Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 281, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 20, 1923 Page: 1 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Galveston Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
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1
VESTON TRIBUNE
INOURTOWN
I
NO. 281.
VOL. 41
COOLD • ®EOS f ) ERNO '
STRESEMANN TO LONGSHOREMEN
CALLS ON STATES
RETURN TO WORK
TAKE UP RUHR AND
OTHER PROBLEMS
AFTERWALKOUT
TO ASSUME SHARE
Brief Halt Occurs Satur-
OF RESPONSIBILITY
day Morning.
V
By Associated Press.
By Associated Press.
sponded to his invitation to attend a white house conference on law
liberally encouraged by the Bavarian handled by local No. 329, a negro organ-
ization, and the South Seas at Pier 15
the president said, are per-
all ships entering this port provided
■ New Sensations In Fake Annual Meeting at Frisco
Diplomas Probe.
Closes.
BUSCH WRITES
TODAY
COOLIDGE ON
1
be based on an order from
Buffalo,
International
2)
SNOWFALL IN MICHIGAN.
ENJOIN OFFICIALS
IN PAST ELECTION
FAIR EDITION. '
are practicing
I
important than railroad rates?
senate
was late yesterday granted by Judge
gether while ladies prayed.
)
THOUGHTS ON THE KLAN AND THE TWO GEORGES
By Will Rogers
J
“As I pick up my . the thing was done. I was away on lo-
ee
2
o.koSi
LLOYD GEORGE IN LOUISVILLE.
I
TRIBUNE BOOTH.
r
4
new
th a
and
Ballots of Mayfield-Peddy
Senate Race Involved.
Berlin government is
activities in that state
Then, 10
written
cano contributed Louis Firpo’s memoirs;
The New York (American first) Amer-
ican contributed Spark Plug and Hiram
P
K
Soldiers and Boy Scouts
Attending County Fair;
Field Meet Scheduled
and
on
L
Guests Are Hurled From
Their Beds.
Public Discussi in Is On
Schedule.
BOMB ROCKS BIG
ST. LOUIS HOTEL
15,000 “QUACK”
DOCTORS IN U. S.
AMERICAN LEGION
ELECTS OFFICERS
illicit manufacturer of intoxicants into
1 the home and by flooding the country
not announced. 1..— ---- -----
I executive department his acceptance.
&
a
A
Friday the union men agreed to work j sive both to the president and the zov-
l shin« anterino this nan+ nwnwid. i ernors of states. He added that the
By* Associated Press.
St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 20.—Political considerations such as the
raising of party campaign funds has entered the enforcement of the
national prohibition law and apparently has made certain large cities
immune from the provisions of the Volstead act, August A. Busch,
former brewer, declared in a letter to President Coolidge, which
was made public here last night. The letter was written by Busch
under date of October 15 in connection with the conference of gov-
ernors of states at Washington today with the president to discuss
enforcement of the dry law.
In the letter Busch asserted that the huge steel, oil and packing
interests of the country had financed and advocated the enforcement
of the eighteenth amendment to side track government anti-trust
proceedings against them, and that only two and one half per cent
of the people of the United States had had a voice in the enactment
of the law. The letter ascribed the latter assertion as the reason for
wholesale disregard of the law by the people.
It only costs twenty-five
get into the fail' grounds.
For that modest sum one
THE WEATHER
FORECAST.
‘ I
r
cation making a Covered Wagon Pic-
ture (I found two Covered Wagons out
here that had' not worked in the orig-
inal so I decided to put them on the
Screen, as I think that every Wagon
that has a clean sheet should be seen
by the multitudes).
Well, as I say, I was away when Mr.
Ochs of the New York Times wired me
and asked if I had any objections to
my Editorials appearing in this com-
bined Paper. Me being away and him
not hearing, why, he supposed of course
that it was O. K. But had I known about
it the thing never would have happen-
Unless Dr. Gessler now succeeds in I this demand.
selecting a successor to Von Lossow euAmeetingnotmaster. stevedores and
snipping men was held in the Cotton
as military governor of Bavaria, the Exchange building Saturday morning,
central government’s state of emer- but there was no indication forthcom-
f
l
I
j
Ks
The annual county fair edition of
the Galveston Tribune isbeingmailed
to every part of the United States.
Hundreds have been sent from the
Tribune booth at the county fair where
an ample supply is on hand.
The annual fair edition of the Trib-
une presents in graphic manner the
progress and development of Galves-
ton city and county during the past
year.
You can help advertise the city and
county by mailing a copy of this edi-
tion to your friends in other parts of
the state and country.
behold! Mess-ages were
More than 5,000 people took in the
sights at the county fair Friday.
Beautiful weather is prevailing today
and there should be an even larger
attendance today and Sunday.
. Everything points to the third an-
nual Galveston county fair being a
far greater'success than any that have
gone before. ,
This is in keeping with the ambition '
of the Galveston County Fair Associa- j
-€ $
which is being loaded by non-union ; statutes,
dockworkers. The Morgan and Mal-
lory lines are not affected.
race figured
that the same men working on the
docks September 30 be re-employed.
: The shipping interests refused to meet
Comedian Gets
Sad Ne a s Bat
Ketps Working
- I
Busch declared that lax enforcement
of the prohibition law has corrupted
j the federal service, uprooted respect
| for law and has set back the cause of
I temperance many years by driving the
cents to
obtained for the high school diplomas
was about $10, he continued, adding
that he disposed of about 1,000 of them.
He asserted that he had evidence
of at least 100 physicians practicing in
various parts of the country wih false
licenses, and that he would present the
names of these to Sidener, together
with hundreds of those he believed
Extra copies of the Tribune’s
fair edition may be had by per-
sons desiring to send them to
friends in other sections.
Leave the address and ten cents
with the Tribune circulation de-
partment and a copy of the pa-
per will be mailed.
Postage on one copy of the
paper when mailed by an indi-
vidual will be six cents.
or what is more improbable, in case ... .________=
they got a government that considers 1 genuine sheepskins.
the people of the . United States more i Intimation was
Meeting with more than thirty state executives who had re-
tion to make each fair greater and
grander than the last.’
As. Mr. Levy, head of the fair finance
committee expresses it, the biggest
quarters’ worth ever offered is pro-
vided for those who attend the fair.
-aeres are at hand. I never thought
the day would come when those papers
would ever agree on anything, much
less be printed on the same pages with
their rivals. But, when it comes to dol-
lars and sense. Policies and Hatreds are
discarded.
It really hurt my pride tremendously
to have my Paper, the New York Times,
mingle its name on the same Headline
with various low-brow Publications,
and I hereby take this means of in-
forming my VAST CIRCLE of readers
that it was not with my approval thai
, , Houston, Oct. 20.—The port of Hous.
The situation with regard to Saxony i ton was tied up this morning when the
indicates a temporary abatement in the : screwmen and longshoremen working
tension of the past few days and the on the municipal docks failed to re-
torney Howard Sidener by William P.
Sachs, former examiner for the Mis-
souri school department, who volun-
tarily appeared at Sidener’s office and
confessed to taking part in a “diploma
mill” which was exposed Monday by a
reporter for a local newspaper.
Sachs named Doctor Robert Adcox of
St. Louis and Doctors D. R. Alexander
and Ralph Voight of Kansas City, all
of whom have been arrested and re-
leased on bond as members of the
clique which operated in Missouri, and
asserted that several other “diploma
mills” were in existence in the Eastern
part of the country and in California.
Telling of his connection with the
clique, Sachs told Sidener that he had
sold principally high school certificates
which it was necessary for persons
wishing to buy a short cut to the med-
ical profession to obtain before pur-
chasing their medical school diplomas
and finally state licensed. He declared
that his activities in the clique ex-
tended over a period of ten years, and
dictator, Dr. Von Kahr, has so incen-
sed both the president and Dr. Gess-
I ler that they felt the federal military
authority and army discipline would be
menaced should they permit the reich-
swehr commander to flout them fur-
ther.
made by Sidener
Railroads Be Kind.
Spirits Don’t Write.
One a Minute? More.
fctily plain,” in the directions they
was ordered set for Amarillo at 10
o’clock, Oct. 30.
The petition, sweeping in its scope,
names all county clerks of Texas and
several hundred presiding judges in
election precincts as defendants, and
asks that the restraining order be is-
sued to preserve the ballots and elec-
tion records for use as evidence in the
contest of Mayfield’s seat in the sen-
ate. It recites the contest petition was
filed by Peddy on Feb. 22, 1923 and ac-
cording to a Texas election law, elec-
tion records may be burned on or after
Nov. 8, 1923. This date is before con-
gress assembles in its new session, or
before a hearing on the contest petition
could be held it further recites.
free vaudeville attractions, hear band
concerts, and wander at will among
the varied exhibits. i
It’s worth two-bits of any one’s ;
money!
The United States cruiser Tacoma
will be in Galveston on Oct. 25.
The warship will remain over to
participate in navy day exercises here
on Oct. 27.
Naval maneuvers will be held and the
public given some idea of the part
played by the United States navy in
American affairs.
New York Newspa-
pers all combined
into one little Pa-
per (for, on account
of a Pressma n‘s
strike all the Pa-
pers combined and
got out a daily to-
gether) I see at last
DR Y MEASURES
his auditors howling, with laughter at ‘
his witty lines. The line he had. read
in the elegram however, were:
“Mother dying; hurry home."
PALESTINE MAN
IS GIVEN POST
port. It is stated here that a confer-
ence is under way in Galveston of of-
ficials of striking organizations. The
: strike is said to be the result of the
failure of stevedoring firms, east of
the Mississippi, on the gulf, to come to
terms with this class ef labor.'
Nine ships, in various stages of load-
ing, are tied up in this port.
About 150 men are affected.
Screwmen and longshoremen reach-
ed an agreement with operators on
west gulf coast points several days
ago, after a dispute over wage scales.
Today’s sympathetic strike is said to
in Missouri without
headquarters of the
Longshoremen’s Union.
There are in port boats over which a
controversy arose because they were
partially loaded by a non-union labor
; crew at New Orleans. This morning
! the union men were due to show up
on these boats and load them, waiving
their objections. This plan was stop-
ped, however, by the strike order.
Khaki became the predominant color on the fair grounds at Dick-
inson today as Boy Scouts of the city and county and soldiers from
Fort Crockett turned out in force for the fourth day of the fair,
designated in honor of the scouts. At 2 o’clock this afternoon, a Boy
Scout field meet was scheduled to start. The soldiers and scouts
were guests of the fair association for the day.
With attendance during the first
three days ranging in an ascending
scale until officials yesterday put the
crowd at approximately 5,000, Satur-
day is expected to outdistance preced-
ing days of the fair in greater propor-
tion. The culmination of the fair is
expected Sunday, Galveston day. On
the predicted success of the last day
officials are pinning most of their
hopes for making of the fair this year
a paying proposition.
Not even a cloud flecked the sky this
morning to mar the perfect , weather
that has prevailed for the fair during
the past two days. As a result of this
favorable weather the grounds at
Dickinson are in excellent condition,
Today’s program will be the most at-
rived here today, a *?ception commit- j
tee planned to escort him to points of i
interest in and about Louisville alter j
which, acording to a tentative pro- 1
gram, it was intended that he be the i
guest over the week-end of Judge Rob- [
ert W. Bingham, publisher of the I
Louisville Times and Courier Journal.
The program provided for on public
functions.
Washington, Oct. 20.—President Coolidge called on the gover-
nors of the several states today to assume their full share of respon-
sibility for enforcement of the prohibition laws.
confining its
By Associated Press.
Los Angeles, Oct. 20.—In response to
impatient calls from the audience of a
local theater, William Burress, the
featured comedian of the play, stuffed
into his pocket the telegram which had
delayed the ringing up of the curtain
and stepped from the wings to keep
country “ought to comprehend that
when laws have been made, there is
and can be no question about the duty
of executives to enforce them with
such Instruments and by such means
as the law provides for securing en-
forcement.”
“TO HIM that hath shall be given."
Fxpensive rents in New York and other
big dities are coming down. The rents j
of poor people going up and there are ।
not rooms enough to house them. Vio- i
Intions of tenement house laws are I
w'nked at, because people “must live |
< mewhere," even in firetraps and un-
healthy, dangerous structures.
Continued on Page Three.
The president suggested no
means of co-operation between
federal government and state
they spelled; II Progress© Italo-Ameri- By Associated Press.
- - , , ------- "------------,— Louisville, Ky., Oct. 20.—David Lloyd
George, former British premier, ar- /
J
ir
11
I
)
the Berlin government is busily en- the exception of three ships. , ■ enforcement Mr. Coolidge flatly declared that "no provision of the
gaged in an effort to subdue the red The only vessels working cargo Sat- i . .
preyier of Saxony, Von Lpssow's stub- urday morning, save coastwise, were-, eighteenth amendment or the national prohibition act contemplates
borness in acting on the orders of the the steamers Etna Maru at 35 and the ' any surrender of state responsibility.”
defense minister in which he has been Jolee at 32, both of which are being : * -
Austin Oct. 20.-—Appointment of ■
aea-a
caused y Ti. I. nfirmed with in any way ballots of the general
Cook of San^tonio was confirmed , election of last November in which the
Saturday by Ms Espa Stanford,- pri- j Mayfield-peday
I vate secretary to Gov. Neff before leav- । i---- , - •
' ing last Monday for Westbaden, Ind. 1 James c. Wilson in federal court here.
Gov. Neff had tendered the off ce to , The order was granted on petition
I Mr. Royall, but the appointment was filed in behalf of George E. Peddy by
Royall has wired his attorney, Luther Nickels of Dallas.
Peddy's petition also asked the court
to appoint receivers in all counties of
the state to take possession of the bal-
lot boxes and all election records and
a hearing on this clause of the petition
LITTLE individuals that get into the I
bands of high finance, via the bucket-
shop, get a thorough dose of the medi- i
cine chosen. A New York bankruptcy ;
of the bucketshop type, shows that
customers had n the shop stocks
woth ten million dollars.
The financiers in charge of the job
sold these stocks in “one big clean-up.”
But they went right on charging the
customers six par cent on the stocks
hat had been sold. After they had
pen sold out customers paid $300,000
in interest. Barnum greatly under-
estimated nature’s fecundity when he
spoke of "one every minute.”
By Associated Presa.
San Francisco, Oct. 20.—With anoth-
er year’s program mapped out and a
new leader chosen. American Legion-
naires ended their 1923 convention with
would have personally made him the
loan.
Each Paper was supposed to con-
tribute something. The Times, as ex-
pected, contributed the intellectual
reading matter (due, of course, to a
couple of other Writers assisting me).
The New York World contributed all
the news of the Klan; the New York
Herald contributed the Republican Ali-
bis; the Daily News contributed the
Pictures to their Public who can’t
read; the New York Staals Zeltung con-
tributed Words, but nobody knew what
were purchased from cliques of phy- i a mammoth ball last night and today
sicians probably will be given to fed- I thousands of delegates were speeding
eral authorities for investigation, it ' home to an sections of the United 'States
was announced today by local prose- I saying farewell with the same char-
cuting officials. acteristic and noisy demonstrations
The information was said to have I with which they greeted each other
been given yesterday to Circuit At- H‛Sodn‛ R^Quinn of California was
made no comment on the declaration
of the governors yesterday in their
conference at West Baden, Ind., or on
the suggestions as to enforcement
methods recently put forward by in-
dividual governors. He did say, how-
ever, that the problems of law en-
forcement could not be answered by
"political intrigue," or determined “by
extremists on either side."
By Associated Press,
St. Louis, Oct. 20.—Several persons
were slightly injured and scores of
guests driven to the street in night
clothes early today when a bomb ex-
ploded in the rear of the St. Louis ho-
tel, which is located near the business
section of the city. The bomb shat-
tered windows in the hotel and in busi-
ness houses across the street. The im-
pact of the blast hurled many guests
from their beds and caused several
; persons sitting in the lobby to be cut
by flying glass. Police said they had
found no reason for any one to place
I the bomb near th* hotel
to a general
tractive since the opening day events.
In addition to the Boy Scout stunts
this afternoon, consisting of demon-
strations of scout craft, five aero-
planes are scheduled to arrive from
Kelly field for an aerial exhibition.
The planes are being brought to the
fair through arrangements made by
the recruiting service. They will stage
an afternoon air performance and
probably will repeat their stunts for
the Sunday crowd.
Aside from the regular program
Sunday, dancing will be held in the
afternoon, starting at 3:30 o’clock.
Fair officials are putting on the after-
noon dance to accommodate those who
can not remain for the evening dance,
starting at 8.30 o’clock
continued on Page Eleven
THAT sounds reasonable, but it
might in the long run be a little dan-
gerous, in case the people ever hap-
pen to think about their public affairs
after the conference that he would use
Sachs as a state’s witness in the prose-
cution of members of the clique, and
that information pertaining to other
j states would be turned over to federal
authorities.
Sachs, who was sought by police for
several days in connection with the
exposure, was not hold by Sidener, who
said he expected to question him fur-
ther next week.
gency decree will become null and void 8 that the demands of the union men
would be met.
so far as Bavaria is concerned and Die- Negro 1ca1 N, son , ,
tator Von Kahr will then be in a posi- up a year’s contract with has psigned
tion to disregard entirely any edict liamson, master stevedore, agreeing to
proclaimed by President Ebert or the work all vessels entering this port,
minister of defense. Reports from Houston stated long-
The immediate outcome of the pres- shoremen there had also returned to
ent controversy will be another ex- i work this afternoon
change of diplomatic amenities be- j ___
tween Berlin and Munich in which th* I STRIKE AT HOUSTON,
central government, experience shows, } By Associated Press.
usually comes out second best. 1
those cards and the names of
Berlin, Oct. 20.—Chancellor Strese- eral longshoremen’s strike for a few
mann, it is announced, will publicly hours along the Galveston waterfront :
discuss today Germany’s foreign rela- were dispelled when shipping men an-
tions and the situation in the Ruhr nounced that members of the Interna-
and Rhineland. tional Longshoremen’s Association were
The report that Gen. Von Lossow, returning to their work at 1 o’clock
commander of the Reichswehr in Saturday. Whether the difficulty along
Bavaria has been recalled by Dr. Otto the waterfront had been permanently
I Gessler, the military dictator, was con- settled or merely a temporary agree-
firmed at the ministry of defense late ment had been reached was not known,
last night. While President Ebert and Up until 1 o’clock Saturday afternoon
Dr. Gessler sincerely desires to avoid the entire waterfront was tied up by
fricetlon with Munich at a time when longshoremen refusing to work, with
THE railroads would do well to
treat President Coolidge’s polite re-
quest kindly. They might live to see
a president, or a popular movement,
that wouldn’t be so polite about it.
Of course, there is the side of the
railroads. Any railroad president
might say, “of course, why shouldn’t
we charge more to people in America
than to people living abroad? The peo-
ple in America can’t help themselves,
we have them where we want them.
Foreigners can buy somewhere else,
and in their case we are obliged to
compete for business.”
Miss Gertrude Girardeau, in Friday’s
edition of the Tribune, outlined the
many functions served by the Galves-
ton chapter of the American Red
Cross.
Miss Girardeau is executive secre-
tary of the Galveston chapter.
What the Red Cross does every day
in the year in Galveston is:
Maintains a public health nursing
service.
Aids disabled ex-service men through
the home service sectio.
Has an efficient life-saving organi-
zation.
Collects fund/. to relieve victims of
disaster.
Fosters a junior Red Cross.
The annual Red Cross roll call will
be held shortly.
It only takes a dollar to get an an-
nual membership card.
elected national commander to succeed
Alvin Owsley of Denton, Tex.
He is a former California cowboy
and now a prosperous rancher and land
owner and was elected on the eleventh
ballot yesterday, with 502 votes, com-
pared with 342 for James A. Drain of
Washington, D. C.; 80 for Clarence R.
Edwards of Boston, and 54 for Wilder
8. Metcalf of Kansas, with 15 absent
or not voting.
Five vice commanders were elected
as follows:
Ryan Duffy, Fon Du Lac, Wis.; Thur-
man Mann, Hightpoint, N. C.; William
B. Healy, Wilkes Barre, Pa.; C. M.
Stoddard, Arizona, and Lester Albert,
i Idaho.
Ezra C. Clemans of Minnesota is the
new national chaplain.
As the legionnaires turned their
backs on San Francisco one phrase
was on every tongue.
"See you in St. Paul next year, bud-
dy.”
policing movement in an effort to sup-
press lawlessness and rioting.
A report that Gen. Von Mueller,
reichswehr commander in Saxony, has
been recalled—.is officially denied. It
is said that the military governor of
Saxony is acting in complete unison
with President Ebert and Dr. Gessler.
admitted having sold a few medical
school diplomas. The average price
The provisions of the eighteenth
amendment and its supplementary
St. Louis, Oct. 20.—(By Associated
Press).—Information alleging that
probably fifteen thousand persons are
practicing medicine in the country un-
der fake diplomas and licenses which
"SPIRIT messages impress scien-
tist s.”
The scientists must have been duller
than usual or the medium cleverer
than usual.
In this case the medium put flowers
between white blank cards, supplied by
the scientists, and pressed them to-
with smuggled liquors, many of which
are dangerous to the public health.
Without offering any proposal for
remedying the situation, Busch ex-
pressed willingness to co-operate with
governmental authorities to "reduce
intemperance to an irreducible mini-
mum," which, he said, would restore
law and order and "purge the govern-
ment of the corruption that now
threatens to undermine the republic,”
By Associated Press.
Sault Ste Marie, Mich., Oct. 20.—Two
inches of snow fell here last night
and early today in the .wake of the
storm that swept the upper lakes Fri-
day. Although the storm had subsided
today few vessels were passing
through the locks.
GALVESTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20,1923.—TWELVE PAGES
He said that when his representa-
tives presented evidence of widespread
violation of the Volstead act to en-
forcement officials at Washington an
officer, whom he did not name, ad-
mitted that "the department has be-
come so corrupt that it could not en-
force the law.”
The letter concluded by calling the
attention of the president to a recent
communication from Prohibition Com-
missioner Haynes to Congressman Hill
of Maryland, in which Haynes declared
it was not -his intention to interfere
with the right of farmers to make
cider and fruit juices for their own use.
Busch interpreted the communication
as “exempting the farmers from the
Volstead act,”
- ■ By ARTHUR BRISBANE-------
(Copyright, 1923, by Star Company)
PRESIDENT COOLIDGE asks the
railroads, most politely, to treat Amer-
ican citizens as well as they treat for-
eigners in freight rates on coal.
Learn, dearly beloved, that if you
buy coal in Pennsylvania to be ship-
ped to your home in New York or else-
where in the United States, you pay a
certain price for ton per mile. If an-
Englishman, Frenchman, or other for-
eigner orders that same coal from
Pennsylvania to be shipped to New
York City, and put on a boat for
Europe, he gets a cheaper rate from
the American railroads than the Amer-
ican citizen can get.
can see I
For Galveston and vicinity:
Fair tonight and Sunday; not
much change in temperature.
For East Texas: Tonight and
/ Sunday generally fair; continued
cool.
For West Texas: Tonight and
Sunday generally fair: warmer
in north portion Sunday.
For Oklahoma: Tonight and
Sunday mostly fair; probably
frost tonight; warmer in north-
west portion Sunday.
Winds on Texas Coast: Light
to moderate north to northeast.
Stead and James, dead gentlemen in-
terested in spiritualism.
Most marvelous of all, "the thing
was done in broad daylight.” Houdini,
the French magician, would do things
ten times as remarkable and then
show you how it was done—also in
broad daylight.
Conditions appearing to be a gen- l
The Tribune has a booth in the
Merchants’ Display building at
the County Fair, where all adult
visitors may register, starting
today. These names will be print-
ed. Copies of the Tribune’s
County Fair edition are obtain-
able at the booth. Subscriptions
will be taken there also.
ed, because I feel that my Literary Johnson’s latest speech. So as you read
standing has been lessened, and I take this combined New York Paper you
this mesns of informing my Public and could tell at a glance just what paper
most of al my old College friends and was responsible for it being in there.
Alma Mater that I had nothing to do So I hope I have made it plain to my
wwith it personally. Had I known that Public that I had nothing to do with
Mr. Ochs didn’t have enough money to my articles slumming, as they have
get out his paper alone without min- been lately.
gling with those other small timers, I j Continued on Page Five.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 281, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 20, 1923, newspaper, October 20, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1597172/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.