The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 48, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1923 Page: 4 of 8
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MONDAY, JULY 30, 1923
THEAUSTIN STATESMAN
The Austin Statesman
BATF
Democratic Possibilities For 1924
Ml
HENRY CLAY EVANS JR.
VII.
CARTER GLASS.
NEW YORK, July 30—A page from
a great weariness that has come to
MEMBKR AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS. .
By carrler, in the city, daily and
Boaday morning edition by mail (in Texas), by the year
prenticeship
Then he did
in half the ordinary time. • crate in 1920. The convention at Roan-
journeyman work and be-
k
in the Italian section a little south
From that he
and
\
is a big event in this quarter
4
Poems thvHJve
A MATCH.
returns.'
EILWHUKERA
A
1
I
way of getting away from the mad-
V
K
t
The farmers should not be diverted from their original plan for
1
you're done for."
By Briggs
I
Totals
it'
/
C
1
I
K
The President’s Speech on Alaska.
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eoung
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bought the paper for 113,000.
owns two dailies in Lynchburg.
Marlin .
Austin .
as he had hd to
life, but he rather
This accomplishment made him well
known among congressmen, but to the
enjoyed this than otherwisa as he al-
ways got the best of them in th* end.
and at another table Alice Duer Mil-
ler.* Trying to- tell a japery, I became
finally
He still
open carriage drawn by white horses.
The funeral is also a spectacular af-
fair?
Totals
"Batte
Score
Hof©
Book
VERY wew
TLL Take
A FiVE -
Relief of Agriculture An Economic
Problem.
Ruth rm
Dockery;
ander,
struck o
l. by Be
bases on
.7084
.7245
.6200
.HM
.$2.75
.$7.00
Bunday:
On month .<
Bls months .
One year .
And So Ended a Friendship of 20 Years Standing
.$0.65
.33 00
33 00
.3100
" WACO
the first
took a 4
Mexia.
Score
Mexia
Waco ..
Batt eri
Johnson
Austin
Cannon.
Iewis. s
Chaney.
Gillespie
Clement:
Grigs3,
Johnson,
Hende rs
Collins,
Brooks.
Joh nson,
•Autry
1
l ‘ The LAST
TimE •LL •
PLAY GOLF
wT- You-'
A Fne
COMPANION
Yom AA@
----1 to gulf.
To luncheon and Klice Rohe there
Once the adjustment of prices has been effected, bringing relief
to both farmers and buying public, the people can concentrate upon
On the subject of adequate communications for the developing
territory, the President comes boldly out for a determined forward
movement nationalistic in character......-
You eeT
IT is BILL
Discounting what was said for political effect on the West, in
revolt against the suspected control of national policies by Eastern
capitalists, the President's speech may be taken as a pronouncement
for a definite program of .improvement through gradual modifica-
tion of the present administration of Alaskan affairs. The keynote
"We must
necessary to encourage leasing and development or hold the vast
treasures uncovered and futile.”
tee
—A
(Copyright. 1923, by the McNaught
(Syndicate, Inc )
There is an old street beggar who
drags his paralytic way up and down
de".
(BAILEYPR
If you were queen of pleasure.
And I were king of pain.
We'd hunt down love together,
Pluck out his flying feather
And teach his feet a measure.
And find his mouth a rein;
If you were queen of pleasure,
And I were king of pain.
—Algernon Charles Swinburne.
Entered as second-class matter at the poetoffice at Austin, Texas, under the
Act of Congress of March 3, 137*.
da
Gressett
pitch, C
9. Aust
to Alexa
Pipkin;
Ashton i
Marlin
Simpson
Alexand
Greer, s
Pipkin.
Chathan
Dockery,
White. :
Covingic
Gressett
Andrews
boys of this age,
fight them- all his
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation oE
any person, firm or corporation which appears in the columns of this Paper
will be gladly corrected if called to the attention- of the publlherB.
CORSI
man won
Score
Sherman
Corsimana
Batt er k
Edgar, B
LittlePenny
)ir
S-,
PUBLISHED DAILY, AFTERNOON AND NIGHT, AND SUNDAY MORNING BY
CAPITAL PRINTING COMPANY
Office of Publication: Seventh and Braspa^ treats.
TELEPHONES
ficials so that few whites were de-
prived f voting under its educational
tests. At the same time, educated
PLAYiG A GAmE
of MARBCES
You CAN'T \
conceve YovR-)
GELe A PUTT
PLAY THE GAMe-\
PAPER DELIVERY,
Subscribers in the city who do not receive their paper by 7 o'clock in the
afternoon on week days and by 1 o'clock oh Sunday morning will confer a favor
on the management by calling the Circulation Department, phone 3153, and re-
porting any irregularity.
J OLD PARDNGR
/ -NOTHING
\ Ar QUITE
LEQUAL •T .
2112722
W:i014
2225)
other side of the city aLfara
uixS 496 as L9z ou _ .
bo that they could not be traced so
a nation-wide agricultural conference by any premature action of
the administration. Such action will accomplish nothing. The con-
be in for a hard job if he found a
new secretary of the treasury soon.
The first man he asked was. Carter
Glass and he accepted.
Business men came to him at once
with the advice not to attempt to make
easily to them. They stole, lled,
cheated and fought all the ime, and
in front of the Pennsylvania station.
Around his neck is a tin sign read-
: ing. "I am' trying to buy a wheel
questions of policy which loom up as big issues in the coming cam-
paign. Chief among these are the reduction of taxation and even-
handed justice to all groups in dealing with the problems of the hour.
Of central interest is the rehabilitation of the railroads and lowering
of freight rates.
The farmers are vitally concerned with the transportation prob-
ler and the lightening of the taxation burden. They are required
to pay something like one-half of the carrying charges of the rail-
roads, and this amounts to one-fifth of the value of their transported
products. They pay one-sixteenth of their entire income in taxes.
. These two items enter largely into the costs of agricultural produc-
tion and the difficulties of marketing. They are claiming the farm-
ers' attention to the exclusion of almost all other questions. As
good credit facilities have been secured as are in the government’s
power to furnish, but the farmers realize that credit will prove a
curse instead of a blessing unless they can market their products
at fair prices and reduce production costs.
It will take long concentration on the questions of railroad
restoration, tax reduction and economic fairness, to find the right
answers. No merely temporary measures of relief or maneuvering
by politicians should be suffered to distract attention from these
. questions until the election returns are in.
of their misdeeds were done on
of the speech was probably sounded when he declared: _______
commit ourselves to a program of moderation, of control, of rounded
and uniform development.”
This idea runs through all Mr Harding's statements on Alaska,
but is somewhat obscured when he turns now to one extreme and
now to the other. He treats alternately of restrictions against ruth-
less exploitation and of a liberal encouragement of enterprise He
makes very plain that Alaska is not to be developed for the sake of
outsiders, but for its own people. Yet he shows that the territory's
progress must go hand in hand with that of the states He denies
that there is any need for "government-managed, federally-paid-for
hothouse development," and accordingly favors statehood as th best
means of securing the kind of development desired.
"In a very few years,” dedared the President, "we can well set
-e" VW -- COIG ne (IV wax < l ----- ’ -----------
1 years old and for years was one of! blacks were not in danger at losing
t----:----- ------- . . their vote. Carter Glass la orthodox.
from a southern standpoint, on the
came a pressman. He took an oppor-
tunity to become local editor of a
Lynchburg paper and was his own re-
- ----- — the shed just above
— the Billy and had - shattered. Before he
wax.fr m coud turn to - wht w3 , tna mAtter
well Et,‘ scnd stone hltthtis en of his
• " horn and then a britk hit his side. He
himself and for Nannie.
negro question.
Ollie James once compared him to a
snapping turtle. "He looks harmless,"
said the Kentucky senator, "but just
prod him once and see how quick he
will bite you.” .That was his record in
of Washington Square, there are many
shops that carry signs "Wedding out-
er- fits for hire!" In the windows are.
. - ---- ------, -----It is no project of:waxed figures and grooms. The wed-
hundreds of thousands in capital; it is the quest of the tens of mil- AlnF “ "" "2 ........ *
lions. Long distances to ports, the making of available ports if the
deposits are proven, demand that grants of leases be adequate to
fair return for the big adventure. No native, no individual enter-
prise is to be hoped for. To uncover the suspected riches, there will
need be the lure of adequate return. We shall have to do whatever is
MEMBER OF THE ABSOCIATED PRESS.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of
al news dispatches or edited to it or not otherwise credited in thl paper,
and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special
dispatches hereln are also reserved.
Busimess Manager ................ I DUplay Advartialag
Auaeine Department, Circulation 1 Editorial Houma .1
and Classiried Ada..............<1m| Society editor ...
off the panhandle and a large block of the connecting southeastern
part ts a state. This region now contains easily 90 per cent of the
white population and of the developed resources. It would be the
greatest single impetus we could possibly give to the. right kind of
development.' As to the remainder of the territory, I would leave to
the Alaskans of the fujure to decide."
Mr. Harding asserted his faith in Alaska and its people, and ex-
cused their present lack of progress on the ground of the general
disturbance in finance, and economics produced- by the World War.
He stated that when stocks of liquid capital are restored, which are
now depleted, Alaska will come in for a fuller share- than has ever
all the savings go to make it
spectacular. The kide and groom
ride or rather pahde, about in an
no check or hindrance to our steady march of progress and pros- j
perity.
porter and copyreader,
became editor-in-chief
GoSH |T3 Mice
To Gef our DOORS
v
-N
could ever do again. •
In the evening to H. Poth’s and he
showed me a caricature he had done
of Irvin Cobb, the merriest ever I
saw, and H. has less braggadocio than
any artist I know. Rode home in a
horse drawn shay and so to bed.
A -
ft
While Mike McDermott—for that -- - * -
was the.bridge tender's name — was tell- that biggest gont
ing his wife how he came by the two boasted Pat
goats and about how nearly he Wan
arownad einwm tell you about the throws. g said’ ,""2
--Edneane- , I Hooligans.
This was composed of five Hooligan —
boys, all of them brothers or cousins, 1
j and one other boy by the name of Pat
Murphy, who was their leader. The
Hooligans' ages ran from 12 to 14
and two of the boys were twins. Pat
SUBSCRIPToN RATES: Cash in Advanca.
By mhr, daily sand Bunday, except
Monday, for Austin Rural Routes and
N
\
%
If love were whet the rose is.
And were 1 the loaf.
Our lives would grow together
in sad or singing weather,
Blov r fields or flowerful closes.
Green pleasure or gray grief.
If love were what the rose is, •
And I were like the leaf.
(
1
They took up their position on an
ash heap about twenty feet awy
from Billy and Nannie. and Pat. being
the leader, threw the first stone. Billy
was rudely awakened from a dream
of green pasture* by a loud bang
right over his head, and a shower of
small stones fell in his face. The
if you were April's lady.
And I were lord in. May,
We'd throw with leaves for hour*
And draw for days with flowers,
I Till day and night were shady
And night were 1 right Ilk* day;
It you were April s lady
And I were lord in May.
President Harding, in his Seattle speech, seems to have been
at once addressing conservative voters andseeking to appease pro-
gressives. Hence the difficulty of understanding just what he meant.
Eromsome.parts-ofhisepeechitwouldappeap-ththebelieves-in
„ lasKa up tight from all enterprise, m order to keep its re-
sources safe from exploiters and profiteers. In other parts he indi-
cates a liberal policy which would encourage new settlements and
large investments.
generally one or two of them were
successfu. In faet, Wklson seemed to
"Don't stop me!" yelled the boy as
Smith seized his arm.
"Im trying to keep two fellows from
fighting!" gasped the small boy.
"What two felows?"
"Johnny Mason and me."
a case the delegates would be picked and docilely led by. the heads
of federal bursas. They have completely lost faith in officials who
Fave so frequently disappointed their hops, IBs? yuldhatheir
own representatives to direct and control the conference,'with the
government and public merely lending disinterested assistance.
the countev aztackea 2. With loving look, and treasons
toderai %hEn "heA-rernztehtanamorroy
’ i ne A Vanaoriin mnia "hat xr you We 8tff*
And I were page t joy.
breakfast w-th him and he showed
m.anewtriok of suagic?
Out through the town and bought
a brave purple tie and then to the
silversmih to. get my wife a picture
frame. Met R. Lardner, the scriven-
er. who was as sun browned as a
berry and, poor zany, has become ad-
When Mr. Munsey . knocked The
Suburban town* and routes:
One month.................
Six months.................
One year . ...................
The S. C. Beckwith Special Agency, sole' representatives for foreign adver-
tising Eastern office. World Building, New York City. Western offic*.
Tribune Building, Chicago. St. Louis office, Suite 1411, Syndicate Trust
Building. Detroit office. Ford Building. Kansas City office, Bryant Build-
ing Atlanta office, Atlanta Trust Building. ______________
Puds Simkins ngen. and wats more I
dont even know if Hl even speek to
him when I do see him, she sod.
Making me feel greater and greater,
and jest than who came in and sat
| down at the next table but Puds Sim-
„orered2 large plates of chocklit and
strawberry mixed, coating 15 cents
apeece; 5 for each and 5 for mixing
them, and I started to feel not so
grate and Mary Watkins started to
look unsatisfied on account of her and
Ioretter Mincer being jellies of each
other, and she started to eat her
chocklit slower and slower insted of
hurrying up lke me, and she dident
finish it till Puds and Loretter Mincer
finished theres, and then we all
wawked out together. Mary Watkins
saying to Puds. Ware you bin lately.
Puds, I havent saw you slnts yeatid-
day. I missod you.
And she smiled a fearae sweet
smile and Pud* started to w a wk home
with her. both twking to each other,
me and Loretter Mincer wawking in
back of them not saying enything on
account of both being mad and jelxiss.
Proving that you may not be ery
better than other peeple jest because
you have more money but its easier
to act as if you was.
His overwhelming handicap has been
a frail constitution. He was at a hos-
pital where fears were expressed that
his life would not last much longer,
when he was chosen to the Virginia
state senate. This was in 1399 and he
stayed there until 1903 when he wept
to United States congress. While Vir-
ginia senator he helped write the new
state constitution and was responsible
for the clause that disenfranchised the
ignorant blacks. ’ The provision gave
wide discretionary powers to local of-
ding crowd - They are thirty miles
from a railroad.
Making the farmers’ needs an issue in the coming national com-
paign can only benefit the party in power. That party can claim
credit for all that has been done for ‘the farmers in a purely non-
partisan way. Its whole record shows that it is not greatly concerned
over the plight of agriculture, except as this disadvantageously affects
the other economic groups of the nation. But if the distressing con-
dition of agriculture is given official recognition in the campaign it
will mean that the Republicans will simply insist on what they have
already done and the Democrats will attack them on their record.
The farmers will have to go without relief for a period of two years
—until a new Congress is elected and goes into regular session.
Clearly they can not wait this-long for the delayed adjustment of
prices, nor can the country wait with them. As this matter of ad-
justment is purely economic, it should be dealt with by the adoption
of economic measures. The most promising of these would seem to
be the suggested national conference at Washington of all agricul-
tural interests and allied businesses, to go thoroughly into the whole
situation and‘see if, with the co-operation of the public and the gov-
ernment, they can not clear away all remaining obstacles to a final
adjustment of prices.
To do its work well, the conference should be free of all political
influences. Already, however, it is indicated that the Harding ad-
ministration plans to forestall any action by farmers organizations
looking towards such a gathering by calling the conference itself.
This is just what the farmers do not want, for they know that in such
That's all rkJht!
IT'S Thos€ LITTLE
3oeT Ones That
A ne MISSED- i ve u
SeeN ceccous uke
SwceTsen AND HAden
MISS TheM
You Ra NOT
an appeal on the basia,of sentiment.
The people are war-weary now, they
said, and tool that they have made
sacritices enough. Merely show them
that it would be a good investment,
make it as attraotive as possible in ths
general market and perhaps we may
all be able to pull it over.
Such an idea made Glass Indignant.
It American soldiers had made the
sacrifices that they had, investors
ought to be willog to make a few more
in a financial way. He believed per-
sonally that the omsiness men had,'
gauged the spirit of the country wrong.
Every speech he made on the subject
compared the sacritices of France with
those that we lied to make. The new
secretary guessed correctly. The Amer-
ican people were stin in a frame of
mind for another patriotic appeal. The
turned to see what was going on
behind him. and saw standing n a tqw
.. u - —C - —........-,slx of the most cruel faced boys he
either in jail or in the reform school, had ever beheld together., And he
___- —_____.___________ -- -- _________,________ -_________„ ____ on their way home from the public lknew there was trouble
ference should be called as suggested, regardless of what the admin-achon which they .attended they had
istration may do, and it should be held in time to give the right the’ridge tender. sering Wo thg
impetus to a full revival of trade in the fall, so that there may be|gonts tied to the side of the woodshea
• • •• • • . - . | they at once scented mischief, for it; --- __________________
was their joy and pleasure to hurt but he feared for Nannie.
and tantalize any unproteected thing, I (Tomorrow you’ll see what Billy did
be it child or animal. to the gang).
was .15.
These boys had been the terror of _ _______ .
the neighborhood for years: But mowt stone had hit
fallen to its lot before, simply because the United States is destined
to become the great capital-nation of the world. In this way he in-
ferred that big capital will, have to be attrcted to Alaska before
the territory can realize its possibilities. Capital he connected with
lower transportation charges, when inupeaking af seal he disavowed
any intention of the government to attempt to create the desired
conditions. g
"Alaska might well be supplying coal for tier own industrial and
domestic needs," said the President, "but participation in a big way
in the wotld fuel supply must await big capital in development and" dieto“
aids in reduced transportation costs, which present day conditions
are slow to promise. The government has its own railroad in Alaska,
and we have our own ships which may be assigned to operate in con-
nection with the railroad, but I can see no more reason for defying
the immutable laws of economics, in providing transportation at the
excessive government cost, than there is to sacrifice Alaskan resources
to the same unfruitful end. Time and the,normal urging of economic
conditions will bring Alaskan coal into its ultimate own.”
The need for big capital and a policy favorable to its employ-
ment was positively declared in the case of oil. "Here is a dis-
covery and development, said Mr. Harding, "demanding-excessively
large investment and a Venture on the part of capital which the
dinarily justifiable, restrictions utterly forbid. -
htnrree A f +h..c.. . .1 - ..
signed to go back on newspapers. They ’ , , , • —
told me they had never been so unhap- , launehed. Frank A. Vanderlip said that
py in their lives .Judge' Smith, yet- it was impossible. One of the proudest
eran. reporter.. to .say. once-zou womwnhen yanderuiporotracera "whatss
said after he saw the system work.
PAGE FOUR
‘--
When he became chairman, it was
understood that President Wilson
oke was under his complete domina-
. tion. The most notable work that he
did there was his plank on the League
of Nations. It had been such a cy-
clonic question that most Democrats
were afraid to handle it. Glass under-
took it as readily as he ha the fifth
liberty loan. . The result was that
Woodrow Wilson accepte it as his
stand and it became the league plank
in the Democratic platform as adopted
at San’Francisco. •.
Carter Glass was Wilson's man in
1920. Ho was closer in touch with
the president than any other man that
year. His presidential stock has never
been high because he has never given
it any boost hfmself and his record has
not been full. But he comes to the
surface every four years as a "dark
horse." Mark Sullivan says of him
that he knows of no subject so fit for
romantic adventure as the job of build-
ing the presidential- boom of Carter
Glass.
Here is the most popular one extant
about Carter Glass. He belonged to
a baseball team in Lynchburg, Va., that
was playing the boys from "over th*
river." The customary fight broke up
the game about the fifth inning and
the "ovr the river" gang were about
to be in possession of the field when
young Carter picked up two bats and
dared them to cross a certain line.
None of them did, Lynchburg won the
day and Mr. Glass won the sobriquet
of "Pluck,” that he has carried ever
■ czieran reporter, USed
ahead for smell printers' ink
He hated
.og,oass‛prgreco
•AR- V6 •cV" M/S3LH-
P1YucerYR
1 ( sugev life
\ You lu Taks
A FI~e-
If I were what the words are.
And love were like the tune.
With double sounds and single
Delight our lips would migle.
With kisses glad as birds are
That get sweet rain at noon;
If I were what the words are
And love were like the tune.
If you were life, my darling.
And 1 your love were death,
We'd shine and snow together
Ere March made sweet the weather
With daffodil and starling
And hours of fruitful breath;
if you were life, my darling.
And I your love were death. 1
story of boyhood day*, that
Nssamssmammzmzm
and finally collided with Mr. Smith on ; that another loan would never be made
his way to town. - •
)
NEW YORK
DAYBYDAY
By O. o. MeINTVRE
ih» q,u, , a - a ' sounds like G. H. Honty, is becoming
the Alary ot a modern Samuel Pepys: a prerequlsli, for any man who has
Lay late and childishly fretful about | political ambitions that aim at all high.
When a fellow swimmer calls for
help, we shouldn’t wait “ntil he goes
down "three times.” In drowning the
rule, of three isn’t infalible; many go
down but once—and stay.
since.
Carter Glas* was the first newspaper
man to be chosen secretary of the was his slogan. Quite a number of
treasury. His record has made it people wondered if McAdoo were not
probable that others from the same . wishing, when it was over, that he had
I profession may be selected frequently, stayed a little longer.
fifth liberty loan went over the top as
easily as the others. "Finish the Job"
He has the regular story of a rise in | This accomplishment and the conft-
the newspaper field. First he was adence of Wilson made Air./Glass the
printer's apprentice, finishing his ap- acknowledged leader of Virginia Demo-
twisted and so cgnused I blushed
a scarlet red which I did not think I
me. Came Eddie Cantor and fell to
wanted a complete reform. He brought ;
_________ __ the president his suggestions and they
Globe in the head, two reporters who I interested him so that the two worked
had been with the paper for a num- I in close harmony over the framing of 1
ber of years came to work the next what later became the famous federal
day with a band -of erepe on their ’reserve act. Credit for the measure
sleeves. They said they were through should be shared evenly between the ]
with journalam and would go in forajpresident and Representative Glass,
whirl lit the .industrial world. Each I Mr. Glass Was one man in whom Wil- 1
rot a toot pSMTVa SiFterangion noxer.lostconfidenee. Mostfinan- ,
remained for three weeksand then re- | 14 exPe.t
- --------chair!” He has been around the dis-
. . - ---------- He said, in another direction trict for years. The other day i
there is justification for a. most liberal disposition, that of road and talked to him He told me he was 77
trail building. Much of the Alaska which will in another generation' (hemendicant gung'iing the APptan
oe ncn and productive, is yet unexplored, to say nothing of being' Way 111 Italy. He had also beksed in-
mapped and equipped with highways. There should be an orcanizai Cairo and In Shanghak. He said his
tion canable of , rendiem re" ,1 J /,U De an organiza ! profession completely ostracized him
ion capaoie o: the readiest response to demands for roads and trails, and that he slept in a rooming house
no discovery of riches should be kept from national development for in West Street and had gone for wekka
wanttof access.toit. Roads constitute a prime need in every new i Mh anz .1 wV^mum^^
- ’ and oun.on8 national experience in pushing our highways myself as I walk along." congress as lng as the Democrat*
ancad of the inrblling wave of settlemeat, ought to convince us that I —:— were in the minority. He could not
the broadest liberality towards roads in Alaska’ will he certain hein I She was walking with one or those I sce ‘he value in making spoeches mere-
mne » ‛ At-K win oe certain to bring thin iittle canes that hang on the arm iy for the purpose or cluttering up the
by a strap. Over a grating the strap j Congressional. Hecord. If the mem-
broke and the cane vanished magical- ; bers of the house would not listen, it
ly. A bright young man came up and , looked to him like wasted time. Like
offered her his walking stick. She j Underwood, he sees little use in flow-
accepted it without a word and walked j ery oratory and striking attitudes. Ae-
on. And speaking of embarrassment : cordirgly his political record is barren
—you should have seen that bright I from 1903 to 1912.
youth. | Vietory for the Democrats brought
------ । out the men who were able, to'be lead-
A group of New York cartoonists i rs. Mr. Glass, was chairman of the
Bet choo I kin knock the horn off have departed for Meddybemps, Maine, I committee on banking and currency.
* -------- gr-t with this rock," • where each owns his own little island I He had been ranking minority mem-
asted Pat. and a shack. In the group are Clare ber in Tuft’s time and hed put quite
Bet choo yer can’t inside of three Briggs, H. T Webster, it. M Brink- * good deal of study on a banking
rows" said "Tim *h- -1 ... - .. erhoff and several others. It is their I bill framed by Senator Aldrich for the
reform of the court try’* finances.
94)
: kecRs.
9- .E.
w)
2,44*02.
ha- what Do I < CovLoc
VCserrje-ntb
voxmissep YoURWALONL.
E OU’’ J?’-"—
-&aX3
Sattiday aftirnoon I was setting in
Sniders ice cream place treeting Mary
Watkins to a small 5 cent plate of
chocklet and eating a email 5 cent
plate myself and feeling like Somebody
grate and wishing Puds Simkins could
of saw me. .and Mary Watkins was
eating her ice cream slow with a in-
joyable ixpressiom. and I sed. This is
swell ice cream all rite, aint ft?
I think its lovely. Alary Watkins
sed, and I red, Aint you glad you're
in heer eating ice cream with me in-
sted of jest setting on your frunt
steps with Puds Simkins or somebody?
O Puds Simkins, wat do I care about
him, I think you’re much nicer than
he is. I think you're twice as nice, she
aed. I wouldent care if I never saw
if you were thrall to sorrow.
And I were page to joy,
Wed play for lives and seasons,
The
I ' was OU
afternoc
but the
to mhak
* wallopil
i before,
and hit
teams h
of runs
tiona I f
a ger R
the fra
respect
of the
the thii
was not
inning.
Both
tial re
Marlin,
blazing
expectet
held th
seventet
another
Ranger}
round f
Lewis h
for "any
who hac
hit aaB
lespie 1
tween Si
l It was t
game in
In th
chased
pan W
to right
Simpsor
him at
a ger Ale
derful b
with a <
. Neithi
seventh
number
always
fielders
sacks,
and Gre
with nc
lieved b
nicely 1
for a h
other in
Both
seventh
caught
posited
wall. 11
Rangers
bags, wi
were ro
however
singled
singled
Cannon
flee fly
and < ‛h:
ending
Dock*
eighth.
• field wi
Covingti
•cored €
The F
the gan
double I
lespie si
doubled
at third
twice. i
•coring
•on was
Griggs
dropped
gaming
"01 t
Pipkin.
Brooks,
a high I
doubled
Canno
single,
Alexand
roundei
Score:
Give me
A FOUR- 1
(TnT S Par /
The student jumped to his feet and
faced his angry father. "Dad," he
exclaimed. "I’ll show you that I’m no
loafer. Believe me, I'll eihter pass this
exam, or funk in the attempt.
"That’s the spirit, my boy,” replied
the father.—Notre Dame Juggler.
.. ■ -
Ot A Pay uikg
Th? S iSn t it
Jim?
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 48, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1923, newspaper, July 30, 1923; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1435040/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .