The Lancaster Herald. (Lancaster, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
; m
mi
THE LANCASTER HERALD
m
m mm—
Ws:
■ iU
—
—
THE MARKETS
■i
v%f-'
ky--*
f
Supplied by" th<» Rnrwu of Market^,
Department of Agriculture, Washington,
P. C.
LONDON CROWDED
K THOUS-
GATHER EARLY.
j
HUMANITY.
MAKES TALK
Oouple
V
» Commended for
ce for the Country During
World War.
mW,-
Princess Mary, only.
* of King George and Queen
r, was married Tuesday to Vis-
t ■ Lascelles -with ail the pomp
dignity befitting a royal wedding,
e-ceremony began' in Westmins-
Ab-bey at 11:30 o’clock and soon
reafter the couple were pronouOc-
_jPfcad wife( while the ..chimes
Westminster rang out the happy
and 'vast crowds gave tumul-
T-.
voyage to gain
mm
:-v\
V'-V-
us greetings.
.scene the ceremony with-
the historic walls of the abbey
one of impressive grandeur,
the King and Queen and the
royal household participating
with all ranks represented in the
assemblage, while outside
.abbey enthusiastic popular hom-
was given the bridal party.
The long-awaited day found Lon-
crowded with excursionists from
parts of the isles and the Conti-
Americans also were in evi-
hundreds having made the
‘ a glimpse of the great
function.
ly motors and carriages bearing
holders were permitted to pass
i police lines. The conveyances
down at the abbey doors streams
gporgcmsly gowned women, myr-
■ of diamonds, sapphires and
precious stones flashing from
tiaras, necklaces and bracelets,
escorts were resplendent in
dress or the velvet breeches,
silit stockings and three-cor-
hats of court regalia. It was
>km of beauty and elegance.
Duckingham Palace, and a
later about the abbey,
guards took up their posi-
forming a line in front of the
5
mediately after the ceremony
the archbishop of Canterbury,
ph couple, saying in part:,
mb probable that no daugh-
p a reigning King was ever until^
married in the abbey. Certain -
marriage ever occurred here
conditions quite like yours,
war-time partly created them,
of you in the grim war
found new opportunities and
them. When the fiber of Brit-
thood was being tested day
in the shell-swept trench and
hillside, you, my brother,
:h more than stand the test,
testing, such equipment can
good its outcome in the quieted
years. No call of that kind, no
ity on that scale, please God,
Come again in your lifetime. To
who are worthy cf it, peace,
brings its privileges in central
Our central homes can be-
on English life an inestimable
If the fierce light which beatq
such a home reveal there what is
pure, the gain is far-..
; it spreads. There lies the
‘ty for both; you are going
use it.”
bfte
L vv.
WASHINGTON, D. C., February 27,
1922.—Quotations for week ending Feb.
25:
BUTTEp:—Markets barely steady.
Supplies of all grades liberal and buy-
ers operating cautiously. Price® on ail
markets practically the same apd there
is very little intermearket trading.
Closing prices 92 score: New York,
Philadelphia and Boston 36c; Chicago
37c. * ,
COTTON:—Spot cotton prices ad-
vanced 32 points during the week,
closing at 17.50 per lb. New York
March futures np 32 points, closing at
18.50c.
HAY:—Market dull and generally low-
er during the week. Good grades alfalfa
firm but low grades of all hay in poor
demand. ■ .Receipts about normal. Quoted
February 24: No. 1 alfalfa Kansas City
$1.9,50,’' ^Chicago 22.50. No. 1 prairie
Kansas City $10.25, Chicago $15.
FEED:—Markets firm. Cottonseed
meal .strong. on reported export inquiry,,
■Western quotations • for wheat feeds un-
changed. Gluten feed offerings . good,
demand,. good. ' Hominy feed production
light, demand fair. Alfalfa meal apd
beet pulp steady. Stocks and receipts
good, demand generally fait. Quoted
February 24: Bran $25, middlings $22.50,
flour middlings $27.50 Minneapolis; 'white
hominy feed $22 'St, Louis $27.23,
Philadelphia-; 36 per cent cottonseed
rheal $37.50 Memphis, alfalfa meal $17.25
Kansas City; gluten feed $32.65 Chicago.
LIVE STOCKS AND MEATS;—Chi-
cago hog prices showed gains of 60-70c
per 100 lbs. Better grades of beef
steers mostly steady while the lower
grades advanced 15-25c, Butcher cows
and heifers advanced 10-25c-; stockers
and feeders up 15-25c, Veal cAlves
mostly $1 higher. Fat sheep and lambs
advanced generally 25-50c; yearlings
50-75c; • feeding - lambs practically un-
changed! February 25 Chicago prices:
Hogs, top $11.10 (one load), bulk of
sales $10.50-11; medium and good beef
steers $7.35-9.15; butcher cows and
heifers $4-7.85; - feeder steers $5.50-7.50;
light and medium weight veal calves
$7.50-12; fkt lambs $13.50-$16,25; feed-
ing lambs $11.60-13.50; yearlings $10.75
to $14.50; fat ewes $5.75-9.25. Stocker
and feeder shipments from 12 important
markets during the week ending Feby.
17 were: Cattle and calves 51,577; hogs
12,703; sheep . 22,644. .The general trend
of eastern .wholesale fresh meat prices
was upward. Lamb advanced $1-2;'
pork loins and mutton $1-3; veal prac-
tically unchanged; beef ranged from
50c higher on medium grades to 50c on
good. February 24 prices good grade
meats: Beef $12.50-13.50; veal $16-20:
mutton $14.-18: light pork loins $19-23;
heavy loins $13-19,
GRAIN:—New high points on crop
were recorded during the week, in-
fluenced by higher foreign markets, good
export sales, and bullish crop reports.
Weakness on 21st and 23rd due mainly
to breaking of drouth in southwest but
market more than recovered and closed
at good gains for the week. Closing
prices in Chicago cash, market No. 2
red winter wheat $1.44; No. 2 hard
winter wheat $1.42; No. 2 mixed corn
62c; No. 2 yellow corn 62c: No. 3 white
oats 37c. Average farm prices: No. 2
mixed corn in central Iowa 49 l-2c; No.
1 dark northern wheat in central North
Dakota $1.36 l-4c: No. 2 hard winter
wheat In central Kansas $1.25. For the
week. Chicago May wheat up 6 l-2c,
closing at $1.47; Chicago May corn t
l-4c closing at 68 3-4c; Minneapolis
May wheat up 4 l-2c closing at $1.47
1-2; Kansas City May wheat up 4 1-2
closing at $1.33 3-8 Winnfpeg May
wheat up 6c at $1.43 3-4.
STATES LOSE IN THEIR
RATE MAKING FIGHT
FRANCE AND BRITAIN
NOW IN AGREEMENT
Texas News
BARRIERS BELIEVED TO BE RE-
MOVED BY THIS RULING OF
COURT.
GREAT THINGS EXPECTED TO
COME FROM MEETING AT
BOULOGNE,
Georgetown will vote on $110,000
paving bonds March 25.
YOUNG GIRL KILLS
MAN IN COURTROOM
IT OUTLINES
SHIP SUBSIDY PLAN
*»V
Tells Congress Of Help That Must
Be Extended This Branch. I
Washington —The administration
. plan for Government aid for the
American Merchant Marine was pre-
sented to Congress. Tuesday by Presi-
dent Hording with the declaration
that the influence of the United
States in world councils is ‘ sure to
be measured by that unfailing stand-
ard which is found in a nation’s
merchant marine.”
The President detailed tb the two
Houses assembled in Joint session
the war-time creation of America’s
great, tonnage—an experimental ven-
ture, aS he" described it—and then
he added:
■ “Having failed at such enormous
cost, I bring you the proposal which
contemplates the return to private
initiative and private enterprise, aid-
ed, to a conservative success, where-
- in we are safeguarded against the
jpromotion of private greed, and do
fiot discourage the hope of profitable
investment which underlies all sue*
jeessful endeavor.”
Katy To Put Men Back.
SmitliYiUe, Texas.—Notice has been
here that effective this week
the forces recently laid off in
Waco, Texas.-—Just after she had
been called to the stand Friday
morning as complaining witness, Miss
Marcie Matthews, 17 years old, shot
and killed J. S. Crosslin, who was
on trial charged with criminal as-
sault.
The shooting took plpce in the
Fifty-Fourth District! Court room.
Three shots were fired by the girl
from an automatic pistol, which she
had in the left pocket of her coat,
and which she is thought to have
withdrawn with her left hand, trans-
ferring the weapon, covered with a
handkerchief, to her right band.
Crosslin had attempted to rise from
his chair when the first bullet struck
him in the stomach. The second
shot hit his right arm below the
elbow, while the third entered his
back on the right side, under the
shoulder blade, as he attempted to
turn around.
The shooting began soon after the
defendant had been formally arraign-
ed, and before a word of testimony
had been taken.
In the Sheriff’s office, where Miss
Matthews was seen by newspaper
men soon after the tragedy, the girl
said:. ■
"Ke ruined my health, prevented
me from getting an education and
disgraced me, but he will never ruin
another girl.”
Crosslin’s wife arrived just as the
body was being taken away, and an
affecting scene oceured when she
viewed the body.
The girl’s mother is dead and she
and her family are now living at
Rosebud, thirty-seven miles south of
' Waco.
Washington, D. O.—There now re-
mains no barrier between the State
Railroad Commission- and the Inter-
state Commerce Commission respect-
ing the latter’s rate making authority
under the transportation act of 1920
as a result of the Supreme Court’s
decision handed down Monday in the
■Wisconsin and New York passenger
irate cases, as viewed by State Com-
mission representatives and members
of Congress. The court’s opinion
given construed Section 13 of the
commerce act having to do with the
preference, prejudice or discrimina-
tion against interstate commerce,
[and Section 15-A„ dealing with the
per cent return to the railroads,
upholding both provisions and saying
that control of Congress exercised
^through the Interstate Commerce
’Commission is primarily for the pur-
pose of preventing injustice by un-
reasonable discriminatory rates
;against persons and localities, and
;that the only provision of the law
'■that required rates should be reason-
lable is in the sense of furnishing
adequate compensation for the par-
ticular service performed.
" The opinion is deemed to have
[gone farther than the court went in
[the Minnesota, the Shreveport, or
the Illinois cases, and harmonizes
;the conditions to the terms of the
new law. The court pointed out that
‘the paramount function of the Inter-
state Commerce Commission is to
maintain interstate commerce, and
’.that in doing so any lap of this
function which touches the rate struc-
ture of a State wherein a discrimina-
tion against interstate commerce
‘exists, was merely an incidental ap-
plication of the Federal power.
Th© opinion bolds that the Inter-
state Commission attempted no sup-
ervision of intrastate rates as such
in the cases at bar. But that its
function was that of making it pos-
sible for interstate commerce to be
maintained, and was, therefore, an
ucidental exercise of .power as ap-
plied to the States. The effective
control of one must embrace some
control of the other, said the opinion,
and the exercise of the incidental
power was cited as in the Shreve-
port case.
There is remaining before the court
the Texas case which challenges not
only the provisions in this ruling
construed but virtually all of the es-
sential features of the transporta-
tion act. Chief issues in the Texas
case are the exercise of power over
State rates and the application of
section 15-A, Texas claiming that in
application of the doctrine laid down
in the Shreveport case the Interstate
Commission and the railroads have
gone too far to strike down the
State rates. Freight rates of them-
selves were not involved in the two
opinions, but the principles announc-
ed by their court is deemed to apply
to rates fixed by the Federal Com-
mission- whether they be freight or
passenger. In the case of Wisconsin
the passenger fares were establish-
ed by legislation over which the
State Commission claimed no con-
trol, and in New York the passen-
ger fare in controversy was the re-
sult of a charter contract.
London.—Lloyd George's efforts at
Boulogne to repair the break in
policy between the French and Brit-
ish Governments and to create a new
Franco-British understanding that
will survive the mutual distrust
that has constantly grown between
the two nations since the armistice
were more significant than was ap-
parent on the surface.
The British Premier’s whole plea
to Poincare was based on the under-
lying theory that America must be
persuaded to partiepate ity the Genoa
economic and financial conference.
Failing such participation, there is
little hope for the restoration of
Europe. Consequently, Lloyd Geor-ge
impressed upon Premier Poincare
these facts: , •
1. An Anglo-French accord that
will remove the distaste of America
for entrance in the Genoa conference
must be created.
2. France must be prepared for a
policy of army reduction to enlist
America’s belief in her good faith.
In order to obtain such an agree-
ment, the Premier was forced to
concede certain points made by
Poincare, especially regarding Rus-
I sia and the German reparations, and
, to accede to the French request for
j guarantees to France in both in-
j stances.
Lloyd George agreed that the Anglo-
French pact would assume a recipro-
; cal character that would be attrac-
tive to the French people and would
! at once insure France’s safety and
permit a reduction in her standing
: army. •
In return, Premier Poincare prom-
ised -wholeheartedly the co-operation
of his Government at the Genoa gath-
ering.
Poincare expressed sympathy with
Lloyd George’s suggestion for a ten-
year military holiday in Europe,
provided an arrangement guarantee-
ing that such a pact would be kept
by all nations, could be made.
Lloyd George now hopes, it is un-
derstood. that the result .of his con-
ference with Poincare has establish-
ed Franco-British relations on «
solid footing.
LEGION HEAD WILL
• LOBBY FOR BONUS
TWO GIRLS KILLED;
YOUTH IS WONNDED
Washington—The American Legion
will use its influence to prevent de-
lay in the passage of the soldier
bonus bill.
Hanford MacNider, national com-
mander, of the legion, accompanied
by Dan* Steek, chairman of the le-
gion's national legislative committee,
will arrive in Washington this -week
to take personal charge of the le-
gion's activities.
They will seek an audience with
President Harding for the purpose
of putting before him the reasons
why the legion believes the • bonus
bill should be enacted now. They
are little concerned with the prob-
lem of how the money is to be ob-
tained. But they are insistent for
immediate action.
The legion’s move is designr-d to
check the growing sentiment in fae
vor of delaying the bill.
Plain view, Texas.—A lover’s quar-
rel between school children over a
ruby doublet ring resulted in the
death of Gladys Solomon, 15 year^
old, and Nell Umberson, 13, and the
expected death of Houston Upton,
18, in the Sunset community, thirty
LABOR STARTS WAR
ON VOLSTEAD ACT
Washington.—Repeal of the Vol-
stead act and substitution of a
measure permitting sale of light
wines and beer was urged by the
executive council of the American
Federation of Labor in a statement
miles east of Plain view, early Mon- which asks all citizens to join in a
day morning.
Misses Solomon and Umberson
were killed instantly in their bad at
the Umberson home. Upton was
found at the Sunset sehoolbouse with
a bullet wound in his body below-
the heart. He was found by his
father at daybreak and is ngt ex-
pected to live,
Miss Vera Wilson. 14, was in the
same bed with Misses Solomon and
Umberson when they were killed.
Walnut Springs Votes Water Bonds.
Walnut Springs, Texas—By a sub-
stantial majority, the citizens of
Walnut Springs recently voted to
issue $50,000 bonds for the purpose
of installing, a first-class waterworks
system.
campaign with this objective.
The statement denounced the Vol-
stead act as “a social and moral
failure” and “dangerous breeder of
discontent and contempt for all
law.”
The council previously announced
its intention to participate in. the
congressional elections through a
nonpartisan campaign comjpittee
which will indorse and oppose can-
didates of major political parties or
enter independents if that course is
considered most effective.
Woman Bound; Gold Is Taken.
New York.—Two bandits bound
! and gagged Mrs. Antona Melenchulk
| in her home in the Bronx Friday and
Abe Katy shops will be put back to took $793 in gold from a bag tied
■work. More than fifty men were cut
off Fob. 1.
Secrecy Surrounds Bonus Discussions
Washington.—Secrecy now sur-
at her knee.
President Nominates Postmasters.
j Washingtoon.— Texas postmasters
nominated: D. G. Melton, Alien; N.
B. Warner, Bells; Ora L. Young,
Jakehamon; John H. Sharbutt, Lue-
ders; George F. Bates. Lyons; B. F.
Robey, Coleman; Edward F. Glaze,
Goliad.
Immigration Law Extended One Year.
Washington.—The House has pass-
ed and sent to the Senate a resolu-
tion extending until June 30, 1923,
the 3 per cent restrictive immigra-
tion law.
rounds deliberations of the Republi- ' Dec. 30. reopened for business Mon-
members of the House Ways and ; <jay after reorganization. Depositors
|p| can m<
Keans Committee, who are wrestling wjh be paid in full, it was announced"
the problem of soldier bonus.
Bank At Coleman Is Reopened.
Coleman. Texas —The First Nation-
el Bank of Coleman, which suspended
Quts British Parliament.
>B.—Sir Eric Geddes, former
of the Admiralty and later*
of Transport, has formally
his seat is the House of
He returns to business
School Apportionment Is Announced.
Austin, Texas —The State Board of
Education has decided to make an
apportionment of $2 for each scholas-
tic on March 1. The per capita for
this year is 712, and this apportion-
ment leaves $9.60 yet to be paid.
C. W. Morse Under Indictment.
Washington—Indictments against
Charles W. Morse, New- York ship-
builder; his three sons, Benjamin,
Harry and Ervin; Collin H Livings-
ton of Washington, president of the
Virginia Shipbuilding corporation and
seven others were returned Monday
by the Federal grand jury, which
has been investigating the war-time
transactions of Morse and some of
his associates with the Shipping
Board. Several others ara named in
the indictments.
Martial Law Ends Wednesday.
Mexia, Texas—General Order No.
10. issued from military headquarters
here, states that martial law will be
raised Wednesday morning at 6
o'clock.
Red Cross Spends Nearly $10,000,000
Washington.—The American Red
Cross spent $9,872,000 last year In
assisting World War disabled veter-
ans. John Barton Payne, national
chairman announces.
Russia Observes Red Anniversary
Moscow.—Soviet Russia Sunday
celebrated the fourth anniversary of
the Red army. Leon Trotzky, the
War Minister, in the Red square of
the Kermlin, reviewed the Moscow
garrison.
Many corn planters were started in
De Witt County this week.
Former Governor Th
Campbell of Palestine,
last week on departmental
declaring that his visit had,
to do with politics.
The city streets of Hempstead are
being surfaced with gravel and country
roads are being graded.
* * *
Jackson County this weak received
4,000 gallohs of cattle dip, which will
be used in the tick eradication work.
The trustees of the Breslau School,
seven miles above Hallettsville, in La-
vaca County, have decided to erect a
220,000 school building.
The parent-teacher associations of
the various schools at Palestine ’irf)
beautifying the school grounds by
planting trees, shrubs and tlowers.
Five thousand acres of land between
Robstown and Calallqn will soon be
Irrigated and a water supply provided
for .Robstown at a cost of $300,000.
Governor Neff has appointed B. W.
King of Graham to be district attorney
of the thirtieth district to fill the un-
expired term of H. R. Wilson, resign-
ed.
A total of 466 cases or appeals have
been filed on the dockets of the couri
of criminal appeals of Texas since the,
court convened at Austin October 1,
1921.
The attorney general has approved
a $100,000 issue of stTe'et improvement
bonds of the town of Mercedes, the
bonds maturing serially and bearing 6
per cent interest.
An issue of $223,000 Collin County
road bonds of district No. 8 has been
approved by the attorney general’s
department, the bonds bearing 5^4 per
cent and maturing serially.
A meeting of Mount Pleasant citi-
zens has been called for the purpose
of launching a drive to vote new bonds
for the construction of a new water
works and sewerage system for Mount
Pleasant.
There were 2270 persons killed or
Injured in railroad accidents in Texas
during 1921, a report of the railroad
commission just issued shows. In 1919
there were 3223 killed or injured, and
In 1920 a total of 2847.
The fair weather during the past
week has enabled farmers of Brazos
County to make fine progress with the
work of the new crop. Nearly all the
corn land has been broken and some
few began planting this week.
The next legislature will determine
whether Texas will continue to co-
operate with the federal government
In constructing and maintaining a com-
prehensive system of highways in the
state, W. W. McCrory, member of the
state highway commission, declared
this week.
The average cost per capita for
maintenance and support of the elee-
mosynary Institutions of Texas for Jan-
uary was $23.23, according to the
monthly report of the state Emard of
control. The average cost for the pr
ceding five months was $22.52. T01
expenditures for the month amounte
to $237,557.
The business section of San Augus-
tine will have concrete curbs and hard-
surfaced streets. Work on the king’s
highway is progressing nicely, and the
street connects up with the highway
through the county. Upon the com-
pletion of this highway there will be
a campsite provided for tourists,
There will also be arrangements made
to show the travelers the places of
historic interest in and around San Au-
gustine, it being among the oldest and
most historic of Texas cities.
Governor Neff has signed ’
clamation permitting the
Texas to obtain Federal
promotion of the welfare ana
of maternity and infancy.
- * .
At the annual conclave
Great Council, Independent '
Redmen, held in Austin,
was ^elected as the pi!,,
ing the next annual meetii
The
State Board of
given notice of opening
March 1 to supply autoi
■ a
aboul
her plates and seals for
. contract will aggregate
000.
* • * >>’2j
r.-, .'yi
Governor Neff receives a
port from the penile
the distribution of fo
on Feb. 16 having been
he said was a slight
previous totals.
■ * * *
The Court of Criminal
affirmed the so-called
case, thereby assessing
vears in the peniten
Byrd Jackson Cochran,
swindling in Stonewall
Mi
,
:JBk
* * *
There are -Ity-five pe
.he Pasteur treatment
Pasteur Institute as
igainst hydrophobia,
ber four were -bitten by
the other by dogs and ■
■ -v- um
. .
Governor Neff has
tion papers from the
Missouri for the re
if Fred Hendrix, said
souri Executive to
Sedalia to answer a
ler. ;
Governor Neff has
King of Graham to be
oey of the Thirtieth 1
the unexpired trem ol
resigned. Bert King ol
first appointed Distri
jlined the position.
Governor Neff anno
that the dissolution t
injunction by the.Ga^
Civil Appeals had .
feet on the conte
to tide the system <
year’s crop is made.
* •• ?
There was sno
Df Criminal Appeals
habeas corpus case
ter, from Smith O
tacking the validity
-egulating the speed
on public highways
* * -»
The State Highway
its regular mort’
week worked on
out of designations o
several. -etJtfntiesS'vFor
in xnTany months
tions for aid for
'A 1
> ,, 9
• * *
Money once
permanent University
ed to the credit of
not by a subsequent
lslature be withdrawn
a special University
the Attorney Gene
* • -''A
The Goliad chapter of the Benevo-
lent War Risk Society sent $1,781 to
the attorney general at Austin this
week. The money was raised in the
country some time ago for the pur-
pose of helping to erect the American
Legir > hospital at Kerrville for tuber-
cular soldiers.
Final work in organizing twenty of
,fhe largest wheat producing counties
of Texas into the Texas Farm Bureau
Wheat Growers’ Association will be
accomplished within five weeks and
at that time the association will have
secured 3.000,000 bushels of wheat, it
was declared by G. H. Alford, who has
returned to Dallas from a meeting at
Amarillo.
Dr. H. T. Musselman of Dallas, edi-
tor of the Texas School Journal, was
appointed by Governor Neff as the
personal representative of the gov-
ernor of Texas to study the school sys-
tem of California and report that
which he may find which, in his opin-
ion, will benefit the school system of
Texas. Dr. Musselman will go to Cali-
fornia In the near future.
has ruled.
; ..
Alleging that he Is
restrained of his libert:
an attorney of Randa
filed an application
habeas corpus in the
nal Appeals. Ball
sum of $500 and the
down for hearing on
• *• .
A preliminary move 1
International A Great
road out of receive
last week when aj
with the Railroad
receiver for a valuation
betterments made on
the commission last.vl
erty. /;
* • •
Under an agreeme:
officials of the Missoi
Texas Railway Comi
of Smithville, the rc
will consolidate itb
quarters at .Smithyi
move its shops from
Waco, according to
ney General T. L. B<
* * •
Charter amendments*
week by the Daniel
Brownwood specifically
the Institution has no.
and that it is not of
ed or maintained tor
pecuniary gain or p*
never be conducted or
pecuniary gain or profit.
County Superintendent George W.
Acton has been advised by the state
department of education of the award-
ing of $16,277 state educational aid to
fifty-four schools in Grayson Countjfc
The amounts to the different schools
vary from $117 to $8000, Mr. Actoq
said. All the schools qualifying rdi
ceived aid, Mr. Acton said, and tha
sums will in every case greatly
lieve the financial stringency some ot
the rural districts are suffering, es-
pecially as regards payments of teach-
ers’ salaries.
• • •
Governor Neff ha»
self a8 being gregtly
the conference held by
Mexia citizens last Saturday,
ing that the conference was a5
meeting.”
• • •'
The omission of tho
“In this case,” from tha
in an appeal in tha cas4
Gray from Wichtta^
dismissal of the
of Criminal Appeals
by Preaiding Judge
tsar
TM
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Tufts, Minnie Wetmore. The Lancaster Herald. (Lancaster, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1922, newspaper, March 3, 1922; Lancaster, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth542966/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lancaster Genealogical Society.