Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 19, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 5, 1928 Page: 1 of 14
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5
VOL. XX. No. 19—Aasociaed Prees Day and Night Lehsed Wire.
AMARILLO, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 1. 1928.
PRICE FIVE CEN
HOME EDITION
FOURTEEN PAGES
I
t
9
1
ANNUALSPEECH
IS INELIGIBLE
ONINTONGHT
4.
PLANE FLEET
>
4
DELEGATES HIS POWER
‘ 6
3 ENGINES
The pieture gives a compariso ■ between the huge new airships that the navy will build (top) and
(By The Associated Prens)
The ships will be supplied
honors of West Texas will be decided fa
DARYSHOWTO
CHEST TOTAL
NEAR SUN
BEHELD APRIL
NOT ON SECOND TEAM
IN BIG GIFTS
1
. TWO DAYs
*- • • vee if. 1 .
Moton will
Distriet No. 1 will be present, was
called yesterday after Lubboek had
filed
given lessons.
I
carriera, provishon has beta mail
I
is baaed
the contention that
(Continued on Page 13, Col. 1)
L
qua of the First National bank of
could eveounter.
ESCAPEDEATH
from people living outside of the
LUBBOCK YOUTHS
(Continued on Page 13, Col. 4)
IN PLANE FIRE
1 a
(Continued on Page 13, Col. 4)
e
ed Prem
(By The A
ay
i
WEATHER
2
MEXICAN DOORS OPEN
TO U.S. INVESTMENTS CENTER WOMANDIES AT 102;
area has moved
MEW GENERAL HOUSTON
1
POSTMASTER XAMED
Prem)
(By The A
Fa,
d
s
II1i3
(E-1%
32
Judge Refuses
Divorce, Orders
Birth Control
NOT GUILTY, IS
LACONICREPLY
OF NORTHCOTT
FOR THE WORLD'S LARGEST
CRUISERS TO GOODTEAR CO.
SOCIATION COMPUTES
PLANS, ANNUAL EXHIBIT
Whether Amarillo plays Abilene
Saturday for high school football
MONTANA REPORTS
46 DEGREES BELOW;
FROST OVER ROCKIES
that the pilot purposely
plane into a fence, whieh
TAKE POT SHOTS
AT PASSING CARS
the
the
st
n
(By The Aesoeietod Prena)
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Dee. 4.
The first large oil well In the Im-
mediate vieinity of Oklahoma City
blew in with a roar late today. He
black plume, wavering 100 feet over
the top of the derrick announced a
at a meeting in Quanah at 11 o'clock
today.
The meeting, at which superin:
tendents of the Class A schools of
.h
AMARILLO HAS
COLDEST DAY OF
YEAR; FAIR TODAY
CHARGED WITH MURDER ON
THREE ACCOUNTS BY
GRAND JURY
TOIL IN THIS ERA OF
PROSPERITY
LOSING GROUND IN Is-DAY 1
FIGHT AGAINST ATTACK
- OF PUURISY
Because Miss Evelyp Mounts lost
three-eighta of an Inch of her nose
when a bus in which she was riding
crashed with an automobile, a jury
in Oklahoma City awarded her 122-
600 damagen. Miss Mounts, who iA
a freshman at the Oklahoma Agri-
cultural and ^Mechanical college, is
shown above.
PROTESTING COACH WOULD
PLAY ABILENE IF
CLAIM HOLDS
• • -
CAPITAL BLOWS OVER
DERRICK
ALL OF FIVE PHYSICIANS FOR
FIRST TIME ARE IN
CONSULTATION
w
l
.... ; Amarillo and the Panhandle Bankers
TEST SIX MILES SOUTH OF association. Other trophies and spe-
. the activities of the show, was out-
lined by the directorate of the dairy
1 show association. A committee was
named to go before the Panhandle-
Plains, Ine., in connection with hav-
■ ing a dairy cattle display added to
runnine gears and brought the plane
to a standstill, but the machine im-
mediately burst late flames when
feel tanks were broken by the impaet
The men left the plane unseathed,
but it was • complete less.
. A, a 2" .
i ita exhibits at Northern and Eastern
fairs.
By IIENRY ANSLEY
PLAINVIEW, Dec. 4.-The second
1
E
2
c WILL DECIDE DISTRICT
NAVY AWARDS CONTRACTS
RIO PLANE VICTIM BURIED
(By United Pram)
-RIO DE JANEIRO, Brli,Dac. L.f
Tew thousand persons attended the
funeral today of Deputy Amaury De
Medeiros, one of 14 persona killed
when a passenger plane fell into
Quanabara bay yesterday. The funeral
procession was four miles long, and
ineluded four trucks loaded with
wreaths and flowers.
An important feature of the motors
will be the twisting propellers, so
that they may be turned into a
horizontai position and so help the
ship upward more easily.
. Carry Five Planes,
Sinde these ships will be airplane
WASHINGTON, Dee. 4-George W.
Dennett was nominated fo post-
masts r of Brownsville, Teana, by
President Coolidge today.
EACH ZEPPELIN
IS TO CARRY
exeitemfot over the capital of Okla-
homa.
The well was drilled six and one
half miles south of Ohlshoma City
by the Indian territory illuminating
Oil and Foster Petroleum eompanys.
Its Initial View, estimated at 54
000 barrels a day, while the gusher
was flowing wild, had settled down
approximately to 1,000 to 2,500 bar-
rels a day and it was, turned into
storage tanks.
The well was 6102 feet deep and
flowlag from the Simpson formation.
It came in while workmen were fish-
ing for tools, jammed in the hole
by a blast ef gaa several days ago.
CHICAGO, Dec. 4—Chieago M
tesehers did not get their seen
salary 'cheeks today — twenty
days before Christmas.
Thirteen thousand teachers 1
abort a total ,00,000 bee
ths scheol b*sM has.no mon
meet its payroll or pay eurrent I
The eituation was brought a
by a $12,000,000 deficit la the M
funds
ft
. • •2
COOLIDGE ASKS FOR KELLOGG PEACE TREATY BY MARCH 4
-- -----; : ------————■ • —— »— —-a — A
(By The Amoeiated Prens)
SHERMAN, Tex., Dec. 4.-Rec-
ords here show that Bub Walker.
Amarillo high school player whose
eligibility for tnterncholastie
league competition is being chal-
lenged by Lubbock, was not a
member of either the first or sec-
ond team of Merman high school
in 1024, but playad with the Bear-
Kittense, a separate and distinct
unit with ne eonneetion with the
team belonging to the league.
-■ These records were corroborated
by J. R. Moody, coach of the Bear-
Kittens during 1924.
The game in which Walker was
alleged to have participated as a
second string player, waa with a
team from the Presbyterian school
at Denlaon, also a non-lesgue unit,
by the Bear-Kittens and not by the
Bearcat second stringers, It was
•aid here.
SHOn
ILAAsT
CgMA
FORKCAST TILL T P. M. WEDNESDAY
FOR AMARILLO AND VCINITY-
"sondwEST"rExAs_Wemnendn, paruy
(My The Ansoeiated Prose)
RIVERSIDE, Oal., Dec. 4HGor-
don Northcott appeared before Su-
pefior Judge O. K. Morton here al
3 o’clock this afternoon and plead-
ed not guilty to three charge* of
murder.
The indietmnenta returned by a
county grand jury charging him with
slaying "John Doe," a Mexian, Wal-
ter rollins and Nelens sad Lewie
Winslow, were rood in full before
the youth gave his Iaeonie reply.
To Stay in Custody.
Attorneys representing Los Anue-
tes and kivernide counttes, and the
chief defende attorney, were present
at the time of plee. together with
a large groap of offieers and newa-
papermen who had accompanied the
necused on a fruitlees hum in the
desert near Vietoriville for graves
of asserted victims.
Following the arrainument. Din-
triet Attorney Burton Fitts of Los
Angeles county moved the court that
Northcott remain in the custody of
Les Angeles officers in order that
the youth might appear in Los An-
geles eourte tomorrow for prelim-
inary hearing on a murder charge
there.
A fourth Indietmoat, charging a
statutory offense, was dismissed up-
on a motion of Assistant Distriet
Attorney Earle Redwine of River-
side county.
In the number of cattle shewn. air resistance and Increasing safe-
A constructive program, aside from ty for the engineers.
...M Noon:.......
...W 1 p. .........
5 i:m
12 ie.
BIr William Joynson-Hieka,
la the open doorway.
When he had finished rem
ument of several headreg w
neeretary wslhed to hla i
1 a year ago when plans for the first _ .___ -
I show wore made and it is thought that cessible during flight
■ them will be a considerable increase be built inside the hull, reducing
bedside, handed the king the papet
and a pen, and the sovereign atfixe
his signature to the document, 0
CHICAGO TEACHERS
FAE TO GET SALARY
< utwara and la central over Oklahoma
(■In morning. The porthwestern hiuh
> emeure area is central over Montana and
tovers She Roeky mountain romon end
"jmina state*. The pressure will rine fur-
a r in thia lorallity favoring fair weether
W Hnenday,
T\ UN-Mlee. 7141: sets SiM.
femperature hr bean at Amarine rw
( dny-
up”* of mil delinquent contributors A11 A A nar ( I BI
todaz.mnw.t2mcmahan of panhanate II |l UUMEI IN
mailed in a check yesterday to help ."1 IM
swell the Chest fund. Hers was one
of mom than a doxen eontfibutions
SHERMAN EIGHTH GRADE
GAME IN 1924 IS UNDER
QUESTION
। ——
protect guestioning the
not yet contributed, and other large am. mauam m ma
donors have not yet been heard from. BB C r Q 111 I I n AO
The corps of new workers which has Im 11 P % W 1111 •%
reported for duty the test two days UULU VI I L M HU
will attempt to atage a final "round- j
CONGRESS MEMBERS SPLIT ON
OPINION OF THE
MESSAGE
AUSTIN, Texas, Dec. 4,— Eseapinu
two forced landings and a burned
airplane four miles northwest of
Austin, two oil men, Horry Seott and
Bill Brown, both of Cisco, flying
from San Aatonio ea route to Fort
Worth, abandoned the wreekage in
time to catch the northbound airmail
plane that hopped off from here late
today, and continued their teip to
Fort Worth.
Expert manipulation of the ship
saved the two men's dived it was
said by aviators here who received a
meagre account of the wreck as the
two men rushed to the airport barely
la time to cateh the air mail plane.
A forced landing was made iN a
field. After servicing their plane,
the men attempted to continue the
trip, and had gotten the plane well
off the ground when the meter again
cut out. The second forced leading
was made from sneh low altitude
eligibility of Bob Walker, star half-
back of the Amarillo Golden Sand-
storm.
The protest was filed by Coach
Henry Frnka of Lubbock. Today's
meeting to diseuss and vote on the
protest will be held in the office, of
C. E. Davis of Quanah Mr. Davis
is chairman of the district commit-
tee of the Interncholastie league.
Neareh Sherman Viles
The protest, wired to Davis from
Sherman where Frnka and S. D.
Hunter, a Lubbock fan, spent Men-
der going over newspaper files to
collect data to support their claim.
Other constructive work, including to lift the planes through large
that have been offered for the 1929 . the builders say, the new ships will
show including gifts from the Pan- be able to stand twiee as severe a
handle Lumber company, W. II. Fa-
the Loa Angeles (below). The pro posed airships can carry five alrp lanes.
WASHINGTON, Dee. 4.—A reaffir-i with helium gaa from the Amaril le plant. *
After the ealdeai to of the rear
yesterday, Amarillo weather promts-
ed to be fair and even somewhat
warmer today, with little possibility
of snow.
Snowstorms were reported yester-
day in Montana, Celorado and porta
of Kansas, but it was not thought
probable that the storm would
spread this far south.
Yesterday the mercury remained
below freezing all day, with tem-
perature varying from a low of M
degrees to a 31-degree high mark.
Last night's minimum forecast
was IS degrees.
(Br The Amoelated Pren)
CENTER, Toms, Dec. 4.—An ac-
quaintanee of General Bam Houston.
Mrs. Aletha E. Armstrong, 102, died
at the home of her son here today.
Mrs. Armstrong was born "in
Warren county, Tennessee, and came
to Texas in 1846, Sha had resided
ia Shelby county since 1884.
5 FOR NEW MEXICO-Wednesdny ken-
«uA, fair.
W Weather
r The Utah low
I «ny The Amoslate4iPrem)
____... „----- BUFFALO, N. Y, bee. 4.-More
ST FAUL, Mina, Dec 4—"Dapper than a scere of well Enown dintil-
Danny" Hogun, one of the leaders and lories and brewers, with several large
peacemaker in the St. Peul under- distilling and brewing companies of
world, died tonight at a hospital from Canada, were named in indictment*
injuries received when a bomb ex- reported today by a federal grand
ploded ao ha atepped on hi* automo- jury. The indietmente charge sea.
Mio starter at his home earlier in the spirney to smugule liquor into the
day- i: * United States.
a praetice range and took "pot shots”
at paming motorists.
Today, they were renteneed to
terms in the etate'reformatory vary,
ing from “an indefinite period" aatll
they reach 21 0
They told officen, laughingly, that
they merely were testing their skill
with a 22 caliber rifle, aa a result
of their target practicing, the smell
dnoghter of C. D. Killeen was eat
by falllag glass when a bullet splint-
bred the windshield of on automobile
and another motorist was shot in
the heel.
FOR COLORADO DAM
___ I the News-Globe Muster Dairy Farm- doors in the bottom of the ship.
un AIIAAAA Arra ers Contest will receive (he full sup- Five scouting planes can be housed
IHI AHIIMA I II V port of (he aszoctation. within the hull.
UVlLHl bUITIM Ul I I ' Secretary Gwven Report Like th* Los Angela*, the new
Maury Hopkins, secretary-manager dirigibles will have duralumin skel-
Five donation* of 3100 each and I
more than a score of contribution*'
over 325 sent the total amount pledg-
ed to the 1929 Community Chert yes-
terday soaring with unexpected
swiftness toward the 325,000 goal
sought by Chest workers.
Eleven new workers teported to
Chest beadquarters yesterday morn- i
ing to be assigned territory still
open for solicitation. Their report
last night indicated that the $20,000 i
mark ia nearly in sight and that the
campaign to finance the charitable
organisation of this dity is drawing
to a close.
“We are not going to abandon this
drive until we have raised every cent
of the amount required," Mrs. Anna
Taylor, ('host treasurer, sold last
night. "The people of Amarillo may
aa well realize this and help us put
the thing over as soon as possible."
Expect More Oil Monday
Directors declared last night that
several out-of-town oil companies
whose products are sold here have
annual Texas Panhandle-Plains Dairy ' knots an hour, the new dirigibles
show will be held in this city un will be able to go 9,180 nautical
April 2, 3, 4 and 5. miles without refuelling. This com-
At a meeting of the officers and pares with only 3,150 miles as. the
directora of the association held here , longent distance for the Lea Angeles,
today plans for the show were com- The ship will be built so three
pleted. Interest Is much keener than galleries will extend throughout its
length, making every part of it ae:
WARNS AGAINST QUITTING
. Ms ;
33 ’i
jds
(Br United Premo)
CIEVELAND, O., Dec. 4.-A
stipulation of throe year* birth
control was imposed an Otto
Kourim and his wife who applied
for divorce before common pleas
Judge Hanion W. Ewing today.
The decision is unique in Ameri-
can court annals.
"I shall not allow you to impose
more children upon yourselves or
upon society," Judge Ewing told
the couple. “I therefore refuse
the divorce and impose upon you
three years of birth control."
The Kourints have three chil-
dren.
“Three children In three years
should not be allowed," the Judge
added.
The husband’s salary I* $24
weekly.
The Kourim* eloped and were
married November 4, 1923. Kourim
then was 22, hl* wife 1?.
“When the first child wa* one-
year-old some court should have
given them a lesson in birth eoh-
trol at that time. They were be-
fore juvenile court at that time.
It was a shame they were not
specifically with farm relief, taxa-
tion, and economy, naval construc-
tion. waterways, commereE, Boulder
(Enyon, Muscle Shoais and other
‘roblems. He wound up the message
Vith an admonition to the country
- to hear in mind that “the era of
prosperity" lie ascribed to the United
State* easily could be lost without
• unremitting toil,” to maintain it.
The message no sooner had been
read in both houses of congress be-
fore many members issued state-
ments, some praising and other* tak-
ing exception to hi* views.
Those to praise were Republican*,
in most inatancea, and those who
found fault were of the opposition
party.
Regarding one of the outstanding
questions which ia agitating leader*
at the eapitol—tariff revision—the
president was silent, while on an-
other leading question—farm relief
—hla recommendations were in line
With those of previous years.
The president’s communication
was transmitted by special messen-
ger to the two Houses of Congress.
In the Senate it was read by John
C. Crockett, reading clerk, while in
(he House thia waa done by William
Tyler Page, veteran chief clerk.
Backs Irrigation Project
win the message, Mr. Coolidge,
without mentioning any particular
proposal by name, recommended
that Congress pass a bil to construet
a dam for irrigation, flood control
and water purpoaea on the Colorado
river “which will protect the rigbta
of the states, diacharge the neces-
sary government funetions and leave
the-electrical field to private enter-
prises."
He also suggested the lease of
Muscle Shoals for the production of
nitrate* end declared himself againet
making this property the “vehicle
for putting the United States gov-
ernment Indiscriminately t Into the
<Hv The Aewoeiated Pren • • 2
LONDON, Dee. 4.-King George 1
lost ground todoy in hit fight againat 4
pleurisy which has kept him in bed
st Buckingham paluee for th* last 15 1
days and cauned apprehension S
throughout the empire.
Although h* hod »i a hour* of sloon i
last night, the best repose in
day*, hi* tempetature rose to 100.2
during th*‘day, and was porsistin« j
tonight when hi. phyalelans issued ’
thole third bulletin since morning
The forenoon bulletin said anxiety 8
concerning Hi* majesty’s weakened 8
hean must continue and tonight’a #
message informed the nation its nov: "
ereign wa* "rather l*M comfortable." j
For the first time wince the Mag
wa* strieken, all five of the pby- 3
sielarib who were in attendance were 4
1 Los Anyeles haa a gross lift of 153- ,
, 000 ponds and a useful lift of only
1 00,000 pounds.
Fuel for 9,180 Miles.
Most remarkable la the cruising
I range of the new abipa. At 50
KING WEAKENING: TURNS OVER STATE AFFAIRS
PROTEST HEARING ON SANDIE GRID STAR AT QUANAH TODAY
*♦* • ♦ ♦ • • • ♦ ♦ • • • » —— e # e , o • a;- o e •
matlon of his position on the big
problems of the day and a boat of |
lesser questions was sent to congres*
; today by President Coolidge in a
message which will bo his valedictory i
so fsr ss snnusl communications on ,
the state of the union are concerned
With the end of bis administration I
oty three months away and with
4eny members of the house and sen-
ate already turning their ears tu
what the incoming chief executiye ,
may have to say, the president de-
tailed his views on various suhjeeta
and on one, the Kellogg peace treaty,'
iv
e u.s.nev
•Aura . <.!■....
VITAL MATTERS \^os A ngeles Is Dwarf Beside New Air Giants LUBBOCK SAYS Awarded $22,500 TEMPERATURE
ARE TOUCHED; To Be Supplied With Helium From Amarillo WALKER, RALF, ForTipofNose OF 100 HOLDS
ThlusNny
expressed the hope it would be rati-l ’
before hi. retirement from of- GOAL OF $25,000 SHOULD BE
8 Warn. About Prosperity, I REACHED WITHIN NEXT
Beside, this proposal, he dealt
8 ENGINES’
—LENGTH -7^5 FT.
------ 658.3 FT. —
la eonsuitation togrther at the i
this afternoon. Before their Bi
the king sighed an order fa counell
driagating to wix of hla subjeete,
three of whom are member* of Ms j
immediate family, mont of the pow:
ora, dull*., and routine laborn that-
appertain to the erown.
Deleugates State Duties J
Unable for the time being to give 7
due attention to the affair* ef th*
realm a* the royal order espressed )
It-King George appelated Quem
Mary, the Prince of Wales, the Duke ,
of York, the Arehbishop of Canter- I
bury, the Lord (hence I lor and Ptime J
Mini.ler Stanley Baldwin to carry on ,
in hl* stead, their positions being 1
that of counsellors of atate. King j
George atlll reign* but does not
act; his duties he has delegated to I
this chosen half dozen aubeete who I
now have the power of the erown 1
save only that they may not dissolye I
parliament nor ereate peer* of the I
realm. I
The order by which the king aigned I
away for the time being hla a«- I
thority, wa* drawn up within Ma I
hearing in an audienee chamber next I
to the royal patient’a bedroom by the |
privy council eomposed of hla ma- |
esty’s principal ministera aad nd- I
vinors. The door between the two I
rooma wa* left open to the king eeaM I
hear the wording of the order at |
It waa rad by the home secrettyi I
k
of the show, gave a detailed report etons of longitadinal and transverse
of the work of the catalogue com- ( construetion, with steel wire bracing
mittee which wa* approved by the • The helium ga* used to lift the ship
i director*. will be in 11 sepurate gus-tight Oom-
■ Special mention was made of a l partments. j
number of .trophies and cash prize As a result of this eonstrion,«rpuAA mam AMPAI
storm or aquai as the Los Aag«l*s' I CR> UIL MEN
dal prises are exported to be an-
nounced later.
The assoclation named a commit-
tee composed of Maury Hoplins, D.
F. Eaton, Lubbock; O. L. Stansell,
Floydada; Bob Anglin. Tulin, nnd R. i
O. Dunkle, Hereford, to co-opernte l
with the agricultural department of ,
the Amarillo board of eity develop-
qnent ia entertaining the Taxa* Jersey
Cattle elub in Janunry.
The visitors wore the guests of the
Plainview board of city development
atluncheon.d_____' ” .
Those present were;
C. B. Martfa. Talia; J. A. Debnam,
Levelland; R. B. Davis, Brownfield;
Dr. J. J. Underwood, Halo Center;
C. K. Korrell, Shellowater; R. C.
Nichole, Talia; Henry Ansiey, Ama-
rillo.
W. W. Evan*, Lamesa; K. W. Hes-
ter, O'Donnell; P. C. Bennett. Ama-
rillo; R. O. Dunkle, Hereford; W.
R. Ferguson, Halo Center; K J.
Payne, Tulia; R. M. Milhollin, Plain-
view; O. L. Kutherford, Hereford;
Ben Dixoa, Iowa; O. L. Stansell,
Floydada.
From specifications and plans of,
the proposed rigia airship* to be
built by the Goodyear company for
the U. S. navy, these largest of Zep-
pelin* will be a* safe as any vessel
on land or sea. Compad with the
present Los Angeles, the ZR8-4 and
ZR8-5, a* they are called, will be
between two and three times ns
large and as powerful. Their ga*
volume will be 6,500,000 ruble feet
a* against the 2,470,000 of the Los
A man mn mmauummmaan Angela*. Their eight engine* will
J Iki DI AIAIWIILVA develop a total of 4.4X0 horsepower
/ I P| FI UAINVVITW nt a maximum speed of 72.8 knot.,
L 111 I Heruuau W Ihe H a* against the five engine* of the.
Los Angele*, developing '2,000 horse-
—— 27 power nt n high speed of 03.5 knots. 1
TEXAS PANHANSLE-PLAINS AS- 22,0/, Sb
lift of 182,000 pounds, while th*
; Yenterd
Ms*, ct. 11
ss
(By The Asoelmted Pren)
DENVER, Colo., Dee. 4‛A large
portion of the west glistened in the
frost of s cold wave that centered in
Montana tonight.
Zero and sub-zero temperatures
were the rule in many mountain
states, the cold extended eastward
into Kanaos, Nebraska and Missouri,
although temperatures there re-
mained sbve the sore mark.
Th. weather bureau reported
Havre. Meat., with 32 degree* below
zero shortly before 6 o'cloeh this
morning, one of the coldest plnse*
in the United States. Chinook, Mani.,
however, reported 46 below. There
is no weather station there. '
-------- mG-EFE"T Iy wrmeruemF- 3.
RILEO Daily News
T 1,15
g 90
—. TWO FORCED LANDINGS END
LUBBOCR,"Deeg“2t4re youtka, AIR TRIP NEAR
between 13 and 14 years of age, were AIIETIN
proud of their marksmanship, so they ' Avd
adeptedahighzar.nearLbheek •• ----
(By Th* Aesoejnted Fran 1
MEXICO CITY, Dee. —President
Portes Gil has informe a group of
Americans headed by Dr. A.' D.
Lloyd, geologist of Fort Worth. Tex-
as. that the doors of Mexico aader
hie administration will be wide open
to American investment. He said
that Mexico welcomed freign capi-
tal when Invested in neeordanee with
Mexican laws, and weald give capi-
talists fall guarantees.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 19, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 5, 1928, newspaper, December 5, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567726/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.