San Antonio Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 117, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 27, 1913 Page: 23 of 67
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SAN' ANTONIO EXPRESS: SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 27, 1013.
THE STORY OF A WIDOW AND HER FRIENDS
ByCharlesDana
Gibson
THE PICTURES THAT MADE GIBSON FAMOUS
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-WW'7 '"/'"i'
No. 17—Failing to Find Rest and Quiet in the Country, She Decides to Return Home.
Title of Next Week's Picture—"Mr. Waddles Arrives Late and Finds Her Card Filled."
Hypnotism Extraordinary-
Iiurlng a recent trial at Prague a man
nai charged with forging entries In a
baptismal register. In pleading not
guilty, he mated that If ho committed a
forgery It waa done 111 a trance and un-
der the suggestion of a certain hypnotist
whose name he had been forbidden to dis-
close Hla family physician declared that,
the accused was a neurotic, easily hyp-
notised, and, to prove his assertion, be-
gan to read, despite the Judge a protest,
a formula beginning "Deus Aotorsus,"
from a French book on magic, which the
doctor had discovered the unknown hyt"
notlst used for the accused. To the
amaiement and horror of the court (Hays
the Family Doctor), the prisoner Immedi-
ately fell Into a hypnotic trance, with
his urniB still and outstretched. Lawyers
preHent thrust needles Into his head .ind
tried to move his arms to see If he were
shamming, hut without producing any
reaction. The prisoner awoke only when
the doctor breathed upon him, uttering
another formula. The trial was ad-
journed to get the opinion of medical ex-
perts.
r—— s
I Are You Anaemic? j
England Welcomes
New J. P. Morgan
Prefers Him to Man Always Suspected
of Trying to Buy Up the British
Kmpire.
PALLOR of the skin, palpitation and debility, are the
prominent symptoms of anaemia. Perhaps this is your
trouble, and you haven't fully realized it
Dr. Pierce's
There is only one thing for you to do, and that's to take a
good reliable medicine that will attack and expel the poisons
in your system and increase the red corpuscles now so
deficient in your blood.
Golden Medical
Discovery
Take this medicine. Begin
today and you will find that
the time will not be long
before you will feel the full
enjoyment of living.
Your druggist can supply
you in liquid or tablet form
or you can send 50 one-cent
stamps for a trial box.
has demonstrated during
the past forty years that it
is composed of the most suc-
cessful ingredients known to
the medical world that can
aid the stomach in manufac-
turing rich, red, life-giving
blood. Science has placed
its seal of approval on every-
one of these ingredients.
Address Dr. Pierce's Invalids Hotel
and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.
Special Cable Service lo The Express.
LONDON'. April Ui.-The fact that the
power and the millions of J. I1 Morgan
have passed Into the hands of his son
causes a sigh of satisfaction In England
Jack Morgan apent many years of his
life on this side and was always popular.
That reserve and curtness which caused
comment In America merely served here
In endear him to the action of uorlety
which regards the average American f>s
being in a perpetual state of ' slopping
over." in the finance, sport and social
life of London, Jack Morgun Is thor-
oughly appreciated and understood He
Is respected, but, unlike his father, he la
not fearel
The late J. P. Morgan was best known
here for hla bark. Hla exceeding brus-
queneaa In minor mattura was responsible
for the ImprtMion that when ha bought
up National treasures In the alutpe of fa-
mous picture*, iteamshlp lines and such
other trlflea he wna attempting to buy
up the whole British empire Aa he never
took the trouble to deny auch paltry ru-
mors his Intentions ware always miscon-
strued by the general public. Time and
again the present head of the firm, by
tactful and tinobtruilve methods, snved
hla father from becoming the target of
a bitter anti-Morgan and anti-American
■ampalgn.
When tha late financier undertook the
absorption of the British trans-Atlantic
steamship lines the negotiations were en-
trusted to the modest little London cfflca.
then known aa "J. 8. Morgan & Co.,
merchant*, 23 Old Broad Street " Todav
the address and description of the firm
remains the same, though the name hna
linen changed to "Morgan, arenfetl *
Co." The attempt to buy U|> and p are
under the American flag the lonf-rainoua
Atlantic ttrumahlp lines of tlreat Brit-
ain created an antagonism on this side
which resulted In the one great failure
of Morgan s career. For once In his life
he got "rallied, and If It had not been
for his son there might have ensued
such a wave of financial enmity as would
have made even the houae of Morgan
quake.
Without any lack of loyalty to his
father's plana, ' young Jack," aa h* was
called then, explained that his ftrai whs
merely acting as "honest hrokert" tn
the transfer, and that Ills father hat
n<> designs upon the maritime supremacy
of England The threatened raid was
averted and, thanks te Jack Morgan,
millions of tola English capital were still
kept at tba disposal of tha Morgan in-
terests.
England mtwt forgave tha great Mer-
iau for attack upon bar nut-Ale
lantic trade. Ills many charities to In-
stitutions in this country, hla installa-
tion of electric lights In St Paul's Cathe-
dral -nothing wiped out this blow aimed
at the British merchant marine. And,
hod it not been for his son'i tact an.l
loyalty, Ihe old man, despite his great
wealth and hla ramified interests In
English finance, would have been social-
ly boycotted by the very people he liked
to cultivate during his frequent visits
to this country
Jack Morgun la regarded here not only
at: more pleasant to deal with, but
sounder In molern finance than his fath-
er His acreaaion to power may mark
a greater community of Intereata and a
far better underatandlng than haa bull-
etin existed between several of the Iwid-
Ing English and American financial
groups.
u*
v
Satisfy
Your Sweet Tooth
with Velva, the syrup in the red can. Make
good things for your kiddies with it, and for their
daddy, too—try it for smothering batter cakes-
wheat, corn, rice. Serve it witn waffles and spread
it on muffins. Quality? Fine. Flavor? Nothing better.
VeIva
makes great cakes and cookies, desserts and candies.
Use it for fudge and you II know what real fudge is.
No syrup is as good as Velva—none so smooth,
none so full of real, true, old-time flavor. Proof
will come out of your first can. Send for book
of Velva recipes. N« charge. Velva in the green
can, too, if you prefer it. At your grocer
cents up, according to size.
PEN1CK <& FORD, Ltd.
New Orleans, La.
.VI
\l
Cup Cakes
I cupful Red Velva Syrup, 1-2
I cupful Red Velva Syrup, 1-2 cupful
butter. 1-2 awful sugar. I egg, 1-2
cupful milk, 2 teaspoonfuh powdered
cinnamon, I 1-2 teaspoonfuh baking
powder, 21-2 cvpfuh flour, pinch of
aaff. Bnl tht btmr a* mar fcfrflw aaft!
rreamr Am add lt» rq til intra.
^aarerfjHMMi. Sal
I jtwua !uu"uu
to tn I mitrmk inn far
% l" . tl &L ■ : • *
.TJ ■■ 'igj |||h-| j 1 itif-| j - L,
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San Antonio Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 117, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 27, 1913, newspaper, April 27, 1913; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth432432/m1/23/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.