The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 193, Ed. 2 Saturday, July 15, 1916 Page: 4 of 8
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THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
SATURDAY JULY 15, 1916.
2
HOW TO BANISH
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ROWZEE....
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laurel on himself and tell the world, “I done it
we feel forced to
0
A CLOSE CALL.
' I
MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PRESS
A FORECAST.
two thirds of the bu-
Cop]
I
seroyed by fire. The
as the water is running
band, be sorry for him for bein
wash the dii
in do their “home
THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY.
installment* at least two-
filed an applicatior.
in many respects.
still entitle him to the bonefl
uncooked bran help to reduce.
■
radishes
uld be eaten in
with
IX
AT THE MAJESTIC TODAY
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Eomnsfroma"TBPURPLA
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reply: “You can’t ‘done’ it with a fountain pen;
what you are talking about doing is done only
with a hatchet.”
- INSOMNIA AND
. ITS MANY ILLS
I
i
.4 ounces
.6 drams
3 drops
3 drops
2 uuncca
7a
A
at 175,000, partially covered by insur-
cnee.
Manager
..Editor
uable
cripple
retire.
Let-
and
g,
a
What Statesman's Files
Tell of Years Ago
I
I
T
0 ■
HXDP.LoCIAIDGD. . ..
ovwIC or pualacaion
seventa nua Drasos atmt.
mmeemem-eermeeem-
per has been de-
loss is estimated
5 ,j
as it was written before the war, and he will pio-
ture Woodrow Wilson as a sort of goddess of jus-
tice standing with torch aloft and sword in hand.
This word picture will be the sole purpose of all
of the diplomatie exchanges and no fact with ref-
erence to warfare will be changed.
Hence when the international law of (he world
is revised, as it always is after every great war,
it will be revised according to what took place
during the war rather than according to any
he again tells the public that during all the trou-
bled years of the great war when humanity and
human righto were forgotten in the heat of battle
the United States stood steadfastly for the law
of the crew shall be looked after with scrupulous
nicety.
But there are certain obstacles in the way of
this which the allied governments have presented
and these obstacles are entitled to consideration.
In the first place the periscope of the Deutsch- i
land when seen above the water line , will look I
just like the periscope of any other submarine. It 1
felt, however,
away rapidiy»
that the government would be
led by his withdrawal, can not
•y
e
notes. In the coming revision'not even casual no-
.7
- . . .
tired, clear the table, •
see that Mary and Joh
.n.
dry the
the following:
\ ee ~FE
The Colorado ner
foot rise and still ris
2
2=
A :
1g 80
Ishes,
I
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8 I
s
Having now considerable precedent upon which
to work, we will lift the veil from the future and
tell our readers just what'is going to take place
in the matter of the Deutschland. The news from
Washington is just a little cloudy at present, but
to the careful observer and the unprejudiced stu-
dent of the part our Government has taken in mat-
ters affecting the freedom of the seas during this
war all should be clear.
The Deutschland will be recognized as a mer-
chant ship. This action at once pledges the United
States under its own declarations to the German
government in the matter of submarine warfare
to demand that the submarine be treated by any
belligerents as a merchant ship. Being treated as
a merchant ship means that it must be warned
to stop before being fired upon and that the safety
Dallas.—Fully I
siness section of
•eg,
gz."
7
qiEngmi
full amount of a year's slary for those
who have served the government ten
years or more. ",
All applications to be entitled to the
.2.0
F-
pou ; 29
I
I
I
It is currently reported that the
Houston & Texas Central and the In-
ternational * Great Northern are will.
Inc to spend 375,000 in the construc-
tion or a new depot ir the cleixens will
ra’so 315,000 additional.
1e,
any wash or bath and while atm wet,
hands lightly with a little of
!
I
to accomplish, would have made Hutchings famous.
—--------
FEAR OF LIGHTNING.
large quantities. Keep the bowels ac-
tive dally and obtain plenty of fresh
air and exercise outdoors. Drink plen-
ty of water to flush the kidneys but
take no liquids at meals—drink them
between times. Lots of fresh fruit of
all kinds are advisable. The buist may
be strapped down witM plasters at
night and a strong net brassiere worn
during the day.
K. W. Q— Please tell me what to do
for my hands. They are very red and
the veins are large.
2--Whnt will make my legs stouter! t
A—Washing powders, soaps with too
much alkali in them and very hot
water may cause this condition. After
The filing of his a
application
Its of the
thirds of the annua salary they en-
joyed at the time of their retirement.
□ he amount of this retirement fund in-
cteases with length of service to. the
mi
lr. bed and-tell John good night, ani
then sit down for a few minutes’ talk
with husband, and call it a day's work? ( more may re
if so, you seem to bo rather a busy I coval annual
El
W
i
-
work.” make Alary brush her hair and
make John take his bath, tuck Mary
Winifred Black Asks Which
Works Harder Man or a Woman
Fine almond meal .....
Finely powdered borax
Oil of bitter almonds ....
July 15, 1686.
Last Saturday marked the comple- |
tion of fifty years of happy married
life for Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Robinson
of this city. They were married in
New Orleans in 1336.
* Always Satisfactory.
People are always pleased _____
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Dlar.
rhoea Remedy. R. M. White, Turtle
Dr. Hirshberg will answer queslona
for readers ofthie paper on medical,
hygienio and sanitation subjects that
are of gonerel Intorest. H. can not
always undogtage to presoribe or offor
edvioe for individual uiix Whore
the subjeot le not of general intereet
lettere will bo,aneworsd porsonally, if
a stamped and addreeged enVelop l.
rnolged, Afre • 1 InguiHle, to DR
U K. Hirahber oare thla office.
TELEraoxEs,
|X’" gma,“pla“zpgzmu; both Phones 150.
Editor 1 Bl Kooms, New Phone 149.
Boo el, Editor, Old pnone 1941.
Boctet, Eaicof, aw Phone 149.
.Ensered an spcond-01As3 matter at the postotfice at Aua-
"V. Taaaa. under the act of congreas of March 1919.
suuscaipnion MArES,
tico will be taken of the Wilson notes because
the country that wrote them did absolutely noth-
ing to make any of them count.
Please, dear reader, observe that this is not a
ple for war. It is simply an analysis and a fore-
cast. The Statesman is no more hungry for war
S8s58
Bexou, Texas wHtes: "We have been
selline Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy for years. and
Have not had one single complaint.”
Obtainable everywhere.
will lie impossible for a British patrol boat to see
any difference between this merchant submersible
and a torpedo-carrying submarine of the German
navy. Taking chances in such a situation is ex-
tremely hazardous. If a British patrol boat were
to approach under the impression it was going
to capture the merchant submarine a war subma-
rine might discharge a torpedo. From the British
point of view there is only one thing to do with
, a submarine’s periscope, and that is shoot at it on
right. _____________________
The situation for the British is very embarrass-
ing. In fact it is just as embarrassing as that of
A German submarine commander who doesn’t
know whether he is approaching an unarmed mer-
chantman whom it would be safe to warn or a
defensively armed merchantman with Royal Navy
gunners on board instructed to shoot at sight of
a submarine.
There is an excellent chance that the submarine
now in Baltimore harbor will be able to return
safely. But others are to be added to the fleet and
may even now be on their way across the ocean io
that the possibility of one of them eventually be-
ing brought down by a British shot is not very
remote.
And there is where we come to bat with our lit-
tle forecast. The United States Government in
such a case will neglect to note that it has already
delivered itself of a most vigorous opinion on the
subject of the treatment of unarmed merchant-
men at sea. It will overlook the fact that nothing
stronger or clearer could be said than has already
been said in notes to Germany, wiich have been
published all over the world. But the Govemnment
will consider that this whole thing is a new prob-
lem insofar m it relates to Great Britain and
Will open the whole case all over again and there
will be exchanges of notes. These exchanges will
go forward right merrily without any effect what-
ever upon facto. But they will pile up a written
record to which President Wilson will refer when
Mr. A. N. Jackson Jr. has gone to
Dallas to attend the meeting of the
Texts Bar Association.
Mrs. M. M. Barf ord nnd daughter,
Iilllan. have returned from a pleasant
yisitto EanMarcos. Mr. and Mrs. R,
R Patterson have gone to Mexico to
spend the summer. Miss Katie Yar-
brough has gone to New Orleans on a
vist of several weeks.
eating is often a prevalent instigator
of this Gehenna of restlesnes. While
it !/. true that a few men and women
are always too mettlesome, fastidious,
spirited or highflying to eat enough, it
is rather those who eat gluttonously
or with epicurean zea? that may suffer
danger from the moloch of no sleep.
Morpheus is more than a just god.
He goes to the point of woding man
rather than wait for negligent human
courtship. Indeed. sleep is not easily
abashed, and only grave or continuous
infractions of discretion ar® needed to
make him turn awy. Therefore, live
a sane, sensible sort df a life, with
time and place for thought, for play,
for labor and for sleep. —-
A hot bath at night, moderately early
hours—few of those who go to bed reg-
ularly at 10 o’clock or earlier have in-
somnia-meals at stated hours with
meat only once or twice a day, no long
enduring fatigue or superanmatlon
late at night, little of anything to eat
after 7 or 8 o’clock in the evening,
plenty of sunlight in the open air by
day will make sleep the guardian of
jour pillowed brow.
A—Excess of fat is not always due to
overeating, but from too much food
of the wrong kind and tbo little ex-
ercise. Sleep but eight hours in the
twenty-four. It is not abolutely.nec- . ft |
essary to fast, but reduce theamoun
of starches, oils, sugars and fats taken
into the body. Food laxatives such as
notice: to the PUBLIt,
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing,
eppsrtton.shny,PpSSimesnasRa"4jegnws
be gladly corrected if calle 1 to tbo attention of the pub-
lishers.
OU of lily of the valley ....
Finely powdered orris root.. _______
Fine p’w’ed pumice stone .« drains
2—All good, nourishing foods help
to make fat. You may massage the legs
with an upward movement with olive
oll Develop the muscles of the legs
by exrcises, such as swimming and
dancing. Join a good gymnasium, nd
specialize in those exercises advised for
leg muscle development.
Rome, Italy—Italy is in the throes
of a panic of cholera that is killing
— * , 2, , hundreds daily. Efforts thus fnr to
cement law, * 111 have stem the disease have been unavailing.
etirement law, passed at the last ses-
Sion of the insular igislature, provides
that employes who have served the
insular government for six years* or
more may retire and receive in three
quest that it be granted in two or five
yorrs. as the cose may be. will be
granted. The date of retirement de-
Aptiwang aukgsba by carrier, daily and Sanday
per month .... ..2.0.........1.........,2.0..210.1.
with my little fountain pen,
■ Etamisneii 3 allr.
Detroit offlco. Fora bulidini.
San Antonio.— Rodriguez, a noted
outlaw who has been just across the
line in Piedras Negras for some
months, was enticed across the line
end of ihe monih. This bas brought! 1 _____
about the recent flood of applications.
It seems safe to say that by the end of
the month every American entitled to
enefit by the ret'r-----' 3— *--
conversation till 2, dress, bridge at 3.
tea at 5, dress, dinner at 7. theater-
and the rest of it.
you, you see, you and your work.
What nonsense It is to attempt to
generalise.
The business woman has less time
to herself, less control of her own
actions and less personal independence
Jr. Jit He personal matters than the
woman who stays home.
The woman at home can regulate her
own hours. If her head aches sho
can bathe her eyes with cologne. if
she’s overtired she can rest—a few
minutes, anyhowhours and minutes
don’t mean so much to her.
The business woman must work, ill
or well. rain or shine, happy or un-
happy. She can’t even take an ho-r
off for a good. comfortable cry, but
when she’s through she’s through, and
that's one comfort.
The mother belongs to an entirely*
different category. She works every
minute, all the time, and is glad of it.
Which works the harder, the man
or tho woman?
It depends on the man, nnd on the
woman, and on the work, doesn’t it?
Insular Service
Employes Leaving
(Correspondenco of Associated Press,)
MANILA, June 10.—The past month
has seen a rush of applications from
American employes for retirement from
the insular government service. The
Hutchings had a beautifully fertile field in which
to work1 for the establishment of areal National
Guard.
But when the call came his men pranced to the
stations all over Texas and were on the way in
a remarkably short time. On examination very
few of them were turned down. They presented a
soldier-like appearance and discipline. Within a
very abort time they were sent to the “front”
at pointe where the probability of action is the
greatest. This compares very favorably with the
laughable delay in other parts of the country
where miitia companies are not even yet ready to
start. If there had been a real emergency at the
time the Texas National Guard was called out and
that emergensy had led directly to border warfare,
the promptness with which the Texas militia moved
as compared to what other States have been able
Can not the multitudes of otherwise rational
people who are obsessed by the same dread take
counsel of the fate of this unfortunate and allay
their fearsT They suffer an access of terror in
every thunderstorm and in effect undergo the
agony of death many times. Yet there arc few
other forms of death so painless or so remote. In
1912 in the whole country only 243 persons were
killed by lightning, of whom but thirty-two were
females. Women who mainly feel this fear should-
be encouraged by their greater immunity.
But in fact twice as many people are burned
to deathrin conflagrations in a year as are killed
by thunderbolts, and the number of those who die
from organic heart disease compared with those
who die from lightning is as 354 to 1.
No doubt the superstition ' that has attached
from the earliest times to deaths by lightning has
had something to do with the survival of the fear.
wsahpdoor"hgtasiborAowanbrwgrkn penda apon m emplos’s ebter ana
ar. ofrico, third nsIEtan to somebody? ihe Governor General.
How hard does he work? That de-
pends---on. John.
Does he watch the clock? Does he
whistle while he‛a working? Does he
than you are. But when someone rises to pin
NTICE TO ADVERTISKRSa
Having deepfhth in the principles of business honesty
and faitaesa Ths Statesman and Tribune management be-
• eves it but a simple duty to keep its ciroulation books
open to all advertisers and will take pleasure at any time
in providing for inspection by any advertiser to determine
for nimseif what our circulation la
_ 4,000,000 we had about 3000 militiamen at the ex-
, treme most and they had been regarded as tin
-== soldiers and affectionately referred to as soda
jerkers who liked to decorate themselves at nele
Sam's expense. - It will be observed that Henry
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO TODAY.
July 15; 1901.
St. Paul, Minn.—Mrs. Maria A. Cur-
tis, wife of Samuel Curtis, an actor,
better known as Samuel Pos filed
petition in bankruptcy here today. The
principal creditor is James H. Ray-
mond of Austin, Texas, to whom is due
375,000 for an investment. James H.
Day, of Austin. Is a creditor to the
extent of 112,000.
But this lots not mean that the gov-
crnmnent’ssto a" "/ oldent em- sion 'at pallas adopte "arestution
Eloxen The retirementt. arplicatien'cali'ng upon the people to adopt a
must.be. Pssed upon both.the nppii- . cansiutional amendment changing tho
centsinmeau atet.siief nd the dovziudiclary section of the Constitution
^.raor ^General. Where a man can be in many respects
spared-orwherehe- car-show good
reasons why his application should be
accepted, it is probable that favorable
action will be taken. Hut the man
who has no good reason for retiring or
the man whose services are so val-
ll
I E
------O-----—
The French authorities have refused to allow
free passage into Germany of American Red Cross
sanitary equipment and supplies, notwithstanding
the society's claim that such passage is justified by
article 29 of the Declaration of London and article
16 of the Geneva convention of 1906. The French
authorities held that article 29 of the declaration
confines itself to aserting that “material exclu-
sively for the use of sick and wounded is not to
be classed as contraband of war,” but that these
words do not prevent such material from being
captured and confiscated for violation of blockade
nor from being held up on the way. Moreover, they
add, the Declaration of London was never ratified
and therefore has no obligatory force. As to article
16 of the Geneva convention the French authorities
now intimate that, considering German methods
of conducting war, they see no reason for depart-
ing from their prohibition of May, 1916, against
sending any goods whatever into Germany, so
can not make any exception in favor of the Ameri-
can Red Cross Society, more especially as the slip,
plies “end by reprovisioning Germany with raw
material that is often easy to recover after usage
and of which the German government hM pressing
need for its military operations.”
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
, ____ AW D TRin UNE
Published daily, afternoon and night ana Sunday mernT
Ing—by Tha Auatin Statesman Company.
‘The Austin statecman, estabiishedlsin.
Austin Dolly New*, established 1832.
The Austin Tribune, established 1898.
Consolidated, 1994. Acquired by Austin Statesman Com.
RAK July 211192.5 Consolidated with The Austin states-
The Sfate Bar Association in ses.
PAPER DELIVERY.
,Eubscribers In the clty who o not receive their papers
by 6:15 on Week days an. by 7:30 on Sunday morning will
confer a favor on the maragement by calling tbo circula-
tion manager et either phone 189.
I
FI
—_ _ ---——
Sitting, left to right: Dr. Ati, Dr. David Stare Jordan,Moorfield Storey and Lois Manuel kojas. Standing:
Modesto C. Bolland (left) and Paul U. Kellogg. . B
to aTheseusixreprs sentative of the American Union Against Militarism met in Washington a few days ago
,"8 ondsmsans. t promoting.good will between the United States and Mexico. The American con-
Pa”u"eraDaxidstarz. ordan, president of Inland Stanford University; Moorfield Storey of Boston, and
Mondial of E/.ed itonosthe Survey.New.York city: The Mexican conferees were Dr. Atl. editor of Accion
dwto C. Rolando YtctSnnor Luis Manuel Rojas, director of the National Library of Mexico City, and Mo-
tuce, spinach, celery,
green vegetables shou
Montgomery, Texarkana and Pierre,
South Dakota registered 107 degrees
yesterdnv. Work on public buildings in
many --- h larger cities of the coun-
try ‛t a been suspended for a brief
period to prevent heat prostrations.
Ex-Governor Richard B. Hubbard
died yesterday at his home in Tyler.
Hn wvas governor of Texas for two
terms.
- ■
I It’s up again—the od question:
Which works the harder, a man or a
weman? And with it comes again the
question: Which has the easier’time,
the woman at homo or the woman in
business’ And it all depends, as most
things do, after all, on the people.
Some women work harder than some
men, and some men work harder than
•om© women, and there you are.
Whieh kind are you, sister?
When your husband slams the door
behind him in the morning, what do
you do? Do you clear off the break-
fast dishes and go int the kitchen and
wash them, sweep the house, dust,
make the beds, answer the bell, talk to
the groceryman. see to the iceman, ar-
gue with the butcher, pay the gas man,
water the plants, put the roup bone on
he back of the range, run up stairs
nnd cut out an apron and a couple of
frocks and get lunch for the children?
Then wash the dishes again, tidy up
the dining room, make the apron, have
the children change their clothes when
they come home from school, get after
Mary to do her practieing, see that
John isn’t out wish those hoodlums,
water the garden, sweep off the porch,
put your roast in the ovent stir up a
cake; peel the potatoes, shell the peas,
tut out some biscuits, tear up stairs
and change your dress, do ycur hair
again—for him set the iabl o nd put
dinner on it? Then during dinner keep
order with the children, l’sten to hus-
is, on a thirty
Ing. No fear is
stop once in a while to tell somebody
"the latest"’ Does he mark time wai".-
Ing for noon? Is his hat and coat on
just half a minute before 12? Does be
snatch a bite or two at some lunch
counter and play some kind of a game
1111 1 o’clock? Does he kill time nil
the afternoon?
Or does he work for somebody else,
and that somebody a slnve driver?
Does he keep on the jump everr in-
stant, from the minute he leaves home
till he starts for his car? Does every
breath he draws, even every thought
he thinks, belong from 9 in the morn-
ing till 5 at night to the man who’s
paying him his salary?
Or is he a boss h’msel" Which kind
of a boas? Mahogany desk, swivel
chair, roes in a cut glass vase, two
atenosraphers and R secretary? Office
at 10. ronterences till 13, luncheon from
1 till 3, golf at 4, home nt 7 "fagged
out T*
Quite a difference both In the work
nd in the man, isn’t there?
It All Depends—Always.
In thl« case you breakfast In bed.
your maid does your hair and gives
you a bit of massage. You ride Ull 10.
answer letters tll U:30. take your
E1AE8.of Erpe juice and an English
Btnoult at ii, tMc. tlll 1:30, Wrene
ANSWERS TO HEALTH QUESTIONS
A. L. Q—Please tell me how I can
gain in weight.
2—I would like to become about an
inch taller. What do you advise?
A—Obtain 10 hours’ sleep in a well
ventilated doom. Water or liquids of
any kind with your meals will help in
the fattening process. Sugars, starches,
butter, puddings, fatty meats, rich
soupa and gravies are fattening. Take
but slight exercise and obtain as much
fresh air and sunshine as possible.
t—Stretching exercises, swinging
from a trapeze, tennis and basket ball
may help to increase the height
R. K. Q—Please advise how to lose
superfluous fat especially on the bust
act, when the government decides it
can spare him and he expresses a de-
s're to leave—but until that time he
must remain in the government sery-
ice. And no min can file an applica-
tion. In the expectation that his re-
By DR. LEONARD K. HIRSHBERG
A. B., M. A., M- D. (Johns Hopkins).
Sleep, an unwrinkled face and your
hair are a triangle of the freemasonry
of health. If all the triad are health-
ful it is well- if the flrat is disturbed, a
tho second majried and ths third in 6
trouble the medicine man must be in-
terrogated. Moreover, when one or all
of these signboards of youth show
damage you may be sure that old age
is on the horzon.
Sleeplessness is no time server. Once
its vicious tentacle© enter as Iron in
the soul of repose, a worm in the bud
of health is born. Insomnia is no re-
specter of fair skins, bright eyes or
elastic steps. It is Die pack train that
travels in the vanguard of many evils.
To win sleep you must woo it. You
should never—as many business men
are accustomed , to do—go to bed only •
"to be alone with your thoughts."' That
Ls to say, do not settle yourself com-
fortably and snugly under the covers
in order to plan your thoughts and
deeds of the morrow. To con over
matters in bed is to stir up a hornet’s
nest of reflection itself until far beyond
the wee sma* hours.
Put All Thought* Away.
When you go to bed, remember that,
it is to sleep and to rest, to relieve
your mind as well as your muscles of
all tension and activity. To be like
Sindbad the Sailor saddled with a
Little Old Man of the Spa in the form
of a continuous performance of thought
and restlessness at night, is to defeat
nature’s very plan of relaxation.
Other than from this fallacious prac-
tice of thinking of the future or of the
ha’st, insomnia comes from overex-
citement or from excessive physical fa-
tigue late in the evening. Often you
are told that "not to eat” or "to eat
something" before you go to bed causes
the god of slumber to depart. Us-
ually, however, the habit of the par-
ticular individual may take care of
this. It is more commonly the exulta-
tions. exaltations or perturbations as-
sociated with the evening's pleasures
which produce the Insomnia.
Insomnia, then, invites a long train
of consequences. Graynsa and bald-
ness, wrinkles and furrows, crows’ feet
and lines, and a loss of graceful figure
follow. One additional factor is that
the needed exercise is given pause, be-
cause the sleepless person is too worn
out to maintain the muscular move-
ments which aid in Keep ing the form
and features at their best
It is bad enough that the years bring
demands and duties for earning bread
which are nut always best for the body.
This in itself puts a check upon ani-
mal spirits and exercise, in addition,
the self-indulgence of those - over 30
and 40 has a tendency to cause insom.
nia as well as to take on fat.
Methods of Inducing Sleep.
Next to not eating enough, over-
person yourself and you could hardly
be called’one of the leisure class, could
you?
How Does “He" Work.
But maybe you aren’t that kind.
Maybe you’re this sort:
What do you do when John runs
down the steps and catches his car
tn ihe office? Do you st at ’be table,
pour out another cup of cofr~>, read
the headlines, have a few more straw-
berries, add a little more cream to the
coffee, cut another slice of bread, turn
over the pnge, answer the telephone,
gossip for a hait-hour over the line,
chat with the butcher, run across the
hnll to ask the woman in the next flat
where she saw those hats she was tell-
ing you about. sit down In the living
room and talk fashions with the wom-
en from upstairs, fed the canar, run
overa.newsong on the piano, dear
(ho (able, let the dishes stand, put on
your war paint and go down town
shopp’ng?
Run from store to store, "looking,"
drop in at a movie, start for home at'
five stop at the delicat esnon. get some
cold roast beef and some baked beans
end a bag of pickles and an apple pie?
Rush home, grab off your things, tie on
an apron, slam the dishes through fhe
hot water, set the table any old way,
warm up the things from the paper-
bags and call it a dinner, make John
help you wipe the dishes or else let
them stand in the sink till morning,
and out again for another movie?
There’s a difference, you-see, quite
a difference, and it’s all in you. not
As we observe matters military in connection
with the mobilization along the Mexican border,
we are impressed with the fact that Adjutant Gen-
eral Henry Hutchings lias missed fame by the
breadth of an eyelash. Opportunity lias a lot to
do with fame, and knowing Henry pretty well,
we are rather "grouched up” about the shabby
deal old lady Fate has handed him.
Texas never had been a shining light in the
matter of militia. With a population of about
daa-eacas-0--l4
During a severe thunderstorm at Newton, N. J.
a woman who “through all her life of fifty years
had felt a nervous dread of lightning” became
unconscious from fright and died.
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Lochridge, Lloyd P. The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 193, Ed. 2 Saturday, July 15, 1916, newspaper, July 15, 1916; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449299/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .