The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 86, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 9, 1923 Page: 4 of 40
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SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 8. 1923.
SU
PI
Do You Agree With This Selection?
The
On]
sb. L
swers
49 $ &.50
WhereS he
While most of the oldr
Connecting All Departmenta
WALTER LONQ.
Today's Thought
regulars
Stal
were thrown out ana those
De
E
tumbled.
forty-
of
"h
Humane see" ration
majority.
everybody elee
until
o’clock.
Then he rushes home
around efx.
They’re about most anythi
ng
you
or Id one could think
in the
even in his wildest dreams. Matters
of vital importance to the people ’ Austin chamber of ommerce
from $13,781,000 to $158,889,000.
—Grover
when he whistles or issues a
Independent on producers have
strictly business purposes
1
somas back.
I
pro-
rail-
Liqu
cause fear would
counteract the
born in all of u&
Frightene, the
After Voters
Titus and sition.
be
SAD
I
St
De,
wil
Miss Elliott Cheatham, of
Mil
Fear
contagious, feeda on itmeiz.
* seeh'a
eceh:
monBippor
tabes -skjag women ras-
r.kxe ttel- Heht te ote.
representation on the statute books
of the world," humanitarian work-
Ho has been declared the demo-
cratio nominee by sixteen thousand
Why the national chamber of com-
mores of the United states. Judge
Elbert H. Gary of the steel in-
dustry and other large employers
humane
seventh
American
the
like
For 6 years organize labor baa
led the fight for restrietea Imari*
the
sho
CIVILIZATION LOOKING UP.
Professor Henry L. Whitfield will
affecting their Interests
ducera
being in no hurry about finishing
UD.
forelgn born citizenship
fluence is negible.
Texas for instanoe. '
conference
annual me
mided newspaper would not be B
suocess in any country.
Wisconsin farmer found dynamite
in oats. Suppose he had fed the
horse and kicked him?
Bergdoll Pays Up
To Aid Ruhr Fight
Com
Texas
limite
Member W the •
Mmber etehe Audit
3• --- . • rm-h--.
ge Hint too en Picher he or
: 2 - -2 • --- -----------
th.
The
tion w!
Texas i
accord!
at exp
exhibit
one wh
able at
Dallas 1
dent 8.
eral Chi
Mrs
partmei
of the
and wl
hibit he
way to
exhibit
said.
In th
beam
achool 1
the pla,
ment, i
me nr
building
ture on
school
Arour
ed pict
cational
also be
sketche
school I
state w l
Other
charts. ।
of illite
ties of |
Ing the
priated
support
priated
■
Man 74 Years Old Is “Rejuvenated”
In 3 Weeks Without Gland Operation
. 0%
serve
Man W
Hai
WASH
Willis o
name ol
fore ths
convent!
Presidon
call tods
holding their
roved shallow
Johr
II
In on
ment so
mand t
for Orel
tomnobile
lys-Kni
making money end the Amprove-
monte to be made by the railroads
in 1924 are already under consid-
eration. Thoee who are on the in-
mtde may that the roads wiu spend
more than 000,000 for steel rails
led Prea
WClriii tert—
Government Can Guide -
Farmers to Prosperity
ea-tyue H-t- re In AAveme
Fee MM mA »— — ‘
■w. * Mo • Mo- Xen
Mrs. Thompson May
Attend Conference
Of Humane Society
Austin ana Travta count m4,
b« reprerented At tb. internationai
of »uch crinen. . .
Th. dollar th. farmee reontves in
worth only about hair as much an
th. dollar he has to tor N12
J
BRrTI8M LABOR
There are four mtnion members
YOUR FEARS.
A baby 100 day, ola, Maryn
ereermen
tn u a... 1.09
foceign... 1.25
The Kntghts of Labor pa ess d onbeen sitting on the top of
...............
.......... 2.59
assa er un
1
4
Ma med- -
E-A ■■ w— >■ •
put Brmne
been Plumas along brinaing in :
a new well now and then, but I
put in th. poettion of continuing th. prepent chaoto condation aur-
rounding Univeratty growth.
pool and are detne no now drilling 1
or hay. moved off their figs to |
wildcat territory and have teken (
over oontrota therein and have j
or Austin, of central Tezs at th.
whole atate of Texas down to ut-
terly unimportant and even fiv:
olous matei—ho anawers chem all
with atudiea car.
Th. frat pure of dictation ena-
M Walter grab. hl. hat and whlok.
out of th. ottice, malting a haaty
report to his aaadstanta ottheap-
proximate time of hi. return
Jute a Dey: Werk
making another hurticane tour and
polling thing don. He again
calle back ovet bi, shoulder to Mien
Jonnmon ana telle her he'll be
"back around 4 or 4:30." It’a unu-
ally about that uime or a ntu• later
that he gate back, and-
Thar.', some more can., tanka,
oonferenoes, telephone calla, and
th. ateen other thing, that tax the
nerves of any but a man of mulu-
nelves and ready application.
After thing, have subetded pome-
What with the neer-clos, of day.
comae wome more dictation When
Every perron Who wervea
farmer, from the day laborer
Jean Anderson; fall, off
area be apeeda back after dinner
to nome meeting or other which
may loot unt • o'clock but usu-
ally until IL
Which we find to a rather large
day daily for the secretAry of the
Completion of mcenio highway
■ uyatem. ineluding road to Mamil-
f ten', pool.
Completion of dam.
Modern abattoir.
that at retail Americans buy
The Austin American’Neither Greed N0r Technicality
American Publishing Company Should Defeat University Extension
Amtae la e- PegtetRe M Amta Tam ' - - _________-----------------___________-
Hogun,
and bes
men in
Hoger
through
counties
males rr
Males co
was co:
Who the
cars th
future.
Hogar
ng debt
the n<(!
joined a
tat ion t
He In g
at his •
ers pushng the oonference mum
gone after
How would you like to be the Ice Powderly and all his Heutenants onsen of oil or gas will not sub-
:• 18 “238 T
Governor Theodore G. Bilbo. It la
admitted that the echolar in pol-
ties in MTisstssippi was given a hot
story fades into taMe: fact
become. Clouded with doubt and
1 e controversy: the inscrtption mould-
F ore from the tablet; the statute
K fall, from the pedestal. Column..
I J arehes, pyramids what are they
H but heap, of sana, and their ePa-
Z taphs but characters written in the
3 dust—Washington Irving.
Somervell counties are the haunts printed for the M.S... as well as
of moonshine makers, this accord-; the maoMO. It mum or a ahoula
Ing lo prohibition otnetnia. There I give an .Mae a bearing. A one-
man in the good old summer time protested to congress ngatndt the
or the plumber in the good old win-| dumping of countiess throngs upon
tor time A a section of the repub- । these shorea They protested
The American’* Program for rlousty erred, and can readily understand the annoyance and indig-
Austin. nation of the signers of the guarantee bond.
. . But the work has been done subject to appeal to the courta.
_Commisslonen.manegor ° There is reasonable belief that the courts will rectify any unreason-
aity government. _
{ County literary. able award. But even if the courta sustain Judge Matthews’ board.
New Travis courthouse. the moral duty of the signers at the bond remains the same
| Beautificaticn of Barton Springs- e e e
Com pi
carry h
abuse o
gists, •
privilege
Texas.
Houston
He will
early in
involvin
said H
almilar
will liki
other ell
investigi
permits
where t
of abuse
uns his soil to the banker who
lends him money, knows what he
is to receive for his nervio•
No other class of free ctizene
would work for other, and depena
upon the unmsinish generosity of
the employer M to the amount of
renymeration to be received for ble
work.
ERBACE, Bipt
present in New York eity and will
likely be there when th. humane"
• oonference I, held The local nec-1
" rotary has written to her anNinei
her to rtpru.nl the local sodety ]
at the meeting in New York. I
t the lent century.
"During this one hundred year,
man has sought to emanetpat. him-
salt from tbs thraldom of his own
cruelly whAch has debased and d-
organise for political jxzi pose. ’ Cleveland Bergdon, the Amerlonn
they certainly can organize for] draft evader, today paid the new
| denttel campalen coming aad this
tar la navance it is safe to prediok oz ekulea ana unskilled labor,
film-, ma btnttorme of the Meding
Walter stays put
THE AUSTIN AMERICAN, AUSTIN, TEXAS.
----she is touring souther
EASY MONEY OVER HERE.
There is easy money eveAywhere
in America. There must be. There
Thomas J Ginsck 14 wen-
known Kanaas contractor, declares
he has virtually been mads young
again by the recently dteoovoroa
ire compound, which 1.pr-
nouncod euperlor to gland treat-
ments" M an invigorator and ra-
million dollars worth of gum a ana the American Federaton of world. Petroleum is much
animal ability to swim that is
Of course the friends of the pro-
tessor before the primary aad ths
run off insisted that th. voters
had his choice. He oonda vote for
Whitfield and intelltgence or Bilbo
and ignorance. Not many people
of the ommoaity it wiu buy. ..
Under the prenent. system the
producers have no votes In deter-
mining the price they shall.recetze
for the service, they nteder th.
-AM-E-- E--d 25 ..... 57 VA-E si: -- . -e- •
•uUeied Erem nerve wekne-, lo.i, need hentat -t-ut no0eptine
ot tyitted nbr, neuraastheuie, i suatahieed atter—hv ' 10
_ . . ..... . . ... hectic job of secretary of the
Palmer's Uttls house of cards had Austin chamber of commerce—that's
without having any power or au-
thorny in fixing the amount he le
to receive for his services is not
far removed from the condition
of a slave
race by the idol of the Hiy-ben Cuero and they were martied March
30, 1915. That was among the
fleet and biggest smiles that tor-
newapaper must be
smile and good humor, and never
be the next governor of Misstsstppt. misses doing up to pertecdon what-
ever he mets out to do.
claimed their seats were admitted
to the conventon. Then what fol-
lowed. Every mother's son voted
against the nomtnation of McAdoo.
hue loot man in Austin. Addresa
your view of the matter to City '
Editor, Austin American.
state obligatory automobile tax In- a. endential ineredienta of human
character and hao mecured their
sana or eO things or see as many
persons—and he usually dote Shoe
leather?—uses lots of 1t And EA6"
Olins’—that Dodge keeps just wltg-
in ths speed limit when somenody s
looking. *
He may get back to the office
before lunch and he may not. If
not he again breezes in shoruy
after the lunch hour. Xes just
come out of an endieee medley of
talka, conferences.ana things that
need “attending" but he. not th.
least bit rumed. He doesn’t take
time to roll up hie aineves, but he
gives you a metal tmprerston of
having done ho when he wades Into
one or two or three of the eeveral
more of things that are always
waiting for him to do.
Quick Worken
He hasn't been settted to ble
chair more than three neconds.be-
for Bomebody enunters into the door
for to eeo him about .emothing or
other. It takes just the baroet out-
line for that neqretary to get the
•drift" and he opens up with both
barreis and hie Hiaitor gets all the
talk that’s coming to him Before
the one le gone another bob. up
and la the meantme 1* telephone
calls to the square inch are being
anewerea and ertap yet full conver-
matiome eneue. And between cell,
.nd conversations th. Rabbit la do-
ing thing. He pumhen acres under
hl. feet with amazine rapiaity sad
h.'s all over that office in a wink
Two hours or there about of thle
end be e beck in the eaddle and
He defeated Former
nounei
brief I
tee wi
25 the
in Au
rector,
sists e
of th
George
tor uni
lor of
Gova
chairn
sion a
secreta
"‘The
agreed
vey la
the au
that in
upon t
to cov
stituti
the ar
largeet
ing. I
start i
•vary
aa to
cationa
cient."
Dr
will re
citizen
conaide
vey. "
all con
Sept. 1
Thos
were G
at Geoi
Waco,
wood (
of Can
Corpus
lasvlle
E Woe
Hutchi
----. pocials that were staged in the
community. Ha finishe achool
who valedictorian and with very credit-
ibe '
world. 4 ..
The man who serves another
ROCKDALE, Tex., Sept, r—Ac-
tfvity in the Rockdale new oll field. *
as well as in the cld Rockdale-
Minerva shallow pool ie slightly
• • rial at present, though pro-
arena is being made. Thia la main-
ty, due te the slump in oil prlees.
to the expectation that things will
tmprove in a few months, and op-
era tore will have a better prospect
before them, and then, too. It la to J
some extent due to jockeying ter i
position ae between the prospectivej2
opera tore who want in on the deal. I
aad the leesee and the land ownersi
who are inclined to stand pat and!
play out their hands in the firm ]
belief, each one of them, that he $
has the "mother poor right under
Pges is exelusivey, en-
tor publication st all
________MO oreditaed to it OS not
gamzzaraas
Um W w—1 4-e- herete
sippi wiu produce another race of th. dollar be has to psy tor 22
atatezmen lusted of political runta zonarH°"n.Eort"b,1e amount
the rabbit they call him around
there, that hope from 30• to Job
the livelong day and never goto a
hair on his head out of place, never
ruffles a nerve never dime ble
father, aa he lay there equirmine.
ever ao tiny. And the fats willed
that he should kMp the promise
Grow Up in Ladonia.
"Honest Andyr" Oh. yea. neg-
lected to tell you—he waa Andrew
Davieon Long, dirt farmer, earned
his niekname just by long restdence
in his community. Walter Ewing
—that's the name "Honest Andy"
and his wife gave their boy—Wal-
ter Ewing Long. They were proud
of that boy wore that mother and
father and they are still proud,
more proud than ever, for they’re
still living at Ladonia; sUU farm-
ing and basking in the nunshine
of that aon'a love and glorying in
his suocsss.
• Right there at Ladonia Walter
grew up. Hs attene school there,
Sunday school (good Presbyterlans
were that mother and father and
the son has not departed from
it) and all the entertian men ta and
tune gave him he will tell you.
Young Man In Big Job.
This is the young man who went
to Ban Antonio after getting that
law degree and became assistant
secretary of the chamber of com-
merce, and this is the young man
who the next year, 1915, came to
Austin to bo secretary at its cham-
ber of commerce, with W. J. Jones
as its president. And ho U the
young man who now holds down
that big man's job with every
to? Thate a
2 utacturer over her own cook stove tor so years ths American Federa-ot trade unions to England and mil
E and the inventer waa Ute welline ton has protested against the Mons ot workers who are aympa-
I agency of the firm, hawktog his dumping ot ellens on thene shores etzers but not members of the
| were from house to houne and by the agents of foreign shipping untons. TM it has oom. to pas.
I street to street Xo"eAmeriesunes and the great employers of that the London Daily Herald. ot-
l chews a million dollars worth of labor in America dietat organ of the Labor Party.
E gum a week and llkee it j Mark Sullivan knows thia. Plon-has made the announcement
These are samples. Speaking of eers in the battle for restrieted tm-' that it win oense publication on
J, to .move It to the third gnat in-migration have been the lenders september TA unlace British labor
I dunt! of Am.rlca with billions tn- , ot organizea labor in America ang [ goes to its asatatano. tn a Hinan-
I wented in «ame Where 40mts too. yean before the coming dal wax
iditur• for improvements may
Ute three hundred million
■ man There is a prest-
PETROLEUM.
There’s money in petroleum. D-
rectore of the Frcduoere and Re-
finers Corporation of Illinols de-
clared a quarterly dividend of fifty
cents after a protracted meeting in
Chicago and the Ohio Oil company,
a Standard Oil concern declared a
quarterly dividend of fifty cents.
In the last two quarters, following
a distribution of a three hundred
per cent stock dividend, the pay-
ment as seventy-five cents.
Now comes Governor Jack Walton
of Oklahoma warning all dealers
{that wastage of the oil wealth of
his state will not be permitted by
. the government. Governor Jack
senses ths situation. There are
sixty thousand oil wells in Okla-
homa averaging less than ten bar-
rels each day, while in the new
| fields of California one pool alone
by natural flow. Is said to have
. yielded temporarily 18,000 barrels
daily.
। Now how will the Governor pre-
vent the flooding of Oklahoma and
vicinity by the oil and gas ship-
pers of other state? Admitting
that ho is a governmental hercules
They landed in the Cox column
without delay after A. Mitchell
There’s too much to tell, but in
the brief and rapid skip across the
span of his lifetime, one thing was
omitted which must be included.
While he was attending the Uni-
versity of Texas getting his LI. B
degree ■ yee. he has one of those
too—he met Miss Janet Kaapke of
Who’s Busiest Man Here Anyhow? Oil Slump Hits ,
Rockdale Pool
bl. farm
operators
own in
Kameg. ontreeter.Tella ef Won-
dHt ulta Obeined in Tm4
of New &clentifie Disoovery.
rather big queation. Th. Um.
worn bee ayaloey neema to nt
parelcularly well in thin case. A
bee .tori, out to get hon.y—It
may go to thl. fower firat or that
one, but it it keepe at it ana Uvm
long enough it will eventually get
to all of them. So does Walter
week and the value of the output Labor beeama all powerful 1b Ite poker. It is B gamble from start
I. increasing every year Not many ntena, samuel On nip ire, an Eb- to matsh but the player always
dezmreaccimeutsi
'J SL Eod ** foot a-dant T-m"h ****-*
years ago a Midler at* Fort Leaven- gitsh Jew, became the leader ot
worth invented the recipe for gume. Federation. Ka has never
making and later along to the dt been atemcnntea He began the
of Cleveland his wife was the man- work where Powderly left off and
_____________ lanW:582 2220 ceobine to
"* npeencraiye-ewj*NteiN-w"mwaT: e*z-*F Y hasdmjgdecmm"oFl‛"m --- -g
—=..... ——m— ...... " ■ h—- ------ ■ • Hcmn cef ozridtakrig fair u, pbusinda emaMjLaemhte ond, er-ofteire*tt fo"a
e
GMACKs still rule at the University. A meries of unfortunate in-
• edeats ex-tng from war-ume to the present has made thia
shack vage possibie
The euzena of ustin aa a whole have beau to blame for none of
there inesdenta. At the precoat moment however, they are being
oE, Atianta, Ga, in the younr-
to-1 pie buy a newepaper for the newa
of the lay. It la a bustnees propo-
All mocieties for the preventtom I
of crueity and an humantaHans a
throughout the world are invite ■
to the convention in New York. S
The world conferenoe of humane I
workers wiu commemorat. the S
centenary of the paenage of the■
first law requiring the humane ana
proper treatment of wub-human•
ore. t urea. lt wi meawtae cele-•
brat. th. century which has don
m much in behalf of th recoen-4
ton of animal right, and th. pre.-- ■
Uoal rellet of th. heiplene and wut- ■
ferine among children and animals, R
noticee of the oonference point out. ’
“It ha. cauped the adoption ot i
the nnum of mercy and juntiee i
Pine to Sell.
The place where the farmer sell,
his wheat, hl. ootton, and hla live
etook to not the place where there
la a demand for them. The demand
Always extsta at the other end oT
the Uns where the commodities are
consumed.
The farmer, do not know, neither
can they know, the piqoes where
.e.e may ba a damanc for their
crop, at the time they are forced
to Mil.
They are thus forced and are
kept out of the sphere of the op-
eration of the law of supply and
demand.
Thing. Government Should Do.
Th. government ahoula ..certain
for the farmere the average sont
of producing, handling aad nellane
of farm products, as a basis of
the price for which they ehomia
Mil.
The government, should render as
much aesistanoe to the producer in
th. marketing of their product, a.
It now readers them to producing
thene prod pet.,
, Finally, the government nhouid
prohibit any person, firm or oor-
poration, engaged in interstate
oommerce, from nening or otfertne
for sale any commodity which at
the time it 4s offered for Ml. he
does not own, or have a valid con-
tract With the owner to mH for
him.
In the two countlee. In the moun-
tain aintrieta of the wouth where
moonshine makers end moonshine
runner, ere over in evidence, alien,
are never touna. Thl. is a matter
of history as well as a matter of
tact
in the great cities at the north
it may be and no doubt is. ant-
ferent, but waiving the nun ques-
tion. who are clamoring for a
change in the existing Immigration
Queer what tricks the fates can 1
fusgie about with such studied
carefulnesa, yet with such careless,
precision. No man can foretell
their motives, and when lt*x dona
hla praise or blame is vain. Over
the vane of the estinies of men
•nd affairs stans that invisible,
irresistible force, shifting men and
masses Into ever changing combi- •
nations—the spices of happiness
and sadness mixed by taU s own 1
recipe.
Once upon a timeon Nov. 1, |
1188, to be exact—a boy was born
on a farm Kear Ladonia, Texas.
Nothing startling about that you'll
say, but thts youngster was in the
hands of the fates and ho was a
promising lad, at least he looked
that way to "Honest Andy,' his
12 Years* Service 1
Pet Momiaem at MeKnney. tor i
th. past 11 yeara conneeted with
r• plain tacts are that shoula Austim welsh on thia proposal, it
— wiu cost many times the loss that coula possibly be sustatned
through any alight excess of actual cost over the es’-mates for pur-
chan. The mere feet that Judge Brook, belleves that he haa found
a technicality under which the bond stgners might escape their re-
sponsibmty. ha. nothing to do with the case. Judge Brooke has a
legej mind. He has given a legal opinion. H. was not naked to give
a moral opinion and has not done so.
E—,
THOMAE 3. JlaMOOK. ge
s.acau. age. tagztrea aancukE,
activity and lack of animation an
vital force. Ito ertecta neemuto '
virtually the name on both ______r.
and old. Phymiesens My the prin-
cl pal active ingredient of the oom-
pound given apeedy entintaotion in
obstinate cane that defy all other
treatments. Elderly people pro-
nounce the 4incovery a real “foun-
tain of youth."
Reeliming that thoumamds ot
enteebled. halt-alive folk may Oop-
elder wuch new, "too good to few
true," the Amertoan distrbutorai
have agreed to supply a double-
strength treatment of the eiscovery
on a guaranteed trial beat, u"
everyone in need of bueh a prepara-
tion. If you wiah to teet the oom-
pound under a money-beok guar.
Antee, write in etriet oontidencs ta
the Melton Leboratoriea, Mil Mel-
ton Building, Kanean Olty, Mo., for
a two-dollar trentment of korex
compound, mailed in a plain,
mill wrapper. You may emclon.
two dollar, or imply Med your
name, without money, end pay two
dollar end pontage on delivery. e.
you prefer. In either rea. fiof.
Lone.- he may go to “• some
committeeman on’this or that; he
may see some bustness men In the
interest of Mme follow who want,
e job; he may ooner with the
head of Mme wort of business a
with reference to a dealer.' son-
vention: ae may om somebody
about a new hotel problem; he
may go to the fair crouadsLto _ . __ ..
mezke woi"tcp“ppaaupuo Pat Moulden Quits
“’o'u^d^r^tS^'t State Office After
Walter Iong can do in Euch, • — - —
short time; bo may see pome leader
on water bond., or <udver.lty tend
bond queatione-he may do a thou-
■ B ■
WHEN the Austin eltizenship clashed with President Vinson over
University location plans, ths citizenship was willing to go to
any reasonable length in order to maintain the University site
where it bow la The result was a citizens" bond signed by if
Austin capitalists guaranteeing that the state would be able to buy
needed land for University extension within the estimate.
Now it appears that certain unreasonable prices awarded to Unl-
versity land hold-outs may bring the price slightly above the est-
mate. -These unrasonabie awards (awards in excess of the price
aaked originally by the owners) were made by a board appointed by
County Judge Matthews. Ths American believes this board very se-
be held in New Turk City. October
11 to 1?. according to announce-*
meat made yesterday by Mrs. M.
B Moreland, secretary of the
Travis county bn mans society.
Mrs. R. M. Thomson, of Austin*
a member of the board of direce
tore of the Travis county humane
society, win likely ba the Austin
representative at the fnternational
oonferenee. Mrs. Thomson is at
8 28 1.30
is not only complete but permanent,
! can’t expreen the heprieee this
| great disoovery has brought to me.
It has made young’ again."
Similar reports are being made
almost daily. For instance. D. W.
Wood of New Orleann past 80
years of age says: "The com-
pound has brought me back to as
good, healthy physical, conition ae
11 enjoyed at it. I am apparently
as supple as at 25 and my eyesight
is better than for years- t would
not take $5,000 for what the din-
covery has done for mt "
The compound is a elmpls home
treatment in tablet form, absolute-
ly harmless, yet rated As the qulck-
est and most powerful invigorator
known. Acting directly on lower
spinal nerve centers and certain
glands and blood vessele, it often
brings amazing benetits in >4 to 88
hours, according to thousands who
have tested it.
It is wonderful," writes a resi-
dent of Hollister, Cal. "In less
than 24 hours you can feel it does
the work it makes one feel young
Austin American ve-
here are many other
men in Austin. Are they
* than Lena? What le your
Who de you think is the
but his father waa an immigrant, his power is restricted and an
the comptroller department, and
now serving chief of its accounting
division, has resigned, of foetid
Sept. 11, and baa announced hla
candidacy for oomptroller next year.
Mr. Moulden was formerly county ,
clerk of ollin county and for a
time member of the McKinney city
council. Ho was formerly presient j
of the Texas State Bwine Breeders’ r
association and has for years been
interested in the raising of fine
stock. Ho was reared on a farm.
Is the son of a Confederate veteran
and was coramandant of the W. W.
Merritt camp. Bone of Confedsrate
Veterans, at McKinney,
Mr. Moulen’s entry into the
comptroller race brings the num-
ber of prospective candidates to
three Mark La WIginton, former
comptroller, and Tom Bell of Tex-
arkana. former deputy labor com-
missloner, are tentative aspirants to
the office. Comptroller Loa A.
Smith will run for railroad com-
mlasloner, and not be a candidate
for re-election to his present of.
tice, he haa stated.
and about 88 nights out of a hun-
MAKING MONEY.
American railways must
I ritr Hist
About 9000 •atents are wought " feei 1k I AM at »»." am Mr.
monthly and pickie botties a. hard Olaecock, "and meem to ba (.nine
to open aa .var, etronger every day. During my
----- three week um ok the new ale:
About twenty mumon pteces of moxny’yzie" .tending napponaro
the prime of •life Furthermore,
when I began ualng the compound,
my memory waa virtually gone and
X was almost blind. Now my mind
is clear and active and I can read
the finest print without difticult¥."
In order to find out whether the
results were lasting, Mr Glascook
wafted elx months before reporting
on his test of the iscovery. On
this polt he says:
"Every passing day strengthens
my conviction that my restoration
Fourth. To nail through thstr
own sales agencies as direct to the
ultimate consumer as practicable
Fifth. To call at prices covering
the cost of producing, handling and
selling and a just profit
Sixth. To act as a unit, but In
a non-partisan way, in all matters
nerve and fiber in his body alive
and responsive to its demands
Has a reticent cuss, this Walter
Long, and that's honest, too.
"Leave my name out of 1t" is his
favorite caution to reporters and
they know he means IL Credit
for any accompllshment goes to
the chambereof commerce and not
its secretary, he says, and he in-
sists things be written just that
•re fourtee= million automobtles PROHIBITION AND
2 in amertea font America on , IMMIGRATION.
i wheels? There are seven million । Theodor. Roosevelt was a to-
| tn LAzxtes to America ana thecr person and • man of many
12 petroleum hunters and refiner, part. Mark Sullivan adoltsea
I have ten MHon collars invested AnRooseveit and didn't mina sayng
'f the gasoline Andustr!. I the pubuc print For this
American women Aean! lov.furana doubtees for many other rea-
bearing animate. Acoordine to a the great game hunter ana
. furrier writer Amertoan wo men taker ehristenea
1 , spend three hundred minion dollars Sark th. Sest npoT^ ta America
| • year for fore .and to obtain * A grent reporter ana tor an
I there tore twentz-v. thounand zntense partisan ‘ vey accurate
f wild beasts are traprod and ths o-ter
B Lora knows how many bob cats re
! ana rabbits and musk rat. and Now Mark has AncoverA *•
’ squirrel.. A writer on tore and reason the extetenee of the Tn-,
m fur benrine animals declare, that visible Empire "nuspiclon of len"
. half the tore used 1b the United and the flockin, of allens to then
“ states are produced to thl. coun-shores." Also because of the b^
try, but upward, of • hundred. Ilef that most ot the volators of
countrles and colonlee trap furs the prohibition law are of alien
--mtAmerc origin. Mark Sulltvan is * wen
Tor shlpment to Amerca • 1
lee 1. no longer * luxury. A Informed man but the demand for
writer on ice etatistics let. loose restricted immigration is not of.
the information that just 80 years recent oriein
E egg the industry was launched in Long ago there was an oreantza-
i the United States. Now the Amer-j uon nationwide known as the
f lean people consume • million Knighta of Labor. Teranos V.
‘ dollars worth of ice every day and Pewderty waa its prestdent He
eince 1890 the output baa inoreasedwas a native son of Pennsylvania
This happened: ths
able work secured his A B. de-
gress from Austin college at Sher-
man. Striving always at the best,
he went beck and in another roar
came out with his master’s degree.
From Jeb to Jeb.
That briefly is the boy and man
chronologically that now fine th.
For the wind passeth over IL and
It is gone i aad the place
Shall now it no mor—Pa 101.1s.
To this end they should organtse nugurated a month ago is supply
for the followne purpoe: funds to aid the dermane carrying
Firat... To. standardize.rther on pasatv. remiatane. to the Ruhr. _
commoditier so ea to Kuaranto--- min mhe
“,iti ziisgsam 2 • "S5fe2 •
Second. To produce as econom- triai o Americas recently ar-
ically aa ponsibie. rested to the attempt to abduct --
Third. To reguint production Bergdon late in Ootobee. raded him.
as far as possibe to the demand I — -
‘rm time is short. If,this Austin dUsans' bond is not property
- renewed by the tOtbof September, certain money epproprtated
by the laat segislature will not be spent. Therein Um the possibility
of a conapse of the entire University extension program
Certain property owners in ths district attected are, of course, also
to Mlame. If greed defeats ttaelt, no one win particularly mourn
for the greedy. But the good name of the city of Austin and the
future of the State University as an integral part of Austin. is a
subject too vital for any hesitancy based upon the posstble loss of a
few thousands of dollars and predicated upon a technical and legal
escape from a moral obligation.
th, niekles and dims got Ask
| ths movie men.
And get this, the movie is here to |
B eay. It isn't an experiment, it Is;
| a stabilized ana standaraizea insti- I
| tutlon and next to the press tt
j should become the crentent educa-
9 ter under American akdes aithough
the putpit will never agree to
eie
This is a grand old world if you
I tabs it the right way. When in
I dohbt, wear furs, imbade ice erinka, j
| enew gum, patronsse the movies
3 ena then put a foot on the gaa
> They an appear te be doing It now
Paramount law.
Ciareno 4 Darrow, of minota,
noted ctminal lawyer and writer
has advised ths democrets of 11-
Unnis to place the name of Gover-
nor Al smith on their primary
ballot aad win for him the votes
of the manols delegation to the
national oonvention la 1012
Champ Clark captured-me minots
dolecation. In 1020 Roker Buamivan
was dead and the delegates from
munota mted for James M. Cox.
It would Ursa things up if William
Jennings Bryan would annoumee
himself a contender for the demo-
lie where they enjoy real winter! , against the importation of mervile been hit hard. Had it not been tor
Speaking of rum. Chicago and pauper labor under contract te the ooming in ot the new fields to
Cleveland let loose the information; these shorea. Cutornta perhaps they would have
road brdg• into the river at
Chippewa Falia, Wis. Water is
warm. She enjoys herselt, evi-
dently thinks she's in a bathtub.
She kicks happily. That keeps her
afloat. Rescued.
A grown-up, unable to swim,
would hare drowned. Why! Bo-
ot what is known as ths Invindte if British organised labor hum
Empire. Are the aliens tbs chief: true te form ft will not go to Uie
violators of the prohibition law! ,m'stance St the London Daily
Twenty-eight prohibition enforoo- Herald. It takes money to run a
ment otctals hare been slain la daily newspaper, tart organised
less than two years, and 24 of labor has never realised the fact,
these in southern states where netther at home nor abroad. Peo-
outside of Mississippi have ever
heard of Whitfield untltl he an-
nounced aa a candidate for the
democratic nomination. Very
many people outside at Misataatppt
had heard of Bilbo and the sym-
pathy of the discriminating ones
was on the side of the man they
never heard of aa against tbs man
of whom they had often heard.
There is a chotce when an issue of
that sort is narrowed down.
Protesnor Whitfield had been the
president of the Mimeinatppi State
Conege for Women. This should
have given him a btg boost in the
beginning and send him over in
the run off by a much heavier
majority.
Mississtppt to days of old was
the horns of statesman. It is to be
hoped that in future days Minsta-
u a young man. I am more than
happy and dad I triad 11- "An-
orhaf Calstorhtan enre The oem-
te a. wmM r 224.4 32-.K
Edirer", note: Whe'e the
bunjest man in Austin! Walter
E. Long, eeretary at the cham-
ber of eommereq and manager of
the Texan 8tat. Exposition, an-
grown-up would yell and empty
his lunge of the air necedeary to
keep him afloat.
Taar drowns more people than
water.
Blondin walked acrons a cable
suspended above Niagara Falla
The rest of us would get trieht-
seed. See our belaace mad Cros.
But we could walk the same cable
atretched only a foot above safe
ground.
It isn't ths difficulty of walking
on a cable that makcs people fall.
They topple ott becaume they tear
danger.
Fear increases, by many times,
the hazard at a dangerous situa-
tion. That's because taar involves
loss of oontidene in our ability to
conquer the dangerous attuation.
Conndeno in eelf i what maken
the man of average or even in-
ferior ability rise to greater suo-
ooaa than the timid individual with
exoepttonal abilities, natural gifts
or skilled training.
Never frighten a child. Faar is
way. How can one check up on
what hs is and does! His edstat-
ant Miss Luian Johnson, she's
been with him 'most ever since he
look up the Job and he mays ohe'e
one than which there is none bet-
ter. can tell you what he geta
done in that office.
Hard to interview.
Now. folk that know aay Walter
Lone is the busiest man in town
if you've ever tried to grab off an
interview with him you'll agree
with them. Let's see if he is. Of
course ws can't follow in every
footstep, but let's step in a few
here and there end Imagine the reel
and then determine whether or not
he's the man for the job. Here's
a few of the things hta emsistaat
could point out in a day's work:
A Day at the Heels of
Walter Long.
Breaktast sometime between 4
and 8 o'clock.
Breezes into the office about 1
or 8:30.
After an exchange of sreetngs
with all his anistanta and fellow
workmen in the office. Mil 1m down
to examine a mountain of mail.
Lettere are reed, sorted and
marked. Then:
So Says His Assistant.
Miss Lillian Johnson (he anys
she's the only assistant in ths
world! is called into play and from
an hour to four hours of dictation
follow, with never less than two
or three minutes between a tele-
phone call, a personal call, a ques-
Uon from a helper or womebody
working in the office, or some sort
of interruption. An interruption
of one minute or ten minutes or
an hour makes no break in the
continuity of dictation, he stops
in .lb* middle of a sentence, an-
swers Mme quentien, gives detailed
information about some matter or
engages in a bit of friendly chet
about, nothing in particular, nd
then turns back to Miss Johnson
and nsver misses picking up the
thread of the letter just where he
left it.
And what kind of letters are
those?—well M1m Johnson can tall
BY H. F. DAVS.
Mate Markets Department..
The present system of marketing
farm proAucta must go-
Under the present system of
marketing, the farmers receive
only about one-third of the amount
the consumers pay. while .1!
should receive at two-thirda
The farmer® including the StocK“
raisers are perfectly helpless in
every bustnese crists xa er
forced to bear most of the loaxee
WHY HE IGNORES TEXA8.
Atianta is ia the fieid for the
next democratio national conven-
toa it has been 68 years since
a national party conventon has
met in one of the cotton states. It
resulted ia a split aad a divided
democracy and paved the way for
the election of Abraham Lincoln.
If Atlanta daptures the democratie
convention will history repeat it-
•elf.
Speaking of ootton states tt the
fleecy staple haa anything to do
with it, why shouldn"t the national
convention come to Tezast Texas
has given the largest majority of
any democratio state Texas haa
the largeet electoral vota of aay
southern atate. Texas produoea a
third of the ootton crop. Texas
produces five or six millions of
pounds of wool every year,
Texas ia the former home ct Col
E. M. House, Albert Sidney Burle-
son. T. W. Gregory. Cyclone Davis
and a whois hoot of looser lights.
Texas democrats say they nomi-
nated Woodrow Wilson st Balti*
more. They prevented the defeat
for renomination of Thoras Riley
Marshall at St. Louis, where Jo-
soph Weldon Bailey and James E.
Ferguson saved the scalp of the
Hoosier.
Texas is ths home of Col Thomas
B. Love who failed to nominate
McAdoo at San Francisoo but is
very 1nsistant that ba is going to
nominate that gentleman wherever
the convention may be held next
year. Why should the McAdoo men
go to Georgia? It is true that it
was the birth place of William
Gibbs McAdoo. It is also true that
in 1820 at San Francisco the Mo-
Adoo delegates from other states
voted to seat the contesting dele-
gates from Georgia.
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The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 86, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 9, 1923, newspaper, September 9, 1923; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1526214/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .