Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 290, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 28, 1930 Page: 1 of 38
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AMARU
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VOL. XXI. No. 290, A—oc io tod Preas Day
Night Leased Wire
• • •
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1930 TRI-STATE EXPOSITION ENDS WITH $10,000 SURPLUS
TAKESFOURTH
THE EMPEROR’S SMILE OF VICTORY
MAJOR TITLE
DUE TUESDAY
INONE SEASON
FINAL CONQUEST EASY
DATA FROM MAYOR
FIND MISSING
33
OLD AND NEW RATES
bni
i By TV. Aasociated Pre. i
27.-
CONNEAUT,
388
JONES
BOBBY awe
m
The Emperor of the Lnks, Robert Tyre Jones of Atlanta, boo attained golf heights never before reached
off the water, but the shallow
CHARGEOFNYE Men Here for Fair Day
4 An in years by-gone, when drum-
BELIEVELOST
Th* end was in eight when Jones
- no hesitancy in predicting that with-
a6-hole final seven
Good and
last curtain dropped upon the per-
lance.
I
Herring Hotel
WEATHER
ed to confer with Chairman Legue Chief W. K McDowell and Fire Chief
(Continued on Pare 11, Col. 1)
(Continued on Page 11, Col. 4)
M
(Continued on Pags 2, Col, f)
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gtgar
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MEN S AIRPLANE
ON LAKE EDGE
AMARILLO WOMAN,
DAUGHTER INJURED
IN AUTO ACCIDENT
EASTLAND BOY DIES
AFTER AUTO STRIKES
Saturday be won t be Nationaj Amateur Golf tourna-
The others were the British Open, the British Amateur
had warmed the earth and a steady
stream of traffic kept moving out
Tenth Avenue and filling the exposi-
tion grounds and adjoining parking
lots.
The rodeo played to a food sized
attendance in the afternoon, while an
equally large crowd took well to the
1
- .1
is believed they had other plans,
possibly to fly to a Canadian city.
peh,
2
not alarming, the attending physician said, and hospital
attendants reported the patient is “resting easily.”
Geraldine was with her brother, 14.a ■ ■ ■ ■■■■■— ——-
RAY SUTTON, FEDERAL DRY
OFFICER, VANISHED ON
AUGUST 28
SHOULDERS OF HIS 38
ASSISTANTS
AVERAGE ANNUAL REDUCTION
TO ALL CONSUMERS IS
15 PER CENT
CAN'T DISCOVER BODIES OF
SALT MANUFACTURER, HIS
PILOT
EMPEROR OF LINKS BEATS
GENE HOMANS BAND 7 FOR
U. S. AMATEUR
Fair la Out of Ordinary
"We arc more than pleased with the
ALLEGES BOARDS OF TRADE IN
CONSPIRING TO DEPRESS
FARM PRICES
’......;
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522-23,2-2,3338
39988888
sible to have a complete financial re-
port ready in less than a week, but
that it would shw a surplus well in
excess of 110,000 for the fair associa-
tion, after having paid for $10,000 in
improvements since the 1929 fair.
Saturday’s attendance had the ap-
pearance of that of a mid-week day,
says requests for a barricade at that
point have been to no avail.
t AMAEIL-
The City
8 8
R*382
8883888
DESPITESOME Reported; Girl Badly ON PROPOSAL
Hurt by Fall in Ditch
AMARILLO, rExAS, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 11, 1930.
“-AND WE THANK YOU,”
SAYS WILBUR C. HAWK
drr the schedule aa submitted repre* .
aenta a reduction of approximately
15 per cent on the total light and
power bill paid by the Amarillo con-,
sumers
City Bill la Cut $21,000
7T"58
8
, )
4
(By The Ansociated Preet)
WASHINGTON, Sept, 27 -Investi-
Augcr
PUTS MOST OF CREDIT UPON ' continued their course beyond Foot
on Lincoln Street, Hankins sas.
In Tulia.
George W. Cook, 803 North Cor-
field, was the third accident victim.
He was bruised severely when his
motor car, a small rot pe. was driven
into a train on the Rock Island eross-
ing at Bachanan Street late Friday
night. Cook was unable to leave the
hospital Saturday morning.
“I don’t know what happened,"
Cook said at the hospital.
Cook's car, badly darmaged, was
towed away from the neene of the
wreck Saturday morning by police.
schedule has been approiimated by
the city commiswlon after making de
tailed comparison of the old and new
rates on typical hills (elected at ran
dom from all classescof consumers
A detailed report on the compari-
sons, with the ssvings shown, wa,
made public Saturday by Mayor Ern
eat Thompmon.
The new achedule was submitted by
the Southwestern Public Service com-
pany two weeks ago at the request
Although Houston street is sup-
posed to end st Fifteenth it has been
graded past his houss to the edge of
hundreds of miles to see what the
of Mayor Thompson and the elty
been carried on by the city over a
period of montha.
The city commission will make
Hurled through the windshield of a motor car Friday
night as it plunged 15 feet into an unbarricaded ditch on
Houston street, just south of the East Fifteenth Avenue I
intersection, Geraldine Rust, 12 years old, 1900 East Tenth
Avenue, is a patient in St. Anthony's hospital with at least '
25 stitches in her chin, cheeks and lips. Her condition is
MARIL
Used Cars "traded-in," have only
been driven a very email per-
i tion of the mileage which has .
r been built la them. Many mo-
i torists make a praetice of driving - .> ’
their ear only one year, trading
•ach year for a New Car. The
I result of this practice is that the
otiginal owner stands the large
first year depreciation and oe-
ables dealers to ofter only slight- ,
ly Uned Cars at real bargnip
prices. Tum now to the Cien
fled Ad Seetion ot todny'a MWOT/i ’I
Look over th* ears advertined
there by AMriUe’e reliable auto-
mobile deslers. a
‘ GLOBE-NEWS coTh
I WANT AM
"Amarillo’s Used Car Direetom"
* -- g-urda "ofi
tan "
Ing erowds away, but by noon the sun -- sntdrdanjshight—
Amarillo’s light and
WEST TEXAS MAINS.
(Hr The Amsel st sd Femi)
SAN ANGELO, Sept- 21. — Rains
varying from a sprinkle to heavy
showers fall over an extehstve area
in West Texas, today, freer* Sea An-
gal* went th roach th* Big Band eoun-
try. A one-Inch rain was recorded
at Big Lake, generous showere le
Burling r*«aty and 20 ineh at San
Angel*.
ram* a young g*|f*r an in Homans,
he was no match whatever far the
stocky king of the linka. It was just
a question of how long it woul ge
in the afternoon, and Bobby kept th*
«alloping gallery in suspenne ionger
than it wan antiepated, largely he-
cause "Calamity Jane," the Jones
putter, was far from her usually con-
sistent self.
Breathless Seesaw
Jones beeame • up at th* twenty-
second, with only 14 to go, and the
erowd beneme frensiedly eager to be
la en the "kill" but it went neveu
more boles. At the twenty-seventk, ,
Homans eat away a hole with a fine
(Continued oa Page S, CoL 1)
|------ —
NO SIGN OF DEPRESSION OR
DROUTH IN EXPOSITION
CLOSED LAST NIGHT
and the Ameriean open.
There was drama and a surging,
। rushing, and at the finish aa ucen-
trollable crowd of perhaps $15,000
I spectators, running wild as they
l nought to see golfing history made
sueh ac may never be recorded again,
but there were few if any compet-
live thrills to s final match that was
Just another big parade for Us alb
•2w- 90000/0MMMKKXXe..
Bs 139289888888888888 8
"a
। dent would be paid by the city.
. ‘ Two other motor car accident vie-
In a very few years it will be one of/tims wr received Friday night at ,
the bizxest.expositions west of the St Anthony’s hospital, on. being
SNIPP , , . — rushed here from Tulia by ambu-
Mr. Hawk said it would be impos-
would be cut approximately $120,000
per year under the new rate schedule
submitted by the Southwestern Public
Service Company and whieh is now
before the city commission for study
The saving offered by the new
AArNT Al WE eonquering son ok the South.
HUDI I HLIVL fintshed the merning1s holes otth.
-g
rather than a closing day. A chilly
forenoon kept the usually large morn-
W ■ GREATEST GOLF HONOR II HISTORY
• ••• O * s woo * • « « • « ••• ••• «I * e ]
NEW SCHEDULE CUTS AMARILLO LIGHT, POWER BILL $120,000
result-. The Tri State Exposition is ditch, during the course of years, has
one of the very few fstrs over the developed a depth of 15 feet or more
country that actunily pays its own and meanders around back of Hank
way, and I attribute It to the untir- inse home after crossing Houston.
ing efforts of the 38 directors and
department superintendents, the un
- daunted faith of exhibitors, and the
unusual interest of visitors who came
ALL DAY BAIN, COLKMAN
COLEMAN? B^f^-^Tetow, an-
day rain definitely broke-the drouth
la oleman eounty today. There will
fohlow general planting of oats and
wheat provided the farmers can gat
money tor seed.
fa, the best ever held here up to that there was a big lake in that neigh- . - _
nrding to the verdict of the borhood and . dump backed up water] For a mile along the shore, parts of
the plane were picked up, but there
Broadway beauties, tnere were things
going on, and usually, numbers of
the grip luggers were in It.
Wholesale prices of pork sausage,
shoe strings, and crude oil were for-
gotten. There were no orders token
i ntho Tri-State Fair territory Sat-
urday. Order takers enjoyed them-
selves Immensely.
Headed by Mason King, Grand Mar-
shall. whe was on a spirited horse,
the sort of motive power used in days
when the old-timers throw their
grips between the seste, the travel-
ing men launched their eampaign
with a formal parade down Polk.
Th* parade formed in front of the
4 "" --*rM —
, 22‛yhA.s.x
. 4
COMMISSION REACHES FIG-
URES BY COMPARISON OF
Ohio, Sept.
den fence, tearing out a section of
red pickets and barely missing Hank-
ins’ house, which faces north and is
Two Other Accidents
Connie Moore of Tulia sustained a
fracture of his left leg when a motor
car in which he was returning from
s football game at Lubbock erashed
into a telephone pole at a railroad
crosaing half way between Kvess and
Tuhia.
| The accident occurred about 9
attendance lower than expected, | ton, which is supposed to end at
despite sn admittedly nationwide Fifteenth. Motorists st irregular In
depression, and itervals tear out the barrier Thur.-,
- despite rumors of a drouth overday night a driver demolished the]
shallow drainage ditch served
the ditch. Hankins says, He also
Mrs. Marguerite M. Ryan, 814 West
Ninth Avenue, and her daughter, Miss
Wilma Neergaard. 17, a senior in
Amarillo high sehool, wore injured
Saturday night in a motor car ecel-
dent, four miles oast of Amarml.
Both were rushed to Northwest
Texee hospital by a Griggs ambulanee
whieh received the eaU at • o’elock,
bat late Saturday night attending phy-
sfeians had not determined the ex-
tent of injuries sustained by Mrs.
Ryan It wae said by hospital at-
tendanta. Mm Neergaard probably
would be able to leave the hospital
Details of the accident wore not
available Saturdny night.
Hospital attendents Mid Mp. Ryan
apparently was injured seriously. The
patient still wes In the operating
room more than three hours after the
aceideal eecurred.
G. H. Cooper,
A ear eontaining Mayor Ernest O.
Thompson. President Ed Herdin of
the United Commereial Travelers,
Neal Ainsworth of the Jobbers A
Manufaeturers Association, and Presi-
dent Wilbur C. Hawk of the Tri-
State Fair Association, followed.
Veterans of the United Commereial
Travelers Association, Walter B
Allow, Newt Riggs, W. R. Whalen and
C. B. Ball, were in the third car in
the parade.
Drummerw Go to Fair
Cars containing Senior Counselor
O. D Snoddy, Secretary- Tree surer O.
D. Bieker, Past Senior Counselors
R. H. Stiteler, R. J. Parsons and Earl
V. Bennett; Junior Counselor Bun
Williams, Conductor M. E. Young
end F. C. Quarles and Byron Weath-
erby. followed in puceession.
Next was ear after ear of traveling
men, wholesalers, jobbers, visitora
and posts.
Following the parade, a’majority of
the visitors drove to the fair grounds
where they viewed the exhibita and
other attractione there.
With a pep •quad equal to any col-
1 lego erew "the boys" Mid the Handle
football squad on the idea of fetch-
ing home th* bog flesh. Each year
ANCIKNT TURK BETTER
i hr The Abnociated Pre)
NEW YORK, Sept. 27—Zaro Agha,
the 156-year-old Turk whose gadding
about town was rudely interrupted
when no was struck by an nutomo
bile Thursday night, is expected to be
out of bed by Monday or Tuesday,
physieiane said today.
Zero slept from midnight until
late this motning and ate a good
sited breakfast torn he woke up.
HAWK WELL-PLEASED -......-............
riding in an open top Buick. They
were driving south of Houston and
BAD WEATHER
per cent. In some individual in-
stances the reduction figured as high
ss 50 per cent.
One group of commercial power
consumers showed a cut of 21 per
cent; commercial light customers are
given an average reduction of 20 per
cent; residential tustomet on old
readiness -to-serve rat* a cut of 14
per cent; and residential euntomers
uadh* the old B-eent rate an average
reduction of 13.5 per cent.
Twenty billa were taken from eneh
group of consumers for the compari-
sons.
Under the new rates the readiness-
to-serve charge to domentie users has
mere com* to town there is usually
something doing. Saturday, there
wan In tbs neighborhood of 2000 of
them in Amarillo for their annual
day at ths Tri-State Fair.
From the flret honk of the first ear
in the Traveling Men’s parsde down
west thst the agricultural situation
was “the issue” with the people in
that territory. He sold he believed If
the administration would Inquire fur-
ter Into the operations of the soviet
government in selling wheat "ahort”
in this country it would be found
that some Ameriean trade organisa-
tions were doing the same in foreign
markets.
“I am convinced of »peration: in
the foreign markets as part of the
program to depress agricultural
prices in order to discredit the farm
board,” he said.
The North Dakotan said he intend-
By ALAN GOULD
(Anacoiated Fresa Sports Editor)
MERION CRICKET CLUB, Ard.
more, Pa., Sept. 27. On the famous
East eourse of Merlon, where as a
•hock haired youthful phenomenon of
14 he flret appeared in notional eham.
plonahip competition, Robert Tyre
Jones, Jr, today completed the great,
est march of conquest ia golf history.
By th* one-sided margin of • up
and 7 to go, Janes brushed as 14* 22-
year old Eugene Vanderpool Homans
of Englewood, N. J., to win the United
State amateur championship and
score his fourth straight national vic-
tory for the year— the “grand atam*
of golf.
There ata no more golfing world*
left to conquer for thia 28-year-old
eitisen-lawyer of Atlanta, who mad*
hl* final triumph look m ridiculousdy
enny that th* wonder is he haaa't
been doing thia sort of thing every
year si nee he flrot began to seal*
the heighte.
Breese By Comparison •
Bobby’s trlumph today after a solid
wooh of eompetition was by far th*
ensient of any of the quartet he
ocered to sweep everything in sight
fer the eampaign of IBM. It was-
just a breexe by cempariMa with the
battles he waged earlier to capture
the British open, the British amateur
(By The Associated Press)
EASTLAND, Sept. 27—Billy Ed-
wards, 10, Olden school boy, was in-
jured fatally today when struck y
an automobile on the Hankhead high-
way ta front of his home. He was
the soa of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Ed-
wsrds of Olden. Lee Holland, Dal-
las traveling nalesman, who wss driv-
ing the automobile, swerved his ear
ia a vain attempt to avoid striking
the boy and in doing so drove the'
automobile into a ditch.
Hetland picked the child up, placed
him in another automobile and
brought him hero to a hospital where
he died tonight.
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88888885
/By The Aneoelated Prens)
DENVER, Sept. M. Federal gov-
ernsnent authorities today expressed
the belief that Ray Sutton, missing
federal dry ngent, may be alive.
Hope was enhanced by the report of
Lee B. MeGehee, a pilot for the Mid-
eontinent Air Express, who sold he
saw smoke rising at irregular inver-
vals from the edge of a high plateau
■ear Trinidad, Colo.
Sutton disappeared near Raton, N.
M., Augaet 88.
McGehee was flying from El Paao
to Denver, eoaring high between Ra-
ton and Trinidad, when he flret no-
Heed the smoke, he eald. He believed
that its appearance at irregular in-
tervals mlht be due to its being used
for signalint.
Commenting guardedly on the pos-
albility that Batten weald be found
•live, govern meat offielals pointed
out that Button and Perry Caldwell,
errented laat week ea a charge of
forging the agent’a endorsement to
an expense ehock tbsued by the prohi-
bition department, had been good
frienda for yearn.
They intimated that Kutten may
have had a motive for disappearing
and gave the chck to Caldwell to
eeah.
tiinij
' day night a driver demolished — .
barricade and Friday Hankins did not , Scores of men and boy*, eoast guards-
have time to erect another. . men and sheriff’s deputies spent to-
Second Car Narrowly Escapes day searching the shore line of Lake
Two hour, after the nccident in Fri. from Conneaut to Ashtabula but
which the girl was injured another
motorist, evidently seeing the danger
ahead, set his brales suddenly and
th. esr careened into Hankins’ gar-
the country.
Various exhibits from all sections
of the Panhandle- Plains country and
three adjoining states failed to sub
stantiate the drouth reports, and the
amount of cash loosed on the fair
grouns for amusements during the
six days did not indicate a financial
‘epreasjon. ,
Wb 4 year's fair was at least 50
per cent better than last year's ex
The Helium J
- City.
failed to find tho bodies of William
McNulty, Columbus salt manutneturer
and Willard Parker, of Cleveland, hi.
pilot, whose wrecked plan, was found
west of here this morning.
Th. cabin of the plane with wings
and motor gone, and cover ripped known it, deeision on th. new sched- 1
from it, was edged in a clump o At its meeting Tuenday night,
fallen trees at ' edzeand pare M ,r Thompson declared. I
ly hidden by an overhanging cliff, "After a careful study of the rates,"
said Mayor Thompson, "we are safe'
azen BEAR PLOT IS Nearly 2,000Traveling
crews closely scanning the water I do intend to see that .11 classes of
Three airplane, from < leveland made consumers have th. benefit of re.
a search overhead. d—ceq rates ”
W. E. Allen, of the Curtiss Wright Th. 1120,000 shown in savings un
Flying Service, who has led the - - -
teach for the men since they took
off from the Cleveland municipal air-
port at 1:30 a. m. Wednesday, said
the condition of the safety belt fawt-
enings in the place indicatedot he men
might have been thrown ou.
Allen said Parker was inexperi
enced as a night flier and expressed
belief that in the darkness the plane
struek the water, hurled its occu
pants out and crumpled to pieces.
The men had told Cleveland airport
officials they were going tn Mifflin
burg, Pa, by way of Buffalo, but it
FIRST COLD VICTIM.
PRINct ALBSTTwrtTBapL 27.
-Snow and mU la North Saskatehe-
wan today elaimed their first vietim of
the fall season. The frozen body of
Albert Irvine, 8. was found buddled
la a thieket.
midway. “Spanish Nights Revue,”
likewise, drew well in the evening.
Traveling Meo's Day
Traveling Men’s Day helped to
ewell the Saturday attendance, also,
with several hundred grip luggers,
city salesmen, credit managers and
Mies managers taking advantage of
their first opportunity to view the
expeeitlon. A parade staged down-
town Saturday morning opened fes-
tivities for the travelers, after whieh
they took to the exposition grounds.
In the evening, the traveling men
were guests st s complimentary ban-
quet given by Col. Ernest O. Thump
son st ths Herring Hotel..
A surprisingly large number of
visitors milled through the various
exhibit buildings Saturday afternoon
and evening, Indlcntlng to feir offi-
cials an inereasing interest in the
primary purpose of the exposition—
to display the prodaats of Panhandle-
Pleins formers, stoekmen, manufac-
Hirers end merehants.
Quality of exhibits this year not
only wss superior to that of previous
years, but to thst of other fairs in
। the west end southwest. This is not
, only/ the opinion of Tri-State offi-
cna, bet of judges from dietent
pints who have offieiated in other
fairs this fall.
The Amarillo Hereford show will
be the largest held ia the United
Styes this year, with the exeeption
L. ofiehe American Royal Livestock
— ehek at Kansas City, mecording to
(Continyed on Pag* 2, C*L 8)
of Mayor ^itempeon an dthe city
commIWHRT Negotfatioms in behalf
PGb
%i-ur
IL
Pierce and Fillmore, moved west to
Polk, south to Eighth, east to Taylor,
north to Third and east to the Her-
' ring agsin, where it disbonded.
I immediately following the drum
| rorpa waa the ear containing police
j Fifteenth Avenue, plunging into the
] ditch about 8:30 o’clock. Nosing
i straight downward, ths front of the
esr wss burled in the mud. The 1m-
2 f ■» f A •
hill psid by the city for street light-
ing and power for pumping. Laat
year’s total street lighting and pump
ing hill wss 88b,000. Under the new '
rstrs it would total $68,000. The re- ....
duction would amount to about 24 ration of any activities by American I formers inn Ernie Young's revue of
per rent. ] boards of trsde and chambers of torn-
The saving to some classes of con- meres in foreign grain markets was
sumers is higher than to others, but urged today hy Senator Nye, Rerub
the average ie approximately 16 perlican. North Dakota, who charged a
cent. The average reduction offered j conspiracy existed to discredit the
to combined lighting and power to s new form board
group of commereial consumers Senator Nye reported on his return
I pact threw Geraldine crashing
Rringing tooa clone the most xuc- । through the windshield. She was cut
cesaful fair, considered from every ] severely in many places about the
standpoint, ever staged in Amarnlo, face The girl's brother escaped Mr
' .. . lious injury and before aid reached
the IMO Tri-State Exposition, with ' the pair he had magaged to g.t hi.'
its now famous free gate, boasts s sister to the top of the steep bank,
surplus of more then $10,000 in thej T. II. Hankins, sn oil inspector for
treasury the Santa Fe, lives at the southeast
. . , ,. 1 corner of Houston and Fifteenth and
-despite unfavorable weather on for long time he has maintained a
three of the six days, resulting in an | barrier across the extension of Hous
i ■ ■ I-......... ■ ■ M X, .. ............. ,
HOME EDITION THIRTYJEIGHr PAGES PRICE FIVE
888883 33g
I
ma
whose bills were analyzed, is 25.3 to the capital today from the middle-
J v
K 1 ahas
Third between
by eny individual and whieh probably never will b
ment to annes his fourth major title of the year,
and the National Open.
IS FIRST GOLFER TO SCORE
"GRAND SLAM" OF
LINKS
Polk Street at 10:45 a. m., until the
TODATS BEST BUY-
in the Automotive line ie un-
gudntionably the reconditioned
Used Car. A large majority of
It offers a cut of 821,000 on the
position," sadi W ilbur C. Hawk, presi approximately 30 feet from the street,
dent of the apanciation, Saturday st । Whem the Ssnta Fe reilrosd built
ternnon, "and the 1929 fair was by | into Amarillo about 22 years -ago
For the phenomenal suecess of the IBM Tri State Exposition, Wil-
bur C. Hawh, president, Saturday expressed his thanks, snd in behalf
of the other fair officials, directors and department superintendents, to
the exhibitors who made the feir possible, end to the attending publie
who "put it •ver.’’
The fair president pronounced the exposition s grand success,
financially and in every other respect.
“I wnnt the appreciation and glory to go where .it belongs," said
Mr. Hawh. “Thore to not a singie official, director, superintendent or
employe who has not eo-operated IM per cent to make the Tri-State
Exposition the grand .usees, that it is. The entire organisation fune-
tioed inke a precision machine.
“Exhibitors from hundreds of miles away displayed faith in the
exposition by showing their peed nets here, and merchants and manu-
facturers. in greater numbora than ever before, showed that they be-
Here in the Texes Panhandle-Plains os a fertile sales territory. ,
“And the visitors, coming from virtually every elty, town and vil-
lage la th« Panhandle, and from New Mesic*, Kansas and Oklehoma,
sr* to be complimented on braving the unfavotable weather that greeted
as ow at least three days *f th* fair.
"To all of these we express our thanks. Without them the fair
could Mt have even been bald, not to mention suecessfully."
RECORD MADE Three Auto Accidents CHY’S ACTION
EX- AM BABB A DO R ILL
(By The Amuoetmted Pram)
FI RIB, atft. rz. -Hugh C. Wal-
lace, whe was ambansador to France
during the latter port of President
Wilson‛• laet administration. Is crit-
ically ill at hlo bom* in Paris of
bronchitis. The former ambasendor’s
American home is ia Tacoma, Wash.
Panhandle-Plains country has to of
fer to the world City orricinls Saturday told the
"Our fair i. attracting sttention father ot the injured girl sll ex-
from many southwestern .totes, a. penses in connection with the aeci-
an advertising medium, and I have -
„ronCAST von AMARLLO AND
VICINITY—Partly eloud. Bus Bar; MH*
chenge la temperntuer.
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*POR NEW MEXICO—Fair Sunday,
alizbeiy warmer north central porttoe to-
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 290, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 28, 1930, newspaper, September 28, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564936/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.