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don misus from any tt FIGHTING FERGUSON} Mayfield, he ur fight a fiv loses—well, its probable he on struggli to which he declares 's- hia just due VIRTUALLY OUSTED, FERGUSON 1 publie funds, If e will con! tan THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1922, t frien wins his the common the end of bts symptoms, tls first sider term, there w d. If he]enemies said, that showed a growing will keep|sense of importance in him. Soon ndication}after his re-election, they say, these r othe vi DEFIED FOES. him. At the clos ° Governor, Once Impeached, | took the rostrum Seizes Opportunity for all X4 : tren made the viet Vindication. iitteal atubitions. ide and his gest © of his ment hearing, althougn no orator, hi and inad cing squarely and decla img th Lim of rit Mie lang Ires unsk symptoms became more violent, In 1917, not long after his second term began, he committed a number of acts vhat brought him censure, and tn ta+ end, a veritable storm of reproach. TROUBLE CAME AFTER ATTACK ON UNIVERSITY. It is likely he might have gone far without Interference had he not made in attaak on the University of Texas. A-large number of prominent and vig aduates of the nd many others in nst impeach his own accusers t he had Nass po JSE , ; who listened to hii de to end their children AROUSES WHOLE STATE 8 day that no finer Speech cver}to the university to be educated, They a ae made In the Inuls of the Texts are! proud of the Institution and love ic es, sc « Has Fine foray When Fer , in @ personal ef. Picturesque Scrapper Has FINE | mist-vary alent attex most of thel tort) they-6 (to eraattake end Chance in “Run-Off” counts against him had sus-| handicap President Vinson, for whom = tuined, ho began his fight for restora-}he had Incurred a dislike, demanded F Primaries. tion by tendering his re be-|the removal of certain: mombers of fore the Senate could reec the |the faculty and announced he would (From a Special Correspondent of The Bve-[Judament pronouncing him removed|not sign the appropriation bills for Like W from the Governorship and ver|the support of the institution unless AUSTIN, Tex, A 1.—Will Jim nes a from, holding any “offi Vinson obeyed, they fairly swarmed sg Governor of (Honor, trust or profit” in the s ) the defense of thelr alma mate es eI ye malieds BuverH OE or Then he told newspapermen he in Vinson did not obe aa Texas in 1917, receive the vindlea-ltended to run for office again and| Fereuson launched into bitter critl- tion for has been fightiy firsts ever since by winning nomination topstart a week which he that, as a y news} ut nned tofcism of his w | wae the university, charging it rin for rich men’s sons and that f : town of ‘Temple, which would keep| poor boys and girls were the objects the United States Sc hate at the runs nn touch sli ritalwatet ° na jabra Sid ne ou eed Si prinaries “Aug: 20 Although the wedlth which he was| would stamp out fraternities, He es- This is the question ‘that bas stirved} reputed to have had wh he ff tablished himself the defender of the jnterest of every one in Texas} took office in 1915 had lareely van-| "the little red 1 house at the following the preliminary primaries] !shed, he fulfilled his prom nsi-rouds declared the State July 22, when Ferguson ran second |) ro erage nae OO houtd money on it rather to Karl 13, Mayfield, State Highwey|aistanced in the primary. ange Commissioner, and outdistanced the]! irned to the fray, but this t f Bone 66 tho: tnoul Present incumbent, Charles A. Cul-] 4 candidate for United States the st be t berson, in the quest for the nomina.| “tor TSE ike whole Bldte faa one tion Texas polities are complicated by HOW POOR BOY MULE DRIVER ROSE TO POWER. hog-wild over hig ted that he education’? and intended to restore the fact that Republicans aro as} Fersuson, like many otter oxa » Pine & State < ele napieached eee \ ete son of former Gov. rearce in the Lone Star State as golf] puting qualities and bizarve person Hogg, took charge of the fight bugs in Meutdor. As your average] ality that gain publicity and command | jichinst Ferguson, M, M, Crane, one Texan turns to politics a8 a duck] public attention, most brilliant lawyers in the He His-youth was pur a poor n situation would be the fat turns to w disastrous \ not for etimated b3 away from home, hop-pieling in Cull- |) former Attorney General and yy runnin tute of the un ity, led the ‘ ts, Ferguson's anti-Pro that lawm: a ' e are very ve a Hs i f ai 3 ‘ et : hibition tendencies made tbe drys obliging. The Logistature passed b uilway the Legislature (and there were law, «when nomination for office by] in Texas and elsewhere. . wny of them) eager in the lists. the primary metirod began to be fash=| -, Hater We Pa ity JC] In no time the State's Chief Execu Jonable, providing for a double pri-] common sense raised bim | : Ha lprnet nests ‘around’ hie Mary system, In July everybody that}ly from farmer to husines 1 . wants office ects a chatice to go lie-| business man to banker. It wa CHARGES AGAINST HIM WERE Le ead \ sore ae, {he Was operating the Temple SERIOUS. fore the wpters. ‘The ballots Atel Bank of Temple in 1914 that he start ees : , counted and all candidates are elim-|running for office. ight on the aera iad not t 1 ‘org cb 1 ) ore effect on his ultimate im save the two receiving the| It was like Verguson, peop y ff iaeree z Bid me knew him said, to grab at the } nt than to constitute the most: v These face each other] ore) Ontainable. It was the Govern rum by whieh the battle was in a “run-off? primviry in August,}orship. There had been a constderay under way ie legal attack when the man getting the biggest|demund for a busine ministration otred at first uy yn's ex- ergs said he id supply 1 he State's allowance for the e gets the nomination, which, of /and Ferguson said he could suppiy tt vote get nomin tically unknown in the| Maintenance of the Executive Man- course, is tantamount tu election, Bue puRlneees aren: wars | on during his first two years in This system crats a chance to seek preferment and play politics a like Nor does it bur the Republicans—the vw fun the latter es all good Demo- his fi much as they few that are B may have is purely Aug. 26 is tho real Blection Day tn Texas, not the first Tue in No vembe: Interest in this year's primaries has focused around three central facts, KU KLUX DOMINATION FIGURES IN FIGHT. there has been a determined to beat Charley Cul- berson, who has given the State fine service over a long period, but lat terly has been too much of an in- valid (his opponents say) to propexly attend to affairs of §& te Second, the Ku Klux Klan, which has found fertile soll fe ‘owth tn Texas, has organized to elect Hich way Sner Mayfield to ceed Culbersoe, Third, James fighting just never amor mselves First, effort for years, Commis: Rdward Ferguson as he has fought every election year since his impeachment for d misuse of public once more king to have mer good standing restored to h by the vote The preliminary primary eliminated Culberson and left Mayfield and Fer guson confronting each other as final ists in the impending ‘run-off’ primary. At this moment a political battle is being fought that ts making Texans forget historic engagements of the past when such men liant Joe Bailey, Jim Hog Colquitt held the arena It is hard to tell which contingency absorbs the voters more—the bility of State control by the through the election of {ts candic Commissioner Mayfield, or the even tuality of a restored and refurbished Jim Ferguson, proudly vaunting his vindication in the Senate Chamber of the United States at Washington, THE TEXANS HAVE A HARD FIGHTER. If the Texas of 1922 !s not,too dif- ferent from the Texas of, say, twenty years ago, it is bet that the dramatic return of Ferguson to a post- tion of potential power is more ap Pealing to the popular fancy than the spectacle of an organization lke the Ku Klux Klan steadily working its way toward dominance in State poli ties, The two-gun man, ¢o all out- ward appearance, at least, has ridden his cayuse over the Great Divide and far from Tex s plains, but his spirit hovers over the land, In other words, good Texans still love a fighter; and whate else they may think of Jim Ferguson, no one holds him to be any- thing other than a fighting man. There are a lot of folks who are going to forget ever fact but this when they go to the polls, Au Whether there wi them to nominate to be seen. As for the stands at the thr tion of which he he enough ¢ Fergison remains Governor, he Md ot Hza- has dreamed ever since the day he stepped out of the Texas White House, ten and discredited man, impeached by the Btate eon re of charges POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL Sold Everywhere in office, wa d by the fact that he was Pre ank, while poor folks ne climb elected “James American Chicle Co. “sim” al ce. Part of the expenditures were r the lee cream anc punch used in ntertaining members of the Legisla- vecording to annual custom. It charged too that personal jew- and « ukulele or two had been were from ob Edward.” bought by the Governor's family and charged to the State, Fergugon disproved the charges, but admitted the dis ments for ice cream and punch. But he registered an emphatic kick against having to entertain the lex- islators, many of whom he did not know, and then footing the bill. “Is tt any more unlawful for me to buy and charge to the State ice cream latter urse for some members of the Legislature y to ‘lick up’ than it is for the State to pay for the stamps they ‘lick up’?"* he asked More serious charges Ferguson's alleged misuse of public funds, It was shown that he had put large sums of State n y in bis ‘Temple State Bank, paying the State related to N. Y. STATE AUTOS KILL 209 IN JULY 76 Killed in City Alone Dur- ing Past Month, Figures Show. According to the report of the Na- Protective Soclety persons were killed by 8 and motor trucks in the New York, including New y, during the month of July, tional Highways 209 automobi State of York ¢ nieen in automo- it railroad grade jest num~ includes sey biles who met death crossings. ‘This is the 2 per cent. Interest and lowning it out} ber of fatalities at grade crossings it 8 per cent. It was proved toofever recorded that Ferguson bad overdrawn his per-| Col. Edward S, Cornell, President sonal account in excess of $30,000 atjof the National Highways Protective a time when he was placing State}Society, to-day pointed out that no funds in the bank; 1d used]safety campaign can be successful State funds to pay a personal note;|unti! there ure adequate Iiws. He that he obtained loans from his own hank in excess of the legal limit, and}, priated for Bank that he kept money appr tate purposes fn the Temple without paying interest. FOUND GUILTY, BUT HOLDS HEAD HIGH. The vote for impeachment wa overwhelming. Merguson stepped down and out and W. P. Hobby, a news- paper publisher and editor, of Beau mont, who had been serving as Lieu tenant Governor, took bis pl But if Ferguson was discov 1 he did not show it, He walked out the dim chambers of the Capitol into the glare o| Texas afternoon with high and his square jaws firmly stated that no conerete change has n New York State in laws enon concerning the operation of automo- files since 1911, except in” cities of the first class " w York City during the nast wutomobiles killed seventy-six ns; trolleys caused the death of five, and wagons thr waiaimincs SAFE CRACKERS AT WORK, VISIBLE FROM STREET Turn Gee * On Is Back Get 8200, last night ed the side I, Oppenthelmer's grocery and hop at No, 9 Amsterdam “It was politics that put me out.’| Aver turned the safe on ho told his fri who were abeut}broke into It with « him in great num) down in ‘Texa Avitty mbOuE) $200 detach man's followers—"polities | uaa ‘ rar and the bi Lbrows on the WL UU sate and » police of haven't got a penny of the State's tation. money, and they know it.” After all, that i what 1 seeking to imp ple—that while technt have misused public funds, y keep any of it for himself. He be lieves he did no wrong. As for his record in the fight or the university—1 cares nothing about that. Hoe doesn’t expect that the enitured people in ‘Texas will vote In these days of quick for him, He's seeking the ballot ef quantity production, it the farmers, the w rs, the com isa pleasu deed to mon people find Ferris Hams and This looks like { opportunit Bacon still eured by has had to in public favor " Po. te a tee Oe tea old-fashioned meth who don't like the (dea of Ku Klux od The flavor is dominance. There's only one wa delicious! they can fight the organization and a . that's by supporting Ferzuson F. A. Ferris & Co., Inc. New York STAND ON PROHIBITION MAY MAKE HIM WINNER. The is standing fo ex-Governor light wine and beer too, This will make him lots of friends, Maybe beat Mayfield. But If he doesn't, for hin to bob up again in 19 1928, 19—until the peor of seeing him run for office and shunt him into one to get rid of him FERRIS HAMS & BACON —_———— "A little higher in price-BUT!” ——<—$—$—$— — ————_—_— — Great big package of pep! S-O-M-E flavor ! You bet you'll like ’em! ine delicious candy coated chewing gum PEPPERMINT (Yellow box) SPEARMINT (Green box) TUTTLFRUTTI (Pink box) 10 for 5c “Hey, you Back an’ Charley, Rime while I'get to the de Hime le Tg lo lee; bottom of this big bow! of Relloga’s Corn Hlahew, en’ frait for my tuneh! Flthen have got to wait for me ee’ betcha, boy!’ Health and hap inevery spoontul of Helloa¥ . CORN FLAKES - because they digest so easily. Eat Kellogg’s regularly and get away from : so much heavy foods and see how much : better every one in the For tomorrow’s breakfast—treat the family to Kellogg’s Corn Flakes and fresh fruit! See that there is a big pitcher of cold milk ready! And, urge each big and little family member to house feels! eat plenty, for Kellogg’s are the per- fect warm weather food! Insist upon Kellogg’s Corn Flakes in the RED and GREEN package that bears the signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Corn Flakes! None are genuine without it! Kellogg’s are not only delicious in crispness and flavor, but they’re won- derfully nourishing and refreshing. They give stomachs a chance to rest ‘Also makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN, cooked and krumbled If you could keep it under lock and key— I’ health were something material, something you could carry in your pocket, youwould be reasonably sure of keeping it. ingredients ‘ nece well-rounded ary ina for chil- dren and people of all ages diet More than any other food it combines most completely all the elements needed to promote growth, sustain the body and furnish energy for every-day activities. You might even lock it in your safe deposit box or put it in a closet at home and carry the key with you. But health is an elusive thing. Even when you are strong and vigorous you never know how long it will be with you. Many men and women wait for the doctor to tell them they should drink milk. They forget or do not know that milk is just as necessary when they are strong and well as when they are sick, It is a perfect food. The danger lies in eating too much food or the wrong kind. Your health and the health and growth of your children depend upon proper And milk is one food that contains the Drink at least a quart of milk a day. There is no other food so essential in keeping your health always with you, nourishment. DAIRYMEN’S LEAGUE CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION, UTICA, N. ¥. CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS 1922 WORLD ALMANAC ARMAMENT CONFERENCE “4 FOUNTAIN OF KNOWLEDGE. Complete in Every Detail AT ALL NEWS STANDS AND BOOK STORES 35¢ és, Copy BY MAIL, POSTAGE PREP ASB, 500 ADDRESS; NEW YORK WORLD “ a“ - “ “ Copy 3 5c NEW YORK CITY ee en