The Evening Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1916 Page: 2 of 10
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THE EVENING STATESMAN
PAGE TWO
T
ENGLISH CHURCH
THWLMAMSal
eeeseces 900900
SENDS GREETINGS
t
TO CONVENTION
g:
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WHY!
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C,
a
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Ches
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er
THWLAMa&
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6
CIGARETTES
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E
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21
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King Otto
CI
CITY IS SAVING
the Border Troops
nounced the dairy regulation orinance
LARGE INTEREST
N
ON BOND DEALS
Al
the walka
regulars
sick, with five
SIOUX CITT, Iowa, Oct. 12--John
I
hands with him.
Sometimes four or
IMMATERIAL.
CARE OF STORAGE BATTERIES.
Fails for Corns!
%
552
/
1
Stat*
T
I
•wm
Free to Pile
Sufferers
Priced from $1.00 Up
Every Corset Guaranteed
F
s
10 for 5c
Alsopacked20for10c
Beeause we know just what the
right model will do for the figure
it is intended to fit, and your fig-
ure will comfortably take on the
.fashionable lines of the corset.
Ohio and Richmond, Ind., as he passed
through this morning en route to In-
as 1
The
$
t
Q
b
Ho i
never
4
[1
Street ...
Otv......
Nor
Is «
AM,
4
2
Wear
Show
That Fit'
Marshal, and Dr. S. A. Woolsey, City
Health Officer, were before the Cout-
cil.
President Passes
Through Ohio Today
Grandma kept her locks dark, gloasy
and youthful with a simple mixture
of Sage Tea and Sulphur.
F<
Aus
Cull
ll
JI
Nineteen Mexicans
Indicted—Murder
0
t
e
Train Ran 533 Miles
in 10 Hours 50 Min.
SOLDIERS GOT RELIEF
FROM SORENESS
Hughes Spends
Day in Kentucky
Crowd Cheers Wilson
In Indianapolis
Insane King Otto
of Bavaria Dies
Uh
"Geta-1""
Tonight
Crowds Cheer for
Eight Hour Law
John Lind Speaks
in Wilson’s Defense
TURN HAIR DARK
WITH SAGE TEA
O
)
i
i
There's Nothing on Earth Like It
For Corns and Calluses.
Boys on the Border Relieved Their
Pains and Aches with
Sloan's Liniment.
reported 3.23 per cent
deaths.
88
87
wages uniess the men are required to
work more than eight hours a day.”
He declared that the measure is a real
8-hour law.
With regard to the administration’s
handling of Mexican affairs, he said the
policy 1® th® same as assumed by Pres-
ident U. 8. Grant
Maxwell House Tea
is good to the
last drop, too
Pa
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1916.
--------a------------------
“Gets-It” Never
“Scientists are now generally agreed
that drunkenness is a disease, and that
the man who drinks should be treated
by a physician.”
"Oh, well, most men who drink don’t
care who treats them ”—Tit-Bits.
?
Once you have tried
it you will always
insist on
MAXWELL
HOUSE
COFFEE
You will find Maxwell Hour.
at th. leading hotel, and
winter resorts throughout the
South, on dining care and In
homes where totuswtly good
. coDee la appreciated.
Cheek-Neal Coffee Company
JEovid Faema
mitted, the Council considering the
punishment excessive. • -----"
J. Bouldin Rec tr City Attorney. an-
Give me a package of those cigarettes that SATISFY 1
f
APKEICAPUDINE
IT 3 ** at
Ethe Hearing Evidence I Health Report for
On Watson Motion! tlD—a—‘T
born on April 27.
DEMINO, N. M., Oct 12.—Nineteen
Mexicans, who are being held by the
, army authorities at Colonia Dublan
for alleged connection with the Villa
I raid on Columbus, N. M., March 9,
, have been indicted by the Luna County
grand Jury, it became known today.
I All are charged with murder.
Dan G. Golding
Auctioneer Appraiser
much more equipment on
than the permit allows.
The reports of Oscar
1.91 per cent, with three deaths.
Kuns, Fire
For twenty years Dan G. Golding
has been coming to Austin once each
year as an auctioneer and appraiser.
Probably there is no other man so wel
and favorably known to Austin people
than Mr. Golding when • It comes to
traveling auctioneers. Lots of people
love to hear him talk. This year Mr.
Golding comes to Joe Koen's, one of his
best customers, to dispose of a big sur-
plus stock of Diamonds. Watches and
Jewelry valued at $50,000.
Itching, EE k
bleeding, in 2
protruding 11 322
piles, bemor* ■ , . . . 2.8
Get Edd. a j H2d
n m . . r > t ox BMMf2eedcF 2682836 1
today of any |EB9BSmmS9EEE!I
ma coupoudfor trial. Take no substitute*
FREE SAMPLE COUPON
PYRAMID DRUG COMP ANT.
"SnFzhamfjMrenidine.
Kindly send me a Free sample
of Pyramia Pile "Trentment, in
plain wrapper.
Name ....................
yangs.
Do not let your figure go!
When you are fifty you can have
the linea of a woman of thirty if
you pay the attention to your cor-
let that you pay to the rest of your
dress, and it is much more impor-
tant, if you ask us we will select
for you a model from
__. ...... . _ ,
"I‘m not happy unless I have an en-
gagement every evening.”
“Me, too. With a couple of broken
engagements to patch up ’ the next
day.”—Kansas City Journal.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 12.—Health of
National Guard and regular army
troops on th®. Mexican border showed
in improvement for he week ending
Oct. 7 over the previous week. A re-
port made public today by the War De-
partment gave the sick of the militia
WACO, Texas, Oct. 12.— Business
men, country merchants and others
were placed on the stand this morn-
ing in support of the contention of
counsel for T. R. Watson, that it will
be impossible for him to get a fair
trial in McLennan County. All of those
who testified sa,d they were con rinced,
from what they had read and heard
in the case, that Watson was guilty,
but that this opinion could be re-
moved by evidence.
It is understood that the defense still
ha« a large number of witnesses to
support their allegallon ’hat prejudice
exists in McLennan County against
Mr. Watson.
The big thing about Chesterfields is their unique
blend. The Chesterfield blend is an entirely new com-
bination of tobaccos. This blend is the most important
new development in cigarette making in 20 years.
As a result, Chesterfields produce a totally new
kind of cigarette enjoyment—they satisfy! Just like
a “bite” before bedtime satisfies when you’re hungry.
But with all that, Chesterfields are MILD, too I
This new enjoyment (satisfy, yet mild) comes
ONLY in Chesterfields because no cigarette maker
can copy the Chesterfield blend.
EggaZeNucaccoCe
N /axwell House
VI Coffee hasfull
1, strength and
full flavor without
heaviness—it is a tru-
ly remarkable coffee.
You will not be sat-
isfied to call it good
—you will character-
ize it as unusually
good.
Nonebutthe choicest
coffees, expertly
blended, are used for
Maxwell House. The
quality is absolutely
uniform—there is no
variance in the high
standard.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 12— On
his second Middle Western trip of the
campaign, President Wilson came to
Indianapolis today to speak to farm-
ers and good roads advocates. He ar-
rived here at 11; 30 o’clock, faced a
strenuous program, which promised to
keep him busy every minute until his
departure at 5:45 o'clock this after-
ngon. At the railroad station and along
the streets cheers greeted him.
The first speech by the President
was to be delivered before a good roads
meeting at the State fair grounds fol-
lowing the parade. Another speech to
farmers was to follow immediately. At
both meetings the President was plan-
ning to speak extemporaneously. After
the second speech he was to hurry to
his private car to begin his trip bck
to Long Branch,-N. J.
The President was cheered by large
crowds this morning at several towns
in Ohio and Indiana on the way here.
Ho appeared first at Dayton, Ohio.
When urged to speak at Rchimonu,
Ind., he said:
"I am not making speeches, but it is
mighty fins to see you. It makes my
heart warm to have ysu come out and
greet me in this way."
Seeing that most of the crowd were
working men, Mr. Wilson, added .
”1 am a hard working man myself.”
At Greenfield, Ind., a band came hur-
rying down a street just as the presi-
dent's trained pulled out. It did not
have time to play. Mr. Wilson shook
hands with the people as rapidly as
possible and waved to them as the
train left.
The amount
of comfort
and bap pi -
ness spread
over the con-
tine nt by tb®
famons Pyr-
amid Pile
Treatment
is truly re-
markable. A
FREE trial
package will
oonvl neo
anyone who
sfers from
CHICAGO, Oct. 12.—Hurrying to the
bedside of his wife who was taken ill
suddenly yesterday, Jacob M. Dickin-
son, receiver for the Rock Island line®
and former secretary of’ war, estab-
lished a new record run from Memphis
to Chicago. He arrived over the Illi-
nois Central Railroad in a special car
at 10:53 o'clock last night, covering the
533 miles in ten hours and fifty min-
utes. The regular schedule for fast
trains is fourteen hours and fifty min-
utes.
22
Genuine vanadium steel Ford parts
last longer in your Ford car. Sold
only by Ford agents.
Once upon a time Norman Jones,
serving in the National Guard at El
Paso, returned to camp after a stren-
uous 15 mile hike foot-sore and leg-
weary. He had not been long in active
service and his shoulders, back and
limbs felt ths after-effects of march-
ing
Remembering Sloan's Liniment,
Jones applied it to the sore spots and
went to bed. He writes: "I arose the
next morning feeling fine; in fact I
had entirely forgotton about the hike
and went out for a four-hour drill In
the sun as spry as ever.”
Private Jones passed the experience
along, and many a boy on the border
relieved the agony of sprains, strains,
bruises. Insect bitee, cramped muscles,
rheumatic twinges, eta., by the use of
Sloan’s Lniment.
Eazily applied without rubbing. At
all druggist e, 25c. 50c. and |1.00.
1848, and succeeded his brother. Lud-
wig II, in 1885. Ludwig II was also
insane and drowned himself in Starn-
bers Lake. King Otto was deposed
Nov, 5. 1913, nnd was succeeded by
the present monarch. Ludwig III. for-
merly regent.
, -----—------- ---- - diana polis. He refused to make po-
und, former Governor of Minnesota litical speeches, but at Dayton declared
and at one tithe special envoy of Presi- i it did his heart good to receive such
dent Wilson to investigate conditions! welcomes. Leaning over the observa-
in Mexico, defended the Adamson bill i tion platform of his private car at Day-
and President Wilson's policy in Me X- J ton, the President was almost mobbed
ico in an address here last night. He by a good-natured crowd of several
•aid "th® Adamson bill will not bring (thousand persons who sought to shake
the employes one penny increase in hands with him. F--------*-------
"How is your indigestion?”
"It has just succumbed to a new
cure"—Ufa
PIKESVILLE. Ky.. Oct. 12.--Charles
E. Hughes spent today in Kentucky.
His second appearance as a presi-
dential canddatae in the State was
here this forenoon. His program called
for a day of short speeches, rear plat-
form talks and an address at Louis-
▼Hie tonight
He will leave Louisville latea tonight
for Springfield. Mo., where he will
speak tomorrow afternoon.
ST. LOUIS, Mo, Oct. 12.—Greetings
expressing the good will of the mother
church for the Protestant Episcopal
Church of the United States were
presented by representatives of the
| church of England with impressive
; ceremonies at a joint meeting of the
[ two houses of the convention of the
, American church in tri-ennial session
here today.
The Right Rev. Huysche Wolcott
Yeatman-Biggs, bishop of Worcester,
England, said that even with the
[ shadow of war hanging over Eng-
, land, members of his church are in-
j tensely interested in the work of the
American chureh. Similar expressions
were made by Bishop H. H. Montgom-
I cry, secretary of the Society for the
I the propogation of the gospel of the
church of England and by Archbishop
George Thornloe of Algoma, OnL and
Bishop David Williams of Huron, Ont.,
fraternal delegates from the Episcopal
church of Canada.
Funds saved in money boxes by
thousands of the American Episco-
palian women in the last three days
to be devoted to the support of women
missionaries, were collected today at
teh "Unitei Offering Service” of the
iVomen’s Auxiliary, holding sessions
simulianeously with those of the gen-
eral convention. Following a com-
munion service the women which pre-
vjously had been placed in the hands
of the sixty-eight diocesan and the
twenty-on® missionary district offi-
cers of the church was presented at
th® altar in a golden alms basin.
Counting of the money continued
through the morning nnd the amount
obtained was to be announced at a
mass meeting in the afternoon.
Meetings of the several committees
appointed at the last general conven-
t‘on held in New York in 1913 to in-
vestigate religious, social and economy
problems and report to this year's con-
vention. were held today preparatory
to presenting their report®. which may
be presented ti ether of the two bouses
making up the general convention at.
any of the regular business sessions,
which begin today nnd will continue
for about three weeks.
LONDON, Oct. 12.—Former King
Otto of Bavaria, who has been insane
for many years, has died suddenly, ac-
cording to a Copenhagen dispatch to
the Exchange Telegraph Company,
quoting a Berlin official announcement.
The mad king died at Fuerste nried
Castle, near Munich, where he has been
confined since 1878.
ON BOARD PRESIDENT WIL-
SON‘8 SPECIAI Richmond, Ind Oct.
11.— President Wilson was greeted by
crowds of cheering people at Dayton,
ON BOARD PRESIDENT WIL-
SON'S SPECIAL, Columbus, Ohio, Oct.
12.—President Wilson passed through
Ohio today on his way to Indianapolis
on his second middle -western trip of
the campaign. Although the two
speeches the President is due to make
in Indianapolis are classed as non-
partisan by his advisers, his visit to
Ohio and Indiana today was considered
a political event.
The President passed through Co-
lumbus early this morning. He had
turned down invitations to speak at
several places en route to and from
Indiana polis, but planned to appear on
the observation platform of his pri-
vate car at each stop and shake hands
with the people.
five persons had hold of each of his
hands at one time. In the usual shout®
from the crowd the 8-hour.law was the
most frequently mentioned. The Presi-
dent made the trip on the special train.
With him were Mrs. Wilson. Secretary
Tumulty, and Dr. Cary T. Grayson, the
White House physician.
A big new discovery in
cigarette blending
Sloan’s
Liniment
A/L is PA//
e990eeg0000ee0veeeeeeeevemvoveweevveee ecece e • o ee 41'
Just because the storage battery
used for cranking an automobile en-
gin® hidden beneath the floor board®
or seat of car, it is often overlooked
nnd doe® not receive the attention that
it requires.
While an automobile starting bat-
tery does not need a great amount of
attenion nor need a car owner he an
expert In order to keep his battery in
good condition. To give good service
It must receive some little care, and
if is Just this little attention which is
very often overlooked. Very often a
starting battery will do its work for
a considerable time without any at-
tention, butswhen it finally gives out,
an inspection show® that either an
entirely new battery is needed or that
extensive repairs must be made, where,
if th battery had been propriy card
for, no rpairs at all would have been
necessary or a very small sum would
have covered th® necessary work to be
done.
A storage battery requires: First,
that it shall be properly charged. Its
state of charge fan be easily deter-
mined by the use of a hydrometer
syringe, which is a simple piece of ap-
paratus and can be readily used by
anyone. Second, the cell® in n battery
must be filled with pure water (not
.acid) from time to time, so as to keep
the water level even! with th etop of
the plates This again is a very sim-
ple matter and can be readily done by
anyone. The heed of proper charging,
fillingyof water and taking'weekly hy-
dromeer reading constitute the three
simple rules that ©very automobilist
should carefully follow.
Of course, an essential requirement
is a good battery, and with a good
battery and the little attention it re-
quire® an automobilts should have no
trouble from this source.
The "Exide" battery, made by the
Electric Storage Battery Company of
Philadelphia, was the first commer-
cially successful starting and lighting
battery on the market, but its quality
and its features of superiority more
than compensate for its first cost.
Appreciating the necessity for a good
battery and desiring to give car own-
ers in this territory good service, An-
derson & Benson are offering "Exide”
battery service to automobilists in this
vicinity. 1 he company is equipped with
all facilities to properly and ocomptly
handle any work in connection with
automobile batteries.
,,2
g
"Whenever you get coms and.cal-
ouses, don't experiment—just use
"GETS-IT and nothing else. Easiest
and simplest thing I know to use—just
a few drops on in a few seconds—
The old-time mixture of Sage Tea
and Sulphur for darkening gray,
streaked, and faded hair is grandmoth-
er's recipe, and folks are again using
it to keep their hair a good, even color,
which 1® quite sensible, is we are living
in an age when a youthful appearance
is of the greatest advantage.
Nowadays, though, we don't have th®
troublesome task of gathering the sage
and the mussy mixing at home. All
drug stores sell the ready-to-use prod-
uct, improved by the addition of other
ingredients. called "Wyeth's Sage and
Sulphur Compound" for about 50 cents
a bottle. It is very popular because
nobody can discover it has been ap-
plied. Simply moisten your comb or
a soft brush with it and draw this
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time; by morning the gray
hair disappear®, but what delights the
ladles with Wyeth’s Sage and Sul-
phur Compound, is that besides beauti-
fully darkening the hair after a few
applicatiens, it also produces that soft
lustre and appearance of abundance
which is so attractive. This ready-to-
use preparation is n delightful toilet
requisite for those who desire a more
youthful appearance. It is not in-
tended for the cure, mitigation or pre-
vention of disease.
"GETS-IT" does the rest" The old
way is to bundle up your toes In har-
ness and bandages, use salves that
make toes raw, cotton rings that make
your corns pop-eyed, knives and "dig-
gers" that tear your heart out and
leave the corn in. No wonder they
make you limp and wince. Forget all
these—use "GETS-IT," the simplest
corn remedy in the world, easiest to
use. never falls nr stks, painless. Your
corn loosens, then you lift it off. You
can wear smaller shoes. }
"GETS-IT >® sold and recommended
by druggist® everywhere. 25c a bot-
tle. or sent on receipt of price, by E.
Jawrence & Co. Chicago. Ill.
Hold in Austin and recommended as
the world's best corn remedy by Morley
Bros. Van Smith Drug Co. and Jeff
WImbinh.’
ATTENTION YOUNG MEN
Get one of those handsome Dorrine
cases or Vanity Box at Joe Koen's an-
nual auction Sule. Sales daily and
evenings until stock disposed of. Mr.
Koen is net going out of business-
just working off annual bargains and
urplus slock to make room for new
holiday goods.
was not ready ta be presented, as T.
H McGregor had not fjnally completed
the draft as desired By certain of the
dairymen. ,
There was some discussion at gaso-
I‘ne pumps and tanks on the sidewalks,'
which led City Engineer Welborn to
remark that they are becoming a nui-
sance since many of the dealers fall
to observe the regulations, and place
instead of receiving a bonus of $6000
on the recent bond refund'ng trans-
। action, the Mayor said at 1 hursday's
Council meeting, the city will actually
be gainer to the amount of about
$10,000, aside from tlie reduction in the
inierest rate. Of this gain, $3500 to
84000 will come by reason of the fact
that interest on the old bonds ceased
• when they were called July 1, and in-
| terest on th® new ones does not begin
; until the old, ones are taken up. Of
lhe 81,700,000 f the old issue called
in, 8111,500 have not been presented
for redemp(ion, and the city is still
saving the interest on them. Many of
the other® were presented slowly.
The Council is about to reach a set-
tlement of its differences with the
bony buyers, Bolger, Mosser & Willa-
mon of Chicago. The Mayor is to
present an itemized statement of the
. deal next Thursday.
The sees on was devoted largely to
the hearing of reports and other rou-
tine business, larger matter® being held
up pending the return of Councilman
Powell from New Orleans.
The City Bor of Equnlizatton sent
in a written report apprising the Coun-
cil that It had finished its work, and
expressing the conviction that prop-
erty values had been equalised in a
thorough manner throughout the city.
The report is something of a document
for the opposition to the Mayor's plan
of installing the Somers system in
I Austin. It call® attention that vir-
tually no changes in renditions on
East Austin property were made, but
says that a 10 per cent raise on land
values Was pretty general in other
। parts of the city. Few change® In
improvement valuation® were made.
I C. H. Cross. Healer of Weights and
I Measures, reported that six of the ten
wagon scales which he tested during
I September were found to need cor-
* rectton. Five error® In weights of
farm products were discovered by
weighing on the city scales, and those
responsible were compelizd to settle
{ accordingly. On one load th® money
value of the discrepancy was 810, on
another it was 85.27.
I Mr. Cross called attention that the
l wood season is on, and urged that all
! buyers of wod cord It and insist on
getting 128 cubic feet, no matter what
UM size or length. He inspected dur-
ing the month forty-six counter scales,
of which he condemned alx and ad-
’ justed twelve.
Mayor Wooldridge informed Ms col-
I leagues of an offer made by the man-
i ager of the Texas Bltulithic Company
to make a wading pool of one of the
, park ovals In West Twelfth Street,
' next to Rio Grande. The matter had
been referred to the Superintendent
McCallum and th© City Echool Board,
, with the result that the board had
' feared there would be some disad-
; vantage® connected with a location so
< near to two schools. The pool will
• probably be provided at another place.
। Councilman Bartholomew announced
i that most of the material for new
, lighting on Congress has at last r-
I rived. He suggested that in order to
carry th® lighting all the way to the
I river bridge It would be necessary to
place thre© additional iron pole® in the
center of th© Avenue.
Part of th© fines assessed some time
ago against Walter Gonzales and So-
cledo Scrivener for vagrancy was r-
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The Evening Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1916, newspaper, October 12, 1916; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1498148/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .