Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 315, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1929 Page: 1 of 16
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„-xx. No. 311
Press Day and Night Lensed Wire.
ICE FIVE CI
* «
SHARKEY DAZES LOUGHRAN AND WINS TECHNICAL KNOCKOUT
*
* • •
4'
EXPECTSTOGET
Border Beauty
BORGERREPORT
DURING NIGHT
is
GOVERNOR HESITANT
U. S. CRIMINAL
AUTO DIES OF
IN LIFE BOATS
(By The Associated Prees)
A
Pretty— and no one
en
Tommy
but thousands were ewarming up and
STONE PASSES
all of us go to the annual?”
That'a what they did. Not a stick
U. 8. ditrict court here
Wednesday when he was atrck by an
loyalty to Hoo-Roo.
Groom business man and their fami-
ent member of the board, apparently
Lou
position.
MeClellan,
expressed before the
farmers
tence of 18 monthe in the peniten-
rounde turned into a slaughter in
for three years.
leash dove across the ring, rammed
DISASTER FROM
(Continued on Page 15, Col. L)
was learned that business
in •
<By The Asnociated Press.)
SHIFTING LAVA
(Contimued mt Page 15, Col. 5)
number of yeera.
killed inetant-
unsuecessful bid for Gene Tunney’s
(Continued on Page 13, Col. 7)
bonde.
NEW GAME
SSION
(Continued on Page 15, Col. C)
the
They followed the read
WILL ORGANIZE, SATURDAY
THE CHEERFUL CHERVB
(Continued on page 15. col. 4)
)+
AVTER HUDSPETH’S PLACE.
WEATHER
(By The Am«
Presa.
DEL RIO. Texas, Sept.
3
to go a long war
you'll
at
i ■ M
Ho spaded the ground. His spade
only one house to
quickly struck
7
■
L
u 9
$
b
a-
a kji
1
Hillll
SraHBSi
Keen Deduction, Aided by Car
Tracks, Muddy Spade, Clues
To Booze, U. S. Court Hears
CASES ENDED;
BEGIN ON CIVIL
JAIL EX CONSUL FOR
MEXICO PASSPORTS
TO U.S. AT $10 EACH
to find one that will boot that
little home of poor owe—
rls. alias “Blackie Morris," of Bor-
g^r, the end of the criminal docket
BELIEVE CYCLONE CENTER
ROARING TOWARD KEY
WEST OR HAVANA ‘
when his ton was injured,
al 303 Van Buren street.
VICTORY WITH ONE
VICIOUS PUNCH
MS |
position “more than 100 miles
and somewhat south of Miami."
three-round
Loughran.
or rope in hit own corner.
John Banovic, Binghampton, N. Y..
heavyweight, stopped into the card ,
as a substitute and won a six round (
C.
14
TS
of lumber was I
yesterday, while
near here today. Smith
s surrendered to the to**
30 days in jaiL
Joe J. Wells, Pampa, and Clyde
"For ea investment to thrift,
economy, health and happiness.
I its vigilance to cope with pos-
emergency.
SENATE TESTS
FDR FARM JOB
Wednesday.
"We ought to be represented at
Amarillo,” one of them suggested.
The other agreed, end then sug-
solitary house usually mood beer or
liquor. maybe both.
H. Cunni
il seetion
*
Ml
-
With the convietfor, and sentene-
able conditions and eo-operation from
the authorities the Laguna cotton
growers should be able to weather
the erisis.
that drawe favoreble comment from
all who sees this picturesque booth.
South Ptalne otflelals Here
Thia year’a -Tri-State Fair la by far
the best ever hold here, it wes de-
dared yesterday by B. V. Dickinson,
president of the Panhandle South
Plaina mesoeiation of Lubbock, who
flow to Amarillo yesterday with A.
El Pace, also annbuneed he would
be a eandidate after Hudspeth said
he would net seek eleetion again from
the Sixteenth Texas distriet.
sapRst stoek <1
Elmer Donegan,
ppDenegan,
TORREON COTTON
CROP IS CUT
eourt prepared to go into the civil
docket.
STINNETT JAIL GUARDS ARE
INCRESGED ON TIP’ OF
GENERAL BREAK
ardson, manager of the National City
Bank in Mexico, said In an interview
with Exeelslor after a visit to the
region. .
Th* normal production in the La-
guna son* is approximately 150,000
bales. —
Richardson said that with favor-
SALVATION ARMY WORKER’S
8-YEAR-OLD SON WAS HIT,
WEDNESDAY
PECAN GROWERS PICK
JACKSON, MISS., IN 1930
FOUND GUILTY; THREE
FROM BORGER
• Judge
24 hen
smehes.
UNABLE TO FACE GOB
AFTER BLOW
Noon.
1 p. m
it:
WILL USE NEAREST TROOPERS
IF MILITARY ACTION IS
DECIDED UPON
The Hellum
CHy -
ly when MeConnell’s nutomobile was
struck by a locomotive within the
eity limits.
Davis was thrown from the ear,
which waa hurled along the right-of-
way for 100 feet, and his neck bro-
M
47
mething hand and
buried, 104 fruit
gallons et whisky
(By The Ameoelated Pree)
GAINESVILLE, Texas, Sept. 26 —
A grade erossing accident claimed the
lives of two aged men here today.
W. T. MeConnell, 67, operator of a
children's rescue home, a filling sta-
tion and farm, and A. L. Dada, opera-
tor of a transfer wagon here for a
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------I----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AMARILLO, TEXAS, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 27, IMS.
70,000 BALES TWO ARE KILLED IN
CRASH WITH TRAIN
ngham, 42, la the res:
of Brewster, railrond
j MEXICO CITY, Sept. 26. The re-
cent drought has cut down the cot-
ton crop in the Laguna region neer
Torreon to 70,000 bales, W. B. Rich
"ca
R
prepared no to withstand attack in
the courts should it ba opposed. In
addition to other things, it must car
ry the correct metes and bounds of
the territory to be included.
■ “I nt, hope rhot tt w4R net ----
neceasary to declare martial In* at
oreer," the governor vain
General Wotlers, aecompanied by
Clam Calhoun, special district attor
noy for the emergency, arrived here
early tonight from the Hutchinson
county oil town, scene of the bommI-
nation of District Attorney John A.
Holmes. ______I--
2335
IIWMICTMIMMIS
i
R-J
pg
where you ore, la truth, "ord
of an yew survey’ Today mon
an adverWaet
k.,,74
for eh
",
■
“ 1
“akdes
__
warnings flew from Miami to Key
West. The populace, well prepored
for whatever may come, had not re-
55 u
9 "
V $9
' i2” M
- wl
AIX QUIT IM BORGER.
(By The Aoeeoiotod Prem) -
BORGER, Texas, Sept. 26—No now -
developmenta in the search for Um
aasasain of John A. Holmes, Huteh-
inson county proseeutor, ar regard-
ing the possibities of martial law la
this oil field town were made publie
today. 9
Martial law, teamed nearer when it a
euld in Tucumcari
> The yard mnag-
FOUR FACE MURDER
CHARGES AT DALLAS
conferenee with Brigadier General
Jacobs Wolters yesterday prom^d
hearty co-operation la evnt Bor-
era were being praised for their
MIAMI FEELS EASIER AS HURRICANE VEERS TOWARD KEYS
Storm warninga, taken down on
the Cuban coaal yesterday morning,
were hoisted again when obaerva-
tiona indicated that the hurricane
might trend toward the inland. Ship-
ping, however, cohtinued to ply yes-
on achedule of the'six days. Special
delegations from all sections of the
Panhandle have made arrangements
to viait the fair for the morning, af-
ternoon and night entertainments.
The Hereford band and Canyon
citizens in addition to the student i
body and band of the West Texa
Teachers’ college will join the New I
(By The Assoelated Press.)
ARDMORE, Okla., Sept. 26-Jack-
son, Miss., was chosen for the 1930
convention eity of the Notional Pa-
dan Growers’ association today at the
closing nesslon of the 28th annual
convention here.
Dr. T. H. MeHatton of Athens, Ga.,
was elected president. The name of
the organisation was changed to Na-
tional Peean Association, to embrace
all branehes of the industry.
the threatening rain. A confetti car-
- .A
Kh - «
than M ________
for sale in the Want Ada. One
of them is just the place yeu
A
Mexico Governor Dillon party
riving here at noon, Saturday.
Hagenbeck Wallace circus and mid-
way attractions at night. All enter-
tainment features will close after but
not before Saturday night.
Yesterday's day attendance proved
to be the smallest of the four days,
A crowd of 45,000 drown to the .
spacious American league ball park
by the lure of the final heavyweight
spectacle of the outdoor season, sat |
astonished and silent as the tempera-
automobile at the interaection of
Sixth Avenue and Jaekson street.
The boy had been unconscious most
of the time since he was taken to
east of has urged from the opening moment
yons. There
Bimini Island. 40 miles
-
YANKEE STADIUM, New York,
FREIGHTER IS SAFE theteportor fntmerottcommieteettiAndhFebd’pmau on LhSURPRISE TO CROWD
business of the convention. ♦----------------------------
Facing the busiest session of the busiest three-day ____.
meeting held in the history of the order, delegates to the
annual conventon of the Concatenated Order of Hoo Hoo BOSTON SAILOR CLINCHES HIS
Phoenix, Arii., and Montreal, Can-
CREW OF ANOTHER SHIP IS ada, both have entered bide for the ।
♦ •
* ♦
the hospital Wednesday afternoon.
"With the progress of civilisation
and the advencement of society, man
has attained an ever-increasing and
an intensified interest in his brother
victory over
decision over Lou Barba, of New
York, in an early preliminary. Bano
vie weighed 178 pounds, Barba 187.
In the opening four round mateh.
Bill Daring, 181, of the U. 8 navy,
won the decision over Bob Carvill,
188, of England. Carvill took counts
------ .---- man,” Mr. Black said. "Today a unl-
Gray said his observations did not | versal brotherhood exists, composed!
BOY STRUCK BY 1 FORMER LIGHT I F A VWEIGI IT
Mr. Harshberger was in
Salvation Army work the third. The gong still was echo-
They live ing in the huge ball yard when Shar-
key, as though finally loosed from a
This is Editors and Children’s Day at the Tri-State
Fair, and with favorable weather as forecast, Tuesday’s
attendance record is expected to be shattered by several
thousand.
Many schools of the Panhandle will be closed for the
day and the pupils accompanied by their parents are ex-
pected to flock to the carnival and circus, Amarillo
schools will be closed at noon.
-------------------—* Tomorrow is the last day of the
tion Army
I Arixona on
of nine 1* both the second and fourth
rounds. /
Heeney In Preliminary
Tom Haanay, New Zealand veteran
who elosed the 1928 aeason with an
VICE-CHAIRMAN CONFIDENT
RELIEF PLAN WILL BE
BENEFIT TO MANY
Emma Cuaron, above, waa ehosen to
represent Juarez, Mes., at the annual
Southwest Range Stoek Show and
Round-up ft El Pano, Toua. Thou-
aanda attend the festivities each year.
house, where they were informed it
waa lha residenee nt Arthur Thomas
Morris, otherwise known aa "Blaekie."
Nosing around, they discovered MM
pinta of boor in ay outbuilding.
But Mr. Bacon waa still a littie
euriqus. His curiosjty waa farther
aroused when ha naw a spade, obvi-
ously recently used, standing ngainat
the residence.
He looked about for the plot of
ground that had been spaded, and
within a abort distance at the house
he saw a email area of ground, obvi-
ously not a garden plot, that ap-
peared to have been disturbed recent-
gallons of whisky. | gave a concert between 12 and 4:30
Will Allen, Amarillo negro, ... Each day brings new viaitors to
. the fair and interest in the great ar-
concrted of Po......on, tanepovta- ( ray of exhnns ant atsptays rever
lion and sole of 48 pints of beer on j lag s. The composite New Mexico ex-
July 31 of this year, and sentenced to 1 hibit is one of the outstanding fea-
tures of this year’a agricultural ex-
The W of L
Eoses I /
EARTHQUAKE DAMAGE TO-
TALS $100,000 ALREADY;
EARTH STILL TREMBLES
No lives were lost in the hurricane is elated for the president’s place, or
on Eleuthera island, said the report Snark of the Universe.
to the Tropical radio at Miami. The , Declaring that Hoo-Hoo will “go
message wan sent from Governor's on the rocks” unless greater interest
Harbor, a mid point on the western is taken in the work, and some
Cemra coast of the island, but com- changes made in the policies of the
STORM LASHES Hoo-Hoo To Face Most FIGHT ENDS
BAHAMAS: NO Important Session of IN 3RD WTH
NASSAU NEws Big Convention Today TOMONROPES
We most be free
before we can live.
Frendom is all that
we need ——
Freedom from fesr of
whet other folks say
And from vlI of’
that member, forget their selfish
motive, and ambition, and get the
vision of the future of Hoo-Hoo and
it. value to the lumber industry,
second largest in the United State..
C. R. Black'. Talk Ia Feature.
The place of Hoo-Hoo and ita
brotherhood were stressed by Charles
R. Black, Corning, Ark., president of
the Southwestern Lumbermen'a As-
sociation, in the principal address at
Ineorparatorss tilt direction.
Donegan, New- ta hin exper
, indicate whether the storm would 1
mov, westward of had started to do :
I io at that time. He said it was prob. ,
able the next 24 hours would bring ।
wind, of gale intensity to the ex-
trema lower East Florida coast.
Earlier in the day Dr. Cerolos Mil-
laa of the Cuban national observatory, j
aaid the storm center apparently was |
moving closer to Cuba. The Belen j
observatory concurred in this view,
but Dr. Gutierres Lanzo of Belen, aaid
it waa impossible to form a definite
opinion because the storm we. un-
: usual
The national observatory at Ha-
vana aaid the disturbance may offer
extreme danger to the Florida Keya.
There was little indication late yes-
terday of an approaching storm. The
barometer was .lowly falling but the
weather was clear.
Storm Flags Stay Up
L "' Hurricane warninga remained on
display from Jupiter to Miami on the
k- Flonda coast and uorthzezt item
# « •
♦ *
Record Attendance of
1929 Fair Is Expected
For School, Press Day
----—
eliek. Shallowly
Mr. Bacon told >n contatninc M
♦ *
•4
♦ ♦ •
tiary and was fined $1,000, while the j
latter received • suspended ventenee
Curry. DeBaca, Roosevelt, Lee,
Ferryton, pleaded guilty Eddy and Chaves eounti.s combined
to liquor possession charges, and j in bringing the Eastern New Mex-
were fined 1100 each, ico display to the fair and is ar-
George Ward and Lawrence Ward, । ranged in sueh a manner aa to bring
Borger, were found guilty Wednesday I out the contrast in the old and the
and senteneed ye.terday on chargee new era in New Mexteo agriculture,
alleging possesaion and manufacture Fifty-three different agricultural
in the case of George Ward, and : producta are arranged in a panorama
sale and possession for Lawrence
Word. The former received a sen-
(By The Amociated Pres )
HILO, Hawaii, Sept. 26 —Dispatches
from Kealakelua in the Kona district
Isle today said damage estimated at
1100,000 was done by the earthquake
at 8:42 last night. People were
roeming ths streeta. fearing disaster.
The earth waa continually trwmbling
aa a result of lava movements within
slumbering voleanies.
Warning waa given today by Vol-
eanologist Thomaa A. Jagger to peo-
ple reaiding within 40 miles of the
volcano Hualalai to be on guard
against tha severe earthquakes which
ABLE TO ABANDON WRECK - snevnthn, - ,
today. Franklin A. Hofheins, pres-
C C. Bobber at Dol Rio announced
today bo would took Representative
Claude B. Had.path's place in Con:
gress. R. E. Thomason, mayor of
. -
♦ ♦
ad .Rttrac|lon jtlghl._________ _
The boy’aaband item Groom aq
companied by a large delegation of
(By Th. Asnociated Press)
Having administered a furious lash-
ing to Eleuthera island in th. Baha-
mm Wednesday night and severed .
Nassat, the Behaman capital, from
communication with the outside
world, the tropical hurricane last
night hovered somewhere off the
eastern tip of Florida.
O *
* *
They went into eonference with
Governor Moody at 10 p. m. They
waited on the governor while ha at-
tended a banquet tendered format
Governor Pat M. Neff by bla Austin
friends.
Adjutant General R. L. dobertaon,
who will issue orders to troops to
move ta Borger in the event martial 1
lew is declated, waa not in hle office j
and no one weald state where he
had gone.
The governer said that should
troops be seat to Borger, National A
Guard eompanies near the Panhandle
town would be used ia order to save A
tMe state cost of transportation.
have been «eekinc"
__
j street from Sixth avenue. The acci-
dent waa unavoidable, according to a
report made by police officers who
investigated it
Mrs. Hershberger is a lieutenant in
the local organisation of the Salva-
(Dr The Amoeiated Pre:)
SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Sept. 26. -
Pasaports from Mexico to the United
States at $10 a piece without satis-
factory accounting for them brought
a passport to the federal prison at
Leavenworth for a year and a day
to Gerald W. Bahl, former U. S. Vice
consul at Monterrey, Mexico, in fed-
eral distriet court here when Bohl
pleaded guilty to embezzling $1,139.
Bahl, in the eonsular service since
1917, won leniency from Federal
Judge Duval West by the plea that
the money obtained from passport
sale had been used solely to supple-
ment his governmental income in
living expenses, required of one in
his position as a conaular represen-
tative.
the Wood-Promotion luncheon at
-------------- — — ,--- - nouanaz were swarming up ano
Lloyd Hershberger, 8-year-old son mental tar, at times the most «ilteding to 30 days in jail, with a 3500 down the midway last night despite
“Why don’twejustclone.up and I of Mr and Mr., Edward Harshberger, I ouddeni"turnedPPtigerheagn““hna l fine attached, of Arthur Thoman Mor-
Salvation Army workers, died yester- i crushed Loughran from tha picture
day afternoon in the Northweet Tex- j in just 27 seconds of the third ses-
m hospital of injerle, reeeivedsion.-------, .____...____. i.‘" t;- 8- t eourt here was
Ths crowd thst paid 300,000 for renched yesterday afiernoon and the
the eventmg’s enterttmment suaw one
Hhe Jur • f*M«
. n
SKULL' INJURIES nmma "uss./s: -mm
------ back 1 ° the, top of.the heavyweight NAPTH pANHANDIE MFN ARFtend the Oklahoma City Sandy foot-
brigade tonight with a sensational | NORTH PANHANDLE MLN ARE ball game in the afternoon, and the
J. N. Baeon, federal prohibition
agent stationed here, whose methods
strongly recall the deduetive sleuth-
ing of Sherlock Holmes and other
famous Hawkshaws of fiction, yester-
day told the jury in U. 8. Distriet
Court he* too-well-mark tar
traeks, an earth-polished spade lean-
ing agalnat a house and seme fresh-
ly-turned dirt led him to a cache at
82 gelion. of whisky.
Mr. Bacon, accompanied by John
Crabtree. Berger chief at police, on
Auguat I ef thle year made a seareh
ef the broken country to the north
ar targtr ta anarch ef a still they
had been advised war la one at the
eanyons la that region.
About two miles north of the eity
Mr. Bacon obsefved a weft-traveled
road leading toward one of the ean-
(Continued on page 18, rol. 4)
munr ons outside that town were order, Melvin M. Riner, president,
lackil
Snip Reports so-Mile Wind.
Hoo-Hoo members of Tucumcari,
N. M., stepped into the limelight
at the international convention yes-
terday, when managers of both
yards eloaed their doors for the
day, and they and their employee
come to the annual meeting.
Lee G. Pearson, manager of the
Pearson Lumber Co., and T. Y.
Runyon, manager of the Tucum-
carl Lumber Co., got together
Miami, had 30 miles of wind from
the north yesterday morning and
similar low velocities were reported
from other points which had radio
communication. Meteorologists aaid
the storm would gather intensity as
long aa it remained at sea. A vessel
menzated Havana late today from the
Bamas that it was experiencing a
hurieane of 80 miles per hour. The
storm center, this ship reported, wss
almost stationery.
While there wes no Washington
weather bureau advisory late yester-
day, United States forecaster, Rich-
ard W. Gray at Miami, fixed the cen-
ter of the storm at 4 p m.. at a
(By The Assoelated Press)
AUSTIN, Texas, Sept. 26 Al-
though ho will decide "immediately"
on the advisability of establishing
martial law at Borger after be hears
the report of General Jacob Welton
of the Texas National Guard on the
Situation there, Governor Moody will
not Issue the proelamation before to-
morrow should he decide to send the
state troops there, be eeld tonight.
He declared that the labor ef com-
posing the proelamation is highly
technical and must be ee carefully
... ... lies arrived in Amarille in the morn-
Morri, was charxed with po..». ing and after a parade downtown
slon of 208 pints of beer snd 52 drove to the fair grounds where they
CAST FOR AMARILLO ANO
-Frida: partly eloudy.
WEST TEXAS —Generally fair
NEW MEXICO—Naetlv fair wouth,
I north portion Fridny: shoyere
nderatorme probeble north-central
lbwoat portion.
rature by boars st Amarillo ye-
hia left to Loughran's body and
| A iff All r r A n fl smashed home a swinging right to the
H fl MM f| I I FFLR% chin. The blow caught the > urprined
| | F (f Fil | I Li fl I * U Philadelphian a glancing crack on the
I chin and he toppled backward to the
floor, hia head resting across the low
(Or United Prena.)
AUSTIN, Sept. 26.—The new state
game, flab and oyster commission,
created by the regular session of the
diet Legisiature, will hold Ite orgni-
zation meeting Saturday, Governor
Moody announced today.
He named two more members of
the six-man commlaaion which re-
placed the game, fish and oyster eom-
mission on Sept. 1. They were M. L.
Buekner of Dallas and J. H. T. Bibb
of Marshall. Former Senator A. E.
Wood of Austin, Caesar Kleberg of
Kingsville end Gu F. Schreiner of
Kerrville, had been appointed pre-
viously. One la yet • be named.
Wood lo elated to be ’ man of the
eommissiom.
bare, ,,
Senate Agriculture Committee today
by James C. Stone of Kentucky, vice-
chairman of the form board.
It may be too much to expeet, he
aaid, that all the farmers of the
country will participate in the co-
operative movement. He belleves
enough will appreciate ttn great
benefits, however, end be eager to
chore in the larger profile it neema
to him bound to bring.
Stone, who represents tobacco on
the board, answered an avalanche of
questiona designed to elicit Informa-
tion of his ability with a view of
reporting to the Hanala regarding hle
confirmation. At the conelusion of
' hla examination neveral committee
members expressed pleasure at the
fashion in which ho had submitted
hia testimony.
Like Chairman Legge, the vice-
chairman said he did not favor gov-
ernmental participation In wtabilisn-
lion opernetons. The board's hope
was, he added, that great co-opera-
tive merkeling corporations could be
set up to eerry on those aetivitiea
should they be found desirable. *
Only One Small Flurry.
The only flurry during Slone's ex-
amination was provided by Senator
Brookhart, Republican, Iowa, who
read from testimony presented by
John L. Buckley, once a business
partner of Stone, In the Sapiro-Ford
libel ense dealing with a transaction
with the Burley Tobacco Growers
Co-opcratita Atzpeistien. ef whieh
Stone wea president until appointed
to the farm board.
The testimony was read aaid Stone
went into the Burley Ansoclation tar
private gain and specified that ha
sold some warehouse property, whieh
be bad purehased for $165/000 in
ISIS, to the association tar $225,000
in IKI. Stone said the assoeiation
was in need ef warehouses and that
be disposed of it as a purely bumi-
nets proposition. He said the prop-
erty waa apprained by offielals of
the association at $282,000, but that
be offered it to the ageney tar $250,
000 and subsequently rat the priee
down to $225,000.
Senator Whaefer. Domoerat, Mon-
tana, said there seemed to him at this
time to bo nothin* irregulat about
the deal. ,
OHIO MANILAIN BY snormen
(Be The Aeoelated Prem)
CANTON, 0, Kept 26.John Cun-
ningham, «, father of eight children,
wao abet to death hr his brother,
nival sponsored by the local order of
De Molay and a eitizen's committee |
interested in Scout work, was an add-
• • P-
--
HOME EDITION BXTEEN PAGES
om TO ANNOUNCE MARTIAL 111 PUNS TODAY
(By The Amwoeiated Prens. I
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2d.-The
opinion that the Farm Rellef Act,
intelligently administered to develop
a comprehensive co-operative market-
ing system, will prove a boon to the
(By The Apsoelated Prga)
DALLAS, Sept. 26,A dlaturbanca
at a roadside stand near Grand Pral-
rfe. September 1, in which. w, J,
Roll, M. received injuries from which
he died yesterday resulted today in
murder complaints being filed ageinet
foer Arlington. Texas, men.
The quartet, R. R. Clark. Early
Dewberry, R. L. Galloway ana 3.
JMM ee teletred under bonden.
daye after the affair. orrieer an.
nouncod the men would he mesh .
rooted and required to make new
i By The Associated Press)
MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 28—The Tropl-l
cal radio station here announced to-
night that it had been in commu-
nication at 8:18 o’clock with the
Italian freighter Laconia, reported (
earlier in the day from Hamilton,
Bermuda, aa having foundered west 1
of the Bahamas with all on board.
The message from the captain of the
Laconia said “have been in no trou-
ble.”
— I I '
S-J
of all races, bonded together in the
___ I
L0
4. J V W1.
jested aa an afterthought:
V.
Amarillo Country club at noon yes-
terday.
; will be “at it again" at the mythical hour of 9:09 this
i morning.
Today’s final business session will see the formal |
election of new officers and directors, and the selection of
of the most amaaing sndings of mod-
era fintie battles as Loughran ren-
de red helpless by a vicious loft hook
to the body and right that crashed
Hi. .kuil was fractured when he wan full on his chin, took * count of five,
• truck by an automobile driven by I rose to his feet, and stood dazed In
8. W. Longert, 404 Van Buren atreet. “ neutral corner as Referee
The body i. being held el the N. Magnolia Hopped the fight
S. Griggs a Sons Funeral chapei Sharkey Outhoxed Tommy
ha. driven d^scele. throuah the bus- pending arrival of relative, after, Seldom, in all hle varied career of
haa driven delegat* ihrough th* °i Whieh “runeri .rrnmmt. will E i suceess and dieappointment. has
iest annual meeting ever held. Ho which funeral arrangements will be •••"
made. Besides his parents, the boy i Sharkey appeered to better advan-
la survived by two brothers and three bag*. From th* opening gong, Lough
sinters ran, a light favorite, waa almost help-
The child was knocked to the pave- less before the vieious cob’a power
ment when he suddenly darted in i and confidence.
front of Longest's automobile just Even in th* short span of their *p-
the latter was turning into Jackson pearance Sailor John outboxed the
former master of light heavyweights,
out-speeded him with sharp isft jabs,
and handled ambitious Tommy with
•ace in the clinches.
With startling suddenness, the fast,
careful milling of the first two
CHARTERS GRANTCI)
(By The Amoelated Prems.)
AUSTIN, Bept. to.-Chartered:
Donegan, Ine, building. Amarillo;
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Daily News (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 315, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1929, newspaper, September 27, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569352/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.