The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, June 23, 1922 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Austin American-Statesman Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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Earth Hath Its Sorrows Which Strikes Cannot Cure
CLL
SOMEWHERES
1)
f
BY BERTON BRALEY
T
6
+
/ IL Me
0
aim reerved
PETTICOAT FAcT
eht
•0 it neema—
_nAMg0
tn Ur a structure gleama.
6
0
(If
-
I.
d
7
r
KN
YOU CAN’T MAINTAIN WAGES IN A CORSET FACTORY IN A CORSETLESS AGE
Better give it to your niece." or "t,
You couid tod
that story before
0
&
a
§
lh
T
Calomel Good
but Treacherous
TRUCK
&
7//
SHORT HAUL FREKGHT
—
NEITHER CAN YOU MAINTAIN RAILROAD WAGES ON A FALLING FREIGHT MARKET
7
g
According to numerous revelations recently made
&
of
I
(Advertjeement)
"Say, is that what’s wrong? a ak ad Wally.
TODAY’S WORD
ha
And though no words were
S
Labor Preacher
2
‘2
-1
!
4<
1
(i
wwY
P-*
a
STOP ITCHING SKIN
in 1914 and piled up a debt of $350,
There to one mA. dependable treat-
at fknrtn, but they are
JORDAN’S
wash eyery day and m.
old days we will wish
elin
,•7
UI
$
9
V
SUNDAY
KODAKING
was their leader and when he
left behind him a record that
Ut
E7g.
WHERE
DEUCACY
COUNTS
Keep Year Gums
from Receding
Dog Hill Paragrafs
BY GEORGE BINGHAM
“G
go
I
I
tel neh other tor kindneea sake
And when w, are really doine it
with that end in view we uaually
SHIP
BY
I
$
i
A
* N
VP
’ )
Next Dose mar Salivate, Shock
Lver or Attack Boom
The Houston Ku Klux Klan rave a big barbecue
supper recently, accordin to the pewa atspetches.
Howover. nobody aocusa the Ku But Klan of hav-
lac anything to do with the barbecue in Waco a
tew week* ago.
i who are left alive
what makes the
are wild in every
re is about to hit
a Moa
sac
200
300
an
Osiy-n
----------O----------
Observations
in, to kep us warm
in this manner may we become
Year.
S !.«•
7.70
10.00
15.00
FREIGat pEPo‘
94 o (
Then. ov
High in
; will Ster
wrecking
90 for the
Now we
wild and
r the sun.
again. I
of a trio of Murphy brothers, all
editors, to die this year. Mike Mi
Get
Fresh Films
For
COWELL WILL HAVE
OPERATION ON EYES
AT MAYO INSTITUTE
• bid Aistpt drorped tour miles and lives; but it‘s
LOOK FOR T KM •A"
*• the Moon.
Am it sails through the sky from
July unto June"
, \
SUNSHINE AND SHADOW
BY -SUNSHINE JOB WEBS
f
t
h,
nanage to say them kindly
But there are also a lot-of things
=:
2
ek
r
Our little friend Plethora says she doesn't know
which would ba the more dreadful—a wrinkle in
her stockings or a wrinkle in her face.
(mice
(
,mo5 Aten Ts^aphana 3333 or
P‘“connecting All’Depertment
h}
TODAY'S
alled Meting
loan Legion
hotel. • o‘lc
tooo6 C
PUAELY VEGF rARLF
his mourners applauded and what few ene-
3“ Biles he may have had must have envied.
When men accumulate gigantic fortunes and
pass away they are pictured in the public
prints and given pages as empire builders.
Why not pictures and human interest tri-
butes to the John George Murphys who
built wiser than they knew, were never
selfish in their service and never money-
mad? All the great editors of the world
do not live in the great cities of the world
All the great benefactors of the world are
-aaN i ’ N
usioN
I
The tranelation of tho Bible into
English took three years.
i every old friend was once a ver
| new friend
I like to feel that each one of
• us is all the time aending out ellent
messnges from theme personalities
of ours, and that they are finding
। lodzment in many a stray heart
that we may never have commu -
nicated with before.
Walt Whitman in his aily jour*
nal tells of seeing Abraham Lin-
coln out for his walk in Washing-
ton and of how the president often
it rains on the average, every
three days in New York City
JUST FOLKS
BY EDGAR A GUEST
San Francisco banker, victim of “amnesta." has
been found Amnesia victims, yknow. forzet their
identity until their fun 1. over and they get ready
to return home He probably had a fine time
while his amnesia lastea.
bowed
! paned
Fort Arthur has a ruline that any cop who baa
liquor on Nis breath shall be diecharged. What
inoentive has a Fort Arthur oop to capture a boot,
lessor If he la to be denied the privilege of aampline
the evidence ?
TODAY’S
ITALK
By GEORGE MATTHEW
ADAMS
8
( Ca-
1 % 4/egg
been sneering at or criticised for
some imagined reason as you passed
him. may have been nurturing a
garden of beauty in his soul for
your own great growth, If you but
knew.
P. Strong do to prevent
worlds? Man hit the
Rome of the June brides have about reached the
conelueion that they'd like to be July divorcees.
William Howard Taft to la Enelana, studvine
Eqelieh cqurt procedure and law, Helsbelst Haven't
", “poushonlegre in enis country without importing
.Wbats in a Mr. O B. Fuller to running for
attorney senerl la anohicn.
What the avernce man needs to a non-pullable 1t
T Perot A man married a widow wia tw.lv.
chudren Thia the aviator who dropped four
mites in eocond piece
Ki .322"
There are six candidates for the demo-
cratic nomination for congress in the Blan-
ton district, counting the noisy Thomas as
one. All the politicians say there will be a
Now comes the story that two women have their
caps set to capture the former kaiser for a hus-
band. But that lean so remarkable We've always
known there were a few crazy women in the world.
tunoff. Cicero Blanton saya that he will go
Hover the top in the July primary. He has
newer been beaten in mis races for public
offices. When it comes to rabble rousing
he hasn’t an equal in Texas. He is willing
S to admit that he is the only honest man
E on congress and all the reading world knows
that Thomas E. Watson of Georgia is an
American senator. Watson admits without
Nulling that he is the brainest man in
and smile to him
5
3,.
No more we break our finger nails and set our
knees on fire
in stretching carpets on the floors, no more our
muscles tire.
No more the mother stands above our bended
forms to see
That exery tack is driven home the way it ought
The times are very different now. and no one ever
shares
The joy and pain of long ago, while carpeting the
st Airs.
-) cops of Dalla, folks .in that city swim In
i same costume that is worn by the fair maidens
Houston when they sleep.
ON FAMILY FRANKNESS beuer gim it 1o yvur nsece, or 1
Family frankness, what cruelties you knew how silly you look when
(To Be Continued)
(Couyright, 1922, NBA Bervice.)
RANCHMAN SERIOUSLY HURT
FORT WORTH. Texas. June 21.
L A Dickson, ranchman of West
Texas, is In a serious condition it
Panhandle Texas, as the result of
being struck by a batted ball during
a game between Panhandle and
Claude. Dickson was a spectator.
Women are staging boxing bouts
in London
Metal production in Russia is only
- per cent of pre-war figures
in Holland Easter eggs are used
for gambling
Coweil, chairman of the
from the way she tried to laugh
“You certainly were never meant
to wear a bathing suit." "What
makes you talk so loud? Fveryone
With pick and drib and dyanmite
The workmen labor. day and night.
To build, oa everiasting rock.
Foundations proof against each shock
They dig an delve beneath tbs 8ol
Tel. to the passerby, their toll
Appears, somehow, of lttle worth—
Merely a deep hole in the earth:
The Pioneers Are Passing.
Texas pioneers are passing. They are
ging to that land beyond the invisiblesriy-
20 Thev biased the way for the civiliza-
tion of today. They banished the wildmen
and the wild beasts. They conguered.
wilderness. They reclaimed wild astes
Thev fought for the budding of railwaz:
rhey fought for the building of telegraph
and telephone line. They,fought for the
construction of highways where only cattle
trails were found before. They paved the
way for the coming of court houses and
School buildings and colleges and churches;
teGa.
I there iqn" ahy heli, as Doyle gaye, where do our
enemies ko?
37$
■wi
.Weniazs teel "F makine “ hot enouxh for th.
bird who is forever inquiring: “Wen, u ft hot
enough for you?"
A British paychoanalyst says a monkey makes
a. better husband to his m te than does a man to
aercndcattrouakz *eTe aercended
Nat Goodwin’e nrt» widow to Mid to have ais.
appeared with her third husbapd. That's hotter
than disappearine with some other womans first
and only husband.
Circus horaw wm soon be in cagen like other
etrange animals
congress and coyly admits that his personal
integrity batting order is 2200 per cent, the
--hat on record. There will be mere than
cat fight in the Blanton district in
TODAY'S WORD
Today's word is CREPUSCULAR.
Its pronoupced kre-pus-ku-lae.
with adcent on ths second syllable.
It meana, pertaining to or like
twiligNt, zlimmerine. imprcepeibly
clear or luminous
it comes from Latin "erepuacu-
lum.” dusky, dark. twiligNt.
H'a uaed like this—-This to the
Mason her excenence for ’hr sweet
air eraduat and her beau to nit
apooninE on the porch swing by the
repumcular iiMhi of the eventde."
And many-atoriea tower riM
in strength and beauty to the exies
For once the atrong foundation, told
Full awituy ell the reel to made
Aad thus we watch it lift and grow
Baaed on the work that aoean’t akow.
Washington Horks saya at times
he gats discouraged at the non-
progrensivenena of some of our
otUMna aa about all they do to
sit around ana think of the faults
of others Ho would not lIke for
Bito to ge< hold of It. but he says
NOowa like Bile Mildew are about
as valuable in a neighborhood as
k Jug without a handle.
Bim runder: gays’—hen he dies
about an he will have to leave Ms
famtiv la hto undivided share of
the fish in Gander ereek.
In a few montha the busiest fellow in town wUl be
a top man trnba to dodge work
nE,. weather " het and the laundries are clean-
Most aU of the now tariff duties are painful duties.
The ez-kgiere memoirs wi be published in sep.
tember The melancholy days are coming-
Money to asrteremnt from people idle mope doesn't
ta"
touching letter asking me to tell her the Bartletts have beard you leu
why. when she tried eo hard, she that story before. You could tel
Wed start upon the topmost step and let the carpat
roll
But then began a feat of strength to try the bravest
Mul
The corners must be folded M and stretched and
firmly tacked.
With mother watching every move aa down the stairs
we backed:
And many a time we've reached the end. discover-
lug there and then
It wouldn't do at all that way and must be laid
again
Houaecleaning time meant weary legs and hands
and aching backs
For no more tedious job there 1. than driving car-
pet tacka.
Then mother told us what to do, and on our hands
and knees
We stretched and hauled and pulled and tugged and
did our best to please:
But oh' I well remember now one tak which pa-
tience wears.
That awkward muscle straining job of carpeting
the stairs.
You am always
mN ia using Mti.
Tucker's Shorten-
ing, and that replies
to a query 1 received
the other day in te-
gard to plum pud-
ding Mrs. Tuck-
The attention of the Depity Con-
stble hga been called to a strav
lux or beet h«, which put in its
appearance around the postotfice
Chie moming Th# hog ia tn ie-
gulee aa It wears a sheep bell.
Ane Cares Malaria, Chills
LLL Fever. Bilious Fever
UUU Cold and I aGrippe.
. (Advertvement)
not praised by the pulpit and the press. All
the humanitarians of the world do not em-
ploy publicity agents. By their works these
pioneer Texas publishers won a place in the
Texas hall of fame, and they should be
placed there by their fellow travelers down
the broad highway, while these fellow trav-
Biers are numbered among the people now
on earth.
A New Yorker, 70 years old, has adopted a woman
who is 45. He probably intends to keep her shielded
from the world until she is old enough and then he
will marry her.
Rev. William Reese was the only
ordatne mintater at the Amertcas
vederation at labor conterenee la
cinetnnat. Ho gave up hts churcA
weveral yeara ago andi.now.Anan:
elai aecretary of the Bunaine Ttades
Council at kew Orteana
with men it. ottenumes th. eame.
They lift themselves to sudden fame.
Or it seems sudden—till we find
What coil of body and of mind.
What years of struggle and of stresa
Have laid foundations for success
For when that work is done at last
The superstructure rises fast
Considering th* publicity he has obtained by
means of his "secret" operation, we shudder to
think hw many pad** would have been devoted to
Harold F. McCormick had he undergone a public
operation
Sidle als
by Rjurfh Cameron
e A
" Oh, hush-a-by, my little ground
diggers.
With Wooliken fur and nice fat lit-
tle figgers.
All cuddly And warm nod as round w. shoula keep th. mhades of
; our hearts well up eo that every
। ray of love and sunshine can creep
She was met a
bridegroorn and
I Jette read the rl
porganist played
surti
l After the ceret
reception was hel
she -bride’s paren
[•nd Utter Mr. a
eft for a tour of
Hastern states
weekm they will
home with the I
ustin
Buenos Aires reports hens are laying blue eggs.
Buenos Aires isn’t dry. it might be remarked
A Chicagoan refused to cut the cards when an-
other player in the gam* saw an ace on the bottom
of the deck He is survived by one widow ana
several children.
Zemo the Clean. Antiseptic Em 9 “7 E 8 A
Liquid. Gives Prompt Refef EEIVIA
other nightt" Such are the shrp
little arrows of family frankness.
Poison tipped by th* victim s own
sensitiveness, they often leave s
wound that festers and endures in
a way tbs offender never dreams of
Family frankness, how many cru-
•hies are committed in thy name'
MEN BUND TO WOMANS
SUFFERING
How many men. think you have
any Idea of the pain endured by
women in their own household, and
often without a murmur? They
have no patience when tbe over -
worked wife and mother begins to
get pale, have headaches, backaches.
Taint spells or is melancholy and
cannot sleep- There is help for ey-
ery woman in this conditod. as
evidenced by the many voluntary
letters of recommendaton which wo (
are contiually publfshing in this
paper for Iydia K Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound it will pay any
woman who suffers from such ail-
ments to give it a trial —Adv.
asked Wally. "I wondered' Who’s
running it now?*
“Mr. Sprinkle-Bow, the Weather-
man. until we find Mr. Peerabout"
explained Nick. “But old Comet-
Legs, a wick fairy, would like to
be Moor-Man and he's doing all ho
can to spoil things Why?"
“Well, I’ll tell you.’ said Wally.
"Iast night my wife was putting
the babies to sleep and she sang
a song like this:
64
was locking around at
aF
2,4
you the
C i H* said he’d turn the Moon square
E: the minute he got a chance. Good-
4 by. Mr Woodchuck."
E; I Off to the Moon sailed Nancy and
E: I Nick and on the way they mot
— I Mr Sprinkie-Blow riding on his
umbrella "I was just going to look
for you," he said.
are often committed in thy name!
A Letter Friend wrote me a
“How do you do!” said Nancy
and Nick when Wally Woodchuck
opened his front door in answer to
their knock.
“Wen. well, well!" cried Wally.
“If you’re not a sight for sore eyes!
Where have you been and what
have you been doing since you were
hire last spring with Mr. Tingaling,
the tain' landlord, to collect m3
rant?"
“We've been on the Moon." re-
plied Nick “But the Moon-Man, old
Mr Peerabout. is lost and we're
hunting for him."
Fay. Is that what's wrong?""
he had vision. He reared his monu-
it at he came along. He was the second
- - - — all pioneer *
lurphy, the
Eainon has But OUt another liat of questiona but
what th. world needa is more answerB
Torturine, itehipe ms.su is if
esnesnmsaretansusninstertumz.ena
AtktnydnitEtotigrsSBctrSl bottle mms* Pare‛sHnHan1BSenTK,n.e
good druxgletB To be tun of g
Ung th* genuine, see that portr
and sigoture of Dr. A W. Chase
• en th* beg-—a trademark tl^M pi
•i
editor of the Devil’s River News at Sonora,
died in March. He was succeeded as the
editor of the News by Stewe, the last of
the brothers, who were among the builders
of the Concho river country and the thriv-
ing cities and towns which dot the map of
that section. These sons of the fourth es-
tate came to Texas when the road was rough
and,hard to travel. They were men of iron
nerve as well as men of pluck and integrity.
"Ruddsniy. our youngest, Woozi-
kins, said. Mamma, why do you sing
to us all the time about th*- Moon
: being round? It was square last
night!'
I "We thought he'd been dreaming,
, but he said he wasn’t. He said he d
wakened in the night and the Moon
ws as suare a* a soap box’”
Nancy looked at Nick and Nick
looked at Nancy, their eyes aa round
i as saucers.
ie , “Oh. thank you for telling us,"
.!jsald Nancy. "Old Comet-Legs must
I have put the Weatherman out. toot
[ er‛s Shortening is
P truly the proper
i1 cooking let here, lot
4 the elusive flavor of L
plum pudding ran- I
not be captured if fl
coarse animal fats H
areused. You are safe ■
with MRS. TUCK- ■
ER‛S, the purely V
vegetable shorten- ■
ing, for it it juat rich E
enough and imparts ■
no flavor of it own.
g.. [are these hidden friends present.
■MB ! And you never know at what
3 hour, under what rircumstances
E : some hidden friend may be revealed
•^B ‘to you
32 ’ Much is said about th* old friend
N • But it must be remembered that
spoken. Whitman seemed to catch
many a divine message of cheer
and insptration from the face and
eyes of that burdened man
The very person whom you have
Bride It
At Societ
The Young
society of tbi
church met Moi
J Mrs W L Brad
was given by
George. George
Gladys Hedick
ing was held
making money
discussed, it v
for a harvest
September and
then each mem
to try to make
<ne business me
rf the society,
ford, presented
toaster to Misa
son a proepecti
derson has be ri
society since it
and will be gr
she goes to Sta
home. Miss Mi
tox, a graduate
was presented
. of handkere hi
I were served by
fellowing: Miss
Maud Whited.
F Katherine Ander
Line Wilcox, Mil<
dames Hcott Yei
Harry W.lliams
W Mem ham, R
Inz, (jeorge By
Austin Foldridg
Milton Horner 1
• once to your denipt and get his advice
and treatment And wash vour mouth
daily with Lykolene, the powrful Ant:
gepte which keepe the ums elean and
free from zerms, thus helping to prevent
the diaease goiu on Lykolene makes the
guma firm and resistant t germ
and tope tendeney to Mewl Use
Former Senator Gore of Oklahoma after forty-one
years of blinness, has decided he will not undergo
an operation, although specialists tell him they be-
lieve his sight could be restored it is a wise de-
cision. A man who has been blind for forty-one
years, should he regain his sight on some prominent
street today, immediately would drop dead of shock.
Now they're talking about performing a brain
operation on Nikolai Lenina if they mean by that
that Nick's brain is Co be operated upon, the sur-
geons would sve themselves a lot of time by re-
fusing to operate
UE AUSTIN AMERICAN
merican Publishing Company
— - - 1 to e. Poatoenc- a'auatm fer-a
• Becond-cle- Mattee.
Member af the hasoctated Press.
Mamba a eh. Audi Bureuof Cinoutatina .
6- a--odatea Pre- to -xchumavely equuee to
—- «_ rubcdson at an new a ane asapatches
JS 05 Baraas oner-E crediledinei
2 and atoo the tooai a—a MQvuimbea herel A.
* of pubLoatloa at alapetchea herein
uZ h Ta 22emo, the penetrating, watiqfyi
Uox.Ped Md. to an Hurt is needed, for _______ _ ___
orhggira bandshen moat akin eruptions, makes tyM, you a«ai>a«
the akia sott, emooth and hmalthy. |
THE CARPET ON THE STAIRS
Let others aine la modern ways. Ite Jay enough torn
Te inz la a—a ola-tasnionea rhyme the days that
used to be
TN. page or boyhood's meribbied run with things we
used to de
Tito fun we had Iba games we played, the uttie
tasks we kn
And berk to mind there comes today the hardest of
That springtime job of putting down the carpet
on the stairs.
You know wnat calomel is it's
mercury, quicksilver. Calomel ia
langerous. It crashes into sour
bite like dynamite, cramping and
sickening you Cnlomel attacks the
bones and shouid never be put intc
your system
if you feel bilious, headachy, con-3
stipated and all knocked out Just
go to your druggist sad get a botth
of Ddson s ldver Tone Cor a fee
centa, which is a harmnless vegeta-
ble substitute for dangerous mln
met Take a spoonful and If tt doean
start your liver and straight# ।
you up better and quicker that
nasty calomel and without makins
you sick, you junt go back and ge |
your money
Don't taka calomeli it makes pm
--ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS--
AND NOW THE MOON
IS SQUARE!
---BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON--
Rat.-Pua to A@vane•
and Bunda- AwsIm,
« Mow
ss
Lss
400
Texi
Miss Griff<
Robert E. i
L Miss Martan w
Robert Hdward Ni
ried at 9 o'clock M
at St. David's it
l’alma and daisie
effective decorutic
•oel T Neott sar
Truly," before ce
Vivian Bpiller at
ard bridesmaids s
dpiller, maid of I
Bundle gowns in
fashloned in quail
berried colonial nr
I Dorothy Nitsc
Frances Johnson w
girls in their org
minlature bride a
bride walked to th
wedding gown wa
meteor and she
range blossoms a
Hal shower of whi
W ths valley. T?
mnded by loouis t
man and Frank S
Barr were ushers.
vr Harrison r ead
by. Mr and M
[or a shert weddi
be at homne to the
Nest 39 Street.
sur gume are reending you have th*
t pyorrhea Don't delay, Ge at
if some men worked half as hard at some regu-
lar jobs as they do trying to get the public to elect
them to some office so they won't have to work,
they'd make a better living and get more pleasure
out of life, and they wouldh't have near the anxiety
about how long the job would last.
you stand there beaming at your-
self in the glass"- “I know that
Now they're planning to feed the silkworms cer-
tain foods so as to make ’em produce silks of a
certain color. Considering some of the ghastly col-
ors of the silks one sees, one must pity the poor
worms.
the coming months of July and August.
Flowers for the dead if the dead happens
to be Thomas.
—.o--
Mars—planet of mystery—is now sweep-
ing toward the earth. Heavens! If Mars
»ck ibe pext Oay II Ipnes yqu ■
day's work Dodson • Liver Tont
mtraightens you right up and yot
feel great No salts necessary
---------------- -- Gve ft to tbe children, becnude I
we say with carelse cruelty: orin 1s perfectly harmiess and can ne
a moment of irritation, and then • aaltvate.
fuatify to ourselves as necessary
Math
te. carrier.... 70
: to trat::.: 20
" foreign...... 115
Sunday Editio.
[iano Pupil
\reditable i
Miss Josie C Tyh
ano « !»•• in rertt
ry to the parenti
I her residenee stu
ternooh. Miss K
slated, giving se
d refreshments
ike and Ire eream
e close of the pro
The followinz of
"sfrmfr
254
couldn’t make friends.
She was evidently of the abnor-
mally sensitive type, self-analytic,
a bit morbid, the kind that finds It
hard to rub shoulders with the
world and therefore has an extra
need for cympathy and understand-
ing in the home.
Did she get it? I should say not.
Can You Imagine This?
One of the things she said about
herself in explaining her case was
this: “I try always to keep my ex-
pression pleasant, but my mother
ays T have a mean look ‘
If that girl had only signed her
name I should have been tempted
te writ* to the mother and ask her
if she realised how deep a wound
such a statement could make in an
already sensitive spirit and why she
wanted to hurt her daughter in-
stead of help her.
It lent usually our mothers that
say such things
Sounds mor* like th* old-fash-
oned conception of stepmother,
loean’t it?
It's much more apt to be other
members of the family rather than
he mothers who in the name of
amily franknese inflict the little
wounda thai take so cruelly long
to heal
Brothers Great Offenders
Brothers are very strong at it
sisters scarcely lews so. though they
sometimes use a rapier instead of
a bludeon Husbands and wives
give the marriage bonds its greatest
trains when they pass from the
nutual admiration attitude of
ourtship days into the family
'ranknees attitude of married life
The contrast between the past,
vhen "you used to think whatever
I did was all right, and th# present
when nothing I do seems to suit
cou," is so violent that it ade to
the intrinsic resentment of being
riticised.
Of course, there are things we
state board of control will leave
today for Rochester, Minn , to have
an operation on hi eyes performed
at th* famous Mayo Bros sana-
torium he has announced
Senator Cowells eyeeight has
been bothering him for some time
and he hope* that as a result of the
operation it will be improved
Senator Cowell will visit rlatives
(n Mlasouri before feturning home
he said.
Bachelor G
Gueett at <
I Miss gndy» Joh
o th# Bachelor (}
vening in the par
ederte home 1
hade welcome hy l
nitintion service w
in the progrnm. |
ger* taken into tl
hrioun forms of |
d fun In plenty
ovices.
[ An advertising <
pllowing the initla
irize. a vanity bo
Irene Hailey and
iottle of perfume.
Eles Ona Platt, v
Belle Robbins cap
e creamn and caki
he 25 guesta at 1
ffair
their fellows to respect law and depency;
John George Murphy was carried to his last
resting place in the city of San Angelo.
Business houses were closed. Flags flew
! at half mast. A giant truck was required
to carry' the flowers to the grave. Hundreds
of people, some of them from far-away sec-
tions of Texas, attended the funeral and the
cortege was one of the longest ever seen in
Texas. All this after services had been con-
ducted at the Murphy home by Rev. H. M. J.
Wirtz, a Catholic priest John George Mur-
phy was Canadian born. His parents fled
from Ireland in the long ago. and settled in
Canada He grew to manhood and then
came to Texas. This was forty years ago,
and forty years ago San Angelo was a fron-
tier trading post and the wildest of wild
towns. All the Concho river country was a
free range, and the cattle barons and the
Sheep kings fed their herds and frocks on
= free grass. John George Murphy was the
pioneer newspaper publisher of San Angelo
and the Concho river country- He estab-
lished the San Angelo Standard. He edited
it thirty-six years and four years ago he
retired from the newspaper business, but not
| from active business life.
\ He printed one of the best wweekly news-
papers in Texas for years and years and
' then he printed a daily issue which was a
credit to his town and section. It is one of
the leading dailies of the small cities now.
Murphy was a builder, one of the builders
of the west. He had a constructive brain.
the nidden ftiend for bome on»
olne
Could a grenter privilege com#
to you?
(Copyright. 1927. George Matthew
Adams
YOUR HIDDEN FRIENDS.
Your greatest posaibilities for
added happiness in thia world He
in your opportunities for new
friends
Every time you walk down the
etreet, in every person you pass
...........
....... Sto
3621
1 g impogsible have nver
Wedding
At Rapt is
The First Ra pi
srene of a pretty
Thursday evenin
’ Hamlett pastor
the matriage vc
Herber and Fr
Though no fort
been issued, the
•5 with relatives
young couple wh
ness the crremot
Miss Wilma
organ accompan
■ Yaney. who sang
I befre the brida
Tiie bridal choru
trance of the br
by the ushers, H
Fyno Herber wh
Ifite aisles
(came Miss Bess
Mfiss Lillie Mae
Inaida They w
in fluffy organi
and shoes ensuit
bouquets of daisi
girls Helen Shuf
Burnette, who fo
ma also wore -
carried daisies
Ruy Herber. nep
wearing a suit, o
white shoes, imn
the bride, who 1
father She wa
lare over white G
veil and orange ।
ried a bridal shot
I come in collision with Robert Lee
, carryin* his fiery cross in his right
and the American flag in his left.
John Geot
base i ri on
AUSTIN AMERICAN, AUSTIN. TEXAS. FRIDAY MORNING. JUNE 23, 1922
Crankness
Poison-Tipped Arrows.
' Wow old did you think you
were wben you bought that hat ?
Miss Grace
becomes Mi
Miss Grace Jneki
Ir and Mra. John
outh Austin, was
ay morning at th
arents, to Rolon
In. Rev M Wi
buth Austin Methe
rmed the ceremo
he# on only the fai
lose friends of br
room.
[The bride wore hi
ame, a navy blue 1
k# coupie left for I
ediately after the
All Hve in Austin.
9* of Bah Antonie
ride, and Milla W
bother and sister
oom, were out-of
te marriage
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The Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, June 23, 1922, newspaper, June 23, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1465575/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .