The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 178, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 27, 1909 Page: 4 of 16
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■
Madam, Be Careful
AUSTIN, TEXAS
I
IIU.UIM
9
OF
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
6
Automobile Users
।
Protect Yourselves
Mar
I
out of your waist and pay
N
r
229
collapsed.
NOT
512
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fountain.
Kei
22
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ulated with a tinge of sarcasm.
ho
7,
mean
IP
home of Mrs. Bechtel, an aunt
Take
E
erine.
A
Examine Our StocK
[i]
TO
1,
)
NO MORE
I
NO LESS
•o
*088
■ I
724
"COOL COLORADO
■
GOES
DIRECT
ild and from an-
nent drew out a
Altogether she
18
C
N
P
me
Rhe
3,200.00
1,800.00
297,730.34
J
1
Th
Issue
July
matt
said
Railw
cellat
pany
28, 41
2 of
origin
2040,
excap
re-c
ton, c
at pol
their lives If nn attempt to separate
thm was made.
points
10, 18!
tion 1
low:
Trir
od3
30.000
istan
>5 per
This
1808.
otWEN
,64
■■
"C
pose
a bo
' T
nn ej
troit
Beans, rightly baked, form the choicest food in existence. Beans are also
the cheapest food you can buy. They are 84 per cent nutriment
ex-
off.
A
The
modit
In i
the T
way c
comm
th^ e
"BEAUTIFYING'’HIS WIFE'S
NECK COST HIM $50
DOCTOR LOCATES A UE
BY MEANS OF X RAYS
YEllOWMONt NATIONAL PARK.
CALIFORNIA and
THE A Y P EXPOS I TA
WHY DON'T YOU? 14
AGED MAN AND WIFE
ARE BLACKSMITHS
AGED BRIDE IS SURE
OF HER “BOYS" LOVE
money
15.”
ft
IZENS BANK 4 TRUST
COMPANY.
Q00000
Furniture and fixlures
i Real estate...........
Cash on Hand.........
"I
of n
hear
Coll.
Thia
vidu
No
dlar
celv
cret
C’olk
is th
Resources
..f478,15848
-
E. H. PERRY
Manager George H. McFadden A
Bee’s. Agency.
F. a SMITH
F. a Smith 4 Ce, Cotton Com-
miesion.
DR. B. M. WORSHAM
Late Superintendent State Hos-
pital for Ineane.
CHESTER THRASHER
Cashiern
WILLIAM R. HAMBY
President,
g nt the
of Kath-
I
I
swallowed the acid.
She receritered the house. told the
policeman of her act. and fell to the
floor. An instant later Katherine Ben-
der also swallowed poison. Both grls
-j0q
0,325.
292,3
1
O
Bes
the
of
not
dric
day
will
low
to t
Am
fact
Chi l
For
coci
F
bee
Wei
Mai
Ove
Noc
Sole
Mar
Ove
Sere
Med
Hele
DRUNKARDS IN BURLINGTON RE-
FORM RATHER THAN HAVE IT
AS A STEADY DIET EVERY DAY
IN JAIL.
WILLIAM BOHN
Bohn Bros., Dry Goods.
J. J. DAVIS
Farmer.
S. GOLDSTEIN
Wholeeate and Retail Cigars and
Tobaoco.
T. W. GREGORY
Gregory, Batt. 4 Brooks.
DAVID HARRELL
Owner Durham Park Stock Form.
A. F. MARTIN
ProoMont Austin White Lime Co.
OFSFAEKSEEESASD"
(Hamburg American Line.),,. ,
‘18,000 tons, brand new, superbly fitted.
ROUND THE WORLD
IETmLp
2259.2247
No
unless
k every
1 regula:
I passag
L two a:
[ There
J adapter
which I
[ using 1
i Syrup
• compou
• griping,
) purity,
n overni
P laxative
came Into view. "I really
you have a bad heart. Y01
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE 2, 1909.
—,132—
BEAN SOUP JAG CURE
SOBERS JERSEY TOWN
F.,"
FRANK X. MAYER, Manager Austin Branch
723 CONGRESS AVE.
The woman nearly
took out the >60 in go I
other part of her ralm
purse containing bills,
had about $100.
fV
We don’t say this to attack competition. That is unneces-
sary. No one who makes a comparison will accept any
beans but Van Camp’s.
But some people don't make a comparison. They get the
wrong beans, then go back to home baking.
They go back to beans that don’t digest—to beans that
are mushy and broken. And they may never, know how
good are the right beans—nutty, mealy and whole.
Get Van Camp’s once, and see how your people like them.
Learn the convenience of having such meals ready on the
pantry shelf. ,
Once taste the flavor of the whole, plump beans, with
tomato sauce baked clear through. •
You will never again want to bake beans at home. And
your people won’t want to have you.
But don’t judge by commonplace beans.
residenco of Mrs. J. A Bechtel, in the
coutheastpart of the city, tonight. Jes-
ale Cole rushed through the house and
REO Automobiles
Tum/HREn 1909 STYLES OFTHIRSE RELLANLN AND SATISFAC-
ronr CARB WILL BE SHOWN AND DEMONSTRATED ALL DUR-
ING run COMING WEHI AT THH.
Austin Garage
TOURING CAR, 11000. RUNABOUT, ISOO. ROADSTER. 31000
i 8. B. RADKEY.
base. It is to be used as the base of a
AVST \
c(noustond
VAN ANTONIO
old-tim
remedy
t keep hi
i qualnte
offer o
1 found h
k now ah
\ k. l. a
’ used it
tof her d
LW
I ylsorou
I Syrup 1
home It
‘eoon dll
I 1 Those
I “aldwel
$ 10
(househo
i you wlti
Klelf the
।’bottle c
v it has b
iguard t
Pilon, dy
I eick hM
I digestiv
eMo"
’ WACOj
From Now York October 16, 1909:
from San Franetsco Feb. S. 1910. nearly
four months, costing only 1650 AND
UP. Including all expenses afloat and
Of beautiful featherweight patterns in various colors
including blue and stripes, then let us measure you for a
suit. You can not begin to duplicate the price, quality
or goods considered, anywhere else in Austin.
We Guarantee a perfect fit.
UNITED WOOLEN MILLS
'-'"special FEATURES— Madeira,
Egypt, India, Ceylon, Burma, Java,
Borneo. Philippines, Japan. An un-
• usual chance to visit unusually attrac-
FAT AND OLIVE OIL TREATMENT
AND THINNESS AS A BLEMISH
CURED IN SUIT FOR THE CASH
IN ENGLISH COURT.
Both had threatened to end
London, June M.—Mrs. Lena Thorn-
ton, who carries on business as a pro-
fessor of physical culture in Sloane
street under the name of Mme. Lau-
rence, sought to recover >72.75 in the
SME99XKyFAKFM(8 I The muscles in Schwind’s brawny
A ANVz:K“A“R,96,3228E9 I arms were in truth as strong as Iron
El NE282224ggg*-e44eeNyVa bands when he opened the shop, nearly
• half a century ago. but he had no mo-
—----- I no poly on brawn, for his wife swung
, - ...0, 1 w,i -.r had died and! the ten-pound sledge as easily as he,
ina suburb, PewXO in token of his b»nd she was an invaluable aid In a
willed hlmthatamountinanoxen which tme When help was har ‘o gt.
appreciation of the klndnesa wmen The Btdcksmith ana his wife, who
Cheesman had foteotten I iive at 102 jirlstow street. .Belleville,
.
m
w
puz2,nw.
gec
13,42603
Some beans are sold as low as 30 cents per bushel. We
pay 12.25 for ours
We buy only the choicest Michigan beans. Then we pick
out by hand the whitest, the plumpest, the fullest-grown.
All but the best are discarded.
There is much tomato sauce made from tomatoes picked
green. It lacks savor and zest.
There is much sauce made of scraps from a canning fac-
tory. It lacks body and richness.
We make our sauce-from whole tomatoes, ripened on the
vines—picked when the juice fairly sparkles. It costs u»
five times what common sauce would cost.
the outer world. Police Captain Shu-
mard received thia one yesterday, writ-
ten from jail. It says in part:
"Dear Cap: I am writing to see it
you can’t get some of my time taken
off. I don't like the bean soup they
serve out over here now. They don t
even use white beans any more. They
make it out of yellow beans. But its
bean soup just the same, and nothing
but bean soup, every day. Damn the
beans!
“rm a sobered man now and I can
keep sober five months, for if you get
me out I won’t come back to beans
very soon. Cap, if. you ever did any-
thing for me in noW: ’
NEW PHONE 565 J
iJ
all dry-baked beans, instead of digesting, will ferment on the
stomach. That is evidenced by the formation of gas.
gMn0‛,
6euH
THE MARYLAND CASUALTY CO. of Baltimorz,,Md.zmuarantn,
v*u thia PROTECTION. Also writes all forms of Personal Asoee
Health. Liability, Stoam Boiler and Plato dlass Insurance.
THE MANHATTAN LIFE INSURANCECO hoonitaHfelnsyn:
a nee ompany having a pormit to write , ‘ New.X2. 7 T..„ E.-
.uranoo policy with Standard Provision. In the State of Tnal
tblished 1860.
Iwai gates. Axnually Participating In the Profits
sipation." ; j .
They were married in the free cit¥
of Bremen, Germany, June 4, 1842, and
twelve years later emigrated to Amer-
ica. coming to St. Louie. In 1860 they
moved to BellevHle. <
Nine children were born of the unic,
three of whom are living. They are
Julius and Jacob Schwind, both Belle-
ville blacksmiths, and Mrs, Amelia Vin-
ing ’of Pine Bluff, Ark. There are
eighteen grandchildren and eight great-
grandchildren living.
-Pm°°VLbEe
-
933
West London county court from J.
Cummings of Lurgan Mansions. Sloane
"Is there any hope for me?”
“Not if you keep on this way.” ..
declared as the third >20 gold pl tee W?
They are better for all than meat.
That is why Van Camp’s are important. Your people will
like them. They'll want you to serve them often. Van
Camp’s won’t be a once-a-week dish, as home-baked bean*
are Kow.
The more beans one eats the less he will eat of something
more costly and less good. ■ •
Beans are 23% nitrogenous—84% nutriment. They form
the ideal food for brain or muscle.
To serve them often means to save on your meat bills, for
beans contain as much nourishment as meat.
Burlington, N. J.. June 26. The
“bean soup" remedy introduced by.
Sheriff William W. Worrell as one of |
his economy and reform plans is not .
only saving Burlington county several»
hundred dollars monthly, but it Is mak- \
Ing more realy converts for temper- |
ante than any number of "gold cures.
Criminologists pronounced it a greater
success even than his “wash and work
f“Ldoes were the scourge of small
towns in the county when Worrell went
Into office. Past conditions at the jail
had made it a handy winter retreat,
and hither they hied at the first frosts:
getting committed for some small
crime, when Worrell made the tramp
; prisoners bathe, wash their cells, and
. : . .. ! do all the work about the jail there
urea are represented. The main fig- was a bolt to other counties and a big
ures are those of two miners, a young saving on the tramp board bill,
man and an old, seated at the opposite ' When the trumps deserted the prison
ends of a huge.mass of ore. The other work was given to the habitual drunk-
figures are the spirits pictured in the ards who were sent up so often that
ore in the minds of the miners, the tailers regarded them as steadies
About July 15 It 1s to be placed 19 -But in addition the sheriff prescribed
Garfield park’as a contributing from a Haily menu of bean soup for all suoh
the department. The model Is twenty prisoners. One experience under the
feet high and eighteen feet through the bean soup" program, pollcesotficlals
say. Is keeping more mensoberthan
the “flag commission, ’ which the.rs-
cent legislature authorized to publicly
blacklist drunkards.
Howls of some of the prlsoneis uh-
der the unchanging diet are reaching
INTERESTING CATALOGUE JUST OUT
TELLING ALL ABOUT THE
LIFE OF STUDENTS AT COLLEGE
In It him aomething about One of the very best colleges in the south.
ST. EDWARD’S COLLEGE
THE LAnomasr AND BEST KNOWN BOARDING SCHOOL IN
TEXAS. Equtpment the best. Location unsurpassed. Strong tacutty
Good discipline. Excellent advantages. Reasonable rates
ARE YOU GOING TO COLLEGE?
If so, you can not attora to be without thin catalogue. It is froe.
Address The President, 81. Edward’s College,
Box 8 AUSTIN. TEXAS.
you said you were poor.
sions. .
Happening to look a bit lower he
was greatly surprised to discover the I-U
outline of two >20 gold pieces hidden
in a chamois bag under the.wom in’s
reply. . ,
"Remember, doctor, that I am too
poor to pay for this." Rhe repeated, as
the X-ray machine began to crackle
and the physicjan gazes at her heart,
watching its contractions and expan-’
Kd 31 H 01AMR
•.5
TUN AUSTIN DAM STATESMAN, SUNDAT,JUN531902
square, for services renered to his
. w l f e
“While, I was dining with Mr. and
Mrs Cummings at the Savoy hotel one
night Mr. Cummings said he was very
distressed about his wife’s neck and
roulders," Rhe stated. "He apoxeof
the difficulty he experienced in taking
her out, and asked me to do what I
could for her.
“After that Mrs. Cummins pald A
number of visite to me, and I treated
herwhat was the blemishr" inquired
Dr. Cooney, who represented Mr. Cum-
Cincinnati, June 26.—"Doctor, j do
you ever do anything for charity? I
am an awfully poor woman and have
heart trouble. Won't you please eX4 ,
amino my heart with the X-ray 155 ।
made today by a ।
• 65 to ]
Don’t buy common beans and then judge Van Camp’s by them, pie
difference is vast and important Here are some points to look out tor.
GIRIS FUF’II ' VW ?Y “THE SPIRIT OF THE MINES,’’ A MASSIVE PIECE OF SCULPTURE
ENDING LIVES TOGETHER cnac 3 „ Ton™
I wonderful and massive pieces of work
HIS FORGOTTEN KINDNESS
BRINGS HIM 85000.
Burlington, N. 3., Man dets Logacy
From a Deaf Man to Whom
He Had Boon Kind.
Burlington, N. J., June H — Bread
cast upon the waters fifteen years ago
in the shape of kmaness to a Civil wat
veteran, has returned to Joseph R.
Cheeseman, of this city. In an unex- r
hzanizumkim
■
Green was very deaf. He was cm-1 are past their 86th birthday?. They
ployed with cheeman in a Camden fac- celebrated the sixty-seventh anniver-
ory as shoe cutter fifteen years ago. sry of their marriage a few days ago
Because of his deafness Green had few | and have one wish in common—that ...... _
companions except Cheesman. who ] they may die together. iof,c08tr ,
inwrn"hstenzarmmoesatrnitnotmcurfaremamb"wanu‛ssttn‛athmanytpoTnyd‛ths“omanptcabosi
.... dreen ST* Wrf "a “ doctor, 1 do not wish to take
Our large cash reserve and our continuous growth l> th. but Ku
ante, of strength and stability. Conte and growwith us
NO ACCOUNT TOO SHALL TO RECEIVE OUR BEST
ATTENTION.
Liabilities.
Capital etock....................
Surplus and profit..... 17,826419
Dividend, unpaid ..... 100.00
Deposits ............ 654,907.00
$772,983.25
,2*, 3,152282
-283*%
e-,75
Some brands of beans are baked in dry beat—just as you
bake at home. But beans, to be digestible, must be baked in
live steam, heated to 245 degrees.
They must be baked in small parcels, so that the full heat
of the dven reaches every bean.
Otherwise, you might as well bake beans at home. For
Three sizes: 10, 15 and 20 c per can.
Van Camp Packing Company, Indianapolis, Ind.
WHEN TRAINED ON -CHARITY”
PATIENT'S HEART MACHINE
SHOWS HIDDEN GOLD IN THE
DRES$.
you, and It costs nothing.
RICHARD CORNER, Agent
AUSTIN, TEXAS. Room 9, Pendoxtor Building S. W. Phons.
Columbla, Mo.. Juno 26.- When Tur- I
ner Acton, 19-year-old bridegroom,
wants hU own way with hla bride, who
was Mrs. Sarah Anne Montemat, 64
years old, won’t quarrel or threaten or
put, she says. She will "coax’ hin
And the gentle art of coaxing in the
opinion of the venerable bride, W. I
keep peace and happiness at the hearth
where she and her boy huzband will I
"Neither husband nor wife ought to I
be boss." Mays Mrs. Acton, whose hair
is white. "I won’t expect to run our I
home and I know Turner will not
especially if I coax him. I
Mr. and Mrs. Acton are still .In their,
honeymoon and are furnishing a cot- I
tage in the western part of Columbia.
They have been boarding since,their
marriage with an aunt of the bride-1
groom on West Broadway.
“Yes, I have sene old fellows, so de- I
crepit that they had to-hobble around
on canes marrying young girls,.8ay5
Mrs. Acton, who is old enough to be
her own husband’s grandmother and I
who, in fact, is a grandmother " and 11
have known marriages like that to turn I
out unhappily, the wife seeking men I
companions of her own age.
“But I don't worry one minute about
my Turner. I feel sure he loves me
just as much a* I love him. I know he I
is trustworthy and honorable and Im
not in the least atrata of hie ever ret-
ting tired of me and runnin« after
I ‛ Mronit see why our marriage shoula I
have stirred up such a commotion. I
| Why. there’s been a newspaper man I
| here almost every day and the news-I
papers all over the country have been I
writing about us. I even got a letter
from a sister of mine in Fort Worth, I
Texas, whom I hadn’t heard from in
twenty years. She’d read of the wed- I
“n Turner and I wanted to get mar- I
ried I don’t see that anybody else need I .
bother about it. The marriage was our I
affair. He didn’t have any home and
neither did I, and we loved each other. I
Wasn’t that reason enough to marry? I
I don’t think it makes a particle of dlf- |
I ference that I’m past sixty and he’s not I
■ I yet twenty. Age hasn’t anything to do |
I with love.
I 'Tm sure he'll be good to me as long I
I as I live and I know I’ll try to be the I
I test wife I can to him. It's a pleasure
now to fix his lunch for him when he I
I goss out for the day’s work.
I This was Mrs. Acton’s second mar- I
I riage. She had been a widow nearly I
I twenty years when she married her boy I
I bridegroom. Two sons are in the army. I
I one now in the Philippines. A married I .
I daughter lives in Columbia and has one I
I hlld, Mrs. Acton's only grandchild.. I
I She has property worth about $1000—-
| and a veteran's widow’s pension of >15 I
I a month. Her husband, who was em- I
I ployed as caretaker by an elderly rich I
I man in Columbia, han given up nursing I
I and gone back to his former occupa- I
I tion, teaming. He has black hair, I
I broad shoulders, dresses jauntily and
I smoke« cigarettes. But he never takes I
I a drink, his wife and aunt both say. |
Mrs. Acton admits that she will try I
I to be financial advisor of the home, for I
I she says she has had years of experl- I
I once in economising and managing a I
I small income.
■ I “If Turner’ll let me—and Tm sure I
I he will—-I’ll keep the money and I'll |
I save some of all we take in,” she says. |
j "Do I want him to take me around to I
| place* of amusement? You mean to I
I theaters and such as that? Not much, I
| they’ll never get any of our money if I
I can help it. I’m a ‘Hardshell Baptist,’ I
I and all the amusement I care for is to |
I go to church and to sit around my own 1
I home—of course, with Turner there.”, I
Young Acton was sought by his aged |
I bride before she would consent to give I
I any interview. He said, “Oh, what- I
| ever you do is all right with me—I’m I
I going to the lodge now.” He is a I
I member of the Tribe of Ben Hur. I
I Acton’s aunt said to the reporterl
I while Mrs. Acton walked to the gate II
I with her husband, “They act just like I
I you would expect of newlyweds if both 1
| were of his are. They never seem to I
I notice that she is so old and he so I
I young. Anyway, she’s as active as f
I any girl I know.” r,
died at St. John's hospital.
Jessie Cole ha<1 been livin
Kt. Louis. June 26.—Swinging the
village smith's heavy sledge has
brought the fullnese of years and the
comfort of a hale old age to John and
Margaret Schwind of Belleville, who
have traveled the road of life together
sixty-seven years. To their jont labor
beside the flaming forge at their cross-
roads shop they attribute their vigor-
ous health.
DISPARITY IN THEIR YEARS,
SHE 64 AND HE 19, WILL NOT
CAUSE TROUBLE, SO - SHE
SAYS.
"It would be better to take it off.
but if you insist, leave it on," was the
Van(amp's ~
PORK,BEANS
I ever undertaken by a students' class in
INSEPARABLE COMPANtONS CAR- culatgroh
RY OUT THEIR THREAT TO DIE The Spirit of the Mine*.’" is being
RATHER THAN RE COMPELLED moulded by the members of the sculp-
RATHER THAN BE -mns-sture department of the institute, more
TO LIVE APART. I than thirty yoong men and women par-
ticipating. The idea originated with
------ I Charles J Mulligan, organizer of the
« . ,, .1 nt i A..,., sculpture department. About forty fig-
Springfield, III., June 26.—As the out - l " "
come of a suicide pact, Jessie Cole and I -----=
Katherine Bender.: 17 years old, are I A,.omlton was going to the church loft my waist; you can make thk
dead. The girls the mrrige ceremony re- amlnatlon without taking that
of carbolic acid tonight, when police- "85 icant your’ asked the woman. 1
men went to the home of Katherine peated. . . inf.nae ...........
Beader to induce Jesale Cole to return! Just arter the priestanad.rinished
to her parents, from whom she has the. coremony, thewman KS. dead.
HeAn Astranped ■ and inside of half an hour his ile
The- girls had anticipated that the had died, too. That is.the tbestaza
police would be asked to take jetisle and my wife and I have often .wished
home and this afternoon agreed to die we may die in the same way. . ..
Ilf policemen appeared at the home. Mra. Schwina. wh" wAA..tan In
I They placed carbolic acid in glasses. | near by wifen. lier,hu band relatedny
ffinS*’ hidden m the rear or 1" a:"he”satddown’to" uS^Hennh’w
I When two _ patrolmen-caled at the I the WUee Tna the wamretxvewitg ’
non, Jacob Schwind. and his family.
Mrs? Schwind, known as "Grossmam-
ma" to the whole neighborhood, does
housework, while her husband workg
in the garden and about the yard.
Both of their sons are blacksmiths, and
Home of the grandchildren as well.
"It was hard work that kept us both
healthy." said Schwind.! ""We have al-
wavs worked from early morning to
late at night. We had no time for dis-
"A thin neck,” Mrs. Thorton replied J
Dr. Cooney mentioned a special I
cream-charged at $1.49. and .asked .
what it would cost to fill a small ves-
sel that lay on the table. I
■'About 25 tents," Mrs. Thornton an. J
s"oredsppose about 4 cents' worth or 1
fat and a little olive oil." Dr. Cooney
remarked. ’ ’ ... ... . ,1, /
Mr. Cumminge paid he did not recol- 1
tect dining with Mre. Thornton at the
SAY°may have said. 'Take my Wfe and
beauty her up’ he added., 2! < ./
never anticipated a number or visits 9
am! a bill." . . ... 4
Mrs. Thornton was awarded 09
garment.
"How is my heart, doctor?”
“Your heart is pretty bad,” he ejac-
12th Annual Orient Cruise, Eeb.5, TheDeadHeart
’10; by North German Lloyd s. S. [ The Rejected One—And ig thl F
t hat "Grosser Kurfuerat," 73 days including I mine to.beucasta80 have it
>u lled wien 24 days Egypt and Palestine. $400 up. She (wear ilv) .You
uC "that FRANk C. CLARK, Time. Bldga N. Y.T sthrredi—The Sketch.
NEELENA .
D
I FtLtOw$TNC‛
~"AEPAbK I
mKAubin R 0T0S
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 178, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 27, 1909, newspaper, June 27, 1909; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1464071/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .