The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 361, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 10, 1923 Page: 1 of 34
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In
AUSTIN SECURES STATE CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR CONVENTION
3
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
IT
nt:
5
(THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES)
COMPLETE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORT BY LEASED WIRE
}
PRICE* FIVE CENTS
(HOME EDITION)
AUSTIN, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 1923
VOL. 51—NO. 361.
WICHITA, KANSAS;
1
LOSSES ARE LARGE
0
NATION TOTTERS
COURT’S QUERIES
Will Be Wonder
2
RAIL TRAFFIC HALTED
PERJURY, SAYS MOODY
-.: >
6
d
last week.
Belgrade advices to the Matin report fierce fighting
PARIS, June 9
Many persons are paid to have been killed
Volstead Law Means
■e must not be
AUSTIN DELEGATES
father.
WIN C.E. CONVENTION
(Continued on Page Two)
(Continued on page two.)
TRIPLE TRAGEDY ON
FOR THE CAPITAL CITY
2
Mexico and by manipulation are
AT PRESENT TIME
estimate
brought in
a-
wounded
Otto
percargo;
a
sea man.
2
it was then
Both of us lost much blood.
to town.
down the door of his cabin and ren-
fr
WNAS
J
WEATHER FORECAST.
usasuanenanansaa:
I
of ap-
charged with embezzlement
Stiles, Reagan oounty.
vacation on tho Bravo Cocur,
k
U.S. FREIGHTER; MATE
KILLS THREE OFFICERS
Experts Confident
Santa Rita Strike
FATHER AND SON SHOT;
SEQUEL TO TANGLED
FAMILY CONTROVERSY
Scouts From All Over the South-
west Flock Into San Angelo;
If Predictions Prove True
University Will Be Enriched.
English Earl Slips
Away To Marry
N. Y. Chorus Girl
KIDNAPPED GIRL DROPS
NOTE TO BOY SWEETHEART
Railroad Bridges Across the Ca-
nadian River Carried Away;
Heavy Rains in West Texas
and Oklahoma.
All Deny Having Been Any-
where Near the Scene When
R. W. Burleson Was Lashed
and Tarred.
GALVESTON, Texan, June 9—Be-
lieved to have become suddenly erazed,
the second mate of the shipping board
DIL RETURNS MEAN
LITTLE TO VARSITY
beginning,
Monday,
H
%
fera
nior
Multi
eet- I
Mr.
iday.
eroy,
3uu:
eas-
-at-
at many points in Bulgaria,
or wounded.
un-
the
ture Must Act to Make Roy-
alties Worth While.
city hospital.
According to Sheriff W. D. Miller,
the shooting started.
“My father and I ran one mile and
a half to a neighbor who brought us
»nal |
pre-
rifle'
will
rec-
eral
ep-
ard
will
normal temperature.
West gulf states: Showers first part,
Two Galveston Men Among
Men Slain Aboard Shipping
Board Vessel. •
WAXAHACHIE MAN IS
INDICTED ON CHARGE
OF EMBEZZLING $41,000
FOUR OFFICERS HELD
FOR KILLING ALLEGED
LIQUOR LAW VIOLATORS
M
i
t
V
MILITARY COUP IN
BULGARIA; CABINET
MINISTERS JAILED
3-MILE LIQUOR RULE
GOES INTO EFFECT
porarily.
Thousands of acres of farm lands
were laid waste along the lowlands of
Frt
ju*
d inl
That
rting
was
sey,
3 R,
ourt
tour 1
edy.
f
Nothing to Detroit;
Beer for Everybody
- ----- Q------------------—
Ludendorff, desiring to avoid the con- j Rogers, and his son,
medi
Jock
lict-
reles
• re* j
rand
g of
med
fhen
thought that they were, however, ns
Maximilian Harden, Noted Ber-
lin Publicist, Pictures Depths
to Which Once Proud People
Have Sunk; All Sense of De-
cency Apparently Lost.
TEXAS STATE LIBRARy
* Austin, Tezaa
cersi
sch,
yer,
‘aul
and
the wife of L. O. Walker admitted
LONDON, June 9. -An Exchange Telegraph dispatch telling of the
overthrow of the Bulgarian government and the arrest of the ministers,
• says that the new premier is Professor Zankof, who also is serving as
minister of foreign affairs.
IN ORGY OF VICE;
are now at the
Four Square Miles of the Busi-
ness and Residential Sections
of .the City Are Covered by
Water.
were placed in a hospital at Oporto
Friday, after which the Bravo Coeur
resumed her homeward voyage under
the command of C. B. Johanssen,Airs t
mate.
Whether or not the bodies of the
Both men
By Associated Press.
SOFIA, Bulgaria, Juno 9.—Tho Bulgarian government was over-
thrown nt 3 o’clock this morning by an organization of reserve officers
supported by the active army.
All the ministers were placed under arrest. A government has
been formed bv all*the opposition parties with the exception of the
communists. The movement is supported by the provincial garrisons.
Order prevails in the capital and throughout the country.
officers of the vessel would have un-
doubtedly mentioned it in the table
In Austin all of
and I jumped up, and
SECOND OLDEST NEWSPAPER
IN TEXAS. ESTABLISHED 1871
reading of the highest court’s opinion
will warrant.
The only ameliorating provisos are
strictly of an emergency and tempo-
rary character. Incoming vessels at
sea when the effective hour arrives
can bring liquor inside tho three-mile
limit for the last time, but It must
remain under seal until the homeward
voyage has started.
The family was
proximately $41,000 from the Citi-
zens National Bank of Waxahachie in
an Indictment returned here yesterday
by the federal grand jury.
He has been at liberty on $5000 bond
following arraignment several weekr
ago and was waiting at the federal
building this afternoon for his bonds-
men to arrive and make new ball of
$10,000 set by Judge Atwell today.
Working on clues provided by the wounded himself before other members
wounded men, officers from thelof the crew succeeded in breaking
The Bulgarian peasant government, headed by Alexander Stam-
boulisky as premier, was first formed in October, 1919, and has con-
tinued In office since that time with some changes in the cabinet
personnel. The present movement originated in the popular resentment
throughout the country against the war policy pursued by formes King
Ferdinand, who threw the country in on the side of Germany and the
central powers.
The Stamboulisky government took a strong stand against the
members of the former ministries whom it accused of aiding in the war
plans of the ex-king and brought a number of the former ministers to
trial. Considerable sentiment, however, developed in favor of the im-
prisoned statesmen and some of them were returned to parliamentary
seats in the last election.
The political situation has been in an unsettled state for some time
and several revolutionary attempts have been reported, the latest only
sequences of his actions, would leave who is a tenant on the Bob Wheeler dated, have flood waters exceeded to-
chaos behind to become a nationalplace, about ten miles from Austin, on ’ day’s high mark.
hero. Ludendorff, poor fellow, could’ the Dessau-Cameron road. The older Salvation Army posts were estab-
not bring himself to sign the capitula- j Walker was shot once through the jlished and scores of destitute victims
tion which was made necessary by his thigh, and is not seriously, injured, were furnished with food and dry
own mistakes. If the German gov- His son, however, has ' a shoulder ' clothing.
eminent and parliament do not per- Shattered by a bullet, and a thigh j Hundreds of passengers were delayed
ceive that, without dishonor to their wound—the younger man is, of course, ‘ here when virtually all train service
land, they must prepare to end the in a more critical condition than his out of Wichita was paralyzed tem-
occupation of the Ruhr by direct un- - — -* -* *’
derstanding with France and by going
back to the Ruhr status of January 11.
last and by separating the Rhineland
Bros. are now endeavoring to get fur-
ther information regarding the dispo-
sition of the bodies.
Details of the slayings wre not con-
tained in the brief cablegram.
Captain Nielson was a resident of
Galveston and is survived by a wife
and little daughter. Supercargo Perry
was also a resident of Galveston. He
was on a leave of absence from his
regular vocation as city salesman of
GERMANS ENGAGE FLOODS INUNDATE OIL FEVER GRIPS WEST TEXAS; ELGIN MEN AFTER
........'.........WILD RUSH TO RERGM C0-K! ANSWER
fair second part; normal
concessions now.
But the world’s peac
disturbed just becahse
by Attorney General George M. Napier,
opposed the release of the officers on
the ground that the attempted arrest
1 of the Smiths as alleged rum runners
was Illegal In that they acted without generally
WASHINGTON, June 9.— Weather
outlook for the week beginning Mon-
day:
East gulf states: Generally fair at
Wife of One of the Wounded
Men Admits Firing
Five Shots.
ported, a number of claims have been
an oil company and was taking his filed in the county clerk's office at
4 O
dering him harmless, according to the the interest applied to the University's
cable. He and the injured seaman needs. It is evident at a glance that
sheriff's office were carrying on an
investigation early Sunday morning
and arrests are expected’momentarily.
BERLIN, June 9.—The latest Berlin
note , which hesitatingly . and com-
plaining!/ at least fixed annuities and
guaranties sounds, after all the fan-
fares since last January, like a signal
: retreat.
Yet it remains to be seen whether
the note can be made the basis for
fruitful negotiations, since it leaves
two chief points unsettled. It promises
neither the abandonment of passive
resistance in the Ruhr nor permission
for the creation of a demilitarized
autonomous German Rhine state.
The necessity of such concessions is
admitted in nearly every quarter, but
it is declared that the Cuno cabinet,
with its hands tied by unwise declara-
tions in the past, cannot make such
East Texas: Sunday and Monday,
unsettled, with local showers.
West Texas: Sunday and Monday,
partly cloudy; unsettled in the Pan-
handle.
steamship Brave Coeur, on route from . . c i • i
Hamburg to Galveston, last Wednes- University Auditor Says Legis
Hausler, and then attempted suicide
after barricading himself in his cabin,
according to a cable received yester-
day by Lykes Bros, operators of the
ship, from Oporto. The Irave Coeur
put into that port to place the two
wounded men in a hospital and also
to report the tragedy by cable, the loss
of the wireless operator preventing
them from sending out word any
earlier.
S. Tsettos, the crazed mate, seriously
through this channel at 800 cases or
about 19,000 bottles.
There is sofne other smuggling from
isolated points on the Canadian side.
It is claimed that beer in small lots
is sent from Walkersville to Crosse
pointe. But aside from the beverage
carried by the fleet and via the rail-
road, it is probable that not more
than 200 or 300 cases a day get across
the border.
The average of estimates made by
half a dozen runners and as many
bootleggers, places the total shipments
of Canadian beer across the river at
not more than 4000 cases or 5000 on
the biggest days. This would aggre-
gate between 14,000 and 15,000 gal-
ons. Canadian customs officials and
local and federal peace officers on the
American side throw up their hands
and declare the figures to be way
high. But the operations on the Cana-
dian side indicate that somewhere in
the neighborhood of 4000 cases do get
across every day.
Wichita Falls, Only Other Con-
tender for the Honor, Fails
to Make a Showing.
three slain men were left at Oporto it possible to spend the principal of
was not stated in the cable. It is . rentals and royalties would be for the
legislature to make changes in the
permanent land act,” concluded Mr.
Long
Saturday morning and for an hour or
two In the afternoon. The two men
drove home in the automobile of a
friend, while the mother and her
seven children made the trip in a
wagon.
the royalties would have to reach a
high total, in order for the revenue
derived from royalties to be large
enough to carry on a building pro-
gram. let us say.
“The only action that would make
with prohibition enforcement." It was ..........- —...... .
pointed out, too, that the regulations, riding a horse that walked beside theday abat and killed Captain John Niel-
in the face of representationsi by most buggy. I Pald little nlt entton, t.tr2 son, master of the vessel; A Glaiser,
of the maritime powers of the world, buggy or its occupants, until I heardiwirAi,e onrator AnA uhn Pm- mi-
are to be appllea as Hgialy as a litera a woman scream for NtyfatherlwirelrzsuoreratnacandJebnmerryott.
Texas Radio Corporation and
Austin Statesman Broad-
casting Station.
Phone 8701.
— \
Thia station is owned and op-
erated by the Texas Radio Cor-
poration, ealers in Radio Sup:
piles and sets. The piano use
at this station la furnshe by
the J. R. Reed Music Company
of Aurdn, Texas.
Ie Cuno,
BY MAXIMILIAN HARDEN.
Special Cable to the Statesman.
(Copyright 1923.)
(While the German government
send another note to. the allies the
German people are living a life of
gaiety. patronizing “wild women
shows in Berlin, going on expensive
vacations and paying fabulous prices
for wines, cigars and California
fruits, It is small wonder the mark
declines when 350,000,000,000 new ones
are printed every day. The German
offer is likely to be found deficient in
two particulars—failure to cease resis-
tance in the Ruhr and failure to
recognize the necessity for an autono-
mous Rhineland state).
loaded here. Runners
dally average of beer
becoming unsettled after
with occasional showers;
By Assoclated Press.
DETROIT, Mich., June 9.—A mos-
quito fleet of from thirty to fifty small
boats is supplying Detroit and Its
suburbs with the equivalent of be-
tween 50,000 and 65,000 pint bottles
of Canadian beer every twenty-four
hours. The illicit beverage is smug-
gled across the Detroit River in bar-
rels, kegs and casts.
The supply of beer transported by
the miniature rum fleet is supple-
mented by occasional carload ship-
ments which come into the United
States from Canada by . way of the
railroad tunnel under the river, ac-
cording to the runners. They claim
that one of the biggest and wealth-
iest operators on, the Canadian side
uses the tonnel to get beer across.
The cars, It is said, are consigned to
DALLAS, Texas, June
Phillips, former bank
No arrests had been made early
Sunday morning in connection with
Special to The Austin statesman.
OEORGETOWN, Texas, June 9_
In proceedings before Judge Jae. K.
Alaminton of the criminai district
icourt here this afternoon, Godfrey
Wayne Lotus, W. E. Posey and G. S
-unbar, committed to jaii and finee
$100 for contempt of court, for re.
! fusing to answer questions before the
.grand jury, were ordered releasea
।from custody, they having appeared
before the court and purged them-
selves of contempt by answering the
। questions propounded to them.
‘ Earlier in the day it was stated
sthat a writ of habeas corpus would
be sought before the court of criminal
appeals for the release of these men.
but at noon it was stated that a hear
ng had been arranged before the
local court, and the men would purge
themselves. The hearing was started
at l o clock ami concluded at 6. Dis.
liict Attorney Dan Moody, represent-
ing the state, propounded the ques.
lions which the witnesses had re-
fused to answer, on the grounds that
their answers would incriminate them
when called to testify before the
giand jury. Additional questions
were propounded for the purpose of
testing the truth of their answers.
When asked by the district attorney
why they refused to answer the ques-
tions propounded to them by the
grand jury, they testified that being
members of the Ku Klux Klan they
feared that their answers would in-
criminate them. Witness Dunbar
stated that he feared his answers. if
made, would incriminate him, and
perhaps, some of his friends in the
i klan.
After the witnesses had answered
such questions as propounded to them
by the district attorney, the state con-
tended that, in orderoto purge them-
selves of their contempt in refusing
’ to answer the questions when before
the grand jury. it was necessary that
the witnesses should not only answer
the questions, but should answer
them truthfully. Mr. Moody further
contended that it appeared that the
answers to the questions were false
and stated that the state believed that
if the matter was postponed until
Wednesday of next week, that the
state could produce witnesses who
i would establish the falsity of the
answers given by the witnesses to the
, questions, which they had refused to
answer before the grand jury.
It was the contention of the state
that, if the answers to the questions
were true, the witnesses would have
answered them before the grand jury
, rather than go to jail and remain
there for thirty days, as their answers
1 did not in any way incriminate them.
Counsel for the recalcitrant wit-
nesses contended that all that could
, be required of the witnesses was
, answers to the questions, and that
when the answers had been given the
courr could not inqufre into the truth
. or falsity of such answers.
The questions propounded to the
witnesses ami answered by them,
after stating their place of residence
; was Elgin, Texas, are as follows:
I "Were you in Taylor, Williamson
county, Texas, on the day that H. W.
(Continued on Page Two.)
9.—Robert
teller was
District Attorney Announces New
Charges Will Be Filed as Re-
sult of Special Hearing Before
Judge Hamilton at George-
town.
had they been buried at sea. Lykes
By Associated Press.
SHERMAN, Texas, June 9. Austin
won its fight for the 1924 Christian
Endeavor Union of Texas convention
in ti report of the convention city
committee tonight. Austin was easily
the most serious contender for the
meeting, although Wichita Falls dele-
gates bid for it,
A large banner, “Austin the conven-
tion city for 1924," was placed in the
front of tho convention hall by Austin
delegates upon first arriving and it re-
mained there throughout.
Austin last entertained the State
Christian Endeavor in 1908, and before
that in 1892. Nearly a thousand dele-
gates attended this year’s convention.
Officers elected were: Atwood A.
Hyde of Sherman state president. He
has had the office of state vice-presi-
dent for the last two years, and suc-
coeds F. B. Porter of Fqrt Worth. At
one time, Mr. Hyde was state field
secretary of endeayor.
Other officers named are: Jack B.
Dale, Electra, vice president; Mis.
Hope Fenfrock Norris, Galveston, sec-
retary; Mis Ruth Burlingame, Hous-
ton, assistant secretary, and Miss Nona
Warden, Greenville, treasurer.
FLOGGING WITNESSES FREED
__~ ___________________—---------:------------4--------------? —.—
from the barnyard. Somebody was
WASHINGTON, June 9.—Beverage
liquor which found asylum aboard for-
eign merchantmen in American waters
after it had been shouldered from
American soil by the Volstead act now
is officially driven out into the open
sea.
After the stroke of midnight, under
regulations drafted by the treasury to
make effective the mandate of the
supreme court, there is no substantial
legal foothold for alcoholic drinks
within the jurisdiction of continental
United States, ashore or afloat.
A reminder of the zero hour as fixed
in the regulations was given by treas-
ury officials today "to all concerned
By Associated Press.
SAN ANGELO, Texas, June 9.—Tho
University of Texas will be the richest
educational institution in the world, In
all probability, scouts from Oklahoma,
Kansas, Louisiana, Arkansas and
Texas oil companies conceded tonight,
if the Santa Rita wildcat, drilled by
the Little Texon Oil and Land Com-
pany on its seventy-two sections of
land flows liquid gold Sunday.
Santa Rita came in again at 3:15
o’clock this afternoon and gushed oil
over the derrick for forty-three min-
utes, making its sixteenth regular flow
since the bit tipped the sand at 3050
feet on May 28.
W. F. Worley, extensive oil operator
of Eldorado, Kan., who came here
representing a group of Kansas oper-
ators. said the wildcat was a paying
well beyond all question and that the
quality of oil was high. Ile said he
expected to see it develop ino little
short of a wonderful well when it is
drilled in hext week.
About 100 scouts, from all over
Southwestern oildom, waited all morn-
ing near the well until She blew in.
The Intensely Interested group crowd-
ed close up when Card Cromwell,
driller, gave the word the well was
about to get into action.
A roar of gas folloved art It forced
thick green liquid up through the rig.
। It inspired confidence in the onlookers.
If the field lies near, which oil men
today expressed belief is here, the Unf-
I versty of Texas’ future is assured and
will be "out of legislative hands for
life,’’ one graduate said. The well is
in block 2, section 2, Reagan county,
i a little southwest of the center of the
’ five hundred and some odd sections
of Reagan county kind owned by the
University. By selling oil from the
well day before yesterday, the Texon
Company proved up its lease on sev-
enty-two sections of the land adjacent
to the well. The closest in that leases
can be secured outside of the holdings
of this company is five miles, but acre-
age is sellins at $20 an aero outside
the Texon tract.
The special train over the Kansas
1 City, Mexico & Orient Railway leaves
। here at 9 o’clock tomorrow morning
for the Santa Rita.
BUFFALO, N. Y.» June 9.—The
Earl of Northest stepped off a
train here today and was whisked
away in haste by his fiancee, Jes-
sica Brown, Follies girl and dancer,
whoso marriage to the young Eng-
lish lord was balked several days
ago when City Clerk Cruise of
Now York refused to issue a license.
Miss Brown was awaiting her
titled fiance with a big motor car.
There were no fond embraces—at
least not until the protecting in-
terior of the big automobile was
reached. The couple went to the
home of Mrs. Albert Starke, Miss
Brown’s mother.
3 p. m.: Regular Sunday radio
sermon by Dr. George Green,
pastor of the First Baptist
Church of Austin.
WICHITA, Kan., Juno 9.—Residents
of East Wichita laid aside street attire
today and donned their bathing suits
when Chisholm Creek, north and east
of hero, went out of its banks and
inundated an area of upwards of four
square miles of the business and resi-
dential sections, causing damage esti-
mated well over a million dollars.
Canoes and rowboats were brought
into use and by afternoon a virtual
ferry system had been established.
The swollen stream, already brought
to a flood stage by raging waters from
its source, was augmented by heavy
rains last night, and early today the
small dike along its banks gave way,
flooding everything before it. Hun-
dreds of families were forced to flee
for safety.
Creeping up to the very door of tho
union station, the waters rose steadily
and by noon stood from one to three
feet deep in the main street. As the
section of the city lying directly east
of the union statior is low, virtually
the entire east side was under water.
The flood was said to be one of the
worst ever experienced in the history
“Even should the University of
Texas’ oil lands in West Texas, upon
which one well was brought in Fri-
day, pay handsome royalties, the Uni-
versity would not at the present time
be materially benefited financially,*’
said w. R. Long, auditor of the Uni-
versity of Texas, Saturday night.
"According to the permanent land net
all funds obtained by rentals on Uni-
versity land have to be invested, and
N. Walker, of of the city. Not since 1904, when a
L. O. Walker, • large portion of Wichita was Inun-
like the wounding of G.
NEW YORK, June 9 -A note to her
10-year-old sweetheart may lead to
the finding of little Ruth Smerling, 8,
who disappeared from her home in
Brooklyn Thursday, police said today.
She note, addressed to “Buster"
Price, was found in a field and was
turned over to the police It said in
part: ' You know the man is very good
to me and gave me 10 cents. I’d like
to meet you at 7 o’clock." It was
signed "Ruth.”
| The note contained the name of the
Iman vho is thought to have taken the
1 girl away, the polic said.
shooting at the two men, and a
pistol with five empty ’shell $ was
taken from her. As neither of the
wounded men had been found when
Sheriff Miller and his deputies were
out to investigate this shooting, and
as it was thought the men were
simply hiding out from fright, the
woman was not arrested, but was
allcwed early Saturday night to go
to the home of her mother. The
woman alleged her husband had mis-
treated her and their seven children.
Last night, when the two wounded
men were brought to the city hospital,
L. O. Walker denied that his wife
had shot them. “My wife would not
shoot us; there are only two persons
in the world who would shoot us,
and I know who they are.” At this
point, Walker mentioned the names
of the two men who he declares were
i esponsible. for the wounding qfhim-
sel and father.
“I was out in the barnyard milk-
ing when I saw a buggy going up to
my house which is quite a distance
ATLANTA, Ga., June 9.—Four of
the six federal and county officers
held In connection with the killing of
Jett and J. B. Smith of Athens on
June 1, were held under $500 bond for
their appearance in the Greene county
courts by United States Judge S. H.
Sibley here today. Two of the of-
ficers. Chief of Police J. P. L. Darby
of White Plains, Ga. and E. N.
Brooks, chief of police of Union Point,
Ga., were released.
Judge Sibley rendered his decision
at the close of habeas corpus proceed-
ing in which the state, represented
Much of the University’s more than
seventy sections of land is leased by
oil operators, and with the bringing
in of the well near San Angelo Friday
night, it is expected that other wells
will be sunk within the very near
future.
In the meantime the state land of-
fice la preparing to handle a rush
of filings on land in the vicinity of the
Hants Rita well. Already, it Is re-
any process for search or seizure, temperature.
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 361, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 10, 1923, newspaper, June 10, 1923; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434992/m1/1/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .