Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 218, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1921 Page: 4 of 8
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PACB FOUK V
m« mm mi
ffimua o» rmm associated raim
TB« aseoclsted Pnm is eioiuaivoiy en-
titled •• »»• ess for r»p«»ii«»H»D o» ail
■•«• dispatches credited to It or Dot othef-
wlse sredltsd in this peper ead aleo «»•
|«««i otWI published herein.
DA1LI TELBOHAM established 1907
DAILT TRIBUNE Established llt4
(Consolidated January, 1IH.J
EXECUTIVE 81 AFFt
B E. WILUAIIS General Mannget
CHA8. W. INOKAM Msnsgln* Editor
Win STEPHENS Business Msnngei
B. COHEN Atlvtrllilui Manager
SIBSCKIPTlOJI rKICK:
Dully and Sunday, per year 1100
Dally an>l Sunday, all mouths i 15
Da,ly and Suoday. per month »
Telephone*:
New a anil Circulation Departments and Busi-
ness Offlte
Advert'stng Department 522
Pabllsbed every morning by the Telegram
Publishing Co., (Inc.) E. K. Williams, presi-
dent.
Entered at the postoffice In Temple, Tex..
Chtober. 11107, us second class nmll mutter.
Under the Act of Congress March 3, 1873.
Office of Publication: 110 and 11! West
Avenue A, Temple, Texan.
Temple Dally Telegram Is a member of
tin Audit Bureau of Circulation*.
i-GMKLE DAILY TELEGRAM, TEMPLE, TEXAS, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 24, 1921.
THE FARM BUREAU AND THE
MERCHANTS
Anyway, Belfast was made safe for
royalty fur one day.
Tlie pro-French element in this
country may not lie very noticeable,
but ft is different with the pro-Car-
jtntier element.
Conditions are. approaching norm-
alcy in Mexico. A rebel leader -with
150 armed men has attempted to
rtart a revolution.
It is an unhappy circumstance that
'the labor convention's settlement of
the Irish question doesn't end the
Irish controversy,
A man has been arrested for threat-
ening to put an end to the career of
t'hariie Chaplin. \Yhere the fellow
erred was in offering to be bought off
for $3(i,000.
The fact that conditions are bad in
Russia is again indicated by the ap-
parent effort of the bolsheviki to ex-
tend their campaign of looting to the
high seas.
Will the casualties in the bombing
ttsts off the Atlantic etfast be taken
into consideration in the effort to de-
termine whether the airplane is sup-
erior to the battleship in coast de-
lenst V
The Sinn Fein boasts of submarine
connections with t£c United States,
Perhaps Situs wasn't so far wrong
lifter all when he said what he did
about these radicals in the United
Bi.i U'S,
rnosiXT riN<; Tin: (jiiaftmk.
In its sign-up campaign in Bell county for the Farm
Bureau cotton pool, the organization has gone practically
100 per cent among the bankers and business men.
Nowhere has serious opposition been encountered to the
farmers' own plan to remedy the marketing situation.
Everywhere the Farm Bureau has enjoyed expressions
of faith and pledges of both moral and material support.
So far, there has been no strenuous "drive" in the coun-
ty to put the pool over. Those in charge have been content
to let the farmers study the contract closely, observe mar-
keting conditions from day to day, consider the possibilities
of the pool—and then obey the impulse.
The time for the campaign to close is near, however, and
while thousands of bales have been contracted to the pool,
yet the Bell County Farm Bureau wants to make the nfllve
as nearly unanimous as possible, and with this end in mind
a concerted drive has been planned for early next week.
Having received pledges of co-operation and support
from practically every merchant and banker in the county,
the bureau now is going to take advantage of those pledges
and invite each business institution in the county to send
a man around with one of its committees to aid in the final
campaign. A special committee will call on these business
establishments today or tomorrow and arrange the itinerary,
etc., of the representative to be furnished by each of the
concerns. This representative, of course, will be accom-
panied by a committee of farmers in whatever precinct to
which he is assigned, and the farmers will do most of the
talking. The presence of the representative is desired mere-
ly to assure the farmers approached that the business firms
of the county favor the Farm Bureau's plan to put the
marketing of cotton on a business basis.
The program appears wise. The interests of the busi-
ness men of the county are inseparably linked up with the
interests of the farmers, and each should have * mutual
concern in the prosperity -of the other. The farmers are
taking a definite step to improve marketing conditions, and
the move is worthy of the heartiest support each and every
business concern can give.
The time of the men assigned by the business establish-
ments to this sign-up tour undoubtedly will be profitably
spent. The object is not to bring trade to the stores and
concerns represented. That should be clear to all. The real
motive is to bring about such an improvement in market-
ing conditions that the principal farm crops can be sold at a
profit, and if we can get the money in the county each and
every establishment ought to be willing to take its chances
on getting its share of the trade.
That is the interest the business men of the county have
in the Farm Bureau movement, and that is why they can
well afford to accept the invitation to be extended by the
organization of farmers to send a man along to help put the
proposed pool over.
There should be little objection to
the rc'Vuest of ?25C,oyo made to con-
gress for the purpose of pressing the
prosecution of "1,500 individuals and
corporations alleged to be Involved In
nation-wide combinations revealed
during the building trust Inquiry by
the Lockwcod' legislative committee."
The information and scandals dis-
closed by this committee in its in-
iiuiries in New York were sufficient
to astound the country, revealing an
orgy of graft in which both rich ami
poor were made to suffer. Building
activity was seriously hampered
through thtwe combines, and some of
the hold-up practices were little short
rf the lead pipe tactics.
The country cannot condone stoh
business procedure on the part of
any group of grafters, and it will be
glad to put up the money to push the
cases against them. Let us hope that
the prosecutors in charge of the cases
will have better luck than the gov-
ernment enjoyed in its drive against
the profiteers.
NO INTERNATION'Mi ANTHEM
NEEDED AS YET.
At the commencement exercise's of
the American 1'nlversiiy in Washing-
ton the other day a proposed inter-
national anthem wr.s sung and intro-
duced to the world. It is about "two
nations by the sea, two nations great
and free," and is fixed to the tune of
•America" and "God Have the King."
The thought that inspired this an-
them may have been commendable
enough, but wise observors of the
times must feel that it is a bit pre-
mature. A man is engaged in no
email task when he performs all of
the duties that his allegiance to
America demands, and the same ts
true with Great Britain. England and
America constitute two countries, and
■while their Ideals may be the same in
Borne re»pects, yet their institutions
are different. The Union Jack bears
little resemblance to Old Glory. There
Mmy be few conflicting interests be-
tween these two nations, both great
•nd free, but at the same time no in-
dividual can be loyal to both. In
America we know that most people
are "aatisfkd with one flag at a time,
and tradition has it that the same is
♦rue with all British subjects—or the
•verts helming majority of them at
least.
But 'suppose a merger of the two
•cuntrlea could be brought about
through something similar to the pro-
iml International aatlisml
# union really desirableT Do at
to add to our Mexican problem, cur
Japanese question, our tariff squab-
bles and other domestic and foreign
issues such vexing subjects as the
Irish controversy and the annoying
situation in the near east?
Hardly.
Let the two nations, great and free,
continue In pursuit of their great
ideals. The more loyal each subject
is to his own flag the better off will
each country be in the long run.
W AU ON SMUGGLING ALIENS
INTO THIS COUNTRY.
The campaign afeainst the smug-
gling into this country of aliens is of
peculiar interest to Texas because by
far the larger number of these un-
welcome and in most cases, undesir-
able, immigrants are finding their way
into the United States by way of
Mexico and across the border of that
country into Texas The immigration
inspectors along the Rio Grande have
received Instructions to stop all aliens
attempting to enter the United States
and, according the late reports, they
are having their hands full.
As a rule those who are making at-
tempts to get in this country in de-
fiance of the immigration restriction
act, are the most undesirable of un-
desirables, and the experiences of In-
spectors along the Texas border
shows that there is good ground for
the belief that there is a well or-
ganized system by which smugglers
are undertaking to pilot those seek-
ing entry here for a price. The fees
fixed by ibis smuggling syndicate are
said to be large and those able and
willing to pay are of that class of
api'ators, nn; rchists and general dis-
turbers it were better to keep out at
any find all times,
When these fellows are caught, and
it is asserted that but a limited
number of them succeed in breaking
through the conltja. of Inspectors
at the border, they are In for a stay
of several months in jails either at
Brownsville. Laredo, Eagle Pass or
El Paso. This is explained by the re-
ouirement for official reports to be
made to Washington, "for investiga-
tions and for return of documents to
the Texas officials in charge at the
scene of arrest, and the tedious rou-
tine of governmental red tape Is
known of all men. By the time final
judgment is rendered most of these
smuggled Immigrants are in a hurry
to "beat it" back across the line and
stay out.
Occasionally quick disposition is
made of the would-be immigrant by
the bullet route, when resistance is
made against inspectors and the smug-
gled alien tries to escape arrest.
In spite of these drawbacks some
have been found who have repeated
several times their attempts to get in
and have been caught no less than
three times.
It is well to encourage the strict en-
forcement of this new law, regard-
less of the opinion one may entertain
as to Its propriety or policy of the
passage of the law. This should be
done because, as stated, those who
will pay for the purpose of evading
the law and getting Into the country,
are wholly of the most undesirable
class,
EDITORIAL OF THE DAY
The Battle of Tbe Bureaucrat*.
To oarry out his plan for a reor-
ganization of government bureaus
and a reallocation of services, a re-
form greatly needed to avoid waste
and Inefficiency In the overlapping of
various agencies, < President Harding,
with the Indorsement of the cabinet,
has declared war upon the Influence
of the bureaucrats in opposing gov-
ernment reorganization.
Each member of the cabinet has
been directed to serve notice upon
each bureau chief and Individual em-
ploye that propaganda against the ef-
fort to reform the government ma-
chinery will meet with Instant dis-
missal from the service. To any one
acquainted In any degree with the
waste and Inefficiency of some of the
government bureaus, this stand will
seem to be well taken. For instance,
there are twenty-seven separate agen-
cies engaged in construction of pub-
lic buildings, sixteen engaged in
hydraulics, river and harbor work.
None of these agencies are co-ordin-
ated. Each is doing or trying to do
more or less the same thing. Each is
trespassing on the others' preroga-
tives, each doing the same thing dif-
ferently, some better than others,
some as best they can, but all to-
gether duplicating, wasting, and de-
laying public works.
It is ob\;lous that a little co-ordina-
tion brought about through bureau
reform would add greatly to the effi-
ciency of these bureaus, and at the
same time would greatly reduce ex-
penses by dismissing those employes
who are merely duplicating and de-
laying the work In hand. It is per-
fectly natural that employes of these
various agencies, fearing to lose their
Jobs, should oppose the contemplated
reform. But no such attachment to
a job ought to be allowed to prevent
the reform which means a saving of
millions of dollars a year to the tax-
payers and an attendant improvement
in the speed and quality of work ac-
complished. 1'resident Harding has
merely declared himself to that ef-
fect. 1
But now comes the "Institute for
Public Service'' through Its director.
William H. Allen, with a mimeo-
graphed question evidently distributed
throughout the country: "Will not
readers of your local newspapers wel-
come a discussion of the relative
benefits and Injuries from the freest
possible expression of information
and judgment by federal employes,
from federal reorganization without
liscussion and from federal reorgan-
ization after misunderstandings have
been removed?"
The question is subtly put. It leaves
the implication that the president Is
planning to gag all employes. That is
not the truth. He has made it flear
that the order to bureau chiefs does
not mean that they would not be giv-
en an opportunity to express their
views on reorganization to the com-
mission which has undertaken the
work. Any constructive suggestion
Which they may have to offer will be
given full consideration. "The freest
possible expression of information
and judgment by federal employes"
to which the circular refers will be al-
lowed. But free expression does not
mean a whispered word or argument
to a lobbyist. That is what the presi-
dent seeks to stop. In that he is
righC Bureaucrats who Interpret
freedom to moan license to lobby for
their jobs will be and ought to be
summarily dismissed as a menace to
good government.
The reorganization committee un-
der Walter Brown of Ohio has a great
and important task before it. It
ought to have the support of thj
cabinet and the country. Selfish op-
position should be dealt with sum-
marily. Chicago Tribune.
TABLOID TALES
and the Worst ls Yet to Come
Progren and the Bathtub.
Whenever a man starts to launch a
new enterprise of sell & uetful but
hitherto unheard-of article, let him
stop and recall what happened when
bathtubs were first introduced. Within
the memory of many people still liv-
ing the bathtub was lambasted as
menace to democratic simplicity and
a danger to health.
An ordinance was Introduced In
Philadelphia—and almost passed—to
prohibit bathing between November
and March. Boston made bathing
unlawful except on medical advice.
Virginia Imposed a tax on bathtub
owners of $J0 a year. Yet every-
body knows new that having a bath-
tub In the house is a first rate Idea.
Bathing was probably even more
needed then. But people resented
tathtubs because they were new.
Many new ldene are made commer-
cially successful, lsut usually there
are difficultly. The public resents a
novelty.—The Nation's Progress.
The Heathen Clilnew.
Chinese writing looks difficult to
the occidental eye, but there is sense
as well as humor concealed in the
characters. Thus, the word "woman"
s represented bv a device consisting
of a head, hartiis, skirt, and feet. If
you put this undt r a roof, you get the
word "peace," a woman at home. A
picture of two women under a single
roof gives the sign for trouble.—
Omaha Bee.
No Placo for a Bear.
Mr. Merrington had 6een invited to
a children's party to help amuse the
small guests.
"Must do something really funny,'
he reflected. "I know. I'll go as a
benr. That'll make the little ones
roar with laughter."
So he procured a bear's skin,
wrapped himself up in it and set off
in a taxicab. When the vehicle
pulled up he sprang out, ran up the
steps of the house anil rang the bell.
The moment the door whs opened he
darted Into the hall and bounded Into
the drawing-room on alt four*,
growling fiercely. But, as instead of
the roar of laughter he had expeci-
cd, a rigid silence greeted him. He
looked up. No children were ihere.
Instead two very print ladies were
regarding hint with icy amazement.
He had gone to the wrong house.—
Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph.
Then There Was Trouble.
"Robert," said Tils spouse, •'fa'her
writes me that he is going to set a
typewriter. What's the best kind, do
you thing?"
"Well," he replied unthinginkly, "I
like them about twenty,"-with soft
brown eyes."—Boston Transcript.
F*unr
i
mi
<g—rtfc—vrvs )\\ ^
corn to fatten s'notes, and all his hens
| are laying eggs, and he should dance
ott buoyant legs.
ANDKEW AND 1MOGENE
(By Ko« rumeraon)
The Gist of It.
An amateur play was being staffed
and Smith had the traditional single
line: "My lord, the carriage waits
without."
He had been carefully drilled and
thought he was letter perfect until,
Just before going on, he was seized
with an attack of stage fright, Dash-
ing onto the state, he bellowed:
"My God! The taxi's outside:"—
American Legion Weekly,
Help! Help!
A small boy stood on a bridge
ing into the water and crying.
"What's the matter, son?" a
a kindly policeman.
"I had a t-t-ticlut to the rn-m-i
its and it fell int»> the river."
"Oh, that's all right," consoled
cop. "I'll buy you another."
"T-y-yes. b-b-l-m it was in
b-b-bn >ther's p-p-pocket."—- A met
Legion Weekly.
gn z -
sked
nuv-
the
toy
loan
Agricultural Achievement.
"I don't believe these gentlemen
farmers tvvr make ;>■ >' money out of
it," r'-marked Brown.
"Oh, 1 don't know-." objected Smith.
"They say Jolmsi.n makt s a good deal
of money out at his country place."
"Is that so? What, does he raise?"
"Oh, he's conservative. He doesn't
raise much—but he always seems to
know just when to call." American
Legion Weekly.
RIPPLING RHYMES
tllj Halt Mason.)
(fop;righted by tleoige Mitthew Adams)
FREE FOR ALL
America Is not menaced by any-
thing half so much as by the Indif-
ference of the citizens to public ques-
tions.—Omaha Bee.
An admiral "called down" by a
former marine! Yet that is the size
of it in this glorious republic, where
the poorest boy may become presi-
dent if he gets enough votes.—Port-
land Oregonlan.
The proposal to give Ireland a k 0
seems to us to be carrying the prin-
ciple of reprisals a bit too far.—Co-
lumbia Record.
A music publisher is quoted as say-
ing that there is still a demand for
old songs, hut whether drinking songs
are included deponent sayeth not.—
Boston Transcript.
Simmering Summer.
Again the summer is at hand, when
talk of crops will fill the land. The
farmer, with a gloomy frown, will
grumble when he goes to town, and
say the weather then on deck is ruin-
ous to him, by heck. And if I greet
him with a smile, and nay, "Such
weather's worth our while," he'll look
upon the smiling morn, and say, "It's
kilting all the corn. If we don't soon
have lots of rain, our season's toil
will be in vain." And if I praise the
passing wind, he shows how grievous-
ly It's sinned. "That zipping, ever-
lasting breeze has spoiled my crop of
early peas. Doggone the wind, that
never stops: we need cairn weather
for the crops." "There W-8 a heavy
dew last night," perchance I'll say,
with weird delight; "and when I
looked around at dawn It seemed that
diamonds strewed the lawn." Where-
at the fatmer makes reply, "The sum-
mer nights should all be dry. The
dew that makes you feel so gay has
spoiled for me nine tor,a of hay. Said
hay was drenched, as though by rain;
the sight of it gives me a pain." And
thus all summer do we hear the hus-
bandman's predictions drear; what-
ever weather is on tap gives willies to
the mournful chap; and yet when
autumn comes along his bank ac-
count Is good and strong his barns
are full of priceless oats, and he has
"Andrew," said lmogene just after
dinner, "sit down here for a moment.
1 want to talk to you seriously."
"All right." said Andrew, "but Jet
me pitch rny four balls before the
game commences. I have never known
business so dull. I have less money In
the bank today than I ever had in my
life. If Dalmation dogs were selling
three for 4 ruckle I couldn't buy tho
smallest spot on one. I haven't seen
a dollar for »o long that I haven't
j sense enough to tell how many cents
at« In one.''
"That's too bad!" said lmogene,
seating herself on his chair arm. "W'e
will torgH what 1 was going to say,
for, as you anticipated, I wanted to
talk to you about money for summer
cloth-«.
"What do I care for pesky clothe-
when my boy is in financial straits?
Don't you remember how much fun
we used to have when we first-came to
the city and were buying the house?
We didn't have a dollar to call out-
own, honey, and yet we were happy.
"Do you remember that summer
lust before the house was paid for
when 1 made myself a dress out of
the Mexican drawn work table cloth
that Aunt Melissa gave us for a wed-
ding present? You said it was the
prettiest dross I ever had.
"Then that fall I had no clothe- and
you had no money and I dug tip a.
my\.lothes from the winter before
and you helped me rip them up and
we took them out in tho kitchen and
i pressed them and you burned your
hand on a hot iron. Do you remem-
ber? Jt was the first time 1 ever
heard you swear.
"Then I made the clothes nil over
after 1 had gone down town and
snooped around to see what the new
Styles Wero like and you thought 1
looked just fine.
"Now, If we did all that once, we
can do It again. If we had fun but of
it then, we can get fun out of it now,
and while the last season's styles will
not be easy to change, that will make
It all the more fun.
"Another thing! I do not need any
vacation this summer. I do not nee.,
any rest or anything like that. What
do I do? .lust bum around, play
bridge, read and enjoy myself. Y011
are the working end of the family and
as you really need your vacation, you
find out where some of the fellows at
the club are going and go,away to the
seashore with some of them for a
week. Tou need the rest. Just go
away and forget about money and
expensive wives and things of that
kind and have a good time.
"I can put in the time here at home
fixing up my clothes for the winter,
and I will have plenty to do and wlH
not be lonesome, and—"
"Stop that!" exclaimed Andrew,
looking at her steadily. "I don't mind
your heaping them on my head, but
some of that last shovel-full rolled off
and went down my neck."
"What do you mean?" asked ImO-
gene innocently.
"Well/' sai^ Andrew uncertainly,
"if you are innocent, you deserve th«
money, and if you are guilty—well—•
er—if you are guilty, I do not know
but what you deserve it more. I have
over-told my hard luck story, I guess."
He took out his wallet. "How much
will see you through?"
"Why, Andrew!" she said happily,
"it will take a hundred dollars!"
If he had seen her grin as she left
the room with her spoils he would
have said:
"Guilty as charged!"
DAILY HOROSCOPE
(Copjriahud. 1921. by the McCJvr* N«*rs-
paper Syndicate.)
Friday, Juno 24, 1921.
Astrologers r"»il th e in unfortunate
day. Neptune, Venus, the Sun and Mars are
nil In malt fie aspect.
It Is a day when evil report nuiy disturb
business and cause apprcb asleo, for Nep-
tune holds-.sinister sway that Cp«ii9 tli»
mind to fear. ,
It Is not u favomble rule under which to
niaq« journeys hy sea and there may
many b« ' ting arcldents at resorts.
Although this Is not • favorable planetary
government for •tiauner hotels, there is to l>o
a late and profitable set&on, if the Stars are
read r.i isht.
Worn-a should !e encti d ngly circumspect
wM!# this coi,figuration privat's.
Thtre should ho 110 l:nt■ -«:• *•) In nmlters ,
that carry future responsibilities, liu-lnoss
should not be begun Under this direction of
the st;.',*.
V.'erm n w ho se< k favors or portions
should <h' ..y ai y ; t on un!li(ta>r, for their
clalr.,'i W .U 1. .l.e tittle Impression.
Tl'iie is a >■» ! read ne forecasting
tfeiihl'' fur I1I11I1 v 'V<n.1'."ot officials. Thu
ire -: 11 ■ ■ 1, t may fae 11 new problem.
o ; rr* •< may he c. slly proovkeil when
M ■':• in evil aspect and *bile the sinister
\,r •• of this 1 huiet Is not rtrong tod»y it
tv , , t> w ;*<■ la aveld dhacnslons.
Much building, so long prophesied, will be
carried en In the next month, but this Is
not a fortunate day for starting construc-
tion cf any sari.
t'hanges in the personnel nf labor lead-
ership are so strongly prt>««ed by the stars
that sensational developments appear to be
witested.
Heat will be unusual during next month, If
the stars are rend aright, and there will be
ninny thunder storms.
Pirsofis tvhese blrthdate It Is have ths
forecast of rather a strenuous year In * hleh
they should be cautious In all busbiess af-
fairs
Children born On this day may be nere-
ots and fond of ewltemsnt. These subject*
<>f Cancer ar» usually greatly Influenced by
their surroundings. Their principal ruler to
the Moon.
QUESTION BOX
<3 Does the Marine Ilsnd give publk)
concerts during the summer?—C. B.
A. The Marine Band will give a pufclW
Concert in the White House grounds every
Ustnritay nfternoon dining the summer. In
addition to this, It hns a schedule of thlrty-
fuur evening concerts tlmt will be given In
various Washington parks, beginning June
2 and ending September 29. ,
Q Con a Clerman officer come Into the
t'nlted States?-U L. a.
A. The State Department says that the
American Commissioner In Berlin does ee»
have the power to grant a vise to n passport
Issued such an officer by Germany. Such a
matter would he referred to headquarters In
America and each Individual case hnesti-
mated.
Q When did chess originate?—T. W It.
A. Chess Is generally believed to base
originated In India at least 3000 El. C. In
Its primitive form It was called chatnrnngm,
and seemed to have spread enstwnrd before
It came west. Owing to the better preser-
vation of records In China, that country has
often been credited with Its Invention.
BRINGING UP FATHER
By GEORGE McMANUS
1
TRCVW UP VOUR. ^
MlTTb AN' BE: <5UKK
ABOUT IT I WAIST
"TOUR COIN
1 MEAN
e>Ot>lNE«bt> - I JUt)T
frEAT UP THE
JANITOR - AN' IF
^00 DON'T-
I HAVEN'T
AN\ COIN
WHAT-THE TALL ^
C>LONO <,(JV OOWN
VTAIR^ 0
DAT't)
4Uv:
IK
t>lT DOWN • HAVE. A T^OKE
WHILE I CALL UP THE OTHER
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Ingram, Charles W. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 218, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1921, newspaper, June 24, 1921; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth468505/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.