The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 113, Ed. 1 Friday, November 26, 1926 Page: 4 of 12
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A
All the New* That'* Fit to Print—Since 1871.
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
Page 4—Friday, November 26, 1926.
All the
ebels
THREA
© 1926
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A Girl in A Small Town
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TODAY’S MENU
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and qulekfire ct volces. Dove
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(To Be Continued
An Angel To Europe
de
I up
them
c
Cupid Trots a Fast Heat
%
Little Benny
And His Notebook
A Mark of Greatness
e
and
Y
7
A
I
can’t have your salmon and waste it, too.
Q
sue in your body.
rich,
blood
TO
the little lessons in food that America
<
*
" - els.n
4
.... -
TO
TORMENTED BY
ACUTE NEURITIS
Whassat?
By J. H. Striebel
man,” he said, going into his shell,
le almost universal ear-mark of a
NEW YORK, Nw. 2».—Thoughts
whse strolling: Th* luncheon hour
' .
WHEN Joseph Conrad, considered by many authorities
the greatest novelist of all time, first landed in' New
York, he insisted to reporters who asked him for literary
opinions that he knew nothing about such things.
really great man.
No matter how far he hits the ball, no matter what
laurels garland his brow, he sees a goal beyond; the better,
bigger thing to be done. He continues to insist that he
has done nothing as yet, that he knows nothing.
It is the little fellow who has accomplished very little ■
who struts his stuff and asks the whole world to bear
witness to his mighty prowess I
...
RHEUMATISM!
What is it—anyway?
• ■ ‘
Crippling aches quickly relieved
by simple home remedy
shattered
d her out
a rubber
ble toll has been taken of salmon as they came up
ers and streams to spawn. Robbed of a chance to
ice its kind, the salmon is passing out of the pic-
Several years ago the United States regarded as al-
ost inexhaustbile the supplies of salmon on our coasts,
ow Secretary Hoover comes forward with word that the
ipPlies along the Atlantic coast have been exhausted.
dd to that the story of the Pacific shores, where waste-
il exploitation has reduced the quantity available by 60
J
1
t
3
«
<
Even th* htaUhieti men sometime*
haM ache*
SCIENCE has perfected a synthetic sausage casing of
• cellulose, but all-wool still is meeting with some de-
mand.
MUSSOLINI calls "a mystic something” his protection
IVI against assassins. We are wondering if it could be
luck or that famous leather shirt.
-g
N/sa
f ( icu THS I
KooctR7)
aA
“I am not a literary
There you have th
Here’swhat it III It is the result
of waste products and impurities in
the bloodt impurities that set the
upper hane because the system is
1
702 Sixth Avenue Des Molnes, Iowa.
HAMBERLAINS
-----01 ——7
Freed from the crippling pain of 4
neuritis after having triad various
treatments without getting relief, s ]
well-known business man of Cincin- |
nati, Ohio, writes:
“Following influenza I was seizg 4
with a violent attack of neuritis in 5
the right arm and shoulder. I got na
relief until I tried Sloan’s Liniment.
The affected arm add shoulder were
shortly restored to a healthy con-
dition and all pain and symptoms dis.
appeared.”
Sloan’s gives real relief because it
doesn’t just deaden the pain. It gets
at the cause.
Just pat it on gently. At once you
feel the increased flow of healing,
germ-destroying blood right in th
spot that hurts. Quickly and surely, I
it reduces swelling and inflammation
drives out stiffness, kills pain. Get s
bottle. All druggists—35 cents.
Campu
E- NE A SERVICE INC.
starving for want of healthy,
red blood)
But you fust cleanse vqur l
' ■ 1
8.8.8. conquers rheumatism’ Th
rich. rad. fighting blood that 8 8. &
helps Nature build brings ease and
[Associated Pr
NEW YOI
that the mq
derbilt threi
Rutherford
•lo eloped w
intensity go
over the an
lie church
to the Duke
. _I‛s
in front
togs in
)
The Editor's Opinion
SoRroa‛%
The exclusive Luden men- L as
hol blond cools and
soothes- brings quick re- e
ief to irritated air passages. _
Loden’s ISSaS
6,
actresses a star and a featured
player—speak only on the stags
where their rotes portray them as
stuneh buma. oedtagopfhy
az
before audiences like puff balls a
few years ago, smirking and gaz-
ing longingly at each other as they
pirouetted. And for two years they
talked only through a third per-
son. Between dances one night the
lady rushed to the stage manager
and cried: “Tell that fathead his
collar scratches me when he twirls
me around his neok.”
res with a single
if anyone notices
mi anyway! The
urned tailor. Win-
pajamas seem to
“^ts^er^
is shops put so
tsldef A store
mbers for homes.
3e
The door opened and Eric Waters stood looking at them.
There wa a large purple bruise over his left eye.
“Uh-huh," said the man. “Too hall. The apron had been removed.
CHIMPA
in Berlin
< 1 । . 11 /• •
1ng in fire
the trick o
the alarm
and in gle
gines com<
The owner
times succe
ities threat
panzee, ple
of humor.
46
3),
egb
,. mm.
All druggists sen 8. 18 qet th
larger bottle. It’* more economice
97.
-
INTO EVERY suggestion for the financial rehabilitation
of Europe the United State* enters—as the scheme’s
"angel.” i'
} Foreign Ministers Stresemann and Briand, respectively
of Germany and France, have framed up a scheme for
getting French troops out of the Rhineland and for the
return of the Saar basin to the Germans, without waiting
for the plebiscite provided in the Versailles treaty.
In return for these concessions, Germany is to issue a
half billion dollars’ worth of bonds on her railroads, and
France is to get the half billion.
But half a billion in bonds isn’t what France wants. She
wants it in cash. Before she can get it, the bonds will
have to be sold. To whom? Why, to the United States,
of course. ,
Herr Stresemann has hinted at it plainly already. Mr.
Briand hasn’t gone quite so fat, but there can’t be any
reasonable doubt that/that’s what both sides expect.
In short, France, which has not yet agreed to America’s
war debt settlement terms, is to get an additional half
billion, to stabilize her own money and possibly—this is
just a guess—to pay some of it back to the United States
on account.
To be sure, America would have Germany’s railroad
bonds, but suppose the German railroads default. Could
America foreclose on the roads, anymore than she can
forcibly collect what’s owing her from France? Imagine
the United States selling Germany’s whole rail system at
sheriff’s sale, bidding it in and running it,thenceforward
for her own benefit!
The proposition simply is the same old thing—putting
it up to the United States to take part, at least, of what
France owes to her in the form of German reparations.
France is to get an additional half billion from America,
with no assurance that she’ll repay any of what she’S in-
debted to the latter now, and America is to accept securi-
ties which will involve constant friction with the Germans.
Mrs. Van
in London,
and though
she was lo
for Consuel
Invited him
Newport an
there for a
W5.
As he was
of the coui
suelo’s han
The evide
nulment sal
to move he
l’ala ,6
Get
TAumnelated r
WASHIN
aid for the
guard can
proved by
chief of the
after a co
Sheppard a
of the Texa
Action or
deferred un
to meet tin
hud been v
Instructio
C
Texas that
Immediat1
Hr/
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k 1
fiction. Two
Weddin
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SHAEBA
EIUKDU33
(Summer Complaint) XaII
Food or water may cause G}-y
diarrhea and stomach cramps A j
For prompt relief take Cham- K il )
berlain’s Colic Remedy in “
water Ask your druggist for thia old.
reliable remedy today. For trial size,send
FALSE TEETH DIVORCE CAUSE
Because he discovered his bride
had false teeth, a Canadian bride-
groom has asked divorce almost be-
tore the ink on the license was dried.
The husband was a psychopath with
a particular lean tn* toward rood
teeth, and he explained to the court
he could not live with a woman
whose teeth were false. He had
not been advised of them before the
marriage, he said.
—2ge-
N t
and watch the rheumatiam vanishi
Why. 8. 8. 8. will aid Nature put *o
many million* of red-blod-clls tn --
your nystem that the impurittes blood to
that cause your rheumatism are healthy.
From sticking to throw-
11L as it were. Superficial
> babble of "careers."
m fire plu* and a lim-
p. A story in two pic-
gar Selwyn. Blondes. No
atory than their brunette
he stir around hotel can-
Russian princess and her
looking gray haired
smiled at her. “Will you come with
me? she asked.
Dr. Dorn interrupted. "I will take
Miss Martin home, in my car.”
Mrs. Brown want upstairs with
the two women, Aand Judith drew
close to her in the hall. "You’re
doing beautifully,” she whispered.
•Eric says there’s no need to
Worry.”
The dean’s wife turned an agon-
ised face toward her. But the next
Instant she was smiling again, and
holding Dean Snow’s coat
In the automobile, the trip to
the Gamma Delta house was very
short. Judith made little attempt
at conversation, and Dr. Dorn
glanced at her from time to time,
uneasily. On the steps of the soror-
ity house, he paused and held out
his hand, “Please pardon my rude-
ness the other day, Miss Martin, I
have been----.’
The door opened and Eric Waters
stood looking at them. There was
a large purple bruise over his loft
Seventy
Fog
rAnmnelated p
LONDON
persona we
two ratlwa
London an<
End caused
The mist
thickened t
London It ’
a few feet
greatly tap
merous mir
BIRD’S
The bone
uld to be
air, thus at
what it w
signed then
as any 1
makes for
for the Ere
bone besld
be less str
as a nyna
THAT awful ngony of swollen--- —
aa- 2 XSB kmbgsasrzasgsnrst
what la mt . sue in your body.
I was wawking along taking little
spice gumarops out of my coat
pock it and eating them, and sia
Hunts quiet little cuzzin Jqe got off
of hie trunt steps and started to
wawk alongside of me without say-
ing anything. wich he never hardly
dont, me thinking, Darn that guy,
he jest wunts some of the we a plea
gumdrops, well if he’s too lazy to
ask for any Im too lazy to give him
say.
And we kepp on going, me eating
a spies gum drop very once in a
wile and Joe not saying anything
and mo not saying anything back,
and all of a suddin Joo leened over
to tie his shoe and I kepp on going
and Joo cawt up to me agen and
kepp on wawking alongside of ma
me thinking. will bleeve me if he
thinks lm< going to give him ony
of these spice gumdrops if he aint
got the ambition to aak for eny.
bleeve me he’s msitaken.
And I kepp on eating one every
once in a Mile a* If I thawt I was
all alone, and Joe stopped to fix his
shoelace and cawt up to ma agen.
and he did that about 4 more times
me saying, Hay. G wias, dont you
know how to tie a shoelace yet so
it wont come undid? Wich Joe dld-
ent anser anythin*, and I looked at
him and his mouth Bas going, giv-
ing me a sispiclon, and I put my
hand in my coat pockit and there
wasent hardly any left on account
of a hole being in there, me think-
ing, Darn the luck, gosh ehang it,
now I know why he was stopping
to fix his shoe ao mutch.
Being to pick up spice gumdrops
and hurry up stick them in his
mouth. And I put wst was left in
my other pockit without saying
anything on account of not wuntine
to give him the sattistnetion, think-
ing. Gosh ehan* the luck. If they'd
of bin ally beans Id of herd them.
Proving the people that never ask
for anything are libel to be the ones
that get the moat.
—T 4—
Well, sir, you could have knocked,
us over with an elephant’s trunk
when we picked up the paper and
learned that Bobby Jones had been ’
listed No. 1 among the amateur
golfers for the year.
And this great 8. 8. 8. goes right
on helping Nature build more and
mor* red cells until your whele
body la tingling with
life and vibrating
-u. Jvu jum wesune your moou wtth.zim.rigor and
and build up the redblood-celle yurst s*aln“ “ke
Ge 8. 8. 8. right
now—build up your — a
“ ' to where it 1* pure, red and
. 8. 8. 8 to the euro way.
M<
IAnr-iate l
MOSCOV
sarlat of f
two weeks
branches 1
soviet -n’ I
in Londor
A neventh avenue speak easy fea-
tures a whispering tenor. There’s
a wheeze there some place.
—
Broadway has a slang phrase
That funny little fellow. Cupid,
worker of woes and wonders,
took only two months flat to step
off ths distance between the
meeting and marriage of Dorothy
Mackail, English screen star and
former Follies girl, and Lothar
Mandai, German movie director.
He dropped an Impedimenta,
even his symbolic bow and ar-
rows, got off to a fast start soon
after Menden and Dorothy were
brought together by their Work
and didn't skip a stride until the
wedding in New York two days
after Mendes proposed. If haste
prevented Cupid from making a
perfectly handsome mateh, those
pictures of the couple don’t
show it.
minsaniiMiisnsuuuMsiisMiiniMnauaiMasenuB
Thurlow B. Weed
EUNERAL HOMI
“AMBULANCE
Two Phones 6080-6317
r,-
‘el/
MY KA ALDKICH.
gray suits. Canes with lizard skin
hanales. Ths single white roses on
ladles shoulders. Whatever be-
came of painted lace fans?
Men with tell-tale eye puffs and
drifting larks with broken wings.
All showy and full of bluff. A Cas-
tillan matador—here to learn sales-
The stage. incidentally, continues
to picture the small town youth as
one who might be standing dumbly
at the plow on a dreary Dakota
farm dreaming of becoming a city
chiropractor. As a matter of fact
most of the whoop and hurrah of
Broadway is due to small town
youngsters in town on the loose.
They have money to spend, clothes
to wear and know the telephone
numbers of more chorus girls than
the average New York youths.
eVirginia Swain
_ Mrs. Brown jumped to her feet,
mmum interrupting him. “I must go to th
kitchen,” she said.
The professor continued. “If this
man Shea could be put out of busi-
E ness, it would mean a vast 1mprove-
ment. He furnishes practically all
of the liquor drunk in the uni-
Dean Snow shook her head.
“Somebody would take his place, I
fear,” she said.
The dinner was an affair of
E turkey and oyster dressing and
crimson cranberry jelly and a flam-
ing plum pudding. “The dean would
not approve of the brandy on the
pudding, chuckled Mrs. Brown. “He
keeps it only for sickness. But I
think a flaming pudding is pretty,
and I knew you wouldn't mind. But
as she spoke, she looked uneasily
E at Dr. Dorn. .
He was attacking the pudding
with relish.
8g They went back to the living
room, and the deans wife drew the
shades and turned on the lamps.
5 Dr. Dorn asked Judith to play, and
she rambled through a long list of
old songs.
When she turned away from the
piano, Dr. Dorn was looking at her
E with a strange mixture of admira-
tion and anxiety. The deans wife
sat staring at the fire, her face
fallen into sombre lines.
Dean Snow stood up. “I’m sorry,”
28888 she said, “bu- I promised to pick
68 up Miss Lucy.’
Judith rose also. Dean Snow
“Alchemy
pertinent P
4 fortune hun
gold."—By
"Write your own ticket I”—which
has many interpretations. Gener-
ally speaking it means “Go as far
as you like!” It was recently the
parting Injunction of a man to the
But the most disconcerting stage
experience must have been that of
the comedienne who noticed two ex-
husbands sitting together in the
front row on an opening night
gravely wearing handcuffs.
Judith opened her mouth to speak,
but the dean’s wife grasped her
hand and led her toward the liv-
ing room.
When they stepped into the room,
a tall man rose from his seat by
the blazing fire, and Judith recog-
nised Dr. Peter Dorn. He was look-
ing most uncomfortable. In the op-
posite armchair sat Dean Angela
Snow? smiling cordially at Judith.
“How do you do, my dear?" she
said, stretching* a hand to Judith.
“So you passed the night safely? I
don’t know why it was that I had
such a queer feeling of discomfort
about you.”
“It was a malevolent night,” said
Dr. Dorn somberly.
Judith glanced at Mrs. Brown.
She was leaning against the table,
her hands fidgeting with its scarf,
and her face rather white.
“Come, said the deans wife.
“Lets sit down before our coxy fire
and shut out the wind and the
rain.”
Judith laughed. “It isn't raining
now, Mrs. Brown.” The woman
looked at the windows, as though
bewildered. “Isn’t it?”
Dr. Dorn offered hie chair to Ju-
dith and went across to sit on the
divan. “Have you had a pleasant
Christmas thus far, Miss Martin ?"
he asked formally.
Judith tilted her head. “Rather
a lonely one,” she said. “But I
know the rest of the day will be
pleasant." She stretched a hand to-
ward Mrs. Browns, and Mrs. Brown
seised it in a fierce grasp and
would not let it go.
The talk ran on small affairs of
the university and the town. Mrs.
Brown listened eagerly and spoke
with animation now and then. Her
eyes were sparkling and she had
dressed her hair more elaborately
than usual, so that it waved back
from her face in a glistening
curve.
Dr. Dorn pursued the subject of
the deans campaign. “If you can
clean up this university as the dean
plans, we will be models for other
colleges, the country over.”
Dean Snow looked at him. quiz-
zfcally. “Do you suppose it win
stay cleaned up?”
Dr. Dorn gave her a quick glance.
“Perhaps not. But some good will
be done. If this man Shea, for one
thing---”
bad you didn’t hit youah man.”
Judith took the case of roses into
the living room and ret it on the
piano. • Eric’s card was in her
pocket, and she looked at it again
as she went upstairs to get
her coat and hat. "Back next Sun-
day. Merry Christmas!” The words
were written on the back of the
card. Judith pinned two of the
roses against her coat before she
left.
The dean's house flaunted holly
wreaths in every window, and a
little curl of smoke from the
chimney over the living room wing
suggested festival cheer indoors.
Mrs. Brown herself admitted her.
She was wearing a lacy aprdn and
smiling broadly. Judith looked at
her curiously. It was the first time
she had seen the dean’s wife smile
whole-heartedly.
“Will you take off your wraps in
my bedroom, at the head of the
stairs?” said Mrs. Brown. “I must
run back to the turkey. My cook
Isn’t entirely equal to the emer-
gency.”
Judith ran up the stairs. The
house was full of savory odors, and
there were vases of bright red roses
on the tables here and there. The
bedroom in which she took off her
coat and hat was almost cloistral in
its severity.. But on the little bed-
side stand Judith’s scarlet poinset-
tias biased in the cold pallor of tbs
room.
She ran downstairs again, to find
Mrs. Brown waiting for her in the
The Lesson of Salmon
daughter of wealth, living ia Judith’s
boarding house, to hi love with Eric
and jealous of Judith.
“KITTY” SHEA, town bootlegger,
overhears the story of Mrs. Ttuothy
Brown's secret love affair, when Mrs.
Brown discusses it in a restaurant
booth with Judith, Judith befriends
her, believeing the dean a heartless
tyrant.
Shea trice to blackmail Mrs.
Brown.
Staying atone in Myra's' sorority
house daring the Christmas holiday,
Judith is terrified when Shea tries to
force an entrance.
Sho shoots from an upper window,
and he goes sway.
Next day she examinee the sic.
walk.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
CHAPTER XXIX
IUE paving was covered with a
I light crust of powdery sleet
from last night’s storm, and Judith
examined it inch by inch, from the
porch steps to the outer sidewalk.
She crossed the sidewalk by the
road, stooping over to look at the
cement. When she reached the
parking, she stood up, with relief in
her eyes. There were no stains on
the walk.
A milkman, jogging along, seated
in the door of his wagon, looked at
Ker curioushy. She turned hurriedly
back towardythe house. The negro
houseman still sat slumped in his
chair, snoring. But the cook had
left her post. Judith found her in
the kitchen, preparing grapefruit for
breakfast. The woman laid down
the little curved fruit knife at Ju-
dith’s entrance. “Merry Christmas,
Miss Mahtin," she said, uncertainly.
“Good morn’ng, Mandy,” st id Ju-
dith. “When will breakfast be
ready?”
“Right away, right away.”
•Perhaps we might as well drop
the matter of the burglary,” Judith
said. “Nothing can be done about
it now. I’ll send for a glazier to-
morrow, to replace the broken
panes.”
The cook seized the corner pt her
apron and wiped her eyes, with it.
"Bles you, chile,” she said. “I’d a
shuah hated to lose this job.”
Judith ate in the warm dining
room, with Myra’s fruit basket for
a table centerpiece, and the Christ-
mas sun pouring in through the
windows.
While she was eating, the tele-
phone bell rang. The houseman
went to answer it and returned to
summon Judith.
“Merry Christmas. Judith,” said
the voice of Mrs. Timothy Brown.
Judith returned the greeting.
“It’s going to be a merry Christ-
mas here,” said Mrs. Brown, speak-
ing more softly. “The dean’s been
called out of town.” She laughed.
“That’s why I’m free to ask you
over to dinner.”
Judith thought a momeht. "Won’t
he learn that I've been there, and
be angr with you?” she queried.
The dean’s wife laughed defiantly.
“Perhaps so, my dear. But times
have changed. I’m not afraid of
him.”
“Very well, then,” replied Judith.
‘Til come.”
A box of long-stemmed roses with
Eric's card came just as she was
preparing to leave the houee that
afternoon. She carried it Into the
kitchen in search of a vase. The
houseman was rubbing silver polish
on the Gamma Delta tea service.
“What did you’all shoot at last
night?” he asked.
“At the top of the oak tree,” she
answered, looking up quickly.
YOU WALK into the Mound Valley State Bank at
Mound Valley, Kansan. Perhaps you need a loan and.
ask for the cashier.
“Right over there,” you are directed.
You turn to see a girl of about 22 seated at the cash-
ier’s desk. You politely ask when the cashier will return.
“I am the cashier,” is the reply. “What can I do for you
today?”
The cashier is Miss Josephine Linscott, and the story of
how she became manager of the Mound Valley Bank
carries with it a word of advice to young women who think
that a girl can’t succeed in a big way in a small town.
Miss Linscott was graduated from the Women’s Col-
lege of Montgomery, Alabama. She thought like many
other girls think, so she went to New York City and got
a job in one of the world’s greatest banks.
She found herself one of hundreds of clerks. All day
long, and often over hours, she punched an adding ma-
chine or made out dry reports. Then one day she grew
very tired of it all. She walked out of the bank and said
she wouldn’t be back.
“I’m going to some town where I will be known to the
boss,” she said. "If I have any ability I want recognition,
and I can’t get it here punching an adding machine.”
She turned up as clerk in the small town bank in Kan-
sas. The opportunity was there. When she caught an
error the bank president and the chairman of the board
of directors heard about it. When she remained long
after hours to complete bookkeeping tasks, the head of the
institution knew of it. It was not long before she got a
better job and salary increase.
When the place of bank manager and cashier was left
open, the board of directors unanimously chose Miss Lin-
scott.. Bobbed haired and youthful she was, but conser-
vativ and accurate.
Mound Valley business men respect Miss Linscott. She
knows business and knows farmers and what they’re get-
ting. She knows just how much she can lend and just
when to call.
The advice contained in her story may be of use to the
girls in Austin. The girls who say their home towns re-
fuse to recognize their abilities also may find a word there,
too • 1
isuipiuEwnuneweI
==
WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE
JUDITH MARTIN, young teacher
la Pendieton University, to admired
by ERIC WATERB, rebel seniir and
DR, PETER DORN. astronomy
professor.
DEAN TIMOTHY EROWN to en-
raged when she chooses student
frienda, and openly defends Erie
•calast a suspicion of bootlegging
poisoh liquor.
" Q
FINGER
It has b
ger printin
first ion wa
early as 406
wills finge
have beer
srread froi
Japan it w
■ 1
hiring Of I
Africa cau
on’ inent"
Eric seems to bound from one
scrape to another, and Evo Ger-
hardt begis to foar for the
young -
HAS AUTO BUILT
FOR TIGER HUNT
LONDON.—Rajah S. M. Saadat
All Khan, of Nanpara, India, has
just had an automobile built ••-
pecially for tiger huntin*. A Brit-
ish firm made the machine.
The automobile has a 50-horse-
power motor an* acommodates six
passengers. There is a special
light to dazzle the tigers. Turned
on at night, thia bewilders and fas-
cinates the beasts\of the jungle.
The car is equipped with a Plant
for coolin* water, and special anv
munition carriages concealed In
the, body. It is said the machine
cost 120,000.
M
When her
she expresse
slrin* that
with a sp
Rutherford
in* a desc
vesant, last
York.
Mr. Ruth
New York,
once was a
derbilt.
“Some 30
knew Miss
one of her
Some Frank Words
on Catarrh
Because catarrh is unpleasant,
few like to discuss it Yet nil know
it* prevalence. Muy think "It will
go away of itself, and ignore it
until finally a chronic catarrhal con-
dition exista
To endure the constant raising o
mucus the clogged nasal passages,
th* offensive breath of c*tarrh is to-
day inexcusable. Thousands have
proved that Hall’s Catarrh Medicin*
drives away catarrh because it
tone* and strengthens the mucous
membranes.
When the inflammation of these
delicate linings of nose, throat and
head is reduced, catarrh vanishes.
You owe it to yourself to get Hall )
Catarrh Medicine today. Ask yoat
druggist. Price 86c. F. J. Cheney
eCo., Toledo, Ohio.
HALL’S
Catarrh Medicine
Nt—they cut stand pure,
blood.
“C
Rome dis
ated Press
bunal which
on the grot
testimony o
former Mrs
derbilt. now
feminist lei
daughter to
fearin* that
to obey he
guard at h
conversing
days after
informed th
tigating his
tion of the
him she hi
marriage
compulsion.
Mrs. Belm
steamer Be
other nota
Marie of R
rope.
According
rota, Consu
gaged to R
(
New York
By Day and By Night
BY O. O. MINTYRE
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 113, Ed. 1 Friday, November 26, 1926, newspaper, November 26, 1926; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1445430/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .