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320789347-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789347-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
5,
92
] | Leiter Co-Operative Build.
ing to Go Out of Busi-
ness March 31.
| CHICAGO 4) -On account of
a lease expiration the Leiter
Building Stores ,thought to be the
first co-operative department
store in the country and one of
Chicago's largest mercantile es-
tablishments will close perma-
nently March 31, it was an-
nounced Sunday. It is said to be
the largest concern ever to go
out of business in Chicago. The
leasehold expired the first of the
year, and a ninety day extension
was obtained from the Levi 7,
‘Leiter estate to permit liquida-
‘tion of stocks. Starting with a
gross annual business of approx-
imately $3,000,000 in 1920, it de-
veloped its business to $12,000,-
'000 a year.
The Leiter estate received wide
publicity in 1923, when the Coun-
| tess of Suffolk and Berkshire, one
of the founder's daughters,
| brought suit in Chicago to bave
|her brother removed as a trustee
because of alleged incompetency,
| After eleven months of litigation
the suit was dismissed.
| [
[
6287.8011523437,
5884.4403125,
7152.6002148438,
7276.7974804688
],
[
6296.0883789062,
5653.8154296875,
7123.8208007812,
5874.6137695312
]
] | [
6287.8011523437,
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600,
2830
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
42,
50,
77
] | Explosion Is Followed by a
Flash of Flames——Pilot
and Four Passen.
gers Victims.
LANDS ON A STUBBLEFIELD
| KANSAS CITY—(P—Five per
eons were killed in the crash of a
passenger monoplane in a stubble-
field near Fairfax airport late
Monday. The ship plunged to
earth from an altitude of about
4) feet and then burst into flames.
Carrying four passengers and
ite pilot, the single motored Trav-
clair ship, which left Wichita, Kas..
at 3:50 p. m., bad made the usual
circle of the airport. Suddenly it
descended at a sharp le and
then plunged into a field about
fifty feet from a factory. Instantly,
there wak an explosion and a flash
of flames,
Airport attendants rushed to the
wreck with fire extinguishers, but
were unable to reach any of the
passengers or the pilot because of
the intense beat. It was believed
all aboard the plane were killed
when the ship struck the ground.
Victims of the Fall.
The dead follow;
UYKE LAUDEMAN, Kansas ity, pilet
ins MARGARET DICE, St. 3
Miss M C , . a.
Cc. R. MCKINNON, Chicago: ‘
manager of Rebhinas & Myers Bales, inc.
JAMES B. BOGERT, .
of the Ager Yellin: Bernstein - Pe.
i re a
wikia FLYNN, Kansas City, Mo..
ooner of the Glebe theater and former
oily alderman,
Officials of the Universial Avia-
tion corporation, owners of the
ship, could advance no reason for
the erash,
The plane was the second section
of the universal lines afternoon
service from Wichita to Kansas
City. The first plane, with pilot
and four passengers, landed a few
m inutes before the ill-fated sec-
ond ship sailed over the airport
from the south,
Immediately after the bodies
were removed from the charrec
wreckage, a dozen pilots me
chanics for the Universal corpora
tion equipped with axes, haok
saws and ropes were dispatches
(Continued on page 9, column 4.
| [
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[
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601
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
27,
94,
99
] | War Risk Insurance Appeal
Will Be Heard by Su.
| WASHINGTON... Hearing
on an appeal by the United States
in a case from Nebraska, which, in
turn, will affect approximately
1.000 war risk insurance Cases now
pending in federal courts, was ad-
vanced by the supreme court Mon-
day to March 3,
The Nebraska test case chal-
lenged the authority of courts to
entertain suits brought against
them by beneficiaries under war
risk insurance and the right of the
courts to give judgments covering
the payment of future installments
allowing interest and awarding
eoaia.
| preme Court
| [
[
261.2266137695,
6121.5656640625,
1105.9304296875,
6919.4123632812
],
[
267.3157958984,
5898.3974609375,
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6073.7006835938
],
[
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869.5747070312,
6109.3525390625
]
] | [
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5898.3974609375,
1105.9304296875,
6919.4123632812
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602
] |
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
21,
79,
90
] | MRS. B. R. VANZYL IS DEAD
Wife of Holland Minister
Is Stricken Monday
Morning.
| Mrs. B. R. VanZy!, wife of the
pastor of the Holland Reformed
church, died at the family home
Monday morning. She was forty
years old, Mrs, VanZy! was born
in Michigan and was married in
1915. The couple moved ‘to, Hol-
land in June, 1923, and Rev. Mr,
VanZy!l has since served the Re-
formed church,
Besides her husband Mrs, Van-
Zy) leaves four children, all at
home. Funeral services will be
held at 2 p. m. Thursday at the
chureh here, Burial will be in Hol.
land cemetery.
| [
[
293.4711206055,
7306.5207421875,
1131.3508398438,
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],
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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6947.1069335938,
1131.3508398438,
8062.0525
] | 6 | 6_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 603 | 603 | [
603
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
19,
89
] | Person Calling Self Thir.
teenth Apostle Causes
| TRUCKEE, Calif.-—(*-—Be-
lieved by authorities to be a re-
ligious lunatic, a man giving his
name as John Turzall of Chicago,
created a panic on an eastbound
Southern Pacific sleeping car Sun-
day night when he suddenly drew
three razors, cul his wrists and
flourished the weapons until he
was overpowered. Authorities whe
took him off the train here and
removed him to the city jail said
Monday Turzall believes himself tc
be the thirteenth apostle. He i:
being held pending word from rel.
al.ves,
| [
[
318.3982141113,
8438.40453125,
1145.9133398438,
9217.1648046875
],
[
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8402.0966796875
]
] | [
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8217.2265625,
1145.9133398438,
9217.1648046875
] | 8 | 8_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 604 | 8,517 | [
8130,
604,
8517
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
25,
95,
97
] | BOK WILL IS PROBATED
Former Editor Leaves Two
Millions to a Philan.
thranic Caneern
| vase lal adie reer -*
NORRISTOWN, Pa...) ~The
will of Edward W. Bok, editor,
writer and philanthropist, who
died in Florida this month, be-
queaths $2,000,000 of the estate to
the American Foundation, Inc.
created by Mr. Bok five rs ago
to take care of certain his phil-
anthropic enterprises. The will,
probated here Monday, does not
give an estimate of the value of
the estate
| With the exception of certain
private bequests not made public,
the remainder of Mr. Bok’s prop-
erty is bequeathed to the widow,
Mrs. Mary Louis Curtis Bok, and
Mrs. Mary Louise Curtis Bok, and
and Cary William Bok,
| [
[
1077.4844873047,
1998.7304589844,
1917.7435400391,
2940.0676367187
],
[
1072.4461669922,
1655.3529052734,
1915.9510498047,
1775.5317382812
],
[
1074.1528320312,
1808.7679443359,
1896.9243164062,
2003.0358886719
]
] | [
1072.4461669922,
1655.3529052734,
1917.7435400391,
2940.0676367187
] | 10 | 10_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 605 | 865 | [
800,
865,
4800,
8422,
1066,
8362,
8109,
2704,
2262,
6876,
605
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
0,
48,
93
] | Mickey Says Other Sections
Depend on Our Products
~— Oklahoman Critic
of Jadwin
WATER CONTROL SESSION
OPENS AT M’COOK.
| | MeCOOK, Neb.—U?Open erit-
-tcism of Major General Edgar B.
| Jadwin, who was chief of army
engineers during the disastrous
| Mississippi river flood of 1927, was
voiced on the floor of the Central
States Flood control congress late
Monday by Judge G. EF. Blake of
Oklahoma City, for thirty years
an active worker in irrigation and
flood control.
Judge Blake went over confer-
ences with President Coolidge in
which the then president was in-
formed, Blake said, of the activ-
ities of seven southwestern states
bordering around Oklahoma, in
the matter of flood control.
“President Coolidge was told,”
the speaker said, “that if dams
had been constructed, as recom-
mended by internationally known
engineers who made the survey in
these states, it would have lowered
jthe 1927 flood stage of the Mis-
sissippi river by a little more than
five feet. He also was told that
if the river had been lowered five
| feet the levees would have held.
“The president then asked Gen-
eral Jadwin if this was correct
,and Jadwin said it was—that the
levees would have held if the flooc
_|stage was brought down five feet
the president then said to Genera
| Jadwin: ‘Why don't you do it?’”
Judge Blake said that co-ordi
nated effort is necessary to effec
a definite program of flood con
) trol in the Missouri river valle
and in the central western terri
tory. He repeated estimates tha
lit would cost $300,000,000 to com
| plete such flood control in the Mis
sourl river valley on rivers suc!
,as the Platte, Kaw in Kansas, Re
y publican and others, Estimate
s placed on the cost of this work o
the upper Mississippi amounted t
| $100,000,000 and the work on th
; Ohio river at $300,000,000,
- Judge Blake was preceded b
Prof. Clark Mickey, University o
Nebraska, who hailed the Missis
| (Continued on page 2, column 3.
}
| [
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3933.4633691406,
1941.0785009766,
6561.6980078125
],
[
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1915.0231933594,
3894.9729003906
],
[
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3352.8041992188,
1925.1831054688,
3558.5949707031
]
] | [
1081.5104882812,
3352.8041992188,
1941.0785009766,
6561.6980078125
] | 12 | 12_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 606 | 606 | [
8882,
606
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
80
] | Psychologist e Says Situa.
tions, Not Books, De.
welan Character
| “Relation. of the high schools,
junior and senior, to the church,”
was the topic upon which Mrs,
Elizabeth M. Finn of Philadelphia,
of the international council of re-
ligious education, addressed nearly
seventy members of the Lincoln
council Monday night in First
Presbyterian church,
“We must know that junior high
high students are discoverers and
youth, that great body of young
people between the ages of 18 and
22, are achievers. One can not
achieve until he has learned the
possibilities, the capacities within,
that lead to individual and social
achievement, Character is devel-
oped thru lite situations, Not books
‘to be read, but the pupil's activity
and experience in reading those
books, is what we are interested
_in, We do not want to plan a
service project, but want to make
it appear to be a privilege, a joy.
to perform that service,” declared
Mrs, Finn.
Tuesday bt Mrs. Finn wil
address members of the Hi-Y at
the Y. W. C. A. at 7:30, and the
high school leaders at &.
| [
[
1149.1204736328,
6966.68578125,
1987.4002783203,
8423.615
],
[
1150.8001708984,
6742.0161132812,
1962.8236083984,
6937.29296875
]
] | [
1149.1204736328,
6742.0161132812,
1987.4002783203,
8423.615
] | 15 | 15_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 607 | 607 | [
607
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
20,
2
] | SLAYER OF DRY MEN
BOUND OVER TO COUR’
| WEST PALM BEACH—(.?)—
George W. Moore, alleged bootleg-
ger charged with the murder of
two prohipition agents during an
attempte raid on his home here
‘Jan, 11, waived preliminary hear-
ing Monday and was bound over
to the grand jury. Bond was set
at $10,000 in each case of two first
degree murder charges. Moore in-
dicated that he would make the
bond,
| [
[
1168.3105371094,
8638.994375,
2000.8516943359,
9198.7409765625
],
[
1172.4664306641,
8459.3212890625,
1977.7336425781,
8625.3310546875
]
] | [
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8459.3212890625,
2000.8516943359,
9198.7409765625
] | 16 | 16_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 608 | 8,093 | [
608,
8691,
8118,
8505,
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|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
53,
51,
74
] | Italy in Meantime to Wait
for Its Opening—Day of
Waiting for Amer.
ica and Japan.
MAY BRING A COMPROMISE
| LONDON--.?T—PFrance Monday |
gained a technical victory on 4)
point of procedure for the formal |
agenda of the five power naval
disarmament conference after «&
meeting of the chief delegates at
No. 10 Downing Street.
What actually happened was
that after nearly three hours of
keen discussion, the delegates en-
deavored to settle part of their
disagreement by invoking the
alphabet, and under its auspices
| France, by precedence over taly.
was granted the right to propose
discussion of the French plan for
‘limitation of naval armaments by
total tonnage instead of by cate-
gories of ships. This is expected
to produce a compromise on the
global tonnage proposals satisfac-
tory to all the powers. Meanwhile.
Italy's desire to plunge into the
question of maximum and mini-
mum fleets for each country must
wait.
Stimson Wants Speed.
Secretary of State Stimson ad-
mitted that Monday's meeting,
which lasted far past the hour for
lunch, had proceeded more slowly
than he desired,
) For the Americans and the =
anese it was
_watebful waiting e yRing Bn
» peon delegates maneuvered in a
maze of technicalities relating to
Franco-Italian problems, includ-
a naval parity.
t remains for the British gov-
\ eummant to add 4 realistic disarm-
‘ament touch, entirely apart from
‘the conference itself, to the events
of the day by announcing the can-
/cellation of construction orders for
two 10,000-ton cruisers, the North.
umberland and the Surrey. Sus.
-j}pension of construction on these
|ships was announced by Prime
| Minister MacDonald after he
| started on his American trip last
(Continued on page 8, column 4,
| [
[
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[
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[
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7669,
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] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
7,
92
] | Marchers and Officer Hurt
After Demonstration by
Unemployed
| VANCOUVER. Several pa-
raders suffered minor injuries and
one policeman, Constable Reilly,
was cut in the face when mounted
and foot police broke up an at-
tempted march of unemployed
here late Monday. Starting their
march after police had forbidden
& parade, the unemployed were
charged by a half dozen mounted
officers, who used their sticks
| Sreely. The foot police followed
and in about four minutes the
parade formation had been
broken up.
| One woman, said to be Polly
Karinsky, afterward arrested,
| flayed the mount of Constable
_ Albert Doe with a stick. The horse
| jumped with fright and the con-
“stable was forced to jump to
safety. The paraders then threw
Stones, sticks and cans at the
| policemen,
Orders were issued by Chief of
| Police Bingham for the arrest of
all leaders of the disturbance. The
parade was to have been staged
(48 & protest against the payment
of unemployment relief wages of
_two dollars per day to married
;men and one dollar to single men.
'Earlier in the day the men em-
ployed on relief work were asked
to stop work and demand unior
| wages.
| [
[
1983.6924951172,
5999.2521875,
2835.7319433594,
7738.8332617187
],
[
1984.4108886719,
5760.6997070312,
2808.4230957031,
5980.9296875
]
] | [
1983.6924951172,
5760.6997070312,
2835.7319433594,
7738.8332617187
] | 22 | 22_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 610 | 610 | [
610,
8132,
8519
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
8,
61,
70
] | Daughter of Queen Marie I:
Expected to Announce
Retrothal
PRINCESS MAY WED COUNT
| BUCHAREST~--CP)—The friend-
ship between Princess Ileana and
Count Alexander of Hochberg,
which is expected to blossom into
official announcement of their en-
gagement next Saturday, dates
back four years. The two have
corresponded all this time and met
again last year in Munich while
the princess was visiting relatives.
The count has since visited Ru-
mania several times and joined in
‘sports and festivities with the
princess.
News of the coming engagement
has made a good impression on the
public, for the princess is a most
popular daughter of dowager
'Queen Marie. The count is the
‘second son of the Prince of Pless
| It was understood that after the
wedding the couple would live in
| Rumania,
| [
[
2018.1841943359,
8120.148671875,
2853.7014257812,
9226.808359375
],
[
2014.2696533203,
7902.1352539062,
2833.3671875,
8099.7099609375
],
[
2015.9196777344,
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2844.5754394531,
7889.7602539062
]
] | [
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7749.490234375,
2853.7014257812,
9226.808359375
] | 24 | 24_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 611 | 611 | [
611
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
9,
22,
38
] | RATIFICATION GIVEN
BRITAIN SIGNATURE
House of Commons Approves
Optional Clause in Inter.
national Court
Statutes.
| LONDON... .-British signa.
ture to the optional clause of the
statutes of the permanent court
for international justice at The
Hague was ratified Monday night
in the house of commons by a vote
of 278 to 193.
An amendment offered by Sir
Austen Chamberlain, former
foreign secretary, which would
have made the reservation that in
carrying out any work for the
League of Nations the British navy
should be subject only to Briiish
Marilime law, was rejected. Sir
Austen said the labor romenot
itself im 1924 had | on the
necesmty of this reservation and
the situation had changed in no
essential since. He said:
“The fact that the United States
has not 1 and is net bound
and has re in connection with
the covenant ‘of the League of Na-
tions) and has repeated its re-
fusal in connection with the pact
(the Kellogg-Briand pact for re-
nunciation of war) to come inte
any obligation aa to its conduct
toward a state which breaks
either covenant or pact, materially
alters the position of clause 16.
“It makes the clause 16, even if
all those who are bound by it
lived up to the expectation of the
foreign secretary, much less ef.
fective than it would have been i
_the United States and Russia hac
also been included in it.”
| Foreign Secretary Arthur Hen.
'derson in moving ratification de
| clared the situation now in fac’
was on a totally different basi:
\from that in 1924, owing to the
pact of Paris wihch outlawed war
| [
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2025,
612,
8878
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
17,
52,
83
] | No Blame for Atlanta Mar
Who Shot Woman Dur.
ing Fake Holdup.
MAN JUSTIFIED IN KILLING
| ATLANTA... A_ coroner's
jury Monday teld that the fatal
“prank” shoeting of Miss Cora
Belle Brown Saturday night was
“justifiable homicide” and released
Otis C. Waller, who admitted the
shooting, from custody.
Walter told officers he shot the
woman and T, D,. Watts, who
posed as her husband, when the
couple called at his apartment and
ordered him to “stick ‘em up.” In
the hospital, Watts said the order
‘was a joke, done as a result of al-
leged threats received by Walter's
‘wife. Both couples lived in the
Same apartment house,
| [
[
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[
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[
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] | [
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] | 29 | 29_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 613 | 613 | [
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613,
2031,
2268,
8094
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
11,
64
] | Veterans’ Council to Pass
on Money Raising Plans
of Outsiders.
| Organization of the Lincoln Vet
eran’s council was completed at
the American Legion meeting
Monday night when the constitu-
tion drawn up Sunday was ap-
roved and adopted. A commit-
ee of this organization is to have
charge of all outside promotion of
veterans benefits to pass on the
percentage basis upon which the
promoters operate, M. L. Poteet
‘Was chosen first chairman of the
council,
It was also announced that the
gees membership of the post is
50. slightly more than a hundred
over that of a year ago.
_ The date of the Greater Lincoln
‘exposition and automobile show
was set for March 24 to 29, to be
held in the coliseum according to
custom, it was announced by Fred
W. Putney, general chairman.
Walton B. Roberts, chairman of
the committee arranging for the
twelfth district convention, stated
that registration will begin Wed-
nesday morning, Feb. 5. and wil
/continue until 1:30, when the
| re is to be held. The prin.
cipal ee ia to be Dwight P
| Griswold.
| Inter.
Others will be announced
| [
[
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2021.2119042969,
4500.724375,
3575.5749609375
],
[
3664.2856445312,
1795.6837158203,
4487.6616210938,
1998.7196044922
]
] | [
3656.8725488281,
1795.6837158203,
4500.724375,
3575.5749609375
] | 31 | 31_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 614 | 614 | [
614
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
26,
84,
85
] | Mayor of ‘San Francisce
Announces Readiness to
Make Race
ROLPH OUT FOR GOVERNOR
| SAN FRANCISCO — Mayor
James Rolph, jr.. of San Francisco
announced Sunday that he wouldd
be a candidate for governor of
California at the next election, if
enough of his “fellow Californians”
gave him encouragement. Rolph's
candidacy would put four republi-
cans in the race for governor.
Buron Fitte, district attorney at
Los Angeles, announced his can-
didacy Sunday: Ray L. Riley, state
controller, announced some weeks
ago, and Governor Young, altho
not formally announcing, has in-
timated he would seek a second
tYarrm
| [
[
3681.5444238281,
3962.0876367188,
4520.1770117187,
4757.4616796875
],
[
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 33 | 33_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 615 | 615 | [
615
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
18,
73,
91
] | Vice Chairman for Repub
lican Senatorial Cam.
naion Committee.
MOSES TO HAVE ASSISTANT
| WABHINGTON,.-(4"——PFor the
first time the republican senatorial
campaign committee, presided over
by Senator Moser, of New Hamp-
shire, is going to have a vice chair-
man. The vice chairman has not
been selected, but it is understood
| the committee members
that he will be a senator from the
western states and that he will
have charge of the republican sen-
atorial campaign in those states.
Senator Moses disclosed Monday
that he intended to leave sometime
this spring or summer for a_ trip
to Murope, saying a vice chairman
would be necessary during his ab-
sence. He will return in time for
the campaign.
There was some discontent
among the “young guard” mem-
i of the republican senatorial
committee at the recent reference
| by Moses to the rebellious western
independents of the party as the
“sons of the wild jackass.” Sena-
tors Steiwer, Oregon and Thomas,
Idaho, are members of the cam-
pay pate ng erammittese fram tha weet
| [
[
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5162.32640625,
4540.5871679687,
6504.59546875
],
[
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5132.0151367188
],
[
3701.0805664062,
4786.1899414062,
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4903.0869140625
]
] | [
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6504.59546875
] | 34 | 34_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 616 | 616 | [
616
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
31,
44
] | PUT ON SIX DAY WEEK.
| PHILADELPHIA-CP~—T h e
Pennsylvania Railroad company
announced Monday that nearly
6,000 shop employes in the western
and central regions of the system,
who have heretofore worked seven
days a week, will b placed on 4
six day week Feb. 1. This action,
it was stated, was taken as a re-
sult of agreements with the re-
gional committees of shop craft
/employes.
| [
[
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4551.8723242187,
7240.9416601562
],
[
3753.4538574219,
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]
] | [
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] | 35 | 35_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 617 | 244 | [
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617,
6320,
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1078
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
29,
3,
1
] | CHICAGO GIRLS AND BOY MISSING:
FRIEND, AN AVIATION STUDENT HERE.
BLASTS DOUBLE ELOPEMENT THEORY
| CHICAGO.--L?—-A barrage of
telegrams was directed Monday to
various marriage centers in the
hope of intercepting two high
school girls and two young men.
| The two couples are Harriet Nel-
son, seventeen, and Larry Mouat,
nineteen of Evanston and Wilmett,
Frances Bell, seventeen, and Jos-
eph Monfort, twenty, both of Wil-
mett. It was thought they might
be enroute to Lincoln, Neb,, where
Monfort is an aviation student.
:
If any Chicago oreo have
eloped recently they did so with-
out the knowledge of Joseph Mon-
\fort, he told The Journal Monday
jnight. And if Harriet Nelson, who
has been Monfort's “girl” for
| nearly two years, comes to Lincoln
with Larry Mouat and Frances
Bell, she is going back on the
|train “if I have to borrow money
to pay her fare.”
Thus Joe Monfort disclaims any
| Intention of marriage. He is un
able to explain how the report got
‘its start that there bad been ar
‘elopement. The first word he had
of the affair came Monday night
| When he received a long distance
cal! from his mother in Wilmett
be said. Mouat and the two girl
took him to the Chicago station
Saturday night in his own car, he
related. There was no talk of an
elopement. Why the other three
had not shown up at their homes
he was unable to say.
Miss Bell and Mouat were once
married, but the marriage was an-
nulled a month ago. Monfort ex-
pressed the belief that perhaps
they had decided to marry again,
taking Miss Nelson with them.
Marinett, Wis., might have been
their destination, as Mouat's par-
ents have a summer home there
Beyond that, Monfort says he has
no idea where they might have
gone. The couple's parents have
been trying to keep them apart
“That's impossible,” Monfort says
ping } onfort, who is a student
at the Lincoln Auto and Airplane
school, has been working severa
months toward a transport pilot:
license and hes managed to ac
quire a plane of his own. But avi
ation study is claiming too mucl
of his time for him to give an;
thought to marriage.
Monfort was registered at th
Cornhusker hotel Monday bu
ehecked out during tue afternoon
He was found during the evening
\at the home of a fellow student.
| [
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[
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]
] | [
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] | 38 | 38_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 618 | 618 | [
618
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
41,
45,
82
] | Two American Who Mad
Discovery, However, Pos-
itive in Their Iden.
tification
WILL CANTINUE HIS SEARCH
| MOSCOW --.T— Doubt that the
wrecked plane recently found off
Siberia was that of Carl Ben
Fielson was expressed Monday
night by &. 8S. Kameneff, chair-
man of the seviet Arclic commis-
sion. He beliewed the wreckage
might have been that of an aban-
doned soviet airplane named
“Soviet North.” known to be in
that vicinity.
Kameneft pointed out that
there are buman habitations near
‘the point where the American
javiators Crosson and Gillom
found the wreckage last Satur-
day. He expressed surprise that
the airplane reported as Elelson’s
had gone unnoticed by the natives
for ten weeks. The Soviet North
had crashed on a lagoon in Ka-
luchinsky bay. The wreckage had
been reported several times.
) Efforts to Be Continued.
| Kameneff who is directing the
/various Russian relief expeditions
in search of Eielson and his com-
panion, Earl Borland, indicated
that the soviet efforts would be
| continued, but on somewhat dif-
ferent form.
“We must wait further details
before acting upon thie report,
jhe said. “At any rate, we must
draw all land searching parties te
(the spot where the catastrophe is
‘reported to have occurred. Onc
| dog sled expedition from Stavropo!
| is already in that region.
. “I am sure the American fliers
| hothwithstanding the crash of
‘their plane, could have savec
| themselves and gone forward t«
the nearest settiement. Search
for the fliers, therefore, must con,
tinue until full knowledge of thet:
, fate is obtained. If Monday's re.
port is confirmed, it will be nec
jessary to pursue the search no
from the air but by means of the
:
' (Continued on page 8, column 3.
| [
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|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
13,
55,
86
] | Chairman of Board Hopes
to Bring Radio Concern
Back Into Shape.
KOLSTER 10 REORGANIZE
| NEWARK, N. J.--(1--Thudoiph
. reckels, chairman of the board
the Kolster Radio corporation,
told of his plans to reorganize the
concern at a hearing Monday %e-
is iavestignting charges that the
market was “rigged’ in Kolster
stock, The concern is now in re-
ceivership in Chancery court.
“I wish to say that it is aa hae
and expectation,’ Sprecke
|mounced from the witness stand
“to bring about a reorganization
‘to protect the interest of all share
| holders of Kolster stock. In my
long career in business there has
“never been any question as to my
“integrity or fair dealings with
stockholders.”
Spreckels is presicent of the su-
gar refining company bearing his
jname, He testified that he once
jheld 387,504 shares of Kolster
}stock, but began selling it off in
1927, He now holds 15,217 shares
of common stock, He said he sold
the stock to meet obligations of
$7,000,000 incurred by the Federal
Sugar Refining company, of which
the Spreckles concern is the suc-
frackone
| [
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] | 43 | 43_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 620 | 620 | [
620
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
5,
66,
88
] | Adherents of Valconcelos
Accused of Hatching It
in Mewico.
EXPOSE OF ALLEGED PLOT
| MEXICO CITY—C?—An alleged
plot by adherents of Jos ValCon-
celos, defeated condiadate for the
Mexican presidency, to assassinate
Pascual Ortiz Rubio, blew up sev-
eral public buildings in Mexico
City and seize the administration
in the confusion was bared Mon-
day night by Chief of Police Quin-
‘tana
: The chief ot police said the plot
bad been frustrated with arrest
several days ago of nineteen per-
sons, two of whom had been re-
leased. Others, he said, had con.
fessed.
| There were reports shortly after
defeat of Senor Vasconcelos that
‘he would head a revolution against
the government of provisiona’
President Emilio Portes Gil, bul
(as the weeks passed and the
movement did not materialize ji
was assumed he had decided te
‘accept the verdict of the polls
‘which gave an overwhelming vic
tory to Senor Ortiz Rubio.
| [
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8514,
803,
744,
2508,
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|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
34,
81
] | Master Finisters Told o'
Methods of Aiding
Ryneinoee
| M. ©. Griswold, Rochester, N. Y.,
addressed Nebraska division of
Master Photo Finishers of Amer-
iea at the Cornhusker hotel Mon-
day night. He discussed methods
of obtaining more business and
outlined some psychological laws
of inducing purchases. He also
spoke in detail of a campaign
which is to be launched in the
spring. Miss Carol Wirts, barp-
ist, played several selections and a
sextet, directed by Mra. Lenore
Burkett VanKirk, sang.
| [
[
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[
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622
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
39,
46,
78
] | City Obliged Only to Fur
nish Right of Way and
Upkeep——Now Is in
Condemnation
GRADING IN THE SPRING.
PAVING IN FALL.
| huskers highway into Lincoln via
the Tenth street viaduct is not
many months away. City Engr
neer Erickson told the council
Monday that the contract for
grading will be let this spring.
This, together with bridge con-
struction by the railroads, will
jeave only paving for the fall.
‘The city’s part is to furnish
right of way and possibly to
maintain that portion of the
highway within the municipal
| Mites.
Mayor Love suggested that it
might be well to procure expert
opinion on value of some of the
twenty-two parcels of ground in
condemnation with a view of
buying direct from the owners, It
was the general opinion, however,
that with the appraisers to be
:
former.
sworn in on Jan, 30, the time is
a bit late for such negotiations,
It was also reminded that the
city and the owners were appar-
ently too far apart to hope for
friendly adjustment without the
aid of appraisers.
The executive did not intend,
he said, to cast any reflections on
the appraisers. He called atten-
tion, however, to purehase of the
Stewart tract at $70,000. This
settlement resulted after the
council considered further litiga-
tion useless in view of the posi-
tion of the supreme court, The
amount, too, included two items
principal and interest, with the
latter little short of equaling the
Nice Thing for City.
It was agreed that the new
highway arrangement is good fo
the city. Highway constrnetion
J grading imeluded, will be by th
_ state and federal governments
The railroads are building twe
| bridges to lessen traffic ove
many tracks on Fourteentt
street. The mayor declared tha
/the municipality will probabl;
| pay considerably less for right
_of-way, that portion not previ
ously obtained between Four
teenth and Belmont and Tent!
' «(Coentinued on pace ?. column 1.
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6251.3977148437,
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] | 50 | 50_320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 320,789,357 | masthead_2034+opinion|front_page_20_99 | 623 | 623 | [
623
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
15,
57,
60
] | PLEA
Convicted Showman Agair
Asks Court for Release
on Rail
| LOS ANGELES -- (? -- Attor-
neys for Alexander Pantages,
wealthy showman, convicted of
criminal Assault, late Monday filed
a petition in superior court for his
release on bail from the county
jail, where he is awaiting action
on his appeal from a one to fifty
year prison sentence. The peti-
tion claims that Pantages is suf-
fering from heart attacks which
continually increase in severity.
A similar petition, filed several
weeks ago, was denied after phy-
‘sicians appointed by the court re-
ported that the fifty-four year old
theater man was suffering princi
pall from a “prison fear psycho:
analysis.” Affidavita of four physi
cians, which embodies reports o!
their examinations of the prisoner
were filed with the new applica
fian for freediam.
| [
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624,
249,
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] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
12
] | BOY NARROWLY ESCAPES
AS BED CATCHES FIRE
| Leslie Lantz, four, narrowly es-
caped serious burning Monday aft-
-ernoon when an electric heater set
fire to covers of a bed on which
he was resting at his home, 2639
‘Vine street. Attracted by his cries,
the boy's mother, Mrs. Edythe
Lantz, found him lying in a corner
of the bed with flames eating their
| way toward him. She carried him
to safety, then called firemen and
helped them extinguish the blaze,
‘which was confined to the bed
,clothing. Leslie's hair was singed.
| [
[
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] | [
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625
] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
43,
47,
68
] | Rule Would Be Followed in
Appointment of United
States Marshals
and Others
ONLY DRY LAW BELIEVERS
| Ae) EP 8 OO ee eee ee
ney General Mitchell has bis way
prohibition enforcement officers
will not be drinkers, but, to the
contrary, will be sincere believers
in the Voletead act. The head of
the justice department, who
would bear the burden of dry en-
forcement responsibility under the
Williamson bill being considered
by the house expenditures com-
mittee, revealed his views in a
lengthy letter made public Mon-
day. He endorsed the bill in an
appearance before the house com-
mittee just before conclusion of
hearings, and forwarded the ex-
pression of his personal opinions
'a few hours later.
| Mr, Mitchells views were con-
tained in an answer to a private
citizen who had called attention
to inquiries being made by a jus-
‘tice department agent concerning
eandidates to a United States
marshalship. The citizen's name
was withheld.
Want Candidates’ Records.
Saying the investigation was
under his direction, the attorney
general defined bis purpose as “to
obtain all the information that is
‘available about any candidate
which bears on his qualifications
for the post and his probable ef-
ficiency.”
: At the hearing, Kepresentatives
Cochran, Missouri, and Stone, Ok-
lahoma, had inquired whether dry
agents should not pledge them-
Po to abstain from
| drinking. Mitchell wrote that he
believed “that no man who makes
-|a practice of drinking intoxicating
| liquer or who has definite or pro-
neunced views In opposition to
prohibition, belongs, during this
| administration, in any post having
| directly to do with the
tion of cases under the national
» prohibition act,”
The treasury department now
(Continued on Page 5, Col. 1)
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] |
|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
14,
63
] | Florida Democrats Voting
for Him Told Not to
Seek Office
| TALLAHASSE... (—Wtih
campaigns for June primaries in
the offing, Florida voters were in-
formed Monday by Attorney Gen-
eral Fred H. Davis that literal ap-
plication of state election laws
would bar from participation as
candidates in the democratic party
all persons who voted for Hoover
in the 1928 general election. The
opinion was expressed in the at-
torney general's answer to a let-
ter from a resident of Hastings,
Mia, The same rule applies, said
Mr. Davis, whether the candidate
voted for Hoover and otherwise
followed the regular list of demo-
eratic nominees. Many Floridans
voted such a split ticket in Novem-
ber, 1928
The law has no effect on voters,
however, explained J, T. G. Craw-
ford, national democratic commit-
teeman for Florida. Any demo-
lerat who felt he could not support
Al Smith in the general election
may come back and vote the dem-
ocratic ticket at any time, he said.
The attorney general pointed out
|that a candidate for office on the
‘ticket of any party must take oath
‘that he or she did not vote for the
nominee of any other party.
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|
320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/320789357-lincoln-nebraska-state-journal-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
4,
49,
59
] | MERGER TERMS ANNOUNCED
Plan for Exchange of Stock
in Big Steel Concern
Te Made Known
| NEW ‘YORK.--(——Llerms tor
the exchange of stocks of the com-
panies to be consolidated into the
new $335,000,000 Republic Steel
corporation were announced here
Monday. Common stockholders of
the four companies will receive
common stock in the new corpor-
ation as follows: Republic iron
and Steel company, one share of
‘new common for each share held;
Central Alloy Steel corporation,
four-ninths of a new share’ for
each share held; Donner Stee) com-
pany, Ind., five-twelfths of a new
share for each share held; Bourne-
Fuller company, ten-thirteenths of
a new share for each share held.
Republic steels capitalization
will consist of 1,985,144 no par
common shares and $5,000,000 tr
‘$100 par cumulative convertible 6
percent preferred stock. In addi-
tion the corporation will assume
‘the $59,059,400 funded debt of its
subsidiaries, as well as $5,000,000
in preferred stocks. No public fi-
lnaneing is planned. ‘The corpora
‘tion is to varry its common shares
int £187 TOR ASE
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628
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
46,
36,
47
] |
JURY ALLEGES FORT BEND COUNTY |
~ SHERIFE HEADED HUGE VICE RING
Lookin’
Ahead
- Anti. Liquor War .
Court ‘Congestion .
Port’ Development -
Rail Construction —
|
4
Galveston liquor = dealers ate
“somewhat perturbed over the latest
aativity of federal, officers.
‘Customs officers and coast
guards went into action Saturday.
making the first’ of an: extensive
series of arrests. ‘
Conspiracy tu violate the cur:
toms and prohibition acts, ix al-
-leged, and preliminary hearing is
set for Wednesday. ~
The latest: watfare against the
_rum. trade is a customs party, the
feguiar prohibition enforcement of.
fleers having nothing to do with it.
LAquor business in Galveston, #8
fn other cities, although iegal, has
‘become pretty well organized in
aplte of federal opposition.
poms :
Different. groups .are recognized
an, dominant in different areas,
with many smaller. fry. FOrpG- in-
dependently.
‘Officers: aay. the present. activity
“is directed. against what fs known
‘na the “down! own gang. Me There ix
also sald to be a “be a “beach gang.’
Moat of the ‘offenses on which the
conspiracy charges. arc based are
“to have been committed
witha ago no that the campaign
initiated - Saturday ‘broke Iiie - a
holt from the blue.
, " Whether the charges are Jurt ot
Unjust, Whether-(f Just there {6 auf.
fletent evidence to “make a case,’
emaing for further developments
ote diacloge,
That something should be "done
ta relieve the congestion in federal
-dtatrict courts as result of prohi:
_ bition beeomes more-and more ape
perent.
_ Many of ‘the liguear cases omigh’
properly be classed ax niiademean-
ora, and as such authority might be
vested In the U.S. commissioners
fo_try and sentence offenders,
This is one of the. recommenda-
{tons of the Wickersham commis-
sion,
qe -
oO. oT oO
Port development on the Texas
coant continucs, Uncle Sam paying
half the’ bill and maintaining. the
waterways, while loen) ‘interests
foot the other half of the bill.
Houston, MANY Years apo, war
the first beneflelary of. this policy,
and Inter Beauninnt and Corpus
-- Christ) took advantage of it:
Now Freeport I getting in line,
and Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown; chief
of army engineers; has approved
the project to carry déep water
. from near the mouth of the Rlo
Grande ta Brownaville,
Brownsville, metropolis of the
lower Rio Grande Valley, hag the
seographical location ate a great
=e idents of that bity have
abored towards tim anget tive for
decades.
The Brownsville oject calls at
& twentyefive | foot Cehannels
. would coat shout $3,000,000...
(oo ;
» While -more Texas poity care be:
| [
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629
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
45,
50,
55,
54,
52
] | RTO AT Pec wd ee
| See Sarees FSA 2 ees
« Mftilo, N.Y. dan, 27-0
A blonde-halred girl, principal
tigure In’ xeveral robberies in Buf-
filo reoontly,—led | two—gunmen
into the jewelry store of David
GUcksteln on Hroadway today,
hound and gagged Glicksteln and
ercaped with gems valued at
$10,000, *
UR ee see FRR Eke 7
Woodville, Tex, Jan, 270 b
Offloers today sought the man
who Saturday night fired the full
charge:of a double-barreled whot-
gun through a window of Dallas
Spurlock’s home at oa himber
camp near here, killing ao man
named Barber. 7
PLEADS NOT GUILTY,
Sheriff H. Wyatt Coltlhs plead
not guilty ‘when ‘arraigned tn
federal court Chis NAT
hin trial was set for Feb, 2
tlon “between highways 68 al Alvir
to some point: on highway No. |
cast of the Brazos River cin For!
Bend County na a state highway:
The exact point atawhich the new
route “wilh connect with No. 3 wil
be decided ‘by survey. ft will prob
ably be somewhere In. the vielnit
of. Sugar Lani.
Improvement of this, euteatr wil
decrease the djstanee between Cal
veston and San Antonio by abou
fifteen mites and will lessen. can
Ming the bY nearly an hour, due
to elimination of ihe roundabout
detour now Heep ‘through Hous
fon.
| [
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630
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
49,
48,
38
] | Late News
| ene one ®
' Texarkana, Ark, Jan, 27,.—(4)—.
Death: pf Oscar Call, 28, Garland
City, fatally w ounded in a prohi-
bition raid yesterday, will be in-
vestigated by tho Lafayette Coun:
ty grand jury, Steve Carrigan,
Proeretiting attorneys, antrounced
todas. :
ANNE EYRE CERES AARNE
~ No- further—arrests—had- been:
twade in the customs war on the
alleged downtown liquor. ring “up
to. 2 o'clock this afternoon, “At
that hour. ‘Theodore “Fatty”
Owens and George “Plegy" Page
made bend before UL 8. Com.
Branthy Parra. is
| [
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631
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
7,
17,
19
] | HIGHSMITH
GIVES OUT
STATEMENT
Says He Alone Respon:
sible for Dismissing
Special Prosecutors. -
| Courtroom, Austin, Tex., Jan.
27. —(/P)—Two lawyers, one for
‘the defense “and one for the
| prosecution, came to blows to-
|day as the hour for taking tes.
timony in the John Brady mur-
der trial. was reached.
‘Dayton Moses of Fort ‘Worth,
who had been ill and had not
been expected to appear.today,
struck Roy Archer, county at-
torney, after Archer, he assert-
ed, had made a charge against
his integrity. Archer then
knocked Moses to the floor.
The fight occurred just before
-court was opened at 10 a. m., and
wan over so quickly those in the
back of.the crowded old. room did
not know until later that there hag
been a difficulty. .
Archer, insisted Moses walked up
fo him and began abuaing him.
Noither was hurt, and each insisted
he was right. : woe
Brady, former eminent Texas Jur:
Ist, came in just too late to sce the
fight.
He looked as poised ‘and. iviredivess
ng usual, and when he atrolled into
the ‘courtroom the sleep appeared
still to ‘be in his eyes.
The session itself was productive
of flttle, for‘after witnesses were
sworn, a recess to give counsel time
(Continued on Page 8.)
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|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
28,
16,
30,
37
] | Eielson’: s Plane’
* Found: Wrecked
Absence of Bodies Keeps Alive Fain
Hope for Safety, But Food —
Store Untouched. ~
| Seattle, Jan. 27—(/P)—Half the mystery of the disappear-
ance Nov. 9’of Car] Ben Eielson and Earl Borland was solved to.
day with discovery. of their wrecked plane in-an ioy lagoon, 90
miles southeast.of North Cape, Siberia, but absence of the bodies
ofthe two American aviators from the wreckage. kept alive a
; bare hope that they might’be alive. _ ,
fhe nove. of optimilsn war Taint,
however, as experienced fliers. said
jihey believed. the plane, ai tuink iebali,
Fand throw. “ther from . the ‘shit
lt was pointed “out. that snow
might have concealed the . bodies
fiam Pilots Joe Crosson and tiar-
old Gillam, who found the wreck
Saturday,
Crosson and. Gillam took --off
again yesterday from the fur trad-
ing ship Nanuit, lechound at North
Cape, for the scene of the wreck:
Wielson and Borland were attempt-
ing a flight from Alaska to the
Nanuk witb they crashed, They
had removed one toad of passen-
|gera and furs nod were returning.
for a second.
With Crosson and Gillam were a
represontative. caf the - Russian
Trading Company and. a sailor
from the Nanuis, ‘owned by the
Swenson ‘Trading Company: Dog
(Continued on Page 11.)
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3
] | } Chiengo, Jan, 27.-- Texas
Guinan's Green Mill. cabaret. had
a knock down and drag out fight
Added unexpectedly..to. the events
of carly: vesterday morning, and
Leonard Schwartz,’ 23, was serious-
ly burt. : Oo
Schwartz -was. dragged from the
‘table he shared with — friends,
slugged with Jfists. beaten with
guns and kicked. Brain ‘concussion
and numerous lesser. Injuries were
inflicted,
Diners-said-five-men participated
in tu: attack, Leonard Leon, man-
ager and part owner of the cabaret,
which {s in uptown Chicago, -was
pointed out as one of. those in-
valved, and was atrested in a
charce of casanplt and disorderly
conduel. :
| [
[
2067.0961269531,
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]
] | [
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4751.64178125,
2639.9483066406,
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] | 8 | 8_209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 209,043,261 | front_page_20_99 | 634 | 634 | [
634
] |
||
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
20,
14,
0
] | Work of Widening, Lighting
~~ Market Slreet Gets Under Way .
Today; Start’ at 25th. Street
| Work on the Market street wide
{ening and. lighting. project. got
under way this morning at 25th
xtreet and will he . pushed -enst-
ward on the south. side, of the
street as ‘far as ifth street, It was
announced by city officials, When
the south side 1s completed thé
contractors will carry out the _pro-
fram on the north side,
Under the plan) Markel street
will be widened. for a distance of
twelve: feat between JMth and 25th,
with the removal of six feet of the
Jsidewallk oan - -cither. side,” New
enrhs, whiel® willl be--reunded: -st
the corners, ure to be installed and
nteps placed at the street Intersec-
tlons
The™ Uphting plan” con Market
qfreet calls far the fustallation of
tT eight ornamental conerete stand
ards to the block, four on alther
dside of tho atreet.- Enchi of theuc
standards will be surmounted with
anvelectiic light of — 1,500-eandle
power. me eg
In line with the street improve-
ment work all stores are required
fo place a .uniforim ‘type. of over-
hanging awning above. the side-
walk. : 7
Contract. for this work was re.
cently let by the board of city com-
miasloners.: ‘Thad Parsons -is. do:
Ing the widening part of the. proj.
ect, while the Innocenti” Fleetri
Company will) install) the lighting
system, pes |
~7Bhe-cost-of-the — work) wil) he
borne by the individual properts
jowbers, “The project was supportec
{hy the Galveston Merehants! Asso
clation and the Market Streqt As
nociation, vs ; ence
That seqlon of Church heliweet
2ist and 20d, not already improved
Is also to be widened, “-
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] | [
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635
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
25,
40
] | PASSENGERS SHAKEN.
| | Huardland. Moo dan, 27.0 ob One
hundred and revin passenger,
aboard the westhoynd Grand Cat
von Fimited, Nol 23, erachk all Potl
man train of the Santa te, were
jshaken near here? tuday when, 2
haprare car and four Pullmans lef
the track. None of {he ears dprned
overs ani: officinis said no one was
injured, 0 oe
| [
[
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],
[
2733.6733398438,
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]
] | [
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] | 10 | 10_209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 209,043,261 | front_page_20_99 | 636 | 636 | [
636
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
1,
13
] | CONTEMPT
CITATION
DISMISSED
| ia
Muskogee, Ok, Jan, 27.--M%—
Federal Judge R. L. Williams today
dismissed a contempt citation
against J. C. Handy of Denison,
Tex., receiver for the Red River
Bridge Company, who had been
ordered to appear in federal court
here and show cause why land on
which an approach to a free bridge
across the river would pass, had
been bought
‘In dismissing the citation, Judge
Williams stipulated that Handy
and C. S, Boswell. of Durant, mem-
ber of the Oklahoma highway com.
mission and also a receiver. for
‘the company, be made parties. to
a condemnation suit: which | has
been issued in-district court at Du-
crant by the Oklahoma highway
commission. ,
» Judge Williams’ “actin came af-
ter attorneys. for Handy. had ar.
ued ¢hat ‘the land wag bought last
pril @nd that Handy did noi be-
come, a receiver ofthe. company
until last October. “The purchase
was not known of until an’ inven-
tory was taken after Handy was
named receiver, the attorneys .con-
tended.
Joe Bailey Jr., representing Han-
dy, declared that the. Red River
Bridge Company was engaged in
interstaté commerce and was en-
titled to protection by the federal
court. Judge Williams held that
it was not, declaring that any at-
tempt to peek protection from his
ele would be stopped immedlate-
ht had been alleged that Handy
bought, or caused to be bought, the
lan through which an approach to
‘a-.free bridge to be constructed
jointly by Oklahoma: and Texas
would ‘pags for the purpose” of de-
laying construction of the free
bridge. The free bridge would 1 par
allel” the toll bridge:
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2176,
4042,
637
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
9,
26,
33
] | FIRE DAMAGES -
PHOTO STUDIO
Gas Meter Causes Blaze
At Maurer’s. © ©
| _Damage Ao" stocl and photos
raphic—equipment—resulted— when
a fire said to have been caused by
racgas jetiunder the developing tank
started In- the drying—room of
Maurér'a Studio, 418 Twenty-third
street about .10:15 ‘o'clock this
morning. The second floor of the
studio where the drying. room is
located was badly scorched by ‘fire
{while water damage to the lower
floor and to stock was extehsive.
Joseph M. Maurer, photographer
and proprletor.of the shop, was un-
able to give an estimate of the
Manace this morning,
The fire was discovered by Miss
“Mary Clayton, an employee, whose
presence of-mind in hastily closing
doors leading to the blaze, and.
promptly giving the alarm, probably
averted a more disastrous confla-
sration, . Clouds: of smoke issued
rom the drying room when she
sopened the door, THe’ timely. in-
tervention of A. Bundc, inspector
for the gas company, «who was
| passing the building when the fire
‘broke out, also probably prevented
‘more serlous damage. He discon-
lnected the gas and jerked out ‘the
burning meter,
Crowds were atkracted - by othe
dense smoke that poured from the
upstairs windows but in a. short
time -apparatus from the central
fire station had the blaze under
eontrol, Fire Chief. A. F. Bockel-
magn and’ Fire “Marshal Victor
Frederickson Jr. were on an. fn-
spection tour of buildings a block
up the street. when the alarm was
turned in. . 7
Business in’ the. studio was not
‘affected by the fire and will be con:
ducted -as usual, according to Mer
Maurer,
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638
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
8,
5
] | BRITAIN QUITS ©
BUILDING OF
TWO CRUISER:
| ABSOCIRTEM. SPER OLATL py ILer.
London, Jan,.27.--()-——As_ the na-
Mal powers moved toward” compro-
mise today on. tw. of their most
troublesome probleme—the physical
methods. of limiting fleets ‘and
Italy’s. demand ‘for parity with
France—Great Britain made a new
gesture: of faith In the conference
success by announcing that con-
Struction of her two newest cruis-
ers had been cancelled.
The British announcement coin-
cided with a meeting of the “big
five" in Downing atrect at which
further progress was. said to have
been’ made toward a compromise
ron a-toennage-plan designed” to set-
tle the perennial argument on this
technical phase of naval Iimita-
tion. .
At the same time it was disclos-
ed that serlous consideration was
being given by scveraledelegations
to a proposal that the Italian par-
ity problem he met by a treaty dec-
‘aration in which all powers would
join. This would ‘state that the
(Continued on Pare 11.)
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0,
3460,
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3591,
1931,
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1973,
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1767,
3558,
6250,
6504,
1133,
2803,
6005,
2170,
3707,
6652,
4093,
639
] |
|
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18,
35,
39
] | ROBBERS FAIL.
‘TO ENTER SAFI
Strong Box at Queen Re.
sists Attack.
| Robbers last night . tried | to
break open the safe at the- Queen
‘Theater but were frustrated: when
the strong box held after they had
broken off the knob, according to re-
ports made today to Detective Chief
Dave Henry. og. n,m
- The robbers had evidently been
locked in the theater, sincd police
were unable to find any placé where
they had broken in. They’ must
have waited ‘intil 2:30, the time
when~the last employe had gone,
and then begun their work. The
had driven a punch into the combi-
ation after breaking. the knob,
Jbut had not driven it straight and
the door held, according to Chief
Henry. . a
Finding their efforts unavatling,
they, probably left by a back door,
locked with the type of lock that
may be opened from the inside
but not from the outside.- No
clues besides the single punch
could be found, Chief Henry said.
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640
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
29,
15,
12
] | “ustoms Officers
Open | War Against
| The long arm of the law reached’ out over. the week-end and
snatched ten alleged members of the downtown liquor gang on
charges of conspiracy to violate the customs laws and the na-
tional prohibition act. Of the men thus far arrested two are
members of the city police force.
Warrants calling for the arrest of a total of twenty-two were
sworn out Saturday before United States Commissioner Brantly
Harris and a short time thereafter coast guards and customs
inspectors began the round-up.
At 1:30 o'clock. this afternoon a
number.of. men not yet arrested are
éxpected to surrender at the office
of Commissioner Harris.
The arrests were engincered at
the customs barge office, where all
inspectors’.and‘ coast guards were
given their instructions. a iy
For weeks past government of-
ficials have. been’ gathering in-
formation, which.led to the war-
rants. It- was reported the. federa}
grand jury now. in session will re-
turn:4: number of indictments this
afterhoon.or ‘tomorrow. ‘Themen
arreated-and those still at large are
‘wanted On-charges growing.out of
liquor dollentog- acon niack) of
“p..man followings acrum- hijacking
fast ont a fg soporte
. Theodore (Fatty) Owens, was ar-
rested this morhing. .-He was to-be
‘taken before Commissioner Harris
at 1:30 p..m., when his bond ‘would
be fixed, . : t an
George. (Piggy) Page, was ar-
rested Iast night while the follow-
ing eight men.were taken Satur-
day ..afternoon. and night: A.
(Mooch) Gleich, Jr.,, motorcycle - of:
ficer; Joe Marerro, patrojman:
Harry Evelt, garage proprietor;
Andrew L:-(Chicken) Best, M. §
Chetcovich, ‘Richard Coftield, Leon
Sabanovich and James Barrett, .
Page and the eight men arrested
Saturday were released unde!
bonds of $2,500, with the exception
ome whose bond was‘set af
. The men are to be arraigned fot
hearing: at 1:30.0’clock Wednesday
‘afternoon before ~ Commissione
Harris. “ ee
_ Phge is not a police officer.
__ LONG INVESTIGATION. _
‘ Warrants for*the wholesale “ar.
(Contihued on Pave 11.)
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641
] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
24,
27
] | TEXAS COTTON
~ MEN PICK ISLE
Annual” — -Convention_t __to
| _The nineteenth ‘annual convention
of the Texas: Cotton Association
will be held in Galveston March 21
to 22, according. to announcement
by E.'S. Holliday, assistant socre-
tary of the Galveston Chamber of
Commerce, today on receipt of ad-
vices from .L, T. Murray of -Waco,
secretary of the association. Sev-
eral hundred delegates are expected
to, attend.
Problems of ‘more than ‘usual in-
terest confront the association this
-year_in view_of creation ‘of..the_$30,-
000,000 Federal Cotton Marketing
Association, and the consequent en-
try of the government in the cot-
‘ton trade.
The Texas ‘Cotton Association Is
one of the largest organizations of
the kind in the South, and sessions
are ‘usually attended by prominent
New York and Chicago cotton_men
as well as British, French, German,
Spanish and other cotton dealers.
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] |
|
209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043261-galveston-tribune-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
6,
4,
11
] | Grand Jury Raps Arrests —
Without Warrants--Scores
Ambulances for Speeding
| Criticizing local officers for mak-
ing arrests without warrants, and |
criticlzing also, the “wanton speed-
Jing of ambulances,” the. December
grand jury turned in a lengthy re-
port as it wound up its duties and
woes discharged this morning after
returning 18 indietments. Thomas.
G. Croft was foreman of, the.prand
Hin.
A total of Sl cates were investi-
sited. the Lepore shows,: In whieh
2) tpue hills were. returned while
22 eases weretno-billed, ;
|} In eriticizihg local officers (at
making unlawful arrests, the ‘Rrand
jury's report says:
“We further -find that officers
charged with: the enfcreemént of
the law (possibly throtigh overzeal-
saan __-breatly handicap — the
yrand—jufry in tts findings and the
prosecuting attorneys inetheir ef-
forts to bring guilty parties to jus-
tice, by making arrests without the
sue pracess ot law Gin net obtaln-
“ings warrants. for arrest) aud) the
ateizure of stolen goods. without a
search warrant. We do*hot .offer
| (Continued on Page 1.)
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|
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23,
31
] | sive ane
Picture ef
Conditions
| A crimmal ring operating on
a highly organized scale, head-
ed By the Fort Bend County
sheriff and several of his dep-
uties, existed in Fort Bend
{County for at least a year for
ithe purpose of promoting traf-
fic in liquor, gambling and
prostitution, the federal district
grand jury charged today in an
indictment returned against
Sheriff H. Wyatt Collins and
sixty-nine other Fort Bend
County citizens.
The indictment charges conspit
| aey ‘to violate the prohibition act,
hut ‘the “bill goes ‘into ‘details’ of the
alleged. organization and declares
that. the . conspiracy extended ‘Into
other ‘fields. :
:. The: sheriff _and ‘his deputies
“were: to permit the manufacture
‘and sale of intoxicating liquor”. for
certain payments to themselves, the
bill charges, . and the Inakers and
‘Seats’ of liquor were to receive pro-
tection from arrést in return, Size
of.payments depended on size of
the | “distillery,” the government
charges. These concessions were
‘let’ for all-of Fort Bend County ex-
cept the city of Richmand,. it was.
charged, while Richmond was di-
vided among others. These others
maintained’ Richmond houses’ de-
voted to liquor sales, gambling and.
prostitution, it was charged, and.
the bill further declates that some
of the houSes were rented fromthe
sheriff, Weekly payments were to
bé collected by the deputies for pro-
tection and the sheriff's department
| agreed to’ station men at the vari-~
ous houses “for protection. of cus-
tomers,” the indictment.declares. .
A’ number of overt acts involving
other defendants were included ia
the bHR 7%
The.indictment was one of about
a half-dozen retyrned at, noca. The
court’ set: hearing of pleas at 2
o'clock this affernoon and. ordered
i the courtroom cleared to accommo-
date the 70. Richmond defendants,
Settings will be. made this after
| Troon, ° )
A list of those indicted follows:
‘H, Wyatt Coljins, Rye Lincecum,
Robert Lee Wheaton, Tom Davis,
Joe Binghan Crawford, Frank Bell,
Ignacio Flores, Fernando ‘Costello,
Justo Villegas, Amador Delgado,
Jesse Martinez, Raymond Hernan-
dez, Luis Sanchez, Rose Sanchex,
Anita Salinas, Mexican- known as
Dumb, - Ramon Rangel,” Ansel
Cuevas, Juan Cuevas, David - Sa-
linas, Pete Cuevas,, Anastocia ‘Or-
tfonarry, Clemente ‘Chapa, Felix.
unpia,.:__Cepronnée_-_ Martinez,
Frances “Cano,. Lizzle Gonzales,
| Maria Wiisori, Victoria Ledesma,
Gabriel: Young. ‘Katie Cato, Willie
| Horton, Louise) Burman, “Milton
Winfree, Tom Daniels, Andrew
L Lewis, Bill ‘Goodin, any: Nor>
(| White, Bessie THUTIAE, B. Cc.
Knight, Homer Howard, Sam W.
Smith, William Hankds, Bill Brent,
-}Bob Haggard, Johnnie Robins,
i} Cleveland Brown, ‘Willie Greer,
‘(Sam Lashary, ‘Beula Prator, Plenz.
Bigion, Leonard Fields, Fred Fields,
=. liam_Melton. Charlie Dodd, Floyd
x|'Taylor, Joc Koteras, Bob ‘Johnson,
>| Mack Styles, Jimmie Myer- and
-|Tom Booth: oy
| [
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209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
37,
32,
40
] | CIVIC LEAGUE
RETAINS NAME
Reorganization Program
Advanced.
| ‘She new. Women's Civic Teague
advanced sevoral steps In its re-
organization today with the ac-
ceptance of a new constitution and
by-laws in which the scope of the
organization was considerably e¢n-
larged. - ot _ ¢
. Decision wax made not (o change
the name but tu continue as the
Women's Civic League even though
men are to be invited to active
membership. : .
In addition to its former pur-
poses of ‘promoting projects for
promoting the sanitation and beau:
tification of the city, the club will
devote itself to a large varicty of
munteipal projects, including co-
ordination with other organiza-
tions, Children’s auxiliaries are to
he formed In the public and
: parochial schools under direction. of
the Parent-Teacher Associations
+t€ontinued on Page 11.)
| [
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645
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
47,
35,
36
] | ‘Alma Rubens May Come
~ On Mardi Gras.
YEARGAN INVITES -
ACTRESS-T0 ISLE
| Miss Alma Reubens, famous mov-
le star, may visit Galveston during
this city’s Mard] Gran celebraticn,
according to the executive commit-
tee in charge of the festivitios.
It has just been learned that
Miss Reuhens, now fully recovered
‘fiom her recent ijiness, is to pass
through Houston over tho Missouri
Pacific lines on March 2 en route
to New York, where a new talkie
js to be filmed with Miss Reubens
assuming the lesding role. —
On receipt of (ho information. a
lengthy wire was sent (o Miss Ru-
bens by J. H. Yeargan Jr.,- secre-
. (Continued on Pave 11.)
| [
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646
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
56,
59
] | FIRE AT TECH
|
Lubbock, Tex., Jan, 28.--14.--The
sterilizing department of the Texas
Tech dairy barn was. destroyed by
fire éarly today. ‘Three animals
wero asphyxiated. The loss was 'es-
tintated at $3,500.
| [
[
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5511.6271640625,
1391.5910976562,
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],
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2576,
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647
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
0,
44,
45
] | PIONEER RESIDENT -
CLAIMED BY DEATH
Moritz” Brock ~ Passes
~ Away-at Residence. .
| Moritz Brock, 75. pioneer Gal-
vestonian and active in the com-
mercial and fraternal life of the
_city, died this morning at 53:15
o'clock at the family xesidence af-
|ter a brief illness. a ee
Mr. Brock. was born in’ Posen.
Germany, March 15, 1854, coming
to this country while a young man.
He had been a resident of Gaives-
tonian for more than fifty yearn
engaged in- business until his re-
tirement several years ago. He
was the direct dealer of Anheuser-
Busch & Company of St. Louls and
was considered one of their most
succegsful representatives, the
president of the company making
a special trip to Galveston in 1913
to felicitate Mr. Brock upon his
unusual business succers.
When prohibition. became: effec-
tive, Mr. Broek retired from an
active busines’ career, with the, ex-
jception- of several rea} estate ven-
tures, a. ‘a
Mr. Brock was known for his
many charities, giving aid to many
{needy families here, for his genial
disposition and for his: . staunch
friendship. OO
He was a member of Galveston
Lodge No. 126, Benevolent. and Pro-
fective ‘Order of Elks; Traveler’
‘yotective Association; Imprcved
Order of Red Men: Fraternal Or-
der of. Eagles: Knights-of -Pythias;
Independent Order of B'Nai Brith.
and was active in congregational
affairs-of Temple B'Nal Tsrael, vir-
tually since its @pception. t
He 1s survived by hin wife, for-
jmerly ‘Miss Harriet Meyer, whbm
he married in Galveston: twe
daughterd, Mrk. Louis Cohen ot
Houston, and Mrs. Dave Woolf o!
Galveston; one..son, Jake Broch
‘Jof Galveston: a granddaughter
‘| Miss Marjorie Hannah Brock 0!
Galveston, and one brother, E
.| Brock-of- Posen, Germany. -
1} Funeral services will be held to
}]/morrow afternoon.at.4 o'clock from
}ithe residence, 1523°° Twenty-first
‘!Rabbi Henry Cohen of Temp)
‘|B’Nal Israeli, officiating. Inter
siment will be in the Jewish Ceme
tery. . :
’ Active pallbearers are: Charle:
-| Hildebrand, Sam Schlankey, Leo
-|pold) Schornstein, Alphonse Lion
Herbert Roach and Hyman §
Rlock. = ot i
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648
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
11,
12
] | Trying to
— Save Family
| _ Prederick, Colo., Jan. 28.—
(#)—Seven persons were burn-
ed to death in a fire today in a
‘two-room shack near the Slope-
line mine. Mrs. Paul Martinez,
her five children, ranging in
age from 13 months to 15 years,
and a miner named Newlon
‘lost their lives. Newlon dis-
covered the fire, broke into the
shack through a window and
was burned-to death trying to
rescue the family... .
The fire is believed to have start-
ed from an overheated stove. The
father of the family was at work
ad the Shope iain on a night
The dead:
Mrs. Della ‘Martinez, 30.
Frances, 13 months.
- Pauline, 12 years.
Ernest, 6 years.
:: Emma, 10 years. .
+ Rosa, 8 years. —--"-- -t
Ernest L. Newlon, 34.
Newlon is survived by his wife
Dr. J. A. Weaver, coroner of
‘Weld County, came. here . from
{Greeley to take charge of the
i bodies.
iF Frederick -is a coal camp, thirty
miles north of Denver. .
| [
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4311,
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] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
13,
27,
42
] | OLDEST ARMY.
— OFFICER DIES
General Gordon Was in
. Indian Wars.
| ‘ Washington; Jan. 28.—<?)—Brig.
Gen. David Stuart Gordon, retired,
oldest officer“of the United States
army, died at his home here today
at the age of 97.......... ae
Brig. Gen. David Stuart Gordon.
United States army, retired, last
survivor of the famous “Frontier
Guard,” participant in a dozen cam-
paigns in the war between the
states and the Indian wars, aftrib-
ruted his remarkable activity as he
approached his 90th year to his reg-
ular habits. Despite his advancing
| age. Gen, Gordon was a familiar
-figure about-Washington;- where-he
| had spent most of his time after he
retired from the army more than
| a quarter of a centiry ago, having
4
had 35 years of active service.
| On a recent birthday anniver-
| sary, white-haired and ruddy of
| complexion. he walked spryly about
the city. receiving, congratulations
lof friends, lodking many | years
younger than his actual age, and
jauntily wearing a shepherd's plaid
suit of latest fashion, tan shoes.
straw hat. purple striped shirt, car-
-rying a cane with the crook over
| bts arm and wearing a flower in
-hi«—buttonhole: - .
| [
[
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4204.175015625,
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],
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[
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]
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|
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28,
14,
23
] | Poll and. Auto Payments
-Far Behind 1929 Recoré
| Poll tax payments up to today
were still 56 per cent lower than
‘the -total number paid Jast year,
while 40 per cent of the automo-
biles_ in. Galveston ‘have vet ‘to te-
ceive their 1930 license plates, ac-
icording to figures given out today
| from the office of ‘W. C. Lothrop.
county tax collector. Only four
days reniain for’ the payment of
poll taxes or for the payment of
automiobile licenses without the ad-
dition of a 20 per.cent penalty.
There are. still 4,000 automobiles
to. be. licensed for 1930, according
to E. J. Mensman, deputy tax co)-
lector in charge of automobile reg-
istrations. Only 7,528 licenses had
been paid dut of. nearly 13,000
-¢Continued on Page 3)
| [
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651
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
7
] | Spa nish Dictator
Continues With
Army Conferences
| DAICLALUN QQURLS.
. Paris, Jan, 28—()—The Mad-
rid correspondent, of the news-
| paper La Nacion of Buenos
Alres Celephoned the paper's.
yore office tonight that Pre '
mier Primo De Rivera tea” ~~
| eed BE B50 Ty mis (2:00 p. m.,
Madrid, Jan. 28.—(#)—Premier
Primo De Rivera today continued
conferring with high army officers
regarding their attitude on continu-
j ation or resignation of the present
Spanish dictatorship... é
Unofficial indications of the re-
actioh of prominent. military of-
ficers thus far seem favorable for
the continuance of Primg as head
of the government.
Student disturbances, apparently
not of a serious nature, broke out
at Barcelona, and the -Universlitie:
of-Madrid-and-most-of-Spain-have
remained closed as a result of gov:
ernment orders or the action ot!
local authorities because ofthe stu-
dents’ strike of the past few days.
- So far as the public has-been in:
formed the issue continues uncer.
tain as the king, the premlor anc
the army and navy leaders con.
sider the problem forced by .the
} premier himself as to whether he
shall remain dictator.
: Gen. San Jurjo, director of th
Guardia Civil. Gen. Barrera, the
captain general of Barcelona, whc
arrived at Madrid this morning
and Gen. Ardanaz, minister of the
army, were among army leader:
closeted with Primo at today’s con:
farannrne
| [
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] |
|
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49,
33,
6,
34
] | Four Men and SEVEN BURNED TO.
Woman Die as DF ATH IN SHACK
Plane Cracheac
| ‘Kausas City, Kas. Jan, 28.—(4)—Burned and mutilated
bodies of four men and one woman lay today in Kansas City
morgues, victims of the crash of a Central Airlines plane which
dived and exploded into a mass of flames last it night within a
mile of its destination, Fairfax Airport. ‘ ;
Cause of the accident probably
wili remain unknown. Almost, as.
soon as the charred bodies of the
. four passengers and pilot were re-
“moved; employes of Universal “Air-
lines, Inc., subsidiary with Central
Airlines of Aviation Corporation,
- hacked to plecea the smoking frame
of the plane and dragged its parts
_to widely separated sections of a
‘corn field. ' :
Even the remnants of the pas-
sengers’ personal baggage—a magn-
zine, a box of cough medicine, a
woman's handkerchief~-were ~ de-
stroyed. . . 8
~The deed are Dyke Laoudeman.,
Kansas City, Kas, pilot; C. R. Mc-
Kinnen, Chicago business man;
James B. Eggert, Chicago, music
publisher; Miss Margaret Dice, St.
Joseph, Mo, and William Flynn,
Kaneas City, former city alderman
-and theaterowner, ce
All are believed. to have been
killed by tmpact of the plane, the
second section of the regular Cen-
tral Airlines afternoon flight. from
Wichita when it dived from an al-
titude of about 500 feet.
. The plane appeared over the air-
port, almost 30 minutes late, Air-
port- attendants -said-it circled—the
field with motor apparently: dron-
ing normally. Then, south of the
airport, already flattening for the
landing, it faltered, dipped. and
plunged Into a cornfield. An explo-
‘sion, marked the moment of im-
pact, and flames roared into the
air.
Employes of a nearby. factory and
airport attendants. rushed to the
wreck with fire extinguishers, bu‘
were unable even to approach the
plane because of the blistering heat.
Aviators said they believed the
most plausible explanation of the
tragedy “was failure of controls
Laudeman had been flying seven
years and was known as a cautious
| pilot..
Dr. L. 8. Fisher, deputy coroner
et an inquest would. be. held. to
ay, - _
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4,
5
] | General gf Cotton Co-Op —
Knows Grower's Problert
| - Montgomery, Ala.—\7)— 1 ne presi-
dent of the governmént's $30,000,000
co-operative cotton marketing as-
sociation has a-background that
taught him the planter's troubles.
Allen Northington, heading wiiat
is potentially the world’s largest or-
ganization of its kind, is a farmer
and banker gitted with a genius for
organizing.
As the only general manager the
‘Alabama Farm Bureau Cotton As-
sociation has had in its seven years,
he has directed the marketing: of
upward of 1,000,000 bales of Ala-
| bama cotton and-has handled’ $55,-
| 000,000 for the farmers.
Coming to Montgomery from the
“plowed ground” country of his na-
tive Autagua County, 16 miles from
here, Northington.‘was. possessed
with the actual experience of the
cotton farmer, gained in operation
of his extensive holdings.
" He. is president of a bank at
Prattville, whict'dcals.largely with
farmers, nearly all cotton growers
| - When he. seeks refuge -from--th
business world he finds it in hil
rore garden at his beautiful Clov
erdala home. When away fram his
flowers, NorthIngton Jikes to hun!
and fish ii his boys, Allen Jt, i
and. Oacar, 7.
He was born in Prattville ° 5:
years ago, the son of W. T. North
ington. His father was organize!
| and_ president of-the Continenta
| Gist pomrens ‘of Prattville, a cor
poration. known ‘to every cottor
| producer in the country. In 191
j he married Miss Kemper Welch.
| [
[
1944.6438876953,
2257.9587070313,
2519.5625332031,
3484.832796875
],
[
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] | [
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] | 13 | 13_209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 209,043,267 | masthead_2034+opinion|masthead_2034+editorial|masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 654 | 654 | [
654
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
20,
26
] | BRITISH SHIP
STRIKES REEF,
| BREAKING UF
|
Bordeaux, France, Jan. w6.-~.1- ‘
The British steamer Knebworth |
struck a reef near Biarritz today, ,
and was believed breaking up. NI
life saving crew from St. Jean De!
Luce was sent to attempt rescue of |
the crew of- -21 men and two women, |
New York, Jan, °28,—%—The |
Knebworth, which broke in two,
after striking a reef near Biarritz, ,
France, in acsteel freighter of 2.555!
ton gross register, and is owned |
by the Robert Stanley Shipping |
Company, Lt, of Newcastle, Eng-:
land. Ttwns 303 feet lonz-and was |
built In 1919 at Glasgow, Scotland. |
| [
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3149.399203125,
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] | 15 | 15_209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 209,043,267 | masthead_2034+opinion|masthead_2034+editorial|masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 655 | 655 | [
655
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
9,
31,
43
] | DENNEHY JURY
~1S QUESTIONED
Hearing Is "Continued
Until Thursday: .
| Members of the Jury which found
Daniel J, Dennehy guilty of hold-
ing up the dry dock pay roll and
gave him a ninety-mne-year sen-
ence were questioned and what
‘went on behind the closed doors of
the jury room was revealed, in the
jhearing on a motion for a new trial
‘for Dennehy. held before. Judge. J.
C. Canty in.the Tenth District Court
‘this morning. After all but one of
the jurors had been questioned,
June Canty adjourned the hearing
until ‘Thursday morning, when
County Superintendent O, E. Ken-
nedy, a member of the jury, now
in Austin, will be placed: on thé
stand. 7 . :
The motion for a new trial
charged jury misconduct on_sev-
-eral .céunts, chief. of .which- alleges
that_before.the verdict was returned
in open court new evidence was im-
properly conveyed to-the jury by a
deputy. sheriff, that ‘the jurors dis-
cussed several matters’ which had
not been introduced !n_ evidence,
and that Kennedy was present in
court in the habeas corpus hearing,
(Continued on Pare 11.)
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209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
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| Ambulance Speed Criticism by Jury Draws Retort From Williamson
|
Ambulances, police” “patrol cars
and fire. fighting apparatus are ex-
empt undor the speed laws of the
state, It was declared foday by ME.
POWilllameon, commissioner of fire
and police, in commenting on the
report of the grand. jury which yeos-
terday critleized =the = “wanton
speeding of ambulances when an-
awerlng. calls to the ecenes af ac-
cldents and upon other occasions
! requiring the services of an emer-
gency conveyance.”
Mr. Williamson confined himself
to the statement that such vehicles
were protected .by the law,
! "We are of, the -opinioh, that a
_apeed_ of from sixty to seventy-five
| miles an hour Is not. justifiable un-
ider any circumstances,” the grand
jury report said,
The: teport then. cited an .am.-
bulance ‘accident of 1zecent date
When “one person was killed and
several others ‘seriously injured.”
The report. concludes with the
statement that aome drastic meas
ures should be adopted to “restrain
‘irresponsible drivers of ambulances
‘from attaining, maniacal speed
lwhen anewerlng calls.”
' For months past a movement har
| been Underway by a certain. grout
fwhich is apparently opposed § tc
y“ambulances "speeding on Brond.
way. Petsons interested ‘in’ this.
question were reported to be pre-
paring to Mle a formal protest with
the board of city commissioners
One driver of an ambulance in
the days when these vehicles were.
horse‘drawn > declared. yesterday |
that excessive speeds of medern
ambulances were unnecessary. Ee
declared that governors shoubi be,
installed on all anvulances “so -ar
to hold them down to net mere
than forty or forty-five miles an
how.” 1t wus explained that this
rate of speed would insure the ar-
rival) of anlemergency case at a
hospital in ample time for treat-
ment and at the same time protect
persons and stim vehicles on the
streets,
Complaints have also been made
of the exeessive use of the siren
hy .ambulanecs, especially ia (the
vicinity: of hospitals,
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657
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
63,
64
] |
“THep eo BAS REE Ww ust
| MERE NEL IEE
Columbus, Ohio, Jan, 28.—.?)—
Three trainmen were killed today
when the boiler of a Now York
Central freight engine exploded
“at. Arnold, 20 miles northwest of.
here.
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|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
61,
50
] | Late News
| tiations’ whereby the Standard
Ou Company of Indiana would
uire full ownership and con-
trol of the Sinclair Crude Oil Pur-
chasing Company. and’ -the Sin-
clair Pipe Line Com , both of
which are now owned jointly with
the Sinclair Consolidated Olli
eg
Corp. are nearing completion, it”
was reported in financial circles
today. At-the. offices of- the -Sin-
clair Consolidated Oll Corp., the
“report could neither be confirmed
nor denied. The-Sinclair Pipe Line
ty y owns more than 6,000
miles of lines in Oklahoma, Texas,
Kansas and Wyoming. .
DIES IN HOLDUP ~
@akland, Calif... Jan. 28.—()—
Joe Fox, deputy sheriff, was kill-
ed today during a holdup of the
Broadway and Twentieth branch
bank here of the American Trust
Co. The deputy was in the bank
as a customer. He was killed
Bnew) nh ee Be Oh
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659
] |
|
209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/209043267-galveston-tribune-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
1,
17,
25
] | Rooming-House . Keeper
And Father of-Slain .
Girl Testify.
Mrs. Brady
Takes Stand
For Defense
| Courtroom, Austin, Jan. 28.—
(P)}—The wife ‘of . John W.
Brady, on trial for murder, was.
the ‘first witness called this
afternoon by the defense. —
' Austin, Tex., Jan. 28.—(P)—
The state rested its case today
against John W. Brady, 59, for-
mer: judge of the Third Texas
Court of Civil Appeals on trial
for the murder of Miss Lehlia
Highsmith, 28-year-old | court
stenographer.
The state’s case was closed
with the testimony of A.-G. B.
Highsmith, father of the young
woman who was stabbed to
death in front of a rooming
house here on the night of last
November 9. He described Miss
Highsmith briefly, and the de-
fense did not cross examine him.
Immediately . preceding, . High-
smith orf the witness stand, Mrs. R.
B. Crider, operator of the rooming
house .where Mies Highsmith Jived,
described Brady as a frequent and
unwelcome visitor to the steno-
grapher’s~apartment.
He was, moreover, the woman
testified, the only “regular” mar
| visitor to thé girl’s rooms. He came
“pretty ‘often,’ * phe: ‘said, adding “he
| was coming against her will.” Late:
under cross examination, she re
peated'she had seen Brady in Mis:
| HighsmYth’s room “several times,’
he state’s unexpectedly brie
presentation of the case, after les:
than two days of testimony, pic
tured only the circumstances of th
slaying, without delving, as hac
‘} been expected, into the past lif
of the former high ranking jurist
Previous witnesses, guests,at :
party in another apartment at the
| | Crider house, described their Ver
(Continued on Page 11.) -
a ns
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|
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15,
3
] | PRISON WORK:
- STILL KEEPING
_- SOLONS BUSY
| *s Austin, Tex., Jan. 28.) —The
house today voted to withdraw
penitentiary reorganization bills
from committee and begin their
consideration ‘as a beomnmusiadl of” tHe
whole. + ¢-~ moe
The ‘senate, siltfuer as a commit-
tee of the whole for consideration
of the. three penitentiary bills be-
fore it, was nearing a choice.
The house had five bills before it,
there being six weparate concentra-
tion plans in the nine’ bills in both
houses.
Austin, Tex; Jan, 28.—(?)—Prison
rehabilitation still) occupied the
center of the stage today as the
legislature met for.the second day's
work since its tour of penitentiary
properties.
The senate planned -to follow yes-
terday’s action in going into com-
mittee of the whole’ to’ consider
prison concentration. measures and
to give initial consideration to bills
introduced by Senator Yat Patton
of Crockett, sponsoring rehabilita-
tion of the present walls at Hunts-
ville, and Senator W. D. McFar-
lane of Graham, favoring centrali-
zation on lands now owned. *
A third measure, calling for re-
location near Austin and sponsored
by Senator Edgar E. Witt of Waco.
was, analyzed by its author,’ but
the ‘senate was far from through
(Continued on Pave &} 7
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53,
57
] | ROY KILLED
| Kerrville, “Tex.,- Jan. 28.—(#)-—
Claude Wooten, 15, was, killed and
Bryan Crenshaw, 21, seriously in-
jured@ yesterday when their car
turned over just outside Kerrville.
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|
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30,
18,
2
] | 21 Other Island
Men Are Charged
In Federal Bill
| Outstanding developments today in the anti-liquor war initi-
ated Saturday under the direction of the United States customs
forces were:
Indictment of “George “Musey and twenty-one others on
charges of conspiracy to viaiate the prohibition and customs
acts: _.
Arrest of WwW. R; “Schultz, . , formey ‘ commander of a” coast
guard patrol boat, on conspiracy charges.
‘Schultz is one of those indicted ‘with Musey, many of whom
have already been arrested, including two Galveston policemen.
.Musey is under a heavy bond in connection with a liquor ‘case
now on appeal, but he had not been apprehended in the ‘Present
campaign at noon today.,
Sweeping ‘charges of conspiracy
‘to import and sell intoxicating
liquor in violation of the customs
laws and the national prohibition
act were contained today in federal
grand jury indictments against
Musey and 21 other Galveston men.
|The case is styled United States vs.
George Musey,. T...R.. Davis -et..ai.
- Defendants named sn the = case
are: ;
George Musey, T. R. Davis, alias
Tom Davis; Theodore Owens, Har-
ry Eveit, Harry Giddy, Abraham
Holden, George Etie, Joe Resse,
Harry (Mac) McCarthy, . Leon
Sabanovitch, Andrew lL. (Chicken)
Best, Harry Best, Edgar Cantrell,
James... Bacret (Mobile Jimmy),
Richard Caufield, George (Piggy)
Page Jr., A. Gleich,. alias _Mooch_
'Gleich; ~~ William~- Watson;--C; ZL,
Bryant, alias Charlie. Logan; W. R.
Schultz, a man known as “Cheerio,”
Joe Marrero. : ; -
Bonds have been made by a num-
ber of defendants and others are
said to have. left the city. ,
> he indictment declares that the.
alleged ring maintained an organ-
ization to purchase foreign Hquors
abroad and deliver it in rum run-
ners and -small “boats at points
along the Texas coast, particularly
on Galveston Island. Musey is
named in the bill as the purchaser
and he is mentioned in other overt
acts as landing cargoes of whisky
and other Jiquors and storing it In
Galveston. | on :
Landing of 350 cases of foreign
Hquor in April in the Sea Hawk
and bringing in of 1,600 cases of
whisky in September from the rum
runner C, M. Lawrence are two of
the overt acts mentioned.
There are ten counts in the in-
dictment, in which different overt
(Continued on Page 8.)
5 ieee pia aii
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|
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8,
48,
10,
60
] | French-Global Tonnage —
Proposals ‘Before Naval
-. Conference Delegates
| London, Jan. 28.—(?)--French
global tonnage proposals were put
at the head of the naval conference
agenda today, but Italian counter-
proposals also will Le given their
day in court’ at the next open ses-
sion of the full conference called
‘for Thursday morning at 10 o'clock.
Again invoking the alphabet, the
big five at a meeting in St. James’
palace today decided to call the roll
of ‘nations at Thursday's session,
thus giving France the right-of-way
over her Italian neighbor.
France will present her proposal
to limit fleets as a whole and not
in separate categories, Great Brit-
ian will reiterate briefly her prefer-
ence for category regulation and
Italy will then make: her plea that
the actual relativity of fleets should
be decided before all else.
The United States and Japan
have nothing to propose in the gen-
eral phase of the discussions, <A
committee of two from each dele-
gation will be appointed when the
| three addresses are finished Thurs-
day to study the situation, bit it Is
fully expected the arrangement
made by the big five will be: ap-
proved eventually.’
Decision for an open session or
Thursday was reached ona motior
introduced. by Henry L. Stimson
American secretary of state, some
opposition had been’ expressed, but
Seeretary Stimson insisted that a:
many newspaper men as possible
be admitted. —
All the delegations exprorged wat
isfaction after the big five hac
adjourned. Dino Grandi, Italian
foreign minister, who has’ been
urging Italian parity with France,
said. Qe _ felt Italy -had —recelved
(Continued on Page 8.)
| BY BYRON PRICE
moersmintntl Wee C4 SSE TE dd.
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38,
50,
60
] | Great Britain Makes New
Gesture of Faith For Par.
loy’s Success.
WILL DISCUSS PARITY
| London, Jan. at, <(jerAo the ne-
val powors moved toward compro:
mise todey on lwo of thelr mos:
troublesome problems — the physl.
tol methods of Limiting Cleots and
ttaly's demand for pully whi
Prance--Cireal Gillin nade o new
gesture of falth ut the naval contur-
ences success by announcing bhat
construchon of — live two newesl
sruksars Nas beon cancelled.
‘phe Upltisl unnounceme nt col
elded with a inveling of she “bly
five” in Bowuine sliecl au whiel
further progress wis sid le have
been inde voward & compromist
on ty Lonnage plan designed Lo sotty
the perennial assuinget on. bat
technlea! phage ol naval imitation
Right Reengniged,
Ab Une same ting, ib was dls.
closed Uhnd sovigus consideration
was being plven by several dolena
tlons to Ww propos bial the ftallar
parity problent oc mek by a brea
declaration iInwhieh ait power:
would Jolin, ‘This would state thal
the sovereign rieiit of every nator
to bull an adequate fleck was Cully
recognized bit (hal the algnatorle:
voluntarily agree nol to exceed ¢
certain construction progam: be
taveen, now and 1996.
‘The bwin atlacs on two of th
most difficult of the conlevenée pro:
bleme, colneiding with che Jsrltlst
cruser caucellalion announcement
sharted (he second week of the con:
forence in an weomuepliere of simil
Ing confidence, Th Was enphasiae
on all sides licwever, Chab neither ¢
the compromise lotmulu has yc
been accepted aud thab much te
mmalned to he done cven if thes
two obstactes ahould be overconte.
Deyeteps Overnieht
"the Vannave meagureent pia
Uber eel ter inors that tho hour
nk the Dowblag strect scssioet, 1
been ares study even befare th
fonfereace beri, but ble proposal
to aigataliten out Cie Franca-Thilke:
quedion dppuarnbe developed ove.
nit. ‘Mls datior Ldta dias nob ye
bert ucceptable to Mussolini's 6%
ernment altho first reaclons ap
peared hop Cul
As Ub stood Ln tentative form, th
suggestlon was blink the tive ett.
naval powers Joln in a dcclarntior
porhnps in the preamble of a itm
itlon treaty, soving Lhal the sover
cls privilege of posarsstag: a nay
of any sive could not be abeldae
exeepl voluntatll 'Ehua, dn eftee
would do awuy with any fixed ra
Ila undeestraiding, suche as was lat
down ty the Washington treats
Then, dn the body of the treaty
pach puwer woukl aipulate the ou:
aide limits on ils budaing needs be
tween now nud the conference ¢
1a when Ue whole situation |
expected fa Gome under verte
npadn tty conlomaiiv with the agiee
meal tached pt Wastilaston,
No Discussion Veet.
Whether appieulton of this pen
eral tormuia lo the tlathus situatlo
would be supplemented by a seourk
pact coverlag Lag Mediterranea
as hae beca sume ded by franc
Tonalin for tulue dcrerninadlion.
spokesman tor bbe Atmerloan dou
gallon sid loday there Hid been p
diseusston whebhe the Unit
States would be salans lo loli ste
a pact Ina Comotutlve capachy,
‘tudag’s mmeelineg ol tle bby fh
was the toneest yes held. ‘fhe ek
fatlon hewis dbeussed a detuile
propo for the canterence pre
fain with Ube tonne mesure
WWenb qeston uppermns! wy
comproniie plan would lay dew
finitatlons for cach spoglie cliss
war tip, but wotild defer lo Prone
views by allowoue a cortaln perc
ace of total totmare to be diver
from ene class lo another
Aynonneimenh oF cuneellion ¢
wort on fhe rlGon Creisars SU t
and Northuinberland was nude |
the adiibally without explanasts:
Vheee me tlie two ships on wale
Pele Minor Macboneld si
pended work sharliy belore bly vis
to (he Untted Sliled titel sean “LL
absence of offletal comment wt
taken as tiathor evidence of Git
Gaiitein’s huth thay same asses
(Continued on saver tn teens
| [
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|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
26,
52,
68
] | HATRING PLEADS TE
BOAR AE APPEL
Upner Michigan Dry Law
Upper Michigan Dry Law
Administrator Asks Re~
inetatarneant.
| Washington, Fan, 27 Seck=
Ine rely Lakeienl as prohibition
adn! Geetar for upper Michigan,
fs WW. Hattlig of Matquctle wire
here to plead his ease below the
hoard ef apps of the Ledutal clvid
servioe couraleston,
Tlatriay was asked lo resto in
Deceraber beentte Re Galledl to pass
ff oclell service examination it
Gand Raptls, fe ts to lenve lis
fost Jan. Sl ualess bly appedl by
eruuti al.
The admund trator browshl wit
him lo Wasbtogton what be ould
were etrone recomendations and
Toliets praising bls record ay upper
Michhran eliet,
| [
[
30.7944190979,
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],
[
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 4 | 4_10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 10,965,643 | front_page_20_99 | 666 | 666 | [
666
] |
|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
5,
22,
23
] | HOOVER DENIES
SHOUSE CHARGE
Alleged Patronage Informa-
| tion Called “Baseless
| Attack.”
|
Washington, Jan, 27% — (PRA
sternly worded denial came quickly
from the White House last night af-
ter JouctL Shouse, chairman of the
Democratic notional erxccutlye com~
mittee had clarged President Hoov-
jer with complling information on
vovernment employes for the pur-
pose of bringing patronage influence
lo benr against recalcitrant members
of congress.
The Democratic statement said
'Mr, Hoover hac sent cards to all
jdepartnionts "to be fled oub by ev-
lory employe glying a tull pleture of
(he hisbory of his employment.”
This, he sald, was ‘difficult to ax
plain on any von-polltical hyna-
thogts.”
Never Ueard of Tt.
Walter Newton, onc ol Mr, Hou-
vers seerclarios, replied that neither
he nor the prealdent had “ever
heard of the matter unlit it ape
peared In the press.”
A card index of prealdentlal ap:
pointers and asher non-ciyll scryles
employes ts kept at the White Hous
as nt mabler ot office routine, be
sald, and some eight months age,
card wete sent aut tot the purpose
of bringing Lhls lst up to date,
Shouse's statement suggested that
members of congress say in the new
system which he charged te the
president a purpose of “visliing pre-
sideutial — cisplewsure’ upon ap-
pulntees “for the sins of thely spon:
jsors, such os vellug indupendently”
of the chief execttives dealies
Taunched Revenl Attack,
! ‘Newton afler deseribing (ie meth
ods of keeping reentds said in 1
Tthat “several weeks ago Chis san
Denocrntic propaganda burgat
Intinched an nltack” upon the chic!
execullve which was “so unfatr
to Invite almost condemnation wll
the result tia the yublle has beer
free from. telr assauit for sever a
weeks.” He added that “this tas!
ts jist as baseless as were tht
others”
| [
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|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
8,
51,
58
] | FORMER KAISER WAS
BARTHOAY FESTIVAL
Herr Hohenzollern Cele
brates Seventy First
Event With Family.
| Bertin, Mun, 2i-(/)—Three of the
sons of the former _ Isat now
plain Uerr Wilhelm Hohensollern,
were In Doorn, Holland, today to at-
tend celebration of thely exiled fa
thers seventy-frsb blrnday,
Brederick Wilheln, the forme
crown prince, the former Crown
Princess Coclle and Prince August
Wilhelm constituted the Potsdam
contingent Lo the birthday party,
while Prinee Adalbert and his wi
slurted trem Hamburg and Princes
Vieloria Loulse, with her husband,
motored to Roorn from Branswie,
None of ihe grandchildren went
to Doorn, nob even Wilhelm, the
eldest son of the tormer crown
prince who |s sludylne ab Koerlgs-
Dur univarsity, According lon
Berlin represvubative af the Wohen-
vollerns, Wilbeln “found the ox-
pense of the lip lrom cast Prussia
lo Holland bon big.”
Of other relstlyes only the Prin-
test Margarete, the former Kafsar's
sister, went to Doorn with her hus-
band, Landgrave Karl Acasen, Al
the farmer emperor's request, fes-
tivities were recused to minimum
becuse of maurplng over bhe death
of Pilneess Vicloria, who was Lhe
wlfe of Alexander Subloff, Russion
adventurer.
| [
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|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
4,
3,
49,
64
] | ‘City of Dreadful Night’
6,791 of 7,000 Village Inhabitants Blind from Trachoma
| Adiyaman, Lorkey, Jan, 21)
Now thal communications have
keen opened partlilly in Turkey's
loug-lsolated burbulenl oastern pr'o-
vines, travelers are bringing to che
world news of the existence of a
hidden and dreadful village: Adly-
anian, the village of the blind.
In the dusty, sandy district of
Hisnimansour, not fay from the
city of Malatia, Iles this village of
whose ‘000 inhabltants 6,791 are
wholly ov pattinlly sightless through
the ravages of trachoma.
It is a village without sound ox-
cep, for tha tap, tap of hundreds
of canes on cobbled roads as the
popuintlon gropes its way through
a ghostly ie from blind childhood
to bilnd old age and death, Through
Adiyaman'’s qualid dungthatched
huts and dust-polluted alleys, hu-
man baings crawl like animals with
oul ayes.
Uhterly disregarded by the old
ipgimoe of the Sulians, the village
hos for centuries been wilhow a
school or hospital Without solane
or help Its peasant population,
stricken generavion after generation
by traehoma, has made its living
palntully and half blindly through
farming and herding.
TWive blines @ day, yenr after year,
this derelict poputatlon has filled
the village mosque to pray to Allah.
Their prayers have not mentioned
thelr afficblon, for according to
the Moslem faith, complaints arouse
the wrath of destiny. The prayers
of even the most wretched followers
of Islam thank Allah for what they
have, lesh worse befall,
The village is utterly unlighted ab
night for there are only a handful
of villagers who could gee by any
night, Kipling’s city of dreadful
night becomes a reality in this Ana-
lolian town where nighb and day
ave of the same dire blackness.
Adiyaman is probably the onty
place in Anatolia where Moslem yo-
men wen no veils. Mor the women
of Adlyaman, religious os they are,
no veils are necessary beyond the
voll of universal blindness which
hides a wontan even from her fath-
er and hushand and child in this
sighlicas village.
The government of Mustapnan
Kemal Is struggling to combat the
trachoma peril here and in all the
surrounding district. Doctors have
been dispatched te the province and
clinles opened. Already, within o
brief period, the government has
spent $76,000 on the treatment of
155,144 trachoma cases, including
the entire population of blind Adly-
aman and the afflicted In 48 other
pilnges of the Misnlmensour dis-
rick,
| [
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|
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11,
19,
20
] | CHICAGO MONEY
COFFERS EMPTY
Dwindling School Coal Bins
Present New Problem to
Officials.
| Chlengo, Inn. 27—-()—Dwyindldng
teal lng in the puble schools
kindled interest ancw today in Chi-
cago's empty money bags,
As some elty offlclais frowned up-
on the resene pool of $20,000,000
pledged to Silas H Strawn, head ot
the cilizens' committee, H. Wnilace
Cnldwell, president of the board of
education, prepared fo ask the
honrd's coal deniers to continue do-
liveries of coal despite the lack of
ae and oc present unpald coal bill
$480,000,
"there wlll he a respite unlil Wed-
nesday, when Strawn will confer
wh the city council fimance com-
mittee relative ta setling in motion
the financial pool pledged to aid
the clty governments.
Ask Cooperation,
Originally «cb ub $50,000,000, the
pool has $20,000,000 in pledges from
business, tndustrial and railroad
interests to be used in leans on bax
untielpation warrants, No moncy
will be loaned any cf the govern.
ments, Strawn asserted, unless co-
operation is pledged to reduce op-
erating expenses to a minimum.
While Mayor William Hale
Thompson was still ab ioggerheads
with the Slrawn plan ot relies,
Chalrman John §, Clark of the
council nance commiltee, sald he
holicved the council would pledge
the requested cooperation,
Prealdent Caldwell, al the board
of education, presented a new plan
—o committee lo supervise expend-
[lure of the $20,000,000 ralsed by the
rescue commibtec
As chalrinan of the new comnuit-
pains,
eee warmers
| [
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|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
0,
31,
48
] | "SAAD CLD MAN CF
BASEBALL” 15 DYING
‘Pongo Joe” Cantillon Has
Practically No Chance
to Recover.
| Hickman, Ky, Jan, 27—()}—The
condition of "Pongo Joe" Cantillon,
the “grand old man of baseball,”
was unchanged today. dockors an-
nounclng that he had practically
no chance Lo revover, Only his iron
constitution and his strong will
were Keeping him alive, the;
During his saschall career,
go Joo" served a$ mannger of a
number of clubs, umpire in several
Jeagnes, scout and player, He is
credited wilh having dlscovored
Walter Johnson and Rube Waddell
Cantillon, whe has spent 46 of
64 years in baseball served os su-
pervisor of umpires for the Amoerl-
can associition last yenr, He start-
ed nls basebnll carer in 1884, play-
{ng for the Green Bay club in the
Wisconsin league, Later_he served
Ré Inanager of chtbs ab BurlingLon,
Town, Dubuyue, Iows, Marinette,
Wis, Rockiord, Th, and Onkland,
onlit.
He wont erst in 1895 as manager
af the Columbus, Okio club and
srived for bhree yerrs as umpire in
the National league. When the
Ametican Lesgue was formed he en-
tered (hab elreult, serving as um-
plre during 1901, 1902 and 1903,
He managed the Milwaukee club
tor three years and served as maAn-
ager of Lhe Washinglow Senabore.
the same length of time. Mike
Crntltion hls brother, bought the
Mlunenpells clus of che Amertcan
assoclation ond Joo managed that
team from 1910 Lhrough 1923. He
uted as scoub Lor Lhe White Sox in
1024 and 1086 and then managed
the Liktle Rock clth of the South-
orn aasoctitian for two years, He
scouted for the White Sox again in
ta,
| [
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[
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]
] | [
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1119.2158691406,
3979.420703125
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] |
|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
41,
59
] | House Committee Asked te
Expedite Prohibition De-
partment Change.
PRESENTS PROBLEMS
| Washinglon, Jan, 27—(?)—Atbor-
ney General Mitchell today urged
the house expenditures committee
to expedite action on Iegislation 16
tansfer the prohibition enforec-
mens unit from the treasury to the
justice department
Mibcheli said he was in accord
with Lhe recommendations of Secre~
tary Mellon before the committee
favoring the transfer and endorsed
‘the Williamson bill to effect this
change,
Attorneys in the treasury depart-
ment connected with the prohtbi-
tlon unls would be transferred to
the justice department slong with
the agents in order to carry on
prosecutions, Mitchell said,
Would be Absorbed
He opposed putting prohibition
unit attorneys, under the civil ser-
vice, and, sald they would be nb-
sorbed in the office of the justice
department on an equal basis with
those already in service,
Many things under the blll, the
attorney general said, would havi
to be worked out as administrative
problems,
Reprosentative Schafer, Republl-
can, Wisconsin, asked "why not put
all United Stales alterneys under
the clvil service?”
Mitchell replied that the question
was not pertinent to Lhe matter un-
der discussion but added his depart-
menb felt attorneys used for the
speeinl work should nob be paced
undar civil service.
Schafer, a wet, remarked bhat
Mrs, Mavel Walker Willebrandt
former, assislant allorney general
had written that one reason for
failure of the enforcement of the
dry Jaw was the ‘spoils system’
used in appolnting district nltor-
nays,
Asked for Assurance
Representative Cochran, Deino
erat, Missouri, asked Mitchell &
give him assurance that dry agents
would not use federal court sub:
poenas on Iprge Indystrial ennoqeay
[to obtain Information. Ile charge.
that dry agents had summionied of:
ficlals of the American Can com:
pany and the Corn Products com-
pany, from Sl, Louis to Springiield
vl, wilh federal court subpoenas.
Mitchel! answered that he did no
\belleve in considering questions o.
(hab kind during the formulation o|
loglelation of the character befor
the committee, He explained he
did nob plan to make promises o.
(Continued on page thirteen.)
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|
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9,
29,
43
] | WisGONSIN TO GET
AID FOR HIGHWAY
Kohler Announces Specia
Session of Legislature
Unnecessary.
| Madison, Jun, 2%7—()--Federal
Highway old for Wisconsii will be
forthcoming for the calendar year
1930 withoul the nnegssity of a
specint legislative session to effect
a change in the Iaw governing ade
minstration of the highwny appra-
priations, Gov, Walter Kohler an-
nounced today,
Tho governor's announeement
‘snid funds which total aimos: $2.-
000,000 will be availakle as a result
of negotintlons belween the Iecetel
| bureau of public orads nud the Wis-
consin highway commission,
Tedern) olficials are of Lhe opin-
lon the preseut Wisconsin law docs
not comply with the requirements
that expenditure or federal aid
money he controlled by the state
rather thar by counbies, Because
of this, the matter will undoubledly
be one of the subjects tor the 1031
leglalatine, the Rovernor sald.
"The present Wiscansin law places
administralion of btghway funds
with the counties. For some thine
rumors Were current Lhab n specin
session of the legislature world be
necessary In order that federal ald
might be obtained bub they were
Wspericd by the governor's announ-
eerent. x
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1478.4358398437,
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] | 18 | 18_10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 10,965,643 | front_page_20_99 | 673 | 6,340 | [
673,
7106,
6340,
5284,
15,
8274,
1374
] |
|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
12,
30,
34
] | IYO AD
faba
(1.5, FARMERS
Secretary Declares “Blind
Production” is Bane of
Aariculiure.
| Washinglon, Jan, 27.- (?)—Secre-
tary Hyde told the farmers of the
nation toda ythat “blind produc-
tion" was the bane of agriculture,
Speaking over the National
Broadcasting company network, the
secretary closed the broadcasting of
the report of the 1930 agricultural
outlook with the warning that gov-
ernmental farm-reilef measures witt
be useless “unless each individuat
farmer intelligently pians his pro-
duction."
Hyde soil he wanted to empha-
slze that in order to ohtaln a higher
level of prices than prevails pow it
appenred necessary to reduce rather
than to increase 1830 productlon ancl
that tho problem mush oe meb on
the farm.
Keep Production Lown,
“It we are to make agriculture
jprofltable we muse nob only produce
at least possible cost but must also
keep our = production reasonably
close to prospeciive domestle de«
mand,” he said. ‘Blind production
for an unknewn demand is pow ohne
bane of agriculture. Competitive
selling by 8,000,000 tndivlaua) farm-
ers usually gives the purchaser 4
great advantage. ‘Lhe challenge ol
the new decade is Lo ack collectively
to overcome this situation.
“Agriculture's leadership has for-
mulaled and secured the enactment
of the agricultural marketing acl
which established the Tederal farm
tponrd backed by hail a bitlien ¢ol-
Jars of public money and clothes
with far reaching powers mn appiy-
ting collective thinking ta Uhat greal
‘iproblem of the new decade — Che
problem of modern conoperative
merehandlsing of ciops and live-
slock,
Must Pinn Truduction
’Bub all Unis will break down un-
less ench farmer intelligently plans
his production,” (ie seerctary con-
tinued. phe individual farmer
|owes a duby to hiniself lo make hit,
efforts profituble and a duty te
Tis fellow farmer to help make age
riculture prolitable, We cannol de
this if farmers woik against eacn
o.ner, We can do ib if we work
wilh each other.’
The secrelary said that detalted
information on the agrieultural ou -
look will be brought to every con-
HImunity with the meat month at
ithousands uf fara meetings con-
Taticled by the extension service ot
the depnarliment,
| [
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|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
6,
7,
13
] | “Snitches” on Brother to
Keep Him From Gang
| Chicago, Jun, — 27—(/P)--Maric
Yoko, 19, {5 her brother's keeper,
She “snitched"' on hlm to police
yoslertiay--liad him “pinched,” It
was the only way she knew Lo save
him from hlmseif.
It was a hard position Jor Marie.
Onc of six children, she has had to
shill for herself, So has brobher
Charlie, 18 She gota job, Char-
lie knocked around, steeping here
and thera, in paclrooms and bowl-
ing alloys His friends wera made
from among the gangs thot bang
around streeb corners ab night.
Movie worked, yom her slight
saviugs she gave him help, Ab
night, her work donc, she would
seek, him out in the dark sbrepis,
No place for ao gir}, but sislers love
rothers,
night, she found she bed
failed, Chnrlie boasted to her, sri
there was a safe his gang was gelny
fo “ernek:" they'd tried the sam
box” three limes before, bul Ins
night they'd open it sure.
Marie wns crying when she walk
ed Into the detective bureau short);
alierward, but her head was nigh
The tears that streamed trom swol
Jen ayes eame wnashamed = Shi
“snitehed."
“He will go on until he kills some
borly,"" she said. “He ls my brother
bul X would rather see him Ly priv
on bhan—that.”
Tho Jaw gob Charile, and got bk:
pale--Angelo and Louls Ferraro, 1
and 16 years old respectively, anc
William Rinkowski, 18
Today Marie was back on Lhe job
She doesn't make much; but she
worksond Charlie in jut, ear
thlak aboub that,
| [
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|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
24,
53,
56
] | Ski Rider Injured While
Practicing on Westby,
Wis., Slide.
WALTER WGK fib
FRACTURE OF LEE
| Walter Wlek, Norrig Athletic club
xt wider, suffered a toe fracune
shile practicing on the hill a}
Westby, Wis, Thursday, eccording
to a telearam received by Mrs, Wick
today, He is now h1 0 hospital att
Dacrosse Wis, where he will remain
for al lensb a week before he can
be moved to his home here. The
leg wus broken helow the knec. Mr.
Wiek was prncticing for the tanrne-
mont held yesterday-nt Westby.
| [
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[
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676
] |
|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
46
] | Bala et SaaS
Bertin, Jan. 217—P)—Fresldent
Yon Hindenburg tosay reeclveit
King Gusinye of Sweden who way
passing thraygh Berlin en route la
Rome ta join Queen Vietorla who
1g spending the winler there, The
queen's condition was reported sia-
tlonary, She has been i) for many
years.
| [
[
1843.1636474609,
3775.7736328125,
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]
] | [
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] | 25 | 25_10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 10,965,643 | front_page_20_99 | 677 | 677 | [
2081,
677
] |
||
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
27,
61,
65
] | Token of Love
Stolen Salami, Bacon
Found Buried in Girl
Friend’s Yard.
| Racine, Wis, Jan WP j-—"and
so, my love, I bring you a little
token of salami, bacon, pork Join
and other dellcncies."
Those may have nob been the
words, but they were the actions of
Edward Gertz, 17, necording to po-
Hee who a dohim for prowllng
butcher shop here. The officers
gald Edward presented Gie meats ws
his girl friend. She in tuum buried
them In the snow ab phe rear of
her home, where they "were tound,
| [
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678
] |
|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
33,
17
] | BRATLUND’S SKI RECORD
BROKEN AT MILWAUKEE
|
| Milwaukee, Jan, 2%) Earl
|Anker, Ogden Dunes Ski chi), I+
idiana, seb nm new record for the
iMUwaukee Ski club jump here Sal-
lurduy, of 183 feet and won the class
A compelliion on distunce and form.
[rhs old record, three fect less, was
held by Walter Braulund, Ironwood,
tavieh ekl elo.
| [
[
1844.0518310547,
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[
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679
] |
|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
18,
2
] | AGED JURIST ORDERED
HOME BY PHYSICIAR
|
Washhigten, + 27--UP}——Justice
Oliver Wendel Holes who will &
&) years ala in March and who he:
been presidins over the supreme
court during the absence of Chicf
Justice Talt was detailed at home
ioday on orders of his physician,
The distinguished jurist. attended
af conference held by the court
Saturday but il was snid today he
had developed a euld over Sunday
and was slaying indoors as 8 pre-
cautionary nicusure.
| [
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680
] |
|
10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10965643-daily-globe-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
14,
28,
37
] | Spectacular Raids May Lead
to Solution of Many
Jewel Thefts,
POLICE RGUND UP
GANG OF ROBBERS
| Chicaga, Jan, 27,—-V—Following
a month of secret investigation,
which Sneluded telephone wire tap-
ping. police Insl night and early
today rounded up 22 pr1vons in a see
ties of spectacular rakis which
they said may leaa io the solution
of jewel robberies totaling more
than $100,060.
As assistant state attorney, a
policeman and scevera) women wer
among the persons questioned,
assistant states utioriey, Harr
Busch, was released on order ol
| Bairiek Roche, chicf mvestipalor Lor
the state's attorney, who | said
“While we know rom telephone
conyersallons that Busch wA8 Asso-
‘einled wilh the Bang, thete ts in
ssufficienl evidence 10 hold him.”
' The policeman, Roche said, ex
iplained sutisfactorty the Unking of
jis name with the persons taken in
the raids. He also was relensed.
Roche said he also had tnforma-
tion the gang intended to rob a De-
(roit hotel tonight
One of the robberics which police
siid they expected to solve hy the
arrests was that of Chailes M. Rich-
ter, president ot ihe Consolidated
Magazines corporatian, whose gald
const home was invaded Jan, @ by
robbers who took $25,000 in gems,
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63,
44,
57
] | ARCTIC FLIERS’ BODIES BELIEVED IN WRECKAGE
Where Byrd and Men Await Rescue in Antarctic
| Trapped behind several hundred
miles of fnastesolidifying pack ice!
that his light supply ships, the:
| Eleanor Belling and the Chy of
|New York, found themselves unable
to penetrate, Rear Admiral Richard
E. Byrd and 42 members of his
South Pole expedition awalt rescue
at Little America, his base In the
Antarctic, The crosses on the
above map show where Byrd's ships:
| [
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682
] |
|
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1,
15,
21
] | Prohibition Administrator For
_ Montana, Idaho, Charg-
ed With Corruption.
OUaTER OF
HEAD DEMANDED
|
Washington, Jan, 22-ifPpLin-
mediate removal of John I. C, Here
bert, as prohibition administrator
for Montana, and Idnho was de-
manded In the senale today by Sen-
ators Borah, Idaho and Wheeler,
Montana, on the ground of charges
placed before them by department
of justice Invesipators
| Wheeler accompanied his damand
with a declaration that prohibition
repforcement has broken down. -He
blamed the “polideians” and called
upon the law enlorcement commis-
sion to summon members of the Re-
pubhean national committee before
jt to delermine “how probibition
aificers are sppointed.”
Both Wheeler and Borah said
they had been — Informed that the
departinent of justice had Invest
ued Herbert when he was probibi-
tion administiator from) Maryland
and nad reported “malfeasanee and
corruption”
“If the facts be une as reported
io ine by a representative of the
‘department of jastice.” said Borah,
“this man has no business i Idaho
‘or Montana or anywhere else out-
iside of the penitentiary.”
| Wheeler said “unless the admins
Astration fakes lleybert cut of
Montana, I will call for an jnvestl-
gauion and 1 will insist that the de-
| partment of justice make public its
revidereea
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|
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10,
45,
54
] | PARDO EXPLORER
PRAISES EAELOUI
Considers Late Airman “One
of Greatest Pilots Who
Ever Lived.”
| Minneapolis, Jan, 23 PV
ahnur Stef mn, famous Arctic
explorer, today jad tribute lo Lieut,
Carl Bon Kielson as “one of tue
nreatest pilots who ever iver,” and
In whose death, “the world, pariie
cularly the north, has lest pe great
man.” Dr, Stefansren js here on,
w lecture tour.
Both Kelson and Dr Stel sso
lwere reared in North Dakota ane
attended bo walvesslly oof that
(ato, Ti was throngh these cre:
stanees they became acquainted, the
-explorer sald today, He aid pe
yecommended Klelnon to Sir Hubert
Wiikins 4vhen che latter w
ing au pilot for hls famous
aeross the top of the world.
"Y vonsider Licut. Elelson one a
the greatest pilots who ever lived."
Dr. Slefansson said, “Consisler nite
record. He was the first man to
fly north of the Arctle circle in
winter, Ho was the first mia to
sayy qwrninil in the Aretie, the
flrst ta fly campletoly agross Che
Arctic, the firsk to fy in the Ante
aretic and the first ta discover land
from a plane in the Antaretic.
"Sadly enough, his is Uae flsst live
to be lost In Arctic flying, ‘Though
over 500,000 miles of {ying has been
done north of Uhe Arctic clrele, Hiel-
‘gon is the first man killed, Roald
Amumdsen lost his life on the open
Allantic, 300 miles south of the fret
cnke of Ire.
“Amundsen said Bieisen's Ceht
adi Wilkins over the Avede was
the greatest in history, Personally,
L believe that Orville Wrights first
flight of BOO feet was greater, but.
the only greater one,” .
| [
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|
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42,
40,
55
] | Remains of Eielson and Bor-
land May be Buried Under
Gasoline Cases,
ESCAPE ‘WAS IMPOSSIBLE
|
Nome, Alaska, Jan | U7—iMeo
Mushers trom Narth Cape, Siberia,
loday headed thelr dog teams lo-
ward the spot where the wreckcd
aurplane of Carl Ben Nielson, noted
Arelic filer, and iis companton,
Farl Borlund, was locnted Salurda;,
expecting to find the bodies of Ue
two missing bhemen
Bellef that Kelson and Berlund
were killed when Lheir plane erash-
ed and thelr badies would be founda
§animed under 18 vases of gasoilue
in the cabin was expressed bae
uiler @ inare deutiled reporl of tne
fInding “of the wreek was received,
Jee Crosson and Harold Gillken,
Alaskan thers, found the wreeked
plane, climasing a seareh which
has lasted for more thon tho
months and which recentiv becane
rap international affatr with Wie en-
try af Ruasian aivators.
Crosson and Cilam have been
operating irom the fur uadine
vesse) Nannk, flosen i the ive near
North Cupe, ‘iney took off again
yesterday for the opeene oof tbe
wreel, and dog teams [rum shy
jNanuk also went out No word had
heen reecived from them today,
Wreckage Seattered
When Crosson and Gillam sige
\c@ Efelson’s ship, only a smal) part
af one wing and a portion of the
enbin protruded from the sno.
Wreeksge was found seattered in ail
directions, ‘The engine was 100 feet
Trom the cabin. Croan opened t
Ideor of the cabla and a slab of
‘bacon fell out,
| Messages describing the dincavers
of the wreck indicuted that Cron:
‘son and Gillam did not inspect
iit closcly at onee, believing Klelsan
and Borlund had heen killed by the
iinpaet and that thelr badira waded
be found buried in the snow anu
Hiee. Lretor ineasages gave ise Lo
the bellet Hiel op and Borland cied
Vin the cabin of their ship and that
the ynsoiine cases concealed ther
| bodies,
Beatty, Jan, Qi Peeialt the
rinystery of the disappearance Mov,
19 ef Carl Ben Etelson and Marl Ber -
land was colved today wilh cin-
covery af their wrecked plane in
an fey lagoon 90-milos southeast,
;of Norlh Cape, Siberia, but absence
‘Jot the bodics of the tha Antero.
‘Faviators from the wreckage kept
alive a bare hope ther may elf} de
alive,
The note af opumism was oy
tremely faint, however, as expec
peneed filers said they believed tty
{plane struck wilh such foree as
to KA] the uvintors and threw them
|trem the ship. Tl was polated out
| that snow might have concealed
ithe bodies from PHets Joe Cron
and Harold Gilem, wha fonnd the
wreck Saturday,
| Crosson and Gillam took out
‘inelin yesterday tram the fur t
‘line ship Nanuk, icobound at No:
| Cape, f for the scene ol the wreck
Were AttempUing Fight
Eielson and Bevland were a -
-fempdng a tient from Alka te
the Nanuk when they erasto
had removed one lead of p
were and furs and were relur
’ jar a second,
With Crosson and Gillam
reprecentauive af the Rurshay t
ing company and 1 mull i
/Nanuk, owned by the Svenson lad
ing company. Dor teams preeeded
jthe plane and wl Jota in a seareh
jj for the missing thers,
|} Crosson, mist ta steht the be
| son plise, signalled to Gil aad
ithe two fhers broushl thelr ma-
chines down moar the wreel,
} The cendties of the piaue, Cros.
sen sald, indicated that both 1g
occupants were killed i le and
ing bul he and GMhum were uo.
nble In the short Une avaliable ro
Tind any traee of the bodes,
One wing of the Mielson-Borland
[plane was crumpled in landing,
[while the motor wa torm out of
the craft and was found 140 tect
{from the fuselive ‘The tall wats
broken,
Setreh for Budies
| Thase wha were enrouie ta te
‘[warek were fo cleay away Ube snow
amid make a (haroweh search for the
hedies of (hy missing men, Re
cause of slowness of eommunicns
Hons at this senson et the yeu an
[the narth dt wis rat espeeted that
ithe men engdred fn tbe seucn
world he able fo report their pros
aress for some Ume,
{ Only the pavents of Borland,
i cOmtinudd a pare thle ae
| [
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[
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] | [
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|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
37,
29
] | ESCANABA NEWSPAPER
MAN DIES AT CLINIE
| Eacanaba, Mich, dan, 2—(—H,
K. Rrnmel, 38. well known news
paper man died tast nlght at Ro-
chester Minn. where he was in the
Mayo clinic, according te advices
here. Ho was managing extllor of
the Eycantba Dally Press and was
a writer of short slorles,
| [
[
62.8279676514,
3287.5227460937,
421.7533769531,
3462.5004472656
],
[
65.3701171875,
3202.4050292969,
416.8531188965,
3279.0903320312
]
] | [
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3202.4050292969,
421.7533769531,
3462.5004472656
] | 2 | 2_10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 10,966,181 | masthead_2034+opinion|masthead_2034+managing-editor|front_page_20_99 | 686 | 686 | [
686
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
55,
60,
71
] | Half Sister of: Late Kohler
Co, Executive Asks Por-
tion of Estate.
AIDED WRONGFUL ACTS
|
Chicago, Jun, 28=-"}—Suly tn
break Uo will of tho late John 5.
Murphy, vice president of the Koh-
Jer company, has beon filed by Mre.
Barah Carroll, of Milwaukes, W1s.
a half-sister.
Tho wilt charges that Mrs. May
Dunn Murphy of Chicago, second
wife of the plumblng manufacturer,
consplred to Intierib his estate, val-
ucd ab $1,000,000.
A vopresentative of Mrs, Murphy
auld the charge was ebsurd and she
was preparing. Lo bring action
ayalnst Mrs. Carroll for damages
she sald sho tad suffered ag a ree
aut of the sid.
he charges ngalust Mrs. Murphy
acl forth that she “onused or aleed
by wrongful and skillful acts” the
doath of Murphy, hls flrst wife, snd
thelr two sons, John B. Jr. ane
Hallett.
Died Krom Cancer
Murphy died insb November it
the ago of 7d, Tho records of the
health depwriment show daath re-
sulted from “cancer of the mouth
and neck.”
Mrs. Roye Murphy, the flrst wife,
died Juno 3, 102%—two days after
an appendleltls operation. Records
further show that Hallet Murphy
died in a Niles, Mich, santiorlin,
Jan, 11, 1927. He was 38 years old
and death was attributed to alco-
holism.
No tecords were found in tho
death of Jolin B. jr. bub the com-~
pinints of Mrs, Carroll sets out thet
douth resulted from wounds dn-
Illeled “by gun tired by a wo-
men.” ‘The only date given was
“sometime" after lly father remar-
ylod, in dune 1023, while the bit]
charged that “again the funoral
was private and al (uformation was
suppressed by Mrs, Murphy,”
Uxerted Duress
The sult further set out that the
witnesses to the will were “infiu-
eneed” by Mrs. Murphy and that
sho exerted duress to have hersel!
nanied sole bencliclary, ib was also
charged that Murphy was montally
incompetent to make a will.
Both witnesses to the will termed
this charge “ridiculous.” One, Miss
Mary Ullinn kent, Murphy's sec-
rotary and still connocted with the
Kohtor company. snid Murphy was
“remarkably strong and active.”
‘The other, Amos W. Martin of Oak
Park, Tl, sald he was Murphy's
personal attorney for 20 years and
added that he did nob know the
second Mrs, Murphy prior te Mur-
phy's death,
Efforts to learn some of the Ilfe
History of the second Mrs, Murpay
wore fruitless. Ab her home, her
son by « former marriage sald she
had always Hved In Chicago,
Tdved With Murphy
The sub charged that Mrs, Mur-
phy lyed with the manufacturer at
his summer home on Lake Beulah,
Wis, before the tlrst wife's death.
Although Mrs, Carroll fled the
sult, It was sald that o number of
relatlves would beneilb if Murphy's
wi were seb aaide,
Chicago, Jan, 28—-(7)—Mrs, May
Bunn Murphy, Chicago soclaty ma-
tron, is charged wilh the deaths o:
four persons, Including her hug
band, John 8, Murphy, sr, former
vice-president of blo Kohler com-
pny, of Iohler, Ws, his fest wife
And two sons, In a bit to sey asic
Murphy's $1,000,000 will,
The sult, Mle Prlelay in supertot
tourt by Mes. Sarat Caroli, Mil-
waukee, atster of Murphy, ls based
on the declaration that Mrs, Mur-
phy number two “mysteriously
enused” Lhe deaths, haylng previ-
ously “Influenced” two persons to
wilnesy a wil lenving the entire
$1,000,000 astute lo herself.
Murphy had been connected with
tho Kohler company. heucded by
Ciovernor Waller J. Kolier, of Wls-
consin, for 20 years, His denth
occurred Nov. 12, 1928, that of his
song, John, jr. and Hallett Mut:
phy, hevings occurred previously,
“Tools” for ter
Mrs, Crrrell charycs Mrs. Mu:
phy wlth “uickotiating’ the drawing
of the will aud declared A.M. Mar
tn and Mary Gillian Kent, the wit
nesses, were “tools” aeting tn her
behalf. he will, Mrs, Carroll states,
was dictated by Mrs. Murphy, and
wig nob signed by ber husband of
hig ow ace He was “Incompe-
pms
| [
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|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
34,
43,
54
] | SPECIAL HEARING
FOR RAY HARRINE
Former Dry Chief For Uppel
Michigan Apneals For
Reinstatement.
| Washlugten, D0. 6, dan. 22-P)=«
A special hearing was given yester-
‘day by the civil service board of ap-
peals for Ray W. Harring, former
prohibition agent of upper Michi-
gun with headquarters at Marquette
for re-instatement after faihire to
‘pass exominntions necessary for
roappointment, No flncding was an-
nounced by the commisstan,
Tarrlng was active in the arre
of Sherlff J. W. Jotinson, of Gogeb!
county, Mich, tow under bond Lor
mloged violation of the dry law.
Johnson was alleged to lnve sold
beer in his botbling plant that cor-
talned more than the Ipgal amount
nf nlesknal.
| [
[
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2596.5405683594,
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],
[
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],
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]
] | [
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688,
6360
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
13,
7
] | MERCHANTS ORGANIZE
AGAINST CHAIN STORES
|
Cknwnvilley, ¥ Jan, 2—00—
More than 00 per cont of the Clin-
tonyille merehants ineeblng in the
eity ball last night voted unant-
mously to organize the “Clintonville
Home Merchants’ association,” a
Group with activities Lo be directed
Realnst chaln slores,
Addressing the meeling, Altorne;
Somuel Siemon, director ol the
Vox River Valley Home Merchants
association, sald sentiment agains!
thnin movenienls was crystallize
throughout the Fox River valley unc
thal lis organizasion was taking
steps to centralize merchant groups
ngiins) the “chaln menace,”
Delmar Peterson, of the Peler-
gon Department store, was elected
chairman of nn execttive commit-
tee chosen to organize the local as-
tania klagy,
| [
[
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3067.2488203125,
781.3367509766,
3518.8039140625
],
[
430.9087524414,
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]
] | [
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689,
6364
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
24,
21
] | THEATRE SEATS AT 5
CENTS CAUSE PANIC
| » New York, Jan, 28—(/P)—Broad-
sway thealie seats at five cenls cack!
Abltracted by the foregcing on-
nouncement thousands of persons
Nocked to the Repubile theatre last
night, causing a Jam that recuired
batlevliuy ram trebles by ten police~
meh to untangle. ‘The seats were
for the sceund balcony std when
Ihe door was opened the crowd in
its rush carried 14 off its hinges.
AfLer the availvsle quota of sea
s filled the resi of the crowd ¢
dd. The show ls a urd
nev
mystory that has been enjoying o
Jong run,
| [
[
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],
[
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] | [
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|
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5,
51,
56
] | Rumors of De Rivera’s
Resignation is Without
Foundation.
SPAIN DENIES
PRIMD REPORT
| Madrld, Jan, 24—(2)—The Span-
{sh governmenk, through the office
of the chief censor, inte today de-
nled reports pubilsied abroad that
Premier Primo De Rivera had re-
signed, utating that the reports were
without foundation.
‘The promice presided as usual at
this evening’s cabinet meellng. Whe-
ther he will resign in the future
continues speculniive, betng depen-
dont upon what attitude the army
and nayy take In accordance with
the premier's expressed desire for a
roll on thelr approval or disappro-
val of the dictatorslip.
Madrld Dispatch.
The following dispatch directly
from Madrid was filed there at 2:42
p.m, Spanish time, of 6:42 a, m,
Central Standard time, Premler
Primo Do Rivera tolay continued
conferring with high army officers
regarding thetr aliltude on continu-
atlon or resignation of the present
Spanish dictatorship.
Unofficial indications of the te-
wotion of prominent military offi-
vers thus far soem favorable for the
continuance of De Rivers as head
fot the government,
Student disturkances, apparently
not of a serious nature, broke out
ab Barcelona and the universilies in
Madrid and most of Spain hay:
remalned closed as a result of gov-
ernment orders on the actlon of
lecal authoritles because of students
strike of tha past lew days.
Tssue Uncertain.
So far as the public has been in-
formed the issue continues uncer
‘tain as the king, lhe premier and
i (Continued cn pare ning
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10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
14,
10,
19
] | Wisconsin Legislature
Assailed at Road Meet
| AARLISON, JAN, somtejemmds COMRCIL
nation of tha last legislature be-
causo it fatled to fullf? election
promlses to care for snow removai
wos made here today before the
anfiual road school by Eel Gleason,
Barton county highway ocommis-
sionar,
“The tepresontatives trom 60
counties, whose boards adopted re-
solutions favoring a gas tax incrense
for show removal, could have gob-
ten an lncrenso If they had-been as
much Interested in gethlng it as
they were in gelling thelr own sal-
aries ralsed," Gleason said.
"I do nob pelleve the people of
Wisconsin are golng to tolerate
tus conditlon much longer," he
conllnned, "we have beggect andl
couxed asking the legislature for
rellof and it has availed us nothing.
I believe! it ts time for us to do
something more effectlve than pass
resolutions.”
) Peculiarities of Wisconsin laws
iwhtch provide that counties main-
|tain highways do not meet the na-
{tonal statutes, K. G. Kurtenacher,
secretary of the highway commis-
sion said.
"T betieve the stale should asswme
its full obligations for the construc-
tlon, maintenance and snow re-
moyal on the system, fundamental
as well as physically,” he explained,
| acding all work ig a Mability of tlic
j state and it should not force sub-
‘divisions to aysume the burden,
' “Unless the law is changed to
‘comply with the federal require-
ments [ederal aid construction In
Wisconsin will cease in 1931” he as
strled, "This will mean a loss in
‘revenues aggrogating at least $1,-
200,000 annually but which is more
‘likely to be $3,000,000 annually.
: Wd. Phillp traffic officer for the
‘state highway commisson, outlined
: loading at the session.
| [
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|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
12,
6
] | THREE MORE COMPLAIN
OF STEAMSHIP AGENT
|
Milwankes, Jan, 28—(P)—Flyve
mort persons, three’ from Racine,
registered complaints yesterday
agninst Roman Wargin, steamship
agent who committed suicide after
defaulting with money entrusted to
him by hundreds. of laborers and
Immigrants,
| [
[
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] | [
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693
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
2,
40,
46
] | Police Suspect House Was
‘Fired to Cover Up
Robbery,
FIND BODY OF MAN
IN FLAMING SHU
| Milwaukee, Jan, 28.<-(P)—-Tdenu-
fled by a half-burned New Year
card From his 1¢ ycar oid son, the
charred body of Clyde M. Steele,
about #0, was found carly today
when firemen and pollee broke into
a flaming shack here. A plpe
propped against the single door of
the shack trapped the man in the
burning building, leading police bo
suspech foul play,
Dotcectlves inyesllgating the dealin
snid bhey believed Stecle wags robberi
of several hundred dotlars by a man
who flred the shack to cover up
the robbery, Bits of burned eloth-
ing found on the body indicated that.
Stecle was fully dressed at the time
of the flre,
The posleard Iound near the bods
was from John Stecle, who lives
with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs,
nuke Duke, Vaday, Wis. Sleola was
separaled from his wile, the former
Allee Duke, some time ago.
While Battalion Fire Chief Jamas
MeCarthy sad there were possihle
causes for accidental flre, nothing
was found in the ruins to Indicate
tho blaze was of necidental origin.
Two minor explostons, belleved from
ww kerosene stove pnd a gasolins
slove, led potlce to believe the fuel
reservoirs were Intact when the flre
started,
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7008,
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] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
3,
35,
58
] | Dig Into tee and Snow Abou
Wreckage of Eielson
Plane.
PARTY HUNT
LOST BODIES
| Teller, Alaska, Jan, 28—(P)—The
far North leday awalted reports
from the searching party near North
Cape, Siberia, which hns been dig-
ging Into the ice and snew abous
the wreckage of Carl Ben Elelson’s
airplane expecting lo find the body
of the noted Arctic avintor and his
companion, Earl Borland. \
Meanwhile Pat Reid and Ed
Young, Canadian pilots, took their
two powerful planes into the aly
here yesterday for a 400-mile flight
to the Sioerian coast where the El-
elson-Borland plane was found,
WItl Find Bodles,
Alfred Lomen, director of bhe
search for Eielsan and Borland, sf-
ter recelying a report of the dis
covery of the wrecked plane, ex-~
pressed the opinion that the hodles
of Hiclson and Borland would be
ifound there,
The searching Lal, composed of
four men, was taken to the scene
Sunday by Joe Crosson and Harelel
Gillom, Americait filers who located
the wreck Saturday, Since Crosson
and Gillant operated. from the fur
tadlng ship Nanuk, frozen in the
{ce near North Cape, reports from
the searchlng party were expected
from that source,
| Reld and Young, who came here
in the hope of flying to Siberia and
finding Elelson and Borland alive.
were instructed to remain at the
seene until ‘everything is eleares
up." They also will transport yalu«
bie furs and possibly same of the
passengers of the Nauk to the Al-
askan mainiand ‘and wil! make other
trips to return gasoline borrowed
from Russian sources by American
filers tm order to continue their
search for the lost aviators,
Disappearcd Nov, 9.
Elelgyon and Borland were flying to
Nanuk, soon after the ship-was [ro-
zen In, to take furs ond passengers
back to Alaska when they disap-
peared Noy. 9,
Hielson's plane struck a low coot-
hil, Té was believed he was biunded
by elther fog or o blizzard and the
althmeter may have misguided him,
as Crosson reporled w registered 1,-
000 feet when he found ib, Tha
Reotie of the wreck 1s almosb at sea
Jevel. ,
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|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
23,
17
] | CUCKOO CLOCK GIVES
STORE ROBBER AWAY
|
Chleago, Jan, 28—-(P)—Ab exactly
'4p.3u., January 27, 1030, something
Inside Godfrey Smith went cuckoo,
Smith had on actual need for a
cuckoo elock for he gets up when
he feels ke it, He could not, how-
ever, resist the timekeeper he, saw
in the Commonwenlth Bdison com-
pany store, so he stuck: ib under his
cont,
As he strolled languidly toward
the exit, it was just 4 p,m, the
clock beneath the coat went “cuck+
00, Click+00, clu:koo, cuckoo,”
A policeman arrested him, for it
i3 ngalnst the law to take cuckoo
clecks,
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4,
62,
72
] | WAKEFIELD CAMP
HAS $20,000 FIRE
Five Tractors: in Axel Hill
Shed Destroyed by
Blaze,
| (By bat? Correspondent)
Wakefield, Jan. 28 — Fire
supposed to have been started from
an overheated chimney in the trac-
tor shed at the canips of Axei HUl,
east of the cily, last Saturday,
caused a damage estimated at ap-
proximately $30,000,
The tractor drivers had warmed
up their machines preparatory ta
going to work and went into the
eating house for their breakfast,
when Mr, Hill, who was outside no-
tleed smoke coming irom the root
of the shed. THe sent a man to in-
vestignte and on opening the doors
the man found the iInterlor of the
shed in_ flames.
My. Hill immediately called on
the iractor men to try and get the
machines started to drive them tu
safely, but they found it imposs}bole
to get even one machine started to
tow the olhers out, Manuel Jurma
tau John Keangas, two of the driv-
ers, were badly burned about the
head and arms in tryhig te save Lhe
machines, They were brought to
this city for treatment,
There were five tractors stored in
the shed at bhe time of the fhe,
three belonging to Mz, Hi and tivo
rented machines. The shed was a
total loss and the machines were so
badly damaged by the blaze that
they are practically an entire 1093.
No insurance was carried on any of
the equipment,
Mi, Hill has magé ucimporary ar-
rangements for other machines to
continue - his hauling contradls,
which will keep him busy until the
spring breakup.
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697
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
15,
61,
69
] | Machine Explodes Into Mass
of Seething Flames Mile
From Airport.
TO CONDUCT INQUIRY
|
Kansas City, Kas, Jan, 2&.—(?)—
Burned and mutilatect bodies of four
men and one women lay today in
Kansas City morgues, victims of a
crash of a Oentral Alrlines plane
which dived, and exploded Into a
mass of seething {lames last night
within a mile of its destination, Fale
airport,
Cnuse of the aceldent probakly
will remain a secrct of the dead.
Almost as-soon as the charred bod
los of the four passengers anct pilot
wero removed, employcs of Universal
Airlines, Inc, a subsidiary with
Central Alrlines of aviation corpor-
ation, hacked Lo pleces the still
smoking frame of the plane and
dragged its parts to widely separnied
sections of a stubbled corn field,
Remnants Destroyed,
Even the pathetic remnants of the
passengers! personal baggage—a ma-
gazing, a box of rough medicine, a
woman's nandkerchief—were des-
troyed by a flre built upon the spot
where the single-motored plane im-
bedded itself in sof, black earth.
' “he dead are Dyke Laudeman,
Kansas City, Kas,, pilot; C, R, Mc-
;Kinnon, Chicago business man;
‘James B, Eggers, Chicago, music
‘publisher; Miss Margaret Dice, St.
‘Joseph, Mo. and Wiliam Flynn, of
‘Kansas City, former clty alderman
/and theatre owner,
All are bellevea to have been
secon by impach of the plane. the
second section of the regular Cen-
tral Airlines ertetnoeh Night from
Wichita, when it sideslipped and
dived from an altibude of about
: 600 feet,
: Motor Was Norma),
| The plane appeared ever the air-
port almost 30 minutes late, Alr-
port attendants said it circled the
‘field with moter apparently dron-
ing normally. Thon, south of the
‘airport, already Nattening for the
‘landing, it faltered, dipped and
plunged into p cornfield. An ex
plosion marked the moment of im>
pact and flames roared into the alr,
Employes of a nearby factory and
arport attendants rushed to the
wreck with fire extinguishers bub
wore unable even lo approach the
plano because of the blistering heat.
The passengers, blackened and
seared almost beyond recognition,
were pitdhed’ forwaré in‘ n grim
huddle against the, motor, jammed
through the splintered cabin,
Aviators sold they belleved the
most plausible explanation of the
tragedy was tallure of controls,
Laudeman had been flying seven
years and was known as an unusu-
ally cautious pilot,
Remains Are Burned.
Dr, %, S, Wisher, depuly core:
ner, said an inquest would be held
today, The deputy coroner said he
Rave orders that the debris was to be
Wentinued on page tina.
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10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
33,
0
] | GIRL ACCIDENTALLY
KILLED BY BROTHEF
|
Bay City, M dan, 2B—-(/P}--A |
hewspaner pleture of a man point-
ing a gun Inspired 8-year-old Nath-
lariat Conklin to show his sister
Dorothy, 18, how he, loo, could
alm!” He accidentally pulled the
trigger on the rifle he used and the
pulleb went through her heart, kil-
{ng her instantly.
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