McAllen Daily Monitor (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 203, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1935 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the McAllen Public Library.
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TWO
Friday, October m lfiSS
It
' T
UcALLEH DAILY
STOCK PRICES
SURGE UPWARD
TO NEW HIGHS
... , f rf 0
Bulls Are in«Saddle
and Selected Issues
heavy 16, small 15; geese 15.
Pnidwv
CHICAGO, Oct. 26-
-UP)— Butt'
6.51$, steady; cregmery-»pe<
(93 score) 28*4-25;' ejetra*
28; extra firsts <90-9li) 27-27 *$
firs-t* (88-89) 25%-26%; ,secoii'>
f
t\r
■l
(lards (69
Eggs $.-
cavalry and
main
the main body
started for
Rise
Pick
Choose Scssipn.
XKW YORK, Oct. 25-—(/P>—J’ulls
on .stock ajH-clalttes brooked no
opposition in today.’a market and
prices of selected iseues zur*oi
forward to new hluti levels Iw the
past four years <lr so..
It was a pick and choose eession,
however, and many of the rails.
Utilities and other past leaders were
content to hold their heads above
-WfiAer Motor and inyrichandising
stocks attaint'd ret>«-w|d populari-
ty and. ate elk found I following.
The activity oorrcspolftcd to that
Of yesterday.
Grains were rather neutral and
cotton eas* d. Bonds wt*re a bit Im-
proved. Foreign exchanges were
■lightly mixed.
Shares of CofO-Cola epurted 9
points and Liquid Carbonic, Ameri-
can Telephone and Chrysler ad-
vanced 2 each.
The coppers were backward and
the oil* were IKtle ixjtter than
steady.
The president's statement that
private industry.In now "taking up
the slack*’ of unemployment, with
a gain of some 158,000 workers in
September, help’d to cheer con-
•trtx tlve forces.
* Other items of market wine In-
fluence included:
*^he department of commerce
. Weekly Index of primary business
activity was up to 88.8, a new 1965
peak and. 13 points above the 1934
figure.
Cotton ginned in the United
States tliis year, up to Oct. 18,
was estimated by the census bu-
reau at 6,589,799 running bales
agalrtst 6,7i3,9t)l' tn tht* corres-
ponding period last year apd 8,-
008.090 to the similar date last
’ year. ■
( 86-87 ) 24 Vi -25; - eta
centralized carlots) 271
321, unsettled, prices unchanged.
Additional Cuts *
In Trick' Rates
For Valley Seen
:—’ "
|N A RUING BN. Oct.
The two Valley railroads. Ml*®ow||
Pacific and Southern Pacific. ha&*
requested still further reductions
in freight rates on Vegetables lead-
ing this section. the Rio Orange
Vklley Growers’ association hfc|
been told. y
Vhese new redu- tiions would
feet root veg> tableswith tops 'HOwj
he supplementary and in additf<»H
to reductions already o.btaihW
from the interstate Commfrw;
com mission.
The mixed car rule on vegetables
will become effective on Dec:* 1,
Homer P. Huntley, Secretary of the
association said. Under this rule.
»«rh commodity ih a mixe'd car
takes Its carlot minimum in ‘fig-
uring the minimum for the car,
whereas under the‘rule which has
is-.n applied to the Valley tlje
minimum of the highest rate q£to.-
modity in a mixed car Is used, t.
Specifically, «uta| on Coot ve$|-
tatiles, such as carrots, beets, tug-
nips, and others, would amount to
aftiput 19 cents with New York
the destination. These reductiqi
w ere left up to the carriers by ,t
ICC since competing , sections
' "t
1 +
the chang’ S. •||!
Dr. Baldwin Die*
MERCKDES. Oct. 25 ,(SpI^
Word has been received of
death of Dr. Clarence ArCT
Baldwin, M. D.. at hla ho^^gth
Peru. Indiana, which ocqulQed
October 9. Dr. Baldwin 8*11
known in Mercedes sgiendiag injlich
of his time here in the hotndjof
iiis father—in—law. Rev. Alper!
Kalbfleisch. Dr Baldwin was »6rn
in Amboy, Indiana, in 1871.
Ethiopian Infantry,
anti-aircraft troops; thi
of the Harar regulars,
the southern front today after be-
ihg reviewed by Rat Natsbu. who
t^ill command them in battle
against-,the Italian*.
Led by 2.000 heavily laden cam-
elgi the soldiers rumbled southward
ht American made motor trucks
toward the fascist forces led by
General Rudtlfo Graziani.
The abuna. OF bishop of Ethio-
pia's Coptic Christian church,
blessed -their colors and cathedral
-prie sts g&ve the soldiers absolu-
tion.
. Almost fanatical Qalla women.
Veeping, siging. shrieking and In
_ dulging in lamentations, lent a true
(Spi )C-i briental touch to the scene—the
1 qnost colorful ever witnessed in the
(jnly aw led city hi Emperor Halle
he lassie.
' Ras Nasibu,
Fanfl a prlncip
go
oil
overnor of Harar
Ethiopian com
mander In the south, told the As-
sociated Press that'Jijiga, 50 miles
to the east, wotild be one of the
main points of defense of the
southeastern front. +
The chieftan, who appeared to
have aged considerably under the
stress of the war since this cor-
respondent last : saw him a month
ago, expressed confidence that he
had sufficient linen and munitions
to hold the city of Jijiga success-
fully. T [
He laughed at reports that Ethi-
opians had suffered heavy casual-
ties on the Ogalden front, either
1^-om Italian gas* ef bomba
total <iai
•The
from Italian
casualties resulting
air/bombirffe at Gor-
rahdl and points along the Webbe
Shibell river were five killed and
’three wounded at Gorrahel and one
Somali killed at Katama Tafari,”
he said.
Nasibu said he had adequate
leadership at Jijiga, asserting the
famous Turkish genera! Wehib
Pasha, former general of the
Wnrm Weal her Restrict* Trade
NEW YORK. Oct -5—</P)—The
recurrence 411 warm and unsettled
Weather "restricted the distribu-
tion of merchandise (during the
week." according to the weekly
review of Dun A Brad-treet issued
tod**)
"Retailer* in some parts of the
-country recorded the smallest to
tals in nearly two months, although
the comparallive figures of a year
ago generally wera- exceeded,” the
survt-y saii
"ItetaiT sales liarely were on a
par with rhn>-o- of the week pre-
ceding. When I'oihpared* With the
showing for the corresponding 1934
period, however, few losses worn
regarded, the estimated increase
for the country over the 1934 to-
tals rang I in from 2 to 12 per cent.
“Ncilhw in reorders nor fresh
commit no-nils did wholesale volume
come up to that recorded for the
week preceding, tlie slower move-
ment of merchandise at retail re-
sulting In many buyers postponing
thiir trips until the weather will
have tinned more favorable."
IJ\Cs|lM k *
FORT WORTH. Texas, Oct 25
—(JP)—(U. S. Dept. Agr.)— flogs
400, truck hogs steady; top 9.75.
few choice butchers averaging 400
lbs. 9 i0, better giade.s 150-175 lb.
averages 9.25—#5; pitekiiy; sows
steady 8.75 down.
Cattle 1,71.0. calves 700; general
market fully steady on all classes;
cows strong, fed steers and yearl-
ings 7.00-si.on; grassy offerings
4.5.11 - a.5n, IV-et cows 3.25 -4.25;
hulls 3.25 I 25, common and me-
dium slaughter calves 3 75—5.5o.
.SRieep I t"i> eariy sales i.rt lambs
steady; bulk receipts late in ar-
riving . medium to good iat lambs
8.26— TT»; hudiuni grade fat ewes
4.ou
( lilt ago Grain f utures
Court--> Ifauks 1.. Miller
look, nge office)
High I a • w *' 1 • >»c
Hurricane Hits Nicaragua.
PUERTO CABEZAS, Nicaragua
Oct. 25—(/Pi—A hurricane wasR-
ported to have hit Cape Gracias
at 8 a. m. today.
At that time the Cape Gracias
radio station went out of commis-
sion after rvporthing that wafer
was rising in the station. t.
COUNTY— ..
(Continu 'd From Page One?,
North African possession of Libya
was described by' Laval as the
first'step toward onciliation."
LONDON, Oct. 25—UP)—Author-
itative sources said today that
Premier Mussolini’s demands upon
Ethiopia now are less than here-
tofore but there is still a wide gap
to he bridged and considerable
time probably will be necessary to
narrow this gap.
These sources said that II Duce’s
original demands for the military
domination of the wliole of Ethio-
pia are “out of the picture for the
moment.”
In reliable quarters, the Italo-
Ethiopian peace developments were
characterized as r coundlngs of the
vaguest kind” between Premier
Laval of France and. Mussolini.
The British government, it was
stated, being kept informed in
the role of an observer.
It was said that the developments
were as yet so nebulous a» to give
no reason stor opjtimism or for ex-
pecting that ainything tangible
would be worketj. out in the n»-ar
future.
It was understood that Laval, as
a result of nearly two weeks’
soundihg out ,of Mussolini, his
transmitted a Report to the British
government but that it indicated
nothing substantial or pracical had
yet been broached.
■ £
5?
i <i
BI .
POLICE GUARD
Mercedes -Honor
Student* Named
* ■ ■ »* ■■
* TCdntlnu
Cdhtlnued From rage One)
Govern
Repor
V'
ent Denies
of a Rebel*
lion in j Spite of Arrest
of Democrat.
JACKIE—
(Conti..ued From Page One)
enlarged through. rf life insurance
premiums, paid several months ago,
after the death of ()is father. John
Coogan, Sr., in an automobile ac-
cident near San Diego..
To the father is accredited the
program of investments and sav-
ings by which Jajckie’s tremendous
earnings were held together.
“Discovered” by Charles Chaplin,
Coogan entereda pictures ivhan he
was four years .old. Even before
his salary-curve reached the top
. w_______ __, °f *ts, arc' l*e Paid income tax of
Turkish tmperial army, was among $57,000 in one year, and $53,000
his commander*. — ,n ',nn",,,r
* Nasibu said he was in constant
in another.
At one time, he received $500,-
telephonic communication with 000 from a film studio < M-G-M) as
Emperof.HanfSelassie an.d kept
him informed hourly of events on P picture9 Jackie was contracted
the southern front^ 'to make.
I He was born here, Oct. 26. 1914.
25-p(tf>) —Italy’s (•’The Kid” was Coogah’s first pic-
was announced ^ure an(j (he result was the most
moving forward up amazjng popularity-wave, sine? the
valley in the (jayS 0f Baby Peggy.
Last year, he returned to Holly
ROME, Oc .
Somaliland arpiy
today to be
the Webbe Shibeli
direction of Harar, Ethiopia.
” An official comnhunique anhounc-j vvood and starred in one picture,
ed the capture of two additional
vllages in the Sciaveli region, Cal-
a "Western.”
iHs 21st birthday, tomorrow, will
lafo and Celedi, taken Oct. 20 and ^ celebrated by a small paityat
a Los Angeles hotel.
Woman’s Exchange
Is Established
ing' firm aa above mentioned) ^to
make and complete such an aiklit
as above described. This grand ^ttO’
is fully cognizant of the fina$$ia,l
conditions oi Hidalgo county atfihe
41resen- time, and fully .feaYies
there arc not a great deal of ft^ids
at ihe present time for the ppj'ra-
tion of county affairs, but
withstanding this fact this g#nd
21 following the fall Of Dagnerrei.
The communique said that after
the Italian forces had moved in to
Callafo, several tribal chiefs pres-
ented themselves to the Italian
command to make acts of submis-
sion, while 500 Ethiopian, rifles
•were captured in the operation.
The aviation reconnaissance con-
tinues, it was stated, af* far as Sasa
Bare h, 80 miles southwest of Bri-
tish Somaliland in the Ogaden sec-
tor and'Magalo in the Juba sector.
. Several military objectives in the
area have been bombed from the
Jair to clear the w<ay for the troops
advancing toward' to north
The communique stated that the
Eritrean front was quiet except for
the gradual infiltration o>f Italian
advance guards ihto scattered dis-
opinion that economies coul^fbe,
Effected in some manner so iihat
tiiis worthy undertaking#couffi| be*
ttfttt
ATHENS. Oct. 25—jf)—George
Papandreupn leader of the United
Democratic Party, was hrid under
police survleillance, in his hotel to-
day althuu^h the government offi-
cially denied reports of a rebellion.
Premier [George Kondylis said
that everything was quiet. Athens
was calm, j
British tourists coming tp Athens
this morning from Crete reported
their ship i had been delayed on
Sail.v by a {strike of longshoremen
but that otherwise they were not
disturbed.
(In Paris, the newspaper Paris-
Midi reported that the Athens gov-
ernment had ordered three des-
troyers gnc| 2,000 soldiers to Crete
where, it stlated, 30,000 republicans
were undef arms in a rebellion.
The newspjaper said 450 republi-
cans had bt-en arrested in Athens;)
Papandruu was arrested last
night on a charge of circulating
inaniftstoea against the Kondyljs
regime. I
(Gen. G’lorgo Kondylis recently
became premier of (»reeee with a
program oif restoring the monarchy
under form* r King George, who is
in exile in England. His reign was
overthrown in 192 2 and a repub-
lican form of government was esta-
blished, but ;for many recent years
the power <jf the monarchists has
been growing in Greece and the
question whether the monarchy is
to lie reestablished is the chiel pol-
itical problem of the nation today.
oay Work Is
Urged By McAllen
C. of C. Directors
_, . _ ^ blaze started back.
MERCEDB8, Oct. 15—<£pl> —, The picturesque Thompson
Honor student* <or the first s’.x rancj,, background of many m’utkm
weeks of the fhwt' semester of the pjctures and receatly a ’iocation'''
Mercedes schools.were announced jor the company making
today by Supt. Poteet. They ..jjves of a Bengal Lancer,” wa8
are as follows: * * j endangered.
Senior High: Fletcher McLane, | Threatened, too, waa the valu.
Robert Green. Jewell Bono. Billy ab,e ranch home of t'ecn b. De-
Ed ferry. John Ragland, Mildred noted producer-director.
Brust, J. D. Wilson, Olive Dalton, 'vvhilc the flame® were two miles
Nina Ewing. Harriet Kidder. Ethel away. DcMille, sent a force of m n
Atlee Lentz and Lydia TreTino. to the pj^e to remove furnishings.
Junior High: Charles Allen. Billy ’books, art treasures and many p»o-
Copeland, Joe Adame. Billy Boler. tJon picture fihn prints.
i Chart* d acre* by the thousand.
Jack Eddy. George -a g. with damages mounting over the
Mondragon C^rlra Settles John #0.000 mark and hundreds
Schmalzried, Tamundo Fernandez. bu n<)n<i faU„ gave vivid evid.
Salvas Galvan. Manuel Gonzalez,
Joella Baunigart Mary Frances
Bishop, Oretchen Bauer, Dorothy
Boirhelt, Carolyn
Dawson, Dorothy
Kirkpatrick, Josephine
Betty Joe McKinney, Dorothy- Mc?-
Neil, Mary Rosalyn Saladinb, Louise
and Shirley Starling, _ Lorraine
Schaeffer and Ella SchwaHz.
f)ore, Frances
Gordon, Gene
McNeil.
once of the most destructive forest
and brush fire rampage in rec nt
Southern California history.
GRUDGE—
4-
Britton U Safety
Director For City
(Continued From r’age One)
his parents?" Hardy Hollers of de-
fense counsel asked. __ -
“Well, he said he had a grudge.
Rogers said.
\r
Removed to Hcxuie
C. H. Britton us the new director
in the Rio Grande Valley Safety
coun. 'll.
Ifis election by the chamber of
commerce directors was almost un-
animous. Britton was:the only
member present casing a negative
vote. Th* board had- a 100 beercent
attendance, others present being
Mrs. Amy Jones, John T. Lomax,
J. C. Paxton, H. H. Damme. W. W,
Dees, J. F. Palmer, W.’ iL. NotI-
en, Kent Manning, R. H. ISawyer,
and W. H. Moon.
Britton will meet with other new
directors elected by the various
towns at the Cortez hotel in Wes-
laco Tuesday night at 7:30 to make
further plans for the Jv4li«y cam-
paign.
Mrs. Ray Klapperich, recovering
from accident injuries. .Was re-
leased from the city hospital Wed-
nesday.
The Kre* )A4‘ k* cream phuH
is valley .owned VaiW oper«*
tigsiorr- —i
Smite " ►
L
No Honking Tour non
No Waiting tt‘ tfij
O. S T.
SERVICE STATION
Rio Grand* City
Drive In Motorists
Service On The Run.
and With * Smile
Water ir the Rkdlator
Windshield Wiped4
Magnolia Product*
Goodrich 'Rreii
*5 A&I!
MERCEDES. Oct. 25 (Spl)
.Mercedes’ newest business is a
Women’s • Exchange which will
have Its formal opening Saturday.
The exT'ange is being operated by
Mrs. Katherine Chadick and Mrs.
T. L. Noitn. Mrs. It G. Lester will
•occupy a space in the building, op- John Lw
I crating a flower shop, featuring mittee of the chamber, headed by
flowers grown by her. Those in- JohnjT. f-ftmax. has been working
terested In the new business are on th
Mercedes women. The building on pletioji
Construction of the highway east
of Edinburg and completion of the
Military highway to Hildalgo were
urged Thursday night in a tele-
gram from’ the McAllen chamber
of commercJe to the State Highway
commissicki.
The Hildalgo county commis-
sioners’ cpiirt is now in Austin
seeing coiriidetion of these two pro-
jects anc.
joined its
commissi’
the McAllen' chamber
voice with that of the
nets on request of Judge
ng. The highway com-
Third street, which they will oc- j for §dme months.
LUI llilA, "v v ii
e prefects) particularly com
(If the Military highway
cupy. is being redecorated and re-
out
.............. .... _ tricts of Tigre province; No resist- _
Turv es sincerely and firmly o^hc fjance, it was stated,, is being offer- J modeled by the new firm. The
' -*•'* *-- **-- ****-•'• *'*“~ walls are being painted a soft tan _ would
I and the floors and drapes are a the ma
The\Wire from McAllen pointed
ed by the Ethiopian troops.
accomplished
Be it further resolved, ttt*1
jcojiy of tills resolution be s#ead |
upon the minutey of this fi'knd
jury, and that a copy be foi**££ded
immediately to the, honorable;pom-
\mission«rs' court of Hi^lgo
county. Texas, and that theSdis-
trict clerk of Hidalgo, Texjjifc be
authorized to furnish copies of; this
resolution to the press. . t '
This resolution unanimously £n
dorsed and passed by the- rfr
jury for the September term of
th« 9 2nd district court Hi-
dalgo county, Texas, on this the
24th day of October, A. D., 1935.
(Signed) A. L. Cramer, foreman;
C. L. Skaggs, secretary.
Members of the grand jury were
A. L. Cramer, Elsa; CharlLp II.
Copyright, 1935, By The
Associated Press' j
ROME, Oct. 26— Premier 'Ml
solini put squarely up to Great
Britain today the next n.ovi .n,
diplomatic negotiations for peace
in Ethiopia and tranquility In
Europe.
The Italian government sent the
steamship Sanniq to Libyla to bring
back the first of the 15.000 soldiers
ordered withdrawn^ from North
African i>osts where they had look-
ed across barbttl wire'barriers at
randYEsypt'
Missolini's spokesmen called this
unilateral actioll), hut diplomats
saw an implied invitation to Bri-
tain to respond by removing some
of its warship* from their Strategic
posts off the African co9»t.
A government spokesman said
11 Duce's decision to withdraw al-
most one fifth of his Fascist
bjick red. The exchange will
handle a large variety of articles, ty and,'
as well as baked, canned and pre-jtiuck |e<|idents.
served food.
t competition of these roads
relieve traffic, congestion on
n Valley artery w ith a con-
sfquent ilimunition of the mqrtali-
cafcualty rate from auto and
Bring your butter fat,, sweet or
sour,* to-the Kree-Mee station.
Highest prices paid, fair weights.
Why r4ad , today's news tomor-
row? llayf 12c a week and receive
the Vauldy’s Leading Newspaper
Daily—-pnone 44 0.
Eleven Indictments
By Grand Jury
EDlNBURG, Oct. 2 5 (Spl.) —
pleven new indictments were re-
turned by the September grand
jury before completing its session
yesterday evening. Arfests have
been made in six cases as fol-
lows:
Lupe Cavazos, robbery ; Zenon
Keyna. burglary: Juan Gairza, alias
Juan Garcia, habitual criminal; To-
mas Garcia, theft of turkeys; ReV-
ael Lucio, theft of turkeys.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
COUNTY OF HIDALGO
TO THOSE INDEBTED TO. OR
HOLDING CLAIMS AGAINST THE
ESTATE OF SARAH C- JOHN-
SON, DECEASED:
The undersigned having V>* en du-
ly appointed executor qf the es-
tate of Sarah C. Johnson] deceased,
late of Hidalgo County, jTexaA, by
John W. Ewing, judge of the
county court of said couhty on the
9th day of October. 1935, hereby
notifies all persons indebted to
said estate to come forward and
make settlement, and thbse having
claims agajrtst said estate to pre-
sent them within the time pre-
scribed by law at his residence in
McAllen, Hidaigo Counjty, Texas,
this the 10th day of October^ A. D.
1935. I
F. XV. LEM BURG
Executov of the Estate of Sa-
rah C. Johnson, deceased.
Wh<n
Dir
*
99
lows
May
1 wit
98
1.0#
July
88%
99 ! H
Cord
V*v
*i 1 *„ ,
60
61 1-8
M n
s
69
59 S
July
, r, n 1 j
59%
60 *8
Oats
l)ti‘.
• -' 6 T,
26 t.
- 26 •»
May
28 \
-'*% \
July
28 \
28 \
" 23 \
Grain
CHICAGO, Oct 25-
- ^TV
— \\ heat
prices
avo as'd higher in
Chicago
early
today*
e to
upturns
11 u|>|>. Mercedes; George P. C^tnes, forces in Libya (represent a ‘‘major
Mercedes; C. L Skaggs, W-effacb; i contribution”1 td- a solution‘of the
T (’. Downs. Alamo, Staqjey^HeJt- j prbblem of -peace, not only in
Europe hut also in East Africa.
‘ The Sarjnio.! dispatched from
can transport 2.000 men.
The present Libyan garrison is un-
officially estimated at^SO^OO Ital-
ian and native troops. »
'Italian officials emphasized
Italy's gesture as particularly gen-
erous. insisting the Libyan rein-
forcements were sent only to pre-
serve internal feecugUy- ’
on. l’hitrr; Frank C. Cro,W, fjhar
C. D. Cawthon, McAllen;-
Starr, Mission; H. E. TewVl}v..-Ed- | Naples
fnliurg", mid K. K. M&rburgc
sion. * r
BEST— m
tContlnu*d From Page (^6)
enemy.
Fixun Harar
ante word that 1
*- i
of Liverpool and Bueno*- Aires quo-
tations.
t Opening *4-:N higher. De> -ember
l.t)ti-I.oc *4. the Chicago wheat
market (hen r* acted somewhat?
Corn started unchanged '* off.
December to \--x. and atierward
sagged all around.
INUlllOt’s
CHB'AGD net 25 —</F> — (l* S.
DejH. Agr.) Potatoes. 77. on track
368. total U S. shipments 4Sv
firm with slightly siromim t*nd-
•nev on best stock-. Kicked
cwt; Idaho Russet Burbanks V. S.
No. 1, 1.62 Hi-60; U S. No 2 1 15.
‘Wisconsin Round White U S. No.
3 85-90 'heavy to small .80; com-
mercial *5-77 V Colorado Mc-
Clure;* U. S. No. 1. mostly 130.
Poultry
CHlCAtrO Oct. 25—'-{&}—Poul-
try. live.. 1 eat'. 5" trucks, steady
to firm: hens les** than 4 1*2
up 2*1: l>tghorn hens 15; Rook
spring’s 19 -19. colored *
Leghorn cjil-kens 17: roosters t..
turkey* 16.-52; white ducks 4 4
lbs up IT. small 15 colored ducks
000 well-equipped Ethiopian in-
fantry, cavalry , and anti-aircraft
troops, the main body of the Harar
regulars, had started for the south-
ern front after a review by* -Ras
Nawbu in Ethiopia's only Walled
city. , - ' .
The Has. governor of llaratjjbail
Jijiga. eastward by 50 miles, would
be one of the main point*^c*£de-
fenso t>n the southeastern fj^n-t-
A Reuters (British) dew* aiendy
dispatch from Harar relatedpour
Italian planes attacke<f»GahraM.rre
today, but their bomb^»womded
only seven Ethiopian aoldiet^i
With the dash and aban
North American Indians.
shrieking Kaffa tribal wafrjlors
rushed in review past the'lr ejW)ec-»
or who. standing admirlnglTj on
the balcony of his palace. hea^S his
soldiers beg for modern rif^A **'
their hand* were old 'fit
and blunderbusses.'
Ethiopian government AfpJl
expressed lack Of interest tn^ndi-
vidual diplomatic negotiatiort¥^for
peace, and ill L»tidon King George j*
epeech from the throne ltV- P*'0-
eoguing parlianjent expressed **my
greatest concern" over the Italoi
Ethiopian crisis. The klpg cited
that his government had /exerted
every effort to Obtain peace. '"
—————— T
Copyright. 1935. by the A satiated
Press > ;; iJ_
HARAR. EtKtoplf. OCU&5
Twelve thousand well-eUg^pired
PARIS, Octl 25—(A5) —Premier
pdubsolini. anxious to avoid appll-
ition of sanctions against Italy
‘or Its warfare on Ethiopia, was
reported today to have made three
notable coivestdons toward peace
•s
he Co’mmeintator Genevieve T*-
bouis. writing; in the liberal news-
paper L'Oeuvire, said he had learn-
ed fixim Rome:
1. II Duce would not consider
that withdrawal of some oj hi^
trodps from Libya required as ‘a
counterpart rjemoval tof some cf
the British worships from the Me-
diterranean.
2. He would undertake to shs-
pend actual military operations and
discontinue sending troops to Africa
•until Great Britain replies to his
suggestions.
3. If Britain
gestiuns an
negotiations,
willing .that
Today and Toi
The First Inside Story
the HoadUn?s are Shot
Poring
th* Rr*l
H*ort of
to Oat
iorrow
SUB
f £Qi %.
Sn
oiMSii|
Country]
ins About!
imaravnan For
ima Panatrata
Iatsia*s Empira
Facts!
See the splendor of the court
of the Lioa ICing; ice his troops
In actual War maneuvers; see
£tkiopia4rcourts, markets,
the savage hill
weird wedding
dances! v '* i>
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Alarming Information
ATTRACTION
Why not get a good health and accident policy to-
day, which will take care of you and your family
regardless of what happens? We write a policy lor
every need.
find® these sug-
acceptable ba®is for j
IJ Due® would be
they be turned over]
to the leagu^ of nations.
Suggestion® along these lines ]
had been reported previously. It
was considered doubtful that they
would prove acceptable either to I
Kritalu or to Emperor Haile Seda*-]
ale.
Premier Pierre Laval persi®ted
patiently in his own search for a
way to end the warfare in East
Africa acceptable both to Ethiopia
and to the league, seeking a more
serene diplomatic atmosphere.
, Italy’s ordje’r of w ithdrawal of
one division ] of trbops from its •
cm*«**4L,® t*"**
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AGENTS WANTED
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Valley Accident! j J
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Kling, A. R. McAllen Daily Monitor (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 203, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1935, newspaper, October 25, 1935; McAllen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1144257/m1/2/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Hidalgo+County+-+McAllen%22: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting McAllen Public Library.