Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 303, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 18, 1918 Page: 8 of 8
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PAGE EIGHT.
TEMPLE trAILY TELEGRAM,
W -rw
TEXAS, WEDNESDAY MORNING,
Connfessiioifiis
Of Eosaini®
CHAPTER 541.
A Sense of Humor to tin- Item*.
"Kenneth," beg?n Aunt Tabitha
with something like a break in her
vclce, "what are your intentions re-
garding that girl?"
Kenneth picked up on* leg verr
quickly, throw it viciously across the
, cf eloping was not discussed at all
between us."
Another «ag« look and a wis# nod
from our venerable aunt.
"I daresay." ahe mused, "but It
would not have been long before It
would have been discussed. That Is
| ths way those thirgs go, la it not.
1 Hoxane?"
j "I am sute I don't know*. Aunt Ta-
jMtha." 1 replied. "1 am not an au-
thority on those things, you may
: imagine."
, "I Imagine nothing of the sort,"
Airplane Usage
After War Ends
; retorted the old woman tartly,
of you seem to be authorities.
lloth
(To be continued.)
I Associated Pr*SS DtapatcB.)
London, Sept. J I —Airplane* will
te widely used, after the war. for
purposes of exploration and aurvey.
mid Harold B-ighouse, of the Royal
Geographical society to a rfpresenta-
I tive of the Associated Tress, com-
' renting on the announcement that
i Captain Amunlsen'a Arctic expedi-
tion. w hich has Just sailed, haa tuken
three airplanes as part of Ita equip-
ment.
"Captain Amundstn will use these
Men If Stood dothln*— airplanes for geographical and ra«-
Mttaftulory clotl.in g-guaranteod uorologlcal research In the Arctic-
other, alapped the arms of his cha,r ! ck>tWlir_Buy It at Junrll's u»w ami said Mr. Hr Ik house and they should
energetically and ea'u nothing.
: save money.
r*
prove very useful In this connection.
'Roxane," Aunt Tabitha continued.!""'^ m With peace will come a large exten-
turnlng to me, "what are your Intefl-1 Dominate *i0n °f lhf °f ,h# a,^p,an,, ,n
tions regarding Mr Gordon?" j UGI/Iid/ia LSVlUIi , ^oration.
Either my conscience was less dull jt i K.^fhOTi'ia "There ,s ro4son why th* re*
than Kenneth's or my nerve was less U nildppy U^lllVlua motpst pan of Afrlci Pr the upper
stronK for no soorer had Aunt Ta- j —- — waters of the Amnion should remain
Vtha's question been propounded, s^pu iT-^lhonla, the unmapped. Aerial photography has
than I was on my feet ready to pro-;f l!!lUlc provlnce of Russia now !rcachec". a stage when all that Is nec-
tcst. dominated by the Germans is another jessary for «act map drawing is a
Kenneth shed h!» air cf sullen ln*: averts Professor Antonlous j continuous series of air photographs,
difference and fixed a penetrating ,.up nn Ksthonlan diplomatic repre- Tracts of Portugu-se East Africa,
-lance upon my face. Aunt Tabitha | senta(lvc «ruRBl9 against p^n-Ger-1 which had never before been chart-
arose and stood barring the way to lnanlc ,,|ang to unite Esthonla' with :ed, were, in fact mapped by means of
Ihe door. | Germany and standing firm in de-; tlu air photography of British nvia-
fense of Esthonian independence. itors.
Summarizing information from what j "The undiscovered natural resour-
ho described as his "unhappy coun-jces of a new country can be observed
try," Professor Pup said: 'from airplanes. Tlio eye of the ob-
"The position in Esthonla is lntoi- g,rver reveals much; the air camera
erable. Arbitrary rulo is the order (\en now Is an excellent guide In in-
of ihe day. I'ress of all Esthonian
parties has been crushed. All
The Fall
Dress-Up
The new fall goods for
MEN are now in.
Early pickers get ex-
actly what pleases them.
"Let us have this thing over and
be done with It, Hoxane." she said
sternly. "No battle ever was won by ;
running away from the enemy. Let
us face this problem now and solve-
Chas. S.
COX
Outfitter to Men.
on ih is in
Pulkc* Misconstrue Law Preventing
German Propaganda and Oppoan
Legitimate Meetings.
V
. Good
Orchestra
Music
MS
Coolest
Spot la
Town,
i it
9
I backed to the chair I had Just
J quitted and sank into It without a
, word.
t "That is rl«ht," tald Aunt Tabitha
j In her most conciliatory tone. "Now,
! will you answer my question
< whisper.
dlcatlng the kind of wood growing
paruvn .ma P°u- In a forest, and will be of greater util-
tlcal life is surpressed. all meeting j jly sln| a8 the development of aerial
forbidden. Many of the. politicians cc]0r photogr iphy progresses,
and ordinary c'tirens are arrested and j "Hallway survey through sava«e
(shot. The German barons and the , ,nni1s which. both In life and money,
[has been a tremendously costly pre-
! limlnary to construction, will become
"What question?" I managed ^o j pan-Germanlsts are ruling the coun-
try'
"Democratic self government has
been dissolved. In place of It new
German bodies are created. German
I language la the official one. It Is
and Mr. Gordon
"When did you
expect to elope?"
All at once the comedy of the sit-
uation swept over me like a great
wave of dellclouslv cool water, and I.
began to laugh. Aunt Tabitha was j
! horrified. She took the symptom as j
( an indication of reckless abandon
• which argured 111 for the state of my
soul.
"Roxane!" she exclaimed reproving
|y. "How can you'
compulsorily introduced in schools.
Russian Is absolutely forbidden, as ^
also correspondence in Esthonian. Of |
the town councils those In which the
majority before the revolution was
German have been restored. In Reval
a German town council and mayor
have been nominated, and they sent
Don't Let Soap
Spoil Your Hair
I AsnrUUA Fr»» OltjMiteh.)
Dublin, Sept. 1«.—The Irish govern-
ment has now corrected the error,
made by some of Its subordinates
which had resulted In the stopping
by force of many football games,
! dances and concerts. The proclama-
tion prohibits public meetings, pro-
cessions. and assemblies without per-
mit. The permit Is given as a matter
of course except where disturbance
sedition, or pro-German propaganda
Is feared. There was a universal re-
fusal to apply for permits at all.
Many policemen throughout the
country misconstrued the proclamation
and applied its prohibitions Indiscrim-
inately. suppressing assemblies for
games and amusement which could
not have been within the contempla-
tion of the government.
j As a protest a "Gaelic Sunday" was
' organized, and it was decided to carry
I on the games In pretty nearly every
, parish in Ireland In defiance of the
police. The government had, however,
1 in the meantime, defined more accu-
rately for the police the real inten-
] tions of the proclamation, and the
I demonstrators were accordingly al-
i lowed to hold their games everywhere
without any Interference. As often
happens in Ireland what threatened to
be a day of general conflict turned
out to be quite peaceful.
An attempt was made on a small
scale In Dublin In get up a Casement
Flag day on the anniversary of his ex-
TODAY
Norma Talmadge
until his body was bolt upright in
the chair. He was watching me with j
a frown which became deeper every
minute. j
"Do not take tho matter so serl-
When you wash your hair, be careful
what you use. Most soaps and prepared
shampoos contain too much alkali, which
is very injurious, as it dries the scalp
and makes the hair brittle.
The best thing to use is just plain mul
IlavB urr„ . jified cocoanut oil, for this is pure and
. "How can you!" an UIWUthorized telegram to Berlin . entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and
Kenneth lifted himself Into his seatj h population. j beats the most expensive soaps or any-
1 ' ,. „ , . heen! thing else all to pieces. You can get
LsthonUn P- • . (h;s a{ any drug stor(!) and a {ew onnces
[broken up. The post does not work i ^ |ast ^ wj10]e family for months.
Every sort of passenger traffic has ^ Simply moisten the hair with water
been curtailed. There are no law ; an(j rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all
courts Crime is increasing, especial- j that is required. It makes an abundance
ouslv. Aunt Tabitha. "I said, ending j|y on arc.ount of the gggeral lack of j of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thor-
my laughter as abruptly as I had be- j work. Th, German barons have re- j oughly itnd nnses out eas, y.^ .ie j
gun It. "I have no Intention whatever | ceive<i the monopoly indieature > . . f .. J . n
of eloping w ith Mr. Gordon or anyone j an,i censorship. The
else." j shut.
"That will do!" mapped Aunt Ta-
, l.itha, much after the manner of a
prim schoolma'am whose pupil had
flippantly given her an incorrect an-
swer to a question
"And what have you to say for
jourself, Mr. Kenneth Holman?" she
demanded, Uirnlie with renewed
fierceness upon my husband.
fierceness upon mv husband, "ft her
Uil you and that girl propose to leave
this roof?'
Kife, and so cheap as to present no
financial obstacles whatever, to a
survey which uses aerial photogra-
phy.
"Not only can the course of rivers
bo traced, but their navigable chan-
nels can be ascertained, and the com-
bined discovery maOe of valuable nat- rcutlon " but ,t wag gtopped by the
ural products together with the best j police.
means of transporting them by river, i . a ,
"Water then a* now, will probably'
be the explorer's chief guide and his
machine Is more likely to be of the
seaplane type, with floats than the
airplane type, with wheels. He will
fly high, and should he have to make
a forced landing, v ill steer for lake
and river ratber than for the rare
open Bpace of a tropical forest.
"For the air explorer, the romance
of flying will persist; the value of the
work ho will do la obvious; and there
are many pilots in the allied armies
today who will find in aerial explo-
ration play for the typically British
spirit of adventure
5EUWCR
In the future of aviation there Is
elbow room for all, the sportsman
pilot will find in exploration by air
an enterprise made to his taste.
H
MSEIMT5] r
AC THE CiESCKNT THEATRE TO
DAY.
In a gripping drama of modern American life by Wilson
Mizner.
Law of
V
"Ths
Compensation
of jurt cj. , Jj.gjk i00icjngt bright, fluffy, wavy and
factories are . eajy j0 handle. Besides, it loosens and
All private enterprise is para- j takes out every particle of dust, dirt and
i
lrzed. The banks refuse to make pay- dandruff
ments, having no money. In the ru
rul districts the authorities who were
in the office before the revolution
have been restored.
"People out of work turn their steps
to the countryside, where, however,
it is impossible to get land, because
the landowners are waiting for the
Germans to buy up the land at a high
price for colonizing. Supplies of pro-
visions, scanty as they are, are rapidy
Guaranteed Wear with every pair
That's a .larrell shoe.
Tha many women connected with
the British air service are called Pen-
guins.
^ (n, „ growing less. There are no Imports;
Kenneth's frown deepened for a «
moment and then cleared. In anoth-
er Instant he. too, was laughing al-
most uproariously.
« Aunt Tabitha, apparently undecid-
ed whether to become angry or to
elt tightly upon her dignity, com-
jromlsed by becoming extremely
t. emulous as to voice. She was con-
vinced that both Kenneth and I had
become hardened sinners.
"Well, you sei, Aunt Tabitha,''
Kenneth explained solemnly at
length, "the precise time had not been
set."
Aunt Tabitha nodded sagely. Here
at least was some encouragement.
Kenneth at least had not denied the
charge she had made against him.
"I see," she said, "but you were
getting very close t1 that point, w ei e
you not, when I interfered?"
Kenneth reflected a moment.
"I can't say that we were," he de-
clared finally. "In fact, the natter
Try
Till*! Hair Gets Thick. Glossy,
Wavy and Beautiful
At Once.
' Immediate?—Yes! Certain?—that's
the joy of it. Your hatr becomes
f light, wavy, fluffy, abundant and ap-
t pears as soft, lustrous and beautiful
as a young girls after a Danderine
I hair cleanse. Just try this-inolsten
cloth with a little Danderine and
need Is growing from day to day.
Requisitions are very harsh. In Re- j
val there have been instances of school j
children being carried home uncon-
scious through hunger. The Esthonian |
educated peoples are also out of j
work, because all the places are filled j
with Germans. All classes of popula-
tion are in absolute despondency,
'The Germans treat the Esthonians
as enemies In conquered land, while
really they are in the country only as j
the 'policing force.'"
"What will the Imperial chancellor
Herding say to this? What will the
Reichstag sny? Where Is the right of
the Esthonian people to self deter-
mination, which was guaranteed by
the peace treaty? The Esthonians ask
in vain.'
The North German Gazette recently
announced that supplementary agree-
ments to the Brest-Ijitovsk peace
treaty, signed at Berlin, August 27,
"contain a solution which assures the
Baltic states independence.
Heads Women's Division.
Washington, Sept. 10.—Miss Mar- j
garett Ne.'tle, of N'-w York, has been
appointed chief of the women's di-
vision of the United States employ-
j ment service in the department of
i labor to succeed Mrs. Hilda Mulil-
' ho user Richards, who resigned re-
' ccntly. Mrs. Neale has been scrv-
i Ing as superintendent of female em-
1 ployment in tho New York city of-
| fiees of the employment service,
j In .her new wore she will eooper-
iate wi'h Miss Maty Van Kleck, di-
rector of the newly organized wom-
en In industry service of the depart-
ment of labor. Ti e province of the
latter service will be to determine
fit occupations for women in war |
time; Mrs. Ne3le's duty will be to see
that a supply of lat>or Is available for
such work.
Why Be Uncomfortable This Winter When You Can
Buy
BLANKETS
AT OUR SURPLUS STOCK SAT E PRICES?
4.50 BLANKETS for
5,00 BLANKETS for
6.00 BLANKETS for
C.50 BLANKETS for
7.50 BLANKETS for
caret'' r draw It through hour hair
taking one small strand at a time.
This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt
or excessive oil, and in just a few mo-
ments you have doubled the beauty of
your hair. A delightful surprise
awaits those whose hair 'ias been neg-
lected or is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle
or thin. Besides beautfying the hair,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff; cleanses, purifies and In-, Bridg.; oil, Conn., to re-
vigoratc-s the scalp, forever stopping i fHCturers at nn . ,
Itching and failing hair, but what will j instate nil striking emp. . • s
please you most will bo after a fewjseek to return to work in response
Must Allow Strikers to Iteturn.
(( Iiiilliilifd From rage On, t
Washington, Sept IT. — President
Wilson has called upon the Reming-
ton Arms company, the rni«n Metal-
lic Cartridge com(my. the Liberty
Ordnance company and other matiu-
weeks' use, when you see new hair
fine and downy at first—yes—but
really new hair growing al over the
scalp. If you core for pretty, soft
hair, and lots of It, surely get a small
bottle of Knowllon's Danderine from
say drug store or toilet counter for a
few cents.
the president's demand.
French scientist* hove figured that
if the grape seeds discarded by wine
makers could be i.tilized as fuel they j
would have he.-' ng value equal to
! 174,000 tons of ■ al a year. j
$ S.fiO
... $ 4.00
$ 4.80
- $ 5.20
$ e.oo
8.50 BLANKETS for # G m
$10.00 BLANKETS for # 8-°<J
$12.50 BLANKETS for * »
$15.00 BLANKETS for • • •
$18.00 BLANKETS for - . $14.40
$20.00 BLANKETS for $15.7»
Many Mew Suits and Dresses
—for Autumn Wear will make the:r first appearance
this morning at Jarrell's.
They keop coming in—
New Dresses, Coats and
Suit?. Too Riany—too
many—too many. • Sur-
plus stock by the Thou-
sands of Dollars—and
during this sale you can
buy them like this:
$20.00 Values for. .$11.75
$25.00 Values for. .$19.75
$32.50 Values for. .$24.50
$40.00 Values for. .$29.75
$45.00 Values for. .$34.50
$50.00 Values for. ,$;{9.7."»
$60.00 Values for. .$49.75
$70.00 Values for. .$59.75
$80.00 Values for. $(59.7.1
Herbert Rawllnsou In '\Suia>lilng
Through" A Cyclonic Melodrama—
The Sensation of the Year.
When Herbert Rawlinson comes
"Smashing Through" which is the title
of this popular star's latest feature
and It Is a hummer, why not? Her-
j bert makes things hum whenever he
is around. And he does all this for
j a girl, but it is some girl, that he is
! after. l>oes he get her? You'll see
when you see "Smashing Through" at'
the Crescent theatre today.
A short story follows:
Jack Mason had a claim called the ]
Rattlesnake which hadn't rattled at j
all for him. It had displayed Its rich-!
es to Dave Marco, however, and Dave j
was the prize claim jumper of Keno |
county, in league with Earle Foster,
mine fixer and investment shark.
Dave did not think his Rattlesnake
quite dead and came east to see Fost-
er. He saw him, and that's all the
good it did him. But in Foster's of-
flee he saw Holly Brandon, daughter
of a rich and speculatively inclined
widow. Jack had a way with women
and he thought Holly was vastly amus-
stenographer. Holly was vastly amus-
ed and allowed him to think so. She
also supplied him the money to re-
turn to Keno, and said she would
come out and help him work the
i claim. Less than a week later Mrs.
I Brandon discovered that Foster had
Induced her to place all her money in
a lemon and that she was a financial
wreck with Holly as her only asset,
and her son In disgrace. In spite of
the fact that Holly was in love with
Jack she Induced her to marry Foster
! as the only way out. If Foster had
not been in such a hurry about his
marriage he might have made a bet-
ter job of it. As it was Jack got hold
of a piece of information which
changed all the world for him. Dis-
tance, fire, flood, wreck and time all
stood In his way in vain. He became
a whirlwind lover and succeeded In
smashing through In the nick of time.
—A drama of joy, tears and love.
Crescent Theatre Today
Herbert Rawlinson
IN
HERBERT RAWUNSON
IN ELMER CLIFTONS DAREDEVIL
AMERICAN DRAMA ,
"SMASHING THROUGH
A cyclonic love drama.
The sensation of the
year.
Special
Musical
Program
AT THE GEM TODAY.
j Norma Talmadjje in a Drama of .Toy,
Tears and Love, ' The Law of Com-
pensation." ™,..i —» —..
Norma Talmadge, the charming and I admiration for the mentality of the
TARRELL'$
i HE PLACE MOST PEOPIiE TRADE.
"The Man All There."
(Temple Telegram Special.)
Paris, France, Sept. 16.—"He was
rc> more than a bry, and both legs
were shot off, but he wished to hear
Dr. Harry E. Fosdick talk to the
nurses when he came to base hospi-
tal No. 15 at the reguest of the nur-
ses' club," writes Miss Willie R.
Young, formerly a teacher in Vir-
ginia college, now secretary of the
\oung Women's Christian association
In France cha-ged with the care of
nurses at a big American hospital,"
so he was wheeled into the room.
"He listened as I never saw any-
one listen, his eyes shining with In-
terest. As Dr. Fosd'ck completed his
masterly talk, the boy, glowing with
not the top that had to get busted
up.' Then Dr. Fosdick looked down
Into the burning bright eyes and said,
'You bet, for the man Is all there.'
And these nurses, Eome 130 of them,
went back to their work better pre-
pared to care for the wounded, to
give the!.- strength In tenderness, be-
cause of the inspiration they had got-
ten from tho speaker and most of all
fsorn the spirit of the heroic boy."
Men if yon want good clothing—
satisfactory c 1 o t li I n g—guaranteed
clothing—Buy It at Jarrell's now and
save money.
nj^n;^
popular young picture star, who re-
cently made such a grent success in
"The Safety Curtain," will appear at
the Gem theatre today In her pro-
duction, entitled "The Law of Com-
pensation" This Is an Intensely)
dramatic story of modern American
life, by Wilson Mizner, w ho was- colla-
borator with Paul Armstrong in writ-
ing such successful plays as "Alias
Jimmy Valentine" and "The Deep
Purple."
In "The l^tw of Compensation"
Miss Talmadge has exceptional op-
j portunities to display her versatile
dramatic powers, because of the fact
that she appears first as a school girl
and later as a mature woman. The
story leads the youthful heroine to
the point of making a fatal step from
which she i» saved hy the revelation
of her father. The father's recital
concerns the girl's mother, and in Its
enactment on the screen Miss Tal-
madge appears In this mature role,
j Both the present day story and the
father's narrative of past events are
of an Intensely dramatis character
and afford mails novel situations.
The picture has been lavishly
mounted by its producer, Joseph M.
Sehenck and the star Is surrounded
by such well known film players as
Chester Barnett, John Charles, Sally
Crute, Robert Cummlngs, Frederick
Esmelton, Mary Hall, Edwin Ijanley
and Fred G. Hcarn.
distinguished speaker, looked queerly
down on his stumps of legs and then
up with eagerness into the face of
Dr, Fosdick.
"In a moment hi burst out, 'Gee,
I'm glad it was thi t part of me, and
The war depiitment doesn't want
any more linguists or army chaplains,
but mule experts—ah, that's another
matter! They're very much In de-
mand for the engineers corps pack
trains. To date 6 00? more linguists
have applied for positions than can
be used, and the job of army chap-
lain has prove 1 a big hit.
Weatherproof is expense-pr* e
Trinidad Lake asphalt makes roofing lastingly tight against rata,
un, wind, snow, heat and cold.
This is the everlasting watcrproofer of Nature. We use it to make
Ce«asc@5s«sps
Because it gives lasting protection Genasco is economical roofing-
It costs less in the end. Call and get samples.
WM. CAMERON CO., Inc.
Temple, Texas
"Trt.M.,1 Asphtlt
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Williams, E. K. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 303, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 18, 1918, newspaper, September 18, 1918; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth469481/m1/8/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.