The Daily Herald. (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 163, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 22, 1913 Page: 2 of 4
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Revival at First Presbyterian Church.
COLLIER OF SAJI ANTONIO
WILL SUCCEED GILL.
! Miss Ellen Bowie has returned frogs (
a three week’s visit to Amarillo. /
O. Browne, the evangelist'1
■
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ESTABLISHED 1868
Citizens National Bank
Weatherford, Texas
Directors—G. A. Holland. C.C. Barthold. J. O. Tucker, Q. 8. White.
C. C. Little ton, Barney Holland, H. O. Barthold. _
I............ SAAA—»■«—
Pip
The Daily Herald
jpj. ■
Published every day except Sunday by
BIW-'-
m HERALD PUBLISHING CO.’Y
121 York Avenue
Altered at the Postoffico at Weather-
Kv.
lord, Texas, as second-class matter.
J. E. H. RAILEY, Business Mgr.
TELEPHONES:
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Southwestern 350 Independent 280-B
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE CITY
life r '
TUESDAY,*,JULY 22, 1918
WHAT KENNEDY HAS DONE.
is
" ■ If(V -
Thib tribute to A. M. Kennedy
from the Honey Grove Signal:
■ “A. M.;K.ennedy has made the fight
against tyiiendment No. 18. He has
made a'great fight, and if the amend-
ment te defeated the defeat will be due
principally to bis . efforts. Whatever
anybtidy. may say of Milt Kennedy,
everybody must admit that he’s the
greatest fighter in the state. When
Kennedy was ousted from the speak-
ership; of the Legislature five years
ago he told this writer he would be
back at the neat session of the Leg-
islature fighting his enemies with new
strength. We didn’t believe him, but
he came back Just the same with a
big majority to bis credit. His health
failed him and he moved to a south-
western county. He had been there
scarcely,a year wh$n he was elected
to the Legislature. Kennedy is now a
victim of tuberculosis and is but a
shadow of his former self, but he’s
still scrapping. At the Press Associa-
tion two moatbs ago he said he was
then making a light for bis life, and,
frail as he was. he declared he was
going to win. But while fighting for
hla life he has also made a great fight
against the adoption of a oonslttu-
tional amendment.”
Milt Kennedy has his faults, along
| is no doubt sincere in his opinions,
I said to the Herald a day or two be-
jfore the election! "I know Milt Ken-
nedy; I know he is a man who will
fight you fair or foul; I know there is
much In him I do not approve, hpt
nevertheless I cannot help liking him,
and I am going to vote as he writes
—against the amendments.” The sad-
dest portion of the defeat of the I
amendments Is that the very class of
people who would have been most
benefited by the bonding features, are
the ones who voted strongest against
the whole number. These are the fay-
knows what happened after this sol-
emn declaration made by Postmaster
General Burleson. From first to last
the conduct of Congressman Callaway
in this patronage issue hae been ad-
mirable. He has not bent the knee
that thrift might follow fawning, but
stood squarely on his rights as the
representative of the people of his
district, and as their direct spokes-
man at all .times.”
♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
THE PEOPLE’S FORUM.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Lancaster Issues Challenge.
Editor Herald:
There is on deposit in the hands of
the cashier of the Daily Herald $2r<
which will be turned over to the first
person who will bring mq a book with
the endorsement or stamp of approval
of the Socalist party and in which
book can be found one line, one sen-
tence, one syllable that inveighs
against the Christian religion of any
denomination.
ed him in prison, he got
made a bond. The men who went his
bond were present before I put him ,
in prison and were offering to go his
bond, and I was offering to receive
them on the bond and he refund to
allow them to make the bond, saying
at the time that he wanted to be put
in jail, that thereby be would make
friends for his cause. /
1 believe in free speech and in
free press as much so as does the
editor, but it would have been much
fairer for the editor to have: made
some inquiry outside of his Socialist
informers before making the uiflvar-
ranted attack upon the officers of the
city.
I have filed complaint againBt Mr.
Loe charging him with obstructing
orie of the sidewalks, which Is a part
of the public streets, believing that a
man can unnecessarily obstruct a
public sidewalk by hiB own body In
connection with the bodies of others
acting in collusion with him as ef-
fectively within the meaning of the
law as he could by placing a vehicle
or any other obstruction across the
sidewalk in such manner as to un-
necessarily and completely obstruct it
so as to prevent the free travel there-
B. R. BARKER,
City Policeman.
W. H. LANCASTER.
Mr. Barker Answers Editorial.
To the Public:
In reply to the uncaleld tor attack
mers. They voted heavily against^the upQB the offlcer8 of the city,
very idea they and their organizations ela0ve to the arreBt by me o{ one
have been preaching and advocating w|Hllun Loe> 1 wlgh to Btate the factB
which are as follows:
with the rent of us. But he’s all the
tor these many years. But when good
men, such as our friend just quoted,
stray off after false prophets, what
else can be expeoted? There will be1
a day of reckonlhg, and Texas men !
will blush to think they followed and l
acted upon the distorted writings of i
men with the stamp of the grafter and
political shyster branded upon them.
-1-*—
I am.fin-officer of the city of Weath
erford and I a munder oath to do what
I can toward the enforcement of all
the laws, and I have always endeav-
ored to do my duty without fear or
favor.
The city has an ordinance forbid-
ding the unnecessary obstruction of
the public square or any street with-
Conditions in Mexico, according ttojin the city by any substance or ma-
press dispatches, are rapidly ap-j terial in any manner whatever so as
prooching a crisis In that much-trou- ‘to present free travel thereon. When
bled republic. The rebel forces seem i discovered Mr. Loe, he was standing
to have occupied nearly all, if not'on a goods box on the edge of the
not >on
quite all the strategic positions In the 'sidewalk and was speaking to a crowd
country and are harassing the Huerta! standing on the sidewalk. The speak-
gvernment so severely as that it is ( er had so placed his box and himself
questionable whether that desperado as to induce the crowd to crowd In
and assassin can last more than a few on the sidewalk rather than out on
weeks longer. Conditions in the cap- the large public square; if the speak-
ital where the despot and traitor pre-'er had faced out towards the public
side are rapidly nearing the point of square rather than in towards the
being unbearable, and unless there is building, the crowd who desired to
quick relief, actual suffering will hear him and entourage him would no
follow. The disturbance seems tp be doubt have gone out on the public
more widespread and violent than at square where there would have been
any time in the history of that unhap- 'no unnecessary obstruction. The
py country, save perhaps in the days'crowd on the sidewalk between the
of Dias when that ingrate undermined speaker and the building was in front
on.
Gave Dinner in New Jersey.
When in Weatherford a few mioliths
ago, Isaac A. Hall, son-in-law of J. S.
Smith, was tendered a smoker by the
local Elks club, and after Mr. Hall’s
return to Paterson, N. J., some weeks
later, he returned the compliment by
a dinner to his brother Elks there.
Of this affair the Paterson Morning
Call printed a column and a half ac-
count, of which the following is part:
“Isaac A. Hall, the host^ called it a
‘little’ ‘ send-bff to his brother Elks,
but everybody else present declared it
was the greatest affair they had ever
attended in or outside of this vicinity;
The invitations read that it was to be
a ’dinner,’ but the thirty-three guests
were made to feel that it was a sort
of festival or mardi gras on a minia-
ture scale. At any rate, the event sur-
passed anything of a similar nature,
and it will be many a day before the
familiar Country Club grounds, just
across the Broadway bridge, will ever
present a similar scene again.
"PaBt Exalted Ruler Hall gave the
dinner to the officers and the house
committee of the Patetson lodge
in appreciation of the faithful manner
I
Continues with more and bigger bargains __
buyers from every section have come and found that here
the place to buy summer goods and “save money” 0_
goods are of the best and our prices the least. Come and
convinced that here is a genuine sale of high class goods
little money. We are selling —
20 yards extra good Bleaching...................... $1.00
20 yards extra good Cotton Checks...................$1.00
20 yards of extra good Gingham Checks. .............$1.00
1 dozen Hand Towels, that sell for 25c per pair, for.....$1.00
14 yards 10c and 12 1-26 Dress Lawns................$1.00
One lot l()c Dress Lawns, 20 yards for...............$^.00
One lot of 15c dainty Flaxons, now 10 yards for........ $1.00
Extra good unbleached Sheeting, per yard..............19c
I
SUMMER WAISTS
Beautiful dainty models, the $2.50 kind for........... $1.50
Beautiful models, the $2.00 kind for................... 98c
DRESSES
For Ladies’, Misses’ find Children—
$3.00 and $3.50 Ladies’ Dresses in fine Gingham, Tissue a^d
Linene materials, special......................... $1.98
Children’s $1,00 and $1,25 Dresses for.......;..........75c
Children’s 75c Dresses, special for..................... .50c
LACES AT CLEAN-UP PRICES
One lot of Laces worth to 75c and more, now per yards
only...........................................*
Lot 10c Laces at per yard ..,
Lot 7 l*2c Laces at per yard
assess .
,25c
. 7 l-2c
....5®
La Camilla Corset Special
the maa who had befriended and ele- 0f the Citizens National Bank and the jin which they stood by the ®*®lted
vated him. Eggs are said to be sell- sidewalk thereby obstructed is the 'ruler during the lodge years 1912-
ing In the capital at fifty cento each center of one of the busiest sections j which, by the way, was a year of hard
and less than three pounds of sugar 0f the city, and It was impossible for , work in putting the lodge back on
now
J sound financial-footing. The exalted
KSfc
>r-.
Signal says, and then some. Kennedy
la a persistent and consistent fighter,
an adroit parliamentarian—the best,
we believe. In Texas, and be not only
{ighta gamely but scientifically with
every blow touching a tender spot/tnat
in time becomes raw. We have agreed
with Kennedy on some things and dis-
agreed with him on many. But we've
not seen the day since we’ve known
him well tbat we haven't respected
his courage, gamonbaa and, above all.
hla unswerving loyally to-his friends.
—Denton Record and Chronicle.
“Nothing succeeds like success.” It
la to wonder what kind of tune would
have been sung bad Kennedy lost In
hhi fight against the amendments, the
measures that he. as a member of thp
f legislature, voted and spoke for, and
which, before the campaign opened,
Kennedy wanted to work for, to write
and apeak for. If the State University
managers had been willing to employ
A. M. Kennedy, there Is no doubt that
this political mountebank would have
been found working on the aide of the
amendments. But he was not so em-
ployed and Kennedy started a cam-
paign of misrepresentation and abuse
that rang the state over. The voters
and taxpayers of Texas will pay for
this man’s duplicity, mark these
* words. They who follow false proph-
ets In any age must pay the price in-
curred.
In saying this the Herald Is hot a
bring eight pesos, or four dol-' the people to pass along this sidewalk----
lare. In American coin. In plain words j i noticed several ladies, who were ruler of that year felt that it was no
Huerta Is about to get hla, |nd In all compelled to get off the sidewalk with his oyrn efforts alone, by any means,
porbabllity the same fate will be met- their baby buggies and go into the that accomplished this, but that was
ed out to that usurper that he gave to street and subject themselves, as well the co-operation of his, fellow- o ge-
the Ill-fated Madero. There came an £* their babies, to the
dangers from)men, and he wished them to know
that he realized It fully.
"There was no mistaking his
in making his appreciation ap-
cerity
The old order is changing.
Impeccable Senate bf the United States walk; repeated this request several
hitherto cold and distant and austere,
delegating to itself powers and privi-
leges that It denied the House, and
arrogating to Itself aloofness from the
common “peepul” Is getting its aural
appendages to the ground, In plain
interior, which was
end to the bloody reign of Weyler in autos iftid other vehicles -in order to
Cuba. There will be an end to Huerta.'get around these people, who were
Then who will be the next butcher to unnecessarily obstructing this dide------ — .
arise in power? walk. I first went to the speaker and parent, for neither expense nor laoor
._*-- '-requested him in a courteous manner were spaced in getting up the dinner.
is changing. The to move or get his crowd off the side- it took place on the north veranda o
the country club, where a long table
times, but he refused to move and
taupted me with the assertion that I
was making the request because hq
was a Socialist. 1 then appealed to
his followers, who were crowded to-
gether on the sidewalk, and requested
them In oonirteous manner to move
or open up the sidewalk so the^ people
getting scared of Ha job. The people could pass, and they jeered me in an
that is the common people, are from Insulting manner, one o fthem cursing Paterson extended
of the centre of the?
and vulgar, but nevertheless expres-
sive language, the august Senate la
was set. The
screened off, was beautifully decorat-
ed with American flags and emblems
of the Elks lodge, while potted plants
and palms were also in evidence ev.
erywhere about the mahogany. But
prettiest of all were the decorations
on the table. A broad red, white and
blue streamer of heavy silk woven in
along the entire
now on to have a little say as to who In a vociferous manner, and the speak- iength of the centre^of iner *^’°H
them by telling them smaller red, white and blue ribbons
shall go to the Senate. It will not be cr encouraged
all left to the legislatures to pick out that I would not make such aj-equest j were laid wt °At
the man with the biggest bunch Of to a Democratic speaker or Republi- 'in the fashion
money, or the biggest grafter, or the can speaker. J equal points along t e a e
Uttle fellow with the prinkest, cutest, > I was convinced that though his fol- elaborate candelabras
most aristocratic handful of whiskers lowers were the ones who were really ,of the same being partly hidden by
themselves will get a slice of the pie, was the one
til IU17 ----- 11 JJml
and have more to say as to the distil- #. and causing It to be done, and^aot jglas* J^tee* gcene wS!
unlay, hare spoken against the
area that the Herald believed to be
•correct, and that the Herald still be-
lieve* correct The Herald Is not one
of the milksop kind that, becauae the
majority has spoken, stands back and
folds ite hands, to jotn the pack lft
cry. - The Herald doe* not hesitate to
tell the people who have area to read
that they were wrong; the Herald
does not fear to voice Its opinions and
A ‘ it dare* to say what It said before the
button of the graft If there Is any. being able to persuade him
Many-years ago, Jay Gould Is reputed obstructing the sidewalk. I arrested most captivating,
to have said that he would not attempt him Just as I would have arrested any
to buy up the people of any state: that other man In the same circum-
was cheaper to deal with a few stances.
We will nowl The statement that he was not al-
Jay lowed to give bond 1b untrue and with-
out any foundation. I urged him to
jdo what he could to make bond, and
K.n» . tMwdm Cr tbo rrprj'™ "■"'«> ™k'' *
bond and would not do anything ex-
Chaage la Schedule.
men in the legislature,
have a chance to see whether
Gould was wrong or a right.
♦
mmw
last Saturday,
were
that the
sorely
behind them, no
catln
aentative from this district, it is
from Fitzgerald* sometimes cau.t!*ha‘ hi.
.. k*im.n*-ri tpi8 Den i* ®d him to do, and after waiting on
zsn a?
car: “Congressman Oscar Callaway
is said to have won in hi. fight to
name the Postmaster of Tburber.
Postmaster General Burleson held up
this appointment for weeks and
eeks. Congressman Callaway, who
is popular with the people cf his con-
-emlonsl district, early In the life
of the Wilson administration asked
Texas. And that there was Burleson If the recommendations
when they have
nsM&eM*
by a congressman
the postoffice de-
that the men rec-
i by a con- *
ed that he was making no effort t<L
make bond, I placed him In the city
prison, just as I would have done any
other m»" In the saibe circuin-
DoUars re
KASTBOUND.
No. 10 arrives at 7:65 a. m.
No. 8. Arrives at 1:00 p. m.
No. 6, arrives at 5:46 a. as.
No. 4. arrives at 4:60 p. m.
No. IS, arrives at 5:10 p. m.
* WESTBOUND
No. 9, arrives at 5:20 p. m.
No. 7, arrives at 9:05 a. m.s
•q. &, arrives at 11:10 p. m.
3, arrives at 11:22 a. m.
13, arrives at 1040 a. m.
W„ M. W. A N. W. By.
EASTBOUND.
10, arrives 7:55 §. m.
8, arrives 2:55 p. m.
12, Motor, arrives 5:20 p.
WESTBOUND.
MlBil
Li--
Here is a regular $3.00
La Camille Front Lace
Corset, with the famous
“Ventilo” back and front,
and all the good features
the La Camille possesses,
for only—
$1.98
This we do in order for
you to try the lace front,
and especially the “La Ca-
mille.” When you have
tried this ane you’ll be sure
to want another.
Don’t let this opportuni-
ty get by you.
I
Special prices in all departments.
Special prices on clothing and shoes.
Gome and be convinced.
Milburn & Co.
By Associated Press
Austin, Texas, July 19.—W. W. Col-
lier of San Antonio, vice president of
the State Bank & Trust Co., was ap-
pointed as insurance commissioner,
succeeding Gill. He will take office
Tuesday. V
Sequel To
Low For
Rev. A.
I will arrive this afternoon
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
11
9.
No.
and preach
tonight. He has just closed a good
meeting at McGregor,
j Rev. J. Addison McElroy, D. I)., in
I speaking of a meeting held at Lan-
caster by Dr. Browne, says: “A strik-
ing feature of the meeting was that
of the large number of professions, j
.with one exception, every one was a
grown man. Dr. Browne’s preaching as
seems peculiarly to interest men.
,1s strong and direct in his address,
; with intense earnestness. His singing
was also a great feature.”
Toledo,
taken tots
mm,
'0ml
It, is especially desired that all who
sing come ont and assist the choir.
Services begin promptly at 8:15. •
RELIEF
FROM
HEAT
Washington, July 19 —No relief is
c^rsiasass;
•r** STiSTn
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mm
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The Daily Herald. (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 163, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 22, 1913, newspaper, July 22, 1913; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth643832/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .