The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 271, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 16, 1930 Page: 2 of 10
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to. 16,192
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several radio addresses.
Sterling.
station and the eight story freight
Ferguson departed today for
incorporators: J. M. Grif-
ling.
These are: Widening Hender-
76 SIGN UP FOR
Transfer
Among building projects now
y
$1 33.000.
Judge S. D. Shannon, he said Sat-
By George Clark
Side Glances
GLEN WALKER ED K. COLLETT WM. RIGG J. N. DOOLEY
“35 Years of Constant Protection"
% Dial 2-2203
305 West Tenth
%.
urday.
Judge Shannon added that
SHANNON BACKS
HOME SITE SALE
YEAR’S BUILDING
TOPS 5 MILLION
WARNING SIGNS
POSTED AT LAKE
STERLING AIDE
SAYS FERGUSON
MEANS BOYCOTT
Acceptable, He Says
The suggestion of Judge Hal |
Lattimore of 96th District Court,
to sell the present county orphans’
home to the Tillar Foundation for
HECKLERS FAIL
TO JAR MOODY
permont iii the county seat, is
thoroly pro-Ferguson, according
to the political history of the
county. Political leaders accept
its majority for-"Ma” as a set-
tled fact. Three to one is the
conservative estimate being made
Our Semi-Annual
Good Will Sale Continues
Con 8
manager, said.
Chief among those speaking for
Sterling will be Gov. Dan Moody,
The governor is scheduled for two
West Texas addresses Wednesday
—Brownwood at 3 p. m. and San
Throckmorton, Thursday night;
Seymour, Friday night.
Mrs. A. C. Zahner of Dallas at
Wichita Falls Thursday night.
Fort Worth's building activity,
despite the slump taryout the 08-
Moody's convicts, whose pardons
have been recommended by his
pardon board.
charges, but I don't any more.
I am like the fellow who was
who drowned in the lake Thurs-
day, were held at 2:30 p. m.
Friday at the North' Side Un-
dertaking Company's chapel.
Brother members of the Pan-
idence at 3917 Monticello Drive.
Largest of the projects under
Street bridge, over the Clear
Fork, $250,000; new central fire
station and fire alarm signal hall.
bored Jim MeNamara, Every esca-
pade of the itinerant worker was
made to appear a crime.
Upon cross-examination by his
counsel, Edwin McKenzie, much
of the sinister aspect of Billings'
associates melted away. The Berk-
a good Christian mother gets in
she’ll have moral courage enough
to turn 'em out. When you de-
prive a man of liberty who is
entitled to it, you are worse
than a convict."
Stonewall County, of which As-
“Good heavens, Henry: It’s those people we met on our
vacation. They’ve accepted our invitation to visit us!"
RUG CLEANING
WANT IT MIGHET
See “SAM HILL"
PHONE 3-8000
BLADDER
TROUBLE
See Us—Advice Free
National Medical
Specialist
611 1 a Main Street
FERGUSON FOES
ARE GOMPARED
TO JACKASSES
The setting was ripe for a real
fact-finding excursion into the
crime for which Billings is doing
| life. Yet not one of these men
| asked Billings if he was at or near
the scene of the explosion at the
time it occurred or if he carried
the lethal suitease.
Instead, Preston delved deeply
into the convict’s past. He sought
desperately to tie him into the
Berkman-Emma Goldman anar-
There is Only One
PROGRESSIVE
PRINTING CO.
1207 Throc kmorton 3-2574
“DISTINCTIVE PRINTING"
Dr. John M. Furman, Jr.
1305 Medical Arts
SILK DRESSES
$3.95
GOLDEN RULE
104-106 Houston St.
YOUR VALUABLES MAY BE
LOST!
While You’re Away
Unless You Place Them
in Safe Keeping-
Use Our Fireproof
SAFETY VAULT
Low Rates
SPROLES
Dial 3-4351 Daggers and se, Adams
(Atlas of the Moving World)
Office Space Available
sinister aura about his relations
with Belle Lavin, who once bar-
North and West Texas to Be
Thoroly Covered This Week
Says Alexander
“Bomb" Was Camera
The ball-bearings taken from
bis room became a pocket full of
junk from his own mechanic over-
all pocket. The mysterious pack-
age delivered to the Mooneys on
the eve of the explosion changed
from a “bomb” to a camera. Bill-
ings‘ politics faded out from deep
crimson to the pale hue of a good
Democrat.
The murder conspiracy became
a tour of malicious mischief with
Billings squirting paint remover
, on five or six autos so as to cause
“unfair" garages the loss of $800.
And Billings himself seemed to
melt down from the arch fiend of
his former trial to a young hobo
turned half-baked radical labor-
ite, selling himself to strike lead-
ere for jobs of sabotage to get
eves with what he called “capi-
talism.”
Billings was abjectly sorry for
it all and promised Preston that
if pardoned he would prove wor-
thy of the confidence the pardon
implied.
Pardon, he insisted it must
be, for “Parole,” he said, “is
for those who are guilty and
here repented.”
See Commutation
Henderson Street subway, be-
Now let us refine it — start neath the TAP tracks, $500,000;
inside e. of e. (1. e„ where you TCU Stadium. $350,000; Royal
started before) and cwt the l * 4 ---4 4
cones at intervals all the way
back past the e, of e. and far-
Werlin Publishing Corporation,
| Houston; capital stock $10,000;
printing and publishing, station-
ery and blank books. Incorpora-
tors: Jacob B. Werlin, Mrs. Ja-
cob B. Werlin, Victor B. An-
drews Jr.
North Texas Oil & Gas Asso-
ciation, Inc., Wichita Falls: no
capital stock; study of oil prob-
lems and dissemination of infor-
mation. Incorporators: P. B.
Flynn, Walter K. Campbell, R.
L. Underwood.
Glen Walker, Collett & Rigg
Insurance & Bonds ■
wan-edited “Blast” turned out to
be Mt Billings’ idea of good light
reading, and, said Billings, copies
were not found in hie room as
Cunha claimed.
to prove the Fergusons have not
always championed the best In-
terests of the people of Texae.
I used to get mad at their
afternoon: Sunset, night.
Joe Wheat at Bomarton, Mon-
day afternoon; Goree, night; at
Vera, Tuesday afternoon; Mun-
day, night; Benjamin, Wednesday
afternoon; Knox City, night;
Other speakers will be:
Judge R. E. Taylor, Wichita
Falls, at Stanton Wednesday
morning; Odessa, afternoon; Mid- 1
land, night.
R E. Shepherd, former Wich-
ita Falls mayor, at Holliday Tues-
The omission of ali examination
of the actual bombing is being
taken here to mean that the state
has dropped the idea of murder
guilt and is turning toward tho
theory that Mooney and Billings,
while not mass murderers, are
yet very bad citizens. Many In-
terpret this as a move toward a
proposal by some of the judges
that the pair accept commutation
of sentence as of the present date
rather than pardon. All who at-
tended the prison hearing agree
that it has brought Billings and
Mooney nearer to freedom.
The hearing is likely to be ter-
minated the latter part of next
week. Chief Justice Waste ex-
pressed s determination to hurry
it to a conclusion, ft is understood
that there will be no final argu-
ment.
nights to see that its signs are
obeyed. The police also may
guard it. _
Unfit for Bwimmlng.
The posting of the lake fol-
lows the third drowning there
this summer, and refusal of the
city to place life guards over ft
and supervise swimming. The
refusal was bssed on a water
department analysis showing the
water unfit for swimming.
Park department and health
department signs were up Sat-
urday morning and police de-
partment signs will be erected in
the afternoon, according to Chief
Henry Lee.
Funeral Kites Held.
Lindy Jr., Is Good
Baby," Declares
Doting Grandma
By United Press
CT. LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 14.-
D Charles Augustus Lind-
bergh Jr., to "a good baby
and doing splendidly,” his
grandmother, Mrs. Dwight
. Morrow, said here last night.
Further than that Mrs.
Morrow would not comment
on her famous grandson. She
left later on a special car
with a party of friends to
join her husband, Ambassa-
dor Morrow, in Mexico City.'
Fort Worth voters will hear ap-
peals for the support of Rose
Sterling for governor from two
speakers at Capps Park Monday
night.
Ernest 0. Thompson, Amaniio
mayor, and Senator Walter Wood-
ward, Coleman, each will speak
for an hour. Their addressee will
be broadcast.
With the run-off primary only
a week away. Sterling forces will
carry Sterling’s message into
every corner of North and West
Texas, Ernest Alexander, local
tion, so there would be no over-
lapping of efforts.
The old Fort Worth Benevolent
Society, which closed its doors In
1906, never owned the land on
the Dallas Pike where the present
orphanage is located. Judge Latti-
more explained. Some persons had
the Impression that the property
was given the county by that so-
ciety, It was explained,
"That society was maintaining
a separate orphanage at a differ-
ent location," he declared. When
it became necessary to rebuild, the
Benevolent Society had $5,000,
which It considered insufficient
for the purpose.
"It offered to give that sum to
the Commissioners Court if the
county would accept the children
which it was caring for. The prop-
osition was accepted, but there
was no obstacle placed In the way
of the county's ever disposing of
its property."
The land which the county was
then and still is uslag for its or-
phanage site had been bought by
the county years before, and the
Fort Worth Benevolent Society at
one time had an Interest in It,
Judge Lattimore said.
Should the Tillar Foundation
agree to accept Judge Lattimore’s
suggestion, the county would build
a new orphanage on SO aerea of
land near Glen Garden.
The county home would care
for children ineligible to enter the
Tillar orphanage according to
Judge Lattimore’s plan.
Funeral services for Edward
Settles, 11, 617 East Second,
kicked by a jackass. I consider
the source and let it go at that."
A fervent "Amen” greeted the
speaker when he declared “If
the pardoning system to wrong,
then the forgiveness of sins ie
wrong. The 2000 convicts my
wife intends tA turn out are
Pro-Ferguson County,
“He hasn't dons this. When
RUNOFF CANDIDATES
ON LAST LAP SOON
Group to Speak in Arlington
Tonight, Rest Sunday
Tarrant County candidates in
the runoff primary Saturday
looked forward to a day of rest
before resuming the last top of
their race.
They will invade Arlington
Saturday night, rest Sunday end
return for the home stretch
Monday night nt Grapevine.
Friday night's unofficial ap-
pearance at the old Chevrolet
plant on West Seventh Street
was featured by the auctioning
of quilts and take for the La-
dies' Auxiliary of the Carpen-
tore’ Union, sponsoring the rally,
and the heckling of epeakero.
Clark Wills, Fort Worth at-
torney, spoke for Mrs. Miriam
Ferguson for governor. The
buckling was mild during his
address and that of Lucien And-
lor, former Houston city judge,
speaking for Ross Sterling.
H. E. Lobdell, Decatur, wae
interrupted repeatedly by men
on the edge of the crowd no he
epoke for Sterling, J. R. "Dick"
Coffman, chairmen, called time
out to appeal for fair play for
the speaker.
The last state speaker was O.
H. Allred, Fort Worth lawyer,
for his brother, James V. Allred,
attorney general candidate. Coun-
ty speakers, beginning at 9:30,
had their time cut because of
the lots hour.
O Sgienee Service , ========-----=
By ALBERT C INGALLS 1 However, before committing sui-
The set-up for making the side stop and think—the world
Foucault test. This particular will not come to an end M our
lamp is a candelabrums bull mirror is not now a sphere. We
an inch in diameter with SWF, can make it a sphere with rouge
fire fine ground by carbore during polishing—provided, M 1
dam and a piece of thin metal said and repeated, some days
wrapped around the bulb. The ago, it is not tee far from
knife edge is a razor Made spherical for rouge to cope with,
on a stick. The distance be- This shadow testing may
tween mirror and lamp in this puzzle you at first but do not
photograph is only about half flatter yourself that you are so
the distance necessary to ac- outstanding example of stupid-
twal test. ness, for it puzzles nearly ey.
• * * erybody at first. Generally it
Usually when we shadow test happens that you some day sud-
a mirror (f, e., Toucaale test or deny Eras" all at once, so
don’t surrender yes
(Copyniee, sets, ty Sintence Service)
By United Press.
ABILENE. Aug. If.-Damage
Suite aggregating $1,000,000 were
being prepared for filing today by
executives of the West Texas
Chamber of Commerce against
textbook publishing houses charge
ed with misrepresenting the
plains country.
"Grotesque and persistent mis-
representations of the West Texas
territory as a semi-arid and al-
most deserted plateau, unfitted
for agriculture and with few large
cities because of the difficulty of
living there,” have been made in
public school geographies, the
chamber chargee.
A brief submitted to the organ-
ization by its publicity committee
contained excerpte from 12 geog-
raphiee, which were declared to be
“scandalously and damagingly un-
true" by chamber executives.
Seventy-six Fort Worth manu-
WEST TEXAS CHAMBER ufacturers have signed up for
A CilC DilDI uEDo space In the first exposition of
TO SUE PUBLISHERS Fort Worth manufactured prod-
Charges Textbooks Misrepresent ucts the last week of September.
Plains Country This was the announcement
W. Whit Davidson, former lieu-
tenant governor, will speak at
Gainesville Saturday night for
Angelo at 8 p. m.
Mrs. Lee to Speak „. .
Mrs. R. Q Lee, widow of the K-e test) we do it to see what
former congressman and prest-the curves are.. Here, howerer,
--dent of the Westexas Chamber—order ttr the PeOiPS
or Commerce, will be active next invalued eadlas “A eraan - dan
week. She is scheduled to make
|fith, Aline Griffith, P. L. Hare.
Farmers’ Gin Company of
Rosebud; capital stock $56,000;
establishment of mills, gins.
■ I compresses, wraehouses and ele-
1 valors for purchase and sale of
j farm products. Incorporators: I.
IC. Clark, J. C. Grenn, D. 0.
| Clark.
heightened by low cotton prices
and a disastrous drought, were
portrayed by Ferguson speakers
here Friday night attacking the
Sterling bond issue plan with its
"burden" of $350,000,000.
"It looks like the country has
already gone wet," remarked
Jim Ferguson as a brilliant elec-
trical storm accompanied by a
sudden downpour of rain greet-
ed hie first remarks. It wae
the first rain encountered by
either of the two candidates for
governor.
Charges Henry Burden.
"There to mors corruption and
depravity in this bond issue than
any proposition ever presented to
the people of Texas," Ferguson
declared, renewing* the attack
against Sterling's plan after re-
viewing the planks of his wife's
platform. "It puts a tax of $65
per capita on every one, even
babies unborn,” Ferguson
charged.
"They have never been able
ther. Near the middle at e. of
TIMBER INSPECTOR’S
SLAYER GIVEN LIFE
Jury Fails to Consider Plen of
Self-Defense
By United Press.
GULFPORT, Miss., Aug. 16.-
Leonard V. Thompson, 19, of
Shawnee, Okla., last night was
found guilty of murdering Frank
Webb, 33, New Orleans, and was
sentenced to life imprisonment.
Webb, a timber inspector, was
found dead of a blow on the
head in a thicket at White Har-
bor, Miss., Aug. 2. Thompson
confessed that he had hit Webb
over the head with a soda
bottle during a quarrel over
liquor.
Thompson’s defense was that
Webb threatened him with a
i razor.
The East Fourth Street under-
pass, beneath the Rock lAand
tracks, $250,000; Tennessee
Street underpass, beneath the
OUT MURDER
EXPENSES IN RUNOFF,
Merrett and shannon Make Cam-
re’mn Statements
' Expense accounts of two Tar-
rant County candidates for office
during the runoff primary were
filed Saturday in the county
clerk’s office.
Bill Merrett has spent $90 ‘in
ths race for county commission-
sr. Precinet 4. Marrin B. Shan-
non’s expenditures have totaled
$79 to his race for justice of
the peace, Precinet 1. Plaes 2. ^
Inge Construction Co., Inc.,
Dallas; capital stock $10,000;
real estate and building. In-
corporators: Wirt Davis, H. P.
Inge. Dorothea Inge.
Tilley Laundry Company, Jack-
sonville; capital stock $25,000;
steam laundry. Incorporators:
E. F. Tilley, Perry Wallace, Mrs.
Addle Wallace.
Tres Cuevas Quicksilver Co.,
Denton; capital stock $12,500;
mineral development. Incorpora-
tors: C. L. Oliver, C. H. Han-
cock. E. J. Headlee.
Foreign Permit—Hanlon-Wat-
ers. Inc., Wilmington, Del., Tulsa,
Okla., and Houston; capital stock
$750,000.
Thru sound reflectors recently
installed, 25,000 persons can hear
a pin drop on a stage of the Holly-
wood bowl.
took up the refrain.
Moody Scores Again
Each beliggerent question was
turned to a score in Moody's fa-
vor so long as he could distin-
guish them. When they became
mere interruptions, he said:;'
“I’m not going to fool with you
any longer. Some folks are like
owls—the more light you give
them, the lees they can see. Stand
by and if you've got ears and an
open mind you may learn some-
thing."
Eventually complete quiet pre-
vailed as he shot thrust after
thrust at the Ferguson record.
Reading from official files, Moody
pointed out:
"Between Dec. 16, 1926, and
Jan. 16, 1927, full and uincondi-
tional pardons were issued to 127
robbers, and 127 liquor law vio-
lators, During that eventful month
the first woman governor of Texas
issued full and unconditional par-
dons to 133 takers of human life.
But more than that, you mothers
of daughters, the first woman
governor liberated 39 rapists. .
All Expect Pardons
"I can call you the roll of some
of the people who are going to
vote to put old Jim back in pow- Dr.2m
er There are the relatives and - - * ।-.•’■. ------------- -------- -----
their friends of men who are In Breckenridge where he will make $10,000; manufacturing and sell-
the penitentiary. Many of them an address tonight,
are good people. Every man in the
penitentiary and all of his friends i
believe that he will be among the
2000 old Jim has announced he
will pardon. They want Jim back — _ .
In power. They are the bootlegger, CAOTADV QUnIA
the gambler, the woman of the PAUTUNT
streets, the hijecker." 1 " V 1 ***""
To the governor’s remark: • _____
"I know that the great body
of Grayson County citizens have Manufacturers" Exhibit On
no sympathy with the hecklers manufacturers ExhIDI on
that are here,” a hearty response |
of “No, we don't,'' was given. | . In September
ther Boys' Club attended In a
body and acted as pallbearers.
CHARTERS GRANTED.
AUSTIN, Aug. 16.—Chartered:
Mohawk Production Co., Waco;
capital stock $10,000; mineral
development. Incorporators: J.
1.. Allnut, F. W. Miller, Carlton
J. Smith.
Sterling Building Co., Hous-
ton; 1,000 non-par shares; office
building construction. Incorpor-
ator# Walter G. Sterling, L. V.
Echols, W. M. Cleaves.
Texas Shirt Manufacturing Co..
Inc., Beaumont: capital stock
c. the performance becomes very
sensitive, so sensitive, in fact,
that a small fraction of an Inch
he toward you or the mirror______________
favored an agreement with the changes the appearances on the T&P tracks, $96,000; new eleva-
Tillar Foundation trustees to con-mirror Repeat this a few times I tor at the Kimbell Mills, $55.
duct the two homes in conjune-
its orphanage. Is acceptable to
Governor Refers ie-(Ma’s'
Record of Bardons.
By Emted Pres. 4
DENISON, Aug. 16.--Echoes of
the tote Sherman rioting subse-
quent to the lynching of a negro
in which the Grayson County
courthouse was burned rung anew
here last night as hecklers made
an unsuccessful attempt to raffle
the complacency of Governor Dan
Moody.
Moody, speaking for Ros# Ster-
ling, accepted each challenge—of
his attacks on Mrs. Miriam A. Fer-
guson until the heckling dwindled
into incoherent mutters.
When Moody began to recite
from the pardon record of Mrs.
Ferguson during her former ad-
ministration a bellow Interrupted:
“She didn't protect no negroes,"
to which the dissenting element
‘Retrial’ Fails to Touch
On Bombing Deaths
At Hearing
emwzees: 2*21-
murder retrial with the murder
left out.
This is about what today re-
mains of the three weeks Supreme
Court bearing into the Billings
pardon plea following Thursday
night’s dramatic scene in Folsom
Penitentiary.
The really significant thing
that happened at that bearing to
just beginning to dawn upon Cali-
formia, for ft was something that
didn’t happen. It was that during
five hours of a hostile broadside
of questions fired by the prose-
eutor-judge, John W. Preston, Ex-
Prosecutor Ed Cunha and several
of the other justices, not one
question was directed at what oc-
curred at the murder scene. Bill-
ings was eager to tell all be know.
Even Big Charlie Fickert, his
| 1916 nemesis, and Jim Brennan,
bis prosecutor, were there.
Not a Question
Senator Pink L. Parrish of Lub-
bock at Quanah Wednesday night.
Austin Hatehell of Dallas at
SangerSaturday night; Bowie,
Tuesday night; Vernon, Friday
night.
E. F. Fruechte at Ringgold
Tuesday afternoon; Nocona, night.
E. R. Surles at Alvord, Tuesday
______$55,
Some time spent thus monkey- 000; four filling stations, $21,-
ing with these shadows will give 0ee: residences $57,000; Collard
you a much needed familiarity Street underpass, beneath the
with them, even If you do net T&P tracks, $25,000, and paving
understand them nil yet. . of Jessamine Street, from Evans
If your mirror really to ato Epps. $13,650.
sphere you should be able to The Henderson subway and the
locate the exact e. of e. at which 1 Royal Street bridge are scheduled
cutting the cone the tiniest bit to be opened to traffic Jan. 1.
makes the mirror darken evenly 1931, while the East Fourth
and simultaneously all over, first Street improvement will be com-
becoming gray, then black. If, pleted about Oct. 1, Lewis de.
In spite of repeated efforts, va-clared. Other projects under way
rious uneven shadows are seen, should be finished to September,
your mirror is not yet a sphere, including the stadium."
Jim Says He Considers the
Source of Charges and
Disregards Them
By United Press,
ASPERMONT, Texae, Aug. 16.
Picture# of an economically de-
pressed state, with shadows
TITLE ASSOCIATION
IN CONVENTION TILT
Committee In Deadlock Over the
Next Meeting Place
The Texas Title Association’s
executive committee was In a dead-
lock Saturday at The Texas over
whether ft would hold Its 1931
convention In Fort Worth or
Lubbock.
D. W. Carlton, Chamber of
Commerce convention, presented
Fort Worth'#' bid. Charlee Ad-
ame, executive committeeman
59m Lubbock, represented his
German Eastland Jr., Hills-
boro, president, eaid It probably
would be late Saturday before
the committee decides.
The convention will be In
June, 1931, and will attract
about 110 visitors.
Park, Health and Police
Department Take Action
Three sets of signs Saturday
will warn the public that Oak-
lawn Park Lake, formerly Foe-
dick Lake, to unsafe for swim-
ming.
two sets are already up and
the third will be erected Satur-
day afternoon.
In addition, the Park Depart-
ment will put guards around the
lake tor several afternoons and
_ “(Nests Pleoning the Mount- ’
1 involved easier to grasp we shall ing). -- . ,
assume that we already know:
our mirror to a perfect sphere.
The rays both to and from the
mirror are radii of this sphere,
therefore if we wished we could
Economic Disaster Under 1
‘Jim’ Seen; Sweetwater 1
Cheers Houstonian 1
By United Press.
SWEETWATER, Aug. 16.- V
Mid-West 'Texas poured its citi-
zenry Into Sweetwater last night
to swell the din that echoed the
“honesty in government” battle
try of Ross Sterling. His audi- .6.
ence was estimated at 7000 peo- 171
ple who had gathered from coun- "
ties adjoining Nolan County for ,
the rally, i
Only one new note of alarm <1
was sounded In the addresses * 1
made during the program. Threats •
of an economic boycott of Texas j
should the Ferguson’s be elected
to power stirred the voters at |
Sweetwater and at Tahoka where ]
R. E. Taylor of Wichita Falla had 1
prophesied earlier in the day such 1
an economic catastrophe. Out of |
state newspapers, Taylor declared, 1
are viewing the present contest 1
with interest and predicting a 1
state of chaos should Sterling be 1
defeated. . 1
-----Thunderous Applause, 1
Sterling, speaking, in a voice 1 1
that was hoarse from the cam- 1
paign strain, spoke of the Sweet- 1
water rally as the greatest occa- 1
sion in his life and regretted that 1
he had not been a native West % 1
Texan. Sterling hewed closely to 1
his original speech from begin- 1
nine to end. 1
Thunders of applause which ■
came from the outskirts of the ■
crowd where sounds from the loud ■
speakers came but faintly, greet- 1
ed Sterling's remarks on the road - I
bond issue. Altho the Houston
candidate regards that issue as 1
overshadowed by the larger issue
of Fergusonism, the Sweetwater ■
rally testified its approvals
Attain Ferguson was branded as
a coward for refusing .to sign 699
waivers permitting newspapers to
open their columns to verbal o
thrusts current in the present cam- 1
paign and once more Ferguson's
pardon record was held up for the A W
jeering of a thoroly pro-Sterling *
crowd. Toe
By United Press, s
Variety in Friday's program of a
addresses by Sterling’s party was
afforded by Charles E. Coons, a 1
Ferguson speaker .who followed
the opposing candidate thruout o
the day taking the platform• as Y
soon as Sterling departed from it,
Frequent word battles, occur-
ring between Coons and Sterling s
when the former overtook the
Houston candidate, delighted the
crowds.
Sterling will speak in Abilene
and Ranger this afternoon and to- a
_ 1
REV. E. C. CAMERON ON 1
BRITE COLLEGE STAFF ■
Joins Faculty As Associate in a
Old Testament
Rev. Emory C. Cameron of a
Winfield, Kan., will Join the fac- «
ulty of TCU this fall as asso-
date professor of Old Testament 1
In Brite College of the Bible. He
recently resigned as pastor of a
the First Christian Church of
Winfield.
Rev. Cameron holds A. B. and a
M. A. degrees from Phillips Uni-
versity at Enid. Okla., and has
done graduate work at Prince a
ton Theological Seminary, spe-
cializing Ip Old Testament. He
served in the World War and is sho
chaplain of the 189th Field Ar--
tillery, Oklahoma National Guard
with,the rank of captain, a
While at Princeton, he was a
acting pastor of the First Chris- N
tian Church of Philadelphia and
later was associate pastor of the
Central Christian Church of New a
York City, a
reflect them right back tate the
pinhole by turning the mirror
just a little, and we would do ft
that way were we able to get
inside the lamp and do our test-
ing from that point of vantage.. . j-------—
But we are not made of asbes- Equal Amount Under Way it Efou He tried to create
tos, so we must do it outside. - ” waiatdr ad=a 4hane 44a eatatia
Since the rays go out of the pin-: Here. No Permits Yet
day night.hole to the mirror and come Pe " Post " 2 19
Parrish on stump back beside it, the bright spot
C. A. Rogers at Electra Wednes-we saw on the tissue paper was _________,_____
day » South Bend Tues.I really an image of the pinhole tion, mounted to $5,028,613 tor
Bob King at South Bend Tues-(examine It from behind with a the year Saturday, in addition to
Fd Gossett at Thalla Tlesday lens and you will there see each an aggregate of $5,751 250 under
Ed Gossett at Thalla 108043 | detail of the pinhole—a burr on way but not yet under permit.
night. its side, a piece of forz on Kj The week’s permits aggregated
etc.) $54,369, toe largest of which wae
Now we shall need the knife-to A. R. Eckert for an $8,000 res-
edge (k e).—Place it at the
bright spot, more ft an inch to__- „ __--,____
the left, then aa inch toward way are the 13-story passenger
the mirror, catch the »g«g in station and the eight story freight
your pupil (mirror bright all terminal for the T&P Ratirad, to
over) and slowly move the k e cost $4,000,900.
across toward the right (At 1 9 The two new structures are in-
the drawing). All this to being eluded to the railroad’s $8,000,-
done for practice and not at 000 building program which start-
present for testing. A black ed here last Winter. Bulling per-
shadow advances across the suite for the station and terminal
mirror—which way? The way are to be issued during this
k-e moved or the opposite? Re-month
member which way it moved. Saturday’s checkup of construe-
Again find the original bright tion activity, by City Engineer
spot and more k-e an inch to Dudley L. Learie, also included
left and an inch toward you, improvements being made by the
then slowly again across toward titf as well as by business con-
the right (at 2 to drawing), cerns.
Which way does the shadow ad- Beside the projects under way,
vance: others aggregating $375,900 are
In each case you are cutting slated to start this Fall.
Into a cone of rays but since These are: Widening Hender-
the rays have all crossed at the son Street. $75,900; overpasses
[center of eurvature (e. sf €.) over the T&P tracks at Ballinger,
the eowe nearer you to reversed. Summit and Daggett, totaling
hence the direction of movement $250,000 and linking of Daggett
* o of the shadows to reversed. De Street with the Stove Foundry
to Tillar Body all of this over several times in Road, $50,000.
order to become familiar with Among building projects now
If, for you will use it frequent- under way are:
ly. Henderson street esbway, be-
SPEAKERSHERE
MONDAY NIGHT
Rea. 4-0592 Office 8-1822
Saturday of 1, R. Lines, Cham-
ber of Commerce home industry
manager.
The exposition will formally
open the new Leonard Brothers
Store at Second and Houston.
There will be daily educational
and entertainment programs.
The following manufacturers
have signed up:
Acme Coffee Co., Acme Tent & Awning
Co., All-Texas Sign & Advertising Co.,
Armour & Co., I' W. Axtell Mfg. Co.,
Mrs. Baird’s Bakery, Baker Machine *
Plating Co., Bestyett Food Co., Bonnie
Brae Food Co., Brandt Upholstering Co.,
Burdett Oxygen Co., Burrus Mill a Eleva-
tor Co., Chemical Products Co., City Jack-
ing Co., Coca Cola Bottling Co., Colonial
Cake Co., Cook Paint & Var. Co., Court-
ney Garment Co., Doll Hospital, Ellison’s
Furniture Co., Eureka Chemical Co., Mar-
vin D. Evans Pruning Co., Port Worth Art
Glass Co., Fort Worth Concrete Tile Co.,
Fort Worth Macaroni Co., Fort Worth
Steel. & Machinery, Fort Worth Tent &
Awning Co., Fort Worth Window Shade
Mig Co., Glenn Mattress Factory, Globe
Laboratories, N. J. Hall Jewelry Co., A.
J. Herbert Cooperage Co., Hub Furniture
Co., Jersey Creme Co., Just Rite Stove
Mfg. Co., H. J. Justin & Sons Shoe and
Boot Co., King Candy Co., Lady Margaret
Co. Inc., Lauritzen & Makin, Leonard
Brothers, Lowry Mig. Co., Lowry Orna-
mental Iron Studio, May belle Mig. Co.,
Michael Electric Co., Milwaukee Bottling
Works, Mistletoe Creameries, Monkey Grip
Rubber Co., Nehi Bottling Works, Nobby
Harness Co., Oliver Trunk Co,. Pangburn
Co., Panther Oil & Grease Mfg. Co.. Dr,
Pepper Bottling Co., Pioneer Pickle &
Canning Co., Quality Box Co., Quality
Shirt Mig Co., Ratliff Pure Food Prod.
Co., Rubber Products Co., Scott Brothers
Grain Co., Sleep-Easy Mattress Co., South-
west Ceramic Co., Steve Sash a Door Co.,
Swift & Co., Texas Cookie Co.; Texas
Cyclone Fence Co., Texas Pacific Coal &
Oil Co,, Texas Syrup Co., Traders Oil
Mill, Transcontinental Oil Co., Uniform
Garment Co., Universal Milla, Utter &
Evans Blue Print Co.. Vinnedge Co., Wil-
lamson-Dickie Co., E. O. Wood Sheet
Metal Works, Worth Bindery
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Minteer, Edwin D. & Schulz, Herbert D. The Fort Worth Press (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 271, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 16, 1930, newspaper, August 16, 1930; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1638742/m1/2/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fort Worth Public Library.