The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 23, 1920 Page: 5 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
A
WEDNESDAY, June 23, 1920.
THE STATESMAN
r
F
=
HE FEELS MORE LIKE
OCIETY
s
‘4
Edited by-
SIXTEEN IHAN SIXTY-SIX
K-c}
SAYS GEORGIA EARNER
&
J,
‘l
. /
S
C
Jm
■ I
The Late Summer and Taffeta Hats Alone Are Excepted
I
(Adv.)
All druggists sell Tanlac.
FEDERAL COURT OF
100 Trimmed and Untrimmed Hats $1.00
WESTERN DISTRICT
50 Banded Sailors $1.95 and
$1.00
FINISHES JUNE TERM
=
1
MY TIRED FEET
I
SAY "DIAMOND DYES”
The mantle and fire-
was converted into
ry
of
bankin
foliage plants flanked on ell
GIRLS! MAKE A
LEMON BLEACH
LIFT OFF CORNS!
\
SHOES WEAR LONGER
\
J
c©
Too Fat?
2
On Festal Occasions
7
E
Become Slender and Stay So
4)
A
Henar"m2KvVEr
A
en
Curly hair can be
made
ft
(2.
M%,
“Use it Dail
IUc Co.
=
agb
W
ihH
||6ar^le Throat and Mouth Wi^||
Radentol
Clearing Almost Our Entire
Stock of Trimmed Hats
$5.00
$1.95
reception rooms,
place in the librai
an altar formed
MRS. FRED SCOTT
Telephone 3261
Dr. ana Mrs. Spurgeon Bell have
gone to Chicgo, when Mr. Hell will
teach in the summer wesalon of the
University of Chicago.
Miao Ilbble White, with her nleces.
Miss Elizabeth Wroe and Miss Jane
White leaves next week for Virginia.
AMERICAN LEGION.
TRAVIS POST, HOLDS
RUSINESS MEETING
St. Austin’s Alter Society will meet
in regular session on Thursday after*
noon at 3:30 o'clock at ewman hall.
Father Lyons will give a short talk
on the creation, and Mrs. Thiele will
suffer-
r trou-
reedom
se are
e case
Marshal
Ingouf
BRITISH INVESTIGATORS
FIND NOTHING WORTHY
IN SOVIET RUSSIA
Misses U J. Stony and daughters.
Misses Anne and Willie Storey, will
leave early In July to spend the sum-
mer in California.
Miss Alice Baler of San Antonio
la the guest of Mn. O. R., Werner.
shoes a size smaller if you desire,-
(Adv.)
Arrangements for July 4 Picnic
Taken Up—Social Function!
Considered.
Mrs. M. L., White and son, Lewis,
will leave early in July for New York
and points In the east.
Mouth Wash
A gnat mannpeople keep a bottle of Eadentot
\ down townIn their offices and use it several
W. D. HORNADAY, OF U.
PUBLICITY DIVISION, TO
VISIT FAR EAST SOON
=—
IN
.OTS
Carl Mayer
Company
Number of Convictions, Some Ac-
quittals. With Hung Jury In
Last Case Tried.
New and Wonderful
Hair Removing Secret
How to Get Rid of Roots and All.
1
TELLS OF ONLY TIME
HE NEEDED MEDICINE
Miss Esther von Rosenberg has re-
turned from a dellightful visit in New
Orleans, whore sho was one of the
bridesmaids at the wedding of a school
friend.
MOVIES LOSE FIGHT
AGAINST SUNDAY LAW
Lemons Whiten and Double
Beauty of the Skin
But a Year Ago He Was Down In
Bed For Fourteen Weeks As
Weak As a Kitten.
Apply few drops then lift sore,
touchy coms off with
fingers
WE MARK DOWN
20 Trimmed Hats......
25 Trimmed Hats.....
WEDDINGS AGAIN
IN FAVOR
times during the day. Kadentol kills
savos the teeth, preserves the heel
leaves a pleasant taste la your mouth.
) Ask Your Druggis
k Saxo Chemical (
ACHED FOR “TIZ"
GREIN’S BRIGADE RIUNION.
By Associated Press,
a.
A Norfolk Ditty.
A way by no man trodden.
Though any man may take.
Leads from the world to Loddon,
Not easy to mistake;
The narrow Chet,
Sweet rivulet.
Will float you up to Loddon.
M. & S. Matthiesen
NINTH AT CONGRESS
speak on the patrlarchs. A full at-
tendance 1. urged, and an invitation
extended to thone interested.
HOUSTON, Texas, June »».—Fifty
veterans reen’s Texas Brigade today
how glad your feet
able your shoes fe
Mrs. L. R. Walker la now at her
home in Hyde Park much improved
after an operation last week at Seton.
ARRESTS MAY SOLVE
HEDLE BODY MYSTIRY
Mr. and Mn. Elmer Rome and eon,
Richard will leave about the first of
July for Long Beuch, Call., for the
summer.
206yBoya,4
colored giri of
Atlanta, G» .
uses Nelson’s
Quite an interesting bit of romance
comes from Hawaii, where Mss Idella
Lingletary went with her aunt,, Mrs.
L. A. Dixon of Sherevport, La., lats
March to spend six months.
The news came in an announcement
of the approaching marriage on June
25 of Miss Lingletary to Col William
Meng, of the Bristish army. The mar-
riage will take place in Honolulu.
i Mrs. Goodall Wooten with her son
and daughter, leaves Monday for Cali-
fornia to join her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. B. Newsome of Dallas for the
summer.
s
I
medy X
>m alco-
ug». A
nd merit
id pros-
y a hot-
kidney *
the road
$1.20 at
Country club luncheon will be en-
joyed tomorrow at the regular ladies’
day abwi van—.
wners
Austin
• with
t rub-
n ac-
. City
bright
obtain
notify
pector
rill re-
struc-
ing up
I must
» own-
body. I now eat as hearty as you
please, my nerves are steady and
strong, and I feel more like a boy of
16 than a man of 66. I consider Tanlac
the greatest medicine on earth, and
I don’t hesitate to recommend it to
everybody.
Let your sore, swollen, aching
feet spread out in a bath
of "Til.”
Among t..ome attending the Han
Francisco convention, going with the
Texas specia! are Mr. and Mrs. Ham
Sparks and daughter.
By Azaoctated Press.
•T. JOSEPH, Mo. June 11—Seven-
teen negro men and women were Uken
in a raid by police detective* of South
St. Joseph negro rooming houses. They
are held for inyestigation of the finding
of the decapitated body Of a young
woman in Lake Contrary near here last
week.
Parte of an iron bedstead correspond-
ing with bed rails attached to the
murdered woman’s body for sinkers
have been found near the place, where
the arrests were made.
Kintho Beaut]) Cream
Fee the Treatment of
FRECKLES
In Um for Over 15 Years
Yeur freckles need attention NOW er
may remain all summer. Ue Kintho,
the old and time-tried treatment that
ha, given eetiefaetlen for over IS years,
and rid yourneif of those homely opota.
of having operated a movie on Sunday.
"Nothing appears in the record save___— M-- _____- ---
every evidence of a flagrant effort to 1 opened their forty-first annual reunion
trample on the law." said the court in] here today, under the auspices of the
affirming the case. I United Daughters of the Confederacy.
pretty carving set and a comple-
ment of choice silver. Table
appointments are incomplete
without—
Just Uke your shoes off and then
put those weary, shoe-grinkled, aching,
burning, corn-pestered, bunion-tor-
tured feet of youra in a "TH” batt.
Your toea will wriggle with joy; they’ll
look up at ypu and a lanos t talk, and
then they’ll take another dive in that
"TH” bath.
When your Scot feel like lumps of
lead-al tired out-just try "Tiz."
pain gone from corns, callouses and
bunions.
There's nothing like "Tiz," it's the
only remedy that draws out all the
poisonous exeudationa which puff up
your feet and cause foot torture.
G t a box of "Tlx" at any drug or
department store-don’t wait. Ah!
J
5
Misses Mary Euphie Moreland and
Flora Agnes Moreland, accompanied
by Mln Lenna Bailey left last week
for Bowling Green, Ky.
NOTHING adds more to a =
I N home dinner party than a =
Doesn't hurtqa bitt Drop a uttt
Preezone on ah achin oom. instantly
that corn stops hurting, then you lift
it right out. Tea, magic.
A tiny bottle of Freezone costs but a
few cents at any drug store, but is suf-
ficlent to remove every hard corn, sort
corn. or corn between the toea and
the calluses, without soreness or irri-
tatlon.
Freezone is the sensatlonar discovery
of a Cincinnati genius. It is wonder 4
ful. (Adv.)
Validity of the Runday law which
prohibits the operation of moving pic-
ture shows on Sunday was upheld to-
day by the Court of Criminal Appeals
in affirming the case of J. M. aley
from Wichita county. Haley was fined
650 in the county court on conviction
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Crawford of
Marshall are guests n the T. E.
Thrasher home, until after the
Thrasher-Hill wedding which takes
place this evening.
By Associated Press.
LONDON, June 23.—A Reuter dis-
patch from Stockholm today quotes
Mrs. Phillip Snowden and Dr. Guest,
members of the British labor dele-
gation which went to Investigate con-
ditions in Russia, who have arrived
in Stockholm on their return, as de-
claring that in their view soviet Rus-
sia could not teach western Europe
nothing..
Socialism, they predict eAv would pre-
vail in Great Britian long before it
would in Russia, the messaage adds.
six years until a year ago, when I had
a very serious illness and was laid up
in bed for fourteen weeks with catarrh
of the throat and stomach. I wasn’t
able to eat a thing scarcely, and got
as weak as a kitten. I was so nervous
that I used to shake life a leaf at the
least little thing. I got the best advice
I could and took various medicines, but
it was all to no purpose, and I never
thought I should pull through.
'Then my sister-in-law, Arthur
Henslee, got me to taking Tanlac. He’s
always recommending it to people be-
cause it did so much for his wife. Well,
it just seemed as though that medicine
had been made specially for me. Every
dose of it seemed to do me go9d, and
before I had finished the third bottle
it had put me into such good shape
that I was back at work on the farm
and able to do a day’s work with any-
After a period of inac-
tivity formal weddings are
again in vogue and Wed-
ding Gifts' are in order.
Gifts of Silver will pre-
dom inate as usual.
THE SILVER SERVICE
A Table Service of Silver
makes an appreciated gift.
These may bhad in Ster-
ling or wonderful patterns
of Sheffield now being
shown here. We invite you
to inspect pur lines.
STELFoX CO.
Quality.
Austin, Texas.
De not try to become slen-
der by drastic doses of
thyroid or •alts. Reduce
Kozaandczhtenyalso
theaafe,reliabl«Kor«ui
system. The U1B do won
ssg.
and followingeasy direct ions of Korein eystem
she reduced from clumsy features to graceful
Reliable antiat self-treatment.
Mrs. Minnie Fisher Cunningham
“Another well known Villa Rica,
Ga., farmer to come forward with a
strong statement as to the remarkable
merits of Tanlac as a medicine is Rob-
ert H. Cooper, who is one of the oldest
residents of that locality and who re-
cently made the following statement:
“I don’t believe I had to take a
thimbleful of medicine in all my sixty-
Travis pest, American Legion, will
be instructed at the regular meeting
this Wednesday night as to what is
expected of individual members in
putting over the Fourth of July cele-
bration. At the meeting last week the
mtater was proposed, and since then
practically every business and civic
club in Austin has token a definite
part toward carrying out the plan
advocated by the Legion for the cele-
bration, it was said.
The question of giving a dance each
week is also expected to come up at
the meeting, and a number of com-
mittees are expected to report. The
meeting is to be strictly for business,
it was said, in accordance with the
plan recommended by the executive
committee that business meetings be
held once each month. In the future.
It was said, the business meetings will
be held the first regular meeting of
*ach month.
You make for Reedham ferry.
You leave the Yare astern;
Perchance a quanting wherry
May show the hidden turn;
Any craft that so you meet
is surely bound for Loddon,
So check your sheet and dream a bit
And look ahead for Loddon,
The gentle Chet,
Fair revulet.
Will lead you Into Loddon.
Delegates to Luther League
Convention.
The Luther League of St. Martin's
Lutheran Church will be represented
by the following delegates to the
Luther League convention, which will
be held in Galevston this week.
Rev. F. G. Roesner, pastor of St.
Martin's Lutheran Church, Misses
Clara Rummel, Elsie Dornberger, Ber-
tha Frenzel, Edith Haene , Mrs. O. it.
Werner, Walter Bohn and Ciara Went-
landt. They will be acompanied by
Miss Alice Baier, of San Antonio, the
guest of Mrs. Werner, and Miss Minnie
Cruetzfeldt, who will be visitors to the
convention.
The delegates leave Thursday and
will return to Austin Monday.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into
a bottle con tai ng three ounces of
Orchard White, which can be had at
any drug store, shake well and you
have a quarter pint of harmless and
delightful lemon bleach for few cents.
Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion
Into the face, neck, arms and hands
each day, hen shortly note the beauty
of your skin.
Famous stage beauties use lemon
juice to bleach and bring that soft,
clear, rosy-white complexion. Lemons
have always been used as a freckle,
sunburn and tan remover. Make this
up and try it.—(Adv.)
When you walk In comfort; so do
stockings. A package of Allen’s Foot-
Ease, the antiseptic powder to shake
into the shoes and sprinkle in the foot,
bath, gives you that “old shoe” com-
fort and saves wear. Allen's Foot-
Ease makes tight or new shoes feel
easy. Ladies can wear shoes one else
smaller by shaking some Allen’s Foot-
Ease in each shoe in the morning.
Sold every where.—(Adv.)
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Payne enter-
tained at dinner on Tuesday evening
at the Driskill, complimenting the
Wooten-Rayne wedding party.
Those participating in the charming
hospitality were Miss Nina Belle
Payne. Blosom Wooten, Josephine
Christian. Isabel Camp, Henrietta
Lightfoot. Mrs. D. H. Hart, Mrs. Philip
Cook, Greenwood Wooten, Donald Lee
Joseph, San Antonio, Calvin Gilfillan.
Maxie Hart, Charles Sherrill, Cheat-
ham Parke, Pat Holmes Seguin, D. H.
Hart, and the host and hostess, Mr.
and Mrs. C- D. Payne.
Takes Tanlac On Advice of Son-
in-Law and Started Working on
Farm After Taking Third
Bottle.
W. D. Hornaday, head of the division
of public lectures and publicity of the
State University, applied Tuesday for
passports for an extensive tour of coun-
tries in the far east. He will visit
China, Japan, and New Zealand, it is
said, and will be absent from his de-
partment at the University in the early
fall term.
Mr. Hornaday, as head of the pub-
licity division, is expected to gather
valuable data on the trip, which should
be profitable not only to himself, but
to the University students as a whole,'
as he will no doubt give out from time :
to time, either in writings or lectures,
chief features of interest and informa-
tion secured while traveling.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gilmore and
son Clarence Edgar leave Thursday for
Wills Point. Mr. Gilmore will leave
Wills Point on Friday for Washing-
ton. D. C., on official business and
Mrs. Gilmore and son wil visit rela-
tives in Wills Point and Greenville
for several weeks.
Don't streak or ruin your material in
a poor dye. Insist on “Diamond Dyes.”
Easy directions in every package.
Leslie Waggoner and famll of Dallas
are guests of Mrs. Frances Waggoner
and Mrs. Elisabeth Fontaine, this
Mrs. Waggener and Mrs. Fointaine
leaves soon for the east, where they
will spend the summer.
been
ought
blad-
rA I
IOBO
and it
enafe
n kid-
UF.
ati
uis
Interesting Wedding in San Antonio.
From the San Antonio Light of Sun-
day is the following:
A pretty home wedding too place
Wednesday evening at the home of Dr.
8. Burg when hie daughter, Miss Elsa
Florence Burg, and Leo Schlochaur,
formerly of Austin, were marled. Rab-
bi David Rosenbaum of Austin and
Cantor David Kanton officiated. The
interior of the handsome old home
was decorated in a profusion of Shata
daisies and green foliage. The stair-
way banisters were entwined with
traln- /Ines end festoon about the
Miss Helen Norris and her guest.
Miss Lucy Chism, df Memphis, Tenn.,
are expected home from a delightful
visit in Fort Worth tomorrow. They
have been guests of Miss Dorothy
Brown on the Brown ranch at a ranch
party, after which they spent a week
in Fort Worth. They were hoorees at
several luncheons and card parties,
and never guests at the Kingsbury
dance given at River Crest Club dur-
ing the past week, which was one of
the most brilliant Country Club af-
fairs of the season.
Miss Norris and Miss Chism went
over to Han Antonio Tuesay from
Fort Worth and will be home tomor-
row.
They tell me there be other roads
Run all .the way to Loddon,
By plodding men with heavy loads
And noisy feet betroden:
If I should meet those dusty men
And see the sign ‘To Loddon,”
I‛d turn me round about again
And leave the road untrodden.
But give me Chet,
Delightful rivulet.
To float me back to Loddon.
—John Brainerd Casper.
Bridge Party for Bride Elect.
A long prenuptial courtesy was ex-
tended Miss Nina Belle Payne yester-
day afternoon by Miss Josphine Chris-
tian and Mrs. D. H. Hart, Jr., at the
home of Mrs. Hart in Travis Heights.
It being a bridge party, with a gath-
ering of particular friends of the bride
elect, which made it one of the de-
lightful affairs of the week to the
charming honoree, whose marlage to
Greenwood Wooten takes place this
evening at the First Baptist Church.
A color scheme of pink and green
was developed in table decorations and
score cards, the floral garniture being
pink roses, with ferns and other green-
ery.
Six tables were placed for bridge,
the guests being Misses Nina Bell
Payne, bride-elect, Mary Elizabeth
Harris, Hazel Smith, Adele Burt, Blos-
som Wooten, Frances Lewis, Eleanor
Atkinson, Emily Wurzbach of San An-
tonio, Isabel Camp, Mary Watson, Len-
na Kate Johnson, Marjorie Watson,
Helen Burt, Henrietta Lightfoot Ball;
Mesdames Luthcher Brown, Parker
Pate. D. H. Hart, 8., Smith, Will Hart,
Phil Cooke, A. F. Beverly, Watson Ben-
son.
A salad course completed the after-
tron of honor.
The hostesses both will take vart
in the wedding, Miss Christian as
maid of honor and Mrs. Hart as ma-
tron o fhonor.
gs of green
Ither side by
wicker floor vases of Shasta daisies.
Over the altar was a canopy of vines
and daisies hiding soft colored lights.
The wedding song' “At Dawning,” was
sung by Walter Robbins of Austin, L
life long friend of the bridegroom, ac-
companied on the piano by Miss Han-
nah Brown. To the strains of the
wedding march played by Miss Brown,
Monzabpthupeae"Nonentythghoygadtin
exercises. Beome eguisitelv tUnd^r and
"210
SUARANTEE or money refund. Buy Koreip
stopped over in Austin Monday with
Austin friends on her way to Dallas
to join the Texas Special for the San
Francisco convention.
Miss Theresa Martin is enjoying
house party gayeties in Floresvi le,
as the guest of Mr. and Joe Houston,
who are entertaining for their daugh-
ter, Miss Bessie Houston, whose mar-
riage to Thomas Weyman of Yoakum
takes place Thursday.
NO matter where you go or
how long you stay, you can’t
keep from thinking about the
dear old home town and won-
dering what is going on. You
ran enjoy your vacation and
have the news of the old town
with you every day of your va-
cation by having THE STATES-
MAN with you. Phone 150,
Circulation Department, THE
STATESMAN.
Dr. Edward M. Burg, Isael Hahn and
Ben Adler stretched orchid colored rib-
bons from the stairway to the altar
forming a pathway for the bridal
party. Mrs. Israel H. Hahn, sister of
the bride, and matron-of-honor. en-
tered first, followed by the maid-of
honor, Miss Beatrice Burg, another sis-
ter of the bride’. Preceding the bride
and her father, Dr. S. Burg, was the
little flower girl, Hortense Adler. The
bridegroom was attended by Benno
Schlochaur as best man. The bride
wore a French model gown of orchid
organdie trimmed with heavy cream
lace with hat to match. She carried
an arm bouquet of bride’s roses. Mrs.
Hahn wore navy blue Georgette crepe
with Jet bead trimmings and black lace
hat. She carried red gladiolas. Miss
Burg wore flesh colored Georgette
crepe with appliqued roses and carried
orchid colored gladiolus. The flower
girl was dressed in pink organdy. An
informal reception followed the cere-
mony. Mrs Edward M. Burg and Mrs.
Joe Pincus presided t the punch bowl
in the dining room here daises, lerns
and orchid maline formed the decora-
dons.
Mr. and Mra Schlochaur left later in
the evening for New Orleans. The
bride vrore a tan tricotine suit with
accessories to match. Among the uot-
of-town guests for the wedding were
Benno Schlochaur, Charles Schwab
and Walter Robbins of Austin.
The secret is out! Any woman
bothered with superfluous hair can
now rid herself of this trouble abso-
lutely-—not only the surface hairs, but
the roots as well—by what is known
as the "phelactine process.” The new
method does away with numerous and
expensive visits to the electrolysis ex-
pert. Does away with depilatories or
■having at frequent intervals. Noth-
ing like it ever known before. Get a
stick of phelactine from your druggist,
follow the easy instructions and have
the surprise of your life.
You do the work in a few seconds, in
your own home, without the least in-
jury. The hair-roots come out before
your very eyes, leaving the skin soft
smooth, hairless. Phelactine is odor-
less, non-irritating, and so harmless
you could eat It.-—(Adv.)
Austin diusets at Son Antonio
Wedding.
Among the out-of-town guests for
the Guidera-Brady wedding in San An-
tonio Tuesday morning were Judge and
Mrs. W. C. Morrow of Austin, Miss
Daisy Bell Smith of Franklin, La.,
Lawrence Tarlton of Franklin, La., Mr.
and Mrs. J. Dougherty and two little
daughters of Beeville. Lawrence Brady
and Ashton Brady of Fort Worth, Mr.
and Mrs. Leigh Ellis of Austin.
Lieut. Albert Michael Guldera and
Miss Mary Ellen Brady, niece of Mrs.
Emma Tarlton Stafford were married
at nuptial high mass at 7:30 Tuesday
morning at St. Mary’s Catholic Church.
Miss Edward Webster sang the wed-
ding song. Miss Lilia Brady of New
Orleans, La., was maid-of-honor to her
sister; little Misses Katherine Jen-
nings, Jean Jennings, Nancy Jennings,
Rachael Dougherty and Mary Tarlton
Dougherty were flower girls. Little'
Little Miss Dolly Ann Ellis carried
the bride’s prayer book. Lieut. Charles
Clarence Cutler was best man. The
ushers were Tarlton Stafford, Law-
rence Brady and Ashton Brady of Fort
Worth and Dudley Tarlton of Corpus
Christi. After the ceremony the bridal
party and immediate family were en-
tertained at breakfast at the home of
Mrs. Stafford.
- ■ -
; how comtort-
You can wear
p
________________________________‘
Knight, sof and glos by using
Nelson’s Hair Dressing
Ther's nothing to equpl Nelsoms
for making nubhorn, airly hair soft
and eney to managa' It deans tha
ucalp and uerengthens tha hair nou,
makes the hair grow. AU good
drug stores veil Nelson'a. Get a
bof today.'
Nolan. Manufacturing Co., )
Richmond, Va. E
sanesssssnnanasesk
Gror er sa1s FI AVOR WITH
VANHELLER
YOUR MON I Y BACK II YOU DON I
I IK} II BETTER THAN VANILLA
Mr. and Mra. A. F. Bush of Cuero
have taken the Spurgeon Bell home
for the summer, while Dr. and Mra.
Bell are in Chicago.
Pretty Silver
q We are showing many of the
newest patterns manufactured in
both Sterling and Sheffield.
q Only the best of every line is
carried at—
tv. watiwaaw a®*. -
All cases which were set for trial
at the June term of the Federal Court,
Western District of Texas, had been
disposed of Tuesday afternoon with
the exception of that of the United
States vs. Otto von Spangenberg.
charged with attempting to incite in-
subordination among military forces at
San Antonio. The jury retired in ‘his
case about 6:30 Tuesday afternoon,
and at 6:15 Wednesday morning had
not returned a verdict. The jury camo
into court near the middle of the day.
announcing to Judge West that it was
“tied up” hopelessly; that there ap-
peared no chance to get together,
whereupon the Jurymen were discussed
and the June term of court was ad-
journed, the case cited going over.
The Federal records here showed the
arrest in El Paso, June 21, of W. G.
Donge, charged w‘th violation of the
prohibition act in El Paso. Defendant
was committed in default of 6750 tem-
porary bond.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 33, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 23, 1920, newspaper, June 23, 1920; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1534189/m1/5/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .