The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 248, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 12, 1922 Page: 4 of 34
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A
I
NOW FOR PITY SAKE BE REASONABLE
ROLL
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WAITER DIVES FROM
rheum*tism, began a hunger strike
•r Sallcglcaci
Aapuria m the trada mark ef Bayer Mi
M'1-
This Will Help You Put On
I
services rendered and bulk of commodities
"In the Heart of Austin”
The
American National
Bank
i generation.
A
I
I
New York farmers have ilmost exter-
ASK STUNNING—HE KNOWS
- I
✓
%
■ Advertisement
the sense
type.. trav-
For Corns -
USE AMERICAN WANT AM
COLDS IN CHEST
Costs Little
is
$
w, R. Smith. D. F, 4
tA4vut-.mant ■
Linea, AMtin.
USE AMERICAN WANT ABB
3
THE AUSTIN AMERICAN
2 American Publishing Company
MIS
GIVE
Headache
Neuralgia
Lumbago
Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are
not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians
over 21 years and proved safe by millions for
Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions.
Handy "Bayer” boxes ot is tabtato— Also bottles of 2 and 100—Druggiata.
Rheumatism
Neuritis
Pain, Pain
Colds
Toothache
Earache
If so-alled corn ‘cures" have only
made your feet more sore and ten-
8 Moa.
$2.00
2.00
3.00
8.75
State Suy
Some i
reeling
School
11. SO
2.50
E changing hands, instead of in terms of dol-
I lars, whose buying power changes constant-
STEADT I
BOY
6 Moa
$.95
8.55
6.00
TAO
ubeoription Rate—Paid 1" Adv.no*
For 5aily and Sunday American.
35-cent Bottle, Ends all Dandru.
Stops Hair Coming Out
of John D.
If you had his money, could you spend it
in a wiser way? If so, how?
Rockefeller, if he lived 800 yean. would
go a step further and recognize war as the
leading cause of ‘disease and ignorance.
1
c-,
aa 2k
T
■ — o------
Boon to Bald Heads
RED-HEADED person has about 90,000
hairs growing out of the scalp. Speaker
MANHATTAN BRIDGE TO ,
DEATH; SECOND TRIAL
Nature’s Scheme.
A LL near-sighted people don't wear glasses.
4 $19.44 to a farmer. by reason of the insects
2 and worms it consumes.
MAN MAKES HIS WIFE
1 FAST OVER SEVEN WEEKS
at sight, only by reading printed L., •
ding or watching instructive happenings.
In possibilities, the movie is scores of times
United States Government
Depository
Resources
(h er >10,000,000.00
DINCOLN
6 Berton Braley
A great, gaunt body, full of strength ana power
A rugged tace deep hewn by Um. ana toll:
This was th* leader, springine from the soll
To bring a nation through ita darkest hour!
He kept the faith when others' taith was breaking.
In every teat hie soul was adequate,
HI. nad eyes baw the truth and saw it atraight.
He held his course, although his heart was aching.
I; Austin, carrtar .....X°H0
anj ::::::: 182
Mali. toreig ........1.25
SUNSHINE AND SHADOW
BY -SUNSHINE- J0E WESS
.€ATy
<cH7
ec;
is
WOULD RATHER FIGHT
THAN WOR}
"I suffered tnr yra with stom
Year.
$ 7.70
7.70
10,00
18. tO
Kars waste j
----->.....—
Chinese Eggs.
, from China, are arriving in New
rk at the rate of 100,000 dozen per
The trip takes five weeks. Some are
nd powdered. Most of them are re-
from the shell, packed in cans and
I fl us mi for bakery use.
zation is built upon a foundation of
r Vs
*
ly like an eternal moving picture.
— . — ----
Should Be Clean.
“Gets-It
‘FIND MY
APPEAL!
FOU
A Mexican
rushe into
Saturday mi
cers that hi
either lost <1
napped him.
nearch Qt U
after a futile
hours they v
child had bei
by a friend c
The child
from a local
friend, meein
picked himn t
ble home at (
; minated blacksnakes. Now they go to the
Reptile Association of the World, buyirg
. snakes at fancy prices, to check field mice
and rats that are ruining crops.
The snake has its rightful place and func-
tion in nature. So have most of the other
“pests" which man destroys without reason,
to satisfy his repressed lust for killing.
Scientists say that each toad is worth
[*
SPIRIN
WARNING! Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin.
H. M. Wilkins G. A.
Morgan Line, Qalyeston,
Wm, immene, Q F, A.
1M Broadway, New York,
V*592
s
,127
“DANDERINE"
■
Grows Thick, Heavy Hal
A Thought For Today.
A wiw man fesreth and donartath Arom
•vlh but th* foel and |, confidante
Proverba 14116.
I
AR
[FREE $1.00 Coupon
p*» . TU. w --a -ie — ---
■ liq;2zya/r2952
n nied Iron thed VMM IMI^MI M zyr
daalae dee. net Um ewe Viamie Tut
ota he cas eeaily qbtain them Ur vou
fremu amy whdesele hemse. ____
•3CONFEREN(5
TREATES
dandruff or falling hair and you
salp wrill not itah. but what will
' please you most will ba after A
I Jaw Weeks’ um. when you aee naw
hair, fin* and downy at first—yes-- ,
but really new hair—growing all '
non powerful than any of these. The pos-
ibilities so far have been largely neglected.
} sign of progress is the growing demand
hat movies be made instructive as well as
ntertaining.
Moving picture films will be the slates,
iaekboards and textbooks of future schools.
Equally knowledge giving, for grown-up*,
ratehing films during spare time, learning
ad enjoying.
MADISON. Wia—wiliam Roche,
who was arrested here recently
charged with bavin* caused hl*
wife to fast titty-one days to cure
Mr*. 1. C wniama at Mahommett
was * guent of Mr. R A. McCann
from Saturdax to Tuesday
Miss Cadle Bailey returned to
Austin Sunday after spending . few
day* there with her parent*. Mr ana
Mr*. J. W Baley.
a senate committee, discussing movie -censor-
“hPnti recent years, knowledge could be
transmitted to the brain, th
Ewted spot ta warmed through ana
throuzh When yu are wuttering
natan trom a eol4, rheumatism, backachet
m-" r ' u ' or a muneles. Juat I
••< • Jar of Rowles Red Pepper
Rub, made from rea pepper* at
any arug More You mil have the
qulckest relief know n
5 DACK in 1913. a normal year, the railroads
a did just about the same passenger and
! j freight service for the average American
2 as in 1921. The cost of doing this was about
' m $30 a year for each of us.
In other words, the railroads in 1921 per-
’ formed nearly the same service as in normal
- times should be considered in terms of actual
I increase just about matched the expansion
: Healing Cream
i Stops Catarrh
eS&.,iZrSS«’8L-"
Visual Education.
BIGHTY-SEVEN percent of the average
person's education is acquired through
the eyes. An educational expert tells this to
Perhapa th. muon Movie Bow wi r
t. move th• movie colony to th. east i* •o that 1
Xez. Tork reporters can be rshed to h. „,n,
winm tme whenever a new wcandal’d.
n ha bege arraneed >• »”•
purebanr *f Suzaued Iree,
******* ha er iarMMW -eent, «
lar peulay 11"" pacaap M C«Ma*
Ta**l vamin. Tableta abwIMMy treej
B. wn l« UM only Xuxau4 Dren
Teg* ynamin- Tabigta with RBMWJ
1f be •« be muand hr amutationd
waich often eontaln druga.
onstration of his faith in fasting
as a cure
Roche, although in good condition
physically, told offkials he waa
willing to take his own medicine • l
to demonstrate that no harmful re- ’
suits could come from the process
The condition of Mrs Roche was ’
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY
Atlantie Steamship Lines.
“Morgan Line”
Fast and Dependable Service
TEXAS and NEW YORK
(VIA GALVESTON OR NEW ORLEANS)
A Through Steamers Weekly
“ EACH WAY-NO STOPS
Frem Galventon Freight Sailinge Every Wednesday and Saturday
From Naw Orleans Madarn Pasenger Steamer Every Wedneeday
“100 Golden Heurs at Sae,"
From Naw Orleana Freight Beilinge Every Wednesday mnd Baturday
, <-na in leave the ubl* now
*' * i1* a aimple, harmiese preparat
if your nomtrti. ar. cloenen ane that.removes th. catafrhal mu
£ H3=-*3* : ptaq-
! iitu. of th’* pum antineptie. Eri 1 and Inteutinal allmenta, including
deetroying eram into your noiriia appendieit Is One. dose win con
1 and tat If penetrai tNrough ever । vInce or money refunded
I air pint*' of four hena ana mem- , Wooqte Gilbert Co. and drugrint
bran** inaunt reliet. i ev.rrwh.ra
. - „ X
says this at convention of New England hair \ x
Cost You $50
! vou and an other Americans contribute
"an average of about $50 a year apiece to
• the railroads. Error ’harks who want to
check this figure can get it by dividing the
population into the railroads tota. receipts
during 1921.
While some of us may think we never use
1 the railroads at all. for freight or passenger
3 service, railroad transportation charges ap-
pear in everything we buy.
> The figure of $50 a year apiece probably
. is a nearly accurate average, for such things
as railroad tolls have a way of slowly butter-
■ ingout evenly over the country.
They are passed on and on until the bur-
den is fairly well divided on the shoulders
of the weary army known as Ultimate
* Consumers.
Multiply the $50 by the number in your
family and you know how much of your year-
ly cost of living is due to railroad service.
; ONE trouble with “the railroad problem”
is that it has been presented mostly in
terms of billions—figures so big that even
the average adding machine can not handle
them, let alone a family that is thinking in
terms of two cents a pound saved on butter.
Having got the railroad problem down to
g levy figure of $50 a year apiece, the ques-
tion naturally arises: “What do we get for
M it?” In return for the $50 the railroads
perform service equivalent to hauling each
American 336 miles a year upon passenger
trains and carrying, for him. one ton of
• freight 2817 miles-almost across the con-
--------—----—--} said by attending physicians to be
in the county jail today a* a dem* i critical
cording to latest figures. Add $1 to it and it 1
is exactly 6 per cent.
The bank has to earn that, covering in-1
terest to depositor and cost of doing busi-
ness, before it gets a profit.
The rate varies—$74 in Texas is high-
est. Lowest is $40, in California.
National banks’ net profit on $1000 de-
posits averages $27 for the whole country.
Lucky people, if we could hold all profits
down to this low margin.
--------o--------
Radical Reasons.
PROFESSIONAL agitators. in their
speeches, are talking mostly about why
the “world revolution” has failed to come off.
as scheduled by the radicals.
Their explanations are usually wrong. The
reals reasons are:
First—The world is tired of experiment-
ing. The pendulum is swinging back to
“normal"—stagnation.
Second—As soon as a radical movement
gets a good start the radicals find they can’t
agree among themselves, let alone getting
the world to agree with them. The leaders
wrangle. The movement paralyzes. Audi-
ence drifts out to another show.
----.-----o---------
Moving Fast
W’ALTER HOLLAND, Washington inven-
W tor, claims he has accidentally stumbled
on a discovery by which an auto can use air
for fuel instead of gasoline.
Other claims, equally amazing. are ad-
vanced daily. Most of them are never heard
of again.
But this is true: Future methods of gen-
erating power will be totally different than
ones we have now. Steam engine, motor and
electricity will seem as antiquated to future
man as ancient human-muscle power seems
to us in many processes requiring energy to-
day. Atomic power is coming, for one thing.
| times (TOW weak, thin, apd emaclated
, OB an abundance of tool (lacking IB
vitamines) while with * much amailer
! l amount of food, rich ta vitamines, *e
I| may qulckdy take om.good fru tesh,
Incieaie in weight, and unake a remark-
jeblegainin skrenguh, energy and en-
durance, provided your blood contalns
sufcient quaatity ot oxygenated or-
ganic iron to enable body to Ga-
imilate your food properly.
Wihout organle fron both food aad *1- |
tamines are abMiouiy uselesa <• —
body cansot change lifeless tert
■otter Into living Mite snd tissue unless
zouhave pienty of organie Um ia row
“Pr centurles selenttata trie la vatp to
make organie iron. At inat the preblez
was solved so that m may Dow obtain
pure organle trop ke the tron In your
blood from any ArMSteC under Lhe Bakue
ot "Nuzated lron."
, Ton minutes atter using Danderine
you can not finA a single trace of
The liquor question la sata to be th. bie ,wu. n
WHO at tbla time Th* nited staten" 12154p"Un1n
furtshed th*, presen prenident we »l»a4 thourt.
Onie *a* a part of th. Unated States. why"mnoun
M8u8 over a auetion that ha* been net Ua* * ,
dressers. The figure seems unbelievably
large, yet it is low. Brunettes average
110,000 hairs, blondes 140,000.
Scientists, claiming prehistoric man was
as hairy as a monkey, say that thinness of
hair or baldness is a sign of superior men-
tality. Future men all bald as eggs, the pre-
diction. If the scientists are right, the red-
heads must be a super-race.
■ o —■
Peace Factors
KEEPING the nations at peace with each
M other depends on “as much intercourse
as possible betwixt people and as little as
possible betwixt governments."
This comment is from the pen of Richard
Cobden, English statesman, economist and
original enemy of tariffs.
Cobden died 57 years ago. But his notion
that wars are caused by governments, not
peoples, is as timely now as when he wrote
it. Same thought probably has occurred to
mature intellects since time began.
Truth is the most obvious thing in life.
Also, the most elusive and disregarded.
--------o . —
Rockefeller’s Beneficense
IN 20 years John D. Rockefeller has given
I $126,788,094 to teachers and schools, J
through his educational board. ,
Charity, as viewed by the world's richest
man, is best handled by attacking poverty at I
its sources—ignorance and disease. Kill these
two monsters and poverty automatically will ]
vanish. Such is the interesting philosophy i
S of cost of living.
A thousand and one morals can be drawn
if from these railroad figures. The most im-
* portant is, that all economic problems at all
times should be considered in terms of avtual
Sunday Edition Only—in Texas
$ su montha ..............................
h Tweve months ---................
Private Branch Telephone 5020
condectinE All Dr partmen la.
Pounds of Good Firm Fles
' And Round Out Face And Figure If You Are Weak, Th
Or Emaciated Dm To Cuses xplained Below
And so the years, which oftentimes bedim
The glamor of a warrior’s victbry.
Bring added rP y to the name of him
Who Led bls country through Gethsemane:
Lincoln, the etrorg, the patient and the tender
Whose memory grows ever in its splendor!
Lberty. taw and public power are the ele.
menu at Metal Uta Law and liberty without
Iberty make a despotism: toree alone u bar.
barism: liberty and taw. joined to foree
make th* republis, the only good civi ron.ti.
tyuon-immanual Kant
of Cherry creak, which one* rat
through the heart of Denver. Thi
•and. they maia, always has carried
a trace of sold.
KILTS GO TO ORIENT.
LONDON—London outfitter* fin
the popularity of th* kilt is apread
in* to the remotegt parts of th
earth. The Scotch drobe 1* helm
■ent to Indian princes, while numer
ou* order, come in from Japan. ,
Q My husband to abeolutely worthlees. What
would you advise me to do?—Worried Wine A. Got
hin life in sured and then persuade him to take
a job which will require him to cross the main drag
neht whan the traffic la heavtest each day.
Q How could I *et a code** education:- Ambi-
Lieu a A. Go to college and study.
Q I* there any chance for me to be president —
Politiclan Accordine to the last census, you have
about one chance in 100,000,000. So cheer up.
Q Will Grover Bergdoll ever be brought bark
to th* United States ? If *c win ha over ba pun-
uhed?—Doughboy. Ta*, for hl* money won't laat
alwaya. That also answers your fleet quetion.
Q What 1* the best method of geitine a xood
brand of hootch?- T K Irsty. A Pay caah
Q Why did Mabel Normand eat peanul la ’—Movie
Fan A She liked em
Q How old I* Dorothy Dal’on?—Antiquarian
A. This la a question requiring a personal answer
and you didn't inclose th* cartlflad check for *1 000
I cen’t afford to publish anythin* In thia colvum
that would cause th* paper to be suea ana 1 can
angwer Any queston uniess I answer them truthfully
9 ,°n zhet .date Al ools‘ day Eal thi
-E McNutt A. On April L
What 4oes B quarter« worth of meat coat
— >Aay» 1—Coteuraer A Haifa dollar.
Q. Walch of the numeroua candidates for United
Stztez.monator.from: ,Trr won • be aiappointed
. morning arter ’be July primarie*’—dtausman
A. The one who receives the most vote,
. 9_wi me moldier» get their br>nu*?—On* of Em
A Tb* politician* might get eo buny areuine about
inconeequenua thiog: that the bill would Sip
throunh And w. Gamaliel Hardin* ian" Eolng to he
preaident •lweya. Don't *lv* up hope, but If Anybod
.y dollar on "hat hav.
coming should the bill pass, you take it.
ach trouble and could not eat an
* fust hated for anyone to say wort
• to ms I would rather fight Sinc
♦ taking a course of Mayrs Wonder
; ful Hemedy I actually want to work
, and talk about eat ! am ths lasi
AV,<24
gesH
J. T. Monroe, S. P. Am
Morgen Line, Hew Orleans, La.
How good it feels Tour head is '
I clear Tour nostrils are open. You 1
breathe reely No mere hawkng or l
snuffling. Hen colds and catarrh
yleld like magic Don t stay stuffed
sp choked up and miserable Ma*
Zief is sure
(Avertsement.)
Ease your tight- aching chest
Stop the pain Break up the con*,
gestion Feel a bad cold loosen up
in just a short time
’ Med Pepper Rub" is the cold
remedy that brings quickest relief
It cannot hurt you and itcer |
seems to end the tightness and
drive the congeston and noreness,
right out
Nothing has such concentrated,
penetrating heat as red peppers, and
when heat penetrates right down
into colds, congestion aching mus«1
elas and sot*, stiff joints relief
comes at once.
' The moment you apply Rod
I Pepper Rub you feel the tingling
beat in three minutes the eon-
Entered to the Poetottice *t Austtn, Texaa
M Becond-claas Matter.
Member of th* Associated Presa
Membar of th* Audit Bureau of Circulation*.
Th. Amoctated Press i* exclustvely entittea to
tb* um tor nubile* Uon of all new* and aispatches
• SGaitea to POTot otherwi"credited"n thi;
saver and atao the local new* published herein. All
rights of pbiscadon of spectl diepatches herein
h *r* alM reervea
BERTRAM TRAVELERS.
Spnciel u Ameriean.
BERTRAM, Feb IL—Mr* S D
Moses has been in Austin the past 1
week, the But of her parents. Mr
and Mrs. J?La Front*.
Miss Edna Blacklock left th*
past week for Austin to attend the I
Nixon and Clay Bustness collage
R. A. McCann returned Tuesday
from Houston and Austin on a bus-'
ineas trip He waa accompanied.
by 1. C. wiliains of Mahommett
Write me ted
a fra* trial i
guaranteed tr
it. stope th*
mamendly. I
write mo—ll»
do, aarees
Dr. Cannad
Aenaihe„zatlPraaPandonin"oFrat don"t For • — *
snd sunshine Ik to vegetation itjcomplete, permanent relief is guar-
"unht 'te G "5.. aniqedlpvnhe. nw methoh , few
and etFengthen them helping the 1 Aropz.ornG25-emovenanya0
“z
. air u"heds ; pComtmmged to an/rXi^
' ifoaana hSiXi M Mu^t
574
Assoctated Press.
NEW YORK, Feb. 10 — Agnosti
Astor waiter- dived from the rail-
ing of Manhattan bridge. 140 feet
up in the air. to Adame street, and
was killed instantly it was his
second attempt at suicide within
a week. He took poison in his
home on Jan 14.
His favorite child. Caroline, 20
pneumonia and diphtheria and in
was because of this he killed him-
melf, the police say The child has
pneumonia and Ihptheria sad is
in the Kingston avenue bospital. In
Brooklyn
Fred Rothansi saw Astor mount
the rail, poise a moment then dive
Astor was identified by means of
an insurance certificate.
| • Ex plain!i
|[ of her dep
■ the so-cal
| of certain
I Annie Wei
I intendent
| sued Satu
I Miss Blan
| as follows:
| This ret
| summary i
| ing my ax!
| census fra
A tained. It
F that the pi
| the facta, i
I torney gen
E withheld i
I pending th
the Corpus
My first
I frauds was
t The great
I scholastic ।
| and the a
K schools att
| vestigation
I our retaki
| county. A
I enumeratio
I cut down 1
Has
I Figures I
L ties and (
K suspect ot
r general wi
city super
formity to
further inv
pered in Bi
census of 1
as to be us
parison in
to be the p
* tic populat
tion; (2) re
tire failed
statistical
were availa
my own t
which was
not a ruffle
pile the fi
Up with it
forced upor
book wyste
effect
lac king i
-.as to othe
planned tn
tigation aft
1920 should
paratory st
Thirty alxt!
meat to th.
to give ata
enabled me
tew In th
to frauds in
me from c
lawn and I
both the coi
intendent U
vet result
When fi
bus were (4
lay was en
not requfre
sent to ns
th uzh by
cured many
of C’orpus 4
spenified. •
sent to ret
cneus and
offke fore
the alate, bj
as to the pc
the scholast
1921 bears
and as to t
children ent
enrolled in i
The avera
ehildren to
1920 was 27
iU« percenta
• nun e । ation
federal cens
lent The
tb* « Mildren
actually in
per cent, ai
cent Wher
the percenta
for the two
the average,
the actual e
low the avei
count y beta
vestigation
UkU actual
te pr cent
children eau
Freud
These fact
operate in t
to diet radii
generally 1
teal or susp
very small l
total numbe
the state an<
of the cena
taken hones
with the law
Th. law !
purtment of
prosecute th
frauds comn
and the lot
prosecutions
ed as to the
ion of thos
them.
In com las
the people ot
* hi h l hav
rosy to mnal
which I rec
the hands •0
th» legislatu
my efforts tc
from the sek
be encouragi
alate in an
An a conseq
partm*nt hat
pie desire g
■hen Id see to
are upheld
charge of th
Geta FREE $1.00
iPackage *
Genuine Yeast F I
Vitamine Tab- I 6
let* Today askY
Explained Be- . k A
low-Try Them Ed
for Ten Day* Bua
and Watch the EBI
' sceReaultz.a abown Low
LABORERS FIND GOLD
1 DENVER, Colo — Scores of CU-
rioux fortune seekers gathered in
th* basement of tb* courthouse
here when workmen excavating for
a new heating ptant. fount pay
dirt with traces of gold The ex- i
citement nudaided when no nuggeta
were found. Old-timer* who saw I
the sand declare it I* from tb* bod
===----====
REO PEPPER FOR
I TWENTY MILLIONS of Americans attend
the movies daily. Only 17,000,000 are
I in schools and colleges.
Will Hays should see, in these figures. The
। —cecity for making motion pictures clean.
’ wholesome and instructive.
Children forget book lessons easily. What
I they see at movies is indelible, in most cases
2 never forgotten—especially if it is something
i they shouldn't know.
A clean movie is mother of a clean next
ATTSTIN AMERICAN, AUSTIN, TEXAS. VTNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 12, 1922.
(
II III H ■ »■
Interest Costs.
OSrs national banka an average of $59
year to handle 1000 of deposits,
Upcoming Pages
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The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 248, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 12, 1922, newspaper, February 12, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1465445/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .