The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 90, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 6, 1922 Page: 3 of 10
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I
1
PAGE THREE J
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
LEAGUE OF NATIONS
PERSONAL RIGHTS
9
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F
I
The
Charles Brown on Spence Street.
0)
4
NO SIGNS OF PEACE
d
I
LECTURE ON RETAIL
MERCHANDISING WILL
BE GIVEN TOMORROW
speech or
upon which the Federal administralio
Local Cotton Eicban^Q
NEW YORK STOCK LIST.
1
NEW YORK COTTON.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON.
Atl., Giulf & W. Indies .
Baltimore & Ohio
CHICAGO, Sept. 6. Leaders of the
railway shopmen's strike and riroad
SPOTS (MIDDLING.)
GRAINS AND PROVISIONS?
NEW LAW FIRM OPENS
FOR BUSINESS HERE
Love Victim Home With Mother;
AUGUST IS LIGHT MONTH
FOR BUILDING PERMITS
values.
{ ■
FUNERAL NOTICE.
a
6,000
FRENCH WOMAN KILLS
PRODUCE/ MARKET.
DRESS WARM ANO
SELF WHEN WIDOWED
KEEP FEET DRY
KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK.
13
FIREMEN ANSWER FALSE ALARM
g , \
meat, dress
warmly as
Bld.
CREDIT MEETING POSTPONED.
LIBERTY BONDS.
-
Miss Marie Carsten,
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK.
DISASTER IN BRITISH MINE.
LIKE CLOUDS ACROSS A
SUMMER SKY
A farmer who owned a largo cattle
ranch was bragging to
passerby
1
WALTER D. ARNOLD, D. C.
.vgi
-0
li
4
"AEre
IN NO DANGER
SAYS DAUGHERTY
See Them in Our
North Window Today
$12.75 Suits Reduced to $ 8.50
$15.00 Suits Reduced to $10.00
$17.50 Suits Reduced to $11.65
$18.75 Suits Reduced to $12.50
$21.00 Suits Reduced to ,$14.00
"I call that cow, Peg.M
“Why, I should think
Nen Fall Shoes
Are Ready
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
SHERIFF DECLARES WAR
ON HIGH-SPEED MANIACS
avold any undue exposure an
all. drink lots of pure water.
Only 3 Days More
Of Our Special Sale on
New Fall Hats
Are Read))
HARVESTER KING’S
EX-WIFE MAY WEI)
SWISS SECRETARY
14%
41
FATHER IS SURPRISED
SPECTATOR AT DOUBLE
WEDDING OF DAUGHTERS
Ptevious
Open High. Low. Close. Close
..20.52 20.60 20.24 20.24 20.60
Buy Your Boy ‘s
School Suits Now at
May
Oct.
Dec.
Jan.
Mar.
May ,
Otc. .,
Dec. .
Jan. .,
Mar. .
/
Tells Rheumatism Sufferers to
Take Salts and Get Rid
of Uric Acid.
Chino Copper ..........
Colorado Fuel & Iron ...
Corn Products ...........
Crucible Steel ...........
Erie .....................
Famous Players-Lasky . .
General Asphalt .........
Leaders On Both Sides of Rail-
way Strike Deny Reports of
New Negotiations.
ELECTS HALF DOZEN
NEW VICE PESIDENTS
o'
PAVMER SOHOOL
OHIROPRAOTOR
4012 Speedway — Phones 7393- 307.1
My Office Is As Near ns Your ‘Phone
. ..137M
.. .190%
GEORGETOWN MAN, IN
SEARCH OF GOLD, IS
CRUSHED TO DEATH
E
. .. 30
... 1334
... 344
... 815
... 46%2
...93
.. 32%
... 16%
.... 31%
. .. ,11914
.. 88%
.. 5894
.. 47%
.. 62%
..187%
.. 72
.. 34%
. .121
.. 63%
. 83%
11823
.r0
. • •
WALTER WILCOX
Everything a Man Wears—from Hats to Shoes
.1,
• 13
NBENVNNS)
2 IN!
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
New York
' New Orleans .
I Galveston .....
Houston .......
Dallas .........
Austin ........-
Allied Chemical & Dye.........
Allis Chalmers ................
•American Beet Sugar.........
American Can .....a..........
American Car & Foundry ....
American Hide & Leather pfd:
American International Corp. ..
American. ocomotive .........
American Smelt. & Refg.......
American Sugar ..............
•American Sumatra Tobacco...
25
l
P. p
WALTER WILCOX
Everything a Man Wears—from Hats to Shoes
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1922
Medium Weight Suits
They are the ideal all the year round-Suits and
are specially what you’ll want for Early Fall.
I
...183
13V %
... 10% 4
... 48%
... 31%
... 84%
■
...140
.. . 80%
... 65
.. . 65%
.. .103%
...»70%
... 63%
... 7%
...117%
... 69%
...82
.. 96%
... W
...152%
... 29
...17
. .. 52%
. '. 17% .
. . . 18%
2.
./
ject to rheumatism should
‘Fo.
. 72
. 58
. 32%
. 93
cult less '
possible,!
d, above
that you’d i
the home of
DELL-ANS
254 and 754 Packages Everywhere
By Associated Press.
CHAMONIX, France, Sept. 6 Mme.
Marcel Sembt committed suicide her
today following the sudden death yes-
terday of her husband, the millionaire
socialist deputy and former minister
of public works.
about his cows. "Why,” he said, "I
have one cow that gives seventy-five
gallons of milk in one day."
"What do you call that cow." asked
the stranger.
Ing at 8:30 o’clock at
"y“
The funeral of Dr. Anton D. Ude n.
son of Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Udden of
this city, will be held from the family [
home at 4:30 o’clock Thursday after-,
noon and at 5 o’clock at the Swedish
Lutheran Church. Interment will be
in Oakwood Cemetery.
Announcement of the establishment
of a new law firm for Austin, to be j
known as Penh, and Lindsey, with of-
flees at 105 Austin National Bank
building, was made Wednesday. Part-
ners in the firm are A. W. Penn, of
Austin, and B. R. Lindsey, formerly
of Marshall.
Messrs. Penn and Lindsey are both
graduates Cf the University of Texas
law school/o the June. 1922, class.
American T. & T.
American Tvhacco
American Woolen
Anaconda Copper
Atchison .........
Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick.
While her former husband, Har-
old F. McCormick, the harvester
king, is honeymooning in Europe
with his second wife, Ganna Wal-
gka, the report % out that Mrs.
Edith Rockefeller McCormick
shortly will marry Edward Krenn,
her Swiss r cretar.
' under the state law is 25 miles per
hour,” said Deputy Sheriff DuPriest
"Underpresent conditions however, a
man cannot take his wife and family
out on one of these roads for an auto-
mobile ride without being in danger of
having his ear crushed into by a maniac
'who drives at fifty miles an hour, only
the other night we arrested one driver
who was going 48 miles an hour and a
complaint has been filed against him in
the county court."
-20 40 20.62 12.88 20.05 20.43 Baldwin Locomotive ..
.20.48 20.75 20.05 20 20 20.55
I ■ hoe
t.
. • in.
P
12e
Previous
Open. High. I ow. Close. Close
.. .2112 21.28 20.63 20.66 21 20
.. .20.95 81.17 20.53 20.58 21.10
...21.10 21.4V 20.75 20.85 21.30
...21.03 21.27 20.60 20,68 21.15 1
...21.10 21-34 20.72 20.80 21.23
- ,03
1
issued from headquarters for a meet-
ing of the union’s policy committee
here tomorrow.
Other union leaders declined to re-
veal the whereabouts of Mr. Jewell
since he dropped out of sight last Fri-
day. Vague and uncertain rumors said
he had been "In the Fast."
Mr. Scott said he had heard nothing
of Mr. Jewell’s return hero today, add-
ing that he was not expected for sev-
eral days.
Coupled with the denial of Mr. Wil
lard that he had seen Jewell was a
statement from Mr. McGrath, assert-
ing that he did not believe the strike
leader had been in the vicinity of Bal-
timore.
Mr. McGrath declared that rumors of
a contemplated meeting of the policy
committee Thursday was part of a
plot to deceive the shopmen.
These denial from both sides in the
strike controversy found support in A.
"Retail Merchandising” will be the
subject of a lecture to be given Thurs-
day night at 8 o'clock at the Chamber
of Commerce by Mr. Greenberg of
Evansville, Ind, representing the
trades extension bureau. His talk will
deal primarily with handling plumbing
and heating supplies, but will be com-
prehensive enough to interest every
business man who desires to hear the
lecture, which will be free to the pub-
lic.
A double wedding ceremony in which
the groons were sons of fellow deputy
sheriffs of Travis County and the brides
were sisters, was staged Sunday morn-
secretary, and J. F. McGrath, vice
president of the railway employes' de-
partment of the American Federation
of Labor, denied that a call had been
VI
foretelling the dreaded storm are the
symptoms of women’s diseases which
point the way to physical nnd mental
breakdown. The nervous irritability,
the backache the drasging pains, are
not only hard to endure but they
bring certain knowledge ol collapse un-
less something is done to relieve the
sufferer. There is one standard rem-
edy which has shown the way out for
nearly fifty years. The women who
have "come back” through the use of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound present an argoment stronger
than words could ver be.—Adv.
Meanwhile Federal agents awaited
the return of Mr. Jowell to' formally
serve him with the injunction writ.
Strike conditions generally were re-
ported quiet throughout the country.
Ten men, all of whom were said by
police to be striking shopmen, were
held at Memphis, Tenn., in connection
with -recent disorders. All of the ten,
the rolice said, have made confessions
bearing on the killing of Charles H.
Lanier, a non-union shop employe of
the Frisco system; a plot to waylay a
shop foreman; an attempt to wreck
a passenger train near Memphis, and
the slaying of two negro employes of
the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific
at Hurulburt, Ark.
Lanier was shot from ambush, but in
their alleged confessions the men said
he was killed by mistake, their Inten-
tion being to frighten his companion,
Charles Stevens, a Frisco shop fere-
man. 6s
State militia authorities tightened
their lines about the Parsons, Knn.,
strike zone as a precautionary measure.
. ..166
... 97%
... 65%
...102%
... 30.
... 129 %
... 67%
... 77%
144 1
... 40%
’• 61%
. . . 48
. . . 31
. 33
...117%
... 96%
... 15%
...101%
... 67%
... .185
... 14%
.... 34%
. . . 93% •
. . .110
. . . 42
...110
... 56%
Because of the absence of many
merchants from the City the meeting
of the Austin Retail Credit Men's As-
sociation. scheduled for today, was not
held. The next meeting of the asso-
ciation will be held Wednesday, Sept.
20.
cret marriage under fictitious names,
and a day or two later they eloped
to Montreal.
For two weeks the parents of the girl
and police searched vainly for a clew
to her whereabouts. Then came a wire
from the Canadian city. It was brief:
"Am married. Don’t worry.”
Papa Carsten didn’t stop to worry.
With detectives he was Montreal-
bound almost ,before he had finished
reading the letter.
Carsten said he found his daughter
supporting Humbert on her salary of
$24 a week. He ordered her to return
home. She refused until she learned
that she had been tricked.
Humbert at first was arrogant with
the father and Montreal police until
they threatened the imposition of a
neventeen-ycar sentence in a Canadian
jail. Then he consented to return.
Humbert I" being held on charges of
white slavery and abduction.
Firemen made a run to Bunas tin
shop on West Fifth street late Tues-
day evening to extinguish a fire re-
ported to have been discovered there
only to find that they had been called
on a false alarm. A light shining in
the shopr at a late hour deceived a
neighbor who turned in the alarm. .
By Associated Press.
NEWCASTLE. England, Sept. 5-1
Forty men were entombed through an
explosion in a coal pit at White haven
this morning, the Evening Chronicle
states. The bodes of ten workers are
reported to have been recovered.__
Hubby Held on Federal Charge i
LIVERPOOL GPOTS.
LIVERPOOL, Kept. e—Cotton spot
in fair demand; pricek wak. Good
mniddling. 13.02; fully middling. 2.87;
middling. 12.77: low /middling, 12 32:
goodordinary. 11.477 ordinary, 10.97.
Kales 7.009 bales, including 5200 Amer-
ican. May 1.07%, .^December
bales, no American./
“ • •?* 2
Attorney General Denies I hat
Injunction Will Abridge Free-
dom of Speech or of Press.
NEW YORK The four-week honey-
moon of 18-year-old Marie Carsten
Woodbridge was just one month of
happiness. Then—
The relentless arin of the law reach-
ed out and plucked her husband”
from their love nest in Montreal. The
charge was violation of the Mann act.
The "bride" of a month resented the
intrusion. But it was only to learn
later that she was but another on the
long list of "victims of love."
Police and the girl’s father say her
"husband," Eugene H. Woodbridge, is
in reality Eugene B. Humbert, with a
wife and several children in Brooklyn.
According to authorities, the two met
some time ago while both were em-
ployed by the Puplic Service Corpora-
tion of New Jersey. Humbert posed
as a single man and made violent love
to the girl.
The infatuated girl agreed to A s-
By Associated Press.
GEORGETOWN, Texas, Sept 6—
August Wedemayer was crashed to
death near here this morning when a
load of debris being hoisted from the [
200 foot level in a mine broke the .
cable just before being landed.
Wedemeyer and some companies i
were engaged in a search for gold de-
posits believed to be located west of
Georgetown.
By ’Associated Press.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6—A deter-
mination to prevent interference with
interstate commerce, but to press no
interpretation of the Injunction grant-
ed the government against the strik-
ing railway shopmen that would
abridge personal liberty or freedom of
Formal declaration of war upon driv-
ers of automobiles "who thingthe coun-
try roads are race tracks" was made
in a statement issued Wednesday from
the office of Sheriff W. D. Miller by
Deputy Sheriff John B. DuPriest. All
of the sheriffs deputies in Austin and
various towns and communities of the
"county are being Instructed to make
arrests wherever speeders are found,
the cases against them to be filed in
♦ th© county court.
"The speed limit on country roads
the press, was the policyo. Wharten, one of the three labor
m members of the Railroad Labor Board.
CHICAGO, Sept. Butter higheg;
dreamery extras, 37c.
Eggs unchanged; receipts 8,206 cases
Poultry alive unchanged.
Potatoes weak. Wisconsin sacked
and bulk copblers, 900$1 .10 cwt.: Min-
nesota sacked early Ohios 750$1.00
cwt.; sacked Ohios, 75090 <-wt.; New
Jersey sacked cobblers, $1.40 cwt.
was proceeding today in following up
the injunction action.
That there would be no use of the
injunction to abridge these constitu-
tional rights was stated on his return
to the capital by Attorney General
augherty, who added, however, that
"freedom of speech and freedom of
press does not mean those mediums
may be used to incite riots or mur-
ders."
His statement followed declarations
by a Wnite Housespokesman that
President Harding felt the injunction
raised no threat against the constitu-
tional rights of the men on strike or
of'other citizens.
With the injunction apparently rep-
resenting a definitely settled policy in
regard to the rail situation, the gov-
ernment was further concentrating Its
attention today on the problem of coal
distribution. Confidence that the con-
vention of anthracite miners in Wilkes-
barre today would ratify quickly the
agreement reached at Philadelphia last
Saturday was generally expressed.
Rheumatism is no respecter of age,
sex, color or rank.' If not the most
dangerous of human afflictions, it is •
one of the most painful. Those sub-
Building permits issued during the
August at the city hall numbered 27
nnd were for a total of >37,560. the
lightest monthly^ figure for the year,
the remainder being for additions in
the way of sleeping porches or galler-
ies and for minor repairs, most of the
permits being for only small sums
To date only two permits have been
issued for the month of September.
One of these is for the construction
of a residence at 609 James street and
was issued to J. H. Cavaness. The
other permit is for minor repairs on a
residence.
two sisters were Miss Mary Brown and
Miss Norine Brown. Miss Mary Brown
that was, is now Mrs. Clyde Fox, the
wife of Deputy Sheriff T. O. Fox's son,
while Miss Norine is the bride of Reg-
inald McCoy, son of Deputy Sheriff
James E. McCoy.
While the McCoy-Brown wedding had
been announced as Impending, the Fox-
Brown matrimonial knot came as a
surprise, such a surprise in fact that
when the minister proceeded to perform
the ceremony (he was in on the secret) |
the father of the Brown girls called
the miniser’s attention to the fact
that he was marraylng th© wrong
couple. Th© situation was then ex-
plained to him, his surprised exclama-
tion received, congratulations passed,
and the wedding ceremony was then
continued.
Both young couples. It is announced,
will make their homes on East First
Street
executives were in accord today in de-
nials of published reports that there
was a new move on foot to settle the
strike.
Inference that .Bert M. Jewell, head
of the shop crafts organizations, who
has been absent from strike head-
quarters since the government’s strike
injunction was granted by Judge
Wilkerson last Friday, hnd been in
conference in Baltimore with Daniel
Willard, president of the Baltimore &
Ohio railroad, was contradicted by Mr.
Willard.
With rail heads asserting they knew
of no new peace moves, John Scott,
Rheumatism is caused by uric acid
which is generated in the bowels and
absorbed into th? blood. It is the func-
tion of the kidneys to filter this add
from the blood and cast it out in the
urine; the pores of the skin are also
a means of freeing the blogd of this
impurity. In damp and chilly, cold
weather the skin pores are closed, Enus
forcing the kidneys to do double work,
they become weak and sluggish ant
fall to eliminate this uric acid, which
keepes accumulating and circulating
through the system. eventually settling
in the joints and muscles, causing
stiffness, soreness and pain called
rheumatism.
At the first twinge of rheumatism,
get from any pharma y about four
ounces of Jad Salts put a tablespoon-
ful in a glass of water and drink be-
fore breakfast each morning for a
week. This is said to eliminate urric
acid by stimulating “the kidneys to
normal action, thus ridding the blood
of these impurities.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless
and is made from the acid iA grapes
and lemon juice, combined with litbia
and is used with, excellent results by
thousands of folks who are subject to
rheumatism. Here you have n pleas-
ant, effervescent lithia water dtink
which overcomes uric acid and Is bene-
ficlal to your kidneys as weal. -(Adv.)
1/, Off Regular
/3 Price
There was an even 100 of tthem to start with
and they are moving out at a fast clip—Come
in now—You know the old saying about the
Early Bird.
..20.54 20.79 20.13 20.27 20.69 Bethteh. mmiseel -U.
..20.53 20,82 20.18 20 25 20 62 canadlan’Pairie ......
Cential Lenther ......
Chandter Motors ......
Chesapeake & Ohio ...
NEK YORK, Sept. 6. Liberty bonds
Closed: 3 l-2s 3100.70: first 4s 3100.40:
second 4s $100.28; rst 4 1-4 $100,46;
second 4 1-4 3100.22; third 4 1-4
1160.22; fourth 4 1-4, $100,46; Yictory
4 3-48 uncalled $100.70: called 3100 23.
b]
biluar
KANSAS CITY, Sept. Cattle:
Receipts, 11,000 head; market steady
to strong to 15c to 26c higher; most
cows, $3.7607.25: better kind. >5.504?
6.00; grass heifers, $5,00/5.50: top
steers. >10.35: canners, $2.00402.50; cut*
ters, $3.0063,25: vealers, $1/.25610.30;
Stockers. $3.1567.00; feeders, $6 50fr
7.30; bologna bulla, $3.7501.00.
Hogs: Receipts, 6000 head: market
very slew, mostly 10c to 25c Icwer;
packer top. $8.65:bulk, $8,0048.60; me-
dium, $8.3008.60; heavies, $7.5018.40;
packing sows, $6.5066.75; stock pigs,
$9,508.80: choice natives $8.90.
heep: Receipts, 3000 head: mar-
ket slow, about steady. Better grade
lambs, $12.00612.25; culls around
$7.50; sheep dull; fat native ewes. >5
66; heovies, $4.0004,50,
call the cow something large, very
large, like, well, like—‘’'United States."
"Call that cow United States? I
should say not. Do you think I want
that cow to go dry on me?”
cun ago, Sept. 6 -Wheat showed General Electric ...........
A tender / to decline in pine todny . Genera! Motors .............
during the erly trading, the market । Goodrich Co
being under presgure from hedging Great Northern pfd.' 2...
sales and there- was but little demahd Illinois-Centra l
apparent. Reports that British food inspiration Conner..........
value were demoralized by unusually internauonal Marvester '.. ::
heavy shipments from central Europe . . M vi „n>
counted somewhat,as a,bearish factor ! t.Mon M !' ' "■7
here. The opening, which varied from Internatio ou * ......’ ’
unchanged figures'to >4c lower, with stirlhei / i: '': ‘
Per-ember 1.01% to. 1 01% and May Kellysprinetteld Tire •/•
i.07% to 1.011. wa followed by a Konnecoutcopper.ommm
slight general setback. Utulsville A Nashville A.
Corn and Oats displayed strength Mexican Petroleum ........
at the opening but soon eased down Chicago A Northwestern ...
in response to a prospect of showers Miami Copper...........
and cooler temperature. After open- Middle States Oil.........
Ing unchanged to %c higher, Decem- Midvale Steel . . .........
ber 573057%. the corn market de- Missouri Pacific..........
dined all around to below yesterday’s New York Central........
finish. N. Y. N. H. and Hartford .
Oats staited unchanged to %c up. Norfolk A Western.......
December 34% to 34%, and all de- Northern Pacific.........
liveries underwent • something of a Oklahoma Prod. A Ref. ...
downturn later. 1 Pacific Oil................
Provisions reflected firmness pf hog Pan American Petroleum . .
! Pennsyivania .... ........
People's Gas..........
, 99 *g
232 jj
28
"■ 2085/Chicago, NI & st Paul..
2o4oiChicago, R I. & Pac.......
.. 20.35
... 19.70
... 19.83
By Associated Press.
GENEVA, Stp. 6.—The League of
Nations assembly today elected as its
six vice presidents the Earl of Bal-
four, England; Gabriel Hanotaux,
France; Senor Gomez, Portugal: Hjal-
’mar, Eranting, Sweden; Amalio Gimeno
y Cabanas, Spain, and Dr. Momtchilo
Ninchiteh, Jugo-Slavia.
The six now vice presidents with
.six members elected by the assem-
bly will make up the steering com-
mittee to organize the business of the
assembly under the rules along with
the President. The debate on the work
of the league was reopened by Lord
Robert Cecil of England, representing
South Africa.
Ho approved of the work of the coun
cil during th© past year but expressed
the fear that it was in danger of be-
ing overwhelmed by a mass of de-
tail, loading public opinion to under-
rate the really important work of the
council.
He asked why the League of Na-
tions could not Intervene between Tur-
key and Greece and halt the bloodshed
in Asia Minor.
/CHICAGO. Sept. 6 Cattle: Re.
ceipts 12,000 head; slow, generally
steady to 15c lower: top beef steers,
>10.85; bulk, $8.75610.25: bulk beef
cows and heifers, $4.500725; bologna
bulls. $3,7504.00; vealers around >12;
Stockers and feeders, $6,2507.25.
Hogfl-. Receipts 33,000; slow, steady
to strong, light, $9.2009.35; medium,
$8.7509.10; heavy, $8.5008.75; pack-
ing sows mostly, $6.4007.00; heavy
pigs. $7.7508.90: medium, $8.5009.50;
light, >9.1509.30; killing pigs, $7,250
8.25.
Sheep: Receipts 22,000 head; fat
lambs slow to steady, shade lower;
top natives. >12.60; bul’-, $12.00012.25;
culls mostly, $8.50; light feeder lambs
>12.75. sheep extremely dull, unevenly
lower; fat handy aged wethers $7,250
7.50; fat ewes, $3.0006,50.
Pure Oil..............'
! Ray Consolidated Copper
Reading ..............
Rep. Iron A Steel .......
Royal Dutch, N. Y......
: Sears Roebuck,.........
Sinclair Con. Oil . . . ...
• Southern .............
Southern Railway .. ..
Standard Oil of N. J. ...
Steudebaker Corporation .
Tennessee Copper . . . ..
Texas Co..............
| Texas A Pacific .......
' Tobacco Products.....
| Transcontinental Oil . • .
I Union Pacific.........
| United Retail Siores . . .
1 U. S. Ind. Alcohol......
| United States Rubber ..
United States Steel .....
Utah Copper.......s.,
Westinghouse Electric « •
►Willys Overland.......
Atlantic Coast Line . . ..
Coca Cola.............
Gulf States Steel ......
Senboard Air Line.....
Sloss, Shef. Steel & Iron
United Fruit . . ......
Virginia Caro. (’hem. . . .
American Zinc.........
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Kansas A Gulf........
International Nickel . . .
Maxwell'Motors "B" ...
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 90, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 6, 1922, newspaper, September 6, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434899/m1/3/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .