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The Galveston Daily News from Galveston, Texas • Page 3

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Galveston, Texas
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THE GAiVESTON DAILY NEWS MONDAY. JANTTABY 10. 1921. FIVB Somewhat Small, but Her Resistive Power, That's IM THESE PEOPLE, MANY OF NO BELITY, AMONG WOBLD'S UNWANTED. Special to The Vevm.

Paris, Jan. 1921. by tha New York all the misery with which Europe is laden at the present time no picture is more tragic or distressing to con- template than that of 300.000 Mus" sian refugees from the Crimea. I whose condition is fast becoming a menace to Europe and whose luuiro seems to bu a worl-i problem. The most pathetic feature of this picture of a misery is the fact that ihese people! many of them scions of the nobility, the as well as the downtrodden, are today among the uii'vanted.

Confined in concentration camps in ifalUpoli. Tchataldja and some of i the islands of the Mediterranean and Adriatic like so many no nation will open her doors to these unfortunates. Greece is so afraid that some of them might rross her borders thut she has hemmed in the Gallipoli camps with bayonets. France has been import to receive them so as to add to her reduced population, but for economic and health reasons she has i a is doing more than any other nation at present to keep them alive. France 180,000.

Up to date France alone has been feeding 1SO.OOO at a eost of 6 francs a day lor euch person, or a total of 1.000.000 francs a day. But the French aid may soon be ended. That is what makes the picture in this respect so appalling in this tragedy, for deprived of food, and ith no nation willing to open her doors to them death seems the only goal for these remnants of the Russia that WHS--these people that hud pinned their hope on Wrangle and lost all to the i One proposed solution is that man- datories for the one-time German' colonies shall agree to allow the refugees to become settlers in the new possessions. This scheme has just been formulated by a little group of men who still go through the form of meeting every day in Constantinople as ministers of Wrangle government. In describing this plan the presi- dont of the council says: "Russia! played its part in the victory of the allies, and it seems that she should share In the distribution of the German colonies.

Therefore we ask a the nations avert this terrible- disaster which the death of all these people i mean, Ijy transporting them to the one-time German coi- about 1.500 or l.COO nilles from New Vork by dos sled and rail, i We maintained au altitude of ap- proxinjately 3.000 feet, being driven. 1 imagine. S. W. at lower altitude.

then N. K. at upper altitude. We did a thing the remainder of the The only place was Welly. and once we hung up in the Adirondack, Mountains, crashing Into trees and nearly got sick before we fcvt ouc.

We kept going, seeing COMMISSIONERS IN OKLAHOMA and after 'i-xpeTided. including drag rope, i i i out of the basket, and when jit I an altitude of 6.500 feet we heard a dog bark, the kid immediately chinned himself on the valve cord and made knots coming I We saw what We thought was a house, but it turned out to be a ha HOLD NOTES AGQEEGAT- ING S22 000 000 mu By Assoeiatca Press. Oklahoma City. Jan i a i stack, as wo found out four day tiling aggregating As wo had no ballast what- i evt-r, we hit the ground i a eras! i a 540,000.000. the commission-i Hm porpoised a couple of hundred I era of the land office of Oklahoma feet or so and then hung up on thf- IM hlcrh i i i side of xome trees and stuck.

in .1 01 nife.i "'aM aban(loni balloon and staru-l makes presidents of some large i i in the direction we mid directors of oil the cog. stuck it out for f'uir panics recede into'obscurity us deal- days, ate carrier iwcen us durlnji that time and ate ers in moneys. The commissioners literally do a "land office I Notes held by the commissioners on land sold, but not yet paid for. had a box 01 matches and aggregate $22.000.000. Loans on.pub- lie secured by farm lands a to more a In are a ncoru- suicide ttnd wanted us to leave him.

ing royalties and bonuses on tracts but of course we couldn't see that. li-itsed'for oil and gas development 1 carried his Hying suit and the Hinton Led Party. we mid a. box 01 matches i would build a fire when Steve would I give out and pass out due to haustion. He wanted to commit --Copyright, Underwood Underwood.

MUSCULAR CONTROL OF KNEES KEEPS BIG MAN FROM LIFTING HER. RS. HIDEO 'KIMURA. wife of Dr. Kimura of 310 West Ninety- seventh street, Xew Vork, weighing only eighty-five pounds, claims she can prevent anyone from i i her, i apparent effort on her part.

These photographs show her being easily lifted by a 225- pound man of great strength--when she wills--and shows him straining vainly to lift her when she resists him. Dr. Kimura taught his Wifi, the secret. Ho says it is accomplished solely through physical and not mental control. WAITEKS LAD) OFF TOTIL EE- TTON OF AMEKICAH TOUEISTS.

onies where, by the formation of refugees now dying by the thou- sands would be able to provide for themselves. If transported, for example, to an African colony, the government of South Russia would prosper rapidly and would not need much financial assistance. Whole World Problem. "The whole world should be interested in the solution of this problem, for to leave 300.000 people wanderers on the faeo of the earth is an indictment against the present civilization." The refugees are divided into two classes, one comprised of the members of Wrangle's army, numbering 50.000. who are in Gallipoli.

Tchat- uldja and other big campe. while remaining 200.000 are civilians scattered In many small camps. Many thousands are still wandering nbout in Constantinople, but are rapidly being corralled and put on Prinkipo Island, where President Wilson once suggested that a Russian conference be held. Typhus is raging in these camps and the ccr-nes Qf misery are said to beggar description. Nevertheless.

under these terrible conditions, the won, Russian i still asserts itself. In the camp at Cataro, where 10.000 civilians are herded, i have been exceeding deaths by GO per cent. Specil to The Newt. Paris, Jan. (Copyright.

1921, by the New York last few months have brought a far- reaching epidemic of economy in all parts of France, and especially in on amusements just made public, which have occasioned considerable comment as to whether the orgy of spending which marked the months immediately after the armistice really ended, or whether it is merely lulled by the industrial Insecurity. Whatever may be the cause, while the dance halls here are multiplying, they are rarely as full as they used to be, and some managers say that the next twelve months will see the collapse of at least 50. per cent of them. Are FILM COEPOEATION FOEMED FOE EDUCATIONAL WOEK. More a 60V OUV of farming ami grazing lund are now open for leue and sale.

To administer the public lands and funds derived from them Is the task of the commissioners of the lanti office, more generally in Oklahoma as the "school land department. The statehood "enabling act. which the state was created, provided a in each township, consisting of 36 sections, sections 1G and 36 should be set aside for school section 13 for the maintenance of state educational institutions, and section 33 for charitable and penal institutions and public bulrtlings. An additional grant of land was made for the maintenance of the state university, preparatory school, the negro agricultural and normal university and the normal schools. To serve as a dowry for Indian Territory In the union at the i of statehood congress in the enabling act appropriated $5,000.000 to the school of the new state.

Money given the common' schools of the state from the land office during the eighteen month's from Jan. 1919, to June 30, 1920, amount- CLEW IS FUEOTSHED OF MES. BANTELL'S EELATIYES Special to The News. Dublin. Jan.

clew as to the whereabouts of relatives of Mrs. Bettie Bantell and daughter, who were burned to death in the fire which destroyed the Star Hotel at Dcsdemona Wednesday morning, has been Turnished by Mrs. J. R. Linn, who states that Mrs.

Bantell and diiiightr-r had rooms at her house for two weeks nbout one year ago. and visited in the home again for a short i about one month ago. which i they wero on i way to Eastland. Mrs. Linn said that the husband of Mrs.

Bantell is a a i salesman working out of Chicago and that she ha? a son in the United States army who was in France last year. Also that she lias a married daughter i i somewhere In Oklahoma, though Mrs. Linn did not lenrn the a of this dausrhfr. Mrs. B.inloll was merly a bareback rider with Fore- 1'fingh and Sells Brothers Shows and was i a stock company In Chicago last summer.

TELEPHONE OPEEATOE IS EUN DOWN BY AUTOMOBILE Special to Tho News. Son Antonio, a Nclli" Prncilla A residing mllos out on the Pleasanton road, was fatally injured at 10:25 o'clock Saturday ns the result fif being run down by nn automobile JLK pho attempted to cross South Tresn. street at Grovo avenue. A i and her sister were employed at tho Southwestern Telephone and Telegraph Company the Mission station. They were leaving the office and made an attempt to catch an inbound street car.

Upon stepping off the curb A i was struck by an automobile. Tim driver of the mu- olilno picked the i up and ruBhcd her to the she died soon after. The theaters are likewise in hard straits, the Comodie Francalse, for instance, reporting that its receipts have dropped from an average of 13,000 francs a week to less than S.OOO francs, while the racing associations have learned with dismay that the parl-mutuel wagers placed last year dropped far below the general average. Expensive restaurants In theMont- marte quarter and some of the larger hotels seem to be holding their own, but business is so slack along the boulevards that waiters in the restaurants there are being laid off i the return of the American tourists next year. FloriHts Arc Affected.

Characteristic of this new appreciation of money values is the complaint by florists that the aaie of Parma violets, the buying of which always required an outlay of several louis. has fallen off greatly not even the wealthiest Parisians buying them now, but instead their New Year's bouquet consisted principally of carnations and roses from the Riviera. Meanwhile jewelers are said to be aghast at the unprecedented a i off holiday purchases. However, things may brighten up somewhat next week, as the municipal council of Taris has decided to make this city once more a real vllle by restoring the gas lights an well as electricity throughout the' city, an the council considers the coal stocks sufficient. PICTUEE CENSOESHL? IN INDIA A POLITICAL MOVE Special to The London, Jan.

1921. by the New York foresight more than a desire for moral i is believed to be responsible for the motion picture cenv sorship which has been established In parts of India, principally Calcutta, Bombay. Madras and Rangoon. was found that pictures In which whlto men and women were placed at a disadvantage had a tendency to sow thoughts in the minds 0 Imaginative Hindus which, if unrestricted, might event a lead to Rerious consequences. In order to circumvent the danger.

compulsory censorship has been es- i'n i rd basc on an act passed in i i Thn censors have been ap- By Associated Press. Chicago, 111., Jan. plan for a nationwide moving picture educational campaign, through which it Is hoped to bring the city and the farm closer and thus solve manj of the problems now confronting the farmers of the country, was announced tonight by Willla'm E. Skinner, secretary of the National Dalrj Association. For this purpose Mr.

Skinner said the Farmers' Film Corporation has been formed, and co-operating with -t In the work will be the department of agriculture, state departments of agriculture and state agricultural colleges, the American Farm Bureau Federation, the National Dairy Association, the American Bankers' Association, Grange movements and co-operative buying and marketing associations throughout the country. One of the first things to be undertaken in the plan will be to help the American Bankers' Association raise a billion-dollar trade expansion fund. The "announcement of the enterprise Raid that the pictures to be made by the corporation would aim to lay before the people of the nation all of the information that touches on tha great production problems of the day, without making any attempt to influence or to settle these problems. The object -will be merely to present the truth and let the people judge. The pictures -will be shown in theaters, churches schools.

FOEMEE DISTEICT JUDGE ACCIDENTALLY'KILLS SELF By Associated Tulsa, Jan. B. Campbell, former United States district judge of the eastern district of Oklahoma and general counsel for Cosden refiners, accidentally shot and killed himself today. He was at his desk in the Cosden building about 10:15 a. m.

today looking at an automatic revolver. which he had purchased since' "Hijackers" became so numerous here, and In closing his desk, preparatory to joining his wife at church the top of the desk struck the. gun, causing it to bo discharged, the bullet penetrating his liver, causing Instant death. He was 61 years old and had lived in Oklahoma since 1894. Muskogee.

Jan. E. Campbell, who was found shot to death in his office in Tulsa today, was United States judge for ths eastern district of Oklahoma from November, 1907. until Sept. 1, 1918, when he resigned to become general attorney for the Cosden Oil Company.

During his tenue in office he passed upon cases Involving many millions of dollars. Famous among them is the Tommy Atkins case, in which his decisJon has been af- i by the supreme court of the United States, and the Barney Thlocco case, still In litigation. Both cases involved the rights of oil leases worth millions. An attempt upon the judge's life a i the fall of 1918. when his home hero was bombed.

John pointed from the Indian civil service. Culver'is now term in "the Each censor acts independently of federal penitentiary at Leaven- otnors. for the alleged crime. COTTON BELT STATE BANK NAMES OFFICEES FOE YEAE Kjx'rlAl to'Thc Timpson, the annual meeting of the of tho Cotton Belt Scale Dunk of i city tho following i dl- rcctom were elected: Directors: W. Trntnmcll, J.

E. Blankenshlp. W. tj. Rugley, Stroud Ivtlloy.

W. M. Byrn, T. N'mple D. Officers: president; .1.

13. a vice i T. F. Whltewlde. vice i Temple D.

Smith vlcr: president: F. T. Conki-, eushier- J. Itlack, assistant cashier Being Trained How to Deal With Criminals Operating in New York MONARCH SJO. 4 COMES IN WITH FLOW Hpsclnl to The I Jan.

rue Mon-! arch Oil and Reflnlnjj Company No Harrison at Hull came in i i at 3,200 feet i 6 000 I barrels of oil. it was hniu.unc.-d hen- tpiny. Tills flow XVIIH from an! trftt 1 01 itml I i Company i i VIIH In or tlVreu r'ftnn' 1 1 1 How if ow nx'fc- liifT i i ed to $1,986,135.81. Each school district receives -an amount proportionate to the number of Its pupils compared with the total school enumeration 'of the state. During' the eighteen months' period ending with the last fiscal year the state leased 187.301 acres for oil and gas development, and its receipts from this source aggregated $2,401,718.22.

being. $1,448,732.81 In bonuses. $765,088.05 in rovalties and $187.897.35 in rentals. Cash received by the land office during this time from all sources amounted to $15,696.163.80. consisting of 51,560 separate items.

LETTEES FEOM BALLOOHIST TELL OF TXE? TO NOETH (Continued From Pag-e 1.) and figured our safest place was in the air until we could locate ourselves. We were in the air more than twenty-five hours and averaged about thirty-three miles an hour. At about 2 p. m. while at an altitude of 6.500 feet, and all our ballast expended, which, included thermos bottles, carpet, lining of the basket and drag rope, and everything we could throw out to stay up, heard of dog bark.

We immediately started valving, because we figured where there are dogs there must be life. Couldn't the Ground. We couldn't see the ground until we were almost on top of it, and found ourselves landing in a dense forest. We started to walk and arrived here four days later. We had to eat during that time two carrier pigeons and moss from the ground.

i lost my flying suit--could not sleep nights for fear I would freeze and never wake up. I didn't fear death, but felt so sorry for you, and my only hope was that you would some day find out had really and how much I really thought and felt for you. Mr. Farrell fell from exhaustion several times. Wanted us to cut his throat and take his body for food, and asked us 'to go on and let him die, but we decided to stick and die together.

I was the only pne that did not express my feelings and kept them cheered up. Otters Prayer. The third day. after Farrell had offered up a prayer and was apolo- iizicg for his sins, I smiled to the tad and said: "Just think what all you will have to tell your little elds some day, Kloor," Farrell said, 'For God's sake. Hinton, what shall we do?" I said, "You heard a dog ark.

didn't you?" He replied "Yes we are following a stream aren't 'we? -Ho agreed. "Why I haven't even started to take it seriously yet. But if you don't stop rour damn foolishness, up and keep your troubles to yourself, it will be serious." Wait till you hear them sing my praise. I am given the credit for pulling the party through. Well.

Hint, we are about 250 miles rom the railroad, nine days' travel 55" dog sled; weather zero to 40 below; 1,600 miles by dog sled and to New York. Have SnoHnboc.1 Made. The first transportation will be next Monday, as we are hav- ng snowshoes made, duffels, i tens, etc, for the trip. They won't et us leave and take a chance of freezing to death. Figuring- nine days behind a dog team and four days by may arrive in New lork by Jan.

10 or 12. Wo travel all day. set up camp at night, which will be a tent. The take us through and thev are awfully clever. A white man is i tin god with them.

We. hardly have to lace our shoes. They cook, pitch tent, build large fires and care for us as though we were babies so we are. as safe as can be There are nbout eight white men this Indian settlement. compass and led the party.

1 dis- eujdr-d my suit to carry Steve's, and at i Steve and Kloor had some- thing to sleep in and I did not. In the daytime I made him travel in his underwear so he had to travel I hard or freeze. I We. finally found a creek, then dog and sleigh tracks on the river, then an Indian, who tried to run away from us. but we put up our hands and followed him to this place.

We have to have some i clothes made and wear snowshoes, travel behind dog sled for nine or ten days. We leave Monday. Dec. 27, and reach New York by Jan. 10 or 12.

We are taking daily practice on snowshoes. The temperature here reaches from zero to 40 degrees below. The Indians are still looking for the balloon. They have made two attempts but did not get far enough. They look upon us as being wonders for getting through.

Kloor and Steve Farrell send their best. Give my. best to the boys, Mrs. Talbot and Addle. WALTER.

Come Doirn Trail. The letters of Lieutenant Hinton to his wife and his pal came, down- fill the long: trail from Moose Factory, where the balloonists to Mattlce. the nearest hamlet on the Canadian National Railroad, a thence to Montreal and down to New I York. Although they were written on i Dec. 21.

they did not reach Mattlce until Jan. 3. Probably they were held at Moose Factory, the Hudson Bay Company's trading camp, for a few days before a a dog-hauled expedition bound for civilization is termed--started for ilattice. Normally, as the outside world has come to know within the past week, it takes nine or ten days under excellent conditions, to ma'ke the journey. The distance Ii vel toward 200 milsa.

over rough coun- with frequent natural obstacles to overcome. Apparently the missives were broght down-by a "packet" of Rev- illion Frerea, the fur dealers, for they bear a large near the brown Canadian stamps on whicfc is shown King- George's likeness The envelopes bear the legend, "The Hudson Bay Company, Incorporates A. D. 1670." The letter to Mrs. Hinton.

whlcl worth special deliverv, bore' 13 of stamps; that -to Talbot only 4c worth. This 'arrived a day later than the first. Thin Hinton wrote to his wife on a sheet of thin foolscap, in closely penciled lines, covering one whole side of the sheet and three-quarters of the other side. His is small and rather careful, though he didn't pay a. whole lot of attention to punctuation and capitalization.

It is needless to say he was not writing- with any idea that his penciled messages would ever be laid before the public. Lieutenant Kloor. one of Hinton's mates in the balloon, wrote some no.tes to New York also, but they were not of the Imortance and did not have the graphic qualities o' Hinton's writings. Kloor, although actually in charge of the expedition, is the youngest of the three airmen, and--as Hinton's letters show--was called "the kid." Hinton Real Hinton, by reason of his greater experience, and perhaps because of natural, aptitude, was the real leader of the party. "Hinton of the they called him throughout the navy.

For many hours of the fight of that winged caraval across the Atlantic, it was his strong arms that struggled with the wheel. He was one of the actual pilots. There was danger aplenty on that voyage. Storms were encountered, the ship almost crashed into a great mountain on the isle of Fayal In the Azores; indeed, it was only a. little rift, in a fog that saved Hin-ton and all his companions and en- -abled them to reach a safe harbor.

But apparently he was in just as much danger or more danger on this expedition, and maybe they win call him "Hinton of the frozen wild" as sr, additional title. Letters Show Peril. His letters show the peril he and his mates were in from the beginning--crashing into" trees in the Adirondacks. "porpoising" (which means striking the ground and bouncing again into the air) at the end of the flight, and at all times being at the mercy of the winds and storms at lofty altitudes. Hinton is not a story writer unfortunately for literature.

But had he the gift of the pen he might, tron-i this adventure, write a narrative that would equal or transcend Jack London's masterpieces of travail in the of was the tale of a man starving and freezing- while he beat his way through the desolate snows'to- ward safety. But what he wrote was genuine, and was calmly, coolly set down. The best comment that could be made about his report came from his friends and his sounds just i Walter." He was a gob, originally, and won his way to a commission through sheer a i i and technical knowledge! He Is 32 years old, has been 1 1 6 I in lh na1 for twelve years, and is good sized chap, standing Tell Tnl to a the paymaster nit in i slcin as an airman and wires us money as per our tele-ram eood luck that--at least so ho 0 i lI Women of Middle Age Owing to modern methods of living not one woman in "a thousand approaches this perfectly natural change in her life without experiencing a train of very annoying and sometimes painful symptoms. Those dreadful hot flashes, smothering spells, fainting spells, nervous troubles and irregularities are symptoms that should have prompt attention. These two letters prove what a successful remedy Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is for women: at this time of life.

These Two Women Helped During Change of Life. conld not eat or tolefcyou sleep for six fainting spells kncrw what good Lydla E- Pinkham's and could not -walk help for Vegetable Comppnnd ias done me. I three by female trouble, had organic troubles and am going" My cousin, who was a doctor, told me through -the Change of Life. I was to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable taken with a pain in my side and a bad Compound and it helped me greatly, headache.

I coold not lie doTm. could Then during the Change of Life I used not eat or sleep. 1 suffered something the same remedy. I am seventy years terrible and the doctor's medicine did old now and am able to do my own me no good at all--my pains got worse housework and walk one mile to church instead of better. I began taking the every Sunday morning and evening, I Vegetable Compound and felt a change am recommending the Vegetable Com- from the first Now I feel fine and ad- pound to my friends having the same vise anyone going through the Change troubles as I had.

Your remedy ia the of life try it, for it cured me after I on earth. I cannot find words had given up all hopes of getting better to express my gratitude for if--Mrs. I will tell any one who writes to me the SUS.UT C. STAPIJES, 157 B. School St, good it has done Taunton, Mass.

DAKZ, 743 N. 25th Philadelphia, Pa. Women of Middle Age Should Depend Upon 1 IudiaE.Pinkham% imf lj Vegetable 4 there's going to be one grand little party at No. 235 West 146th, Neponsit, L. as soon as they get home.

Tal Mar Party. Tal is considering the matter of running up as far as Buffalo to meet them and carry with him some new uniforms so they may "ahow some class," as he puts It, when they report to the air station. Lieutenant Farrell, like Hinton is married. He and his wife have two children and live at No. 1701 Woodbine street.

Brooklyn. They are close friends of "the Hintons. Farrell is the oldest of the three rescued airmen. He Is 45 years old, and is 1 another example of a man who climbed from 'the ranks. He is 5 feet 9.

weighs 190, and was a star heavyweight boxer in his gob days. He has seen nineteen years in the service and is senior line officer at Rockaway. Lieutenant Kloor, "the kid," is the bachelor of the trio--although it is said he will not be a bachelor long after his return. He was 23 years old today. Like the others, lie was a gob.

but quickly became an ensign and last May a lieutenant. He is 5 feet 6, weighs 140 and is brown haired and blue-eyed. Hint, Steve and "the kid," three brave men, but the: bravest--and doubtless Hint and the kid will say when they emerge from the forest--was Steve. He suffered worst. The cold got to him more to lis companions.

So did the enforced ack of food. Maybe his years told. Perhaps he was not in as excellent physical trim as the rest. But at all events there came a time when he felt.he could go no further. This was during the days when the three were wandering blindly in the woods, eating their carrier pigeons and mouthing moss dug with their fingers from under the snow.

It was then that Steve, made his amazing offer--asked his comrades accept him as a sacrifice. To Hinton and Kloor it was unthinkable, of course, that they should abandon brother officer. Let him die? No! If there was any dying the three should die together. That was their agreement. That's U.

S. navy style. i road station by the i i i u-snancnes npr, get I seriously worried about him. She lc a slender, blue-eyed, brown haired said nlght WORD IS RECEIVED OF THREE AMERICAN AVIATORS By Associated Press. Mattlce, Jan.

tonight was lacking In regard to the hreo American naval balloonista who ire i from Mooaefactory. near where they descended Dec. 14. The time of their arrival is still )roblcmatlcal. George MacLeod, one of the Indian runners who brought the aeronauts' dispatches here from Moosefactory, BUSINESS FOE THE CALENDAE YEAE AGGREGATES $38,000.

BULLIARD'S EVANGKUNE TAMPICO PKPPER SAUCE. Leading Chefs Indorse It. Made from Improved Tabasco peppers Put np by EVANCEUNE PEPPER PRODUCTS St. Startiiivllle, V. 8.

A. Austin. Jan. of' the departments of the University of Texas which is daily growing in. importance and scope of i the printing shop.

During the past calendar year thirty-nine bulletins, ranging in size froin thirty-two pages to a hundred or more, have been printed. There are on the press at present four large-bulletins, one of about 250 pages for the bureau of economic geology and technology This bureau has by far more bulletins published than any other, it is stated. In addition there was printed the Daily Texan, eight Issues 'of the Longhorn Magazine, two issues of the Political Science Quarterly, eight issues of the Interscholaatic Leaguer the Texas Industrialist, the directories of the -main university, the Medical College and College of Mines and Metallurgy, 10,000 copies of "Why Joe Harris Came to the-University." 80,000 copies of the Interscholastic League spelling list fdr the extension department, besides announcements of courses schedules', office stationery; form cards, etc. i The business of the printing shop will aggregate about $38,000 during the calendar year, according to A. C.

right, manager. "The pressroom is always flooded with work." Mr. Wright said. "There are five or sis men and two women employed. Despite the great amount of work, the efficiency is better than the average.

Work is usually gotten out on time and there is little delay. The year.has been successful in every way." JUSTICE GATHEES COAL DATA FEOM GOVEEHMENT Special to The News. Estherwood, Jan. justice of the peace of this district Is getting some special data from the government relative to excessive precise of coal for fuel sold to the people in Louisiana' and Texas. In a shore while the public-will be shown the difference in the prices for which coal has been sold, both wholesale and retail.

FROM ALCOHOLISM INCREASES IN COOSC COUNTY By Associated Press. Chicago. 111., "Jan. 9. Cas'es of Insanity from alcoholism have increased in the Cook County Psychopathic Hospital prohibition went into effect, according to the quarterly report of Dr.

James Whitney Hall, chairman of the Insanity commission for the county. Dr. Hall reported an increase of 33 per cent in alcoholic cases in December. 1920. over the last officially "wet" December.

DEAN OF JOVR.VAIiISM AT UNIVERSITY IS HONORED Austin. Jan. the annual meeting: of the Association of American Schools and Departments of Journalism, which was held during the holidays at the University of Missouri. Columbia. Will H.

Mayes, dean of the department of journal- 1 1 1 i. 1 I IlJilrCQ i 11 Will be home just as snnn is pos-1 of 22 Pretty and vivacious and toT tOm rr 'T iihle. Lots of love, as ever. altogether charming. Lieutenant Farrell, the India for i i i Hit I I I 1 I I fc.iw i i i i course it wonderful re- ued 'JLH, 1 1 0 El i a Texas, was association uing year.

Professor E. of the University of Mlnne- HKCHNT ADDITIONS TO NEW YORK POLICE FORCE. I KOO prospective i i snun to he aildi-d tu the I.cKer to l-'rlrnil, not bo seriously worried i Here Is i a i let ter In fact, we wero almost reconciled, i I Sunday, to tl I tu -DT-TlTTnTTi AunTTwn Tdrrmrr.TT it.ti.UU(j-tijU AKOUND MIDWAY in the i i i the crime Washington streets, at the begin- i of the i driveway, Iiy Mrs a S. M. Rot.in of The seriptlon declares that the i a Is dedicated to the memory of the I late Judge James L.

L. Mc.AH and i and other early citizens of Waco. Mrs. Rotan Is a daughter of Judge and Mrs. McAIl.

and It wns largely her that the i a was made possible. Use Cuticnra Talcum To Powder and Perfume An ideal facc.skin, baby and dusting powder. Convenient and economical, it takes the place of other perfumes. A few grains sufficient. I Olatmut a int Cuncmr.

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