The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 52, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 26, 1925 Page: 4 of 8
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Page 4—Wednesday, August 26, 1925.
THE AUSTIN STATES MAN
All the Newa Tha’s Fit to Print—Since 1871.
An the Ne
rh^AustinStatesma
Town
AUNT HET
Lo<
‘ »
Talk
I
L
1
W
John
%
M
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at
I
9,
But
(6
(2
€
IF SICK TODAY!
8
O
ill
TAKE NO CALOMEL
V
to
or
Jilin
T
),
cX
news-
~3
‘4
yeara, unless the taxpayers
are will-
out the
%/
Not Perfect
PAIR!
I
1
ththgs Ilka that
1
25
•r r.nttorr.
INSTANTLY - HARMLESS TO
L
A
10
=eex
so good to see you a
and May flew into
their friends without remuneration.
Other forms of healing are banned
if the practitioners are unable to
pass examination by the board of
does not ever
No, that is n
of the rights of those who wish
use faith healing on themselves
NE of Kir
drive off,
. So skille
made
there
the sand was running low in his
financial meter.
Clears
Complexion
WILL mose
SHOES WeAR
LOMG!
THE STORY SO FAR:
MAY SEYMOUR, whose husband
killed himself because of her love
THE CITY STREET department,
facing four more months of op-
eration to complete its year, finds
its funds depleted.
That is sad news.
Austin taxpayers are interested
in two subjects, water and streets
The water situation has been im-,
proved and will be entirely adjust-
ed when the new filtration plant
irons out kinks in recently-installed
equipment
should be a gradual reduction in
the number of irregular practi-
tioners and a corresponding sate-
guarding of the public.
850-00
reward
if it falls
to kill
I
(
2
Flies, Water
Bugs, Mosquitoes,
Ants, Moths, Bed
Bugs, Roaches
“I wasn’t bein’ proud
the party. My chair
Medical Practice
Act
Then, after much biting of the pen, she wrote to Gloria
Gregory.
gain:" she cried,
her arms.
NANN, the
hitting
Tuesday, has
H• was coac1
he played in t
in the pest fe
passed roun
another.
I membership periodically in
“,8.
8**
1
'----- ~i । in___:■
Pop was smoking and thinking
and ma sed. Willyum, everything
has an end and so has my patience.
I dident do anything, pop sed.
I was thinking of that gerl, she’s
becoming intlrely too impudent, ma
sed.
Meaning our cook Nora, and pop
sad. Well wy dont you give her a
good old fashion tawking to, and
if that duzzent work give her the
old fashion bounce.
THE Buffs ,
r They are
second dlvlslo
Ran Antonio,
on the toboggi
ego by the I
time they hav
las. three to 1
to Fort Worth
mont
Little Benny
And Hit Notebook
New York
Day By Day
by o. o. McIntyre.
NNY has
I dope "bue
to. At the rat
it out, they c
dope “barrel "
NoE
«Be
ment. He was just getting his pro-
gram underway when the guardian
of the city treasury announced that
eHs5"
toward her. “Oh, you darling!
in one. He is thin, half bald, keen affair with another man, returns to
_____. .i.. her home town after a year’s ab-
eyed and hard boiled. sence. She sells her property and
The world bruised him quite a with her small fortune sets out to
,, , , a ,, „.0 .-4 find and marry a man with money,
bit before he found his niche and She tells her lawyer. DICK GREG-
there is just a strain of cynicism ORY, and GLORIA, his wife, that
piNT WEB
I stop who
the grade w
last spring,
good season v
East Texas
Jackie Radfc
his size is i
only weigher
more, he wot
NAC and J
-vI of the u
busy removin
, field Tuesday
.the summer
were used for
play hours We
• The Texas a
, Heve in mass
, ranged for in
'ball and oth<
that summer
fit.
II
^*"5 JULU fl
same seven elephants, trunk to tail.
He called three doctors in as many
moments and not until later did he
learn that the seven elepaants were
from the circus at the Garden mere-
ly encircling the block for exercise.
T OCAL golf
a rare tr
wood gives }
Country club
wood was her
his performa
players very
'•.anything wit
11]said.
yet to be
Imsects get into the most
carefully screened homes.
They spoil food; they spread
filth and disease germs from
waste piles. rick rooms and
garbage cans.
Rid your home of these
pests! Don’t depend on
powders or liquids that merely
•tan and do not kill.
greater advances are
made.
time goes on and he
in the serious business of pro.
moting the public health the rec.
“Dodson’s Liver Tone” Straightens You Up Better Than
Salivating, Dangerous Calomel and Doesn’t Upset
You—Don’t Lose a Day’s Work—Read Guarantee
I TICK WH
i —— want to
| count of his
I might have a
I He is married
to chase arou
ing ball. He1
to show the p
displayed wit
would be hun
We think hi
though.
far removed from
Calomel is poison—It’s mercury—
It attacks |he bones often causing
rheumatism. Calomel is danger-
ous. It sickens—while my Dod-
son’s Liver Tone is safe, pleasant
and harmless. Eat anything att-
erwards, because it can not sali-
vate. Give it to the children be.
cause it doesn't upset the stomach
or shock the liver. Take a epoon-
ful tonight and wake up feeling
tine and ready for a full day’s
work.—Adv.
AND THERE WILL be other ad-
aitiona. Austin, growing ntead-
UF. naturally .nd on a very Stahl.
<•«•. Is the natural attraction for
PeoPle seeking homes. The prob-
lean of a growing etty will ever face
'he street department. That means
this department is going to need
more money next year in order to
Ni-Late Reward
The MLLat Compan,
<111 pay ffty dollars te-
ward to anyone who can
offer proof that they have
"ped Ni-Late accoring to
dirctions and founa tbat
to kil M kepre-
But, as she whirled through the
fami *r under the familiar
.""‘,*“2822
In her heart for these things.
hEtenathe r’XnW.OhC
-Ana..yet thouEt
I guarantee that one spoonful
of Dodson's Liver Tone will put
your sluggish liver to work and
clean your thirty feet of bowels
of the sour bile and constipation
poison which is clogging your
system and making you feel
miserable.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
this harmless liquid liver medi-
thetr pockets
and nhell out th, cash themnelvea.
And even ware such ths rasa a con', trol ot his nerven, peeked
•Idsrabl. outlay wil be necessary
to keep the streets in repair.
window again and there were ths
REING in
• mean tha
the majority <
Boston Brava
weeks. the Bn
ing about .500
defeated Phi
Cincinnati sr
beat the Ret
Pirates Tuen
THE STREET DEPARTMENT is
2 going to need a great deal of
attention next year. And it is go-
ing to take considerable nursing
during the next four months to Udo
itself over the usual protests over
chug holes and the like.
When Commissioner Searight be-
came the unfortunate victim of a
stroke of paralysis recently, C. N.
Avery took over a great deal of his
work. Avery, who has a knack of
working with other commissioners,
and who is by nature an ambitious
man. went to work and laid plans
for considerable street improve-
RERKELEY
• ning the
singles titles
Mich., and a
doubles. will
Thursday. I
t the ellminati
. through tissui
THAT cool
I came up
lowers of foo
anticipation,
except for t
. slackened. T
I by the mere
I witnessed the
| tween Austin
MARK LEUSCHER took care of
the Hippodrome’s Toyland ani-
mals this summer at his farm in
Connecticut. A country home with
a private 200 is a novelty even for
New York. One of Mark’s week-end
guests is said to have awakened one
morning to see a caretaker escort-
ing a white monkey over the green-
swarf He dressed and left for town
immediately leaving a simple note
reading: ’Tn not well.”
pound that does the work of
dangerous, sickening calomel and
I want every reader of this paper
to buy a bottle for a few cents
and if It doesn’t straighten you
up better and quicker than sall-
TH IS fall
I likely use
pass ball. TI
seriously as
school were
sophs look c
more as a jo
NEW YORK. Aug. 26.—Perhaps
the most discussed person in
the New York theater is James
Gleason. He is co-author of "Is
Zat So?” amna "The Fall Guy,” two
whopping successes. And he acts
Cotton Irrigation
Cotton Irrigation in the Stool
■tore community of Brazos county
will Inorease production from half
bale to a bale to the acre, the
first water having been pumped
rOM DENN
- of his bes
junior college
that Dexter s
for Dallas u
other school v
It is a shame
solicit the sei
writer waited a while to get con-
“love means nothing in her life.”
At Atlantic City she meets a di-
vorcee. CARLOTTA FROLKING,
and her friends, HERBERT WA-
TERBURY and DAN SPRAGUE.
Both men pay court to May, greatly
to the distress of Carlotta, who has
been in love with Dan for years.
But May sets her cap for Water-
bury, who, she thinks, is the rich
husband she is looking for. In her
effort to “land” him, she spends a
third of her little fortune on clothes.
GTUD WRI
• man to h
the summer t
condition. S
to do the sam
captain of th
I discovered a vegetable com- cine will relieve the headache
bilousness, coated tongue. ague’
malaria, sour stomach or any other
distress caused by a torpid liver
as quickly as a dose of vile
nauseating calomel, besides it will
not make you sick or keep you
from a day’s work.
cnSha.wsa Min trembling when the
srg sqiupeneranomrna"puk
He Is
vating calomel just go back to
the store and get your money
back.
Ni-Late Kill* Inttctt
Instantly!
Inmecta breathe through their ekina.
Ni-Late dores the emall ekin open,
ings by forming a moist, dud, g,
that umothers them inUmrtf. There
is.nompe for insects of ady kind.
Yet Ni Lett is harmless to humane
and will not stain the finest finend"
Teat -Lat todtmyt Prove to
yourmelf that it is the qmickeL ..few
and mow powerful insectidde known.
O’Neill in personality an the die*
tance between the pole. but just
as virginal in ideas and delivery.
Both know human nature and life
in the raw. Gleason "grew beards”
in the waiting rooms of practically
every producer before he landed his
first play.
His wife is as much of a person-
ality as Gleason but as he express-
es it has "more gloss.” Gleason
the rich silk lining with her favor-,
ite narcissus perfume, and had
burned a hole in the fur collar with
a cigarette. The coat had not
seemed such a precious thing 10
days ago, when she, looked forward
to marrying Waterbury a money.
The future then had promised fur
coats galore, and diamonds, and all
the glittering luxuries that money
could buy. ...
On the way back to Miss Agnes
Minny’s boarding house she pro-
vided herself with an inexpensive
black coat. She hated it, but it was
all she could afford.
But, by an entirely right instinct,
she had picked out the very thing
that best suited her. It set her off
as dazzlingly fair, as more delicate
than she was. It was more becom-
ing than ever the mink coat had
been.
But_May, of course, didn’t know
thia. Like most women, she thought
•he couldn’t be beautiful unless she
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 26.
If so, you are a brilliant talker.
You have literary ability.
And an unlimited vocabulary.
You are voluble.
But not insipid.
You are easily irritated.
And can be greatly overworked.
People confide in you.
Often, alas, to their sorrow.
For you can’t keep secrets.
You are intuitive.
To the point of being psychic.
You make sudden changes.
That astound your friends.
You are undemonstrative.
But loyal and steadfast in love.
And how did that blast effect
her? pop sed.
She hardly had a werd to say, ma
sed. Now- look heer, Nora, I sed
to her, this may be a free country
and all that sort of thing, but
theres a limit to wat you can say
to me wen you address me, and
youve reetched it and passed It and
exceeded it. I sed to her. They were
my absolute werds. I dont intend
se 1 8 & Slave to my servants, ma
Did she apologize? pop sed.
Well, she did and she dident, ma
sed, and pop sed, I see, I mean I
dont understand, and ma sed. Wen
to make a long story short. the end
of the matter was that I gave her
a 60 cent raise jest to show her I
still held the upper hand.
Yee gods, pop sed.
Whats a matter? ma sed.
Nuthing, I jest felt dizzy for a
moment, it will proberly pass off
in a few munths, pop sed.
And he finished his cigar behind
the sporting page.
HANS are p
( — of the wo
Mont has be
straight. D<
anything exce
such as tenni
two usually r
GOME coach
• thing to
order to get
are easy at n
get you a sc
expenses. I’l
How about :
way they do
’En
.weu,meN
SALES iANTID
25TAT. NOBODY
EVER cane 8ACK
FOR A SECOND
..Three days Inter she had shaken
the. dust of Atlantic City from her
feet and started home.
Home! She hadn’t realised that
Austin meant home to her "n‘u
SFEING animals, they say, is
largely a D. T. myth. The su-
perintendent of a jag cure uptown
says he knows only one patient—
a playwright — who nees animals
when floored by hooch. Most of
them, he says, merely have the
fantantical dreams' that come to
ordinary sleepers with nightmare.
DUMB-BELLS
ONE DIFFICULTY GEORGE
Beeright has faced has been the
rapid growth of Austin. Every-
•■hers, almost in any direction, new
additions are springing up. Ike
flowers under April showers. There
are so many new residential sec-
tions to the east, the west, nor:
end south that real estate men
thempelven, well, vernea with the
AliEhtent changes In their city can
hardly recount all of the new m.
tlons offhand.
Of course much of the work done
on thee, section. Is handled by the
promoters of the addiudn. But they
grow up rapidly, houses replace
tree, .nd shrub, and then taxpay
orn move in and begin to demand
streets.
ordinary run of traffic. The song-
BVIDINa A TOWN is a big job
and a slow one as well. This
paving problem will not be elim-
inated in a single year: it will take
a progressive program of several
for the kow-towing of certain of
the aesthetes. Gleason knows that
had he not done what he has done
he would be in their eyes just "a
laugh.”
He was born on Second Avenue
off the Bowery where canary birds
flinging bass were first discovered.
He has been twice in the regular
army cavalry and has gone around
the Horn on windpammers. He
knows soup kitchens as well as he
knows the stage.
His patter is of the street, not
guttery, but direct and telling. Fine
phrases are to him just thaf. If
he appears in a freshly tailored
suit he is “wearing a new set of
threads.” Something that interests
him tremendously is “a darb.”
n-, - ——vw. -"o u>p nere a
mypPhusbananinoy"nzmmambsrcthat
I ran around with another man!"
At that moment th. taxicab
nloxeddown V? FOundea • corner
and «h. found herseir looking into
two cold tnr *rn net to « far.
"he.know- the fhee of one of her
oldest frlendn, Myra Gali.
Bh. stood on th. aidewalk walt-
wf For. the.cab to paer, atarring at
May, but giving no other sign that
zhe, knew her. .Ana M’r Rhran
back, on the leather neat, trying to
shteid herneir from the cold, .barn
Eaze. a • .
I
It’s । Dick. He could do something about
it, I'm sure! And we'll get him to
The next morning May sold her
fur coat.
The furrier gave her $1000 for ft
—only a third of what she had
recklessly paid for it 10 days before.
As he pointed out, it would have
to be repaired. May had stained
doesn’t propose, she accepts Car-
lotta’s invitation to winter with her
in California. Then suddenly Wa-
terbury asks her to marry him, and I
May promises to be his w ife at once j
—before he has a chance to change
his mind!
A few days before the marriage.
May turns over to Waterbury all
the rest of her money, so that he
can Invest it for her. But she im-
mediately regrets this when Car-
lotta, leaving for California, warns
her not to trust Waterbury.
Worried, May goes to Waterbury (
and demands that he return her'
money to her. She waits for him.
to bring it to her in the lobby of •
the hotel, but he never returns;
and May finds herself penniless.
She sells her jewelry to pay her
hotel bill, moves to a cheap board-
ing house and tries to steel herself
to go back to work as a stenog-
rapher to support herself. But 10
years of case have softened May
and made her lazy and she finally
decides to sell her fur coat rather
than get a job at once.
NOW GO ON WITH THE 8TORY.
That no incompetent person be
allowed to practice medicine; that
no method of healing attended
with doubtful and sometimes dan-
gerous results be tolerated in
Texas when such services are
charged for, was the purpose of
the medical practice act passed
some years ago and amended in
1923.
Through the advance of med-
ical science and allied studies the
average life has been extended to
a remarkable degree within the
past quarter of a century and
take us out and buy us lunch at
the kippiest place in town!”
She caught May’s hand and raced
her upstairs.
“Here are your bags—all un-
packed in the guest room, and
everything put neatly away! Don’t
you think I’m a perfect hostess?---
Why, whats the matter?” Gloria
asked for May stood drooping In
the doorway of the dainty, chintz-
hung room. •
“I can’t,” May answered, “I just
can’t—go out and face people in
this town again. Now, don’t tell
me I'm silly! This mornihg as I
drove out from the station I passed
Myra Gall, and tried to speak to
her—and she looked right through
me, as if I’d been so much thin
air!” She groaned.
“Myra Gall—what she does is
hardly what I’d call the cat’s pa-
jamas! She doesn’t matter!” Glo-
ria said loftily. “You powder your
face and buckle on your armor, and*
we ll go out and face the town with-
out the flicker of an eyelash.
Then, as she saw that May was
going to refuse, once more, she went
on:
“The only way to face life. May.
s to face it—not to run away from
it, or turn your back on it! Lifts
a hard proposition, and you've got
to ba hard .tuft it you’re golng to
meet it properly. Come on—let’a
go.
And no Mey braced herneir to
meet her world.
(To Be Continued.)
|p^MAY SEYMOUR
• SEQUEL TO" KeFLAPPER WIFE" ©NEA
papera.
With such information
available to the public
ogntzed fraterntties of pathology
are active in promoting higher
standards of etfielency. In this
movement there is no curtailment
e (hip your
BIRHDAY
rattled around in vaudeville and
stock in all the opry houses and
town halls on the Pacific Coast for
many seasons. He had much the
same experience of Frank Bacon,
the beloved star of "Lightnin’"
Of course, they are saying now
that he has drunk deep of tho
classics—knows Shakespeare like a
book and beneath the tough ex-
terior stirs great cultural ferment.
I doubt it. Gleason, I Imagine. is
what he appears to be — a rough
and ready guy with a world of
bright ideas.
Thats ixactly wat I did, I meen I
gave her a good face to face tawk-
ing to. ma sed. Who do you think
you are and ware do you think this
is? I sed to her, If yo dont watch
Kas’ -« St peFiarmyneaatzna =
ma sed. ■ I knowed if I leaned back, (‘
hot as I was, I’d stick.” ft.
can handle, as quickly an ponstbie, „
l. "t very tar mseh of this long-aelayea ntreet lm.
An old woman was found in
Iha poorhoun of an Ohio town.
She wan born there, 11 years ago.
and has never been out of it.
ornelais of the poorhouse aren't
M tnult. They only did what they
had to. And yet this woman has
been robbed of something that
can never be repaid her—in this
ate, at least. •
Ours is a great country. But.
."But why. shoul4 rr she arguea
Zan—hekne it. 1 hnrdly know the
.Curlous thing-tht warm and
friendly feeling she had for a por
"on.whom she had been but once
in ner lire.
.m"Prrhaps when 1 go back to Aus-
herself 5ee him again," she said to
Somehow, the thought was very
comforting.. She sighed as she got
intorherebed with “• lcy heets And
lumpy mattress.
Oh, she needed thia!— This
• knowledge that ‘someone in the
world cared whether she lived or
died! She clung to Gloria, crying
ns if her heart were broken, while
Gloria drew her up the steps and
into the little house.
“Why. May, what in the world's
the mattar?” Gloria asked, patting
the shouder of May's hated black
coat. “Don’t cry like this—you’ll
make yourself sick!”
“Oh. I am sick—sick and tired of
everything!” May sobbed wildly.
“Everything, I tell you. . .
Her voice thickened; she choked,
slipped out of Gloria's arms and
dropped down upon the bottom step
of the stars, with her head buried
in her arms. Huddled, she flat there,
sobbing. And Gloria stood, looking
at her helplessly, not knowing what
to do.
Then, as if a brilliant thought had
just struck her, she ran up the
stairs, past May, and returned in
a moment with Dicky. Jr., on her
arm.
Here, Aunt May — hold your
nevvy!" she said with summoned
gayety, laying the small creature in
May’s lap. He looked up at her
with his bright eyes, blinked like
a little bird.
And, as if by magic, May stopped
crying. The maternal instinct that
is burled deep in the heart of every
woman under the sun, stirred with-
in her, and she held the baby close
to her. as a mother holds her child—
mysteriously comforted.
Without ■peaking aha looked up
at Gloria—and Gloria felt almost
aanamed becnuse she had an much
happiness and May had none,
Sha rang a bell In the wall and
presentiy a very young nursemala
appeared and took the baby Up
statrs again.
piaihatmandor Nlanap" "lava «;
moat wonderful breakfast ready for
you—cooked it for you myseif with
my own hands. ..."
Chattering, she sat down opposite
May in the eunny little dining room
and poured coffee for her. Then
zhe.brought shirred eggs and a
khtEhen.Tbone atenk from the
"Here’s toast," she purred, lifting
a enowy napkin, "and honey—end
ohe.dear! 1 forgot 1 ha orange
juice for you. ..."
Frowning, she dashed back Into
the kitchen and brought a tall giqgz
of-kgsetin,,“,bowi t cracked ice
May hadn t had euch a meal alnen
ehe had left the hotel In Atlantic
St-nor such an eppetite, either.
nB the time she haa had her
thira-cup.of cotfee rhe teit mor
cheerful than she had since the
night Herbert Waterbury had atn2
appeared with her money
aiond Abrst teu
S’.1!—
^hZrnBvT0^* W60
she had finished.
cMax nodded., unashamea. "Of
cour2e 1 was. goIng to marry him."
The answe „ frankiy. "Why not?
-he thing I was after was
•nd I thought he had it.” V,
She crossed both arms on 41
tahleana looked stralght mto che
----- ,11UU.1H rias wide brown eyes. “Listen +.
can live here again me. Glory Gregory,” ehe Mid "j
wav" -amaa- — was dead tired of having Deopi
"ike •“’hum. wanted to b treaPa
L..8 * buman being again—to be
TPantedutnntead Ot being shunnea
n"Wel . rixuredrthat the one thing
people do respect money. They
AB.zouknow. They kow-tow ta IL
They bow down and worahlp «
Noton iz.tht but they worahip the
people .who have “ o 1 mAe up
my mind to get money. if i had to
W out and sent It!- But Iwtead
pfoztealing Ie 1 haa mine Atoln
from me. Poetic suntice, j sup.
poee. you’d call RI” p
."Pontie nothing! It’e the wicked-
et.5hin5 I ever heard of!” Gloria
itedw.Jumping up. "Ana I think
thia Watorbur,, ought ,o be foun
and jailed!— Let’a go down to eeo
gOMEHOW or other the intem-
gentelt la always hunting for
the highbrow strain in kenius.
Charlie Chaplin was a atage aouae
with funny falla before fame. Now
he la the "intellectual dreamer.” I
read the other day that "Bugs"*
Baer was passionately fond of
Greek history. I’ll wager he is
fonder of country sausage with
dish gravy than of the nine day
fjaet of Apollo.
Inst week, accordine to reports, ing to alg down |B t
The farm belongs to M W 81ms
Jr., who met drouth emergency by
becking hie Fordcon tractor down
the slope and hitehing H to •
pump which throws • atx-Inch
ntream from the Brazos river.
It la often posnible to rig up on
tnexpensive plant in this way by
using either old or new oil well
casine for th. dimcharge pip«.
Drouth is a severe teacher end
leavee the farmer in poor shape to
invest in improvementa, but when
F good times come again and
drouths ere forgotten, a tractor
| and pump end a uttle pipe should
abmorb some of the protits and
I become a balance wheel of the
I varyig sensonn.
A BONG writer and an actor after
a turbulent night wound up in
a hotel near old Medleon Square
Garden. The next noon the song
writer pulled up the blinds, looked
out and hastily withdrew the
shadea. He had seen eoven ele-
phants trunk to tell moving elong
the street. He called the actor.
"Look!” he eald pulling up the cur-
tala. They mw nothing but the
THE STREET DEPARTMENT
probably does not get enough
money to spend. But whet depart-
ment doee? Approxlmstely 6100,-
0O0 a year is put on Austin strsets.
From this sum, Austin is ehtitled,
every year, to a stretch of paving,
even if it be but a. connecting link
of a couple of blocks. Men acquaint-
ed with such work win answer
that these two blocks would cost
you from $7000 to $10,000. By shov-
ing other items, this money couli
be spent every year, or allowed to
accrue in the budget, and spent
when a greater lump to accumu-
iated.
wore expensive clothes. She cried
as she opened the door of the
boarding house—cried because she
hated the smell of boiling corned
beef that filled the place, because
she was poor, but most of all be-
cause she hated the black coat
• • •
She spent ell of that day In the
Slough of Despond, pitying herself
with all her soul, grieving over her
ruined hopes. And she awoke to
find herself crying in the middle of
the night, when everything seemed
even .more hopeless than it had In
broad daylight.
Thon, being practical at heart,
she euddenly jumped out of bed.
put on her dressing gown, and eat
down to make her plane.
.1 rat.of,all, nhe wrote to Carlotta
and told her that ehe had decided
to "pena the winter with her in
Canifornia, After ell—thet le. If Car-
lota still wanted her.
Then, after much biting of the
pen • she wrote t Gloria Gregory to
tell.her that she was coming to
Austin and would stop at the Greg,
orys. It was the one place in the
world, she said, where she was sure
of a welcome.
.Before her mood coula change,
shew.dressed, npped out into the
nieht, ana posted the letters.
Coming back to her ugly little
room., "he. stood with her beck
azninat the door—wide eyed—won-
firing if nhe dared to write to
MAxesez. Forgan ana tel him how
bad been robbed of all her
money.
examiners However, the exam-
iners do not concern themselves
with the methode any ph’ystetan
may choose to uee, leaving it to,
hie judgment to treat a patient -as
may eeem beet after he hee passed
the required teet in the varlous
branches of learning conducive to
the art of healing.
The public le at the mercy of
pretenders unless ths medical
fraternity itseit intervenes in some
organised manner to inform the
public. This, they are planning
to do. While the striet ethice of
the profession do not permit ad-
vertising, ths American Medical
association haa taken a very prac-
tical view of the matter and ban
Recommended not only protesstonal
cards in the public press but went
farther commending to aounty sq-
citfes the adoption of a custom of
publishing the rooter of their
T EWie WH
1 helm er de
and Jean Bor
in the Davis
line in five I
day. The Te
stronger than
port.
PVBLISNED EVERY AFTER-
MOON EXCEPT. SUNDAY BY
THE AMERICAN POBLsAING
COMPANY
AT SEVENTH AND
BKAZOS STHSBTB._______
Private Braneh Telephone:
_______Dial Mt» or IMI.__________
Eatered M xocond-elns matter at th.
postoffiee at Austin, Tum undet th. Act
5 Congres. of March A 1870.- Meraber
Audit Bureau at Circulationa.
Th. Associated Pres • ezelasively eh-
titled to the um for pgblieation of all
nova and diapatchaa eredited to it or set
dtherwise eredited in the paper, and alao
Ehe local nasa published herein. All rtahta
nt republication of epecial dispatehes here-
in era elan renerved.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES 1 Cub la ad-
rance—Evenine Statesman (6tx dura) and
Sunday American-Statesman. G5c; six
months, $3.75; one year, $7.00. Sunday
American-Statesman (only) one year by
mail in Texas, <2.60.
SFVERAL YEARS AGO under the
administration of A. P. wool-
bridge, Austin launched a paving
campaign that brought ths old
town to ths tors. Beautiful 11th
ntreet is a,monument I, a,, ettorta
of Wooldridge ana his progrssslvo
aonoctates. Charming University
avenue is another beauty epot cre-
ated at thet time. *
W/e
"Oht how deer and beautiful you
complexion is today, my dear 1"
s HERE 18 a certain joy—a cer.
A tain pride—tn knowing you are
admired, whether it be from father,
brother, husband or sweetheart.
And hack of that joy is the satis-
faction of knowing all is well.
Men are taaclnated by the
charms of beauty. Women gaze
with envy, secretly jealous, per-
haps, wondering—hoping—proving
for that attractivenesa which le not
theirs. But why the wondering-
the hoping—the praying for that
craved for attractiveness—th at
clear skin—that beauty. A clear
akin—la the barometer of one’s
condition. A healthy akin radlatea
beauty. Pure, clean blood means a
dear akin.
RS B. Ie waiting to help yon. It
will rid your blood of ita fmpurities
•nd give you that clear complexion.
Since 1826 8.8.8. haa been ridding
people of blood Impuritles, from
pimplee, from blackheads, boDa,
eczema and from rheum atlsm, too.
Because 8 8 8. la made from fresh
herbs and barke, it may be taken
with gerfect safety. Try it your-
nelt. You will not only look better,
but you will feel better, too.
IANOTHER
A "Say. I’ve
record, and y
the spots ou
seen. All the
up have some
feel proud t<
team.” That'
3 COME fane
• •• teams wi
j In such a hur
I hour and thr
I be a record.
1 The Senators
’ trip to Palest
h had to make
I home.
NoW THE STREET department
is practically “broke.” About
all that can be expected during the
next four months le a little work
from the “patching crew.” This
unit, devised by Avery atter a trip
to Paris, Texas, whers he saw how
that town was taking cars of Itsi
strsets, csn bs opsrsted economical-
ly end csn actually keep streets
In repair. That le something.
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 52, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 26, 1925, newspaper, August 26, 1925; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1435335/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .