Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 94, Ed. 1 Monday, February 18, 1929 Page: 2 of 8
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IHE AMARILLO DAILY NEWS.
PAGE TWO
-
GERMANAIR
PIONEERSEES
GIVEN HISTORY SOCIETY
CATAPULTUSE
BIG RANCHES
WAGING WAR
OVER WATER
ering helped by rather more encour
Low Close
I
December . 19.43
CLAUDE BANK
ductive to bond buying, and trading
mittee, including
members, for action.
STORK SHOP’S
1
ANNIVERSARY
BA
GANG MURDER
SALE
F
BEGINS
E
DOROTHY DU
night at this week and allo in a spe-
be
TODAY!
Thursday night, and "Lora in Liv- clamp the lid down on all spenk-
goods and silks. Sizes 1 and 3 ....
..... $1.so to $5.00
ly as before.
Burial was in Llano cemetery.
MRS. GENTRY RITES
1
WERE HELD SUNDAY
DOHENY DIES
robbeiles in Amarillo. ended Mi
send name, address.
will
name and rel
iip
send this poliey on ten
I
a*
Rev.
Euriai will ba in l Ima cemeteiy. be giving food to Pansehi
i
5
t
IM
Funeral setvics for Thomas Jef-
terson Clark. M years old, who died
A PENNY A DAY
INSURES $100 A
MONTH INCOME
IS DISCUSSED AT
FORUM SUNDAY
KENTUCKY WIFE IS
ACQUITTED IN CHARGE
MURDERING WOMAN
the week. however, priees rallied 10
poina from the low on week-end cov-
High
.19.47
.19.61
.19.64
. 19.41
19.25
19.35
19.38
19.20
19.24
RITES FOR HESTER
SUNDAYAFTERNOON
HANSONCASE
LIKELYINMAY
•tend for 125 days.
The actual taking
FUNERAL FOR AGED
CITIZEN AT 3 TODAY
CALIFORNIA COURTS TO DE-
CIDE CONTEST BETWEEN
LARGE UNDOWNERS
19.33
18.44
10 44
19.26
19.27
PRISONER HERE
ENDS FOURTH DAY
OF HUNGER STRIKE
OUR NEW SPRING UNES ARE HERE-
THE BEST FOR THE BABY, DISTINCTIVE,
ORIGINAL, INEXF£NSIVE.
Adorable Dresses in Wash Materials and every variety of sheer
BOND MARKET ON
REACTIONARY MOVE
Simply
beneflelai
and they
COFFER-MILLER PLAYERS
HERE 14 YEARS AGO
COAST GUARDSMAN MUST
FACE JURY AGAIN ON MAN.
SLAUGHTER CHARGE
PRICES DURING WEEK FLUC-
TUATE BOTH WAYS IN
NARROW LIMITS
March .
May ..
July . .
October
ended January 0. this year, and the
presiding judge, Lacy D. Jennings,
allowed each side 15 days each tor
argument
COLLEGE DEBATING
HONORS GO TO
HOWARD PAYNE
first made their appearance 14 years
ago in a group of plays that brought
immediate popularity.
“A Marriage of Convenience," on
Chie Styles Coots in all
years .............
CURB PRICES ON
TUMBLE AFTER
COMPLEX TURNS
.’.tu
..He
..$145
..5160
(Inatead of $150 to HM aa quoted la Hedterdars Nem-Globe)
Spring bonnets, dainty assortment moderately pzlced.
15% DISCOUNT 11% on all sales iheludide sew spring merenan-
diae in eoatn, bonnets and dresnes. '
BABY SON DIES
AT RHODES’HOME
TWO FIRE CALLS
EARLY LAST NIGHT
TARIFF COMMITTEE
INTO ITS SEVENTH
WEEK OF SESSION
MEMPHIS OFFICERS
GET STOLEN GOODS
(Continued from Page 1, Col. 7)
mono came. Dr Fishbaugh said, Mra.
Doheny ■ said she did not ehear the
shot whlrh hilled her hueband.
Today Mra. Doheny and K. L. Do-
heny. Sr., were confined to their
rooms in the home of the murdered
man under the rare of Dr. Fishbaugh,
who said both had collapsed and Do-
heny, Sr., was in a serlods condition.
AMERICAN SHIP SAFI
AFTER 8 0 8 CALL MADE
I By The Asoetated Preset
New York, Feb. 17--The American
Freighter Psdncay was reported aafe
today, 14 hours after she had broad-
cast an 1 0 8 from the storm-swept
North Atlantic.
A radio message from Copt. WIL
Ham Kind, of Iha'United Stales liner
Presidenv Harding. to New York of-
ficew of the line told of the safety of
the vessel for which three ships had
anarch cd during the night.
Funeral services for Mrs. Joli Gen-
try. who died at the family home, 1314
Hillcrest Street, Saturday afternoon,
was held at 1 o'clock Sunday after-
noon at the Griggs Funeral Chapel.
Kev. L. N. Stuckey, pastor of the
Polk Street Methodist Church, con-
darted the services.
Burial was la Llano cemetery.
EXTRA SPECIALS
Monday and Tuesday omly—
Feb. is—Feb. IB
Hand embroidered baby dresses, each.........-
Hand embroidered Gertrudes, each...........
Hand embroidered Baby Bibs, each............
Birdseye Diapers, hemmed 30 by W, dozen...
Print wash dresses, sise l and 1 years, each....
the , Democratic j Answer— : : . 2.. ..
' if women have any privilefes, I don’t know what they are. •
Thousmnda Are Protecting Themeelves
Against Warty—Plea Sent Free
For Your Inspection
cry," Friday night, are two of the
beat comedies presented by the popu-
lar troops.
There is nothing ponderous about
the repertoire of the Coffer-Miller
Elayers, who shun melodrama aid
trashy offerings in favor of rolliek-
leg comedies of ths master play-
wgact-
Martha Miller and Jess Coffer do
more than lead the way in dramatics,
they entertain brightly, forcefully
and feelingly.
Special prices of M coots for adults
and 85 cents for children are being
asked.
easies, beer flats, gambling houses
and dives in Chicago brought the ar-
rest of more than 400 persons in
week-end raids. ■
Many of the speak-easies had elos-
ed their doors but the raiders dis-
slseal that the bootleggers still main-
tained a defiant attitude and eontin-
hearings on tariff revision. .
During the week the committee
concluded consideration of the sched-
ule covering paper and books and de-
voted two days to the zundry sec-
tion. t T
Monday. February 26, the commit-
tee will take up administrative pro-
visions of the law which Chairman
Hawley has stated will he given a
, T: - W IS
“ X’ .x;; ann n! aeu
Bright's disease, frazaled nerves, that is the priee tag on drinking
when you are young.
And do not forget the Linen Bargains at the
Oriental Shop
% PRICE—Winter Coats and Bonnets.
14 OFF 1-3
Knit Wear Including Sweaters, Caps, Capes. Bootees, and Logging
Sets. •u
% OFF %e
Jersey and Wool Challie Dresses
(y The Associated Press)
SOMEKSET, Ky. Feb. 11. -A jury
here has acquitted Mrs. Ida Cross
Perkins of murder for the killing
last August of Mrs. Pearl Decker
Owens, Loulsville, whom Mra. Park-
ina found sitting beside her husband,
Logan Perkins, in a train coach.
The verdict waa reported twenty
minutes after the case waa given
the jury.
Spectators who had listened to the
defense plea for freedom for the
“gingham girl" who had killed the
“girl who glittered with gold and
diamonds," expressed surprise that
the jury was ent so long.
The small town mother of two chil-
dren who killed the eity woman she
accused of breaking up her home,
won her freedom, however, only af-
ter hearing the commonwealth's at-
torney deseribe her aa a cold blooded
murderer. Sandusky told the jury
he believed the 27-year-old defendant
and her husband, who ia circuit clerk
at Whitley City, Ky. plotted the kill-
ing and that Perkins gave his wife
the weapon.
(By The Asaoc iated Press}
WASHNGTON, Feb. 47-Havinz
heard about 800 witnesses ask for
higher protective duties against im-
ports of products of tbs farm. fac-
tory, ranch, mine and sea. the house
out their own husbands.
So what are women's privileges?
(Mr The Asnociated Prema)
NEW YORK, Feb. 17— The bond
market started the past week with
strength, but turned reactionary on
resumption of trading after the Lin-
doin’e Birthday holiday. On Friday
The Associated Press combined aver-
ages declined to their lowest level in
more than two years. Developments
in the credit situation were not n-
The Postal Life and Casualty In-
sura oca Co, 1248 Moriarty Bldg,
Kansas City, Mo, la issuing a new
accident policy that paya up to RIM
a month for 84 months In case of
total dltahllliy-Dt.OOB la ease of
death, and casta less than 1 coat a
day-83.50 a year.
Over 40,000 men, women and chil-
dren ever IB yeara of ago already
have this protection. Me costly ex-
amination in required- you do not
even have to pay a cent entil you
have thoroughly examined the policy.
THESTORK shop ;
: Wumerel services win br j
the Grier Funeral chmgeet
Mendny afternoon. • on ducted
J. C. iemere, paster at the
mhele Baptist chureh.
fy
vA
FLOYD COUNTY ]
G. C. BANQUET TO
BE HELD FEB. 28
owned by Pio Pico, first governor of
California, for water which it claims
the 90,000-aere Vali ranch is with-
holding from it.
The preliminary skirmish started ,
in 1924 and waa in court a month.
Thia cleared the field for the main
engagement, which began ia a local
superior court, October 18, 1926, and
has continued.
Instead of pouring armed men into
the combat the ranch owners have
put in dollars, hundreds of thousands
Pc2FoR; o 17-A minlature
3 A outfit, designed and made by
men who have known chuck wagona
for a long period of years, and no
well made that it is pronounced a
work of art by both artists and ranch
men, la the work of Clinton Hoary
You have the opportunity to acquire culture that will give you
poise, and charm of manner, and make you not only an interesting
companion for everybody else, but for yoursek. You have the op-
portunity of storing up information that will serve you at every
turn, no matter what business or profesnion you elect to follow.
You are given the opportunity of developing your mind so that
you can got the very most out of whatever brain power God gave you.
Answer—
I often wish that some philanthropist would
endow a chair of Moral Agriculture in our col-
leges that would teach young men the cost of
raising a wild cat erop, and prove to them by
/acts and figures that it is a disastrous business
that will almost surely land them in bankruptcy
for life.
. . .. wild women with whom you go on wild parties. They are fought with sword and gun over the
the co.il/Item in all the wildcat. bill of expenses. Don't delude I ownership of water bolas, bat today
™™liX tYinking that potting parties are cheap. Doot fool your- the raneheros hero 'Stacked their
youre1. intumn.t“ K" get tired of MaMe and Sadie you arms and resorted to too ourts.
a into it^d-br and ’rid’ .Jay- Far from it, They wil bang This eUng. hergiven’t otate
on as long as you have a dollar in your pocket
Year
17.97
18 12
18.18
18.05
18.02
word. Last night wo had on argument about it with
some other colleglana, aad they contended that we
wore right. that youth must follow its course, and
we must have our fling while the blood ran hot in
use veins. What do you say?
ALPHA and BETA.
(B, United Press)
BUFFALO, N. Y, Feb. 17.— Glenn
Jonnlags, coast guardsman accused
of second degree manalaughter in
‘connection with the death of Jacob
D. Hanson, prominent Niagara Falls
Ilk, probably will face a J cry of his
peers for the second time during the
May term of the Federal Court in
Rochester.
Jennings was recently tried on the
charge by a jury at Elmira, N. Y, the
jury disagreeing. Boatswain Frank
L. Beck, commandant of Fort Niagara,
Jennings’ superior offieer, who waa
Jointly accused with the youthful
coast guardsman, was freed of the
charge by Judge John R. Hazel.
According to Richard H. Templeton,
federal attorney who defended the
government men at Elmira, a confer-
ence to set the date for a new trial
will be hold between counsel and
Judge Hasel during the March term
of court here.
Templeton declared he would fight
any move to hold the second trial at
Buffalo.
“There isn’t a chance of the gov-
ernment permitting the trial to be
held here," he said. “In the first
place, it’s too near the border, and
that’s enough reason. Wo look for
Rochester or Canadaigua to got it."
The Honson case attracted nation-
wide attention, primarily because it
involved the question of whether a
coast guardsman is permitted under
federal law to fire at a moving ve-
er the driver la dmmiting a viola-
tion of a federal statute.
The State of Now York, in prose-
cuting the defendanta, alleged that
the men exceeded their authority.
The federal government contended
that Jennings was “entirely within
his rights."
Hsnson was fatally wounded last
May when a bullet from Jennings’
gun entered hia temple. Hanson at
the time waa driving his car from
Lewiston to Niagara Falls on a state
highway. He died three months lat-
er, blind and insane.
Jennings contended he fired be-
cause Hansen refused to halt his car
and allow it to be searched for liquor.
a substitute for trial by jury
adopted.
DEAR DOROTHY DIX: We have had an argument about you. Some
say there is no Dorothy Dix. That it is just a name. Some say you are
a man. Some say that you make up the lettersithat.yoy mZdFRS
settle this dispute. SIx DAILY READERS
days’ free inspeetion.
If you are not entirely satisfied
after a thorough examination that It
la the boot and cheapest insurance
yea can bay, just return the poliey
and you owe nothing Write them.
4
(Continued from Page 1, CoL 8.)
covers ths period of agriculture de-
velopment in Armstrong county.
Prior to that day the county waa
strictly a grating county. Cattle was
the one chief induttry.
Today registered livestock, wheat,
oats and all the sorghum grains,
poultry and dairy industry have all
become a part of the industrial life
of Armstrong. - The county also
boaata one of the beat rural school
systems in the state.
Among the continuous depositors
during the entire period that the
Firat National bank has operated are
found the names of C. M. Byrd, Solon
C. Byrd, Carl Appling, 8. W. Calli-
han. Jeff Campbell, A. L. Cobb, C. C.
Gilbert, L N. Collins and estate, H. A.
Finley, J. M. Howe, Mrs. D. L. Ker-
rick, J. L. Pafford, B. L. Ransom.
W. C. Ransom, Hugh Reed, W. M.
Miller, J. P. Reck. Andre Rock, O. F.
Smalley. J. 8. Stallings, J. T. Swink.
K- M. Taylor, W. A. Warner, C. A
Weaver estate, J. W. Wseks, J. A
White and Oscar Harris.
Ths Coffer-Miller Players, who will
be seen and heard at the High School
auditorium Thursday and Friday
contact. Over thirty thousand drug
gists are recommending LEES CHEA-
LYPTOS as a proven remedy for
coughs and cnida,
"Furchave a bottle of LEE'S CREA-
LYPTOS at your druggist today for
“ “ doses will relieve your cough.
mable materiatu Siues 1 to 2
‘urday afternoon will he held at toe
Grigg’s Funeral Chapel at thre
o’eloek Monday afternoon.
Rev. Guy Shields pester of the As-
sembly of Ged chareh will eonduet
the services. The pell bearers will bo
Lap Burkhalter, R, L Burchfield,!
Firemen were called to extinguish
a roof fire at the corner of Twenty-
second and Fillmore streets shortly
after midnight Saturday, and an-
swered a eall on North Florida last
night where .a gas explosion did
slight damage to a garage.
the greatest cour figm la its his-
tory, the battle of the great 240,000- |
acre Santa Margarita ranch, eneo
So what especial privileges have womn. They arepmenabltte
the laws as men are. They have to give as good work, or better:
than"d men to hold down a job. Mrs. Grundy deals twice as hard
with them as she does with men when they step aside from the
"traght and narrow path, and they haven't the privilege of picking
2•CP-y
says: -si
MEDICAL AUTHORITIES
AGREE that Creosote it oneof the
moat powerful pulmonary antineptice
known. It penetrates the air passases of
throat and lungs—destroys germ life on
(Continued from Page 1, Col. 5)
women oa members of the Purple
gang. The trio waa believed to have
been a “lookout" for the killers who
lined up seven of Moran's gang
. ----- at the homk of his daughter Mrs.
Id Passchl, efarred withgehrhe K M. Strawn. 1000 Uno Avenue, Sat-
SECOND TRIAL j| MINIATURE J A OUlTIT,
PERFECT IN DETAIL, IS
For ths trouble with boys is that they, ste too
Young to have found out that when we dnce we
always hove to pay the piper. They think that they can have a wild
time and go the pace that kills, and when they get tired of racketeering
that they can cut it all out and settle down, and that will be all there
ia about it. The past will be past, and they ran go on with the future.
They think they esn plant thistles and gather figs, and that the wild-
cat eroy they have sown will never come up to bother them.
93 - SveythngdlheBaly-
Il b East Seventh Phom ius
—.....1
4, .2006 2
4 * , gndela wMK
(eahia-c2
doLkTa-Amany,fi—A re-
turn to the methods used by the
Wright brothers, for launching planes
in the air with a catapult is seen by
Major Alfred Hildebrandt, dean of
German fliers, who ia considered one
of Europe’s greatest authorities en
aeronautics:
“Much fun was pehed at the cata-
pulting arrangement of the Wrighta,"
Dr. Hildebrandt said, “but as a mat-
ter ef fact, after 25 years we are now
discussing the reintroduction of some
artificial starter, such as a catapult,
both to enable heavily laden planes
to take off more easily, and also to
make starting on small airdromes
possible."
Hildebrandt, whose active interest •
in aviation began ia 1889 when ho
became a balloon pilot, is held in
high regard by European aviation ex-
ports who are acquainted with hiv
work.
Since IBM, he has devoted himself
especially to the problems of heavier-
than-air eraft. Ry 1897, Hildebfandt,
thea a lieutenant of artillery, pre-r-
dieted in a lecture at Strasaburg that
“in one or two decades everybody
will be able to travel in flying ma-
chinos." This prediction was the in-
direct cause of his latest visit to
America and ef his becoming the ar-
dent supporter of Wilbur and Orville
Wright
Hildebrandt waa for a time a
co-worker of Count Zeppelin.__
like Hugo Eckener, Hermann Kochl,
Baron von Huenefeld’and other eon-
temporary Germany fliers, raid his
numerous articles in scientific jour-
nals and daily newspapers.
(By The Anjocinted Press)
SAN DIEGO. Calif., Fab. IT —In the
days of the dens the pieturesque
raballeros of the great ranches
Never was there a greater mistake. Never was there a more
erroneous belief than that while the woman who sins must pay
for her wrongdoing, the man who sins goes scot free. He also
must pay, and pay, and pay.
Let’s count up the cost of the wildcat crop you are sowing and
see if it is worth what you are paying for it. You are spending your
nights in wassail. That means you are neglecting your studios. You
are throwing away your opportunities for a good education, and that
ia something you will pay for for the balance of your life.
How anybody ever imagines otherwise passes eomprehension, for in
£.,2 z ““ Taorey al a
knew wkat he was about when he made both men and women, and that
each sex does its beet work when it stays in its own sphere.
As for the letters, I give you my word of honor that every letter
that is published in this column is a real letter, written by some
man or woman out of his or her own need or perplexity-
Funeral services for Walter L
Heater, 2407 Cleveland street, who
died at Mushogee, Okla., Thursday
afternoon, waa held at 8:30 o'clock
Sunday afternoon at the Griggs Fu-
neral chapel. Rev. L. N. Stuckey, pus
tor of the Polk Street Methodist
church, presided.
aad Jimmie Moore, who have placed
the modal in the museum ef the Pan-
hroNh Flub i Historieal society at
this place.
For five months these two men,
who have worked for years ea the
famous J. A. ranch, gave all spare
time te the construction ef a com-
plete chuck wagon outfit which would
be e perfect reproduction of the one
used on the ranch.
Every piece, from the wagon to the
butcher knives, coffee cups and Dutch
ovens, and from the sachs ef feed
to the cow pony, which stands idly
by. is made to scale, and one of the
requests of the makers ef the out-
fit was that no one be allowed to
measure or copy the model into which
they had put ae much careful work
and study.
Complete in Detaiis
The small outfit ia placed in n
glasa case, the bottom of which is
covered with sand exactly lihe that
of the great canyon in which the
J. A. outfit frequently camps, Te
add to the sense of reality, the mak-
ers provided tiny boot end horse
track models te give the ssud the
tramped appearance it should have,
in ths midst of this stands ths
chuck wagon; on one side hangs ths
quarter of hoof, the water barrel, ead
stake ropes end pins. On the other
aide of the wagon there are mounted
the coffee grinders, a small mirror
and a tool box.
Oa the heck of the wagon is ths
chuck box itself, in ths drawers of
which are small utensils, forks,
knives, broad pan, pie peas, plates
and cups and spoons. The chuck box
lid forms ths esok’s wsrk table, in
real chuck wagon style. Beneath the
real spring seat ia the commissary,
and in the wagon bed behind it the
cow punchers’ het rolls are carried;
sa the wagon stands -the hods are
piled out on the ground, each roll
complete, even to buckles oa the tiny
straps which hold them together.
Under the spring seat are cases
of tomatoes, buckets of lord, sacks
sf coffee, flour, slabs of bacon, and
sacks of food for the horses.
Behind the wegon is ths pits of
wood with the tiny ax imbedded in
a log and nearby ia the firs with pot
rack over it and coffee pot, Dutch
oven, dish pen and brood pan, meat
aew and battered wash pan, sou/
dough hog and kettles—all the uten-
alia necessary to camp cookcry.
On one side of the wagon horse
shoes, hoof nippers, and branding
irons hour testimony to the presence
of other workers than the cook.
With a bed role under hia head,
and hia hat oeer his eyea, the Mex-
ican cook drowses kit spare time
•way while the hones wrangler lazily
ayaits hie next work. Not for away.
Doc, the pet hone of the eamp, stands
with saddle in place, nins on the
ground end hip hunched. The horse
wes carved out of wood by Clinton
Henry with en ordinary pocketknife,
but was painted by Harold Bugboe,
artist and eon of the range.
The little J A outfit stands in the
center of a group of ranch relies, in-
cluding fnmous branding irone which
tell stories of northwest Texss.
Here it wss recently seen by George
Finley Simmons. Texsn, and now
member of the staff of the Cleveland,
Ohio, museum. Looking at it, he said:
“This is the first model of any hind
I have ever seen which was convinc-
ing. No ship's model ever suggested
• ship, at sea, but this tells the whole
story of s ranch camp. It ia a real
work of art, and is located In the re-
cial matinee on Fridey afternoon, against a wall and mowed them down
with machine-gun, shotgun and revel-
rate to IB per cent probably helped
Friday's moderate reaction.
The following shows the high, low -
Bad dosing sales in the New Orleans , ton, and J°u
futures market during the past week
bompared with a year ago. ------ Last ,
ver fire.
The ediet of State’s Attorney John
A. Swanson that the police must
Believe me son. the most inexorable law in all nature is that as
wo sow, we reap Figure it out for yourself and see whether you are
going to want to harvest the crop you are plant ng when I “
Spending your time at college running around nt nights, and drinkinK
and going on wild parties with "id women. DOROTEY DIX.
nr so wrse nix Do you think women have too many privileges.
DEAR MISS DIX. •° you « ANXIOUSLY WAITING.
ways and means committee will bo- ।
gin tomorrow its seventh week of
PERRYTON WOMAN MD
pAUGHTER INUJURED
1Mno, ss"
ties were aafferad by Mrs. W. D.
Fulton 'and her daughter Evelyn,
when the ear in which they won re-
turning from a basketbali game at
Miami turned turtle while rounding e
curve, loot night.
Gertrude Glasgow and two smell
children in the enr were not injured.
Pasnihe malipt, picked the peo-
Officers report thnt Papnehl rests
woM end avpareny is not ►offering _________ ... .. ■ , .
from the tack of fe0a rheyae H9MMisepv, A, Waldorf and J. R.i
hint that other boy in the cell might T “----- — "* ' “ 1
Heaven knows I have no need to make up letters, •• every day I get
hundreda of them from all over this eountry. and England, and Canada,
.nd Australia. They form the most interesting human documenta ever
written, and present to me problems from every sidnomndoperprcondi
tion of life . . , DOROTHY DIX.
(Copyright by Public Ledger.)
B. -Shidlen Burial wIM ba to Unno । pie ep and took them to Miami
Cemeter A medical aid waa E’ven them.
Or if you have the misfortune to have a rich father, one of
them will marry you when you ar. half drunk and full of aleoholie
, sentiment, end you will find yourself tied to awifenfor whomyn
: have neither affection nor respect Or you will be made defendant
in a disgraceful breach of promise suit. Or blackmailed.
r in, - ~
X4’..".2
Along-on their canes and dragging their, feet an inchAt • tim '
paying for the wild-oat crop they sowed in their youth
^FLOYDADA. Feb, 17.- Dato fer the
annum wloydeda Chamber of Com-
merce banruet has been changed from
February >3 to February 28 and the
prineipel speaker for the ocension
will bo' Josh Lee, hand of the publie
•peeking department ef the Univer-
ejty ef Oklahoma. The change in the
date wea announced by the program
committee after it was learned that
Mr. Lee had accepted aa engagement
for the original date and could not
be present
Recognised as one of the most ea-
tertaining speakers in the South, the
program committee foal, that Floyda-
da ia indeed fortunate in securing
Mr. Lee for the banquet. His soldier
rhymes, written while serving the
colors in France, are thrilling, hie
funny stories all clean and inoffen.
sire and his ability to held the atten-
tioa of his audience has made him
much in demand by the public.
Frank L. Moers, retiring presideut
of the chamber of commerce, will
give the annual report of the organi-
sation at the banquet. The report of
the home demonstration clubs will be
mode by Mro. Joe H. Smith of ths An-
telope Community. Special music
numbers will be featured through-
out. The event Is scheduled to be.
gin nt 7 p. m. in order to give the
visitors who come from neighboring
towns time to return home early in
the evening.
Five hundred plates will be laid by
i the ladies organizations of the city.
gion to which it belongs.”
The outfit may be aeon by all who
wish to vlait the museum of the Pan- _______
handle -Plains Historical society. EJ wJ?
which la housed in the Adminiatro- 50c.Siidoreswillrelsv egyoayh
tion building of the Teachers college . If not your money wil be Elady
at Canyon. I funded
thorough overhauling Four days
probably erill be spent on this sec-
tion before Republican members
break up Into sub-committees to for-
mulate the rate changes and the new j
bill to be presented to the full com- ;
hhvthemceiveae morrtnan solror ! was on • restrieted scale,
transcribing testimony of the 195 , New bond offerings, however, wore
witnesses. Ons witness was on the : readily absorbed, deapite the declin-
| ing trend in prices of the listed
of testimony curitien. The feature was a revival
in foreign financing, five loans being
placed during the week for amounts
ranging from $7,000,000 to 315,000,000.
MONDAY MORNING. FEBRUARr 18, 0.
fourth day of a hunger strike IB Pot-
tar Ceaaty Jail yesterday.
Paaaehl baa been placed la • cell,
with several boys charged with va-
graney, bat each time that food im
proffered him he either ignores the
offer or strikes the feed to the floor.
ACTIVITY ANO Dorothy Dix Says:
QUIET MARKS " Szrgmbxe"an ku
COTTON MART -p5nuzeeeeniadaeze
_____ wonder if this ia leading us to a manhood in the real nense at the
(By The Associated Prem)
NEW YORK, Feb. 17. — Complex
turns ta the credit situation end
sharp breaks ea the “big board" sent
prices tumbling In the curb market
the past week. Trading, however,
get off to a flying etart Monday
with heavy buying of Public Utility
ead mining shares, but on resump-
tion of business after the Tuesday
heliday the bears took the reins
and drove prices downward. Losses
ran from 1 to 40 points.
Public Utilities wore the moat ne-
tive features, fluctuating wildly.
Aircraft stocks were strong moot
of the week, but turned reactionary
Saturday under the usual week-end
profit-taking.
William Edward Hhoden,-two
monthe old sea of Mr. and Mro. W. I.
Rhodes, died at the family home, 304
- Roberta atreet, at 1:30 o'aloek sun-
n’dag morning. u. .d
' I have heard people speak of women having the privilege of voting,
s
‘niinted money to have control.of their own fortune. But surely these
are nothing but mere human right..
_ .But you are not doing it. You are letting your chance, for an edu- '
aging advice, from the cotton good, j cation slide by. You are loafing through college, and you will pay for
markets. I It by being hampered by your ignorance, and by having formed habit. |
The weaknea in the .tock market , or idlenesa that will take you year, and year, to break, If you over do. ?
and the advahce in thn call money Pretty ateep price for a few good time., isn’t it? You are drinking
too much. Most of the seed of the wild-oat crop is kept in a bottie.
You don’t mean to be a drunkard. No man starta out *ith that inten |
intend to cut ant drink after a while. Perhaps you will
Speeial to The News.
MEMPHIS, Feb. 17—Approximate-
ly $600 worth of stolen goods ware
recovered Thursday night by local
officers, some of which was stolen
in December. Two hundred dollars
worth of jewelry that was stolen from
the Clark Drug company December
33, which was identified by F. V.
Clark aa his property, and $165
worth of painters material belonging
to J. B. Hart, and about 3200 worth
of carpenter tools, belonging to T.
Kittinger, which wee taken from th^/
Kittinger Planing mill one night th?
peat week, was among the goods that
were recovered.
The loot was located in aa aban-
doned hack at the roar of the Gober
blacksmith shop between Sixth and
Seventh streets.
(B, Tb. Amoeieted Prese)
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 17.—The cot- ,
pen market alternated hetween ae
tvity and quiet the past week and
priees fuctuated both ways but al- 1
Ways within comparatively narrow
limits, although the trend has been |
cenerally upward to a slight extent,
.he not result of the week's trading
kraa a alight gain of 14 points or
about 70c- a bale.
The early part of the week de-
veloped steady improvement in values
due to trade and speculative buying
ea unfavorable weather in the belt,
eomewhat better textile statisties for
January than expected, a deerease in
''the sales of fertiliser tags during
December and January of 26.6 per
cent compared with laat year and
finally the census bureau's report of
heavy domestic mill consumption
broke all previous records for that
month.
“ As a result of the large January
, consumption the May position ad-
vanced to 19.61 on Thurdny, the
high point of the week and 26 points
above the previous Saturday's close.
As there had been considerable buy-
ing in advance of the census report
on a private estimate which approxi-
mated the official total the effect at
the report had been diseounted and
buyers took profits with the result
that May eased off to 19.35 on Fri:
day. In the final abort session of
An"ansure you that Dorothy Dix ia a real person, just as your own
mother or grandmother, and although I am.frequentiyacuned.of
being a man—I get many letters beginning "Dear S ir. or. Madam
I am most emphaticaly a woman, first, last and all the time.
REINTRODUCTION OF ARTIFI- a
CIAL STARTER IS BUNG f
DISCUSSED
“The Full Task of Modern Educa-
tion" was the subject ehosen by L. B j
Cooper, desn of Clarendon College on
addressing a peeked house at the
Public Forum, First Congregational
Church, last night. *
Professor Cooper said in part: .
"The full task of modern education I
does not conslat essentially in provid- '
ing buildings, materials and equip-|
went, but it consists in the changing
of the plastic nervous system of each
individual hoy or girl.
“This change includes the biologi-
cal adjustments as well as the soctal,
moral and religious natures of all hu-
man beings.
“From the biological point of view I
the individual is to be taught to ad-
just to an ever changing envtronment.
“As a sotcat berng the individwn
must be taught to take hia proper
place in human society to assume
the duties and obligations of self-
supporting citizenship la order that
poclety might obtain its highest de-
gree of efficiency.
“The ethical and religious natures
of our boys and girls are not receiv-
ing the proper emphasis in our
school'.
"An individual developed in those
four aspects will result is one who
. is able to render real democratic pub-
He serviee."
The Clarendon College Glee Club
rlighted the large audience with sev-
bpi vocal numbers and the members
gfoo song in quartets, trios and duets.
The program was brondeast over
statjoy WDAG.
(By The Ameoclated Press >
ST LOUIS, Feb. 17.—Cowboy de-
haters of Howard-Payne College,
Brownwood, Texas, defeated a St.
Louis University debating team her
last night by th unanimous vote of
three judges. It waa the first defeat
the St. Louis debaters have suffered
this year.
The winning team was composed of
L. A. Singleton and Ben Davis, who
appeared in cowboy outfits and took
the negative of the resolution that
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 94, Ed. 1 Monday, February 18, 1929, newspaper, February 18, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567800/m1/2/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.