The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 46, Ed. 2 Saturday, August 21, 1915 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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THE AUSTIN STATESMAN AND TRIBUNE
4
BAVARIANPRINCE PLAYS BIG PART IN DRIVE ON RUSS
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MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PRESS
.3
Going Away for A While?
away.
/• «<
ONE KIND OF MUNITION.
book shows that 983 performances of Shakes
year
1914
peare’s plays were given in Germany in
found the usul number of performances being
The Merchant of Venice
followed in orler by "Hamlet,"
and the Congo and Niger and Nile
K
WOMEN RALLY TO NAVY LEAGUE'S CALL
of a counterpoise
which. It was now apparent.
Hance In Central Euro
pe was
nating
seeking to build up ft preomi
4
INSTITUTE LECTURES.
I
UGH
•top u
5
ed with all of the aina of lese majest
1
46
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. 3
0864
)t
Rudolph Guertelschmied, an Austrian who in
1907 lost both arms and both legs in Spokane,
Wash., through contact with a high eurrent electric
given.
anees.
Keep posted by havirg The Statesman follow
you each day* Changea of address will bo
made as often as you desire. Simply phone The
Statesman, giving both old and new addresses.
There’s, no - used doing without your favorite
newspaper while out of town, so arrange today
to get The Statesman regularly while you are
cadets are leaving for the front this month—mak-
ing a tota lof 106.
FOUR FAMILIES REPRESENTED
BY FORTY GERMAN SOLDIERS.
TRAFALGAR STREET BOASTS
LARGEST NUMBER OF RECRUITS
Manager
..Edito:
Fubushed daily. afternoon and night-and Bunday morA*
Ing--by The Austin Statesman Company.
neutrafity gained the day and the end of the year
Sowameco
M. H. ROWZEP.........
LLOYD P. LOCHRIDGE.
----------O---------
Over $1000 per ton is now being paid by the
German government to householders and others
who bring copper objects to the metal collecting
7-
BRITISH ARE SORRY SALT
IS CONSIDERED CONTRABAND.
Austin'a fresh water searide continues to give
the 'bathers their great big opportunity.
'■ ---—--o------—
24’
Ml
.3 3
■----------0--------------
OVERCOMING DIFFICULTY.
da
SOWING SEED TOO THICKLY
CRIMINAL OFFENSE THERE.
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
AND TRIBUNE
statesmen th/* need
to the ambition of
Fred
ger and
every t
at the
organiz
the "IA
eplane :
will be
restrict
resident
for a c
combine
the site
interest
of this
the nat
is inten
widely I
tend thi
of the
cillatlen had Impi
slowly on British
d.1
paigning, but are quite competent to aet as in-
struetora. Until they arrive the reduced teaching
staff is carrying on the ordinary eurrieulum with
the eighty-four cadets who are yet at the institu-
tion.
Germany,
by ite all
8
-en
arranged with the minister of defense, Senator
Pearce, to take in thirty-five young volunteer of-
fieers selected for service at the front. These men
eame up from the various states of the ommon-
wealth and were given two month?’ training of
a highly intensive and speeialized character for
01
On aceount of the dearth of officers for the 100,-
COO troop* which Australia expects to maintain at
BONO ISSUE APPROVED.
The Attorney General’s Department
has approved a $18,000 bond issie of
the independent school district of San
Diego, Duval County, 40-109, 5 per
cent.
g.
On t
way th
cal cen
lasco i
A. H. V
Myster
"Rolling
"Searc
agemen
Harris
new pl
duction
IV of
By the
•f the c
be car
You’r
2°N9
gest
tonfght.
nd stra
calomel
ing you
V
you will
seeted,
a spoon I
son’s LA
feeling
so give
it can’t
thing af
•,23
21
tA9wrN ’ r1 I
u2
PAUL CAMBON IS
OhE OF FRANCE’S
GREATEST MEN
34-7 KE62se
PAPRR DEMIVIRY,
Buhscsibers In the city who do not receive their paper*
by 6:15 on week days and by 7:30 on Sunday mornins will
confer a favor on the management by calllog.the circula*
2lou manager at either phone 150
NOTICK TO ADVWRMISEHSI
i .......’■
Using Schools to
Make Army Cooks
Despl
play n
tention
gust us
ng pow
tion, lot
unusual
offices.
Ity Ne
market
of the
never b
for "ho
come c
never c
“II
M
terday, today and tomorrow are looked
upon as passing acenes' in a larger
drama, which may take m nths or
years for its denouncement, bnt which
in the intercet of the countries in-
volved and the world at large must be
worked out to a successful conclusion
thought the contest be recokned by de-
cades instead of years.
Unde:
bum "
review,
ater Se
general
which I
of gran
nental i
tion wl
Ten national presidents of wom-
en‘s organizations, representing a
combined membership of aver half a
million, have promised to serve the
women's section of the Navy league,
the first women’s national defense
organization, on Ite national com-
mittee. Prominent among the ten
are Mrs. William Cumming Story,
president general of the Daughters
of the American Revolution, and
Mrs. Daisy MeLaurin Stevens, presi-
dent general of the United Daughters
of the Confederacy. Mrs. Genevieve
Champ Clark Thomson, daughter of
Speaker Clark, has accepted as na-
tional committee member from
Lovisinna.
rocco, England recognized the predom-
inant position of France. and thus laid
the foundation fcra great French em-
pire of Northwest Africa, linking- to-
gather Morocco. Algiers and Tunis,
and with the territory along the Straits
of Gibraltar sharing with England in
commaiMling the entrance to the Medi-
terranean and the route to India and
the East. Similarly the long standing
controversies over the Newfoundland
fisheries were set* led; also those of
Siam, Madagascar and New Hebrides,
with various mutual readjustments of
J and important figures in
------ -uring these war day*, for
more than any other single individual
Colonel Parnell, the commandant of the college, • .... . . , 10
Walter Lewis Emanuel, who endeared himself
irS‘,
depots,. This compares with a price of $360 per
graduated forthwith and in December last thirty- ton recently guotedon the London market for
copper in bulk. The prices fixed for the various
mands. This ustralian school for military train-
ing has been established but a few years, modeled
to a certain extent upon the lines of the famous
institution on the Hudson, and the era of activity
through which ft is now passing is not-altogether
unlike the era through which West Point passed
during the Civil War. In the present European
struggle the school has lost its founder, Major-
General Sir William T. Bridges, who was fatally
wounded by a Turkish sniper, and whose body
be, was inconceivable of realization.
This reflected British public opinion:
that England and France could not be
reconciled after being traditional ene-
mies for hundreds of years, with a
long train of histertc wars between
them. But in three days the document
was signed, .and from that dates the
entente cordiale and the fruitful re-
sults of the larger alliance under un-
der the stress of today.
The convention thus signed cleared
the entire slate of the many questions
of friction and discord between France
and England in all parts of the world.
In Egypt, France recognised the pre-
dominant position of England. In MOt
six others were graduated. A further batch of
(2 1-5 pounds) ; brass, 75 cents; nickel, $3.75.
Bnt not satisfied with this rate of production, . ..........o____________
ressed itself rather
been operating slowly but surely to
make this need apparent. First, both
England and France had embarked on (
extensive colonial policies, and these 1
colonies were so situated that they
were a continual source of discord, and
misunderstanding the. world over—in
Siam, where the British interests were
on one side and the French interests
of Indo-China on the other; in Africa.
Having deep faith in the principles of business honeety
and fairness, The Statesmaan and Tribune management be-
lieves It but a simple duty to keep its cfrculatton books
open to all advertisers and will take pleasure at any time
in providing for inspection by any advertiser to determine
for himself what our efreuhatiot is.
Corsonidated with The Austin Stute"
influence on the course of European
affnirs. When Germany after the war
of -1870-1 wan ready to crush France.
England was not aroused that such a
course might affect not only Franca,
but the equibirium of Europe. in a-
vuncing the Imperial design, of a para-
mount influence of the central powers
over the affairs of Europe. But later
events made this motive clear to Eng-
lish statesmanship, and it was the sec-,
ond and decisive factor leading to the
reconeilatlon o France and nglanl
and alt its train of momentous con-
sequedices down to the present hour.
Singularly. however, Lord Salisbury’s
early conviction that the time had
come for this reconciliation, was not
realised because of a peculiar obstaele
Ho had seen many French ministries
come and go. for some of them were
of brief duration, and these frequent
falls of ministries impressed Lord Sal-
isbury with an idea tht there was ft
lack of stability and continuity in
French policy. For that reason the
first hopes of a reconciliation were not
realised, halted because of the feeling
that it migbt not be enduring.
It was in these cireumstances that
the reconcilation moved slowly, until
the decesive action of Bismarck clear-
ly showed the design of a dominatins
cent i al influrence. And even then nego-
the army in which they were to serve. At the
end of June the thirty-five went to join the ex-
peditionary force at the Dardanelle* ami with
them went thirty-four cadets who had been spe-
cially graduated.
The accession of youths who must be fitted for
command in a hurry throw a great amount of ex-
tra work upon the Duntrpon faculty, and lectures
and demonstrations had to be given day and night
to aeeomplish the purpose in view—turning out
about 400 regularly and speeially fitted officers
in a year—but it was being done. Then the war
office cabled that all the imperial officers on the
faculty must return at once and thus the college
will be crippled for the time being. These officers
will be replaced by wounded offeers from England
who have been rendered incapable of further cam-
five months of graduation. These youths were
LONDON, Aug. 21—Trafalgar Street,
in the, southeaster part of london,
boasts’ the highest proportion of re-
eruits of any street in England. Al-
though there are only ICO houses on
thestreet. there are 175 men:bers of
Trafalgar Street families servins or
fallen in the war.
I is not an opulent residential thor-
oughfare, but is part of the estate of
Lord Llangattack, and consists of neat
little houses built to the same pattern
and rented for about $4.50 a week.
The resldents are practicallly all work-
ing men’s families.
THIRTY-SIX FOR a CENTS.
Dr. Kin*-, New Lte Pill* are now
wupplted in well corked glaan botllee
•ontalrl,* >* nugar coated white pHI»,
tor a50 One pill with a slean of water
before ret. rm* la an averate done Easy
and pleanont to take. Kefective and
posttive in resuita. Cheap and eco-
nomical to ur Get a bottle todas,
take a dom tonight -your constipauoi
will be re’leyed in the morning, a6 tol
Me, at all druggiata
Only three daye before the;London
Timea had tasud n formal denial to
4 dtapateb cabled from Paria te the
Atociated Prosa thAt soh a reooll-
taton was about 10be counumate4. by
a treaty, the Timea noseruog (het
nuch a thing, benofteia though rt ml«ht
s 3 - - . - .r -- -
Ma a 1 r X;a /M.
NEV
popula
ing pr
Roi C
This e
ion of
of so
bomb-
hospiti
thing 3
patche
vance
lies an
been n
ever,
mirab
—to gi
sation
for wl
promnot
would
may b
Amu
the pl
the mo
almost
acene I
in Nor
piece c
critic
stara, .
sentrie
bombs
the aer
never <
Willi
which
Frank
Phoebe
.,-5
owvcm or vuDLICATOX
seventh and Brasoe streeta
TELEVIIONES:
Buane. orlea, all aepartments, both Phones 1et
Mitorlal Tooms, Old Phon, 1246.
Eifofial Noom.s, New Phone 149.
BcUty KOller. Old Phon, 1>U.
ESrred ae'eecond’-c’laee’matteLt the postotnea, alaua
Wn. Texaa, under tk» at ol Conkrean at March ». 187*
sunscarnos mavEse
AnaUn and euberb br carrier, dally ,ad Snd‘ 10
outeid. at austin, by mall or carrier, ver montn.....50
By wall. one year, in advance........... .WO
sinday edittom, one year............................ 1.01
he A a Beckwith Speelal Ageney sole repreeantetvs
for frelg* aavertintg. Kaalein otAca, Tribune Bunait«.
New York Lily. Weeurn office, Fibun Hundlng. Chicago.
BL Louin office, Third Natlona: Bank Build.ng,
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC*
Any erroneous reflection upon the character. standins.
« reputation ot any person, firm or corporatlon whieh
appears in the columns of the Statesinan ad Tribune will
Thladly correeted it calUd la At attenton of ika pub-
is to be removed from Alexandria to Canberra,
the side of the new Australian federal eapital. In
addition to this loss, eleven officer* from the Dun-
Doon school have been killed at the Dardanelles
and twenty-one have been wounded.
Normally Duntroon turns out forty officers each
year, but this number proved too small in the
stress of war. To meet the aeute demand for
competent officer* the four year*' curriculum has
had to be readjusted. When the war broke out
there were at the academy twenty-seven Austra-
liana and eight New Zealander*, who were within
in the exhibition of “war atroeities" that has
been opened in Dresden, showing the way in whieh
popularity of German leaders is being exploited
for trade purposes, General von Hindenburg is the
chief victim, his portrait being shown on scores
of candy boxes, cigar cases, ash trays, mustard
pots, pocket handkerchiefs and even doormats.
The Emperor and Crown Prince also receive con-
siderable attention, while many articles of common
use are found ornamented with the Iron Cross.
BERLIN, Aug. 21.—Four amllies in
Schfeswfg-Helstein can claim with full
right to having done their duty to
the Fatherland, One family in Anslet
has ten sons in the field; a widow in
Hegeberg has nine eons and two sons-
in-law al- the front; nine sons of a
beer dealer in Schoenberg are with
the- army, as are eight sons and two
sons-in-law of a family in Hellschen.
1 he total is forty soldiers for the four
families.
order to demonstrate to them the use of artificial
limbs, and to cheer them up in general.
Guertelschmied was able to walk five days after
his artificial legs had been supplied him, and to-
day is able to walk between ten aud twelve mile*
a day, without relying upon a cane. He runs with,
out difficulty, jumps and goes up and dowu s’ais
readily. He enn even climb a ladder and ride a
trieyele, ami does almost everything that a person
with legs ean do.
lie is quite as celver with the use of his “hands
end cats with knife and fork, write* and carries
packages and parcels seemingly with no difficulty.
He is married and is engaged as a tobacco worker.
The war has lessened hi* earning capacity, and so
he has become, so to speak, an instructor in t.ie
use of artificial limbs to keep his income up to par.
* was second,
Richard III,”
be is the physical embedtnieiit of the
alliance by which England, France and
Russia are jointly prosecuting the pres-
ent tremendous struggle, as it was he
who signed, on April 8, 1904, the me-
morable convention establishing the
ertente cordials ompletely rcconstruc-
ting the relations between England and
France and leading straight to the
present conipact by which the three
entente allies are fighting together to-
day.
When M. Cambon was seen at the
French embassy by a representative of
the Assoclated Press he was preparing
to leave for Paris to meet his brother,
M. Jules Cambon. who as French am-
bassador at Washington, signed with
President McKinley the protocol re-
eatablisbing peaee-betwen the United
States and Spain, after arranging the
memorable preliminaries with Madrid
by which Spain was to retire fromn
Cuba, Porto Rico was to be ceded to
the United States and the PhilipRines
were to pase under American control
by purchase.
The brothers are of that notable
Cambon family, uli distinguished in
diplomacy, who at time have repr-
rented Franee simultaneously at Lon-
don, Berlin and Constantinople three
of the vital spots of French Interna-
tional contact just now .the brothers
were meeting in Paris to sce their sons,
fighting at the front, who in the lull
of operations had been granted leave
for this family reunion. The visit to
Faris, too, gave the ambassador op-
portunity to consul with the chief
French officials on the many questions
of joint policy constantly arising under
the existing alliance.
The French embassy is one of the
massive piles of gray stone at Albert
Gate, leading from the' busy traffic of
Knightsbridge and Pieadilly, to the
calm and beauty of Hyde Park. Here
N. Paul Cambon has presided since
1898. and here wasmnsuredthe entente
cordiale, which is having such a mo-
mentous sequel today in the war al-
IONDON, Aug. 10.—(Correspond-
sees of Associated Press.) - The French
ambassador to the Court of HL James,
,2,
6200. A
2561 r: • A 24 52182212
4eeem/9ee..k«me292.
In wake of Teutonic armies in Poland; Prince Leopold of Bavaria (arrow) directing attack on Warsaw.
Prince Leopold of Bavaria is playing an important part in the great Russian campaign, though his general-
ahip ia outshone by that of von Hindenburg and von Mackensen. It was Leopold who led the Stat German force*
into Warsaw. The accompanying picture of him and of member* of his staff was taken just before Warsaw fell
to English bearts as the writer for fifteen years
of a weekly eolumn of bon-mots entitled “Chari-
varis" iPumneh, is deni), aged 46. By profession
a lawyer, Mr. Emanuel abandoned the bar in 1901
to become a humorous writer. His dog books, such
as "A Snob,-" “A Dog Day” and “Dogs of War"
were very popular both in England and Ameriea,
LONDON, Aug. 21.—The British war
office has taken advantage of the ya-,
cation season in the city schools to
turn several of the building into cook-
ing schools, where 1500 soldiers are
learning elementary principles of the
culinary art. There are 100 men bil-
leted in each building, and they must
provide their own food on the custom-
ary war office allowance of 40 cents a
day. If they can not eat the meal they
prepare they must go without.
“To cook rapidly and well is an art
which can easily be acquired." says the
war* office mnual, "aud It is an art
that every soldier should learn. At
least eight men in every"tompany must
be taught to cut up meat and hpe rats
field kitchens."
the front, youngsters at Duntroon, the West Point ,_____,.
of Australin, are being commissioned for com- Pherewas a shurp deerease in July, buttheutcica
BERLIN, Aug. 21—Eight farmers
have just been tried before the Pots-
dam criminal court for an offense cre-
ated by order of the Federal council
some months ago—that of sowing graln
too thickly. It was charged that they
had sowed more than 110 pounds of
oats per "morgen" (about three-fifths
acre), whereas the limit is thirty-seven
and a half pounds. The defendants
joined in declaring that their swampy
moorland required more seed, partly
because of the character of the soil
and partly because a considerable part
of the seed was eaten by the pheasants
from ths adjoining hunting preserves
of a prince. The minimum fine of
three marks each was imposed.
country in the Center; the Newfound-
land fisheries, a source of controversy
for 200 years, with Madagascar. New
Hebrides and many other points af-
fording points fur misunderstanding in
colonial development. Some of these
had become acute, notably the Slam
crisis, and the Pachoa incident, when
the French expedition under Captain
Marchand reached the Nile simulta-
neous with (he arrival of General
Kitchener, two weeks after his cap-
ture of Khartoum. These and ke
incidents had amused such feeling on
both sides of the Channel, and had
caused such grave misunderstandings
that they gave the first-real impetus to
the view, both in England and Franec
that some broad policy ef re conci la-
tion was essential between France and
England.
The second reason for such a recon-
“A* You Like It" led with 129 perorm-
From all reports the Germans still have a num:
her of “taking ways.”
_—•------o---
And now it would seem that another note to be
sent across the seas is in order.
-------__<>-----
All the textile factories along the Rhine, and
also those around Prague, Budapest and Vienna,
are said to be working day and night, turning
out winter garments for the armies. Large orders
Laxe, been placed with Swiss manufacturers of
heating appliances for the German army. A Bar
lin automobile manufacturer is said to have dis-
covered a system of curtain for motor cars, which
rot only protects from the rain, but also from
the cold aud permits a ready change of the color
to aceord with the foliage of the country. The
winter .campaign seems to be looked forward to
without much apprehension in Germany as the
measures taken to economize food supplies have
been so effective that no lack of provision is feared.
In Austria, however, according to reliable reports,
the situation will be more serious as the same
precautions were not taken and their application
is not so easy as in Germany.
---------ot--------
The nwly issued German Shakespeare Society's
metals which the government has asked citizens to
contribute arc ss follows: Copper, $1 per kilo
lest airference between the two conn-
tres was thus closed, and in place Of
a traditional enmity there was sb-
stituted an entente cordiale which not
only established a sympathetic and
practical working arrangement be-
tween the two countries, but also whef
the supreme crisis of the present war
camo brought them together with Rus-
sia as allies in a common cause.
An to the war, the Freneh viewpoint
is probably less optimistic than the
English official view, but no less con-
fident of the ultimate result. To the
French, the war has the grimness of
being on their own setl and not as
with England. In the distance. But
with all Its trials, the events of yes-
M. Paul Cambon, is one of the must
wire, is now in Vienna, and is being taken through itnaotiu
the various hospitals where war cripples are in
with Egypt in the northeast, Morocco, , - -----, ..
Algiers and Tunis in the northwest, i territory, in Central Akfrica, nom the
- — - —• Niger to Lake Chad, and including
the Islands off Sierra Leone. Every
nations (IM not take a definite form
until shortly before th actual sign-
ing of the Anglo-French convention.
M. Cambon had arrived hero ft few
years before, having had exceptional
opportunities, as private secretary of
Tresident Jules Kerry of France, for
observing the development of interna-
tional forces at work in Europe. With
Lord Hnnsdowne in the foreign office
here, M. Dslcasse at the head of foreign
affairs in France, aud M. Cambon ns
Austin's depot matron should be fully aequnint- ‘istern, (r nigrvhetweenthetneonmir,
• —L - -A -L- -----A t-------ct- and although at first considered futile
they at las' eventuated in the convon-
tior signed in London by Lord ans-
downe and M. Cambon at noon on
April 8, 1904.
Top, Mrs. William Cumming Story
(left) and Mre. Dalsy Melaurin
Stevens; bottom, Geneveive Clark
Thomson.
The Department of Agriculture an-
nounces the following Itineraries of
farmers’ Institute lecturers:
J. O. Allen: De Berry, Aug. 24;
Deadwood, Aug. 26: Carthage, Aug. 28;
Tatum, Aug 30; Beckville, Aug. 31;
Murvaul, Sept 1; Gary, Sept. 2; Ten-
eha, Sept. 3: Center, Sept. 4.
H. I. Bentley: Sterling City. Aug.
25; Tankersley. Aug. 17; Mertzon,
Aug. 28.
William Connally: Point. Aug. 24;
Emory, Aug. 21; Alba, Aug. 28.'
Tom B. Taylor: oBmarton, Aug. 23;
Goreo, Aug. 34; Munday, Aug 26; Wei-
nert, Aug. 27; Haskell, Aug. 28; Stam-
ford, Aug. >1; Anson, Sept. 2; Hawley,
Sept. 4. ________
HEAVY LOSS OF REVENOE
FROM OPIUM PROHIBITION.
CALCUTTA, Aug. 21.— The loss of
revenue to the government as a result
of ths prohlbitloa of opium is shown
in a blue book just issued here, in
1311 the net revenue from opium was
Ver 925,000,000. In 1913 it dropped to
33,36800000* Last year At was ieha than
AMSTERDAM, Aug. 21— Although
salt by old custom is regarded a con-
traband of war, yet in the present
confllct.lt is against the interests of
the alllesto consider it so, and there
Las therefore been an effort to prevent
the enforcement of this part of the
contra bond laws.
The Dutch fisheries use large quan-
tities of salt, all of which is imported.
When England Insisted on the letter
of the law regarding these importa-
tions. Holland is obliged to buy from
Germany and Austria, which have a
large surplus. It is urged that the Ger-
man salt industry is thus assisted by
English detention of salt-laden steam-
ers bound for Holland. Moreover, the
tn ore salt te extracted from th® Ger-
man mines, the more potash is pro-
duced. and this is a necessary constit-
uent in the manuacture of certain ex-
plosives.
“Orthello," “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” “Ro-
meo and Juliet," “Taming of the Shrew” and the
“King Lear,” "Coriolanus" and "Love's Labor
Lost" each had but one production. Berlin the-
aters had 364 of the 983 productions to their credit.
---------O--------
Hance. Th® ambassador much re-
sembles hi® brother Jules—of middle
height, lithe and athletic frame, with
iron gray hair and beard, and a keem-
ners of .manner which combined cor-
diality and unfailing tart— diplomatie
tact, which has been the keynote to
the not ahle Cambon careers. The am-
bassador never speaks for publication,
yet certain impressions were gathered
(’uring the visit which indicate the role
of the principal fcures in the negotia-
tion of the entente cordiale and ths
great events leading up to the present
war drama.
It was Lord Salisbury who first per-
ceived the need of reconciling the dif-
ferences long existing between England
and France. The main reasons- had
. n,
Judging from the market report*, the whole mar-
ket is again troubled with supersensitiveness.
1 ‘ ,
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Lochridge, Lloyd P. The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 46, Ed. 2 Saturday, August 21, 1915, newspaper, August 21, 1915; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1448977/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .