The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 96, Ed. 1 Monday, September 11, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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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I
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER ii, 1922
FACE TWO
FELT SO TIRED -
I
M -
SEVEN DAYS IN LIL’ OL’ N’YORK
, Manufaclurer’s Close Out Sale
ALL THE TIME
t
Real Leather Bags
3
4
WUR-KLY-KEL!
&
comes across with 150 a week alimony
81.00
HI
We took the manufacturer’s entire surplus stock in order
4
You will want
$ J.48
«?
L-n.
C
&
SCARBROUGH’S
(r
SUNDAY HAPPENINGS
4
P
THE STORY OF
d
AN UNLOVED WIFE
39
-by-
AS IOLD 1O GRACE PHELPS
Florence Austin Chase
ALEC’S STORY.
COMMON TABLE SALT,
S:
dam
Clarl
try Farrell; Miss
chairman of the
Katherine Harrison.
s
FOREST FIRE CAUSES
MILLION-DOLLAR LOSS
P
I
o
Q
Do
1
2
ZJEAITwHOMEPBOBLEMSE
me
ft'
■
sions and refreshments wilemake the
evening a pleasant one to all comers.
' the boys consider us good looking and
Tho class in Expert Endeavor which
is being conducted by the Senior So- We are ready to settle down in homes
2
thing to try to win their affections
3
the
1
8
6
28
E8
Ironized Yeast
for Rheumatism
DELIGHTFUL PICNIC
FOR NIECE.
Hundreds of Bags in the Most
Wanted Shapes and Sizes at a
Mere Fraction of TheirWorth
$1.00 $1.48 $2.00
EXPERT ENDEAVOR CLASS
MAKING FINE PROGRESS.
arrangements namess her assistants:
Misses Kate Friend and Bertha Moore
AUSTIN COMMUNITY
PLAYERS TO MEET.
entirely different sort credited to Cath-
erine Dickey of Atlanta, Ga., who was
of
d
HI
His thoughts were not of the pleas-
antest as he journeyed southward. He
had done everything he could think
» r.
||
Miss Anne Hamilton of CGero will
arrive for the opening of the UnIver-
P
II
IT
1
!
Now, all
lime, of pot
pre useful :
Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Iglehart have re-
turned from a delightful summer trip
through the western states.
FRENCH CAFETERIA AT
COTTON PALACE.
Mrs. C. C. Huddleston has returned
from a ten days’ stay in Houston.
The Austin W. C. T. U. will hold
a rummage sale Saturday at 6th and
Red River Streets.
a
to
of
va
br
be
ad
at
vis
spe
nit
to
ve
tl
u
I
d
tl
p
be
ti
8
Bad, Mother,
! BRITISH DEBT-FUNDING
MISSION COMING SOON
taken New York by storm. They’re lit-
tle and big—in bright red and dark
coors—
Edited By
mrs. FRED soorr
Tolephono 8261
f
ANNOUNCEMENT FOR
'SEPTEMBER WEDDING.
cr
kl
de
M
of
M
sc
lash. of iron, of magnesium
and- necessary in the body,
to walk until he had tired himself out.
Maybe he could get some sleep then
He had returned to his room ready
to drop with weariness when there
By JESSIE HENDERSON;
Special Correspondent of the Austin
Statesman.
(Copyright, 1922)
ROCHESTER, N. Y.—Worry because
she bobbed her hair was assigned as
the reason for the suicide of Miss Nor-
ma Teffner.
I
F
t
11
8
8
Creamery Butter
$2-oa.
IE
83′22203)
We don't dare tell you what our New York buyer said
these were worth—You'd accuse us of exaggerating. But
Bags over which every girl will exclaim with delight—
real leather every one—in odd swagger shapes that have
-
them by choosing the proper foods. But
they are too gritty or to-aisagreeable
to taste or upst the digestion or spoil
the appetite too much in their pure
form to be used freely as such in our
delL
Common table salt is simply the most
will be called by the president, Chas.
Casey.
sit/cond will be at the Keta l longe.
TO BE GIVEN.
St. Martin's Junior League will giye
a benefit party on the church lot cor-
ner Congress Avenue and Fourteenth
Street on Wednesday evening, Septem-
ber°13, at 8 o'clock. Numerous diver-
SAN ANTONIO.— Gene W. Gillard,
pilot, was killed and Miss Clemine
Cromwell and Miss Vivian Johnson
injured when their plane fell 300 feet.
4
w
came a knock on the door. He opened
ft to find Estelle standing on
f
threshold.
(To be continued.)
Gy
mu
axsgg623
for instance, is a salt of Carbonic acid
and calcium; blue vitriol is a salt of
coppe r and sulphur to a Ud. I p som
salts are salts of magnesium and sul-
phuric acfd. But, jst for convenience,,
when we say “salt’’ without any further
qualifications. or "common table salt"
"or table salt,” we mean the familiar
and appetiing chloride of sodium.
Miss Bess Logan returned yesterday
from a visit to her sister, Mrs. J. T.
Hughes in Mineral Wells.
NA
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Duval have
moved to 102 East Thirteenth St.
popular.
Our steadies have proposed to us
in the past, but we have refused them.
Now we are sorry and would like them
to ask us again to become their wives.
CHICAGO. — With shafts of light
through a steel tube a mile long Prof.
A. A. Michelson announced tests of the
Einstein theory.
ke and Miss Mai
0
Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Shipp and Mr.
and Mrs.. Will Scarbrough leave soon
for a stay of several weeks in the
East.
tion and the second was to telephone
the police. The soup had barely been
consumed when in walked the detec-
tives and the dinner party was dis-
tinctly off.
Moreover, if you are charged with
killing the lady whom you charge with
breaking up your home, you can still
get alimony from your husband even
while you are in jail. This, at least,
is what Mrs. John J. Reiser has found
to be the case. It is only a few weeks
since Mrs. Reisler was arrested on the
charge of shooting her own sister and I
while she is in Raymond street jail I
to give such values to Austin women.
to buy two and three and four—to keep
for yourself, to give as gifts and as
prizes—•
What did they name their place, pray
tell?
A devilish name—plain “WUR-KLY-
KEL!"
—Violet Alleyn’ Storey.
g
Mrs Fred Petmecky gave a picnic
convenient salty substance which can
be used for keeping up the proper den-
sity or thickness of our blood under
Richmond, Ind.— "I thought I would
write a line or so, to say that I owe
walting trial, her-husband is In din- j mz .5001 heaith;an d strength io Car-
ger or Ludlow street jail unless ho Courtne o 31 lUilrv»d‘ 8Ueei. tma
city.
salt would be dietically, flat and stale.
Salt is commonly accused of irritating
the kicrys, inflaming the skin, caus-
ing rheumatism,- eczema, Bright's dis-
ease. etc.
We are told that we actually need to
maintain our salt balance from half
a teaspoon to a teaspoon and al half
out of the salt cellar per djy, but we
actually eat on an average from the
salt cellar in our foods from four to
six teaspoons, that is to say, from
CHICAGO.—The Illinois League of
Womer Voters announced the names of
forty-seven women would appear on
ballots in the November election in
Illinois.
B
They bought a cottage by the sea; .
Ho needed.rest and so did she.
Well, that may bo!
They thought they'd raise a bean or
1 two, .
A little corn, and onions; stew
They had in view.
They planted seeds and soon they had
Enough to make an army glad.
It made them sad
' To waste such food, and so all day
She canned the stuff—it might decay!
' He gave away
All that she couldn’t can. Some haul!
People kept baskets, plates and - all.
They worked till fall.
He, worn from contact with the sun,
And she by all the canning done.
Went home for—FUN!
Miss Mary Louise Pillow of Baton
Rouge, La., will attend school in Aus-
tin this year and will be with her
grandmother, Mrs. B. J. Pillow, this
winter.
PRACTICAL HOUSEKEEPING
Dear Mrs Thompson: I am a girl
18 years old and have been going with
a fellow of 20. He seems to like me,
ng he calls up two or three times a
week if he is unable to nee me. I like
him an long as I am with him, but I
when I am not in his company I hard-
ly ever think of bim. Do you think he
really cares for me, and could I learn
once more. They seem to admire us,
LIGO. Spain.—Naval authorities re-
ported the rescue of all passengers on
the German steamer Hammonia, which
foundered eighty miles off this port.
At this point I must be permitted
a diversion that perhaps, should have
been made before. Alec. very definite-
ly, did have business in Washington.
It is true that it might have been car-
ried on by letter but as he told me
a forward, he simply had to get away
or go mad. He had been playing a ;
game that failed and he simply could j
not stay and face the-consequences of j
his failure.
and we can get a regular supply of
Austin Chapter, Royal Neighbors of
America will be entertained on Wed-
* home of Mrs. Edward Owers ajand using rouge.
■ th.' society have at- thim- *- *— *e
but he had failed in that as in every-
thing else. He thought if. another girl,
about her own age, would show an in-
terest in him. it might make Doris
revise her opinion about his age and
make her realize he was not just an
old duffer, ready to be put on the
the i of our own, and we think a triple mar-
pro- 11 inge would be very romantic .
I cn 1 We are quite "flapperish," each hav-
Yon Realize What Ironized
fine thing to have good friends. Nev-
ertheless, It is too early for you to think
of marrying anyone. You have no
real reason to think the boy loves you,
and it is evident that you do not lov0
him. U
Dear Mrs. Thompson: We are three
girls, 17, 18 and 19 years of age. All
varying conditions, an which can be
taken in large or small quantities as
Dear Mrs. Thompson: On my num-
mer vacation I got tanned and now
that summer is nearly over I want to
begin to take care of my skin so that
I will look better indoors when I go to
parties and dances. Will you kindly
print a skin whltcner? BLONMIF,
r UTS-SORES
. Cleanso thoroughly - then,
“ without rubbing, apply-
V!NS
oor IT Million Joro Good Yoorly
Yenst-Vitamines Will Do for
Rheumatism and Lumbago?
Do you know that vltamlnes and
Iron are part of your very life? Do
you know that the tissue-and-blood
factory in your body needs these two
materials, and needs them badly? Do
you know that if your body furnace
does not get enough of these, that
ips Greer Patton; Virginia Rose
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I was going
with a young man for some tme, and
ho eemed to care a lot for me, and
I surely carpd a lot for him. Then ho
dropped me for my girl friend. I didn't
want him to know that I cared and so
I went with others hoys and pretended
to have, a good time. After a few
months I met another young man, and
I like hi mmuch better new than I do
the one who gave me up. The one
who gave me up is tired of my girl
friend now and he has asked to come
back. I told him I would think It over
and let him know.
I really don't care whether he comes
or not, because J have three other
good friends. What would you advise
me to do? IN DOUBT.
Since you really don’t care whether
or not he comes, I should think you
would like to let him see how pleasant
it is to be "dropped." As a rule, I do
not preach revenge, but sometimes I
like to see a boy get the same treat-
ment he has given a girl.
to care for him? Would you advise
me to go with him as he is a nice boy
and keeps good company?
BOBBIE.
I would advise you to retain this
boy’s friendship, for it is always a
Austin Community Players will meet
on Friday evening, September 15. to
elect officers. The club closed its first
year an a civic organization on August
31. Reports of the year’s activities
will be a featu.....f the meeting which
I
I
' I have Uv j children, four in schbol,
my husband and a boarder to do fcr,
and I do all my own wrk for all of
us, and find time to play. We all
praise Cardui. Every sick and run-
down woman should take this won-
derful medicine.
"I suffered with my back; a very
Weak feeling in ny limba
"I felt hardly able to usa; just tired
—so tired all thitime.
"It was an effort for mo to do any-
thins, but Cardui helpc i me so I fcit
like a different wox .o ”
If you are in a run down phhysical
condition, sufferirg cs this Indiana
lady says he did give Cardui a fair
tria: It should ‘12) you.
Cardui is a purely vegetable, tonic
medicine for woman’s ailments, found
valuable in thousands of such eft sea as
described above.
Take Cardui. Your druggist sells it.
—Adv.
A teaspoonful of the tincture of
benzoin to an ounce of rosewrate forms
a well known lotion which Is excellent
for whitening the skin.
To compliment the American Legion
visitors. Le Alliance Francaise will
establish a French cafeteria at the
Cotton Pa}ce coliseum during the
coming week, and the days overseas
will be recalled by the buddies as they
are greeted by chic French maidens
who will park vous Francas with
them as they offer them cigarettes,
soft drinks and dainties.
rhia unique feature will be under the
general chairmanship of Mrs. Leslie
Gardner; Mrs, Roy Beach, chairman of
refreshments will be assisted by Mes-
tended and have shown Increased In-
terest.
Mrs. Owers has been conducting the
class and has made a fine leader. Each
officer and each committee chairman
has led in the discussion of the chap-
ter pertaining to each respective of-
fice and this method has made the
study hours more interesting. A pro-
«Whoopee! Rheumntism Pains and
Agony All Gone. Ironized Yest
is Rarely Wonderful!**
queer poisons, joint poisons, muscle
poisons, acid poisons are formed in-
stead of the healthy flesh and the
rich blood you used to have in days
gone by? If you hobble in your gait,
if pafns distort your body, if bending
over is an unspeakable agony, if dull
pains make you breathe heavily and
moan, do not grumble at the rough-
ness of the way,—smile sweetly,
there is a rainbow ahead. Things
are different now than they used to
be, in the days of liniments, salves,
complicated drugs, and all that,—re-
member? The happy secret today is
ironized yeast, one of the greatest
body-and-blood builders of all time.
Begin taking Ironized Yeast today.
Beware of imitations and substitutes,
because Ironized Yeast is not a mere
combination of yeast and Iron, but is
yeast IronIsed, which is a substance
all by itself. There is only one Iron-
Ised Yeast in all the world. Sold at
all drug stores at 91.00 a package and
containing 80 tablets, each tablet
sealed. They never lose their power.
MTd only by Ironized Yeast Co.,
Atlanta, Ga. Say gobye to rheu-
matism from now on.
As most of us will remember from
our high school chemistry days, thrr.il
are hundreds of different kinds of
"salts," because to the chemist a salt
is simply the production of a union
. of an acid with la base, usually an
earthy substance or a metal. Lime,
needed. We know that life without
Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Adrian and
little daughter. La Verne. have return-
ed from a visit to Mrs. Adrian's pa-
rents in Bastrop.
with Estelle for the express purpose i
of trying to rouse jealousy in Doris
and sundry arrears. p
Then too, there was a killing of an
and Mrs. W. R. Clifton.—Waco Times-
Herald.
By Associated Press.
FRESNO, Cal., Sept. 11—A forest
fire which virtually destgoyed the log-
ging camp of ethe Madera Sugar Pine
Company at Sugar Pino Saturday
night, is reported to have heen brought
under control, though it still is burn-
ing in the forest nearby.
Officials estimate the loss may
reach 81,000,000.
nesday afternoon at the homo of Mrs.
A E. Deats, on Willow Street at 3
o’clock.
By Associated Pess. a .
LONDON, Sept. 10 The TImessays
that the British debt funding delega-
tion will leave for the United States
shortly. The personnel ia still un-
known, but it has been suggested that
Sir Robert S. Horne, chancellor of the
exchequer, will head the delegation,
and, adds the Times, no doubt the
government has fully provided itself
with the necessary dollars to pay the
first half year’s interest of £25,000,000.
CHICAGO.— Venceslav Kotal, Czecho
Slovakian globe trotter, arrived here
after covering 11,500 miles of a con-
templated 40,000-mile hike.
shelf. All it had done was to mak
her despise him. Ay
Woll, It was over now. Doris show-
ed that she couldn't stand the strain
of keeping up appearances with him
any longer. He’d set her free as soon
as the law allowed.
The decision however did not serve
to lighten his depression. It persisted cc . Al
Kidr oe, arived inoWashingtonana Fuesdn§ And on Thuday evening, at | Ing bobbed hair, wearing short skirts
or Mr" .Edward owers a | and using rouge. In fact, we do every.
room. Ho put on his hat and decided
those different salts of
ciety of Christian Endeavor of
Hyde Park Christian Church is
20
sEvezyapys3235
but never speak of marriage. We
dream of them by night and thing of
them by day.
FAITH, HOPE AND CHARITY.
Girls of your age have plenty of
time In which to marry, and are fool-
ish to worry over "puppy loves.” You
will be much better off if you cease
trying to gain the affections of these
boys, for once having it. It is not like-
ly that they will ask you to marry
them. Being a flapper is nothing of
which to be proud.
The following from the Waco Times-
Herald of Sunday will be of interest
i to Austin friends:
! Friends of Miss Sybil Allen, daugh-
' ter of Mrs. Bryant Allen, and of C. J.
!Glover, Jr., are expressing best wishes
on hearing that they will be married
the last of September.
( The bride'elect is ( harming and at-
tractive and comes from a pioneer fm-
lly of thi community, and she has
! many friends who Join with those of
her father arid mother in wishing her
all happiness. Her father, the late
Bryant Alen, was a prominent city
executive.
Mr. Glover, as the business medger
‘of the ’ Waco Times-Herald ds well
known over Central Texas, and has
followed the work so well begun by his
father in the same field.
After graduation as class valedictor-
I ian, Mr. Glover attended the Univer-
: sity of Texas.
I He has been reared in this city, and
his- sterling traits hive .made him a
host of friends.
Indiana Lady Says She Was
Run-Down, Suffered With
Her Back, Took Cardui,
and Got Well.
1
’1
JI
I
‘ I was all run down- until my family
thought they would ise ri.e,* writes
Mrs. Courney. -My husband, couxed
persuaded ioteii about 11 when she i me 10 take C ardul, to please him,
arrived on the Mauretania. She killedimand wo say I do not egret it.
royal etiquette as dead as a door nail ‘r 1 anadle to do all my work and
*— .... do my shopptu^.
-• of to make Doris happy. AU he had
five to ten times, what We absolutely succeeded in doing was to make her
require. , * wretched. Her haunted eyes camebe-
Salt fa .so universally present intween him and the paper he’was vain-
foods, in all our animal foody and most ‛y attempting to read. At last ho
all our vegetables one, that even by threw it down in disgust and went
the most careful selection of thOse into the smoking room where he sat in
which contain the smallest traces of, moody silence over his cigar, ignor
this omnipresent mineral it is impos-iine the efforts of some of his well
Bible to pick out any diet on which Ilf- meaning fellow passengers to engage
and health can be maintained which. "'"J in conversation.
has lew than about a teaspoon a day kie had been a fool of course to g,g, qcgtngy/nem_
In it expect that a girl of her age should nml swim at Barton s Saturday in com-
eyer fall lii love with an old rewiplimeut to Miss Mary Louise Pillow.
In some cases of Bright's disease , like himself He* hadn't thought >( her niec. who has come from Baton
the Inflamed and damaged kidneys had Himseir as Dla previously but he p[Rouge, La . to attend school in Aus-
difficult filtering out the salts, ’O ’ now in her *this winter. Arter the,swim and
that it Is.retained and pitei up in tt 01 to considr in the light " a husosupper, gthe guests went to the Pet-
body Uhls proluene what IeJ ommon • , band. she had accepted the protec-mecky orpe for musie, xames and re-
t known a, watehbloat. To relieve tion or Nis name beeatdse there h d freshments. Those invited to welcome
this condition the patient is put on been no other course open to her. Ne the attractivo young stranger were;
a «"Udiet made up of Food had thought himself clever to have *"'*•" Mary Loulse .MUnberry. EllzA-
containing the smallest amount of salt, (IIminated eyery other dossibti ^Jbeth Smith. .Jean Granger, Irene Pat-
such as potatoes, uneaited white brad that she bhould take the "step VOlun- trson, Mary Bell, and Iouis Petpecky.
unsalted butter, certain kinds of fresh tarily. He had done wrong but he h ,■ Maur ice llate her, Fred Felder, ack
< ment. egg. and certain vegetables andjhoped that propinquity would have the Douglas, Fred Petmecky.
u som: time theidekired of making her fall in
ampunt <|f water " limited This dirt love with him instead apparently, it nAce nive. in unnn
Will In the course of a week or two h nc turned (. r eninAt hm DANCE GIVEN IN HONOR
bringzlownthe,amount or sAir, Inthetn weI । I J nis Innir He ' of VISITORS.
heys Enr deni With it and'drain .msrUnd’Dori, boy was in lovowith her Friday evening th. employee, of the
the surpin, water Ahng. somn mhimtaknesenzestate.ptzhwayepartmengevertpin:
In The same.s Troi'" aomeimes usaful or loyalty to himself had prevented ! ftlcnds WAh an informal danc and
Mseh»id even t^t t'. 1 .?l^n her from Kiving way to her. feelingnmusicai program, speciai features on
cmoandevn.that due ' Inflamma- toward red, but once free, there was the entertainment program were a song
_____________________________ no doubt she would marry him Hr d , by m(f, b,.„ Calloway, a violin solo
• have to see about settuinK some moneyi by Miss Erin Jnekson. short skits of
on them for he would nt want Doris i scottish ballads by Mrs Henry Leh-
to feel the pinch of poverty He'd I erman and a special clog dance by
never want any more than his salary Floyd Cain
now himself and his savings might just , Ilefreshments of punch and cake
as well go to them. 11; would only be
repaying what he- owed to her father ___________
anyway. •a e *
Ho had gone Into that little game BENEFIT PARTY
at Deauville a fortnight ago. King
Alfonso of Spain was dancing with
tion of the Sunday evening prayer
meeting of the society was given to
work on the book and there will be
two more classes this week. Tuesday
and Thursday evenings. It is planned
to complete the study and take the ex-
amination on,the book next Thursday
evening. Rev. Owers will have charge
of the next two meetings of the class
in the absence of Mrs. Owers. She is
goingato Beaumont to visit her father.
NEW YORK, Sept. 11. —.The past
week lias decidedly been ladies’ week.
In athletics, crime,* romance and gen-
eral dare-deviltry the men as compared
with the women have made no more
noise than a canary compared with a
boiler factory. .
First came the nine girl athletes who
had represented the United States at
the first women's international ath-
letic tournament in France.
Gaily and exultantly they returned
on the Saxonia, pointing with pride
to various medals and to 19-year-old
Camelie Sabinie of, Newark. Camelie
ran 100 yards, Jumping hurdles two
and one-half feet high in 14 2-5 sec-
onds, and if you think that's easy
just try it yourself. She proved her
tiny feet to be the fastest women's
feet in the world and she made herself
otherwise famous by one dazzling re-
mark: "French women wear such queer
clothes.” Shades of the Rue De la
Paix!
Well, and then came along Gertrude
Ederle. This 15-year-old member of
the women’s swimming association of
New York entered a 546 yard race
against some other girls-who had brok-
en records. Gertrude swam the dis-
tance in 22 minutes 7 1-5 seconds and
incidentally broke five world’s records
for speed and set a seventh. She’s
a bobbed haired blonde person with
an engaging grin and so utterly lack-
ing in any smarty-cat gloating over
her achievement that one begins to
have a lot of hope for the younger
gc.neratlon.
You’ll have to admit that in the
matter of seed of limb, the ladies
showed the gentlemen a clean pair of
heels, but, ah! wait till you hear about
the ladies in the little matter of beau-
ty. After anguish, perplexity and heart
burnings, such as are always attend-
ant'upon such ordeals, four lovely as-
sies were selected to represent New
York City In the beauty carnival at
Atlantic City. The four girls, left
town in an A. A. seaplane and as. they
leaned over the side to say good-bye
to admiring, thousands, the whole of
Manhattan went absolutely cock-eyed
trying to tally and compare the vari-
ous phases of attractiveness possessed
by each and all. Another such con-
test. and another such send-off and
this village will be even a more total
wreck than the railroad, coal and
clothing strikes have left it.
But passing lightly over sped and
beauty, consider womanhood this week
in relation to science and war. The
decoration of officer of public Instruc-
tion— no, neither do we, but It must be
something pretty nifty because it
comes from Paris—Is to be bestowed
by the French ambassador upon Mrs.
Robert G. Mead of New York for her
war work and for her aid In purchas-
ing the famous gramme of radium for
Mme. Currie. Mrs. Mead directed the
Y. M. C. A. women in France during
the war and thoroughly earned this
public instruction decoration, whatever
it may be.
And if it comes to romance—cgnstd-
er the ladies once more. You ‘simply
can't count on ’em at all. For instance,
Harry Halder escaped from Ward’s
Island and what was the first thing
he did? Telephoned his wife and in-
vited her to dinner. The first thing
the wife did was to accept the InvIta-
they're handsome tooled leather in browns
and greys fitted with dainty toilet
accessories—
CEDAR rapids. Iowa. — Judge
Frank F. Dawley, 66, of the Eighteenth
judicial district, died.
Miss Dickey when she suddenly left
him flat, rushed up to another man,
and kissed the newcomer with zest.
The other man happened to be her
father. And what do you know also
about the attack on the Episcopal ban
against re-marriage after divorce, the
attack made by the Rev. Dr. Percy
Stickney Grant of the Church of the
Ascension? It may be that the year-
old rumor of a betrothal between Dr.
Grant and Mrs. Philip Lydig has noth-
ing at all to do with the clergyman’s
views. But you can’t deny that where
there's a divorce, there’s a woman, so
women may fairly take the credit for a
big share in this latest agitation.
Keep your fingers crossed when you
see Miss Ingeborg Nielson on the hori-
zon—this is another bit of excitement
which the week produced. Miss Niel-
sen is a blonde assistant to the Dan-
ish police, and she is here as a dele-
gate to the world conference of police
chiefs, the world conference being yet
another of those scintillant ideas with
which the brain of Police Commission- '
er Enright’fairly sizzles. Miss Niel- !
sen, moreover, is 'one of the world's
greatest finger print experts and un-
less you keep your hands in your
pockets or otherwise engaged she will
whisk out her implements and have
you finger printed, classified and cod-
ed before ou can say “Help!”
The classifying is good, but the red-
ing is better. The Danish police,
among whom Miss Nielsen is included,
have reduced finger printing to such
pimple terms that if you .leave a slight
mooch on a busted window in New
yrk they will merely wire ”2345'' or
“9876" to Valparaiso or to Yokohama
and you come back, neatly handcuffed
on the next steamer.
There were two other impressions
made by the past seven high strung
days on the mind of Manhattan. One
was the deluge. It arrived with the
holiday and smashed every week-end ,
plan into a soggy top hat, though what
was the beaches’ loss was the movies’
gain. You couldn’t cram a muddy toe
into any movie houso-b 3 o'clock Ia-
bor Day afternoon, the places were
full of sesentfui baseball fans seeking
Lie forget their rain checks.
The other impression was made by
hay. The state department of farms
and markets Has announced that the
Largest crop bf New York state is
hay and that New York City is the
largest hay consuming market in the •
country. Go on, you rural dwellers;
hav a good laugh on, us.
Beautify the Complexion
IN TEN DA YS
Nadinola CREAM
The Unequaled Beautifier
। Used and End of oo^l
I By Thovtando
Guaranteed to remora
tan, freckles, pimples,
sallowness, etc. Ex-
treme c’ases. Rids
pores and tissues
impurities. Leaves the skin clear, soft,
healthy. At leading toilet couhters.
At Pre-War Prices,
Two Stew. B0e. and tl 00
NATIONAL TOILET CO., Pario, Tenn.
S’
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 96, Ed. 1 Monday, September 11, 1922, newspaper, September 11, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1434904/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .