Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 287, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 25, 1927 Page: 1 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
s
I ■
4
I
mi--
ac8 I
6
az
AMARILLO, TEXAS, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 25, 1927.
SIXTEEN PAGES
HOME EDITION
PRICE, FIVE
FOUR INJURED
FIRING SHOTS
AIR HUB IN CITY
a
ARE TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
LIGHT LANDING FIELD
se"
!
A
I
rer Hino
is
BANDITS WOUND
U. S. WOMAN IN
lj
RAID ON TRAIN
* In the next five to seven daya the pop-
JUNIOR PLEADS
(Hy The Aawoeinted Prems .)
WASHINGTON,
24,— Mexican
Doran,"
NOT GUILTY TO
Captain William Erwin piloting and
MURDER CHARGE
It
a few days. Eventually there will ba
will
(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
Hundreds of Workmen
I
g
(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
begin on the eriminal docket for this
4
3
THE WEATHER
♦ :
development of dairying." to Amarillo
for the fair.
last Monday, Mr. Emmett was advised.
»
re
with
mu::
r '
itar
i-e-e n" -
F
E
c
Prepare Tri-State Fair
Grounds for Exposition
Of Early Days Is
Camped in Canyon
Merchants Offer
$2 Value For $1
It’s Dollar Day
Texas like a blanket.
There te a Is0-hon
CHARTS; MAY
STOP SEARCH
sort of thing. but it's all impromptu.
Songa of the old days will bo sung
CARBON BUCK GAS
IS AUTHORIZED FOR
NEW PAMPA PLANT
(
the lighter machine, head-on.
Both ears ware damaged badly.
। POLICE STOP
PARADE AFTER
■s
#
FLIERS EXPECTED TO TER-
MINATE THURSDAY
to
A
August term of court this morning but
could not be sure which case would be
the first on the docket.
MUCH DAMAGE DONE BY FOR-
EIGN SACCO-VANZETTI
SYMPATHIZERS
T
around the mouth, where his face was
plunged against the steering pole of
his car.
Guthrie's injuries are a gash in his
face, from the lower lip to his chin,
which went to the bone, and minor euta
and bruises.
The Dotson family, in a Ford coupe,
were returning to the city after a pleas-
SYMPATHIZER TO
JAIL FOR THREAT
to use M million cubic feet daily of
residue from gasoline plants in Huteh-
inson county, about Borger.
SEVERAL MACHINES BEGIN OP
ERATION WITHIN NEXT
FEW DAYS “
NO STOCK FOR SALE AS COM
PANY HAS AMPLE FINAN-
CIAL BACKING
EXTRA FRISCO DIVIDEND
NEW YORK, Aug 24—St Loule-San
Franciseo Railway today declared an
etxra dividend of 25 cents a eommon
share in addition to the regular quat-
terl, dieidaad at 81.75 M caman.
N—...........
jE
isz
MISS FLORENCE ANDERSON SERI-
OUSLY HURT; ONLY AMER-
ICAN INJURED
ADRIAN, TEXAS, MAN SUFFERS
SEVERE GASHES AND
BRUISES
Here are two of the mont famous characters of the Southwest who will be on
band today at the T-Anchor raneh, near Canyon, for the annual round-up of Plaine
cowpunehers.. Both J. Frank Norfleet, left, and Col. Charles Goodnight “punched
cattle" in the Panhandle prior to IBM.
BOND SET AT $8,000, WHICH IT
IS EXPECTED HE WILL
FURNISH
♦ \
was fortunate, Detective Denton said,
that neither waa going at much more
than a snail's pace when they collided.
Had they been traveling at a high rate
of speed the consequence would have
been far more severe, Denton declared.
The injured were sent to the North-
west Texas hospital in a Griggs A Son’s
ambulance, where Dr. E. A. Johnston
II
i
(ByTheAssoclated Preaa.)
PARIS, Aug. 14.—Radicals, apparently
determined to keep up the Sacco-Van-
aetti agitation, made an attempt to car-
ry out another demonstration in Paris
(Dr United Press )
CAMDEN, N. J., Aug. 24— Rocause
ho was refused his wife's permission
to go on a one man strike and in
consequence threatened to bomb hla
home and shoot his mother-in-law,
A. Fratarello, Sacco-Vanzetti sympa-
thiser, was sentenced to jail here to-
day in default of bail.
days” in Amarillo have
to mean something to thrifty
The August "dollar day” la h
today!
Stores which are co-operating
The Glebe-News in this big m
saving affair n
nlsabte by the i
Mies Andersen’s
graphie represent
Ford To Budd
Model Highway
For One Dollar
__________________ f
BOSTON, August 14.—Henry Ford
will build a mile and a half of model
highway at Sudbury, near his famous
Wayside inn estate, for »1.
in exchange for this nominal sum,
which he will receive from the state.
Ford will eonstruet a strip of high-
way which it is estimated will cost
f240.000.
The new road will lend the heavy
Boston-Worcester traffic awsy from
the entrance of Wayeide inn.
I
1
plane. "Dallas Spirit," which hopped
from Oakland last Friday with
LEGION PLANS GO ON
_____•
ulation of the city will have been in-
creased by five families, which is th/
initial fores the air transport ia bring-
ing here.
It io the purpose of Mono Air Trane
port, aceording to Forster, to have a
landing field on a paved highway not
to exceed three miles distant from the
city. At this point there will be hangers
erected, ground mechanics’ shops, an
office, check rooms and the like, and
buildings in which expresa may be eter- (
ed and where mail may be handled.
Field Electrically Lighted.
This field, of course, will have to be
eleetrically lighted and beacon lighta
will have to be established for the
guldeaco of ships which may be ia the
air at night, going or coming.
No down town offices have been opened
so for, but they will be announced la
of the volunteer rescue
CLEVELAND, 0, Aug. 24.—Miekey
Walker, world’s middleweight cham-
Pinan, wen over Wilson Tarbo, Cleve:
••"d negro, by a decision in s it round
bandits "neriously wounded" Miso
Florence Andersen, an American, in an
attach yesterday on a train 11 kilo-
meters south of Kcaponeta, Mexico, the
state department was advised today by
J. Winoar Ives, vice-consul at Mazatlan.
Miss Anderson was the only American
Injured out of a party of 11, although
Ives plaeed the number of deed and
wounded as high at 11.
Several hundred men participated in
Two Famous Old-Timers on Hand
fore the disturbances were brought to
an end by a heavy storm soon after
midnight, thousands of dollars worth of
property was wrecked.
Police reserves drove the manifestants
from their meeting places earlier in the
night. They recouped at various points
well away from where the police were
concentrated, notably “on the boulevard
Sebastapol."
In the Montmartre section, they were
augmented, the police say. by a large
proportion of apaches and underworld
-chareters. ,
On ths way thsy smashed store win-
dows, scattering or pillaging the con-
tents of shops at Sebastopol. in ths ab-
sence of ths police, they had everything
their own way for a time.
In Montmartre, most of the cabaret
some short talks and that
atives and tele-
is were made im-
rernment and the
of Mm state of
glassss, accompanied by ysIls of death
to ths bourgeoisie."
The famous Moulin Rouge suffered
most. It had its glass front completely
demolished. Automobiles parked outside
were turned and their tires cut.
“When chased by the police the mob
hied itself to the arc do triomphe where
it was joined by many who had been
vainly trying to get to the embassy. At
the arch, the site of the tomb of the
unknown soldier, the newspapers re-
port, flowers were trampled upon.
After the mob left this locality, the
echo de Paris says ths flowers were re-
piaced on ths tomb by an American who
knelt and prayed.
and will be accompanied by two experts
who will explain It in leetres afternoon
and evening.
The dairying exhibit la in addition to
the covernment’s agricultural exhibit,
money enhibit and postage stamp ex-
habit. This exhibit is a hundred feet
ia length, la three seetiona, tea feed
deep and ten feet in height.
There are four persons in Northwest
Texas hospital, all more or less pain-
fully hurt, and suffering from shock,
as a result of an automobile collision
early last night on the highway to Vega,
about six and a half or seven miles
west of Amarillo.
Those injured are:
George L. Dotson, a supervisor for
the Western Union, living nt 805 North
Taylor street; his wife, Mrs. Florence
Dotson, and their son, aged about 10
years; and D. D. Guthrie of Adrian,
Texaa.
WESTERN UNION SUPERVISOR
AND FAMILY AMONG
THOSE HURT
ing scrutinised closely. If a likely
unexplored area ia discovered, the navy
may alter its orders to terminate the
search tomorrow night.
In the meanwhile. destroyers and
naval planes searehed the seas near
the great circle shipping lane about
2,000 miles west of San Francisco for
some trace of a wrecked plane or life-
rafts containing the crews of the miss-
ing racers “Goldsn Eagle” and “Miso
- - — _------2 Chief Engineer Parker has recom-
This exhibit was shipped mended permit to the Skelly company
company here, and the Mona Air Trane-
pert, for the handling af passengers
from down town to the landing fiela
Then It is likely the Meno Air Trans-
port’s down town office will bo estab-
lished in the bus office.
Direct conneetions with El Paso, Mid-
land. Dallas, Wichita, Uses, and Tulsa
will be made from the outset. Late*
this service, as the demand for it growa
will be extended in scope until there
will be airplane connect lone with vir-
tually every town in this part of the
state, in Oklahoma and in southern Kan-
Daily to Oil Fields
Daily trips are te be made to the oil
fields, too, Forster announced.
Only pilots licensed by the govern-
ment will be employed to handle the
ships of the Mono Air Transport, Forster
said. This will insure the safety of
the flying public. ..nd lessen damage to
the ships from Improper handling.
"There is just one thing which we
want the public to understand at the
outset,” Forster pointed out. "We have
no stock to sell. We don’t need any
money. We are fineneed now, and have
unlimited capital. What we want is the
passenger end ex press business in and
out of Amarillo. If we merit this busi-
the held up. which Ieoh place at 4 a. m., a hook-up between a bne transporttion
and more than 40 shots were fired, Ives * * “ • ■ —
monoplane—a wold aad Mach ehip-
in the banger at Bivine’ field which
ia Mie first of several machines
which the Mom Air Transport will
have bare within the nest twenty
The Hinno monoplane is a three-plat
ship, but all the others will be five
passenger planes, equipped with the
celebrated Wright whirlwind motors of
225 horsepower. There will be one of
the five passenger ships at Bivins' field
before September 11.
H. G. Forster of Amarillo, made the
announcement yesterday afternon that
Amarillo will be the hub for all nctivi-
ties of the Mono Air Transport. With
Amarillo yesterday become head-
quarters for the Mono Air Trana-
part
Thue was Amarillo made the hub
for air tranportatlon la every di-
reetion, and ultimately it la expeet-
ed the Mono Air Transport will
redeh out with a Hee of expreme
and mail planes, covering West
Mr. Dotson made a report, it was said,
that he was as far over on his side of
the road as he could get end that
Guthrie’s car was keeping to its side
of the road. until within a few feet af
the Ford, when it swerved and struck
GREENSBURG. Pt- August 14.- Strap-
ved to a stake to prevent him from
wandering away, 4-year-old Charley Gar-
land was housed in a dog kennel for two
weeks, it was revealed today with the
filing of a complaint charging cruelty
against Mr. and Mre. Jacob Steinman,
who lives near Grapeville, Westmore-
land county.
Roy Hallam. humane agent. found the
child, suffering from exposure, tn thet
kennel in the back yard of the Stein-
man home yesterday- A dog waa the
child’s only companion.
investigating. Hallam found Mrs. Til-
lis Lovell, the child’s mother, in the
Steinman house. Mrs. Lovell said her
husband had deserted hsr six months
sgo and she returned to the Steinmans,
to whom she is related. They gave shel-
ter to her and 3-year-old eon. Henry
1 Lovell, but refused, she said, to have
anything to do with the Garland child,
her son by a former marriage. The
’ Steinmans forced her, she said, to keep
. the older boy etrapped to the poet and
would not permit her to bring him into
• the house. The boy had no attentie?,
aside from water and food she was able
to carry to him surreptitiousiy, Mrs.
| Lovell said.
i MICKEY WALKER WINS
: OVER YARRO, NEGRO
I
SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 14.- Naval
officiate here were checking their
AIR TRANSPORT HEADQUARTERS IN AMARILLO
*** ♦ ♦ * ( ; •** • • • « « o • • • • a «
Bivouacked about campfires of
mosquito, with the chuck wagoa
in the background, swapping yarns
of the good old days, with Skil-
letty Bill Johnson of Canadian,
as master of ceremonies, nearly
a hundred men who punched long-
horns over the trackless prairies
of Texas prior to 1890, wore gath-
ered last night at the T-Apchor
ranch, just north ot Canyon, for
their annual roundup of each
other.
This story is written by a dude
wrangler out of the east, . and
some of the Idioms in it may be •
entirely foreign to the veteran
cowmen of the Panhandle and
West Texps, but what can you ex-
pect of a man who has just had
his first taste of a son-of-a-gun,
prepared by old John Turner of
Umbarger, than which there was no
better mess hand in all ef the
weat when cattle punching was a
he-man's affair?
It ia ths occasion of the annual
roundup of members of the cattleman's
clan of the early days. Thsre is a
nams for the organisation, of course.
And it is one of the oddest namss
imaginable. Ths fellows call It ths
Old Tims Cowpunchers Roundup of
Each Other on the T-Ancher Range.
Don't you love that?
No man ia eligible for membership
who didn't punch cattle on ths open
range prior to 1890. And the organisa-
tion now is holding its. siath annual
roundup of members. There it ons
woman member of the organ ization--
Miss Laura V. Hamaor, superintend-
ent of public instruction of Potter
county. Miss Hamner was elected to
membership and made necretary af
the organisation when every member
solemnly swore that she had "punched
cattle" out here in the west prior to.
1820. But that was because they all
liked Miss Hamner and readily admit-
ted they needed a woman to be their
secretary.
Predict Larges Attendance.
In yaara past there have been about
125 men present at these roundups,
but this year there wil be at least
175. Today is the big day of the
roundup, and last night was ths gath-
ering of the elans, the renewing of
friendships of many yeara atanding,
the reminiseing by grizzled vetearna of
the open range.
There never ia any attempt at form:
mality at these roundups. The old
cattle-punchers don’t want a fixed
program. They’re stilted things, any-
how, those programs. Of course, there
Vereeast Tilt fan. Thunder
Fer Amarillo end Vieinity —Thurday fair
"H.w"wor Tegm- Thuraday partly eloudy:
wermer in Panhendle.
a For New Mexleo- -Partly elondy Thurnday.
Erobebiy ehower •na thumderatofma north
“eneral in temperature
The Somuth.Dakthlesprencure area Na,
■anil •Jowiy nouthemstwara ng central
.hl .1rn sutndanub.c2okt.wenther over
lim ni: n“.otnrx""ha and
eenteel Pialm slain. The pr-N cmUb m
Kw over the Moeky mounain rekion" tv.
Cimpn eoMHIeM fame fal
Westhet Tharedey. "me
ATemperature by been at Amarine vetr
ure ride laat evening. Guthrie, In a
Hupmobile eight, waa headed out of
town. A report received by police
through Detective O. H. Denton, waa to
the effect that Guthrie’a machine hit
the Dotton car after crossing from the
right to the wrong aide of the high-
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Aug. 24.—Two
thousand manifestants issuing from a
protest meeting organised by the Saceo-
Vanzetti committee, descended on the
center of the city tonight. Mounted po-
lice ebarged with drawn swords and
temporarily disported the assemblage.
Mobt however ropeotedly gathered at
various placet, beeping the police bury
until midnight. '
A. H. Eichwaldt in the navigator's
cabin.’ . I
No word had been received into to-
day in Honolulu from the army planes
tent out to investigate reporta that a
green flare was teen Sunday night.
8,000 feet up on the aide of Mauna
Kea, the 13,000-foot mountain on. the
ialand of Hawaii.
Several persons reported teeing the
flare and it waa hoped that some of
the loot fliers might have loot their
way and been forced to land on
the rocky slopes of the peak.
The plane "Misa Doran.'' carrying
Mitt Mildred Deran, the "flying school
teacher," of Flint. Mich.. John Auggy
Pedlar and Lieutenant Vilaa R. Knope;
and the monoplane “Golden Eagle,” pi-
loted by Jack Froat apd navigated by
Gordon Seott, carried green and red
flarea aa a part of the emergneey
equipment.
4-YEAR-OLD BOY IS
STRAPPED WITH DOG
IN KENNEL 2 WEEKS
NEAR AMARILLO Cattleman’s Clan
patrona were panic stricken. Proprie-
tore put up their shutters; those who .
were not quick enough had windows and t off
customers showered with bottles and Ca
AUSTIN, Aug. 24—The railroad
eommission has authorized the General
Atlas Chemical company to use four
million eubie feet of casinghead gas
daily fer manufacture of carbon blaek
st Pampa.
Mre. Dotson has a deep gash running
from her forehead to the erown of her
head, which laid the acalp back, and the
boy has a major cut in his hesd. both
received from broken glass.
tions, today in Washington authorised Dotson’s injuries consist of bruines
Admiral R. H, Jackson, in charge of1 and minor cu“ and oov.ro laceration,
the search for the missing aviators,
to use his own judgment as to how
long the search should be continued.
From the local naval communications
office came word that charts were be-
A small army of workmen already ia
swarming over the Tri-State Exposition
grounds east of the city on the Fort
Worth pike, and by Monday morning
their numbers will have been trebled as
preparations are ruahed for the housing
of everything before the gates to ths big
spectacle and fall featival are opened
Sunday, September 11. ,
One of the biggest jobs right now is
to get machinery hall completed and In
readiness for the exhibits which will
crowd it to capacity. Workmen are
trebling the size efthis building.
Groundskeepers are laboring to put
the landscape In shape for the apening
of the exposition, men armed with buck-
ets of whitewash are going over the
fences, flag poles are being added to
the buildings, graveled drives are be-
ing put in tip top shape and everything
that It is possible to do ia being done
so that the grounds will present a spic
and spane appearance.
Coneesnions Along Drive.
States have been set for the conces-
sion booths along the principal drive
through the fair grounds, and the part
of the inclosure allotted to the big car-
nival company which will be here has
been measured off.
Ths plan ia to make the driveways
from the entrance to the grand stand at
the race track, and from the entrancs
-to automobile and merchants kali, a
midway, along which will be the carni-
val testa, the various concessions, rid-
ing devices and the like for the enter-
rainment of the fair vinitors.
Anouncement waa made yesterday by
Bob Emmett, secretary-manager of the
exposition, that arrangementa had been
completed to add one day of motorcycle
racing to the program of auto apeed
events already arranged. The motor-
eyelee will be raced on Tuesday of fair
week f
XVIII. No. 287.—-Associated Preas Day and Night Leased Wire.
tonight. A column of 800 collided with _____
EhnaPnlmcerinathnozouwovardgiseaastPo COMBING Of PACIFIC FOR LOST
"eeriously wounded” when the train I
upon which aho waa returning to Lea
Angeles from Mexico City wee attacked
by severe) hundred armed men at fear
o’clock yesterdar morning IM kilo-
meters south of Aeaponeta, Nayarit,
Mexico, the state department waa la-
fermed today.
About forty shots were fired on the
train which waa being operated by the
Southern Pacific railread, the depart-
ment’s advices said, adding that fifteen
other persons were reported either
killed er wounded. Mlaa Anderson re-
ceived a wound in her loft. aide.
Misa Anderson waa the only American
eltizen injured in the train attach out
ef a party of eleven Americana aboard,
the report said.
Upon arrival at Mazatian, Mexico, at
9:45 a. m., yesterday she was taken to
a hospital where she was to have been
operated on at 4 p. m. yesterday. Hos-
pital physicians reported her eondition
as "serious" since the intestines ap-
peared to have been perforated.
Immediate steps were token by the
American consul at Mazatlan to inform
Leo Junior was ararigned, on a grand
Jury indictment of murder in connection
with the fatal shoting of Irving Odell,
in the Forty-Seventh criminal court yes-
terday and pleaded not guilty.
His bond was set at $8,000 by agree
ment with District Attorney W. J.
Flesher.
The tnal was set for September 24
and a sped si venire of 100 men ordered
summoned.
Junior who has been in the Potter
county jail since the fatal shooting Sun-
day night at the etore building on
Buchanan street where his family and
Odell lived, probably will be able to
make the bond within a few hours. His
attorneys Mays A Mays Indicated that
a reasonable bonf could be made.
A special venire of 80 men has been
summoned in the trial of O. W. Webb
end Tom Meniek charged with robbery
with firearms. The ease has been set
for September 18- before Judge Henry
Bishop.
Another special venire of IM men has
been summoned in the trial of Lon Hig-
gins charged with the murder of H. L.
Shore lost Juns. The trial is set for
September 11.
District Attorney Flesher announced
PARIS RADICALS ATTEMPT ANOTHER DEMONSTRATION
Cowhands of 40 Years Ago Gathered MONO COMPANY
IN AUTO CRASH At T-Anchor Site Today in Reunion ISTO ESTABLISH
police quickly scattered the mob, how-
ever, snd orders were issued for in
creased vigilsnee of tho patrols.
Psris was taking stock today of the
damage wrought by infuriated radicals
in an orgy of demonstration laat night
after they were baffled in attempta to -
otago demonstrations against the exe- charts of the Pacifie ocean today
cution of Saceo and Vanzetti on the to ascertain whether territory uncov-
great boulevards and around the Ameri- ered.in. the navy’s search for the miss-
can embassy. It is estimated that be- j ing Dole air. racera warranted an ex-
tension of the aero hour originally
set for Thursday night.
Admiral Eberle, chief of naval opera-
T "N
RiLLO DALy News
______________________■ ’ i ; ‘ i . ' .
If somebody waa selling two dollars
for one, would you invest?
Well, that's practically what Ama-
rille merchants are doing today ia
the bimonthly “dollar day" bargains
they are offering to housewives of
this eity and the surrounding eoun-
tryside. .
isared by The News-Globe
TREAT TO RREVENT COAVEN. NAVY CHECKS
DISCOUNTED
- !
reported. After the attaek the train
proceeded to Mazatlan and Miaa Ander-
aon waa taken te a hospital.
A wound was found upon her left side,
and an operation waa deemsd necessary.
No advieea have been received aa te the
outcome.
Ives said Misa Anderson was return-
ing to Los Angeles, from Mealro City,
where she had attended summer lectures
at ths Mexican National university.
He advieed the state department that
he had made vigorous representations
to the governor snd military authorities
of the state ef Nayarit, in which the
attack occurred. The department la
understood to be awaiting more detailed
information as to ths attack itself and
the steps Mexican authorities have taken
to apprehend and punish the bandits be-
fore deciding upon a eourse of action.
If negligence In the pursuit and prose-
cution of the guilty becomes apparent,
Il is expected that representationa to
the Mexico City government through
diplomatic channels will be added to
those already made by Vice-Consul
Ives. Pending word to the contrary,
however, the Washington government
will assume that the Mexican authorities
are taking appropriate steps and will
take no action.
That makes the program of events In
front of the grand stand open with a
foolball game on Monday, the second
day of the fair; the pop pops on Tues-
day, automobile racing on Wednesday
and again on Friday, and another foot
ball game on Saturday.
Added to the speed events and ths
football game will be the extravaganza
which Ernie Young will present in front
of the grand stand each evening. Thia
company Includes 80 persona, and prac-
tically all of this number are young
women picked far the revue because of
their pulchritude. ------—-----
Box Reola Are Available.
It is Mr. Emmett's hope that he can
dispose of the box seats in the grand
stand ia advance of the fair. He pro-
poses selling them for the season, and
believes the price itaelf will be on in-
ducement to social leaders of Amari Ite
to take ths boxes, let alone the advan-
tags of knowing they have the best
aeata available for the entire week of
the exposition.
Tks midway will present special
vaudeville turns each afternoon and
evening,, aa well aa the usual midway
shows and riding devices. The fireworks
spectacles will be presented from the
infield inside the race track.
Government Dairy Exhibit
Ward eame to Mr. Emmett yesterday
that the department af agriculture at
Washington ia sending its exhibit, "the
<Bv The Armoemate• Presa.)
BOSTON, Aug. 24.—The bodies of
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti
L wil Ite in state at a funeral parlor
In the North End Italian section from
tomorrow afternoon until Sunday, the
Saeco-Vanzetti defense committee an-
nounced tonight. Sunday afternoon, a
funeral parade will march through the
downtown streets and past the atate
house, to Boston Common, where tne
caskets will be placed in automobiles
and the bodice taken to Forest Hills
I cemetery for cremation.
I Extensiot of a city ordinance re-
quiring burial within four daya of
death waa granted by city health au-
thorities late today, otherwise the
| funeral must have been held before
midnight. Friday. H hours after the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 287, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 25, 1927, newspaper, August 25, 1927; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569141/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.