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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 | [
11,
30,
50
] | PLOT TO KItl Gil
FOILED BY POLICE
Seventeen Persons Have
Confessed Connection
With Plans.
| | Mexico City, Jan, 28—(P)—Mex-
‘ico Ciby police claimed today te
have frustrated a plot to_assassinate
President Emilio Portes Gil, and the
president-elect, Pascunl Ortla Ru-
Hbiv, blow up severnl bulldings, and
seize admintstration of the govern-
ment,
Of 19 persons arrested several
days ago, Valente Quintana, chief
of police, sald 17 have confessed
connection will: the plot and are
being held. Tle two released were
women who preved thelr inneeener,
The chief of police snid the
plotters were adherents of Jose Vas-
concelos, defeated candidate for the
Mexican presidency, who charged
after his loss at the polls jast Nav.
17 that the Orbiz-Rublstas had tak-
fan advantage of certain pecullaritles
‘of the Mexican election Jaws to win
from him.
‘The plot, he sald, was to unssaere
the guard at ihe government power
plant here, enpture the plant, selve
arms at a foctery 1 the center of
the cily, and subsequently to terror-
Jue the populnee ay shooting rockets
with a large dynamite content Inta
ihe air. In the confusion the pras-
ident and president-elect were to be
shob and the government selzed,
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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 | [
26,
63,
66
] | James W. Oxnam, 70, Stric
ken at Family Home This
Mornine.
BUILT MANY ROADS HERE.
|
Another name was added to the
list of departed pioneers of Iron-
wood with the denth of James W.
Oxnam, 70, who passed away ab
the family home, 136 Norrle street,
at 10:15 o'clock this morning. Mr.
Oxnom suffered a stroke of apop-
lexy at 5 o'clock Saturday morning
and remained In a state of coma
unthl he died.
Atrangements for the funeral
have not been completed, pending
word from relntives in other cities,
Mr. Oxnam was a resident of
Tronwood since 1883. He wos born
at Councl! Hill, near Galena, IL,
July 27, 185%, Before coming to
Ironwood he ved at Greenland,
Mich, where he served as post-
master for four years and where
he was married, There was no
railroad between Ironwood and On-
tonagon county points at that time,
so in coming here Mr. and Mrs,
Oxnam went by boat from Onion-
agen to Ashland, landing at Ash-
Tand May 1, 1886.
’ Served on Council
The railroad had been built from
Ashiand to Ironwood, but this city
was then only a tiny village, so Mr.
and Mrs. Oxnam were among the
first settlers here,
Since coming here, Mr. Oxnam
was engaged for many years in a
general contracting business and
Riso conducted a coal and wood
buslness, Ee was first in business
with the Inte Arthur Sutherland,
brother of D. &, Sutherland, and
later with his son, B, R, Oxnam, the
firm being known as Oxnam & Son,
Before entering the contracting
business, he served as street com-
missioner of the clty, He also ser-
yed as one of the first members
of the city council, being alderman
from. the old. first ward.. He was
one of the first members of the
yolunteer fire department, serving
as assistant chief and later for
many years as chief, being suc-
ceeded by Ernest Dear, During the
early days of the elty he was fro-
quently called upon to serve as
marshal of the day for various cele.
brations,
Member of Masons
The contracting firm of which
he was a member constructed one
of-the first real highways in Goge-
bic county, orlginally building the
highway between Ironwood ana
Bessemer which ts now US-2, ‘The
firm also builb a Inrge portion of
the highway between Ironwood and
Watersmeet and the highway be-
tiveen Hurley and Mercer, and roads
in Ontonagen county.
Mr. Oxnant had not been in the
best of health during the lust five
yoenrs and during that period was
practically retired from all business
activity,
Mr, Oxnom ts survived by the
widow and one daughter, Mra, L, 0,
Brewer of Duluth, and a son, BR.
Oxnam of Chicago,
He was 4 thirty-second degree
Mason
| [
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701
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
9,
41,
52
] | Board of Review Orders Vir.
tual Reassessment of
Loop Property.
CHICAGO SITUATION
FACING SHOWDCWI
|
Chieaga, Jan, 28—()--Forchod-
ings of continued financial chnos
rumbled through the local govern-
menis today as public officials pre-
pared for a final showdown with
the citizens’ reseue committee,
Adding to the slready muddled
siluntion, the board of review fur-
ther delnyed collection of 1928 and
1920 taxes by ordering what virtually
amounted ic a new reassessment of
Joop property.
This action followed protesls from
many sources—-ineluding the board
of cdtreation—that Joop property
wos und lucd $300,000,000 in the
1628 asscssment.,
Meanwhile, officials were still di-
vided over the acceptance of finan
elal nid offered by Slins TL Strawn,
thnirman of the rescue committce,
Mayor Willlnm Hale Thompson,
his forces in the city council, and
H. Wallace Caldwell, prosident of
the bonrd of education, suill frown-
ed upon the strawn offer—which
was accompanied by an ulblinmatuny
Lhol the public officials musk pledge
ecoperation Lo reduce operating ¢x-
penses fo pm miinimum and allow the
Straw commilten to designate for
what needs the $20,000,000 in
“pledges shall be spent.
Anton Cormnk, president of the
eounly board, and Howard Elmore,
hend ef the sanitary district, favor-
ed acceptance of the Slrawn offer
and niedzed their coapnerntion,
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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 | [
22,
1
] | AD FINDS DAUGHTER
MISSING 34 YEARS
| Omahn, Nebr. Mun, 2RUP)—Mrs.
W, L.: Doty, of Omahn, has been
converted to the belief that news-
paper want ads bring results, Four
months ego she inserted a small ad
jn we Denver paper, seeking the
wherenbouts of a daughler she had
nob seen for 34 yenrs.
Last weck Miss Un Fay Perkins,
of Denver, the long lost daughter
who believed hor mother dead, wes
infermed of the want ad by A
friond. = She communieated with
her mother, Mrs. Doty baatened
to Colorado where the reunion took
place, then returned here.
The two women plan to sce each
other again soon “to get better ac-
quainied,”
| [
[
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3555.9109296875,
2224.91621875,
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 31 | 31_10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 10,966,181 | masthead_2034+opinion|masthead_2034+managing-editor|front_page_20_99 | 703 | 8,250 | [
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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 | [
18,
31,
68
] | Youthful Film Actress Wed:
Grant Withers in Aerial
Elopement.
BE ANNULLED
|
Los Angeles, Jan, 28—-(4?)---The
serlpt for the scenarib of Holly-
wood's newest film colony remance
was belng re-written teday by the
mother of the bride,
Stating she believed her daughter
{oo young fully to realize the res-
nonsibillties of married Hfe, Mrs,
George Belzer announced she would
file sulb today for annulment of the
marsringe of Loretta. Young, 17 yeur
old film actress, to Grant Withers,
06, featured screen ployer,
Miss Young and Withers, who
met six months ago when they were
cast opposite ench other in picture:
elimaxed thelr courtship Sunday
(Continued on DAE nine)
| [
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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 | [
74,
73
] | Shoots Detroiter
| Olare Hopper, above, horder pa-
trol agent, is sald to have admitted
that he shot and critically wounded
Walter Grundt, 27, alleged rum
runner near Detroit. Grundt, near
death in o hospital, claimed that
he and a companion were rowing
Along a dark river bank in search
of & lost motorboat when they were
flred_ upon without warning by the
Agent who mistook them for rum
runners,
| [
[
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1571.5475664062
],
[
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1265.0639648438,
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]
] | [
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705
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
64,
77
] | INIDQED RY CAR
| Rachie, Wis, dan, 48-—(@)-—Pele
Jorgensen, 55, rural resident whe
works in a nearby factory, was ruy
down by an automobite last night
and suilered a fracture of both legs,
The enr was driven by Willan
Slendler, who said that approaching
cnr Hghts prevented him from see-
de Jorgensen.
| [
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8256,
706
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
48,
75,
76
] | Beggar Returns $10 Bill
Found ln Old Suit
Of Mathes.
Square Deal
| Marshfield, Wis, Jam, 28--i}-~-A
beggar who was elven an old sus
of underwear and an old sult by
Mrs, Louis Hart] a few days go
returned two days later and lnnded
Mr, Hartl a $10 bill he said be
found in the vest pocket, “You were
square with me," he sald, “and I
dust wanted to show you IT wes
atinre with you,
| [
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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 | [
27,
32,
67
] | Investigation in Prospect a
Result of Dispute With
Lowman,
SENATORS MAY
PROBE SERVICE
| | Wasbingion, Jan, 28.—2}-—Senave
Investigation of the prohibition en-
forcement sarvice was in prospec:
today as a result of{ the sharp dis
agreement between Assistant See-
retary Lowman, of the (rensury anu
‘Senators Borah of fdaho and Whee-
Jer of Montina, over the qualifica-
tions of John F.C. Herbert as dry
administrator for Montana and td-
aho,
Borah indicated that he would ask
the senate Judiciary committee lo
gO into the enforcement problem
AS soon as Lhe comimitlwe Lakes ws
the pending dry bills, as a result
of Lowman's defense of Herbert,
"We ought to nave the facts,” he
sald, “we have been teld by an in-
vestigator of the deyartment of jus-
thee about the record of Herbert as
prohibition administrator for Mary=
land, We may ave een misin-
formed bul we will have to find
out,”
Watching Office,
It alsa became known today vat
Senator Borah has been told thar
the depnrtinent of Justice is watch-
ing his office.
'T am not interested Jn that,'
laughed Borah, “but my secretary
{Continued on PAKS LwO,)
| [
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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 | [
39,
25
] | PANTAGES PETITIONS
FOR PRISON RELEASE
|
Los Angeles, Jan. 28=())--Argn:
mont on a petition seeking the re-
lease from jnil on bond of Alex:
ander Pantages, —muithniilonaire
{healer man, pending decision S,
jis appeal from m& conviction o
Assmut upon Eunice Pringle, 17-
year-old dancer, was to be lear
today in siperior court,
Altorneys for the $4-yenr-old
vaudeville magnate yeslerday filed
with Superior Judge Charles '
Frinke affidavits by three phy
cians, who declired Pantages was
jn danger of permanent infury and
denth as a result of his confine-
ment, The affidavits declared Pan-
jlages had ° ‘ffered several heart
attacks, and menuoned a “very
serious” recent allack,
A previous attempt lo obtain
freedom on bond falled alter physt-
eians appointed by the court testt-
Jiad Pantages suffered principihy
from wofounded fears of deal.
| [
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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 | [
8,
28,
45
] | Snowbird Patrol Leaves
Minneapolis for Wausau
Future Naval Sessions
Will Be Open to Press
| | Minneapolis, Jan. 2B—i4—Army
Diers in 17 pursuit ships making ug
the snowbird patrol, took off from
Wold-Chamberlaiu field here at 1
p.m, today for Wausau, Wis, after
an overnight stop.
A mild temperature, clear sklos
and only light winds furnished srt-
isfactory flying conditions for to-
day's stage of the ight which wilt
be continued Wednesday with a
jump) from Wausau to Escanaba
Mich, ‘The following day it $s plan-
ned, according io Major Ralph
Royce, in command, lo fly the final
lap to the patrol’s nome port at
Selfridge Field ot Mt Clemens,
Mich,
In addition to the pursuit ships,
three larger planes, two of them
large trasport ships and the third
carrying radio apparatus, startled
from here for Wausau. The latter
dropped out of the flight at Wausan
when the snowbirds started their
iweslern inarch mong the northern
border of the U. S. to Spokane as
a winter flylng test early in the
month, but rejoined the patrol here
yesterday,
The twenty second plane ts a
wreck at Beach, N. D, and has
been abandoned. Its pliot, Lieut. EB.
E. Warburton, who crashed there
during a snowstorm, today was ci
route home by train.
| [
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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 | [
16,
20
] | WEALTHY BROKER, WIFE
ON TRIAL SEPARATION
| Chicago, Jan, 28—4)--A_ Cliicage
newspaper today quoted Chaunecy
B. Blair, wealthy unstranece broker
und elubnuin, as saying he and his
Wife, the former Mildred Marshall,
were Wving apart in what he termed
a “trin) separation,”
Trcompatability, he suld, Wis rene
ponsible, ‘The newspaper quoted
Blair as saying that nelther his wife
vor himself bad any thovght of di»
vorce, nor did ellber regard’ the sep=
aration as pormanent
| [
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3947.1007890625
] | 42 | 42_10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 10,966,181 | masthead_2034+opinion|masthead_2034+managing-editor|front_page_20_99 | 711 | 711 | [
711,
8239,
8566,
888,
5884
] |
|
10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/10966181-daily-globe-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
53,
65,
70
] | Seats Will be Given to 78
Reporters For Full
Meetings.
PROPOSALS ‘PRESENTED
| EULER E EINE, PUREE ba Ee,
_ Landon, Jan, B.-)—Under te
‘leadership of the American delegi
:Uon plans were made late odny Ww
Jet the whole worla listen {n througn
;Ube press ab all future — plenacs
i Meetings of the naval conference,
| Greatly expanding previous ar-
rangemenls it was decided al Amer-
joan jnalstence that seats be given
in the conference room at Sb, James
palace to 78 reporters representing
all nations.
Toud speakers wii be installed w
carry the proceedings to the pres”
room outside for those impossible
to admit,
American newspaper men ore vw
Get 12 seals in the meeting room,
The plan applies anly to full meei>
ings of conference and not tn
sessions the big five or cominil-
tees,
Senators Robinson and Reed o°
the American delegation played 4
prominent park jn initinting the
move which Secretary Stimson tool.
insistently hefere his colleagues of
the other represented nations,
London, Jan, %8—VP— French
Aiobel tonnage proposals were pul.
at the head of the naval confers
ence agenda today, but Malan
counter-proposals alsa will he given
thelr day In court at the next open
session of the full conference called
for Thursday morning at 10 o'clock.
Again invoking the alphabet, the
vig five ala meeting fn St. Jame
{palace today decided to call the
roll of nations at Thursday's session,
thus glving France the right of
way over her Italian neighbor,
France will present her proposal
to Nit fleets as a whole and nov
in separate categories, Great rie
tnbt Wil reiterate briefly ber pre-
ference for category regulation ond
Italy will then make her plea thar
the actun) relativity of fleets shout
be decided before all else,
Nothing to Propose
The United States and Japan
baye nothing to propose in thts
general phase of the disenssionns.
A committee of vo from enen
delegation will be appointed when
the three addresses aye fhnished
Thursday to study vhe situation, but
it ds duly expected the arrange
ment made by the big flve will be
approved eventually,
The decision for an open session
Tllursday was reached on a motion
introduced by Honry 1. Stimson,
.the American secretary of state,
Some opposition had been expres.
sed, but Secretary Stimson insisted
that as many newspaper men as
possible be admitted,
All the delegations expressed sat-
isfaction after the ble five had ad»
Journed, Dino Grandi, Italian fore
elgn minister who has heen urging
Ttalinn parity with France, said be
felt Tunly had received recornition
even if her elaine was in sevondary
place on the agenda,
Resume Conferences
; Jmmediitely after the big tive
jadjourned, individual eonferences
j were resumed, Prime Minister Mac»
;Donald calling at the American
| Neadquarters aad Hugh §, Gibson,
Amerlean delegate, haying lunehed
with Foreign Minister Grandi,
Afternoon meetings Were arrang-
ed between the British and dapare
ese and British and French tlele-
milions. ‘The ble five will not meet
ngain unul after Thursday's ses +
sion,
While the big five debated agey+
da, proposals far settlement of the
Franco-Tidinn parity disagreement
‘wate stirring jn other conference
elreles,
ald with some authoriiy
that Tendy probably would accept
& plin ta do away entirely with
ratios and confine the prolected
rely fo building decinra:
f for the next five or six years,
Although the Italians — sleadfastly
declined any promise this method
woukt salisiy completely thelr des
mand for naval equality with
France, .
Conlinve Dincussion
Tiseussion was continued in some
quarters of ihe French proposal for
@ secunty pret in the Mediterrmns
ean, Some suggestions were thn
all five mations might be invited
to participate fy such my agreement
in some torn) or another,
The Uniled States and Japan, it
was sald, haying onty distant refas
Mons jn the Mediterranean area
probably would be asked to partl:
cipale only in w consiitative eaps
aclty, Wf at all, under the theory
that sigh a pact would be an ex»
pansion %" principles laid down th
the Kellogg anu-war treaty,
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29,
43
] | John H. Piper of Spokane
to Attend Luncheon Here
at Noon and Address
Leaders This Evening.
| Boy Scout executive for the district
made up of Montana, Idaho, Oregon
and Washington, will arrive in Butte
today for conferences with loca] scout
officials before departing Tuesday for
New York city, where he will attend
| [
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[
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] | 0 | 0_274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,328 | front_page_20_99 | 713 | 713 | [
713
] |
|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
7,
57,
70
] | Everybody’s
Business
Chasing Away Failure.
A Dividend Record.
The Investment Trusts.
| ‘Copyright, 1930, by the North American
Newspaper Alliance.:
Some towns move ahead and
blossom into cities. Others,
equally well situated, lose out in
the struggle and sink back into
villages of no importance.
Why? More often than not it is
a problem of leadership.
Consider Round Rock, Texas
—~a Village of 1,100 people, en-
tirely surrounded by cotton
fields. A typical one-crop town.
When the cotton crop was good
and prices high everything was
fine. But more often than not
the cotton crop was poor and
prices low. Then the town just
crawled along; times were
hard, there was no money in
sight and more debts ahead.
Just too bad!
Thomas E. and Carl A. Nelson,
brothers, owned the Farmers’ State
bank. It, too, had hard sledding.
They resolved to widen the business
foundation of the community. They
considered it dangerous to hobble
along on the one leg of cotton. So
they set to. work to diversify crops. ©
The established a cheese factory,
opened it in January, 1828, and the
first day the receipts of milk were 800
pounds from 20 farmers. Now 300
farmers are delivering 22,000 pounds
of milk daily. Hundreds of farmers
from two to six cows each. The first
year the local farmers received $86,-
725 for their milk.
i A ee Oe eae AS
| [
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|
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54,
26,
40
] | THAEE BOYS IN
MOTOR oktD 10
DEATH WN EAa|
Heavy Coating of Ice at
Railway Crossing Is Cause
of Terrible Accident.
| WILMINGTON, Ohio., Jan. 26.—(*)
—Three young men, identified by
papers in their pockets as residents
-of Springfield, Ohio, were crushed to
death beneath the wheels of a Bal-
timore and Ohio train which struck
their automobile at Reeseville, 10
miles from here, late today.
The identification papers indicated
the three men were James Gossett,
25; Earl Gossett, 23, and C. J. Smith-
gon, 25.
The highway at the approach of
the Baltimore and Ohio crossing was
coated with snow and ice. The car
skidded onto the tracks. directly in
the path of the train.
The wreckage was carried several
hundred feet down the tracks
PAYMATE’S SHOT FATAL.
LASCRUGES, N, M., Jan. 26.—(UP)
—Three-year-old Martha Jane Kelley
was killed late today by a bullet from
a revolver discharged by her little
playmate, Kenneth Tuttle.
Kenneth pointed the revolver at
‘Continued on Page 2, Col. 1)
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49,
59
] | NOT IMPERIALISTIC.
| | PARIS, Jan. t—(®—The French
press on the eve of beginning the
second week of the London five-power
Naval conference expresses general
satisfaction with the work of the
French delegation and belief that
France is fulfilling a great national
and international duty at London
with the sincerest desire for world
peace and protection of the interests
of the country.
Le Temps said today “all should
rise against the charges of imperial-
ism. These accucations have been
made by persons whose tactics will be
thwarted by the sincerity of France.”
The only grumblings thus far heard
have come from the extreme left
parties.
| [
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[
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|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
18,
4
] | REGIONAL SCOUT EXECUTIVE
TO ARRIVE IN BUTTE TODA}
| a meeting of the national executive
board. The message announcing Mr.
Piper's arrival was réceived yesterday
by Paul N. Campbell, local scout
executive.
Mr. Piper, who is well known in
Butte, will be given the opportunity
of meeting with the Silver Bow coun-
cil executives and field staff at a
luncheon to be held at t he Thornton
grill today at 12:15 p. m. and at 8
m. this evening he will address
ut leaders, scoutmasters and
‘Scout committeemen at a meeting to
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8)
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] | [
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717
] |
|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
25,
23
] | Denver Judge
Says Divorce
Popular Sport
| DENVER, Colo., Jan. 26.—(UP)
~-District Judge Charles Sackman
characterized divorce as a popular
sport at a hearing in his court
here for temporary alimony.
Instead of being ashamed of di-
vorce, people are now proud of it,”
he said.
“It is apparently a popular
sport, Parents don’t think much
about their children. They are too
much occupied with selfish inter-
ests.”
Judge Sackmann ordered Wil-
liam Platt to pay his wife, Mrs.
Esther Platt, $50 a month tem-
porarily alimony. The couple are
parents of a seven-months-old
child,
| [
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] | [
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|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
32,
47,
55
] | Chief of Washington Dele-
gation Motors to Chequers
to Cunfer With MacDon-
ald Relative to Meeting.
STIMSON 15 VERY BUS
| LONDON, Jan. 26.—(#)—An
important conference between
American and French delegates
to the naval conference was
held tonight at the French
headquarters.
Ambassadors Dwight W. Mor-
row and Hugh S. Gibson called
on -Premier Andre Tardieu.
Rene Massigli, French repre-
‘Sentative at the League of Na-
tions was present also, and For-
eign Minister Aristide Briand
joined the conference tater:
Later it was said informa that
the Americans and the Fr had
principally discussed. the agenda of
the conference, which at present is
absorbing the attention of all. delega-
tions. It was added that no complete
agreement had been reached but that
“progress was made.”
The Americans are eager not to
seem to be insisting on the imposition
of their agenda ideas on the other
delegations and consequently friendly
discussions are proceeding.
| [
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|
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6,
38,
39
] | RUBBERY MYSTERY
THOUGHT CLEARED
UP: TWO ARRESTED
Police Find Cached Loot
Pair Said to Have Con-
fessed Store Burglary
| The mystery of the burglary of the
Charles Men’s Furnishing shop on
East Front street last Tuesday night,
during which more than $300 worth of
sheep-lined jackets, blazers and other
clothing and a quantity of pocket
knives were stolen, was solved with
the arrest of two men early yester-
day morning, police announced.
Orville Burby, 1112 South Wyom-
ing street, and Howard Rheim, 1108
East Second street, were arrested by
ge oory ChieR of Police James Lar-
kin Detective Frank Roe and
een with the burglary. Both
men admitted that they were impli-
cated in the affair, police sald.
Two sheep-lined coats, six blazers
and 16 pocket knives were recovered
in a shed on South Wyoming street
yesterday morning by Detectives
Powell and White. They had been
cached there by the men under ar-
rest, who directed the officers to the
place of concealment, police said. Sev-
eral more garments, which had been
disposed of, were also recovered yes~-
terday by police and the remainder
are expected to be returned today, it
was stated.
The clothing store was entered
some time early last Tuesday morn-—
ing through a front window which.
was broken by the thieves in gaining |
entrance. A part of the loot, which |
had been cached under a mattress in
@ room where Burby spent the night |
with a friend, was removed last Sat- |
urday night and the remainder of the |
stolen clothing was found following |
the arrest of Rheim and Burby, po-
lice said. |
Both men are expected to be.
charged with burglary in informa-
tions to be drawn by the county at-.
torney today.
| [
[
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2529
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|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
17,
45,
53
] | GARFIELD PUPILS SHOW
FLASHY SKATING FORM
TO CAPTURE ICE. MEET
score Total of 42 Points to
Lead Monroe School for
City Championship; Earl
Sullivan Individual Star.
| | Gartield grammar school ran
away with the city champion-
Ship in the two-day ice carnivaé
series of events which con-
cluded yesterday afternoon,
scoring 42 points to lead their
nearest competitors, the Mon-
roe, by 13 points. Flashing
‘skillfully over the smooth ice in
practically every event, the
wearers of the colors of the
Colorado street school, showed
their heels to competitors from
every school in the city to glide
safely into first place long be-
fore the final race was run.
Earl Sullivan, Monroe school en-
trant, with 15 points, won the indi-
vidual high point honors, contribut-
ing more than half of the points
garnered by his school. Frank Hinch-
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
| [
[
1968.2621103516,
2701.2397714844,
2847.7245839844,
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],
[
1999.4958496094,
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[
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|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
68,
52,
20,
65,
27
] | CITY OFFICIALS AND CITIZENS
BICKER WHILE GOVERNMENT
OF CHICAGO-NEAR COLLAPS|
| ‘Committee Ready to Raise Between $20,000,000 and $50,- -
000,000 to Relieve Financial Crisis Serves Notice That
‘Money Will Not Be Paid Into Politicians’ Hands; Mayor
Blames Reformers for Plight; Strawn Has Whip Hand.
BPD BS SUBSE REPENS ER Ne LR BRIVESRIN
CHICAGO, Jan. 26.—(UP)—Imminent collapse of Chicago’s
city government brought only unpleasant and ineffective bick-
ering between city officials and citizens’ committees here to-
night in their battle to stave off municipal bankruptcy.
Forty thousand city employes went unpaid, interest on a $290,-
000,000 debt piled up at the rate of $50,000 a day, streets went
uncleaned. garbage was ungathered and supply bills were unmet.
» While the various cogs essential to
the smooth running of the govern-
| mental machine thus gathered dust,
(Officials intimated that members of
various rescue committees were no
gentlemen.
_. The committee heads lied that
the officials from Mayor William Hale
“Big Bill the Builder” Thompson on
down to the junior alderman, would
come to their terms, “or else.”
The terms in short were that the
committees would raise between $20,-
000,000 and $50,000,000 with which to
meet the most pré@ssing of current ex-
penses and that the committees them-
selves would supervise the spending
of the money to see that it wasn’t
wasted.
“It is the officials’ next move,” said
Silas H. Strawn, international attor-
ney who is taking a leading part in
the financial rehabilitation efforts.
“We have the money pledged, but we
are not going to rush to any public
official and give it to him. Our com-
mittee was organized in this crisis,
caused by government expenditures
in excess of revenues for many years
and precipitated by a year’s delay in
tax collection. Many large taxpayers
are willing to help but they do not
want their money wasted.”
° Chicago Is Riled.
Strawn’s statement came close to
being an insult, replied the mayor in
a broadside. In a pamphlet mailed to
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7)
SOPRA DA DARA Ay
~~-And Monday, as well, you
may be rushed for time. But
a thorough scanning of the
Classified columns will put
you a jump ahead. Always
something worthwhile there
for you. And they're easy
to nee.
| [
[
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[
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[
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722,
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] |
|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
14,
8
] | Stars Elope
in Airplane
to Beat Law
| HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Jan. 26.—
(UP)—On the screen the romance
of Loretta Young and Grant
Withers is still in the “agony
column” stage but in real life
they were married today after an
airplane, elopement,
Theftwo young screen players
returned to a local airport this
afternoon only eight hours after
they had taken off for Yuma,
Ariz., to evade the California law
requiring filing of notice three
days before a marriage license
can be obtained.
“We just decided we didn't
want to wait any longer so we
chartered a plane and got mar-
ried,” Withers said, placing his
arm about his shivering bride.
“T haven't anything to say right
now,” the pretty 19-year-old ac-
tress smiled. “It was too cold in
that airplane and I cant think
vet.”’
| [
[
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2775.3313242188,
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3926.181859375
],
[
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2714.1313476562
]
] | [
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2530,
723
] |
|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
37,
42
] | Allen McPhail, 94, Who
Came to State in 1865, Suc-
cumbs on Old Homestead.
PIONEER MONTANA
RANCHER Uleo IN
GRANITE COUNTY
| DEER LODGE, Jan. ar hay mw
—The oldest citizen of ranite
county, and one of the oldest. ploneers
of Western Montna, is dead.
Allen McPhail, aged 94 years, passed
away at his ranch home at New Chi-
cago last. night from the infirmities of
age. The body was taken in charge of
R. W. Ross, Deer Lodge undertaker,
and the funeral will be held at the
family home tomorrow afternoon at 2
o'clock, with Rev. Phillips of the
Drummond Methodist churcr. officiat-
ing. Interment will be made in Valley
cemetery at New Chicago.
Mr. McPha!! was born at Harrison’s
Corners, Ontario, Canada, August 8,.
1836, and when a young man of 24
years, migrated to the gold fields of
Colorado. Following a residence of
two years in Denver, he moved to
Oregon and later to Boise, Idaho. In
1865 he came to Montana and settled
in the fertile Flint Creek valley,
where he resided continuously for 60
ears. During the first few years of
s residence in the Treasure state he
engaged in placer mining operations,
and in 1871 he turned to ranching,
which occupation he followed for 4
great many years. He had lived con-—
tinuously on his homestead at New
Chicago since 1871.
The deceased is survived by his
wife; one son, Emery McPhail of
Three Forks; three daughters, Nettie
McPhail of Missoula, Mrs. J. R. En-
man of Hall, Mont., and Mrs. Nakken
-f Drummond; one brother, Chris Me-
Phall of Harrison's Corners, Ontario,
and three grandchildren.
Mr. McPhail! was a well-known and
wsteemed member of the Society of
fontana Pioneers, many of whom will
ittend the last rites tomorrow. The
vmallbearers will be John Dingwall,
Yhester Hoover, Jesse Henderson,
Yaniel Atwell, John Brogan and Earl
ing wall.
| [
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[
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],
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] |
|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
11,
58,
56,
62
] | RESIGNATION 1S READS
if Ballot Shows He Has Los
His Hold on Governmen
Arms He Will Resigr
Five Minutes Afterward
| | MADRID, Jan. 26.--(UP)-~
Premier Primo De Rivera played
on what was regarded as a
trump card in the dictatorship
he has held over Spain since
1923.
| Jn a penciled note which he
nervously wrote at 3 a, m. he
declared he was “voluntarily
submitting myself to a se
tional and decisive test”—that
of publicly asking the.army and
navy through the highest chiefs
whether he still deserved their
confidence.
If they say no, the government will
resign “five minutes after knowing”
their attitude, the note said.
The premier stipulated that the
question of confidence would be put
to 10 captains-general, to the com-
mander of the Moroccan forces, to
three navy captains-general, and to
three other men, directors of the
civil guard, carabineers and disabled
veterans.
The 17 shall make a “brief, discreet,
investigation” among the chiefs under
them and either communicate the re-
sult in writing or convene in Mdarid
os
i(MantinuealA an Dace 9 Cal 9)
| By JOHN D'GANDT
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] |
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
15
] | HEROINE DIES OF
BURNS RECEIVED
IN SAVING BABY
| TWIN FALLS, Idaho, Jan. 26."
~Clara Rankin, 15-year-old Hazel-
ton, Idaho, high school student, died
in a hospital here today from burns
suffered yesterday in rescuing her
baby half-brother from a fire which
destroyed the family farm home.
The baby, Lloyd Wilson, severely
burned, has a chance to recover.
| [
[
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],
[
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] | [
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] |
|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
19,
3
] | EPISCOPAL BISHOP
SLIGHTLY BETTER
| CHICAGO, Jan. 26-—)—A_ slight
improvement in the condition of The
‘Most Rev. Charles Palmerstone An-
derson, presiding bishor of the Epis-
copal church in Amenca, who has
been critically ill since suffering a
heart attack last Tuesday, was re-
ported today. The primate’s blood
pressure, which had been dangerously
low, rose considerably today and his
general condition was better, attend-
ing physicians reported.
| [
[
4569.532984375,
7908.7776132812,
5435.388890625,
8470.2218984375
],
[
4583.78125,
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] | [
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|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
9,
30,
31
] | LAGKMAIL GALLa
OVER PRONE ARE
SHOOTING CAVA
Man and Wife Attempt t
Jarry Out Practical Joke
and Woman Shot Fatally
| ATLANTA, Ga., Jan. 26.-(7"—~Po-
lice sought in vain today for some
explanation of the alleged blackmail
telephone calls to the wife of Otis ©.
Waller, which were made the basis
last night of an attempted “practical
joke” that turned into tragedy with
the death of a girl and the probable
fata] shooting of her man companion,
Confronted at his apartment door
by a woman and man who command-_
ed him to “stick ‘em up; we've got
you,” Waller believed the blackmailers
had come to carry out threats against
his wife, and opened fire. When the
smoke cleared he found a couple
whom he knew as “William Warren”
and his wife, Cora Belle, lying in the
hallway, the girl dead and the man
wounded. ‘The couple rented an
apartment from Waller.
Officers said today they had learned
the victims of Waller's bullets were
T. A. Watts, 35, who has a wife and
child ving here, and Miss Dora Belle
Brown, 18.
Waller, 39 years old, was held in
jail pending an inquest, and the out-
come of Watts’ wounds. The latter,
in critical condition at a hospital, ab-
solved Waller of blame. He said he
and his “wife,” knowing of the calls
to Mrs. Waller, “tried to play one of
those jokes that just didn’t work.”
Waller told police the mysterious
calls to his wife started several weeks
ago after she had complied with the
request of a friend, whose name was
not given, that she deliver to the
friend's attorney $1,000 in cash. Soon
afterward, he said, she received a call
from an unidentified woman who de-
manded to know what was done with |
the money and refused to believe it}
was delivered to the lawyer.
Four times since Thursday, Waller |
said, Mrs. Waller had been frightened |
by anonymous calls, climaxing Thurs- |
day night in a declaration from the |
caller that unless she left $1,000 tn)
the mai] box outside her apartment |
by midnight she would “be a dead
woman s00n enough.”
j
| [
[
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[
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|
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24,
44
] | More Than 700 Gather Fron
Butte, Anaconda, Dee
Lodge and _ Philipsbur;
Join in the Program
| San Sava, Patron Saints day of all
Slavonic nations was observed here
bed gene when more, than 1700 Si-
rian people gathered at the Legion
hall. Large delegations from Deer
Lodge, Anaconda and Philipsburg
| [
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] |
|
274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875328-butte-montana-standard-Jan-27-1930-p-1.jpg | [
35,
5
] | SERBIANS OBSERVE SAN SAVA
DAY WITH FESTIVITIES HERE
|
were the guests of the Butte Serbian
fraternal organization for the occa-
sion.
A delightful program of native folk
songs, concluded with the
national anthem was given by the
Serbian Girls’ circle, and was followed
by a luncheon and dance. Short talks
by R. Vukanovich, chairman of the
committee in charge; D. B. Komad
and O. Delich were featured.
The gathering was one of the larg~
est and most successful held here
several years, leaders said last night,
(Continued on Page 2, Col, 2)
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34,
2
] | MAN RELIEVED OF
$7.50 BY ROBBERS
| Ed LaDuke, 426 Hopkins street, was
“strong-armed” on East Platinum
street early yesterday morning and
relieved of $7.50, he reported to police
yesterday. LaDuke was able to fur-
nish only a mager description of two
men, who he asserts stopped him and
searched his pockets.
| [
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[
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|
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12,
1
] | LOVE AFFAIRIS _
FATAL TO SWAIN
| BOISE, Idaho, Jan. 26.—(4)--Upset
by a high school love affair which he
took too seriously, Donald Munson,
17, committed suicide here early this
nes shortly after returning from
a
He had just taken the girl, Ruth
Summers, home from the dance
ly friends said they had quar-~
reled.
Walking a@ few blocks to his home,
Munson entered his room and shot
himself.
| [
[
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67,
51,
21,
63,
50
] | Americans Report Progress But Not Agreement After Meeting French Envoy}
WRECKAGE ON ICE ISLAND, MILES
FROM LAND, INDICATES MACHINE
PLUNGED FROM GREAT ALTITUDE
| Motor, Torn From Fuselage, Is Found 100 Feet Away; Right
Wing of Plane Demolished and Tail Is Torn Off; Search
of Deep Snow Fails to Reveal Bodies of Flyer and His
Mechanic. Pilot Believes Men Were Killed Instantly.
~ SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 26—(AP)—On an island of ice in a lagoon
near the cost of Siberia, 90 miles southeast of North Cape, two flyers
yesterday found the scattered wreckage of the airplane of Carl Ben
Eielson and his mechanic, Earl Borland, missing since November 9.
This would place the plane in the Anguema River valley where re-
cent dispatches from Moscow reported a plane wrecked.
“i AAMT WAY SLEW SENSE eSg = Te rs Wee ve
from a high altitude, The motor had
been torn from: the fuselage and
hurled more than 100 feet from the
ship, the right wing was demolished
and the tail was torn off. A search
of the deep snow, which was drifted
over the wreckage, revealed no trace
of the flyers’ bodies.
Pilots Joe Crosson and Harold Gil-
lam, who made the discovery, said
the men must have been killed at
the moment of the impact.
Details of the find were communi-
cated to the Seattle Times today
in radio messages from Marion Swen-
son, marooned on the trading ship.
Nanuk, at North Cape. Elelson and
nd left Teller, Alaska, November
, for North Cape to transport pas-
sengers and furs from the Nanuk ta
} Nome, .They were never seen again.
f Cabin Seen First,
Crosson first ted the Elelson
plane, the dispa 6 sald. His at-
tention was attracted to the spot by
the exposed cabin of the plané, which
glistened in the sunlight. He sig-
naled to Gillam and both alighted
on the snow. Gillam said he had
reviously scouted over the spot, but
alled to see the plane because of poor
visibility. The two men found a sup-
ply of provisions in the cabin, un-
touched. A slab of bacon fell out
of the cockpit. when Crosson opened
one of the doors which had escaped
jaraming in the crash.
The fuselage, headed southwest,
was found about 10 miles inland on
a small island in a lagoon, It was
near a reindeer camp, where herders
had reported hearing an airplane
November 9, but had been unable to
seo it because of fog.
(Continued on Page 2, Cul, 6) ;
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|
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0,
13,
22
] | Dr. H. E. James Suggests
Possible Landing by Para-
chute From Falling Plane.
EIELOUN'S BUTTE
CHUM HOPES THAT
FRIEND ESCAPED
| “I hope that Elelson and his
mechanic escaped uninjured from
their plane by parachute before it
crashed,” Dr. H. H. James of the
Murray hospital, a schoolmate and
fraternity brother of the missing avi-
ator, said, last night, when told that
Eielson’s wrecked plane had been
found.
“IT had not made any conclusions
about his disappearance, believing
that he could manage to take care of
himself if the ship had not been
wrecked, and I always hoped for the
best,” the doctor continued,” but if
the plane is wrecked and the food
supply has not been touched, I fear
the worst.
Elelson was the guest of Dr. James
two years ago while on a visit to
Butte. The two men attended the
University of North Dakota together
for three years and cultivated a deep
friendship. Dr. James was deeply
touched when Associated Press dis-
patches telling of the wrecked plane
were read to him.
“Kielson was a fine fellow and we
spent many pleasant hours together.
It is sad that he was taken just as he
reached success in his profession. We
planned many visits together when
Carl was here two years ago and I
deeply regret an untimely end,” Dr,
James sald last night.
| [
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|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
40,
29
] | Butte High School Has th:
Largest Enrollment i
History With 1,550 Stu
dents Attending Classes
| With more than 1,550 students
actively engaged in pursuing their
educational advancement, class as-
signments were completed and the
work of the second half year started
school, with a to
iPrincipal J. G. Ragsdale, at the
est mark in the of in-
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]
] | [
194.9418031006,
7681.970703125,
1075.5960234375,
8537.2620390625
] | 0 | 0_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 735 | 2,503 | [
2503,
735
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
4,
14,
39
] | Butte Chamber of Com-
merce Acts to Have Cham-
pionship Games Here.
MINING CITY MAY
SEE BOBCATS IN
PENNANT CLASHE:
| Butte, which has annually wit-
nessed for several years the state
football champio contests will
witness this year also the Rocky
Mountain conference basketball pen-
nant eontest, if the plans of the ath-
letic committee of the Butte Cham-
ber of Commerce are successful, and
the Bobcats win the western district
championship.
Dr. H. H. James, chairman, has
called a meeting of his committee for
tomorrow at noon at the Silver Bow
club to consider the matter. The
Montana State college officials are
quoted as having expressed the belief
that Bozeman, which has been the
scene of interscholastic championship |
contests, is not large enough to sup-—
port the conference championship
games. Denver is prepared to offer
inducements to have the games
played in that city but the college
authorities, and Coach Schubert
Dyche of the Bobcats favor Butte. _
The Rocky Mountain conference is
composed of the colleges of four
states—Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and
Montana. Montana and Utah con-
(Continued on Page 2. Col 7) i
| [
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] | [
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736,
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] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
35,
65,
71
] | Party of Four Begins Clearing Snow From Wreckage of Ben Eielson’s Plane
Everybody’s
Business
| ‘Copyright, 1930, by the North American
Newspaper Alliancs.)
In the nation's business for
January, F. J. Griffiths, chair-
man of the Central Alloy Steel
corporation, head of the re-
search division of the Republic
Steel corporation, says:
“Fifty per cent of the steel
used in automobiles is alloy and
the average weight per car has
been reduced to less than 30
per cent of what if was.”
The use of steel has expanded
rapidly snce the development of steel
alloy, for it has increased flexibility
and endurance. It has solved the
problem of rust through “stainless
steel.” The use of rust-resisting alloy
for freight cars has reduced the
weight of each car by one ton. A new
alloy process known as “nitriding”
has produced the hardest known
metal surface.
‘It has been found ‘that every time
the price of a special steel is reduced
one cent a pound, the market for it
is widened by 10 per cent,” says this
international authority on alloy steel.
The steel industry, already huge, is
only in its infancy. = ;
An industry that has a monopoly
upon one form of service or
is apt to become stale. A new invén-
tion often wakes it.up and forces it
to extend its research and to speed
up its lagging interest. Fine topic for
most monopolies. |
Not, long ago a leading member of
the artificial ice industry, in speaking
of the effect that mechanical refriger-
| [
[
255.1868745117,
2726.7826386719,
1144.9510039062,
4844.2986601562
],
[
332.1716918945,
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1723.8481445312
],
[
351.3303833008,
1820.4705810547,
1120.1003417969,
2137.3469238281
]
] | [
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] | 3 | 3_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 737 | 737 | [
737,
2502
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
52,
59
] | Hundreds
of Offers
| —Including for rent and for
sale, situations and help
wanted, real estate, used cars,
and more than a half hun-
dred other classifications
await your inspection in the
Classified columns.
| [
[
1194.5693818359,
6463.6012421875,
1940.5957792969,
6797.645828125
],
[
1261.7850341797,
6195.056640625,
1892.6397705078,
6449.2006835938
]
] | [
1194.5693818359,
6195.056640625,
1940.5957792969,
6797.645828125
] | 4 | 4_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 738 | 738 | [
738
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
74,
49
] | @ he Hlontana Standard
| Classified Ads always the
same—in service. ways
different in opportunity.
PHONE DIAL
5411
| [
[
1168.815109375,
6953.7696992188,
1940.2849882812,
7255.7029570313
],
[
1154.4323730469,
6838.39453125,
1954.5272216797,
6942.3247070312
]
] | [
1154.4323730469,
6838.39453125,
1954.5272216797,
7255.7029570313
] | 5 | 5_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 739 | 739 | [
739
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
19,
0
] | ATTENDANCE RECORD BROKEN
AS SECOND SEMESTER STARTS
| | Registrations during the past week.
which included approximately 14
new students from the Washingter
‘junior high school and some 12 or
15 who are entering Butte schools
for the first time has increased the
enrollment to very close to the ca-
city of the Butte high
“ the Washington Py,
school, 240 additional students were
; th
Bs and 50 are Seventh As total
in from the Grant school. —
enrollment at this school
Blsced at spproximateiy an studenta,
Quigley said.
| [
[
1096.4338837891,
7645.7521210938,
1969.9699248047,
8548.5100859375
],
[
217.3933563232,
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]
] | [
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] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
28,
46,
53
] | Soviet Authorities of Opin
ion Wreckage Is That o!
Another Plane; Repor
to Determine Course
MOSCOW NOT CONVINCED
| NOME, Alaska, Jan. 27.—4(/P)
—The final chapter in the in-
ternational search for Carl Ben
Eielson and Earl Borland,
American aviators, was being
written today by searchers who
dug into the tightly packed
snow and ice around the wreck-
age Of Eielson’s plane, 90 miles
southeast of North Cape, Si-
beria.
Four men, taken to the scene yes-
terday from the ice locked trading
sone a fi
the area around the lished all-
demolishi
metal monoplane in the belief that
Eielson and Borland were flung out
to instant death when their ship
crashed in a blinding snowstorm, No-
vember 9, or were under wreckage
of gasoline cases near the cabin.
Two dog teams driven by natives
also were on their way to the wreck
from North Cape.
Was Flying Blind
Meanwhile, the conviction was
growing here that after a faulty alti-
meter upon which Eielson was forced
to rely when the snow storm wiped
out all visibility, was in part to blame
for the crash.
Pilot Joe Crosson reported upon
his return frém the wreckage yes- |
terday that the altimeter registered |
1,000 feet. Inasmuch as the plane |
crashed on Tundra almost at sea)
level, the instrument’s error may
have misled the pilot.
Proof that the plane was traveling |
at a high rate of speed was found by
Crosson in the fact that the throttle |
of the ship was wide open. The
manner in which the metal propeller
was wrapped around the motor of
the plane testified to the terrific im-
pact. with which the ship struck the
frozen: earth.
Wing Cartwheeled
Crosson reported that Eielson evi- |
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
Pe ee as aS
| [
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|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
24
] | EARLY SETTLER OF
IDAHO IS VICTIM
OF HEART ATTACK
| MOSCOW, Idaho, Jan. 27-—(*)-—
Mrs. William J. McConnell, widow
of Idaho's second governor, and the
mother of Mrs. William E. Borah,
wife of Idaho’s senior senator, suc-
cumbed at her home today from 4a
heart attack.
Mrs. McConnell, 84 years old, had
suffered from a cold for several days,
but until] a few hours before her
death it was not believed that her
life was in danger.
| Mrs. McConnell, as the wife of one
of Idaho's most brilliant 2 and
early political leaders, played a prom-
inent role in the mt of the
‘state from its beginning.
| [
[
1989.6584931641,
7734.0153046875,
2858.520828125,
8532.1761015625
],
[
2012.177734375,
7444.7778320312,
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]
] | [
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|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
23,
30,
37,
61
] | DEMOCAATSLOSE
IN ATTEMPTS 10
LOWER SGHEDUL|
Three Assaults on Rayon
Tariff Rates Are Voted
Down When Parties Split.
| we Vee
WASHINGTON, | Jan. 21.—~H—
With wide swaths in the ranks of
democrats and republican independ-
ents, the senate beat back three
democratic attempts today to lower
existing traiffs on raw products used
for rayon clothing and voted for the
slightly higher protection proposed by
the republican regulars.
The debate, lasting all day, cen-
tered around an attempt by Senator
Wheeler, democrat, Montana, to elim-
fos oe ovision calling for a mini-
Seas of 45 cents a pound on
— and Seoteed rayon filaments
pn ser basic products of the
rayon industry.
After a lengthy speech in which he
charged that the majority of the do-
mestic rayor manufacturers were
| By D. HAROLD OLIVER.
| [
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12,
55,
57
] | Recent Arrests of 19 Persons
and Subsequent Confes:
sions Reveal Scheme.
REVELATION FOLLOWS
NUMEROUS THREATS
| MEXICO CITY, Jan. 27.—4P)
—An alleged plot by adherents
of Jose Vasconcelos, defeated
candidate for the Mexican
presidency, to assassinate Pas-
cual Ortiz Rubio, blow up sev-
era] public buildings in Mexico
City and seize the administra-
tion in the confusion was bared
tonight by Chief of Polite Va-
lente Quintana.
_ The chief of police said the
plot had been frustrated with
arrest several days ago of 19
persons, two of whom had been
released. Others, he said, had
confessed.
In July 1928 General Alvaro Obre-
gon was assassinated within two
weeks of his election to the presi-
dency. Senor Ortiz Rubio, within a
few days after his election, Novem-
ber 17th last made an extensive visit
to the United States, from which he
only recently returned.
There were reports shortly after
A Pian iad BD ee > a.t «6
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|
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33,
41,
7,
70
] | Mother-in-Law’s Objection
Withers Aerial Elopement
With Threat of Annulmen
| {United Pree ftaff Correspondent j
HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Jan. 27.—
Under the watchful gaze of his
mother-in-law, Grant Withers
made love to his bride before
movie cameras today even as
their aerial clopement was head-
ed toward annulment.
Withers was married to Loretta
Young in Yuma, Ariz, Sunday
and when they returned here by
air only eight hours after their
departure, the 17-year-old actress’
mother demanded that the mar-~
riage be broken.
“We aren't especially rr use
about it,” Withers said, with
bow to the mother-in-law, Mre
George Belzer, “but, of course, we
(Continued om Mane 2 Cel, &)
| RY DANE HENNE Say
| [
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43,
17
] | FIVE ARE KILLED
IN FLAMING FALL
OF AIR TRANSPOR
| KANSAS CITY, Kan., Jan. 27.-—(%
Four passengers and the pilot
crashed to death in a monoplane of
the Central Air Lines, a subsidiary
of the Universal Aircraft corporation,
bound from Wichita Kansis to Kan-
sas City, near the Fairfax airport
here late today.
The five-passenger Travelair plane
second section of the regular 3 p. m.,
Pttamibimeaad am hana & fial 91
| [
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|
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9,
15,
18,
68
] | MONTANA POWER EXECUTIVES
DISCUSS PLANS FOR BETTER
SERVICE TO STATE PATRONS
District Managers From 18 Cities Attend First Quarterly
Conference Here and Listen to Interesting Discussions
of Business Experiences and Means of Anticipating Pub-
lic Needs; Meeting Closes This Evening With Banquet.
| District managers representing 18 cities, department heads
and general officers of the Montana Power ‘company met yes-
terday in Butte in the first quarterly conference for 1930.
The object of the meeting is to compare experiences and to
discuss plans for better meeting public needs and preferences.
| dhese conterences, instituted sev~
eral years ago as a sort of experi-
ment, have now become a _ regular
and highly valued feature of Mon-
tana Power company business meth-
ods. They are said to have increased
the gen 46 of the various district
heads, with corresponding apprecia-
tion on the part of the company
patrons throughout the state.
John C. Ryan, vice president and
assistant general manager of the
Montana Power company, presided at
yesterday's meeting. Many interest-
ing discussions were heard of plans
calculated to better meet or to an-
ticipate the requirements of the
ublic who are patrons of the Mon-
na Power, and to maintain the po-
sition of Montana's power company
in the forefront of the power com-
panies of the United States. The
conference will close this evening
with a banquet at the New Pinlen
hotel.
Those in attendance are: Manager
C. H. Christenson and H. 8. Thane,
(Continued on Page 15, Col, 1)
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2,
25,
32,
66
] | 10,000 EMPLOYED
AGE HUNGER Ad
CITY FUNDS G1
Unpaid Bills Cause Trouble;
Families Thrown Out of
Homes for Lack of Rent.
| (United Press Staff Correspondent.)
CHICAGO, Jan. 27.-~(UP)—-While
Officials and rescue committees
rushed about smartly tonight and ac~-
complished nothing, Chicago’s bank-
ruptcy rapidly grew desperate.
Financial rehabilitation plans be-
came tangled up in political charges,
counter plans were offered and re-
fused, and all the while these things
were happening:
Forty thousand city employes, un-
paid for nearly a month and faced
with prospects of no actual cash for
weeks to come, were forced to nego-
tiate credit with merchants as beast
they could. Many borrowed money
from loan sharks at rates mounting
to 120 pa cent a year
The family of one polleeman was
broken up when he was unable to
pay his rent. He was evicted and his
wife and children moved to the home
of his mother. Other similar cases
were expected when savings accounts
of clty employes started to dwindle.
Coal Held Up.
Three of the largest coal dealers in
the city delivered an ultimatum to
the school board in which they said
oer would refuse to deliver more
fuel to public schools until they re-
reived definite assurance that it
would be paid for. The board al-
ready owes one firm $90,000 for coal.
Public hospitals and poor farms
(CantiniuedA peg wpe 9 ftal a) ;
| By FREDERICK ©. OTHMAN.
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3319
] |
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
27,
16
] | COPPER PRODUCERS
WANT FAIR. RETURN
FAR MEN EMPLOYED
| NEW YORK, Jan. 27.—\4)-—<-
Declaring that co-operation and
not competition should be the
watchword in business, Gordon
RK, Campbell, president of the
Calumet & Arizona Copper Co.,
was quoted today as stating that
consumers of copper should not
try to make their profit at the
expense of the producer, De-
fending the price of 18 cents a
pound for the metal as “reason-~-
able,” Mr. Campbell said it en-
ables the company to pay fair
wages to its workers and fair
returns on the money invested.
| [
[
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6675.1910859375,
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7407.5554960937
],
[
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6155.7709960938,
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6603.939453125
]
] | [
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6155.7709960938,
6363.4221953125,
7407.5554960937
] | 27 | 27_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 749 | 749 | [
2515,
749
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
38,
42
] | Fast Transportation Will Be
Inaugurated Here Feb. 1;
Great Saving in Time
Will Be Available.
| Airplane express will be inaugu-
rated by the American Express Co.
out of Montana, by means of the
National Parks Airways, on Feb. 1.
The time on naghegee’ Gah at. he
Butte district, by west and south,
will be cut more than one half.
| [
[
5518.66471875,
8191.27409375,
6391.6546171875,
8535.8577421875
],
[
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8166.9267578125
]
] | [
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7827.0278320312,
6391.6546171875,
8535.8577421875
] | 28 | 28_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 750 | 2,516 | [
2516,
750
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
22,
50,
58,
69
] | ENGLAND CANCELS
BUILDING CONTRACT
Realistic Touch Added to
Conference When Work
on Ships Ordered Stopped
| —Cc FF eer YY eS
(Asanciated Press Staff Writer.)
LONDON, Jan. 27.—(?)—
France today gained a techni-
cal victory on a point of ait
cedure for the i
of the five power AY’
wment conference af a meet-
‘ng of the chief delegates at
No. 10 Downing street.
What actually hapenéd was that
after nearly three hours of keen
discussion, the delegates endeavored
to settle part of their disagreement.
by invoking the alphabet, and under
‘its auspices France, by precedence
over Italy, was granted the right
to propose discussion of the French
Plan for limitation of naval arma-
ments by total tonnage instead of
by categories of ships.
This is expected to produce a com-
promise on the global tonnage pro-
posals satisfactory to all the powers.
Menawhile, Italy’s desire to plunge
into the question of — and
must walt.
Secretary of State Stimson admit
tod that today’s meeting, which lasted
for past the hour for lunch, had
proceeded more slowly than he de- |
sired.
For the Americans and the Jap-
anese, it was largely a day of watch-
ful waiting while the European dele-
yates maneuvered in a maze of tech-
nicalities relating to Franco-Italian
problems, including naval parity.
It remained for the British govern-
ment to add a realistic disarmament
kuch, entirely apart from the con-
ference itself, to the events of the day
2y announcing the cancellation of | 1]
“onstruction orders for two 10,000-ton |
ruisers, the Northumberland and the |
surrey. j
| Ry FRANK HAVILAND KING
| [
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[
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[
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[
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] | 32 | 32_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 751 | 6,865 | [
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2517,
3670,
1369,
609,
5730,
227,
6373,
751,
8431,
7669,
1271
] |
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
21,
1
] | AMERICAN EXPRESS TO JOIN
WITH AIRWAYS FOR SERVICE
| - The time from Butte to Salt Lake
‘City will be reduced from 18 hours
to four hours. The time between
Butte and New York City will be
cut from four and one half days to
18 hours. Proportionate reductions
will appliy to intermediate points
and to the west and south as well as
the east.
The National Parks Airways and
the American © have joined
of rapid express transit to all parts
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5)
| [
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 34 | 34_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 752 | 752 | [
752,
2518
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
3,
6,
26
] | Regional .Executive Tells
Silver Bow Council of
Rapid Progress in Butte,
QUOUT WORK HERE
RECEIVES PRAISE
OF JOHN H. PIPER
| From a Boy Scout council of
doubtful standing and somewhat vac-
illatory spirit a few years ago the Sil-
ver Bow council has become among
the most active, enthustastic and pur-
poseful-minded of any in the United
States, John H, Piper, Spokane, re-
gional Scout executive told 30 mem-
bers of the executive council of the
local group at an informal luncheon
| yesterday.
Praising the work of Paul N. Campe
bell, local Scout executive, Mr. Piper
explained the rise of the Scout move-
ment in this region by pointing out
that Silver Bow council has been re-
corded on the books of the national
council as one of the outstanding
groups of its size in America
“The efficient management of Mr,
Campbell coupled with the exception-
al fulfillment of his Scout duties in
relation to the community, the
healthy growth of the Scout organi-
zation in this section, and the interest
(Continued on Page 2. Col. 4)
| [
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],
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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753,
2519
] |
|
274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
5,
51
] | Attempt to Bring Clarence
True Wilson, F. Scott Mc-
Bride Before House Com-
mittee Is Frustrated.
| WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.—(4
—If Attorney General Mitchell
has his way, prohibition en-~-
forcement officers will not be
drinkers but—-to the contrary—
will be sincere believers in the
Volstead act.
The head of the justice de-
partment, who would bear the
burden of dry enforcement re-~-
sponsibility under the William-
son bill being considered by the
house expeditures. committee,
‘revealed his views in a lengthy
letter made public today. He
endorsed the bill in an appear-
ance before the house commit-
tee just before conclusion of
hearings, and forwarded the
expression of his personal opin-
lons a few hours later.
Mr. Mitchell’s views were con-
‘fained in an answer to a private citi-
mn who had called attention to in-
juiries being made by a justice de-
yartment agent concerning candi-
| [
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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7383.4461210937,
5178.5628203125
] | 38 | 38_274875340-butte-montana-standard-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 274,875,340 | masthead_2034+general-manager|front_page_20_99 | 754 | 626 | [
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229,
2026,
626,
754,
7672,
6393,
1274,
8702
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
46,
70
] | Welcome. Tourists
| , the home seekers are still com
“mE to Harlingen in spite of the re-
ent cold spell and over 900 wer¢
“Bere Sunday and Monday.
_- &'X hundred came over the Mis.
Suri Pacific ines and 200 ovei
“te Southern Pacific, and both
"eS are expecting about 500 to.
*
| [
[
166.7275653076,
10347.498515625,
1173.93703125,
10883.267109375
],
[
240.8370056152,
10219.5986328125,
1111.0544433594,
10334.1279296875
]
] | [
166.7275653076,
10219.5986328125,
1173.93703125,
10883.267109375
] | 2 | 2_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 755 | 755 | [
755
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
40,
8
] | Anderson Goes
To Water Meeting
| ores LO Valier Morning ae
SAN BENITO, Jan. 27—W. E.
nderson, local engineer and a
iemh., of the International Wat-
*¥s commission, left here Monday
Might for Washington, where the
American half of the commission
i will meet,
® Immediately following the meet-
ing there, the commission will turn
in 4a report to congress, through
retary of State Stimson, on its
a for the past two years.
The commission has been unable
ie reach an agreement with Mexico
t division of waters of the Rio
rande.
| [
[
147.2209277344,
9181.62546875,
1176.2951855469,
10175.521015625
],
[
175.7206115723,
8940.9384765625,
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]
] | [
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10175.521015625
] | 4 | 4_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 756 | 756 | [
756
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
5,
0
] | Fruit Shipments
Continue Heavy
| Special to Valley Morning Star:
The Valley shipments of fruit
and vegetables were heavy Sun-
day and Monday and the recent
ccld spell did not seem to have
much effect on the movements.
The Missouri lracifiec and South
ern Pacific lines shipped 134 car-
loads during the two days which
ran the total for the season up to
71416 cars ever both lines. |
| [
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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9785.964375
] | 5 | 5_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 757 | 757 | [
757
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
15,
6
] | Beauty of Valley
Surprises Dyers
Here From East
| The 168 dyers and cleaners who
teured the Valiey on a sidetrip
'fyom the national convention at
Dallas were very much surprised
at the wonderful. progress here |
and some of them said they expect-
cal to see nothing but wilderness. |
The cleaners frem the East sain.
the schools were much nicer than
those back East and many said the
Valley was the most beautiful
country they had ever been in.
The party was met in Edinburg
by local cleaners and dyers and
from there were taken in cars te
Sharyland where they were served
j} breaktast. Then they were motor-
'edd to Mission, McAllen, Mercedes
land Stuart Place where they had
ltwnch.
| [
[
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7651.2343554688,
2239.7422070313,
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],
[
1198.7583007812,
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]
] | [
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7338.82421875,
2239.7422070313,
8864.401875
] | 6 | 6_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 758 | 758 | [
758
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
43,
30,
36
] | HARLINGEN IS
SCENE OF
BUILDING
ACTIVITY
New Projects Recal
Boom of 1926
Here
| Close to $1,000,000 worth of con-
struction and improvement work is
going on in Harlingen now, includ-
ing some projects which are plan-
ned, and to start in the near future.
A survey of construction in the
city indicates that the new year
has started off in a manner remi-
niscent of building in 1926 and
1927.
Leading the list of new projects
‘in Harlingen is the huge cold stor-
age plant which the Central Power
& Light company is building. This:
building will cost $100,000 for the
first unit, and additional units will
raise the cost to several hundred
thousand when it is finally complet-
ed.
The excavation work for the
vlant was started Mondav. contract
| havine been awarded to W. A. Vel-
;ten of Brownsville and Harlingen.
Bond Money to be Spent
Construction work on projects
provided in the recent bond issue of
$500,000 voted by the city will be
underway soon, some of them, such
as the municipal golf course. hav-
ing been started already. Mavor
Sam Botts said the work on the
abattoir, incinerator, additional
paving, sewage disposal plant and
enlargement, and other such work
will start within thirtv days.
Harlingen’s new high school
huilding, costing about $500,000
is nearing completion, and will be
one of the finest structures of its
kind in the state. Additional school
work is being urged by some resi-
dents, including a gymnasium and
athletic stadium, to cost around
$150,000,
The $15,000 office building for
the Postal Telegraph company — is
being constructed now, and will be
a two-story building. An office
building costing about $10,000 for
Water District No. 9 is planned
near the city, and a $20,000 garage
building for the Hollingsworth Mo-
tor company is to be built in Har-
'lingen soon.
Hotel Remodeled
The Damants hotel is being com-
|pletely remodeled, at a_ cost of
about $18,000, the work on this job
nearing completion at the present
time. |
. A number of residences, ware-
souses, and other buildings are go-
ing up in various parts of the city,
showing a more rapid rate of build-
ing than Harlingen has enjoyed for
“months,
| [
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],
[
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],
[
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759
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
34,
65
] | PEAS ESCAPE FROST
| |Special to Valley Morning Star:
BROWNSVILLE, Jan. 27.—The
|recent freezing weather in the
| Valley failed to make an impres-
sien on one patch of English peas
near here, a vegetable that ordin-
arily would have been = severely
damaged by a mild frost.
The field of peas has created
considerable interest for the man-
rer in which it came through the
freeze. .
| [
[
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],
[
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]
] | [
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3292.0800976563,
9776.665546875
] | 10 | 10_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 760 | 760 | [
760
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
3,
9,
1
] | Ewing Asks Trade Territory Towns
To Advise City On New Road Work
| Finley Ewing, chairman o1 the
chamber of commerce 1930 road
committee, yesterday appointed
John C. Myrick and A. I, Brooks
‘as members of this committee to
serve with him. Myrick was chair-
man of this committee last year.
“We want all communities in
the Harlingen trade territory to
get in touch with us and give thi
‘conmnittee thier recommendations
as to where the new roads should
be built,” “wing said.
_ Two million dollars is expected
to be expended in highway work in
Cameron county this year, bonds
oa which already have been voted.
These highways will be divided ac.
‘cording to taxable values in vari-
ous precincts of the county,
| [
[
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],
[
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 11 | 11_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 761 | 761 | [
761
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
45,
32
] | | Shaw Elected
| Pipe Co. Head
| MPCCIAL 19 Valley MOTHIZ oar:
MERCEDES, Jan. 28.—W. F.
Shaw was named active president:
of the Mercedes Concrete Pipe Co.
at the annual meeting of the stock-
holdrs. Mr. Shaw has been con-
nected with the American Land and
Irrigation Co., since its organiza-
| tion more than 20 years ago, as
vice-president and engineer. Other
members of the organization are
J. C. Shaw, vice-president, H. M.
Rouse, secrezzry-treasurre, Clar-
ence Rouse, assistant secretary-
_ treasurer, and H. B. Seay, chair-
|man of the board of directors, The
Concrete company also have a plant
at McAllen.
| [
[
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8887.5610546875
],
[
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]
] | [
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3291.4133300781,
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] | 13 | 13_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 762 | 762 | [
762
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
28,
50,
80
] | CITY PAID PAE
FOR 3500,000
ISSUE
eee
$30,000 Structure to
Go Up At San
Benito )
| Bonds in the sum of $590,000 vot-
ed by the city of Harlingen last
week were sold by the city commis-
sion at a special meeting Monday
to A. ©. Allyn & Company of Chi-
cago, for par and acerued interest.
The bid of Allyn was the best of
three bids submitted, A, L. Lewis
submitting a bid as representative
for an outside bond houge, and
Woods & Company of Ohio submit-
ting a bid. There was less” than
two points difference in the bids.
At the meeting of the commis-
sion A. M. Horne was named
city building inspector succeed-
ing M.1. Olsen. Horne has been
here several years, and was for-
merly a city building inspector
in El Paso.
All other city employes and offi,
cers have been retained for the
vear, Mayor Botts said.
The commission at a meeting
Wednesday night of this week will
open bids on water pipe line and
grsxss seed to be used on the new
($50,000 golf course being construct-
ed by the city.
With the bonds sold the city is
expected to advertise at once for
bids on the other projects planned
in the voting of the bond issue.
siiiiiiiiesiccecctmicecemiiimi iia SUM a
| [
[
2263.30125,
5474.701640625,
3292.1355175781,
7542.6816601563
],
[
2296.4682617188,
4433.3251953125,
3272.005859375,
5071.685546875
],
[
2280.7429199219,
5129.7783203125,
3299.5324707031,
5452.1791992188
]
] | [
2263.30125,
4433.3251953125,
3299.5324707031,
7542.6816601563
] | 14 | 14_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 763 | 763 | [
763
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
85,
20,
27
] | Several Witnessed
Death, They Say
On Stand
WITNESS TELLS
OF WATCHING
BRADY KILL
GIRL
|
AUSTIN, Jan. 27.—(4) — In
this high old chamber filled with
memories for John W. Brady, fou
star prosecution witnesses told this
afternoon what they saw of the
knife-slaying of Miss Lehlia High-
Smith, for whose murder the 59-
year-old former appeals court jus-
tice is on trial.
One, F. R. McNaughton, said he
wrested a knife from Brady a
momént after the girl had been
stabbed. ‘
Another, Frank Graham, Jr.,
svid he saw Brady “strike” the girl
while she stood there and saw him
bending over he- still striking.
A third, King McFarlin, swore
he saw Brady puil a knife and
heard him threaten Miss High-
smith.
The last, Mrs. R. B. Crider, tes-
tified she saw Brady’s arm move-
ment as the girl sank to- the
ground, and heard the girl ery out:
“Please don’t do that.” |
Tells of Drinking |
The first, F. R. McNaughton, a
stationery company employee, told
cf drinking with Brady on the
afternoon of November 9 ,of at-
oe a football game, and then
going back to the rooming house.
Here, he testified, Brady became
loud and unruly and finally = wa;
turned out by Mrs. McNaughton, . :
MeNaughton reneatedly tout:
fied that he didn’t believe Brady
was “drunk,” exeept once on cross
examination he said he was not
qualified to say definitely,
He said that early on the night
of the killing, Brady, Miss High
smith, Mrs. McNaughton, Graham
Mrs. L. J. Nachtab and_ himself
were in the MeNaughton apart-
ment. After Brady was sent away.’
he added, the others went to the
home of Mrs. Martin.
An hour or so later, MeNaugh-
ton testified, Miss Highsmith,
Graham and himself, went back to
the rooming house to get a port-
able phonograph.
Tells of Quarrel
They met Brady coming down- |
stairs there and Brady | started
quarreling with the girl, he went
on. MeNaughton went in to use
the phone twice and while he held
the receiver in bis hand the sec-
ond time he heard a scream, dash-
ed outside and found the former
judge bending over Miss High |
smith.
Brady offered ne resistance, Mce
Naughton said, but insisted on us-
ing the telephone whe it was
needed for calling an ambulance.
During the testimony this alf-
ternoon the defense made a po-
tion for a suspended sentence in
the event of convictioii.
When Graham, considered _ the
ace of star state witnésses, came
tc the stand, Brady looked at him
steadily. Ovccasi: mally during the
accusations he half closed his eyes |
Graham told the jury that he/|
went to the house that night or
business and that he had known
Miss Highsmith eniy about a week
then. When he réturned with Miss
Highsmith and McNaughton to get
ine phonograph he declared, Brady
‘vas there and lecked angry.
Brady, he added, said something
tc Miss Highsmith ‘“‘about a Sat-
urday night party.” |
“I saw Judge Brady strike her |
and I ran into the house to get}
MeNayghton, and met McNaugh- |
ton opr the steps,’ when he turned |
around he said:
“Brady was holding a knife sc
was still hitting at her.’”’ He said
ne believed Brady was intoxicated. |
MeFarlan said he drove up to:
the house that night intending to)
get a room there, and that he saw,
Brady draw a long knife from his
pocket, and heard him say to Miss
Highsmith: |
“Where in the hell did you go? |
damn you, I teld you I was going!
to kill yo uand I’m going to do it.’’|
“Some one was cailing the po-!
lice,” MecFarlan said, “and I de-
cided to leave.”
On cross examination, he said!
Brady was “‘very drunk.”
The defense asked MeFarlan if.
he had been “intimidated” by the
presecution. He replied that a dep-!
uty sheriff had come to his note!
and had taken him to the court
hcuse to see the state’s attorneys
“In that conversation did thei
county attorney ask you if Daytor |
Moses had offered you money to
testify in this case,” E. A. Berry |
ef Houston, chief of Brady law-
yers asked.
“Te ae”
“(TURN TO. living aE aa pt Rag
| [
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3187.2040820312,
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10972.9633984375
],
[
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2890.9426269531,
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3210.9914550781
],
[
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] | [
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2010.8059082031,
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|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
59,
81
] | FIREMEN DINE
| Local firemen will entertain
members of the city commission
next week at a fish and oyste
supper, it was decided at- thei!
meeting last night. a
| [
[
4354.1542773438,
10584.1528125,
5365.6259960938,
10892.7973828125
],
[
4569.7016601562,
10502.0380859375,
5172.7719726562,
10580.0302734375
]
] | [
4354.1542773438,
10502.0380859375,
5365.6259960938,
10892.7973828125
] | 17 | 17_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 765 | 765 | [
765
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
68,
88
] | RENE LA COSTE BACK
| | NEW YORK, Jan. 27.—(#)—
'Rene LaCoste, the most machine-
‘like of the great French tennis
| Stars, is entirely cured of the ill-
-ness that kept him out of the Da-
vis Cup challenge round last year
and is planning another’ interna-
pore campaign this season reports
no less an authority than Big Bill
, Tilden,
| [
[
4345.6298632813,
8640.0190234375,
5384.3955273438,
9235.306171875
],
[
4466.6762695312,
8561.990234375,
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]
] | [
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8561.990234375,
5384.3955273438,
9235.306171875
] | 19 | 19_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 766 | 766 | [
766
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
41,
38
] | Sheriff Indicted
| GALVESTON, Jan. 27—(4)—
Operations of an alleged liquor
ring in Fort Bend county headed
by Sheriff H. Wyatt Collins and
five deputies, were described in an
indictment returned today against
the sheriff, his deputies and 60 odd
citizens of Fort Bend county.
charging conspiracy to violate the
prohibition act. -
| [
[
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6324.9111132813,
5373.68703125,
6938.9360546875
],
[
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]
] | [
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] | 20 | 20_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 767 | 767 | [
767
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
58,
72
] | CONSTRUCTION STARTS
| “eyes SF VN TOUS Ste, «68S
DONNA, Jan. 27. —The founda-
‘tion work en the new $100,000
| canning plant of the Uddo-Taor-
mina corporation here is being
done now, and construction is to
‘be rushed in order to get out some
i produce this sprine.
| [
[
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10457.5503125
],
[
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9997.1875
]
] | [
4342.75828125,
9910.3193359375,
5377.7016796875,
10457.5503125
] | 21 | 21_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 768 | 768 | [
768
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
57,
75
] | BUILDING BOX FACTORY
| ;}opeciai to Valley Morning Star:
| SAN BENITO, Jan. 27.—Con-
I struction work is well along here
on another warehouse building for
the Valley Box and Crate factory.
The building is located next to the
present structures of the company,
near the Central Power & Light
cempanyv pnlant.
| [
[
4351.9286914063,
9353.2826953125,
5375.9570507813,
9867.7915234375
],
[
4424.0649414062,
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9349.6669921875
]
] | [
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9268.1162109375,
5375.9570507813,
9867.7915234375
] | 22 | 22_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 769 | 769 | [
769
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
54,
53
] | Miss Johnson Hurt
| opec iai to Valley Morning Star:
“Miss Nora Bell Johnson of thi:
city was given emergency treat
ment at the Valley Baptist hospita
here late Sunday for injuries suf.
fered when the car in which she
was riding overturned on the high.
way near the city.
Her injuries were not serious.
| [
[
4364.5932421875,
7116.4950976563,
5372.005390625,
7642.1689648438
],
[
4404.421875,
6997.6586914062,
5344.2299804688,
7100.5869140625
]
] | [
4364.5932421875,
6997.6586914062,
5372.005390625,
7642.1689648438
] | 23 | 23_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 770 | 770 | [
770
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
33,
13
] | Six Solutions for
Texas Pen Svstem
| | AUSTIN, Tex,, Jan. 27—Prison
‘centralization asd reformation re-
!ceived early attention from the
‘legislature today. The legislators
got on the six different plans put
' forward for reorganizing the
/ system immediately after return-
ing from a tour of the penitentiary
' properties.
| The senate resolved itself into
a committee of the whole to con-
sider the three measures before it
and the house committee on pen-
itentiaries took up the five bills
before it. The house group decided
to hold a public hearing on_ its
bills tomorrow night.
| [
[
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],
[
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3713.4150390625,
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3924.4775390625
]
] | [
4372.4111132813,
3713.4150390625,
5404.3017773438,
4963.888203125
] | 24 | 24_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 771 | 1,605 | [
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771,
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] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
22,
25
] | Irrigation Heads
Meet Next Week
| opeciat to Valiey Morning Star:
SAN BENITO, Jan. 27.—A meet-
ing of the Joint Association of Ir-
rigation Dis*riets of the Valley is
to be called for some day next week
at which the immigration question
is to be considered, Frank S. Rob-
ertson, secretary of the organiza-
tion, said here today,
The question of forming a Valley
immigration bureau was turned
over to the irrigation districts by
the Valley immigration committee.
The districts may form a Valley
erganization of some kind to han-
dle ¢he sitnation.
| [
[
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5227.9794726563,
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],
[
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] | [
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] | 25 | 25_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 772 | 772 | [
772
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
26,
4,
62
] | Schools May Need
Special Session to
Finance Teachers
SAN BENITO FACES SUIT
MILLION DOLLAR BUILDING PROGRAM FOR, ‘HARLINGEN
| | AUSTIN, Jan, 2i/—A’)—The pos-
sibility of a second called session
to enact remedial legislation for
those rural schools deprived of
| necessary funds through an_ in-
{junction against” the $5,000,000
| Spec ial rural school aid fund, was
foreseen here today by S. M. N.
Marrs state superintendent of
i schools.
Marrs pointed cut that an appeal
from the injunction granted by a
district court in San Antonio last
Saturday will be filed Wednesday
; with the court of civil appeals
there. If that court dissolves the
injunction the necessary legisla-
tion can be had in the last two
weeks of this session. If an appeal
;to the supreme court has to be
made, another session will be
necessary, he said. :
ee ee
| [
[
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[
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773,
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|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
35,
55
] | | WORK TO BEGIN
iwLEY 1. SAYS LOUTHAN
| Optimism over the Valley port sit
uation was expressed Monday by
members of the delegation. to
Westen one ‘whos returned to the
Valley.
Judge James Q. Louthan, att» ~
ney of the San Benito-Point Isabe!
district, and H. L. Yates, attorney
of the Brownsvilie district, — re
turned Monday.
Judge Louthan said that the Val-
icy delegation*was assured that
work on the project will be start-
ied by July 1. He explained that the
two projects are separdte, and that
San Benito, in view of having he:
funds already available, may go
ahead without delay m _— starting
the construction.
| [
[
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],
[
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] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
67,
86
] | DAY IN WASHINGTON
| Supreme courl recessed until:
February 24. |
Attorney General Mitchell de-
clared against employment of
“wet” prohibition enforcement of-
ficers.
Senate voted «lightly increasec
tariff rates on products entering
into manufacture of Rayon gar-
ment<«.
| [
[
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[
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|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
44,
84
] | PROBE MYSTERY DEATH
| | MARSHAL, Jan. 27.—(4) — A
grand jury today reopened its in-
quiry into the eleven months’ old
mystern of the death of H. B. Als-
ton, railroad mar, found beaten te
ceath in a cemctery here,
| [
[
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],
[
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10525.7978515625
]
] | [
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10459.595703125,
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] | 29 | 29_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 776 | 776 | [
776
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
71,
64
] | Convict Captured
|
An escaped Mexican convict
from the State penitentiary at
Huntsville was captured near here
Monday morning when Jim Collins
border patrolmati.ran upon. the
eenvict near the Harlingen ceme-
tery.
Collins fired several shots at the
eonvict before capturing him.
| [
[
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[
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] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
49,
77
] | $5.000 for A Bandit
| DALLAS, Jan. 27.—(#) — The
Texas Bankers Association today
announced that payment of $5,006
weuld be made to deputy sheriif
rR, W. Summerall of Coleman coun-
ty who earlier in the month killed
one of ‘the bandits who robbed the
Lehn State Bank at Lohn.
| [
[
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[
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]
] | [
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4906,
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] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
42,
10
] | Mexican Office
Stoned In Uruguay
| MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay. Jan.
27.—(#) — The Mexican legation
today was stoned by a small group
of demonstrators.
The foreign office sent apoligie:
to the Mexican minister immediate.
ley
| [
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[
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] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
31,
7
] | Sheriff and Aides
Kill Man at Still
| : TEXARKANA, Ark., jan .27.—
|(P)—Decision to investigate cir-
cumstances surrounding the death
of Oscar Call, killed yesterday in
a dry raid near Lewisville, was
announced today by Steve Carri-
gan, prosecuting attorney.
! Call was shot as he fled from 2
! till raided by Sheriff R. H. Duty
and three deputies. The shots were
fired by Sheriff Duty and Deputy
Bryan Cryer. Both men declared
they were not shooting at Call, but
at three other men, whom they
hoped to halt. They said they shot
.in front and to the rear of the men.
| [
[
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[
5414.29296875,
6444.4291992188,
6422.5493164062,
6666.638671875
]
] | [
5404.1630664063,
6444.4291992188,
6439.0732617188,
7655.4243359375
] | 33 | 33_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 780 | 780 | [
780
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
21,
18,
39
] | PORT PROSPECT
OKEH, SAYS
CHAMBERS
IN WIRE
Rivers and Harbors
Committee Has Not
Acted As Yet
| “Tell the people not to get ex-
cited.” :
. This is the terse wire, received
by Tyre H. Brown, local banker,
from J. B. Chambers, Sr., in Wash-
ington yesterday.
Chambers is in Washington seck-
ing a hearing on the local project
before the rivers end harbors com
mittee.
“The rivers and harbors com-
mittee has not acted,’ continned
the wire. “We are to be heard ina
week or 10 days, after which all
projects will be considered. My
statement in the Valley Morning
Star stands. We are all right.”
Chambers referred to the en-
‘gineers recommendation last week
of the Brownsville and Pt. Isabel
25-foot projects.
Local leaders in the port fieht
yesterday urged triends of Harlin-
gen’s fight for a channel to wire
Chmn. S. Wallace Dempsey of the
rivers and harbors committee, a-k.
ing that the lower Valley projects
be delayed until Harlingen’s story
is heard.
| [
[
5424.5995898438,
3308.5124316406,
6463.1753125,
5086.5361523437
],
[
5458.9877929688,
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],
[
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781
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
69,
78
] | STYLE SHOW PLEASES
| A merchants pageant, trade:
display, style show and home tal
ent concert was presented Mondas
night at the high school auditor
ium under the auspices of the
Young Peoples department of the
Methodist church. Forty-fiv:
firms and trades were represente<
by young women of the city.
| [
[
6448.6923632813,
9460.84421875,
7458.9887890625,
10127.4731640625
],
[
6567.974609375,
9350.71875,
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]
] | [
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9350.71875,
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10127.4731640625
] | 37 | 37_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 782 | 782 | [
782
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
66,
87
] | BOARD TO REORGANIZE
| Sree Ss Ne UV OF 6 60EWS £24455 LUGS .
SAN BENITO, Jan. 27.—The
‘board of directors of Cameron
County Water Improvement Dis-
trict No. 2, of this section, will
meet Thursday night of this week
to reorganize. The board mem-
bers expected to effect a reorgani-
zation at the meeting last me
_but did not, . = Si aR gelatin ie rs a a a camel
| [
[
6438.4120898438,
10306.682109375,
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],
[
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]
] | [
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10908.95265625
] | 38 | 38_247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 247,078,729 | front_page_20_99 | 783 | 783 | [
783
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
12,
11,
82
] | WISCONSIN BAN
FAILS TO STOP
LAND SALES
Here She Is
| Wisconsin ban on Valley land is
‘being disregarded by a number of
Valley land companies, which are
'at the present time soliciting pros-
Jpects in that state, it became
:known here Saturday.
| It was disclosed at the same time
| that there is a much bigger traffic
in Wisconsin prospectors to the
Valley than there was before the
difficulties between the two states
broke out.
“Tt’s the old case of ‘I don’t care
what you say about me,’ so long as
ce mention my name,’ ” said one
Valley land man.
“The Wisconsin people have be-
come interested in the Lower Rio
Grande Valley since all the trouble
‘started. Now they all want to find
;out what kind of a country it is
that they are being kept out of, and
many of hem are voluntarily com-
: ing to the Valley, and are buying
land.”
Legal !oopholes in the law creat-
ing the Wisconsin land board are
working to the advantage of Valley
land men, many of whom are con-
tinuing their operations there the
same as they did before they were
refused prmits.
| [
[
6445.6474414063,
6459.736796875,
7485.7959179688,
8389.7622265625
],
[
6475.0517578125,
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],
[
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] | [
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784
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
47,
14
] | Delegation Opposes
Immigration Plan
| WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.—i+)
—-A delegation representing rail-
reads and agricultural interests in
California, Arizona, New Mexico
and South Texas, arrived here to-
day, to appear before the house
immigration committee in opposi-
tion to the proposal to place wes-
tern hemisphere immigration upon
a quota basis.
| [
[
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8656.5893359375,
7488.4287304688,
9309.8130078125
],
[
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]
] | [
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785
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
51,
73
] | Hung Jury Looms
| | FANHANDLE, Texas, Jan. 27.
—(P)—A second hung jury seem-
ec in prospects here tonight for
Keuben A. Franks, former Boo
ant bank wer gag! ¢
participating in a Stinnet Sank rob
ery last November, er, eee
ai lala Ss aa ce ad
| [
[
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[
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] | [
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786,
4916
] |
|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
2,
17
] | No Thought Given
To Road Matters
Yet Savs Starne:
| New members of the Harlingen
Irrigation Wistrict have been too
|busy with reorganization to give
any thought to road matters, and
the question of changing the legal
form of the district, H. L. Starnes,
newly appointed manager, said
Monday.
Starnes was named manager suc-
ceeding C. P, Bobo, who for a num-
ber of years has been manager of
the district.
New officers of the district in-
clude F. H. Green, chairman of the
board; J. S. Blakney, vice-chair-
man; and J, W. Wade, secretary,
The next meeting will be held
Feb. 3, when irrigation matters
will be diseussed Starnes said.
The Harlingen district has been
a center of controversy in the road
paving program, county officials
trying to get the district to change
its legal form in order to make pos-
sible issuance of additional county
bonds. PS
| [
[
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],
[
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] | [
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|
247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/247078729-valley-morning-star-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
48,
23
] | SE —_—
Officials Charged
In Law 'Viclatias
| JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Jan. 27.
—-UP)—-Violation of the National
prohibition law was ‘charged _in
three indictment« made public
here today involving three city of-
fwials of New Smyrna, a former
pelice chief, two policemen and a
diug store operator. ee
| [
[
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9843.8158984375,
8550.759296875,
10340.0180859375
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[
7506.1655273438,
9604.2060546875,
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]
] | [
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6869,
1367,
5599
] |
|
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29,
37
] | Cameron’s Master .
Farmer to Dallas
| mpecial to Valley Morning Star: ‘
SAN BENITO, Jan. 27.—Two
-hiaster Farmers of Texas from
| Cameron county, H. H. Whipple of
los Fresnos, the 1929 Master Far-
imer from this county, and M. F.
iOrr, the 1927 winner, will leave
‘here Tuesday night for Dallas, to
| attend the Master Farmers ban-
(quet Thursday night.
| County Agent Henry Alsmeyer,
| under whose direction the two men
| who state honors, may accompany
them, as efforts were being made
today to send him.
i
| [
[
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[
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] | [
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] |
|
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52,
16,
24
] | INJUNCTION ON
AIRPORT GIFT
ISBEING
SOUGHT =.
Attack Would Be
Launched Against ©
Warrants |
| Special to Valley Morning Star:
| SAN BENITO, Jan. 27.—Plans
for the filing of an injunction re-
straining the city of San Benito
from carrying out its plans of
furnishing the government with a
site for an intermediate landing
field here are beiag worked out by
a group of citizens here, it became
known today.
Rports were that t heinjunetion
petition would be filed in Brwns-
ville tday, although investigation
failed to reveal that the plans was
carried out.
The decision to protest action
of the city In purchasing a site for
the landing field was reached at a.
mass meeting of local residents
recently. It is reported that an out-
‘side attorney, probably one from
Geeville, will be retained to repre-
sent the plaintiffs in the case.
Protest Warrant Issue
Exact information on the
grounds on which the injunction
is to be filed was lacking today.
The injunction will probably
‘cieen, however, that the warrants
}issued by the city to pay for the
| 100- -acre airport site were not 1&
sued legally.
The San Benito city commission
last fall decided to buy land and
furnish the sit for this airpor
emergency ianding field. The lan
is to be turned over to the de
ment of commerce, which will level
it, put it in good shape, put in
runways, and light the field for
night flying.
Contract Let Jan. 31
| Contract is to be let January 31
for improvement work on the port,
including levelling, and sodding it.
Awarding of, contract was post-
poned from Monday of this week,
and bids will be opened at Browns-
ville.
Four local men ere to bid on the
werk, J. E. Clark, W. O. Roselle,
H. B. Livingston and Joe G. Bal-
lingwar
| [
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29,
40
] |
WOMAN KILLED IN CRASH.
| Centerville, Ia, Jan. 27. — Mrs.
Florence Blaine, 53, of Mystic, was
hilled today when an automobile in
which she and her husband were
rain was struck by a Rock Island
iroad freight train at Sharon cross-
in’, 4 miles east ef Centerville.
| [
[
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8404.165484375,
1191.2580996094,
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],
[
186.2650604248,
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] | [
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] | 0 | 0_283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | 283,951,464 | front_page_20_99 | 791 | 791 | [
791
] |
|
283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
57,
56
] | Dangerous Rioting.
They All Stay.
Happiness Foundation,
Thanks for the Searchlight,
_RY ARTHUR BRISBANE-
| ' syndicate. 266.)
ODGE, Calif.—Vicious race riots in
} this state. Filipinos and white
men quarrelling, murderously. Warn
against Asiatic immigration, from
whatever source. The riots, starting
in the Pajaro Valley, near Watsonville,
spread for fifty miles. Fermin Lovera,
a 22-year-old Filipino, was shot to
death. Alfred Johnson, white youth,
Filipinos have been imported in con-
siderable numbers to work on fruit
and vegetable farms. That caused
trouble, aggravated by the Filipinos
hiring white girls to entertain them
in their so-called club-houses. Seventy
Filipinos spent the night in the city
pall for protection.
00 0
j.egardiess of opinions as to human
rents, international brotherhood, etc.,
the fact is that white men, in a white
-ountry, will not allow their jobs or
‘heir women to be taken by asiatics
and common sense forbids asiatic im-
migration of laborers, from our own
Acatic islands, or any other source.
©)
7OU cannot be in this state without
\ talking of California. No Cali-
fornian will permit it. And those not
o ginally Californian are more des-
perately enthusiastic than the native
hoon. In other parts of the country.
‘ou hear occasionally, plans for mov-
ing to another part of the country,
some other state.
Never here. Fathers and mothers
from the east and miadle west tell
ou “even if we wanted to move, our
-pildren would not let us. You cannot
‘alk to them of any other part of the
world.” As for Swasey, newspaper
rian who has lived everwhere, he says
only wonder is that everybody
joes not come here. They would if
they know about it.”
000
RESIDENT of this Mojave desert
J% valley has among his books “Sixty
True Short Stories” by Bob Davis. One
tells of a tablet in a ruined Chinese
ternple, with inscriptions on both sides.
One reads “Health, Love, Food, Lib-
erty, Shelter, Labor. The foundations
of all human happiness.”
oo;°o
The old Chinese omitted the most
important word AMBITION. Without
that, life means nothing—is wothout
light or purpose—has no reason for
being.
The other inscription reads “Ruler,
Priest, Officer, Merchant, Prisoner,
Pauper. All are the same man.” Also
inaccurate. Huxley says the difference
between a low grade bushman and an
intellectually developed European, is
greater than the difference between
that savage and a blade of grass.
o 090
Some that the world calls failures,
are greatest among men, and some
called great are miserable failures.
But the real failure need not seek con-
solation in the theory that all men
are alike. They are as far apart as
Niagara Falls and a city gutter.
o © 3%
ee enforcement says let
there be light, and establishes a
2,.500,000-candle power searchlight on
the Buffalo Custom house at the foot
of a Hoist street, opposite the Bridge-
port, Ontario, liquor docks.
oe oo ©
The theory is that rum runners, now
load their boats, in broad daylight, for
any one to see. Searchlights will
‘imply enable them to work longer
10urs,
To enforce prohibition, you must.
create respect for the prohibition law.
Or failing that, make it a felony to
buy liquor. If you do that, and juries.
do net refuse to convict, you will dis-
irage the bootlegger trade.
o ¢ Oo
Me CARNERA, fram Italy, weight |
*ktwo hundred and sixty nine
pounds, knocked out “Big Boy” Peter- |
of Minneapolis, in one round. A
tory of the Latin over the Nordic |
only the Nordic race weighed
xty pounds less than the Latin.
Nearly seven feet high, indifferent
pain, powerful beyond ordinary un-
-rstanding, the huge Italian, if prop: |
’ guided and not swindled, two big
ifs,’ in prize fighting, should go his |
‘vy unbeaten. If he could be trained |
three months by his African broth-
Peter Jackson, he would be invinc-
probably.
‘ut youthful ambition will kindly |
ember, for the hundredth time,
it in the zoo, so short he would |
irdly reach to Carnera’s waist, there
-cs Carnera’s alleged cousin. That
hundred and twenty pound cousin,
'amed Mr. Ourangoutang, would pur-
« Mr. Carnera around the ring, and
‘rive him out ef it, happy to escape. |
\nd his half brother Mr. Gorilla would
| [
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[
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|
283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
16,
6
] | Wilhelm II, Former
Kaiser, Spends 71st
Birthday Quietl)
| By The Assoctated Press.
Doorn, Holland, Jan. 27.—Wilhelm
II, former emperor of Germany spent
his seventy-first birthday in unusually
quiet circumstances today. It was
the simplest celebration since he took
refuge in Holland after the collapse
of the Hoenzollern dynasty.
Divine services in the morning, a
formal dinner at noon, and an educa-
tional movie in the evening offered the
cnly outward evidence that Wilhelm
thought of his birthday as a formal
occasion.
Only three Hohenzoliern princes
were present, former Crown Prince
;and Crown Princess Adalbert and his
| wife and Prince August. The _ ex-
kaiser’s only daughter, Victoria Loulse
was prevented from attending by the
illness of her children.
The mourning of the imperial family
for the late Prince Henry of Prussia,
brother and intimate advisor of Wil-
helm, and for Frau Victoria Subkoff,
the ex-kaiser’s sister, who married a
Russian dancer, contributed to mak-
ing the birthday observances informal
and inconspicuous.
|
| [
[
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[
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|
283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
31,
7,
19
] | Believe Faulty Altimete:
Caused Crash Of
ill-fated Ship
RESCUE PILOTS
FIND WRECKAGE
OF THEIR PLANE
| Nome, Alaska, Jan. 27.—-Searchers
today dug into tightly packed snow
_and ice around the wreckage of an
airplane 90 miles southeast of North
Cape, Siberia, in their quest for Carl
_ Ben Ejijelson and Earl Borland, Am-
Pra aviators missing since Nov. 9
ast.
Four men taken to the scene yes-
terday from the ice-locked trading
ship Nanuk in planes piloted by Joe
Crosson and Harold Gillam, explored
the area around the wreckage in the
belief that Eielson and Borland were
flung out to instant death when their
ship crashed in a blinding snow
storm Nov. 9 or were under wreck-
age of gasoline cases near the cabin.
Two dog teams driven by natives
were on their way to the wreck from
North Cape.
_ Meanwhile the conviction was grow-
ing here that a faulty altimeter upon
which Eielson was forced to rely
when the snow storm wiped out all
visibility was in part to blame for the
crash.
Pilot Joe Crosson eported upon
his return from the wreckage yester-
day that the altimeter registered 1,000
feet. Inasmuch as the plane crashed
on tundra almost at sea level, the
instrument's error may have misled
the pilot.
Piane Traveling Fast
Proof that the plane was traveling ;
at a high rate of speed was found by |
Crosson in the fact that the throttle
of the ship was wide open. The man-
ner in which the metal propeller was
wrapped around the motor of the |
plane testified to the terrible impact
with which the ship struck the reson
earth.
Crosson reported hat Eielson ont |
dently was attempting to make a|
banked turn when he struck.
| “His right wing cart-wheeled,” Cros- |
son said “the fuselage broke in two.
just behind the baggage compartment |
and ianded on its side. The on 4
shot out a distance of 100 feet. The |
right wing dropped off about 200 feet |
from the fuselage.”
| Crosson brought back the clock of |
the wrecked plane, which had stopped
at 3:10 p. m. teller time (6:10 Pacific
coast time). This would fix the time
af tha erach af alhinewset Arnelle |
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|
283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
42,
54
] | <I AYER TO GRAND JURY
| V7 Ae ASSOC te Ft ee-
West Palm Beach, Fla, Jan. 27.—
George W. Moore, alleged bootlegger,
charged with the murder of two pro-
hibition agents during an attempted
| [
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[
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] | [
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795
] |
|
283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
10,
4,
36
] | BEGIN TRIAL OF
SIX CONVICTS
Prisoners Must Answer Charge
of Murder for Killing ‘Chief
Devil’ of Recent Auburn Riot
| By The Aesociated Press.
Auburn, N. Y., Jan. 27.-Handcuffed
to alert guards, six Auburn convicts
went on trial today on joint charges
of first degree murder, in the killing
of Henry Sullivan, another convict
called the “Chief Devil” of the prison
riot of December 11 last year.
Those standing trial are Leo Lewis
and William Force, Oneida county,
Claude Udwine, Albert Cassidy and
Frank Leagan, Erie county, O. and
Jesse Thomas, Cortland county.
*The prisoners were transferred from
the penal institution to the court room
‘under most elaborate safety precatu-
tions. Twenty-four guards and state
troops accompanied them. When the
convicts stepped from the prison en-
trance toward the three cars awaiting
them, wall guards with guns ready for
any eventuality stood looking down.
| Auburn city police stood guard
along the route. At the court house
further strict precautions were taken,
every.door being under surveillance
by a guard.
The prisoners watched the initial
work of pury selection with keen in-
terest. The room was jammed. Many
of the seats formerly reserved for
spectators had been removed to make
room for press tables.
Selection of a jury began promptly |
after Supreme Court Justice J. B. Cun-|
ningham, presiding, denied a motion
for separate trials. William Nuget.
farmer of Thoop, was the first juror
seated.
| [
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34,
0
] | State Senator Morgan
Cleveland’s New Head
| By The Assoctarec ress.
Cleveland, O., Jan. 27.-State Senator
Daniel E. Morgan of Cleveland was
elected city manager of Cleveland to-
night by the city council to fill the
position left vacant by the
Hopkins, head of the city govern-
ment for the six years the manager
form had been in use here, was dis-
missed and charged with failure to
fully investigate city land purchases
and with interferring with the offices
of council.
| [
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|
283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | /img2txt_pipeline/jpg/283951464-burlington-hawk-eye-Jan-28-1930-p-1.jpg | [
21,
23,
41
] | Will Rogers
Says—
THE 1930 JUGGERNAUT
| Special Radio to Tne Hawk-Fye.
ONDON, England, Jan. 27.-—
Delegates to ship-sinking
conference sunk as follows yes-
terday: Ambassador Hugh Gib-
son sunk a six-foot putt and
when Stimson almost sunk an
approach Dave Reed of the
Grundyville club, cne of his op-
ponents, almost sunk his Adam's
apple.
Senator Robinson, from the
persimmon and pawpaw coun-
try, making his first appearance
in slow company on English
greens, sunk his democratic
identity behind a check plaid suit
with knee breeches in happy dis-
cord. Dawes was the referee
and sunk over two cans full of
decomposed Carolina dry leaf
during the attempt at festivities.
It was a great day of relaxa-
tion after one solid week of do-
ing nothing but attempting to
pronounce the Japanese dele-
gate’s Wakatsuki's, name. This
week the agenda calls for the
pronunciation of the French
names. If our putting and our
driving hold out we are going
to be hard to beat in this con-
ference.
WILL RocERs.
P. S.—Mr. Morrow didn't con-
fer with ‘em; they didn't have
any boys’ clubs.
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27,
24
] | Manifesto Protests
Filipino’s Killing
| Manila, Jan. dh, strong mani-
festo protesting the death of Fermin
Tobera, Filipino, during the race riots
at Watsonville, Cal. was adopted at
a meeting tonight of leading educa-
tors, legislators and labor leaders.
The manifesto urged “a national
discipline and personal sacrifice on
the part of each and every Filipino at
this time of national humiliation.”
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