The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 80, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 26, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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SATURDAY. AUCUST 26, 1922
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
-
PAGE THREE
-5
{ How They Stand
CUBS AND PHILLIES
BASEBALL
TEXAS LEAGUE.
Yesterday’s Results
Won, Lost, Pct.
4
65
Texas League
SAN ANTONIO, 3; DALLAS, 1.
$
I
d
N.
Score by . innings:
R. I J. E.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Won. Lost pc».
ks
GALVESTON, 4; SHREVEPORT, 0.
A
Score by innings:
R. 11. E.
S88
GOV. NEFF PRAISES
WICHITA FALLS, 10; BEAUMONT, 4
WORK OF ED HALL AS
NATIONAL league.
BANK COMMISSIONER
6
Won. Lost. Pct
R.H. E.
c2
&
HOUSTON, 7; FORT WORTH, 3.
Score by innigs:
11. H. E.
a shakeup and
rocking
8V
NEXT DOSE CALOMEL
American League
MAY SALIVATE YOU
ST. LOUIS, 3-5; NEW YORK, 1-6.
needed to. make the tight draw
I
BROOKLYN, 8-8; PITTSBURGH, 7-6.
hand.
Ira Thomas,
Score first game:
R H. E.
BOND ISSUE APPROVED.
Brooklyn
Score, first game:
IL IL E.
Pittsburgh .......000 222 100—7 10
ith
treacheroj
ep-
waijing
Score second game:
R. II. E
de-
ll. H. I.
MH
5 10
New York
301 200 00‘—6 10
4172 Our Service To )
LiFTeS
BOSTON, 9; CLEVELAND, 0.
Score by inning*;
R. H E.
568
Hartford, Conn.,
and
Morley !
Phone 7106
DETROIT, 3; WASHINGTON, 2.
City from future amateur tourneys
Score by inning*
R. H. K.
THE GUMPS—A TONIC FROM THE STATES
L National League |
i
NEW YORK, 4; ST. LOUIS. 3.
22
9
1
2
2
94
• (I
A
G
A.
n h E,
Acor4 by Ihnlngw:
New York
000 000 031—4 12
A
CHICAGO, 26; PHILADELPHIA, 23.
leaves Austin
Arrives Dallas
Governor Neff has addressed the fol-
lowing letter to Ed Hall, who retires
on September 1 a* commissioner of in-
CREATE NEW FREAK
RECORDS IN WILD GAME
10:15 P. M.
7:30 A. M.
that bears recommending,
in the house constantly.” <
Brooklyn .
Pittsburgh
. EVEPY
! W/TER
HF dOES
0
0
100 421 000—8.14
000 200 013—6 11
.000 300 000—3
.003 002 11*—7
Ith
orn
nil
Fort Worth
Houston ...
Cleveland *
Boston ....
TRY JAZZ ON BATS,
REMEDY SUGGESTED BY
FORMER AUSTIN CITIZEN
1
3
St. Louis ...
New York ..
Detroit ....
Cleveland . .
Philadelphia .
Washington .
Chicago ....
Boston.....
17
20
24
27
32
34
37
44
6%,
7
CHICAdo,' Aug. 25.—A modem ma-
jor league record for scoring for poth
( TAEY’LL BE
7 REIN" V$ Tos
tm‘ Gali IN a
COPL6 d<Faes
New York ....
St. Louis .....
Chicago.....
Pittsburg ....
Cincinnati . . .
Brooklyn.....
Philadelphia . .
Boston.......
rty
ulk
sin
ed-
u s,
ers.
Wichita Falls .
Fort Worth ...
Galveston . . .
Dallas........
San Antonio . .
Shreveport ...
Houston.....
Beaumont.....
25
l-A
14
)73
33
5%
IV*
0%
3
2
5%
4%
9%
2
y
dropped Hip anchor with the Mound depend upon it entirely for effective-
City aggregation, which must be .well ness anyway.
.712
.677
.586
.550
*.448
.424
ei FunD ro
hy in A
R4G IWfU
nt at mn) mt A
SPttBAlL A
MS ro St 29
BMHP N
Dallas and North Texas
Is Dependable
MISKE FINISHES FULTON
IN 3-MINUTE FIGHT
It is Mercury, Quicksilver, Shocks
Liver and Attacks
Your Bones.
ory
).
.610
.563
.558
.538
.533
.492
.357
.336
1c:
BeANCH"FoR 4
LOJVi rINE. .
the Spudders to victory.
| score by innings:
players compounded yesterday. when,
for three hours and one minute, t‘
.50
50
56
61
68
’ 64
62
72
.593
.590
.545
.508
.419
.471
.483
.390
E r2.c,A..
46
52
53
55
56
60
72
75
Thomas has been out of the game
since 1919, when he resigned as coach
gave him his base- ,
pinyed with Newark 1
We check your baggage to home or hotel at destination
in 200 cities.
Results Friday.
Brooklyn 8-S. Pittsburg 7-6.
Chicago 26, Philadelphia 23
New York 4, St. Louls 3.
Cincinnati-Boston, rain.
western outfit and has watched many the freak delivery, refused to fly
players cme an go. ’ a rage and save the price of a ha;
GENTLE
RENDERS,
NOT WWN{
RN
AmPOXE
IT
WAG
e -
-L “1
Batteries: Nehf and Smith; Hatnes,
Pertica ardeAinsinith.
no
en-
eat
m-
• r-
om
ith
e-
‛ol-
nil
ge
A SEASON OF TORTURE FOR
SOME.
ep-
ear
City Ticket Office
107 E. Sixth St.
NA
Where They Play Saturday.
Boston at Cincinnati.
Brooklyn at Pittsburgh
New York at St. Loui.-
Philadelphia at Chicago.:
UNLIKE MANVOTMER ,27Aa2
HURLER HE- A
1
0
0
1
6%
7 *
214
3%
7%
I
t
9 •
8
3
5
7%
3%
... 72
...67
... 67
... 64
. . . 64
...58
... 40
I
1M
1
...... 73
...... 72
...... 67
...... 63
...... 49
...... 57
...... 58
J..... 46
... 42
... 42
... 34
... 33
...26
... 25
... 19
...13
nt Rome time in his career. With the
Athletics he played a no small part in
the wonderful achievements of Jack
Coombs, Eddie Plank and Chief Ben-
der when that trio mowed down the
American league teams as ruthlessly
ns a machine gun. He was noted for
up feelir
Your dr
Dod son's
22, 1881. ;
/ MR. (VMP-,
I A CASLSGGA
\ from "E
\BNe3-
Result, Friday.
Galveston 4, Shreveport 0.
Wichita Falls 10, Beaumont 4,
Houston 7, Fort Worth 3.
San Antonio 3, Dallas 1
I
—‛Vo•P
AD A
MPHFVL1
cngo won, 26 to 23. Chicago scored
fourteen runs in one inning and ten
in another. The former record was
made by Chicago and Louisville June
29, 1897, when both clubs scored forty-
three runs, Chicago making thirty-six.
j u
%
1
)
3
3
5
5M
l%
)4
in
1
3
17
34
1%
2
1%
I
i
57
J
%
H
)
3M
I
1%
3%
11
I
3
31
0%
3%
5%
3%
8%
i
71
8%
2%
9%
6%
2
2%
6%
3%
4%,
0%
2% ,
4
6%
573 '
*5
sion with the Cinci. Tied*, and in 1913 chair and announced that he didn’t
"Mr
sftuativn prevail nine times out of ten
when titles change hands?
The fight world never has had any-
thing but praise for the wonderful
little Terry McGovern. But McGovern
won the title from George Dixon after
that brilliant little battler had past his I
zenith. Why, then, make it appear that
Kilbane won his title on a fluke?
Results Friday.
Detroit 3, Washington 2.
Boston 9, Cleveland 0.
St. Louis 3-5, New York 1-6
Chicago-Philadelphia, rain
covered with barnacles and deep sea .His great drawback right now is his
moss by this time. "1
k always has been n noted spit-ihe’s all to the imported French bon-
opiates. Refuse substitutes.
Drug Company.—Adv,
was later re-instated.
BY NORMAN E. BROWN.
hl
qabe
showdown with the Bill, unlike
11/9
—07
I V 7
( I ( /
that Fred was really knocked out and
had not, as man- fans intimated, quit
cold.
100 104 002—8 14 0
Where They Play Saturday
Chicago at Philadelphia.
St. Louis at New York.
Detroit at Washington.
Cleveland at Boston.
William Leopold Doak, a* member of,
the i itching staff of the St. Louis
Cardinals when Branch Rickey took
over the team in 1917, is the only one
of the "big four” on the Sards' mound
! The recent action of the golf asso-
'elation in barring' Willie Hunter,
former British amateur golf champion,
and George Van Elm /of Salt Lake
wiMharsThextlaxcSeturday.
Dallas at Houston.
Shreveport at Beaumont.
Fort Worth at San Antonio.
Batteries; Slappey and Burns; Lyle
and Griffith.
If you are being entertained by bats
flying around your home or place of
business, entertain them with jazz mu-
sic if you want them to leave.
This is the prescription suggsted
Charley Pick, former major league
ball player now piloting the Sacra-
mento club in the Pacific Coast Lea-
gue, Insists that the long spikes now
adorning the shoes of ball players not
only handicap them but cause many
of the accidents that force players out
of the game for varying lengths of
time. After sustaining a broken leg
The ex-catcher was born in Ball-
9
twice through catching, his spikes in
. .. the sod Pick has had his spikes short-
I keep it I ened.
Contains no • ____
today. - ball artist, and when the news flashed bons, but he seldom has the
The veteran Bill has weathered many out that the spitball was to be barred, last through the whole nine
PBNHIVE
uuwaxaazannuniuduesmas
made i ed our state banking institutions over
ske Si ' the financial ocean during the most
Fulton I stormy period in the history of our
' state banking laws. I have never heard
[ J VST MEARD CF NOVR
| ILWNE3T- ONN wiru
; It WA$ I ms VowEw
N To help Mov-
. -,-ALOS
/9, tr
BEAUMONT, Texas, Aug. 25.—Wich-
ita -Falls took the final game of the
series from the Exporters here this
afternoon 10 to 4. Keene, after being
knocked from the box in two previous *
games? came back today and pitched
Clinton avenue, Plainfield. N. J., says:
"Foley's Honey and Tar is a medicine
1Ag
( I know wuo KE 60
TMNT MESTAE FROM- tes
TNT LEMON -KEASED wwow-
AND HERE ME VOCCORs '
MAVE BEBI FEEDING Wi
MEDICINE For weeks T no
.AVAIL BV A ML$S46E FROM
HER ANO HE JUMPS vP EWIPP
At TOU PUAs- WHAT A
BLOOMING JACKASS-
{TA
The Yankees have offered Sacra-
mento $10,000 and a regiment of play-
.nen, - —
, they by W. J. Jones, president vt the Aus-
ran themselves breathless, amassing’tin Street Railway Company, who is
fifty-one hits of assorted varieties and
FASTER THE
Mwdow ZADLR
WAS NOTIFLEV
OF VHCIE BIM
BEING ILL
, SHE SENT
ACABUEGRAM
. expressing
$VMPATI-
is manager and all he asks is earnest
effort and obOyance to orders. A sim-
ple plan when the rfght man adopts IL
“Kilbane won the title from Abe At-
tell when that great fighter was down
and out,” a one remark that comes
from the cast—where the new '.feath-
erweight champion” is recognized. .
There is no doubt but Avhat Attell
was not at his best when Kilbane de-
HOUSTON, Texas, Aug. 25,—The
Buffs broke a long series streak here
today when they handed Fort Worth
a 7 to 3 -defeat. Atz used sixteen men
in an effort to win.
'Batteries:.. Keene and Kitchens;
Morris, Busch and Anderson, Schroyer.
Eerema 6n Feet.
One man saya he had It over twrenty
years and that one bottle Imperial Eezema
Remedy cared him. All druggists are au-
thorized to refund your money if it faila.
now in Dover, N. H. Mr. Jones based
jail and fined $10. This sentence was
given McCollum in connection with the
theft of two sacks of the value of 10
cents each and sudan grass seed valued
at 15, the property belonging to John
Stalcup and W. C. Watson.
MEADOW- I'M FEELING MUCH
BETTER- I WEUEE | CA
ATTEAD TO busiNesss*
TOMORRoW- BRING ME
A SRAND AND SonA-,
stuff to< Minneapolis, in lesh than three min-
-hrough the whole nine innings. ’ utes of fighting here last night.
At the end of each baseball season Although outweighed by nearly
into he packs the alligator bag and goes] twenty pounds. Miske literally swept
ireutback to the old home town of Pitts- the lanky plasterer off his feet, and
out, roots and! burgh for the winter, .and with theFulton failed to land anything like a
He just ' coming of spring he packs the bag good punch. With the round less than
rocking again and starts for St. Louis- a jolly half over, Fulton went down for the
8 3
8 0
Batteries:.. Mitchell and Wheat;
Lewis and McKee.
George Carpentier’* next opponent
will be battling Hiki, the Senegalese
. — . —.....-- killer. Georges hadn’t ought to be
WAS undoubtedly a sincere one and worried over the coming fracas, how-
taken with the interest of the game ever. He lived through a session
R. If. E.
23 26 4
26 25 5
old life, wot? I count of seven, and as soon as he aros
He throws right handed and bats Miske sent over a vicious left and the
right, rPached six feet one-half inches
120.000, according to figures
public today, tsee Billy Miske. St.
I Paul heavyweightstop Fred l ul
Rigney made a bad start He com-
court of criminal appeals in the as _________
of O. IL McCollum, convicted In Floyd swelisthe ton
county of theft and given 10 hours in
An appeal has been filed in the
se z/ T-8 S '
a flock of twirlers using
Batteries: Oldham and Woodall;
Mogridge, Francis and Gharrity.
surance and banking.
I "In accepting your resignation as
commissioner of insurance nd bank-
| ing, I desire to thank you most hearti-
1 ly and most sincerely' for the very
j faithful and efficient services you have
I rendered the state of Texas during the
* L ,
a 8iei> THAT ( z
HAS srucEwrH/TWE
WuL• AgE)
‘Vo GOB’NA /
NOVEQr AdD
' 6^^. •oodG )
reiLevs a _/
CANct )
Batteries: Davis, Vangilder, Pruett,
Bayne and Severeid; Bush, Jones and
Schang.
the Giant Kilter—Jack Dempsey. Carp
showed his shrewdness when he ap-
parently ducked a maten with Hiki for
over a year. Folk began to say the
dapper Georges feared Hiki. That
Score bv innings
Philadelphia 0 3 2 130086
Chicago ... . 1 10 0 14 0 1 0 0 *
Bill McKechnie has whipped the
Pirntes into a serious, fighting, base-
el “So v; he "ampieomplshee ball start and he ? ,...............
making It clear that Bill MCKechnie and.Providencein.the minors 08 well
• ■ - as the 1 gers and Yanks in the major*
Batteries: Shocker and Severeid;
Hoyt, Murray and. Schang.
Bill Doak, Last of Pitchers
• Willed Rickey, is Still There
. ___________________________________• »
*ton Spa, N. Y., January
his pleasant, sportsmanlike manner on
the ball field and his gentlemanly [
with bearing off.
B4Ck To I Vr.
outbid the Cubs and Reds, however, to ban. The officials simply said the FVT i
land him, according to the dope at men had done nothing dishonorable. 13 11?
Can it l.c that the association is hain- I MhEa
poring itself and hurting the game by : ______
adhering to trifling rules which do not •
Minneapolis man was counted out*.
immediately after the bout the state
boxing commission held an impromptu
GALVESTON, Texas, Aug. 25.—Two
errors on fly balls gave the Sand
Crabs all their runs today and Gaives,
ton evened the series with Shrevepprl
4 to 0. Slappey allowed but thresh it*.
By Associated Press.
tanT Tpeegonsnpidpprxkimatery! past eishtren months. You have Piot-
.‛
Once a star catcher with Connie
Mack’s famous pennant -eating ele-
253
-—5
forty-nine tallies, twenty-six for the
home club and twenty-three for the
Phillies.
The bases were filled by Philadelphia
players when Chicago’s fifth pitcher
fanned the last batter, leaving strand-
ed the potential scorers one solid hit
would have sent in.
The fifty-one hits, forty-nine runs,
eleven Cub hits in one inning, fourteen
Cub scores in one inning and Cal-
laghan’s three appearances at bat in
one inning, all were record perform-
ances, the first two new ones for the
book. The last three only equalled
previous records. .
Total times at bat, ninety-nine for
both teams, came within one of tying
a thirty-year mark.
Twenty-one bases’on balls yesterday
lacked three of tying:the record credit-
ed to Chicago and New York in th
morning game of May 30, 1897. Twelve
two-base hits-yesterday were two less
than the record made by Chicago and
Buffalo July 3, 1883.
Thirty-two years ago, in the old
Players’ League. Brooklyn and Buffalo
amassed forty-four runs. June 9, 1901,
New York and Cincinnati together ac-
counted for forty-nine Hits, excelled by
yesterday’s performance. - Fifty-three
hits were made once, April 30, 1887, in
a Ht. Louls-Cleveland American Asso-
< iation game, but. at that time bases
on balls were counted as hits.
In yeste rday’s avalanche of hits and
runs the sparkling exhibition of Cliff
Heathcote, with five hits in five times
up, and Hack Miller’s two homers, one
of the second longest in Cub Park,
Were nearly overlooked.
VmU
Ei
anything but expression* of commen-
dation from the bankers of Texhs in
connection with your work. We re-
■ gret beyond words that you will not,
j after September 1. b the head of this
department of our government.’’
some i>t thia bunk about making have any part in keepinK the same on I
Johnny Da dee featherweight cham- ! A fair. sPortsmaniike basis Many
plon makes us guffaw. I read,,ib will recai how Francia Qul-
------- ■ - met was suspended several years ago'
because he got a job In a sporting
goods house that sold golf clubs. He •
------—------------•_ players cme and go.
• | His career began in 1910 with the by yanking his tresses
temsWas established here today when > Wheeling, W. Va., team in the Central all. Not by a Ing shot,
ine i hlladephia Nationals and the league. He later enjoyed a brief res- leaned back in the wicker
t hl<ago Cubs scored a total of forty- . . -
nine runs in a nine-inning game. chi-
Batteries: Ring Weinert and Hen-
line, Withrow: Steuland, Kaufman
Eubanks, Morris, Osborne and O Far-
rell. Hartnett.
Emor, coop,, «
Tiger. Is the only‘regular’pialor h8 ! leave his 0,1 interests in Louisiana. . bonds, bear ing 6 per cent and mat ul
the American league who came up last I long enough to head the Shreveport. I Herially, Was approved by the a
spring All the others have been in La , club in the Texas league. A syn- ] torney genera '• department .
the league at least one season. Rigney | dlcate of Shreveport business manls---=======
s on. of the four best shortstops in . have talen ove the'club on conal mamemnasoamnmmmamaaumamn
Jhe American league this year, within ton Thomas boss it. I ■
a year he should rank with the best. .... > .__ ’
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 25.-After holding
a three-run lead for seven inning*, all
markers being made, on hrpm runs,8kt Q
. looule today loststhefrst gams, so'the *
seriept with New York. .4 to. 3,, An
error b Hornsby in the lhth pst-
vnted a po Bible double play andas-,
nisted the .champion materially 1
whingihuntesk The locals' hom-
erriVAnTmacle by. Hornsby, Mann and
Ainsmith. It was Hornsby’s thirtieth
circuit drive of the season.
...000 000 000 0 2 0
...100 141 20»—9 15 0
4 By Associated Press.
CHICAGO, Aug. 26 —Record sharks
todayhad succeeded in digging nearly
a half dozen nw marks from the mass
of figures-thirty-three Chicago, and
Philadelphia National League baseball
NEW YORK, Aug. 25.—The New
York and Ht. Louis Americans divided
an exciting doubleheader here today,
the Browns winning the first game, 3
to 1, and New York taking the second,
6 to 5. Shocker pitched brilliantly in
the opener and held New York to seven
hits, three of them coming in the ninth,
when Meusel drove in New York’s only
run with two out. New York evened
the day by winning behind Bush and
Jone* in the second game. Vangilder,
who relieved Davis, got into trouble
in the fourth, when three hits filled
the bases with none out. Pruett, who
was so effective against Ruth early in
the season, struck him out. Schang,
however, followed with a single, send-
ing in two runs.
Wichita Falls ...102 420 001—10 12 3
Beaumont .......000 130 000—4 9 4
WASHINGTON, Aug. 25. Detroit
defeated WashingtoA today, 3 to 2, in
the opening game of the serles.
Hay fever carries untold misery to
thousands. Foley’s Honey and Tar
soothes that raw, rasping feeiing in the
throat,, relieves hoarseness and wheez-
ing, makes breathing easier, permits
refreshing slumber. Mrs. O. Stapf, 736
APPEALS FROM
THEFT SENTENCE
Score, second game:
St. Louis ........001 010 102
Dallas ..........000 001 000—1 6 1
San Antonio .....000 012 00*—3 9 0
was
at heart. But the association should I b8
haw stated specifically the acts of.
BOSTON. Aug. 25.— Quinn held
Cleveland to two hits today, one of
them a scratch, and Boston won, 9 to 0.
skyward and will have to blow out
thirty-two candles on the birthday
cake next January.
Calomel salivation in horrible. It
nmba ie ivngue, loosens the teth and
‘ starts rheumatism. There’* no reason
I Why h person should take sfckening
। salivatng calomel when a few cents
buys a large bottle of Dodson’* IJver
Tone—a perfect substitute for calomel
It I* a pleasant vegetable liquid which
will start your liver just as surely ax
calomel, but it doesn’t make you sick
and can not salivate.
.Calorhel is a dangerous drug, besides
It may make you feel weak. sick and
nauseated tomorrow. Don’t lose a day's
work. Take a spoonful of Dodson’s
Liver Toae instead and you will wake
ng great No salt* necesaary.
CUist says if you don't find
5 Liver Tone acta better than
•oil* calomel your money is
for you.4 Adv.
cr* for pitcher Earl Kunz. They rnusi those nun which brought about the j
SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Aug. 25-
With Sam Lewis in good form and
holding Dallas to six scattered hits.
San Antonio won today 3 to 1. paailas
only run resulted from a homer by
Massey inside the park when Kirk-
ham misjudged his long fly into right
field in the fifth.
of the Williams college baseball team j
mitted many errors and could not hit after filing.three years of a five-year
But he was game and played out oricontractHe then had hopes of his
the slump and established himself aspleprospectsturning.out favorably,
a real star. His ability to deliver in Hi hoPe8We re ’ ealized,, it is said.
h ioht Ratr"hbqu‛kim. I
r “— Connie Mack.
Batteries: Cadore and Deberry;
Glazner, Yellowhorse, Hamilton and
Gooch.
5, ■
%
feated him. But does not that same
5"0>
"SA Srirs 4 Li HOW . r
me eting in Fulton’s dressing room and .
after consulting, the referee decided
PITTSBURGH, Aug. 25. —Three
home runs by Reb Russell failed to
prevent Pittsburgh from dropping a
doubleheader to Brooklyn here today.
The scores were 7 to 8 and 8 to 6.
Batteries: Grimes. Smith. Decatur
and Miller; Adams, Carlson and
Schmidt.
St. Louls .........200 100 000- 3 9
Shreveport ......000 000 000—0 7 2
Galveston.......000 040 002—4 3 1
3Xob
Batteries; Whittaker, Goodbrel,
Gray and Moore; Bailey and Ienning-
hoven.
©W12 w< cica6o pomo
Batteries: Boone. Edwards
O'Neill; Quinn and Ruel.
St. Louis ........010 002 000—3 10
New York .......000 000 001—1 7
his remedy on investigations made by
Dr. Charles A. R. Campbell, an Amer-
ican scientist, who recently discovered
that bats abhor jazz. •
With the notation "tiygit on the
court house” appended "‘hereto, Mr.
Jones several days ago sent a clipping
from a Dover newspaper to an Austin
friend containing the following lan-
guage
"In hi*, experiments with bats, Dr.
Campbell lias come across several pe-
culiar characteristics of the animal.
For instance,- bats abhor jazz. A
phonograph, a jazz record and a small
boy stationed on the top of a hunting '
lodge infested with bats so startled the
animals in the early morning hours as
they returned to roost that they flew ..
some two miles away, entered another,-
lodge and never returned to the one
in which they had been living for two
years. The explanation of this is that
the car of the bat is so delicate that
discordant or strident noises are to
them the most irritating of all sen-
rations.”
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 80, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 26, 1922, newspaper, August 26, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434888/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .