Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 339, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 16, 1927 Page: 4 of 50
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SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER IS, 1927.
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PAGE FOUR
MISSISSIPPI STAGES COMEBACK IN COMMERCE
PRIZES
1 By Th. Amociated Prema>
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PEPS YOU UP!
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ALBANIAN MINISTER
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parentally.
To Be Divorced
STINNETT’S NEW
CONFER AT CLOVIS texas MOHAIR BIDS
BANK IS OPENED
REJECTED FIFTH TIME
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For Chilly Fall Evenings
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Silver
Foxes
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Gish Radio Service
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The Amarillo Silver Fox Ranch
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Phone 4788
Rom Hotel Bldg.
AMARILLO. TEXAS
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Markets Special
News Items
SANTA FE WAYMEN
OF FOUR DIVISIONS
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PAROLE FOR GORDON
CAMPBELL APPROVE®-
10 a. m.
U. S. Weather
Forecast
Aged Woman Says
86 is Too Old
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MADRID, Spain, Oct. IB.- Women crim-
inal, are not numerous in Spain, and
Sunday
11 a. m. - Central
Presbyterian
Church"
O.LS. CHAPTER CELEBRATES
TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY
WITH PROGRAM LAST NIGHT
Amarillo
Broadcasting
Daily
I
8 to 8:45 p. m.
Bud Averill’s dance
Orchestra of
Lindyland
OFFERED FOR
"A---- Jr l
AMARILLO SUNDAY NEWS AND GLOBE
TSCANfed DivoaCE
(By United Press.)
EDINBURGH, Scotland. Oct. 151Con-
stance Talmadge, American motion.Pi-
ture star, was granted a divorce today
from Captain Alistair Mackintosh.
farrad W i t h a
ana four prizes of each and fifty
If you are interested in a radio at $120.00 to $250.00 let us
put a SHAMROCK beside any Radio in this class for com-
parison.
...J VIII A delleiona refreshment courao was
number, ' served at the close of the evening.
Campbell was convicted in May 1925
and recently was recommended for
parole' by the parole haard— —
4
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Prince Edward island has 1,000 Silver Fox Farms, Michigan has 352, Wis-
consin 340, Oregon 116. Colorado 58 and Texas has one. The Rocky Mountain
News, of Denver, says that the fox ind ustry is the most valuable asset that has
come to Colorado in twenty years. The business has grown in five years from
one pair of foxes to a FIVE MILLION dollar industry and this paper says that
foxes will bring more money into the state than sugar beets.
The Amarillo Silver Fox Ranch is the parent ranch in this state and will
profit from sales to other ranches. There is room in this state for hundreds of
ranches. A fox ranch as a usual thing will pay about 15 per cent cash divi-
dend the first year and a one hundred per cent increase in foxes; the second
year about twenty-five per cent cash dividend and a one hundred per cent in-
crease in foxes; by the third year most ranches pay a one hundred per cent
cash dividend and continue to increase the number of foxes on the ranch.
Work is being rushed on the pens and construction work and the foxes
will be shipped here in November. A few thousand shares are available at
par one dollar a share. We do not believe that it will ever sell as low as par
after the foxes arrive as this company owns twenty-five pain of thorough-
bred, pedigreed, registered foxes thatwill probably raise us from 50 to 75 pups
this first season that will be worth 11,000 each when they are two months old.
Call or write
KANSAN APPOINTED ON
U. S. RADIO COMMISSION
(B, United Prena.)
WASHINGTON, Oct. IB. -Sum Pickard.
Kansas, was appointed by President
Coolidge today to ba a member of the
federal radio commission.
Pickard will take the post of Henry
A. Bellows. whose resignation was an-
nounced simultaneously with the new
appointment. The post of Col. John S.
Dillon, who died recently, remain, va-
cant temporarily.
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ALL
W. 0. W.
Are requested to be at
Hall Tuesday night, Oc-
tober 18th, 1927.
Important Business and
Banquet.
I CLOVIS,. M., Oct. 15. —An annual
general mooting of the Maintenanee of
K Way organisation was held in Albuguer-
que today.
Delegates from the four divisions of
a the Santa Fe railway company were pres-
out at the meeting. The divisions repre-
. 1 seated are the Pecos division, the Slaton
division, the Belen division and the Rio
Grande division. A general meeting of
I the officials of the different divisions
L la held every year at some point in the
F state.
I prizes of 1100 each.
I j la an ad carried in The Amarillo
charges with gentleness, but are strong
diseiplinarians when necessary.
A large percentage of those convicted
of robbery are the servant girls from
outlying country villages. Others have
been convicted for Crimea of violence
against husbands and numerous unmar-
ried women for infanticide. .
Everything is done in the women's
jail to recall the inmates back to honest
ways. Work is provided for prisoners
conducting themselves well. They are
able to earn as much as three dollars
weekifat needlework and ironing. With
their earnings they may purchase food
luxuries. Some of them are thus able
to add sweetmeats and other tidbits to
the prison ration.
One of the greatest punishments for
the women is to be expelled from the
workshops for misconduct and confined
to their coll.
After an hour's recreation in the open
courtyard each day they are permitted
to converse, but not loudly.
WASHINGTON, Ort. 16—Attorney
General Sargent today approved a poroe
- — , CampbeHt; otaGreat Vallz
Mont., nerving a two y«r wntsncw-A-
:t federal prison at Leavenworth, for
using the maila to defraud in conneetion
. ,a at.. --ntnre
(Br United Press.)
WOOSTER, O., Oct. 15. At 86,
a woman is too old to be divorced,
Mrs. Minerva Kerr said in her re-
ply to the divorce petition of her
husband, Joseph Kerr, 62.
The couple separated more than 20
years ago and since then have been
living in adjoining houses on the
same street.
Besides objecting to the petition
on the strength of age, Mrs. Kerr
chargod her husband wanted his
freedom to deprive her of a part of
his 172 a month pension.
Furthermore, Mrs. Kerr charged,
her husband supports a pretty bob-
bed haired woman. When he bought
the woman silk stockings with
bloomers to match, said Mrs. Kerr,
“I made up my mind I would keep
a tab on the monthly pension.”
slogan. You may win.
No need to tell you about the wonderful achievements of
radio. The great number of homes now radio-equipped attest
that. But if you have never purchased a radio, you are for-
tunate.
(Br United Press.)
PRAGUE, Oct. 16. — An 18-year-old
Berlin student was hey today for the
a=anam
"‘atggzre:*
_ c2.a m the Father or Waters by the packet boots snd “barge lines has increased
Tonnage being carried । . i t glorious •ges when the river was
mo In the last few years that commerce la again aimost as great aa in.ne g to
XlX’SZ gafaios "czi,p Eaoficma" I ; -*• Ian 15045506 *— •'
river freight moved through St. Louis alone. _____________________ ________________
I assassination of Ceno Bey. who came
’ here three days ago aa Albania’s first
minister to Czecho-Slovakia,
“Boy was a traitor to Albania and
therefore had to die,” said Algiwiath
Bebi, who confeased he had assassinated
the Albanian minister.
Bebi said he came to Prague, on Wed-
nesday for the express purpose of kill-
ing Bey.
Bey was dining in a cafe when the
shooting occured. Two shots were fired.
The minister died on the way to a hos-
pital.
Bey was the son of Rita Bey, a wealthy
Albanian landholder and merchant He
served in tho Serbian army and later
led a revolt against former Premier
Fannoil of Albania.
(Br The Ameociated Pesos)
SAN ANGELO. Oct. 16—Rejection of
bids by concentration houses at Uvalde
and at Rock Springs this week msrked
the fifth failure of mohair buyers and
producers to get together on prices this
fall.
The only sale thus far was at Brady
where 100,000 pounds are reported to
have brought 62 and 62 cents.
( Special to The Sunday News-Globe.)
STINETT, Oct. 15— Organization of
Stinete’s new bank has been completed
and the institution's doors are now open.
It is the First State Bank of Stinnett,
with A. P. Borger as president, and with
capital of 525,000 and surplus of $5,000
J. T. Peyton is cashier, Mr. Miller, vice
president. snd A. P Borger. J. T. Peyton,
J. P. Hodges, Judge R. C. Goodwin and
W. C. Wamble constituting the board of
directors.
Glebe under date — ..
n Long Bell Lumber company called at:
15 tention to this campaign, in an effort
1t intereat local people. In the body
LI « ef the ad ia this information, "Remember
' —these slogan contesta prizes are
hardly ever won by professional writer:
at technical experts. Nearly alerays the
winners are people who never expected
to win. They just hit on the simple wey
to express the big central idea. Y ou
can do that aa well as anybody."
. In order to clearly present the plan
before the people of Amarillo the Long
■ Bell Lumber company have ordered a
' supply of the booklet “The Story of
Weed” which will be distributed free
af charge to those asking for same;
| Further announcements of this national
L campaign will appear in the pages of
M The News-Globe from time to time.
I Watch for these ads and turn in your
—
FIONAL LUM LR MANUEAC-
TURERS’ ASSOCIATION IN-
ITIATES CONTEST
FORCE Tonic braces and builds you up. It
animates, enlivens, drives away that dull,
heavy, sluggish, “no ’count” feeling in a
iffy! Why, then, drag around half dead.'
Let FORCE Tonic recharge your run-down
body with the current of vigorous new life!
Just try it. You’ll like it; it’s pleasant.
At all druggists.
Force7nic
Fortunate because today you can enjoy the new, the improved
BREMER-TULLY “Better Tone, Better Tuning Radio.
t"S S3 X" cons
ment.
KGRS—Amarillo
tion under the direction of men, but
the actual guardianship of the prisoners
is confided to nuns. They guide their
40
O
! A campaign Is now on, conducted by ,
the National Lumber Manufacturers ss- 1
' spciation, in which they are carrying
. the message of lumber to all corners of
the country in an effort to educate the |
‘ American public to the various uses of
' wood and combatting the various
* agencies which are responsible for the
• hue and ery that lumber is fast losing
f ground as the premier home building
commoaity of America.
In an effort to reach each and every
fireside they have inaugurated a prize
award campaign in which they are of-
fering large cash prises for e sloxan. on
wood and every man woman and chiid,
exciusive of those in the lumber busi-
wees, is eligible to compete for the
award. A rirstoprizecoa851000‛hira, when they do commit erimes they are
looked after by the authorities almost
e 3 ms Eu .
tion of the anniversary of their found- affair was a elever one-act play presentr _ ___ ___•a . 1
ing end in observance of the birthday of , ed by the members of the chapter, an
.RbertMorrs,the founder of the East-titled “isfer . ain,
cm Star. Mias Eather Clopton Kave wredinE’
Saturday evening in the Masonic Tom- concluding the program.
pk. a large number of Eastern Star After th. program, th. guoste rtired
members .nd their immediare families to th. basement,, where, Mr. Woash
gathered to eelebrate their twenty-fifth George gave a brief h istory.o theao a
nniversary and to observe the birthday ta chaper and conclude by readins a
staobert Morris, founder o the B“Ur" Pore intromtk of eharter members
An interesting program had been ar-followed.
ranged for this annual occasion and was I •
opened with several delightful - — -- -
9 p. m.
Entertainment
Monday,
Wednesday and .
and Friday
FRENCH TARIFF REPLY
DELIVFRED TO U. S.
(B, United Prem.)
PARIS, Oet. 16.—The French foreign
office today handed to Charge D‛Af-
fal res Sheldon Whitehouse, of the
American embamy a reply to th. last
American note in tho pending tariff
dispute. I
Whitehouse subsequently went from
the foreign office to th. ministry of
eom mere, to confer with Trade Minister
Maurice Bokanowsky on the note.
KGRS 4
GISH RADIO 845
SERVICE
7 p.,m.
Entertainment, In-
formation, Sports
News
6:30 to 7:30 a. m.
Breakfast Hour
with news briefs,
courtesy Amarillo
Daily News
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 339, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 16, 1927, newspaper, October 16, 1927; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569193/m1/4/?q=aRCHIVES: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.