Article clipped from Abilene Morning News

it nan nouns, uiaAMucunmoved by the verdict. His sister. Mrs. D. C. Hughes, wept.Glasscoe also was under indictments charging kidnaping and assault with intent to kill- DistrictAttorney R. G. Waters was undecided whether he would ask trial oi these charges. Glasscoe s attorneysannounced a motion for a new trial would be filed.Identification of Glasscoe as Hanks abductor was based on ownership of a patched plaid jacket given Hanks by his captor. Zora Belle Foster and Roy Towles, friends of Glasscoe for years, identified the coat as his property and Della Mae Warren told of accompanying Glasscoe to Redwater onthe night of the kidnaping Thedefense, as an alibi, sought to prove Glasscoe was in Texarkana on the night of the banker's abduction from Redwater.here and in Texas, and charged the two with conspiring to defraud her of her share of money derived fromthe gas invention.iwn i fi r r i r niMi w—i -y—- ***- m • mm ■ muUCV Camp Votesto Disband Due to Thinning of Ranks(it Th* Nwa*SAN ANGELO, March 11.-The records of Camp Schuyler Sutton. United Confederate Veterans, here have been closed forever, by the vote of five of six members, the only ones of 19 surviving who were able physically to attend the last meeting.Tlie dissenter was W. M. lt;BU1)Murphy of Bronte, small, bewhis-kered and 87. the oldest veteranpresent. He literally leaped to hisfeet when the vote upon disbandingwas called and declared: I’m agmdisbanding. I rode with MorgansRaiders and we never laid down ona job-' But his negative vote could nwi f»cT*u against tnose oi j. nMcCormick of Eldorado, 85; J. M lire ah commander. R C. Bates and j. P Dugan, all of San Angelo, each 34 and S J. Martin of Bronte. 83.Schuyler Sutton was the last of the Confederate veterans' caunps inim nnicman L-ouon V/Wper- iative association handled 2.000 000 t bales of the south's 1930 crop, oi 1 which nearly one-third, or 600.000 i bales, was handled by the Texas or- i gantzation,” Carswell said. “District 7, of which Abilene is operating ( center, led all Texas districts in per- 1 centage of cotton handled, our total s being 65,000 bales, or 22 to 23 per t cent of the total crop raised in the l 38 counties. If we had produced a t normal crop we would have handled 5 at least 100,000 bales through the f co-op.-’Federal Loans—(Continued from Page 1strued as violating the terms oi the loan, it has been held.“The law requires that security must be given,” says the circular. Applications for, loans will be considered on the basis of the necessity of the applicant and the security offered in each individual case. ' Loans for agricultural rehabilitation may be in addition to and in excess of loans authorized under the regulations governing crop production loans issued under date of December 30, 1930, as amended.where the security offered is adequate.“The maximum loan for agricultural rehabilitatoin to any individual or to the tenants of any one landlord tn any one county will not be in excess of $1,000. Loans for the purchase of seed, fertilizer, feed for livestock, fuel or oil for tractors used tn crop production will con-,tlnue to be charged to the $45,000.-000 appropriation, but loans for agricultural rehabilitation will be charged to the $20,000,000 appropriation previously cited in these regulations. [110.000.000 Available“The total amount available for such loans in all states is not in excess of $10,000,000 at this time $10.-000,000 of the $20,000,000 having ( been set aside for loans to Individ-tssargrraair--!- - —«gsr---sI DAY in every way the ]Clarified Ads help you to profit.
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Abilene Morning News

Abilene, Texas, US

Thu, Mar 12, 1931

Page 8

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USA 15 Sep 2018

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