The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 104, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 17, 1926 Page: 4 of 12
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Ml the News That** Fit to Print—Since 1671.
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
DI
ABE MARTIN
The Editor’s Opinion
On
N
WHAT HAS GOMI BEFORE
Cotton and It’s Conservator
(22
$
A
"..‘4
».
V
KPOLrIcAL wASH
in the world m I golng to
Les
keep
mother away from all
the tattle
17
b i
WHETHER HFIKES IT
9
I
I
1
A
<
chain
cash
■trip of Bary
feasor.
y entered the tract of rolling
Where Democrats Won
J
D
Corns
Lift Off-No Pain!
—u‘
Holding the Cotton
Little Benny
waves have inundated West Texas.
ONE
And His Notebook
How To Reduce
3
$
4
«rasln* for at
number of Jermey sows—more land planted
4
Sure Relief
0,
ltuett.
City Attorney.
Attest:
Ni
&
BEl
I IND
Judith learns in the next chapter
that she is threatened with dismis-
sal, and Dean Brown's wife triss to
help her.
WWW
22
Old News
On New Lines
FROM STATESMAN FILES
“D
hlm1
dead
prate
133
q!
r 5
Au
Re
victe
of tl
itars
was
oral
Also
final
his (
Or
licly
ho v
ing
unif
sent
bare
Islar
Bt
ed 1
how
goat
cour
marl
-wit
He i
prke
into a s
ise area.
Dr. West, Jr.
By J. H. Striebel
New York
By Day and By Night
BY 0. O. MINTYRE
A MAN may gaze on feminine apparel, talk about women and
A often have them on his mind without being insane, a Bos-
ton judge has ruled, A Solomon come to judement!
THE FRENCH cry at Verdun, “Thou Shalt Not Pass," has be-
- come one of Mr. Kellogg's very favored quotations.
Il’ 2
scope.
The]
ople." Spright-
lay gaudy fa-
mands where
shops enee of-
si proprietors
6 BEL-ANs
Hot water
Sure Relief
nngtetan is a night ".tub
and to able to make
disappear >ut the cou-
r«. It is noted also the
■ are changipe names to
ne moment The Hotay
now the Black Bottom
® i
22
1 8 s -I
A
, Iowa and the Dakotas are
resented in th. Village now
r bring a breeziness the old
deplore. The shabby gen-
d gas jet cooking have mad.
: French chefs, uniformed
and Grand Rapids furni-
cASARREr
k find grateful relief in the
exclusive menthol blend
in Luden’s Menthol
I Cough E
• Drops •C
CUDEN
-7
./ HAVE TO WEAR \
( IT THAT WAY I
I UNTIL NeXT )
\ WASH W
EENdins
25, and 75c PkgsSold Everywhere
*
(Signed) P. w. MeFSDBISN,FA
in some sections tenants have deserted their holdings, leav-
ing the landowners and the bankers to hold the bag. If the
landowners and bankers insist that the cotton must be picked,
it will be up to them to engage the pickers, to pay for the
pickers, and to warehouse or sell the cotton gathered by those
who did not produce it, but who furnished the land or the
coin to the one crop tenants who are ever in debt and who
are getting to be the gypsies of this modern civilization.
«t where Stetansson, the
eIntnra and painters in
Sshouette is bit by bit
-----a apart-
iusnN STATESMAN
PTERNOON mxCEPI SUNDAY
AMERICAN PUBLISHINGCO.
5 W' •
> / h
> ( 5.
) fai for neighborhood Eo8-
a a help yourselk pickle bar-
c' ■ > ■’
Bop took me down town to buy
m. a new sult Sattiday atternogn,
and we was wilting for ■ trolley
ear to come home, and I sed. I herd
a good one about a man in a trolley
car, pop. the conducktor sed to him,
Did I get your fare? and the man
■ed. Your the conducktor, aint you.
If yo dont know how Jo you Ixpect
m, to know? and the conducktor
dld.nt know wat to think so th.
man dldent haff to pay any fare.
#-, ha, ill haff to spring that on
on. of thene fresh conducktor, wen
t get a chance, pop nd.
WIch he got a chance on ths way
home, the trolley car bemng kind
of crowded and the conducktor
coming up to pop, saying. Fares,
fares, did I get yours?
Whose. mine? pop sed.
Certeny yours, whoa, did you
think, the man in the moon? th.
Conducktor aed.
Being a big square conducktor
needing a shave, and pop sed, Well
well, wat. a big hurry, your th.
conducktor, amt you? and th.
conducktor sed. For Peet sake who
did you think I was, nttie Lord
Fautelroy? Now are you coming
ncrosa with that fare or do you
want to get throwed off on your
Keep your shert o» my good
man. heers your fare, pop aed. And
he gave It to him without rintsh-
In* the reat of the Jok., and art-
mt people started to lift and kepp
on looking at pop and pop got off
the car 3 block before our corner,
saying to me. Well do you know
any more Jokes?
No. sir, I Md.
Wich even if I had I would nt
had more eente than to tell them
to him Jest then.
Page 4— Wednesday. November 17, 1926.
====================
up the street. "I have some field
glasses in my pocket,” said the pro-
If our dollar Is only worth sixty-
eight esnts, a tolerably dood. Pain
• woman’s pump, only coat 310.20
after all. Whatever become o’ Es-
telle Taylor’, husband?
nwich Village, by the way,
r did have a yMr ago—the
oro in New York with a ball
ne suspended over th. roll
awr wrapping paper. Many
tally believe the real debacle
Village began when the old
rt put in man stzed eleva-
to corn and other grains, marketed through a rensonable number of
ho*, and othet stock—with sumhietent poultry and a garden every year,
wUl solve most of your trouble, and stew you clear of situations such
an you face today.
If Mr. Davis coula have hela ths air a Mt longer doubtlesn he would
have added that th* value of hl. premertption had been abundantly
provenithat it had been trled with »ubcess by tarmern within hl. ac-
(KLAHOMA DEMOCRATS smashed the republicans and
• Jack Walton and all secret political organizations in the
recent election. At least this is what their leaders say. They
elected Henry S. Johnston, governor by a majority of 36,205
votes, and they elected Elmer Thomas, United States senator
by a majority of 39,758 vote*.
There was approximately 450,000 votes cast in the election,
and all the major and minor offices were won by democratic
nominees.
J. W. Harrold had his day in Washington. He won his elec-
tion in the Harding landslide of 1920. He will be out in the
cold next spring. He is said to be worth a couple of million, so
he will be able to keep the wolf from the door and continue to
draw royalties from his oil wells.
Where was Jack when the republican* of Oklahoma yielded
up the ghost? He never let one yelp after the primary or even
after the general election when the full count of the ballot*
showed that the republican elephant had been sent to the
slaughterhouse.
“NOW the rush of cotton to the market is over,” editorial-
-% izes the Dallas News. But the picking season is not
over. In West Texss there is a million balea of unpicked cot-
ton in the field, and the blizzards and snow storms and crust*
of ice .are coming.
Indeed, the blizzards and the snow storms and the frost
’THEY have named a planet after Harvard. It was nowhere
x visible in the recent game with Princeton.
CEORGIA produced a huge crop of cotton this year. What
Y did the banks of Atlanta do? They underwrote a fund of
$12,000,000 to withhold 300,000 bales of cotton from the mar-
ket, and the cotton to be marketed through the Georgia Co-
creative Cotton Growers association. Aaron Sapiro and the
followers of his gocpel of marketing appear to be making
heavy enroads in the ranks of Georgia cotton growers.
It is announced from Washington that the farm loan board
and presidents of the Federal Intermediate Credit banks have
approved loans to co-operative marketing associations for the
present emergency totaling $38,500,000. Furthermore, it is
announced that no limit has been fixed as to the amount which
will be loaned to sound co-operative marketing associations to
assist in marketing the 1926 crop.
One of the large advances has been made to the Texas Co-
operative Marketing association. And the amount of Texas
cotton to be taken from the market is something more than
one million bales. It is said the plans are designed to make
loans to farmers who are not members of the co-operative as-
sociations as well as member farmers and the pledge of the
Texas financing organization is $5,000,000.
It is the contention of Joseph F. Leopold of Dallas, manager
of the United States Chamber of Commerce, that Texas can
look for no relief in the cotton depression from Washington or
from legislation, but must settle the question on an acreage
basis fpr itself.
Holding cotton for a better price is not a solution accord-
ing to this Chamber of Commerce economist and advisor.
Holding cotton, he says, just delays the evil day until next
year. A diversified plant program in his opinion is the best
solution.
Speaking of the present he says the cotton situation works
a hardship on the farmers and the country bankers, otherwise
the large cotton crop has helped business for the reason it has
given more people employment, and kept more money in cir-
culation.
If the bankers and the big landowners would present a
united front and tell it from the shoulder to the tenants that
the acreage must be reduced the coming year 30 or 35 per
cent, perhaps there would be no carry over of the crop to be
raised in 1927.
Whenever there is a famine crop, high price cotton rewards
the grower. Whenever there is a bumper crop, the little fel-
lows are pinched and broken.
This is the record of 50 years. It will continue to be the
record in the cotton belt while the land tenacy system prevails
and the antiquated credit system, which is covered with moss
and almost as old as the Rock of Ages, retains its vice like
grip on the throatsand the hands and the souls of a vast army
of cotton producers.
■nt May’s etti
11 ■■ her poetry—
1, She to off in
growing sapples.
who sti live
j, ana West 67th
have
. W A-- AETUS
nau LADIES tow,,
"But we’ll use the tele-
too."
Suitor: Well, possibly I might be ■
able to wash the dog, or cook a i
chop in an emergency!"—Passing I
Show, London.
Doean’t hurt one bit I Drop a little
"Freezone" on an aching corn. in-
stantly that corn stops hurting, then
shortly you lift It right off with
ringers.
Your druggist Mils a tiny bottie
of "Freezone" for ■ few cento, suf-
ficlent to remove every hard com,
soft corn, or corn between the toes,
and the foot calluses, without sore-
ness or irritation. —Adv.
EEE
PeVe:2
- a
has not had a giddy
it in poetry for mere
And in the garrets
taper that Sherwood
"gone Algonqutn."
rd* has relinquished
of Tbe Quill and no
his cigar box uku-
Shops. Bobble has
(From the Dallas News)
AFTER broadcasting a statement' explanatory at the cotton relief
A corporations about to ba completed, T. H. Davis, Austin banker,
ustng KUT Station at the University of Texas, went on to say.
To the black land farmer, who predominates in thto section, who
may say it is hard for him to reduce cotton acreage, as well as to
the farmers everywhere, Iwieh to say that more land planted to
prova st DEAN TIMOTHY now,
because she spends most of her leisure
hours with ERIC WATERS and his
young radical student frienda. MX MA
ALDRICH is in love with E.lc and jeai-
MB of Judith.
DR. PETER DORN, astronomy pro-
fessor, admires Judith and tries to per-
suade her to maha peace with the dean.
The dean's wife is carrying on a se-
cret Ure affair which Judith discovers
a week-end trip to the city. Judith
listens to her story of the dean's tyran-
ay and assures her that she will not
gossip.
Tw. de .t bootleg whisky
■M th. dean indirestly necuse am .t
tmporuing th. liguor t„ Erie «»-
■an Iba conference room and denies the
That aisht Erie, mother come, to
xnand.xivese.dinner party, to whieh
Bria inyite Judit,
. 4*. *• mgment Eric telephones
that Ale mothier Imalau upon hia HW-
eme Myra, whom aha has known in ineir
womruze; Me.ekter U WiLL
warEREL • ta brother, after Jn-
aith. but aka refunea’ t com 1 ine
dinner.
NOW GO ON WITH THE SrORY
CHAPTER XXI
“But Judith.” gasped Eric, “how
tales, unless I have you to help me?”
“Oh, to that’s it?" snapped Ju-
dith. "Wela, Eric, I must confess
that it isn't of much importance to
me whether you keep per away from
now G^by,^ Koing to hang up
Myra ran out Into the hall as she
passed and followed her into the
room. She was wearing a Hilmy
lavender gown and Jingling a half
dozen bracelts on one arm.
Judith hurried through her bread
puadinggthat night and ran uP th«
steDs. Nev watch said ten minutes
oEzeven. She did not turn on the
light in her room, though it was in
deep shadow, but drew a chair
ciose to the window and sat down.
The street was lighter and she
could see the passersby distinctly
And when Eric Waters drove his
racer under the street lamp and
turned in at the Stedway walk she
drew hastily back behind the scrim
curtains.
.,"Oh,Miss Martin,” called one of
the girls downstairs. Judith did not
answer. The call came a second
time and a third. At last she heard
the girl say, “Sorry, she’s not in."
Tere.was silence for a moment.
Then the voice sounded again.
Miss Aldrich." Myra’s door
opened with a bang and Judith
neara her run across to the stairs.
"Coming, Eric.”
last the two went down the
front walk together and climbed into
the car. Judith waited until it had
turned the corner before she rose
■nd switched on the light.
The evening was a disturbing
one. It was full of the treacherous
soft..airs that rightfully belong to
April, but sometimes appear late
in the autumn.
Judith set her room to rights and
prepared.her papers for grading.
But the fragrant breeze whipped the
curtain, and the lamp light outside
blurred softly golden against the
gloom.
At last she rose, seised a large
woolen scarf and went downstairs.
On the top step outside she seated
herseif, huddling against the wood-
en post and pulling her scar around
her.
The street was filled with the
sounds t laughter and music from
many boarding houses. Somebody
down the way was playing "Forgot-
ten." with sobbing, trembling chords
that slurred down the scale.
Judith strolled down the walk
toward theroad and found another
seat on a stump in the corner of
the yard.
A huge police dog came running
up the street and darted af her. Ju-
dith jumped and fell off her stump
into the wet grass.
"Down, Ponto," shouted a voice
that she knew. Dr. Dorn Was tow-
ering over her. Judith sat up in
the grass and giggled.
"Oh, it’s you,” said the man, giv-
ing her a hand. She pulled herself
up by it, still nervously giggling.
Tve been wanting to see you,"
said the professor, to tell you how
•orry I am that I blundered yester-
day. For, of course, it was a blun-
der."
Judith brushed a wet leaf off her
skirt. "Never mind," she said shak-
ily. *Tve had such a fit of blues
that I‘m glad to see wren you. For
goodness* seke, talk tb me."
*T11 do better than that," said
Dr. Dom. "Run in and get some
heavier wrap and TH take you star-
gazing with me. Ponto and T were
on our way to the observatory.”
Judith hesitated a moment Then
she looked at the sky and found it
jet black with crusted brilliants. It
Wes one of the rare nights when the
milky wav looks milky.
"All right" she answered. *T11
hurry”
She came back with a tweed top-
coat over her arm and they started
“Somebody has called those spots ‘windows of absolute
night/*’ she said.
4 -%
0xp
a ""
"44 “
NOV. 17, 1*01
A fire occurred in a mine in
West Virginia yesterday which,
killed five men.
Jefferson De Angelis will be seen
in “A Royal Rogue” tonight at the
Hancock theater.
The Colorado was on a slight rise
yesterday.
Tne North Austin Improvement
club will meet Thursday night.
The crossings on the avenue
were a little bad yesterday, as they
usually are after a little wet
weather. *
Gov. Sayers yesterday received a
letter which stated that the people
of the San Ignacio precinct in Za-
pata county were in destitute cir-
circumstances.
Herbert E. Boye and wife left
yesterday for. Cincinnati, where
they will spend several weeks.
Hunter L. Wilson left today for
Fort Worth, where he will spend a
few days.
The Altar society of St. David's
church was entertained yesterday
by Mrs. Walter Bremond.
State Insurance Commissioner
Jefferson Johnson Vas confined to
his bed yesterday on a brief illness.
Early yesterday morning five
shots were fired by a man suffer-
ing with Wild Bill fever. No one
was injured.
* ।
25' T
822482 ; 888818888868888888888282228 —-J
Ta an alserence, tress OH* UDI
LADIES!
Don’t wave your hair daily—or
even every week. Here’s a way to
keep it wavy for days at a time.
BEFORE you use your irons, or
curlers, DAMPEN the hair with
DANDER INE. Just a few DROPS
on comb or towel. Tour locks will
then behave for a MONTH! Of
course, you know what Danderine
does to dandruff; dissolves every
speck, within five minutes of rub-
bing Into the scalp. But as a wave-
preserver on the hair itself, Dan-
derine is a JOT. The best dressing
in the world because it doesn’t
show. Any permanent waveor wat-
er wave lasts much longer and looks
much nicer when Danderine is used
instead of water to "set” the wave.
Ask Your Druggist
Get a bottle of Danderine and
start its benefits today. Every
drug store in America has it, for
only 35c. For the finest dressing
you could find, and the best aid to
hair health yet discovered just try—-
Danderine
Bu
a pc
cour
cent
and
Dt
artil
His
the i
a c
Croi
Drey
onel
cer <
I 1
A alwa
( men
tty t
Bi
. is n
cierg
goin
"A
you
a ca
neve
Colo
gay.
hapr
py a
son,
brotl
hopeless bungler with women—or.
In fact, with human beings. IVe
limited myself to my work—any my
mother. She is ..n invalid.”
"Oh." Mid Judith, ’Tm sorry."
"It’s on her account that Ive
never been able to think of—many
things. I’d like to leave teaching
and go into research* But it doesn’t
pay enough at first."
"Aren’t you happy here?" asked
Judith.
He leaned toward her but did not
touch her. “I might be, if we were
friends, instead of enemies," he
said. "Why can’t we be, Miss-
Judith?"
The girl jumped to her feet. "We
can, but not if we catch cold and
die from sitting on this roof. Levs’
go home.”
They left the observatory and the
grounds, with Ponto at their heels,
and walked through the dark streets
toward College road. Dr. Dom
talked of impersonal topics.
"I’m in a dilemna," he told Ju-
dith. "The dean wishes the disci-
pline committee to go much farther
with this bootleg investigation that
I am willing to go. I cannot consent
to go on the presumption of any-
one’s guilt until it has been proved
to me. After that let the law take
its course, mercilessly, I should
say.”
Judith laughed shortly. "Eye for
an eye, Dr. Dorn? If you are an
adherent of that barbarous old law,
Em afraid we can’t be such good
friends."
"Right is right,” he said, as he
opened the door for her.
Judith bade him good night and
ran up the stairs.
The professor stood for several
minutes on the steps, lighting his
pipe. He strolled down the walk
and called to Ponto. The police
dog came bounding at him from an
alley where he had been stalking a
giant tomcat
The professor turned and looked
back at the house. It was entirely
dark. As he looked at it a light
flashed on in a window.
Dr. Dorn took the pipe out of his
mouth and bent forward. It was
the window looking out upon the
balcony. A trellis leading down from
it offered an easy ascent from the
ground. On that trellis, a few
weeks before, he had seen a man
climbing down.
The dog knocked against the pro-
fessor’s knees. For the first time
in Ponto’s life his master pushed
him away with his foot.
Then, after a moment, with his
eyes still on the lighted window, he
reached down and laid his hand on
the dog’s head. Ponto pushed closer
to him, whimpering.
(To Be Continued)
sleeve brush her arm. “Do we? I
wonder. Perhaps we have lost the
feeling for pretty things. That is
because we look only for truth. And
truth is not always pretty.”
Judith shrugged. “Then why
bother abot truth?" she said.
Dr. Dorn put one hand on hers.
"I can’t talk about science. This
night is a setting for—” He pulled
abruptly away from her and walked
to the edge of the roof. Judith
watched him from her place.
He put the glasses at his eyes
again. “See, there is Vega,” he said.
“Isn’t she blue tonight?"
4----IAA \oWA c
~ampHsaeeDens
••Judith did not trouble to look up.
Neither did she answer him. In-
stead Eh walked to an elevation
near the edge of the root and.sat
down. The protessor strolled.adou
with the glasses, exelaimns now
and then over a constellation.
At last he came back and seated
himself beside her. "I still haven t
told you how sorry I am about yes-
terday afternoon. I assure you I
spoke only to warn you against the
dean—to help you. That wae be:
cause I wanted to see you succeed.
Judith moved restlessly* ‘Oh,
dear, why will people always do
things ‘for your own good ? They
never reall help—Just hinder.
He nodded ejectedly. "That e
true. I learned it yesterday after-
noon. Sometimes I think Im a
on conditions are favorable: all-
a price ot, say Mo, were guaran-
there to no such guarantee, and
I to producing abundantly they
worl
d his I
w stop
nizet
able
Alfr
Th
fram
Islar
furn
swa
Pari
nant
qule
and
will
ground in the center of which the
observatory was set. It gleamed
white and globular aa they ap-
proached. Ponto had run off to
parts unknown.
“We’ll go up on the roof,” said
Dr. Dorn. 'This is a marvelous
night to take in the whole heavens.
The telescope limits one so.”
Judith followed him into the dark
building and up the tiny circular
staircase. “I didn’t turn on the
lights here, for they would show
through the windows and spoil our
clear black and white view,” he ex-
plained.
Standing on the square roof of
the building, behind the telescope
dome, they might have been on a
watch tower built to command the
universe. Black country rolled
away on every side, with deeper
black shadows here and there to
show where trees clustered.
Dr. Dom was looking through the
glasses. “See,’’ he said, handing
them to Judith, “how clear the Coal
Sack is tonight.”
She nodded. The great black spot
upon the Milky Way suggested
mysteries and vague terrors loom-
ing beyond.
“Somebody has called those spots
•windows of absolute night,”’ she
said.
The professor laughed. “A pretty
phrase but not very significant.
They may be masses of stolid dark
material, Instead of holes looking
out on voids that our telescopes
cannot reach."
Judith spoke crossly. T like the
pretty phrase. Why do you try to
take the pretty things out of science
—you scientists?” She turned her
face up toward his but the night
shut them away from each other.
Dr. Dorn was still. At last he
moved and she could feel his coat
JUDITH MARTIN, a teacher at Pen-
dleton university, is under the disap-
gulps of a hewer Manhattan.
All this despite fresh honors dur-
ing the past year. The Village has
Ak.mninn Gene Tunney, and a
sestDihg novelist, Theodor. Drel-
. m?, to that Short span of time
in the im-It coffee houses they
axdiain the change of front with a
"Reoe
©v •,.12
dh. Wfc- SRI
YOU OAFI
Mother: My daughter sings de-
fully, playa the harp, has studied
botany, zoology and bacteriology
and can apeak Hladuatoni, Pottu-
guese and Cingalese. And you,
air?"
Vinol Gives Girl
Appetite and Strength
"My 10-year-ola daughter was
weak and had no appetite. Since
•Ivin* her Vinol. she has an amaz-
In* apetite and atrength."— Mra. w.
Joosten. The very FIRST week
they take Vinol, children Segin to
feel tronger, eat and alee Aettar.
A "imple strengthening iron and
cod liver compound in um for over
_ xeara for run-down men ana
women and weak children. Contains
no.oll-pleneant U take, Rentf
Drug Company.—Adv.
W
NEW YORK, Nov. 16.—Slowly
hut surely Greenwich Village
crumbles! New people, new bund-
toy, have shorn the winding streets
of their isolation. Ite cobwebby
attica, shabby shuttered and decay-
w,, houses, musty book shops and
candles sputtering cellars are being
devoured in precise mechanical
TAKE THATI
Mrs. Elderly: Ths insultina6a
wretch! He asked me if I rg
membered the dreadful cold winte
of 1869. Think of it!
Miss Smarts: I’m sure he did not
mean to offend you, dear. He prob-
ably didn’t know what a bad me-
moy you have.—Barnet Press,
. AN ORDINANCE
An ordinance regulating traf-
fic on the streets of the city of
Austin, cumulative of certain
ordinances heretofore ordained,
repealing all ordinancee in con-
flict herewith, and prescribing
penalties.
Be it ordained by the City Council
of the City of Austin:
Section 1. That o vehicle chai!
stop for a period of tihhe greater
than one hour in one place between
the hours of 3 o’clock a. m. and 7
o clock p. m. on any day except
Sunday, and holiday*, within the
Aistriets bounded and desertbed aa
follow,, towit:
(a) On Congress avenue, between
na intersection with Fourth street
■nd internection with Fifth btreet: a
(b) On Went Fifth .treat, beesme
tween Ito Intersection with Congre-e
•venue and It* intersection with
Colorado street; and
(2 On Hast Fifth atreet, on the
north aide thereof, between It* in-
teraectlon with ‘Congress avenue
and It* Luterbection with the alley
Immedintely met of end parallel I
with Congresa avenue.
See. 2 Any person violating any
ot the prgvislons of thl, ordinance
•hall be deemed gullty of a mtade-
meenor. and upon conviction nnall
22.1. ” In any sum not more than
*100.00.
Seo. 1. Thl* ordinance |* cumula-
tive of and supplemental to the cer-
tain ordinances retarding traffic
neretotore pAssed by the city coun-
cil. and shall not be constfued an I
the repeal of any such ordinance*. I
•xeept in thorn particular* where I
•ame ar* Inconatotent wlfii the pro- |
vlilon* of thl* ordinanee. I
Passed Oet. «, lit* I
Approv*d Oct *1. 1026. I
Approved: I
(Signed) J. BQULD1N RECTOR, I
1 S; 1
4- D
MVTNe./,
Lmme".
FkPoLiTS I
AGAaz•e
E gesoe.
PERHAPS JO
Mistress: Can you explain why
It is. Mary, that every time I come
into this kitchen I find you reading?
New Madi: It must be those
rubber heels fo yours, mi m.—Pass-
ing Show, London.
NOV. 17, 1911
Mrs. Lester Tarrington has gone
to Houston for a visit.
Prof, and Mrs. Ira Hildebrand
and Mr. and Mrs. Dodd as visiting
in San Antonio.
Mrs. Frank Raymond has re-
turned from a short visit with rel-
atives in Bastrop.
Texas defeated A AM college by
a score of 6-0 yesterday.
The first icicles of the season
appeared yesterday morning.
The Tuesday Bridge club will
meet with Mrs. W. T. Caswell.
The Amateur Musical club meets
tomorrow.
Mrs. Craig Riddle, well known
Philadelphia society woman, cre-
ated quite a stir the other day by
carelessly smoking a cigarette in
the lobby of a well known hotel
The magnates of all the big base-
ball leagues are the guests of Aus-
tin while on tour this week.
Twelve hundred students of the
university staged a nightshirt pa-
rade last night.
* I
34
1 A
in*«W
amnnn. * 1
wa2ij.‛
th JU JU ® -1
19.5 •
ge .JU
idea of th. uitimate in witely
on whs ilustrated in on* of
tetter and bank oatertes the
evening, somehow or other
per teeth •lipped their moor-
.nd siaded several feet across
omale, she promptly left her
retrieved them and dusting
off with her napkin, handed
back. That’s nefvice.
I New York. Uke Ufa. hu Ito
•ionmenta I accompanied a
to a certain apartment after
beater.. There were three
i there tn * conversation as
ted and intelligent as I had
beard. As all were strangers
them from my
barted. AU three
and at the time
were under high
1 "
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 104, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 17, 1926, newspaper, November 17, 1926; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1445421/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .