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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 6
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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 6

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE SIX THE ARIZONA DAILY STAR TUCSON7, ARIZONA, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 30, til HEIRESSES ON WORLD TOUR faced with the tanfftM. ANOTHER MAD DOG HEARING OF R0M0LA CASE IS POSTPONED shots, doing considerable damage according to Farrell. The gun was thrown away on the Sllverbell road where it was recovered by an ARIZONA LEGION IS READY TO GO LAWS ATTACKED BY U. S. BANKER held by Sheriff McDonald Hollis has been In troubi, i.

according to McDonald county attorney's office kl complaint for him, fnea T3' and charging petit larcen, latter was never served. old Mexican and turned over to LOS ANGELES, Sept. 29. the sheriff. The men told conflict ing stories after their capture un Thirty persons under federal indictment in connection with the 1 4 Big Delegation Will Attend Boston Convention With Circus Adjuncts Tariff and Immigration Are Inconsistently Handled, He Tells Meeting CLEVELAND, Sopt.

29. (P) An attack on the tariff and immi Is-? gration laws of the United States FOUND IN COUNTY With another person bitten by a dog Infected with rabies in the section north and east ot Tucson, the county health department Is now of the belief that the mad dog who bit a series of children and dogs near Fort Lowell a short time ago, must have spread rabies throughout that neighborhood. Sunday night Mrs. Mary E. Naegle, route 2, box 207, residing on North First avenue was bitten by a dog.

Yesterday morning Sanitary Inspector C. L. Harrell Investigated the matter, became suspicious of the dog, killed it and took the head to the state laboratory. At 11:30 yesterday morning Miss Jane Rider, state chemist, reported that an examination showed that the dog had a positive case of rabies. Mrs.

Naegle, who was bitten in the hand, is being cared for by her family physician. was delivered at the American Hankers' association convention today by John W. Barton, vice presi California and Arizona operations of Romola, fruit land subdivides, won a continuance until October 27 when they appeared in federal court for entering of pleas today. The thirty, officials and agents of the concern, are charged with using the malls to defraud. The continuance was granted at the request of defense counsel.

Indictment of the thirty resulted from prolonged investigations by postal Inspectors into the methods of Romola, which had offices here. In San Francisco, San Diego, and Phoenix, Ariz. dent of the Metropolitan National bank of Minneapolis and president 4 1 7 -V of the association's national bank THE EXTRA MONEY YOU WILL NEED within the next ninety days for Christmas will be coming to you in ample time if you belong to our 1930 Christmas Money Club and have kept your payments up to date. If you are behind in your payments, there is still time to catch up, if you start right away, on your pay day this week. Just divide the balance you are due, as shown by your pass-book, by the number of pay days between now and December, and deposit accordingly on each day day.

ARIZONA vs 1 The Arizona drpnrtmont, Amorl-can loKlon la on the threshold of one of It's most netlve weeks In the year. Hearted hy Russell Meadows, department commander and Mrs. O. N. French, auxiliary president, 25 deleiraten will env6 Phoenix at 7 o'clock Wednesday morning bound for Boston, Massaehu-etts and the twelfth annual national convention of the leelon nnd Its auxiliary.

In the meantime, posts and auxiliaries throughout the state will concentrate efforts on completing the election of officers for the cominsr year and laying the foundation of an early 1931 membership drive. Delegates to the Tiatlonal meeting will seek to fill two national offices. Mrs. Wilma TToyal of Douglas will be a candidate for the national presidency of the auxiliary while C. E.

MacMillin of Thoenix will be placed In the race for national vice commander of the legion. Favored to Win Both Arizona candidates are favored to win in the national balloting-. The Arizona croup also will seek passage of several resolutions the majority bearlner on aid to disabled veterans of the World war. 4 1 HOMESTEAD HOUSE SHOT BY VANDALS division. He aid creating a tariff and raising the wall against the immigrant is an Inconsistent policy.

"If the tariff wall tends to reduce our foreign trade, as I think It will, then we need more people to consume our surplus," Barton said. "Yet we further restrict Immigration and at the same time continue to reclaim arid lands at an enormous expenditure of capital annually." "If we are limited by the tariff In buying from foreign countries," he said, "we cannot expect to sell our large supplies of products." Idea Defeated The announced purpose of high tariff proponents to retain a high standard of living In this country iff. fj ft' Si j8 ft state banking is on a sounder basis than it ever has been in all its history." An optimistic note came from the farm region of Minnesota in an address by Charles F. Colllson, farm editor of the Minneapolis Tribune. "They tell us the farmers' dollar is worth less than the industrial dollar," he said, "and that our best customer has lost his buylng power.

That's less than half the truth. The fact Is, the products of the right kind of diversified livestock farming are all above or right In line with the general average of retail prices of the commodities the farmers buy even in 1930." 5 it An almost unprecedented example of pure vandalism on a homestead west of Tucson Sunday evening, was followed yesterday by the arrest of three men charged with the offense. The men are Emmet Stelhorn, Ned Hollis, and Alfonso Acevedo. All were apprehended by Deputy Sheriff Johnny Farrell. The homestead robbed was that of Miss Elizabeth Martin, located about six miles west of Tucson and in the Tucson mountains.

According to the report made to the sheriff yesterday the men broke into the Martin house taking a .38 pistol and a box of shells. Going outside they riddled the house with Martha (left) and Helen Candler of Atlanta, Coca Cola heiresses shown as they left San Francisco on a tour around the world. SOUTHWEST BANK 52 EAST CONGRESS ST. OPPOSITE OPERA HOUSE lillillliT PHONES -245 0-2451 hy raising a high tariff wall Is defeated by the efficient methods of transportation and communication now being applied throughout the world, bo said. Barton advised that government stay out of Industry, adding: "Subsidies of any kind are absolutely unsound." Neither should there be any necessity, he said, for business to lob Fifty words are all the average person uses in an average telephone 11111111 Ife; conversation.

Mapping and Study of Moon Helped by Arizona's Crater Scientist Working to Get Accurate Idea of Conditions on Satellite Through Great Mt. Wilson Telescope and Photographs Accurately Made is- by In legislative bodies, but bankers and business men should not be backward or timid in attacking det 1 i. rimental legislation. On Sounder Basis The general condition of banking in the United tSates is undoubtedly better than It has been since 1921, Dan V. Stephens of Fremont, outgoing president of the state bank division, told that division.

In fact, he said, "one might conservatively (Continued" From Page 1) Pease and Edison Pettit of Mt. Wilson Observatory, Drs. J. P. Buwal-da and Paul S.

Epstein of California Institute of Technology, Dr. IT. N. Russell of Trinceton and Drs. A.

L. Day and F. E. Wrieht of the geophysical laboratory of Washington. Dr.

Wright Is chairman here In charge of the work. Artificial Moon A miniature "artificial" moon, a globe 15 inches In diameter, Is set up in a clearing In the pines on top of Mt. Wilson, alongside the great 100-Inch telescope. The clearing resembles an open air theatre. At night moon photos are projected with a 1.000-candIe power beam upon the globe, which Is a curved instead of ordinary flat screen.

The globe glows realistically In the black shadows of the pines, but with a thousand times the detail seen by the eye looking at the real moon. The astronomers can step to one side and photograph this artificial LEU X- kjfa I ICfSfeS: 1 WELL-KNOWN MAN PRAISES DIAFEPSIH FOR STOMACH ILLS STYLE SHOW HOURS 7:30 9:30 P. M. DAILY PROGRAM KVOA 5:30 6:00 P. M.

ml If moon uust as it it were the rea OLDER PEOPLE Must watch bowels Constantly! As we grow older trie luvels become more sluggish. They don't get rid of all the waste. Some days they do not move at all. So older people need to watch their bowels constantly. Only by doing this can they hope to avoid the many forms of sickness caused by constipation.

When your bowels need help remember a doctor should know what la best for them, and Bet a hottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup of Pepsin from your drugstore. Syrup l'ep-ln Is a doctor's prescription for lagging bowels, good for all aces. No restriction of habits or diet is necessary while taking Syrup Pepsin. JIade from fresh, laxative herbs, pure pepsin and other valuable Ingredients, It is absolutely Bate.

It will not gripe, sicken or weaken you. Take a spoonful next time your tongue is coated, or you have a bad taste In your mouth. It clears up a bilious, headachy, dull weak, gassy condition every time. When you see how good it tastes and how rice it acts, you'll know why Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin Is the world's most popular laxative for every member of the family.

hp These resolutions were adopted at the recent state convention in Ts'o-gales. In addition to the 2" delegates the Arizona contingent will have it's own Drum and P.ttcle corps, the Ernest A. Love post champions. An intensive drive to raise funds to take the corps to Boston was conducted throughout the state during the la.t week under supervision of James R. McFarland.

manager, and resulted In the raising of the necessary $6,000 to take 25 members of the corps to Boston. Circus Planned And that Isn't all. Arizona will include a circus In its repertoire. Hal Grimshaw, Phoenix legionnaire gets a new idea each seventh year and this happened to be the seventh. So he suggested taking a miniature circus to Boston as a feature.

There will be 10 tiny circus wagons heading some 73.000 legion men and women through the streets of Boston as a result. The wagons will contain a lot of Arizona's wild life. Rattlesnakes, bull snakes, king snakes, chuck wallas, gila monsters, desert lizards, tarantulas, desert frogs, road runners and monkey faced owls will be among those present. And furnishing the motive power for the first wagon will be "Hiss Arizona," in the form of a five-month-old burro. one, but it Isyno ordinary photography.

Much of the past year was spent perfecting the Instruments that Bhoot light beams four times across the clearing, a distance of 135 feet, which Is the "focal length" of the 100-inch telescope. Their accuracy appears from the fact that in the Carnegie Institution astrophysical laboratory In Pasadena where thev were developed the instruments could not be used because of traffic tremors in the ground. Distortion Corrected The pictures from the side straighten out the distortion photographs of shapes of craters and peaks near the edge of the moon. This rectification is useful to geologists In determining whether these topographical features were caused by volcanic action, meteors, or something else. The real moon continually nods, with a motion called libration.

The consequence is that no two ordinary photos are likely to be exactly the same. But with the artificial moon the "libration" is controlled, so that photos of the real moon can be projected section by section In their proper positions on the artificial moon, and then re-photographed to build up a correct map. Old moon pictures also will be projected, showing the satelite as it appeared 50 and 75 years ago. Comparison of these and recent photos Is expected to settle the controversy about the moon's face lifting. After being re-photographed from 7:30 To 9:30 P.

M. Thousand of Tucson home lovers have taken advantage of the combined showing of Tucson's four leading furniture stores. Again new displays have been arranged for you featuring at this time "Bed Room" Suites. Come. Or.

W. B. Caldwell's SVRIP PEPSIN A Doctor's Family laxative Paris telephone users are in the future to be answered by an automatic clock when they ring up to ask the time. "Studying and working at the same time as I do keeps you on a strain," says John Armstrong, 11 12 W. Santa Barbara Los Angeles, Cal.

"So my digestion suffered. I got so I would have severe headaches and a heavy feeling in my stomach after meals. I had gas on the stomach; would belch often, leaving a sour, hot taste in my mouth. Few things agreed with me. "A friend got me to take some Pape's Diapepsin.

I had immediate relief from the first few tablets, so I kept on with it. Now I feel fine; eat all the pastries and sweets I want without bad after-efferts. I intend to keep on with Pape's Diapepsin until I am sure my trouble won't come back. The tablets are pleasant to chew and sure get results quickly." Pape's Diapepsin is the best thing yet discovered to end digestive worries, give tone to a disordered stomach, increase appetite, make digestion vigorous and complete. Its "success in so many rases where everything else has failed, proves that.

All drugstores sell these harmless, pleasant tablets. If you prefer to try them before buying, a letter to Pape's Diapepsin, Wheeling, W. will bring a sample box, FREE. Showing at LOBBAN FURNITURE CO. TUCSON WEDNESDAY West Congress Street Show Grounds Ample Free Parking Space Showing Showing At At ALBERT Mclaughlin the same angle, the old and new pictures will be compared by the I "blink" system which was used by the American army in the World war to detect camouflage.

The i "blink" will show any slight changes I which may have taken place on the moon's surface. The corrected map gives sclent-; tsts an accurate base for the studies they are making of the moon's sur PAPE'S FURNITURE CO, STEINFELD CO. LEI Quick Relief for Stomach Ills face a square mile at a time. AND THE ADDED FEATURES PP1 Ready to Go THE and happyrjoo 'ftHJEftNfDF FEMR" i'y jf a clear skin makes for popularity w-Wj BODILY VIGOR and natural skin fresh -ft" ness come from the same source healthy red-blood- JFlRST- 3 furnish YOURHOME i IT TELLS rj tlWHAT YOU AReJ cells. When you tire easily TRAINED WILP ANIMAL CIRCUS laper and Better or your skin is sallow and pale or broken out, common 1 sense surarests that ever? pos 7 t- sible step be taken to correct it.

S.S.S. should be your gafctruard. CO. "GREAT GRETONAS" SENSATIONAL HIGH WIRE ACT TIMF IN AMFOirA It restores the red-blood-cells to normal. The system tones up, skin eruptions and sallow complexion disappear.

Your appetite picks up, your whole body is strengthened, invigorated! If your vitality and clear skin are slipping away from you try S.S.S. Get the large size bottle. At all drug stores. PERFORMANCES 2 AND 8 P.M. DOORS OPEN 1 AND 7 P.M.

Ileal ili restored Mr. Florence Allen. Detroit, trrite! "S.S.S. inv prored my appetite and restored my lot tceipht. I think it tronderfuU My greatest turprise teas that there could be anything tchich could make me feel and look to much better in to thort a timet Work i now a pWature." GRAND STAND CHAIRS AND GENERAL ADMISSION TICKETS ON SALE CIRCUS DAY At FLEISHM ANN'S DRUG STORE.

21 E. Congress 40 Dancing Horses 40 Dancing Sunkist Girls "Tusko," the Largest Beast That Walks on Earth Today THE SHOW THAT'S DIFFERENT Showing at GROVES-BRYANT, INC. Builds Sturdy Health.

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Pages Available:
2,187,651
Years Available:
1879-2024