Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 92, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 29, 1927 Page: 1 of 10
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J
vol. xxvn
»rty ot
NO. 92
10 PAGES
MASS MEETING CALLED FOR
"--L>
lU-
F
A mass meeting will lie held in the municipal audito-
te and
4»»♦♦♦♦♦♦!I I I. M4t4444 494
>ur se-
OFFICER SLAIN
recom-
HUNTING FOR
see to
nr.
BOOTLEGGERS
ON BIG FOUR LINE
be thoroughly explained, as It will
• 1
Will
Mrs
row
my
■ 1
a
A
7
?very
Bomb II in fare in
n
then
uddle-
Clnclnnati
Charges
it ions,
rmilk,
Nnv.
oil
n
M
IN
-
M
Ji
I
fete
__Mr la
* 5?s
! ''3
SANTACLAUSTO
SPEND HOURS
IN DENTON
Bennett Duly to Be
Release^ nt Ornn
Are Ready to Testify In
Lilllendahl-Beach Trial
Factory Seeds of
Denton Stressed
by (). M. Curtis
THURSDAY NIGHT TO DISCUSS
GARMENT FACTORY PROJECT
Sixth Victim's
Body Found in
Arizona Mine
Child Watches
Over Bodies of
Parents 24 Hours
Bits of News From
Today’s Want Ads—
more out <
th
WILL ARRIVE HERE AT 3
O’CLOCK SATUR DAY
AND REMAIN FOR AF-
TERNOON AND EVE.
MUCH TESTIMONY
ON REMUS' SANITY
DAM PLAN PROMISES
BATTLE IN CONGRESS
j
'J
While police
sudden
over
daughter
bodies of
11
ASSOCIATED PKStXH HEKVICB
UNITED PRESS BEHVK E
uriz«d
r little
nhood
PARIS, Nov. 29—Th. release of
Bennett Dofv of Mississippi from
the French Foreign Legion will take
tU ; ;
OKLAHOMA CITY. Nov. 29
—At waa (eneraUj cenoeded al
the rapitot today following re-
fusal of, Dietrlet Judge Tom G.
Chambers to grant an Injunc-
tion against salaries and expen-
ses of the pronoxed session that
the Eleventh Oklahoma Legi.-
lature would meet in extraordi-
nary session i wreb from today.
nix raaen
of I
IB
I
IB
Nov. 29—
at
29
had
ol
wolves In thia country
have reported losses of
turkey*, sheep sin! pigs
.1
•4
TUAL
I-ong staple cotton MB
“*• • -F-■
'.’a
* ■
1 -
I' ■n*
Over 500 Thought
Dead in Floods
in Sorth Algeria
he had left for
Woods on a deer and
Police were inclined to
^8
* — —- - * 4^*44$*^ F'’""V W — •• .Ufc-
Insurgent House Leaders in
Oklahoma Deciding Strategy
in Plan to Convene House
-
•f -re-
0 CHARGED IN
DALLAS ROBBERY
$725 REPORTED IN
RED CROSS DRIVE
shot THREE local boys
GIVEN PLACES ON
T. C. DEBATE TEAM
MISTRIAL RESULTS
IN LIQUOR CASE
TEXAS TOWN
CONSTABLE
TO DEATH.
PROBING DEATH OF
MAN AT MARSHALL
arc not yet. under ar-
t last
A gun
who
and
Aff.'V the shooting. It had been flr-
W bur times but It Ls not known
whether the slayers used it to kill j
the officer or he fired it himself.
Willis
attack,
and
citizens at which the matter would
ment for labor Its State schools , pe thoroughly explained, as it will
attract families from all over the ' be necessary for a general stock
ONE KILLED AND 15
WF'-'
j
A verdict of not guilty wan
returned in the Richard Gould
Scase hy the jury which reported
at 2:30 Tuesday afternoon.
MARSHALL. Nov. 29— Ike Kil-
lingsworth, 54. prominent fanner
today Is being held in the Ham
son County Jail pending a-further
Investigation following the shoot
trip of his son. Roy KllllngswortJi
30. Monday afternoon in a ■boot-
ing affray near I/mgswnrth. No
charges have been filed, authorities
said.
I «■
Party want*
hatching eggs
breed.
UH
lie weather bureau is again pre-
pnit colder weather, notwith-
kding the continuation of num-
I teni|wrature. Partly cloudy and
pr is the forecast for East Tex-
tonight and Wednesday, while
■ to be fair and much colder
kVcst Texas. The maximum
berature here Monday aftec-
n was 78 degrees and the rnini-
n Tuesday morning was BO
------ a
urkey receipts are very light
1 and. in fact, buyer* are en-
raging the raisers to keep the
s on the farm for fattening a
more days. It is expected that
Ly buying will start within the
L few days for the Christmas
Ret and Indications are that a
er supply will be available than
I the Thanksgiving market..
VI ue
menu
■•rty
■T
♦re." Gjfl
I
.re ’i
■
e men r
but. Dallas officers left
I for Oklahoma, apparently for
purpose of apprehending the
Jed men who. local officers
have been kx-ated.
L in
7:1.1
Ji
SB”1
*»*r, ,
jw*
BEa0»y
of
” out 91 “
Blanchard Company of Gainesville Proposes
to Establish Plant in Denton If Stock of
Company la Purchased Here.
1
J
FOUR MEN HELD IN WEST
AFTER
IS *
START W*fc ON ’*WOLVES
BASTROP COI'NTV
BASTROP, Nov. 29.—A club h(u» «>l»ce at Oran. Algeria,
been organiaed here to start war «ai
Farmer!
chickens
according
King. A
n wolves st
la
fn the following statement O M
Curtis, chairman of the industrial
committee of the Chamber of
Commerce, stresses the importance
of manufacturing indu^riea to
Denton and urges attendance of all
citizens at the mass meeting to be
held here Thursday night to dis- |
cuss the Blanchard Manufacturing
Company's garment factory pro-
ject
"One of the. most pressing needs
of the town of Denton is employ-
Its State schools
vtesatn
Albert »
SB-
% I
■K'*
Roomin tjr
DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
DENTON, TEXAS, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 29. 1927
Secretary’s Children Must “Help Out’’
OKLAHOMA CITY. Nov 29—In-
surgent House leaders cf the Osla-
homa Legislature were deciding to-
day final strategy in their maneu-
vers to convene an investigating
and possible Impeachment session
of the State solons one week hence.
Claiming to be strengthened by
an informal opinion of Attorney
General Edwin Dabney upholding
the "inherent* right” of the Legis-
lature to convene upon its own in-
itiative for investigatior. purposes,
the tnsmrectiontsts prodalm.-d
"last barriers had been swept away”
to their convening Dec. 6.
At the same time forces of Gov-
ernor Henry S. Johnston, whose
less than one* year in office the in-
surgents plan to review, were pre-
paring to carry to the State Su-
preme Court their efforts to en-
join salaries and funds necessary to
the extraordinary assembly
Such an Injunction was denied
by District Judge T. G Chambers
here late yesterday when he held
that the session not. yet having
met there was nothing before the
court, to enjoin He did not undcr-
upon the validity of
land Indians. Alva Bradley Pml-
dent of the Club asid last night at
a banquet to Clevr*"^--------
ora, Kvana was g
visa preddeht.
The jury which heard the case of
Lew Richie in District Court here
Monday was unable to agree and
was discharged after several hours
of deliberation. This is the second
mistrial for Richie.
The case of Richard Gould,
charged with theft, over the valir
of »60. was expected to go to the
Jury Tuesday afternoon Practically
all of the testimony in the case was
offered during the morning and the
charge was expected to be read to
the Jury early in the afternoon ses-
sion.
KAI FVtAN TO HOLD EXIIIFH
OF DAIRY CATTl.F. MONDAY
K AU EMAN. Nov 29—Dairy cows
In the vicinity of Kaufman will oe
exhibited at a nne-dny dairy show
to be held here Monday. Prises arc
offered for the best cows. The show
is given to create Interest tn the
dairy Industry which already hai
five cream stations in the county
LEGION WELL SHOT; SHOWN
SMAH AMOUNT OF GAS ,
MINERAL WELLS. Nov. 39.—
The American Legion oil well, be-
ing drilled by T G Shaw bf Foft
Worth was shot with 80 quarts of
nitroglycerin and mad? only <
slight showing nf gas. The well la
down 2 <!Mi feet tn the sand whtdfl
lias produced in neighboring wcllA
The proceeds of tne well were to
have been divided between the Fgrt‘
Wort li Leuion post and State Leg- _
ion department .
Ah hough he live* in one of Washington's
finest homes end is retarded as a millionaire.
Secretary of Labor JaflM J Davis believes
in teaching his children to -wash d|*hv* and
help with the housework The Becretary,
an immigrant boy. worked for years in the
steel mills of Pennsylvania The »ecretary,
Mrs Davis and their five children are p|c.
lured above. Left to right, the children are
Jane. Jewel, Jamea. Joan and Jean
FLOYDADA,
Lee Stegall, constable
Flamot, 30 miles northeast
of here, was shot and in-
stantly killed last night hy
alleged bootleggers. Four
men h^ve been arrested by
Sheriff Paul Stegall, brother
of the slain man. The men
were taken to Lubbock for
safekeeping.
Stegall is survived by a widow
and four children
Stegall liad been searching for a
party of bootleggers earlier In the
afternoon but had failed to locate
them. He was driving down the
main street of the little town when
four men jumped on the running
board of his rar and grappled with
him.
Several shots were fired and one
entered his head Just above the
Two Important Witnesses
The release has been hanging
fire for a week. The ministry of
war's instruction to Dotv’e colonM
was to muster him out of tte ser-
iiwf to
iford the AmericM oon-
"**■.' , ’v' ■
lies of Mun
I II oman Found Chicago I nahaled
House
♦ ORAN Atperia Nov 2ft ♦
♦ With every hour bringing fresh ♦
♦ tidings of disaster, ft was es- ♦
♦ timated today that a total loss ♦
♦ of life in th< floods which ♦
+ swept Northwestern Algeria ♦
+ would exceed 500 The catas- +
+ trophe Is the worst expert- ♦
♦ enced here in 50 years The ♦
♦ situation thvrouvhout the dis- +
♦ trict Is still grave The weath- +
+ er is bad 7 tic water, while re- ♦
+ ceding in some places, is ris- +
.♦ ing in others A torrential <1
♦ rainfall continues +
Baptist Conquest Campaign
Drive Will Open on Jan. 15
• DALLAS. Nov 29—Dates for the
cork-cried drive for the 1928 Con-
quest, Campaign to raise funds for
paying off debts on Texas Bap'is’
institutions, have been ret. accord-
ing to announcement by Dr F S
Oroner. general secretary of the
convention.
The entire force of 1.800 State,
district and aasociational organiz-
ers and affiliated workers, will get
under way Jan. 15 and will contin-
ue without. in'erruption itnitl
March 15. Contributions and sub-
scriptions will be received at any
time before or after this campaign.
Groner announced.
The goal set for 1928 Is one and
one half million, which Mficiabj
believe may be reached with nor-
mal economic conditions prevail-
ing in Texan. . (
PrgcHcaUy all pledge, g*
1927 campaign have been collect-
And «n ■ IM BUY fill (
rium Thursday evening to discuss a garment factory for
Denton, the call tor the meeting having been issued at a
conference of the industrial tfbmniittee of the Chamber of
Commerce and others with Manager Blanchard of thfl
Blanchard Manufacturing Company of Gainesville here
Monday afternoon. .
vet turned
I ienton
I may be around $550.
r "
Ffff? ..... .
Fg
pROUND
ABOUT
|’» TOWN''
ptm W Million, president of tiie
ton County Poultry AMOciaUon.
er whose auspices the Denton
Itry Show bt to be held here
t week, Tuesday started soliclt-
subscriptlons from local busl-
k houses for the premium list for
■hew. Over $400 ip cash awards
I offered in addition to the tarq-
number of special premiums
offered here Tiie show starts
iday morning and continues
High Thursday, exhibits to be
ted in the William Building
East Hickory Street.
subscription on Uw paxt of tha
citizenship if the project la put*
over, it was pointed out.
Denton has long been interested
in securing more industrial enter**-
prises, Curtis pointed out. and add-' ,
ed that, the only way to secure I
enterprises is to Invest money
them, as is done in Sherman ___
otiier cites where new factoreisare
being secured and where the ih*q
iustrinl concerns are being suc-
cessfully operated. >«•*
Company Now Operating
The Blanchard company has been
successfully operating for - ugg '.‘JIM
time, as has the Pool Manufaa^i
ing Coinpenv of Sherman, altho„ -
not w> a» Ww a—!■ as tire-lptre*-
ter Rtnoe the Blanehard cbmimbp
alreadv has its goods on the mar-
ket an<f traveling salesmen tn the '
field, the output of a Denton plant
should be di snored of through the
same agenev without the costly pro-
cess of building up a trade. It was
pointed out.
All Danton people are urged by
tl e committee to attend the meet-
ing Thursday night, where the'
matter wit! be discussed thoroughly
and any questions answered that
might .' r>.'.e in the minds of proe-
pective investors. No bonus would
be ask ’d under the proposition
made bv Blanchard, into--*;--bear-
ing stock in the company being of-
f’Tcd lor sale
,_____________________________________________
Onlv Capital .Asked
"For this $50,000 our people will
be issued 7 per cent cumulative
preferred stock secured by the as-
sets of Ixrth plants in case of liqui-
dation This proposition is a good
one for the town of Denton for this
reason In nnv business there are
two prime factors necessary ahso-
1'itelv (or success. First, proper
’’lamu’cment. which comes only
(tom experience, and second suffl-
eion' capital for ltis>opcrntion Both
must l>< present from some source
u o'her In this case we have the
opportunity to get a business wo
or<’t\ need by putting up the cap-
ital. the experience coming from
elsewhere And with this experience
com* a management we can de-
pend u|x>n for it is making a splen-
did success of Its present business.
can get this plant it will
<ime benefit to every prop-
owner and every citizen of
Dor ton and it is therefore one in
whb li every citizen should be Inter-
ested mid everyone is invited to
tiint out at the mass meeting in the
citv IihII auditorium at 7 o’clock
Thursday evening."
BILLY EVANS GENERAL |tAN-
AGER OF INDIANS U
CLEVELAND. Ohio, Nov 29-
Ltague umpire, baa been appoint
’, Sf the Cleve-
Presi-
SUPERIQR. Ariz. Nov 29 -One
miner still was missing tn the w<>rk-
ings of the Magna copper mine
here today as helmeted rescue
crew's continued their search of the
mine
The body of the sixth victim of
fire tliat raged through the work-
ings Thursday was found shortly
before midnight.
IS INJUNCTION
GAINST NEW TAXI
REGULATION HERE
__
WASHINGTON. Nov 29.—A
mammoth dam in deep Boulder
Canyon on the Colorado river in
Arizona to stem the waters of that
mad rushing stream; a power gen-
erating plant there to furnish elec-
tricity for cities of Southern Cal-
ifornia; a big Irrigation canal be-
low to water the thirsty valleys of
the southwest into garden spots ts
the vision conjured by proponents
of the Johnson-Swing Boulder Can-
yon dam bill
This measure Ls expected to fur-
nish one of the bitterest legislative
batles of the century in the session
of congress which opens Dec 5
Senator Hiram Johnson. tRep.i,
Cal., and colorful orator who ma-
neuvered his measure during a
filibuster tn the last session has an-
nounced he will press it to a vote
if possible before congress has been
sit Ung long
♦ CANTON. Ohio. Nov 29— ♦
♦ Watched over by their 4- ♦
♦ year-old daughter for 24 ♦
♦ hours, tiie bodies of John ♦
♦ Mann ^0, and his wife. An- ♦
♦ nette. 24. were found last night ♦
♦ by a friend who called at their ♦
♦ home The small girl told po- ♦
♦ lice she was sleeping with her +
♦ mother when the father en- ♦
♦ tered tire room and fired two ♦
♦ shots. Mann had been ill for ♦
♦ several months Mrs Mann ♦
♦ recently field 'tilt for divorce ♦
♦ but withdrew It ♦
31
kart Texas; Tonight partly
My, colder In northwest;
bdnoMlay partly cloudy, .old-
|ln wort and north.
idi tice detailing a
; dity was loose.)
Remus, accused of the murder ol
I.is wifi, Imogene, was prepared to
summon literally scores of witness-
es to describe her as having been
faithless. He won tiie right to do so
w!ci lodge Chester R Shook rut
rd the defense could introduce tes-
tmiony on circumstances that
have impaired Rr mils’ mind
Between the time he was direct-
ing an enormous bootleg business
and the time he shot iii. wife Re-
mus became insane, he asserts and
adds that foremost in the breaking
down ot his mind was the conduct
cf the woman who once to 1.1m
was "my beautiful Imogene. ’
The triangle was formed, Remus
says with the addition of Franklin
L Dodge Jr. into what ,vas once aft
example of happy domesticity.
Dodge the thick necked, ponder-
ously built former operative of the
Department of Justice, met Imo-
gene Remus and then, runs the de-
fense contention Remus became
the injured party.
Already the name of Dodge has
appeared so frequently in the case
tl.iit from one standpoint he is the
def* odant fn the rase
Dodge, who is in
awaiting call as a rebuttal witness,
lias denied all of Remus' charges
Hi* friendship with Mrs Remus was
plutonic, he has said and he lias
offered to prove that on many of
the occasions he was allegedly with
her. as sworn to in defense depo-
sitions. he was in other cities.
ROMAN STARTS LONG SEN-
TENCE FOR FRAUD
SALINAS. Cal.. Nov 29—Mrs
Genevieve M. Paddleford, divorced
wife of a California oil mllltonftlre
started a sentence of one to 14
years in San Qur”' - —- * —
on a charee qf 4
tictoe of cww
KJRANCE FLIGHT IS POST-
PONED
k FRANCISco Nov
I of the endurance flight of the
rr monoplane Southern Cross
been postponed until Wcdnes-
It was announced loday follGW.
aUure to complete load teats.
■
< - --
177 Small Boats
Struck by Storm
in Caspian Sfia
MOSCOW Nnv 29—Buffeted by
high winds amid ice blocks 177
small vessels, with crews totaling
about 500, wear isolated today tn a
terrific storm in the Caspian Sea,
and grave fear was felt for them.
Nine i>ersons perished tn the
wreck of a small private boat.
Tiie boats unaccounted, ice block-
ed in the open sea. all belong to ..
tiie Soviet Government or to Rus-
sian Cooperative trading organiea-
t ions
They Inch de 100 vessels of the
State Shipping Trust., with 400
men. 14 fishing beats and 42 men;
s< ven motor boats, eleven pontoons
and many ethers enlLsted.
DAYTON. Ohio. Nov 2!» —One
| man was killed and 15 persons were
injured, some seriously, when a
Big Four passenger train, train,
the Ohio Hpecial, New York to
Cincinnati, and a Big Four freight
train collided at a Street crossing
thLs morning Tire diner and four
Pullmans of tiie passenger train
were derailed
Tiie industrial committee, ot
which O M Curtis is chairman,
has Been investigating manufac-
turing projects during the year and
has been discussing the matter ot
a garment factory here with the
Blanchard company for some time.
Proposal Submitted
A proposal was submitted by
Blanchard at Tuesday afternoon's
meeting. $50,000 subscription in
preferred stock being suggested for
the establishment of a garment fac-
tory here which would be operated
in connection with the Gainesville
project, of which M. A. Joy of
Dallas is one of the backers.
Those present at the conference
; Monday were favorably Impressed
j with the proposal and it was deem-
ed best to call a mass meeting of
iton Police
Bge Gunfight
' ith Two Blacks
which ftows
to conserve
wafers for irrigation development
end for water supnlv to cities and
<44 create hydro-electric power
Ashiirrt believes that the dam
ehonld be huilf at another «We
further no the river re th'**' Arizo-
na could reclaim g_..
re w* «.**«
'.t
• ’'iii
■ J
?'■ A . ' Sr——" .
tr.ke to rule
the session
Further, the Inquisitors claimed,
there was already available to them
safe from injunction tactics of op-
posing forces, approximately $97-
(•00 in legislative funds appropri-
ated for salaries and expenses in
the last, regular session
p injunction to pr<vci.t the
of Denton trim r'ltoriing the
city ordinance prohibiting taxi
krs from soliciting businc s. on |
public streets was secure.I in j
rict Court here Monday a'rer-
■ after City Marshal Jo* Young
filed charges against Wayne
man. who is making a te ,t case
he ordinance
bo writs of habeas corpus, one
County Com' and one m Dis-
Count, also were sworn out |
huae ilie apjx’arai.'e in Co..nty
ft Wednesday ot Young and
man for a (rearing Wednesday
B the District Court writ is re-
kble in District Court Dec. 2
h a hearing will be? held on the
ms corpus and injunc-lon writs
Ashurat To Renew Fight
Senator Ashurst. <Dem » Arizo-
no. who sjreke against the measure
until his voice became a u hisper.
has announced that he will never
let. the measure go through as long
as he Is able to raise ills voice
t> ralnst it. He feels that his State
is not getting hill share of the
benefits from the project which lies
wholly within its boundaries
A majority of both houses is tin ■
cierstood to be in favor of the bill
and It will pass' If it can lx- brought
to a vote. An organized filibuster
of some proportions may hold up
a vote.
Johnson’s people charge that the
so-called power trust is attempting
to defeat the measure They are
unwilling to accept the compromise
ofler of some which would provide
| for construction of a small dam in
the river which would furnish no
electric powFr and offer only flood
protection to the residents of the
Imperial Valley
The Johnaon-Hwing bill antici-
pates expenditure of <1.50.000.Ml
for the protect; $41.500 000 for con-
struction of the dam. $31000 000
to build a. canal for Irrigation and
$31,500,000 for construction of a
ix>wer plant to furnish cheap elec-
t ricity.
Farrewe of Measure
Purposes of the measure as out-
lined bv fta author are < D to elim-
inate the dancer of floods tn the
rich Imperial Valiev which is too to
350 feet Mow the bed of the river
and without * drainage outlet; (2)
to change the present system
wherebv valley farmers get their
water from a canal
through Mexico: <3t
CHICAGO Nov 29
pondered over the sudden and
mvstenous depaitute ot "Scarface
Al" Capone, gangster leader on a
"hunting trip bomb warfare for
(ontrol of the ci’vs vice continued
unabated.
The two newest explosions were
In a restaurant and soft drink par-
lor. bo ll said to be owned by Jack
Zuta. one of Cafxtne's minor ene-
mies and rivals 'I he bombs did lit-
tle damage and police were inclin-
ed to regard them as a warning.
Meanwhile, the suddent depar-
ture of Ca]x>ne, also known as Al
I down, overlord of Chicago gamb-
ling had ixilice perplexed. Friends
of Capone said tits life had been
threatened recently, and that, fear-
ing tor tiis safetv
toe North
bear hunt
I elieve I he unprecedented absence
of Capone during wartimes presag-
ed a new outburst.
CINCINNATI. Ohio. Nov
All levees curbing leticvnie
crumbled today in the trial
George Remur and a torrent of v-
charge of pi 1 -
»n, one of whom was white-.
Ps of shots were fired Tear
M were used. One negro was
luied seriouxlv
ke siege threw a thickly settled
let inhabitat<xi largely bv nc-
I into an uproar Tin- ]*>lice
unable to explain ttie cause
be trouble which started at an
Ught drinking party.
Three Denton students won
places on the Teachers College de-
bate teams in the try-outs for men
debaters at the college Monday
ev< r mg
Those from Denton who placed
on the team are E L Majors.
Noms Hlet.t and Hugh Masters.
Tom B Hyder. Lewisville. Emmett
rant. Kauffman ana Oecu La-
(irone. Logansport, La. are the
three other students who made
the men s team.
Ross Compton, debate coach, said
he probably would postpone the
girls' trials until a week from Fri-
day as another girl had entered the
contest and would require addi-
tional time ,for preparation.
Compton said tire schedule for
debates would be completed as soon
as possible.
l)8TON. Mass Nov 29
e between 80 policemen
iged a south end house
pur Inhabitants for hours end
at davbreak today when riot
Ids stormed tiie building and
MAYS LANDING. N J., Nov 29
The “you hoo witness" and at
least one of th? "State's mystery
witnesses," were here today to add
their testimony to tire lengthen'ng
chain of circumstances designed to
convince! a Jury that Mrs. Margaret
LUllendahl and Willis Beach should
go to the electric chair for the
murder of Dr William LUliendahl
Both these witnesses were in th*
vicinity of the swamp road Sept. 15
when Dr Lllliendahl was shot
wlille seated tn his automobile
Both connect Dr Lilllendahl s
neighbor and alleged rival for the
l ean of Mrs. Lillicndahl with the
crime Prosecutor S. Cameron Hin-
kle believes.
Mrs Anne Cavallier will tell of
picking berries nearby and of heat-
ing "yoo hoos" wheih State detec-
tives think was a signal between
Mrs. LilliendaJil and Beach.
George Sanderson of Sydney.
Ohio, the “man from Moline, Ill
who was driving by the murder
lane when a man dashed out and
drove rapidly toward Hammonton
in a car Sanderson got a good look
nt the man. He will be given a
chance to say whether it was Bearn
Mrs. Lllliendahl was In high
spirits last night after the first day
of the trial
While Mrs Lillicndahl waved to
passersby through the bars of the
.tail window after court,
Beach suffered a heart
complaining of suffocation
pains.
State In order tliat their younger
members may have the benefits of
these schools and it develops too j
often that many of these families !
must leave because of a lack of
employment. In our various get to-
gether meetings we have recognised
this distressing condition and va-
rious means have been suggested
for its correction. One of the most
logical and businesslike has been
that of encouraging manufactur-
ing
Depends on Local Capital
"Too often we gel the idea that
when a town need*, say, a factory,
the way to go about getting one
is to go aai naw here and find some
man or men with the experience
and capital necessary for the oper-
ation of one and prevail on him or
them to invest that capital and ex-
perience In your town. That would
be nice if it could he done but
usually It cannot Usually It hap-
pens that when a town wants
factory that its citizens have to
nut. up money necessary. And that
is what the citizens are going to
do now I believe
"Here is the situation. A textile
factory' fn a tovta near us has
been in business two years and is
successfully operating the pWnt
Their sales force is selling more
goods than they can manufacture
in their present plant and they are
confronted with the necessity of
its enlargement or opening a branch
plan: I i order to tap a new labor
s**i ply hey prefer to do ;he latter
cere Tliev put n capital of $50,009
into their present plant which em-
ploys about 100 people, mostly wo-
men Tliev ask us io put In a like
amount here and the^ will install
a simitar plant, here wdilch will be
operated as a branch of their pres-
ent plant.
have
for
i cca'ion Christmas mere! an-
is apix aring in the show wln-
■ Ui'l cares and by Saturday a
dcpl.iy of Christmas articles
- ■
[PERIOD Wis. Nov. 29 The
of Julia Salmi 23. of Forbes.
L and Christ Olson. 25. be-
ll to be from D<‘troit, were
8 today tn the girl's room in
fining house, a revolver was
by tiie bodies Police believe
man killed the gn] and
himself No motne oilier than
usy could be advanred. ihey
CMW of
Bos rd I ng house for boys
girls wanted. ,
Six room bouse, gangs, co
lot Hli'l barn fpr rant.
Suburban boms. tost
plated, five rooms and
two poultry houses, two
of land
Ewre with lambs foe i
ILLAS, Nov 29. Charges ot
pry with firearms were on file
k against Chef Fowler and
Long in connection with the
pry here on Nov 17 of the East
id Avenue State Bank of $2,-
Ovcr $725 has been reported
collected in tiie six towns of Deli- *7"** '■■'
r-.au.gy that have made report. re*.olver fou?d
h> Jnr< Christel, treasurer of U*
RAd Cfosr, RoH Call fn Denton
County Christal said 'Diesday No
rejxut.s have tx-en received from
"tlier places.
In five of the towns the sub-
scriptions exceeded tile quotas set.
but the amount subscribed in ex-
cc'-s of the quota has not been re-
ported Christal said Towns which
out two negroes and two ' have turned in reports on the drive,
winch was conducted during the
week preceding Thanksgiving, are
Pilot Pom’ with a quota of $75:
Sanger. $50; D'>nton. $500; Krum.
$50. Pondcj". $25; Justin, /whose
I quota wa.s $50, raised $’4
Some ot the committees in Den
I ton have not vet turned in their
i re|x>ri.s. and Denton contribution
Santa < Ians will arrive in
Denton at 3 o’clock Satnr-
iliiy atteriioon, the time of
arrival having been advanc-
ed three hours to permit
I town visitors to
attend the opening of the
early Christmas shopping
i'ampaign, I'.arl Mann, secre-
tary ot tJie lb tail Merchants’
Association, said 'Fuesday
morning.
Mann and that a number ol cut-
cl-toxn childien v.i.siieu to form a
| part <.f ttie tn, i*ti:i d .-mwi to San-
ta ( laus and that it ti e jrarty were
staged at G o. kw k as had b< en
planrad. it would lx- ini|x>ssibie fori
Un’ vi.'itnii' - tuldri n to take par;
To Spend Attemoon Here
'So tl,” committee in charge of
tu i angenx rits decided to have 8an-
I ta arrive at 3 .,'<■]<>< k Saturday M
I ternoon, hi said "Santa will b-
down town all afternoon and will
return to tlm business section tiat-
mdav evening to visit all the
stores."
| Tiie electric light decorations to
L” placid mi th<- court square are
tn be completed W< dnesday ana
w.ll tie pm up < it her Thursday or
Friday .Mann said
Merchants here already
[ ■ tart, d d' l ortiting their stores
I th.
dis.
dew ■
t'.l! dr ; >l.i v of
v ill be used in decorations.
W ire AHZO- umpire, uun
nrtl of its dM- m*i«m
the bill, h* con- “
000 acres
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Edwards, James L. & McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 92, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 29, 1927, newspaper, November 29, 1927; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1369923/m1/1/: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.