Albuquerque Morning Journal, 11-21-1921 Journal Publishing Company

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Albuquerque Morning Journal, 11-21-1921 Journal Publishing Company University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 11-21-1921 Albuquerque Morning Journal, 11-21-1921 Journal Publishing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_mj_news Recommended Citation Journal Publishing Company. "Albuquerque Morning Journal, 11-21-1921." (1921). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ abq_mj_news/392 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. n CITY CITY EDITION ALBUQUEBQU N6 JOUKNAL. EDITION POISTl SK OM VKAK New November 21, 1921 Dully by Carrier or Mull H',c a Month VOL. C1.XXI. Xo. 52. Albuquerque, Mexico, Monday, ei:nicle topic 5p ' LiBO? PRAISES 5-5- -3 RATIO OF 2 CARBON CITY TORNADO as a EXPECT BRIAID CD T. IUs Son Heads Ceiraitte sudiri AMERICAN PLAN NAVAL STRENGTH ME J MURDE RED HEAVY PROPERTY PROTEGTIOW FOR TO CUT NAVIES TO SPEAK TODAY . Is Endorsed By Executive OPPOSED 0! LETTEHSTATES AND CROP LOSS; ! ITALY IS URGED Council of the A. F. of L. IN DEFENSE OF 1 in Resolution, as a "Mag- pnnpinnnniiirnn nificent Proposal." William Kellv and Samuel ! 4 PERSONS DEAD BY Mi FRENCH POLICY (By The Answlated l'r..) Grey Their Washington. Vov. ZO (bv the As S'a.jid ... Bodies T'stfn Inti til sociated Press.) organized labor, Plan Qncrrrocorl fnr Ampr- - Bluff, Mo and V- Cannot Consent to tnrougii the American reiteration Premier Will Make It Poplar Any of Labor executive council Probably River, and yester- ica, England and Japan, 'deged. icinity Hit By Storm Limitations on This Type day endorsed us "a magnificent a Frank Statement Why (By Tlr 6 & rrr-M.- ) proposal," tho American plan fur Is Be fin Terrific Rain; Piedmont of Craft Unless She Can limitaliwn of naval France Feels to Said to Coming 1 N ov. 20. Fed- - reduction and Impelled Durango, fj" armament. A resolution I Inrler Inrrfinsin. Pressure oral author Snn Juan coun- Is Under Water. Obtain Guarantees. declared: Maintain Big Army, i ty. New If 0v,fV. todav wre Inves "The American delegation tigating f fncw the spoke for America in proposing ' angle TO the wholesale destruction of FORMULA 1, of FAMILIFS FORCED MEDITERRANEAN IS WANTS THEW0RI..D TO PROFOSR) August last, warships. WIIHam and Samuel Grey of LEAVE THEIR HOMES STILL BRITISH LAKE "The American BE FULLY INFORMED I DEFECTIVE, ASSERT Gallup, , following' receipt of delegation n. spoke for America in propos- letter Vh the slaying of the con- two m and Houses Will ing cessation of warship Are Doness Say They Should iiurgoii Between 40 50 England's Superiority struction lor ten years. American Armed Forces The letter, written hy a man "America is la favor Be Allowed an Increase whose name the authorities with- Within an Area of 40 Not Be Accepted; Hope unitedly Far Below Any Ratio of '- -p aS those proposals. held, declares that a woman, the Miles Train E hits V H 41 of Lies in wo is will- ; Over the Fleet Strength wife of the shot to death the Demolished; V, i Independence "America, believe, Land Power Which Might writer, ing and ready to place. Its full men In their automobile and their Service Impaired, Unclerseas Fleet. of dem- Be Is Claim. Set Forth By Hughes, j wore trust in the methods Suggested, bodies thrown into the river ocracy and in tho efficiency T?i- - under the Arroya bridge, opposite m v- win w r'M.) (Ily The AfMK'luli'd Frrm.) and in the of dejnoc-rac- y. The N. M. integrity (llv Awlsfed Pre.) Shlnroek, The letter is post- Poplar Bluffs, Mo., Nov. 20. Rome, Nov. IS (by the Associat- Washington, Nov. 20 (by the As- marked Connellesvllle, Pn.. and waR in and ed An 20 High water the Black river Press.) argument for the "America, we trust, will con- sociated Press.) World attention VasMnTton, Nov. (by addressed "To the Sheriff of San St. was submarine as a ar- 1ir tho Francis river tonight protection for Italy tinue on tho inspiring course will shift from naval to land .VsnHnfd Great Juan county." It follows: at. flood In of Is the i4 1ns endorsed''rss). without stage the vicinity printed by Mcssuggcro today laid down at the outset by its maments when Premier Briand nf Prlmin "This is to Inform you that on North Bluffs as the result in an editorial. and will on every before the "3-S-- r'-'- Poplar delegation France speaks tomorrow August , 1921. a double murder of a tornado and rainfall Friday "It can be understood why Great take tho samo lofty und His addresi In tl'ot American was cemmltfed in on coun- sub- point the arms conference. proceed your county ni!ht. Greenville, in Wayne Hrllaln should be averse to advanced transcend- Is be a statement It l"nrneil nallup-Fnrmingt- position, to frank naval jifnn, wna the rond below is Isolated two rivers, nnd marines," the editorial says, "but tho note expected on M"l?p-- ty, by the ing It possible, struck of the reasons that lmncl France i. n"t'orlty. the S'llproek Nnva'o Indian Is that is no reason why France and A . ..!. na agency Piedmont under water, on that first memorable day. lo maintain tho world's largest by Mrs. , who before that lived The water at Piedmont lat night Italy should, accept Mr. Balfour's "Wo record the position of II a whole C"'v t'l rr',.r!pl(, he- - near the Coal Basin near families to limitations. We aro unable to con- army. mines, forced nl out twenty Mr. ana Mrs. Ineoaore KooseveiU America's workers, for whom The to be covered by his cause of their 'eslr to nut Gallup. Great loss to struct lar.,ro ships because wo have us in accord subject . - leave theii homes. 1 we speak, being statement Is the point of ronvniil proposed nioci'rn- "She shot nnd killed been fore- Col. Theodore as- not the financial moans. There is of dis- probably re-- Billy Kelly property nnd crops has Roosevelt, with the utmost degree to t'nn of the submi'rine mi l 4 with a .22 and I to have f nothing hostile in our to utmost most immediate Importance ririt- - pistol, wa.i cast. in sistant of the r.avy and policy armament, with the In the conference. In In- p'nceTnont feat'iros. Hi" done the same to Sam Grey, but got The which struck here secretary Great Britain but our only hope of effort to the France Isli 1s wild to have tornado, one of the advisers to the Amer- destroy machinery formed circles, H Is expected the l'lcTa'on a chill at the last minute. She took Friday night, hilling four people independence consists in owning of war and to make unnecessa- 3 re'n- - bc-c-n address will be a defense of French nT'rovril the RiigcreMod hold of my hand and pulled the and lnlurltuf about fifty, caused ican arms delegation, has many submarines. Lot ua remem- ry and Impossible the appetites, tlvo onpl'nl chip stronjrHi for trls?er of a gun. a .4"i Colt. estimated at of the naval ber that the Mediterranean is still a the the rivalries, military policy. the United property damage made chairman British a Jealousies, What Brland Said. Great Britain, "She then fired another shot at $100,000. Between forty nnd fifty of lake, presenting problem and the intrigue that lead to States pud Japan without she a can- technical committee, composed more and more delicato Tn expressing general adherence Kelly, after which threw houses within an area of forty from Great important war." equivocation, teen of water at me and forced mo were demolished, as well as a one naval expert for us than that of tho Pacific. rf France tn the American plan for P.ritlsh miles and ex- de-th- e Adlirronoo of the under pain of death, to throw their of Today Britain. Jaran, Italy, "Mr. Balfour has said the bo suggested that it is to number outbuildings. will ar- is representatives the capital bodies under the arroya bridge, di- men, women and children started the United States, which istence of his empiro impossible conference: ! shin ratio became, known to. the at details of plans for re- without the safeguarding of its long FOCH VISIT "When it comes on the ngend of rectly opposite river brldgo rebuilding manv of tho homes, range .night ns an nftorn.i the Shlproek. The rains In the Ozark the naval strength of the lines of communication, but Italy, as it Inevitably will come to tho conference between heavy 'f ducing as uro all the Mediterrean nations, of land a yesterday "This Is my first opportunity for mountains during the storm show- powers represented at the con- if question armament, ques- Koeretnrv Hiir"S. M". llal'oitr makinir tl inform.it'on as she has and is at tho complete mercy of Eng- tion particularly delicate for which ed the effects Saturday night ference. able to stifle them ut and Atl'"rnl Kto, at watched me too elo!;o and thr"t-ene- d when the streams poured Mrs. Roosevelt were land, who is France, wn have no Intention to nnvnl ii"slon was enn- - today Mr. ani will. cannot consent to any AL BUOUEROUE Ion. tlie to kill me if I pqnealed.
Recommended publications
  • Guide to the William K
    Guide to the William K. Everson Collection George Amberg Memorial Film Study Center Department of Cinema Studies Tisch School of the Arts New York University Descriptive Summary Creator: Everson, William Keith Title: William K. Everson Collection Dates: 1894-1997 Historical/Biographical Note William K. Everson: Selected Bibliography I. Books by Everson Shakespeare in Hollywood. New York: US Information Service, 1957. The Western, From Silents to Cinerama. New York: Orion Press, 1962 (co-authored with George N. Fenin). The American Movie. New York: Atheneum, 1963. The Bad Guys: A Pictorial History of the Movie Villain. New York: Citadel Press, 1964. The Films of Laurel and Hardy. New York: Citadel Press, 1967. The Art of W.C. Fields. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1967. A Pictorial History of the Western Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1969. The Films of Hal Roach. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1971. The Detective in Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1972. The Western, from Silents to the Seventies. Rev. ed. New York: Grossman, 1973. (Co-authored with George N. Fenin). Classics of the Horror Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1974. Claudette Colbert. New York: Pyramid Publications, 1976. American Silent Film. New York: Oxford University Press, 1978, Love in the Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1979. More Classics of the Horror Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1986. The Hollywood Western: 90 Years of Cowboys and Indians, Train Robbers, Sheriffs and Gunslingers, and Assorted Heroes and Desperados. Secaucus, N.J.: Carol Pub. Group, 1992. Hollywood Bedlam: Classic Screwball Comedies. Secaucus, N.J.: Carol Pub. Group, 1994.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Donald J. Stubblebine Collection of Theater and Motion Picture Music and Ephemera
    Guide to the Donald J. Stubblebine Collection of Theater and Motion Picture Music and Ephemera NMAH.AC.1211 Franklin A. Robinson, Jr. 2019 Archives Center, National Museum of American History P.O. Box 37012 Suite 1100, MRC 601 Washington, D.C. 20013-7012 [email protected] http://americanhistory.si.edu/archives Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 Arrangement..................................................................................................................... 2 Scope and Contents........................................................................................................ 2 Biographical / Historical.................................................................................................... 1 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 3 Container Listing ............................................................................................................. 4 Series 1: Stage Musicals and Vaudeville, 1866-2007, undated............................... 4 Series 2: Motion Pictures, 1912-2007, undated................................................... 327 Series 3: Television, 1933-2003, undated............................................................ 783 Series 4: Big Bands and Radio, 1925-1998,
    [Show full text]
  • Economic Effects of Vertical Disintegration: the American Motion Picture Industry, 1945 to 1955
    Working Papers No. 149/10 Economic Effects of Vertical Disintegration: The American Motion Picture Industry, 1945 to 1955 . Gregory Mead Silver © Gregory Mead Silver, LSE November 2010 Department of Economic History London School of Economics Houghton Street London, WC2A 2AE Tel: +44 (0) 20 7955 7860 Fax: +44 (0) 20 7955 7730 Economic Effects of Vertical Disintegration: The American Motion Picture Industry, 1945 to 1955 Gregory Mead Silver Abstract In 1948, the United States Supreme Court declared the operations of eight of the nation’s largest motion picture studios in violation of the 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act.1The decision ordered them to disintegrate their producer-distributor roles from cinemas. The Court believed this would promote competitive practices in a hitherto uncompetitive industry. However, these desired benefits were not entirely reached. Instead, by leading the Hollywood studio system to collapse, the Court also distorted the supply- chain for motion pictures. This work utilizes Coasian analyses of transaction costs to show that institutional integration was an efficient structure for the motion picture industry. It explores the motives to integrate and the benefits it garnered. Having laid this groundwork, it then assesses the effects theatre divorcement had on the industry and offers plausible counterfactuals had the studios remained intact after 1948. 1 Introduction There has been much conjecture over the effects that government intervention can have on industry. The case examined here is the intervention of the United States Judiciary on the American motion picture industry in the late 1940s. Since 1890, the year Congress signed the Sherman Antitrust Act into law, the government has served as the self- imposed overseer that assures the proper functioning of competitive markets.
    [Show full text]
  • Betty K Ryan Collection
    BETTY K. RYAN COLLECTION RUTH T. WATANABE SPECIAL COLLECTIONS SIBLEY MUSIC LIBRARY EASTMAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER Processed by Laura M. Schweibacher, fall 2005-spring 2006 Revised by Gail E. Lowther, December 2019 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Description of Collection . 3 Description of Series . 5 Inventory . 7 2 DESCRIPTION OF COLLECTION Accession no. 2007/8/14 Shelf location: C3B 7,6 Physical extent: 1.3 linear feet Biographical sketch Rebecca Lelia “Betty” Ryan [née Kinard] was born on October 21, 1917, in Louisiana. She began a career as a child performer at the age of two, and, throughout her childhood, she sang, played the piano, and acted professionally under the stage names “Betty Collier” and “Betty Lee.” When she was a little older, her family moved to Houston, where Betty began attending dramatic workshops. She spent a brief time in Hollywood before settling in New York as a young adult, where she earned a living as a song plugger. At the age of seventeen, she quit show business, went into cosmetology, and settled down with her husband, Eddie Ryan, who was in the real estate business. Several years later, when their son Edward “Russell” Ryan was preparing to enter high school, the family moved to upstate New York (Hilton). When her husband died at the age of 77, Betty moved to Rochester to be closer to her son, who, at the time, was working as a firefighter with the Rochester Fire Department. Mrs. Ryan passed away on November 20, 2018, at the age of 101. Provenance The collection was the gift of Betty Ryan and was received by the Sibley Music Library on October 22, 1999.
    [Show full text]
  • The Blue Book of Non-Theatrical Films
    fit &/ue Sooii 7M Scanned from the collections of The Library of Congress AUDIO-VISUAL CONSERVATION at Vu- LIBRARY of CONGRESS mi Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation www. loc.gov/avconservation Motion Picture and Television Reading Room www.loc.gov/rr/mopic Recorded Sound Reference Center www.loc.gov/rr/record 100(W0NE (SEVENTH EDITION) JheBlueBook Tlondheatrical — 3ilmj THE EDUCATIONAL SCREEN CHICAGO NEWyORK. The Educational Screen, Inc. DIRECTORATE Herbert E. Slaught, President, Dudley Grant Hays, Chicago The University of Chicago. Schools. Stanley R. Greene, New York Frederick J. Lane, Treasurer, City. Chicago Schools. William R. Duffey, College of St. Thomas, St. Paul. Joseph J. Weber, Valparaiso Uni- Nelson L. Greene, Secretary and versity. Editor, Chicago. EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD A. W. Abrams, N. Y. State De- Dudley Grant Hays, Assistant partment of Education. Sup't. of Schools, Chicago. Richard Burton, University of Minnesota. P. Dean MoClusky, Scarborough Carlos E. Cummings, Buffalo So- School. ciety of Natural Sciences. Prank N. Freeman, The Univer- Rowland Rogers, Columbia Uni- sity of Chicago. versity. STAFF Nelson L. Greene, Editor, Marion F. Lanphier Evelyn J. Baker F. Dean MoClusky Marie E. Goodenough Stella Evelyn Myers Josephine F. Hoffman Marguerite Orndorff Publications of The Educational Screen The Educational Screen, (including Moving Picture Age and Visual Educa- I tion) now the only magazine in the field of visual education. Published j every month except July and August. Subscription price, $2.00 a year S ($3.00 for two years). In Canada, $2.50 ($4.00 for two years). Foreign J countries, $3.00 ($5.00 for two years).
    [Show full text]
  • Il Railway Rate —1 Inquiry Planned Assert Tax Rate In
    4 WEATHER FORECAST whereto go to-night Columbls^Th* Rainbow Trail For It hour* ending 6 p m. Frldey: l>omlnlo»—Tbr*e IWV* Oho**» Capitol—n*aui>"e Worth Victoria and Vicinity — Southerly Royal—Penrod Variety—The Foolish Age wind*, mostly cloudy and mild with rain. Prince»»—Charley'* Aunt =r VOL. 60. NO. 106 VICTORIA, B.C., THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1922 PRICE FIVE CENTS GERMAN-RUSSIAN MOUNT ETNA -r Soviet May Accept ASSERT TAX RATE TREATY NOT AGAINST RUMBLES; SMOKE THE HELD Peking Surrounded IN VICTORIA LOW VERSAILLES PACT FILLS THE SKY GOES p EFFECT Terms and Demand Paris. May 4. — The Allied Baton la. Sicily, May 4.—Mount City Hall Figures Show Rates Reparations Commission, it was Etna has broken out again in an Now by Troops of officially announced this evening, eruption of increased violence, Two Factions of “Republican in Other Cities has failed to find that the Rapallo and is emitting continuous roars, treaty between Germany and which can be heard for several Army” to Meet Full Recognition Victoria’s tax rate this year will be Russia is a violation of the Tregty miles. Dense black smoke is of Versailles. General Wu Pei Fu a heavy Increase over the rates of filling the sky. To Negotiate on Unification recent years but it will be below the rates in other Canadian cities. This Plans assertiçn of the City Council is borne • ______ Proposals of Allies Are Telegraphed From Genoa to out by' figures which have been col­ Dublin, May 4.—A trues between General Chang Tso Lin’s Army Scattered; Acting lected by city officials and given out.
    [Show full text]
  • Cinéa N°45, 17/03/1922
    Numéro 45 17 Mars = 1922 = Abonnements - Étranger - I an : 55 tr. 6 mois : 35 lr. s) France a 1 an : 45 fr. 6 mois : 25 fr- 0 Hue le Cinéma û Hebdomadaire Illustré — Louis DELLUC, Directeur 0 Que le Cinéma 0 français soit français PARIS, IO, Rue de l'Elysée — Téléph. : Elysées 58-84 Londres : A. F. ROSE Représentative. 102, Cbaring Cross Road. W. C. 2 français soit du Cinéma cinéa cinéa 1 j j ! REPONSES Bientôt une Œuvre de £ £ £ £ Les Commandements ! A QUELQUES LETTRES Concours de Projets d'Affiches j du Cinéaste G B. —-Je n'ai jamais su pourquoi on Un sujet simple choisiras a dénommé le cinéma ainsi : d'ailleurs Cinéa a fait appel à tous les peintres, décorateurs, dessinateurs, i Et présenteras clairement. peut-on cataloguer les arts? caricaturistes de toutes tendances et de toutes nationalités pour j Marcel L'Herbier, 53, rue de la Villette. Ton œuvre tu composeras Studios Gaumont. prendre part au Concours de projets d'affiches destiné à MIDVID KIPLING j Comme symphonie ou roman. RUYDYND. — Asta Nielsen est allemande le célèbre auteur de Kim, des Livres de la Jungle, de La Lumière qui s'éteint illustrer la publicité de trois filins français : ou danoise. Peu importe puisqu'elle a Au spectateur tu parleras du talent. Son dernier film est Comtesse Par l'Image exclusivement Julie, d'après Mademoiselle Julie, l'œuvre * A L'ECRAN * DON JUAN, de JVIareel L'Herbier. de Strindberg. Interprété par Vanni-IVIarcoux Jaque Catelain, parcelle Les gestes représenteras Et les paroles rarement. C. G. IL — L'Homme inconnu s'appelait Pradot, Iterner, Philippe Hériat, J.
    [Show full text]