" gained a great
moral victory ia one of the biggest
upsets of the dope the young season
has yet seen.
county jell, it waa announced today.
The negro was brought hero after the
alleged attack. Greenville officers
fenred mob violence.
Another Amarillo business man who ’
believes in making use ef modem
transportation methods for Ha pro-
fession la Albert L. Randall, build-k
ing eontractor. A
Friday night Mr. Randall flew t
Big Spring la aa airplane piloted by
Lieut. Robert H. Gray. Saturday he
attended a meeting to bld, in compe-
tion with contractors from Fort '
Worth, Dallas and other eities, ea a
8184,888 office buildlag to be erected
in Big Spring.
Shturday night Mr. Randall and
Lieut Gray flew both with the eon
tract
■ er to pay other important office la
state Of New York."
» ----------
air and two nice heaves, the last from
Henna to Hamel carried the oval over
the line. Hanna failed to convert.
The Aggies started out as though
to rash the eleven off their feet
From the initial kiek-oft Coach Bi-
ble’s machine drove dowi the field al-
meat to the visitors’ goal, only to fal-
ter when the Gents' defense stiffen-
ed. Again in the third parted the
Aggies made a suntained march Goal-
weld, bet lost by fumbling when deep
la the Centenary territory.
In a final effort to score after cen-
tenary had chaihod up ito six points.
Coach Bible seat la a subatitute Ag-
gio backfield which opened up a pass-
ing attack that penetrated within
four yards of the visitors’ goal. Again
the entenary Mao braced aad bold
and the Farmers had loot their leaf
chance.
. ......0 7 • 7—14
........,'S 000—0
For Arkansas: Toueh-
Picn
ishmenta inta bin e7zyepr H kle. .
His contributions to the Southermn
Total
Fire .
<. brie
roums, $
1 Hiford
s.
wa. <
8. F. F
Fillin
Sa mer
ha, 1
Hill S.
Dwell
lion, b
46x30, :
htrong.
owner.
Dwell
club d!
roof. 32
M.....
Dwell
Glenwo
Sliek B
Cathe
street,
$200; A
Merci
nue. re
$800; ■>
Dwel
roof, j;
Repper
Rear
plumbu
lor am
liar (sub for retry) L
rouehdowns: Harrie 1
Gibner (sub for
-"78 "jkezijg"th.
TUITION
MO
(By. The Angeeiated Pram)
NEW TORE, Ort. 18.— One jump
ahead of a eeld wave which ia fore:
eaet to reach the Atlantic Seaboard
from the west tonight or tomorrow,
old man summer celebrated Columbus
new Day by mendinc thermometers
to aew high marks ia the enst. %
Jeha J. Burns, 60, died ef heat
prostration at Providence, R. L Te
tempera tar* there we* 87 idegrees.
Th* highent mart reported in the
part was at Springfield, Nara., where
the wenther bureau thermometer
reached 90 degree*, the highest tem-
peratore ia M year*. It was M at
New Tork.
-YEAR-OLD GIRL FATAUY
INJURED I MS EXPLOSION
en. MA AaAnathanA p,aama
CORPUS CHRISTI, ,"13—
Beultinghoyse, 7-year-old daughter
pt Mr. aad Mr». 0. M. Bou Hi ugh ov m
W Callehan, agar herewenatatly
on a-tractor explodd. Fart of th*
tank struek her on the head. She
squad of Coach Ira Rodgers of West pietured during a test flight which preceded the suceessful trip from Leaden
Virginia university at the stadium to Parial Noto the gint tour-bieded propeller which, sumountine the
fusefage ms a vertical shaft, gives the craft Ite un/ne power. It is this
“windmill" contrivanee that allows the altogire to deaaaad almost vertically,
Aa ordinary propeller preeidto the forward metlon.
BANTA MONICA. Col., 5* ah.-
I .Man Murray, star ef the Aims Md
atag« wil zoeon trial her. October
as ea a charge of forcibly entering
a home.
'. A tan minute hearing before a po-
bice judge after Miss Murray had
Fsurrendered to police resulted ia her
being held for trial ea charges pre:
• ferrod by Jack Donovan, Hollyweed
arehitect. Police held a warrant fer
the arrest of the actress on chargee
ef forcibly entering Donovan’s Santa
Monica home,
> Mins Murray, headlining at a
I downtown vaudeville house, appeared
in fine burner Md not bothered.
She walked into police station
shortly before noon today aad calmly
said: "Well, here I am. What can
I , 1 de for you."
After it waa explained that Dono-
/van had sworn out a complaint on
. which ball had been not, counsel for
Miss Murray asked for immediate
I arraignment, and that she be tried
2 before a judge instead of a jury. The
' request waa granted.
I I Mios Murray recently obtained
htrom Donovan $32,000 judgment in
I ; civil court for alleged misrepresenta-
l tion by the arehitect-actor of furnish-
l i ines in a house purchased by the
octree*. She la echeduled to go be-
fore the grand jury next Moaday la
aa investigation by that body of
I chargee of suspicion of perjury pre-
forced by Donovan in eonneetion with
I ■ testimony given by her during the
I i civil trial.
KILLS YOUTH FIXING .Tn. XT
TIRE AT ROADSIDE IN 264 BL
of hie coming death and urging them
to do what I. right.
“Hie mind works ae queeriy, he
took the New Teatament and draw
ring, around a lot of wordc and
phrases. Do you know what that
boy then did? He composed those
wordc and phrases into a connected
story justifying hl. erime." There
was a net of pride in the father',
voice as though he were pleased that
the ton were able te do inch a thing.
“He was quite proud of thia and
boasted that Gad bad approved his
art through the Bible. That's why I
knw be le erazy. That's why I know
'that after the trap is sprang he will
net suffer the punishment of a Juot
god."
Hickman said that he will stay in
California until after the eon has
been hanged.
“I want to be aloao during those
last days, he said. “And on the very
last day I want to be very much alone.
Ton know a san is always a son.
Tklnk of your eon going to his death.
Wouldn't it wring your heart? God
knows I am suffering."
A. C C. WINS
(By The Associated Prem)
ABILENE. Oct. 18.—Abilene Ckris-
tian college defeated Southwest
Texas State Teachers college of San
Mareos, 88 to 0, here today te mala-
tela ita undefeated status in the T.
t. A. A. Roy Stevens and "Goober"
Epyes. Christian bachs, wore the out.
standing players on the field.
(Continued from Fage 1; Columa t.)
ship was proceeding at 88 knots en
a course directly toward Lakehurst
where the navy department was mak-
ing extensive preparations to receive
Thia message atated that ths ship
anticipated ne peed for th* surface
vessell previously requested. A wea-
ther synopsis waa requested a* well
aa • forecast along her present
course Thia Information immedi-
ately waa forwarded by Washington.
The fofecast aaid a direct course
to Lakehurst would bring the ship
late winds while • more southerly
route would give her more favorable
wind conditions. In view of this,
there was a possibility that the ship
might again veer aouthward and
would pane the Bermudas before
turning north to skirt the south At-
lantic, coast of the United States.
Damaged By Wind
Advices from Friedrichshafen, bom*
port of the airliner, aaid ah* waa
expected to pasa the Bermudas about
midaight. It was understood the
port horizontal had been damaged
by • sudden vertical gust of win.
When the Zeppelin reported et 9:80
a. m., sho hud boon in the air Just
M and n half hours and had reached
• point aboyt midway between the
A so res and Bermuda. During the pre-
ceding 84 hours of flight aha had
covered about 1,683 miles, at an aver-
age of 68 miles an hour.
If she should (tribe for Lakehurst
by way of Bermuda she weald have
about 1,800 miles to civer. At her
last average of 80 miles an hour thia
would mean an additional M hours
ar a total of (I and • half hour*.
This would bring her into port about
8:88 p. m., Bundy night. The winds
along the coast, however, ware none
too goed and there was the distinet
possibility that she might wet get
in until ealy Monday.
Although reassurine word had come
through from the Zeppelin, the naval
department ordered the light cruis-
ers stationed at Hampton Ronds and
a squadron of destroyers at Charles-
ton, 8. C., to be reay to leave im-
mediately la case they should be
needed at any time.
(By The Amnoeimted Pram)
COLLEGE STATION, Oct. 18. —
Coach Homer Horton’s Centenary
College Gentlemen dropped ia from
Shreveport Saturday afternoon to
hand the Texan Aggies the first lick-
ing tkey bed received ea Kyle field
since 1026. The score was 4 te (.
The Gents and Aggies had battled
oa even terms during the first two
quarters of the game and the Farm-
era held a alight advantage ea first
dowas when the Gents pushed over
their winning touchdown. la the
the steamship W. M. Tupper, whiehe
left Bethel with 870 of the hard, M-n
suited I athe desht of 40 aa Imah.
department are founded
. researehes
. Nora It the famed ehannel-spanning autogiro flying maehine aad, inset,
Ito 80-year-old Spanish inventor, Juan da la Clerva. The "Windmill" ia
PLEAZANToRF2,,Bds—ra
Anderson, 18-earola Plenantom
bey, was hilled here tonight when a
track on which he and it ethers were
riding waa atruck by a heavy touring
car. Allan with the remainder of the
Forty was driving to the Pittsburk
fair aad had utopped to repair a'
puncture. The heavy car crashed
into the party, crushing Anderaon
and continued ea down the highway.
Buster Allah. it, received a broken
leg and is thought to have been in-
Jared internally. 4
and placed the belt on the Rasor-
backs’ 20-yard line. Baylor was an- PoIn"
Ricot
referee; Alvin Bell (Vanderbilt) em-
2--------- - . .E pire: Diek ayah (Missouri) bend ,
the state la behalf of the anti-Smith iinesman; CL ampben (Little Rock)
movement, raid that Smith had ap- field judgn./-2e er
=HANNAS
solutely false. Governor Smith bos 1
’ neved appointed negro either as head
jof efyi service commission er as
member of civil eervice commission
LATE" SPORTS
(Continued from Page 1; Column 7.)
northwest proclaimed passing at tho
storm.
Snowfall had abated in Wyoming,
where the storm, which reached bliz-
sard proportions yesterday, marooned
tourists, halted air mail and delayed
train mall and impeded wire com-
munieatioh.
Mere than M automobile tourists
escaped possible freesing through the
heroism ef an unidentified woman
whe led n relief party from Roch
Springs to their marooned automo-
bile* along the Lincoln highway be-
tween Baxter Station and Bitter
Creek, Wyo.
The skies were reported clearing
and temperatures rising aver Mon-
tana, first to fool the effects of th*
stem which blew ia from Alaskan
wastes Wednesday.
Cold in California.
1 Los Angeles was caught in the celd
and spitting snow as was northern
California and Nevada pointa,
Centrl Idaho received a heavy
saow, and Nick Marner and Clarence
Paulson, Spokane aviatore, war*
anowbound in the inacesnible Cham-
berlain basin country, 880 miles from
Spokane, where they had flown to
inaugurate a hunting service by air-
plane
tlans whipped over three touehdowns
in the flrat five minutes of play and i
than quit—not voluntarily but be-
cause they were stepped by the fiery | . .
play of the crimson-Jersey ed invad- tech oa a white woman near Groen-
— villa Tueaday, ia being bald in Dallas
HIS RESIDENCE --- ——
‘ RAZORBACKS UPSET OLD DOPE DIFKAT LEVN FROM AUSTIN
as the quarter ended. The first
three plays in the next period net-
ted a four-yard loss. On the fourth
down Brice tried to pass. Atkins
broke through, rushed Brice and aa
the ball left the latter’s hands it was
defleeted by Atkins. Buster Walker,
whe was also rushing th* passer,
eaught the ball and ran 40 yards be-
fora he was pulled down from be-
hind by Brice oa the Austin college
a0-yard line. From there Morgen
The contributions Friday
eluded:
Amarillo Tira Dealers A*s'n.8
C. 8. Lambie Co. ............
M. C. Hancock Construetion Co.
Toxae Band A Gravel Co.....
Moore-Poston D. G. Co.......
Amarillo Teat A Awning Co. .«
Williams Sign Co.......
Pool Drug Store .............
HMEMURRIYT
EIUDGEONBAYLORBEARS HORNED FROGS
ARGE BY MAN ARE DEFEAT
T h,.......M.-. 1
’ mos
• The >■setsIs* Press)
WEST POINT, N. T, Oat. 13—
Three army football teams, first,
second and third, get n taste ef batle
today whoa the cadets ewept over
Providene college for a 44 to 8
score. The Rhode Ialanders had ne
chance in the one elded contest and
the Army unloose dita whole reper-
tory of long runs, paste* and 11m
playa. The game woo played in a
Am driuzle of rain which did art
beep IRAN spectators apay. There
were few thriei the iemy which
wm just owe touchdown after an-
other for the Army. The easead ead
third beams eontribuiting almost as
much as the varsity players.
Seore by periods:
tont Hall High (Gelva*- time to five year* that the Moun-
son) 43; St. Homaa (Hoes toe J 0, taiaser* bad raegaiehed PiL h
2 W- - . 3 04 • ma M K g 3
IN NEGRO-WHITE CASE ___________
first downs, mere than all the other
three opponents combined ead limi-
ted Toxae Christian University to 18.
less than they have made in any
ethar one game.
The first touchdown, wbirh came in
the first five minutes, wm well parn-
od. Austin eelleg* received the first
kickoff, couldn’t gain, aad punted to
T. C. U‛s. 27-yard line. From that
the outstanding ball lugger on too
field. Brooks Conover, Aggie half,
shared honors with him in this de-
partment.
Score by period::
Centenary .......... 0 ( « 6-6
Aggies..............0 8 8 0—0
“The finent, sanest courage Ive.i3
over soen," Mise Lee sold of the peo-
ple." They have the tranquility of
unperturbed eearage aad goed bu- >(
mon" a
Mias Lee who is director of the
Bureau of International Relations of. ,
the University of Porto Rice, told
proudly of the "earry oa" spirit of
her institution and ef the leading, ,
part it toeh to the relief ead rhabil- ..
itation work. The university was one -n
sf toe institutions hardest hit by the
storm; the parents of assay ef the • •
1,200 etudeats registered for the fall
term bsfore the storm were ruined m
the wreck of tobaeco, coffee and
grapefruit plantations. ,
But tke school reopened October 1,
and classes are continuing oa a cam-
pus whose fine old trees were torn
down by the storm. Tbs books of
the library will bear the sears sf wa-
ter-sonking for many years. Many
reefs torn off by the wind were hoot- ,
ily replaced ead rebuilt.
The Univerenity Authorities led ia ,
organization and direction of relief ,T
wort after the great disaster, ead
chaneellor Benner seat through the ,
United States Proc* the fleet com-
prehensive story of the tremendoun
damage done to the ioland to be wide-
ly printed in the United States.
Cadet* from the university r***rvs
officers training corps patrolled many
devastated spots after the storm.
Three membere et the faculty made a
loag trip late the interior on foot
1 T*. -
Amarillo
Saturday
with 80
courses or
thin mean
Teachers
possible b
Literary Messenger are said to have
played a part la toe founding of the
United tates Naval academy and
Cyrus W. Field wrote of Maury's as-
sistance in laying the first Atlantic
cable aa “Utaminatiag the path for
— the lightning" Manry's researches
(, The Ameeciated Preer
FOBT WORTH, Oct. 13.For the
fourth time ia as many starts the
Texas Christian fortball Frogs •cor-
ed three touchdowns today and at
tho aame time hept their goal lino
inviolate. Auatin college wm the
victim and the final acero wm 21 te
*. Playing good football the Chris-
(Speeiai t Tho (on flex New--Globe)
MEMPHIS, Tezas, Oct. 1(.—Judge
A, J. Pires overruled a motion for •
new trial in Distriet court here Saf-
urday mornlag to the case of Clyde
Miller, whouwas found guilty by a
jury bare Wednesday. October 10, of
he murder of Bruce Collier, and
sentensed to 25 years in the state
penitentjar,
Detinae lawyers David Pitzgerald
aad Allen Grundy My they will file
an appef with the Mart of Criminal
eppeaisjat Auatin nt once. Miller
has beta* pieced in Jell to aweit th*
dvriaieawf the higher eourt, which it
is <*g srill be at least pix months,
before a decion can be bad.
(By The Ascelated Pree)
CHICAGO, Oet. 1 a—Behind It*
eiant Indian battering ram. Mayes
McLain, Iowa’s ponderous blnek and
gold football machine started Hs
drive for big tea prestige today by
whipping the University et Chicago.
18 to 8 before 30,000 speetators on
Stage field.
Kicking, passing, piewing through
the line and skirting tke ends, tke
big Cherokee Indian wke lead tke
Mtlon in individual scoreing ia 1824
witk U3 points while et Haskell,
made his big ten thdut nmid glory.
Twenty-two times heSeagried the bell
for an average of slightly men than
five yards.
On defense, McLain was a bulwark,
stepping the Maroons time and again.
His prowess, coupled with thnt of
his running mates, Willis Glassgod,
barges down the Kuskokwim river to
Bethel, where they were pat aboard' •
steamers to Seattle.
Stormy weather encountered byi
Amarille Lodge No. 781 today. Sea-
day, October Jd, for the purpome of
eoadnctlng too funeral et oar de-
ceesed brother Natl W. Mart. All
Master Masons whe can ponaibly u-
toad Uls meetlag plehse"be present
MeCormiek Advertising Agency M
ISLAND'S POPULATION MOWS
FORTITUDE IN HURRL
CANE'S AFTERMATH ' -
McIntosh
ties.
Dr. B. 1
lege, is it
psychology
course is
parent* ■
boys and
expert in
L. A. O
departmer
| , self a sue
the cour*.
al reedy p
All Am
terested *
as auditor
vision is
er de not
continue
These
three m«i
period oi
meet at
Preside
"We wilt
of Amaril
ness mat
arithmeti
education
clans can
fifteen n
to fifty <
The t
months <
Said P
when eve
educatior
to get t
Texas St
tending
all adult
Accord
rollment
started
meeting.
—
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 332, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 14, 1928, newspaper, October 14, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564102/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.