The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 70, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 22, 1928 Page: 1 of 10
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I
FINAL
0
FORT WORTH, TEXAS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1928
VOL. 8, NO. 70
SCRIPPS-MOWARD
TEN PAGES
ere
. — 1
9
Gift Surprise
BORDER FIGHT
E
By United Press,
1
Troops Reported Marching
restored order.
5
Roundup of the 100 "strays"
e
1
whereto was attached a sign read-
ling "Lost Children,
here?" " '
ritory, and Paraguay was re-
"DADDY" BROWNING
I
9c
BULLETINS
might prove fatal.
C. K Wilkins, 23; and B I.
9c
UPHELD
competitors in the American market.
I: T. Camack Awarded $35,000
terest to the public. that man
MEXICO CITY. Dec. 22.
Bahia Negra is about 100 mileq
LAWRENCE, Kan.. Dec. 22.
98
of his store and saw a ball of fire
fraternity house was destroyed by fire here today with
it landed
attorney, McLean, Scott & Sayers.
latest situation.
Court -at-Law No. 1 he was sen-
FAIR BUT COLDER
tenced to 90 days in the county
from gas poisoning.
9c
HEADLIGHT WARXING ISSUED
WEATHER SUNDAY
DALLAS, Dec. 22.— Attempts of
rayon
plain
discovered nearly decapitated in her modest home late
for
purveyor
yesterday.
' Southeastern Bolvai."
Bolivians to Start
LA PAZ, Bolivia,
After
HOUNLY TEMTEIATURES
Stack is badly cut and Bruised.
U. S. DREDGE RAMMED
Harveson
TELEPHONING WIFE
took the pair to the hospital.
Violated Injunction Granted Mate government- dredge Kimble
UNEMPLOYED PERSONS MEET
Nov. 17, Charge
ft
she
steering gear jammed
was outbound near Fort Point.
701
TODAY’S MARKET HIGH LIGHTS
(
29
re-
waB
Ata. us. Mt orF.
(Further
let news on Pago 8)
4
z‘
(Turn to Pnge 8)
AM
1—1
rreg-
anted
ift..
n the
for
five
ds...
wide
. rose.
1
E
Upon City In Disputed
Paraguayan Area
This is to correct the impres-
sion that the raids were not made
a matter of record.
alive, so Novitsky advertised in
a Russian newspaper. His daugh-
ter, Mrs. Barbara Reiner of Chi-
cago, saw. the ad and communi-
cated with her father.
suits of clothes, virtually /all of I
which were found in their apart-1
ment on East Front Street.
Kies in
. just
kes.
Host of Santa Pals Ready To Start Out
Christmas Eve With Kids’ Store of Gifts
Company, where they were for-
merly employed.
Wilkins, the alleged offender
Landis predicted fair and
weather for Saturday.
pressly requested that his
marks not be quoted.
When this explanation
Damages for Burns
Judgment of 835,000 against
the Sandegard estate for burns
to his hands and face, received
by R. T. Camack In an explosion
in the Ritz Hotel, was affirmed
id
49
BABY WITH TOY IN
THROAT IS STARVING
Street Car Had Stopped to Unload
Passengers, Witnesses Sy
.4517 a. m.*.
.42 8 a. m. .
.40 9 a. m. .
.40110 a. m.
.39 11 a. m.
.30'12 Noon .
.38 1 p. in.. .
[Death Prevents | DURING HOLDUP.
Police Called to Break Up Riot as Presentation of 700,000 Gifts Is Started; 100
Lost Children Rounded Up Following Disturbance
43
.481
. 40
.91
get under steam and get their
bag of Christmas toys ready.
But as many of the families
found to be worthy as could
possibly be taken care of will
be visited by Santa-Pals Mon-
day.
Some of the latest to add
their names to the list of Pals
include:
E. L. Chapman, oil operator.
Lorna Jane Culp and Mar-
engineer of the freight train.
W. McCLELLAN. Durant, Miss.,
passenger.
(1am Of Arriieted.
Children of the Oral Deaf De-
partment of the Fort Worth Public
WASHINGTON, Dec. 22-President Coolidge today
isiued a proclamation increasing the tariff on onions
from one to one and one-half cents a pound, effective 30
days from today. The proclamation listed Spain, Egypt.
Mexico, Cuba, South American countries as the chief
and
pearl,
. . a
gift.
The newspaper El Liberal said
today that three new sheds have ’
19
The Fort Worth Press
. I THE WEATHER: TONIGHT AND SUNDAY CONTINUED FAIR AND COLDER.
of Second Marriage
By United Press,
CHICAGO, Dec. 22. —
-
-
। by the Second Court of Civil Ap-
peals in an opinion handed down
BEG YOUR PARDON
i
3
Outstanding features on the world's markets today:
/ Stocks: Shares were depressed in late trading by pre-
holiday profit taking.
- Curbs: Ford Motor of England again was a feature
as the general list gained despite the proximity of the
holiday.
Bondsp Altho convertible coppers advanced with their
stocks, other issues continued a decline on the Christ-
mas market. )
Grains: Wheat was weakened by northwestern selling
but corn field firm on light receipts and unfavorable
weather reports. Oats remained about the same.-
Cotton: New York and ew Orleans closed steady.
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS
What thia country needa ie
more sparking apace.
Second Operation May Kill Child,
Doctor Naya
i
.»
Admit Taking Variety of
Goods From Store
By United Press
. CINCINNATI, Ohio. Dee. 23.-
1 Baby Frank Brooks of Bluefleld,
i
3
5
>
i
i
?
i
$
I
|
I
and vicinity.
Prevailing weather conditions in
"Daddy" had given 75,000 pre* _ -
lents away to some 35,000 chii-j ported to have declared war
Mothers dren, and 1000 eager children
claim the region. .
A national defense committee,
composed of leaders of all politi-
■
the assassinated President-elect of Mexico, has received Pan-American
letters threatening him with death unless he intervenes (conciliation conference
on behalf of Jose De Leon Toral, the asassin.
today
Bolivia also had equipped a ;
Police reserves stood by to pre- regiment of students and was to
PRINCETON, N. J„ Dec. 22.—Prof. Henry Burchard
Fine, 70, dean of science at Princeton University, and
former associate of President Wilson, died today of au-
last night, but without avail. Ho
fears penumona will develop.
The baby is so weak. Dr. Hag-
WASHINGTON, Dec. 22.—President Coolidge today
approved the recommendation of Attorney General Sar- Regiment to Border
W. Va., who has a toy motor-
eyele stuck in bis throat sad is
slowly starving to death, may not
Dec. 22,—
Regiment,”
Mistletoe gathering parties will state headlight engineer, warned
have perfect weather Sunday, Th • statement here. Hill also
Weatherman Landis promises. ( warned station men against tssu-
Fair Saturday and Sunday with Ing certificates tomotorists with-
little change in temperature, was I out first testing headlights.
Landis' forecast for Fort Worth ( .—_?_______________________
J
I
•
%
1
1
.1
*
1
i
i
i
!
§
e
v
1
<
%
Is that it serves a public need,
and a public demand.'
Partly, the newspaper deals
TH" newspaper reporter may
I have only a casual interest
in the particular piece of bust-
i
4
---
PRICE TWO CENTS
clean up. They found Mrs. Mary
Talbot with her right leg twisted
(and gashed. A girl of 12 was
( rushed to a hospital with cuts and
. bruises. Perhaps a dozen children
' had been cut by glass but per-
i sistently remained in line.
By 1:30 p. m. police estimated
1
p */3
. A
A
friends. Believing she had been
killed in the 1917 revolution in
Russia. -Neviteky - married again.
Novitsky now has filed a bill
to annul his- marriage to Zen-
aida Pavlanowa, whom he mar-
ried in Constantinople in 1922.
Novitsky came to the United
States in 1923, settling in New
-The Sigma Phi Epsilon •
... e-- L---S-J— -al I boundary, thus falling within Bo- I shooting from the sky.
livian territory, although the en- .........
h. intervenes I conciliation conference to settle ,
•11555 the Bolivian-Paraguayan crisis.
the extreme northwest, cradle of1
the nation's weather. Indicate a '
cold and clear Christmas.
Mercury missed freezing by five
degree* at bottom Saturday morn-
ing. "Low" was 37. Temperature
had climbed to 51 at 1 p. m.
and his action* become public
property
The function of the newspaper
is to supply this vast and wide
range of information about peo-
ple and things.
Yet the newspaper has a
deeper obligation than that. It
is charged with a higher duty
than that.
Its highest duty is to supply
information about public busi-
ness and public officials . .
to keep the people informed j
about their public business.
with the ’ Ford, 28. were painfully burned, figured. It was contended by his
and costs aggregating 8426.20.
While Talley was sentenaed to 60
days on each of two charges and
ordered to pay the costs, amount-
ing to 827.10 in each case.
2 Killed, 52 Hurt In Train Wreck MNFA
—_ ~ t--‘________________________________ IUULIIUNCI
'the sight. He called police who
Are yours
,, . „ BOLIVIA ARMS
tViiidow At Dad Fete STUDENTS FOR
In a news story about gambling
raids, which appeared in Friday's
Press, City Manager Carr was
qudted as saying that 57 arrests
had been made a few days before
| bundled off to police stations to
await claimants. The 40 others
were gathered up and detained
around a large yellow taxicab.
Two men were in Harris Hos-
pital Saturday after an auto in
which they were riding crashed
into a street car at Evans and
Arlington shortly after 11 p. m.
Friday
L. T. Quinn, 1037 Jessamine,
and Burl Stacks, 1206 East Allen,
are the injured. They were riding
in a small sedan with J. C. Quinn,
3538 Mount Vernon.
The street car, going south on
Evans, stopped to unload passen-
■end them to border territory.
Hopes of mediation in the Pan-
American conciliation conference,
as accepted by both countries,
faded.
old nephew, were killed. Others . said to have been badly horned
in the house, Minnie and Doris , when his room stove exploded as
cal parties, conferred today with I Peator, 5-year-old twins. Ruth 1 he was lighting a fire.
President Jose Guggiari to deter- peator, 16, and Mrs. Raymond; Camack was permanently dis-
Complete Wire Reports of the UNITED PRESS, the GREATEST World-Wide News
AUTOGYRO SUCCEEDS
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 22—The
autogyroplane of Harold Piteairn
underwent another successful test
today. It is the first autogyro-
plane to be tested in the United
Sate*.
C. J. Faulkner took the eraft
up at 3:30 p. m,
large signs on
"Jorge Aleman,
pleted, was to be ready for occupancy Jan. 15. It was
insured for >20,000.
with private individuals and 8. M. Toss, conductor of the
private enterprises— partly with motor coach, was seriously hurt,
publie individuals and public ( Misunderstanding of orders la
enterprises. given as the cause of the accident, 1
CHICAGO. Dec. 22.— Three-
• year-old Joe Bromberg
and his mother, Mary, went
Bolivian forces were
marching on the city of
Bahia Negra, in-disputedter-
garet McLean Culp of Gaines-
ville.
Magnolia Avenue Christian
Church Young Men's Class.
Mrs. A. L. Miner. 2831 Wil-
kinson. *
Rainbow Assembly,
been opened in the Argentine
province of Formosa to accommo-
; date the increasing stocks of air-
planes and gasoline.
The paper said the sheds had
a loss of approximately 165,000. The house, just com-
ness he is reporting.
Personally, he may be more TWO ARE HURT WHEN
Arthur football eamb than in AUTO HITS TROLLEY
lately for Tarija. The regiment
The police found a mess to
On the front porch, they
found a policeman who had
been sent from the hospital
where Sidney Bromberg died.
Mary listened to the police-
man's words and then turned
to little Joe.
"Come, dear," she said,
"let’s hide Daddy's presents
and then I'll put you to bed.
The man says Daddy will
have to work late tonight."
& Cole ambulance
in dry dock here today for re-
pairs after having been rammed
amidships by the 8. S. Manta.
Damage will amount to 130,000
it was estimated. The Manta's
gent to grant a full pardon to former Representative
and served a sentence in Atlanta penitentiary, uniforms and will leave immedi-
e e e
gers at Arlington. The auto was .... .
said to have crashed into it. searching over most of the world,
Quinn's condition is not serious , for 14 years, Peter N. Novitsky: tomobile injuries.
according to hospjtai attendants, former colonel in the Imperial (-------------------------*-
Russian army, has found his ---
wife, Barbara, living here with MAN JAILED FOR
Fight at Frontier Village
Would Nullify ' Plans
For Conciliation
live until Christmas. He is in a
hospital here.
The toy has been lodged in
his throat since last Saturday *
and his only sustenance has been
milk which doctors have forced
past the toy.
Dr. H H. Haggert, throat spe-
There was a .rattle of gun- .
fire, and Bromberg was shot.
Little Joe and his mother '
came home, Mary with her
arms full of package* and Joe ,
toddling along beside her, j
chattering about the "sur-
prise for Daddy.”
CARMI, Ill., Dec. 22.—Investigation of the murder of
Miss Anna Preher, teacher, narrowed down today to a
search for a negro in whose home a bloody coat has
been found. Miss Preher, a 45-year-old spinster, was
BANK CASHIER SHOT BY BANDITS
BY JOHN SORKELLS .0.. ‘ . . .. .. ..
B Ualt*4 irBk 0 METEOR BURNS I
ASUNCION, Paraguay, Dec. 22. • unior A Hit
Thirty-five hundred Bolivian HUUBE. J IE
troops, consisting of 3,000 infan- ___ 9
tnamenngnonsonccacatrpotenaanzjsix Others Injured When
Negra, the newspaper La Patria ( Body Hits Residence I
■aid today.
The newspaper added that ( By Vetted!Pte".. .. IIIInGMFNT
should the Bolivian contingent at- GREENDALE, N.Y.Dec.22.— --rumEN l
tack the city, the encounter would Farmers in this neighborhood to-
be one of major importance and iday are convinced that a meteor |
Jose Obregon, brother of would nuliry the efforts of the fell from,the ast night and
1 arbitration and | burning a woman and a year-old I
jail on each of seven charges
(and fines, amounting with costs
i to 827.10, accompanied the sen-
tence in each charge.
Talley’s sentences were also
imposed by Judge McGee.
The two youths admitted the
theft of articles ranging from
playing cards to shotguns and
Midnight .
1 A. m. . .
2 a. m. ..
3a.m...
4 a. m.
5 a. m. ..
0 a. m. ..
SANTA CLAUS and his host
P of Santa-Pal assistants have
but two days to wait before
they make their rounds of
Fort Worth.
From all indications, Christ-
mas Eve is going to be agala
and happy occasion in most of
the homes of Fort Worth.
Many homes of poor folks
which didn’t come to the at-
tention of the Santa-Pal Edit-
or in time to arrange for San-
ta-Pals will of necessity be left
out this Christmas.
For it takes time for a
Santa Claua or a Santa-Pal tg
cold on previous raids.
A paragraph following indicat-
! ed that no record was made of
"these raids.
..27 The raids were recorded on the
CZ*" police blotter at Central Station.
By United Press.
GALVESTON, Dec. 22.—The
ARBITRATION MENACED
Talley, 20. pleaded guilty in
elalist. attempted an operation
SCHOOL JANITOR KILLED
CANYON, Dec. 22—Falling 10
feet td the basement floor front
a ladder in the basement of the
school building here, J. H. Good-
glon, janitor, sustained injuries 1
which caused his death. His skull
was fractured.
THE meetings of the board of
I the association have been
open meetings until a day or so
•go.
Then a reporter from one of
the daily papers was asked to
leave the meeting, and the
board went into executive ses-
sion.
One of the members of the
board. explaining the request for
the closed session, said that re-
porters had quoted some re-
marks he had made at a pre-
vious meeting, when he had ex-
LONDON, Dec. 22.—Fires which followed explosions
I began. Sixty lost children were
another operation
of gas mains in the Holborn district early Thursday,
were extinguished today. Seventeen persons were sent mine means of dealing
to hospitals with injuries received in the explosion, or "i
ization to all unemployed per-
sons in Fort Worth. This organ-
ization was formed here by
James Eades How, the "million-
aire hobo.”
An educational meeting of the
International Brotherhood Wel-
fare Association will be held 2
p. m. Sunday, in Room 202%
ed "disputed." Both countires
rpHE Association of Commerce
I is public property.
It considers matters of pub-
lic Interest, and takes action on
matters of public welfare.
But more to the point of
’ public ownership, the public
foots the bill.
The deliberations of the as-
Relation, menr ftsacttons,its
aims. Its projects, its purposes
—all these are matters of deep
public interest.
It is a public business the
public is deeply interested in
knowing about.
field.
A few additional Santa-Pals
will report for assignments
Saturday, and then the work
of delivery will be all that re-
mains.
Anyone who still wants to
be a Santa-Pal need not want
for an assignment ... be-
cause the Santa-Pal Editor, at
2-6161, etill has plenty ipf
them. K
baby to death and injuring six (
others painfullly. . I
J. R. Hicks; storekeeper, relat-
Bullets Fired From Guns or
Two Robbers Strike
Victim in Mouth
SHREVEPORT, Dec. 22—
William Parnell, assistant
cashier of the Avenue Branch
of the City Savings Bank and
Trust Company, was shot in
4 the mouth by one of three
bandits who attempted tc
hold up the bank today.
The bandits escaped in a
car without obtaining any
money.
Parnell’s condition was not
serious.
S'SaHn'S "a Engineer and Passenger Die ieASEWwoTorgns Wrare 23urat
5 o 2! ftersBail rash Near
ganizations which ars public MISSISSIPPI lOWn ed from their mother. today in
property, but it I* likewise true . -------- . A,riot.. that featured Edward
•• It aDplies to those privateiv. "Daddy Browning s annual ■
owned "ganizMlon. and agen- CONDUCTOR IS INJURED Christmas "girtday." ,
ci*, that serve the public in , Browning had advertised that
bulk and derive their revenue . ------ he expected to give some 700,000 .
Which pubnie purie the "" Most of Victims on Way to rrethusandayot NrV “foronaa.
utmty. the railroad, th. bu. Do Christmas Shopping dren •By 6 a, m.Nevera" thou-
X. dependaupon pubiicconf- 1 At Gwynn WNen Spada «nd 3* Santa
thesgovernor or thelegistator. a HOWARD, Miss., Dec. 22. fume. wh7X
.-The.cournhepring 1n..closed Two men were killed and 52 and fountain pens, the line extend-
counelt"orthpeslatuobethon e5 persons injured at noon lodar cdnseveranszlockaeinueachudirec-
...a., (akow n .IN.. ..... m llOn Irox 118 Hroadway OI1en:
eret treaty-ve tween nation.— when a motor < passenger M "miieN Mne.. 1.
a Thesewarecypicat.egamptes.ot coach on the Yazoo and Mis- loaded the youngater. down with plate glaas window,
tru.t P sissippi Valley Railroad and a presents. By 10 o’clock he thought rought to get their tots to safety were atiil in line.
• • • freight/.ram met in a head- seriously oerttincmore Several women fainted. Ch- r--
IHE newspaper i. a privately- on collision between’Howard Then terewasa°crash just dren burst into tear, and pushed ( vent further mishaps. Tratfie was
L. owned enterprise... but an and Gwynn, Miss. outside,., followed by screams and thia way and that. "Next war I’ll hire Madison
enttrprni, "ithua.puh liestrunt.. The,,. confusion. Thirty children, crowd-| bad, to bad • said Square Garden and hold my pirty
- - pn excuse for exl.tence O. J. HMDER. Durant. Miss. Jng to the front, had goae thru a ,.D,ddy. wringing his hand, at there,” Browning vowed.
A HASTILY conceived idea
H newspaper reporter, should
be excluded from Association of
’ Commerce board meetings has
died a-bornlng.
The Idea, presented in a
somewhat nebulous and tenta-
... - . .on the roof of William Peator’.
tire surrounding district is mark- home, he said. _______ _____ ____
Mrs. William Peator, 43, and the Ritz Hotel, where Camack
Raymond Ford Jr., .her one-year- was stopping at the time ho in
i will take up quarters in the dis-
trict. .
The Tartja district is in the
heart of the disputed Gran Cha-
co region and is immediately ad-
jacent to the Paraguayan-Boii-
vian frontier.
More than 810,000 has been
donated by employe* of the Bo-
livian railways for the purchase
of a military plane.
SpnTW-poltttcal circles express
ed the opinion today that the
resignation of Minister of Public
Instruction Canelas will precipi-
tate a cabinet crisis. The cabinet
has only been in office a week
and was appointed by President
Hernando Siles to deal with the
international crisis.
Saturday.
The Sandegard Estate owns
Main Street. An invitation to; York. Zenaida feared that the
attend is extended by the organ- first Mrs. Novitsky still was
gert says.
Calling his former wife at
night by telephone in the face of
a court injunction la to cost Met
Kinard three days in the Tarrant
County ja|l on a citation for con-
tempt of court. The citation was
issued late Friday by Judge Hal
Lattimore of the 96th District
Court.
The injunction restraining Kin-
ard from telephoning or "other-
wise molesting” Ada Hester, his
divorced wife, was issued by
Judge Lattimore on Nov. 17.
Mrs. Hester complained to the
court tbst Kinard had called her
by phone at all hours of the
night on several occasions and
used abusive language toward
her. Kinard admitted her
charges but said that he was in-
toxicated at the time and prom-
ised not to do so again.
them reading,
made, with its implied sugges-
tion of closed board sessions.
President Herding invited re-
porters back into the meeting,
and discussion of business pro-
ceeded.
Following the meeting, Mr.
Harding and Mr. Hott said that
they are not in favor of closed
Mrs. O. M. Short, Haltom’s '
Jewelry Store.
Robert L. Kinkade, Marmon
Co.
Mary Theresa Couch, 1420
College.
And Mrs. Clarence Rosen-
Schools were entertained Friday , ... j . . ,,
with a Christmas party at the I,n 18 cases, received a total jail
home of their teacher, Mrs. George .sentence of *3° days and .fines
Maury, 416 Lipscomb.
Game* and a candy-pulling pro-"
vided pleasure during the after-
noon, and favors were distributed
mong the guests from a Christmas Eleven of the cases against
tha.. ..... .. „... Wilkins were in the Justice Court
Those present were Wallace j or H n Balch. In each case
Hess. Ramsey Bullock Qulnten • hf> was fined n and
costs.
Haaf. Bertooper- amounting to 821.50. Before
smith, Ametine Hamby, Marjorie ruden n.. Mne. i •ni.
Marler, Lela May Lancaster, and -udge Dave MeGee. in Count
Mary Frances McAfee.
Yet in the complexity of our The motor cosch was filled with
civilization, the enterprires, the passengers, most of them bound
comings and goings, the doings, for Gwynn, for the holiday shop-
the thoughts and ideas, the ping. ,
ideals and beliefs of prtvste In- 1 ——
^bSr'i’nt^.’ "dean d0P TEACHER GIVES PARTY
- Whenever any individual, any- me wear crnrae ~ c. _ -- .
whre, does something, or says FOR DEAF STUDENTS Tarrant County courta Friday af-
something that is of deep in- ------- ternoon.to 20 charges of theft
Mr. George Maury 1. Hostess To under $50 in the removal of
— ------- - goods from Montgomery Ward &
Clear, Cool Christmas Also Fore-motorists.to. get headlight, certif-
cast Hy Weather Eurenu- lead to their arrest, James E Hill.
FIRST WIFE FOUND
AFTER LONG SEARCH
Russian Colonel Asks Annulment
Christmas shopping "for
Daddy."
They bought him a pair of
, new wool socks to keep his
। feet warm while driving his
! truck, and a bright necktie.
BY SANTA-PAL EDITOR I
tive form, has been turned down
^akident Ellls<^''Harding 1 _. , ________________________
maasam MOTOR COACH, 30 Children Pushed Thru Glass
ment- on the part of Association 1
of Commerce officials. DDEICEIT ADQ
AN organization that is de- rnLunE UHK3 i
A signed to serve the public •
interest cannot exist without IKI An I IQIAAl
public confidence. IN I I I j l l\||IN
And one of the surest snd BIV UULLIUIUIV
quickest ways to destroy public j
l ( Daddy meantime went out
to do a little extra trucking.
He was hauling a load of
merchandise from the L. J. - |
Wilke Tobacco Compny when
I two bandits stopped him. .
I He fought to defend himself.
the sale of bonds, or the build-
ing of a hospital, or the paving
of a street, or the letting of
a contract, or the opinion of a
judge.
But the newspaper which he
serves is vitally interested in
those things, because the public
that the newspaper serves is
vitally interested in those
things.
And the obligation—the duty
—of the newspaper la to supply
that information to an eager
and interested public.
PAIR FACES 20 ;
THEFT CHARGES
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 70, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 22, 1928, newspaper, December 22, 1928; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547257/m1/1/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.