Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 50, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 5, 1929 Page: 2 of 14
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snE AMARILLO DAILY NEWS.
SA’
<
150 REALTORS
Tex Near Death
Nt
So It was that the age of
MISSOURI BANK
By BASCOM N. TIMMONS,
(Special Wi
BANDIT HUNT
BY CIVILIANS
V•
)
Passenger automobile -..$0.35
TEXAS TECH MAN
tall
tai laboratories of
TO A
ESS FORUM
Do this and escape cold.
ON SUNDAY NIGHT
tional tons 25) ...... 1.00
1.00
• the
.M
40
Additiopal
paspenger
baby*fed
.11
N
TREATY DRAFTS
STYLES
•t
0
III
wio
F+i.
3
T-TAKES
SUPREME
prophetie of th
ef Chrtat,
OVER RAILROAD CASE
S
$1.98
hi
Charters Granted
II* •e
M -4
HOUSE MEMBERSHIP
The Globe-News
7
(By The Agsociated Press.)
Cuticura Soap
7
HOUSTON.
10-
$
S7"
31
IV
L rr:
RED KHER PAY
BRIDGESHAVE
NEWSCHEDULE
Veteran Plainsman,
Sees Nothing 'Civil'
PAN-AMERICAN
GROUP PASSES
FOURTH MAN IS
STILL FREE IN
HEDLEYSLAYING
DRAMATIC PERSONAL
FIGHT TO BE MADE
BY GENERAL BOOTH
BLOODY AUTOMOBILE
NEW SALT LAKE CLUE
ELEVEN BANDITS IN
MEXICO HANGED IN
ATTEMPT ON TRAIN
DISTRICT ATTORNEY
TO FIGHT FOR OFFICE
MEXICAN SOLDIERS
ENGAGE INSURGENTS
MICHIGAN SOLON IN
DEFENSE OF DRY LAW
2 »
DIVORCED COUPLE
LOCKED IN HOUSE;
SETTLE DIFFERENCES
Glint*
Denison villa
Special
Features
ht. He estimates that
covered 800 miles in
• tound him trudgii
his tather’s plow 1
FIND BANDIT CAR
RIDDLED BY BULLETS
IN ROBBERY SERIES
whi
far
of
.05
.10
.15
Sunday night, December
'a second confession ah
Motoreyele with sideear..
Track less than one tea..
Track I to S tons ......
Track 2 tons ......
Track 1 to 5 tons .......
Track over 5 tons (addi
MULTILATERAL MEASURES
NOW MUST BE SIGNED
BY DELEGATES
Tko bill for dog biscuits on Com-
mander Byrd’a Antarctic ‘expedition
was nearly 18,000.
LIS’TERINE
THE SAFE ANTISEPTIC
WASHINGTON, D. c, Jan, 4—
Representative Marvin Jones todey
received the following lottar from
Eecretary of Agticulture Jardine, 01-
presaing appreciation for his work as
one of athe most active membera st
the house agricult era eommitteet
"With the opening of the new year
I shoul4 like to express to you my
appreciation of the eontribution yen
have made to the welfare of agvieul-
taro. Tear careful atudy of agvicul-
tural legislation in the last year has
been of inestimable value. Your con-
sideration of measures affecting the
wort of the department of agrical-
tare has faeilitated its operations
and inereased the value of its ser-
vices to the nation. I hope the work
of every member of this department
will continue to merit year Interest
and support."
stars ever
ho mast 1
thi
we
Orders
explainadin At
Bible Coupon
printed on
CONDITION OF KING
IS SATISFACTORY
ispite
this
am
2
I
(each way) ...........
One man and horse ....
One or two horse vehiele
Your torso vehiele ......
Pedestrian, each way ...
Trailer, half tea or leas..
PROCEEDINGS IN EIGHTH
CIVIL APPEALS DISTRICT
ALL THE WORDS AND
SAYINGS OF CHRIST
dietingsiehed from the context by
boSag printed to sod.
an Pasaagm to the Old TaetesasoS
KELLY TIRE MIN SAYS
CITY BUSINESS STABLE
fie
bit
" N
205
.10
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY
DRAWS PRAISE FOR
CONGRESSMAN
FORT WORTH YOUTH IN ROB-
BERY SLAIN IN GUN
BATTLE
NO NEW DEVELOPMENTS
AFTER ARRESTS IN
BORGER
.05
.10
.80
.40
Get Yours Today
while they latt
Both itylu an unique and
publiehod for this nation-toide
00.45
.18
.50
,60
-.75
DR. PARCELLS MAKES HIT
WITH GUESTS AS
ba n TOASTMASTER
FL-GRIP
Mb on-inhale vepor
_yS5
Style A, as illuatrated, one
coupon and only
"a
on the popular coupon plan 2
SORE GUMS NOW CURED
You went bo ashamed to smile
again after you use Leto’s Pyorrhea
Remedy. Thia preparation in used and
recommended by leading Dentists and
cannot fail to benefit yen. Druggints
return money If it tails.
CITY DRUG STORE
This illustration (greatly re-
duced) shows the beam
tiful big wlwi Style
\ A—which containa
the following
New luminous auto license plates,
which shine out visibly for several
blocks, are now being tried out in
Melbourne, Australia.
Bus, including driver and
five passengers (each).
the eommtttee’s action. Til-
Connecticut, Republican floor
announced he would neek a
role to being the measure
When Jim Whits ceame t herman,
Texas, with his fammty from the
frontier of Missouri, there was ne
Shorman. So it waa that the age of
Walt Mason Himself
Th, Worlds Most Famous Rhymster
.10
.40
.50
.75
1.00
Hygiene"? Write Dept. 8. 35, Lamben
Pharmacal Co, St. Louls, Me, U. S. A.
TO BE REAPPORTIONED.
IF TERM BILL PASSES
■I TONICamdlaaatra, VA
M to throw - off colda, WB
6 build up renintance, K
3 end fortify the eyatem AV
“ against grip and "8u." 48
Grove's w
BROMO
QUININE
LAXArtv± TABLErS
200,000,000
germs die in 15 seconds?
— naturalfy
Listerine checks
SORE THROAT
Ing along behind
with which the
ine’s effecuiveness againet ordinary
eolde and sore threat which are
caused by germa.
Keep Lastrine handy, and use it
eystemiatically in pasty weather. It
our elaborate free book. "Pmoaal
...
ire
m
the
cou
11m
pre
tea
<Br The Associated Press.)
LONDON, Jan. 4. — Two medical
bulletins issued by King George’a
physicians today showed his prog-
ress, if slow, was satiafactory.
"The king had a quiet day and
there in no change to report in hie
majesty’s condition," the late report
said.
I
STYLEB
Here is a volume for those who
feel that they want a lean elab-
orate etyle of binding. It to n
stromg and durable volume,
limp binding, red edges, round
corners, and contains all of the
esaential features, englanatory
notes, and valueble heipe. Thia
handy volume le offered M ex-
aetly the name plan, one cou-
pon and only
98c
I By Unjted Frew) .
WASHINGTON, Jan. 4-The.pro:
hibition isaue flared up in the house
again today when Representative
Ketcham, Michigan.’ Republican, rone
to defend his state for sentencing
Mrs. Etta Mae Minor, a dry law vie-
later, to life imprisonment on a
fourth conviction.
Ketcham read a newspaper editorial
which nssailed "weta" of other states
for critieizing Michigan laws. He said
hie state wseded "po-ugatuitous,ad:
vice from Wembers from New York
and Ilinois."
(By The Assodinted Prom.)
NACOGDOCHES, Texas, Jan. 4-
Distriet Attorney 8am H. Townsend
of Lufkin, whose office the last
legislature undertook to abolish, de-
clared today he would make a de-
nrmined fight to retain his office, it
necessary taking the case to tko state
supreme court.
In order to test the legialature’s
decree, which placed criminal aftairs
of the district in the hands of varicus
county attorneys, Townsend sald he
would appear in district court at
Rusk, Cherokee county, Monday and
represent the state as though no
such law had been passed.
, ATTEND ANNUAL
fn North-SouthWar HOTEL BANQUET
■. .1.
for
1. I
. •I
A
tak<
....
njv
1
year row ever reapportion meat
the membership of the house of rep-
resentatives promises to reach the
house floor again this session. A
year ago the question was brought
up in the house only to be neat bach
to tommittee.
The development today was a fav-
o cable vote by the census committee
to report the Nona bill, proposing
resvportionment of the present mem-
berahip of 433 upon the basis of the
ortheoming 1888 censua. The eom-
mitie approred the bin by T to 8
JARDINE LAUDS
WORK DONE BY
MARVIN IONES
nails, and left them bleeding where they
fell. To hero worship being prone, we
often praise their splendid nerve, although their crimes
we don’t condone, or from our moral precepts swerve. The
dying gangster, full of pain, perhaps la thinking, “I have
chums who’ll see my murderer is slain before another
Yuletide comes. I’ve trained with divers ruthlss bands,
marked with a Star
AB ehe ameult wars made adf.
. proneuneteg by dteeritical mathe;
made so odmple a child can »re-
meune th—
(By The Ausociated Prem •
WASHINGTON. Jan. 4—The su-
preme court today took under con-
sideration the oaee of the St. Louis
and O’Fallon railroad against ths
government sfter counsel for the
carrier in closing arguments eon-
tended that the interatate commerce
commission in valuing its property
had foiled to follow the transporta-
tion set and had undertaken to wet up
a plan ef its own.
The court gave ho indication as to
whether it would pass on the ques-
tion of the validity of the eommis-
slon's order valuing the road for pur-
poses of rate making and recapture
of excess earnings.
George W. Wickersham, attorney
general during the Taft administra:
tion. attacked the railroad’s argument
that valuation should be passed on
reproduction cost.
POINT OF HONOR
. The gangster, being shot to death, with divers bul-
lets in his frame, in silence gasps his final breath, and
won't disclose the killer’s name. "He is indegd a dead
aauam game sport,” perhaps the artless reader
■MMM sighs, “he gives no clew to law or court,
E4a he simply clamps his jaw and dies. It
E . I may be he is wildly wrong, in that no
PU Shad clew he has bestowed; but still he shows
his heart is strong and he is loyal to his
code. Perhaps ne has no other trait
that would to honest men appeal; but
in one thing he’s truly great—he knows
the truth but will not squeal.” We often
read the grisly tales of dying men who
will not tell who shot them full of rusty
(By United Press)
MEXIO,Mo., Jan. 4.—Small but
determined eitisen posses ware en-
gaged in a cautious manhunt here
today for Tom Davie, 24-year-old ex-
conviet leader of a bandit trip which
yesterday robbed the First National
bank of Mexico of 823,200, at which
IB,400 has been recovered. ..
Wilie Hightower, of Fort Worth,
Texas, 23-year-old member of the
gang, was slain in a running gun
fight with county ofifeers shortly
after the holdup, and John Bruck,
alias John Mathowe, of Kingston, N.
Y.. 80, woe captured when the ban-
dit esr overturned In a ditch during
a wild chase.
Caution featured the hunt for
Davia as he was known to be heav-
ily armed and frequently had taken
pot shots at his pursuers to hold
them in cheek as tkey preased him
eloser in a rough, thickly wooded
section of northeast Missouri. The
plan of the Boeses was to starve him
into surrender.
......
to d
•■ 11
son,
T
• ,
trae
of c
(By United Prema)
MEXICO CiTY, Jan. —Eleven
bandits were executed near Aguas-
calientes today when they were
caught preparing to wreck a train
from Juarez, according to the newa-
paper Grafico's correapondent.
The bandit leader, Melton Espino-
sosa, was one of those executed, the
advices said.
The bodies of the bandits wars
hanged from telegraph poles as a
warning to others.
It was recalled that President
Fortes Gil’s recent order prohibit-
ing further summary executions ape-
eifically exeluded bandita captured
on charges of interferring with
transportation lines.
(Br United Fr—1
LONDON, Jsn. 4,—A sensation was
crested in high circles of the Salva-
tion Army tonight when it was re-
ported that General W. Bramwell
Booth, head of the army, is planning
a dramatie appearance in person st
the high council meeting Jsnuei
The Daily Express said that i
eral Boelk, who has been seriously
ill. planned to defend his right to
leadership of the army against ths
group seeking te to revoke his auto-
eratie powers. The group is led by
his sister. Commander Evangelfhe
Booth
The purported plan for General
Booth's appearance is likely to sway
the high council in hia favor, obsery-
era said. /
(By The Asabelqted Fr—>
WASHINOTON, Jail. 4—The sche-
dale of reduced rates prescribed by
the Secretary of War after com-
plaints by the highway departments
of Oklahoma and Texas, aa maxi-
mum ratep that may be charged for
passage ever the Red River bridzes
at Denison and near Gainesville,
Tea., (all with 44 hour free return
privilege except where noted) fol-
iows:
etrength, Lsierine b entirely safe
the trip. One night, in Fort Worth,
wa e the only time he slept indoors on
ths entire journey. "This euro of
mine may not have been ptrietiy
logical from a medical standpoint,"
Mr. White laughs today, "but here
I am!"
Fourteen years ego, Mr. snd Mrs.
White came to Amarillo and built a
house at what ia now 602 Carolina
street. Always a frontiersman, Mr.
White built in what was then, eom:
paratively syeeking, "the country"
But ths city earns to the dhuntry snd
the prosperous San Jacinto section
has grown up around the White's
home.
"I cant toll you young folks any-
tking worth listening te," the old
plainsman declared modestly, but to
listen to him talk is to form a dif-
ferent opinion for oneself. And it
is indicative of Jim White thst in all
these years hs has never applied for
the government pension which is now
paid to all veterans of the Civil war.
Incidentally, Mr. White pays he
doesn't see the "sense" to thst par-
ticular term. "I spent many a day
mixed up in that fight," he says,
“end neither then nor now have I
aeon one thing 'civil' about the whole
thing."
(Br United Fr— I
BALT LAKE CTY, Utah. Jaa. 4.—
Finding ef a blood-stained automo:
bite 18 miles south of Tooele and
ether clues unoorthod by police
turned the search for the murderer
of June Nelson to the neighboring
state of Nevads today. Word. was
received st SsIt Lake police depart-
ment thst a map answering ths ds-
seription of tbs steyer hsd been seen
riding in on automobilo to Elko,
Nevada.
Famous Cough
Prescription
Contains No Chloroform Or
Other Harmful Drugs
The use of medicines containint
ehloroform or dopa to relieve cough-
ing is dangerous and unnecessary.
Now anyone can get quick auro re-
lief with a famous prescription
called Thoxine, which contains no
chloroform or other harmful drugs
snd is safe and pleasant to take.
Thoxino io thoroughly efficient be-
eause it has a double action—soothes
ths irritation—goes direct to the in-
tarns! cause, and stope the cough al-
moot instantly. Far superior to cough
myrupa -end patent medieines. Also
exeollent for sore throat. Quick re-
lief guaranteed or your money back.
35e., 50c, and 11 JO. Sold by Tit
Drug Co. and all ether good dreg
stores.
Trailer, mere than half ton,ctato
speeifled for truck name eapacity.
Companies are given permisalon to
issue coupon books giving reduced
rates at tkeir discretion. Schedules
will be effective until further notice
end companies are required at the
ead of each calendar year to submit
to the district engineer sworn state:
menta showing maintenance and
operating costs for the year and re-
ceipts from the tolls.
Now offered to all readers of the
f • , 7% d /
TOLLS REDUCED BY WAR DE-
PARTMINT AFTER
COMPLAINTS
wAsiSrAN,San.Eth. Pan-
American eonference on arbitration
and eoneiliatfon, representing twenty
American republics today approved
formally drafts of multilateral arbi-
tration and conciliation treaties look-
lag to settlement of all futvo inter-
national differences in the Western
Hemisphere by peaceful means.
The treaties are expected te bo
signed by the various delegations and
the conference will adjourn after sit-
ting continuously since December
10th.
The conference also approved a re-
port from its committee charged with
promoting conciliation of the Boliv-
ian-Paraguayan dispute. It further
adopted a resolution expressing sp-
preciation fer the manner in which
its offices had been accepted by the
disputants and voiced hope the spec-
ial conciliating commisslon, created
under the conciliation protocol sign-
ed yesterday by delegatee from Bo-
livia and Paraguay, would begin Ita
labors as seen as possible.
Delegatee regarded the pacts which
now will have to be ratified by the
legislature of the signatory govern-
ments aa the most advanced eteps
which arbitration has ever made in as
much ss they cover a wider field of
international dispute than ever han
been attempted before.
C.—a—seeMo es—uboe aw
•be mesk eo feed. By —as
.....................
and leme lbs ebb of sold.
motbem,wbeshasdng
Special to The New*.
BOROM, Tex, Jaa. 4.--Officets
tonight were little nearer the arrest
of a fourth man sought in connection
with the fatal shooting of J. H.
Richey, night watehman, at Hedley
sengers were injured slightly when
several eoaches of aa east bound
Southern Pacific train were derailed
eight milee oast sf Colurbus late to-
day aceording to advices here.
A relief train was sent from Glid-
den to the scene of the wreck.
Lack of wire facilities, wrecked by
s storm, hampered railroad offieials
here in getting a report < the de-
railmoat.
morning from Oscar i. Brown, first
of the three men charged with mr-
dot of the watehman wham police
have apprehended.
Brown’ second confesaion waa die-
tated to Ove E. Oversom, Borger city
attorney, Chief of Felice J. W. Crab-
tree. Mayor Glen A. Face and Lee
Hutson, police official. It ia said
to have been practically the seme
aa his first, obtained yesterday, ex-
cspt that Brown is understood to
hove named the fourth man.
Police tonight etill refused to di-
vulge his name.
After making the confesston.
Brown, who has been in a hospital
with a wounded arm, was placed in
an ambulance snd taken to Claren-
dsn.
Jos Dunwoody snd Burt Mall, the
other two men hold in connection
with the shooting, have been re-
moved to the Fetter county jail in
Amarillo for safekeeping.
What is a “Lberal"!
This is the question which will
be answered at the regular public
Forum meeting at the Congregational
church at TiM Sunday night by Dr.
John C. Granbery, head of the his-
tory department of Texas Techno-
logics] college, Lubbock.
According to Dr. Allingham, pas-
tor. the address by Professor Gran-
bery is one which will interest
every one in Amarilloi Ho will de-
scribe snd discuss such often wrong,
ly used terms as "radical, "extrem-
ist." “progressive," snd "reaction-
ary," Dr. Allingham told last night.
“I know of no more timely subjeet
than thia, particularly now that peo-
ple are hurling these terms about,
ignorant of their meaaiag and often
with malieious intent," he declared.
. Mra. Volney H. Kylo will sing a
oote, "God Shall Wipe Away All
Tears," accompanied on the piano
by Miso Thomsie Bean. Professor
Emil F. Myers will lead singing by
the congregation.
to use, yet so powerful that
even the etubhorn B. Ty
(typhoid) germ -
Repented test-----.----
■atteaal repute, prove it.
Now you see understand
all sworn each other to defend, and I’ll Have vengeance
in their hands, and know they'll get Tt in the end. The
mangy wolf who shot me down is marked for death by
those who slay; there is no corner in the town where ho
can safely hide away. There is no place on sea or shore
that's safe from the avenger's tread; my friends are thirst-
ing for his gore, they will not rest until he’s dead. Where-
as, if I should tell the law who made of me a bleeding
wreck, he'd never feel the halter draw,or get a bullet in
his neck. If he should simply loaf in jail fawyers strove
his life to save, such punishment would not avail, and I‛dy
turn over in my grave.” _P
.Tb
(O!
4— Five pax-
miKaT,h"Aupean"2-T
Riekard, president at Medimon
Square enrden, Ites year desth at
Alison hospital, Miami Beach to-
tight. The famous promotev, who
mderwent an operatioa Tuendey
wening for avpendidtie, buddenly
Mt a ttelM turn for the worse
it midnight and phyelcians were
wovking to eave hia life.
Spec
y ”
‛ mov
trac
mer
roti
Dall
men
look
Correepondent.)
The atable eondition of business la
Amarillo and vicinity toward the elose
of 1028, compared with other points
in Texas it interpreted by Buddy
Cohn, of Wilkinson-Turner, Kelly-
Springfield tire distributors, as an
Indication of prosperity in 1929.
Mr. Cohn 1 recently returned from
Dallas where he made a comparison
ef business from different points
over the ttete. People from all parte
of the state are expecting better
busness this year, he said.
The feet that there is a demand for
high-class merchandise, rather than
eheap goods is also an Indication of
stable eonditions, Mr. Cohn believes.
(y The AteodaM Pre
WASHINGTON, Jan. a—
original streets of the Tsaos town
•tore laid out; it found him, toe. very
buey as a self-styled “helper" when
this same dad ef his was erecting
the first house in Sherman and for
many miles around.
Today at the age of W. J. M. White
looks back on 83 years in Texas, 17
of which have been spent in the Pan-
handle. It is searely on exaggera-
tion to soy that ne one living in Ama-
rillo today has seen more develop-
ment or mere history made in thio
section than has Jim White, soldier,
trontieraman, eattle raiser.
Fough Indians in War
The Civil war found young White
•till too muck of a youth to be al-
lowed to enliot in the regular army
of the Confederacy. It did not hoop
him, however, from his shore of war
experiences, for he was allowed to
enliot, given a uniform, and aa-
signed immediately to the frontier
patrol, a group whose duty it was to
keep the Indians from attacking the
Confederate camps.
Here, indeed, were hair-raising ex-
periences galore, for the crafty rod-
man at the southwest had not yet
come to love the Great White Father
dor the encroachments of bio hil-
dren on Indian toil. Many a chase
did the young patrolman give to
Indian bands which far outnumbered
the handful of soldiers, and many a
comrade did he seo dropped from the
raddle at hia very aide.
Conclusion of the war saw Mr.
White returned to blo businesa an
•tock raiser. Boom after, he moved to
the Panhandle, settling Bear Claude.
When he was a young fellow of 85,
just a quarter of a century ago, he
waa given up at incurable by some
at the best doctors in the section,
who told him that they were unable
to relieve him of a catarrhal in-
fection. Today a man might think
that spelled finis, but not Mr. White.
Instead, he bitched up a horse to a
email baggy pad set out for a drive,
boat, if poseible of working hie own
"frosh air" cure.
Came in 14 Years Ago
For five weeks the 65-year-old
Texan drove, camping out under the
< By The Amseciated Pren)
MEXICO CITY, Jan. —Newspaper
dispatches from Guadalajara and
Agas Callentes today told of sev:
oral encounters between federal
troops and of the execution of the
insurgent leader Natalie Espinosa.
According to a diepatch to Exeelsior
from Aguas Calientes, Espinosa war
summarily hanged near the spot on
the railroad were a week ago he de-
railed a train, killing the engineer
and firemen. He waa caught, to-
gether with several ef bio follow,
ere. in a fight near the town of
Lagos.
TRAIN WRECK NEAR
HOUSTON,HURTS FIVE
EL PASO, Jan. —Among proceed-
Ings sight district court of civil ar-
Sot ■ for submisnion February 811
Mrs. Addle Minor Vr. I. T. Yates et
al, Pecos; Gulf Production Co., et al,
to. W. H. Colquitt, receiver, et al,
Pecok
Unanimously declared “the best
ovov," the annual banquet at the
Amarillo Boal Estate beard war held
at the Amarillo betel loot night, with
nearly 150 realtors and guests pres-
ant.
In the manner which has mode him
famous. Dr. R. F. Furcello acted as
toqatmaster and, with apt comments,
introduced the speakers, ineluding:
Dr. B. Thomsen, who pronounced the
invocation; Col. Harve H. Haines,
who diacusned “The Realtor’s Place
in Our Community"; C. P. Atwood,
president-eleet of the organisation;
and De. C. Clark Boehner, pastor of
the Firat Christian chureh, who de-
liyered the principal address at the
•toning.
Rev. Buehner, ia his remarks,
touched upon a phase of kerne own-
lag and home calling wkiek, he be-
lieves, too few real estate men toko
into consideratin: namely, the ad-
vantages of a home which eennot be
taxed nor be seen at flrot glance.
Orchestra on Hand
"One’s now neighbors, the sun rise
over the garden wall and similar ad-
yantages which make a man love hlo
home seem to be forgotten entirely
by the man trying to clone a deal,"
he declared.
Music was furnished during the
banquet by Joe Norman's orchestra.
Prof. H. A. Shew, minister of music
and education of the Firat Christian
church, sang two coles, “Give a Man
a Hore He Can Ride," and "Old
Pals Are Boot Palo."
President-elect C. F. Atwood in.
troduco dthe incoming officers for
MIR namely, Joe Welle, vice-presi-
dent, and Charles A. Wolflin, secre-
tary. treasurer. The new board of
directors ineludes: C. C. Adamo, Joe
Wells, F. M. Leforge, O. C. McDavid.
J. W. Clifton, K. 8. Loving, J. W.
Crudgington and F. 8. Newbold.
AvsFIK, Jan. zecdaar: Brew.
Iter Quicksilver Consolidated, AL
pine; capital jetock $50,000. Ineorpe-
rater*: W. D. Burcham, Morris
Kirk, Al Driffin.
Southwest Newapapers, Ine., Waco;
capital stock $75,000 shares nonpar
value. Ineorporators: B. 8. Fentrass,
Charlee E. Marsh, Harlon M. Fen-
tress.
Amendments:
Ainsworth Drug Company, Ine.
Amar(llo; decreasing capital stock
from *150,000 to *115,IM.
Valley Motor company, Mule Shoe,
increasing capital stock from 58,000
to $18,000. •
Foreign permita:
Haynes Drilling Company, Ine,
Shreveport, La.; Texas agent, Ben H.
Powell, Austin.
It kills
ihosus
if
(Br United Pre.)
LEWISTON, ldaho, Jan. 4.-After
being locked up together for 15 days
d because of a smallpox quarantine,
T a Lewiston man and his diverted
I wife apparently have reached a
’ xeconcillation.
Three weeks ago Ray Farr visited
.2 Mrs. John Hall with Christmas toys
■ for his 4-year-old daughter. While
Mra. Hall's husband protested in.
dignantly outside the house, she and
Farr were confined in quarantine.
The enforced close companionship
V looted 15 days. Hall being daniod
admittance during the whole period.
What happened during the period
at quarantine has not been disclosed.
But Thureday night Mrs. Hall and
'Farr ware found unconscious in the
"—snow beside Feto'e wrecked zutamoz
bile. They hod started away together
| for an unknown destination.
I Mrs. Ball was taken to her home
while Farr will be in a hospital for
I some time. Their injuries were not
serious..
c.n tu.
Globe-News Want Ads Get Results
‘ 1 . , ... Mugoe i
(By The Aseoeisted Prem.)
DALLAS, Jaa. 4m Punctured by
bullets, a large sedan, taken from its
owner here last night by a wild-eyed
bandit who staged throe ether hold-
ups in rapid succesaion and was
frustrated in a fifth, was found late
today in a ditch near Dallas.
The bullet holes were thought to
have been rung up by E. H. Kants,
Jr., manager of a service station, who
fired on the bandit after he had
frustrated the letter’s attempt to rob
a drug store. There was no indica-
tion that any of the slugs had struck
the driver.
Several persons were questioned to-
day but all were released. It was
thought the bandit, who robbed two
individuals, a service station and a
pharmacy in a riotous hour of ac-
tivity, had eseaped the country after
abandoning the ear.
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 50, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 5, 1929, newspaper, January 5, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567756/m1/2/: 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.