The Frisco Employes' Magazine, November 1925

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Frisco Employes' Magazine, November 1925 Submarine Coat Combination Raincoat and Warm Orrercoat Men! Here is the most practical coat ever made, at a bargain price and only $1.00 down! Broad shawl collar of best qual- ity 4x beaverized lamb skin; and warm plaid blanket body and sleeve lining. Outer fabric is rippled submarine cloth with a coating of rubber between making coat absolutely stormproof. Smart stylish double breasted belted style with two large patch pockets with flaps and two muff pockets. Strapped sleeve. Length, 44 inches. Tan only. Sizes 34 to 46. The Mount Vernon Car Manufacturing Co. Just completed, New Repair Shop, 500' x 150'. Capac ity Fully equipped with 10,000 Freight Cars; Cranes, Electric I50,OOO Wheels; Heaters, etc., enabl- 20,000 tons Forgings. ing us to work in all kinds of weather. BUILDERS OF FREIGHT CARS MOUNT VERNON, ILLINOIS R. F. CARR, Memphis W. E. LOWRY, Hickory Flat, Miss. President Vice-Pres. and General Manager 0 S'A~HICKORY FLAT, MISS. SPECIALIZING IN RAILROAD BUILDING MATERIAL Strong as Ever for the "Frisco" GENERAL OFFICES P. O. BOX 1032 MEMPHIS, TENN. Phone Main 2312 MANUFACTURERS AND DISTRIBUTORS OF I Ashcroft Gauges Putnam Machine Tools I'p , Consolidated Safety Valves TRADEMARK Hancock Inspirators and Valves Shaw Cranes BRANCH OFFICES Birmingham Cleveland San Franclsw Boston Detroit Seattle Hayden & Derby Injectors Mill Supplies ~ ~ - - Buffalo Philadelphia St. Louls Main Office: 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N. Y. Chicano Pittsburgh W. H. CROFT, First Vice-president M. S. PAINE, Secretary-Treasurer Magnus Company INCORPORATED Journal Bearings and Bronze Engine Castings NEW YORK CHICAGO HOUSTON, TEX. SHREVEPORT, LA. ROGERS, ARK. Hussey-Ho bbs Tie Company Railroad Cross and Switch Ties Lumber, Poles and Piling "WE HELP MAKE THE FRISCO SAFE" General Offices: 1967-1969 Railway Exchange B.uilding ST. LOUIS, MO. WALTER POLEMAN, President WESTERN TREATED AND E. A. NIXON, UNTREATED CROSS Vice-president and SWITCH TIES A. R. FATHMAN. TIE AND TIMBER COMPANY PILING Vice-president CAR and TRACK THOS. T. POLEMAN, 905 Syndicate Trust Bldg. ST. LOUIS Sec'y and Treas. OAK Kettle River Treating Company White C o u n t y Lumber Mills ZINC AND CREOSOTED CROSS TIES 1 ENRIGHT, ARKANSAS MODERN ADZING AND BORING i\fACHINES Quick Deliveries of OAK, GUM, CYPRESS Especially Equipped to Fill MADISON, ILLINOIS RUSH ORDERS of CAR and TRACK OAK E. A. XIXOS, PresidenL R. A. CALfIX, Sdeu Jkrnager WALTER POLEMAS, President THOS. T. POLEJIAY, V.-Pres. A. R. FATHMAN, flce-Pres. H. G. JlcELHINWEY, G. SUIJ~. A. R. WATH.\IAS, Secretary and Tre.lsurer R. E. KXEELAXD, Gcn. ~lgr. I. E. PETERSOX, Sec'y-~reds. II 905 Syndicate Trust Bldg. SAINT LOUIS THE OHIO INJECTOR COMPANY 1437 Monadnock Block CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Manufacturers of OHIO LIFTING INJECTORS CHICAGO NON-LIFTING I N J E C T 0 R S CHICAGO AUTOMATIC FLANGE OILERS, CHICAGO LUBRICATORS, OHIO LOW WATER ALARMS, CHICAGO AUTOMATIC DRIFTING VALVES, LOCOMOTIVE BOILER ATTACHMENTS, OHIO CAB SQUIRTS ELECTRIC METAL CUPOLA MET~L-- EXCLUSIVELY WAITE PHILLIPS COMPANY PRODUCERS. REFINERS. MARKETERS OF PHILLIP'S HIGRADE PETROLEUM PRODUCTS Refineries : OKMULGEE, OKLA. WICHITA, KAN. TULSA, = = = - - = = OKLAHOMA Page 5 THE FRISCO EMPLOYES' MAGAZINE 827 FRISCO BUILDING ST. LOUIS WM. L. HUCCINS,Jr., Editor MARTHA C. MOORE. Associa~cEditor WM. McMILLAN. Adocrlislng Manager VOL. 111 NOVEMBER, 1925 No. 2 Permission is given to reprint, with credit, in part or in full, any article appearing in the Magazine Contents of This Issue PAGES "The St~ti~~ylatid"Cliriste~icd at Kansas City, .\.lo., Octohcr 5 ........................................6- 7 Keclamation Plant at Springfield, Mo., Saves More Than Million 1)ollars a Year. Part 1.8 10 Making the Grade, a Cartoon and Story of Prcsidcnt Kurn ................ ................ ....................I I Frisco IdRailways of Nation in Adoption of Nc\v Paint .................. .... ............ ......................I2 Xcw Plan for Better Service Contest Ko\v in I:.ffcct ............................................................... I3 Xight-I'ternal Sight-a Short Story of Carelcssncss ............................................................ .... I4 Somc Personal Experiences of a Railroad Rail ...................... ......................,.....,.....,........... ...,.... I5 Second .i\nn~tal Scrvice Mecting at Springfield, Dccctnber 3 and 4.................. .. ................ I6 \.\%at ! Another War in Texas?...................................... Claim Agcnts' Meeting at Springfield, Mo., October 9 and. 10............................................... I8 Rev. H. F. Rohn of St. Louis Offices Is Methodist Minister ................................... 19 "Mother" Clark, Eighty-one-Ycar Old Frisco Booster has had BIany Expcrienccs ................20 Fucl Economy Embraces All Classes of Scrvicc....................................................................... 23 The Pension Roll ........................ ........... .................................................................................................27 Hotncmakcrs' Page ....................... .......................................................................................................28 Miss Frisco Clad in Fashion's Latcst ..................................................................................................29 The Twilight Hour ............................................................................................................................... 30 Frisco Rahics ......................................................................................................................................... 31 Flashes of Merri~ncnt............................................................................................................................ 32 .-\mong Ourselves-l‘hc Scction Mcn--4 Page of Cartoons ......................................................33 15tlitoriaIs .................................................................................................................................................. 34 &tween the Rails ....................................................................................................................................3j Photographs of "The Sunnyland's" Christening........................................................................ 36-37 Pastime .................................................................................................. ... .... ... ...... ..... ..... , . , ..... .. ............ 38 The Frisco lfechanic .......................................................................... 3-41 Frisco Family xe.'ews.......................................................................................................................... 42-68 THE FRISCO EMPLOYES' MAGAZINE The Frisco Employes' Magazine is a monthly publication devoted primarily to the interests oC the more than 30.000 active and retlred employes of the Frisco Lines. It contalns storlee, Items of current news personal notes about employes and their families, articles dealing with various phases of railroad work: poems, cartoons and notices regarding the service. Good clear photographs suitable for repro- duction are especially desired, and will be returned only when requested. All cartoons and drawings must be in black India drawing Ink. Employes are invited to write articles for the magazine. Contrlbutlons should be typewritten, on one side of the sheet only, and should be addressed to the Edltor. Frisco Buildlng. St. Louis, Mo. Dlstributed free among Frisco employes. To others. grlce 16 cents a copy; subscription rate $1.50 a year. Advertising rates will be made known upon application. "The Sunnyland" Christened With Elaborate Ceremony at Kansas City, Mo., October Five as Maiden Trip to Florida Starts Miss Jeanne Koontz, Frisco Daughter, Is Sponsor-Mayor Albert I. Beach of Kansas City Officiates-Train Receioes Rousing Reception Along Right-of-way 21'1'11 a triumph;~lltI)last the nhi5tlv and a at 830 ~)'cl~cIithe nest morning, she bore her 1;risco r--!w2 prolonged sllout of enthusiaml frotn the 1;qe colors xaily and gallantly. !---£crond of official5 ;mcl 5pectatorh. "'l'he SUI- Aq royal welcome awaited the new train! www n> land." ncw l:ri\co train to 'l'am1)a antl St. Never before in the history of Kansas City had ne\v I'etcrsburg. F'lorida, left Kansas City, Missouri, at railway service been so enth~~siasticallyreceived, antl 9 :00 o'clock on the dot the morning of October 5. besides the official welcoming committee antl the fair r,1 he new train \\m chrihtencd with a pomp antl ccre- sponsor, more than a h~undretl other rail~vayworkers many befitting its merits, and all along the righl-of- in tlw great terminals hat1 joined Kansas City news- way from Kan5as City to Birmingham, F'rixo employes ~)alxrnicnant1 ~)hotographersto witness the event. and Frisco townsmen lined the tracks to wave "'l'he Ilon. A%lbertI. Beach, Mayor of Kansas City, Mo.. Sunnyland" God-speed. arrived at 5:45 o'cloclc and escorted Miss Jeanne Koontz, daughter of Mr. J. 13. Koontz, vice-president Many Departments Aided Plans in charge of traffic, to the head md wherc the chris- tening ceremonies were held. ;\4iss Koontz 1n;ide an lior month5 ahead the passenger department had :~ttractivesponsor for the splendid train. busily ironed out the details of the Sunnyland's rout- Mayor Beach presented a bouquet of two dozen 1111- ing and schedule-in conjunction with the Southern perial roses, the gift of employes in the passenger and Seaboard Air Line Railways. For weelcs ahead tlepartnient at
Recommended publications
  • Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945
    Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945. T939. 311 rolls. (~A complete list of rolls has been added.) Roll Volumes Dates 1 1-3 January-June, 1910 2 4-5 July-October, 1910 3 6-7 November, 1910-February, 1911 4 8-9 March-June, 1911 5 10-11 July-October, 1911 6 12-13 November, 1911-February, 1912 7 14-15 March-June, 1912 8 16-17 July-October, 1912 9 18-19 November, 1912-February, 1913 10 20-21 March-June, 1913 11 22-23 July-October, 1913 12 24-25 November, 1913-February, 1914 13 26 March-April, 1914 14 27 May-June, 1914 15 28-29 July-October, 1914 16 30-31 November, 1914-February, 1915 17 32 March-April, 1915 18 33 May-June, 1915 19 34-35 July-October, 1915 20 36-37 November, 1915-February, 1916 21 38-39 March-June, 1916 22 40-41 July-October, 1916 23 42-43 November, 1916-February, 1917 24 44 March-April, 1917 25 45 May-June, 1917 26 46 July-August, 1917 27 47 September-October, 1917 28 48 November-December, 1917 29 49-50 Jan. 1-Mar. 15, 1918 30 51-53 Mar. 16-Apr. 30, 1918 31 56-59 June 1-Aug. 15, 1918 32 60-64 Aug. 16-0ct. 31, 1918 33 65-69 Nov. 1', 1918-Jan. 15, 1919 34 70-73 Jan. 16-Mar. 31, 1919 35 74-77 April-May, 1919 36 78-79 June-July, 1919 37 80-81 August-September, 1919 38 82-83 October-November, 1919 39 84-85 December, 1919-January, 1920 40 86-87 February-March, 1920 41 88-89 April-May, 1920 42 90 June, 1920 43 91 July, 1920 44 92 August, 1920 45 93 September, 1920 46 94 October, 1920 47 95-96 November, 1920 48 97-98 December, 1920 49 99-100 Jan.
    [Show full text]
  • Naturalism, the New Journalism, and the Tradition of the Modern American Fact-Based Homicide Novel
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand corner and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. U·M·I University Microfilms International A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zeeb Road. Ann Arbor. Ml48106-1346 USA 3131761-4700 800!521-0600 Order Number 9406702 Naturalism, the new journalism, and the tradition of the modern American fact-based homicide novel Whited, Lana Ann, Ph.D.
    [Show full text]
  • Stacia Yearwood Yearwood 2
    Yearwood 1 Like Salt Water¼ A Memoir Stacia Yearwood Yearwood 2 For my Family- Those who have gone before me, Those who Live now, And those who will come to cherish these words in the future¼. Yearwood 3 Proem Not, in the saying of you, are you said. Baffled and like a root stopped by a stone you turn back questioning the tree you feed. But what the leaves hear is not what the roots ask. Inexhaustibly, being at one time what was to be said and at another time what has been said the saying of you remains the living of you never to be said. But, enduring, you change with change that changes and yet are not of the changing of any of you. Ever yourself, you are always about to be yourself in something else ever with me. Yearwood 4 Martin Carter (1927-1997) CONTENTS_______________________________________________________ FOREWORD page 5 HOPE FLOATS- A JOURNAL ENTRY page 8 SOJOURNING page 10 A LONG TIME AGO- THE ANCESTORS page 12 DIANA page 25 EYE WASH page 27 PARALYSIS page 32 NERVES page 35 TO REMOVE SEA WATER FROM THE EARS page 41 SHINGLES page 46 HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE page 50 RASHES AND ITCHES page 55 MALARIA FEVER page 58 STROKE page 61 HEART TROUBLES page 68 INDIFFERENT FEELINGS page 72 Yearwood 5 SUNBURN page 79 SCARS AND BITES page 83 LAST JOURNAL ENTRY page 87 Foreword Four rainy seasons ago I wrote in my journal: “I hope this place doesn’t change me.” But I have come to understand that just as culture is fluid, so are the personality and identity malleable.
    [Show full text]
  • Banks Are Reopened Under Restrictions Board Trade Banquet
    LEDGER Odds and Ends ENTRIES Here mul There Pithy PointN Picked Ip and Btinic a Collection of Varioui alto solo Patty Put RT Our Peripa- Topics of Local and letic Pencil Pusher General Interest VOLUME XXXX LOWELL, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1933 NO. 40 Well, we're over at least one THE BANK HOLIDAY depression the one in the ther- mometer. OCAL bank employees hope Board Trade Banquet ASHLEY AGAIN | that the next huliday will lu- Banks Are Reopened L called during the fishing or Mrs. C. L. Williamson was bunting .season. Of course they E ADS TICKET brmiglit home yesterday from the could have gone fishing through hospital and IN rejiorted as recov- the ice last week up at the Con- Was Brilliant Success [!. ering nicely from her operation. suinerN 11.mil but that would onl\ Under Restrictions n have served to remind them o( Win. Van Vorst ventured on frozen credit. FOR PRESIDENT thin ice this morning and went iu up to his neck. Hill seems lo The banks of Lowell and Alio reopened for business Fitzgerald, Vau^han and Hayes Prove have a penchant fur such things A brother editor asks the (pics- tiiis (Thursday) morning following the slate-wide H-day WILLIAM C. HAHTMAN NOMIN-' v,r> sl>ring. lion; bank holiday declared last week Tuesday morning by (tov- "U the Union (iuardian Trust Great Headliners ernor Comstoek. ATED FOR VILLAGE TKEAS- Uvi Edson.l^ear-ohl Civil comiMny a banking institution or The annual bampiet of tlu-lelected to that oflice in mam I I RKR—ALL OTHER INCL.M- VV!,r veteran, who knew Lincohi n n'al estate company? With In compliance with Ihe new proeiamation issued this I LoweII Hoard of Trade, held years.
    [Show full text]
  • Shail, Robert, British Film Directors
    BRITISH FILM DIRECTORS INTERNATIONAL FILM DIRECTOrs Series Editor: Robert Shail This series of reference guides covers the key film directors of a particular nation or continent. Each volume introduces the work of 100 contemporary and historically important figures, with entries arranged in alphabetical order as an A–Z. The Introduction to each volume sets out the existing context in relation to the study of the national cinema in question, and the place of the film director within the given production/cultural context. Each entry includes both a select bibliography and a complete filmography, and an index of film titles is provided for easy cross-referencing. BRITISH FILM DIRECTORS A CRITI Robert Shail British national cinema has produced an exceptional track record of innovative, ca creative and internationally recognised filmmakers, amongst them Alfred Hitchcock, Michael Powell and David Lean. This tradition continues today with L GUIDE the work of directors as diverse as Neil Jordan, Stephen Frears, Mike Leigh and Ken Loach. This concise, authoritative volume analyses critically the work of 100 British directors, from the innovators of the silent period to contemporary auteurs. An introduction places the individual entries in context and examines the role and status of the director within British film production. Balancing academic rigour ROBE with accessibility, British Film Directors provides an indispensable reference source for film students at all levels, as well as for the general cinema enthusiast. R Key Features T SHAIL • A complete list of each director’s British feature films • Suggested further reading on each filmmaker • A comprehensive career overview, including biographical information and an assessment of the director’s current critical standing Robert Shail is a Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Wales Lampeter.
    [Show full text]
  • Business Review: January 1, 1927
    THE BUSINESS REVIEW THIRD FEDERAL RESERVE DISTRICT PHILADELPHIA JANUARY i, 192.7 By RICHARD L. AUSTIN, Chairman and Federal Reserve Agent FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of PHILADELPHIA BUSINESS CONDITIONS IN THE UNITED STATES Activity in manufacturing industries maintained during November at approxi­ of merchandise carried by wholesale decreased in November and December, mately the same rate as in October. The firms declined further in November and while production of important minerals value of building contracts awarded were smaller at the end of the month continued at a high level. Wholesale showed less than the usual seasonal de­ than a year ago. Inventories of depart­ prices declined to the lowest level in cline in November and was slightly ment stores, however, increased slightly more than two years. Firmer money larger than in November, 1925. Awards more than is usual in November. Freight conditions in December reflected the usual for the first half of December likewise car loadings declined considerably in seasonal requirements in connection with exceeded those reported in the corre­ November and December from the record holiday and end-of-year activity. sponding period of last year. high levels of October, although the Production. Factory employment Agriculture. The Department of movement of coal continued heavy. and payrolls declined in November, re­ Agriculture estimates the value of 55 Prices. The neral level of whole­ flecting decreased activity in many im­ principal crops raised in 1926, on the sale prices declined in November and portant industries, but owing to the large basis of December 1 farm prices at prices of many important basic com­ output of minerals, the Federal Board’s $7,802,000,000 compared with $8,950,- modities decreased further in the first index of production in basic industries 000,000 in 1925.
    [Show full text]
  • Five Years of Prohibition and Its Results, North American Review
    BECOMING MODERN: AMERICA IN THE 1920S PRIMARY SOURCE COLLECTION Destruction of an illegal still, Miami, Florida, 1925 Anti-Prohibition campaign, Wilmington, Delaware, ca. 1930 Florida State Archives Hagley Museum __Should Prohibition Be Repealed?__ “Five Years of Prohibition and Its Results,” The North American Review June-July-August 1925 & September-October-November 1925 EXCERPTS * After decades of vehement debate, the “Noble Experiment” of Prohibition commenced on January 17, 1920, one year after the Eight- eenth Amendment had been ratified by the states. The debate did not end at that point, of course; it switched to the issues of efficacy, unforeseen consequences, popular support, and repeal. In 1925 the North American Review invited essays on Prohibition—its success or failure—from leaders in the law, government, public health, business and labor, education, and the church. Excerpts from the twenty-one essays are presented here; the pro-repeal arguments appearing first, as they were in the Review. What factors were central in the debate five years into Prohibition? What later factors entered the debate, especially in the 1928 presidential campaign? [Images added.] Samuel H. Church was president of the Carnegie Institute. “‘the greatest mistake in the world’” His essay was titled “The Paradise of the Ostrich.” Finding myself seated one night at dinner beside a United States Judge who possesses one of the greatest judicial minds that our country has produced in this generation, I asked him what he thought of Prohibition. “Regardless of what your feelings may be concerning the use of liquor,” he replied,” the American people made the greatest mistake in the world when they inserted the statute itself in the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
    [Show full text]
  • The Pump Room Is a Drama About the Intersection of the Criminal and Political Worlds, the Sexual and the Ideological
    Introduction Force creates pressure and pressure creates counter- pressure. The result? A blowout. The Pump Room is a drama about the intersection of the criminal and political worlds, the sexual and the ideological. It is a play about the South African reality of the late 1990s, but one which applies to many other societies that have experienced epochs in their history when, after a long period of oppression, a new period struggles to resolve the past and deal with fresh challenges. The central event that drives the play is the murder of a ‘postman’ carrying drugs. Over several hours on a hot summer’s night, the consequences of this action cause a number of inter-connected people to meet in the pump room of a public swimming pool in Cape Town. These disparate characters play out the tensions and contradictions of their pasts and presents, and a complex web of relationships emerges. One of the key elements is the renewed confrontation between Peter, a middle-aged pump room worker (but one-time actor and political activist), with Mike and Lombard, former Apartheid agents who had previously detained and tortured him. This history dogs them, but the time of state terrorism and political activism is over - they are all now involved in an underworld of drug dealing [and taking] and are desperately, if paradoxically, trying to restore some balance to their lives. Other characters are Lewis, Peter's pump room assistant who is both a dealer and an informer; Elsie, Lewis’s girlfriend, a domestic worker; and Mumsie, also a domestic worker and occasional prostitute, who is connected to both Peter and Lombard, but in very different, conflicting ways.
    [Show full text]
  • Albuquerque Morning Journal, 11-16-1921 Journal Publishing Company
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 11-16-1921 Albuquerque Morning Journal, 11-16-1921 Journal Publishing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_mj_news Recommended Citation Journal Publishing Company. "Albuquerque Morning Journal, 11-16-1921." (1921). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ abq_mj_news/387 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CITY CITY G ALBUQ1JEBQUE MORNING JOURNAL. EDITION FORTV-S- VK.AH New Mexico, November 16, 1921. Dally by Carrier or MU, 85c a Montt VOTi. CLXXI. No. 47. Albuquerque, Wednesday, single topic Be 0, S. NAVAL LIMITING 101 NATIONAL BRIAND IS HERE TO REPRESENT II JURORS ARE NAVAL WAR E L AND ARMAMENT FRANCE AT DISARMING MEETING IN GUARD ORDERED v ; j II THE BOX IS DOOMED IS PROBLEM VITAL PROGRAM IS ACCEPTED TO STRIKE ZONE ARBUCKLE GASE VIEW OE HUGHES TO THE FRENCH BY 4 LEADIKG POWERS Situation at Ottumwa, Five of Those Tentatively Secretary of State Believes DELEGATES SAI Where Packing Employes Seated Are Women; Jury Conference Will Agree to Walked Out, Is Beyond Won't Be Selected By Discontinue Offensive Control of Local Officials Tonight, Attorney Claims Strife on the Seas. Representatives Take the ITALY AND Initial to the FRANCE, AnKOfllltrri Steps Bring (By Thr PrfM.) (Bf Thi Amoclatfd Tmm.) (By The A"noliit'f(1 Piw 1 Eimm, IB.
    [Show full text]
  • Albuquerque Morning Journal, 02-08-1922 Journal Publishing Company
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 2-8-1922 Albuquerque Morning Journal, 02-08-1922 Journal Publishing Company Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/abq_mj_news Recommended Citation Journal Publishing Company. "Albuquerque Morning Journal, 02-08-1922." (1922). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ abq_mj_news/471 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Albuquerque Morning Journal 1908-1921 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CITY CITY EDITION ALBUQUERQUE MORNING OURNAL. EDJTJON FOKTY-S- X1 YKAIS VOI. C'LXXII. No. :t. Albuquerque, New Mexico, Wednesday, February 8, 1922. Dally by Carrier or Mull a Month Single t opto ,r,c U. EFFECT CHARGE FATHER WITH 5. 10 0,000 PERSONS CITIZENS ALONG "PUNCHING NOSE" OF Stars of Film World in Search "FLAPPER" DAUGHTER Helping T FUN OF 1 MEXICAN BORDER Chicago, Feb. 7. While not El For Slayer of lor, Famous Director of a puritanical turp of mind. ay Joseph Miller today explained to Police JurtBO mine that he FILM DIRECTOR was unable to stand the rolled lASKADDITIONAL5 stockings, bobbed hair, galosh- TP es, plucked eyebrows and paint- BOARD BE ES ed li3 of the modern flapper. Mabel Normand, Screen Ho was charged by his wife REPORT with "punching the nose" of Actress, Faints When She T000PS, Ilia daughter. Kthel, 1G. Views Cut "My daughter wants to be a Body; Negro About $200,000,000 ho flapper," said.
    [Show full text]
  • The Automobile in the 1920S: Collected Commentary
    BECOMING MODERN: AMERICA IN THE 1920S PRIMARY SOURCE COLLECTION ONTEMPORAR Y IN OMMENTARY HE WENTIES* T T C Indiana Historical Society traffic safety poster, ca. 1925 — THE AUTOMOBILE — “Why on earth do you need to study what’s changing this country?” exclaimed an Indiana resident during an interview in 1929. “I can tell you what’s happening in just four letters: A-U-T-O!” What more was there to say? Plenty, it seemed, as the media of the day were filled with commentary on the a-u-t-o and where it was taking America at breakneck speed. Darrow was the famous defense attorney in the Scopes Trial, the Leopold-Loeb murder trial, and Clarence Darrow other headline-dominating cases of the 1920s. In his memoir he mused on a range of social issues. The Story of My Life The day of the horse is gone. The automobile has driven him from the 1932 roads. The boys and men and women of this generation must have automobiles. Those who manufacture them and sell them have made fortunes unknown in any former age. Every automobile costs more to sell than to make. No one can even guess at the cost of this new invention to the country or the change that it has brought to life. New roads have been built at great expense so men may ride quickly to some point so they can ride back more quickly if possible. Finance companies have helped the poor to get further into debt; an automobile complex demanding haste, change, and going and coming, has taken possession of mankind.
    [Show full text]
  • President-Elect Tries His Hand at Peacemaking
    S' - I - ii; ; -. ■ ;? -? » V ,■ ••' •■ • NET PRESS RUN THE WEATHER AVERAGE DAILY CIRCULATION PoMcaat hr U. ». Weatter Bnreaa, for the month of December, 1928 . I N Mew Uaeea 5 , 2 0 9 , I iV»>*ftrV“—CoDoP* Rain and warmer tonight; Satnr* Member of the Andit Bnrean of r.o»n- ^ ® ^ - day rain followed by clearing and Circalatlona Sttmitm colder. VOL. XLIIL, NO. 81. (Classified Advertising on Page 10) ' ' SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1929. (EIGHTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE CEN’Ki MARRIES A GIRL FOUR PERSONS LAND BLAZE SPELLS OCEAN LINER’S DOOM 12 YEARS OLD CHIEF UGGiNS PRESIDENT-ELECT So Judge Forbids Him to See '■i KILLED IN A Her Until She Is 18 Years of MAY REPLACE T R m W R E C K Age. TRIES HIS HAND Niles, Ohio, Jan. IS— James ARMUEADER Lucas, 18, today was under a court decree which forbids him AT PEACEMAKING to see his 12-year-old bride, Officials Cannot Understand 5. ^ Eunice Parsons, for the next Four Names Placed Before 9 six years. How Express Train Ran After they were married in Wells burg, W. Va., Dec. 28., Salvationists’ High Coun­ SENATORS AHACK Fixes Up a Truce Among the they returned here. About a hto First Wreck— Fog week later, the girl met her former teacher who had both cil Today to Succeed Gen­ Warring Republican Fac­ brought into court. MELON’S RECORD Blamed for First Crash. Judge William J. Hyde in eral Booth. tions of New York State; the Trumbull county Probate Court, fined ljucas $50 and sentenced him to 90 days in Accuse Him of ''Laying Appoints Three Men to Aberdeen, Md., Jan.
    [Show full text]