The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 44, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 17, 1921 Page: 13 of 26
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Austin American-Statesman Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1921.
MRS. UBER ESCAPES BODIES OF AUSTIN
CURITY TRUST
TRAINMAN RALLIES
I.
COMPANY DECLARES
FIRST DIVIDENDS
PUT
ustin Financial Institution Pays W. J. Boring Reported Much
Ohio Woman Found Guilty of Funeral Services For Privates
YOUR PRINTER
■' ■ ■
ON AN EVEN BASIS WITH
W. J. Boring, railway trainman, who
His Competitor
TEACHER CERTIFICATE
not recommended mercy.
the
FRAUDS UNCOVERED
IN SAN ANTONIO
We are at Your Service.
Children’s
Low Shoes
PHONE 7158
“There are two
High-Grade
centers in this
Footwear
¥
RAINBOW DIVISION
VETERANS COI
unto
N
GOVERNMENT WASTE
<
IG
Q
52
X
ES
g
2
h
la
3
2
A Few Small Sizes
' ' A--
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The
Al
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in
363
be
INFANT
BEAUMONT
KARS
M/
LIFE
CHAR
KING DIRECTING
.f
I
9
Burt
NE
Shoe Co
606 CONGRESS AVENUE.
Phome 7048
——
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lilj*
ausaa
am
#2
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Sizes 11% to 2 now...$3.85
Sizes 8% to 11 now... $2.95
Sizes 5% to 8 now.... $2125
Sizes 2% to 5 now:...$1.95
DEATH CHAIR; DOOMED
TO LIFE IN PRISON
Now is the time to buy. Lots
of bargain* on the tables.
Help yourself. Prices— .
Washington Officials Confident
Nippon Will Agree to Discus-
sion of Far East Problems.
We have them in Patent Kid
White Kid and Canvas Strap
.Pumps.
Moderate
Prices
Arrest of Negress With Copy of
Answers to Examination Queries
Promises Sensation.
twelve men returned a verdict rec-
omni ending mercy.
As a result of the recommendation
CONFERENCE PUNS
AWAIT DISCUSSION BY
JAP GOVERNMENT
THREE WOUNDED IN
' TWO CUTTING AFFRAYS
AUSTIN CONSTRUCTION
CONCERN GETS CONTRACT
FOR A. & M. BUILDINGS
SOLDIERS DUE HERE
- TUESDAY MORNING
2s
d
FROM EFFECTS OF
WOUNDS IN HEAD
th. Tokio
servedly um
th. exact p
th. Untied
conference.
Improved Late Saturday
Evening.
to drown noise while the alleged assas-
sina were shown their victim by Mrs.
Kaber.
72 Stockholders Dividend
Totaling $10,000.
was that a delay a
ensue before the
velopment.
Meantime those
RA T
"N)
If you do not know bow to draw the specifications, any reliable printer
will help you.
Britain, Franc* I
accepting full par
Mona
It was emphesiz
that no hasty deci
that there Was no
AUSTIN SPINACH
INDUSTRY TOLD IN
RAILWAY MAGAZINE
Soldier Association Refuses to
Demand Immediate Enactment
of Bonus Legislation.
Donley and Arbuckle Set
.For Wednesday.
I
$1.85
$2.85 and $3.85
. ( j I
a-e
was conscious at frequent intervals
throughout the day Saturday and late
Saturday evening was reported to be
approximately 450 cars shipped out of
{Austin by express. I. ----— ——
3 /
CALL VS UP—OR COME DOWN.
LETS TALK IT OVER.
gove
til it
a
& T. employes magazine have been
recelvea by th* Austin Chamber of
Commerce to be distributed to busi-
ness men ana others interested in the
spinach industry which I* written up
as a feature article in thia issue.
The writer of the article says of th*
/s 1
cn,
just an illustration:
1 M Competition Bond Letter Heads 16-lb., $ 7.50
1 M Japan......Bond Letter Heads 16-b., $10.00
1 M Coupon . .. .Bond Letter Heads 16-lb., $12.00
ratsing and shit.—------ ----
Norfolk. Va., 1* one and Au-
July 11.
At the clos* of th* buntness session
th* delocates stood for twenty seconds
a i milence as a tribute to th* dead of
th* aivialon.
spinach industry as follows:
— ‘ portant sptnach
/ef
■ 22
---
its
I
I
Murder for Plotting Assassin-
ation of Husband.
. -----
logo. will conduct the services. Inter-
ment wiu be held In Oakwood Cemsa
tery under the auspices of Travis Pt.
This difference in the quality of the paper is proportionate in all
printing.
The difference in the price of Printing is more often in the Paper
than in the Printer.
Put the Printers on an Equal Batu.
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
2.
W- - —
#e-EA
dlrecUon of the Greekortenmtve ngninat mended by Colonel Arif Bey. consu-
the.Turkishnationellsta,now.inpro.tutoathe.main_defeneivatore.
SANITARY WIPING RAGS
FOR AM, runroscs
2
a
$1.35 Ana $1.65
Mu ma offensive.
for mercy. Mrs. Kaber was sentenced Funeral services for Private Donley
to life imprisonment in the Ohio re- win be held Wednesday mornins »l
"5 -EI " E -- 1530 st Mary’s Catholic Church,
fornatory for women at Marysville, by Fenth an Brazos streets. Rev. Walter
Judge Maurice Bernon. Had the jury -- - “ ~ — -*
two stockholders amounts to $10,000.
Tiie Security Trust Company was
organized nine months ago by promt-
neut financiers and business men of
Austin to carry on a general trust
business handling loans and securities
of all types. The company was capi,
talized at $200000, and at the close of
business Juz 30 undivided profits of
the concern amounted to $33,958,20.
Officers of the Security Trust Com-
pany are: F. W. Sternenberg, presi"
dent; D. C. Reed, vice president; T. J.
Buler, vice president, and E. P. Cra-
yens, cashier.
I Directors are J. A. Bachman. Ben M-
Barker, J. T. Bowman, T. J. Butter.
E: P. Cravens, Sam N. Key, D. C.Reed,
8. E. Rosengren, Charles Hosner, F. W.
Sternenberg and W _T. Williams.
MF* . 9
Th* hodtes of Private Arcadio Don-
ley Jr. and Private Thomas Arbuckie |
Will arrive in Austin from San Antonio |
over th* International A Gret North- ।
ern Tuesday morning at 11:M o’clock, i
according to word received Saturday
from Hoboken by E. C Grissom, fu-
neral director for th* V. O. Weed Uu-
dartaklnc Company.
Private Doniey, aged 28 year* was
the son of Mr. and Mra Arcadio Don-
ley Br„ who resid* at 1710 East Six-
teen th street. Beside* hl* parent* he
is survived by three brothers—Ramon.
Guillermo and Ernest Dontay—and one
sister, Mrs. Benito Donley Acosta.
Dring the woria war he was a mem-
ber of Company D, Twenty-third In-
fantry. and died while overseas Oc-
tober «. 1918. He was a member of
the famous "loot battalion” la the
HOUSTON, Texas, July South-
ern Pacific official* in conterence to-
day with Ralph King, general chairman
of the Brotherhood of Hallway Clerk*
and a committee representing the un-
ion. refused to abrogate the separate
agreement recently made with clerks
: in the reneral offices.
I King contended that the labor board
| decisions sustain him in his con ten-
i tion that his committee should nego-
. tint* the azreement covering both cier-
leal and station employe*
. _
Statseraictthey were Pleased withxustinbyrexpress. -In addition some
Derense counsel announced there will freight movements were mad* Dur-
be no appeal__inr the season of UfO-tl there were
during the trall.
Both counsel for the defense and
it appear* was to strike alrecuy at
th* Turkish center at Kutaia, (now
reported from Athens to have been
occupied by the Greeks) where the
third nationalist army corp* com-
death penalty. Ball tor Miss McAr-
die was refused today by Judge Bernon counter. . - • - . -
«nny
as £ »s a »as Ae Hm M iEemee «
ary freedom. Martan is alleged to ered that the land in Trevis County
have furthered her mother's murder centered about Austin contained all the
designs and to have played the piano propianelamaestsafoncrengetnna"ippa
252
U
ip 1
-sp
[win lie in state in the governor's pri-
. vats reception room until the funeral,
which has been set for Wednesday
in Minneapolla, July 14, and
a few baskets. The results were so
good he went Into the spinach busi-
ness much deeper the next year
“Other farmers saw the possiblittes
in raising spinach and the spinach in-
dustry at Austin grew rapidly. In
the las"year Norfolk has come up and
now equals the Bone Star State point
"For the season of 1919-20 there were
fl®
ANATOLIA CAMPAIGN ",5
Spwio,ptheaut SthtEmozne-
abeMarasdegjgana an.“ 20
to cut him off before he travel* far
on Ilfs'* pathway seem tutue Recent-
hr he tail from th* second story wm-
dow of a houe to Beaunoat hitting
the cement pavement net end was
not injured. Yesterny he had a pea-
nut removed from his right lung by
an operation tn a local sanitarium.
He was playing with some companion
in Benurmont And was laughing and
runntne when half of a kernel of pea-
nut loged in hie wind pipe, strang-
ling him, and later doscondin into
the right lung. He was rushed to a
nanltarium here, and the operation yen-
terday removed the peanut eatiuactor-
lly Ha is reported rooting wen new
ana will soon be out.
He is only 16 months old.
special to The Austin Statesman.
DALLAS, Texas, July 16.Clarence
Watson. negro, may die and his step-
father. Will Kirkendolph, is seriously
wounded as the result of a cutting ot-
fray here Saturday afternoon.
Watson was slashed across the ad:
bomen, stabbed in the back and right
shoulder and otherwise cut. Kirk
wendolph was slashed across the throat
and forehead. A long bladed knife
was used by Kirkendolph. Watson
wrenched it away from him and used
it after he had been cut by his step-
father.
Alfredo Martino, 48, was slashed in
the abdomen and on the left arm with
a knife wielded by another Mexican
tonight. Martino says his assailant
ws "muy boracho." He escaped.
Because of her physical condition.
Mrs. Kaber will not be taken to pris-
on for ten days more, it was said. The
jail physician said he thought Mr*
Kaber’s condition is due to over-strain .
their attention to
Involved in providi
her* for *o import,
meeting plan* haa
although suggestio
that that the Pan
probably would pr
In th* national on;
it is thought no
•rat hotels and ap
have to be taken c
th* visitor*
the crime are Mr* Erminta Colavito. I
mid-wife-nurse, who is alleged to have
been a go-between for Mrs. Kaber and
Salvatore Cala anavitor Pisselli, who
are alleged to have actually killed
Kaber.
Mrs. Kaber showed no signs of in-
terest in the verdict or even the sen:
tence Imposed by the court. If in fact
she actually knew what w as happen-
ing. for she was apparently oblivious of
all thing* She merely nodded her
head when pressed for answers as to
whether she understood. She waa
limp and had to be carried to and from ,
the court room.
Her own fate seeled, what little In- |
terest Mr* Kaber did show was snid
to be in the future of her daughter
whom County Prosecutor Edward C. .
Stanton says he will ask be given the t
City Hospital Friday night by the po-
lice. who were called to his home by
neighbors after three shots were heard.
Upon reaching Boring's home the offi-
cer* were forced to break into the
house and found the wounded man
lying on the floor of his room with a
35-20 caliber pistol a few feet from
his body.
During a conscious Interval imme-
diately after the officers reached his
home Boring asked to be informed how
he had been shot. He stated that he
did not know how the near-tragedy
had cote about. He identified the
small caber pistol as his own.
485 express cars shipped north and *
freight cars of spinach.
"Th* spinach movement begins in
December and lasts until about th*
middle of April, Th* prices quoted
were rather low the peat year or the
movement would have been consider-
ably larger.
"The City at Austin,' in the Umpire of
Texas, which Stat* covers 266,000
square mite* has a number of distin-
guishing feature* This city .has al-
ways been known as the head* of edu-
cation in Texas. Austin is located In
that part of Texas where the moun-
tains meet the plains and half the city
is on level country and the other had
is on hills. It is located in that port
of Texas which is most abundant in
minerals conducive to the study of ge-
ology. There are other things that dis-
tinguish Austin. among the most prom-
inent of which is the production of
spinach."
After telling in detail about the
growing of spinach and the method at
harvesting this crop which is don*
mainly by Mexican* th* writer con-
cludes his article by stating “Austin
is at the prenent time the second lar«-
est psoduoing point in the United Statez
and will doubtless continue to hold
its prestige and become the largest
produelg point*
By Associated Press ■
CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 16.—Mrs
Eva Catherine Kaber today.escaped the
electric chair but was found guilty
of first degree murder for plotting the
assassination of her husband. Daniel
F. Kaber.
It was the hope that mercy would
be extended by a male Jury whieh
caused her counsel to exclude women
Juror* on the ground that they are
more cold blooded and merciless than
men.
The hope was fulfilled when the
home on the night of July it, Hl*.
There remain five others to be tried
rallying strongly from the effects of
his wounds. He was carried to the
ALDNIN 8 SONS
PRINTERS F BINDERS
BOOKMAKERS
STATE CONTRACTORS
BX
By A. setated Free*
CORsTANTINOPLE, July It.—King
Constantin. Is undertaking the acttve
s
Don’t fail to get a pair of
Black or Tan Oxfords. Just
the thing for service. Sizes
8 to 11. Priced $1.85
By Associated Press.
WASHINGTON, July 1*.—.Diplomatie
preliminaries to the disarmament con-
ference went into a period of qules-
oence today whie Japan delboratea
whether to consent to the breed als-
cusslon of Far Estern problems con-
sidered emsentiat by this government if
a serious disarmament effort is to be
attempted.
So ter as could be leraned, no word
had come to th* state department to-
night in response to lb* informal ex-
planation mad* to Japan yesterday
relative to probabie scope of the con-
ference. Official* however, made no
necrot of their conttnued confidence
82 5
w
Pa
If you get prices on your printing from two or more Printers, have
them give you price* on the tame thing.
Send the same specifications to all the Printer*, and insist that they
be followed.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas, July 1«.—
Investigation was started hero today
into an alleged statewide ring which
is said to be furnishing answers to ap-
licants for teachers.
The investigation followed the de-
tection of a negro woman, taking the
examination here for state teachers’
certificate with a copy and informal
officers from whom she purchased it
On this information officers have
served subpoenas tn disclose crime
upon twelve negroes in San Antonio
ordering them to report in court late
today.
County muperintendent W. A. Thur-
man who detected the negroes with the
answers declared today that the in-
vestigation tends to show that whites
as well as negroes are involved and
that the ring is statewide. He de-
clared there is a leak somewhere
through which copies of the state
snperin ten dent’s questions for the ex-
aminations are obtained by presone
who compile the answers and sell them
to applicants for certificates.
S. P. OFFICES STAND
BY AGREEMENT MADE
WITH THEIR CLERKS
- _ . . 3. O'Donnell, C. 8. C.. otfiedatin »I
not recommended mercy, the court th* obsequies. Interment will be held
would have been compelled to sentence in Oakwood Cemetery under the aus-
Mr*. Kaber to die in the electric chair, pices at the American Legion.__
The prison term for Mra. Kaber was Private Arbuckle, aged 22 Vea was
the first tangible result of the State'* A member. ot.Companyk 360“klna
effort to bring to justice those respon- tantry. Ninetieth Division, was kiled
sible for the murder of the Lakewood in action in the Meuse sector on No-
publsher as he- tay an invalid fLhis vovpon pody wiu be taken
to the state capitol, where the body
on first degree murder charges in con-
nection with the crime. -
Two ot these are Mrs. Mary Bickel
aged mother and Miss Marian McAr-
dle, daughter of Mrs. Kaber.
Miss McArdle was with her mother, '
who was lying in a semi-conscious
state in her cell in the county jail American Legion. '
when news ot.the verdict.was brought Besides his parente, Mr. and Mr* J.
to them by Attorney W. Poukson, Mgs. m Arbuckie, who resid* east of Austin
Kaber's personal counsel. lonthe Manor road. Private Arbuckle
Mrs Kaber'* mother, 89 years of age, is survived by six brothers and two
was at Sterling house, a detention homa sisters.
for women. The others charged with,
445
-- " ver
ell ■ e m e “r
By Associated Pres*
CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 16— The
Rainbow Division Veterans' Associa-
tion tailed to endorse an immediate
cash bonus for former soldiers at th*
clobing session of their annual conven-
tion here today. They paused a res-
olution, however, recommending eariy
collection of th* accrued intereut on
th* allied war debt to the United
states and the use of the money to
pay th* adjusted compensation for ex-
service men.
The bonus remolution, reported out
at committee after two da ya dincus-
alon, took into eonsideratton the fact
that treasury officials elated it would
be imvossibie to pay a bonus without
disrupting the financial organiration
of th* government.
It condemned th* "waste of the mil-
lion* at dollars each year in the em-
ployment of a vast army of unneces-
sary public officers and agents ana in-
dulgence la other forms of national I
extrevagance by th* federal covern-
ment."
Ths latter clause was said to be In-
tended as a condemns teen of th*
amount at money being spent in en-
forcement of th* Volstead act.
A resolution wa* adopted demanding
efficient care for atsabled service men
Colone George R. Lench, former
commanding orRieer at the IMst field
artillery, now mayor of Minneapolls '
was elected president for the ensuing
rear.
Th* next national convention win
Contract for th* construction of two
new building* at the Texas Agricul-
tural and Mechanical College was
awarded to Jacob Wattinger A Horn,
contractors of this city, Friday, it was
announced Saturday by Jacob Wat-
tinger Sr. _
The contract calls for the erection
of a modern agricultural building cost-
Ing $250,000 and a workshop coating
$150,600. Th* contract wa* closed Fri-
day in a comterence between Jacob
Wattinger Jr. and the board of direct-
or* of fees A. A M. College.
Details of th* buildings were not
available Saturday night, as Mr. Wat-
tinger is nt expected to return to
Austin untltjsome tlm* today.
E Man,
opb
aq-4ppe ‘5-40 11*
cesSeda,
gmg
gud"
, ■ F ■
CV, - i
3
MeemaN
pmesmth
g2a
Stockholders of the Security Trust ----------- —--------
company, which maintains offices in wan found in his room Friday night
this city, in the Littief ield building. . with two bullet wounds in his head.
Saturday received the first dividends. •
amounting to 6 per cent, according to
E. P. Cravens, cashier. The total divi-
dends which are being paid to seventy-
S548
a-EReke
red
afternoon at 5 o’clock. Dr. E. Olnder,
president of the Texas Wesleyan Uol-
W* are now wotting out a good line of Sanitary Wiping Rags
I*m* an ty»** of machinery and for automohlles. Abi
eurantesa to b of Rre^M^a;. Ugrewkly "pitait
BAUM JUNK 00.
•M Kam Sixth St A«Ua. Texna (
Austim's Mew Mnterprtee.
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 44, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 17, 1921, newspaper, July 17, 1921; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1534486/m1/13/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .