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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 1

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Tucson, Arizona
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hchmm- Btife Sim" Sup WEATHER TUCSON: Maximum temperature yesterday, SS; minimum, 45; humidity, morning, 35, afternoon, 26. An Independent NEWSpaper Printing the News, Impartially VOL. 90 NO. 305 THIRTY-TWO PAGES TUCSON, ARIZONA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 1, 1931 THIRTY-TWO PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS, Mli ilMCf: wk Football Scores This Is Real High Spot in World of Science ELKS HOSPITAL DEDICATION TO BE HELD TODAY JUDD TO URGE WIFE TO TELL ALL TO POLICE FEDERAL JUDGE HOLDS ANSWER IN WATER WAR 4000 MEN WILL RETURN TO JOBS IN METAL MILLS 'i lk The "High Alpine Scientific Institute Jungfraujoch in the Bernese Oberland, Switzerland, is completed, and has been turned over for operation to the international scientific organizations, including the Rockefeller foundation in New York, which are its sponsors. This unique stronghold of science is located at an altitude of 11,340 feet, on Jungfraujoch, in the shadow of the famous Jungfrau.

Scientists can reach this spot without any physical exertion, for the trip, taking only three and one-half hours, is made entirely by elec CHIHUAHUA HAS NEW GOVERNOR Ortiz Resigns and Fierro Is on Way from Mexico City By Airplane EL PASO, Oct. 31. (IP) A Chihuahua City dispatch to the Times says Gov. Andres Ortiz of Chihuahua, Mexico, resigned today, and the resignation was accepted by President Ortiz Rubio. A fight to oust Ortiz has been waged by state politicians for several months.

FIERRO ON WAY TO TAKE GOVERNORSHIP MEXICO CITY, Oct. 31. (P) Colonel Roberto Fierro, chief of the Mexican civil aviation service, said tonight he would leave tomorrow morning by airplane for Chihuahua City to become governor of he state of Chihuahua, succeeding Governor Andres Ortiz, whose resignation, Fierro said, was accepted today by the state legislature. Fierro said he probably would take the oath of office Monday, as provisional governor by appointment of President Ortiz Rubio to fill the vacancy. A message from Chihuahua today said that nine of the twelve qualified legislators had joined the anti-Ortiz camp and had demanded the resignation of the governor, who long has been under fire.

Another message reported the exact reverse, said the fight was merely a row among the dozen legislators, and that the people in Chihuahua had no interest in the matter. Manuel Perez Trevino, president of the national revolutionary party, together with Colonel Fierro, conferred for more than an hour with General Plutarco E. Calles, minister of war and Mexico's "strong man." 8TATE University of Arizona Temps State Teachers College 19. Tucson Seconds 25; Nogales Seconds 0. Wlllcox 14 Tombstone 2.

Willcox Seconds Douglas Ses-onds 7 (tie). Flagstaff Freshmen 20; Phoenix Indian Training School 7. Marana 18; Tucson Indian Training school 0. Hayden 13; Globe 6. NATIONAL Ohio W'esleyan Ohio University 18.

Kenyon 44; Capital 0. Muskingum IB; Cincinnati 0. Western Reserve Oberlin 0. Georgetown Boston College 20. Clarkson Middlcbury 0.

Bates 30; Bowdoin 0. Coast Guard Academy Connecticut Aggies 0. Albright 20; St. Joseph's 0. Gallaudette Pen Mil.

Coll. 20. Maine 19; Colby 7. Union Williams 7 (tie). Otterbein 13; Marietta 0.

Bowling Green Defiance 15. Dennison Miami 19. Transylvania Dayton 63. George Washington Iowa 7. Wisconsin Minnesota 14.

Dartmouth 33; Yale 33 (tie). West Liberty Fordham 33. Muhlenberg Lehigh 33. Portsmouth 14; Frankford Tellow Jackets 0 (professional). Urslnus Gettysburg 6 (tie).

Lebanon Valley Mt. St. Marys 6. Kent State Baldwin -Wallace 31. Ashland 13; Akron U.

6. Alliance College Wilmington 52. Purdue 14; Chicago 6. Brown Holy Cross 33. Exeter Worchester Academy 7.

Rhode Island Boston Univ. 25. V. M. I.

Davidson 7. Roanoke Richmond 7. Allegheny Grove City 7 (tie). North Carolina 18; North Carolina State 15. Rochester 14; Buffalo 7.

Virginia State 19; Howard University 0. Western Maryland Loyola (of Baltimore) 7. Loyola (New Orleans) University of Detroit 21. Fairmont Bethany 27. Westminster Waynesburg 7.

Providence College 19; Lowell Textile 6. Lawrence 25; Hamilton 7. Virginia State 19; Howard U. 0. Campbell Marines 22.

Trinity Wesleyan 13. Vermont Norwich 26. Alfred Hobart 0. Knox Beloit 0. Ohio State 13; Indiana 6.

Depauw 18; Franklin 7. Morningside 43; Western Union 6. Iowa State 13; Oklahoma 12. Oklahoma Aggies 13; Kansas 7. Mercer Center 3.

Detroit Tech. Adrian College 25. Wabash Butler 13. Shepherd College 13; American University 7. Nebraska 10; Missouri 7, Wittenberg 14; Heidelberg 6.

Washington and Lee William and Mary 0 (tie). Bridgewater Randolph Macon 33. Furman 20; Wofford 0. Geneva Franklin and Marshall 20. Morris Harvey26; Bluefield College 0.

Auburn 27; Springhlll 7. Texas Christian Ark. 0. Illinois Northwestern 32. Louisville West Ky.

Teachers 20. South Dakota State South Dakota U. 10. North Dakota State 12; Dakota U. 20.

White Water Teachers Osh-kosh Teachers 6. Carroll College Ripon 33. La Crosse Teachers 13; Eau Claire Teachers 0. Western State Denver U. 25.

Wagner College Moravian College 18. Catawba High Point 6. Kalamazoo College Olivet 13. Augustana Monmouth 7. Delaware Rutgers 6.

Vanderbilt 49; Georgia Tech 7. Kentucky Alabama 9. Duke Tenn. 25. Long Island U.

12; Rensselaer Polytechnic 0. Georgia 33; Florida 6. Mankato Teachers Winona Teachers 0 (tie). Stout Institute River Falls Teachers 33. Shenandoah College 12; Potomac State 6.

(Continued to Page 12, Column 4) HOLLYWOOD NEWS IS SOLD TO COMPETITOR HOLLYWOOD, Cat, Oct. 31. VP) The Hollywood News, a daily, was sold today by Ira C. Copley to Harlan- G. Talmer, former municipal judge, and his brother, O.

T. Palmer. They said the News would be consolidated with their Hollywood Citizen. The deal includes a new building, and the consideration was reported at $600,000. Tne Citizen, the oldest dally in Hollywood, will become the Citizen-News and will be published from the-News plant.

The Associated Press membership owned by the News was acquired by the Citizen. Tulsa Greets Higher Rate of Crude with City-Wide Demonstration MINES ADDING MEN Shoe Industry Reports Many Plants Back on Full Time Basis Silk Mills Boom PITTSBURGH, Oct. 31. AP) The "back to normalcy" movement in the steel industry will receive added impetus in the Pittsburgh district tomorrow and Monday, Between 2,500 and 3,500 men will resume work in the Edgar1 Thomson plant of the Carnegie Steel company at Braddock. With these men at work, the mills will be operating at approximately 70 per cent of capacity, officials said.

The Davison Coke Iron company reported today that it expects to reach 90 per cent of capacity production in its Neville Island plant during November. Since August 1, the output there-has jumped trotn CO to SO per cent of the plant's peak. Between BOO and 600 men arc now employed on, a seven days a week basis. Officials said a few more wnuld hired during November. The Union Car Wheel works plans to recall 100 of its former workmen, to its Thompson Run plant during the coming week.

The Homestead Steel works this week increased Its employment considerably, recalling furloughed men and placing those already working on a longer hour schedule. The Union Car Wheel and the Homestead and Braddock mills are all subsidiaries of the, United States Steel corporation, whose president, James A. KarreU, this week made optimistic utterances concerning tho steel industry. At Braddock, plant officials said a large rail order was responsible for the acceleration of activity there. It was of sufile.lent size, they said, to keep the plant running at 70 per cent capacity for at least a month.

Additional orders, anticipated before the end of November, probably will keep the plant busy for another month, or perhaps indefinitely, they sciid. Resumption of activity in steel brought general business optimism in the Pittsburgh district. TULSA HILARIOUS OVER OIL BOOST TULSA, Oct. 81. (P) Announcement of a 15-cent increase in crude oil prices electrified the midcontinent oil Industry today and brought cheer to the entire southwest.

The turn came after months of discouragement and tribulations in seeking a cure for overproduction. The price advance was made possible largely through an interstate agreement on proration of output, enforced by martial law in east Texas and Oklahoma. Initiated by the Continental Oil company, the new scale of 61 to S5 cents a barrel will become effective next Monday in Kansas and Oklahoma. The increase was immediately met by the Barnsdall Oil company, the Wilcox Oil and Gas company, the Phillips Petroleum company and the Vickers Petroleum company. No change was announced from Texas, although lUigadier-General Jacob Wolters, martial law com-(Continued to Page 8, Column 1 13 NATIONS AGREE TO NAVAL HOLIDAY GENEVA, Switzerland, Oct 31.

(P) Thirteen nations including the, United States have signified their willingness to participate in a one-year armament building truce proposed by tho council of the League of Nations, unci although there was no official statement from the league secretariat today, there was a dis position to helievo that some sort of arms truce can be put into ef fect. The building holiday, the league proposed, would begin tomorrow and continue fur 1:1 months. France accepted conditionally, asserting that she was willing to participate if the nations which border that country also awreed. So far, in addition to the United States and France, affirmative re plies have, been received from Japan, Russia, Hungary, Holland, Australia, Nfr Zealand, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, Albania, Latvia and Luxemborg. Great Britain has not replied nor has Switzerland, and there has been no word yet from Italy or Germany.

Italy, however, proposed the holiday. The secretariat published the response from the United States without comment and it was not possible to obtain any further official information this evening, for all the officials of the disarmament section had left town for the Disappointed on Trip to Home Where Trunk Murders Were Committed SHERIFF HITS PRESS "This Is Arizona," He Says, As Reporters Demand interviews PHOENIX, Oct. 31 (AP) Dr. William C. Judd, husband of the admitted slayer of Mrs.

Agnes LeRoi and Miss Hedvig Samuelson, volunteered his services to Arizona authorities today in their effort to clear up discrepancies between evidence found in Phoenix and Winnie Ruth Judd's statements. Dr. Judd went personally to the duplex apartment in which Mrs. Le-Roi and Miss Samuelson were killed, in an effort to find, following directions by Mrs. Judd in a Los Angeles statement, a mattress taken from the apartment after the slay-Ings.

He expressed chagrin at his corroboration of previous reports the mattress was not where, his wife said she had placed it, and said he would urge her to tell all the facts. Mrs. Judd was allowed to see her husband once today, in the presence of Sheriff J. K. McFadden and Mrs.

Lon Jordan, the jail matron. Mrs. Jordan, since the arrival of Mrs. Judd in Phoenix yesterday, has been, and will continue to be, Sheriff McFadden said, the slayer's constant companion. In Juvenile Cell "Oh, doctor, I was afraid they wouldn't let me see you," Mrs.

Judd cried, as she embraced him. Their conversation was brief, and did not deal with the slayings. She told her husband she had not been able to sleep well in the cell she first occupied with four other women prisoners. She now is in the juvenile cell, where the sheriff said she would remain until it may be needed for a juvenile prisoner, in which event he would be forced to return her to the regular women's cell. "She will be treated as any other prisoner, and will have no special privileges," McFadden said.

"The move to the privacy of the Juvenile cell was made chiefly for the convenience of the matron, and to avoid the necessity of her sleeping in a cell with five prisoners." An arrangement was made whereby Dr. Judd is to be allowed a brief visit with his wife every other day. Mrs. Judd, noticeably less nervous than when she bolted, between McFadden and Mrs. Jordan for the door of the jail yesterday when the automobile which had brought her from Los Angeles skidden to a stop in a crowd of more than 1000 persons wl i had fathered to witness her arrival, appeared relieved when informed of the sheriff's ordir that visitors generally would be barred.

This Is Arizona "This is Arizona, and we do things differently here," McFadden told newspaper reporters who had made the trip with the extradition party from California, when they sought jail interviews today. He relented briefly when Mrs. Judd hade goodbye to Undersheriff Eugene Bis-cailuz and Chief Deputy Frank De-war of Los Angeles, and allowed newspapermen "your last chance" to visit the cell. "Make it snappy." he admonished. Mrs.

Judd aided him by refusing to talk of anything but generalities. Dr. Judd, present again with the reporters, urged them to "give her a break, and clear out." County Attorney Lloyd J. Andrews said Mrs. Judd probably would be allowed to rest unmolested over the week-end.

"She Is tired, and so are we." Andrews said "We'll probably all rest until Monday." Mrs. Judd wVl be arraigned before Justice of the Peace Clarence E. Ice next week, probably Tuesday, Andrews said. Her counsel, Paul Schenck, to follow her frorn Los Angeles, has not yet conferred with her In Thoenlx regarding her plea. Authorities said there likely would be no conference between her and her counsel until she had been questioned further by investgators.

The 1 lies of her victims, held here in a morgue, will remain, where they are for the time being, officials said, pending final decision regarding the necessity of an Inquest. One Inquest alread-- has been held in Los Angeles, where the bodies were found, packed in trunks, in a railway station. The Los Angeles coroner's Jury found Mrs. LeRoi and Miss Samuelson came to their deaths from "gunshot wounds inflicted by a person or persons unknown." KILLED IN CRASH WACO. Texas, Oct.

31. Wayne Bone, pilot. Kelly field, and Edgar Thompson, 18, passenger, were killed today when their airplane crashed near Gates-ville. REELECTED NOGALES, Oct. 31.

(JPi J. C. Tovrea, manager of the Arizona Packing company's branch here was re-elected school trustee of tills district. It is his third term. Bishop Gercke to Be Principal Speaker in Services at 2 o'Clock CELEBRITIES TO SPEAK Civic Clubs to Congratulate Fraternity on Its Achievement Featured by ceremonies of both a fraternal and civic nature, the new Elks' hospital, located northwest of the city adjacent to the Silver Bell road, is scheduled to be dedicated at 2 o'clock this afternoon.

The public is invited to attend the dedicatory program. The dedicatory address will be made by Daniel J. Gercke, D. "Bishop of Tucson, and the response will be delivered by K. Berry Peterson, attorney general of the state of Arizona and a member of Tucson Lodge No.

385. Speaking on' behalf of the Tucson chamber of commerce, which has aided materially in equipping and furnishing the new institution, will be W. A. Julian, who was one of the prime movers in having the tubercular hospital located at the Old Pueblo. Following will be an address- by Mayor G.

K. Smith, representing the city of Tucson, and succeeding will be remarks by J. C. Kinney, chairman of the board of county supervisors. There then will be presented a series of brief congratulatory talks, including the following: William McGovern, Tucson Sunshine Club; Herbert Brown, Rotary Club and Tucson Lodge of Elks No.

885, of which he is present exalted ruler; W. Clarson, Kiwanis club; Merl Garrett, Junior Chamber of Commerce; Grant Warner, Tucson Lions' Club; William J. Hall, Morgan McDermott Post No. 7, American Legion; Thomas Elliott, Disabled American Veterans; Lloyd Johnson, Hiram Club; Captain C. E.

Highhouse, United Spanish War Veterans; Hazen Shower, Boy Scout executive of the Tucson district and Dr. I. E. Huffman, president of the Pima County Medical society. In addition addresses will be given by E.

M. Dickerman of Tucson and Joseph. Mayer of Globe, each of whom are past grand officers of the fraternal organization. The organization is scheduled to witness the largest gathering of Elks ever to assemble in the Southwest, according to Jacob Gunst, chairman of the hospitalization committee of the State Elks' association, which is sponsoring the new Institution. The hospitalization committee Includes Frank Baptist of Phoenix and Victor R.

Wager of Nogales. Each will mako a brief address at the dedicatory ceremonies. The institution formally will be. presented to the state organization by Jacob Gunst, of Tucson, the committee chairman. An outstanding feature of the ceremonies will be laying of the cornerstone by members of the state group, all of whom are past exalted rulers.

Those officiating will include P. E. Howell, Tucson; R. I. Winn, Yuma; Peter Riley, Clifton; Joseph Mayer of Globe, a past grand lodge officer; and Moise Bergman, formerly exalted ruler of Albuquerque, New Mexico lodge.

The entire program will be broadcast over KGAR, under the supervision of Harry Herman, studio director. Music for the occasion will be furnished by the Blue Moon orchestra. With a corps of nurses functioning the new hospital Is scheduled to be placed in operation Monday. Several of the patients scheduled to enter the institution, which formerly was the county hospital, have been in Tucson for the past 30 days. The medical staff will be composed of physicians and surgeons of Tucson who will donate their services.

Widow of Rockne Watches Son Go Down in Defeat LAWRENCE, Oct. 31. (fj Mrs. Knute Rockne saw an unusual sight today the defeat of a Rockne football team. The Pembroke Midgets, captained and quaFterbacked by 13-year-old Knute Rockne, lost, 6 to 21, to the Bearcat junior.

But young Rockne, son of the late football mentor of Notre Dame, gave a typical Rockne climax to the contest played before and between halves of the Kansas-Oklahoma Aggie varsity game in memorial stadium of the University of Kansas. He sprinted 25 yards around end for Pembroke's only touchdown In the closing minutes while his mother and 5 1-2 year old Jackie Rockne, sitting in her lap, exerted. "C'mon Junior." Contract Between Wilbur arid Metropolitan District Termed Illegal PROTEST ALLOCATION Injunction Suit Taken Under Advisement in San Diego United States Court SAN DIEGO, Oct. 31. AP) Federal Judge Paul J.

McCormick took under advisement today a petition for an injunction brought by a group of non-resident Imperial Valley land owners which would prohibit the Imperial irrigation district's ratification of a contract with the federal government for construction of the all-American canal. The case was submitted after two hours of argument and Judge McCormick, without committing himself as to when his decision would be given, Informed counsel that the decision might be handed down either here or in Los Angeles. Attorneys for the plaintiffs, Clara D. Strieby of Bloomington, 111., and M. Edgar Greeson of Kokomo, were Joined today by the CoacheKa Valley Land Owners' association, whose attorney, Reuel L.

Olson, appeared as friend of the court. Waived Perfected Rights The suit for the injunction was based on a contention that the contract tentatively drawn between the imperial irrigation district and Secretary of Interior Ray Lyman Wilbur, representing the United States, waived perfected water rights now held by land owners in Imperial valley in favor of the Palo Verde irrigation district, Coa-chella valley water users and unreclaimed desert lands in Imperial valley which the all-American canal would serve. Charles L. Childers, attorney for the Imperial irrigation difcfrict, argued that the suit was an attempt to delay the ail-American canal project and to saddle Imperial valley indefinitely with the expense of maintaining its present canal in Mexico, thus making the farmers subservient to a foreign government. Years of Delay Childers said actually the exact holdings in water rights of the Imperial valley could not be determined without tedious litigation and a delay of years.

E. R. Simons, attorney for the plaintiffs, said in support of the suit that under the tentative contract the Imperial valley waived rights to approximately 700,000 acre feet of water which, when subtracted from the 3,850,000 acre feet annual allotment to Imperial valley, would leave Insufficient water for land now under cultivation. He also said that the remaining water would have to be spread over a much larger territory and that the present land owners would be guaranteed only 55 per cent of the amount of water they now find essential. C.

W. Brockman, Imperial district director of Calexlco, and Frank Baele, director from Brawley, filed separate answers to the suit in which thev admitted the allegations made were correct. Thus the directorate of the Irrigation district was split, three opposing the injunction, and two favoring it, The tentative contract was approved by the directors recently by a vote of 3 to 2. Could Withdraw The proposed contract also was attacked on the grounds that the irrigation district agreed with the metropolitan water district that the metropolitan district could store unused water from its allotment up to 5,000,000 acre feet in the Hoover dam reservoir. The plaintiffs stated that under the storage compact, the metropolitan district could withdraw if it should find it necessary the entire flow of the river for a year without consideration of the needs of Imperial Childers said such withdrawal would be impossible because the metropolitan district could draw on only water to which it was entitled and had not used and to which the Imperial valley was not entitled in any case.

Until a decision Is rendered, a temporary restraining order prohibits final approval of the contract will be enforced. SPLIT INFINITIVE IS BASIS FOR DIVORCE CHICAGO. Oct. 31. (Cruelty to the king's English and the rules of etiquette constitute cruelty to Mrs.

Helen William Morse, she said today in a suit for divorce. Mrs. Morse charged her husband, John, was cruel because he split infinitives, used the double negative, and said "ain't" to annoy her. He also, she added, refused to abide by the recognized rules of etiquette, much to her chagrin. tric trains from Interlakerf' up to Seheldegg station on the Wenger-nalp.

There a cog railway starts for Eiger glacier, boring through the giant peaks of the Eiger and Monch to Jungfraujoch. Previous attempts have been made to conduct scientific observations in high altitudes. Such efforts had, however, invariably to be abandoned, for reasons of inadequate transportation facilities and shelter. But Jungfraujoch, adjoining the source of Europe's mightiest "frozen stream," the Great Aletsch glacier, fills all these requirements Statler Leases Ronstadt Ranch Hotel Man Will Operate Dude Colony on Large Scale Los Enclnas, historic raneho In the Altar vslley and former home of Harold Bell Wright, has been leased by its owners, J. M.

and Csrlos Ronstadt, to R. W. Statler, son of the hotel magnate. Young Statler will conduct a dude and guest rsnch during the winter months, according to Carlos Ronstadt. Young Statler is already operating a summer dude and guest ranch on a broad scale in Colorado, Ronstadt said, and contemplates the same procedure at Los Encinss during the winter months when the Colorado rsnch will be shut down.

Harold Bell Wright lived at Los Encinss prior to building his hacienda east of the city. Following his leaving there it became a part of the extensive Ronstadt holdings in the Altar valley. S0UTHSIDER LOSES DINNER TO THIEVES Theft of a radio, a camera, three coats, groceries, blankets, and a. number of less valuable things was reported Saturday to the sheriff's office by W. L.

Hyche of 1910 East Fourteenth street. Hyche stated that the thieves took all the groceries purchased for Sunday dinner besides two ladles' coats, a man's coat, eight blankets, the radio and the camera. Ora Shinn and E. B. Keebey of the sheriff's office are investigating and believe that they may be able to trace the thieves.

here last year by Coach Ted Ship-key, completely baffled the Wildcats In the first half and only in the second half did the Arizona defense become powerful enough to hurl back the Bulldogs from the goal line. In addition to their scoring drives, which were helped by several brilliant passes over the heads of the Cat defensive men, the Bulldogs penetrated twice In the sec ond half to within the Arizona 10-yard marker wtlhout scoring. Statistics of the game compiled by AzzI Ratem showed that Tempe gained yards from running plays and Arizona 194 yards. Arizona advanced the ball 60 yards from passes and Tempe 12. Long run backs of kicks helped Tempe.

Arizona punted 11 times for an average of 26 yards. Tempe kicked eight times for 45 yards. Long rolls of the ball after well-placed kicks by Steverson was a big asset to Tempe. The Wildcats tried 20 passes completing six. Eleven Cat passes were incomplete and three were Intercepted.

Tempe attempted 11 (Continued to Page 11, Column 2) throughout the year, and an abundant supply of electric current is at the disposal of scientists and workers. The High Alpine Scientific institute is electrically heated and lighted, electric stoves are provided, and facilities for a movie projection apparatus are available. Numerous and difficult problems are to be solved here. Research work will be done in meteorology, physics and geophysics, and the effects of a high Alpine climate on the health of human beings will be a subject of elaborate study. FORGET-ME-NOT SALE GETS $800 Returns Not Yet All In and D.

A. V. Leaders Call It Success With more than $800 (aken In at 6:30 Saturday night the forget-me-not drive was still booming during the evening with no prospects for final returns on exact amounts before Sunday morning. Although the amount reported was somewhat short of that taken Into the fund for disabled veterans last year, it was hoped that workers at the Saturday night carnival might materially increaso the sum and E. S.

Harder), chairman of the drive stated that more, people than ever before contributed although amounts given were smaller. last year J1.047 was taken In. One hundred thirty-five workers were in the field during tho day and drive officials were seeking others willing to work nt the carnival, although several girls were In the field when the last reports for the evening were turned In, Organizations which furnished teams and team captains are as follows: Spanish War Veterans' auxiliary, Mrs. R. E.

L. Kite: Alpha Sigma Phi, Miss Walter Powers; Miles School, Beth Mason; Gray Ladies, Mrs. W. C. Uptlgrove; Davis School, Vernice Misenhelmer; Tucson High School, Miss Mnrjorle Townsend; American Legion auxiliary, Mrs, Frank Peyton; Republican Women's club, Mrs.

Clifford Parsons; Sigma Phi Gamma, Mary Reed; Otonka club, Jeanetto Guist; Elizabeth Bor-ton school, Dorothy Dinsmore; El Salona Loronen, Charlotte Parker; Sam Hughes school, Catherine Ford; Safford Junior High School. Miss Eula Holland; Safford Elementary School, Miss Alice Full-man; Girl Reserve of Safford, Miss Helena Patten; University Heights school, Carolyn llalliday; Drach- man school. Miss Muriel Upham; Catholic Daughters, Mrs. Marie Gomez; Mission View school. Miss Nan Moore; Carrillo school, Evelyn Jay; Saturday Morning Musical club, Miss Ruth Parett; Ochoa school.

Miss Genie Pendleton; Mans- feld school, Miss Julia Clark; Chinese Colony, Miss Mae Don; Menlo Park school, Miss Mildred Davis. Miss Rose Buzan acted as chair man of the drive for the women. Miss Helena Patten, acting as assistant chairman, spent the day at headquarters, placing all workers In tho field. NEW YORK'S BUDGET LARGEST IN HISTORY NEW YORK, Oct. 31.

(F) Overcoming the city comptroller's spirited opposition, Mayor Walker won the approval tonight of the board of estimate and appropriation for a 1932 municipal budget J631.2C6,- 297.97 the largest in history. Mayor Walker attributed high budgets of the present to "correct Ine mistakes for 40 years before 1926." "Vou can keep the budget down and kid the people by the transfer of funds, by tax notes and by reve nue bonds if you want to, bu'- in the end you've got to pay the said the piayor. Tempe Teachers Defeat U. A. Wildcats in One-Sided Game By CHUCK KINTER IRISH FIELD, TEMPE, Oct 31.

(Special to the Arizona Daily Star) The Arizona State Teachers college found the end of the rainbow in this stadium tonight and the pot of gold was a well earned 19 to 6 victory over the University of Arizona Wildcats. It was the first time this Tempe Institution has defeated Arizona in football In a competition which dates back to territorial days. The intricacies of the Warner system put the Wildcats on the run In the first quarter. The Bulldogs scored two touchdowns In the opening quarter and added another In the second. Arizona's lone score came in the third period.

A crowd of more than 3,000 persons, which officials announced was a record for this stadium, saw the game. The Irresistable attack of the Bulldogs was built around Norris Steverson, triple threat halfback, who did most of the ball carrying, kicking and passing. He also turnt-d In the longest run of the day, an 82-yard return of a kickoff. The bewildering offense of the Warner football system introduced.

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