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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 4

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 Telephone 3-1111 Arizona Republic, Phoenix, Thursday Morning, July 2, 1936 Page Four Little Stories Of Phoenix Daily Life Wallace Calls Republican Farm Plank 'Contradictory1 Texas Floods Drown bcore (Continued From Fage One) 10 cars tumbled through a washed out trestle. Six Mexicans and three colored persons were drowned in the same Party Charter Is Criticized (Continued From One) trasting the Cleveland and Phila. delphia conventions as "'completely and entirely different. above all different in their choice of candidates." continued: Sees Victory Certain "It is indeed fortunate for tk nation that this was so. If, in short, the picture of the Republican oon.

vontion had been a duplicate of th convention which just closed la Philadelphia, then indeed America, might despair of restoring orderij and intelligent government the traditional process of a fr I elect ion." Asserting there was "no neejl Thiird.T. July 3. 1f 47th ar. So. 48 Published Kvrrj Morning and Sunday Arirnnii Publishing 120 North Ontrnl Avenue rhneni.

Arizona Suhwrlptlon RMm in Advance IVr Three, Si One In Cop Mo. Mm. Mo. Vmr Arizona .75 MOO 8 0O Ollt Of 4rona .10 fl.55 S3.S0 M.75 130 Entered second cla mnttrr. at the pott office (it Phoeni.

Arizona, under the art of March 3. 1879. BOYS riding bicvcles kept the juvenile detail of the rhoenix police department busv during June. A re- port released yesterday showed that out of is cases handled dutmg the month. were in connection with violation of a municipal ordinance concerning riding of bicycles.

Many of the violations were committed by boy.o rid.ng their vehicles on sidewalks or hanging onto motor veil iclrs. WHEN H. n. ramp failed to appear in Kast Phoenix rrfinrt Justice Point yesterday to face trial on a pea iis'inlnni'p charge, a bench warrant wa issued for his arrest. "For the West, however, the farm plank urges policies to bring about an adjustment of agriculture to meet the needs of domestic and foreign markets.

Every farmer knows that attaining such adjustments without any -adjustment programs merely means forcing farmers out of production by bankruptcy due to low prices. Promises Imports Exclusion "Tie Republican promises on the tariff are just as contradictory as those on production adjustment-Em- the rock-ribbed protectionists of the East, they contain the plain itoril ion agriculture IS when mmsj smt before the raging flood. Six others, downstream when the An He charged with having disturbed) DR PATTERSON, PmiS-the p.i,.eJune 21 of Tom Pharnt; yVsterdav was named bv Cov-and Hill Moore, special deputies, on the (board of optometry, succeeding Dr. MASON W. DAVIS pleaded guilty! Soiosth.

Phoenix, whose form doubt of the support that is bein accorded our party, re-creatad If eterday in justice court opera in a motor vehicle without an on- orator's licence June 4 on Central avenue. He was fined FIVE TRADE marks were reg-Henry Warhasse of tlie Arizona istered with the secretary of state Highway patrol cited Pa vis. yesterday. They were Ii Tub." NON SUPPORT charges! pending! James H. Beam Pistilhng Company: against Albert Hall, I.eo Tota and "Van Camp's." Van Camps, Haskell Jessup were dismissed ves- "Cap Sealed." Continental Can ferday in Kast Phoenix rrecincti Company; "Hydro Gas," Hvdro das Justice Court, either at the request! Company; and "Stokely," Stokeiyj of the complaining witnesses or be-' Brothers and Company, cause the complaining witnesses THE AIR Conditioning Kquip-could not be located.

merit Company of Thoenix was in- A r.OMPI iiNT yesterday by Pay N. Lindsay with malicious mischief1 was dismissed yesterday in Kast; Phoenix Precinct Justice Court at the request of th- complaining wit-! ness anil by consent if the county y's office James K. Iindsay. Ill': Smith Mth street, charged that the defendant destroved a garage door at his home. Ar I fc.

waiving preliminary hearing yesterday in Kast Phoenix Precinct Justice Court. Calvin lliiitz was bound over to Maricopa County Superior Court on a forgery charge and returned to jail in lieu of $1,000 bond. He is charged with having forged the name of A. S. Iewis, Cavecre k.

to a $30 check. Mrs. Ann Poulosf. Cave-creek, is the complain ing itness. J.

B. MALOTT, C.lobe attorney, again to be used as their tariff cats paw. "The farm plank promises the exclusion of imports 'of all livestock, dairy and agricultural products, substitutes therefor and derivations therefrom "And as if to clinch a policy of tariff exc lusionism. the Republican platform promises repeal of the reciprocal trade agreement act. The return of an unreasonable tariff would certainly mean destruction of western and southern agriculture, which depend on exports ami on domestic buying power, which is so close related to international trade." Tells Of Adjustment Of the Democratic platform.

Wallace said "a good many people will disagree XXX but they at least know what the administration stands for. XXX "Production adjustment within federal authority to support farm prices, commodity loans, soil conservation, aid to co-operatives, rural electrification, credit at low interest rates, and other activities which must be part of a well-rounded national program for agriculture have been actually carried on by this administration." Woman Is Held In Arson Case jniy 1. (AP Mrs. Ruth Esthe McConnell was or- de-red held to answer to Superior court todav on arson charges, and her husband, John F. Mc onnell, was released from the arson accusation at the preliminary hearing resulting from alleged acts of the- two people last May 14 on a homestead north of Tucson.

The hearing covered the alleged firing and burning of the house of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Hulsebus, pear Picture Rooks, following the alleged shooting of the Hulsebuses by Mrs. McConnell, climaxing a three-year fight for ownership of the homestead.

Harry O. Juliani deputy county attorney, represented the state. hile the McConnells were rep-; tesented by John L. Van Buskirk and Mrs. Rose Silver.

A. R. Harrod, special deputy. iCompania de Iuz Fuerza de Mexico, S. and subsidiaries refused to accede to the electric workers' demanels for higher wages and other changes in labor contracts replacing those just expired.

"KLUTCH" HOLDS FALSE TEETH TIGHT Klutch forms a comfort cushion; holds the plate so snug it can't rock, drop, chafe or "be played You ran eat and speak as well as you did with your own teeth. 25c and 60c a box at Drug Stores. Adv. with Mrs. Malott ami their da ugh-! vw- He ww convicted or re-ter, Jeannette, are registered at Ho-' rc-ivinc into his possession a stolen tel Adams automobile radio valued at WALTER ST.

CLAIR, I.os An-j BENJAMIN FUNK, 17 West geles representative of the Chicago, Holly street, returned to his home dramatically in the leveland con-vontion, the national chairman et. pressed certainty of victory la November election. Landon "Creates Unity" "With a reunited party, with realistic platform. with support daily increasing from all groups, of citizens, and with a candidate ofths caliber of Governor Indon," said, "we can enter this campaign with confidence. And let me d4 that the very unity which is em strength today is due in large meas.

ure to the character of our candi "Governor Indon has the genius for creating unity; he has the habit of achieving victory. Under his leadership we need not doubt th lg. sue, if we give to the party and the cause the same full measure of devotion they will receive from hinj." Students Aid Murdock TEMPE. Summer session tttt. dents of Arizona State Teachert college here met on the lawn of the borne of Pean and Mrr Johj R.

Murdock tonight organiiej Murdock-for-Congress Club. A watermelon feast followed a short business session. testified to a conversation with' Mrs. McConnell in the home whifh be was guarding, in which iht said. "These ioopie will never com bac he re.

P.efore they can do this I'll kill both, burn down tt house ami till up the wen. I Mrs. McConnell allegedly tompte-d to carry out this threat icvidencefl a. the homestead May ii. in wmcn me semises al 'egedly were shot by her and thi I home burned, the state contended.

PHONE 4-3139 "Johnnle-On-The-Spot. FIV1? POINTS in AM) FUEL CO. I FOR ii i A W. J. JAMIESON, state administrator of the Works Progress Administration, is expected to return to his office here today after examining projects and contacting sponsors in Southern Arizona.

DOUGLAS CHESTNUT, Tr.n East McKinley street, Mrs. Chestnut and their daughter left Texarkana. to for two weeks. R. N.

BALL, Phoenix field repre-1 sentative for the Federal Housing! Administration, will leave today nn an inspection trip to Ciiandl. r. Cool-; idge. Cast Grande and Tucson I EDWARD S. GLAVIS.

Washing-! ton. 1). C. personnel officer in the! engineering division of the Public! Works Administration, visile,) here: vesterdav with p-. PAUL H.

GASSER was program chairman at the weekly meeting of the Casey Club at noon yestetday; in the Arizona Club. Miss Mickey; Sullivan sang two numbers ami an 'educational motion picture was shown. TOWNSEND club meetings' scheduled at o'clock tonight No. It. 11th and Culver streets.

C. Anderson. speaker: No. 16 Bowles church: No. is.

East lake! park, and No. West Monroe street. A PICNIC will be held from noon to 4 p. m. Saturday on the east side of University park by the Madison Baptist Sun.

lav school. ANN BRACKEN, director of the social service department, Arizona State Board of Public Welfare, returned yesterday from a one-week business trip in Southern Arizona WILLIAM SNOW. in the Phoenix office, Ke-const met ion Finance Corporation, will go to Pn-scott tonight on business. S. A.

SPEAR, state director of the Nalioiial Emergency Council, returned last night from a one-week business trip in Northern Arizona. THOMAS J. ELLIOTT, Arizona director of the Federal Housing Ad-' ministration, returned sterday from business trip to Tucson 1 HOWARD S. REED, acting state1 Idircctor of the Public Works Ad-! ministration, returned last night' from Northrn Arizona where he' inspet't project and attended th' opening of teds. RAY GILBERT, Arizona .1, rector! iof the National pe-em ploynu-nt Service and the Arizona State Km-! ptoyment Service, returned jester-1 Idav from a business trip to BARNEY COHEN.

Phoemx busi-i ne.ss man. is visiting relatives in: Penver. olo. He will be about two weeks. gone A SERIES of Townsend club picnics in various parts of the state have been arranged for Saturday.

The are; Tempe Beach Col. C. H. Rutherford and John orbin. sf.ea' ers; Miami and Oh.be, C.

Anderson and C. M. Brim-hall speakers; Tucson and surrounding towns. J. Bolivar Sump-ter.

sreaker; Douglas. O. A. Ash speaker. W.

L. BARBER. 2517 North Seventh street, has been called to Oklahoma City by the serious illness of his mother. A PERMIT for the Central Arizona Light and Power Coinpanv to extend the I'linix natural gas line to servejthe tow of Chamber Hiprnvc( vesterdav I Maricopa County Board of visors. the uper- "OWING to the absence from the city of several members, the week-y meeting of the directors of the I hoen.x Chamber of Commerce ror toeiy M3S post unTii next Wednesdav chn oei oinciais announced.

Fleeing Bandit Car Kills Boy r.N CITr' Co" JljIv 1- f.Y H.oieci a canon mj mn tonight and killed year-old boy with his ear an an 11- un- successful attempt to escape. man no Harry Ri e. night police off. cer said gave the name i. X.

Truman. 28 vears nin vv ih.t. a 'ter was arrested as the robber he Abandoned his o.ica,.i..i,. city and varf'. ran into a nearby io the state prison here for scale.

The dead boy was the son of Rus sell Hundley, a guard at the prison. Bruce said the Andrews, deputy sheriff, prisoner nrobahlv would veoterdav visit relatives I na expired. The appointment is for and dates from ester- Pytle, Norma W. I.ytle and N. A.

Lytle. The company has a capital stock of fSO.Otifi. THE APPLICATION of M. A. Moody for authority to sell his natural gas service in Superior to the Natural Cap Service Company of Arizona will be heard July 22 by the corporation commission in Plu.enix.

ARTICLES of incorporation were filed yesterday by the Old Pueblo Ice Cream Company of Tucson. The company lias a capital stock of and was incorporated by K. T. Cusiek and John Lyons. CONVICTED after a trial in justice court ef receiving stolen property.

J. W. Jyile of Phoenix yesterday paid a $.1 fine imposed by Harry Wostfall. justice of the yesterday after having been ill in; a Phoenix hospital for three During the week-end he will leave for the coast, where he will rest for several weeks. Powers Rally! To Aid League (Continued From Page One) asserting it would shatter the league, international confidence and, hopes of making world peace ef-' fective.

i 5. Foreign ministers of Tinland. Norway. Sweden. the Netherlands.

Spain and Switzerland adopted a resolution asserting "the worsening international situation and cases in which there has been resort to force in recent years" created doubt in these countries "whether the conditions in which they assumed obligations under the covenant still exist to a satisfactory degree." 6. Tanama warned the assembly of "a streing current of opinion favoring the withdrawal of all I-atin-A merican states." Canada Supports Move 7. Canada, through Vincent! Massey, announced "there is no alternative but for Canada to support the discontinuance of sanctions." Ede, asserting sanctions had failed, said "only military action; could succeed" in amending the situation and this "could not be con-! sidered as a possibility." He promised France full co-oper-l ation "in rebuilding a league of au-i thority." The British foreign secretary suggested the question of league reform should be taken by the September session. up Nazi Aggression Hit He also disclosed conversations on Germany's denunciation of the; Locarno treaty, with or without I Italy, probably would be held in i Brussels July 20. Rv that time nor.

i I tonio Oonz.alcs nouse collapsed, were believed Crushed By Cars Young Tcague was crushed between two freight cars catapulted off the track at the trestle washout. Muddied in Antonio Conzales' home, a few hundred yards away from the train crash, were nine Mexicans. wateis finally swept the shack loose and all were carried away. Mrs. Jesus Carza and two children nnd three other members of the Gorzalcs family are missing.

Several miles downstream, the creek surged into the homes of I la yn os. colored, and Valdez. The Mexican's wife and three daughters and sons escaped but Valdez, and Ignacio and CSabino Hernandez were trapped. Damage Described Jack Blackwell. city editor of the Conzales Inquirer, estimated crop damage alone would mount to more than a million dollars.

County Judge Willis W. Ellison, Conzales county, said: "The damage to farm crops is tremendous. It will run over a million dollars." Sixteen persons er reported marooned atop buildings nnd in trees late in the day at Conzales. Motor boats were pres cd into service for cittemptcd rescues but could make no headway in the swift currents. Creek Half Mile Wide An airplane tour of the area show.d water standing in the fic ids as far nortji as Funis and roughly r.u miles south of Pallas.

Tiny figures were visible with boards and chains endeavoring to niove stalled a iltoinobileS cm so. I id country loads. A small cteik lo miles northca-t of Cameron. Milam county, was half-mile wide, flooding farmlands on either side. There, ravages of the torrential rams was plainly visibh.

In soiii" spots only fops of the cotton stalks ollld be seen. Bridges Inundated Th- San (iabriel river, west of its confluence with the little river, backed up ever thousands of acres of rich farmland. Many bridges were under water. Near pockdale, farms were a pic ture of desolation. miles west ef Lexington, a 'stream so small the map did not it, was a vast, dirty torrent, a ha If mile ide.

Now and then bodies of dead cattle could be seen where waters had receded. Near Conzales. for miles the rich farming country presented the appearance of a huge lake. In some low are as only fence posts marked the boundaries of cultivated fields. Steers Marooned The Cuadalupo river stretched two miles wide in places.

Twenty miles northeastward, two white-faced steers surveyed a rine world from sanctuary on a bridge which once spanned the San river. Henry Howell of San Marcos wni went the scene of the train wreck last night, said: "1 have lived lie re about IS years and never have sn the roads as covered with water as they were last night. 1 parked the car about a half mile from the wreck. About the wreck was a sheet of water. "Through flashes of lightning 1 saw the wreckage and water.

"I didn't see the body of the boy but the Mexican's body had been washed into a fence, where it hung. The body was unclaimed until today and remained at the spot until an ambulance came today and finally took it away. "Since the iu damage was done, vou can jump eiver the creek how-It's really just a babbling brook. "It must have been an awful wall of water that rolled down and rolled everything before it. because the creek is hardly a creek normally." Local Woman's Funeral Is Set Funeral services for Mrs.

Pora Sloan Short, who died Monelay the home of her daughter. Mrs. William R. Wells, North Kenmorr street, will fie held Monelay morning in Jefferson Citv-, her former home. Her body will be taken there tonight by Mrs.

Wells and her Ruth Mary Wells. Friends may call this morning at the (. M. Mans mortuary, where the body will Me in state, although no services wib be conducted here. Mrs.

Short was the wife of the late John T. Short, prominent con tractor and builder, who consfrnct- former mcmbeT of the Miasom i istafe legislature. Mrs. Short, who lias resided here for the past nine years, had been invalid several years. The Egyptian government has founded a glass manufacturing school.

MILLER'S SELECT The Best Milwaukee Beer NOW IN CANS SUPREME BRAND GROCERY eft MALT SYRUP SHOP 4it k. wash. i -boo Navy To Get 16-Inch Guns WASHINGTON. July Japan havin? failed to 1. (UP) agree to a limit of 14 inches i.n the rahhrr of battleship armament, the States probably will mount 16-inrh rifles on the two sea monsters it plans to build next year, Admiral "William H.

StandUv. chief of navai operations, indicated today. Standley told newspapermen that It was the considered opinion of the navy that lS-inch suns were better adapted to American naval needs than the smaller rifles. The admiral's- statement was in no sense a chaH'-nur- to It arose from the fact that if Toko had agreed to the H-mrh limit provided in the recently-sianr-d London naval treaty this count ry would have been bound to mount nothing larger on its ships. Japan withdrew the London deliberations last fall and declined to sisn the treaty eventually dratted by the L'mted State, Great Britain and France.

The treaty placed no limit on the number of ships a nation might build, but restricted the tonnase of each particular type battleships, aircraft carriers, cruiser, dest rovers and submarines. One section of it provided that suns on battleships Should not exceed 14 inches. However, the signatories agreed to this provision only on condition Japan would adhere. Tokyo has just announced that it would not. According to experts, there is very little difference in the rang'-Cf 14- and 16-inch guns.

Both carry about soii.fioo yards at maximum elevation. However, the lfi-lnch typo, beiause it is heavier, strikes with greater force and hence does more damage. At the present time, the United States has only three ships tin-newest three carrying 16-iiuh gune. They are the Colorado. West Virginia and Maryland.

The former two were completed in 19-3 and the latter in 1921. Kleven other Amcri- can battleships carry 14-inch guns i and one, the Arkansas, completed I in carries only 12-inch armament. It is regarded as obsolescent. -o Third Wife's Death Is Told (Continued From Page One) women for the purpose oi insuring them, and murdering them." Crash Recounted Rodgers, a bulky man in a loose- fitting coat and gray shirt, finally was permitted to testify on a rul- ing by Judge Charles W. Fricke.

He told of accompanying James to; the roadside where the barber, I driving through the state with hisi third wif en route to California, 1 claimed the car pitched off the em- bankment. In a gruff. Scotch accent, the! highway superintendent told of! climbing down with James to where the car was wedged against! a huge tooulder, and rinding Mrs. James laying head down the gravel bank. "Her head was all blood," he aid.

"I helped him lift her. I held her head and it was soft in back. I knew it had been mashed." In the car, he sai he found a small hammer, its rounded surface smeared with blood. On t'-ie highway above, Rodgers said he saw foot tracks on the roadside. Steps Retraced He said he retraced the steps 80 feet, and found marks where someone had stepped out of the car, circled into the road and followed beside the auto tire tracks to the point where the car plunged down the mile-high cliff, bringing up miraculously against 4.

boulder 150 feet down. The state contends James got out of the car, circled behind it and struck his wife on the head with a hammer, presumably turning the steering wheel so the car toppled off the edge of the road. Rogers said the front seat of the car was "a mess of blood." Clothes Unrumpled James told the superintendent, according to the latter's story, that he had stayed in the car ror about 30 feet, then managed to leap free. Rogers testified, however, that when James met him two miles up the road, his clothes were unrumpled and not noticeably marked with dust. Prior to the ruling on the Colorado testimony by which the state hopes to prove James murdered another wife "under circumstances almost exactly paralleling the murder of his last wife" William J.

Clark, shaggy-haired legal expert for the defense, threatened to "withdraw James' insanity plea" and depend solely on an appeal. "If that testimony introduced. I am confident we will get a reversal in a higher court," he told newspapermen. Praying Boys Are Flogged (Continued From Page One) a former matron at the school who went to investigate when "one very small boy" was slow in getting tip one morning." "His bleeding back had stuck to the bed clothes and it was covered with blood from wounds inflicted the night before for a small in fraction of the rules, the report said. "When she approached the superintendent in behalf of these little helpless children, her pleadings were denied and she was given to understand that he, the superintendent, was running that institution not she.

A farmer living near he school testified; the jurors said that he saw about SO boys hoeing corn, one in each row, and a guard with a long strap walking from row to row "snapping this strap on the little fellows' backs." One inmate told the grand Jury, the report said, that during a whipping he was "so badly cut across his back that the blood flowing from the gashes" was stopped "by the guards putting two bandfuls of sulphur on the open wound." Eight Are Killed In Strike Riot MEXICO, D. July persons were killed and 10 wounded today, said dispatches from Merida, Yucatan, when striking taxicab and omnibus drivers attacked guards at the governor's palac. who fired into the crowd of demonstrators. The governor, Fernando Lopez Contreras, was reported to have resigned. An account received here stated the strikers attacks tne guards in demanding Immediate settlement of their waUcfiut requests.

PKS MOI.NKS. July J- (AP) Henry A. Wallace, secretary of agriculture, criticized the Republican farm plank as contradictory, and lauded the Democratic as "clear and explicit" in a letter made public here today. The letter, written in response to an inouirv by Robert M. Clark, Mitchellville.

apple grower, said the "contradictions, paradoxes and half promises in the Republican! farm pl-'nk must be due to the strong influence still wielded by powerful ultra-conservative forces." Makes Five Criticisms "Viewed in the bald of what the Roosevelt administration lias already done," Wnllace said, "the Democra i farm plank is clear and explicit." Wallace criticized the Republican farm plank on five points, prefacing his analvsis with the assertion "first of ail the two platforms must, be studied not only in the light of what they promise farmers, but also in the light of what the two parties have actually done to help solve the problems confronting them in the critical period since the World war." Of the Republican plank he said: Control Exercised "Stripped of its essentials, the Republican farm plank makes conflicting commitments to eastern capital and western agriculture. "By its reference to the 'restrictive and coercive AAA' it denounces the principle of production adjustment. The monopolistic industrial groups which are back of the (American) Liberty League were eager that it should, despite the fact that they have exercised and still do exercise rigid control over their own production, Mexico Fears New Strikes MK.XICo. 1. July i.

f.P A tiio of new strikes or threatened strikes arose tonight to plague la-bor boards already worried over the prospert of an electric power stop-pate in "much of Central Mexico July 10 A general strike to tic iup virtually every activity in the state of Vera Cruz was de-creed by 'the power! ill Confederation of Workers of Mexico as an aftermath of months of labor troubles involving four textile factories at Orizaba. jTlie date for the strike has not 1 heen Set. The factories were declared under boycott. I Federal troops took up their stand about the British-American Pos Ks-Urellas mines at Kl Oro. state of I Mexico, here workers were idle- after the management, without explanation, shut down all its prop-(ert ic esterda y.

At Los Mochis. Sinaloa. thou- I sands of organized peasants and i workme staged a monster demonstration and tlireateneel a general strike to protest a labor board decision outlawing a walkout of cm-Iploves of the Redo and Company i hacienda. The electric power strike due to darken the federal district, the states e.f Mexico, Hidalgo and and parts of Puebla and Mi-choacan was called after the light and power company of Mexico ii c3 MESA HaiE341-OlHSN I RESULTS If you want to hire a maid, rent a room, lease your home, sell your furniture, get rid of your car, find a partner, ell your business, recover a lost dog, en gage a typist there is one sure, quick and ECONOMICAL way to do it. Use the PEPUBLIC and GAZETTE WANT ADS! Here's how easy it is: many is expected to have replied to'- robbing an inn operated by a British questionnaire on her sub- Minnihan on the fditute Pocarno proposals of Canon City of $3S, The annual meeting of the assem-'J My will be held September 20.

when hired 'u "ntl in it expects to receive the report of Kca ner wlm w' ridrng fXTn'f rrn Pitvinoff spoke of "preparations! As Nuce overtook the driver near elsewhere for aggression on a muchja golf course a crowd of golfers larger scale" as alarming Europe 'sathered at the scene of the arrest and mentioned "the actions he heard threats against statements of one European state (Truman and therefore rushed I. mi Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific railroad, was a visitor in local railroad offices vesterdav. BRUCE DUNCAN, employed by the state highway department at fiuncan. arrived in Phoenix yester day and will remain here through' today.

Mrs. Duncan is accompanying him. A MEETING under the auspices of the Maricopa County Co-operative Society will be held at o'clock tonight at the Starck citrus ranch, north of Scottsdale. William Hau-sen. state organizer, will speak.

MEMBERS of the rhoenix chap iter, American Association of Engi neers, will present a past presidents'; program at their luncheon meeting; in the American Kitchen at noon today. Two reels of motion pictures. showing ocean scenes will be offered as entertainment, C. C. Hus-kison.

president, said. MRS. L. R. MITCHELL, 507 East Moreland street, has returned from Evansville, where she accompanied the body of her husband, I K.

Mitchell, who died June 10 in Presbvterian hospital, Albuquerque, N. M. She will remain here a few days before returning to her former home in Indiana. WILLIAM C. FITCH, connected with the operating department of the Southern Pacific company at San Francisco, arrived in Phoenix yesterday and will remain here several da vs.

W. R. BOWSER, 3 years old. pleaded guilty in city court to reckless driving yesterday at lfith and Van Buren streets and paid a 125 fine imposed by W. O.

Glick, magistrate. He was taken into custody by Joe Keith and Jim Morris, citv motorcycle officers. FOLLOWING a visit here with her son and danghter-in-la Mr. and Mrs. N.

A. Thamsen, 12. West Broadway, Mrs. Pelia Thamsen left yesterday by airplane for her home i.i New York. C.

W. PETERSON, chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, accompanied by Mrs. Peterson, left yesterday to spend several davs at Prescott. ORGANIZATION of a Stanford- for-governor club will be completed at a meeting on the lawn of Bowles church at 8 o'clock tonight. Offi cers will be elected.

J. B. Weber will speak and musical entertainment will be presented. A $50 FINE was paid yesterday in municipal court by Bernice Mur-nett. 21 years old, who pleaded guilty to being the operator of a house of ill fame.

TRIAL of Lionel Pamire on a rape charge, scheduled todav in Maricopa County Superior Court yesterday was postponed until September 17. Convict's Wife Will Re-Marry NAPA, July 1. (UP) Florence Irene (Dolly) Gardner, who waited 15 years before she got an annulment freeing her from her convict husband, the spectacular Roy Gardner, today filed an intention to marry with Ralph Dollarhide, county clerk. The 'ntention papers named as her prospective husband William Parkes. 40 years old, attendant of the Napa state hospital where she is employed as a nurse.

The 39-year-old nurse stuck by the western desperado, one of the most daring on record, while he was in McNeil Island penitentiary, in Atlanta penitentiary and at Leavenworth, but her faith and loyalty began to waver 18 months ago when the government placed him in Alcatraz, the American Devil's Island. She obtained an annulment -Tune 8 from Superior Judge Percy King on the ground he withheld from her the information he was an ex-convict when he married her in Vallejo, in 1918. (Copyright, 1936, by United Press) -o Crash Injures Local Couple DELANO. July 1. (AP) Mr.

and Mrs. Jessie Abell, Phoenix, were Injured -in an automobile accident six miles north of here to day. Mrs. Abell suffered severe lacerations of her left foot, shock and bruises. Her husband escaped with bruises.

Both are in the Delano hospital. Officers reported their automobile was struck by a truck driven by Charles W. McCurley. ramento. The Abells were en route to Sac- The names of Mr.

and Mrs. Jessie Abell are not contained in either the. Phoenix city or telephone di rectories. Efforts in Phienix last night to locate relatives ef the in jured pair proved fruitless. Decide what you want to say in your ad.

They write it, leaving out unnecessary words but give complete information. wnose aggressive intentions leave! no room for doubt concerning its' preparations for aggression in more than one direction. This was generally interpreted as a reference to Germany. ITALY BACKS HECKLERS many important public buildings Missouri. Mr.

short also 'wj V- 1 nenind the.elothinz Telephone 3-1111 or stop at the Classified Department at 120 North Central Ave. The ad-taker will take down your ad and help you with any details you do not understand. charged with manslaughter as a re-la sult of the boy's death. prisoner's! eiuie i ne name ne sure -euic Mia, ana indicated he was employed by a petroleum ccmpany at Wichita. Local Elks To Make Convention Plans Plans for a rhfenix headquarters in lxs Angeles during the convention of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, which opens July 12.

will be made at a meeting of the Phoenix Elks lode at o'clock tonight. A. P. Harrington, exalted ruler, will head the Phoenix delegation. Plans also will be maele to receive the Elks' Good Will Tour Fleet crieuniea to stop overnight here Jiny 7.

Half a spent on million dollars is being roads in the Philippines. TWO-BITS will bcij a well Lunch at th EAGLE DRUG Central at Jefferso PIMPLES BUCK. KEA0S ITCHING ECZEMA RASHES FREE sample to A 1 an THESE Wonderful, penetration of helps banish ugly causes. Wonderful, Soap cleanses relieves and helps as even the first KnM trerrwhrnL That's all Now sit back and wait for RESULTS. They won't be long in coming nearly everybody reads the Want Ads.

r.cisi news men who hissed Halle Sela.scsie. The Italian minister at Berne Switzerland, was ordered to protest the arrests of the eight at the Geneva league of Nations assembly vesterdav. Official reaction to the demonstration they staged was that it was "a gesture of spontaneous reaction by a group of patriotic Italians to an offense against Italy Tafari's speech." (Italians now refer to the conquered "king of kings" merely as Signor A spokesman said: "It would be useless to say their gesture was prepared, inasmuch a its (spontaneous character dent. Official Rome feels that in a theater where applause is permitted there can be booing, also. The journalists were treated more roughly than their behavior warranted" The fact "Tafari" was allowed to speak, one official stated, was particularly irksome in that his address followed on the heels of an Italian memorandum, couched in moderate terms, carrying pledges of Italy' desire to co-operate In European peace.

Dino Alfieri, minister of press and propaganda, sent a personal tele gram of "salutes, sympathy and solidarity" for the news men, who. he said, "did not restrain their disdain for a grave offense to our country." re BBfonsncMs; Smt Stomach, natal Ma Sick Ha4ch rf CMDttM. WONDERFUL FOR SKM BLEMISHES thousands say, how the soothing CUTICUKA Soap and Ointment skin irritations due to external how this mildly medicated and soothes how the Ointment heal Wonderful, youH agree, application aids and comforts. Ointment 25c. Soma 25e.

Writ for a a fl fl POE7-MAM1 KCHE 3K PBBP "Cuticar," Dept. 11. HaieJen. (8m 1 SB 'im I.

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