Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

El Paso Evening Post from El Paso, Texas • Page 1

Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Complete Wire Reports of UNITED PRESS, tlie Greatest World-Wide News Service El Paso Evening Post Home Edition VOL. VI. NO. 298 FIVE LINERS SPEEDING TO PLANE I SEA British Craft Is Forced Down On Way From Horta to U. S.

TRACY: What a world this will be when we can live without work and fight without injury as predicted by members of the American Chemical society meeting in Chicago. FOUR MEN ARE BURNED 880 Milos Off Newfoundland Coast By M. E. TRACY are all children when it comes to building air castles. None of LAY KILLING OF OBREGON TO SOCIETY Big Texas Beat Mother Superior Named Member Terrorist Death Ring United Press Leased Wire NEW fleet Atlantic liners were converging today on a spot in mid-Atlantic to rescue the flying boat and its four occupants, forced down on a flight from the Azores to Newfoundland.

The radio sputtered out its call for help during the early morning hours and the ships of several nations combined in the race to save Capt. Frank T. Courtney and his companions. The American ships Pres. Hayes and Minnewaska, the White Star liners Celtic and Cedric and the North German-Lloyd liner Columbus were speeding to the rescue.

The Pres. Hayes radioed that she had arrived at the plane's approximate position but could find no sight of the craft. The liner could get no reply to his radio messages. The sea was smooth. The Whale is down about 720 miles northwest of Horta, Azores, and about 880 miles southwest of Cape Race, Newfoundland, her goal.

The call for help came approximately 15 hours after the left the Azores. If the is picked up, it will be the fifth time in the perilous history of trans-Atlantic flying that a crew has survived after being forced down on the water. Capt. Courtney, accompanied by E. S.

Hosmer. Montreal banker; Fred Pierce, mechanic, and E. W. Gilmour, radio operator, left Horta today at 1:55 a. m.

E- S. T. after waiting there for more than a month since their flight from Lisbon on June 28. They intended to fly to Newfpundland and then down the coast to New York, completing the first westward crossing of the Atlantic with a stop in the Azores us are so old or hard boiled that he does not like to travel thru the beautiful land of some day on the wings of his imagination. Even the scien-! tist, who is supposed to be a stickler pcrimenting10 THINKS OTHERS MARKED mathematical precision and whose aim is exact knowledge is a victim' Attorney General Charges of this age-old habit.

Listen to him, as he regales the Americal Chemical society, now in session at Chicago, with what he professes to see thru the rose-tinted spectacles of without farms, factories run by sunshine, and war without bloodshed. What a world this will be when; we can live without work and fight without physical injury! Anarchists Met At Convent Weather Forecast: Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; probably showers. EL PASO, TEXAS, THURSDAY, 1928 IwmT OIL PRODUCER CEASESFLOW Cav -111 Bridges Over Oil Sand; May Force Drilling Deeper OIL SCOUTS RUSH AREA Lease Prices Soar When Culberson Found to Be Producer nn 2 Cents in El Faso cents Outside El Paso Armored Car Coming to Ft. Bliss May Put Whole Cities to Sleep R. GUSTAVE EGLOFF believes that, instead of killing men.

it may be possible to put them to sleep and let them recover after they have been captured. He even suggests that the sting of their defeat may be softened by pleasant dreams. use of tear he says, a start in this an anesthetic can be de- veloped of such he it may be distributed over en- I tire battlefields and cities, enveloping the defenders in quiet Dr. vision would be more convincing, wrere it not for the obvious peculiarities of human nature. When men are mad enough to wrage war they are generally mad enough to slap each other on the wrist if nothing more.

By G. F. FIXE United Press Staff Correspondent MEXICO de Leon Toral. assassin of Obregon, plotted his crime as a member of a terrorist organization called the Villa de Guadalupe, of which Mother Superior Maria Concepcion and Manuel Trejo were members, Atty. Gen.

Juan Correa Nieto charged to- day. Nieto said that police information indicated that the Villa de Guada- lupe was an anarchist-like organ- ization, and that Carlos Castro was a fourth leader, apparently had plotted the deaths of various Mexican leaders, Nieto said, at meetings in Mother Superior Maria convent. is undoubtedly abnormal, but I should not say that he is unbalanced mentally. But there were others behind Toral. believe that Toral is shielding Manuel Trejo, who, he says, gave Police who walk a few city blocks, shouldn't kick.

Bob Summeral. Texas ranger, covers the Big Bend; country of the Rio Grande, and his oi, over the Ai 1 rl nn Anlrinrv if i beat is 100 miles long. The country The Deep Rock Oil Co's new Culberson county wildcat Bettis No. 1, on Grisham-Hunter holdings near to flow when control heads and gate valve wrere attached in an attempt to turn the oil into flow tanks, according to word received from the well today. Going into the hole again, drillers found that a cave-in in a section is rugged and mountainous and Summeral covers it on horseback.

The organization i Rum runners and illegal Mexican entries make his work interesting. S. P. WASHOUT HALTS TRAINS iviaiiuci i i Iff 1 r) him the pistol with which he killed Hali-Inch 1 a Causes N. M.

Washout Obregon but had no idea for what purpose the pistol would be used. That is absurd. believe that Trejo is the key to the father, Aureliano de eLon, in an interview published in El Universal today, said he believed his son must have obeyed outside influ- UCH as I respect science, I doubt ences in killng Obregon. In childhood, the father said, Jose gon and East Yanaell were delayed spread. Thinks Brutality Will Continue in War oil sand, checking its flow.

The sand barely had been tapped when the started Monday night. Drills now will be sent deeper into the sand, to give the well a thoro test, unless gas pressure cleans out the hole again. Further test, however, will be delayed until more storage has been got on the ground. Lease Brokers Rush Definite discovery that oil exists there in commercial quantities has caused a rush of oil scouts and lease brokers from all neighboring oil fields. J.

R. Miller, one of the owners of i Miller Brothers ranch on w'hich an- was delayed, other Culberson test is being drilled, out of order said today on his return from the ALD. MULLIN TO QUIT CITY COUNCIL POST Head Finance Division Expects Move to Denver KR0HN MAY GET PLACE Watson, McKee, McAfee And Schwartz Are Considered F. Trubee Davison, assistant secretary of war for aviation, is shown behind the machine gun on one of the newly commissioned armored cars to be assigned to the First Cavalry Division at Ft. Bliss.

The car in the picture is one of the models. Armored Cars To Receive Trial At Ft. Bliss in Fall NO FUNDS FOR DEM PRIMARY Street car service telephones put here and a small washout was re- i "'ell that hundreds of them swarmed ported near Columbus. N. to the new wildcat all day yes- the Southern Pacific lines during I terday and that prices on lands the half-inch thundershower today, cither fee or lease have soared rap- Street cars running on North Ore- idly as word of the new discovery its ability to civilize war.

The cussedness of war is not much a suffered from paralysis and various matter of weapons as of will. Recent medical tests m- Whether with knotted sticks or dicated, he said, that Jose might be machine guns in their hands, men. suffering from pathological weak- have shown a distinct tendency to nesses, traceable to his grandfather, turn brutal when facing each other Among the persons held with U. S. LAGS IN WORLD GAMES Flying Finn Beats Nurmi 1 500 Meter Record on the battlefield.

The essence of war, as it has come down to us thru the ages and as it I has been visualized in monument and history, is violence. I Except for the mental quirk which inspires all of us to look far ahead for -conquest, fame and salvation, the scientists now gathered at Chicago! might find it worth while to solve some of the problems right under their noses. If gas is good for the why not moonshine as a source of political unrest? It certainly be agreeable to wake up some morning and find that chloroform had been substituted for bullets in our rum running strife, and that the innocent bystander, as well as the bootlegger pleasant while he was being captured. Toral are Ignacio Trejo Morales, a brother of Manuel Trejo. by sand brought down from the hills by the water and deposited on the tracks.

About 50 telephone lines were temporarily out of order thruout the city. Not First West of Pecos Some confusion has arisen as to the designation of the well, due to the fact that the Deep Rock Oil Co. has drilled several wells on Grisham-Hunter holdings. It's itie Deep Rock's fourth well in Culberson Trains No. 3 and 103 of the South-noKiitv.

but each test has been on The brother has maintained that i crn Pacific, which left here for the a different lease. The discovery he has known nothing of Manuel since a recent attempt to bomb the chamber of deputies. wrest today, were delayed about two well is Bettis No. 1. By FRANK GETTY United Press Sports Editor AMSTERDAM The stars and stripes was almost totally absent from the Olympic flagpole of victory today as Finland, Germany and Japan shared honors in four finals on the fifth day of the Olympiad.

A second place in the hop, step And jump, won by Oda of Japan, was America's only place in the three finals of the events. distance 15.21 meters (49 Steurt, Overton and Dass Score In ARM IS TORN OFF IN CRASH Youth Loses Limb When Autos Collide BATTERY A MEN WIN 82ND PICNIC HONORS feet, 10.818 inches), Levi B. Casey, Los Angeles A. second, with 15.17 meters. Florence McDonald, the Boston girl, won the only other place of the day for the United States wrhen finished sixth in the 800 neter final, wron by Fraulein Radke )f Germany in two minutes, 16.8 seconds, a new record.

Larva, flying Finn, captured the 1500 meter final setting a new Olym- Dic record of three minutes, 53.2 seconds. The former record was 3.53.6 made by Paavo Nurmi at the 1924 games at Paris. Point score after today's events follow: United States Finland 48; Great Britain 37; Sweden 31; Canada 28: Germany Japan 15; South Africa 14; Ireland 10; France 10: Norway 7: Haiti Hungary Italy Philippines Holland and Switzerland 1. Many Events At Park Battery A carried off major honors in the 82nd Field Artillery's anniversary celebration at Washington Park Wednesday afternoon. Battery A won the mounted tug-of- war with a team of R.

Steurt, R. D. Overton, J. A. Broom and E.

W. Dass, and the mounted WTestling contest with Broom, Overton, E. L. Sink and De Haven. L.

A. Ryan, J.Nickum and F. Virgin won the guidon relay race for Battery A. Headquarters battery and battery C. tied in two heats of pushball, and the headquarters team took the verdict in a mounted WTestling contest to decide the contest represented by H.

Mayberry, T. L. Turner and Landrum. Roman riding honors went to battery represented by J. C.

Lightner, O. A. Witt and J. J. Hodge.

DEADLY STREETS In El Paso Since Jan. 1 Injured, 254 Dead, 13 The left arm of Vegigno Rodriguez, 15, 2130 E. San Antonio, was torn off at the elbow when a truck in which he was riding, driven by Preciliano Madrid. 2018 Bassett, collided, with a car driven by Richard Glaze, tourist from Bisbee, at McKinley and Byron today. Rodriguez was taken to the Masonic hospital by Joe Young of the Elite Confectionery, and operated upon by Dr.

Felix Miller. The truck, according to Madrid, had five boys in it returning from the municipal golf course where they are caddies. Rodriguez w'as sitting in the rear, on the left, riding backwards. When the cars collided, the truck was thrown against a telephone pole and arm, resting on the side, was cut off. Feliciano Rodriguez, father of the boy, is employed by the city.

Charge El Pasoan Set Garage Afire HOLD SPANISH BEAUTY United Press Teased Wire J. W. Tinsley, 52, 806 N. El Paso, was charged with attempted arson in Peace Justice R. B.

Rawlins court today. The complaint was signed by F. J. Powers, in charge of the police arson squad. Tinsley is charged with setting fire to a garage in w-hich he had a car Wednesday night.

A. P. Pickett, a neighbor, put out the fire, Powers said. Tinsley denied the charges. do remember lighting a cigaret as I left he said.

match I threw away might have started the fire. I did not gather any papers or intentionally start the Tinsley is the husband of Isis Tinsley, dancing teacher. NEW Agueda Adorna, who was at the Galveston bathing beauty revue, and her chaperone, Alma Alba, are held by New Orleans immigration authorities today for possible deportation. They were taken from a local hotel Wednesday night, charged with over-staying their time in this country. To Get Fast Plane United Press Wire COLORADO SPRINGS-Arthur Goebel, winner of the Dole flight to Honolulu was Colorado Springs en route to California where he will gain possession of an airplane reputed to be the fastest in America.

He will attempt, to break the trans-continental record in his new machine. Bixel Named Instructor Lt. Chas. Bixel, 8 th cavalry, is detailed as instructor to the C. M.

T. C. in orders from Brig. Gen. Geo.

Van Horn Moseley today. Says Assaulted Officers Charges of assaulting federal officers with a deadly weapon and importing liquor have been filed before U. S. Com. A.

J. W. Schmid against Manuel Vasquez. Vasquez w-as recently arrested alter he had been at large since escaping from Hotel Dieu in 1925, Plane On Way To U.S. Is Down in Town rom Where ColumbusSailed United Press Leased Wire PORT OF HUELVA, the surf at the little port of La Rabida, from where Christopher hours near Columbus, N.

where high waters washed out a small section of the track. Rain was general. The Southern Pacific reported it extended as far north as Dawson and west to Douglas. Half-Inch Rain At Ysleta, water ran over the curb in the business district. Fields were reported under water.

Two cars were reported to have skidded into ditches on the El Paso-Ysleta road. Others stalled. The U. S. weather bureau reported half an inch of rain fell during the thundershower.

This is not unusual for July or August, the bureau said, as these two months are the rainiest of the year in El Paso. Practically all of New Mexico range country has received some rain since July 20 and cattle and sheep are in good condition, according to a bulletin issued today by R. F. Hare, agricultural statician. Prices, he says, are good thruolt the state.

The north central section around Dawson and Raton report ranges dry. Prices high with more buyers looking for stock. In portions of the northeastern section around Wagon Mound, Ocote and Optimo, ranges were dry but both cattlc and sheep were ing well. Clayton reports good general rains. Most lambs, steers and cattle in that section were contracted.

Steers at 10 and 10 1 a cents; calves, $40 and $45; lambs 10 and cents. Rains Arc Late At Datil in the west central section rains were late but good showers have greatly benefitted the section. Steers and calves were in good demand with an 80 per cent calf crop. At Beaverhead the calf crop was 10 per cent greater and cattle sales 10 per cent less than last year. La Lande in the cast central section reports calves contracted at $35 and $45.

Buchanan, Duro and Nara Visa report ranges needing rain but all stock doing well. Calves are weighing 375 400 pounds and lambs 60 pounds. Report Dry Range Tyrone, Lordsburg and Deming in the southwest report ranges dry, but conditions were generally good. Calf prices were expected to be $35 to $40 for November delivery. Hillsboro and Cutter report good I bars that rains with grass improving, stock laws, conditions good.

In the south central section, Hatch reports ranges dry with some local rains, cattle and sheep poor but no loss. Salem conditions look good. Las Cruces reports good rains. Good Some published reports also have confusedly referred to the new well as first West Texas producer west of the The whole Yates pool in Pecos county is west of the Pecos river. Fort Bliss will be the trial ground for the war departments experi- ments in perfecting a rapid-motor I armored car for reconaissance and anti-aircraft service, between now next summer, according to Maj.

A. D. Surles. Two types of the armored cars, the only ones turned out so far, will arrive at Bliss in October, according to war department orders, i Two of the cars will be models equipped with a machine gun and steel windshield. The car is built on a five-passenger chassis, 1 equipped with a six-cylinder motor.

The other four cars in the ment for Fort Bliss are the type, on seven passenger chassis, with eight-cylinder La Salle engines. The heavy types are to be 1 equipped later with anti-aircraft and 37 millimeter guns. Cregor Estimates Vote to Cost 1500 H. O. Cregor, chairman of the Democratic county executive committee, said today he does not knowr where funds are coming from for a run off primary.

He estimates the run off will cost $1500. This would provide a judge and two clerks for each box. Two years ago judges and clerks donated their services. Candidates for the legislature are only required by law to pay $1 toward election expense. Cregor said.

This would leave Miss Lillian Huggett and Fletcher Campbell, and K. M. Linker and W. A. Simpson to bear the entire expense.

Cregor said he has been advised by attorneys that he cannot safely use money left over from the first candidate assessment for the second primary. By GERALD DAILEY Aid. R. N. Mullin will resign within a few days, it was learned today.

His successor is being considered by the city council now and an announcement is predicted within two days. Mayor R. E. Thomason refused to confirm or deny the report. Choice of a successor probably will be made from the following: Ed Krohn, general manager of Albert Mathias Sc Maurice Schwartz, vice president of the Popular Dry Goods R.

E. McKee, contractor; Robt. W. McAfee, cashier of the State National bank and Sam Watkins, of the Watkins Motor Co. Mullin will resign because his duties with the Continental Oil to which he recently sold the Calumet Oil keep him out of the city a great part of the time.

He is district manager with headquarters at Albuquerque and may be transferred to Denver. Mullin is head of the finance division of the city. He has made a creditable record, saving the city thousands of dollars thru his handling of sinking funds. He urged the audit which uncovered the shortages in the tax collector's office and the audit which disclosed shortages in the water works department. He has been active in revising svstems of accounting in various departments and substituting more modern methods.

The council in choosing his successor is looking for a type of man familiar with business finances. Ed Khron probably will get the appointment. Krohn has been active in promoting the College of Mines. He headed the drive for athletic funds for the college last year. Aid.

Stewart Berkshire. Democratic nominee for district will not resign until NoverAber. More Pasoans Found With Culberson Land Additional El Pasoans were found today who have land holdings near the new wildcat oil well in Culberson county. Mrs. M.

W. Tatum. 1132 Arizona, owns a ranch of approximately 100 sections of land adjoining the tract on which the well came in. She owrns adjoining sections on the west, east and north. Mrs.

Joe Seay. 3127 White Oak, owns a ranch adjoining the Tatum ranch. Part of the Seay land adjoins on the south the land on which the well came in. A1 Tatum, son of Mrs. Tatum, who manages the Tatum ranch, is at the ranch now.

Mrs. Seay and her son. left Sunday to see, the well brought in. Their ranch is managed by another of Mrs. sons, Frank.

Mrs. E. B. Altman, 1620 N. Mesa, owns some land in Reeves county, about 10 miles from the well.

Several oil companies have leases on lands near the well. These companies include the World Oil Sun Oil Gulf Production Humble Oil and the Tidal Oil Co- WM. S. VARE Buddy Ward Plans Mayor Names Robey HAS STROKF Practice Law As Chief of 1 Rnbrv was aon M. L.

T. Robey was appointed chief V. Ward, defeated iof today by Mayor R. E. Ppnna Senator-Elect in Ser- candidate for sheriff, today opened Thomason Every policeman in the senator in Der offjce 6fl.

Cap)es petltlon that Dist. Atty. Clias. Vowell refused to be made chief. give Ward his job back in the dis- Stowe was appointed trict attorney's office, stating that Sgt.

W. C. Woolverton was named ious Condition Unifed Pee T.rafd Wire ATLANTIC CITY, N. S. Wm.

S. Vare, of Pennsylvania, suffered a stroke of apoplexy today at Vent Orin near here. His condition is said to be serious. Vare has lost, at least temporarily, the use of one side of his body. The senator-elect had been away he had already employed W.

W. Bridgers. Peace Justice R. B. Rawlins turned over his office in the same suite with Atty.

J. U. Sweeney to Ward. Rawlins said he does not use his office often enough to justify keeping it. Both Sweeney and Rawlins fought on a fishing trip and returned here in the election.

Wednesday night a houis bcioie ward said he will practice both the attack. civil and criminal law. WINS 44 MILE DANCE TEXAS STATE HIGHWAY BOSTON. Footsore and weary, COMMISSIONER TO WED Louis Lerner waltzed into Park Square here today, an easy winner of the 44-mile dance marathon from Providence, R. to this city.

Bathed in perspiration from the AUSTIN State Highway Comm, brim of his withered leghorn hat to cone Johnson of Tvler and Ethel Flag Station May Become Oil Town San Martin, desolate little flag station on the Texas Pacific railroad, may become an oil town as a result of discovery of oil in the Grisham-Hunter well in Culberson county, oil men say today. San Martin is a tiny station, with a name and nothing else- However, six miles southeast of the well, and the nearest railroad station. Kent, nearest railway station equipped as a trading point now, is 10 miles away. MORE ABOUT OIL On Page 2 Today the soles of his dusty shoes, the slim, bald dancing master crossed the finish line at, 12:32 p. hours and 12 minutes after the start.

Half a dozen young women were Lerner's relay partners enroute. Beth Calvin crossed the finish line with him. DENIES PR0HI SLUSH Com. Doran today planned a. further campaign against night clubs and open violate the prohibition Remove Steers Boss United Press Prosed Wire DALLAS Bert Ellison, manager of the Dallas Steers of the Texas league, since the opening of the current season, was relieved of his duties today and will be replaced by Bob Tarleton, recently named business manager of the club, Fred McJunkin, one of the club's owners, announced today.

Ellison will leave the team, McJunkin said. Ellison came to Dallas from San Francisco. Failure of the Steers to make a satisfactory showing this year was blamed for Ellison's removal. i captain and Patrolman N. L.

Clark was advanced to sergeant. Robey has been on the police force 12 years, making a notable record. Capt. Stowe joined the force 13 years ago. Before coming to El Paso he was a police offiger in San tonio.

Aid. R. £. Sherman said today he was a reporter for the San Antonio Express when StowTe shot and killed three bandits who first shot fellow police officer. Stowe has been shot twice by negroes.

Once was in San Antonio. He was shot thru the leg. One of little fingers was shot off July 30. 1927, he entered a dark house in south El Paso to arrest a drunken negro. Stowe is 46 years old and married.

Woolverton went to work on the El Paso police force May 2, 1916. Previous to that he had worked on the fire department for five years. The last two years he was a captain. He received his sergeancy in 1923. i He has been in the city employment 17 years.

He came to El Paso 20 vears ago from Uvalde. Texas. BLAST TOLL EIGHT Clark has been on the force June 22. 1923. serving in both the VINCENNES, Ind.

Seven em- i police and detective departments, ployes, burned in the gasoline still Sgt. Billy Matthews, it explosion at the Indian refinery at ed today refused to go to the uni- 1 Lawrenceville, 111.. Wednesday, were formed forces or he would have been believed dving here today. appointed captain of police. He ha? Eight men were killed and 72 in- i been a sergeant of detectives for Will Take Assistant Attorney General as Wife Hilton of Galveston, assistant attorney general of Texas, will be married here tonight.

They expect to leave at once for Colorado on a trip. jured. Sixty-five of these, in hospitals at Lawrenceville and Vincennes, are expected to recover. several years and prefers the detective work to the uniformed service as captain. TEMPERATURES: Rogers Wires: A 1 In nf a 7 Xew Ori.

no 7S 74 Xew York 7 is 70 1 6 Phoenix 4 El Paso .8967 Roswell OU 70 Ivans. 00 7 Santone Los A ns'. SO 61 Seattle 58 Engine trouble developed. Com. Franco planned to land at rains had also fallen at Glencoe and Horta, Azores, refuel, and then continue to New Foundland.

A third Columbus started on the voyage that hop will be to New York, resulted in discovery of America, the damaged seaplane waited today for another start to reach that same America. The plane, piloted by Com. Ramon Franco, was forced to land at La Rabida Wednesday morning after having started from Cadiz on the first part of an around the world flight. La Rabida is about 50 miles northeast of Cadiz. The plane suffered some damage but the extent was not known.

The aviators made their landing just as the residents of La Rabida port known better as were celebrating the anniversary of start towards America, Aug. 3, 1492. cattle were in good condition, no calf contracts. Picacho and Carrizozo report) need of general rain, cattlc in good shape. Roswell in the southeastern section reports range conditions poor from lack of rain, lamb crop 55 to 60 per cent of normal.

Carlsbad has had plenty of rain and conditions were greatly improved. He said such places have become a "national and that special agents will be detailed to eliminate such nuisances. Doran said the recent investigation of night clubs in New York City cost the government less than $9000. over a period of six months, and that the expenses were considered small. He denied charges by Rep.

Laguardia of New York that $65,000 had been spent in the New York inves- tigations. Says Life Threatened Gus May threatened to kill her, Maye May charges in a divorce petition filed today. I Flapper Mothers Not Harmed By Drink, Cigarets Says Physician United i'rcsH Focused Wire flapper can take a from a whisky bottle and puff cigarettes and still not endanger the health of her babies after marriage, Dr. John Whitridge Williams, professor of obstetrics at Johns Hopkins university, Baltimore, said! here today. most women drink! very little- docs not harm he said.

Germany, beer is a first diet a in France, water is seldom used as a drink. "As for to it. Women are just as able to smoke cigarettes as men and the effects are the same. rises above the enlightened and blase exterior of flaming youth. Despite her longing for a and her detestation for conventionality and sentiment, the flapper is a good mother.

"The girl of today is no different at heart than her mother. Indulgences of flaming youth have nothing to do with the high infant death SANTA MONICA. Calif. Se! I New York. That means tliat they just have to gc out of busines? for you look at those shows sober.

i woman brandt that doing all this and she is a ep li a The Democrat! will say that just a political move, but when you take away ao out of town booze more than politics. It comes under the heading of disaster, for how is he going to tell the folks back home what a devil he wa: I in New York if he buy some courage. ROGERS..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About El Paso Evening Post Archive

Pages Available:
14,038
Years Available:
1927-1931