Call Now! 1-888-845-2887 Hablamos Español

You have viewed 1 newspapers today. Please Register in order to view more newspapers.

You are currently viewing page 1 of: Woodland Daily Democrat

Show More

Other Editions of Woodland Daily Democrat

Woodland Daily Democrat Friday, January 03, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Saturday, January 04, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Saturday, January 04, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Monday, January 06, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Monday, January 06, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Tuesday, January 07, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Wednesday, January 08, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Thursday, January 09, 1890,
California

Woodland Daily Democrat Thursday, January 09, 1890,
California

Other Editions from Tuesday, January 14, 1930

Bismarck Tribune Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
North Dakota

Coshocton Tribune Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Ohio

Decatur Daily Review Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Illinois

Decatur Evening Herald Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Illinois

Edwardsville Intelligencer Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Illinois

Indiana Evening Gazette Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Pennsylvania

Marion Star Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Ohio

Middlesboro Daily News Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Kentucky

Laurel Morning Call Tuesday, January 14, 1930 ,
Mississippi

Embed Publication

Embed this publication to your website

NewspaperArchive
1930-01-14 for page-1
Woodland Daily Democrat
Woodland Daily Democrat

My Recent Searches

No results found

See all my searches

Newspaper Content on page 1 of:

Woodland Daily Democrat

   Woodland Daily Democrat (Newspaper) - January 14, 1930, Woodland, California                               Timely Appeal Advertising in un afternoon paper of satisfactory circulation times the sales appeal perfectly Today's Best Smile These big cars really need two homi to howl Look and oilier to growl I told you Robert Quillen Richmond ISSUED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY WOODLAND CALIFORNIA TUESDAY JANUARY 14 1930 ESTABLISHED 1877 HOLD UP DAVIS STATION Ota 040 MEXICAN STABBED IN LIQUOR PARTY i i Total Passes Mark of i ATTENDANT LOCKED UP HUHT KNIFER Twenty-nine goes into the Monday night's rainfall of 13 inch brought the seasonal total to 6.92 inches 43 inch more than the I total last season at this date i 17 inch more than at this C B HUTCHISON HEADS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE DUO ESCAPES WITH AT By Valley News Alliance Jan Boss and convicted of Clifford Carey grocery store clerk here in a holdup Staff Correspondent her You know what this means Jack Gomez service man looked at the customer j date j The rainfall has for all agricultural needs it isj said I Tuesday's lowest temperatures I was and Monday's highest 39 j i Unsettled weather is HIGH GUARD OFFICERS CO E LAUD UNIT By ELIZABETH FITZGERALD were sentenced to e on the at Folsom prison of ing before him His eye fell to the stranger's coat pocket in which one hand and a significant bulge that narrowed to a point directed towards Gomez While he bandit covered the vice station operator a seized locked him in a rest room and the pair escaped with in cash taken from the till Although Gomez speedily crawled through a window climbed over the top of the filling station and ed Chief of Police Floyd Gattrell i was too late to overtake the men Gomez told Chief that the two men drove into the service trial was for the defendants filed notice of appeal to the state supreme S Luke Howe Sacramento i ney who entered the case to file an uppeal for Davis submitted an the court from Miss Irene Frost designed to prove that Davis was seen in front cf her residence between and S p the night of the This would contradict the testimony of Miss Hester Wilcox who said the two men visited her apartment after the and re- mained there Accused of stabbing another can as the climax of a drinking Juan Conterras is being sought day by Yolo and Sacramento county police K Olgun of Sacramento the victim is in the county hospital at mento with deep knife wounds in his face and neck The stabbing Olgun told mento police occurred in a shack near Ben's warehouse at Broderick Olgun Conterras and several others had been drinking for some time when aji argument which ended in the stab bing STORMS FLOODS TAKE BIG DEATH PROPERTY TOLL FARM HEAD SUCCEED MERRILL c Fight Dropping in on Company E Monday night two high of- of the 40th Division saw the guardsmen go through a series of drills and then expressed their faction at the way the local unit is By United I CHICAGO Jan trapped three bandits in the darkened or of a west side duplex early day opened fire with pistols and i guns in the quarters killed two of the robbers captured the i third and lost one of their own j bir Warned by a buzzer signal the de- squad surprised the bandits By United Press Storms and floods lashed separated portions of the progressing The officers were Lieutenant Col- as they poked pistols in the ribs of Floyd Stewart assistant chief of Harry Sucherman rich sausage widely nation staff and Captain Robert L Draper adjutant of the 40th Division both Tuesday carrying the toll of ot Berkeley Frost who is said to have tion at about 8 o'clock Monday night now testimony in the der at Sacramento is to be the woman who was forced at the of a Kun to accompany TELLS NEED FOR CENSUS WORKERS nnd ordered five gallons of gasoline When they had been served ami Gomez went to give one of the bandits his change the stickily occurred The pair escaped in a blue Buick Both were young looking Gomez ported Opened only the filling tion at the corner of B and First streets on the highway is owned by Brothers By Valley News Alliance suffering and property damage to a foreboding level and threatening to assume disastrous proportions in many places The gravest menace in the roaring waters of streams and rivers in the Mississippi valley Swollen by heavy and repeated rains and the water from northern states livers flung levees aside and poured over thousands of acres of agricultural lands Some GO had been killed as the re- B Rowland of the since it began last Porterfield a jealous lover to supervisor for Colusa Glenn was injured in a taxicab dent in Sacramento Sunday FIRE SCARE AT YOLO ROTARY TALK Inmates of the Yolo county hospital were given a thrill early Tuesday a morning when a small fire of un- known cause broke out in the engine room near the furnace Speedy flooding of the room with water and use of a chemical guisher by one of the inmates ended the blaze before it had a chance to spread land Porterfield is now serving a Yuba Sutler Butte and county jail term Miss Frost a di- counties is here on his first visit in I the northern territory lie said the I number of applications and j to be filled are ay I Colusa 11 to be appointed 1C to be appointed 24 applications Butte 42 to be appointed 43 tions Yuba 14 to be appointed 1 applications Suiter 14 to be ed 29 applications Sacramento 103 1 to be appointed 325 applications Appointments will be made the names have boon approved by the census bureau work will start April 1 Results will be announced the latter part of May j 1 COUNTY PROGRESS BY PROCTOR SNOW HEMS IN BUTTE CENTER It was the annual inspection by the officials who are visiting all ics with the view of having all units attend the summer encampment next year Each year the camp is being in- creased in size and it is believed by 1931 all companies in the 40th sion can be handled at San Luis i Monday night's attendance was fair and the local guardsmen ed they knew their drills They were put through close order drill manual j of arms first aid and map reading After the inspection the two expressed satisfaction with the showing and departed to visit other units in the Sacramento valley pany official trying to force him to open a wall safe STATES MUST KEEP ON ENFORCING RUM LAW SAYS BOARD By United Press Claude Burton Hutchison at one time director of the Branch of the College of Agriculture at Davis and now director of the Giannini tion for Agricultural Economics Tuesday afternoon was appointed dean of the state College of ture This action taken at the ing of the board of regents of the J University of California in the State i building at San Francisco Hutchison succeeds Elmer D rill who has resigned to become di- rector of the Bronx Botanical dens in New York Once at Davis I Scores of who were i with thc Hutchison i while he was at Davis from 1922 to County Surveyor A G Proctor gave comprehensive report of some of the improvements made in Yolo ty dating from 1912 up to the present time in a brief talk made Tuesday before the Woodland Rotary club In 1912 Woodland had four blocks of paved streets compared to 11.05 miles today he said At present there are 81.5 miles of paved highway By Valley News Alliance community on the rk of Butte county is bound With 25 inches of snow on the ground mail service has been and schools have been closed for nearly a week Farmers are un- able to use their to buy food with roads blocked by snow HENDLEY CRASH ECHO IN COURT 1921 were enthusiastic today over his tion prohibition program does not con- advancement to have charge of all the template relieving the state of any j agricultural activities of the state un- responsibility for enforcement it was including the Davis Farm emphasized here Tuesday in official j Also a part of Hutchison's office quarters congress began work upon w ill be the directorship of the i President Hoover's program j ment Station of the Agricultural Col- of the President i lege Attorney Mitchell and the law Until a new director of the j forcement commission were designed i nini Foundation is appointed j only to correct faults in the federal son will continue to hold that post j enforcement machinery and nothing i Hutchison was appointed director in them meant that states would the Giannini Foundation in j relieved of their responsibility because of inci eased federal activity it was said tember 1928 For four years to that time he had been o of agricultural education in Europe in making the coun A belated contest growing out of the crash of J T Hendley's a I bile business here two years ago more dry heard in Superior Judge W A This interpretation came from re- Anderson's court Tuesday The sponsible authorities in charge of the Finance company and the Bank I prohibition program soon after the The state it was explained should for the Rockefeller International Methodist Men to i More Snow Falls cation Board which position he while Director of the Branch at Missouri Hutchison was born in Chillicothe from of Yolo are contending over the of several bills designed to carry Missouri and was graduated j of four automobiles the recommendations of the com- j the College of Agriculture of the Un- to Hendley missions had been introduced in of Missouri with the degree n Yolo county compared to a half mile Have Boys Night The next meeting of the At Oroville The case was taken under Tt was the measure providing j for transfer of enforcement agencies 1 from the treasury to the justice 1 of Bachelor of Science in 1908 He received his master's degree in Men's club January 23 will Mrs Van Tassel Growing Weaker Death steadily grows nearer to Mrs H M Van Tassell it was ported today She grows weaker hourly at her home in West mento where she lies a victim of in- heart trouble and shock re- from the death of three er members of the family within month n J 1914 Proctor called attention to the fact that all of the present houses in Woodland the and county jail were constructed boys and games are included By Valley News Alliance j n v city was Boys Night program according to I t f v under a third snowstorm within chairman for the Li A i a week Monday night when twoi A dinner program of talks by i y inches of snow fell here The Rites Held for Continued on Page Three in the plans kJ i i V V i i 1 V V JL 1 V 1 IW V I iest fall in this part of the state was The oi Former Childs Heads Davis Rotarians Tehama Board I Hear Students MAN DIES By Valley News Alliance YUBA William chiis 55 of Sutler City many years died Tuesday foi Building Development He stated that an average of 35 sub- stantial dwellings were being con- annually in Woodland and nearly all the business houses had been rejuvenated in the past few years Similar conditions also exist in Davis and Winters said the speaker Proctor gave a description of the new sewer extension in Woodland ann stated that it was built to take cave of conditions here for many years Since 1915 there has been a general j Tf at BUCK s ranch in county It is expected that representatives where 169 inches are on the ground Payne Case Delayed Day from Clarksburg Rumsey Guinda and Dixon will be present The com- I on arrangements includes C G Epperson Howard Brown and man S A Larsson is club president Baptists to Elect known musician who passed away atj j his home in Sacramento Sunday was i News Alliance i held Tuesday afternoon in j RED L Childs was j j to The services were under the chosen chairman of the Tehama I of Sacramento Lodge No 40 board of supervisors Monday after- A M of which deceased was a member He was also a member of the l Sacramento Musicians Union many noon i With attorneys for both litigants endeavoring to work out a Officers agreement on property j rights the case of 0 D Payne of whose members attended the last BOY INJURES EAR Peter Richter high school student Continued on Eight Activity Halts as Hundreds Pay Honor to Judge WILLOWS Jan stood at half mast and stroe doors were closed Claude F Super- ior Court judge and political leader Uy CHARLES GLEESON V X A Staff Correspondent 14 While flags state and nation Election of officers for the reconstruction of bridges and culverts i Baptist church will be the of j the meeting which they will hold at j the church Wednesday evening j ginning at o'clock First there j will be a covered dish supper the short business meeting The j sion will be concluded with a program i of games led by J W Howell Y C A secretary All members are ed to come Rev J II Howe is in i charge i case against his wife Mrs Frankie Payne was continued Tuesday to Wednesday j noon at 2 o'clock I If a compromise is reached a court ruling on Payne's injunction suit will i become unnecessary j Claims Sugar Men Victim their telegraphed condolences Praised in Eulogy High tribute was paid to Judge By United Press men who paid publicity agents on either side of sugar tariff question were duped Weather HoldS by Chairman Caraway of the Senate lobby investigating committee told the Senate Tuesday in a report Caraway said that while the report was treated at the Woodland Clinic Tuesday morning for an injured ear j received while boxing The injury i was not serious but the boy 1 ed a physician to be sure no cations would set in E A S T OAKLAND Extensive l street improvements proposed at this place The program of the Davis Rotary Club meeting Monday was presented by X M Fiske chairman of the club music committee in charge Leslie Waight a college student appeared first on the program with a vocal solo He was followed by Paul Day Davis high school student who played a cornet solo accompanied by Miss red Hoag Miss Hoag then played a piano solo An invitation was read from the Calaveras Cement company for the club to visit their cement plant in San Andreas Visiting club bers were Harold Ellis of Berkeley and Leroy Hyde of the Woodland club Up Street Grading Press Time Bulletins Between showers George city street superintendent is making j NEGRO CADET FLUNKS OUT OF WEST POINT WEST POINT Jan Cadet Alonzo Parham of Chicago i i it i JL JL j JL only a half million the only Negro cadet in West Point was among 64 honor an effort to level up dirt streets in tho residential section He has been were spent in this way it was his opinion twice as much was expended II S Saxby who officiated at vices held at the home Lehr was placed in his eternal resting in a eulogy delivered by Rev place here Tuesday afternoon Tho funeral was the greatest ever held in Glenn county Tin numbers Colville and Dayton sang at- of residents who came by the by Mrs C R reds to pay homage to Judge Burial took place the Willows wore augmented by scores from other counties Leaders from all over the Continued on Willows Memorial Edifice Accepted in thc Time Stage DV thu sower Driver Passes By Valley News Alliance WILLOWS The recently com memorial building hove was formally accepted and plans for a e in Orland wore boaid of supervisors by the sewer ditch crows and as soon a- the dirt has packed thc streets will DC Several loads of gravel to be deposited on the streets shortly similar proved by Tuesday tlu ably discharged today from the military academy for deficiency in their studies Parham was appointed kst summer to West Point by De Priest Illinois Negro member of i Congress The appointment of the Negro created wide comment land agitation at the time SANTA Market od fish department at 542 Third street NEW STORM ON HEELS OF FRIGID SPELL Hy Valley News Alliance j SACRAMENTO Jan northern California was still j Fligar itself out of the snow i new storm was seen sweeping stable owner and operator of down upon the slate late today N R Taylor United States he old line between Marysville and Column or observer forecasts a clear night Tuesday with killing frosts dicil Tuesday in lowed Wednesday by more rain additional down to law I levels possibly once again reaching the upper Sacramento   

Browse our 120 Million papers!

Browse by Surname

Newspaper articles about more than 99 million People!

Browse Alphabetically

Choose the Membership Plan that is right for you!

Unlimited 6 Month

$99.95 (-45% Savings!)

Unlimited page views for 6 months Learn More

Unlimited Monthly

$29.95

Unlimited page views for 1 month Learn More

Introductory

$19.95

100 page views for 2 months Learn More

Subscribe or Cancel Anytime by calling 888-845-2887

24 hours a day Monday-Saturday

Take advantage of our Introductory Membership offer and become a member for 2 months only for $19.95!

Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!