The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 116, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 29, 1922 Page: 2 of 4
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t
kss
• 4 • •
New
Creations
Cullen F. Thomas
ii.uH
|"l Papers
u nd
that
i reusury
as
Inn
v
of
In u
.hint Ai livid
A
to
litt.
vi<a
Thi
itai
ti i<
i
lie hereafter understood
principles the
*
mile south
Owner nml Editor
CAHCY SMITH
administration of smallpox
vac-
• • • o • e o »••»••<*<*•«
*i on
YASOI SI I MI SIS
$ I Ml
Ou«
o
(re-election).
to
loop
wit-
Act
pentacle for these same railways] Pumping from a pool, creel; ot spir-
it
I’oi.riit \i.
\SSOI St I Ml ATS.
<A
YE II ItSOOS
M YY
I III
moakyy
I
April 24th to 29th
Hills
nir.
*
1922, at
PRETTY GINGHAMS
ATTRACTIVE All-OVER PAT-
MODERATE.
<; I N G II A M
HOUSE DRESSES AND
THERE ARE MANY
TERNS IN THESE GOOD QUALITY. LIGHTWEIGHT
APRONS. TOO, ARE CONVENIENT AND BECOMING.
WE ARE OFFERING SOME REAL BARGAINS DURING
WASH GOODS. SO ( HARMING. YET SO LOW-PRICED.
NATIONAL GINGHAM W EEK -COME IN
YOU CAN AEEORD TO MAKE UP SEVERAL DRESSES,
CHILDREN OR YOURSELF. AT A COST EXTREMELY
AND GET OUR PRICES.
j,
i
SIMON BROTHERS
\
I
tbtks
been
taken
Entered us second clans mailer at
the puxlofflio or Huy City under net
of Cougreua.
Typhoid I'ruphy liixls Mill lie Ydinliils.
tered Candidates YYilh»iH Pay.
and
ti single talnl
In !S9s during
at I
Mrs
for I
svst cm
NATIONAL
GINGHAM WEEK
tin
the
»
*
•
$
4
•
1'or County Treasurer:
W. F. PACK I re ele ct Ion I.
Fof S tmtor 17lh rfiurpo'!:■! Di trlct
of Texas':
Special election, May II. 19"?
T I. I li H .1 :Rt u >K, of Halves,, n.
inch
Uh It
inch
Inch
inch
iinccitiHclonablc
farmer
product*
as a po-
prnpert -
For County Judge:
AY. E. (WILL) MeNAHB.
For Conttnl .sioiii.-r, Precinct No. 2:
E. <’ (Ed.) BAK EK.
THE
SI MI-YY EEKLY
I V K M A i M S
Luhestaii-li.illa-, leva*
lilt. JOI! A II. SMYTH
A eterlnnrlaii
dw tt
• • • •
For District Clerk'
A. I). HENSLEY
PHONES:
Residence No 259
Kugeley’ii Drug Store. No. 12
Office, No. 101
Wharton, Texas
1
! or County Attorney■
THUS. 11. LEWIS.
For Tax Assessor:
OTIS MONTGOMERY'
I
use
\ T.
W. F
Jeweler and Optometrist
and
'I
i *
*4 ♦.
I
*
Ml
thickly over throat—
cover with hot tUnnel—
VICKS
▼ V A ro Rub
Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly
The Dully Tribune
One Year
'The Weekly Tribune
Year
contemplat ■
conMequen'**! 4
“ i war hut
tab!ishiiieiit of this svsi * n
B
Botiaaoeettiv
How else hut
system could out government
loaned $llMHtt>.OI>ll,imil abroad''
thaw out
count ry;
cloud of
hanging like
Reform led era I Reserve SjMem.
—--------o-o----
WII YT Y I Y I KIM I
PI MP! It (YA no
Write for
day oi
to
hl tv J Tuesday and Fi ‘day
Er cry M eek.
1011 Inehe-
5110 itlehei
Inches
In
trea
an
camps.
I Lockhart Post-Register)
Wednesday night during the
ADVERTISIAG ItillS
The Dally Tribune
• 444440404O440404
• si y les. an t< si: a i it it hso\ •
• Altorneya.at-I.aiv •
• orrict In First State Lank Bldg. •
• Hay Chy, Texas •
BisBBstattocfliaga
II. BELO A COMP YAY.
I'llbllahers
Rah <s|"ii, Texas
created for 'tin people?
11S
nation's ettr-
o o
YYYAIID FOR UY I I I I
For County Superintendent:
W, T POLLARD.
For Commissioner, Precinct No 1
.1 II l.HMi PYLE (reelection)
•ample copy to-
end vour . iRs.iiptioii
Wc."«
W-'
|' ,_.u yW/. —
•
9
L •»••••«••• 0.0 0 0 0 0
ill announcements under Hus head-
ing arc ■ailiject to the White Man’s
Union Primaries or Matagorda
County:
——» I ~' ' ' —
The Daily Tribune TONSIUTIS
. . • cover with bo
Published Every Day Except Sunday | U “
t'HYMKIAAS WOHh
FOK SI ( CESS (IF
< ITI/.EAS' ('IMPS
..... — o o ■- —
The • :ttn of Bhopal is the iAly
woman ruler i»i Asia She has reigned
over )th cml India, for 20 years and
is always veiled In nccordalice with
the prec pls of Islam Within her ter-
ritorh'f, he wields powers of life and
(loath.
quicken all lines of businesi
give more tubs to tin
streets, would start the nil' s
factories humming once mo'e
the frozen credits i
would remove 'lie
business despondency
pall over the land
up to
up Io
up to
up Io
up to
and hawk their securities for
hundred millions more
The transportation act of congress,
passed in 1920. was the consummation
of legislative iniquity. The 1'
Cummins act was hatched in the eun-I making,
ning inner councils of railway nabobs j lorge( that agricultural exhibit al the
It was sponsored by republican lead-i Dallas Fair this fall.
100 lu.'hcc
turn tm her
1100 lllclii i
500 illi'li'i
Brno illi'liet.
/.v \o\ / i.t} /■: \i: hK'oi's, i:i; \i>s
A :d h \.\1> i:a<;s. i>o.\ i i:i:
7H1 LAST TO Sl.l- THUM.
Rio Grande Valley limit'.'
unconscionable that Height
should total one-third of
consumer pays?
For Commissioner, precinct No 4.
(’ V. CYBANISS, of Markhamt
power over Intrastate traffic and ser-
The federal transportation law
fate statutes, emasculates
state railwa yeommis~i ins, and con
centrales supreme power over the
I believe the evidence to be abun- railways of the country in Washing
of ton.
To those who say that they voted
for the monstrous Esch-Cummins act
because of the threat of governmental
I pause to ask which i
a government shall owe
the railways
* \
Some Problems of Agriculture;
Resolutions have been adopted by
th* Bexar Medical Sociely. emlorslnr.
the Citizens' Military Training Camp
moveeinnt and pledging to co operate
In the adniinlstratou of lyphod prop-
bylax* to all accepted candidates for
thv summer training camps Action
of the society In this county ha been
reported to the Eighth Corps Area and
was announced yesterday following a
meeting of the medical men
The physicians of He.xar County not
only agree to co operate In admnlls
terIng typhoid niur smallpox vaccine,
which is required of all students prior
to entering the summer camps, but
they recommend that member of the
auciety tender their services for physL
rally examining all candidate' witlio.it
expense to the government.
The medical societies In other corps
areas have offered similar co-opcr.itIon
to the government, It was announced
at tile corps area headquarter
The following resolution wu« adopt
•J Friday night by Bexar Counts Med
lcn| Society
‘ Whereas, the I'nited State- govern,
tuent hus tentatively announced tile
holding of 1922 slimmer tr.lining eiimp
at El Paso .Denver, Fort Sill and San
Antonio of Citizens’ Military Trainitr.'
Camps, Involving an estimated attend
anca of about 1,000 from July 27 to
August 2fi. physeal examination- of
applicants in April and Max and ad
mlnistratlono f para typhoid prophy-
laxis and smallpox vaccine for ;I,.".00
tentatively accepted students and al-
ternates In June ami July for the
Eighth Corps Area of Texas. Oklatw
ma. Colorado, New Mexico and \ri-
voua
"And. whereas, the project of tin
C. M. T. C. is highly praised and a
worthy cause and the giving of gi- it
benefit to the health, physical .level
opment and mental nlertm - of the
future tnunhood of the nation is also
an Important step In atioal protection
from foreign aggression at a minimum
expense to taxpayers.
"Therefore, be it resolved that Bexar
County Medical Society endorse, these
Citiiens' Military Training Camps mid
recommends that Its members tender
services t< the commanding . neral of
the Right!. Corps Area for the pur-
pose of making, without experts,. to
tha government, such physical exami-
nation for candidates for the 1922
camps as required by the War Depart-
ment and further purposes to admlnis
ter typhoid para-typhold prophylaxis
supplied by th* government for the
taatatlvdly accepted applicants or fur
| For County Cb rk:
Mit.-i RUBY H AM I' i:.:;
| For Shorin':
FRANK ( .’.lilt (ri-elction).
anniml earnings of the
farmer approximates |45O.
No wonder the drift Is away from
(lie country when, a- Theodore 1’rici
A bootblack in tile* city
better chance l<> provide foi
farmer with ItiO acres
y in time uf authorized
be revived tor bunking houses
up to
up to
up to
Reading uotlcea, 10c per line Hi (
aartion; 5c each subsequent In
--o—o-------
All crops are doing splendidly Lei
Escli-| us hope that a bumper ciop is in llu
. ....... „. Ami. by the way, lei u hoi
25 cants an
20 cent* uh
18 cents au
15 cents an
12 cents uli
Reading uotli es, 10c per line Hi -q in
sertlou; 6c each subsequent Insertion.
The Matagorda Coiiiity Tribune
25 cents an Inch
20 cents an Inch
17 cents an inch
accomplished witli the aid of Bob For Tax Collector:
house.moving block and GEO. E. SERRILL (re-election).
The Commis .ioneni’ Court of Mala
aide l ountv will, on Max
1 o'clock p m . receive bids for 11.000
gallons of "dip" for use in tick ernd
icatlnn."
Dip to bo an approved dip. in live
gallon containers
Bev City. T. xas
an amount
bld to be fi'
serves all ’
The May Fete and crowning of the
qtli'en will lake plnee al (he Eplseo
oil Church Monday afternoon
o'clock under the direction of
Harry Jamison.
CIIKISTI YA St IIIACE
SERVICES
('hurt'll ci'riicr iilli and Yve. ('
Scrv lei's Funday al II i m
Sunday School nt 9:15 a m
Wednesday evening at 8:00
Everyone 1.- cordially Invited
Die
cine.
Thereforn. be it further resolved
(hut n copy of thesn resolution be fur
nislmd Hie commumllng general of tin
Eighth Goips for hl informal ion ami
Hull copies be Sen! Io counsellors of
llie Stale Medli ul \sxoclal ion ulol lb.il
report of tUD ai'tlon be published in
Hie Texas Slate lourmil of Medicine "
Army HlutisIcHl show that 5.mm.mm
■mm reielvXWt *lvphohl prophylaxis
Inmtnmnl diirln gthe World YY
among llicm wm not
cu e of typhoid fever
the Spanish American war there were
’.l>Ml cases (M (y pliqid and 2'is d' .illr
in tin army division In Florida \t Illis
lime the typhoid vaeclie hud not been
discovered. In 1911 there were only
two cases of tvpliod In Hie maneuvei
division in San Yntonlo and these two
men had not lieen furnished with the
lirophyhixis
Regular Army officers here believe
ili.it it Is II privilege to get the typhoid
iropliy laxis as it w ill Insure against
Itt.icll Of fever \l the Eighth Corp
Yle i I leadqmirlei's I5.IMII) do-es of ty
’bold vaccine luA'e nlready been re
elved mid will he distributed to the
amlldatcs for summer camps after
li v are aci'cpted
Lust year the vaccinations were ml
nb'lstercd to tin' students after they
reached camp Much valuable time was
lost on this account, it Is stated. The
plan this year is tn have local physl
inis ndmfniiter the prophylaxis be
foie the .students lenve their homes.
Ths physical exmniniitioiis of a large
number will be held in April and May
and all applicants who puss the exami.
at ons 'ill l>" provided with the vac
cine during the months of June anti
July.
v large number of npplientions are
now being received nt the corps area
headquarters in Ran Antonio for cnniPs
In each of the foul parts of the area
F. t Illis ( amp Tr.'ivl . Fort Logan,^||11|t |)(,WIM. ' \yhuf musty platitudes of
ami Fort Sill. One local chairman -ent
Ip the names of 2' applicants n few
■ lays ago The officer in charge of the
C M. T. C of the corps area expects
more than "O.mm applications In this
<)f this number only about li.mb)
gain admission to (b< summer
1 T
Sjp . HL edited for. th |iv-
in. in the rural d tiiits sad
appeal to every ineoHUH of
th family
deelu i ed:
stands a
himself than
■if land."
But the farmer's problem is a mi
llonal problem The hour has struel.
to marshal all the resources and en
•‘igin, of the government to restori
slid rebuild this basic Industry in tin
nation's life
Let us
co operative marketing organization?
i in ('uliforniu mid Denimirk, and
abolish forever the old system of mar
kellng the f.Hiner's products every
ea-on by forced siile
Lot us slash the
railway rates to enable the
without , onfiscal ton of the
if bi loll to re 'eh the markets.
Let uh strengthen the legislation ol
'he l ist congress regulating the t'lll-
'>■><> <..".l,> l.ll >> '.II II......
l rnnsportation
I titious book values of the railways of the city
" th This is an A DC prop- Highway
These bool: values are based the hay in the loft set lire
up
levying
In New unjust tribute on the farmers and
more than stock raisers and fruit growers of the
nation. Armed with Rs weapons
I deprecate and condemn Hie atti- they have unlocked the do, rs of the
tude at timer* of Hie Fmleral Reserve I nited States treasury and taken
haughty, de therefrom the money of the people
tablish a II.mt and unsyinp.ithetic tow ml the hard-wrung fro mtliem it: day-
In this connection it may be said
billion dolars since return that the Fire Department Ita. secured
permission to use the copious well
K. & T. railroad in that
railways should take one
the farmer's crop to ship two?
take one Texas beef to ship t wo mot ■ ’
Or take one-half of wlmt the con-
sumer pays for a carload of wonderful 1
Is it mot I and the department worked until
charges about live o'clock releasing it which
what tile ;
Is it not highway ;
robbery that freight rates have been
advanced approximately 80 per cent
wit Ilin three years?
Is it anything short ot railway pi
The problems of agriculture ibul-
I' tig'* alike our sympathy and our pu-
iriutlsm The farm is the mainstay
<>f the nation's eeononiic life Ju num-
bers the farmers represent one-third
our population In wealth they rep
resent one-third the nation's re-
source They are the first to suffer
and will lie the last to recover from
Hie effei ts of the world war In spite
"f tian) work and simple living, they
faic dlslo-artenment and bankruptcy.
Hv foi,, beyond their i-otnrol, they
■u w their markets glutted, their
j pri' e Jut lied und within half a year
I livi tllions in values destroyed It
a
to take the place of
Is not very appetizing
uiicer of oatmeal to cost a
It 1s enough to make
a f.it liter kick hard to get 25 cents
for a cowhide and pay 5U cents to
have "tie old shoe half-soled. and to
find Hint one new pair of shoes would
co t a whole wagonload of hides
AVh.it demortilizatIon when, accord
mg to Hie Department of Agriculture,
on a wage bust' the average farmer
annual earnings of the average
gets about I", cent- per hour and th'
average
political economy shall stand in the mous suipluse,;
way?
If the United States Grain Corpora- In extravagant
tion l.i a useful agency in time of authorized the
war, why should H not
emergency In time fo peace when all pointmeuts. notably
the world yet suffers fiom the mm York,
of war? or if the government should |2o.b(IO.IiOti.
Use its powet to i-Htublish a miixiniuin I
price for wheat ns a war measure, is
it not good business and self defense Board at AVashiiigtoii
for the government to establish 4 Haul and unsympathetic tow ml the hard-wrung f
minimum reasonable price above the farming interests of this count ry. that pinch and stress,
cost of production for corn and wheat long ago should have had representa-
and cotton us uu emergency
measure?
This heroic action ought
taken last year it
promptly this year;
should not wait until next year
This action, in my judgment, would should reject the appointment
put hope In the farmer's heart, would
would dant that the sudden contraction
who walk the credits through the deflation policies;
and inaugurated at AVasblngton
would tent factor in destroying
of t
Tilt TBIHUNF I'lGATIAH ( DMI'AAY
Fubllsher
lullions in values destroyed
i In enough to kindle revolution fo r
fat mer's coi n
cordwood It
for a
bushel of outs.
ago grain pit, where 50 limes as
illicit wheat was lionglit and sold last
voiii's
Hid where doting three days by mar-
ket niaiiipulnllon 11 half dozen specll-
Ho, < cleaned up more than $9.00". ,
>1)0.
Lil 11- set up whatever government
igcncies tire necessary to provide
'uiire liberal I'l'edits over longer pe-
riods of lime, adapted to the necessi-
ties of the tai inIng and stock raising
Interests
Let us level the walls built around
'bls , oiintry by tariff barons, thus
opening up wider markets In marts
If the world for American products
Let flic government In its strength
give to Hie fnrmers another form of
'Hitectlon protection from the prof-
itei'i'S whose hands are In his pock-
et-; protection from unjust laws, tut-
idneered through congress by corpor-
ate cunning. protection from
monopoly luindlts who deny the farm
■1 . a reasonable l et urn on what the
:.irniets sell and rob the farmers on
til of life's necessities they ate fore
•■d Io buy
Government Gimraiil) Prices.
I d" not I Itate to go further ami
declare that in a crisis such as this
I would Invoke all the powers of the
government to lift up and stabilize
ind sustain the prices of the staple
inrm products of the country Does
the government possess Hie power"
That is not denied Should the people
through their government exercise
f the values and bringing untold calatnitv I <*wnership,
black to the country ! better, that.
auw 1 Lot it lie hereafter undet stood I, • the railways or that
(those In authority that this Federal shall hold -t mortgage on the Amiri
Reserve System was not
The Federal Reserve Bunt'.ing Sys- itself, but was brought into lu ing
ten, is intimately bound up wi'h the a public Instrumentality to supply
I'ndi r the liberal
to com and rency.
t is lodged in ding" s l| Again, 1 protest in the name of th' (Lockhart Post-Register)
departure from early d''tn-, whole people, against that provision Wednesday night during thi' rub
this in the transportation ad that au and thunder storm the barn of Wil
ithoriz.es a per cent return on ill- Ham Guckfan about
z limits on the Middle Busi,
Highway was struck by lightning an,’
Th" me
bond put up an unsuccessful fight will
The buckets and Mrs. Guckian colic
the Lockhart and the alarm was sounded
one third and |Though rain was falling in torrents
the department responded prompt!:
and run lhe big pumper Io the seen
was fill’
vva
osltion
on watered stock and inflated
issues and total $18,9u(t,()00.l)tM.
best expert opinion estimates
actual value at least
probably one-half less Therefore
under this act in these days of defla
tion of all values, witli business stag- The ditch by the roadside
mint, witli agriculture prostrate, witli of water and the hydrant hose
Hie oppressed and depressed all about laid therein and the pump , lot ted
us, the railways bleed the people of throwing streams with powerful fori ■
the country for a fixed return on ap The blaze was extinguished in a fev,
proximately seven billion dollars ot minutes
false and fraudulent valuation of th. Air. Guckian ha two large barn-
properties. near each other and all his stock wa
Is it not beyond endurance that lh< in the lots and all efforts to driv
bushel of'them out is said to have been un-
Or successful.
The department's timely arrival no
doubt saved Mr. Guilt in 11 heavy Io. -
The lug pumper mired in the ditch
worked
1 object to that pi-in i-ion of
peace tlou on that Isiard. law t li a t undertakes t,> clothe
I share the general opinion that th- Inter tate Commerce Commission with
have present head of that board has lost
should be Hie confidence of the Southern people.
congress hus outlived his usefulness, and that niiiilifles s
should he be reappointed the sotiat
lership it was passed by a repuMi
■ can majority, abetted by a few strug
'Kling demucrats. For nearly two
years, under its terms, the railways
tltut some of the re- have ben lieen ed to plunder tic t
glottal banks in the North have rioted ducers and shipper.- and travel'-
salaries: that it ha- “nd consumers of this country i n-
butldlng of palatial det it provisions tin- rttiluuv ■ have
luxurious a., stood boldly and defiantly.
New . unjust
and delivered in
Cashier's check for
I'lal to five per cent of
| VI 1th bld County re.
It"
'mo Lee. Auditor
Hay Ci' Tex 1 April 2‘‘. 1922
0 O ---
Bnptl-t women In the farm districts
of Iowa have agreed to contribute all
fin 1 ,' y their hens on Sun
da- ,[• r | the end of April to help
finance foreign mid home missions
it is be’; ve.t that the contributions
from this oitrce will total more than
175.000.
eoiintrys’ economic life
conrtitution the power
ib-'tii- money
believe it a 1
ocrath' principles to transfer
power Io corporations und iiol vi'i-
nnh As an original propositioi'. I
woi )<! deny I" all ban'll .uit'ioiil . to
encourage the formation „t ' lM‘"" ' ■'« money T "
... i- moiiev is <1
that
iHMiif n<>h‘H to uiiuulatf
pc.wor lo isyiip paper
fiUH-tion <»f sovereignty that shoul I
never be doh gates (o private aRuncies.
ihit tlw federal Bank, oinb-
li.»M-d and udniiniHtPied during its
eirlhst years, served well the du-
tloi.’H need for a soiin I and ebi. tic
(•nrrency. It enabled this government,
without financial urisiw o»‘ ra'di, m
in the demands <>f this nation and
its allies in the world w.f.
Who can contemplat* without i
shudder the conseqiien ■ $ to this
" the ^nited"RtMte7■|>I•odll^<l:,•,, "’'-y w'"' ""
," l.ib'ishnient of this sv"» ■ n !•' ni"'.l
recull the old days, when they could
not get their own money mt of l.ielr
own batiks? Do bankers recall the
panic of 1907. when 11 Texas bunk
could not gel $511,01'0 from New York
for ordinary transactions.’ Do we
understand that 11 limit of rediscounts
under the old system did not exc ed
$60,000,000? How else but for Illis
have
And
how else could we have floated bond
Issui’M of $24,000,000,000 at home"
Again, under the old system, no
provision was made for any national
bank for as much as one dollar of
rural eri'dits; under lhe Federal Re-
Herve we find multiplied millions of
dollar available for farm credits.
Under the old system no national
bunk could loan a dollar on improved
farm lands; under Hie Federal Re-
serve Act It is estimated that $279,-
04)0.000 Is available for loans on, farm
mortgages alone
Some I tirri'iil ( htirgt's.
Is charged at the liar of public
opinion, and the evidence sustains the
charge, that the present Federal Re-
Board regards the Federal Re-
Hunk ns purely a private cor-
poration, free from congressional con-
trol; that pursuant to this attitude
it has undertaken to make money for
itself, that its original purposes have
been perverted by piling up enor-
was
Braden's house-moving block and 1
tackle and the Lockhart Grocery Com-
pany’s truck.
It is demonstrated that the new
pumper is available for fire fighting'
racy that the total annual revenue - , t in any territory where sufficient
the railways have jumped from an ter can be had a- near Hie -urfaee
average of four billion dollars before as ten feet
federal control to an annual average
of seven
to private control?
AVhut more shameful piece of leg- of the M.
islatlve grab than that, in addition to territory,
these outrageous returns from these \ door has also ecu cut in the lii-!
exorbitant rates the government fur covered pool of the Citizens Light ,V
ther appropriates in loans and iril'ts Power Company near the Randle re-
more than one billion dollars more , idenee for the protection of that ,■<
out of the public treasyr? And what .tion.
a s|
to call on the government to endorse age tank in no manlier wetil.ens He
their securities for five force of the stream turned upon the
fire.
w itli
that
estimated to cost
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Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 116, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 29, 1922, newspaper, April 29, 1922; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1365523/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.