Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 184, Ed. 1 Monday, June 16, 1930 Page: 2 of 10
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■ ■
we’
—
N
DIES IN SHERMAN;
OPEN MEETING
CHOOSE NOMINEES
%
PLAN RITES TODAY
FOR SENATE TODAY
ST.
(By The Amoetated Pres)
b
Wichita Talk to Farwll
the
t)
know that the
i
GREAT STRESS
o’eloek thia afternoon from"the Box-
"Christianity deals with personali- - (Continued from Page 1, Col. 1)
i R. Nicholas, seriously injured
SOUTH TEXAS
Herring hotel Friday, was reported
(Continued from Page 1, Co!. 1)
from the northwest, who opposed the
, olas.
.2
state government.•
PASSENGER KILLED
Minnesota and Wisconsin
in-
FORGERMANY
in Mew Jersey or elsewhere.
changes.
Mr. Gilbert’s report pointed with
Roger Stiles, 20, wife of a young
SMALL
shot and seriously wounded today
The
murh as 300 per cent
(Continued from Pago 1, Cel. 4)
SIDE GLANCES
MAN IS KILLED AS
CAR SKIDS ON HIGHWAY
eSoden Ii
I
$
5
DEATH TOLL
THREE PERSONS IN
(Continued from Pago 1, Col. s)
V
2
$
U
r
in man
1
4
•na
IOWA ARE VICTIMS
OF FLOOD WATERS
FLOYDADA'
TALKROUT
WACO YOUTH KILLED
IN CRASH BETWEEN
CATCHING SCORPIONS NEW
BUSINESS FOR MEXICANS
TORNADO DEATH TOLL
MOUNTS TO SEVEN
VICTIM OF PISTOL
DUEL REPORTED ON
ROAD TO RECOVERY
MME. LUPESCU TO
STAY AWAY FROM
steamed out of Toledo with 600 Elks
aboard.
Troy Blake, Amarillo, is being held
in the county jail under an indiet-
(
REPUBLICAN SENATOR SATS
THEY ARE MOST COMPE-
TENT AUTHORITIES
BLAKE CASE BOND
IS RAISED FROM
$2,500 TO $5,000
by maintaining an adequate national
defense and they are the most compe-
tent authorities in the world on the
will go into the
1th either Mayfield
er eased to seven today when John
Logan, a farmer living eight miles
from Augusta, Wla., died in a hos-
pital here. He had been struck by a
d
c
o
21 A
50)
to answer attacks
press."
by her husband, a bullet wound in
her body near the heart. A pistol
lay beside her. She wss taken to
a Harlingen hospital and little hope
was hold for her recovery. She was
alone in the room at the time of
the shooting. Her husband and five-
months-old baby were in an adjoin-
ing room eating lunch.
recovering last night by Or. R. M.
Bennett, shortly after he had visited
the wounded man in his room at St.
Anthony's hospital.
H. W. Hyde, held in the county
jail on charges of assault with in-
night search for his body was unsuc-
cessful.
been raised from $2,500 to $5,000. He
had not posted the amount at a late
hour last night.
Blake was arrested last week on
an auto theft charge. The indictment
was returned later.
The auto which he was eaid to
have stolen was recovered and re-
turned to the owner, L. B. Taylor,
Clarendon.
the Panhandle, officials in charge of
, the mooting announced. -
‘The sessions will be held at the
Methodist eamp grounds in Cota Can-
Speelal t The News
PLAINVIEW, Juno IE—From
CAMPAIGN TO BE CARRIED
THIS WEEK TO CLEBURNE
AND HILLSBORO
CITIES FROM WICHITA FALLS
TO FARWELL WILL GATH-
ER JUNE M
or Mrs. Ferguson, while some predict
Senator Tom Love of Dallas will be
among the four high candidates.
LAMESA YOUTHITOGO
ON TRIM. FOR SLAYING
ATTEND CONFERENCE
SESSIONS
a. ............ Island. In it were three life pre-
. - , servers and a hat. No tract of any
Everything ie in readiness for thoj bodies was found.
fsmse- '
temporary landing field. It went into
a tail spin, erushing on the Dixie
highway.
NEGRO SLAYS FARMER
OVER DEBT OF ONE DOLLAR
---—
WASHINGTON, June 15—Cominc
‘ tense of the navy admirals
to their views against ths
TWO DIE AS PLANE
CRASHES IN KENTUCKY
_ " ----------—— ! Several deals have been recorded antisfvetion to the accomplishments
Commereial fishermen took approx- where prices exceeded the valuation I under the outgoing Dawes plait, and
nately 15-000.000 neund- prawn ! given the property a year ago by as ! expressed con- let ion that Germany 11
titan political strife. and put him HEAVY RAINS DO MUCH
into office before the Republicans DAMAGE IN OKLAHOMA
make good their beast to control our I - < By The Amsociated Preen
vin Mayfield, 21, Horse Cave, and
Lemuel Timmons of Nashville. Tenn-
esses, were killed today in an air
(B> The Ameociated Fame.)
BUCHAREST, Rumsnis, June 15.—
subject.")
Senator Oddie’s statement followed
closely the recent criticism by Seere-
tary Stimson of thejattitude of some
"professional warriors" towards the
Haggard, 32, who died Saturday night
at Abernathy, following a lingering
illness.
—The body was necompanied to Ama-
rillo yesterday by his parents, Mr.
snd Mrs. G. M. Haggard and hia one
sister, Luellle. Interment will be in
Memorial Park cemetery with the
Rev. J. R. Hleka of the Panhandle
Baptist church officiating.
BRYAN MAN DROWNS.
I By The Ansociated Freea.) _
BRYAN, Texas, June 1».—Robert
Ryan, 36, son of a farmer living south
of Bryan, was drowned in tbs Brazos
river last night while swimming with
his brother. Ho was believed to have
(ByTheAmoeiated Prem)
EAU CLAIRE. Wis., June II.—The
death toll in Friday's tornadoes in
The Oklahoma Gity detention hos-
pital will be moved because patlente
complain of noise caused by oil drill-
ing nearby.
Speeial t The News ।
FORT WORTH, June 15MContin-
uing his campaign in East Texas,
Senator Clint C, Small, democratic
candidate for governor, is seheduled
to make addresses in Cleburne, Cor-
sicana and Hillsboro this week.
His speaking itinerary has been
reduced in order that the candidate
might devote more time in the east-
ern portion of the state of a personal
handshaking tour. His first addrsss
of the week will be made at Cle-
burne Wednesday night. Friday night
(Ry The Amosiated Prea
HORSE CAVE, Ky, June IS.—Mar-
of the state, are expected to att~ Denial that Mme. Magda Lupescu,
ths meeting. I companion of King Carol II when he
K. E. Higdon, professor of religion was only a prince in exile, has any
Sunday evening talks on Gandhi some
time ago.
ie that Mr. Small
run-off primary sail
a epeedboat to Fetes Island to at-
tend the annual Elba pienic.
The speedboat was found this
morning drifting near West Sister
WILL CONTINUE
IN EAST TEXAS
Cude’s body waa sent to Waeo.
The two men were en route to mo-
torcycle contest at Palestine.
the Dots community, near Fredericks-
j burg. In Gillespie county, ranch
homes were wreeked. Many residents
along arroyos and small creeks were
forced to flee their homes as unpre-
eedented rises sent waters of Beaver
Creek out of banks. In several pieces
in Mason county, track washouti were
experienced by the Orient, Wichita
Valley and Wichita Falla & Southern
railways. Train nervice between San
Angelo and Sterling remained at a
atandstill. f .
Highways near Olney, Vernon, Soy-
FATHER AND DAUGHTER
KILLED IN CAR CRASH
GRANBY, Colo., June IS.—A fathr
and. daughter were hilled and three
other members of the family were
Injured when their’automobile over-
turned today near here. <
The dead:
FRANK A. STROESSNER, 40. Don
ven. . ,
- . bettet ge Joe’ signature on that order when he geta eta el Ue
shewer. Juattobe boeisum Uhl." ,---
esmmetneu -r
Leesmree.cua
■OWEN FOUND DEAD
",."2..
B. Rowen. To, superintendent ,t th.
Norther Tosas Traction e ompany 1
einee 1908, was found dead in his |
room St a bedel to Mineral Wells to-
been coming to him after the meet-
ings saying he was the kind of a man
they had been waiting for," Mr.
Utecht said.
"If the people of the Panhandle
section will stand by him he will go
into the run-off without a doubt."
General sentiment at headguartera
trh I1
on the point of collapse after an
unprecedented period of Inflation,"
said the report.
"Reparations were not being paid
rad prospects for future payments
were uncertain. With stabilization of
currency and adoption of the Dawes
plan there came the turning point in
German reconstruction, and In Ue
succeeding years German economy
hah made remarkable riogress.
J toreyele he was riding struck a mule
rraxlng alqpg a road in the edge of
Fairfield. Max Sanders, who wa,
riding tandem on the motoreyele -
wax injured. He wa» taken to a
1 Teague hospital.
River near
• He hed Sone to the resort city
an effort to regain his health, un- ,
uriBdod by heart dnesne. He win;
buried St Minerai Wella tomor
Pj*8* trash three miles from here. Cmmereimi fishermen took i
pilot. J. Plummer, Piqua, Ohio, imately 15,000,000 pounds of
injured eritieally. from Georgia waters last yea
Plummer said he lost control of
the plane after it took off from a
midway aerosa the stream the ear
waa swept from ths slsb and the
occupants were forced to leap
through the car windows and swim
to the bank. The ear was swept
downstream and no trace of it waa
found.
Some loss of livestock was report-
ed but just kow great tkis loss will
be could not be ascertained because
of impaired communication.
nesota Republicann will n choose a
United States senatorial nominee to-
morrow from among three men-
two outspoken ovponents of the
Smoot-Hawley tariff bill passed by
Congreds, and the third espousing
only repeal of the eighteenth amend-
ment.
It will bring to a head an old po-
litical feud between Senator Thomas
D. Schall and Governor Theodore
Christiansen, Isadora of two power-
ful factions of the party In the state,
who reveal ne dirferenees on major
national issues during the campaign.
Instead the campaign had ended th-
night in a blase of personal bitter-
ness.
John F. Saib, a newcomer in state
politica, ia the third aspirant for
th* senatorlal nomination, and made
his appeal entirely to those favor-
ing repeal or modification of national
prohibition. His opponents support
prohibition but have kept the issue
in the background.
In addition Republicans will select
nominees for state and congressional
offices at the primary in prepara-
tion for 'the general election in No-
vember.
inches fell late last night and early
today, the second hoariest downpour
recorded by the weather bureau.
City officials estimated Us damage
in ths Oklahoma City business dis-
trict at $150,000.
A train bearing Governor W. J.
Holloway1 and 123 other Shriners
and their wives from the Shriners’
convention at Toronto, Canada, was
stranded one mile west of Luther
where a bridge waa believed unsafe.
The train backed into the town where
it was learned the track ahead had
been washed out. Another washout
later east of Luther prevented the
train from leaving. Workmen ex-
pected to have the line open tome
time tonight.
More than 200 motorists were re-
ported stranded by high water on
U. 8. highway No. 66 near Vinita
where Big Cabin ereek was out of
ita banks and flowing over the high-
Southeastern Oklahoma received
only light showers and although the
southwestern section had oom* rai
last night. It was light.
OH Field Shut Down
The Okishoma City oil field was
forced to shut down Saturday night
and Sunday in the river bad dietriri
where water flowed into the der-
dieks. Roads, made almost impass-
able by the storm, handieapped op-
erations throughout the fjeld as
heavy troche eould not reach the
leases.
the public
yen and the activities of the meeting
will be under the direction of Charlee
Marion Roee of the Texas Christian
University snd Southwest regions) di- t
rector of the United Christian Min- j
aionary Society.
The conference will continue until
next Sunday afternoon when it will
be fraught to a close with the Friend-
ship Circle Farewell ceremony.
Representatives from the various
Fanhandle Christian churches, as
well aa others from different parts
waxa^h^X^is-
Arnold Greer, 20, filling station ope-
Eator, Waxahachie,, waa injured ser- j
—sly today when the,!
truck he wae driving skidded and,
turned over, catapulting him into al
tree beside the road. The aceident
oceurred between Sardis and Midi*- l
thlan, near here, during a rain storm. I
He was brought to a hospital hero
and at a late hour, was still uncon-
I sei our
Two ARE NEAR DEATH IN
STABBING. SHOOTING AFFRAY
GALVESTOKArezas,mn"as_An.
drow.Asp, 5, dredge boat employe,
and Mn. Oscar Engbald, 48, wer in
hospitais here tonight after an at-
fray in which the womam waa shot
aad Asp wae etabbed with an Ice
s. pieke..
.Both were in • serious conditiom.
? Police paid Asp's daughter roomed at
Mrs. Engbald'a home, Pollce were
" investigating but no charges had I
been filed. 1
New Mexico-Texas state line, repro-
sentatives ofeities and communities
on thB United States hlgbwsy Ns. 7*
in Texas will meet ia Floydada Fri-
day afternoon, June 20, to pertect
organised plans for promoting and
hastening the eompreton of th* hard
surfacing of the entire route, and
promoting travel ever the road.
The meeting te being called upon
the Initiative of the Plainview Board
of City Development through its
highway chairman, L. S. Kinder, pio-
neer jurist of Plainview, and tha
chamber of commerce of Flozdada.
Chambers of eommerce of all the
cities served by ths road are being
naked for enoperation in making the
ties; by thet I mean the personality
of the spirit, for God is of ths spir-
it,” continued Dr. Smith.
He endsd his sermon by showing
that when any one geta away from
the truth that acme one whe loves
thst person must hsip bring him back
if he ie to be saved, and to put a
person out of the church does not
save him, but only sends him further
from God.
Dr. J. A. Bays at the Polk Street
Methodist Church used as kis sub-
ject "The Othsr Prodigsl Son."
In this sermon he took up the eass
of ths elder brother thst is given in
the parable of the Prodigsl Son.
"Though we never think of the older
son as a prodigal there are many
facts that show thst bs was far from
perfect,” said Dr. Bays.
"There was no particular show of
love or affection on his psrt over the
return of ths younger eon, but on
ing end learned the cause he com-
plslned bitterly. Thie revealed the
selfish side of his nature,” continued
Dr. Bays,
Dr. Bsys brought out other facts
•nd points of the ease to ehow that
the elder son was a prodigal.
At the Central Presbyterian Chureh
(Ry The Amoeated Prana)
DES MoiNS, Iowa, June 15.
Three persons wsrs dead today, vic-
tims of heavy rains that have swept
the state during the last three days.
Davenport officials reported near-
ly s imeheko /rain in a 24-hour down-
pear, duplicating rains yesterday
which did extensive damags te crepe
throughout the etate, crippled lines
of coimunication, pat rivers out of
their banks and destroyed city prop-
erty estimated at $00,000 in Sioux
City.
Cecilia Nelaa, 81, of Winterset:
Mrs. Leo Hantings, 21, of Davenport,
end Albert Da Hack, M. of Indianola
drowned yesterday. They had gone
I to see the swollen watera of South
Nobles of the Mystic Shrine here,
were brought to Oklahoma City
from Luther late today.
(By The Amsoelated Premy
DURANGO, Mexico, June it.—A
Mexican family has started A BCW
business—catching scorpions.
The state government recently an.
neuneed it would pay far all live
scorpions delivered to it, and a fam-
l ily of eix here entered into the cam-
paign with a vim. In one day 1,000
i scorpions were caught. The price av-
eraged 4 cents per inseet, and the six
ecorplon hunters received 840.
' Before the campaign ends, the fam-
ily expects to make enough momey
to carry it through the rest of the
year.
Most of the day’s cateh waa made
in the city’s slums. The govern-
ment uses serum extracted from live
neorpions as sn antidote for eeorploa
bites end during one month of each
year pays 2 1-2 cents for each mate
and five eents for each female seor-
pion.
Wichita Falls, Iowa Park, Electra,
Oklaunion, Harrold, Vernon. Thalia,
Rayland, Crowell, Paducah. Matador,
Floydada, Dougherty, Lorkney, Plain-
view, Olton, Earth, Muleshoe, Farwell
and Texted. For many years the
road from Vernon to Farwell i has
been part of the Lee highway wfheeh
traverses the United States frBm
east to west. Formerly the’ rout*
from Crswell to Farwell was part
of the old F. F. F. highway. From
Vrnon to Muleshoe the highway I*
state highway 2* at the presen tvtime.
- Much of Road Paved V
in sending out' the notice 9 the
meeting et Floydada. Maury Hopkins,
manager of the Plsinview Board of
City Development, has this to say,
of ths condition of the rood at th*
present time:
"From Wichita Falls to Vernone
and from Wichita Falla north to th*
Texas Uns, of course the read has
been psved a number of years. From
Vsrnon to Crowell, the paving waa
opened last month with approprinte
ceremonie». From Crowell to Pa-
ducah, part of th* road ia patved and
the other is being paved. From Pa-
ducah to Motley county's east line,'
it is our information that the pave-
ment is open snd is being traveled.
Motley county has voted ths bonda
fsr paving Ite part of tha road.
Floyd county has not voted ita bonds
as yet but haa an excellent grad*
through the county. Halo county
haa voted bonds and ths grade end
drainage structures hsvs been in for
some time. Psving of thst part of
the road east from Plainview to the
Floyd county lino haa been con-
tracted, and work will start seen.
From Plainview west to the Lamb
county line, no paving haa been
done but the grade is ready. From
Lamb county west to the New Mexico
line there is an excellent dirt grade.
Such ie the physlcsl condition of
the road through Texaa."
Important Highway
Commenting upon the importance
ot the rood, Hopkins in the notice
continues:
"We believe thst Highway No. 70
through Texas, and far that matter
through thia part of the Southwest
in particular, should be advertised
and given more attention than it
has been in the past. For the peo-
ple of Oklahoma, north and west
Texas, and all the eastern states,
highway 70 offers an excellent road
not only into our own section of
Texas, but on to Now Mexico, Ari-
zona, California, and the Paeifio
coast. Conversely it effers a splen-
did road for the people of the Pacific
eoaat to the eastern part of the
United States.
"Much is bsing hsard of ths fhe
ous Carlsbad cavern at Carisbyr.
N. M. Many roads are being Ko-
jected In the direction of Carisbaki.
With the splendid connection that
highway 70 has with the road from
Carlsbad to Clovis, N. M., thee is
no reason why highway 70 shbuld
not carry n big part of the uvern
travel.” Voo
break the spirit' of these splendid
men.”
"It should be remembered," he
added, “that they are not permitted
ia, and were I
when their re- i
bor; that with returning normal con-
ditions our foreign trade will con-
tinue to expand.”
Shouse ia Statement.
The presidential statement came
simultaneously with one issue by
Jouett Shouse, chairman of the Dem-
ocratic national executive committee,
laying down the challenge that the
Hawley-Smoot measure would be "the
isauo" in the approaching congres-
atonal elections.
"The Grundy bill ia thus made the
issue of the coming congressional
campaign; Shouse said. "The people
will render their verdict next Novem-
ber and the Democratic party feels
at concern over the results."
Tariff Major Isaue.
It waa generally agreed among fac-
tional leaders tonight that the tarjft
would be a major Issue in the bien-
nial elections, with indications that
opening at noon today of the Ama- The missing men are Charles H
ii -n mi aramazous
by approximately 70 persons frou Who was piloting th. speedboat. Lon don, t reAt‛jes.t.r Oddi s. R.pub-
Tho men were last seen yesterday j lican, Nevada, todayyisaued a atate-
morning as their speedboat circled mont assorting “They . 2
about the eteamer Greyhound ss it | successful way to preberve peace is
- meeting a auceess.
.Funeral, services will be hold at 3 ..In,Tnxa 2 emw Tnavoonithroukh
Logan’s death occurred while relief
work gained added momentum ia the
stricken areas, with national guards-
men, Red Cross . workers, business
men and others co-operating. The
guardsmen still pstrollsd the sections
around Menominee, Wis., and at Ran-
dolph, Minn., where the storms took
their heaviest telle.
Funds were being collected at Me-
nominee, Eau Claire and at Randolph,
with local, organisations taking
charge of the money to be used in
emergency relief work.
J
A
Prelinghuysen and Representative
Fort.
Widespread publication of a speech
in New Jersey last eight by Senator
Baird, Republican, New Jersey, in
which he was quoted as saying Preai- l
dent Hoover was "intensely inter-
ested" in seeing Mr. Morrow elected
to the senate, drew word from the
White Moue* that the supporters of
Fort and Frelinghuysen had protested
•"4 that the president wae taking ao ‘ Br The Associated Pre.. ,
part between Republican candidates' FAIRFIELD, Texas, June 15.—;
। James Cude, 18, of Waco, was killed
instantly early today when his m«
Ths heaviest rainfall appeared to
flying timber while eeeking shelter be at Oklahoma City, where 6,94
from the storm. —
g
way, causing much damage to ths
shoulders of the road, but it was be-
Heved no damage was dons to the
pavement.
The Sen Antonio trio attempted
to cross ths rapidly rising Nueces
in spite of wsrnings given by par-
sons on the bsnks. When about
mour and in Coke county were dam-
aged by washouts. N
Row crepe were believed benefitted <Br The Anoetated Pres)
where they were not washed away FOREMAN, Ark., June IB.—Elmer*
and ranges were helped but the heavy Watts, 37, farmer and ex-convict, waa
downpours, el cloudburst proportions killsd near here today during an al-
ly places, intertupted grain tereatjon with a negro over a $i debt
tinE. ' ' i Watts claimed the negro owed hie
:---- j- - wie."
Sales of new automobiles In Ok Sherift N. P. Sanderson of Little
encouraged. Another, who might
have run a good race when it waan't
stylish to bolt the ticket, wanta to
lead us to the land of milk and honey
by fighting Tammany and Raskobism,
an issue with which Texas is not
concerned."
Senator Small aald that thinking
people who recognise the Democratic
party aa an ageney of good govern-
ment had better look around now
for some good man, untainted by par-
MINISTER DELIVERS STIRRING
SERMON ON TRUTH’;
' BAYS SPEAKS
Dr. J. H. O. Smith began his ed
interim ministry at the Fl rat Chris-
tian Church yesterday morning with
a prelude on father ia honor of Va-
Ihor's Day.
The subject for the sermon st the
morning hour was, "Erring From the
Truth."
I* thie sermon he brought out the
point that truth must walk ia the
straight and narrow way and that it
any one errs from the truth that they
must seek 13. Jesus aald, "I am the
way, the truth and the light.” Thia
ia not only what he taught but what
he was, according to Dr. Smith.
"Truth is ths way from God to
man and the way from man back to
God. . Tke word of God ia greater
than anything else that haa ever been
said or written,” eald Dr. Smith. He
alee brought out the thought that
God ia not looking on but that he la
hero with us.
bill undar the leadership of Senators
Borah. Idaho, and Norrise Neb., would
join in the campaign against it.
Thd Hoover statement came as a
surprise to tariff observers outside
of congress. They had been led to
believe no announcement of the ex-
ecutive's attitude would be made
until he had made a thorough study
of the bill's provisions and sent it.
through the routine departmental
channel for comment. The bill itself
will not go to the White House until
tomorow as Vice President Curtis
hss yet to aign it
Possible Answer Seen
A possible answer to the question
regarding the suddenness of the
Hoover announcement was seen in
hit statement- to this offset:
"Certainly no president, with his
other duties, can pretend te make
that exhaustive determination of
the complex facte which surround
each of these 3,300 items, and which
haa required tho attention of hun-
d reds'of men in congress for nearly
a year and n third; That responsi-
bility must rest upon the Congress
in legislative rate revisions.
Under th* sxisting flsxlbls clause,
written into the low for the first
time in 1922, the president said, the
task ot adjustment of rates was im-
posed directly upon ths president
with such limitations ss to dolay
action. Aa a result, he added, it waa
“largely inoperative, although impor-
tant benefits ware brought to the
dairyin*, flax, glass, and other in-
dustries through it.”
fered fractures of the skull and legs. ; _
MATADAVN r Mill r The men, executives of a restaurant SATS NATION CAN MEET OBU-
MUIUhTuLE, Nuix ““X CATONS ST RADICAL
Fitnhe’s parents when the plane CHANGE
ment returned by the Potter county .... . . -
grand jury. Bond in his case has “WillaeyL .county farmer, "aa found
the houw hnndewhanshnasame ds“- the senate Republican independents
ocintedrre)
1*., June 16.— Min-
CAROL AND WIFE
j able to meet the Young plan obliga-
- lions. The agent-general, whose task
n ~ ~1 s' ends with ths start of Young plan
By George Clark
■ ■ ..... 11 t ' “When the experts of the Dawes
' j committee were called together at
the beginning of 1924. Germany was
at Eureka Springe, will act as dean intention of returning here at pres-
of the conference. C. M. Ross is di- ent, was issued by a high official to-
rector and H. A. Shaw, pastor of the day.
Memphis Christian church is as-
YANCEY REACHES ARICA
(By The Aeeoeiated Press)
UMA. Peru, June 16.-Captain
Lewis A. Yancey, who left her* yes:
terday for. Arica and waa unreported
during the night, reached that city
this morning.
passenger was killed and a pilot se-
riously injured in an airplane erash |
near here today.
Hansyl Johnson. 24, of Clearfield,
died soon after being taken to a hos-
pital. Milton Fritshe, 24, .Merlon, suf-
l
(BP The Aeeoeiated Prena.)
SHERMAN, Texas, June 15—Rob-
ert Harvey, M, retired railroad engi-
neer and Confederate veteran, who
piloted the first locomotive over the
Texaa A Pacific railroad from Dallaa
t* Fort Worth la 1876, died today at
hie home here. ’ 1
He waa commander of the Mildred
Leo Camp of the United Confederate
Veterans and recently returned from
attending the annual Confederate re-
union at Biloxi, Miss.
In 1474 he waa sent to Dallas by
the railroad and put in chrge of ths
historic old locomotive “Thomas A.
Seott," the only engine on that line
which ever wae given a name.
Funeral services will bo held at
2:39 p. m. tomorrow end burial will
be here. Survivors are three eena,
Earl. George aad Robert Harvey, aU
of Sherman.
WOMAN FOUND SHOT
(By Ths Associated Press >
RAYMONDVILLE, June 15 —Mri.
SHANGHAI REAL ESTATE (By Ths Assoristsd prem.)
SOARS TO RECORD PRICE Germany can meet her obligations .
__ j under the1 Young plan, and develop j
. B, ne AmnociatetPre.,, ) i -dustrially, only by immediate and
SHANGHAI, June 15.— Real estate radical budget reform, waa Bounded
values in Shanghsi have risen to now by s- Parker Gilbert, agent general
high records despit the silver slump for reparations under the Dawei
snd the continued low money ex- plaa. In his final report today.
. The statement said the report that
Blatant director and also director of Mme. Lupeseu was hurrying here to
recreation and social life. prevent a reconciliation between Car-
Mr*. W. P. Bennings, wife of the ol and his divorced wife, Queen Hei-
pastor of the Lubbock First Christian en, had originated with newspaper
church, will ct.as dean of women correspondents here and at Budapest,
and director life evaluation J, w Hungary. One rumor was that she
Boultinghouse, pastor of the Here- would be made one of Queen Helen’s
ford Christian .chureh, is dean ofindies of honor, while another cred- .
men and inatructor. Mrs. Bessie ited Mme. Lupescu with planning the [ during a pistol duel in front of the
Hart,.seeretary.of oTtae Tera. coup Which brought Caro! home rom Herrini
cL"X MtustonaryTeoexin his bid for the
eiety of Fort Worth, will be another „pe:. ... iu
instructor. Mrs. E. T. Cornelius of , Please set the mind of the world
th. Mexican Christian Institute ofateane rezardinK. Mme. Lupescu,"
Sa. Antonio, will act as director ot “d the statement.. "She is too as-
worship. Jas per Vogue la conl ere nes • ,peron to return to Bucharest tent to murder, in connection with
librarian and evangelist of the Pan-ilor A long time, if ever. Sho has her the affray, had not posted bond of
handle district of tbs Texas Chris- income, and knows she cannot induce $2,000 at a late hour last night.
tian Missienary Society. F ICarol, now that he has taken the do- Th, duel as said to have been
The boys and girls wbe will attend cisive plunge, to draw his mind away the climax of two years of domestie
from the First Christian chureh ars; ' from the serious work awaiting kim.” i troubles involving ths wife ot Nich-
Dorothy East, Dorothy Russell,____—7—;—’ "-1
Evelyn Crowe, Maurino Trollinger, TCYAQ MCTCDANQ
Anna Ruth Denton, Louis Simmonds, ILAAJ VLILANS
Maxins Grant, Lloyd Boxwell, Alton
Boxwell, Donna Clyde Wright. Mervin 1 WII I ADrN A A MD
Walker. Elizabeth Jameson, William vTlLL UrCN UAMr
Gray aad Elizabeth Reynolds.
enuhen Wusasneetcamemtactegate. 1e HERE ON SUNDAY Contraet tor the new school In the j Dr.R. Thomsen continued his talks
composea ot: Hicks Daniels, chair- Bivins addition will bs 1st Wednes- of Gandhi and India. Ths talk last
man; J. aWina. S. M. Bralley, H. ------ day. it was learned yesterday. iniEht was on, Gandhi and the Caete
X.Crudgington and Ed S. McKinney. . Plans were being complete* last Miss Maude Fletcher, head of the Sytemo India.”
■ I. . ....... । ,4 * ’ night for the annual encampment of Sanborn school for several years, was -n his confession of faith Gandhi
unnurn ururnAn the Texas Veterans of Foreign Wars, elected to fill the position of prineo explained what he believed about the
HuiJVtK NEUIKAL which will open here next Sunday, pal in tha new Bivins school, which aystem, "eow. protection,"
"VV’-I "--nuu- , continuing through Monday and Tubs- wil ba ready for occupancy at the "untouchables" and yings of that
111 Dint prrrrA day. . start of the September term, it ia be- nature. Pr. Thomse showed the
IN KAGE DL I WrrN One of the features of ths meeting Nleved. bearing of these problems on British
"V HA-- v--! will be a memorial aervice to be held Actual construction on the school rule and Indian independence.
MnDDnU Alin tnOT in, the City Auditorium at 3:13 which will cost $50,000, is expeeted _ Dr Thomsen began this series of
MUKKUW ANU I Un I otU*k next.Sunday evening, in hon to start within the next week.
mow l VIIB or of the departed members of the • _________
ONTREATYVIEW FIRST CHURCH
_______.__
“S^S^SERYrCESWlLBE
tris HEID HERE TODAY
SSSrtS! FDR J. V. HAGGARD
life. He particularly has been at-.
tacking the "profensional political
tribune" of Ferguson, Love and May-
field. These political characters, he
Mid, have been running for office
no long that it ie about time for
Texaa to retire them on a pension.
In his recent Sulplir Springe
speech Senator Small iMwrred to Mr.
Love aa one of the greatest trouble
makers” Texas politics has ever
known. Discussing statements made
about him to the effect that he “was
a good man but not well enough
known,” the senator replied that
some of the well-known "leading
candidates" were a little "too well
known.” •
"And where are these 'leading can-
didates' trying to lead us?" he asked.
"One of them," he said, "wanta to
lead us to the chute where we will
be saddled with a 360 million dollar
bond issue. Another wants to lead
us to where ths tax will be removed
from our lands and put on ginger
ale and malt extracts, and where the
manufacture of beverages outlawed
by the prohibition statutes would be
AMARILLO DAILY NEWS. .
ODDIE DEFENDS SMITH OPENS ■«£ CIMTC.SMM1
PASTORATE AT
_______ I organization.
(By The Aesoeigted Pre) j A special section will be set aside
WASHINGTON, June 15. — With in the auditorium for Gold Star
only two days to go before New Jer- Mothers.
sey Republicans veto their choice tor C. C. Gibson, representing the
the United States senate, the White World war veterans and A Petersen
House reasserted today the Presi- of the Span tab-American War voter-
dent's neutrality in the race between ans, will participate in the cere.
Ambassador Morrow, former Senator monies.
PAIR POSTPONE FLIGHT
. (By Tbs Amociated Press)
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., June 15—
William 8. Breck and Edward F.
Sckleo, Detroit fliers, tonight post-
poned until Tuesday their scheduled
round-trip flight to San Diego, Califs
after conferring with local weather
observers.
LET CONTRACT FOR
I SCHOOL WEDNESDAY
well Brothers Chapel for James V.
lahsma since January 1 phew a de-1 River Counts, followed by a poise,
erease of more than 10,0p0 over thescoured the countryeide an a vain
aame patted in 1022. —_______search for she negro.
■““EE
11 TODAY AT CETA tou286.--amas
parties were,organised her* tonigbt
i .— -- te visit Lak. Eris islands to hunt
J enwmu-, ta tor seven Toledo men who may have
APPROXIMATELY SEVENTY TO drowned yesterday while racing in
OKLAHOMA CITY, June 16.—Tor-
rential rains, accompanied by elec-
trical displays, flooded central, east-
ern and northeastern Oklahoma last
night and early today, doing damage
amounting to hundreds of thousanda
of dollars.
1 Streams were sent out of their
’. AS ONE MAN DIES
nv vise. """ ing more than 250 negroes to flee
from their homes in the southeastern
part of the elty. An unestimiated
amount of damage waa done to
ripened wheat ready for harvest in
the storm arsa. Traffic waa para-
lysed for several hours in some sec-
tions.
Heaviest Oklahoma City
penpij 'seven num meh
NAVYADMIRALS
(By The Anmoeisted Press.) .
LAMESA, Texas, June 16.—Ira M-
Keo will face trial here tomorrowon
charges of murder in the slaying May
1 of W. E Billingsley, Sparenbure
merchant, who eras injured during •
gun battle which followed an attempt-
ed holdup.
McKee waa arrested May M near
Athens by a group of eoven pence
officers and Texas Rangers, who had
trailed him for several weeks aeross
Texas.
Mrs. Emma Mayhall, charged as a»
accomplice of murder in Billingsl’s
death, waa expected to be brougheto
trial after McKee’s case bad ben
completed. She was arrested in RM*
ger May 4 after a gun battle when
offieers attempted to arrest McKen
CARO OF THANKS. X
We wish to express our appreelH.
tion of the many kind and comforf
ing expressions of sympathy extend-
ed during the denth ot our beloved
wife and mother, for the beautiful
floral offerings.— w. C. CRAIN, bps-
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 184, Ed. 1 Monday, June 16, 1930, newspaper, June 16, 1930; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1568101/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.