The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 34, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 9, 1922 Page: 1 of 36
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i
V
COMPLETE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORT BY LEASED WIRE
ED
(HOME EDITION)
AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JULY 9,1922
VOL. 51—NO. 34. *
TWO STATES MOBILIZE TROOPS
ises
GOVERNOR GALLS
ILLINOIS AND MISSOURI
CONFERENCE ON
TO CHECK STRIKE RIOTING
FLOOD CONTROL
KENTUCKY TROOPS
CULT OF FORCE RULES
iY
GOV. NEFF CHARGES
PEACE OFFICERS WITH
PROTECTING CRIME
ONE MAN KILLED IN
(Continued on Page Two)
GRAHAM YOUTH KILLS
HIMSELF ON GRAVE
OF HIS SWEETHEART
He
(Continued on Page Three)
NINE INDICTMENTS
R
ARE RETURNED RY
TRAVIS GRANO JURY
the
during the present adminis-
Saturday afternoon
at
turned
tration
jury, which then recessed until Mon-
Of the fel-
day morning at 10 o’clock.
the of-
R
but he did not know if they were en-
the offenses charged in the other four
er
according to officers here.
masked men e
while only one person, J. R. Jackson,
was |
For weeks officers attempted to lo-
rate the robbers but
obtain sufficlent information then on
Special to the Austin Stateman.
WEATHER FORECAST.
<3
6
New
W
C
--
filed.
(Continued on P.ge Two)
these two cars.
I
irk
n's
BRITISH CABINET
MEMBERS UNDER
CONSTANTGUARD
ALLEGED BANK ROGBER
WANTED IN FT. WORTH
CAUGHT IN KANSAS C.
STILL EXPLODES IN
AMARILLO; CREATES PANIC
on
of
id Oklahoma City, it was an-
here today by officials of the
HOUSTON RIOT; HEAD
CRUSHED WITH ROCK
The latter is said to have paid three
cents a pound for the metal or one-
third under the market price. Military
fenses of burglary, theft over <50, run-
ning a gambling house, an l manufac-
Mob of Strikers Threaten To
Attack Non-Union Workers .
At Madisonville.
en-
ets
ral
ich
ch,
ng.
the
Pistol and Bomb Appear to Have
Become Most Popular Po-
litical” Arguments.
FOUR ALLEGED THIEVES
CAUGHT AT SAN ANTONIO
SURPLUS ARMY GOODS
SOLD AT SAN ANTONIO
sr
9.
Engineers and Other Experts
Asked to Meet In Austin
On August 7.
ty.
of
er
nly
the
e
in-
ur
locked lIn.
The two bandits then escaped in an
Ing
et-
not
ap-
uld
lar
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
Prisoner Is Charged With Com-
plicity In Hold-up oF Suburban
Banking Institution.
Executive Declares Something
Must Be Done to Prevent
.Huge Annual Losses.
TO FORCE ACCEPTANCE
OF FORD’S PROPOSALS
FOR MUSCLE SHOALS
lite
led
to
ner
vho
nal
for
the
||
to
wis
hae
ur-
md
the
sed
is-
the
iti-
et-
ged
uly
or-
in J
ool
ers,
re-
ne-
me
Executive In Dallas Speech Urges
That He Be Given Powers
to Prosecute.
Negro Strike-Breaker Victim of
Outbreak In H. & T. C. Rail-
road Yards.
out
do
an
Mr.
an
ue,
Mr.
ol-
bi-
raw
md
eld
cal
ow
the
OPEN SWITCH WRECKS
TRAIN; SIX INJURED
the
of
ud
ilo-
the
FEDERAL COURTS
ISSUE INJUNCTIONS
AGAINST SHOPMEN
I_____________
ry.
m-
ier
ce-
er-
ho
did
«4
20 PERSONS INJURED
IN T. AND P. WRECK
other
were
')
First Week of Strike Closes
With Danger of Strife at
Many Points.
By Associated Press. ,...
SPRINGFIELD, 111., July 8. — Troops under
command of Major John O. Smith of Champaign,
were on their way to the scene of rail strike rioting
at Clinton within thirty minutes after the order was
issued by Adjutant General Black, it was announced
here by Colonel Frank A. Taylor of the general’s '
er
bio
ok
AV-
my
gh
.1 1
, I
ed-
did
at
m-
' i
ny
30-
gh-
ivo
aa
to
re.
in.
Reports to Department of Commerce Show
Vast Improvement In Every Branch
Of American Industry.
---
Nine indictments
and one for a misd
I
gaged to bo married.
“My boys—the other one is 17
By HARDEN COLFAX
Special Correspondent of The Austin Statesman.
(Copyright 1922)
Body Is Found In Cemetery Ly-
ing Between Tombs of
Drowned Sisters.
arrested until Saturday.
The Polytechnic holdup was one of
which to base an arrest and indict-
ment..
Business Humming
Despite the Strikes;
Prosperity General
-----------q----------
in
the
of
ig-
ect
rill
fa -
a n
ion
in-
b-
l. <
(Continued on Paxe Three)
---— *•--
Pine Bluff, Ark.; W. C. Hattield, Sher-
man; Mrs. Josephine Hobson, Okla-
homa City; Mrs. <>. R. Mahafes Cbp-
poral Hlil; Mrs. Thereon Hightower,.
3S322 Campbell street; Dallas; Mor-
vina Walker, Now York City; W. U.
Mutton, 235 South Aaralls street, 1ml-
the situation if trouble developed, as they antic-
ipated.
Governor Morrow was reported tonight en route
to Frankfort, leaving here after a brief business
visit. A total of fifty-five men were due to arrive
in Madisonville early tomorrow morning.
The cavalry troop from Hopkinsville will be
equipped with machine guns, while the infantry
from Livermore will carry its regular field equip-
ment.
By Associated Press:
COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 8 —Law en-
forcement in Ohio coal mining regions
in the event of mine strike trouble was
put squarely up to local officials
throughout the state today by Federal
Judge Slater and Governor Davis here.
Orders that United States marshals
proceed to the Consolidated Coal and
Coke Company properties in Perry
county temporarily were held up by
Judge Slater. At practically the same
time Governor Davis issued a state-
ment declaring county and municipal
jaw enforcement officers in the mining
regions of Ohio "will be held to strict
account" if there are strike disorders.
Special to The Austin Statesman.
GRAHAM, Texas, July 8.—A tragic
sequel to the drowning of four young
'women in the Brazos River near Gra-
ham July 4 was enacted in the ceme-
tery at Graham some time Friday
night, when Edward Sanders. 19, took
his own life beside the grave of his
sweetheart, Miss Lottie Anthony.
Dawn Saturday revealed the body of
young Sanders, lying face upward and
dead between the graves of the An-
thony sisters. Passersby made the dis -
covery. Two photographs, one of the
Anthony sisters, were found at the foot j
and head of Miss Lottie Anthony's
*
ony indictments four cited
By Associated Press.
BARBOURVILLE, Ky., July 8.—Governor Ed-
win Morrow late today ordered troops to move
from Hopkinsville and Livermore to Madisonville,
when county authorities at that place advised him
the situation at a strip mine there was threatening
An appeal to the people of the state
to join in a war against lawless ele-
ments closed the address. A large
number of statistics were cited to show
’ements and economies had been
in the felony indictments has been
arrested. He is F. Cantu, a Mexican
farmer of Pflugerville, charged with
manufacture of intoxicating liquor. He
has been released on $500 bond.
City. i
Recently a complaint charging Brock-
man with the robbery was filed here
— BEING RUSHED TO
TO CHECK DISASTERS SAFEGUARD MINES
District Attorney Dan Moody not to
give out any information. The offense
charged in the misdemeanor ndist-
loaded reached 877,856 an increase of i
more than 17,000 cans over the preced- (
Ing week. It would not surpiise rail-J
road officials if loadings jumped to a
the board of water engineers. At this
las; Jeshe
nance showed that $4,993 had
taken.
COLUMBIA, Mo., July 8. Adjutant
General Raupp today ordered Battery
• B. 128th Field Artillery, Missouri Na-
tional Guard, stationed at Columbia,
not to entrain tomorrow for Camp
Knox, Kentucky, for the annual en-
campment, as previously planned. The
adjutant general said Governor Hyde
had decided to postpone the movement
of the entire regiment of artillery In-
definitely on account of the railroad
strike situation.
automobile. A check’of the bank's fi-
SECOND OLDEET NEWSPAPER
IN TEXAS. ESTABLISHID 187
- Reports or conditions obtained dur- conference general consideration of the
Ing the week from every state by the engineering problems involved in the
department of commerce, labor and undertaking and the formulation of a
treasury, show that business continues ‘program that will insure the utmost
‘‘ . . .... . economy in securing the data neces-
to Improve notwithstanding strikes in sary to plan this work of conservation
the coal and transportation industries will be decided upon.
Involving approximately 1,000,000 men.! "Within the past twelve months the
Anxiety is rei with respect to the coal swolea mtrmyasudbieives and’hdve
situation but otricial missivines have roused property damage in excess of
failed, thus far. to reflect.themselves $20,000,000,: sala Governor Neff in his
in the business world. No induetx cl ror the conerence. "At the same
of appreciable silo has been affected ume these streams have poured Inta
as yet by a coal shortage, the Gulr of Mexico enough water to
The railroads are reported as having miiiions of acres of semi-arid
on hand a comfortable supply of 1ocot ian and t generate hundreds of thou-
motive fuel coal and the public utility o horsepower for industrial
companies on July 15, by conservation purposes,
and replendishment of stock from non- •within the next twelve months we
union sources, had kept their coal might have a recurrence of these flool
stocks at about the same figure as conaitions, or. sust as likely, we might
when the strike occurred, April 1, ac- have insufficient water for our cities
cording to reports to the department
of the interior. Retail dealers had >
considerable stocks on hand July 1,
present. Jackson at the point of a were placed on the su
gun was forced to hold up his hands
and walk into a vault where he was
despondency to that.”
The drowning of the four younE, WO-
men and the near death of others in
a Rrzos River swimming party Tues-
day was the most tragic Fourth of July
in the history of this section.
DUMB-BELLS
' _____________________ _ •
MY Wire UnWt ft SENSE O*
HUMOR , BILL - I'VE TOLO HER
THE OAME JOKE OVER ANO (MS
ANO I PONT BEDEVE eHE H0
IftUfoHEO AT r MORE TANNiC
- IN HER WHOLE LIFEI J
BURTON, Kan., July 8- Six persons
were seriously injured here late today
when Santa Fe passenger train No. 4
crashed into an open switeh and into
a string of oil cars, which took fire.
The passenger train, casthound, ran
into an open switch at the junction
of the Frisco just west of the Burrton
depot.
The dining car and buffet car were
telescoped. All of the injured were in
had grown a little careless, are now.
after the Rathenau and Maximilian
Harden incidents, more closely pro-
tected than ever before. It’s a dull
day in Italy when the wholesale gro-
cer's son doesn’t get nn opportunity
to take a pot shot at the shemakers
apprentice, with whose political phil-
osophy he disagreeb-or the apprentice
doesn’t find an emphatic individualist
to shy a bomb at. In Ireland the other
day a school teacher belonging to the
wrong generation (I. e., not this one)
advanced on, a naughty boy with an
upraised rulr and changed his plans
when the naughty boy made a sug-
gestion with an automatic. Not so
long ago I saw a parade of faselst,
returning from a "punitive expedition’
in Milan and the standard bearer was
a promsing young gunman in short
pants an socks, his knees bare.
fantry, now at Decatur, has been ordered to proceed
immediately to Clinton in response to rumors of
further troubles in the shopmen’s strike there.
The entire* 130th infantry, Illinois National
Guard, was ordered mobilized tonight by Adjutant
General Black. The troops will be held in their
armories to be moved at a minute’s notice to the
scene of threatened trouble in the railroad shop-
men’s strike. There are troops now under arms as
far north as Rockford and as far south as Cairo.
*,
outlook for the week beginning Mon-
day for the West Gulf Suites. Widely ____ ____
. scattered showers; normal tempera- Mexico; Guy Pierce, Route 8, Dallas;
police claim they have broken up a ture: no indications at this time of All of the Injured were taken to
ring long suspected. disturbances in West Indies, Grand Saline for medical treatment
road. It was said the warnings made
no specific threats ajd were not signed
and that local authorities would be unable to handle! staff.
Regimental headquarters company 130th in-
according to a telegram received Sat-
urday afternoon by Constable H. C.
Cantrell.
Carrying a warrant on which Brock-
man will be brought to Fort Worth.
Deputy Constable McCoy left Fort I
Worth Satus f y night for Kansas
felony indictments were, court offi- . .
cials refused to reveal. Members of: “My boys—the other one is 17 Wer9
the district clerk’s staff stated that expert swimmers.' Enid the father Sat -
they had received explicit instructions! urday. "Edward held himself respon
from Judge James R Hamilton and slble in Aa, way for the drowning.of the
• girls, because he had promised them
ho would be at the bathing place Tues-
day and he was not there. Ho thought
he could have prevented the drowning
had bo been there. I attribute his
WASHINGTON, July 8.--Weather
tinues to mount. During the week
ending June 24, latest period of avail- j
able statistics, the total number of cars
(FORTY PAGES)
PRICE FIVE CENTS
lemeanor, were re-
Court Officials Instructed to
Keep Nature of Four of
Bills Secret.
Hale, Newberrie,
largely because of lack of demand dur- 1
ing the spring.
Analysis of car loadings discloses
that w ith the single exception of 1920.
the railroads are handling nt the pres-
ent time a record volume of business
The total number of cars loaded con-
RAN ANTONIO, Texas, July 8.— Enid an
Three men have bee placed under nounced
Charged with robbery with firearms
in connection with the daylight rob-
bery of the First Stte Bank of Poly- moroye
technic, November 24, 1920. BillProck-errectea
man has been arrested at Kansas City,
turing intoxicants. Of what nature
the cashier nnd vice-president
By Associated Press.
AMARILLO. Texas, July 8.—Several
blocks of residents in the south end
of Amarillo were thrown into a panic
this afternoon when a still in the house
of Martin J. Delong blew up. A sixty
gallon barrel and the worm went
through the roof of the house. Delong
decamped. Officers are searching for
him. ,
A complaint charging him with ille-
gal manufacture of intoxicants was
East Texas: Sunday and Monday,
partly cloudy, continued warm.
West Texas: Sunday an 1 Monday,
partly .cloudy, not much change in
temperature.
By Associat Press.
FORT WORTH, Texas. July 8.-
Charges that workers who had re-
fused to join the shopmen's trike were
being intimidated were made here to-
day by Texas A Pacific officials. Per-
sons had visited the homes of loyal
workmen, the railroad officials said,
and threatened damage to property
unless the men joined the strikers.
Federal authorities received author-
ity from Washington to take whatever
steps are needed to protect the Mis-
souri, Kansas & Texas property and
passengers.
BY NORMA H. MATSON,
Special Correspondent of The Austin
Statesman.
(Copyrighted. 1922.)
LONDON, July 8.-—The cult of the
deed, the use of pistol and bomb for
purposes of political debate, continue®
to be held in high regard by the youth
or the old world. if it is not, indeed,
gaining in favor. All of the members
or the British cabinet and those M. P.’s
who have taken prominent parts in the
Irih controversy are now being care-
fully guarded lest acme frantic young
man empty his, automatic Into one of
them by way of additional ’gesture"
for the cause. Germany’s leaders, who
By Associated Press.
HOUSTON, Texas, July 8—Will
McClure, negro, said to be a strike-
breaker, was killed by a blow on the
head during a fusillade of iocKs thrown
by persons collected near, the H. & T. C.
yards here late this afternoon Police
officers were unable to determine who
threw the rock that struck the negro.
He was on company property when the
blow crushed his head and killed him,
almost instantly, it is declared.
grave. An empty strychnine bottle be-
eight fur felonies side the body told the story of San-
dora’ death. The body had probably
_______ __________ --- ____ 5:30 been lifeless since midnight, it *as
o’clock by the Travis county grand said,
...... Young Sanders had been despondent
since the tragedy, according to his
father, J. W. Sanders. However, there
was nothing in the boy’s actions to
cause alarm. He had been going with
Miss Lottie Anthony, the father said.
Special to The Austin Statesman.
GREENVILLE, Texas, July 8— A. C.
Andrews, high school teacher, who
yesterday put aside his textbooks and
donned overalls to work in the ral-
road shops here. was attacked and
badly benten by five men late last
night. Andrews said he was on the
railroad property at the time of the
attack. He failed to identify any of
his assailants, and no charges have
been filed.
By Associated bress.
WASHINGTON, July 8. —Uncon-
ditional acceptance of Henry Ford's
offer for purchase and lease of the
Muscle Shoals projects, including the
government’s interests in the stean
power plants at Gorgas would be pro-
vided under a bill introduced in the
Senate today by Senator Ladd (Re-
publican) of North Dakota. Senator
Ladd said his measure had the ap-
proval of several members Of the Sen-
ate agricultural committee, of which hr
is a member.
The bill wag identical with that in-
troduced in the House by Representa-
tive Wright (Democrat) of Georgia,
but was given a Senate title.
By Associated Press.
JEFFERSON CITY. Mo.. July 8-
The entire Nationnl Guard of Missouri,
4021 men. and officers, wiil be mobil-
ized and ready for instant service at 9
o'clock tomorrow morning by order of
Governor A. M. Hyde and Adjutant
General Willinm R. Raupp, acting at
the executive’s order, called out the
troops tonight “upon information that
a state of lawiessness and insurrec-
tion exists within the borders of the
State'’
By Associated Preet.
CHICAGO, July 8 -The calling out
of troops in Illinois and Missouri, the
assembling of soldiers in half a dozen
other States and the intervention of
the Federal courts in the nation-wide
■trike of railway shopmen marked tho
close of the eighth day of the walkout
tonight.
The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy
railroad tonight.secured a Federal in-
junction here restraining picketing at
the Aurora shops, while earlier in the
day an injunction was issued at New
Orleans restraining strikers from in-
terfering with trains on the Southern
Pacific. At Council Bluff.. Iowa, the
Burlington obtained a temporary re-
straining order directed against strik-
ing shopmen in southern Iowa. De-
partment of Justice officials at Wash-
ington were Investigating reports that
strike disorders were interfering with
the malls.
Lieutenant Governor Sterling of Il-
linois tonight oldered troops to Clin-
ton. where an outbreak was threat-
ened following a clash betwren Illinois
Central guards a strike sympathizers
in which a boy was killed and two men
one a striker, were injured.
One bright ray appeared through
the threatening strike clouds tonight
when D. W. Helt, president of the
Brotherhood of Signalmen, announced
that he would withhold strike orders
to 14,000 signalmen pending the prep-t
aration and subniission of a progrum
to the United States Railroad Labor
Eoat d.
Nr. Helt’s announcement was made
following an all-day conference with
W. L. McMenimen, labor member of tho
board. This makes the second time
within a week that members of tho
board have inte rvened to stop an ad-
dition to the 'strikers’ ranks, walkout
of 400,000 maintenance of way men
having been prevented in this manner
a few days ago.
Many roads were preparing to open
their shops the first of the week when
.(Continued o? rage Two.
the miners from this county,
states and from Herrin, 111.,
among those visiting the mine.
stances, textiles, medical nnd. hospital
supplies, aeronautical equipment, Big-
nal corps materials. The sab? was said
to have been’ about three times bigger
than any previous sales of surplus
army goods held in San Antonio.
mt nt is adultery.
Only one of the defendants named
By Associated Press.
MADISON, Ky., July 8.—A decision
to ask Governor Morrow for troops as
a precautionary measure against trou-
hle at tho Dunlap Mining Company
here, which is operating with a force
of about 100 non-union men. wa 3
reached late today by County Judge
C. C. Givans, County Attorney Charles
Franklin and Sheriff L. R. Racy.
Reports to the county officers that
approximately 200 alleged union min-
ers visited the Dunlap mine during the
last few' nights in efforts to persuade
the minora there to join the union were
made. It is reported that a number of
............. - . RAN ANTONIO. Texas, July 8.— By
in the justice, court but he was not far the largest auction sale of surplus
army goods held here was completed
---- - — at warehouse No. 1.0 at Fort Sam
the 1ldstn Tarrant ounty in years, Ilouston, aftr more than a day and
officers here. Two un- a half of g bidding. The total sales
i nered the bank «( noon i amounted to 1677,890.08. Of this
’ ” amount $555,968 64 was paid for the
455,712 olive drab army blankets that
- - ■’ - rplus list Wed-
nesdny. The entire stock of blankets
I was bought by S. Lovtt. mannger and
buyer of the burlap department of the
American Mills Company of Atlanta.
Ga. Mr. Lovitt bought the blankets at
been 1 9 1,62 each
lu addition to the huge sale of blan-
kets, there was disposed of clothing
unable to I ana equipage, general supplies, ma-
chinery and engineering supplies, mo-
l tors, vehicles, raw materials. sub-
NON-UNION MEN WARNED.
By Aesociata Press
OKLAHOMA CITY, July 8.-—Notices
warning non-union men to refrain
from worklZc la railroad shops have
been posted in the St. Iouis San Fran-
cisco shops in Afton. Tulsa. Sapulpa,
WASHINGTON, D. C., July 8—The railway shopmens strike]
during the first eight days of its life apparently has failed to make
any impression whatever upon, business conditions or to retard the. With a view of devsing a dehnite
continued progress toward prosperity. Preliminary reports of freight program for flpod control in Texas
hauled during that period, made by the chief railroads to the American and a proper solution of the problem.
Railway ASSOcigtio here, state that traffic continues at normal. Car orrneonRrns tordanginsura 4‘b
loadings fell off during the week, but as they invariably do fall off held at Austin on August 7 next, with
during the week of the Fourth, such a situation was expected, the state reclamation department and
B peel al to The Austin Statesman.
DALLAS, Texas, July 3.—Declaring
he has evidence in his office to show
that many peace officers in Texas are
supporting and protecting bootleggers
and other lawbreakers, Governor Neff
in an address at the Fair Grounds
here Saturday night pleaded with th
people to pass a law that will enable
the attorney general to go into tho
district courts and have local officers
removed by jury trial.
The governor declared that although
the rangers and other state law en-
forcement officers have gathered evi-
dence, it has been flatly refused by
local officials, and the state is power-
less to prosecute. He reiterated his
recent statements that authority to
enforce the law lies with the state,
and defended his institution of martial
law at Mexia.
Governor Neff spoke under auspices
of the Dallas County Women's Demo-
cratic Association. Approximately 1500
men and women heard him.
The governors opening address, de-
livered a short time ago at Plainview,
was followed closely here tonight. Ho
declared that owing to the fact that
13,000.000 of last year’s taxes remain
unpaid, the treasury is so depleted it
is useless to call a special session of
the Legislature to make appropriation
for the schools. He said all the money
that was available can be appropriate
next Januarj* and the state will be
raved <100,000, the cost of a special
session.
|500 bond and a fourth, a junk deal-
er, under <1,000 bond, and charged with
stealing 7,900 pounds of cable from
a government warehouse at Kelly field.
The three men were arrested early Fri-
day morning when they were found
hauling the cable into the city. They
had been watched earlier when they
wore In the warehouse, cutting the
cable off the spool into small lengths
suitable for transportation. Under the
eyes of the military police the cable
was loaded into trncks, which were
then camoflouged with sunflowers.
The truck appeared like a load of hay
when finally halted upon the road to
the junk dealers*
Special to The Austin Statesman.
DALLAS, Texas, July 8 The first
violence to be reported in Dallas in-
cidental to the present strike of rail-
way zhop craft workers occurred early
Saturday morning, when W. S. Cal-
vert, car Inspector for the Union Ter-
minal Company, was slugged with an
iron bar and seriously injured. Union
Terminal officials says they will spare
no effort in trying to locate Calvert's
assailants. They did not know if the
man had been assaulted by strike
sympathisers.
Mr. Calvert, who is 40 years old, has
been employed by the Union Terminal
Company for some years When other
members of the shop crafts walked
out under strike orders Iasi week Cal-
vert refused to strike.
3 he car Inspector left his work at
midnight Friday. He took a street
(ar and alighted within a block of his
home at about 12:30 a. m. As he
started to walk to his house, two men
on motorcycles rode up to him. They
were armed with pieces of iron and
clubs and commenced to beat the min.
Calvert tried to fight off his assail-
ants, but fell .with a broken collar-
bone, deep cuts about his head and
with his arms and body severly
bruised.
Leaving their victim lying bleeding
on the sidewalk, the motorcycle riders
sped away. Neighbors, nropeed by
the noise of the fight, called the po-
lice and the city ambulance. Calvert
was treated at the Emergency Hospital
and later sent to his home.
Special to the Austin Statesman.
FORT WORTH, Texas, July 3-
Twenty persona were Injure*) this af-
ternoon when the west bound Sunshine
speckal, running one hour and thirty
minutes behind schedule, was wreck-
ed near Grand Saline. Two cars turn-
ed over and three sleepers were do-
railed, due to the forward cars split-
ting a switch.
The list of injured nil of whom will
recover follows: Mrs. Z. E, Mason,
Fort Worth; Ethel Flowner. Fort
Worth; John Feeney, Fort Worth; J.
Johnson, Fort Worth; Muggle Moore,
Fort Worth; Mis. J. H. Pritchard.
speeial to the Austin Stateman.
FORT WOKTH, Texas, July S.—
Spread of Murder Mania
Throughout Western Europe
Causing Uneasiness.
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 34, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 9, 1922, newspaper, July 9, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434841/m1/1/?rotate=270: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .