The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 159, Ed. 1 Monday, August 4, 1919 Page: 3 of 4
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(COLLEGE PROFESSOR CAN'T
. FIND ANYTHING RESEM-
BLING RED DOCTRINE
VERBAL TILTS MARK SESSION
Witness** and Attorney Engage In
Brilliant Duel of Wits.—Tribune
Poem Is Read To Jury With
) Dramatic Effect.
YOUNG LADY DESCRIBE*
ERUPTION OP VOLCANO.
By associated Press.
Sinapore, June 21.(By Mail.) — The
awful scenes which prevailed when
the volcano of Kalut in Java burst in-
to eruption on May 20, destroyed 26
villages and caused a loss of life es-
timated by some at 50,000 are vividly
described by Miss E. W. Cranen who
has arrived here from Sourabaya.
A river of boiling mud and lava that
overwhelmed the village of Blitar,
where Miss Cranen was staying, she
says, was ten miles wide and four feet
deep. "
The first symptoms of the coming
eruption. Miss Cranen said, were the
sounds like thunder and vivid flashes
in the sky. Enormous boulders were
flung from the volcano into the low
lands around it for immense distanc-
es. There was pitchy darkness owing j
to a rain of ashes.
Then came warning to the occu-
pants of the hotel at Blitar that the
river of iava and mud was approach-
ing. "We were almost beside ourselv-
es as to what to do to avoid a hid-
leous end,” she said. Twenty-four of
those staying at the hotel escaped
failed. Counsel also made efforts to|death in the boilinS mud bX fleeing
draw damaging admissions from thelaboard a motor car driven by the wife
■ ML Clemens, Mich., July 30 —
Lawyer and teacner, matched wits hi
the Ford-Tribune libel case Wednes-
day and the teacher w«n when W. A.
Budding, professor of Memory and po-
litical philo.-ophy at Columbia Univer-
sity met and defeated E liott G. Ste'
jenson in the most tuilliant display of
(verbal fencing that has been seen dur-
ing the entire trial.
Mr. Stevenson tried hard to draw
from Prof. Dunning in admission that
Henry Ford was an anarchist but
pOR SALE-
200,000 76 per cent; the 50,000 to 100,-
000 group, 81 per cent, and the little
cities, or those under 50,000 71 per
sent.
Twenty-one cities out of twenty-six
of more than 200,000 Inhabitants, each
have placed over 50 per cent of their
soldiers and sailors. The Middle West
claiitfs the first five places on the list
of the big cities on the percentage
basis. Mineapolis heads this list with
a record of 126 percent of registered
men placed (which means that she
placed every man registered in the
United States bureau and a large num-
ber unregistered or .signed up with
other organizations). St. Louis fol
lows Minneapolis with 102 per cent,
Cleveland shows 92 per cent, Toledo, | FOR SALE—Two good milch
86 per cent and Kansas Ciiy 81 per | both fresh. T. W. Moughon, 3J
cent. ^ east on Fort Worth road.
Los Angeles, Portland (Oregon),! - _ .
Philadelphia. Seattle, Chicago and FOR SALE—50 choice Holstetn **ows;
Baltimore had over 2000 men to place and heifers. In T. R. Erwin's feed lota,.
in that period and all, except Seattle [After August 3. R. L. McCRElGHT-
and Baltimore placed over 70 per cent
FOR ba Lie—Throe good
820 cash, balance monthly.
M.
FORT SALE-extra good
es, 75c per bushel at orchard.
DOYLE.
FOR SALE—Good gentle
and good 4-year-olu milch cow.
372-R S. W.
FOR SALE—The Parker dairy herdL
See them at lot on Spring streeL-
JONES SMITH.
tniletB
Wrapped tp insure its perfect
condition in all climates and
» seasons. Sealed ttfiht—kept
6 right. The perfect gum in the
witness regarding a man who would
jtake down the American flag.
“Henry Ford,” said Mr. Stevenson,
“is said to have declared, ‘I am going
to keep the American flag flying on
my plant until the war Is over ai.d
perfect package.
J^f
m.
The flavor lasts
ALL RUN DOWN,
-»
nut since neiug wm k-mi >j>
sole feels better, and in f30i I air
well heeled cy
OFFICIAL TIME TABLE.
DAWSON’S SHOW fHi
gp Nolan Queen
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Civil and Criminal Practice. South-
western Telephone Building.
Weatherford, Texas.
gS
mu. E. DAVENPORT
Cltlsens National Bank
oom 6. S. W. Phone 267.
Building,
ft-
Dr. M. Thompson
Physician and Surgeon
I?
Office Breselton-8mlth Drag Co.
PBONISi
Office -Southwestern IS, Home Phone 83
__ucn -ouuuinwwiu
Regldenoe- 8. W. 310, Home 51.
liU
T. & P. Station.
Nh. 12—Baird to Fort Worth, 3:30 a.
in.
’No. 26—El Paso to New Orleans,
5:50 a. m.
No. 10—Mineral Wens to Fort Worth
—ar, 7:53 a. m. dp. 7:58 a. m.
*No. 2—El Paso to St. Louis (Sun-
shine Special) 1:33 p. m.
j No. 804—Mineral Wells to Weather-
ford, 4:21 p .m.
No. 4—Sweetwater to »t. Louis and
New Orleans, 4:36 p. m.
WEST BOND.
No. 23—St. Louis and New Orleans
to Sweetwater, 10:15 a. m.
No. 823—Weatherford to Mineral
Wells, 10:44 a. m.
♦No. 1—St. Louis to El Paso (Sun-
shine Special), 4:36 p. m.
No. 9—Fort Worth to Mineral Wells,
Ar. 5:40 p. m., dp. 5:45 p. m.
No. 11—Fort Worth to Baird, 10:21
p. m.
*No. 25—New Orleans to El Paso,
11:45 p. m.
*Do not make local stops.
Santa Fe
No. 41—Cleburne to Weatherford,
ar. 1:05 p. m.
No. 42—Weatherford to Cleburne,
dp. 3:00 p. m.
i
PHONE
-
Wampler
Oarage
Soutwestern, 490
ffome, 352
GAS FITTING!
___________
ROYAL ARCH MABON*.
Stated convocation or Weatherford
Chapter No. 105, R. A. M., second Fri
say night in each month. A cordial
avitatlon Is extended to all visiting
umpanlons.
J. M. VENABLE, H. P.
J. G. SHARP, Secretary.
MASONIC LODGE
Phoenix Lodge No. 275, A. F
’r fe A. M., meets Saturdaj
’ V night on or before full ircoB
in ench month.
C. J. CLARK, Y,r. !J.
HOWARD PUTTER.
KNiviHlS OF PViHlAi
Lone Star Lodge No. 4, A. oi
p„ meets every Tuesday night
Visiting Knights are alwayt
welcome. Castle Hall, Wes*
ANARCHISTS
A very dramatic Incident of
Wednesday’* session of tho
Ford-Tribune case was the read-
ing by Alfred Lucking of a
poem beneath a John T. Mo-
Cutcheon cartoon entlttod "Tho
Munition Maker** Daughter.” In
part it was a* follows:
Her necklace coet a thousand
eye*, her rings a hundred
lives.
Her pendant cost a million tears
of weeping soldiers’ wivee.
Her slippers coet the profit from
a high explosive shell,
Her gown was bought and paid
for in the agonies of hell.
“I ask you, witness,” ex-
claimed counsel, "if there is any-
thing In Henry Ford’* utterances
comparable with that?”
"No."
then I am going to* hoist In Its place
tie flag of all natkms.’ Is that the
• explicit teaching of anarchists?”
j "Not at all,’’ answered the professor
1 "the hoisting of a flag of all nations
j Is assuredly not anarchistic.”
“Well do you think pulling the
! flag down at the end of the war was a
(patriotic thought?”
i “I think keeping It up until the end
I of the war was. I know many people
• who kept flags out during the war
who haYe taken them down sinoe.
• Keeping the flag flying does not neces-
sarily impress me
how."
"What is a Bolohevist?”
of the Assistant Resident Commis-
sioner.
According to Miss Cranen the river
of mud ran for three hours and did
fearful damage to life and property.
It covered the railway station, buried
the locomotives and cars and destroy-
ed virtually every house in Blitar,
WUngi and Srengat.
Mr. Boekhont managed to rescue
his wife and some of his children, but
owing to the velocity of the mud river
was unable to save two of his little
ones who perished before his eyes.
One European, while in bed in his
house, was carried away and deposit-
ed miles distant.
A Sourabaya paper which places the
total loss of life at 50,000 says that
fifteen Europeans perished, and that
-after the volcano subsided the arms
Und legs of the victims were seen
protruding through the mud all over
Kediri district, in the vicinity of Kalut.
iMany thousands of persons are re-
ported missing.
! It is learned that three lava streams
I
flowed from the volcano all taking the
same course in the eruption of 1901.
One of these destroyed Blitar. Govern-
ment geologists who ascended to the
| crater of Kalut after the eruption
found It empty.
The Dutch Governor of the devas-
tated district reported that 5,100 per-
sons were killed in the eruption of
Kalut.
HIGH PERCENTAGE OF EX-
SERVICE MEN PLACED IN JOBS
New York, Aug. 1.—Sixty-six per
cent of registered soldiers and sailor
applicants for jobs were placed by the
as patriotism any-1 various governmental and volunteer
employment services during the five
weeks ending June 28th, according to
the^TtnS aaj kD0WB’” fibres made public here to-day by
"Z anarchists claim that the M. I Colonel Arthur Woods, assistant to
sence of their theory la baaed upon' ^be Secretary of Wiar and head of the
Christianity?" I government’s organization for the re-
“No, ma&y anarchists repudiate tbs employment of service men.
Christian doctrine and look upon It as, The seventy-seven cities in the sur-
I have opened a shop a* 108 west side
square and am well prepared to do
all kinds of g^s fitting, and carry . im* Public Square,
a comp^* , line of gas appliances of A. E. ZELLERS, C. C.
every de&fiptlon. THEG. YARBROUGH,
—Prepare for natural gas and let me j____
figure with you, as the construction
of the natural gas mains is well under
way.
K. R . ■
Weatherford Gas Appli-
ance Goipj
A. L. REECE, Manager
108 W. Ride 8quar*. 8. W. Phone 463
I. O. O. F.
Weatherford Lodge No
N°-77*L °-r’
every Thursday night
lorthwest comer square.
G. T. GIVENS. N. G. -
W. A. JOHNSON, Sec.
their worst possible adversary.1
“Anarchists recognise only produo1
era, do they not?”
"Well, they recognize only contrib-
utors to production."
fi¥bu recognice in some of Mr.
Ford’s writings that he believed In
that idea and that he was not going
to have any parasites associated with
him In hie new venture?”
"Well, but In his new ventures he
was the capitalist”
Yes and be held that he was 3
worker himself and he was not going
to have associated with him anyone
who was not a worker, is that not an-
archistic in its essence?”
"Why not In the least.”
On direct examination Alfred Luck-
ing, chief oounsel for Mr. Ford asked
the witness whether Henry Ford’s
statement that if those who were
preaching fear would point out the
enemy and show that It was menacing
the nation every American would be
willing to lay down his fortune and
his life at the feet of the president a«
Americans have done before, was
compatible with anarchy.
“The exortlon to stand to by the
government,” responded the witness
Is quite Incompatible with anarchistic
doctrines.
"How about this idea of Mr. Ford’s
that the water power of the country j +> ■
•ought to be owned and controlled by } 1 !| J
the state, Is that anarchistic?”
"No, no anarchist can talk like that
because the anarchist does not believe j ;
in the state and thinks the state
should be abolished.
vey are divided into four groups, ac-
to population ,and represent
every section of the country. The
cities over 200,000 placed 63 per cent
of their enrolled men; the next group,
consisting of cities from 100,000 to
of them. New York City, with 15,653
jobless men, had a problem five times
as big as any other city except Chica-
go, and placed just one half of the ap-
plicants, or 50 per cent. Pittsburg and
Boston have only 36 and 38 percent
records to their credit, and Buffalo
trails at the foot of the list with 29 per
cant.
Of cities from 100,000 to 200,000 in
population, the middle west, with
Dayton, Ohio, again Is in the lead.
Dayton placed in that time 124 per
cent, or 882 men. Fort Worth, Tex-
as, follows with 117 per cent; Spo-
kane Washington, has 94 per cent,
and of the entire list of sixteen cities,
only one, Nashville, Tennessee, has
placed less than 53 per cent, her re-
cord showing 44 per cent.
San Diego, California, in the third
group, has the most sensational per-
centage record to her credit for that
period, although the actual number
placed was not large. She placed 152
percent of her applicants which is the
best percentage showing n-nde by any
city. San Diego is folio-ved n the
list of cities from 50,009 to 100,000
populatoion, by Mobile, Alabama, with
a 97 per cent record. None of ;hese
cities has placed less than 5" per cent
of their registrants and as a group
have made the best record of ail. Lit-
tle Rock, Arkansas, had more men lo
place than any other city in this group
and succeeded in obtaining jobs for
1,407 of her 1,907 men.
Of the little cities, those with pop-
ulation under 50,000, Pougnkeepsie,
New York, has the best percentage
record, although Cheyenne, Wyoming,
with 895 men to place, made by far
the bigegst showing by getting jobs
for 860 of these. Poughkeepsie's per
cent was 98, but she had only 55 men
enrolled Five other cities in this list
got jobs for over 75 per cent of their
applicants. These were Pensacola,
Florida; Wilmington North Carolina-
Racine, V/iscans.in; Butte, Mo:i1ana,
and Reno, Nevadi.
FOR SALE—One Ford truck. Paint iss
still good. Perferct shape. Too cheap.,
or will trade in Ford car. See me quick-
JNO. GLAD1SH, 124 York Ave-
YYAnted—
WANTED — Roomers and Bnactfers.-
South Side Hotel.
WANTED—Good waiter. Appt> a ft
once at Montfort Hotel.
WANTED—A mechanic to work nightt
shift. Must be well recommended:.
Phone 200.
WANTED—Carpenters, rough and* *4--
ish work. Good wages. Call S. WY 2M-JI
ALBERT 6TEPKIN.
L
OST-
LOST—Saturday evening, one while;
and blue Georgette hat off train be-
tween Weatherford and Aledo. Finder'
notify Y. H. ISBELL.
LOST—Between postoffice and Chaa..
Rogers’ tailor shop, a registered letter-
addressed to F. A. Browning, Weatlv
erford, Texas. Finder please return to»
the postmaster and get reward.
SID WILLIAMS.
- TO TRADE
>op- JL
TO TRADE—For good car, 30 acreei
land north of Weatherford. Not
leased and near drilling wells. JNO-
GLADISH, 124 York ave. Phone 130..
pOILRENT
Don’t forget the name of the rem-
edy you need when the stomach or the
bowels are disordered. Prickly Ash
Bitters quickly corrects such troubles
and makes you feel bright and cheer-
ful. Every man should have a bottle
at home all the time. It is the dose
taken promptly that prevents sickness,
misery and expense. Price $1.25 per
bottle. —Cherry Akard Drug Co. and
R. W. Kinds! Drug Co., special agents.
FOR RENT—Four upstairs rooms, un-
furnished, 429 Spring street. Call at
220 N. Main street.
TWO NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS?
—for light housekeeping at Columbian
house, 107 West Columbia street. S.-
W. Phone 373-J.
Notice.
Wc will have barbecue at the Cen-
tral Meat Market, 204 North Malm
street every day. Don’t forget to calk
us. We deliver at any time. Botto
phones, S. W. 118, Home 319.
DAILY HERALD. «•» HER MONTH
Eat all you can, but can aU yon
oan’t Get a peeler at Everysport.
Few Dead Unidentified.
New York.—’Less than one-half of
one per cent of the American soldiers !
who died on the battlefields of France j
were buried unidentified, according to ;
Col. Joseph F. Herron, of Cincinnati, j
commander of the 15,000 troops who !
interred the fallen Americans. The
men under Colonel Herron’s command
removed the dead from the temporary
graves dug for them under lire or at
night on the field where they fell and
laid them to rest to largi
tlon oemeterles.
The Charlie Davis (Ranger-Rock Island |
Oil Co’y) Well Promises to be a Winner!
—The Charlie Davis well, south of town, is to tne b.ack
lime; expert drillers state the formation is as g:od as they have ;
ever seen, and that when the bit goes through this black lime ;
the sand will be next. When the storage tanks a:e completes
this well will be brought in. t
—Before this wrell does come in you can buy an interest in
1-4 of the 1-8 royalty in arid to 1015 acres of land, including
this well, for $10 per unit—when the well does come in these
units will go up like the mercury on a hot day.
—Get in now7 while getting is good.
Sandlin Realty Co., Agents
Over Citizens National Bank
A-
S
■
:; Capital Stock $12,500—
—PER UNIT. $10-00
144*4
44**4
4*4*444
444 4 4H4*H
£B8!
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The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 159, Ed. 1 Monday, August 4, 1919, newspaper, August 4, 1919; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth643487/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .