The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 114, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 30, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Austin American-Statesman Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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■
1
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Saturday, September 30, 1922
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
PACE FOUR
4
BRIG. GEN. ERNEST HINDS.
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Artillery
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than all the rest of the fellows put to-
9
SXEa
F
$
42
8;
Pome by Skinny Martin
C
Burke As a Tie That Binds
The Werst Itching Place
ee
jest wen youre feeling lovely
O
16/
BY GRACE PHELPS
NAN MEETS AN OLD FRIEND.
F3-
' I
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2
$
Letters From the People
k
Ma
42
1
ATTITUDE OF AUSTIN GREEKS.
cA
BILLXWHLKERER
FI
PUBLIC RECORDS
MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED.
Colony Hall Constantine's Fall," to be
Then she dis-
as
g-
AUTOMOBILES REGISTERED.
r
large majority of the Greek
F
old age than that of which he draws in the same letter.
?
Vpe
REALTY DEEDS RECORDED.
Respectfully requesting
give this the same publicity which you
VARSITY PRESIDENT
4
SEEKS CLOSER TIES
LEWIS WHITE MADE
WITH STUDENT BODY
SOLITUDE.
JUDGE MARCEL SAYS:
81
NEW HONORARY FRATERNITY.
NEW TROPHY OFFERED.
4
(To be continued.)
of students, I am getting further away ' University of Texas in 1910. and who
€
WINNIE WINKLE, THE BREADWINNER. Starving It Out of Him.
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133
igoraeidb
dddthenes
woman not his wife,
missed the thought
IittleBonnys
1 Note
And your thawts are noble and grand,
Its too bad if a musquito bites you,
Espeshilly on the hand.
gether, amung the things he found last
week being a locked padlock without
a key, 10 diffrent size rubber bands, a
I box of safety matches that wouldent
Sund
munion
subject
his sole executrix.
It is our opinion that a man who
makes his wife solo executrix of his
will shows that he is of found mind.
Executors are often expensive luxur-
Emzy Routt and Bessie Reaves.
Ray O'Neil and iola Bugg.
?
Intrsting
more things
Colo
Alm
Hum
9:45.
ject 01
pie's f
lng R
cord la:
The cl
Cor
S. I
Hur
Bybec
II a.
Lord’
vice.
The
’ montl
MANAGING EDITOR OF
UNIVERSITY CACTUS
"Edmund Burke was probably as good a choice as could have
been made for the statue which delegates from the Sulgrave institute
have unveiled in Washington as part of the movement to remind
Americans that not all Englishmen were hostile to the colonies at the
time of the war of the Revolution,” says the Springfield Republican.
“Many Englishmen agreed with Burke, but none of them could rival
him in eloquence and his speech on conciliation has been much studied
in American schools, partly as a literary classic, partly as a historical
document.”
WHOSWH
IN THE PUBLIC EYE
It Jr about time for the Tired Busl-
ness Man to begin rehearsing the dls-
mal story he will tell hs wife on her
return from the summer resort.
Y
5242
25
Tei
Dr
Su
class
Supe
o’cloc
by t
Inter
Even
"The
From a purely impartial standpoint,
it looks as if the age-old plea has at
last been granted and that Erin has
gone bragh, ,
191
Los
ute e
Mass
Ross,
ing 8
Ross,
at 7:3
cept 1
Fred C. Malone, County Clerk.
Lonnie Cheatham and Yonia Barnes.
Steve Jackson and Mattie Johnson.
John D. Connors and Susie Diax.
Dennis Hill and Liza Jane Chand*
ler.
I reached the silent woodland dell.
Aweary from my tramp;
But found there not a place to rest.
The ground was soft and damp.
Con
H <
The
course
High
Octobt
7:30 ]
servic
Artillery
First
IHEARDYOUTELL
HIM TO GO ON A
IDIETI 1—
The
Whi
Fred
Sixt
Comm
School
dents'
W. J.
Comm
Subjec
a Gro
dents'
Young
Thurse
All Sa
is no
be at
And It
women
this 01
ga
e
392
u/46M
KuL
C01
Re
Bit
M, V
ganiz
cours
Preat
the p
State
Toole
nine
cial '
p. m.
be or
THE WAYS
OF A WIDOW
e
I
(DOY9UTHINKK
EXTING SUCH A
LITTLE WILL
HELP HIM 9? J
446
53
2787
I went out to the fragrant ..elds,
’Mid flowers and th© bees.
I breathed the scent of new-womwn
hay—
And then began to sneeze.
strike at ferst on account of being
wet and wouldent strike afterwerds
on account of having bln wet, 37 ord-
nerry pins and 4 safety pins, 2 tickets
for a movie but he cant find out wich
movie. a bottle of red ink wtih some
still in it and a tack lifter.
7
'it!'
BANG! BANG! HURRAH!
The Possum Hunting Season Opens. Soon the Woods Will Be Filled With Political Smoke and ths
Reverberations of Big Guns.
(/
...
Then to the beach I hied myself.
The ocean breeze was grand.
I dozed and, when I woke, some kidt
Hhad buried me in sand.
At home at last! I locked the door
And ' let hone.
The only place where man can be
Content'd and alone.
—Lester Lamb.
E'o
o)
■ ,, /p3
7
a
is now assistant manager of the Dallas
Power and Light Company, has pre-
sented a new cup for intramural ath-
letics to replace the D. A. Frank cup,
which the engineering department won
last year. The department which wins
the Gill cup for three successive years
will gain permanent possession of the
cup.
mind when he made Lady Northcliffe chief of the Cactus, will bo the taking
' ■ ■ of all photographs for the Cactus on
to be a fact
DO YOU MEAN
IHE MAN WHO
JUST LEFT HERE?
11
ft
ft:
4
I
A good many Rhode Island schools
cannot open on account of the coal
shortage. Among those who are not
worrying about the coal strike are the
kids who go to those schools.
Qse month.....................
NX months ....................
One year ......................
Suoday morning edition, by ma!
better examples of withering scorn than some of the passages in his anti-Vnaezclisttondofromsmzstnnrd“r
"Letter to a Noble Lord.” There are few sadder pictures of despairing unhestitatingly state it
F<,0N>N
e2ve “
:::p_____________
. .$7.00 One Year ........
11 (in Texas), by,the year
A physical director says people are
becoming round-shouldered. Probably
from carrying their salaries around.
modern admirers may think it, he often wearied his hearers. Buckle | strictly for and infayorofa republican
coupled his name with Bacon’s in the field of political thought, but, form o.government, and.Ibelieve.a
F . . , . . , - 1 1 ‘ipoll of the other Greek citizens would
in respect of method and style of expression, Bacon and Burke wereshow them to join me in this, 1 as well
The Park Ave. News
Weather. The same. t
16th
K. O.
E. F
"Servl
munion
Import!
Story <
Prepar
Bunday
Service
Bible (
League
at I p
Wukas
probably had hesitated
Extr. Serious Axsident! Wile eat-
ing a eetch and thinking of something
elts last Thersday Sid Hunt swallowed
the stone but nuthing has happened to
him yet from it, saying he feels better
insted of worse.
Sisslety. Mr. Sam Cross had unix-
MEMBER or THE ASSOCIATHD PH KHA
The Assoctated Press ia exelusively entitled to the um for publication ot
all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in thia paper,
and also the local news published herelu. All rights of publication of Bpeclal
dispatches herein are also reserved. «SDa
Mir
2, 44
g()
Zn,. {o%
«*
YES THAT WAS )
ERNEST JAY KINK
THE WELL-KNOWN
SIGN-PAINTER!!
HE'S A CHRONIC I
"(J PEy
Fred C. Malone, Cou:ty Clerk.
Chas. Wendlan;. Jr., to W. A. Mc-
Kinney, and wife, a part of outlet 40,
division D, City of Austin. Consid-
eration 35500.
„u,ade
that a
/a5
22:
PAPER DKIIVEIY. I Intrlsting Facks About
Bubseribers in the city who do not receive their paper by 7 o’clock in the 1 people Ed Wednick finds
afternacn on week days and by 1 o’clock on Sunday morning will confer a favor than all the rest of the fel’
on the moapaement by calling the Circulation Department, phono 6160. ana
porting any irregularity.
Corn
Lewi
Holy
at 7:30
the He
glad tc
other 0
at 9:3
Superir
adults,
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
nr Person, firm or corporation which appears in the columna of this paper
dll be gladly corrected If called to the attentiou of the publisher a
The competent work of Brig. Gen.
Ernest Hinds as chief of Artillery with
the American Expeditionary Forces!
during the world war was one of the
accomplishments which caused Secre-
tary of War Weeks to recommend him
_.e, as one of the six
A 28me, men of his rank
As an orator, Burke stands in the first rank. Yet, strange as his
as far apart as the poles. Bacon was concise, weighty, epigrammatic.: as they. for reason, too numerous to
"His hearers;" says Ben Jonson, “could not cough or look aside from hme mantipnetdlosnottbtiexe thme tor
him without loss. Burke out-webstered Webster. He was fervid, the adoption of said form of govern-
imaginative, dramatic. He indulged in such long-sustained flights as|ment by the Greek nation,
few other men could attempt. Always clear, he was rarely brief, and "aeme"u" ro"peIne
Joo H. Gill, who received hls elec-
trical engineering degree from tho
Lost and Found. Nuthing .
Avvertizementa. None.
yes, I TOLD HIM TO EAT
ONLY THE SIMPLEST KIND
Gunmen took 3760 from a couple of
bootleggers the other night. Hort of
violating the ethics of tho profesh, as
it were.
have to the above referred article in
the interest of fair play.
Yours very truly,
HARRY NICHOLSON.
BNreSPYR&MOMENTES
....
in time his parliamentary colleagues lost patience under his floods of
eloquence, and left him to speak to well-nigh empty benches. How-
ever, his fame so increased, that, to this day, his speeches are taken'
at models by orators great and small, and perhaps no other country
has produced more followers of his style than our own. To the force
his example was added, here, that of Webster’s, and the combined
influence of these two great masters in what De Quincey would term
“the department of impassioned prose” has been, for many years, an
important factor in the development of our oratory.
OF. FOOD AND VERY, v
VERY LITTLE OF THAT !ly V
3
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
By carrier, in tho clty, dally and
Sunday:
businesg and then decided I e had time A. D. Herdeg and Julia Oglesby
to come after all. Besides, they had Wiggins.
There is going to bo a bitter battle
over Lord Northcliff’s two wills. It
is claimed that he was not of sound
- .A.
an,
-goshneH,^ 4^
Lewis White of Austin has been ap-
pointed managing editor of the 1923
Cactus. As managing editor White
will have full charge of most of the
executive work entailed In publishing
the Longhorn yearbook.
One of the Important changes in the
working up of this year’s Cactus, ac-
cording to Maurice Angly, editor-in-
Cash in Avance., ,04
By mall, dal; and Sunday. eX0PK
Monday, for Austin Rural Routes and
Buburban towns and routes: -kg
One month ................••••'«» as '
Six Months ...................... 38.00 ;
:1:::.:0‘:..1200 I
_____________________________ ._______ . — ----------—" pected company at his house last Sat-
The 8 C. Beckwith Special Agency, sols representatives for foreign adyer tiday and Sundey so he had to sleep
Kastern office, World Bnilding, New York City. Weatern „OIetr ! on the setting room sofer, not imjoying
EribuneBulldingChicAgo st. ouls 9//^ J10 a ec. it mutch on account of rolling off so
Att.’rrd Bpdnn Kaneas City office Bryant Building. Atlanta offen.
From the way Bob’s face lighted up, Declaring that he "longed for the
she judged that they meant more to day to come when students would not.
him than his wife did, and somehow upon seeing him pass, ask. "Who is
she felt a little sorry. He was too he?" President Robert E. Vinson of
young—and to, for that matter, was the University of Texas expressed his
Ethel—to look toward his children for determination to get in closer touch
his only Joy in life outsld • his busl- with the students of the University of
ness. t Texas. The occasion was the official
They parted on the best of terms, opening of the department of engineer-
Bob looking quite animated and more ins yesterday morning, and the presi-
like his old self, and Nan feeling that dent of the University explained that
she had really found an old friend. A hi8 purpose in taking part in the open-
slight awkwardness fell between them ing, exercises was that he might
just at the last. , achieve his ambition.
.... . ..... . . . , , ' I have been going to all of the de-
You know. Bob said, lqoking over partments every year to get acquaint-
her head if youneed any hep in get- ed with the students. That is one of
link started-f there s anythine I can the reasone that I am here this morn-
doforxouat.the bank.or.well, . ing, but 'here 18 another . reason—I
need, any he IP of any kind. Just call on .want you to get acquainted with me.
me: ; Each year, with the increasing number
that von
Gamma Epsilon Pi, national hono-
rary business fraternity for women, is
the newest honorary crganization on
the campus. Last year there were
three separate business fraternities for
women on the Varsity campus, in
June of 1922 the three were consoli-
dated into Gamma Epsilon Pi.
school the First
1
W'4
T
2,
to bo raised to
major generals.
Brig. Gen. Hinds
commanded suc-
cessively the Sau-
But Burke was not a bad choice. His speeches and writings are round on pnge two ot saia issue, is
treasured wherever English is spoken. His plea for conciliation of'erossly misleading, and, iu truth and
... in fact, a misstatement.
the colonies is perhaps better known in this country than any other There are residing in this city some
of his forensic efforts. But almost every lawyer has read his famous SonxpracquzntrasWithondslandevery
denunciation, in the trial of Warren Hastings, of unchecked power, jone of them, ond by conversation and
... . . . r . . . , . . ■ .'Intercourse with them have had ample
His address to the Bristol electors contains the classic statement of opportunity to learn from them their
a representative’s duty. Countless lovers of beautiful prose have' severai ideas, and personal senti ments
’ / r in rererehce to this particular subject.
delighted in his description of Marie Antoinette, “glittering like the and from same to judge as to whether
....... . . . r they were either pro-Constantino • or
morning star, full of life, and splendor,, and joy. , There are few anti-constantine, or pro-Venezelist or
50M£ PATIENTS WILL Y
COME IN HERE WEEK I
AFTER WEEK FOR
MONTHS, AND NEVER /
THINKOFPAYlHGUPl
L PILLS
I
Mvore HURTINS g
ASEASONOPEN |
7 TILL NOV 6 2
J. R. William*. Tax Collector.
C. M. Dugger, Nash, 758312
Frank Swan, Overland, 758313.
Mrs. Tillie McGurie, Overland, 758-
314.
Swann. Schulle Furniture Company,
Ford, 758315.
F. M. Branyon, Overland, 758316.
E. G. Hoppe, Ford, 758317.
J. C. Townes, Dodge, 758,318.
Maerki Baking Company, Dodge.
758319.
Bliss Ima Pennington, Ford, 758330.
S. E. Hays. Ford, 758321.
Max Ehrich. Overland, 758322.
A. E. Devinney, Ford, 758323.
Austin, Texas, Sept. 30.
To the Editor of, The Austin Statos-
man:
As a Greek citizen of this city and
a reader of your paper and one who
believes in fair play and keeping the
record straight—which I believe is also
one of the objects and desires of your
paper—I desire to call your attention,
and also for the benefit and informa-
tion of the citizenship of this city and
State who are readers of your good
paper—to the fact that the statement
contained in your issue of the 29th.
entitled "Majority of Austin Greek
C’orps
and the
WELL, IT WILL
HELP HIM PAY
MY BILL !!!
V
absurd. He
because of
The money the other fellow has is
capital. Getting it away from him is
labor.
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
PUBLMHHD DAILY. AVIRRNOON AND NIGHT. AND SUNDAY xonna BY
CAPITAL PRINTING COMPANY
.___Office of Publication: Seventh and Brasos StreatM,
FELEPHONE8
Business Manager...................... Display Avertjelng ..........984
Auditing Department, Circulation Kdltorfal Roons......................
and CHMtrtot Ads. ............ .3153 [ Society Mditor ....................
Kntercd as second-elss matter At the posioftee at Austin, Texas, under the
, ___________AetofCongr eesof March m*- i
. _______MKMBMH AU DIT BUREAU oV CICULAT IONS._____'
the campus. Dan McCaskill, photog-
rapher for the extension department,
will have this work in charge The
studio work will be done on the second
floor of the main building. The stage
of the old University auditorium has
been fitted up as an up to date plcture
studio for the use of Mr. McCaskill.
Ban ]
Ivan
■
Buchan
m rnin
venin
Sin." ' ’
p. m.
noon a1
’ nesday
"They do? Well, come ahead then.
We better get busy and make a pen."
"Gee! I‘m glad it’s Saturday, so we
don't have to go to school and we
can have all day to build it," said
Johnnie.
"I bet you I haven’t got the right
kind of lumber to build it with,” said
Bobbie:
"Never mind: I have. We got a lot
of laths and stuff left over from our
big chicken yard pa just built, and
there will be enough fur both of us.”
"Where are you going to build
yours?” naked Bobble.
"Down next to pa‘s big one.”
"Where shall I build mine?”
“I don’t know. Let’p look up a
place.”
(The boys find just the right spot,
as you will gee tomorrow).
Ies. A wife can always get advice
from reputable lawyers and banks.
Ask yourself this question: Why
does a man want to be the executor of
a large estate?
We have to thank Funk & Wagnails
for remembering us with a copy of
the new "Etiquette,” a very ambitious
work on all the phases of polite social
entanglements by Emily Post, with an
introduction on morals and manners
by Richard Duffy. Although while
teaching us etiquette is like carrying
coals to Newcastle, we appreciate tho
remembrance. Although we have been
the Lor Chesterfield of Park Row
for many years, wo are, glad to learn
what others think of it. The intro-
duction on morals and manners by
Richard Duffy is of no use to us what-
ever, as our morals are exemplary and
our manners quite beyond criticlsm
Ono gets that way after twenty years
in the newspaper business. One la
never rich enough to be immoral and
is seldom thrown in with a class of so-
city where his manners show up min-
uh However, as somebody has said,
it is a great game and we wouldn't
be doing anything else if we could,
and we cant We know this, for wo
have tried.
from the students. I am going to keep
on coming before you, until all of you
will know me."
The president of the University, in
speaking of the need and reward for
high scholarship, said: "If you are a
dub in the University, you will be a
dub in after life. Take the Phi Beta
Kappas and trace their records in col-
lege. You are fixing your future now.
There are two reasons for failure,”
concluded the president. "Either you
do not have the right'sort of stuff in
you, or you are too lazy to make
good."
70'
Cor
H.
"Ba
ing tl
Latti
hour,
and i
Schoc
ers ft
P. U
quart
the y
fore i
1401
Fira
holds
m. S
nesda
8 o'ch
tlefiel
Sunde
m. to
Bible
Christ
rowed
cord ia
room
Nan turned at the familiar voice and
held out both hands.
"Bobby Grant! I never would have
known you! Whatever have you done
to yourself to look so dignified and
prosperous?” ;t9
The man laughed as if embarrassed
and his face flushed as it always did
when anyone referred to hie prosper-
ity. Nan noted the flush and remem-
bering what Dr. Nelson had told her,
had a swift feeling of sympathy not
unmxed with anger, though the latter
feeling was not directed toward him.
"Still the same olil Nan. though!”
he said, rather awkwardly. "You
haven’t changed a mite—except to
grow even more good looking!”
"Flatterer!” laughed Nan.
They chatted for a few minutesiuntil
Nan, realizing that he seemer eager
to talk, bethought herself of a tea-
room she had passed.
"Suppose we go .and have tea while
we reminisce!” she suggested. The
man hesitated, then turned and walked
back with her. It flashed across Nan's
mind suddenly that perhaps it was ah
unprecedented thing in Greenbriar for
a married man to take tea with a
"What cher reading, chum?” asked
Johnnie, coming around the house and
seeing Bobbie sitting on the porch
busily engaged in reading the news-
paper. He knew it must be something
very interesting, else Bobbie would
not be reading it. for he could not keep
still long enough to read an) thing that
was not very exciting.
“Come here, and I’ll read it to you.
Do you want to win a prize? Well,
here is your chance. There is going
to be a county fair, and they are of-
firing prizes for the finest thickens and
ducks. Now we have some dandy
White Wyandottes that I could fatten
tip and take ahd you could get some
ducks. What do you say that we fat-
ten them up se they can’t waddle and
try for the prizes?”
"Just the thing! I’m with you.
What’s the prize?”
"Three dollars and seventy-five
cents for the first, two dollars for the
second, and a dollar for the third ”
"How many have you got to have?”
“You would have to have two ducks
and a drake, and I would have to have
two hens and a rooster."
"When is it going to be?”
"Two weeks from today,” informed
Bobbie. "That will be plenty of time
to fatten them.”
"But the first thing we will have to
do will be to shut tem up in a little
yard.”
"Shut them up? What for? I should
think you would want them to run
around and eat all the bugs and grass
they could, to make them fat.”
"Oh, no! When they run around
loose they run all the fat off When
people fatten fowls for market they
shut them up in a pen or coop and
feed them corn, wheat and tverything
they can think of that will fatten
them.”
citizens of this city are unequivocally
pro-Constantine.
While speaking for myself I am
We should have thought William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, a more
likely selection for the institute’s purpose; because Pitt was the most
distinguished advocate in the British parliament of the principle for
which the Americans contended, while Burke, though urging concilia-
tion, did not deny the abstract proposition that parliament could bind
the colonies "in all cases whatever.” Pitt, indeed, used language,
while the revolution went on, so bold that is surprises even the modern
reader, accustomed as the latter may be to freedom of speech. "If I
were an American,” said he, almost with his dying breath, “as I am
an Englishman, while a foreign troop was landed in my country, I
never would lay down my arms—never—never—never.” It is to be
remembered that he regarded the Amricans as oppressed fellow-
citizens. French participation in the war led him to oppose a peace
’notion.
/ 1 A Army Artillery
S9 f 483 before assuming
ran 1 2 the duties of chief
hets A39g °- the artillery,
gus J.AWMnS Elis knowledge
bu-"0 of organization in
R/GOFNM/NDS the military serv-
ice caused President Harding to name
him on the board of general officers
organizated some time ago to elimi-
nate or reduce approximately 2,500
army officers. ~ •
•s
4%
}_ /Ak l
been nt school ‘together! He could not.
have hesitated because of any notion
of unconventionality in having tea
with her.
Nevertheless, she noticed that he
hesitated again when sho led the wayi
to a table near the window. It might
have beerr a more coincidence that he ■
took a chair with his back to the pas-i
serby, but she wondered if iT were done
deliberately.
Sho forgot her momentary annoy-
ancetin the talk that followed. He
was much interested when she told
him of her plan to go into business
and agreed with Dr. Nelson that
Greenbriar held plenty of opportuni-
ties. She smiled a little, inwardiy, over
the judicial way in which he consid-
cred the pros and cons of the proposi-
tion and sho realized that ten years
had changed a rather impulsive, light;
hearted boy Into a man not unlike her ।
own husband had become. She won-j
dered if it were the fault of business
that made men heavy and dull once
they had begun to get prosperous, but
deckled that in Bob's case it seemed
hardly fit to call him Bobby now! —
there was something else behind the
change.
She asked about Ethel and neither
noticed that the query had come rather
tardily.
"She’s all right," slid Bob, his face
flushing again. "Of course the two
children keep her pretty busy. She’ll
be glad to know you're here.”
Nan doubted that privately, but
aloud she asked about the children.
23 A
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 114, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 30, 1922, newspaper, September 30, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434923/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .