The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 33, Ed. 2 Saturday, November 8, 1930 Page: 2 of 10
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SATU
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8,1930
THE FORT WORTH PRESS
PAGE 2
FL
By George Clark
DOL DR. PROVENCE
Side Glances
MORE
NO. 28-TWINS CONTEST
SEEN AS FARM IN SANITORIUI
Pros
TO TAKE REST
PRICE BOOSTER
next
town
%
teeble
Enjoy Disc closure.
By United Press
Public Health
TON
Minin
tive.
10-15 to 11:15p. m.
11
Vera.
for the Thanksgiving holidays.
mittee
on this date.
The most powerful lighthouse
in Britair
St. Catherine’s
Sweetmeat
er light.
MRS. GARNER CRITICISES
ser
GRIDDER SCORES IN COURT
vent the enactment of
ariff
bill which was not only the apoth-
I ‘A
4
* GLEN WALKER ED K. COLLETT WM. RIGG J. N. DOOLEY
tt
“35 Years of Constant Protection”
Dial 2-2203
. 305 West Tenth
TT
AC
1 JOT
LEAN
RIDE WITH COMFORT
NEGRO CHARITY-GROUP
TO PLAN CHEST DRIVE
CONVENTION TO BEAU MONT
HOUSTON, Nov 8.—The Tex-
U. S. GRAND JURY CLOTHING DEPOT
DEGINS MONDAY TO OPEN NOV. 11
souri
court
Swar
tuall
return in time for TCU-SMU game
which will be played in Dallas Sat-
pre-
Game.
the :
the J
c indi
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Tanna-
hill, 2215 Prospect, upon the
will h
as.
Muc
board
San F
The
side <
betwe
M
the L
be the
Thi
‘ Theat
Harth
are g
@* MA AX NCOSPLC
What Do
You Think?
2000 SEARCH
IN HILLS FOR
TRAIN BANDITS
SAM HILL SEZ:
We solve the rug cleaning and
do it well—
• PHONE 2-8090
"Do you know," she said once,
with a twinkle in her eyes, "I
have attended many social and
official functions in Washington,
and while I enjoy them I have
one criticism.
line
St.
It
. sented The
Martha Ward
DISCOUNTS GLORY
SUMNER, Mo, Nov. 8.
meeting of the board of trustees
Friday night.
There will be no Interruption
In the administration of the col
lege, trustees announced.
PUBLIC HEALTH TRAIN
Tripipers to Mexico City Return
To Posts In U. S.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 8. —
rosy-cheeked boy of 2.0 has been
as Methodist Conference, holding
its annual convention here today
chose the First Methodist Church
Observance of 'the
will start Monday night with a
cantata. The New Earth, at Cen-
tral Methodist Church. It will be
directed by C harles C. Croxton of.
theft of clothes from a fellow
student, preferred last year, were
dismissed for lack of evidence.
Fort Worth will be a stop late
who
| town, enjoyed the disclosure.
| . "When.I was up there not even
my girl knew what I was doing."
| he said. "I doubt if any of the
1 Senators I waited on in the ata-
ST
’"an a
Fund
A
courr
struct
town 1
d urin
teams
mate"
Ho
■ hild
•d 1 1
Suppe
erty.T
Ma
1
WOODS ENLISTS AID
OF CITY OFFICIALS
415-417 S. Jennings
Phone 2-3101
rpHI
1 (
mite
the
! to w
looks
I as al
gliste
ao bi
Sa
ville
"Oh,1
Then
miles
sure 1
1 ’ • 11
away
and 1
to fl
billed
done
day.
The 1
quite
right
died!
could
and I
here.
Judge Atwell empaneled the 1 vo-,. commerce oucru w auxi msm. —. vy .— -......: T 1 a a -1 IDRAV
Jury In the absence of Judge J. W. Cooper, 4629 Crestline tendents have college training. It SERE LA 1 t SATURDAY
James C Wilson, who Is con-
tion, recommended that all Texas
In urban
Walker, Collett & Rigg
Insurance & Bonds
Frijoles and Cornbread
WF
I to the
I Glo
this.
She
ing g
stamp
And
the s
for th
Lev
for a
ARMISTICE DAY
PARADE PLANS
ARE COMPLETED
day for Campaign
Twenty leaders of the Council
of. Negro Charities were to mJ
WA
movie
teat.
, - "W
at the
revealed as the undercover agent
i who collected Information- regard-
Ernest Joseph Vetrano
D. C. '
Has Returned
1122 FAIR BLDG.
Phone 2-7945
R‘A
Wi-
tale 1
, Nobod
13 about
the cl
Mr.
opery
This 1
schools except those in urban
district of 5000 population and
more be placed under the super-
vision of county boards of edu-
cation. to eliminate a many feeble
Independent districts now exist-
A trio 1 the robbers jumped
into the baggage car, while the
A first man got into an nutemobile,
his gun trained on the engineer
and mototman.
Today The Press
Congratulates
“KansasCity
andChi cad0
Agencies president •■
G. S. Blewett, Decatur, was: Vera said that next Wednesday,
named foreman of the Jury of 22 Thursday and Friday an appeal
Judge W. II. Atwell, Saturdayner and open a used clothes depot
convened the U. S. grand jury | Nov. 17. ,
The depot will be established at electing county superintendents.
105-7 Commerce Street with Mrs. only 35 per cent of the superin:
The convention in Mexico City
closed Wednesday night with
banquet, given by the Public
Health Association of Mexico.
.......half. according to Dr.
Mrs. Henry G. Bowden, chest execu-
HERE’S MORE ABOUT
POLITICS
(STARTS ON PAGE 11
Every day The Press asks
four or five persons what they
think about current news. To-
day’s question and answers fol-
low:
industries were doing and what
plans for relief had been devel-
oped.
"Victory depends,” Woods said,
"on thousands of local communi-
ties planning and working to-
ward the common coal. In that
way we can help the return to
prosperity."
EATON MERGER SUIT
RESTS WITH JUDGE
No.Immediate Decision in Youngs-
town Battle. :
By United Press. :
YOUNGSTOWN, O.. Nov. 8.—
Decision in Cyrus S. Eaton’s suit
| to block the billion-dollar merger
| of the Youngstown Sheet and
Tube Company with the Bethle-
Educator in Houston With
Wife After Suffering
Form of Aphasia
By United Press.
HOUSTON, Nov. 8.—Dr. E. W.
Provence, Burleson College prest-
dent, who wandered for four
days thru the state with a form
of aphasia, was in. a sanitorium
here today, resting, according to
W. C. Averill, brother-in-law of
Provence..
The educator was brought here
late yesterday by Mrs. Provence
and Dr. E. P. Good of Green-
ville, family physician for the
Provences. They found Dr. Pro-
vence in Crockett, where he had
appeared the night before.
He had told T. E. Walden,
Crockett banker, ”1 just had to
get away from school awhile or
I feared I would have a nervous
breakdown."
WOMEN OF CENTRAL
PLAN PRAYER WEEK
Meetings at Methodist Church to
Begin Tuesday.
A week of prayer will be ob-
»n for Thanksgiving The addi-
tional time this year will permit
students to visit their homes and
ley, formerly of Huntsville and
Corsicana, has been appointed
, first assistant attorney general,
i succeeding Jack Blalock of Mar-
shall, resigned. John Dupriest of i.
Austin, who has been investigator
for the attorney general’s depart-
ment, has been made an assistant
attorney general.
IN FOUR ONE-ACTS
Dramatic < Club Presents Program
The Friday Night
TU IN
J 1
travai
lywoo
Mil
1 tiful I
field 1
Th!
Satur
Radio Station WRAP. The pro-
gram Is being arranged by I,eon
tionery room ever tumbled to the Leaders of Council to Meet Sat-
eosis of bad economy but was
doubly dangerous because of the
conditions in the country. Cer-
-tainly with the nation in the
throes of a ghastly business de.
of Fort Worth.
served by,the women of Central
Methodist Church, beginning at
10:30 a. m. Tuesday at the
church. Mrs. A. B. Curtis, lead-
er, will talk on Prayer, ling bootlegging on Capitol Hill.
A sandwich luncheon will be j - - 7 - - *
is a
Homecoming Day campaign will paign, Dec. 2 to 10.
be in full swing Sunday, accord- The council has been admitted
ing to Douglas Tomlinson, chair-to membership in the chest. The
man of attendance. 1 "
orous a campaign as they could,
not to destroy the administration, ( A DITAI CACIAI A FEA I DC
not to accomplish the downfall of VAT AL OCTAL ArPAIMO
any political figure, but to resist -----------------
and to correct a situation that t , ..
had become well nigh Intolerable W ife of Probable Speaker Wishes They Would Serve
The minority in the Senate and
Sceleta Rogers of Mart and Miss
Davidson made up the cast for
Letters.
Clara Frances Lane of Memphis
and Helen Hall of Fort Worth of-
fered a surprise skit, Goodnight.
mother of Mike Rusick, gangster
slain in St Paul last summer,
was arrested
Then all heaped the stolen
goods into the car and sped away,
vas accomplished in 15 min-
work resulted in arrest of George utes—about $1,000 a minute
Altho postal authorities were
, urday, Nov. 29.
Until last year the Frog - Pony
game was played on Thanksgiving
Day, but many of the Fort Worth
ett Shouse of the executive com- fans attend the Texas-Aggie game
Point on the Isle’ of Wight. It
Volunteers Join California
, Peace Officers After
$55,700 Robbery 1
By United Press.
" BERKELEY, Calif., Nov. 8.—In
a country where mail robberies
have been no novelty since the
early days of stage coaches and
raw gold, a hunt was made today
for five desperadoes who Friday
held upp the Southern Pacific’s
Stockton Flyer at a lonely spot
northwest of here and escaped
with more than $55,700.
Two thousand peace officers
and volunteers searched Berkeley
Hills—at one time a retreat of
the infamous Jake Fleagle gang—
while detectives attempted to find
out what became of an assortment
of weapons shipped from a New
York munitions house recently- to
mysterious consignees here. - -
Used "Tommy" Gun.
It was near here — within 30
Davidson of Grand Saline
in the afternoon
FROM
FORT WORTH
tandard
_ullmans
and Chair Cars
reservations and details
E. B. MELTON, Div. Pasar. Agent
112 E. Ninth St. Phone 2-1560
Fort Worth, Texas
Dean Wedmeyer Acting
President at College
By United Press.
GREENVILLE, Nov. 8.—Dean
Wedemeyer assumed the office
of president pro-tern of Burleson
Dr. D. W. Provence, suffering In
a Houston hospital from amnesia.
Dean Wedemeyer was made tem-
porary president at a special
PREPARE MOODY PAINTING.
AUSTIN. Nov. 8.—Gillis King
and Mrs. King of Austin, both
portrait painters, are collaborating
on the picture of Gov. Dan Moody
that will be placed in the rotunda
.of the state capitol. The picture
of each governor is displayed.
School football game. I
"There Is no Insignificant child Saturday for ’225 delegates
in. Texas and therefore there attended a post-convention session
should be no Insignificant coun-ofythe American
try school," declared Birdwell. | Association in Mexico City.
"Let's quit kidding ourselves. The special train over the Katy
and put. In the country schools line is due to arrive at 5 p. m.
those principles which have made The delegates are headed by
our city schools so efficient.” Dr. Hugh S. Cummings, Washing-
Clough denounced as "undem-ton, D. C., surgeon general of the.
ocratic” the system of electing U. S. Public, Health Service, and
superintendents for Dr. A. J. Chesley, Minnesota, re-
He declared that 78 tiring president—of the associa-T
COLUMBIA, Mo., Nov. 8.- Lee
Derby, former University of Mis-
football star, scored in
here when charges of
hem Steel Corporation rested
with Judge David G. Jenkins, to-
day after the trial was adjourned
last night, terminating five
months of litigation in the Ma-
honing County courts.
No immediate decision is an-
ticipated because of the vast
number of questions Involved In
the suit and of an understanding
between opposing counsel to al-
low three weeks in which to file
reply briefs with the court.
county
Arrangements have been made I schools. __ ...________
with local plants to clean the per cent of the votes are cast (n tion.
clothes before their distribution, cities under the jurisdiction of
Vera said A complete record will, independent districts."
be made of all persons receiving Marrs Predicts Fight.
the clothes, 6. health .and Mrs:
The depot will give out these S ate Superintenden of instrue-and Mrs H. V Cardona,
clothes on presentation of a requi-tion S. M. N. Marrs agreed that |
. sition. The requisition is given the small independent school ais- I
A social tricts served a good purpose 40
years ago, but were obsolete.
Just so the contestants won’t
have to worry much over the
week-end. Picture No. 28 in
The Press Twins Contest, print-
ed today, are the easiest thus .
far in the contest. There won’t
be much trouble in matching
these two and the mates to both
have already appeared. Clip |
ing. /
1 Appoint Superintendents
. Their recommendation was
-. adopted after/the 5000 figure
Judge Orders Fearless Study Appeal for Used Wearing bad beenchanped, to apply to in-
” A dependent districse with 500 scho-
lastics and more.
The commission also indorsed
the appointment of county super-
intendents and supervisors by
county boards of education, with
the state board fixing qualifica-
tions..
Under the present system of
Republic.
Military units will comprise the
second section Marching in uni-
form will be Company B, 144th
Infantry: Service Company, 144th
Infantry; Headquarters Company,
144th Infantry; Ambulance Com-
pany, 11th Medical Regiment;
Service Company, 111th Medical 1
Butts, now working as an ac-
countant in a near-by Virginia
birth of a son Nov. 3.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Inlow,
9 a fifteen million candle pow- I 1609 East Harvey, upon the
birth of a daughter Nov. 5.
is to her husband and family,
and that includes upholding the
dignity of any position her hus-
band may attain, as well as aid-
ing him in bearing the burden
of his duties,” she said. “Dur-
ing the years I have worked
with Mr. Garner, serving as his
secretary, I have been too busy
to worry over the fine points of
official or social precedence."
Mrs. Garner took up shorthand
and typewriting so she might
serve as her husband’s secretary.
She has one son, now a banker
in Uvalde, the South Texas city
where the Garners live.
pression it was no time to place a
greater burden upon consumers
and an additional handicap on
business.
"Democrats in the present Con-
gress sought the enactment of a
plan that would limit changes to
those obviously required—changes
in Individual schedules on the
recommendation of non-partisan
experts In consonance with the
dictates of economic science. With
such a process tariff alteration
would proceed with the maximum
of patience and caution, and would
cause no earthquakes In our busi-
ness structure. Whatever changes
may be considered necessary to
rid the present act of its outstand-
ring enormities, nothing is further
rom the minds of those who will
50 Organizations to Take
Part in Observance of
War’s Ending
— Fifty organizations will be rep-
resented in the Armistice Dey pa-
rade planned by American Legion
posts or Fort Worth Tuesday.
Ex-service men, associated bod-
fee, military unite and fraternal
"and school groups will march
down Houston and up Main Street
i in observance of the ending of the
World War.
Five bands will play martial
music. Traffic lights and bells will
be shut off from 10:30 to 11 a. m.
The bells will ring at 11 and,
as they stop, the marchers will
halt and face westward for one
minute in silent tribute to those 1
who died in their country's serv-
ice. All citizens have been asked
by the Legionnaires to Join in the.
tribute,
Six-Section Parade
The parade, which is being ar-
ranged by Capt. Jernes L. Stitt,!
will be in six sections with service
men, police escort and band and |
massed colors of the United States
and allied nations near the front. |
The first section will be compos-
ed of ex-service organizations-
the Legion, Forty and Eight, Eight
and Forty, Disabled American Vet-
erans of the World War, United
Confederate Veterans, Spanish-
American War Veterans, Gold Star
Mothers and Grand Army of the
Hreet legislation on the Demo-
raile side than a general revision
f the tariff."
ducting federal court at Ama-
rillo.
wanted,'' Vera said. "Coats, shoes,
underwear and more useful and
desirable clothes are the kind
needed.'
Road, in charge, It was announced was shown.
by A B. Vera, Council of Social | The commission adjourned. %
noon. Many members were to t-
tend the Central - North Side High
worked well in Denver,
i Louis and Los Angeles.
saves a duplication of work, and
. . By MARSNALLNEIL between Mrs. Longworth, wife of
Er N° Mar o xi the present speaker, and Mrs.
WASHINGTON, Nov 8. Mrs. Gann, sister of vice President
John N. Garner, wife of Rep. Curtis
Garner, who is en route to the , .
speakership, attends the various I believe a woman s first duty
social functions in Washington,
but she has one criticism to make
of them.
Blooming Grove; Betty McCombs,
Rotan, Estalene Vaughan, Tula;
Helen Hitchcock, Vernon; Mar-
dilla Taylor, Ennis; Kathleen
Neal, Cisco, and Clarice Ashley,
Goldthwaite..
Ruth Bailey of Tyler, Elsie
Brandt of Fort Worth and Lady
"That is not upon the .ques-
tion of precedence,” she was
quick to add.
"But If they would serve frl-
joles and corn bread those din-
ners would be delightful."
Mrs. Garner, who was born on
a South Texas ranch, where they
cook frijoles — Mexican beans-
with just the same artistry that
New Englanders prepare baked
beans and mince pie, has her
own ideas about what a legisla-
tor', wife, should do.
"I have never been interested
in such matters," she said, re-
•ferring to the precedence row
___...
out the pictures today and
match ’em and rest easy until
Monday. Pictures No. 29 might
not be so easy. Tuesday is the
last day. Then you have until
Saturday to get your entries in
to the Contest Editor. The
judges will be announced Mon-
day.
■ L. Parkman
The story of the 36th Division,,
trained at Camp Bowle, will be de. Hailey, Chico: Robert Jaynes. County consumers Juury WALLL at .XI , XX
pleted In a program over KTATs Dey Diceyi J. co-operate in furnishing a budget State Heard
from n:30 to 11 p. m. The contin-J. Cranford: Perri W. R. Rob-
uire play was written by Clyde ingon, Crafton: W.
Kraft. Arlington: R.
Another Armistice program will | Booneville, and M.
be presented over WRAP from Springtown.
Longer Sessions Will Cut
Cotton Crop, Says
Birdwell
Keep the country boy and girl
In school nine months a year and
Texas will automatically reduce
Its cotton crop and solve one of
the state’s gravest economic
problems.
A. W Birdwell, president of
the State Teachers College of
Nacogdoches, said this here Sat-,
urday in a plea for better schools’
"down at the forks."
He addressed the meeting of
the Texas Education Commission,
at headquarters of the Texas
State Teachers Association/
Birdwell and G. O. Clougof
Southern Methodist University,
Dallas, chairman of the commis-
sion’s committee on rural educa-
"A remarkable.victory has come
to the Democratic Party," said the
statement, "We, however, regard
It less as a political triumph than
as a great opportunity for con
structive service.
No General Revision
"For a year and a half the
Democrats have conduct'd as vig-
miles of yesterday’s scene — that
Jake Fleagle, now dead, held up
the same train and escaped with
$16,000, later taking refuge in
the Berkeley hills.
Riding as "blind baggage," one
. of the outlaws poked a revolver-
“Why don’t you and the Missus drive over tonight for into ,he back of he Emmery,
a bride ? | veteran engineer, forcing him to
"Be glad to, Frank. We’ll be there at seven fifty-three siamed two ennlehonoctatoeTnette
and a half." There, startled passengers saw
—— ---------------------------——-----------------the train slow down and five
the House of Representatives
fought bravely and sincely, to pre-
Ladies’ new Lace Q1 00
Hose, Special.... O L. VU.
Of Cases Apparel-Is Broadcast
Charging his Jurymen to study. Fort Worth welfare' agencies
“fearlessly" all cases presented I will abandon their former system
to them, particularly those in-j of gathering and distributing used
volving bank ’ fraud. Federal clothing in an unorganized man-
fact I was a prohibition agent."
HOMECOMING DRIVE-
AT FIRST CHRISTIAN at 3 p m. Saturday .at Com-
—- — munity Chest - campaign head-
Four-Month Campaign In Full quarters to map out.their drive
Swing by Sunday. . . c 1
The . First Christian Church in connection with the ehest cam-
Cas work will be resumed on power and the glory of being Four one-act plays, were pre-
Monday morning. Dec: 1. Prest-mayor of Sumner is discounted sented by the .Thesplan Club at
lent 1. M Waits announces, by L.- Sharp, incumbent, re-elect- TWC Friday night as its first pro-
La ’ ye ir only one day was giv-Fed many times. "Nobody else - or the fear .
wants the job," said Sharp, who sram of th year.
also is a lawyer, justice of the Cabbages was given by a cast
peace and farmer. • which included Mae Heaton,
Bov CO BEVEAL Cn masked men emerge from a car
BUT, LU. REVEALED parked at a crossing. Sub-machine
SENATE ‘QI PIITU’ gun to his shoulder, another of
DENAIE OLTUIN the bandits passed quickly down
. , 5 . the length of the train.
Undercover Dry Agent Appears to Took Only 15 Minutes
. nitenleura PIlOUTON.
members, , would be made to Fort Worth citi-
Begin M ork Monday, zens to take used clothes to thee
.........._. The Jury will begin its inves - depot. .
REEiment: Third Battalion ifend-itimatonr, Monday cubAtou TH Want Useful Clothing-
a. 124th Cavalry, alatrier attorney horrteethad, S. dresses and similar attire are not
Junior Reserves The chief work of the jury will
Twelve companies of the Junior be on the failure of the Texas
Reserve Officers Training Corps National Bank.
from Fort Worth high schools ‘A supplementary report includ-
will be in the third division. Next Hing the disclosures of the bank’s.
will be Boy Scouts and fraternal condition as found by auditors,
organizations — Saturday was being checked, by
The fifth section will be uni the attorney general’s depart-
formed school bodies, led by the ment at Washington.
drum corps and- pep squad of it will be sent here next week
Texas Woman’s College. The Ma- for use by the jury.
sonic Home and School band and Five Missing, Fined.
pep squad of various high schools---Five AV Awes were assessed , .
will follow - against persons summoned but the needy person- by
---Negroes will form the sixth sec not present for jury service. | agency handling the case, after a He predicted educators would
tion It will be led by the r. M Jurymen, besides Blewett, are: thoro investigation, Predu Iedincal from A
Terril High School band C F. Hall. Grapevine; A A. Fort Worth ministers are being me In get ng the 1.27:
Armistice Hansford, DeLeon; Nat Brooks, asked to announce the opening of ' ankrs in getting th Levi a
Smithfield; w D HeAlister, Stel the -depot and the appeal for tire topass an act inline with
phenville: w E Rickman Boyd: clothes in their sermons Sunday, the motion. Passage of such a aw
50: would move school deposits from
‘ L Harris, Strawn: ; M Jor- Ask Women's Support • many small banks to county seats.
dan. Seminary Hill: R Moore, The council will go before all Marrs pointed out.
waPi.Arthur ordon, Huckabay: women's and civic organizations Maris was reflected chirman
shoemaker, Decatur: J. D and ask their support, Vera said, of theistate illiteracy committee at |
la r. Decatur: Loy Stoek, De- j The Community Chest, the City a dinner at the Blackstone Hotel.
Tatar: Jim, Robinson Gordon: E. Welfare .Department and the Friday night |
alley, lico: Robert Jaynes.l/nuntw Commissioners Court will Nat M. Washer, president of the
of Education, the1
much money."
Glover Johnson, Sinclair
unable to make a definite state
ment of the loot, it was known
sco
had sent $55,700 by registered
mail on the train.
a . to op date the depot. . chief speaker, warned educators of I
t N deruten. The committee in charge of the the danger of a Communist upris-
Morris depot Is : C W Atkinson, county ing in the 1 S •
1. Donney judge elect, chairman; City Man- Henry G. Edwards, Tyler news
ager Carr, Mrs C W- Woodman, paperman, also was of the opinion
Travelers Aid Society: Miss Mar- that the Communists were strong
wANEenAv MANNAN: saret McLean, Rod Cross: Mrs. in the Southwest, and growing in
WEDNESDAY MONDAY Verna- Adams Girls’ Service numbers. .
HOLIDAYS FOR TCU League; L. L. Manchester city
welfare department: Dr. Henry TUCODIAHO DI AV
Long Thank-givine-Taration for 0 Bowden, chest executive, ardIlWC THESPIANS PLAT “It is a good thing.
Students This Year,
TO r students will he dismissed i
after classes Wednesday, Nov. 26.
Employment < Chief Asks Co.Oper- "The can paign, started last Sun- chest will provide all if hud it.
ation to Avoid suffering day, will continue four months. provided the negroes raise the
By United Press. | Others on the committee are I other
WASHINGTON, Nov. 8. — B. White, J T. Hamilton, 1
Chairman Arthur Woods of Pres- Isaac Van Zandt, Mrs Charles
ident Hoover’s emergency com-Stephens, and George Oliver Tay-
mittee on employment used the lor and Dr. L. D. Anderson as ex-
radio last night in asking all officio members.
... mayors and city officials of the Every member of the church Is
. .nation to aid in "a race against to attend at least one religious
WHAT do you think Of Sena- human suffering.” service during each of the months,
• ’ tor Walter Woodul’s plan Woods asked for Information l and once a Sunday if possible. An
of combining the city and coun- on how individual communities honor roll v III be published at c°RS the --
ty governments in counties of were organizing to meet the un- the end of each month, including , Beaumont A 1 5P
200.000 population or more? . 1 employment situation, what the+xe -------~ •>'"■* nereana wehelfor next year W
Clay Cooke, 3345 Hemphill:
Building; "It is the only sen-
sible thing to do. It will simpli-
fy our government. However, I
believe it will require a consti-
tutional amendment."
Clarence Farmer, representa-
live-elect: "I'm certainly
against It. I’m a Democrat.
There is too much centralization
of government now. Further-
more, It would not be fair to
make the farmer pay city taxes
when he does nor have the ben-
efits of the city."
Gordon Whatley, Park Hill
Apartments: "Off-hand, ft looks
like a good idea, but we ought
to give the matter much
thought before, making such a
derided change in our govern-
ment.”
C.E. Baker, 614 Parkdale:
"Properly worked out, it might
be a good plan. It would save
a great amount of, duplication
and would simplify our govern-
ment, but it would not be so
simple to get."
served at 12:30 p. m., and Circle
No. 1 will be in charge of the | L. Cassiday as the “man in the
worship service at 1:30 p. m. green hat,” purveyor of liquor to
Other events of the week for lawmakers, and compilation of a
the church are: list of Senators and Congressmen
„ The New Earth, cantata by who patronized him.
Henry Hadley, 8:30 p. m. Mon-
day, in observance of Armistice
Day,----------------
Board of Stewards, 7:30 p. m.
Fori .Worth delegates who Monday,.
made the trip were Dr A II „ Worship Service. Cigele No 2
Flickwir, city director of public 2:30 p. Wednesday.
ritaimee. nr Alice W right Circle, worship
Flickwir: Dr service, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday,
. t ? Worship Service of.Circle No.
Marguerite Cummings and Miss , , an „ . r
Sfarsuerite Cunningham • 3-Chor TremarTatredego p. m.
y Thursday. Harvest afternoon ob-
alservance, 2:30 p. m. Friday, with
Mrs. S. J. Taylor and Mrs. C. A
Boaz as leaders.
KNIFE FOR 1 CAPPER
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov 8
When Joe Kovick 40, a roomer,
struck her with a bottle capper,
Mrs. Rose Rusick countered with |
A butcher knife, killing Kovick |
here last night. Mre. Rusick.
the names of those persons who
have attended two preaching |
services each Sunday. A final roll
will include those persons, who
have attended all the preaching
services during the four months. D /. X 0
-----------Conic Cons
TILLEY SUCCEEDS BLALOCK. ”1 NNT
AUSTIN, Nov. 8. _Rice M. Til- -----------------
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Minteer, Edwin D. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 33, Ed. 2 Saturday, November 8, 1930, newspaper, November 8, 1930; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1638814/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.