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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 1

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WEATHER Tent. Tr. Aro 3 Jkf im An Independent NEWSpaper' Printing the Newt Impartially Maximum temp. 70 77 Minimum temp. 32 IJ Humidity m.

pet. ...83 49 Humidity p. m. pet 44 JO NO. 340 VOL.

92 TUCSON, ARIZONA, WEDNESDAY MQRMxg, DECEMBER 6, 1933 SIXTEEN PAGES SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS PROQJUMS REPEAL- Of iHO mm President Asks Obedience To New Laws Under Repeal Lindberghs Start On Atlantic Flight UTAH'S VOTE AT 3:31 P. M. ENDS DROUGHT Over Atlantic J. BARLEYCORN RETURNS AMID HIGH REVELRY 1900 MILES OF SEA AHEAD OF FLYING COUPLE SOCIAL WORKER DENIES CHARGE OF TRANSIENTS The National WHIRLIGIG Behind the Newt in Washington New York By Qors Durne and Jami McMullin Washington Lets Down Bars to Canadian Liquor 118 STATES AFFECTED New York Hotel Bars Are Thronged to See Drinks Mixed Make Dozen Attempts to Start, Held Back Four Days Declares Tucson Camp Is Within Rules Laid Down By U. S.

DOES BinT" LOCALLY FUEL JETTISONED WASHINGTON, Dee. 5. (IP) The text of President Roosevelt's repeal proclamation follows: Whereas th congress of the United States in 2nd session of the 72nd congress, begun at Washington on the fifth day of December in the year one thousand nine hundred and thirty two, adopted a resolution in the words and figures following: to wit "Joint resolution Proposing an amendment to the constitution of the United States. "htesoived by the senate and home of representatives of the United States of America in con-Sres assembled (two-thirds of each house concurring therein)( that the following article is hereby proposed as an amendment to the constitution of the United States, which ahal1 be valid to all intents and purposes as part of the constitution when ratified by conventions In hree ourt hs of the several states: "Article 1. The eighteenth article of amendment to the constitution of the United States is hereby repealed.

"'Section 2. The transportation or importation into any state, territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, In violation of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited. "'Section 3. This srtlcle shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to tne constitution By convention, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the states by the Whereas Section 217 (A) of the act of congress entitled "an act to encourage national industrial recovery to foster competition, and to provide for the, construction ot certain useful public works, and for other purposes," approved June 16, 1933, provides as follows: "Section 217 (A) The President shall proclaim the date of (1) The cloce of the first fiscal year ending June 30 of any year after the vear 1933, during which the total receipts of the United States (excluding public debt receipts! evceed its total expenditures (excluding public debt expenditures other than those chargeable against such receipts), or (2) The repeal of the eighteenth amendment to the constitution, (Continued to Page 4, Column 3) of WASHINGTON By George Jurno G. 0.

P. Republican headquarters here Is tossing up its hat over the tenor of its recent mail. National Chairman Everett Sand-erg and his aides report what amounts to a nation-wide Insurrection against the national recovery administration and the agricultural adjustment administration. As the men directing the G. O.

P. see it a natural reaction has arisen to the extension of federal bureaucracy. They intend to play the trend straight, place and show. Should Reach Coast South America In 14 Hours Mrs. Williams Gives Lists Of Tucson Firms Patronized Signing of Proclamation Is Marked With Little Ceremony BAT ML" KST, Gambia, Pec.

C. Wcdm-Mlay) (AP)-Col. Charity A. Lindbergh lifted his WARNINGS ISSUED Shouse Senses Danger if People Do Not React Properly NEW YORK, Dec. 5.

(AP) John Barleycorn came back to Broadway tonight from his 14-year exile. The town had changed, so had he. He was not the bleary-eyed bid man they drove into the wilderness 14 years ago, but a An emphatic of charges that supplies for the Tucson federal transient camp are purchased outside the city was made vesterdav bv Mrs. heavi! red monoplane into the air at 2 a. today (9 p.

Tuesday, E.S.T.), and with Mrs. Lindbergh at the; tadio headed across 1900 miles! Amelia S. Williams, case worker for the camp. Mrs. Williams also denied that the group of 50 inmates which.

Monday morning walked forth lit WASHINGTON, Dec. 5. (AP) With a dash of ceremony, Utah late today wrote an end to national prohibition in a decree that opened the doors of liquor shops in eighteen stales. Alniosl half a rlorii oihrr states were complel in plans for letrnlizinrr their own laws. The remainder of the nation remained dry.

Word thai Utah (he thirty-sixth slate had ratified repeal was flashed to the capital few hours nftr Pennsylvania, and Ohio had tskn simihr aeiion, A little later the final foinialliies wore eompinted with the Issuance of proclamation How Utah, Pennsylvania and Ohio Ended 18th Amendment Republican high command also reports a big pick-up In correspondence aimed at President UoosevelfB monetary policy. Summed up, the letters on this score bear down on the uncertainty of the policy and demand to know when they're to get stabilization. The letter-writers are worried in particular about uncertainty as to the measuring standard of our currency. Sanders says the. people don't understand the mechanics of administration manipulation of the dollar but are quite sure they should know right away what's to be expected in connection with Its ultimate purchasing power.

from the camp and issued general charges of Implied graft, mismanagement and cruel treatment, had been so treated, op graft done. Appearing In behalf of Paul Murphey, Arizona director of federal transient camps and of the THE LINDBERGHS if. restrained patriarch who realized apparently that his popularity depended on his decorum. Dusk was here when he came tearing across the country from Utah, but even then the multitudes had gathered at Times Square to welcome him. They watched the story unfold In the lights that tell the news on Broadway.

There was no shouting, only the usual noises the rumble of traffic, the clang and bustle of SALT LAKE CITY. Dee. delegates elected last November by camp Itself, Mrs. Williams gave the of open sea toward South Xmerica, Afttr a score or more unsuccessful attempts to lift tho plane In an almost dead calm, he was helped on his way by a light breeze from the interior which rippled the surface of the lowfr Gambia river. (A mcssHge direct, from the Lindbergh plane to Bahta.

Brazil, relayed to Fan-American Airways In New York, reported their position at 3 a. an hour after tlie takeoff as 12:17 north latitude and 17.60 longitude, US miles at sea. The message reported a true course and was signed For four days the Lindberghs had been balked by Inability to lift the heavy load of fuel required for the Utah today added the Wh rati NO PERMITS FOR TUCSON ISSUED a. vote of 1.S64.411 to 5S3.513. The proceedings were as simple 'is they were expeditious.

Shannon I called the convention to order and, after an Invocation, read the legal set up of the session. Secretary of the Commonwealth rib-hard j. Beamish presented the delegates' wedentlals. They were sworn In and adopted essential rules of organization. by the state department and President.

Hnosevelt declaring prohibition at an end. Tbern was little ceremony st th Kignltig of the presidential or the stats department proclamation, but In wet states and some dry ones there were, celebrations. the street. Ten thousand eyes were glued on BECK Before many nights pass Times Square's lights you may expect to hear the per- "Utah voting!" the sign flashed. suaslve voice of Rep.

James M. A lull. A policeman's horse i Pa- on the radio blasting Sales Here Still Illegal But Licenses Will Be Issued Today flcatlon tu the 21st amendment, and thereby terminated fed. ml prohibition throughout the nation. Final action came at p.

m. Mountain Standard Time when Run D. Thurninn of Salt Lake City, one. of the leaders of the, repeal campaign in this c.ist the 21st vote on a rolle8-! of the state convention after having called attention to the t'(ict that Ms vote would place the 21st amendment Info effect, thereby" repealing'- the ISth. Prolonged cheering hv delegates and guests who taxed the limited last! l'j ifcest hop yet attempted In their Repeal arrived In Tucson Nearly fourteen years of atcohollo Among tne resolutions was one away at the Roosevelt administration lock, stock and barrel.

O. O. P. strategists decided on the former Republican solicitor 'pawed the pavement. The multitude shifted, swayed and sighed.

"Prohibition is dead!" The lights flickered the flash. The night without either legal sales of rial survey tour of Atlantic calling It a. deliberative body-fne-l dtftttsUU (jntorced by the eighteenth of the thin- denied In court at- amendment of World t'ar day ln potent spirits or any visible, fele-j jpjttuwsiV wiiwii. brationv Drvnktatteei-thCllcs Excess fuel and baggage was Jet ceptinn, was ended by tho Utah lack and then cams the resolution to "assent and tutinn numbered three for tha all general, orator and cons'ttutlonal lawyer as' their best spelling bet. It's Just ft question of finding a good spot for him on the air.

tlsinrfl, and at 4:30 p. today 'the colonel went to the plane for a Jinal Inspection. Heady for the other side of the story. Referring to the walkout of Monday morning, the social service worker stated that Murphey knew nothing about the situation In the Tucson camp until late last week when matters climaxed In the organization of a camp union and demands for many things which, under the rules of the camp, could not be granted. The boys of the camp were organized by A.

R. Endsley and his cousin, Mrs. Williams said. "We have every reason to nelleve that from the way they worked and the way they organized, they are not just transients," she said. While refusing to make a definite charge that the movement is Communistic In Its origin, Mrs.

Williams stated that Endsley and his group were seen coming from the home of a man nearby alleged to be a Communist leader and organizer in the community. "With Individual" The men demanded at least $5 a week for their work. Mrs. Williams said, and the right to form and maintain their union. Endsley fooled the camp staff, Mrs.

Williams said, by saying that he was organizing boys clubs. "The camp tries to deal with the Mrs. Williams explain fv.int minutes later a motorcycle patrolman and mi airplane were 1 racing townrd Washington, each with a certified eopv of Uennsyl-; vnnin's action. ti If ford Plnchoi, noMantlv drv In flight, the rratt bobbed in a. gentle swell before a picturesque row of flatlve sharks bordering the river.

tire day as compared with five in the evening alone of the day before and six in the evening of the day before that. Only two of the inebriates were arrested yesterday evening. Legal liquor here awaits issuing of permits to Tucson stores. The colonel was Informed that seating capacity of the rhiiinhor of the house of representatives in the Utah state capitol, interrupted proceedings and It vas not until 3:32:30 o'clock that Kay L. Olson of Ogden, president of the convention, formally announced ratification had been cP' ted.

Meeting at noon today, the convention wan torn between a pro- HOOVER Here's the latest Hoover story circulating In Republican quarters. Even if our former President didn't say it, It's a good story. A solicitor for a relief fund Is supposed to have called at the Hoover home in Palo Alto. A par Weather indications insured a bright, clear trnplral night for the takeoff. S.

The German steamer Westfalen, which had been In Brazil securing supplies, was due to return to Its ins i wo terms as became; chief of the liquor control forces, I placed there, oddly n. ugh by polil- ical foes. Me asked the Sintloti -controlled general ass' tnbiy i to approve his progr-on of the hul of which a a system nf vote. It. found I he federal government prepared lo control the flow of liquor In wet states, through a virtual dictatorship over the industry, and to protect the arid ones.

Several of the 1S states where liquor could be sold Immediately, however, were without regulations. Repeal celebrations, hoever, found liquor supplies for Immediate-consumption restricted in some sect Ions. Flow Is Started In a hurried effort to meet the demand and thereby thwart the I'oolleggir, the government today decided to allow large. Importations of American tvpo Bourbon and rye whiskies from Canada. It also planned to release for beverage purposes medicinal liquors held In bonded wirehoiises and customs houses.

A move of the Ini ernational Re- ticularly generous contribution was cram calling for a lengthy recess urged "because of the unusual de and final action this evening, and mands made on us as a result of the depression." "What?" Mr. Hoover is quoted erowd whooped a few hoorays, tut It idat or Tha let-down was obvious. It was all over but the shouting, but the throng didn't hout it milled about and waited. Newsboys took up the peal "pro- liibltlon Is dead" and a million lights -epeated the story. Over 'n the Hudson the frog-throated steamers began a sonorous symphony, a requiem for the era.

The harbor boats whined prohibition's dirge, then began blasting salutes to John Barleycorn. From Four Corners From the four corners, he came to town. Trucks began scurrying away from liquor wholesalers, careened through the streets and disgorged their liquors at hotels and restaurants and clubs. Ships and pianos brought it in rum from Cuba, Scotch and Rye from Canada, wines from France's slopes of gold, the Rhine, the vineyards of California "in the early evening, there had been no concentrated drive on the speakeasies, but police authorities warned all unlicensed bars must be closed. Police Commissioner Bolan called his men together tonight, as replying.

"Tou dnn't. mean to tell me there Is still a depression?" Immediate ratification. insistence of eastern states and a feeling among delegates, as expressed by Mr. Olson afterwards, that Utah "owed It to the rest of the country to act without delay," finally won, however, and the recess was limited to an hour, and at p. statej liquor stores and a hoard to issue licenses.

The legislature approved the In-' dependent Republican governor's proposal. The board set to work handing out. licenses. Meanwhile, plans are heme hustled through to open 'J(nl nf the pro- POENIX, Dec. B.tP) Liquor flowed openly and In some cases probably entirely within the law in Arizona tonight for the first time in 18 years.

There no longer are any laws, state or federal, forbidding sale of liquor in Arizona, but permits to sell liquor, as required by a new state regulatory law, tonight had been issued to only a few scattered dealers, none of them in Phoenix or Tucson, the state's two largest cities. Most of the permits issued were to drug stores to sell In the original package only. Tlie state tax commission said, however, more permits would be is CONFETTI It was most satis factory political turn that lifted mid-Atlantic post yesterday, affording further security for the Lindberghs on their Inns flight. The Westfalen Is used by the Lufthansa line as a. base for trans-Atlantic, fllclits, nnd officials of the line previously had offered the Lindberghs use of their facilities.

By veering slightly northward off direct course to Natal, Brazil, they could also stop at St. Paul's island, a French possession in mld-Atlantle. Fernando de Noronha, a volcanic Island 125 miles off the coast of Brazil, offered another possible landing place. delib- posed 300 state liquor stores I 1 -Lr O.n 't-uM- theni the convention resumed its erations prepared to carry to a climax. ed, "rather than with the group.

Fr. Murphey feeling that there was too much of a problem to cope with In the Tucson camp, sent guards down from Phoenix and told the boys that they would either have to leave the camp or abide by the rules." uary 2- anee of the rep. al proclamation was Ketwcen the opening! Mnt of rnlmWa nf the liquor stores Intoxicants may; wllPn be. sold by the drink, bottle or case; a petition in all hotels, restaurants, clubs, sl)Paf, sued tomorrow. noats anil riming cats licensed he state hoard.

DRY GOVERNOR TO ENFORCE LAWS Pa Dec. 5. iPi The Keystone state, which approved the eighteenth amendment only after 36 other states had added It to the constitution, today light A total of 50 permits was issued from the party the onus of firing short from the opposition camp. Sprague and Baruch did bnter for them. Now' the Repuhs can go ahead without being accused of partisan prejudice.

Roosevelt knew of Sprague's and Ranich's coming broadshots well In advance of the firing. He also is tuning In on the Republican slogan now going the rounds, a wisecrack borrowed from Hoover who sprang It at a private dinner party in Iowa recently. The guests were razzing Inflation when Hoover Interrupted them with: "I think It ought, to be called "confetti money'." None of this Is keeping the President from his beauty sleep. I'reirn I he second day of the year, liquor may be sold by the bottle or case only in the state stores. 14 HOURS NEEDED FOR OCEAN CROSSING gave them a list of suspected speak to retail and wholesale dealers, the tax commission said.

No licenses were issued to restaurants or ho be Chase of Brooklyn, N. on the ground there was no basis for the action. He ruled repeal was effective upon ratification by the thirty-sixth state and not through the proclamation. was brought about through the convention system, authorized under the constitution, but. used for the first time In this case.

The easies and Instructed tney tels Licenses issued today went to dealers in Douglas, Bisbee. Globe, Mrs. Williams then explained that these camps are not "grand clubs for boys" but rather federally regulated camps wherein transient boys and young men are placed and kept, while their legal residences are being verified, after which they are sent to their own homes. The passage of hundreds and thousands of young men and boys, via the freight trains, has been found to be a menace to the country, Mrs. Williams explained, and thus the transient camps were created to put a stop to this form ot traveling.

Quotes Endsley Miami, Ajo, Flagstaff and other smaller cities. None was issued to eighteenth amendment is the first. retail dealers In Phoenix, Tucson Yuma, Prescott or Tombstone. OHIO VOTES WET BUT REMAINS DRY COLUMBUS, Dec. 5.

Ohio removed the bung from the hard liquor barrel today but the spigot, remained legally clogged. Like a well-oiled ma.chine, a constitutional convention officially ratified repeal of the 1 St amendment, and. amid cheers from well filled galleries, the state became the to vote for legal liquor. To the nian In the street. Improver, the action meant little or nothing for the Ohio prohibition Dean Acheson received no acknowledgment from the President of his resignation as assistant sec-(Continued to Page 15, Column 1) heartedly ratified its repeal.

Before a smiling, chatting crowd which filled the rnuralled senate chamber, twelve men and I hree women cast. Pennsylvania's formal vote, to reject prohibition and were given an ovation. Then the commonwealth, once famed fur fine liquors, turned to the task of enforcing the new laws governing the man who makes the liquor, the man who sells it and the man who drinks. It took Just SO minutes for the state convention to ratify the twenty-first amendment, making Pennsylvania the first of the three states dealing death blows lo prohibition today. Lieutenant Covernor F.dward C.

Shannon presided over the fifteen to be ejected from the constitution In the history ot the republic. Thirty-three states. beginning with Michigan, had, ratified tha twenty-first amendment previously. Pennsylvania's delegates were the first to ratify today. Ohio soon followed.

Utah had determined to have the thirty-sixth position. To assure itself of it being the final t-t-itc ttie had nlan- Calculations based on the known speed of Col. Lindbergh's plane fixed the approximate time of a flight across tlie south Atlantic at 14 hours or less. Their route. In a south southwesterly direction, will carry them across the equator at approximately the location of St.

Paul's Island, a little more than midway distance. Natal, believed to be their Intended destination, Is a seaport with a harbor of two square miles. Advices from Eiouth America said Pan-American Airways, for whom Col. Lindbergh is technical adviser had requested that tlie harbor be kept sufficiently clear of shipping to enable a nafe landing. Landing places were also prepared at Recife (Pernambuoni, 110 miles south (Continued to Page 4, Column 4) J.

HAM SORRY BUT Getting back to Endsley. Mr, Williams reported the following statement as coming from him while addressing his group at the WOODIN IS BLAMED driven from business. Crowds were waiting at the licensed bars when the first drink was poured. "A toast," said the barkeeper at the Hotel Astor, which has License Kumber 1. "To happiness and prosperity," echoed the revelers.

By early evening, the crowds on the streets had swelled into a noisy, playful throng, bent on seeing all there was to see. To the speakeasies went many for a gulp of illegal liquor. Old man barleycorn had been hiding there for many years. The speakeasies were Jammed at the minute Utah rubbed the ISth amendment into oblivion, but in a few hours many pf the revelers had gone to the. street to look around and catch a drink of legal liquor.

Traffic Tangled The traffic became thick and tangled. Policemen waved their slg-i nals frantically. The crowds laugh-t ed and shuffled along, peeping In windows, pausing at bars. The Waldorf Astoria's elaborate (Continued to Page 3, Column 4) amendment canned be erased until np(1 (o mort toniht at out 7:3" Under an agreement with the city of Phoenix, a limited number of licenses for the sale of hard liquors will bo issued to dealers here tomorrow. Is expected also a limited number will be issued to restaurants, hotels, drug stores and grocery stores in other cities.

More than 500 applications for permits to sell hard liquors have been filed with the tax commission. About half of them are from restaurants and cafes for permits to sell liquor for consumption on the premises. A hout 25 hotels applied for similar licenses and the remainder, except from some 30 wholesale dealers, are divided equally between drug stores and grocery stores. Thursday, and ou-n after that the camp prior to the walkout of last Monday morning: "There are two political parties EL PASO. Dec.

5. (IP) Senator J. Hamilton Lewis of Illi at war at present In Tucson and so (Continued to Page 7, Column 1) p.m., mountain time, or 0:30 p.m., eastern time. Pressed bv telegrams from eastern state officials for early action, however, Utah delegates moved up the timi and ratified four hours before the time originally set. Meantime, in the capital government officials hurried tlielr preparations for liquor control.

Tho federal alcohol control administration was the dominating group. Under state's two dry enforcement acts i will remain In effect until repealed! by the legislature, which meets tomorrow to enact liquor control laws. Exactly at 2:43 p. m. (Eastern Standard Time I.

Ohio's vote for repeal became official. 2S days after the electors had approved repeal of national prohibition by an 850,000 majority. Immediately after today's vote a telegram came notifying President Roosevelt of the R. R. SIGNS BACKED UP BY COURT RULING Last of Tewksburys Starts Repeal Celebration, Jailed GREECE READY TO OUST SAM INSULL GLOBE, Dec.

5. (IP) Ed Tewksbury, the last of the Tewks- state's ratification was dispatched to the White House, and another nvs'ace sent to William Phillips, ac'in- secretary of state, i White the delegates still were i signing- the resolution, Phillips telephoned Ohio's secretary of state, Gfo-gn f-'- Myers, acknowledging receipt of the repeal notification and the directorship of Joseph H. Choate, of Xew York, it was passing on import nuotas of foreign liquors and bringing other branches ot the liquor Industry under its authorit v. Bureaus Transferred Attorney General Cummings issued an order transferring the prohibition unit of the justice department In'o the alcoholic beverage (Continued to Page 5, Col. 1) MONEY TOSSED AWAY, SOME FOLKS GET IT the progeny and friends of the Grahams and of the Tewksburys.

There are two general stores In Pleasant Valley the "Graham clan'' trades at one, the "Tewksbury clan" at the other. They do not mix. despite' the fact that the original bone of contention has been buried in the sands nf time. The Tewksburys, sheep raisers. In jburys of the historic Graham- ATHENP, Dec.

5. OP) It was Tewksbury Pleasant Valley cattle-learned reliably tonight that theep nar. wnich t0k three, score Greek government will request 40 years ago, started clebrat-Samuel Insuil. former Chicago a trifle prematurely, ties magnate, to lcav- at the Utan convention wa8 the expiration of his police permit maklns "Ppa1 official this after-December 31 1933 noon, was before Justice of the The "Stop, Look and Listen" signs at railroad crossings mean exactly what they say. This was brought out In superior court yesterday afternoon when Judge Fred W.

Fickett overthrew a Justice court verdict for Stanley W. Cruson and against the Southern Pacific Railroad company. The case had been appealed to superior court. Evidence showed that Cruon's car was hit by a locomotive at the Main street crossing but no one was Injured. Waiving personal damages, Cruson sued for damages to his car.

The Justice court Jury verdict gave him approximately 1 "1 nois- Is sorry he disappointed audiences in Springfield. and Dallas, but he Just had to see Secretary Woodln. The bewhlskered and sartorially splendid Ham" explained it here today as he nursed a cold and speculated as to whether he could speak tomorrow night as scheduled. Associates in Chicago had expressed concern at not hearing from the senator for several days and became worried when he failed to appear for speaking engagements at Springfield and Dallas. It happened in St.

Louis, the senator said. "I received a message In Springfield, 111., to Join Secretary of the Treasury Woodln In St. Louis," he said. "I barely had time to board his private car. "I came to El Paso to rest.

I shall go back by way of Dallas and Springfield." he said. Senator Lewis expressed extreme regret that his unexpected change of plans Inconvenienced the two expectant audiences. If able, he will speak here tomorrow and will go to Albuquerque Thursday. Secretary Woodln, en route to Arizona for his health, went on to Tucson after leaving the senator here last night. the state on the rapiditv with which Its convention oitifi'-d the voters' expression.

the end won the bloody combat, and I'eace Virme receiving a sen- tence of 60 days in Jail for "drunk having done so, abandoned the val- Insull. it was explained, has r.o passport. The government, was said to prepared to furnish laissez passer for any country wbl-h Insull de WAR IS OVER Dec. and disorderly." i The sentence was sevr re, but. said Justice Grice, the offense had been, ian oft-repeated one, and repral of; MONTEVIDEO, 5.

IP) between War in the Gran Chaeo sires to enter from Greece. This action would he the result I national prohibition entered into LOS ANGELES, Dec. 6. (IP) A heavy canvas bag containing $4,000 in big bills and little bills was tossed from a speeding train to flie Moor Park railway station platform today. The hag split.

The wind blew. Rumor did the rest. Men, women and children joined in the frantic search. All but J500 was returned to the American Commercial and Pavings bank for which th was intended. Officers said they believed someone had played "finders keeper." ley with its water and Its grass and came to Globe.

It's cut up Into farms now. with milk cows standing placidly In fenced enclosures. The beet cattl" and the sheep graze the higher hillsides. Ed Tewksbury, died in Globe In 1004. Twenty-nine persons were killed in the "war." of with he was a hading figure, which started In 1SV5 and lasted seven '-ars Grahams, four Tewksburys.

and three "innocent bystanders." of the Greek government's decision ot at to do all possible to avoid disturb-1 Corn hisky played its part In l.i. rir.tio.-s with the the famous fued, hut curiously Bolivia, and Paraguay faded definitely from the realm of open discussion In the Pan-American conference tonight with a statement of Secretary ot State Hull that he believed the conference was disposed to let the League ot Nations commission, now In Bolivia, complete its peace efforts in the Cliaco. and the case was appealed by Francis M. Hartman, railroad counsel. Reading from the leading cases In point.

Judge Fickett summed up supreme court doctrine on the subject with the statement that the court held that the crossr of tracks must stop, look and listen, or he cannot collect enough cattle and sheep, over which the sanguinary serjo of batH.s were fought, graze In Pleasant valley no more, although still there Is a distinct division there between United States which has made repeater representations desiring his extradition to face criminal charges in Chicago in con'. action with the bankruptcy of his utilities concern..

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