Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 317, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1928 Page: 1 of 14
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Amarillo Daily News
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AMARILLO, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPT. 1», IMS.
HOME EDITION
FOURTEEN PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS.
1
• « •
♦ ♦ ♦
* • *
* • *
♦ # •
♦ * #
• • •
OFFICIALS SAY
I
The Hoovers Greet the Coolidges
Orient Headquarters Here
NEXT MOVE IS
HOUR AND HALF
MANY MILLIONS
GOVERNMENTS
MANY ARE negroes Road Contracts to
HIGGINS IS SILENT
1 .
LIVESTOCKMEN
MAKE PROTEST
ON BEEF RATES
। its controversy with th* board of
CITY WILL LET
CONTRACTS ON
AIRPORT WORK
Neumhauser and daughter, Kelsey
ASKS BIDS ON WATER WELL
SEATTLE AVIATOR IS
MISSING IN EUROPE
(Contiauad on Page 2, Cal. 6) *
report of the eommittee of cradaatlal*
(Continued oa Page t, Col. t.)
I
WEATHER
»
(Continued oa Page >, Col.’7.)
3 DAYS
MEXICAN
IS
itained.
pletely worn out, be
such ar-
l
......78
FREE GATE
Globe-News
Ivy of Childress.
b
3
i
13
SMITH APPEALS
TO FARMERS IN
OMAHA SPEECH
To Close Tuesday
For A marillo Day
JURY RETURNS
VERDICT AFTER
PANHANDLE RUUNGS
DY BUS COMMISSION
MARYLAND PRISONERS
STRIKE AGAINST WORK
CHILDRESS GIRL DIES
IN MOTOR CAR.CRASH
File Formal Charge
Against Youth in
Murder Farm Case
Globe-News Clasnified Ada.
Phone 4676 "Aa-Taker
FUKE GATE at
niState Fair
Sopt. 2229
ESCAPED PRISONER IS
HELD AT FORT WORTH
Reed Retracts
What He Said
About Cal’s
Worm Bait
AND HIGH FENCE; COM*
MISSION REPORTS
City; Mr*. Smith, Jahokee: Wallace,
negro, Jupiter; Westbrooks, negro.
AUTO GYRO MAKES
FIRST HOP ACROSS
ENGLISH CHANNEL
Mayor Loo Bivins was not present
last night. He la In Kansas city.
• half.
Thee
ATTACKS COOLIDGE AHD H00-
VER; ANSWERS QUES-
TIONS IN PAPER
138 OF THOSE DEAD ARE UN-
IDENTIFIED; ONLY 11
ARE KNOWN
1M PERSONS ARE INJURED
SUNDAY IN TROPICAL
DISTURBANCE
mend to th* Congrens and ha can
atsume th* leadership of the Amari-
Min people la an effort to show them
that hl* recommendatlon I* right.
That I* what I .propone to d*.
"How can I support a dry Demo-
cratic candidate far Congress?"
“That question cam* up la th* no-
tional eonvention and th* nationni
NO IMMEDIATE ACTION CAN BE
TAKEN ON RECENT
STRIKE VOTE
WARD OF MEDIATION ISSUES
STATEMENT AS DISCUS-
SION CLOSES
HUSBAND OF RUTH
X ELDER JOINS BYRD
Until the
Amarillo Tri-
State' '
Exposition
Opens,
Sept 22 to 29
PROPERTYLOSS
IS ESTIMATED
Lake Okeechobee, ** I* South Bay,
from which place casualty reports
war* also received.
Three Bodies In Canal
in addition to th*** reports, which
cam* through the Miami News, a man
named Beardaley, at Laho Parh, eight
miles aaat of Clewiston, which I* on
Iha western side of Laha Okeechobee,
telegraphed that three bodies had
been recovered from Miami canal at
Lake harbor and thirty-five other
<
r
l
left evety Democrat in the United
States free to express his own in-
dividual opinion of what he thought
on that subject."
"You hate an admirble, scholarly
gentleman running for U. W. Senator
here Mr. Metemir. I understand that
Nebraska la dry, but l weald never
ank Mr. Metcalf to turn his back on
the people of his etete until each
time a* he can come oat here and
convince them that they are not
taekling the problem the right way.”
By B. N. TIMMONS.
Speeial to Th Now*
representatives of all cities and towne .
between Fort Worth and Loa Angola*
will be called within a few weeks by
D. A. Bandeen, general manager of
(y United Prowl
BALBOA, C. Z.. Sept, 18—Lyle Wo.
mach has left bla divorce malt against
Bath Elder to Ito in abeyanee for
two yearn white ha goes to the South
Pete with the Byrd expeditlon,
Wofack boarded the Byrd flagship
when it passed through the Panama
Canal yeaterday and waa accepted a*
one of the erew. He and Mm Boehn-
Ing, a eanal employe, were taken on
In place of two member* of the crew
who were rejected beenuse of poor
heaith.
( United Prem)
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 18—A eec-
ead blood-stained mo waa found in
the basement of the Northcotr resi-
dence here ae deteetivas pieaged
further intethe Moertod conduet of
Many
People—
Simply discara old or lit-
tle wood furniture, when
I Hr The Aueceiated Prem
LB BOURGET, France, Sept. 18.—
The first auto gyre flight between
London and Paris, including a hep
aerons the English channel, was com-
pleted here today by J. De La Cierva,
inventor and pilot of the machine.
He landed here at 4123 p. m , after
making three stops M route.
The machine gives a speetator the
Impresnion that a Dutch windmill le
flying through the air.
The eartsra Bomb Dakota blah p romon
hma tea mpreed eestward and t* cen-
fu----------------
control oo Mero ing mont of the half.
million-dollar purehase of read ma-
chinery recommended by the commie-
■Ion.
Among counties receiving favorable
consideration from th* commisnion:
g
#
a murder farm by Gordon Stewart
Northcott near Corea*.
Thia second im. said by officers
to be most important cte* found so
far, held half a hundred hairs in a
quantity ef dried blood.
Chemists will determine today
whether the hair aad blood came from
a human,
if so Identified, detective* Mid,
they would prove eonelusively that
young Sanford Clark told the truth
when he Mid Northcott murdered at
least four Los Angeles county youths
in the Northcott home bore and on
he Mipelaaivoi valley and Rocky
to reglon. The tropieni hurricane
Borithenat and b atiended by rein
t reglon. A low prepsure area
Northwest b artauded by warmer
r in the eentral Rocky Mountaim
erature by beam at Amarillo ye-
•ear aerthera UNoeb (his mornine.
> attended to feir weather gengralb
U. S. BD A RD FAILS TO SETTLE WESTERN RAIL WAGE DISPUTE
--- . a, •...................—-------------------------------------------------—----* --- #------............. » —•
way* in that section.
Knox-— Referred to elate highway
MOODY REQUISITIONs
MAN IN MICHIGAN
V‛
gye. A
f • vu / id
(By The Asooctatod Pram)
PORT WORTH, Sept. 18—Sam
Hightower, who escaped from Sugar-
land prison farm, near Houston, on
September >, waa captured in Part
Worth Tucaday.
Hightower, who was netving a sen-
tence on a liquor traffic count eon*
vietion, has escaped twice previously.
He wm convicted in Collin and
Grayson counties.
His capture was effected when of-
fleers raided a downtown residence
and confiscated several gallons of
lienor after receiving a peace dis-
turbance alarm.
Eh.:......
be taken and indicated the next move .
shouid come from the government.
They promtsed an official statement I |
shortly of labor's position in the
wage controveresy.
J. W. Higgins, chairman of the 1
Board of Railway Managers, had no
statement to make concerning the-
carriers’ attitude.
(Sr The Associated Prsse.)
RIVERSIDE, CoL, A*. IS. — A
complaint charging Stuart G. North-
cott, M. with murder, wm leaned by
the district attorney’s office here to.
day after evidence subatantiatin
further the etery that four boys had
boon slain on the Northeot farm
was furnished to Alfred Ford, dis-
trict attorney. •
Upon his roturn to the capital after a vacation in Wisconsin, President
Coolidge wm greeted at the station by Mr. and Mrs. Hoover and members
of the cabinet. Left to right in the foreground are Hoover and Mrs. Hoover;
President Coolidge and Mrs. Coolidge. Behind the president, left, is See-
rotary Wilbur and. right. Dr. Hubert Work, chairmen of the republican
national committee. Behind Mrs. Coolidge is William F. Whiting, the
new secretary of commerce.
Hardeman.—Allotted one-third state
and one-third federal aid for grading
and drainage struetures on 21 miles
ef Highway II.
Among contracts lei:
Jim Walls county— Limestone base
course from Duval county lino to
Afire on 11-2 miles of highway 12-A,
Advertisement for bids on a 75-
gailon-per-minute water well and a
high sheep fence to surround the new
480-acre municipal airport wm au-
thorised by the city commission at
its regular meeting last night when
the airport commission made its flrat
list of detailed recommendations for
improvement of the new port, located
on the Panhandle highway.
Th* airport body recommended
that the city get the ground in shape
at once, Ming city employes and
equipment in charge of the engineer-
ing department to get rid of weed*
and grade and roll the surface for
landing and taking off of planes.
Frpd Bone, contractor, wm added to
the airport commission membership
upon recommendation of the body
that two more members be named,
one of themeat once.
' The commissioners also fevered
the airport body’s recommendation
that a member of their group and the
city engineer. Banks Jones, be sent
to some recognised consulting airport
export for advice Md to go over the
plans. The city 1a to pay for Mr.
Jones’ trip and the airport body for
its representative.
Other business before the commis-
sioa wm the receipt of bids on 2,368
feet of cast-iron water extenalon pipe
which were taken under advisement.
The Board of City Development ag-
rieultural and immigration extension
department was allowed $2,000 more,
bringing the total of the $10,000 al-
lowed for thia work to $7,500 already
paid out.
Bids were received for paving on
Thirteenth from Taylor to Fillmore,
Fourteenth from Tayler to the alley
west of Buchahan, and Ninth from
Hoyden to Lpscomb.
The engineer’s department submit-
ted plans for the new firs station on
Northeast Fifth atreet, just off Fill-
more, and the advertisement for bids
was authorised.
The eommisslon also asked that
prices on motors for eight eity Ford
trucks, whose power plants are com-
(By United Press)
PARIS. Sept. IN-—George H. Storck,
Seattle flyer, making a flight around
the world from London, had not been
heard from for 53 hours at ( p. m.
today.
Storek, who started his flight from
London last Saturday, left Port Sar-
trouville, outside Paris, at noon Sun-
day. Intending to fly in the direction
of Nevers towards Marseilles.
He told airport officials he did not
know his exact destination, as it de-
pended upon the wind. He carried
only 26 gallons of gasoline.
Storck is using a small seaplane
and would have had to alight on
water to nvold a smashup.
(By United Frans)
8T. LOUIS, Sept. IB.—All the un-
complimentary things United States
James A. Reed ever Mid about
President Coolidge's use of worms
have been retracted.
"I have just come back from a
fishing trip in Wisconsin,” the sen-
star from Missouri Mid her*, "and
my experience has made me a whole
let more charitable.
“I want to retract everything I
ever Mid about Coolidge fishing
with worm*.
“A man is entitled to use any bull
ha can get hold of in those north-
ern waters.
“I deeply regret the Injustice' I
did Mr. Coolidg*.’*
<Br The Amoriated Frsos.)
JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Sept. 18—
Loss of 149 lives, injury of over
IM more persons and property dam-
age running into the millions. wm
reported, today from the section la
tower Florida atruck by the tropi-
cal disturbance Sunday. Of the
dead. 11 ara identified and IM un-
identified. Seventy-six of the un-
identified deed are negroes.
■ The unidentified dead wer given
aa twr negroes at Jupiter, four ne-
18—Om girl is
dead, sad five ether girl companions
are bruised and slightly injured as
she result jof the eutomobile in which
they ward returning from • picnic
overturning about • mile from the
city while they were on route home
after nightfall last night.
The victim is Ylorenee Ivy, IN years
old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. C.
AUSTN, Sept."18.— heqisitien
was issued today by Governor Moody I
oo the governor of Michigan for ex- '
tradition of Alfred Cochran from
Pontiac, Mich., to Cold Spring, Tex-
M, to answer an indictment <
ing murder of Frank Turner,
crime is alleged to have been com-
mitted July Id, 1028.
xpxTo"ciAY,ejspe."nDp-
patehes from Queretaro said that it
rebels entered Um tow of 1 oilmen
during the absence of the garrisen
and beraed the postoffice and other
MmdMB* They aM**«l "Viva Crie
to Boy.- (Long live Christ the King).
Federal irsops from Queretaro eel
out in pervert.
( By The Asnoelated Prens)
OMAHA, Nebr, Sept. IB.—Attack-
ing the Republican party, Pres. Cool-
idge, and bla opponent, Herbert
(By The Associnted Premo)
CHICAGO, Sept. 18—The Federal
Board of Mediation this afternoon
announced it had terminated It*
efforts toward bringing about an
agreement between the Western
railroads and the trainmen and con-
ductors unions,
Samuel E. Winslow, chairman of
the Federal board, issued the fol-
lowing statement:
"In behalf of the board, the me-
dintion proceedings have been ter-
minated for the reason that the
carriers and the employes' organi-
1 zations were enable to reach an
4 agreement.-
W E P. Curtis, president of the Order
X of Rallwa4 Conductor* and"A. F.
Whitney, head of the Brotherhood of
Railroad Trainmen, Mid ne imme-
diate action of the atrike veto could
afternoon and Winter Garden revue
in the evening, in addition to the
many other features to be presented.
“I certainly appreciate the apirit
of the Amarillo merchanta in their
decision to done,- Mr. Hawk said.
It shows they are aelidly behind the
fair and are anxioa* to do their pert
in making it a suecess. Not only have
Iha members af the Business Men’s
association decided to elose, bat I am
told that merchants whe are not af-
filiated with the organisation also
will take the afternoon and evening
off."
48SSHMHSS11 n;.11-, ■■■■rr .............—. , .
VOU XIX. Nk 217 ABNBdBtBi Pnm Day and Night Leased Wire.
Total $2,347,977
Are Let Tuesday
CHESHIRE MUTED IN DICKEY MURDER CHARGE
149 LIVES ARE LOST AS HURRICANE SWEEPS LOWER FLORIDA
...
(Br The Anoeinted Pram)
AUSTIN, Sept. 18—One applica-
tie* ter change of schedules and
fares, six for transfer of stock and
four for transfer of certificates of
motor bus lines were granted today
by the railroad commission,
Leo Randals wm permitted to
change achedules and fares on his
line between Lubbock and Clovis, N.
M.
The following transfer of certifi-
eates wer* approved: Atehie Tyler to
W. F. Daniel, line from Plainview to
Floydada: C. I. Md I. C. Ward to
Arch Tyler, Texas part ef line from
Amarillo to Tucumeari, N, M. •
Mrs. Vieta Block to D. K. Brown.
Borger to Pampa; Reynolds and
Moms to H. H. Dodson, Texas port
of Uno from Mangum, Okla., ta Well-
ington.
her of reepirta in that the aeon
were both raspirtsd eitlsene; da
not know each other and the eh eel ■
lug wm a mutual cane of ante*
taken Adentity, the evidence Mio
caked.
From the tfme Chonhire surrend.
erod to the sheritf’e office about
midnight immediately after ho was
seriously wounded by Dickey and a
few minutes inter had fatally wound,
ed the elder men, there wm doubt
expressed that the young man would
be found guilty.
The defendant took the stand in
his own behalf yesterday and his
father, a L. Cheshire, and hia meth-
er ware on the stand while the son
and widow of the slain man wore
also part of the IT witnesses pro.
Mated by the state and defease.
The testimony offered still another
ununual angle ta that both defense
and state witnesaes told virtually
(Continued on Pago t, Col. «)
near Deerfield; Mrs. Julia White, TN,
Delray, county line —. -
=Mi-m
Glade i. .. the southeastern aide of t Kermi, Winkler county.
Lubboek, Torry, Gaine., Andrews
and Ector.— Referred to state high,
way engineer proposal to extend
Highway U from Brownfield to High-
way 1 at Odessa via Seminole and
Andrews.
Dimmitt.— Referred to state high-
way engineer designation from Cata-
rina to La Salle county line.
SHOOTING CAUSED BY MUTUAL
CASE OF MISTAKEN BEM. 4
TITY, IIS BELIEVED #A
aaadi
GIVES HIMSELF DR
DEPENDANT TESTIFIES mm
SHOT BECAUSE DICKEY ge)
POINTED SHOTGUN ./d
P /
3. L cheshire, 18 years ola, tens
found not guilty by a jury to dle-
trirt eriminal eourt yesterday la
bin trial far the alleged mardar
of W, B. Dickex, aged filltag eta-
Man operator, aa the Panhandle
highway near the edge of the ety,
Inst May M.
The jury waa out aa hew and
• • ♦
persons were missing.
Gov. Martin, at allahassee, an-
nounced receipt of a message from a
member of the nationel guard staft
raying 11 persons had been killed et
Okeechobee and that several author-
Ilies had requested military aid. At
the same time, he announced he had
graatod a request ef state adjutant
general V. B. Collins to sena national
guards men to the storm strieken city
of West Palm Brach to render “what,
ever asnistance ia necessary.”
The governor said 100 national
guardsmen had been requested by the
major of West Palm Beach.
Guardamen 66 lob.
He raid he had been informed two
hatteries of guardsmen had been sent
to Okeechobe City I* responne to a
request far military aid.
A message received by the gover-
nor through Asheville, N. C, Md
signed by the Palm Beach town ca-
di advised that the aituation was “m-
rious" and that "nearly all houses
had been damaged and are open.” The
police force, the messnge Mid, wm
Varaart TUI Tite P. M. Will liter /
FOR AMARILLO AND viciNTi-
POR WETTEXAS-Wednendny fete;
HN1 msth puritan.
Fo
Winter Garden Rev
(Nighte)
Leonard Stroud
Rodeo
...........
Tri-State Fair
. ____ groes at Delray Beach, fifty ne-
SCHEDULES ON CATTLE FOR groes at Tahokee, and twenty ne-
grees at outh Bay. In addition,
there were reperted ton unidenti-
eonvention. deliberately, th rough the} ttweon rtein “nKanaramri
equitable and diacrim I natory: as are
rates on other classes of livestock.
The brief wm filed by E. P. Spil-
lor, A. H. Priest and Dayton Meses,
of Fort Worth; James Cornell, Han
Angelo; E. R. Tanner, El Para, and
H. D. Driscoll, Oklahoma City.
Rates on livestock shipped out of
the"southwest for stocker and feeder
purpones are unreasonable, they
charged, to the extent that they ex-
deed 75 percent of the contempo.
faneous rates on' animals intended
far slaughter.
The minimum weights en livestoek
also are unreasonble, they raid. The
line between the southwest and the
mountain Pacific territory, they held,
should be the present 2707 boundary
line which extends through Deming.
Albuquerque end Trinidad, with
branches on both sides.
"The intarstate commerce commie-
sion," the brief said, “should find
that whatever basis of rates deter-
mined upon for application In the
Rocky mountain and Pacific coast
regions should net be exceeded on
traffic between the southwest on the
one hand and those regions on the
other." It added that the rates be-
tween the southwest and western
trunk line. Including everything east
ef the Rocky mountains, should be
no higher than rates locally in the
southwest.
i --
—
(Br The Azociate-freno)
OMAHA, Nebr., Sept. 18—Gover-
nor Smith wound up his first Mm-
paign speech here tonight, devoted al-
most entirely to the form problem,
by replying le eight questions put to
him by newspaper ndvertisements by
ten Omaha eitisenw, declared by
Demoeratie leadere to be Republicans.
The inqutries sought to draw him
out on certain phases of the farm,
prohibition and tariff quentions.
The governor said It had been sug-
tested te him that the Republican
national committee probably had paid
far the advertisements, but he de-
clared he did not believe that. He
proposed that if the men who signed
the inqulries were actuated by pat-
riotic and not partisan motives, they
should put the same question to Her-
bert Hoover. There wm tremen-
deus applause ae the Democratic
nominee, declaring he wm not em-
barrrassed by the inquiries, announ-
cod that be intended to fight hie
campaign in the epea aad dodge no
isnues.
One of the questionn put to Ahe
governor waai
“How can you square year support:
of Democratic candidates fer Cm-
grass pledged against liquor with
what you any yen de far liquor?"
"Ther is nothing that the presi-
dent can do about liquor," Smith de-
clared. “All he can de le reeom-
engineer proposal to Improve High-
way 1M from Benjamin to King
(Ry The Aasocinted Presa)
AUSTIN, Sept. IB.-Eighteen road
contraets, involving $2,347,977, bring-
ing the total for the two-day seeeion
to $3,815321, were let today by the
state highway commission.
In addition, the commission ordered
inspection of new routes and pro-
posed designations ef etale hlghwny*
in a number of seetions and gave
state and federal aid to projects in
Hardeman and Tyler counties.
This wm Iha largest amount at
eontracts ever let at a single sension.
The commiusion took ne aetion on
WESTERN DISTRICT ARE
CALLED EXCESSIVE
___________________ I
fied whiten among the dead at Ta-
hokee, twenty at Belle Glade, flf.
teen la lb* Okeechohee City area
and seventeen in the Palm Benches
area. ’
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11. — The , The Identified desd are: John An-
liventock interests of the southwest derson Blalock, West Branch; Bob: Hartley-Survey ordered in regura
Tuesday filed with theinteretat Kink.negro, pitesEitaJones,rne: U Improlin Highway 5 from Ama-
commerce eommiraion a brief setting £•. DHrayi." »I J:neReneK,o De: rill, to Dalhart' Road dintriet ef
forth their side of the wetern dis- Nymintagt.no ofMr ana Mri Fred three counties, Sherman, Dallam and
trict rate cane. Rateson beef eattle. Helms, Kelaey City, Mrs. Arthur „ । planned improving high-
they Mid, are excensive, unjust, in- Neumhauser and dauahter. Keiser ' “
• LOOT, BURN TOWN
■ (Br United Prems)
BALTIMORE, Md., Sept. 18—
More than 350 prisoners at the Ma-,
ryland penitenitary refused to work
today, after a night of rioting in
which BM are Mid te have joined.
The strike and uproir were staged
M a demonatration against the re-
fusal of state welfare Blraetor. Jan-
ney, to order a publie bearing an
charges of cruelty by offielals and
guards at the prison. .
Warden Patriet Brady had aa-
nouneed prisoner* who refused to
work would net Mt and al 6130 a: m,
guards want through the tiers aad
roused all prisoners. Of MB con-
viets in the wMt wing. BM refused
to g* to the shops aad. remained la
thelreeils.
Desiring to do everything In their
power to make the Tri-State fate
even a greater suceess than in past
years, the merchanta ef Amarillo yea-
terday announced they will close their
stores Tuesday afternoon »t next
week, Amarillo Day.
Wilbur C. Hawk, president of the
fair, announced last week that the
merchants would not be ashed to
close for any period during the ex-
position, but the merchants are anx-
ious to maintain the traditional pol-
icy of closing for a day, and spon-
taneously agreed to elose their stores
at 1 o'clock Tuesday.
Thia announcement wm made last
night by H. C. Gouldy aad R. 0.
Walkup, president and secretary at
the Amarille Business Men’s asso-
elation, who declared members of the
organization expressed themselves
100 per cent in favor of closing in
order to have a day free to attend
the exposition and also permit their
Definite announcoment that the Orient railroad, recently acquired by
the Santa Fe, will be operated out of Amarillo, has been made in New
Yorh by the Wall Street Journal.
Officials at the Santa Fe, la Amarillo recently, said it was probable
that hendquarters for the aew road would be maintained here.
The Wall Street Journal announcement renda:
“Headquarters of the Orient railway, recently acquired by the Banta
Fa will be at.Amarillo. Freight originating on the Orient will reach
the main line of the Haata Fe at Amarillo via Sweetwater, to which
place freight from Dallas ead East Texas will be shipped via the Cle-
burne and Temple division. Th* Orient Ila* top* a large oil field in
Weal Texas, also considerable of the goat and shep ranch area ef wort
Central Texas which ships large quantities of wool, mohair, ebeep Md
goat* to the northern marketa."
. (Continued on Pag 2, Cel 8.) I
Merchants Decide
N‛m--24
8W meesceeeet•• •60
9 *O NKseooe00*ooo *M
-------------- ------------
HE;.*
TO DISCUSS AIR
ROUTE TO PACIFIC
-- %
(By The Aenoelated Prega) . .
FORT WORTH, Sept. 18—With the
they midh
tieles late
Buyers ore eagerly wall-
ing for offer* listed under
"Household oods"--in the
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 317, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1928, newspaper, September 19, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564077/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.