The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 247, Ed. 2 Wednesday, July 17, 1929 Page: 13 of 20
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Complete Wire Reports-ef the UNITED PRESS, the Greatest Wo
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The Fort Worth Press
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FORT WORTH, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17,1929
VOL. 8, NO. 247
IPPS-MOWARR
PLAN OF CHEST
FORT WORTH'S
First Lady?
THEY FIGURE IN THE WHITNEYS’ MARITAL TANGLE
ROAD MARKERS
1483
CONTRACT LET
*3
irs79c‘
«E
r
BEGIN WORK AT ONCE
Sets
207
Uod
8
(
5
—7
(C.) Bachrach
ei
Call For Bids Soon.
gly will be determined after bids
.5 98c
AT ESTES PARK
Worth,
weafthy
by New York society
the
memberships In the chest after it
anteeing Fort Worth’s future
। president, Wednesday
5
$5.95
Fort Worth Girl Reserve clubs.
Te8.. 79c
tell
to
near here, believes that he has
lication.
MINOR DISORDERS IN
52 years old.
BIRTH RECORD GAIN
Is Injured
unknown
The month showed a marked Wednesday to push their
PRESS REPORTER FINDS MONTEREY, MEXICO, AN IDEAL VACATION SPOT
duennas look on.
Gran Hofei Ancira, most pppular
tourist to park his ear
CED
printed in both English and Span-
B. .. .
k
4
A*
• ad.
am.
■, 5"
- ,
32a
-*.*
, ‘*z
Receives Belated Credit
for Deathless Death Poem
CLYDE SPRACHER TO
BE BURIED THURSDAY
WORK ON DAMS
MAY BE BEGUN
BY THIS FALL
Sale
i. M.
BROWNS, JONSES AND
SMITHS ARE MISSING
GONE INTO AT
WORKERS' MEET
....29e
... .,19c
...15c
....49c
will be called together for try:
outs and reading. tests shortly
altho
reason,
soma
made
ton growth.
The seed
TULSA JAIL HOUSES
BOTH YOUNG AND OLD
VETERAN LEADERSHIP
SOUGHT BY ENID MAN
Mrs. Ismet 3. Dails, above,
wife of the secretary of labor In
President Hoover’s cabinet. anay
be the next First Lady of Penn*
the U. 8.
Menu in
-
.;i
found in any American restaurant.
The Mexican business man and hie
family do not eat enchilades.
Now la the ideal time to vtift
CONDEMNATION
IS EXTENDED
Friends and Relatives of Iowa Man Dedicate Tablet
To His Memory
for
he
prove
cause.
and
com-'
that the poem was his during
the period it was credited to
Bulwer. .
RAISE PETIT ONERS
FAIL TO OFFER PLEA
times that of Lake Worth. Due to
its extreme depth, it will cover an
area, on J y about two times that of
Lak* Worth —------—
The Tarrant County. Water Im-
provement Dlatrlct was created by
fare roads on either side of the
Henderson«treet underpass when
It is constructed at the Texas &
f’arlfle tracks.
mltted that the bill will cost Dal-
las a few thousand dollars more
at flrat, but said that it will r-
lease $100,000 that the board can
use for new buildings.
Park, Colorado.
The annual conference Is a com-
bined educational one for business
of a hundred literary disputes,
among which was this question
of authorship. When the truth
of th* authorship wag revealed
friends and relatives began a
fund to buy th* tablet
McCreery did not die until
1906, so he had the satisfne-
by a atreet car.
mktent of his tnjuries WM
connection with the annual all-
day picnic for extension club mem-
bers of the county at 2 p. m. os
{Thursday at Forest Park.
The girls will appear both as
modistes and mannequins. Judges
will pick the most attractive ap-
parel for school and party wear
i.
has started operation.
Membership of 18.
Signs to Be Put Up Over
3000 MilvS of Highways
Thruout State
Make Plans for Formation
Of Council of Social
Agencies
Twelve Delegates Will Go
From Fort Worth
Twelve delegates will represent
beautiful 79c
NEW ORLEANS STRIKE"A-•* ______
Police Quen pieht: striketrenker .CHILDRESS REPORTS
vag5
A
€
be built. It is estimated.
Besides making a future flood
impossible, the new lakes will pro-
vide the city with enough water
for a million persons, thus guar-
, resentation in the Council of So- girls. Girl Reserve and YWCA sec-
cla! Agencies regardless of wheth- retarles.
voted for the dams Oct. 8. 1927.
Without the two new proposed
lakes, silt would completely fill
Lake Worth by 1940, tests made
by engineers have shown.
Insures Water Supply.
IHE action of Marie Norton ,
L Whitney, weafthy r
2-
Mr 5
Victor L. Berger, Socialist lead-
er and former Congressman, was
in a Mriona condition today in
a hospital here after an aocident
in which he was knecked dewp.
A ’ I
9
•-
at least three years old.
•'The chest in Fort Worth needs
—
SECOND
SECTION
definitely, three atu
Me aald, boeauno M
mevet Im H X*r
elty.
Mako whoopee in Nuevo Lardo.
• Go to Monterrey t Mjoy Ito
quaint old Mezioen
thrill to iu besettei n««M»
tetreste, . ■ »152225%
1.27%7
: ‘1-79
g2,20
E- ’ •
Mb.-
Phillips, a governmental expert
on the federal experimental farm
YW CONFERENCE Society Woman Believed
Ready to Seek Divorce
lidid 79c
patio of the hotel without charge.
The rates and charges in the
tvtel’s breeze-swept dining room
soaked and planted Saturday. The
seed burst the ground on Monday
and was chopped within a week
The seed was soaked, when worr
on the demonstration farm halt-
ed planting. .
"785222*7 "23
4’"
fF*,
1
VICTOR BERGER HURT
SERIOUSLY-BY CAR
4.
-------—8
FIFTH AND JONES STREETB
ing cars a wide berth for the first 1 and the triendllest people tmag-
10 miles out of Nueva Laredo Inahia
The gravel is loose here and a fly-
ing stone may smash the wind-
shield.
Gravel surface of the highway
alio makes it Imperative that all
tires be in good condition.
Filling stations are few and far
between below the Rio Orande,
but there are ample to keep even
the thirstlest machine going.
A log supplied by the Laredo
chamber chart* each filling ata-
tion and the miles between.
There le no need to convert U.
8. currency into Mexicat money
before crosnthg the border. Amer-
ican money fe accept*bU every-
where and Mexican money la giv-
Ihoe
3
-r
rd it to th* British nobleman
n E •
rd under his name in Arthur’s dos 40 years.
upemnm
mmd"aammdmttheep
Nenrly Half of Month’s Inmntes
Under 31.
n, urn,* Prene.
soon as the 81,930,000 psld f*
the bonds Is received.
The dams will be at Bridgeport,
More than 400 farmers and
I their families are expected to at-
en as change.
Monterrey la a dry almost *•
targe 4s Fort Worth, with a fine
atreet car system, telephones,
miles and miles of paved street*,
Will Enter Race at Denver Con-
vention in September.
By Unttea Press.
ENID, Okla., July 17. — Col.
Winfield Scott, Enid, has tossed
his hat into the ring of candiates
for the commander-ln-chiefshlp of
the United Spanish American War
Veterans.
Col. Scott, former federal com-
missioner of pensions, will enter
the race at the organization’s an-
nual convention at Denver, Sept.
8-13. Eleven atatea already have
endorsed he Enid attorney and
he claims aupport of seven oth-
ers
had been practically forgotten
To become a legal resident
of Nevada Mrs. Whitney must
remain there for three months
Rhe has taken a cottage on
the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe
and has retained a Reno at-
torney.
ty,
A unique arrangement at the
no attempts to
seteet. 49c
near Reno, Nev., is accepted
Wednesday amending the original
’ renution on ths condemnation
"procedure.
The original resolution called
San Saba County water litiga- -
tion, which has delayed sale of
the Fort Worth bonds more than a *
year, has given engineers time to
make a more than ordinary care-
ful survey of the sites of the new
woman, in
allow a more gentle and sweep.
Ing curve.
tion of seeing
straightened out.
50 size... .33c
Cream... .33c
iize........29c
c
ty sets, with
9 and 79c
Highway No. 10.
’•’Dallas schools will bet strong- | Petitioners agreed to .donate
er insurance at less cost under 100-foot right-of-way for the en
my bill, said Love. '-The bill is tire distance with the exceptfom
mandatory in requiring use of the of the stretch thru'Bellaire Addi-
j mutual insurance. I tion, owned by private develop-
ment interests. This was obtain-
Guild, it
00
11 known
he Lord's
$1.00
THEATER PICKS
NEW DIRECTOR
the 37 births recorded for the | Petitioners for Increased pay
month, four pairs of twina were for city police nnd firemen fall
included. I ed to appear before City Council
593 to Be Installed at Cost
To Association of
$2.40 Each
Contract for the Installation
* of highway markerE over *,000 •
Increase in births over previous
months, Of the total number, 21
were boys and 18 were giris.
Berkshire Playhouse, -
bridge,* Mass
in ‘the
learned Wednes-
er they are members ef the cheat. , The Fort Worth delegation will
it will sponsor and authorize new leave Fort Worth August 17.
memberships in the chest after it it will be a part of the Texas
Breakup About to Take Place at Reno Recalls Evan
Burrows Fontaine’s Charges
Four Pairs of Twins Ineluded on
- Month’s List.
CHILDIESS, Texss. July 17.—
This city is claiming a birth rec-
ord for the month of June. Of
are only (lightly higher than in
-73
-g.x 8-2
Or
NK
2 1V
igw
51Gi-
VAa
Moatarr*r Later, the stream of
tourlsts l> sure to spol tt. To-
day, the ney rood l* too zoun.
Boro to' ml wtory-book: enlk.
the dining room la
lah. The dishes dre the same aa
in the Jail here during the last
Magazine, auPenneyivantazpub- shAwssaratan.
i. are below 21. The
V "‘7“ MV-5 " tyoungest prisoner received was a
By {ACK GORDON
A trip to a city aa foreign as
can be fecund in the heart of Spain
itaelf can now be made in three
days’ easy driving from Fort
Worth.
The city is MonJcrej, Mextco,
597 miles south—155 miles be-
low the Rio Grande.
Monterey ia brought within easy
reach of Fort Worth thru comple-
tion thia Spring of a new high- 1
type gravel highway between the
Mexican city and Laredo on the
border.- '
The highway ie a aectlon of a I
cardinal the Mexican government i
in constructing' between the Rio i
Grande and Mexico City, capital 1
of the republid. i
Except for a mile of twisting
road thru the magnificently aenie '
Mamilique Pace, thia road,' 1* the
answer to * motorist’* prayer.
They believe in buildihg gravel '
qrosdr plenty wide in Mexico.
Former Congressmnn and Social-
let Lender Very Hl
By United Prenu,
MILWAUKEE, Wla., July 17:
American visitors.
alumi 29c
# There were 32 bide (or the
« installation of the markers I iylvnnin. Thnt is, providing her
Stanton will install 593 markers ; husband runs for the governor-
at 13.49 a plece/fQtalllng 61,J00. ; ship of the state, as rumor has
’ ll!i* (1(9*. belt,*'mi^ufaclu7«d ! it'nO 41.11, And H JIWIWI.
TULSA, Okla., July 17,—From
1 survey of the agenof the 580 after King arrives, which will be
. prisoners who have been received
King has played juvenile roles
for Mary Pickford, Nazimova,
cd at total cost of 12,000, half
being defrayed by the county.
ng of 70,
value I JC
dynamic leadership and adminis-
tration of the highest type in the
person of an efficient oxecutive,"
he said.
"To be auccesaful the chest
must adequately finance ageneles,
protect them against promiscuous
solicitation and fly-by-night insti-
tutlons. and should not obliterate
the identity of the ihdividual or-
40 miles north of Fort
Club Roster of 240 Has No Such
Common Names.
QUANAH. July 17.—There are
no Browns, Smiths, Jonses or
Johnsons among the 214 4-H Club
boys In Hardeman County.
The fact waa discovered when
County Agent Luther T. Hunter
was sending out invitations for
the club picnic last week.
legal residence
for planting
S2.2
framed
d in gold
ncy chip-
immed in
id green,
nd 9x14,
r 79c
Council Asks More Property
For Henderson Widening
Additional condemdation for
■the Henderson street widenins
program was authorized in reso:
hotel with
New ; faced extended litigation
brought on by pretty Evan
makes it possible for the auto
Curvet are ao rare and eo gently
bent they are hardly noticed.
And, joy of joys, there la no
speed limit and consequently no
Maying motor "laws" to worry
about.
Passport annoyaneea have been
set aside by the Laredo Chamber
of Commerce.
A, short-time permit for vistt-
ing the interior is easily and
quickly obtained thru the cham-
ber. There le no fee.
The chamber asks nothing ex-
cept that the tourist properly
identify himself. rA letter frm
the Fort Worth Association of
Commerce to the Laredo organiza-
tion la ae good identification aS
any to take along.
First leg of the trip le the 300
miles from Fort Worth to San
Antpnlo. A bight in San Antonio
and the tourist is ready to push
on the next morning for Laredo.
The road, " " ""
Board of 35 Directors May
Be Appointed to Carry
On Work
The Arts definite step tending
to set the machinery of the com-
munity cheat in operation in Fort
Worth waa taken by the Social
Workera Club of Tarrant County
Tuesday night at the Assoclation
of Commerce.
This was the authorization by
the club of the appointment of a
committee of five men to develop
plane for the formation of a
Council of Social Agenclea. a vital
part of the plan of administra-
tion of the chest here.
This committee will be appotnt-
edbyK.D.Evm,presreet.B.
R. Brammer, Chicago, community
cheat expert, suggested the forma-
tion of the council'aa an aid to
the operation of the ebeat here
when be met with the representa-
tive social agenclea of the city
Tuesday night.
Board of 85.
The plan of operation suggest-
ed by Brammer calle for a board
of directors of 35 instead of 30 as
the original plan outlined for the
eheat, provided there are 16 so-
cial agenclea represented In the
ell of Social Agenclea.
Every beneficiary and soclal
agency in the city will have rep-
it will take 700 years for silt
Judges will be Misses Ann Bur- to ril the two new reservoirs to
-d —“ ..------ ------. in- . . .
arr,-t.
In AeSSSEhB"“ur of key with .
the buoy, commercial spirit of the •
Dr... 15c
AILS
er palls, values
5c and 29c
: 49c
5ot8,P-49c
laire Addition to Benbrook.
Petition from property owners
in that section and near Benbrook
was responsible for the action.
It was cited that on July 11, Coun-
ty Commissioners' Court azreed
to build a highway from TCU to
Benbrook connecting with State
_• । with band concerts on the plhza
Inabie. and beautiful senoritas and awar-
The city ta walled In with moun- ,. .. -om-.N
tains which pierce the clouds, thy youn bladen promenading
giving it * setting of rare beau->while watchful
Were Io Have Presented Cawe
Before Council Wednesda}
King is a graduate of the tend the annual all-day picnic be-
University of Idaho and holds ’inning at 10:30 a. m. and last-
certificate, from Yale. HA was Dinher “wPin "be nerved by the
lir stock- at Spokane, Wash., for Home Demonstration Council,
one season, and was electrician ; Members of the Commissioners'
for one summer season at thelc----- --a---‘—■
would like to become a part of
the chest," Brammer said. "It is
probable that the community chest
As It starts operation in Fort
Worth will have a membership of
15 agencies, a probable budget of
1150.000 and the first campaign
will likely occur in October or
November. I will know more def-
initely these details in a couple
of weeks."
Brammer frankly pointed out
to the social workers that in the
'first year of its operation they
SURVEYS COMPLETED
I____.___
2 Lake Will Provide Water
Sufficient for Growth
To 1,000,000
Workmen should get started
building Tarrant County's two
new dams early in the fall.
. Two million dollars in bond*,
voted for the dam*, have been sold
and are now in the bands of the
stste comptroller for registration.
Money from the bond* 1* expect-
i ed about Aug. 1, according to Ire-
land Hampton, attorney for the
[Tarrant County Water 'Improve-
ment District.
-gza-e
. 7; /. 13 . ' - • . ™ • 07
out of Fort Worth by the Asso-
ciation of Commerce was award-
«d l« L A. Stanton and Com- 1
pany, Ed Flannery, publicity
manager announced Wednesday.
Walter Scott, attorney
chairman of the citizens'
ganlaztions."
present* "r"tD meeUng °kith achieved a “record for rapid co^
Brammer.
and waa worked out by William
H. Furlong of the San Antonio
Chamber of Commerce.
Laredo ahould be reached ear-
ly in the afternoon. Thia early
arrival will give the vacationist
.time to. get hi* permit from the
Laredo chamber and be ready to
cross the Rio Grande when the in-
ternational bridge open* at 7
a. m.
The road between Fort Wgrth
and San Antonio le all-weather all
the way, and for the most part as
smooth ae a speedway.
Forty miles of graded highway
at Cotulla breaks an otherwise
glassy 150-mile drivs bstwsen Ssn
Antonio to Laredo. This atreteh
is nothing to cause worry ta fair
weather. Most of It can bo cov:
sred at a good clip.
From Laredo to Monterrey, all
is fair sailing.
Ono warning should be sound-
•4. The driver should give A-
• ' •
tion, criticising his bill to provide
for mutual school insurance. Re-
plying to the criticism, Love ad-
the matter
mlde
York, society
tablisbing a
King accepted the Fort Worth
Little Theater directorship in
preference to ssslstant director-
ship of the New York Theater
1
, ny "-"-4 pre-.
NEW ORLEANS, July 17-
Minor dinorders broke out afresh
today in the New Orleans street
car ntrike.
Police quelled a local fight
between strikebreakers snd s
group of men believed to be
' dock employes and sailor*.
One strikebrenker wan Infured
when hit, on th* head with a
rock, while two other* were ar-
rested.
COMMITTEE NAMED
early in Heptember.
4224,-
.. ...... .. .1.. Jess Umbenhour, Marian Benton
eouldno ‘Z. Il nav ott an and Mary Elizabeth Blanton, rep-1
all their fnancial HNPazaotr or resenting the Business Girls
Old debts.doublestheirbudeetnLeague; Misses Alta Beall Blan-
assure.an.expansion..proram;ton, Blanche Williams and Mary
That will oom. after the cheat 18 Witherspoon, representing the
Burrows Fontaine, dancer, who
sued him ior 61,000,000 for
breach of promise and charged
him with the paternity of her
son, "Sonny," with whom she
is shown at the left.
After a long battle in the
courts, Ip which Miss Fon-
taino asserted that Whitney ■
had agreed to marry her in
1920, but had failed to do so.
the New York Supreme Court
last May, decided in Whitney»
favor, dismissing the dancer »
suit.
Since (hat time New York
society has heard repeated ru-
more of sn approaching sepa-
ration by the Whitneys, but '
the reports were alwys de-
nied and until Mrs. Whitney's
recent move to Nevada they
delegation making the trip in a
special train over the Fort Worth
... inxda.., n*..n and Denver lines. Th* cities of
. h X or 8eynAndivid that ran, San Antonio, Galveston, Waco,
1zations have Indicated that they Ei Paso will be represented on the’
lutions of City Council passed
Me*
f * 'I
t, w . d
HLm02
id” „5mE
63fg
S;.R,
DELHI, India, July 17.-
I Friends and relatlvea of
the late J. L. McCreery, an
Iowa poet and pioneer news-
paperman. recently dedicated a
tablet to his memory on which
is inscribed a poem written by
him but which for many years
was wrongly credited to an
Englishman—Edward Bulwer.
somethes known aa Lord Lyt-
ton.
The poem, "‘There Is No
Death," has been widely quot-
ed but until late years it was
always credited to the British
poet instead of to its real au-
thor.
Once, some 20 years after he
had written it, McCreery sat
In the stranger's gallery in the
House of Representatiyes at
Washington, D. C.. and heard
a. Senator from Pennsylvania
quote a verse of the
noem- while delivering an ora-
tion on the death of Rush
Clark of Iowa. He quoted a
vers* of the poem and credit-
mllis. of the principal cardinal •
and lateral highways radiating _
Henry Walthail, Viola Dana.
’ Pearl White and others.
According to announcement
from Morgan, seven major pro-
ductions will be presented this
season. Selection of th. plays
i will be mad. before the arrival
of King.
Talent is being enlisted and
. for condemnation of property
necessary to create an 80-foot
rfght-of-way from Pennsylvania
to the Trinity River, along Hen- 1 . ,, “ ~ at the conclusion of the revue.
’derson to a point* near the Idaho Man to Take Charge
courthouse and then along Royal In Sontamhar ford and Frances Bethanyx, I
to the river. 1 " Pepennper structors in the city schools.
Additional isnd was author- selectton of Cameron King of 1 Winners in the clothing contest
T1 condemned between E! Lewinton, Idaho, as produeing wl-b Eiven,scholarshiPs paand
l'aso and Broadway to allow a . K "" railroad fare to the annual harm-
144 foot roadway, This will pro- director of th. Httle Theater era' Short Course at A&M Col- -ueg Eur wornszuturewa
; vid* ground for two 38 foot aur- and Community Playhouse forlege, July 29-Aug. 5, represent-her supply.
th. 1929-30 season was sn- ing this county in th. state cloth-I Cheap and abundant water for
nounced by Charles L. Morgan, i "KMorntthan 400 farmer, and wriratsondandvanduserlalpurponcs
of additinal property for ap-1
proaches to the bridge across
Drnity River for two blocks'
Talon Royal Street.
It also shifts condemnation
proceedings from the west to
east side of Henderson Street st j
its Intersection with North, to
49c
by the R. Hardesty Manufactur- . -------1--
Ing Company of Denver, will be m la AIn A «A
' received in Fort Worth Thureday A 11 nIDI Q Tn
: and installation will begin with- 4 IT IinD.3 IU
in 24 hours, Flannery said. , .I I..m
Th* markers will be placed on QTAC DDWNILC
allhighwayu" that.ttwilbe IROL HL I UE and at Eagle Mountain, 10 miles
dPO5MDI5 -or a WHr1*- traveling i north of the city
in any qirection through the i ------- The Rrid.nori renervntr .in
sat not .to me the name or a All-Day Picnic to Be Heldhaveda'maximumcapaerto'or 20
Way. Porthemyapnat hieh- In Forest Park - -
special.
The Fort Worth delegates are '
as follows:
Mmes. Luther Hogsett. Girl Re- '
’ serve chairman, end Harry F.
McKeever, both representing the
Fort Worth YWCA board of direc-
tors: Miss Jean Batty, executive
secretary; Miss Aliena "Milam,
physical education,secretary; Miss
Ruth Crosby, Girl Reserve execu- '
tive; Miss Gladys Crim, vocational
and employment secretary; Misses
" 1-=e.,4g2E*e82
: . ■ • „.mipg,ptc5u
mtttee which circulated the pe-
titions. advised Henry Keller
assistant city secretary, Tuesday,
that he would appear before the
Council.
Petitions were referred to
City Attorney Rinehart Rouer
several weeks ago for an opin-
ion on whether it was a mattar
for referendum or for final ac-
tion by City Council.
The petitions ask a pay boost
of 20 per cent.
19c
’ iU 19c
UND
nd .. 10c
IS
r10": 49c
Its’
H.^.Sc
ACH
pass, no 5c
19c
19c
3.98
r. $3.98
b.ThewPhngtneommittpeohez 4-H Club giris ot Tarrant
since last Hovcmbtr. County will glve a style revue in
vote Oct. 7, 1924. Bonds were
EXPERT SETS RECORD
FOR COTTON GROWTH
Government Man Sonks Seeds
Before Planting. •
By vntted Press.
GUTHRIE, Okla., July 17.—Lee
- ' 7
Is First Fatality At Meacham
Feld Since It Waa Started
Funeral for Clyde Spracher,
31, 1806 Hemphill, who died at
9:15 p. m. Tuesday from con-
cussion of the brain sustained
last Thursday in an airplane
crash at Meacham Field, will be
held at 10 a. m. Thursday.
Services will be conducted
■c
r”a"'y 49c
19c
"h.dh 49c
0c
10c
RY 98c
ing Die- (jo
ectal . . JOC
from Robertson-Mueller-Harper
• chapel, with burial in Rose Hill
Burial Park.
Arlington Height* Masonic
Lodge No. 1184 will have charge
of services at the grave.
Spracher, Texas Air Transport
pilot, was flying at an altitude
of 1000 feet when his plane
went into a spin and crashed.
Hia was the first fatality at
Meacham Field since it waa
started three year* ago. .
He formerly lived at Houaton.
He ia survived by his widow.
«xu wemeuan
... "Ade
) g
" $1,000 Appropriations la Voted By
Objection to Insurance Rend Into i City Council.
. Senate Record- । Appropriation of 81.000 was
" July ,_ senator! mapaybzthtgitornsrWernprday
Tom Love, of Dallas,.had read In ert damage Incurred In obtaining
the State Senate today a letter rizht-or-way for a road thru n„
from the Dallas Board of Educa........
Th* resolution amendment
also provides for condemnation
Whitney, however, soon
erry sets
nd Nile
ig of one
six ind-
speclally
$1.00
_____________J
chest. This would mean one rep- th* Fort Worth YWCA at the an-
resentative from each beneficiary, nual conference of Young Wom-
an equal number from the Asso- en‛s Christian Associations of. the
elation of Commerce and five ad- Southwest- and Rocky Mountain
ditional members from th* Coun- states. August 20-30, at Estes
ar* received, Hampton said.
Call for bids will be made as
editor saw the manuscript,
printed th* poem and credited
it to “E. Bulmer."
Th* poem then attracted th* ,
attention of another editor,
who, believing that a typo-
graphical error had been made,
changed the letter "m" to "w."
Thus the poem was credited to
"E. Bulwer.’’ Readers took
the name to be that of Ed-
ward Bulwer, whose poetry was
widely read at that time.
For yeara the Britisher re-
ceived credit for writing the
poem until Lippincott's Maga-'
zine in 1889 uncovered a iist
The Mexican boys and (Irie are
smartly dressed, sensitive and In-
telligent looking. The seption-
gang typ* of Mexican famtiar in
Texas is rarely encountered.
Bar-rooms there are a plenty in
Monterrey, but one find* more
busy music and department stores,
benks and produce markets.
Intemperance la a rarity. If
one enters the city with thoughts
centered on 'a lively senslon of
whoopee, he 1* apt to find hi*
enthusnam dampened before he la
i**e*n
Lil ‘
Whether work will begin on
the two reservoir* simultaneously
arthaiue-dama-miuaesuiei-
— a*.......02 .
$2,000,000 Bond Sold and
Bids Will Be Called
For Soon
c
59c
89c •
VhadM 89c
’AIR
veyy M 10c
TUBS
sites,.. 49c
the j Court and agricultural committee struetiondonc work’ zpeedzrcon-
Stock- of the Association of Commerce Hampton said
'will be guests. j ________,
ccg, Q AT HAI I AC CITY TO PAY FOR
OPPOSE LOVE B?LL NEW ROAD DAMAGE
"""
Soap
pat lath-
kt water,
„25c
__
forerunner to the eventual fll-'
ing by her of a suit for di-
vorce from her husband, Cor-
nelius Vanderbilt Whitney.'
Mrs. Whitney, shown' in the
center with her two children,
Nency (left) and Harry Payne 1
2nd, married the son of the
multi-mllllonafr* Hgrry Payne
Whitney in Paris in 1923, af-
ter a romance suld to have
started when she met Corne-
Hus Whitney on his father's i
yacht. For a time they lived
in the far West, where Whit- i
ney wss looking after his oil ,
interests, then they moved to
New York and became promi-
nent among the younger so-
cial set on Long Island, where
they were considered an ideal- ’
. ly happy and fortunate mar-
ried couple.
The' picture at the right,
showing Mr. and Mrs. Whit-
ney together, was taken dur-
ing that period of their lives.
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Sorrells, John H. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 247, Ed. 2 Wednesday, July 17, 1929, newspaper, July 17, 1929; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1638560/m1/13/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.