The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 98, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1923 Page: 1 of 8
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THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
COMPLETE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORT BY LEASED WIRE
PRICE FIVE CENTS
VOL 52—NO. 98.
(HOME EDITION)
FATE OF CAMPUS BOND IN DOUBT
■
I
♦ ♦
* +
» ♦
MORE WORKERS NEEDED TO POT DEAL OVER
nd bit
ITALIANS PRESS MACHINE GUNS DOMINATE OKLAHOMA CI TVs f.m. Tuesday is
THE TIME LIMIT
N
EASTON HELD FOR CIVIL OFFICIALS CITY DECLARES WAR
> '
FOR MAKING GOOD
OF EXTERMINATION ON
PESKY MOSQUITOES
k off,"
*
FOR PATRIOTIC REASONS
FORCES ARE ORGANIZED
BOND FIXED AT $2000 GRAND JURY STAYED
I
1
activities of the Ku Klux Klan
s US
in’ ug
Commerce frankly -net
Sept. 17.
- -
night when a Louisville & Nashville
elieve
WORKMEN AND HIGH
CONFESSIONS CLEAR
it
SALARIED OFFICIALS UP MURDER MYSTERY,
It wan indicated that
alleged floggings executed or directed
AT COUNCIL BOARD
K. C. POLICE REPORT
{court is not yet complete, but the full
force of the investigation is expected
Buick which was traveling slightly in 1
of regular civil procedure in the state
In
occurred with the exception that
(Continued on Paze Three)
Continued from Page Three.)
EARTHQUAKE REFUGEES
HUSBAND TO BE TRIED
FOR FANCY PRICES
Pax
and
4
and
Sparks
to
(Continued on Page Three.)
dealt
mi tied that he fired the shot.
WNAS
DUMB-BELLS
then refused to marry her.
GALESBURG, .III. Sept. 17—Lock-
said one woman in borrowed clotl
mmee
[
THE WEATHER
sus
with an exhibit of war relics.
O
sald
Now
“MOB” MARRIAGE CASE
NEARING CONCLUSION
Signers of Original Guarantee
and Solicit Their Renewed
Support.
Absolute Martial Law Put Into
Effect At the State Capital
and Number of Other Import-
ant Centers.
The Forty Thousand Italians of
Disputed District, He De-
dares. Must Be Taken Un-
der Mother Country’s Wing.
Youth Whose Car Is Alleged to
Have Caused Fatal Injuries to
W. M. Ellis. Bound Over by
Justice Tannehill.
CASE OF FORT WORTH
WOMAN WHO SLEW HER
CHICAGO, Hept.. 17 -One hundred
represent atfves of the industrial rela-
tions organization of the Standard Oil
Company of Indiana, including pump-
into a northbound excursion train on
the Atlanta A St. Andrews Bay Rail-
way standing on the crossing, accord-
CONSIDER PLANS TO
ELIMINATE UNTRUTHFUL
ADVERTISING IN U. S.
Roman Fascista Leader Asserts
That City Must Be Annexed
to Italy, No Matter What the
Cost.
Descriptions Eagerly Purchased
By Pacific Coast Papers.
1. IIke
storm
r me2.
ppene,
em, but
disaster sold at a high premium and
eye witness stories of survivors some-
move
ocko
dere
Their
York
Others Implicated in Killing
of Ex-State Senator.
in’ .to
vritin*4
r day,
er ths.
otherl
Bank Aids Divorce Seekers;
Finances Those Who Wish to
Sever Marital Ties That Fetter
By Associated Press.
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Sept. 17.
tn dvr.’*
rfa the
L & N. Express Crashes Into
Excursion Train at Cotton-
dale, Alabama.
ex-
the.
tions Organization In Session
at Chicago.
Liberty bonds In a holdup today at the
State Hank of Cameron. near here.
The robbers made their .escape in a
car thought to have been stolen from a
Galesburg garage last night. "
ban gin*
and in
a hat-
Goliath
half a
They
. and I
w Jim
thindig,
• r hi
blacks
MAY SOLVE MYSTERY
OF KIDNAPED BABY
PAIR OF BANDITS
LOOT ILLINOIS BANK
in operation today in the two largest :
cities, in Oklahcma, Oklahoma City and
Tula.
The Oklahoma City court convened
riage to Ina Cartwright Lvenay.
Livesay claims he was fovced
clared. wgnt around the,Greene home.'
After Ryan made his confession, ac- i
cording to the police, Richardson ad- [
lettin*
ut it,
four
Lefty
didn't
Russell was called preliminary to the
{actual opening of an investigation into
'COM
6awi
PAY
MOT pnE
or t»«
• *v»ras( ’
IN FORT WORTH COURT Photographs and Eye-Witness
i I‘m
said,
She
mile, ।
elvese J
sank
this
hit,’
i hid
them,
ed iC
ghtaj
good.
1921 |
asa nik
times brought ns high as $100.
"I haven’t a cent. but I have a stor
NOU ARE RGW
I LEMMING
‘NAFFLEOWN
ON AGAN!
wapnLGe0
m— — "nDe
AUSTIN, TEXAS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1923
I .and!
orilla<
mitts
roken leg and internal injuries, and enberg testified that he was riding on
This station is owned and op-
erated by the Texas Radio Cor-
poration, .dealers in Radio Sup-
plies and sets. The piano used
at this station is furnished by
the J. R. Reed Music Company
of Austin, Texss.
attempted robbery was in _______
Richardson, and another man, he de
“Sun Goddess”
Topples; Japanese
Myths Shattered
I sal id,
t," says
y otheri
not. I’ll;
present •
today and summoned as the first wit-
ness Campbell Russell, former chair-
he state corporation com mis -
The other injured brought here In- ;
eluded Three other Lane children.
John. Robert and a little girl: Mr. and
Mrs W. Y Campbell. Mrs M C. Hol- |
land and baby, Miss Inca Cameron.
Mrs. E W. Bush, Storman Bush. 8
years old: Masin Roney, Joe Hodges. ’
Leroy Olide, Ida Tines, Mrs. J. L.1
Tinea Mrs C. L. Watford, and a Mr.
Battle of Dothan.
SELL THEIR “STORIES"
persons were killed and twenty-two
oilers
ghin.
outa
arms
rotest
’ Jim
door.
• hol.”
it ths
. and
fadin’
into
, L
mart
e, C
every,"
beat,
tters
■I
beer
Several of the injured were taken
to Marianna, Fla. •
prolific breeding places for dengue-
bearing mosquitoes.
Mosquitoes are to be found all over
the city in great numbes, and the
council is acting wisely. In appropriat-
ing money for the extermination of .
the disease-carrying pests,” declared {
Mayor Yett.
Inny,i
durr ’
mere
23 •
nut I
fred Lane. 6 years old, whose mother • Chalmers Avenue and caught sight of
was killed, and who suffered a crushed a large automobile as it flashed east •
skull, are not expected to live. it was on East Sixth Street. He turned into
a
usta
Hd
devil
win
that
bein’
SECOND OLDEST NEWSPAPER
IN TEXAS. ESTABLISHED ISTX
I am,
at y‘
with
?•
n‘ her
it was ,
tchin"
x-foot,
at big
paper men of the Pacific coast did |
------ : their share of relieving the financial J
wed the girl by armed men who took difficulties of some of the destitute ।
him to a lonely spot on the roadside . survivors of the Japanese earthquake
where the ceremony was performed who arrived here yesterday. Photo-
in the darkness. His bride claimed ] graphs of scenes connected with the
that he had wronged her and had — “ "
was not as gratifying as was
Ing to reports here today by local She hastened to him and worked over
hospitnt ofrielals. The dead are: i him untu the arrival of an ambulance .na Nan. , H Harrold
Mrs I.T. Lane, Dothan, Ah.; Mr..! in which he was placed. Mr. Ellis Graves. and.Na oTnlhaluaHters n
Frances Holland, Dothan and a Mrs i testified that her husband never spoke ihasentabished headeu t rs
Howell of Cottonwood, Ala. { and died in the ambulance on the way — n own po 5.
Of the injured brought to hospitals to the hospital. )
here T. J. Kelly, suffering from a I Motorcycle Officer August Von Ros-
FORT WORTH, Texan, Sept. 17.
Arguments began today in district
court in the case in which Mark Live-
say is attempting to annul his mar-
FORT WORTH. Texas, Sept. 17,—
’The fatal shooting af Louis Broussard,
. 28. by his wife, Lillian Broussard, 28,
Sunday morning at their apartment,
I will be submitted to the grand jury
i within the next few days. Assistant
District Attorney W. H. Tolbert said
today.. ______.
Military courts of inquiry into
Texas Radio Corporation and
Austin Statesman Broad-
casting Station.
Phone 8701.
vled oJc4
Autobat,
ind then
Cochran
nickered. !
Imple to
eaks up
Ie’s cer-
his Mon»
st Jocko
ou work
I certalr
nd over,)
redit for
I bit by
f That
id wheo I
er, why,!
n on It
remained in the automobile while the No. 8: H. A. Wroe, Sam
progress. { and John F. Buller.
Traffic Officer Test lies That
Easton’s Car Was Exceeding
Forty Miles an Hour Just
Prior to Crash.
In Oklahoma City. Machinery of the
met today in the fifth annual confer-
ence since the plan was inaugurated
under the guidance of Colonel Robert
W. Stewart, chairman of the board of
directors.
At the banquet to be held tonight
there was to be no speakers platform
or special table for the more dis-
tinguished guests.
An equal number of employes and
company representatives from the six
refineries, Whiting, Ind.; Wood River,
St. Louis.; Sugar Creek; Kansas City;
Casper, Laramie and Grey Bull, Wyo.,
were chosen for the conference.
Since the industrial relations plan
was put in operation 96.6 per cent of
the qualified voters in the plants hav
voted at elections. The employees by
secret ballot elect their representatives
and form joint general committees for
the refineries whichmake recommen-
dations to the management on matters
of working hours, wages, safety, hous-
ing. living conditions, athletics, and
other miscellaneous subjects.
About 1400- cases have been before
the joint general committees and of
the recommendations made 93.3 per
cent have been approved and made
effective, according to company of-
ficials.
The most important fenture of the
industrial relations plan, according to
officials, is the better understanding
and co-operation among employes,
management and officials.
Through this organisation Colonel
Btewart has declared he is convinced
of the "inherent fairn ess, good faith
and square dealing of the American
working man,"
East Texas: Tonight and Tuesday
partly cloudy to cloudy, occasional
showers, cooler in northwest portion
Tuesday.
West Texas: Tonight partly cloudy,
local showers. cooler In the Panhandle;
Tuesday generally fair, colder.
said. They are both from Dothan. East Sixth Street and followed the
Ed Leonard and
started.,
o he’s'
sidled
nd big
J and |
mmons:
om. j
aid to
down,
n he’s
a hop
zle. ,
says, i
And. ■
Ide Of |
d then*
eague, ’
an
a
the campaign against mosquitoes.
Orders will be issued to all Boy Scouts
to empty every vessel in the open
that contains water and that would
likely serve as a breeding grounds for
mosquitoes.
Negroes will be employed by the
health department to distribute crude
oil along stale creek waters within the
city limits.
automobile carried
license.
CLAIM TO FIUME;
FEELING IS HIGH
Titled English Girl Goes on Stage.
LONDON, Sept, 17.—Lady Mercy
Greville. 19. youngest daughter of the
Countess of Warwick, is the latest re-
eruit from the English nobility to the
stage. She is acting the part of a
domestic servant in "The Liies of the
Hield."
SEATTLE, Wash . Sept. 17—News-
committeemen at
--I C, B. Easton, charged with negligent
homicide, in connection with the death
•--------------------- r r " ~ of W. M. Ellis, Hept. 9, as the result of
. Al, mi* a py injuries received in a collision betkeen
THREE PERSONS KILLED, anapnckchevrotrcnedanionpvoraemz,
• just beyond'the Farmers A Gin tier a
TWENTY-TWO INJURED, SSBstSc
... ... -Au nehill’s court. Iinan or (I
IN RAILROAD WRECK xi WtmeaFuat"he oashammnn hin no other city ot the arate was
| beside her husband who was driving there any indication that military rule,
the Chevrolet and that the Buick car in erfect more than a month inTuls,
j which collided with them was being had been extended to all corners of
driven at an excessive rate of speed. , the Mate. ...
| lira Kills said that her hueband fried : < reek county, which, with Oklahoma
desperately to avoid a collision with county. (Oklahoma City), was placed
I the Buick car and cut the front wheels under "absolute/martin law Saturday
I of his , car sharply to the right and nizht by Governor J. V- Walton was
iwhen the impact occurred the front without, any vestiee of military
[wheel, of the Chevrolet were In the activity; Xo trooPs had been mobiiized
Three ‘ weeds at the extreme right edge of "nd civi authority was undis-
the street. .turned.
. The impact of the Buick overturned ’ Adjutant General B. H. Markham
injured at Cottondale, Ha. late last the Chevrolet, pinning the occupants arrived by airplane from Tulsa today
t ................ beneath the car. Mrs. Kills raid ah. and went at once into conference with ;
eastbound passenger train crashed was pinned in such a manner Ihat Mie Colonel W. S.Key.anatcommandarti
! could not see her husband and when troops nere. The adjutant Eenerar
the overturned Chevrolet was pulled , declined to say whether the state, mili:
(back she was released and then rawI tary headquar era would be transferred
iher husband lying prone on his back, ihere Irom T““
— ... 1 The military court here is composed,
of Colonel Paul Walker, Colonel W. A- i
It was stated this morning at the — • tJ - ■
council meeting that the Boy Scouts |
aepartntent"nudve X poxaibsath Comm ttees Appointed to Canvass
Number of Patriotic Men Signed
Up This Morning and Many
Others Are Confidently
Counted On.
. PITTSBURGH, Pa. Sept. 17.—
Lack of funds no longer need
prove a hindrance to mismated
couples who would obtain a di-
vorce if they had enough money
to pay attorney's fees and court
costs, according to A. M. Custer
of Johnstown, who is connected
with the Community Savings and
Loan Company of that city.
In an address here before the
Retail Credit Men's Association
Mr. Custer said that the newest
thing in banking was the exten-
sion of credit to couples who
sought freedom from the marriage
tie. He described the system
initiated by the Johnstown bank
and said that not a dollar had
been lost through loans made to
those who had availed themselves
of it.
said*
i
yell* I
speeding car. Just beyond Chalmers
Avenue he took the time of the racing
"We need more workers if we ex-
pect to .put thin thing over by tomor-
row’ night," was the declaration of
W. H. Badger, one of the committee
chairman in charge of the work of
! underwriting the citizens’ indemnity
bond guaranteeing the state of Texas
, that the University campus extension
will not cost the taxpayers of Texas
more than the appropriation of $1,-
350,000.
A number of citizens this morning
responded to the calk, but the response
At a called session of the city coun-
cil Monday morning $200 was appro-
priated to earry on an anti-mosquito
campaign in the city. This fund will
come from the money set aside for
the use of the public health depart-
ment under the direction of Commis-
■li ner Hhrry Nolen.
It was pointed out this morning that
the menace to the public health by
mosquitoes was a very real one be-
cause of the heavy ruins of recent
| dates. Commissioner NDlen said that
he would order sixty members of the
fire department to spend an hour each
day in the'emptying of tin cans and
other water containers that are to be
found in large* numbers in the alleys
of the business and residence sections.
The city health officer has recommend-
ed that this action be taken. It is
■aid that the water containers are
KANSAS CITY, Kan., Sept.
17— A new Japan will result
from her recent earthquake, ac-
cording to the Right Revi Sid-
ney Partridge, Episcopal bishop
of Kansas City, who was mis-
sionary bishop at Kyoto, Japan,
for eleven years.
Christianity will grow in the
land of the “sun goddess” be-
cause its people have been dis-
illusioned as to Japanese myths,
Bishop Partridge said in a ser-
mon here last night. Supersti-
tion in Japan has received a
vital blow, he said, if Im* the
shrine of Ama-Tarrasu, the sun
goddess, the national deity and
divine’progenitor of the Midados,
was washed away in a tidal
wave."
"If the shrine has fallen, her
power has vanished,” the bishop
said. "Japan will be open to
conviction. The era of Chris-
tianity will begin.”
TRIAL; NEGLIGENT ARE OUSTED BY
HOMICIDE CHARGE MILITARY FORCES
DOTHAN, Ala.,
serted. An encouraging feature, how-
eve, was the fact that a few of the
nubs* rfptionn entered today were for
large amounts, there being at least
two for 15000 and several for $2000.
Quoting Mr, Badger in the matter
"business men must leave their places
of busness long enough to do their
solemn duty—that ut telling the leg-
islature and the people of Texas that
Austin is not going to break her word
—and thia must be done by coming
in to the Chamber of Commerce and .
underwriting the indemnity bond for
the maximum amount in which they
can be held liable. To delay this
matter is disastrous and we must all
get busy right now if we are to save
the appropriation of $385,000 to pur-
chase the remaining tracts in the
University campus. Above all we
must have workers, for we have as-
signed only- half the total list of 149*
signers of the Original bond thus far
and it takes time to see these people.
Subscribers to the bond are urged not
to wait for a committee to rail on
them, but to call on the central com-
mittee at the Chamber of Commerce
and let them know how much they
are willing to sign for."
Up to noon fifteen committees had
started the work of seeing indemnity
bond subscribers in the hope of com-
pleting the task of raising the total
indemnity of between 4150,000 and
$200,000 by Tuesday hight at 6 o’clock
Each committee was given a copy of
the bond and instructed to secure ax’
many signatures as possible in order
that the signers of the guaranty bond
which must be filed Tuesday night
with the stats will be protected
against excessive liability or unusuni
loss.
Personnel of Committees.
Committees in charge of the various
By Associated Press
ROME, Sept. 16.— Feeling regarding
the Fiume settlement is steadily rising
throughout Italy. A prominent fascists
leader, speaking to the correspondent
of the Associated Press, today said:
"Most Italians acknowledge that the
fate and prosperity of Fiume, wh
scarcely 42,000 inhabitants, is a small
detail in the internal and foreign pro-
gram of the’ Italy of today.” Admit-
ting that for many reasons an Italian
Flume, perhaps, would never be a
business center as under Austrian
rule, he declared emphatically:
"Fiume fought so long and courage-
ously to assure and preserve its Ital-
Unity that it has become the incarna-
tion of Italian ideals. If now we fail
in our loyalty and support of the brave
little town we should feel ourselves
traitors to our ideals, to our most
sacred duties.
"The truth is that despite the ab-
negation of the population of Fiume
and the assistance received from Italy
its inhabitants are on the verge of
starvation and Italy feels that it is
impossible to leave 40,000 fellow Ital-
ians to die without trying to rescue
them. Any measure taken by the
Italian government with regard to
Fiume must therefore be considered
as plain humanitarian duty, not as
antagonistic to Jugoslavia, for the
Italian government declares that it is
not preparing fr, nor does it desire a
rupture with Serbia."
MORGANTOWN, W V»., Sept. IT.
The New York police were notified
last night of the death in a Morgan-
town hospttal of a 4 months old girl,
left there by tourists, upon the pos-
sibilityt that the dead babe may be
LA Ilian McKenzie, kidnaped New York
child. The child died yesterday,/ac-
cording to hospital autborities, from
malnutrition.
The child was left at the hospital
Saturday by a man and woman who
said they were touring the country
growl|i
‘e hun- j
e back i
, mtne;
ve him
{to be in effect tomorrow. ------ ------
। Meanwhile courts throughout the’ I i
state, including Oklahoma city and; Standard Oil s Industrial Rela- Former h'atrolman and Iwo
Tulsa are in session. No interruption
- . pected, the
Chamber of
Persons of respectability •nd
good standing in their immediate
communities found little diffi-
culty, according to Mr. Custer, in
obtaining the loan of funds with
which to prosecute their divorce.
Credit in the past had been ex-
tended to both wives and hus-
bands, and in no case had the
bank's confidence been abused.
It was also said, that in several
instance* in which the courts had
•eon fit to refuse a decree there
had been no trouble in obtaining
payment of the funds advanced.
In addition Mr. Custer told of
other purposes for which persons
had borrowed money at the Com-
munity Bank and said that of
loans amounting to $425,000 the
bank had not lost a cent.
Military Court of Investigation
Begins Funcloning; Next
Step in Governor’s War on
Klan Eagerly Awaited.
the
were '
lay at the Canadian government quar-
antine station at William Head and
dispatched by alrplne to Victoria and
Vancouver, B. C., Senttle and other
coast points. Others were hurried
eastward by fast mail.
Nearly two score reporters and
newspaper photographers boarded the
Jefferson at Willam Head.
Dave Gracy.
i No. 7 j Charles J. Schneider
f John I.. Lewis.
5:45 to ip. m.: Local and
general news.
9 to 10 p. m.: Regular sum-
mer program consisting of pho-
nograph selections on Bruns-
wick furnished by J. R. Reed
Music Company of Austin.
By Associated Press.
GENEVA, Hept. 17.—Discussion in
the council of the League of Nations
of the question of the leagues com-
petency in the dispute between Italy
and Greece was postponed until to-
morrow after speeches today by Sig-
nor Balandra and M. Politic, the rep-
resentatives, respectively, of Italy and"
Greece.
When the meeting opened, Hjalmar
Branting of Sweden declared the
Italian occupation of Corfu was con-
trary to the provishons of the league
covenant and might establish a danger-
ous precedent, affecting the prestige
of the league.
Lord Robert Cecil said the council
had dune everything it should have
dune in the Greco-Italian controversy,
and had seized upon every means to
obtain a settlement.
Lord Robert admitted that the ques-
tion of the league's competency which
had been raised by Italy, was grave
and could not be left unsettled.
He appealed to the league and to
Italy to reach a solution which would
not infringe the national pride of
Italy and at the same time would leave
unimpaired the authority of the
league, upon which to a great extent
he believed the future hopes of the
world were centered.
/ KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 17.--
Many of the most prominent adver-
tising men in the country were here
today for the four-day convention of
the better business bureaus, under 1
the auspices of the Associated Ad- |
vert lai ng Clubs of th World.
Plans to eliminate untruthful ad-
vertising fit furs, furniture and!
jewehy will be considered at the!
meetings A plan to secure co-opera- {
tive and simultaneous clean ups of
the various retail mercantile fields
also is scheduled to be passed upon
by the convention.
.. Ing the cashier and assistant cashier
hem in the vault, two young unmasked
.who had lost everything .h. h.d. anbanaits "ecured 82500 c..h and l»000
, was faced with the necessity of find-
ing work in a strange land imme-
diately. She asked for $50.
"Fair enough,” said a reporter, and
the deal was closed.
Photographs were in the greatest
demand. It was sald that one transac-
tion for less than two complete rolia
of undeveloped films involved a money'
transfer of $5000. Photographs were
hastily gathered on the ship as she
n. "Mr.
average
KANSAS CITY, Sept. 17.—Ross R.
Richardnon, ex-patrolman, and Ed-
ward Ryan conf fraud to the killing -------------------- -------.
yune tn af w W.lie. Guon oibonds at noon today were ns follow.:
June SO o W “ allace Greene, former. ‘No. 1: Professor T. U. Taylor,
era, stinmen and other worker. In sixintate senator, according to announce- Chamber of Commeroe .
refineries and high salaried executives, | ment last night by the police. Greene No. 3: giesple Stacy and W. H.
was shot just after driving his aut.- Badxer, Chamber of Commerce head-
moblleninto the basement Karage at “No. 3: Dr A. W Griffith and B.
dis nome nere. r Diminehm
The men, according to signed con- 4 L, Jewett and F. W
fessiehs, went to the Greene home in- pogey
tending to rob it. Greene was shot.; No. 6:
they said, when he failed to comply . Daviss.
with a command to hold up his hands.1 No. 6: John K. Donnan Jr.
Greene died In the arms of his wife
before aid could be summoned.
. Ryan, according to his confession.
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 98, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1923, newspaper, September 17, 1923; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1435088/m1/1/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .