The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 148, Ed. 1 Monday, November 30, 1925 Page: 4 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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■
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
WINNIE WINKLE, THE BREADWINNER: Hall, the Conquering Hero Comes.
{ miss ■ J { au mus J
wNK5:/ Lm mE3.
o
Today
* •
The Governor’s Great Problem
me M Happlen
imltable
AMlkVliDeU.
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.8
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b
BEWARE THE
--
Crossword Puzzle
Little Benny
4
And His Notebook
HORIZONTAL
for the sellers.
the
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27.
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57
31.
Platform.
34.
A Penalty Outside The Law
I IE 16ICU
Town Talk
E
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Be Sure It
Price30c
AM
UININE
that this has not been
normal
withportran
your
BIRTHDAY
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta.
bleCompoundHelpedwhen
Other Medicines Failed
Some
i
"uk
the
ONE IN TEN
ft
hever
SUBsgRIP
RATH I CM I M-
BOUND TO WIN—Trapped. By Edwin Alger.
SIR m/A
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not lead.
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MKui MAHAAENIAMIM Mkkm
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MH 9111 W
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COUGH OR COLD
THAT HANGS ON
Got you NOW
-you LITTLE
New York
Day By Day
By O. 0. McIntyre.
MULLI
------
The Editor’s Opinion
On New Lines
FROM STATESMAN "FILES
CASCAR,
Ger Red Bax 9
-f
eoooueas:
wu uwusTOR
— AFUNERLtE
MONDAY, NOV. 30.
If so, you AT, accurate.
You rarely make errora.
You have a keen mind.
And quick judgment.
You are cheerful.
And you cheer others.
Austin Statesman
Subscription Rates
By Carrier Daily and Sanday Editions
Haus swemne’
00 YA GET TW
nOWea5 AM CM
I SeIT VS m
00
17177
1 year
$7.00 •
1 year
$8.50
1 year
$7.00
1 year
$5.40
M. November 90, m.
==---
—-m
a
1 year
$5.40
A
A
day, at th, week, and that would
prevent month, with #ve days and
pehe comphtcationa.
1 year
UM
deat
tried
: the
Work of ge-
ntus.
Surzical in-
For you are a born entertainer.
You have ready wit.
Your laughter 1, infectious.
You are taithtul.
And your friend, connide in you.
Which takes you into others' at-
fairs.
And you will help them in their
troubles.
GUESS EVERYTHING IS
FIXED NOW —IT’LL BE
GOOD BYE, SQUIRT-
yyygege--gN
By Mall in U. B.
Daily and Sanday Editions
Private Bra neb Telephones
Dial 8888 8521.
MRS. FULLER
MADE STRONG
ity.
so. Sugar stalk.
ejwm
ub
ec‘
A
5
Mt the number of
i eham in nte’s good
erchanta, the
$ gatn poorer
Aee-ve-
met MV
Rich I
FREND. I
wnNE!
JUSTICE of the Peace F. R. Tannehill, who mixes his
legal opinions with a great deal of common-sense justice
despite his ferocious moustache, may or may not pass with
reluctance on the case of the young man charged in his
court with the theft of the photographs of two pretty
young girls.
Certainly this youthful Lothario is more to be censured
for his lack of sense than for his breach of the law. Only
a youth—a youth in love, perhaps—would be so foolish as
to steal something so intrinsically worthless as the picture
of a girl. Whatever Judge Tannehill’s decision, The States-
man knows that it will teach a lesson to the young man.
At the same time, that young man should be thankful that
he has escaped the most severe punishment possible in
this case—that some wicked newspaper should publish his
name, thereby making him known to his "girl,” to his
friends and to the world in general, not as a thief, but as
a fool.
By Man in Texa
Dally and Senday Editiona
MHHHM
MHH
33. Negative.
Widely cele-
roR ME PAST weex
"FwAw HAS UlU
RASING A M*U
RUOING IN A aassy
CAR AND onde@IG
ARoNO me SERMTS
of A mystemous
MAM OS weaM.
whinme HAS beew
BuasTING WITH
aymosw TMNGTo
FINO OUT wom
RICH MAN IS
FawTaw REFUSED
TO DISCLOSE MIS
BUENO’S IDENTITY
BUT PROMISED TO
BRING HIM HOME AND
INTRCOUCE HIM —
EVERY APTERNOON EXCEP SUNDAY
BY THE AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.
BEVENIHAND BRAZOS STREETS
Entered la the Postotfice at Aastin, Texna,
as Second-class Matter.
. wMk •• than any other nation.
(onaeu Tats
MV Site
\Fu•D:b
y
--
AB the News That's F to Print—3^-1871.^
1.Mmch hranos wer• np alao.
J mat oughr to plean the Unitea
H sites especially as France doos
E at least 30 per cent more buying
UMh
MIRIAM AMANDA FERGUSON, first woman governor
-- of Texas, after 10 months in office, is facing a prob-
lem that would merit the daring, fighting, indol ’ ‘
spirit of a James Stephen Hogg, the wisdom of a Sam
Houston, and the cool, deliberate planning of a Joseph
Sayers.
To answer the ultimatum of those 40-odd legislators,
demanding "a special session for impeachment of others or
we shall call one at the menace of your own office” re-
quires nothing short of a composite statesmanship as found
in some of the state's greatest minds. And in so saying,
we are making no reference as to why the governor finds
herself in such a predicament. We are prefixing our
assertions upon the fact that she has arrived at such a
problem.
The threat of the legislature to disturb the office of
the governor herself, of course, is foolish. It is, at best,
only an idle boast—not too well put. We do not believe
there is the slightest danger of the governor being im-
peached. As to the proposed call of the special session,
that is a different manner. It is no longer a wild rumor.
It sounds like business, especially so when Speaker Satter-
white, who recalls the words of Jim Ferguson, "Crack your
whip, Lee, when 'er you’re ready,” is ram-rodding the spe-
cial session machine.
The apparent simple expedient of calling a session or of
refusing to call one carries with it this problem.
The governor may acquiesce to the wishes of the legis-
lators and co-operate in the demand for a complete inves-
tigation of highway affairs. Or she may ignore the ulti-
mattum and point out that the house, without the support
• of the senate, (which is pro-Ferguson) can only waste.
money, and accomplish absolutely nothing.
The Statesman does not believe that the time to act has
arrived. We believe that the machinery of the courts
should be allowed to go along uninterrupted for the present;
that a grand jury, a small, competent body of men can
accomplish more than a bulky, factional body of legis-
lators; that the action, if any at present, should be legal
action and not political action.
---------------------
Old News
Our Christmas Cards are now on
Alsplay, The sentiments are beau-
tiful Jordans.—Adv.
soaka Hight in through skin and
Resh right down to ltgament and
bone. •
It oils up and Iimbers up the
joints, subdues the inflammation
and reduces the swelling. Joint-
Ease is the one great remedy for
all jotnt troubles and Brown &
Odilorne and other live druggists
are dispensing it dally—a tube for
60 cents
it might help me. lam very
better now, strong enough to «
own housework, end have two
babies to care for besides, f
SWSSftW ’
TT TOW nena a queen bee and
I some worker bees by malt and
die onuma the food to give out,
rou may find the workers dead
( bon hunger, but the queen win
be sitae. fat and eared for to the
. end The worker eee to that
n antmalm and tn man there is
eeavtne and adoration for lender-
NOV. 30, 1900.
Texaa defeats AIM by a 11-0
score in the second game played
with them this season. Texas won
by a score of 6-0 in the first game
of the season.
Up to date the Texas team is
undefeated and its goal line has
been crossed but twice.
mean-spirited little king of
ms — Slam aivoroea his wife and
• took away her title, “queen," be-
• omas- eke hadn't any children. It
RUSIESS hums. Not by the
D faces one eees oan be guessed
NOV. 30, 1910.
Mrs. W. L. Stark of Orange en-
tertained the members at the uni-
versity footbell team, the coaches
and her son Lutcher, who is man-
ager. at dinner at the Driskill hotel.
Short speeches were made by the
members of the team and the
coaches as well as Lutcher Stark.
Mrs, J. A. Jackson left today for
Ban Antonio, where she will attend
the meeting of the federation of
Women’s Clubs to be held there.
~ ' 1,1 " in i i
ForCreakyJoints
Just rub on the new applioation
called Joint'Ease it you want to
WAS YOU DOWN
ON TIME THIS
MORNING?
Na
Acrobats hold my attention at
vauleville while others walk
thoughtlessly out Somehow they
seem heroic troupers In face of
such discouragement. They shout
their "Alles houp," toss their hand-
kerchiefs aand rush to the foot-
lights with one arm raised in the
manner of the Roman circus, as
though they had universal atten-
tion.
The acrobat must blend his Mfe
with his profession. He does not
smoke nor drink, and every murcle
must be attuned to supreme en-
deavor. His identity is hidden by
pseudonyms. Sometimes the house
is entirely empty when he retires,
perspiring and fatigued, to the
shower.
No training for vaudeville is so
arduous and difficult A slight slip
has hurtled many to permanent in-
vallism. A vaudeville agent tells
me he has yet to hear an acrobat
complain of the lack of courtesy
on part of his audience. He expects
and accepts it.
WIJJNG foxes protects better
M animals, and wearing fox skins
is not as bad as wearing the skins
of unborn Persian lambs.
Even the most fashionable fe-
mmale might shudder at the thought
ot a savage wearing the skin of
an unborn human body. What’s
the difference?
Somehow people these days shun
the whimperer. The world expects
th suffering to grin with his afflic-
tions — mental or pysical. Nellie
Revell, for three years in a piaster
cast without a tear, taught a great
lesson in bravery. So have others.
A man with the wealth and fame
of a Chaplin will have difficult time
developing the faintest sigh of
sympathy for himself.
UH MMM• USIS WB
aBBaBBa sm
Tm jail inmates got ttred of in-
1 action and tried to burn out.
The city jail lost its can opener.
But the city sky-iine haw been im-
proved at its foundation, as seen
from Barton Springs road. The
grounds around the new filtration
z2nthec,bemsmetpdgarra;
perate.
Title of re-
spect.
Paid public-
TT HAPPENED down on East
I Sixth street. Six boys, calling
each ’man.’ were betting on the
kind of car that would round the
corner next. "I’ll bet three points
It will be a Ford, and the first
number of the license tag will be
seven,” quoth the tallest. ’'Taken,
and if it should be a Buick, you'll
owe me back all you won yester-
day.” It is human nature to bet, to
take a chance and to gamble on the
turn of the wheel. Lawing against
gambling just makes it more secre-
tive. and forces it to find new meth-
ods of expression. Life itself la a
gamble, but who" have it other-
wise?
T ET'S run Dan Moody for at tor-
—4 ney general. Wonder if he gets
a worthwhile salary. Highway en-
gineer gets 38000. The governor,
84000. But it takes years of train-
ing to be an engineer.
These monologists who seem so
annoyingly sure of themselves win
applause by sarcastically prodding
the t udience.- They accuse them of
wearing handcuffs and the like. At
the Palace the other day one was
floundering in a flood of male
jokes. He kept intimating to “he
orchestra leader ths audience was
muffing his brightness. It had the
desired effect, for forced laughs
and applause followed.
I have been drawn up short in
vaudeville vagaries by a letter
postmarked New Britain. Conn.,
and unsigned. It says: "Don’t you
think Chaplin is overdoing this sad
and lonely pose—the clown with a
heavy heart?" I do, and have for
some time. The few tims I have
seen Chaplin in the flesh was the
center of rather high spirited rev-
elry. Tears seemed far, far away.
I see no reason for tears on Chap-
lin's part. Everything contidered,
the world has been mighty kind to
him.
rFALKED to T. K. Irwin in cap-
— ItoL He brags of his Indian
blood. Says it makes him tired,
when he talks about conditions at
the penitentiary, for folks to say,
"You’d like to have them in the
Rice hotel, maybe?” Indians never
forget, never forgive, never quit.
Saturday crowd. Christmas
I shopping on with a rim. Pedes-
trians meet, dodge or bump into one
another, laugh and pass on. Fords
whack Doges and get away with
it. The very air of the streets is
alive with good humor. Policemen
turn their backs while cars race
through amber lights. Out-of-town
numbers on cars, carefully parked
parallel, while the newest law is a
'so many’ degrees angle. Peddlers
again tap at your door, showing
buckets of apples. The notice to
peddlers signs all blew away. An
employe at the Capitol bought some
face lotion. It took <11 the skin off
and she is now in a darkened room,
hoping to save her eyes. The akin
will always show red marks, as
though badly burned.
maestro ’of vaudeville should wage
a campaign of kindness among
audiences toward acrobats. They
are gentlemanly in their demeanor
and deserve better treatment when
they try earnestly to entertain.
the enterprising
rHn Merchant's association of
{I New York, and business men
of other cities, would like to
change the year. They suggest
13 months of 28 days each. Each
- month would begin on the same
German comedians who explode
their talk like bottles cf soda have
also apparently lost hold on vaude-
ville audiences. I saw one team
walk off at the end of their act in
dead silence. A trained seal fol-
lowing received thunderous ap-
plause as it waddled grotesquely to
the wings. How much more that
outburst would have been appre-
ciated by the human beings who
preceded it.
LlaE’ikhha’VeJeuSt cqm
pound and And it
has improved my
ANE hundred and forty-nine
U Alaskan foxes, with fur of the
taahtonabie color, are ahipped to
B sweden, to be used for breeding.
On th. Journey they will eat live
5 chickens occasionally, each will
C have its compartment. weU looked
.atter. Th. animals ar. worth
1 ' $76,000.
Neglecting a little wound, cut or
abrasion of the esh may in nine
cases out of ten cuu- no great
suffering or inconvenience, but it is
ths one case in ten that causes
blood pol toning, lockjaw or a
chronic festering sore. The cheap-
ML safest and beat course is to
disinfect tbs wound with liquid
Borozone and apply the Borozone
Powder to complete the healing
ptocess. Price (liquid) 30c. 00c and
31.30. Powder 300 and 00c. Sold by
Renfro Drug Co.—Adv.
ft*
Zr'
42s
nONT weep, however. The fox
• dealer might as well have the
: . thomsand dollars ns the foolish
permon convinced that wearing the
skin of a dead animal makes her
beauunu
etrument.
3. Legal rule.
13. Expressing a
motive.
14. To argue.
10. Covered with
glased blocks.
IT. Line.
19. To navor,
20. Egg of a
louse.
31. Reputation.
23. Malay Negri-
to.
34. Energy.
30. Became tem-
NEW YORK, Not. 30 —Diary of
-) a modern Pepys: Up to see
Homer Croy, the pamphleteer,
home from 20 months in Europe,
and mightily pleased to de back,
he said, and I told him of recently
starting twice for Europe in a
week, once leaving the boat at the
pier.
Worked five successive hours
and then to Irvin Cobb's tea with
my wife, to My farewell to his
daughter Elisabeth, who, with her
husband, is going'to Europe to re-
side; and thence to the Green
Room club for a reception to B. J.
Kaufman and his fair bride, from
Budapest.
Later to the opening of Vincent
Lopes’s new supper club, and he
made a brave speech, but the won-
der of the fellow to me is I have
never seen him smile. So home and
to bed.
RVT the word "it" would worry
D the s-paratitfous. Superstition
is powerful. That waa proven
when the calendar waa once
changed, cutting aparentiy several
days from one year.
The people rebelled, saying bev-
oral days had been taken from
thetr Ures.
Over 200,000 women have no tut
Pinkham s Vegetable Compound?”
88 out of every 100 of EereDlies
say"Yes," end because the vegetn
lo Comroend has been helping thes
women it should help you
TRERE goes J. Gregg Hill, dog-
I trotting towards his office. (He
doran't fox-trot.) But J. Gregg
knows more about oil leases, as
they are, than a hen knows about
raising chickens. And, they do say
( he can beat a hen at that job, too.
W/HEN you see Gregg Hill you
V think of Jess Maxwell There
was quite a contest on between the
two some time back: beauty contest
I believe. It ended In a tie, so they
are stm arguing about t But to
rile Maxwell. Just ank him about
fish fries.
■ me probably his fault. Now he
: la dead without a male heir.
A young lady whom he married
. * A month ago has just given birth
2 little girl. They arrange those
2 mdngs aittereniy in Siam, and it
' » went hurt her reputation.
K 2 You can tell that the kings of
e Siam have been running down.
* This little girl born Wednesday is
the first child bora to any king of
■Bam m 33 yean.
MAJ. ROBERDEAU has new
II doors on his double garage.
Deputy T. O. Fox is off on a deer
hunt. The man who shot at Fox
is safe in jail . . . Met a woman
who has owed me 310 for more than
10 years. I was the most embar-
rassed. Guess the interest has
eaten up the principal.
' I 'HERE gore a truck load of ay,
1 and a dappled horse leading be-
hind. Truck not breaking speed
taw, maybe, but horse looks tired.
. . . Wagon, mule drawn, loaded
with sand, drags a chain on ground.
Why—statie?
Signing off—L. L.
at the bridge meet, the foot of the
sky line will be a river front park.
Remember when Wooldridge park
was a trash dump? Not so very
long ago, either.
HAVE you seen the old quarry at
II Breckenridge park, San An-
tonio? A beauty by day and mar-
vel by night. The South Austin
smelling park, where the car track
turns, could be done likewise. New
window display at Dahlich’s. Col-
orful pictures at Bradford’s. Saw
a man in Waco yesterday, painting
such colorful pictures wbile you
walted. Advertising house and
barn paints. On the road home
paased three blind men, arm in
arm, coming down the road for an
afternoon stroll. Prof. Leberman,
who teaches pipe organ at the
school for blind, and plays the or-
gan at ths Christian church, was
the middle man, and leader.
Let us frame you Christmas pic-
tures now. New moulding styles
in stock. Our stand frames are
different.—Jordan Co.
”3
m wmompiem
_ r—
Eagam
EamnmE UH
brate.
35, Bed laths.
37. Caustic.
38. Principal pipes.
33. Valleys.
42. Dandy.
44. Point of compass.
48. Wild duck.
47. Color.
43. Variant of "a."
49. Was seated.
31. Billed as the leading player.
53. To entreat.
54. Exclamation of disgust.
56. To curse.
57. Drone bee.
38. Fragrant oleoresin.
30. Fluid in a tree.
61. Popular assembly of people.
53. To blunt
•5. To take charge.
58. Tough wood.
87. Mora boisterous.
68. Plot of ground.
VERTICAL.
1. To perform.
2. Showered.
3. Bulb flower.
4. Boy.
5. Deity.
8. Solitary.
7. Alleged force supposed to pro-
duce hypnotism.
8. To soak flax.
9. Endures.
10e To reach a given degree.
11. Tiny.
18. To place upon.
15. Bleat of a sheep.
17. Garbed.
18. Units of speech.
31. To sharpen a razor.
22. Genuine.
24. Rectors.
25. Specimens.
TE signs of city-hood are upon
X us. We hive a woman news-
boy. New York and even Houston
have long Roasted (?) the corner
paperwoman. But our’s does not
yell. "Pepper” at the approaching
customers. Trick one in our favor.
Other city signs are the red disks
on the upstairs windows of many
stores, indicating pathway for fire-
men in time of need. I have often
wondered at the light at the second
story window of Penny’s. It is a
burglar light, to scoro him away,
not to aid him.
omokeu
I coyjw
I B
MU
-
-eh,
28. Precious stone.
28. Exciting.
30. Unit of weight for diamonds.
32. To commence.
34. Fashion.
36. To perch.
40. Devours.
41. Cabbage salads.
42. Strip of leather.
43. Breakwater.
45. Erns.
48. Rust.
50. Tusks. •
52. Twenty quires of paper (pl.)
53. Astringent powder.
55. Similar to an ostrich.
57. To put os.
68. Age.
59. Road house.
61. Distant.
62. Joined.
64. To accomplish.
65. Myself.
ANSWER TO SATURDAY’S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE.
year. Big money may have been
leaving Texas for northern con-
struction companies, but not much
of Austin's money is going north
this year to the catalog concerns.
Already are we living up to the
many slogans offered for 1926.
IjUTIM DAT! tn Wall street
Mman e. WMk endea Th* "Big
mm acke wer headed in th.
IB ' oteetal timber with
wehems tar wola th. market short.
: met was up, end Lberty
bomds wee wp. becawee Secretary
Ma InMBds to buy government
>1 f—o- "over th. encounter," baving
weocher enused by tm rEenas anzstebolmmhonaPketd
A few seconds' rubBing and it
gameg—Evenibe Seatesmad (Ma 4ya) aqa
mondaz
Ameriehn-Stat-man (om1y ome year by
mall in Texaa, 62.50.
Pestetnt coughs and colds IMS
to seribus trouble. You can •fob
them now with Creomulstom, «
emulsttied oreosote that la plenmit
to take. Creomuisfon ia a Bk
medical aisoovery with twoHa
action: it noothes and heals Ehe
inflamed membrane, and manftn
(erm growth.
Of all known Arugs, ersomote u
recognized by high medical author.
ItiM aa one of the greatest healin
agencles for persistent coughs and
colds and other forms of throat
troubles, Creomulston contains, fa
addition to creosote, otner healing
elements which soothe and heu
the infected membranes and stop
ths irritation and inflammatiem.
While the creosote goes on to t#
stomach, Ie absorbed into tbs blood,
attscks ths seat of ths trouble and
checks ths growth of ths germa
Creomulston is guaranteed :
factory in ths treatment of per
sistent coughs and colds, bronchial
asthma, bronchitis and other forma
ot respiratory diseases, aid is ex-
cellent for building up ths system
sfter colds or flu. Money re-
funded if any cough or cold is not
relieved after taking according to
directions. Ask your druggist.
Creomulsion Company, Atlanta.
Ga.—Adv.
£ ' KUCH is the power of fashion.
3 The furs collecting germs are
not sanitary. A 31,000 fox skin 1.
not as useful for warmth as 50c
worth of wool and its purchasers
waste enough money to feed five
, aammies in Europe for a year.
health wonderful
ly. For months
and months I was
not regjar and
hadterriblepaina.
ITH= next step alone the path of
l democracy wm bo another in-
treame in the number of earth's
ehildren that share it. property.
That step will be taken, when the
grant crowd learns how to rule
itself, and finds competent lead-
ers that won't betray it
Aa important sign was ths brief
bowee at McDonald in Britain. But
seek things come slowly, they help
everybody and neea not hurt any-
bohy when they do happen.
Sattiday nite pop and ma had a
ingagement to go errouna to Mr.
and Mr*. Hewses house and play
bridge, and after dlnnlr ma sod.
O my goodniss my only pair of
silk stockinn has a run in them,
I cant possibly go out with stock-
ings that look like that
Thats too bad, Im mutch releeved,
pep sed. We'U call up the Hewsas
and tell them not to ixpect us, he
sed. and ma sed. We'll do nothing
of the kind, dont you know its ons
of the 9 dedly cine to break up a
bridge party? You'll haff to run up
the avenue and go to that little no-
tion store and get me a pair of
Silver Dot stockinn. Prines of
Wales, size 9 and a half.
How can I wawk In a store end
make an announcement like that?
pop sed. And wats the Prince of
Wales got to do with It enyway?
he sed.
That's the color, ma bed, and pop
sed. Tea gods, wsll then wats the
Ideer of ths silver dots, we’re not
going to a masquerade party are
Silver Dot Is ths name of ths
brand, and done forget the else. »
and a half, and now for pity sakes
hurry up and get started, ma sed.
Wich pop did, me going with him
partly for the wawk and partly to
see wat happened, and wen we got
to the notion etore some lady was
buying something in there, pop say-
ing. I can't go in .there and make
that speech wile that woman is in
there.
* And we waited outside till she
came out and then we went In and
jest then another lady came in rite
after ue and pop and me wawked
out agen and-waited till she came
out and jest then another one went
in, pop saying, Lets go home. Im
through. And we started to wawk
home and jest wen we got there I
sed, G, pop, you could ot sent me
in to ask for them, I wouldent of
cased.
This is a swell time to make the
suggestion, pop sed. O well, 1 prob-
erly wont haft to play bridge, so
alls well that ends well, he Md.
And we w en ntithe house and
my sister Gladdis sed. My stars,
father, ware have you bln, mother
couldent wait any longer so she
sewed up her stocking and went
and says for you to hurry rite over.
Wich pop did, saying, Yee gods
wst a Ute.
B They used to af.
*. feet ray side so I
« could not work, J
h. resdof others be-
52 ing bel
n Vegeta
1 month 3 months 6 months 1 year
81.88 $3.00 66.00 $12.00
Dall Only
1 month 3 months 6 months 1 rear
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
Wn*« oomes suddenly. It
took a long time and several
utiona for the humble bur-
We to take power from kinga,
Im and dersy, thus increasing
Stops
Colds
The best way known to stop a
cold is Hill's Cascara-Bromfe-Qul-
nine. Millions prove that every
winter. It stops a cold in 34 hours.
Many thousands of people very
year die from results of coIda.
Pneumonia alone claims 130,000 Ro >
a cold is a very Important mster. /
Treat it in the best way knoJa
Take Hill's tables the mBment "
a cold appears. A cold is danger-
ous—stop it st the start. Do it
in this way—-the best way science
knows. All druggists sell Hills.
wudaio voubhusnoA e-..
was coma wem w-lee l mowens •oe
641 t -ori Vo /5 I •3 wend 1
—22-y—-
V Mu-AAee “r. /?
nuaTb HIM E‛3 // )
MOW?.
#---=z-a
HiS IS THE StORO
PHIL HARDY-TO
"HELP HIS WIDOWED
MOTHER HE HAS COME
TO THE Cny AND
OBTAINED A JOB- HIS
FOREMAN AT THE DOCK
OF THE SEVEN SEAS
I SWIPPING CORPORATION
I’FOUR EGG* GQRE -
PHIL HAS DISCOVERED
THAT GORE IS CROOKED
AHO GORE IS HOW
TRYING TO DO AWAY
" WITH PHIL.
1 month S months 6 months
. 8 .88 $.55 $5.19
Daily Only
1 month 8 months 6 months
8 .66 SLU $3.10
By Mail Parmtn
Daily and Sanday ditions
1 month 8 months 8 months
8 .68 31.75 88.80
Dally Only
1 month 8 months 8 months
8 .48 $1.35 83.70
1 month 8 months 6 months
8 .65 $1.90 81.16
By Carrier Daily Only
1 month 8 months 6 months
8 .45 $1.85 81.70
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 148, Ed. 1 Monday, November 30, 1925, newspaper, November 30, 1925; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1435420/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .