Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 310, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 22, 1929 Page: 1 of 64
sixty four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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(
——
—
or
2
•*#
OD WEATHER FORECAS
5MPROVEMENT
GIBB GILCHRIST, ENGINEER
=L
THREE PROJEGTS
NOMARTIALLAWNOW
WILLIAMS JURY
nezt United Btates ambaskad
theim to
Amarillo.
id
NAUGURAETRIP
* Pieturesque and Hi mantis eireue
ng
See them boys
giris a-holdin'
in chairman.
*
pro-
Bante Domingo nt 1104 P:
miles to
to a perfeet landing
Colonel
The furors deliberated tour houra.Duteh Guldna.
(Continued on page 2, Col. »)
IES TODAY FOR
4
2
4-
AL CAPONE AGAIN
-
to*
pil
w
manner.
lira nEkruN
M any other case, and will be called
when the doeket to ealled," he er-
'IBM* einter.
Bis brother iJnek
lives near
hart
‘g
Pm400
4
1o
i
«
I
n
'...'
Leavii
m,te
STATE NOT THROUGH
WITH BECKY ROGERS
CASE, ATTORNEY SAYS
PROGRAM WILL
BEGIN AT ONCE
May Be Next U.S.
Envoy to Cuba
tod his
thelon
PIONEER DALHART
REAL ESTATE MAN
DALHART, Sept. 21—Faner serv-
ices for J. D. Starnes, 48, pioneet
tor k
Texas
LIVESTOCK BARNS CROWDED;
AGRICULTURAL BOOTHS
FROM 21 COUNTIEG
HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT GOES
OVER OIL FELD ROUTE
RELATIVE TO PAVING
BETTERS SCHEDULE SECOND
TIME DURING DAY; TO
USE SMALLER PLANE
hands? That pink lemonede? Them
barker barkin'T
Bigger and better than evert That
is the spirit of the bi* tops that in-
fliets I', magic spell of far-away
FOR TEXAS, IN MEETING
WITH LOCAL MEN
n
Laviah Entertainment Ready
Th. most lavish entertainmen
EXHIBITS ALREADY AHEAD OF
ANYTHING EVER BROUGHT
FROM PANHANDLE
la* th* jury. His wife was not in the
eourtroom,
it was Hoekloy eounty's first mur-
der triaL
IgheLmadethe
Juan la tw. ha
■OOI
“si
uned d
74
9)
d
«
Pam.)
ma piraeus
in the southem part of the etate.
He wae well-kpown over th* mUm
CAPTAIN DECLARES SOME OF
OFFICERS HAVE SERVED
TIME IN PEN-
ORGANIZED CRIME SITUATION
UNCOMPARED IN 23 YEARS
OF EXPERIENCE
wider right-of-way have been obtain-
ed along th. entire route hr the
highway committee of the Chamber
of Commeree, of which Bill Lampe
party will wpend the ntght bore and
leave la the morning tor their sweep
around th. Caribbean eirele, follow-
Ing th* Windward and Leeward Is-
lands m Ms route to Prnmaribo,
BOYD JONES CANTERS
INTO CAPITAL, FAILS TO
SEE HOOVER, VANISHES
viw. Ne ome
lly concerned
for th* youth
dflity to care
/Joufney from
a eimil la r trip
By BABOON N. TMMONS
(Speelal Washington Cortespondent)
•r wh«n he visited
r at his fishing
in. It to Boyd’s
capitol and every
CAGE DROPS THREE FLOORS
ro BASEMENT; NEGRO
* LOSES CONTROL
t
Th* first indiecatlon that th*
ctol investigation might h* ma
headway was given by Calhoun
who to rettiing, Gi
identetthe Danlet
■a to expeeted to suereed Col,
mudon‘"Judah at chicayo.
FAIB PARKING
TH1-State Fair offices will he
(Continued on Fa** t, Col. •)
LEVELLANDMAN GETS
SUSPEHDEDSENTEHCE
FORDOMESTICKILLING
tnjurles to f
Mr*. Ui
- ■• i* survived hr his widow, tor-
marly Mias Both Chfldera, his tath-
gram af any fair la hlatory haa been
arranged for the entire week. There
ar a "thousand sad one" eventa like
band conearts and special attraetlons
to Kold the interest of visitor* from
Monday morning until the end of
the wook.
All roads of the Plains country lead
to Amarilo this week, and the state
highway depertmeat and the weather
barenn hard JolnM H*dk M
in* that ell reada will be good made
during fair week.
There wer threatening weather
eload. Baturday, bat no rain to fore-
cast for the week. The weather man
reported last night that generally fair
weather to prevalling over the Plains
territory aad he doeen’t have any
fears of rain.
Mowever, rain will not deter motor-
lots from visiting the exponition this
year, owing to the paving andgrav-
eled streets to the grenade. Every
precaution will be token to avoid
eongested traffic by rooting all ear.
ent Tenth street and baek on Third.
The eattl entries for this year's
exhfbit iwaode that of all former
times, end nceording to officials,
much of it wil be shipped from here
(Continuea on Page t, Col. 4)
Noted neronautical leader and min-
la* director, Hany F. Gugzenhelm,
above, of New York, probably will be
iv 1
-n
he would return again Mont
up to.a lata hour Saturda
neither had heard from him.
For the time bain* ho ha
gtetheim have been relensed.
Henland who was hold
Wa chief officer’
reached Hajehow
i
4
I
He said he did not know what steps
would be taken to sombat the erime 1
"ring" deseribed to him.
27 minutes, just 33 minutes under
sehedule. On his morning flight from
Santiago De Cube to Port Au P ri nee,
Colonel Lindbergh had hettered the
Miss Dale Galloway, fractured an-
kle.
Mr*. 0. ■. Galloway, injuries to
foot.
Mr*. I. L Holmes, Viekery, ankle*
hurt and back imjurles.
Mr*. H. B. Harris, wife of the
store's , first floor manager, bruises
and abrasions..
He said Captain Hamer said some
of the tow enforeement offleems had
elther served terms la the peniten-
Uary as ware now under indletment.
niht
P
J
J
SU-
MS* passengers and lobbed
other pessenger,. The cargo
i act touched.
atest reports indicated that the
stoe released the ship whoa a
tish warship approached. The
anese ateamer woe en route to
Mm* for the Md mile Janneby 24
minutes against varying head winds.
A lange welcoming party was on
the plane when n
night.
"Things are looking better powy" ,
he told newspaper mecHesaid sen
hand to greet
swooped down--,----- ------
M the Pan-Ametlea field at Baa
--o.e
DALLAS, 8»
I AUSTIN, Sept. di. Borgov bee Mb
worst "bit of organized erime” he has
I Over encountered I* his a years in
. Mr. LJkWw. store employe,
• foot end both kneea-
____ iwrehce B. Ladd, bruises
and abrasions: *
tool, racing part the main floor iand-
tog and crashed into the banement.
A flash of flame sprang uptheele-
voter abaft as the cage dropped.
The injyned:
► . Mn. MN. Nail, injuries to left
side and probable knee fracture.
Mra. C. H. Barbea, both anklw
sprained." '♦
Mrs. Sudie Holmes, Viekers, Del-
ELEVATORIN !
DALLAS FALLS;
H ARE INJURED
- nf remperison of im with
the previous census of IMS.
Gt y
cVe
eral volunteer witnesses had talked
with him. Ro would not divulge the
nature of their statements.
Calhoun and three rangers left
their hotel early today for a trip to
Sanford, IS miles west ef Berger,
near the Moore eounty line "ft woe
just like the root of the tipa," Cel-
boon sold upon his rotor*. The
rangers. However, left on a necond
visit to *M*Hsa aaettaTmaw.
* *V
r
Tsmorerw to the Hg day, folk.!
Displays and exhibits have been
arranged. Bootha are filled to ovet-
flowing. The cattle and other live
stock barns are erowded for apace.
The circus and the carnival attrne-
ileus will move onto the grounds to-
WASHINGTON, Sept.
hie pet horse Molly, and dressed to
the preverb lol cowboy fashion, 15-
(By The Asseeleted Prem),
BAN JUAN, Forte Rieo, Sept. 21—
(By Pan-American Bodie to Miami)
--Bettering his schedule by mor
than half an hour fur the second
time today, Colonel Charles A. Lind-
bergh eompleted the second day of
bto 1000 mile flight to extend the
United Btates mall to Dutch Gulana,
whoa bo leaded hero at 1:11 o'elock
this afternoon.
Tito down-town tiehet office of
the Hagenbeck-Wallace Oireus,
where reserved grandstand seats
may be purchased, will be opened
Monday morning at the City Drug
Store, US Polk Street.
Patrons of the circus are urged
to reserve their neata in advance
in order to lessen the teak of se-
curing the choice seats. Prices
for these sects will be exactly the
same a* charged at the grenade.
0 Veic
appointment with the
that before he coula
by”
• ,
2 lje.
enm
day. 1 Hear them bend, a-playin't
were injured, iome seriously, when
an elevator in the W. A. Green de-
partment .tore fell three floor, here
late today. o./ ■
The ear, la charge of John Worth-
ington. a aogro, who wae unhurt,
'stopped at the second floor and waa
starting down when it got ent of con-
(By The Amoclated Prema)
LEVELLAND, Texas, Sept. 21A
Jury into today eonvteted B. A. Vo-
shop of the murdera Elmer Wright
and aanesned a three-year suspended
sentenee,
Foshee pleaded that he killed
Wright, M-ydor-eid farm head from
Oklahoma, because of the latter’s al-
leged intimaeleg with Mr*. Voshee.
The wife corroborated the atory of
Special Wanhington Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Sept. 21-Most
Texas eitles will find something ever
which to exult in the cenaus of man-
ufacturers of 1027 made public by
the Department of Commeree today.
SHOWS ARE FEATURE
chief exeeutive, be weald have to
obtain the help of either of Tomb’
21-Astride two smhetors.
......... 1 - ■ — ■ •.—1 I—
> a* HW Wi~. i" AMAMLLB, HXM, SUNDAY WORKING, WT. 13. HOSS* CDmOM SIXTTCICKT PAGES PRICE FIVE
SAYSBORGEBCRMEWORST IE M
• • ♦. .ern*** • • • •• ••
RROW^SO
of perklag specs tieketa. The
trekets Ore priced at $3 for the
fair neanon ead entitle the owner
to an individual space that may
not be occupied by any ether eer
during the week.
■eng Kong today
SHANGHAI SHIP LOOTED
all free, all—
the ranger service, Captain Freak
Hamer told Governor Moody in re- ]
porting hie estimation of the nitua-
tion.
Governor Moody returned to leg I
from Doline end Terrell. ■• hold
a conference with the ranger captain,
the two riding f/em Dallas t* Taneu. J
together. ,
The governor retuned to deelar. hit '
, Intentions end sold he had no opin.
' Ion M to the lfkellhond of martint
, law.
v ACaptnin Mamor did not make any .
recommendations, he merely reported
ea the eituation and declared it the
worst bo had encountered da Ma lea*
eareer," Governor Moody sald.
Blundell hee boon kt Lock-
e the nizht the argument
was completed. Hie wife, who ie
Hey, Skinnay! It's coming to town today with all its
elephants and giraffes and lions and tigers and downs and,
and— *
Let's go!
Ladi-e-e-es and Gentlemen. Right this way, folks;
The figures for the state m a
whole showed that Tomo to going
forward in manufaeturing at a fast,
er percentage rate than any stata in
the union. As for the individual
cities, Houston led to the number of
workers in manufacturers with 12,044
Md in wages paid with a payroll of
_ ________________________-
Dallaa led in the number of planta
with 470 and was behind only Hous-
ton with its payroll of $10,471,073. ■
Fort Worth was first tn the value
of products with $100,637,000 bat a*
ita products chiefly were these of
peeking plants the sproed between
the cost of row materiel and the pre-
eesned product wea email and it was
third In employees in manufactpring
planta wit’ 7,410 and also third ia
wages with $0,070,061.
Sea Antonio,which 1« the part ha*
not been a manufacturing city, began
to tab* strides which are likely to
put it toward the top.
nett, where It will conneet with a
paved highway north and eastpand
esurfacing end widening of the
vadlouz paved rondo now loading
°Mr.XFrench and Mr. Gilehrist *nl<
work kill start nt onea rebuildin
the highway west from the city
limit* to Bushland. Permit* for
Bonniwell today. A'
flood for October 4
Judee John B. Wal
taMtABbam, wMltoas
““ prevlausly informed eoncerning the
one munt go through to
Fledges from both the county and
the state to "forget the port" and
set la motion a program that will im-
prove Potter eenaty*. highways,
were given here yesterday.
The open discussion of local road
problems was held at a meeting of
the county, state and Chamber of
Commerce ofSicials, in the eounty
eourt room with Judge Sem Motlow
presiding.
Representing the etate were Gibb
Gllehrist, etate engineer of the Tex-
as Highway Commisaion, aad W. A
French of Amarillo, distriet highway
"Fhen important projeets were
brought up, and assurance was given
that all three of them may be ear-
vied out in the immediate future.
They are: Paving of Highway No.
s from the ziver to Ike Mogre eoun-
ty Um; opening of a state high-
way over Petter eounty’s new oll
field route end completine it
through Hutchinson county I* etin-
lands Md acenes of make-believe lute
both pen ng and ald .nllki ___________
Arrives Barly Today.
At this time tomorrow there will
be a complete city of tents where to-
day there ia merely a barren field at
the fair grounds, and it will be a
busy time for the cireus people until
that time.
The eircas trains will arrive ia the
early hours of the morning and the
hug* took of trahsporting the ton*
and ton* of equipment and the hun-
foods of wild animais a mile aad a
half to the Tri-Btato Vair I
will bogie. Thio ia a task, wl-----
the lay mind is truly marvelous in
the dispatch with which it is carrled
out. / " i'
As soon ns the first section of the
RETIRES FOR NIGHT HI FATAL
STABBING OF O. C. HILL
DURING RODEO HERE
- »
Hey Kids! Big Circus WLLIAMS JURY
Arrives in Town Early IS DEADLOCKED
Today;ShowAll Week AFTER 12 HOURS
...... .......... *1
Photo copyright, 1929, by NEA Service, Transmitted by Telephoto.
This remrkabi airylape view shews flames at their height during the regia* forest fire on the mountain
Moped near Bea Peale. Calif,, which eaaaed approximately $2,000,000 damnges and left 300 people homelesa. It
waa one of the wort forest fires hl CaUferain hlatory. The emoke was viaible for many miles. This pieture was
reeked to Leo Angeles and transmitted thence by telephoto for thio newspaper.
MOVES FOR PARDON
day through Ms counnel, the law
firm of Golder, Felger and Lemisch,
made another ettempt to get •
The petition ea behalf of
and Frank CUne, bio body-guard, who
also is servihg time ia Jail, was
presented to o Judge Eugene C.
.■<gSX*;^k 21.Dr.a, two broihars
Drepen, former Kropp muni- E — 5- __—-----
Hr sai sr and somstructor of the bar*, while his other rejativey Ito*
pert Austin. Carsieann, Denison,
Greenviile, Marshall, Palestine, Faris,
Fort Arthur, Temple, Texarkana aad
Tyiar, which haa led it two years
previously aad put it in a position to
chsllenge Beaumont, Galveston, Sher-
mn, Waco aad Wichita Falla.
El Yasu galned little Md Beaumont
end Galveston nice made only email
gaine. Today's figures accounted
only for the FT Texas eitles, wblsh la
1020 had more then 10,000
tlea as compared with 1925. ,
Amarillo, Austin, Beaumont, Browna
villa, Corpus Christi, El Paso, Fort
Worth, Galveston, Houston, Laredo,
Pert Arthur, Ban Angelo, Ben An-
tonio, Temple and Tyler showed in-
ereases both la the number of wage
■
1
It reported 835 manufaeturing
plant* with 6,363 workers, a paytol Cab*.
488825 end produeta volued at sTy,
real astata man of this elt will be
boto from th* Firt Baptist Church
here MB deloek Sunday atteraon
IT’S OPEN SEASON—and
how—on hunting and an
some of the best Used Car
often ever found in Ama-
rillo.
Today on the Glebe-New* Speeiel
Classified Ueod Car Page 10u7
find bays that can’t bo boat. Bead
these speciais for Tri-State Fain
Wook, then look over the earn.
. GLOBE-NEWS j
WANT ADS.
..... .....—.............
Ito leount. bruised.
~ Mn, a. B. Ffanij, *H*bt hwrte. ■
Esther Jnckson, store employe, leg
fracture. ‘
for the pvemrtlea of evlealeu.
UNDBERGH IN
PORTO RICO ON
he Asseetetod Press:
kf, Sept. 21. -
■a steamer Botnia, looted
M after going agtouyd
r oft Halehow last week,
refloated, and all the of-
except Chief Officer
ct
bdaggmcgu..
(By Uoleed Prem)
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21.—Al
Capone, Chicago gang chieftain who
is serving a esse year bentenee to
ditionel miosis* papers to be used in 1
the prosecution •( lquor law vie- I
lators were the objec or * neareh
today by special Prosecutor elam I
Calhoun Md Toms rangers investi- 1
gating the assnssination hero Sept. 1
ia of Dletrict Attorney John Molmee, I
The papers were dote Holmes bad 1
gathered in conneetion with-iquor
charges against U moa and two
women here after a ranger eleanup |
in July. Federal Asaistant Dintrict
Attorney Ates Mow* MM over the
telephone from Amarillo today that
Holmes had not delivered the papen 1
to him.
Holmes, Mood deelared, wae to have
eohferred with the federal attomey
at Amarillo a week age today, th* ]
morning after Holmes was abet to 1
death aa he put bla automobile into
the guru** *t hi* b**»o berm— ---e
Holmes also wm to have asaistede.
In the presentation of casco to thE
federal grand jury new In aession in
Amarillo. Five Berger residentn
NA,."
Starnes died la Denver Thursday
morning following an operation sev-
oral months ago for esneer.
Ho was prominent in chureh, civie
ead business’ affairs here and eame
to Dalhart I* 1908, He was the ne-
nior member of the firm of Starnes
aad Griffith, was e director of the
First Nationa: Bank, a member of the
Rotary Club ,th* Elba Lodge ana an
officer in the Baptist Church.
entimeter guns
lorld War, died
-ddr—2
Amarile Mont Remarkable.k.....
Amario showed the most remark-
able percentage in doubling Ite num-
ber of plants and prsetleally tripling
wages paid and value of proddeta.
It* $7,016,167 la produets took it Ml
of the small city doss aad sent 1
OFFICIALS IN PLEDGE TO END HIGHWAY FRICTION IN POTTER
IMPROVEMENT L When Forest Fires Caused $2,000,000 'loss —BIGGEST E VERTexas Leads Union and REPORT MADE
HELD IN THIS Amarillo .Leads State TO GOVERNOR |
SECTHJH, CLAIM/n ManufacturiryGahr BYCAPTHAMER
---- V By BASCOM, N. TIMMONS
L (By Unhed Prea)
BONG KONG. Sept. 21—Chinese
5 Pirates headed by e bobbod-haired
girl, captured th* Shoehan Kaisha
P ateamer Dell Maru near Biao Bay,
ndvices received here said today.
< The pirates, were traveling as
pessengers. They seized control
at the ship, shot and wounded
three Indian guards kidnaped four
year-old Boyd Jones wba 78 days
ago left Amarillo to pay his rasps st*
to President Hoover, Saturdey mem-
lag rode golly up the White Momse
drive M if it were but a day’s rou-
tine, newspapermen and photog-
raphers who nr* ednetantly stationed
at the executive mansion, rashed out
to meet the youth and thus learned
that he was the boy whom they knew
had started on the erona country trek
two and a half months ago.
demhe
-..a
Chinese Pirates,
Headed by Girl,
Rob Jap Steamer
, 4
mrhe-"
her relations with the vietim, Juan.
Foshee made a abort speech thank-
(Continued on Page t, CoL-l>
day. u fact everythinc la in readi-
nens for th* official opening of the
Tr-State Fair tomorrow morning at
• •’stock.
And indications are that it will ba
tha "biggest and best" ef any fair
in Amarillo’s history, deelared Presi-
dent Wilbur C. Hswk tort night. De-
partment heads aad memhers *f his
board of directors, all ef whom have
been buey day aad night for the
past week, conecurred in hip opinton
that the exposition should cut a new
mark in attendanee and fa the quan-
tity and quulity *f ita exhibits.
Seme af the finest cattle herds ef
the Southwest era ia the barns.
Twenty-one Panhandle counties have
entered agricultural exhibits, and la
addition five New Mexico counties
have eet up a composite farm display
that will ba a show within itself.
ER DIES
A
‘ unds Bendy for No. »
Thd,state has funds available for
paviak No. 5 from the river to th*
| county Um north, and the county
officiais aald they would have avail-
able their share of funds for this
project if the state department will
t "help ont" on surfacing of the new
•fl fluid route.
v Mr. Gilchrist will spend today go-
to* over the new oil field road, and
the ptoposed route from Four Cor-
ners across the river to Stinnett. He
aald he could make no recommenda-
tions until he had inspected th* route,
tart declared he,waa ’ready to de
. overything possible and reasonable to
| eive Potter eounty a firat elass ays-
tom of roads, and to help eonneet a
syatem of fifse-claas roads leading
out of Amarillo through shb other
counties."
I Fetter eounty voted $500,000 road
bonds two years ago to build the oil
field road and to pave the river road
' north, but to for the state has not
Th* ear's roof eollapaed, when it
plunged into the basement. The in-
jured were removed through the
store nad through a street opening
from the basemen onto the sidewalk.
Traffic on the atreet wm tied up for
an hour, polce making lanes fat the
ambelaheez ’ 7" .
bad surrendered N in 1
“Thia ense to e* the
M . s
A* u
Apparently deadlocked, the Jury in
tha trial of C. A. (Pet) Willama,
charged with the fatal stabbing of
O. C. Bill, jr. of Ashtola, retired
late last night without arriving nt
a verdirt.
Taking the ease ia charge at noon
yesterday, the Jory had deliberated
almost 11 hours when they went to
bed to sleep ever the matter. They
listened during the forenoon to argu-
ment of eounsel, Disteiet Attorney
Bdw. W. Thomerson, E. A. Simpson
Md B. B. Underwood for the state,
aad Cleo G. Clayton and E. T. Miller
for the defense, speelal Prosecutor
Underwood closed for the state.
Shortly before 6 o’clock yesterday,
the Jury, came into open eourt aad
aeltod for the court rvpcrter, Nonaaa
Minter, to reed the eross-examina-
tion of Buffalo Himes, employ* of
th* JA ranch and a witness for the
state. They then announced that they
had disagreed ea a point of testi-
mony and that the portion of the
record read did not contain the in-
formatian they wonted. They rotired
for further deliberation.
Men Were at Rodeo
In th argument of eousel, it woe
the contention of the defense that
Williams did act Mt Hill except in
seit-detense, after Hill had knocked
him down aad waa oh top of him.
The state declared there was ae
testimony, ezcept Williams’ that in-
dicated Bill ever knocked Willlams
down, and that Williams was pre-
pared with M Men knife and walt-
lag for ■!■ to come dawn the incline
from tMfll—Bifd at MS sodas.—
Williams aad Bill were spectators
at the rodeo bora on the night of
July 4. They fist mat when Wil-
items stepped M Hill’s toe M the
former entered the rodeo grounda
The fat*l fight followed the rodeo
performed it >
Dleavveers Until Noadny
Uadiemayed mtthough a little die-
appointed, bb left. It was expeeted
he would immediately get la touch
with either Senator Morrie Shephard
or Tom Conhally, for be indicated
triet Attorney Fred Blundell plans
to take no netion regarding the ense
against Rehecea Bradley Rogers,
rharged with robbing the Buda bank
in 1026.
Blundell emphatically denied Satur-
day hight that he had said he "was
throagh with the sasa," sr that ba
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 310, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 22, 1929, newspaper, September 22, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569347/m1/1/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.