The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 56, Ed. 1 Monday, July 31, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
MONDAY, JULY 31, 1922
e -
4
I
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
. 4'
PUBLISHLD DAIX, AFEKRNOON AND NIGHT, ANO BCNDAY MORNING *r
BY JACK HEIL
5
I
FOR
(
----ro.v
Cash in Adyance
9
On® mouth
Six Months ...
iy the year
3
GAU
Economic or Psychologic?
*
D)N"eSPURMMOMOENTE
CULEX PIPIWNS.
‘4
a
)
0
WICH
I
V
INNER TORTES
' }
So, of course, when Billy
butted him, it took him so by surprise
A
CHI
& p
20
s
shootin’ the boudoir of an 4 inpress—
Every fatal case of tuberculosis is
CLEVE
.2"
Granny expressed
7
remarking
cafe.
Four Mountain Climbers Killed.
DETR
rot/i/f/?
Physical requirements for
of air lines .has been demonstrated on
night lights and terminals, must bo
7,
thre ia no .regulation in the United
WINNIE WINKLE, THE BREADWINNER. Look Who’s Here!
G00D HE AVEN!
N;
7
?/? ;
ST.
i
i
5
6
0
O
PITSTI
aBowKe.,
I
t ' r ■ ■
KitleBonnys
i 4, Note
the Indiana side,
herself as much
Say It With Hooch,
Flowers Wilt; Stage
Door John's New Motto
landing
kinds,
Score
BenunJ
WLhH.I
t’M GI KO TO
HEAR THAT
MB. BOOKER
Batte
der son.
I
Washing
Clevelan,
aBt
Boss
But torll
BI nr . .
Batter:
nch, Toi
Score
Boston
HL Lou
Batte
Blanker
Scor
I allas
Fol । I
Screen the door, boil the water—
healthy son, healthy daughter.
Some day we are going to pay the
doctor to KEEP us well—we'll hold
Teach your child to walk, then to
swlm. A good swimmer seldom drowns.
that he fell over and rolled nearly to
the taxicab.
"Let's go get the other boys to help,"
said Dick.
< N)
8
NEW
took the
ond in a
Batte
due an
DA I
movin
day 7
ord fol
Ing th]
Sco
Gan J
Fort
FO
crt
to 1,
two 2
Cats 1
the B
run ne
New yJ
Chic ngo
CHIC
the ' I
White ;
kees tl
Score 1
Pittsburg
New Yor
Battert
Dougls,
BROOF
evened Ui
- / 1 .
Sco a
Galves
Shrev,
I
Phlladeli
Detroit J
Why will youth always believe that the marriage ceremony is e
magic incantation by which a heart-fancier is transformed into
a blind man, a butterfly turned into a grub and a temporary
dalliance transmuted into eternal love?
CLEV
defeate d
Erickson
the Indi
bases on
Second:
successful
By Associated 1 ress.
BERNE, Switiprland, July 31. By
a sheer drop of 3000 feet into a crev- .
that she had "heard tell Injianny was
a powerful unhealthy state."
WIC
The S
double
and P
Perduel
seven i
over til
base i
ejected
strikes
game. I
second I
i
I
I
I
Batt
and bJ
Score I
St Louls
Brooklyn
Battert
Cad ore, A
Bat
Grew
I
the films commit dreadful errors when
they depict foreign life.
SHI
veston
for tel
on fl
Score
Beaurae
Wichiti
Ratter
and Rue
If contagions were tigers, we'd all
be huntsmen.
Up from your slumber,
Sleepy eyed dub!
Turn on the water—
There's pep in the tub.
CAPITAL PRINTING COMPANY
Office of Pubilcation: Eeventh and Brazos Streeta
ELIPHONES
I
Little Cutox Pipens,
Party-spoiler, he.
Stings the ladies, stings the gents
Most impartiality.
And doesn't care where he stings.
How he must hate me!
To a man who drives a flivver and lives with a temperamental wife
there are no new thrills in shooting the chutes, playing faro or doing "stunts"
in an airplane. »
Perhaps the reason why an Amazon always marries a
doormat and an iron-willed man nearly always selects a
sofa-pillow is because they are looking for a REST'rather
than for a wrestling-match.
Just when a woman is beginning to think that "it’s
a pretty good world,” after all, somebody hands her an
Upton Sinclair book, or a Sinclair Levis novel, and she
discovers that it’s all, ALL wrong!
SUNSHINE
PELLETS
.6Y PR, W. F. THOA.ON
The only "perfect wife" is one who has managed to
hypnotize her husband into THINKING that everything
she does, says or wears is perfect!
How different the men at the beach in their bath-
ing suite look from those in the garter-advertisemenis
—and how much more discouraging to a girl- who is
fond of her illusions!
zr—
Who his patron’s food would serve,
must his waiter's health observe.
’ THE TYLER
MWINS "•»
3222
‘ the chauffeur to come up to him. The
"esagood thing that charlie Chap- ! man, not knowing what kind of goal
* ..... ’ Billy was, took him for a quiet old
I hope there's at te*sr one
OR two DECENT CMAPS AMONG
THE NEW GVE515! We MAVE r
ENOUGH SAPHEADS now " )
that they were in a sellers market, where the customer didn't count.
They had been successful, but their success was only during a period
of rising prices, and it was due to circumstances, not to their own
ability."
I
I
After a cold shower, a dose of pepsin and his wife’s kiss of forgiveness,
a man is so noble and abstemious for a whole week that Id wife fears ha
is going to die or something.
I
Browns
defeatin
neth Wi
hitter, al
sluggers
knock ini
eighth I
one-halt]
due to
’ hl a 6
except
les and
...• •»
A hero is generally depicted as a young man, but a man at Quincy,
Ill., eighty-seven years old, has just been married for the seventh time.
Un and our other film stars are now
taking foreign tours occasionally, for > tame one.
Little Culx Piplens
Lghts upgn a chump
And when re) pre se nts his bill
Raises quite a lump.
Little Culex Pipiens,
Stabs ’em on the jump.
OVER 100 NEW."
cmw REGBTERED
TO-DAY, M15$ ,
2lWINKLE3
DEI R
Phladel;
Detroit v
The United States of Ireland seems to be considerably in the dim and
distant future. 4/
$?ILLyWHLFKER
3 • 1 ¥ Frances TREGO MONTGOMERY
f it.................
1
B
perience in dealing with difficult situations. An experienced execu-
tive at the head of several organizations is quoted by Mr. Atwood
as saying, "I won’t pretend that I took any active stens to unload
until I saw business beginning to slow down a little. But in June,
1020, I began to sell our raw materials, and as quickly as possible
disposed of all in excess of what had been a normal volume. I got
rid of that part with which we had expecetd to take care of the in-
creased business.”
-o !
eimet
and fetch us a big,nifty, up to date
bronze cuspidor.' ”
But now "them days is gone for-
every"—the days when the gilded Wall
street broker and the callow but mon-
eyed colltge youth formed the army
of stage door Johns up and down' the
great white way.
The days when a great bouquet of
American beauties and a tender note
informed the chosen lady of the chorus
that an admirer would be de-lighted
to dine her on lobsters or anything else
her fluttering little heart might de-
sire. ' -
Yessir, tiyes have changed. And so
have therstage door Johns. Roses are
passe ’ just like the goloshes of last
winter.
Instead, the invitation to an after
theater party now is accompanied by
a quart of gin, perhaps Scotch, merely
as an evidence of good faith or a good
supply:
Hi
22." Am
7
Mr. Atwood's preventative for the recurrence of business expan-
sion and depression is the furnishing of co-ordinated business infor-
mation which will enable the manufacturer to keep a close watch
upon production. But it is clear that this can only succeed as it
draws the consume? and the producer into the economic councils of
the nation and balances supply and demand.
( OH WINNIE — '
I JUS1AHINUTE"
-g
It is very hot weather in Washington, buCthe report of almost every
state primary sends a chill through the capital.
Atwood declares "there cannot be the slightest doubt that a L.
cause for the heavy losses of the last two years was the belief on the
part of younger men who had experienced nothing but rising prices
that their success was due to their own efforts and not to the fact
TMHEY Utt no
GEMTLEMEN!!
V (mEvERy
' IIEA
Little Culex Pipiens
Doesn't mind the screen.
Uninvited, in he comes
With his jabber ken.
Httle Culex Pipiens’
Disposition’s mean.
Japan is reducing her standing army. Japon has now reached that
enviable point in empire's progress where she can grab territory without
fighting for it.
Government reports that 100,000 automobiles were stolen last year,
but doesn't state how many Fords.
In periods of business expansion everyone will quite naturally
trade upon the basis of the Unusual prosperity which it seems will
continue indefinitely. In periods of business depression everyone
will as naturally trade upon the basis of the declining prosperity
which it seems will continue without any immediate check. In the
former case there will be a tone of optimism in all business forecasts,
in the latter, pessimism will predominate. It is this which determines
that mass psychology that is made to shoulder the blame for our
financial panics. There are, of course, weaker and stronger firms, ex-
perience! and inexperienced men in business, but in normal times
these distinctions would not be so sharply drawn. We must have
new organizations formed and young men starting in business with-
out the former possessing sufficient reserves or the latter possessing
enough experienre to maintain themselves in periods t unusual
strain. They will be the ones to suffer the greatest losses but even
the well established and perfectly sound firms and the experienced
men can only save themselves by making tremendous sacrifices.
Mr. Atwood shows that the soundest firms and the most expe-
rienced men did not commence to prepare themselves for the coming
depression until it was fairly upon them. Their action was really
forced by circumstances, and they got off as lightly as they did not
because of superior foresight but because of their possession of suf-
ficient reserves to take care of losses .and their acquisition of ex-
Why will youth always believe that the margiage ceremony is a magio
incantation by which a heart-fancier is transformed into a blind man, a but-
terfly turned into a grub, and a temporary dalliance transmuted into eternal
love?
a _
---------------------------------------------------------
Meditations of a Married Woman
By HELEN ROWLAND
States, there have been numerous ac-
::‘:3.5206 raw materials far in advance and to accumulate stocks in the expec-
tation of a vast increase in their volume of business. Then the crash
What can’t be cured can be pre-
vented. There’s typhoid, for instance.
By mail, daily and Bunday,
Monday, for Austin Rural kou
Suburoan towns and routes;
the continent. Due to the fact that
Prince Ibrihim of Egypt says he will become a movie actor if Matei
Normand will only marry him. Gosh! We hope she will refuse him. • We
have had enough shiek stuff.
asse three men and one woman werejhim responsible for any illness we may
,,11. -mi Er,, ,1, . acquire; but that day will not come
killed while climbing the Jupfrau yes- untin we are willing to observe the
of developing municipal landing fields. ____________________________ Ordinary simple rules for keeping well.
fields, landmarks of various
one of the early settlers, was found ,, . ... , . ,
to lie in 1linols, About eleven tort from ' Thoheaith of the coo In your pri-
iyate humo is quite as important as the
health of the cook in your favorite
provided. He stressed the importance
Spring Valley, Ohio, minister ran away from his wife. "She is no
inspiration to me," he said. "She eats with her knife.” , He should have
taken her out to dinner once or twice before marrying her.
"Lady Beatty Hobbed While With Royalty."—Headline. It seems the
thing to do ia to stay away from royalty, then.
business cycles as if they were something apart by themselves. They
are nothing but human nature. If demand is 5 per cent more than
supply, then the crowd thinks it is about 500 per cent more. If de-
mand is 5 per cent under supply then the crowd thinks that business N
has gone completely to pieces." This would seem to indicate that -
the real problem is economic and that what we need to do is to bak
ance supply and demand instead of vainly trying to correct human
psychology.
- ■.
' 0I 10075
Ilham
When the chauffeur got up he shook
his fist t both Billy and Dick. And
to get even with Dick for it, he drove
him over nil the stones and rough
places he could find on his way to the
park. • But Dick, who knew what he
was up to, only laughed and said noth-
ing about ft, and gave him an extra
quarter when he paid him, to soothe
his feelings.
. ‘Thank you, sir! Thank you, sir!
Shall I wait and drive you back to the
hotel, sir?”
"Yes, I believe you may, when they
have succeeded in finding the other
animals,” said Dick. "Oh, hello, Harry!
Have you found Button and Stubby?”
(Tomorrow's story will tell whether
Button and Stubby were found or not.)
-------
' ■' ? 1 . ■
camo with the cancellation of orders all over the world. The con-
sumer had stopped buying with the result that orders were cancelled
back from the retailer and jobber arid manufacturer, upon the pro-
ducer.
Sir Auckland Geddes said
Washington dinner party:
i 7
pleased.
Time was when the lovesick swains
said "it with flowers" and this was
true not only on Main street but also
at the stage doors of the Gotham the-
aters, where the twinkling toes ar©
much in evidence.
Busnese Manager.................61501 Display Advertising
Auditing Department, Circulation I Editorial Rooma ...»
and Clasetlled Ada. ............Soclety Editor ......
Enterea an secold-class matter at tha pontortice at Austin, rexan, under the
_______ Act of Congresa of Maroh 3, 1879.
NOFIOE TO THE PUBLIC
Any errpneoua reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
any, person, firm or corporation which appears in the columns of this paper
will be gladly ccrrected if called to the astentlon of the pubiishera e
0jIMEIYVIEWSSWORLDTOPIGS
flying, such as
9UB8CRIPTIOX RATEB;
By carrier, in the city, daily ana
Sunday]
There was only one thing that might have prevented the business
expansion and consequent depression and that was the establish-
ment of peace upon a firm basis which would have permitted a speedy
return to normal processes. But the peace settlements were such
that the various European governments continued in their control
of private enterprise and in their attempt to make up for the de-
ficiency of production at home by placing large orders abroad. The
expectation was general that the expansion of trade following the ces-
sation of hostilities would more than absorb the losses sustained in
the war. Production was stimulated by the false assumption that
shortages existed everywhere. Manufacturers were induced to buy
(WINNIE!)!:)
.ves ,v
223 ? ? 6
It is suicide to attempt the rescue
of a drowning person, unless you are
a good swimmer. If you cant’ swim
you should learn.
before Dick could drive these, as ho
had to go around several blocks, while
Billy could go across lots. Then if
I Dick wanted to punish him, why all
। right But he would not bo humiliated
| before these new friends.
I Billy stood stock still and waited for
"It is all up with me,” thought Billy,
as he saw Dik and the chauffeur
• coming toward him, "for if I run tway
• from him now ho won’t take me with
: him to California. Still, I hate to bo
. caught and dragged off, just when I
am having such a good time. It would
make me look email, too, before all
thesahgoats."
"Here, you, Billy! Como here this
"No other nation in the world offers
the possibilities for commercial avi-
ation on such a mammoth scale as
does the United States."
This is the opin-
ion of A. H. G.
Mr. Parkins who down in the parlor
last nite waiting for my sister Gladdis
to take her) out, and Gladdis came in
the setting room on her way down
stairs saying. How do I look?
You look lovely, you certeny do, ma
sed
The end of your nose is snow white,
if that intrsts you eny, pop sed.
It was shiny, I cant go out with a
shiny nose, can I? Gladdies sod, and
pop sed, Feepie have bin spared for
werse crimes than that.
Well I dont wunt my nose to look
shiny, do I? Gladdis sed, and pop sod.
How do you wunt It to look?
Nature). Gladdis sed and pop sed.
Well do you think it looks naturel in
that snow wite condition?
I had to take the shine off, dident*
I? Gladdis sed, and pop sed, But did
you haff to leeve the powder on, thats
the point? Wat lm trying to get at is,
do you consider you look naturel at the
present moment?
Yes Gladdis sed. And she went down
stairs singing as. If she felt naturel as
anything, and op sed to ma, Wy dident
you say something, do you wunt her to
go out on the street looking like a
ovvertzement for Smith Brothers
flour?
Now Willyum dont bo rediculiss, sho
looked perfectly all rite, ma sed, and
pop sed. Wat, do you meen to say you
thawt that nose looked naturel too?
Certeny. ma sed.
Ye© gods, its a womens World, pop
sed. And ho quick got behind his
newspaper.
a royal empress? Tako that cheap an unnecessary fatality,
little old fashioned spittoon out of here — —
Russia is now willing to shake hands. But she'll have to wash them
first.
__MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION
Tribune Building’. Chicego. st. Louls office, Post-Dispatch Building. Detroit
AESRta"rrd 83 IldnK Kunsan eit office, Bryant Building, Atlanta office,
Today the doorman gives Miss Mer- minute! Why didn't you come baek
ingue a carefully wrapped package and' with Jake when I sent him after you?
confidentially informs her that a "gent” For. your disobediepce I am going to
is outside with a car full of the same. tie you to the back of the taxi and
and better stuff. C you will have to travel pretty fast or
“The bootleggers, or, as they style! else set vour head serked
themselves, liquor brokers, have put "Oh, what an indignity for Billy to
the skids under the heavy swells and be tied behind the taxi, as though he
the college boys that used to drive us were a dog! But there was no use
to drink.” doormen along he rialto gay. fighting; he must submit. Then Billy’s
"And they’re more popular, too." |independence took possession of him.
"Say 11 with hooch, rowers wilt,- 1B No he would not. Ho wouUl sustbuet
the new motto or the 1922 variety of the chaurteor over when he tr led to
stage door Johns. put the ropo around his neck, and then
______a run back by himself the way he came.
Ho could reach it, very quickly—long
a marble Venus. | -----
"'For Mike’s sake,’ he roared, "look A waiter with a positive Wasser-
at that there spittoon! Can’t I never mann test is a positive menace.
make you boys understand that we’re -----
at a
One month ....................... 0.65
Six months ...................... i munu
One >e,r ................... 67.00 On, Year
Munday mamJiy cdition,by mail Texas), by
"Despite every excuse and every explanation that can be made,
the fact remains that there were two groups—those who got stuck to
much, and those who didn't. Here and there concerns may have suf-
fered or avoided really serious losses through sheer luck. But there
were enough who did" escape to show that elements besides blind
fortune were at work."
Mr. Atwood then draws the distinction between old well estab-
lished firms headed by experienced, conservative executives and new
concerns floated upon the crest of the wave of abnormal prosperity
cidents among stunt flyers and by the
operation of machines which were not
airworthy,” he says.
Pointing out that no less than six air
lines are In operation in Europe carry-
ing freight and passengers and serving
London, Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin,
Brussels, Hamburg and Moscow, Fok-
ker adds:
"There has not been a sFnglo acci-
dent on any of these lines The first
of them was established threo yers
ago. Two types of planes, having a
capacity of six to twelve passengers
and 4000 pounds of freight, are bring
utilized on these routes. American
possibilities for development along this
.line are unlimited.”
Tae Dutch inventor says, however,
that two steps must be taken, each of
them of vital importance, before the
United States can make a real forward
stride in commercial aviation. These
are:
First: There must be legislation for
the strict licensing of pilots and the
inspection of aircraft, so that the pos-
sibility of accidents may be reduced
to the minimum.
"AMERICA OFFERS WONDERFUL
POSSIBILITIES FOR COMMER-
CIAL AVIATION,” DE-
CLARES FOKKER.”
"I want a shave," said the determined looking man as he climbed into
a chair in the barber shop. "I don’t want a hair-cut nor a shampoo.* Neither
do I want any bay rum, witch hazel, hair tonic, hot towels, or facemassage.
I don’t want th© manicure lady to hold my hand nor the bootblack to
fondle my feet. I just want a plain shave, with no trimmings, o you un-
derstand that?"
. . ' Yes, sir,’ said the barber. "Will you have sonic lather on your face,
sir?”
I
i
having as directing heads inexperienced, unseasoned amateurs. Mr.
Albert W. Atwood in an article entitled "Swelled Head In Busi-
ness, appearing in the last issue of the Saturday Evening Post, makes
a strong argument along this line, but one which will be found upon
searching 'analysis to be more plausible than convincing. He does
not, of course, slight the general situation or overlook the economic
factor but he insists that: •
„ , ... PAPEH-DELIVERY.
8ubseribers in the citv who do not receive their paper by T o’clock in tha
AIternoon/on Week days and by 8 o'clock on Sunday morning will confer a favor
on the management by calling the Circulation Department, phone 6150, and re-
porting any irregularity.
. MEMBER OFTHE ASSOCIATED PRESB
The AEsoclated Pre ag In exclusively entitled to the use for publication of
A.newe.dispatces credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper,
AnaHeo the 1ocal nows published herein. All rights of publication of speclaj
dispatches herein are “20 renervec gepo
Australia has begun scrapping her navy. The white people evidently
basic took -the four-power pact seriously.
Any American with fifty real American dollars'van go to Russia now
and hire a grand duke as a butler.
Quoting the words of a successful manufacturer Mr. Atwood
says: “The good organization of today was not built today or yes-
terday or last year; it is the outcome' of policies and plans estab-
lished a goodmany years ago. You cannot develop an organization
inside of five years- probably inside of ten.” The distress has come
in the case of large organizations, Mr. Atwood holds, because they
were not “definitely integrated, controlled and co-ordinated from
within" or because of lack of ability on the part of executives. “The
senior credit officer of a bank with thousands'of customers told the
writer," says Mr. Atwood, “that he did not know of a single case of
real distress among either large or small organizations- where there
was not an element of speculation aside from the necessary risks of
business or the wrong sort of management, and that in the case
of trouble in the larger organizations the two elements were prac-
tically always present.” Another cause of distress, thinks Mr. At-
wood, is that the managers become obsessed with the idea of expan-
sion, they prefer to be big instead of sound.
Those firms which have weathered the storm are regarded as ex-
ceptions by Mr. Atwood. He says that “most people will diways fol-
low crowds,” that “mass psychology is almost irresistible,” that "it
takes a tremendous amount of character and backbone to fight the
current." Mr. Atwood quotes a banker as saying: "Don’t write about
"French noblemen for example, aro
always kissing girls' hands in formal
salutations in the films. No in
France, as a matter of fact, only the
hands of married women are kissed by
men. To kiss a girl’s hand would bo
an insult.
"I heard the other, day of a Holly- . ,
wooa producer who was shooting the ’ Guard you. well the desperate hold
boudoir of an empress. Suddenly he of the drowning man.
I stopped the performance. He pointed I
savagely to a small spittoon of pink ' A pure food handler is quite as im-
, and white porcelain that stood beside portant as pure food. .
Little Culex Pipiens
is an awful bore.
And the way ho sticks around, O-
Looking for our gore.
Makes us mighty sore.
That evene a public survey may pos-
sess a humorous aspect is evidenced
by a story told by a Westerner.
It appears that the boundary line
between portions of Illinois and In-
diana was long In dispute and that at
length the government authorized a
resugvey. which was duly executed.
The old homestead of Granny Garver,
Fokker, inventor
of the Fokker type
of airplane, which
Germany used in
the war. Fokker is
now planning pro-
duction of planes
in America.
"In the United
States, where such
great distances
obtain between the
principal cities,
there is a more
crying need for
: irplanes than in
Europe,” he said,
"and yet we find
virtually nothing
here. The safety
Now that business is getting back to normal there is consid.
erable speculation as to the cause of the tremendous losses sustained
during the period of depression. This is only another way of deal-
ing with the question of over production which is universally con-
ceded to be an economic problem. But by fixing attention upon the
losses of corporations instead of those sustained by industry gen-
erally, the psychological factor is emphasized. This makes the whole
question much more comprehensible to the average person, who is
accustomed to hearing almost all the ills of life explained by the
frailties of human nature. It also permits a certain optimism in re-
gard to the future, founded upon the belief that poor old human
nature, having been chastened by experience, will have learned'one
more of the hard lessons of life. The view that human nature has ,
somehow been at fault is reinforced by casting the blame for a gen-
eral misfortune upon the cupidity of deluded individuals while the
hope of future avoidance of calamity is confirmed by pointing to
the shining examples .of certain wise men who have weathered the
storm.
61:
I Gm ckocoTiwdt
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 56, Ed. 1 Monday, July 31, 1922, newspaper, July 31, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434862/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .