Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 331, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 13, 1929 Page: 29 of 40
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DAY
s
A
E
Baking
1
• ♦ •
ByT.E JOHNSON ;
M
I
#
,000 SPENT
y
Second of Six Girls He Thinks He Love
ic
THAN IN 1128
Ue
I
u
of
NEW MEXICO
REPRESENTED
ATSTATEFAIR
•The commission now offers as its
Tw
petitons were granted for
37 block* of new construetion work.
"Ruth naturally has a sweet disposition. But she’s boon spolled by too much money- you know, trips to
iobile, finishing school and what’s worse, her own way, la everything."
ing through the door to the nod.
A
»
carpenter work of
ancock, 1024 W- 6fDear Bill:
Griggs ambulanee. Phono 4311.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE FIFTEEN)
Griggs ambulance. Phone 4311.
Tonight he offered me a job. And
7
Political Plans of
for eh
the date game
linden.
tioa for a third term for Governor
Dallas long have been
fair*
tempestuoua, what with a eonserva-
3
ing
greatly
bin for
la the
by
III
KX
aqququn”
MBRMMB
■ oommem
Moody Are Subject
OtMuch Speculation
CAR LICENSE
BEING CUT IN i
HALF FOR 1930
six girla. It
that each of
IN FIRST NINE
MONTHSOF1929
D. W. Wileox, Demooratie atate
chairman. mpparently is sounding out
seemed to take it for
had travelled all the
Europe, her own ai
Warren Hoyt lo
scems very probe
at
er
rt
fa
GOVERNOR DILLON MAY JOIN
DELEGATION TO EXPOSL-
TION, OCTOBER 19
ri-
ks.
to be a bright spot
to G. O P. board of
8
The attack opened when Buckner
accepted appointment as a member of
NEW FKU BASED WHOLLY ON
WEIGHT ARE ANNOUNCED;
TRUCKS INCREASED
come into the busineas with ma. I
need young blood, someone to carry
the load, so that I can ease out,
gradually: I'm not as young •• I used
k-
nd
la
MORE THAN HALF-MILLION IN
GENERAL FUND; POLL
TAXES INCREASE
"d
.0
$ 5.04
8 »M
$ 8.64
t 9.09
$18.24
$21.12
$23,50
FROGRAM IS BIGGEST SINCE
1926 WHEN MILLION WAS
SPENT IN CITY
the women drya, were
tinted at the senior
de. Mo wan NOT,
more liberi element.
r I really did
have, for she
anted that we
ly back to the
ae to th« official
, . the two
"Not a grent- deal," I told her. I
eouldn’ tell Rath how I felt. how I
zThe more the water question is
diacuazed, and at mere facts are
-___________ brought to light.
things haven't'i
they. Warrenr
id much, have
Bath.
cost would seem to indicate.
French’* prediction that the pav-
ing in Amarillo will exceed a half
million dollar* by the end of the
year is based on the rapidity with
which property owner* are petition-
ing for construetion in their vicinity.
At the city commission meeting last
state dairy judging championshd
when the farmer*’ short course wa
held at A. A M. College, and the
are new competing at St. Louie wttl
teams from all ports of the Unite
States.
FIREPREVENTIONWEEK
OBSERVED BY SLATO
KJ
eaid he would NOT bo a candidate
for a third term. He has NOT said
he would and in these Demoeratie
parts it is taken for granted that
the governor does NOT intend aspit-
ing to mere than the customary two
term*.
But, there wa* considerable agita-
major bottle in 19a2.
■ may be counted upon
mite alay toward keep-
reing and a majority in the eounty of
Democratic voter* who flopped over
ting by hi* hen*. Dana placed ■
lath acre** each hen’s bosom and tied
(Bpeeiat to The Bandar New* HiUe
SLATON, Oct. 18.—A speclaf9
prevention” program was obooe
Friday by the Slaton Notary C
fitting in with observation of 1
Prevention Week in Touno. 1
Chief E. V. Woe lever, City I
Marshal Tom Abel, Mayor W.
Reese, F. C. Sector and other* 1
port. Exieting fire hazards ia l
tomwere pointed eat by the fire
pertinent official*.
Co-operation between city otfie
nehool"nuthoritien,firedepert
was urged to keep Siatea’a five
ord on the emme excellent plane 1
It hoe enjoyed during the port
yeara. ,
1030 Demoqiatie primaries?
2. Will bolter candidate* be put on
the Demoeratie primary ballot?
The eeeend question mean* “will
Thomae B. Love got on the ballot as
candidate for governor™
The first call for eommittee policy
declaration wa* made by B. D. Sartain
of Wichita Falla. To him Chairman
Wilcox replied, for himnelf alone,
"yes" to the first question and "no"
to the second.
Now Alvin Moody, chairman of a
bolter*’ committee, hae renewed the
plea for formal action by the oom*
mittee, insisting that he speaks in
the name of 376,000 Texas voters.
Chairman Wileox’s insistence that
he has nothing to say just aew.
either that he will or won’t onyene
the committee, seems to Indicate
pretty clearly that he is Ie the pre*
cess of finding out if he can get the
committee together ebon to eonoider
the fate of the wandering Demes.
respeet to aa early
sider, define and ci*
status of the Tonne
From two souren
mands have boon mi
—..... Which Girl Shall Warren Marry! -.....f
He Tells of Ruth, Spoiled, Rich Girl
•( New York for president but he
stumped the country for him, and
Senator Sheppard is the author of the
18th amendment. He stood ace high
with th. probibition element im the
I* ’
e 4 kl
I
6
meeting to eon-
rify the political
Moeoererat..
QUEEN .MARIE R|
PNLACEIN
Mie holding of the state office and
of the county chairmanship at the
sametime was put under fire of the
Love force* inetantly.
' Mr. Buckner pointed to decieion:
of supreme court that a political
party post lo not a “public office,"
as be prepared to fight hack.
County executive eommittee af-
CURE FOR SETTING HENS
(By The Aesoeiated Pram i
BLOCK ISLAND, N. I.-A iltle la-
in the first place there are no fact*
to ahow there is a dependable supply
at the new place. To say the least,
it ta an experiment, and in order to
carry out the experiment the city is
naked to veto 3200,000 in bonds. The
issue before voters te whether they
want to go in debt deeper to experi-
ment with a now plant, or go ahead
and get more water at a plant al-
wady in operation and which Is now
dodueing water cheaper than any
"Ther water plant in this section of
the state.
and the winner of the third prize,
310. la cawe of a tie, the full amount
will be paid to each tylag rent cutout.
3. No letter* are te be sent to the
Newa-Glbe until all six epiaodee
have been pubitshed,
4. The Sanday NewaGlobe will be
the cole judge of the contest.
5. I to Mt necessary that a tow
testant buy the Bunday News-Globe
in order to enter this eontest Copies
en
MA
For cabiact and.
all kinds. M. C. Hi
W a
LO
SLATON CLUB BOY AT
ST. LOUIS DAIRY SHOW
watrata uezaite
110.000 a year salary amendment was
defeated. It was argued then that
Texas owed the young man two more
yean in the governor’* office at $10,-
000 per to assiat him in making up
for the financial ground he lost in
serving four year* at 34,000 annu-
ally.
At that time it waa pointed out
that Governor Moody's plaaa were in-
complete, partly because he had been
retarded by an indifferent, if NOT
unfriendly, legislature.
HI* civil service, income tax as a
substitute for the present ad val-
orem duty, prinon coneentration, abort
LATTLEFIELD THEATER
• INSTALLS "TALKIES"
other reform had been defected by
the legislature, and this was thought
sufficlent excuse to warrant his tak-
ing his slution of these problems
to 'the people.”
Hi* friende may make an effort to
influenee him in doing this anyway.
i11M9, seek senate MT • -
Senator Monte Sheppard of Tex-
arkana ta up for re-election to the
United States Senate next year and
Governor Moody may moa euro swords
with him. Last year when Senator
Mario B. Mayfield was seeking re-
election there wm considerable de-
mand for Governor Dan Moody’* can-
didacy, but be finally decided to stand
for re-eleetion to the governor’* of-
fice. • * i
Seek To Oust Dallas Democratic
Chairman as Plans Get Under
Way for Political War of 1930
These are the respective depth* to
water, but total lift is come 30 or 40
feet greater a* the pumpc are not set
on top of th* water. At the Word
plant the water i* now being lifted
from an average depth of 73 feet,
which added to the 106-foot lift in
the pipeline give* a total of 131 feet.
City official* estimate total lift at
the Bush site would be 130 feet.
So there i« no difference, one way
or the other, between the two prepe-
tition* a* to how far the water must
be lifted. And, if there ie no dif-
ference how doe* the city (tend to
save 311,000 to 320,000 in pumping
coate each year which the eommisston
saya cane be done and which it
claim* justifies the bond issue?
There 1* no opposition to a program
for more water. If Amarillo need*
to inerease ite present supply of 7
to 8 million gallon* up to 18 mil-
lion, nobody objects. Diseussions and
investigations have served to develop
the feet*, and the facte show beyond
any question that the safe and san*
way to increase the supply I* to drill
more well* at the present plant. Th*
farts de not substantiate any claim
erease over last year at $67830. The
rate la BIAS, th* same as last year.
The general fund this year, will
total 8340,887.77, compared with a
total of 8*40.884.08 last year. The in-
terest and sinking fund for 1838 will
total 83*1,4*0.04 as against $261,144.20
in 1833. This year’s poll tea rendi-
tions total 8*4144, compared with 3,-
078 last year.
Despite the fact that valuation* of
buildings in the city were eat from
8 to 10 per cent because of deproela-
tioa during the past five-year period,
the total taxable valuation of Ama-
rillo real estate decreased only $140,-
180 from last year, It was stated last
night by City Tax Assessor lames
Bowen.
The 1838 tax valaatloa of real es-
tate la the city is $4,477,400, compar-
ed with $4,617,330 in 1838, according
to the city tax rolls which have just
been completod, Bewea said.
Personal Property Inereased
While the raise of real estate de:
ereated, the total valee of pornonal
property la the city iacreased $207-
080 over the 1838 total, tbe tat assese-
er stated. The 1838 total of this class
of property is $0,941,450, as against
a valuation of 88,788,470 last year.
Completion during the part year of
a large number of now bulldings, nev-
oral of which were large business
strueturos, prevented a greet decrease
in valuation of real estate, Bowen
said ;
Depreciation of bulldings, be ex-
plained, is figured every fifth year -
for the entire five-year period. Blnee
buildings depreciate in value at the
rate of from 1 1-8 to 8 per eent sack
year, bo pointed out, the total five
year depreciation represents a large
sum.
Taxes of many property owners
were decreased from $50 to $600 by
the lower valuation placed upon them
for this year, Bowse said.
The tax assessor accounted for the
fnereased poreenel property total by
pointing to the fact that a number .
of new business establishmenta have
been opened boro dering the past
year. In additlon to this, he said,
most of Amarillo’s merchants have
larger stoeks of merchandise this
peer than loot.
CAPT. W. J. ITANNARD
Lender of the famous United States
Army bead wMeh will appear to
Amarillo on October 34, ea its third
annual tour of the countey. It will
be the band's first appearance in
Texas, and the concerto here, mati-
nee and night, will formally open the
1*28-38 artist course.
day that picture wm taken, and that
I MI just as I did then.
She was quiet for a time. Then,
“Warren,” she said, "Daddy and I
were talking about you at dinner.
He asked me to toll you jo step into
the library and see blm, tonight.”
I wm pretty dense, I guess, or !
would have tumbled. But I didn't,
and I wort on into the library to
And by these announcements the
necessity for a bond issue to build
a mw plant disappears. By their
own admissions the Word plant la
producing water at a low cost, more
water can be produced there and the
pipeline will handle it. The ques-
tion then is: Why go off to a now
site, buy high-priced land, experi-
ment with a new type of pumps and
build' a new water plant?
This present status of the Dome,
irrstic committee’s business of ran.
______inIng a party gave pointed signit-
to the Hoover side ef the ballot las Rance to the enheuneement of R. B>
Creager, Repubijenn natiotal commit-
teeman, while here, that bo sees a
prospeet of his national eommittee’s
meeting Mb'
Texas is
on the aw*
strategy, M
pore for I
liminary to
think Warren should mariy.
1 The Sanday Newa-Glohe will
My a total of 3M la eash prizes for
the boat letters reeeived. The win-
show that the
water supply can be increased with-
out baying any more land, or build-
ing a mw plant on a new site.
when I went to take her in my arms
and tell kor I could never live with-
out her. And when sho’s mad—and
that’s pretty often, I’m of mid—I feel
like shaking her until ker white tooth
rattle. She needs it.
But it isn't all her fault. Ruth
naturally has a sweet disposition.
But she's been spoiled by too much
mrney— you know, trips to Europe,
her own automobile, finishing school
and what’s worse, always her own
wag, ia everything.
Thet’s what lots of money ana no
responsibility does for some people.
Her father’s old W. K. Wright, of
I saving in pumping costs. This, too,
| is only an opinion. Nobody know*
| what ths cost of producing water at
> the new site will be until after the
I welle are in operation. There is no
waQe telling ta advene* whet the
upkeep on the pump* will b*. The
only fact* to be guided by are the
expetiences of others in pumping wa-
ter.
At the Word site, with its air lift
xhachinery, water is being delivered
to the top of the hill at 3:18 cent*
per thousand gallons. No other city
ia the Panhandle is pumping water
at such a low figure. The Santa Fe
railroad isn’t doing it. Cost of pro-
nTonidt RuthamnigHmadeisznzeina the w. K. Wright Company.
The commission in a sined state-
meat last Sunday declared: “There
is plenty of water at the Word site
Md it U being produced very econ-
omically. We can get more water
there.” Mayor Thompson on Monday
told the Kiwanis club that the pipe-
line will carry from IQ to H mil-
lion* gallons daily.
SYRIA AHO PERSIA
BUILD NEW RAILWAYS
The city of Amarillo will eolleet
slightly more then $800,000 ia taxoe
this year, an inerease of less than
1,000 over lad ysar.
Amarillo’s total tax valuation for
1888, according to the city tax depart-
_ menti" record*, la $50,418,850, ml in-
By RAYMOND BROOKS
AUSTIN, Ort. 12—Good new* for
ever 1,090,000 car owners is being
written by equnty tax collectors.
It record* ante in "automobile H-
cense averaging bo per ant otthin
year’s fees. And regiatrations for
1830 will start within 80 day*. *
On the lightest care, the decrease
will be more than one-half; on med-
fum-weight cars, jurt *0 per cent;
aad on the heavier machines toss
than one-halt the present registra-
tions fees.
But the gosd news for passenger
ear owners doss not extend to those
who must register trucks and com-
mercial car owners. License fees for
those were not lowered, but in meet
eases have been increased.
Gas Tm Haloed
The reduction in fees was made
aa an effect to the increase from
two to four cents in the gasoline
tax rate. It will cut down the state-
wide registration total on possenger
Mr* from about 880.0M.0M a ysar to
under $10,000,000. Thie is based on
the larger proportion of light then
heavy ears being in use.
The new fees are computed wholly
on weight. Old fees were based on
both weight and horsepower.
For the information of those who
will buy license plate* In December
and Mrly* January, the following
table will show the eomparisons be-
tween the old and the new. The 1830
fees . mey vary a few eent* from
those figures, based on the proper-
tions within 100-pound brackets
adopted as effleial, but this shows
substantially what next year's foes
will be for typical cars: _
Car Old Foe New Foe
the contestant plainly written on the
letter of advice Iteelf. They matt be
addressed to, Marriage Contewt Edi-
tor, The Amarillo News-Globe, Ama-
rillo, Texan.
T. The contest started last Sunday
aad will end in the iesue of Novem-
her 14. Letters of th* contestants
must be la the offire af the News-
Globe by midnight of Bunday, Ne-
vemher 17, one week from the day
the last episode I* published. Win-
ners will be announced the follow-
ing Sunday, November 34.
Berry %‘ for rug cleaning. M3 W. 14th.
ImUI to Th- Bundny New* Globe).
FTLEFIELD, Ort. 18.—The
lee theater in Littlefield to this
; installing the Vitaphone, which
'be randy for use beginning with
day of next week. The manage
I to also opening up this week
» Eite" wheh wih make • speeial-
d western scenes.
she returned.
Tonight wa did. Wa ware looking
at some old pictures-anapshots of
high school picnics, tbe kind of pie-
turn girls sees. One was of Rule
wearing my vanity sweater. We
both remembered the day, Md hew
we had promlood each other we’d love
om another alwayi.
"Tht seems a* long time ace, but
genuity on the part of Exra Dunn,
North lighthouse keeper here, was
buffieient to prevent too much net-
The eonsensus of opinion in politi-
cal eireles wm that the governor
would have had a better chanee at
MOody"a tow,"weeks baekbeforc the Senator Mayfield’s place than in de-
— -------feating Benatar Sheppard.
Governor Dan Moody’s candidacy
against Senator Sheppard, should it love. Perbaps I
materlalize, shoula prove aa interest-
ing contest. Senator Sheppard not only
voted for Governor Alfred K Smith
In the light of these facts ths ques-
tion answers itself. There Is not one
fundamental reason for a bond issue
and a new water plant. The Word
plant with its nine well* ta good for
7 to 8 million gallons daily. Two or
three more walls would bring it up
to 10 million gallons. The pipeline
will handle it. These being the facts,
ths only logical or reasonable plan
would be to get whatever new water
we need at the Word site and keep
running the plant that is now pro-
ducing water at around 3 cents per
thousand gelions.
♦ • ♦
party chieftains pre-
1080 ."skirmish, pre-
VOL. XX. Na. Ml., Aob—fateJ Fr— Dmym*W Night Loa—dWha. ~__________________________ AMARILLO. TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1929.
CITY’S TAXES TOTAL MORE THAN $800,
AMARILLO IS SPENDING HALF-MILLION FOR PAVING
(Speelel to the Hunday News alto*
8LATON, Ort. IL-Jack Stal
Slaton 4-H slab bey, ta company 1
County Agent D. F. Eaton, and Ja
Potto, Fred Elliott aad K C. Pew
all of this eounty, are attending
National Dairy Bhow to St. U
October 13 to 17. The boys won
main argument for the new plan a other than those directly interested
— ' in the work, ta 1«m than the $500,000
dating water la its two wells in Ama-
rille Ta approximately 7 cento The
avelew cost of water in the Santa
Fe’Kells in 14 titles over the Pan-
haydle Is 13 cents. Those are farts
>Mt must be considered.
(By Th* Amoeiated Pren).
BANTA FF., et. 18. -Coe Howard
of Portales, New Mexico Commission-
or to the Dallas State Fair, ta ar-
ranging far the New Mexico exhibit
aad likewise plans to have Governor
Dillon and his party fly from Santa
Fe to Dallas if negotietione are suc-
cessfully completed with the Trane-
continental Air Transport Company.
Mr. Howard has urged state wide
partieipation la the exhibit aad
among the towhs who will co-operate
through their chambers of commerce
ore Clovis. Carlebad, Roswell, Por-
tale*, Lovington, Albuquerque, Scala
Fe, Farmington, Tucumeari,
The Dalia* fair will open today aad
Governor Dillon Ie expected to at-
tend on October 18.
The New Mexico space la fifteen
foot by fifty-ix feet end the Dal-
las fair offlicale attracted by the ex-
hibit which New Mexico had at the
Tri-state, Fair offered to waive the
$1,000 space fee if the state would
send aa exhibit there to farther ad-
vertine the Southwest,
Ineladed in the exhibit. Mr. How-
ard said is a miniature pueblo de-
pieting Indian life in New Mexico,
and fxhiblta of agricultural products
from the various Motion s af the
state
The background is an immense ean-
vas of a New Mexico mountain scene
by Ted Milner of Clevis with letter-
ing by M.la Troutt of Clovis.
To do this ths only cost will be
the drilling of three new wells at the
Word atte. The other plan means a
bond inue of $200,000, and. a gamble
on whether there is ample water at
the new site. One plant already is
built, and is operating efficiently.
The other is a guess.
Cost of paving in Amarillo either
completed or under contract totals
$340,877 for th* first nine months of
this year. This figure will exceed a
half million dollars,by the first of
1930, according to Frank French as-
sistant city engineer.
The paving already in sight more
than double the amount laid test
year, but is considerably eft from
the total of 1884, the peak year far
paving in Amarillo, when ever a mil-
lion dollars was spent in surfacing
streets.
Most of the 134 blocks included
in the $349,877 have already been com-
plated and the net is either under
construction or will be shortly. Sev-
enty-six blocks of streets, mostly in
the residential district, are surfaced
with penetration material. The re-
mainder are ef either brick or con-
crete.
City Paye Om Fourth
Nearly all of the smaller paving
job* will be completed before Janu-
ary 1, French sad. One or two pro-
jects, including West Third Avenue,
which comprises about 33 blocks of
work, will lap ove into the next year.
Dm to the fact that the city pays
but one-fourth of the cost of the pav-
ing, the expense to the taxpayers.
nor of the prist prize will reoetvo $25; live “regular” Democrat holding the
the winner of the necond prine,sis;
AA
——---
Director
Y ti 4
"ns
er. I’ll start you at $7,000, and ad-
vance you as you learn the busi-
ness" -
"But Mr. Wright," I interrupted.
“I don’t know anything ebout your
business, and you’re offering almost
double what I'm earning in a busi-
ness that I do know. Where'* the
catch in it?"
He just laughed. “There isn" eay
eetch, my boy. I want you with me.
I like you, Ruth likes you, we‘d like
to see you getting somewhere in the
world ...” He talked on, but I
wasn't listening. “I like you, Ruth
likes you,” he said. I'd besn pretty
dense, but it dawned on me then. Old
IW. K. wm offering me nearly twice
m much as I ceald earn, en Ruth’s
account. I wm being offered enough
money to marry Ruth and give her
the things she was accustomed to.
Of course, he was nice about it,
but it wm a* elear as could be. Bo
finally I thanked him, aad told him
I’d think it over.
That wm enough for him, of course.
But not for Ruth. That's why we
quarrelled. ■tee couldn’t anderstsnd.
Mho said I wm stuhborn. She had.
"arranged” things far me, and I had
been too perverse to accept the op-
portunity. "Voolish pride” was an-
other phrase she used. And, though
I did my best to show her how it
looked to Uto, I eouldnt toll her the
real renson that held me back -the
reasons I should say. For how could
I toll her there were five other girls,
aad that for the life of me, I didn‘
know which Ao I really loved or
should marry.
■o help me. Bill. Write and toll
me what to do.
Always and afterward,
WARREN.
Relee of the Contest
1. A pieture of Warren and one
of hie‘aweetheerte will be pablished
la the Sunday News-Globe each Sun:
day for six weeks. Contestants should
read each ef the eplnodes aad after
the tart le publlehed write ia 144
these girls loves him. What should
he do? Which one should he
marry? What would you de under
thene cireumstances?
The Sunday News-Globe has
volunteered to help solve this
problem by paying a reward of 884
to the readers who beet solve this
problem, telling whom Warren
should many, and why.
Warren wrote to his beet friend
—Bill—for advice. Being a modest,
normal yoaag man, he wm re-
luetant to tell hie story to tho
world. But In letter* to Bill he
ha* descrihed hl* problems aad The
Sunday Newa-Globe today presents
the second of Warren’s letters to
Bill, expiaining why he loves Roth,
and why he think* she love* him.
of 26, but Ruth ta that way. I can't
get along with her-and I wouldn't
want to get along without her.
■he'* a beauty, lipe a* rod a* heart
bleed, and enapping black eyes with
a fire burning behind them. When
•he'* happy, she's cae of the
prettiest girls I ever saw. * That's
(Br The Aseceleted Pram)
BUCHARUT, Oct. 12.—’ 1
direct supervision of Queen J
the royal palnee, which buraM
while the late king Yerdinani
tying en hie deathbed, I* beta
built. She te assiuted by a M
slea ef the leading Rumanian
teeta, engineera and decoruth i
wbe advice the Department ad
lie Works.
The palaeo is to bo onaf
the more the
public is convin-
ced that plana ,
for experiment- I
lag with a mw
site are both M-
necessary and
dangerous. Much
has been *nid by
members of the
city commission
during the wek
to show that
there is no dan-
ger of a water
shortage; aad to
it started another quarrel with Ruth.
"You really have * terrible temper,
Ruth,” I told her. “Why must we al-
ways quarrel, this way?”
"Warren, you sweet old geese,”
she said, *1 deal know a single oth-
er person ta the world I care enough
about to quarrel with. Do you think
I could get so angry at you if I
weren’t mad about you?"
What could I say to that? Tell
her I wm mad about her, too? I
am, sometimes. And then, again, I
wonder whom I am mad about. Which
girl do I love! And times like that
I feel like Brighem Young, Re I just
sold. "Well, you have a funny way of
showing your affection, young lady.”
And she rumpled .my hair, aad we
had started in all ever again.
Before Ruth went to boarding
acheql,zeruzedtzzy zexereze.
ingito marry Me another, Ruth end
I. We haven't mentioned it since
Ford "T" Model....81 IM
Ford “A" Sedan............
Ford “A” Coupe......8I8M
Chevrolet Coach.....$16,50
Buiek, light.........837.70
Buiek, heavy.........888 35
Cadillac sedan.......840.47
The commission offers two reasons
why it believes water can be pumped
cheaper at the new site. One is a
purported difference in lift of the
water, and the other is that pumps
will be used in the individual wells
at the new place. The facte as to
lift of water speak for themselves.
At the Word site the average depth
to water ia 40 feet. Added to this is
a lift of IM feet in the pipeline to
thejtop of the bill. This makes a to-
teMof 144 feet. At the new site the
waPer level is reached at approxi-
mtely 180 feet.
1 By RAYMOND BROORB
(■portal Correspondent)
AUSTIN, Oct. 18.—Coborta of Ion.
Thomas B. Love already have opened
an oftensive aimed to oust Marvell
L. Buekner, friend of Gov. Dan
Moody, as ehairman of the Dallas
county Democratie extctive commit-
tee.
This wm revenled when Buckner
come to Auslin to hunt up apparently-
forgotten supreme court deelsions on
(Br Th* Asbociated Prew)
DAMASCUS, Ort. 18—Both in
Syria and Persia progress is being
made ea several new Ums of rail-
ways.
In this country, the French High
Commission ta drawing plans for two
lines, one from Horns to Palmyra, the
legendary city of ruins, with branch
linca to Damascus, aad the other
from Nissibin, present terminus of
the Baghdad railway, to Deir-es-Zor
on the Euphrates.
In Persia an American-German
syndicate ia pushing the Trans-Per-
sion line extending from the Caspic
Sea to the Persian Gulf. In the
southern section 14 1-3 miles have
been completed and 4,000 workers
are extending the rails northward.
In the northern section a four-mile
tunnel between Aliabad end Firuzkuh,
about 60 miles east y Teheran, the
capital, is under consideration. It is
estimated that this work will require
three years.
By R. W. BARRY
Associated Press Staff Writer
AUSTIN, Tex, Ort. Ur-Thu matt
interesting piece of political new*
one could disneminate jurt now would
be some- positive inform*tion about
thrpiansetGevetnerBaMopdz
when he complete* his second term la
the chief executive’s office, if in-
quiries indicates in any degree what
persons are thinking about.
Governor Dan Moody has never
INCOME TO BE
SLIGHTLYMORE
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Howe, Gene A. Amarillo Sunday News-Globe (Amarillo, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 331, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 13, 1929, newspaper, October 13, 1929; Amarillo, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1569368/m1/29/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.