The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 176, Ed. 1 Monday, December 4, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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2
66
Resignation of Coach Fails
© K
He
would not.
to Be Retained for Another Term.
Children Are
(Continued From Page 1, Col. 6.)
tion and also was denied the right
. Will He Go?
I
rk
th
I
the Aggie victory.
A
two Varsity men. unhampered at-
(TEE
TODAY—TUESDAY
MMARRDN
Ethel Clayton
as a result of a fumbled punt.
But
BERRY M. WHITAKER
Priscilla Dean
in the Greatest Picture of Her Career
lghting. according to Earl A
often mentioned
a posefbillty.
THROUGH
THURSDAY
TODAY
Florence Reed
Regular Prices
the mentor
Many of the collegians
as
"Faustine"
in
AR
THE
STYLE IH
HUTCHISON GETS REMINISCENT
MARDSK
Jock Tells About Purses and Scores
BY JOCK HUTCHISON.
Wanda Hawley
of the Red Box. to the end.
5
N
»
3
States Golf association
has
QUEEN
e
a stroke of apoplexy on
^^7
WODOLDE
VALENTINO
IM
THE YOUNG RAJAH'
aQanunoMiQidan •
EXTRA
A eomedy featuring Brownie, the bull pub. and eome of the
SKINNY.
w*Hd'» grenteat data.
I
I
F.," "
HAJE5TIC
Students Wearing Whitaker Tags Gets
Under Way Following Announcement
That Football Leader Will Not Seek
The Greatest All-American Drama!
A Lightning Bolt From a Clear Sky
This paper, in Sunday’s issue, says 23 days—and
they are about as near correct as a local politician
is, in giving out DOPE on NATION'S POLICIES.
GLhe Black
Panther’s Cub
We Didn't Have a Sunday Ad
Did you notice it?
LAUGHTERe ROMANCE
AND.MAYHAPATEAROR
TVO-VITHA TRIUMPH
OF MOTHER-LOVEAL
THE WAY THROUGH
add 1
piayer.
Eighteen days seems to a business man a lot of
time to think and figure on gifts—UNLESS you
are a John D. Rocky-Fellow and have your secre-
taries attend to that detail.
Perhaps you did, or did not, it’s another story.
The QUESTION is NOW—with Christmas only
18 SHOPPING DAYS AWAY—WHAT to buy,
and WHERE to buy it. Each merchant is offering
a lot of suggestions—and they may be useful, to
those who can’t think.
that Whitaker should yo only tn
the consideration that Dana Bible
Dr. BELL’S
Pine-Tar Honey
and undeserved. The Tex-
ieves that‘the students of
The Perfect Lover in Another Triumph!
CAST INCLUDES ige 3-9 wummouumm
do not
On.
by Senegalese
Deputy.
Arrow
Collars
Claeu.Peabody 6-Co.Inc
Varyi
17.6 to 1
cidents
auto, or were playing in the street
Ed ucat tonal work in the schools ।
be out to buy an interest in a
b. wnh Chance to be the man-
Commence TODAY and buy carefully—NOT hur-
riedly—Come to our store if the gift is for a MAN.
for HE WOULD probably come here if buying for
himself— Every ARTICLE PRICED FAIR.
Blues Buy Enid
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Dec. s—
Premaent George Meuhidach of the
Kansas City American ennoclation
elub announced that h* has closed
a deal for the purchase of the Enid.
Oxia, Hub of the Westera asmoel-
ation. The deal includes 1* players.
from that quarter," the deputy add-
ed. but he said he had absolute
proof of hi. charges.
TODAY
THRU
THURSDAY
ATTEND THE
MATINEES
nine attempted passes. the Farmers
complete two—the two that re-
rant to see him leave.
It commented to the effect
bad
An*
We are not sending out any picture books and
long lists TELLING you what to buy—other mer-
chants are doing that and we use to do so—but we
find it only CONFUSES THE BUYER—and you.
can only tell values WHEN YOU SEE THE AR-
TICLE advertised with hte price—it may be a Rube
Goldberg—IT MEANS NOTHING.
bulldin*, and
(round.
sional
today.
To Make Sure of
a Seat!
have been many and his defeats
few; he deserves the appreciation
and esteem of all university stu-
dents.
200 laps of the 1%-mile
hours 10 minutes and
S Earl Cooper took
and Harry Marts fin-
" “Come back with your shield
or on HZ
“Thus modern football enthusi-
eats are prone to apply the an*
cient Spartan erood to intercol-
automobile accidents shows prac-
tically all of them due to some of
the following causes:
Careless driwers
Intoxication
incompetent drivers
Disregard or ignorance of traffic
Poorly lighted streets
Speeding
Playing in streets
Careless pedestrians
Defective brakes *
Attempts to pass two vehicle* go
ing in the same direption which are
Tom Apart by Texan Editor, Who
Substitutes "Win or Lose, Texas”
circumstances, a coach who de*
veloped a good team from the
material ho had—surely, they
should not have to bear the whole
brunt and blame of a defeat on
the team’s “off day,’ an inexplain-
able and unpreventable condition i
so peculiar and fatal to football.
The best coaches in the land loss
games, but ths few losses ds not
r
l
brom THE PLAY and NOVEL “AMOS JUDD-
By John Amos Mitchell
should come to Texas University
But .he changed his tack by saving
jade. a pae
gold butterflie
storks, with
UHEER
TWO FLAGS
,9
I it wae annpunced, of luring Bill
Bowe from his home town. Lewis-
ton. Me . to th. Hub again as box
of the Sox.
Carrigan ha. been in bustness
I "down east • and eeems to be doing
I ao well that nothin* but a stupen-
E ‘doua salary would appeal to him.
■ Be the report goea, anyway.
heavyweight championship of the
world by defeatin* Georges Car-
pentier. but recently was deprived
ward page tor touchdown in rain-
in* the recond Aggie touchdown a
ama Leads All
Southern Scorers
Dispatch.
Dec 1 —The
(
completing
oval in 5
53.10 I
necond -
sahed third
obb’s Discoverer
Dies on Saturday
aunetamd P Diapateh.
MINEAPOLIS, Minn. Den l —
fiusam Armour, K discoverer of
athletic limelight goes.
There were no rejoicing shouts from the students—
either they were silent and not ready to speak as to the
justice of having their grid coach leave, or they regretted
the passing of Whitaker. A few students had a hang-
over of gripes against Whitaker, and buzzed around with
talk about "our new football coach.”
The Daily Texan lost no time in* * ■ —'
This, with the I say. Such drivers are not only im-
with the speed mania but
they tke the most hazardous
chancer while frequently their con-
"Exit the Vamp"
Cast Includes
THEODORE ROBERTS
and
T. ROY BARNES
EXTRA— MTHE LEATR
PUSHERS."
WHITAKER STILL FAVORED
ON VARSITY CAMPUS.
• Varsity students seem to have a
feeling of sympathy for their coach.
. which is entirely an upset of the
dope gathered from other such oc*
20
each
GRAND CENTRAL
ON THE SCREEN TODAY AND TUESDAY
HOOT GIBSON
MtW of th* diamond belt, the world’a oreatest eowboy, in/
§ilve
Wing
--- MARY CARR
rhour playe4 betore UM. In
ayear he wae manager of Day-
ohlo, olub, in the oM Central
achooled to .low down and have
their care under absolute control
when they peat playing khheren
point* led the majority of
football team, in wcorine
M 021 meason. but Virginia
absttute. which played
taut, to ten for Alabamad
Thio le whet the Deity Texan i
hee te eay about dethroned ______ _____________
coaches: i the university are back of Coach
SEE ITf .
NOW ■ D R AMATI C - TE N S E
""""" VIVID-POVERFUL
IT’S-A PICTURE
_________VITH A SOUL
o Bring Qut.Shouts of Joy COURT MONDAY
but is rrotested by lexan —
--------- 'Ugly Charges Made
Loyalty demonstration Backed by 3000
"JUST DOGS
in 1916
Iqg in different cities, from
50 per cent of all auto ac-
Murphy Wins Race
At Beverly Hills
a---ata pre Dipateh.
Los ANGELES, Dec. I—Jimmy
Murphy won the 250-mil• cham-
punahip nutomoblle race held today
at the Beverly HUI* epeedwar.
••••ry
on bet
contest had bennet no other way
around, would he Kve egid a word
about quitting the Varsity?
warrant thet the conches be see- !
rificed in futile expiation af de- nN.T-.--I
ft Coach Whitaker has eerved Ihat 1. Bii"etenenornnns"er:.t
th. university weil, hi. victefies RBepageerhavtosemtkathat
l thounand victories over ASM
would not appease th. wrath of
Varsity student and alumni
By L. L. ENGELKING
The university campus was silent yesterday so far as of the title by th* boxing teder®
the dropping of Berry M. Whitaker from the Longhorn ten “i “ n ted "eh
5exzetm2MiBznonm
peeeeee ,
HERE’S WHERE THE nearly abreast.
BREAKS HELPED OUT. { Intoxicated drivers are one of the
There is one point certain—the] worst menaces to life and limb that
breaks of the game had to do with authorities have to deal with. they
•vsr made,
99
Nineteer students, upon being
queried in regard to Whitaker, re-
turned favorable answers against
one negative.
dition causes them to drive through
safety sones. onto sidewalks and
even into buildings.
Pedestrians’ Faults.
The pedestrian is in many cases
to blame, through carelessiy step-
ping from the curb into moving
traffic, running across the street
behind a street car and otherwise
failing to use proper caution.
casions Sunday afternoon the top-
ic of conversation in stuent board*
ing houses was Whitaker and the
football squad The Thanksgiving
contest was rehashed again but
moot of the discussion was about
A week or so back, Frazee had For the past few years I have
a conference with BIII Carrigan. been laying aside every interesting
formerly catcher and famous man-'golf clipping that I could get my
ager of the Red Sox. to the end. hands on At least all of the good
“Victory or Death” Escutcheon
Leletield to th* only Texas man
who ever made three tetter* a year
for four consecutive years. Little-
fiela ha* coached Greenville Hgh
and for the last two year* ha* been
treshman football and track coach
Although th* athletic council will
tormally have Whitaker', with-
drawal formally laid before it te-
night, there will not be anything
peary like a final decision, says
L T. Bellmont, Jim Hart. chair-
man of the football committee, is
out of town, and the Whitaker mat-
ter will be taken up when he re-
turn. this week.
The formal bustness of tonl*ht'.
meetinE will be to award T” let-
ter* to tootball men, although there
likely win be some red-hot Atacus-
■ton on Whitaker's word to the
counei.
ir-
fact the Longhorns were playing bued with
out of form. One break came when -
AUSTIN AMERICAN. AUSTIN. TEXAS. MONDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 4, 1922.
occasion. R H
tempted to pick up a fumble. One
player tried it. and shoved the oval
out of his reach Another pulled
the same stunt and a wildcat cov-
ered the ball The fumble waa an
Aggle fumble and the first Lona-
horn had a clear field to the Eoal—
there was not an opponent in ten
yards of him. >
A A M. made fta first touchdown
Chance has nold a bl* ranch be state* Goir association has sust
wned oat In Loa Angeles and is advised in regara to prize money
Ma* back into the rams that made — -....._ . -
"RIDING WILD"
Perhaps one of ths greatest western thrillers
I It w as an anci
"leather cover
fine and delicat
[low with age
turned the pag
[care, for the pa
[had dined early
to his hous on
Germain in Pari
He wished to
diary that had
from a branch o
ly in Virginie-
gone out with a
Virginia was a
collateral ances
been a justice c
ginta. and a epl
written down a
cases with whi
been concerned,
believed that tl
tragic details, at
al deductive ha
erf modern times
overlooking the
main was curta
Monsieur Jonqu
fire; and I liste
some recession
ginia of a van
narrative of the
It was a big
low windows
formal garden,
and the bow of
it was a sort of
bookcases built
height of a mar
tervals between
the floor to t
shelves, were r
drawers with K
was also a flat
it was the ro
man of letters,
table were an I
Sarazen drew down for their re-
cent match at Westchester Bilt-
more ana Oakmont.
Th* highest ncofe evet known of
In a self champtonehip -»» wheh
Jame. Robb beat C C LAngen an
th* final* of th* amateur cham-
pionmhip at itoyiake in INN They
halved on* at th* bote. In ten!
*H In pointa ver game with] Couree in Even -Threw.*
E nt »lt 'But playine in th. Bra Burn
25. indership went to open in 191), Wie Chitholm who
-Mil whoa* commedores per. WA partnered with Long Jim
tbMr nin- opponent* to Barn**, required 16 ntrokes tor
r but 1« Jatata. ja 200-yard hole. Chiaholm, who
also manager the Detroit
cans and the Kansas City
Whitaker and the Longhorns,
even though the Thanksgiving
game was lost. A team that
"played the best it could under the
Whitaker, Wefre With You ’ Movement Gets Under Way at University Cri
signation of Coach Fails -,/o’the Mornin’Stuff e gTatres#
Bring Out Shouts of JoyD U°mment of the Sport Scribes New Political by Mee
homes
us will mv* you money. Let
u* rigure oa your lumber Mil*
BRYDSON ^XXeo.
1612 Guadalupe. Phone 6240
Associated Frees Dispatch.
PARIS, Dec. 8—The •’Affaire
Siki" surrounding the big Senegal*
are attributable to
suited in the scoring. Few teams
have ever had the good fortune, to
make th* only completed passes of
their play count for scoring
ing defeat and anticipating the
howls against him—which has been
the case always in the past when
a Longhorn team was not a winner
--Whitaker has resigned. Yet, if
the score of the Aggie-Longhorn
did nine holes in 2? end each hole
in three
in 1868 two golfers, both well
knows amateurs, a lord and a
duke, played a match in the dark
with only a lantern at each green
The stake was Md pounds a hole
A golfer by the name of Brown
pleyed a hole at Hoylake once in
the twilight and a remarkable thing
happened He drove from the tee
and went into a rabbit bole He
drove a second ball and landed in
the same hole, but he had better,
luck with the next, as it stopped!
only two feet short of the hole
These were three remarkably AC-
eurate drives.
"It was the
oy erhented in h
piled my fa’her
the roa where
leading th* hor
eAli young Mar
"It wae no fi
• hell Penletor
-Ruf. alee he is
ford He is a d
litle H' Vre« a
learned in Par
force of vigor
was a renmet
who loved the a
ties, end the sot
ament, noftened
timely in view of what the United
of Alabama, with an
I ese prize fighter wHo won the light-
ranked as one of the world's great-
est gridiron tutors.
All of which may or may not
have any bearing in the Whitaker
case. We give it to the reader,
everything said in this column, Just
as a bit of sport rehash Now we ll
act the part of the innocent by-
stander and see what happens—if
anything. a
to engage in pugilistic contests for
nine months, Is to be threshed out
before the courts.
A complete investigation of the
circumstances surrounding the Car-
pentier-Siki fight, which the Sene-
galese deputy, Diagene. qualified in
the chamber last week on the de-
bate as a "frame up" is to be made
by the civil tribunal. The boxing
federation has called a special
meeting for tomorrow afternoon to
discuss the accusations made
against it by Deputy Diagene and
announces that it will take legal
proceedings "for damages against
the deputy.
" Deputy to Fight.
On the other hand. Diagne him-
self has engaged counsel to sue
the federation in an attempt to ob-
tain the rehabilitation of Siki and
to prevent the federation from plac-
ing the Senegalese fighter in the
position of being unable to earn his
living, thus leaving Siki, his wife
and child "facing starvation."
Diagene's accusations in open
session of the chamber of deputies
to which the federation take* ex-
ception are quoted in the report
published by'the Journal official as
follows.
lease on the
By BLONDY CROSS
Is history about to repeat itself in the Longhorn eamp? Some
say “No." Ones more there has cropped up the age-old controversy
on the Varsity campus--“Must the coach who fails to build a cham-
I pionship team make way for another mentor?"
Out of remorse at the Thanksgiv-#--------------------------------
Dame Rumor Has
Chance as Next
Boss of Red Sox
„ —--- — ------- The first big prize in England
tamous H* ana Barmey Old- was for ite pound*. It was th*
. the man of A stubby cleer Machrie tourmiament and It was
won by J h Taylor. Th* "News
25-yara forward pase put th* pl*. ---— ------.
•kin on th* four-yard ige Out of and horn*. I* now looked to for a I
' lessening of this danger. At th. |
same ume, driver, are being
For Coughs mJ Colds
Moehing eape Yourvtallty and Now.
down nw wok tore than * cold
—th. kind that drp on ana on.
Batata thom wtreggth-etealing colda
awtar.tatoir. D: -r-tmeoe
iedr-b uet, jegoln tetata.
B.in.aite-Ol. IzrHMtethvMn.
©hr: "N. •< the Be Dr bn
Aldretta,20.
JESS L. LASKY
onasents
| as a result of a fumbled punt. But Children espcially present a m-
we item that Whitaker drilled th. rious problem one-third of those
men on catchinr punt. After th. j killed by automobiles ar. children I
punt had been dropped, the Agkies and in 4 majority of cases, they:
bucked twice and ehot over a for- were .truck down when they rud-
— - - - - denly ruebed into the path of en
By Unsuer SeMe.
NEW YORK. Dec l — Alone th.
eurish way. to come th* Rialto, to i
thers rha great whit* way. It was
reported tonight that Harry Frazee,
•wn*r of the Red Sox. had con-
fpesed that Frank Chance would be
the next maneger of th* Boaton Red
Sox, which Mr. Frazee owns
of the World" tournament le the
largest prize played for in E ng-
land Now the Hirst ward la 100
pounds and altogether 690 pounds
le put up. This la not quite m
much a. our proteesional jolt
tournament offer* In this country
Duncan Won Largeat.
George Dunean te credited with
winning the latgest sum ever won
by a protessional in Engiana He
won the prize of ill pouda for
first place in the North Berwick
tournament and 5 pounds for the
lowest acore durine the meeting
Germany onoe gave en open tour-
nament in which 12,500 mark ware
offered as prize money for the firet
ten positions. This waa back in
1*11. Today it would amount te
about $2.50 at present value of the
mark
in 1849 th* golfing world then
was start 1*4 by a match with Al-
lan Robertson and old Tom Morris
on one side and the Dunn broth-
ers on the other side. It was
played for a purse of 400 pounds
or two-thirds of what Hagen and
Siki Refused.
“Siki refused to carry out in-
structions which would have caused
the public to be fooled and swindled
of its money Suddenly becoming
conscious of his own strength while
in the ring, ha refused to lie down
in the fourth round and abandon to
Carpentier another victory.”
Deputy Diagene explains that his
words as quoted above cast no re-
flection on the honesty at the mem-
bers of the French boxing federa-
tion.
“Th* overtures made to Sikigto
gat him to lie down did not come !
LONGHORNS REALLY
OFF FORM THURSDAY.
When the Wildcate downed Var-
sity there is no doubt that the
Longhorns played an inferior de-
gree of ball than in a majority of
other games on the schedule The
Longherns may have been stale and
they may have been over-confident
The Utter was no fault of Whit-
aker Perhaps if the former were
true, a bit of blame coud have been
laid on the mentor. But the game
is a question mark—the Texas team
failed to show the caliber of ball
it was capable of Whose fault it
was is a hard proposition to decide.
legiate competition. Regardiess of
a coach's past record of achieve-
meet, his steady and meritorious
work, and his conquest of diffi-
culties, 1st his team loss an im-
portant game—and the fans
quench their disappointment in
the merry game ef firing the
coach. Sport fee its own sake,
ths arduous development of a good ।
team from scanty material, the
delieate psychological factor* [
that enter into a winning team,
are all overlooked and forgotten
in the passion for victory. “Vie- 1
tory or death' is ths tost which I
ths fickle publie appiies in grant-
ing its favor.
"But the Texan believes that
Coach Whitaker’s rumored resig-
nation as head coach is an act of j
self-sacrifice that is both unnsc- 1
Austin and Lockhart Bus Line Daily
Leaves Austin 7 A m. and 1 p. m.
Leaves Lockhart 8:45 a m and 1:11 p. m.
Fare $2 00—Round Trip $3 BA
Austin Depot, Brown A Odiorne Drug Store
Lockhart Depot. Corner Drug Store
WHAT THE COACH HAD
TO FACE THIS YEAR.
One game: a championship gone,
and the coach must quit. Playing
the hardest schedule in the confer-
ence, handicapped by injured mem-
bers on the squad, and with a team
on which there were few outstand-
ing pUyers—the mentor had a task
on his hands Especially so did he
have a task when it is taken into
consideration that everything for
him depended on the club going
through a successful sason, and
then defeating a team which works
for ohe contest—the Longhorn-
Farmer fracas—a team that goes
through an entire season, disre-
garding other losss, but preparing
for the Longhorn*. This must be
said in fairness to Whitaker.
JONES STILL STICKS
ON WITH YALE.
The Longhorn coaching problem
brings to mind a similar case in
the "Big Three " Follwing the de- (
feat of Tale by Harvard, wealthy i
alumni began yelling fot the scalp ।
of Coach Tad Jones This bit of
griping has become rather habitual
with the aforesaid alumni. When-
ever the Bulldog loses a tooth or
scratches a paw the cry is 'Out
with Jones." but the wily mentor is
still coaching Yale football teams
An incident which ia amusing to
an extent took place in Chicago not
long ago. After th* orange and
black of Princeton had walloped
the Chicagoans in a decided upset
of the so-called statistics. Coach
Alonzo P Stagg was approached
and asked when he intended to re-
sign from the Chicago athletic
staff Th* grey-haired old general
replie. "When I am 70 years old "
Stagg 1s 60 now
People yelped at the redoubtable
Knute Rockne of Notre Dame when
several Catholic elevens hit hard
year*, but Rockne paid little atten-
tion to the criticisms and today is
jumping into the fight for Whitaker I
with all its might The request of
Whitaker not to be considered as
the Varsity 1923 coach screamed
forth in a three-column black head -'
line, with a bold editorial on • Win
or Lose, Texas." underneath The
Spartan doctrine of “Come back!
with your shield or on it” aa the’
Unwritten law for football coaches 1
was strongly denied
Organized Movement.
As the first part of a fighting j
campaign to retain Whitaker as I
Toxas football coach. It was stated |
Bunday that approximately 3000
tags with "Whitaker, were witn
you" inscriptions, or something of
the sort, would be immediately
printed and distributed to those
students willing to demonstrate
their loyalty to the coach who has
won one championship, tied for an-
other and lost one. These- tags
will be given out early this week.
It is said, and worn on a specified
day. with very likely a pre-ar-
ranged campus demonstration to
back Whitaker and as an evidence
of the new-born “Texas, fight’
spirit
Hopes It Will Be Rejected.
"Well, I don't blame Whitaker a
bit—he had a hard time of it last
year," informaly said a prominent
basket ball letter man who has con-
siderable influence in athletic cir-
cles "I hope the council turns
down his resignation, but I doubt
if even that will get Whitaker to
stay "
Campus talk Bunday among the
few students idling around on the
benches and loafing up and down
Guadalupe street turned on the
Identity of a new coach, should the
expected Whitaker boom fail to
persuade Varsity'a coach to lead the
Longhorns again. "It‘s up to the
council to turn down Whitaker's
resignation—rm sure the student
members of the council are for
Whitaker " wee common
Littlefield Mentioned.
But the name of a man who holds
I the beet athletic record in univer-
sity history—Clyde Littlelfeld-- was
Valentine as a breezy
American lever end e
glittering Oriental prince
in hie latest end greatest
। (Continued From Page 1, Col 2.)
I port of accepted progressive prin-
ciples and policies "
Borah's Idea.
Senator Borah aaya th* future of;
the progressive movement does not
necessarily demand the organisa-
tion of a new party—unless a "lib-
eial and sane"’ legislative program!
laid down by the progressive is
rejected by the party in power.
"I clearly foresee a new political ’
line-up." says Lindley M Garrison,
former member of President Wil-
son's cabinet, 'The political divis-
ion which is ahead of us will take |
this cleavage The conservatives :
of both parties against the radicals ;
of both parties, and it will be safer
if this is done by the above-board
formation of a third party under a I
new name, and by scrapping one or 1
both of the old parties, or perhaps '
welding them under a hyphenated i
name ”
Garrison would call it the Liberal
Conservative party with th* con- I
stitution acting aa a sort of divid-
ing line between conservative and'
radical opinion j
Similar method*, in some re- I
spects, are advocated by Nichola*!
Murray Butler, president of Colum- i
bia university
Samuel M Vauclain. president of 1
the Baldwin Locomotive Work*, re- i
plis laconically to the survey qua*- |
tionnaire: "I can aee no necessity
for a third political party “
The same reply is made by !
George L Record, friend of Then - |
dore Roosevelt and Bull Moose sup-
porter, and recently • New Jersey I
senatorial candidate on the repub - i
iban ticket
Smith W Brookhart, new senator
fmm Iowa, agree* He says: "I do
not believe any necessity exists for j
3 new party."
Like Record. Senator Ladd of
North Dakota thinks history will
repeat He says: "No three par-
ties are continuously possible The j
people will either take over one of
the existing parties or form a new
partv ae at the time of the civil
' He has one,’
"A guardian'
“What court ha
ian for young
"A court” r
“that oes not
thority of VIrs
Lewis. tn their
e©<-e. are not w
the apofler "
The boy that
very yonng — u
say He was 1
haired with th
—which eboxed
bred to the ios
the fine, open 1
who takes the
story Ruf now
anxiety in it. ar
ae though the
had got some
At this momi
my father and
violently open.
He was a pers
of a barrister,
he had a long,
and a clone-rr
.brought out th
Vmouth He busi
Mown a sort of
a n Inkhonk, a *
' And drew up a
t© take Iha ml
And all the whi
his delay, He
ter* to get off
make sure, had
tavern himself
"And now, el
this business," I
who calls Ma a
My father
looked at 1 be r
"Ie ) our nam
in hl* cold, levi
"Tt 1*. sir," r
man, “Anthony
Well. Mr. Ar
piled my fathei
door that you I
was playing off a rock and falling
to got out of the trouble, insieted
that those keeping tab on his
stroke* had counted in at least a
couple of echoes
All sorts of golf prize© have been
put up for competition Ir 1311 a
duffers medal wae played for at
Biarritz The medal took the form
of gigantic wooden spoon about a
yard long A golfer taing 308
strokes for ©no round won it.
A golf yarn of pure fiction was
woven around a young man who
played a course in even "threes."
But this actually happened on one
“The upirit of ‘victory or death'
should not reign at the univer-
sity. The motto of every studen
and alumni should be ‘win or looe.
ones and I find this collection so
interesting that I have decided to
give my readers some of the facts
I have gathered from various
sources.
The first item that I noticed was
about high purses being hung up
for golf professionals. This is
id a racing automobile were said
'held an exqulsit
The room wi
drawers pulled t
ransacked
My father ste
the casement of
ing out The
eat in a chair t
eyes on the viol
• Pendleton " ?
this Englishman
The words se
father out of t
reflection, and
lawyer, Mr Lev
‘ Gosford," he
"He is behind
dleton." the la
went on "Mat
gomes here whe
he forces his
bed. he putt tl
locks the door
had thia Englisl
on his deathbed
a gecrecy so el
son te barred ou
He paused si
ring on his fina
• When you a
th* sick man 4
here, as thoug)
upon ua, and wl
alwaya to this
letter*, ashes
’And more th
Marshall is har
fore Cosford w
by what leg*;
man’s paper* m
a will. And it it
a negro ruling,
on the crupper,
th* name of tip
Virginia to ar
into the rim
burg lacy
“I mistrust tr
hang about M
upon some ent
and now he ta
lendershtp in h
the mar • son Mi
Pendletnn oei
Englishman feel
My father did
iecourse His <
other quarter
Here is ym
Goeki," he said
The Ue yer r
to the window
Two persons
from th* direct
a tall elicate
©14 men The’e
a quirk, jerky a
' country doctor
any other man
he would work 1
fully on the ho
would on th* be
ping out hie qu
stresn of effort,
g>d with sore
for its prey Tl
say that the <1
Gaekl and he 1
to dieable a ma
the devil • will
the begroes im
.fear what they
® #
a
ha* been wiped out, until Inter-
city and interstate trips are the
nil*.
Confusing Regulation*.
The result is confusion, due to
conflicting traffic regulations in dlf
f er ent states and cities which lead
to accident* Unfamjliarity with
danger points in strange towns is
another cause, while the careless
motorist, roaring through small
communities on his way to larget
cities has become one of the big
killers.
To successfully combat the grow-
ing menace of automobile accidents,
the causes must be studied and re-
moved There are not many un-
avoidable accidents a check on
"c
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The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 176, Ed. 1 Monday, December 4, 1922, newspaper, December 4, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1526034/m1/2/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .