Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 272, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 10, 1930 Page: 2 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Amarillo Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
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vrornw*c
THE AMARILLO DAILY NEWa 1
.E
BY BOOZE SPECIALISTS
Q
TO JAN. 2 1935
JO.
detd
A Camvbell, C.
K,t
-
$
MURDERERS OF
6
YOUTH MAY BE
V
HID IN HOUSTON
--
K
president made plans for the recon-
renented hie
resignation.
Duncan
The epecially mIkIkI null at the school in
brought to beer on Dunton grew out
ton today in tba auto they’stole from
.Ki
1e
passed and approved upon
geons was
The ordinance, it
second roading.
illness. Mr. Craw-
ford with hie family had lived in
.at Portland, Ore., in the war oa the
Ho is 48 yeara old, bald, stocky.
•is
H.
Hei
qualifications Garner
speaker
was
ger.
Whoa placed on cane sugar la a at 2 o'clock in the Social Center of
nitrogen, and instead of lemon flavor,
grief
ring of 14 men rounded
"Th* men
are
t'
FAIR OFFERS DOUBLE
PICTURE BILL TONIGHT
I
«
sueh pretext. He said he thought
servica in the dig
I
Germany To Be Heard
At League of Nations
Council, Envoy Shows
Three R’s
Cheat Tree
$14,000 PAVING
ARE GRANTED
DONALD K. CRAWFORD
WITH SANTA FE, DIES
BUSINESS WOMEN OF
TEXAS TO HOLD 1931
CONVENTION IN CITY
NEW RESIGNATION
IN PANAMA CLEARS
POLITICAL SITUATION
BOY FOUND DROWNED
IN SAME POOL DOG
WAS KILLED BY DAD
Kiwi
membi
Tuesd,
For
guard
COMPENSATION APPLICATION
PERIOD WILL AFFECT SO
TO 70 IN THIS AREA
ton, C. T. Dsvis,
Walker, Mr. and
Donald K. Crawford, 40, Santa Fe
assistan; signal supervisor, died in
an Amarillo hospital early Tuesday
neel
surp
l" • |
petin
1 •
FUNERAL SERVICES
HELD FOR VICTIM
OF GAS EXPLOSION
OTT
marked
Saving
more |
ent catalysts, depending on the food
which is supplied to it end the condi-
"Any given organism," he said
'may produce • a number of differ-
on land,
learning
GEORGETOWN FARMER SHOT
TWICE IN HEAD; SEEK
MAN AND WOMAN
shallow pan, they said, and fed the
proper amount of nitrogen, he makes
citrie acid, the essential of lemon
juice. He does it so cheaply that one
HOLD NEGRO AFTER
BATTLE IN GEORGIA
He has turned up big rum
orators in several conspiracies.
ALM
robbed
of an J
raped
Fort 8
employ
in the
Th
crons
work
“M
could
him
bice
Vi
mind
. with
things. He has had temporary charge
of offices in Chicago, Fort Worth and
Albany, for instance, and served ably
contained in the Hoover letter
Sheppard.
meeting wes changed from 4 o'clock
to 2:30 to accommodate mothers with
children in school.
The climax of the deadlock came
when the cabinet requested Duncan's
yika and her adjacent colonies, Ugan-
da and Kenyeuhder common admin-
istrations as regarde customs duties
and floral management.
TRIESTE, Italy, Sept. 8.—Italian
police have made many arrests in
the Postumia district, it was learned
today, in connection with recent rev-
elations concerning Slav anti-Italian
societies
The police were given information
concerning the societies by docu-
ments and a notebook found on the
body of the Slovene bandit, Kucek,
who was killed in a clash with Italian
border guards during the trial of
Slovene terrorists here last week.
Seeretaries were appointed for each
of the churches represented in the
Woman's Christian Temperance Un-
Ion at the meeting Monday afternoon
would quickly gather a national fol-
lowing which would make him a
formidable bidder for the presiden-
tial nomination, many observers be-
lieve.
W.C.T.U. APPOINTS
NEW SECRETARIES
being trained as teachers for the «uidance of other agents in ths field.
LEGION AUXILIARY IN
CHARGE OF SOCIAL
attended by 25 members.
The first order of business was
X- and Mrs. L. P.
fra. James C. Ely.
■ ’ ,
‘ y hi
vestigation work, is one of the pro-
hibition bureau’s star. moa.
For years he has been a trouble-
shooter and an ace investigator for
the service. When a prohibition ad-
ministrator became diacouraged, or
Ml Prase.)
Resignations of
Mrs Floyd Sloan aad Mr. and Mrs.
Will Benton.
ard E. Boxwell, Mr. and Hra. H. I.
Pond. H. F. Newman, Mra. W. M.
Deaton, Mrs. W. J. Danforth, Fort
U time of I
la the
assistan
bandits]
the flow
When
. Motley
shots al
the fir
was in J
. time of I
ho rani
e shots si
not kna
effect. I
It wJ
office 1
in the!
Logans
tial part of their manufacturing pro-
cess.
"Tea, coffee and cocoa or choo-
lata are not usually considered under
the heading of fermented beverages,
but fermentation has its part ia their
preparation for beverage use."
Ferments are used, he said, for
artificial agoing of green coffee.
I SIX PROJECTS LET BY CITY;
r. NURSERYMEN’S-ORDI-
NANCE PASSED
long, set on wooden pllee with steel
stringers and concrete floor. Estimate
of the cost was placed between $60,-
000 and $70,000 by W. C. Burnham,
state highway construction engineer
today.
known hat cleaner.
One of those products is a health-
ful drink and the other a dangerous
poison.
The fungi and bacteria first hove
to be “purified," that is, separated
from the thousands of other slightly
different organisms with whom they
ordinarily live. This is done by stiek-
Prohibition Director Amos W. Waedrerk. shown above, left, with M. M.na
their victim.
The homicide squad was looking
for a man and a woman aeon near a
tourist camp here last night in a
car the license number of which was
the sams as that on Miller’s auto.
The youth, who expected to be mar-
ried in about three weeks, was shot
about 1130 a. m. Monday shortly after
he left hie fiancee at her home and
drove toward hia brother'a home eevon
miles north of Georgetown, where he
lived.
The killers shot Miller twice In the
head, rolled hie body down an em-
bankment and rode off in his auto.
The body was found after daylight
Monday. It had been combed of valu-
ablee except two 81 bills.
A Williamson county deputy sher-
iff is in Houston working with De-
tectives DeWeese and Whatley in an
'effort to locate the couple.
W. J. Campbell,
M. Crafton.
suffering from gunshot woi
He was taken to Savannah
keeping. Three o4Ms musge
MS held fhme
ITALIAN POLICE MME,
MANY SUV ARRESTS
the First Christian Church.
The time for th regular meetings
was changed from the first and third
Mondays of each month to the second
(By United Prewe)
HOUSTON, Sept. The murder,
ore of Ron W. Miller, 11, Georgetown
factoring the acid by this method.
Make Nat Cleaner
But feed thie fungus a little more
(By Untted Pres)
AUSTIN, Sept. 9.—Roller skat-
ing has not been done justles in
this age of marathons, in the
opinion of A. A. Schmidt, erstwhile
mechanic of Luling. He’s out to
rectify the overeight.
Schmidt rested here today be-
tween laps of his long distance
skating from Luling to Washing-
ton, D. C. •
Tanned a rich -brown from long
exposer* to a glaring Toxas sun.
he rolld. up Confrere Avenue end
removed hie skates tor a breathing
spell. He planned to resume his
northward trek tomorrow.
"It‘s not bad at all.” he said.
n yy - :
rAGE TWW
DARIEN, Ga., Sept. 9.Nationai
guardsmen cap ts rod a wounded negro
today whom they believed participat-
ed im the attempted bnk holdup
which led to a gun fight and lynch-
ing here yesterday.
The negto, "Bubbles" Grant, was
Itngon; Construct and maintain bowl-
ing alleys and other Innocent aporta.
Capital stack $24,000. Incorporatore:
Lynes Syndicate Mo. 1, El Paso;
establish and maintain oil business.
Capital etock $52,000. Incorporators;
John Lynes, Charles C. Gibson, Eu-
gene B. Clark.
„haowing boot-
"Wadhington ere
(By The A
PANAMA, Sep
. sprink
at th
Meyer
and M
in si
been
been
The
Xet
rion
denies
dred I
ians J
quart]
off t
Mrym
A:
' did, J
they
Rr1
comp
was explained at the time of ita in-
troduction, is consideted a protective
measure against “fly-by-night" auro-
(GE
5 B
(By Untted Prem)
CLEVELAND, Ohio, Sept. 9.—
Tree aitting yielded to the three
R‘s today as Aaaa Kobik, 14 end
Naomi Worden, 12, returned to
their class rooms.
Aaaa aad Naomi descended taste
eight after living nearly two
months in their leafy retreats.
Anna, according to unofficial yoe-
ords, won with a mark of 1,a06
hours, id hours better than Naomi.
supervisor of Uncle Sam's new prohibition school, ja reported to
dered deleted from the course, of instryetiow my further sug-
that children be employed aa dry epira or in Thadewine boot-
Mrs. L. L. Brewer, national organ-
toer of W. C. T. U-„is visiting cities
in the Penhandle,‘and will be ia
Amarillo ‘this week. Mrs. Brewer
will remain in the Panhandle and
la West Texas engaged in organiza-
tion work until the national conven-
tion which meeta in Houston, Novem-
ber 14-19. •
TEXAS-OKLAHOMA
TO GET BRIDGE BIDS
tions under whiek, it is naked to
work."
Gae From Corn Stalks
g-gg
School Displays
S
(By The Asociated frm
CINCINNATI. Ohio, Sept, f.—Ar-
tificial lemon juice made out of cans
sugar by a fungus was reported to
the American Chemical Society today
ae the latest feat of a new industry
which usee molds. fungi, fermenta
and bacteria to replace machines and
human hands.
Scientists told how to catch a bacil-
lus or a fungus and train him or her.
Far from being preposterous, they
said, the idea started when man first
made alcohol, and recently bae grown
no fact that today it adds hundreds
of millions of dollars dnnually to
American commeree. This saga of
the "microscopie workmen" wee re
lated at the first general session of
the society in symposium on indus-
trial fermentation.
Illustrating the versatility of a
properly managed fungus, Dr. H. T.
Herrick and O. E May of the United
States bureau of chemistry and noils
at Washington, described the new
lemon juice fungus.
nually, said Dr. F. C. Blanck, of the
food research division of the Uaited
States bureau of chemistry and soils.
"Such foods." he said, "as broad,
certain cheeses, cocoa and ghocolate
certain eared meats and fish, sauer-
Kt
0 A
h A
SAN JACINTO METHODIST
MIXED CLASS IN SOCIAL
The mixed class of tbs San Ja-
cinto Methodist Church held a so-
cial Tuesday night at the parsonage,
and wears tortoise-shell glasses. At
when they go back home at the end
of September are being told the best
means of getting evidence against
largo scale liquor conspirators and
the best way to avoid making them-
selves both obaoxieus and futile by
treading on the toes of the American
citizen and wasting time with a lot
at patty bootleggers.
The pupils are supposed to be more
or lees the cream of the prohibition
service and anyone who lo acquainted
with the ordinary run of prohibition
agents would realise that this wide-
awake, anappy-looking crew was
chosen with some'are. As they sit
at their desks taking extensive notes
during lectures they are learning not
the rudiments but the fine potato of
the business. Between leeturen they
get together in groups and exchange
notes on their own experiences in en-
forcement work.
Harry M. Dengler, who supervises
the school and teaches all about in-
86,690 MEXICO JOBLESS
(By The Asocinted Press. I
MEXICO CITY, Sept. -The de-
partment of statistical information
today announced that the census of
May 15 showed only 86,690 unemploy-
ed in all Mexico. This is slightly
mor* than one-half of one per cent
of the population. Of the unemploy-
ed. 13,695 were In the federal district
around Mexico City.
An ordinance providing for vacating
an alley in block Mo, 89, Bivins No. 2
addition was introduced.
In addition to the usual claims,
bills presented by Vanee Huff, Maj.
E. A. Wood, city planner, the Tri-
State Fair ead D. L McDonald were
allowed. Huff's bill covered an ex-
peace account on a trip to Austin
during which he represented the city
of Amarillo in connecton with the
sale of a recent bond issue. As city
planner. Major Wood received a sal-
(By United Prem)
FORT TALBOT, Wales, Sept. 9. —
Three days after his father bad
drowned the pet dog of Albert Dono-
van, 11. in a pool here, the lad's body
was recovered from the same spot.
Tho father, a fuel worksr, told a
On Long Skate,
resignation, Duncan prenented his I AyA€ to
resignation to Easiquzihzies, man, i -AD •V.
age? Of the Natior’siik, who Xi l • .
1 it to the president. The prevtpeT Washngton
brought to bear oa Dunean grow out ” “1 1M5-1
thorough, up-to-date, scientific meth-
ods of investigation to enable them
to trace crimes from the evidence
left behind,” Dspgler expleins. "They
are being toldo bo felr, honest and
truthful, and to face the facts at all
ttmes even if they don’t fit with their
theories."
Their Quallfieations.
He wae caked whet qualities make
a good prohibition investigator.
"There to no special background
or quality for aa investigator.” he
replied. “The British take country
boys from the plow for their mas-
veloue organization at Scotland Yard.
The Germans get their official detec-
_________, MURRAY,’
TWO-FISTED SCOTCHME
Amick, E. M. Fitch, K. K. Bigelow,
H. M. McIntosh. E. M. Paneoast and
II. 8. Anderson.
Honorary pallbenrers were Frank
Ford, W. A. McSpadden, Cy Roiger,
J. M. Baldridge, C. N. Ochiltree, J. B.
Harrie, R. A. Ford. William Kane, T.
K. Cherry, Hugh Alspaugh, 8. D. Mc-
Ilroy, Paul C. Jones, John H. Sheerin,
W. E. Hubbard, and Dr. F. M. Bose
of Amarillo, T. F. Morton, M.. M. Mc-
Donald, Alec Schneider, Tom B.
Bliss, Ed Daly, Earl Jayton, M. Mc-
Laughlin, C. L. Todd, H. Busby, Don
stricken at the loss of bie pet which
had developed a case of distemper.
The jury censured the father for
not exercising sufficient vigilance
over hie eon after the incident.
ice overseas. This credit applies as
the premium on a paid-up insurance
policy for whatever face amount that
money will pay for. It really en-
tities him to a certificate which
amounts to a policy.
At’the end of two years this policy
has a loan value of nearly nine per
cent of the face value and the loan
lvalue constantly inereases with' each
passing year.
The state convention, recently held
at Austin, passed a resolution asking
that these certificates be paid off at
80 per cent of she face value and it is
hoped by the Legion that ouch legis-
lation will be formulated some time
in the near future to the end that
the policies may be paid off.
C, M. Rogers, along with Miao
Anna McDonald, will be in charge
of the city echool display at the
Tri-State Fair this year. Accord-
ing to Mr. Rogers the display was
prepared last spring and everything
to in readinees for the opening of
the Tri-State Fair Meaday, Sep-
tember 22.
coroner’s jury nis son
Six paving contracts, calling for an
expenditure of nearly $14,000, were
awarded Tuesday night by the city
commission and petitions for throe
other paving projects were granted
Th* si* projecta, successful bidder*
and cost of each:.
West Seventh Avenue from Van
Baron to Jackson, Wost Texas Con-
struction company, $1,075.31.
North Garfield, Wichita to Eighth.
Gober A Thompson. $5,663.54.
Kansas from Sunset 140 feet south,
Gober A Thompson. $1.16885.
Dixie from Sunset 144 couth, Gober
A Thompson, $1,163.85.
South Ong from Fourteenth to
Fifteenth, Gober A Thompson, Mr
21140,
West Seventh in San Jacinto, John
S. Meknight, $1,696.80.
Petition for paving ea West Ninth
from the precoat pavement on Woo-
torn to the pavement oa Bushland
.Australians are plenning an air
mail service between Melbourne end
Tasmania.
dieated dearly Germany regards the
Britleh proposal ae to Tanganyika as
direct violation of the terms of the
mandate.
A few minutes after the Tangan-
yika incident, the question pf a de-
fence force in the Saer dlctriet eame
before the council. Thin force con-
•tot* of approximately 200 French and
50 Belgians. The council was con-
sidering a proposal for reduction of
thie defense force.
Foreign Minister Briand of France,
By RODNEY DUTCHER
NBA Service Writer
WASHINGTON, Sept. —You can
go ahead and laugh at Uncle Sam's
new school for prohibition agents if
you waat to, but to ono who site in
and watches it looks like just more
trouble for the bootleggers.
— The M or mere pupils in the school
ar* by ne means merely a bunch of
dumb prehibition agents, nor are
their teachers anything other than
the boot experts the government caa
provide in their respective field*.
Besides being • good publicity
stunt for an administration which
doesn’t want people to believe that
it isn't trying to enforee prohibition,
the school is giving its students an
exact idea of just what th* now en-
foreement regime wants done and
the way to do it.
Oppose Biggrat orfenders
. Briefly, the lawyer* and officer* of
the notional enforeement nystem who
ar* learning their lessons and will
pass them on to their various forces
K,
of his newspaper campaign against
the assembly which he had charged
was unconstitutional. The education
minister said his own strict adher-
onco to th* constitution prevented
him from resigning without first be-
ing asked. Bofor* writing out the
paper he eonsulted Dr. Harmodio
Arias, a prominent lawyer on the con-
atitutionality of his act.
Active pallbearers were
general business discussion which
was followed by gomes and refresh-
ments.
Those ettending were* Mr. end
Mrs. H. H. Yarberry; Mr. and Mrs.
C. M. Henderson, Joe Shields, Mr.
end Mrs. H. D. Cuykendall, Mr. and
Mrs. G. F. Branson, Mrs. W. W. Chil-
Richard Arlen in Zane Grey’s
"Light of Western Stars” win be the
added tentmr on th* regular weekly
double 'Mil at the Fair Theater
'Wednesday night. This picture will be
shown following the • o'clock show
at which "Anybody's Woman” with
Ruth Chatterton end Clive Broek is
the chief attractiom.
Those who attend the 9 o’clock show
may remain for "The Light of W•st-
ern Stars" without any extra admis-
sien charge.
suggested that the procedure wae ae -
yet not outlined dearly enough to
permit the French and German rep-
resentatives to draft a resolution of
agreement.
Dr. Curtis retorted that since the
Rhineland was evacuated, he believes
there wins no longer any reason for
the French to maintain any force at
all in the Baar.
The German minister firmly urged
that the eouneil should decide im-
mediately to suppress the defense
forces.
Briand rejoined that his suggestion
was not a pretext for maintaining a
French force in the Baar and that
th* French government sought no
Gribboa aad Frank Beery of Pampa.
• Clabe Kennedy and E. J. Wise of Bor-
The Austrians use only university
graduates. The Italian carabinieri la
part of the army.
"But a good investigator needs to
know a little of everything and to
be able to recognise evidence when
he sera IL He must be a good ob-
CONTRACTSFORUMESASSAENSRUN
Rites for Charles L. Echard, 40.
Amarillo drilling contractor who re-
ceived fatal burns in a gae explosion
near Fritch Sunday morning and died
here eerly Monday, were hold at 9:80
Tuesday morning from the residence,
8008 Harrison. ,
Dr. R. Thomsen, pastor of the
Presbyterian Church officiated at th*
services. The body wae taken over-
land following the services to Lawton,
Okla, for burial.
Only Mrs. Echard survives the de-
ceased. ,
Mrs. Echard is the sole survivor.
< * Te Aemocipted Prma)
ATHENS—This Aeropoli-crowned
city where Plato dreamed of a now
wnd has the fresh distinetion of
entablishing the first electricaily
instance, wbsn the coast
ing August and was granted expenses,
making a total of $567.74. The bill
from the Tri-State Fair wae 8109 for
eatalog advertising. D. L McDon-
ald's claim was for $728.20, repreaent-
tag expenses connected with pumping
water from a privately-owned well
to supplement the city water supply
for 12 days during August. A mil-
lion gallons of water were furnished
daily during that time, it wae said.
A quarterly report of th* Pleasant
Valley bus line, showing a loss of
-$742 from April, when th* lin* was
established, to August, wae accepted
and ordered filed.
Ia order to secure the proper
width for Highway 83, a* specified
by the State Highway Commission,
th* city had donated a 10-foot strip
along that highway at the Municipal
Airport end the commission author-
ized th* mayor to sign a deed for the
land.
-M- -0
----
was grantsd, it being explained that
the city limit line was in th* middle
•f this email strip and that the coun-
ty had agreed to pay for its share of
the paving cost. Mvo i
petitions for paving North Clem: gootta
land from Wichita to Eighth end
LEGION POLICY WASHNTpNINERFSTF
LIMIT SET IIP IN STERLING^ MURR
Placards bearing n quotation from
Herbert Hoovor'e now famoue letter
to Senator Sheppard on June 4, 1918,
are to be need by wets in their cam-
paign for modification. One of the
famous Hoover utterances said to
have been chosen for the placard* is:
"It is mighty difficult to got drunk
on 8.78 per cent beer.” This wae
Tanganyika is now administered by
Great Britain under a mandate from
the League of Nations. Regarding the
atatus of both the Saar and Tangan-
yika, German public sentiment from
time to time has been m a e h
agitated. A strong faction has stead-
fastly hoped thsy would be returned
to German control.
Dr. Curtius announced to the coun-
cil he would have something to say
later—presumably tomorrow when
the league assembly open*—About
Another convention for Amarillo.
And unique, too, that it ia a meet-
jpg of busineas women.
Representative of the successful
business women of the state will be
800 delegates who> gather hsro for
the 1931 convention of the Toxas
Fsdsration of Business and Profes-
sional Women’s clubs. ' ’ nr”
Formal acceptance by the state as-
sociation of Amarillo as a convention
elty was announced at the meeting of
the local club Tuesday night in the
Amarillo hotel. Invitation was. made
by Amarillo delegatee and by the
Chamber of Commerce at the 1930 as-
sombly last June in the Rio Grande
Valley.
It is the first time the association
has met in the Penhandle. The dates
will be announced later.
The AmariHo club lo 10 years old
• nd ranks fourth in membership
among the 49 clubs of the state. Ap-
proximately 8,000 members are en-
rolled in Texas.
Miss Frankie Gober ie president of
the local club.
misrogom, ana anstena oi wmon ii*v*r, At this meeting literature wae dis-
ho produces exalie acid, the well tributed and plans for the work dis-
cussed.
struetion of bie oabinet.
Worth: Mra. Hei Pegues, Bernice
Pegues, Mrs. Georgie Ferlet, Mr. and "I
A speech made bore recently by i____________—_____
Ludwig Kastiy, former German mom- ome force necensary to insure free-
An
Seldom has so much interest been
shown in a primary as attaches to
that in Louisiana Tuesday whsre the
popular vsteran Senator Joseph E.
Ransdell is seeking re-eleetion with
tho turbulent Gov. Huey P. Long ae
hie opponent. Ransdell is the quiet
effective type of southern eenator
which has reflected great credit to
the South and to his party aad has
been of great service to his state.
Long is of the Heflin-Blease type and
his term of office has boon one of
turmoil. Reports from Louisiana ere
that there is a strong swing to Rans-
doll. His high ranking placo on the
Senate Commerce Committee, which
handles flood control legislation,
which is at psrsmount importance to
his state, ie a big aid to him in his
campaign.
With Heflin's elimination certain
■nd Blease’s chancew dimmed, the
hope here ie that Long will be do-
feated by Ransdell. It would avail
little to lose Heflin and Blease and
gain Long. Irrespective of party
Washington is pulling for'the **c-
cess of the dignified Ransdell.
kttrintatonipeseraand.oncnhan. wut Calvin Coddardand
basic at 81 per day for service In------- ---- _
the states and 81.38 per day for serv- farmer, were believed to be in Houn
PERU FREES AMERICAN.
(Ny The Azoetated Prem.;
UMA. Porn, Sept. 9.—The govern-
ment announced tonight that Char-
loo W. Sutton, American who had
been arrested by the new Rancho*
Carre government on chargee of mis-
handling irrigation funds during
the Leguia regime, had been re-
leased from custody. J. H. Gildrod,
another American, hold ponding an
audit of hia account, wae released
this morning.
MURPHY TAKES LEAD
FOR MAYOR OF DETROIT
(By The Auociated Pram.)
DETROIT, Sept. 9.—Frank Murphy,
former reeorder'e coart judge, took
the lead in Detroit'a special mayor-
alty election tonight in returns from
127 scattered precincts out of a total
of 828.
Murphy had 18.188 votes and
Mayor Cheries Bowles, who was re-
called on July 22, had 10,001 in these
precincts. George Engel, backed by
enforcement seemed in a particularly
had way in a certain section, DengE following a brief
hao been sent in to take hold ofFard -ith hit “4
Charters Granted |
__(yThaAnnqelaigarea)
AUSTIN, Sept. 9 — Chartered:
Del Norte Oil Co, las. El Paa*;
transport, buy and 9*11 oil aad gae
and other minerals. Capital stock
88.000. Ineorporatorst R. Q. Scott, W.
U MeWillams, Joseph U. Bweeney.
service. He wq* born in Pennsyl-
vania but comes from Missoula,
Moat, near which ho taught in a
high school for five yeers. He took
a civil service examination, cam* to
Washington and naturally drifted
into investigation work with the in-
ternal Revenue bureau. He haa writ-
ten monographs on inveatigation aad
report-writing which have been pub-
lished by th* government, including
the manual for prohibition agents.
These were based on hie own experi-
ences and observations, as well as his
knowledge at laws and policies.
Rounded Up Gang.
radPkleend“umnah,Tpxa tives from among ex-service men.
-he Structure Will De -,00 *M*
night he reads deeply into the refer-
ence works on criminal investigation
and at actual experiences of the
world's real life detectives. But he
never reads any fictional detective
neized the British ship Pescawha off
the Oregon coast it found 1,000 cases
of whiskey but no evidence of ille-
gality. Thia wae embarrassing and
Dengler wae put on the job.
Down behind the captain's bunk on
the Pescawha he found a vaguely
worded note containing the name of
what turned et to be another ves-
sel. Intensive investigation revealed
the on-shore gang with which the
Pescawha wae doing business and,
thank to Denglar'a application of
meager clows, the illegitimate er-
rand of the vessel was proved and a
lag th* point of a needle Into a
colony containing the wanted one
raising a new colony from what ad-
bares to th* point and repeating the
process until just on* breed remains.
Then be is teeted for efficiency,
aad perhaps set to work.
These organisms, said Prof. Ellis
I Fulmer of Iowa State college, pro-
duce substances called eatalyst»
which am their working tool*.
MEMPHIS GETS BIG RAIN.
Special to The News
MEMPHIS, Sept. 9—Rain amount-
ing to 1.20 inches fall over HaH
county last night, which will prove
very beneficial to the cotton al
feed erope, especially the feed.
la feed manufacture alone, Fer-
ehop in Greece, menta help produce hundreds at mil-
(By The Aswoeiated Pram.)
GENEVA, Sept. 9.—Dr. Juliue Cur-
tius, German foreign minister, today
gave the League of Nations council
two proofs that Germany has a vig-
orous foreign policy despite the tan-
lied political situntion at home.
Dr. Curtius' moves wore mode dur-
ing diseussion of the Saar district,
former German territory, now admin-
letered by the League of Natione, and
Tanganyika, former German Booth
African colony loot by the World
<
30A9
masked I
State Ite
eashiet, I
lag *9
dashed
into an
escape. I
A she
pursuit I
--------- 4 J
A great governor omes alon«Kat
rar* intervals. Texas ones had two
in suecesston, Hogg and Culberom
Mow York has had Clev*laad, Hughee
and Smith ever a period of 49 yearn.
Now Jersey had Wilaon; Illinois had
Lowden, and Iowa had Cummins.
Texas has a governor now. Moody,
who is time’a perapective will rank
high. But as usual things gov-
ernors’ fame doos not extend far out-
sid* at their state boundaries.
Washington knows Murray much
better than it does Sterling, for after
writing the Oklahoma Constitution
Murray served several term* la con-
grees. The lata Congressman Lind-
bergh of Minnesota, father of Col.
Charles Lindbergh, once told thie
correspondent that Murray knows
mom about government than any man
in the United States. Lindbergh and
Murray were congressionel colleagues,
the one a Democrat and the other
a Ropublicen.
Sterling, a busineee man, won a big
victory at a time when business men
la ekecutive officee were in at least
a temporary eclipse. The Texan
stepped In and demonstrated that ha
haa been accumulating a lai of ideas
about government. There lo little
doubt about the ability of Murray
and Sterling. Either or both ere like-
ly to achieve greatness.
Murrey is very poor. Sterling Is
very wealthy. An ieeuo against M ar-
ray wae that ho wore hie shirts a
day or two after they ehould here
been in the laundry. An issue against
Sterling was that he had too many
bathtuba in his house. Ia their hearty
western menner both Texans and Ok-
lahoma laughed these objections out
of the campaign.
W
jv
Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Garvin, Mr. and
Mre. C. L. Smith, Mrs. D. W. Wise
nnd Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Priee.
—.1 1.1 .
By BASCOM N. TIMMONS
(Special Washington Correspondent)
WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. B.-
Political observers have their eyes
on two Southwestern gubernatorial
nominees, a couplo af two-fisted
Seotehmen who have attracted far
mors attention than tho oommoa run
of gubernatoril nominees. These two
man ora Boss Sterling at Texas nad
William H. Murray of Oklahoma.
Both are Democratie nominees end
both are ae certain of election as
election day la to arrive. The Ro-
publiean party in the two states after
a 1928 spurt finds its fortune at low
ebb.
server. He doesn't have to be an
expert on fingerprints, bullets, fire-
arms, handwriting or any such spe-
elal field, but he ought to know what
eon be done by on expert end when
an expert' ehould be called in.”
Webster Spates, who assiats Deng-
ler and irate res the prohibition stu-
dente on the law— using Supremo
Court decisions largely, founded the
firs* prohibition sehool hore in 1927
under Gen. Lincoln C. Andrews. That
was confined to egents in the division
of aleohol aad brewery contrel. Spates
woe eeven years in the attorney gen-
eral's office and six years ia private
praetice before he became logoi ad-
vieor for alcohol aad brewery con-
tmnL --I , .3,. .. .....
the Bowles Recall committee,
third with 9,741.
So what the ferment finally gives
bach to man depends ea the catalyst
tool.
Furthermore these ferment work-
meet often produce the eamo product
out of quite different raw materiale.
An illustration was given by Prof.
A. M- Boswell of th* Univeraity of
nii**ls. H* ha* bacteria making
fuel and illuminating gas, called
metKane, out of waste form products.
Whether he feeds them corn stalk*,
say bean vines, straw, excelsior, al-
most anything * farmer raises and
cannot sell, they always make meth-
ane out of it.
If the natural gas bow being piped
from oil fields through the Middle
West ever gives out, said Professor
Buswell, It is quite possible that the
farmers along the route can make
enough methane to keep the gas pipes
full for the city folk*.
stories. He keeps in touch with Au-
Louisiana from Fourth to the edge
of the pork nt Second alto ware
granted.
Signatures of all th* homsteaders
•n North Cleveland between Wich-
ita and Eighth were on the one pe-
tition. ..J" -
Petition for curbing nnd guttering
streets in the Country Club district
was granted.
Resolutions aecepting completed
paving on four street* were adopted,
the projects beinz Fant Twenty-
Second from Fillmore to Pieree, Van
Buren from Thirty-Bixth to Gables
addition. Van Buren from Thirty-
Fourth to Thirty-Sixth and Northenst
Seventh from Buchanan to Lincoln.
No protests were registered againat
the proposed paving of North Wil-
liams from the north property line
at Wichita to the present pavement
an Northeast Eighth Avene* and an
ordinane, levying assessments far
the improvement was ordered.
_ Paso Nurnery Ordinanee
Haviag been amended to reduce the
fs* required of nurserymen who rail
stock in Amarillo from 828 to $15, an
ordinance providing for granting per-
mits to nurserymen and tree sur-
OF UNIQUE EXPERIMENTS____________________
■ ■ -- - ■ Tfn*im~~r eff the northwest const
By HOWARD W- BLAKESLEE lions of dollars worth of edibles an-
(Associated Proes Selence Editor)
Amarillo since Mey, 1928, when he
wae transferred here from La Junta,
Colo, . 1.6
H* resijea t‘1016 West Fifteenth
Aveuw’atd is Survived by his widow
end ous ton, Rei, age 8. He wae a
member of the Congregational Church
and the Masonic Lodge.
The body ie in eere of the Griggs
funeral home awaiting the arrival
of releilves when funeral arrange-
ments will be made.
American concern already is menu- end fourth Mondays. The hour at
Tbs American Legion Auxiliary
was in charge of the joint social eve-
ning of the Legion und Auxilihry, to-
rether with the 40 A 8 end 8 nnd 40,
et th* Legion Homo Tuesday night.
Games were played.
Ics eream wes served st the close.
The following were present: Mrs.
J. Hartley, Mr. end Mrs. Otho Far-
rail. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Nation, Mr.
and Mrs. N. B. Armstrong, Mr. nnd
Mra. Reyes Gaut, Mr. and Mrs. I. C.
Barend, L. T. Baker, Mr. and Mra. E.
A. Hudson. Mr. and Mrs. E: B. Arch-
ambeau, Mrs. Harvey Crudgington,
23
Hanson Poet No. 84. American Le-
gion, at Amarillo, wishes all ex-aerv-
lee men to know that the time far
filing eppliAtlona on adjusted com-
pensation has been moved up by eon-
grass from January 2. 1980. to Janu-
ary 8. 1888. accotding to word from
Floyd L. Bloan, post adjutant.
A dead-line had bran set on the
filing of such applications far Inst
January. Wbsn congress eonvened in
June the time web advanced. Thie
makes it possible for ex-service men
of World War service who ore en-
titled to adjusted compensation, to
make -proper application.
The local headquarters kero, In the
American Legion home, hoe received
a new supply at application blanks
and io anxious to file applications for
any ex-service men entitled to com-
pensation and wko hao hitherto not
made application.
Mr. Bloan estimates that there are
49 to 70 ex-service men in thie terri-
tory entitled to the privileges under
thio net of congress.
The adjusted compensation works
ia this manner: The ex-service men
goto credit for bie service on the
Few senators hove come forward
oe rapidly in party councils as Sena-
tor Tom Connelly of Texas, who wee
put forward by the party organisa-
tion Monday night to open the qon-
Etessional campaign over a natien-
wide radio hook-up. Conna)ks
epeock lo to be a campaign deed-
ment. There has seldom been eo
effective a political address as that
delivered by the Texas ssnator.
Talk continus* to be heard tht
Congressamn John N. Garner A:
Texas will be put forward as a can-
didate for president in 1932. If the
Democrats win the house. Garner will
come forward in the eeme manner
as Chump Clark did ia 1912. In the
event of Democratie success in the
congressional election Garner's elec-
tion an epeaker of the house ie cer-
tain nnd the epeeker of the house of
opposite party to the president of the
United States ie always hie party's
natioaal leader. With hie atural
-epamemen
Bmuddandhdbnadkasihsdwwudhuhmaa
.Ngcu
According to motion picture trade
paper the Republican National Com-
mittee plans to purphase recording
equipment nnd a mumber af pottable
projector to be used throughout the
length nnd breadth of the land in
case. President Hoqver ie the party
nominee la 1988. A demonstration of
th* type at photophone to be used
has already been made. it is said.
The personality of President Hoover
ie to be exploited in film addresses
which will be distributed ovet the
country, it woo added.
Whether or not thie is true, it ie
certain that the 1932 campaign for
the Republicans will be vastly dif-
ferent to that of 1928. The big four
of the Hoover epeakero in that cam-
palgn were Hughes, Brookhart, Borah
and Lenroot. Hughes end Lenroot are
ia ths bench nnd, therefore, out of
it as party advocates. Borah is, in
disagreement with the’ president 4n
meet every leouo. Brookhart, whose
oampelgn in the form etatee, made
thousands nnd ton of thousands af
Hoover voter, broke first with the
president over patronego matters in
Texas where Brookhart conducted an
investigation. Later he voted against
almast every Hoover measure.
President Hoovr’s friends despair
of hie ever obtaining a reconcilia-
tion with Borah, but hope that he
may patch up hie differences with
Brookhart, whose ie mora strongly
entrenched in hia state thun qer.
Brookhart, it now appear*, willgbke
a senatorial colleagu• of hie Thdi
ia the next eenate. The Brookhart
candidate, Representative U J. Diek-
inson, won overwhelmingly I* Iowa,
where Dlekinson’a opponent. Gov-
ernor Hemmill mode his eempsige w
the slogen: "End the Braokhert td-
tatorship." K
BEBE CHEAPER PLANES ;
economics far manufacturing air-
craft will be made by th* Satiety at
Automotive Engineers insechnicai
LEMON JUICE FROM CANE .
SUGAR IS LATEST FEAT
(Br The Ausoeiated Pres.)
OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept. The
Oklahoma aad Texae highway com-
missions will receive duplicate bide,
September 14, fot construction of a
free bridge-neross Rod river oa the
Carlsbad highway between El Do-
Minister of Agriculture Luis Felipe
Colomeat and Minister at Public Ed-
ucation Jeptha B. Duncan today clar-
iflod th* political atmosphere and
waa believed to have everted n crisis
menacing for many been the life
at the administration of President
Arosemena.
Following the resignations the
other experts in the general field, in
thin country nnd Europe.
Dengler had twelve iars of inves-
tigation work for ike Bureau of In-
tonal Revenue end the prohibition
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 272, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 10, 1930, newspaper, September 10, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564918/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.