Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 11, 1928 Page: 3 of 14
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THE AMARILLO DAILY NEWS.
Tbi sensation ot the drug trade is
take.
TRUCTION BEGINS ON
Don’t be bashful, for all druggists
LORDSBURG POWER URE
b
irritationa. Creomulsion contaii
addition to creosote, other
In January, 1920.
FOR THC COUGH fROM COLDS THAT HANG OH
4
I am. But we
ee
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§
L
How Low Down
Is Low?
is
A
Come See For Yourself
Ballew-Satterfield Co
I
3rd & Tyler Used Car Dept.
A
/
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4"4
Announcing
RCA Radiola 60
$
W,
e
1
»
I
1 ■
-4
95
Dependable Service...
is the
«
Price
FIREPROOF STORAGE
by getting our rates.
. Phone 4385
99 FolkSe.
l
—
MISSION
K
4
Cash Price
One Dollar
PAYMENT
PLAN
Our storage facilities are second to none. Any*
one who needs storage quarters will save money
We have the assortment, they are in
good condition. We have the terms.
JUDGE REESE TATUM
ON BENCH IN DALLAS
ile M tan
> as whis-
EGYPTIAN ENGINEER SEES
BIG DAMS IN NEW MEXICO
Bl. down-$1,00 per
month for 4 months
*
and proclaimed by the
vimes as quick and eff
Phone
2-1257
i
Musical Aceompaniment by the
Roxy Theatre Orehestra
We asked him how, then he got mad
—real mad—He said—"CUT THE
PRICES ON USED CARS UNTIL
YOU HIT THE BOTTOM.”
Aerom from
Post Orfiee
HEM
FEXANS
CANYON SOCIETY SHOWS PER-
SONS FROM MANY
WALKS OF LIFE
■ALLS STUDENT HONORED
FOR MEDICAL STUDIES
THIS WE WOULD LIKE
TO KNOW
If you are going to move into new office quarters,
or a new home don't fail to allow us to figure with
you at once.
of us Pieees
Bonutiful Vocnl Solbs and
Mondax
. 2 " — 2
TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 11, 1928.
WE HAVE THE LOW DOWN
ON PRICES
f
»
.‘A
Want Ads Get Results
, ' t
"Lucky boy.”
invite you and expect you to try it. I
Everybody’s doing it.
Take the remainder of the bottle
home to year wife and children, for
Aspironal Ie by far the safest and I
most effective, the ensieat to take
and the most agreeable cold and
rough remedy for children as well as;
SPANISH SOUTHWEST
W PAUL A. F. WALTER.
President ot the New Mexico Hietorical Society.
For The Aanociated Presa.
■ ■ »--
LITTLEFIELD BAZAAn HELD
Special to The News.
LITTLEFIELD, Terao, Dee. 10.—The
ladles of the auxiliary to the First
Presbyterian church of Littlefield
served their annual turkey dinner, in
connection with the bazaar which is
held just before Christmas every
wear. This annual bazaar has proven
to be quite a financial suecess.
RALLS, Dec. 10.—Bill Marr, son
of Will Marr, owner of the Marr
Furniture company. who has been
a student in the state medical col-
lege at Galveston for the past few 1
years and will receive his diploma in
Jane of this year was one of the
13 selected out of 300 applicants to
de Intern work for a year in the
Ford sanitarium at Detroit, Mich.
—v-*T- ■ — — . ■ ■
;22
234
didn't get good cof-
fee until we found
SDALNKMT,"Dee. 10. -Judge Reese
Tatum of the Sixty-ninih Judicial
district in la Dallas this week to
temporarily relieve Judge Royall R.
Watkins, of the Maty-fifth Judicial
district. He was accompanied to Dal-
las by Horace L. Schlosa, court re-
porter of this district.
After several days on the bench
in Dallas, Judge Tatum will ge to
Austin for a few days, returning
home la time to epea Farmer county
distriet court ia Farwell the second
Many p aspic find that with M’J-B, the
strongblend,they um slightly less coffee.
But whether you make it strong or weak,
M-J-B has • flavor that only the strong
biendcangive.
Now it comes to you in an improved fric-
tion topkey-can available only to MJB
uners,packedby our own vacuum process.
on EaSy
On Sale nt—
RUSSELL & COCKRELL
The famous Super-Heterodyne
Let Us Demonstrate This Latest Model in Year Home,
Phone DIM
-------------FINKLEA ELECTRIC CO.
■It Folk Street
FARMINGTON CASE DECIDED.
Special to The News.
FARMINGTON, N. M., Dee. 10.—
Daring district court hero this week
the case of Quine and Pierce vs. the
Independent Diteh company was de-
cided by District Judge Reed Hol-
loman in favor of the plaintiffs.
The diteh company, the plaintiffa
alleged. was attempting to assess the
plaintiffs with unjust water assess-
ments.
’5
MOVIETONE
SUPER-FEA TURE
Charles Farrell
and
‘ Janet Gaynor
The wonderful young lovers of
-7h Heaven" in their
FIRST SOUND PICTURE
MJ
COFFEE
Amarillo Warehouse Co.
Fireproof . • 0 Bonded
adults. Qulekest relief for cater-1
rhal croup and children’s choking up
at night, (adv)
"Always.'9
blood, atacks the seat of the trouble
and checks the wrowth of tye germ
Creomulelon is guaranteed asMMk • i
lory in the treatment of cougbs from
colds, bronchitis and miner lermsat
sperial to The News. T 2441.
SPEARMAN, Dee. 10.TAt a recent ! L1LCIC
meeting of the Spearman Chamber
of Commere, J. R. Collard was I
elected presideni: C. A. Gibson, vice
president; Bob Taylor was re-elected |
Secretary for the ensuing year.
TMANN BOMZAGC"f
/TDk
CANCEL
R Wits MM vox
is a characteristic of this company. We realize the
value of your personal belongings, and handle them
at all times, with care. *
Parquet 71c, Baleony /sOe,
Children 25c
(SEB
Vaudevile seo — «■« — 9F. m.
...............
MIDELY VARIED
"Do you always get coffee like this ?"
y,
(By The Associated Pres)
LAS CRUCES, N. M. Dee. IS-1.
M. Zaki, Egyptian elvll engineer, mak-
ing a study of irrigation projects
throughout the United States for bis
government, is inspecting the
Elephant Butte irrigation projeet
with L. I. Flock of El Paso, manager
of tko porject. Later ko will make
a Study of the Elephant Butte dam.
•PB-
Aspironal, the two-mine to cold and
cough reliever, authoritatively guar-
anteed by the laboratories: tested
approved aad most enthusiastically
endorsed by the highest authoritiea.
MVs
Hi
c® 1
SPEARMAN PLANS FARM SCHOOL
Bpecial to The Newa
SPEARMAN, Doc. 10—-Spearman
Motor company, local Hart Parr
dealers, will have a one-da powr
farming school ia Spearman. Decem-
ber 14, it waa stated by W. D. Cooke
of the Spearman Motor company.
The day will be consumed by lec-
tures, charts, movie slides and actual
tractor demonstrations by factory os-
ports of the Hart-Parr Tractor com-
pang.
Dealers.In territory adjacent to
Spearman are invited to attend this
school. The Spearman Motor com-
pany will be best to a lunch served
that day at nooa.
(By The Aasoeiated Pree)
SILVER CITY, N. M, Dec. 1®.—
Construetion work Was started this
week on forty-two miles o high
tensiea power line by the Texaat.
Louisiana Fewer company, which will,
when completed, furnish power to
Lordsburg. A crew of one hundred
men started work under the super-
vision of the company’s own general
foremen, and the work la expected
to be completed by January 15. Ibe
coet of construetion is estimated at
$50,000.
The Texas-Louisiana company will
begin work shortly after the first of
the year on its $75,000 office building
here.
“TARZAN
THE MIGHTV*
—•NBiLLWFFH —
-PAIR OF JACKS ANDH-
A QUEEN
In a Radio Studio
Favorites from WFAA
HARRY HOLMES
The Pessimist
CARL ROSINI & CO.
The Master Magician
CY AND BELEN
PLUNKETT
In "Laughs Preferred’
SHELDON HEFT
- A LEWIS
“Two Jacks and a Jill"
On Iks Screen
BUDDY ROGERS ■
Ih "Someone To Love"
Special Prices ,
For Children under 12 up
to 6:30 P. M.
15c Admission
We asked the boss—He said, “Find
out yourself."
■ Ipeeiat to The News. I. '
CANYON, Dec. l®.~The member.
; ship list of the Panhandle Plains His-
. torical society might easily be mis-
. taken for that of the well known
i eivie clubs, such a great variety of
• professions aad business interests
! are represented.
The cattle industry probably has
t more representatives oa the roll
than any other, such men as R. B.
2Masterzen of Amarillo and Mark
$Huselby of Mobeetie among them.
Martin B. Gerrettson of New York
Frepresens the American Bison so-
feisty, whieh J. Marvin Hunter of
EBandera is a magazine editor.
" The detective brotherhood has J.
•Trank Norfleet, famous rancher de:
; tectivo on the list and the railroad
J fraternity has Avery Turner on the
I roll.
Guleke is Member
I Among the life members there are
) more lawyers and teachers than other
• professions. Representatives of these
t are Judge A. J. Fires of Childress, J.
: O. Guleke of Amarillo, Colonel R. P.
ILSmythe of Plainview, J. D. Hamlin
of Farwell and Professor S. H.
Condron of Canyon, President H. T.
Berton of Clarendon Junior college
and Miss Hattie M. Anderson of
Canyon, the last named was the
first life member and the organiser
of the society.
J. R. Kelso of Cape Girardeau,
Missouri, president of s large public
utility company lives farther from
the headquarters of tbs organisation
than most of its members. Fred
Kell, capitalist of Wichita Falls,
Texas is a life member whose
personal history is typical of ths
most successful men of the rapidly
developing southwest.
Women on Lists
The women whose names are on the
roster include Mrs. W. W. Wetsel,
pioneer of Amarillo; Mrs. T. D.
Hobart of Pampa, who has lived in
the Panhandle for nearly forty years;
Mrs. San Isaacs and Miss Capitola
Gerlach, of Canadian, botth promi-
nent elub women of Texas.
The officers of the Panhandle
Plains Historical society believe that
th}, variety of interests which are
re He onted in the long membership
list shows conclusively that the people
of northwest Texas are generally in-
terested in the preservation of the
history of the territory in which they
live.
The proposed museum building
will become one of the points of in-
terest for the entire region and will
at tract visitors from long distances.
SPEARMAN HAS NEW
OFFICIALS FOR C. OF C.
Chen sOs
Also
Three ■elected Aets of
VITAPHONE
. VAUDEVILLE
The club is outlining a very com-
prehensive program for the following
year.
President Collard in an address to
the attendance stressed the import-
ance of co-operation, friendliness, and
fair dealing with the neighboring
towns. Mr. Collard states the coming |
year will be the greatest from a de-
veloping and business standpoint, not
only Spearman and Spearman trade
territory, but the entire North Plains. ,
The directors for the following yesr
are: R. W. Morton, A. F. Barkley,
F. W. Brant. P. A. Lyon, R. L.| Mc-
Clellan, L. C. Wiggins and Homer
Allen. The chairman of various com-
mittees will be named at an early
date.
________ You can Nop them
your watch in your hand, take the now with Creomuleign, an emulsified
drink at one swallow aad call for creosote, that is pleasant to (
year money back in two minutes if Creomulsion is a medical disce
you cannot feel the distressing symp- 1 with two faH actjion l it soothes —
toms of your cold fading away like ““ the inflamed, membranes aad la.
a dream, within the time limit.1 Mbits germ growth.
Dent be bashful, for all druzeists Of all known draga ereasate b rao-
ogniued by high medica! authorities
as one of the gieatest healing agencie
for coughs from rolde and bronchial
Testimony taken from the Indians
who had partieipated ia the Pueblo
Rebellion of 1680 by Governor Oter:
Nin the year after the Spaniards had
been driven from Santa Fe by the In-
diana forms a curious story, but hangs
together remarkably well and gives
a vivid picture of the Indian eoncep-
tion of the rebellion.
Encamped in the Rio Grande Val-
ley* above Albuquerque in a bitterly
cold and anewy month Oter min heard
the Indians and planned determined
efforts to reconquer the province al-
though that waa not flnaUy achieved
until the reconquest of DeVargas 13
years later.
One Indian testified that the In-
dians burned the church at Santa Fe
proclaiming that the God of the Span-
lards was dead and that the Holy
Virgin Mary and the saints were only
“pieces of rotten wood."
The only living Gods were their
own, the Indisn said, and the re-
cord relates “thus they ordered all
the temples, images, rosaries and
crosses to be burned, and having fin-
ished this work, they all went for a
bath in the Santa Fa river, believing
that in this way thex, weuld get
rid of the baptismsl waters." On
stone altars in the plasa the Indians
made offerings of tobacco, meal,
features and corn and performed
superstituios rites and impressed
upon their children that they should
do those things in the future.
The caciques and prifcipales er-
dered that no one should be named
Jesus or Mery and that the names of
the Holy Baptism should be done
sway with, and that Indiana should
separate themselves from the wives
which the white men’s god had given
them in matrimony and take other
wives, whomever they chose. They
ordered that the estufas, houses of
idoltry, be rebuilt, and throughout
the kingdom they danced the katzina,
making for the dance many masks
bearing the images of the devil.
Asked what the Indians would do
in tko event the Spaniards returned,
the Indian replied: "Some would fight
against the Spaniards to dsath, and
would not let them in, while others
said we were not in fault and would
await our coming in their pueblos,
saying when the Spaniers lived among
them they lived in security and quiet,
and after they left, in great restless-
nesses."
Otermin, however, was compelled
to return to El Peso being unable to
cope with the Indian forces which
gathered south of Santa Fo to fight
off the invaders.
hronchial irritations, and is excellent
for building up the aytem after colde
nr to. Money refunded if Mt re-
. _______________ _ lieved after taking according todiree-
addition to creosote, other healing tions. Ask your druggist, (adv.)
CREOMULSfON
key, roc|t and rye, or any other cold
and eough remedy they have' ever
tried. '
All drug stores are supplied with
the wonderful elixir, so all you have
to do is to step into the neerost
drug store, hand the dark 60e fer a
bottle of Aspironal and tell him to
serve you two toaspoonafuh "itt
29 There’s.one sure
7 way to get rid of
• the everhasy
A TICKLE IMF.
Edestroy him with
DAVIS
Mentholized Beans
They are delicious and
, give instant relief to
A "coughs and rr1^!
k at all drug stoeea. in
N green boxer -fc. ।
AN (Toee-iM-0-ADe
। rious trouble. You CM Nep them inflamed membranes and step the In
ritation, while the creosote goes M to
the stomach, is absorbed into the .
, -
IMP
5882188.822*3850.2
MEMBERSHIP HI-yesierdays in the
“HISTORYCLUB
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 11, 1928, newspaper, December 11, 1928; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567732/m1/3/?q=central+place+railroads: 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.