The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 84, Ed. 2 Friday, October 1, 1915 Page: 1 of 10
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N
X
$
AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 1,1915.
TAINETEEN
MOUNTAIN
ed Dissolved
Ord
GUNS IN
4
Federal Cotpl
4g
Their Underground British Stop to Consoli-
Bomb-Proof Shelters.
•H
m. ~Seven
ASION BY
-Raiders feared
J
i
pany is a holdun
Many Small Boats Were
nle
Hurricane.
inson.
bl,
dergoing repairs and overha
several others together
wil
pany, Thomas A Edison (Inc.), Essa-
Manufaoturi
Hnknown Bailors of Italian' bafk
it
constant stream of bombs and soon
s,
Irove the Germanr from
Mi
by Tales of Victory
Blocksom,
1
favorable
circumstances permit
in a dang
(Continued on Pare Two)
nd telephone companles
were workl
lay and night to restore
wire
com
stricken cit
DRESS UP WEEK IS
was stated
ALMOST HERE
Storm Warnings Out
s'*
crul
on Serbian Frontier
gb
f
of not more than ten
millimeter gun.
j was silenced ‘
lb
a bnllet,"
I
of the region who has
ll
4
Houston and New
tween
in
excellent condition
■
[F.ilPI
EXAMINES ■ •TIMATIB.
Dress Up!
Cheer Up!
I
I
\
L,
>
M)
sg
where dy
"hel-roingum.n,H4.
114
Uvalde Rock A
nt.
,7
'll
6
.0
which remained in oua han
Paris Is Thrilled
7
Ar
r
Eye Witness Says Ger-
mans Were Killed in
"is excluded from the findings and the
petition as against n is diwmos’u d."
Ito Restore
elegraph Tonight
WASHINGTON 0. C.
BANKERS INDICTED
ON PERJURY CHARGE
PROGRESS
STEADILY
TEXAS & PACIFIC
PAINT AND COACH
SHOP BURNS DOWN
SUBSCRIPTIONS TO
BIG FOREIGN LOAN
ARE 430.000.000
the work of r
was progress
een In Matamoros reached him.
arrest was requested by Colonel
The governn
Motion Picture
other defendant
terstate and fol
tion pictures, f
Ing machines I
HA
. still
Then
PARIS. Sept. 10, 11:10 p. m.—The
Temps, commenting on the American
loan to Great Britain and France, says:
"The conditions of the loan are as
had
Than
A. F
age to New Orleans
itimated at Several
Millions.
I ’ fol
tiout
fes '
ra co
BETWEEN SIXTY
- AND SEVENTY LIVES
LOST ALONG COAST
date Positions They
Have Won.
No Word Received
From Big Steamer
Bulgarians Invade Ser-
bian Territory, It Is
Reported.
ago
lose
Motion
nts Com-
s Law by
Patents.
HEAVY LOSSES
ALONG COAST
in
Eu
"i
Uh
BATTLE FRONT
__ jIN EAST SAME
Cavalry Patrol On River
Is Being Closely
Watched.
st ate
| into
bh co
ghEro
rd
tri
222
10
by Judie Ollve :
decislon sw
United states tf*
f
fart tally reg
the telegra
Intai
Ver j
1!
•ERISHED
IN STORM
apparatus usedinc
art, in violation ।
The defendants
petition of compi
tion picture pat I
General Film Co
Look Up!
bring
left 11
Allegation .
Picture El
pany Vio
Controllita;
ft
i ■1
sir
id
system Were carried in stoc
Several coaches were in the
"The Two Spot,’ or 'The Buffalo*
Though the scrap pile beckons
home.
Will feel the wizard’s magic wand
And live til Kingdom Come.
the woods,
2,"
“Mo
I have a phonograph attached,
Just under my wooden skin,
That says for me the following speech
That's grown threadbare and thin:
Clothes are the mirrer of the man. If you are the posses-
.sor. of great wealth, you- cn possibly afford to wear last year’s
suit and “Third Term” hat and shoes. But if you want to look
successful, if you aspire to be something more than a nonen-
tity, by all means dress up. • .
You don’t need to be freakish or extravagant or loud in the
. . selection of your new clothes. Be modestly attired, but buy that
new suit and you’ll feel better when you don it
Our Home Circulation
•• orowing by leaps and bounds be-
The Stateuman carries the for-
eign. National, State, market, locat end
societ, now. Into the homes FIRST.
MS. Tenn., Oct. +-orfielais
po A Missinstppt Valley raIl-
h today their Irackn were in.
Isew rleans and that tele-
hmunlcatlon with New or-
ably would be completed by
ilinolN Central trins will be
rom Hammond, LA. to Baton
I thence to New orlean», over
| a Miasissippi Valley tracka
FRENCH
WASHINOTON, Oct. 1—Charlen C.
Glover, prenident of the Riggs National
Bank; William J. Finther, vice presi-
dent, and it H Flather, ennhier, were
indicted today for penjury in connec-
! tion with the bank’s recent suit
' Againt Becretary McAdoo and Comp-
troller Williams. ___
KUROPATKIN APPOINTED.
I
Advertising Experts t
that the evening pap hoe greate
us as an advertising medium. Tha
why American evening papers
making such wonderful progress. 1
nay Film,Manufee turing Ce
Kalem Cbm pen;
Lubin Manufaq
nidentiried white man, washed
at West End.
Algiers nejroes, two drowned
killed la fllapse of his home,
negro fidherman, drowned In
Remember the Dates—October 4 to 9
. t•
And all eyes areapon YOU. Get in the game; buy that suit,
put it on and lok prosperous!
Your clothes may not be your fortune, but your appear-
ance is evident tocxgur friends of about what you are, all in all.
. . The Habitul crpe hanger, the perpetual grouch, the slop-
py, ill-clad man is never a success: You can tell one of t h i s
type as far as you can see- him, and sometimes you can almost
feel him coming.
1 the chent by
A resident
! was struck in
“And so it is with the wood box cars.
Though they would not bouse a bat,
The 'cracker box’ coach and machines
and all
Have as many lives as a eSt."
I have heard it so much, I bellve it
myself,.
Though it sounds too bad to be true.
That enternal life waa meant for them
And not for me^ Hoof"
•AILING VESSEL BUNK.
age estimated at 1700,000 was caused A
here early today by a fire which ds- • * *j
tation of ths city
idly, ths streets
“An engine, old and wheezy and lame,
That's patched In a hundred ways,
if the patches hold out, ‘from a service
stndpoint,
is bound to ‘last always.*
NEW ORLEANS, La., Sept. 30. 8:80
p. m. by courier to Baton Rouse-
Nineteen known dead, probably 200 in-
jured and damage to buildings, wire
circuits, railroads, ahiping and other
property in New Orleans and vicinity
geti ma ted at several million dollars,
was the toll exacted by the hurricane
which swept the city Wednesday and
was conceded to have been the worst
ever experienced in this section. These
figures were compiled from the best
information obtains bl here late today.
Of the known dead, ten were white and
nine were negroes The dead:
L CAPTAIN C J. MENGES, of Cinein-
P qati, manager of the floating etock of
L ke ononsahela Coal and Coke Com-
ft ’ . LEy MYERS of Algiers, La.
k. Br9 VAHIE, New Orleans.
New CRUM, New Orleans*
■ /g. “ML FLORINE, New Orleans.
1 )HFsTER DIAZ, St. Bernard
AUSTIN STATES]
And TRIBUNE
'wave* of assault. I was In a stream Half Million Men
which passed four lines of trernches In
four jumps We rnn like mad mnen
forward always forward At one mo-
ment we were confronted at a distance
fic from the wept
w
— ------
mMBIritlon betweor the
sit* the gutside woria. It
ed] 67 outalde aid would be
BULGARS AND CLASH.
TURIN, Italy, Sept M. via Parin
Oct. 1. 4 «t a. m Thar, have been
beverai clushes between serblane and
Hulgnrians ulong the frontier. nOeord-
ini to report, received here. A Bul-
«arian patrol at Tritehouke la report-
ed to have attcked serbian Mnlln.l.,
who retreated. Th. Hulgarlans erom.
ed into Serbian terpitor, where they
remained several hour,.
"ulqurian troop, are mala to be dig-
Kin, trenche» along the frontier and
protectin« them with barbel Wiie
tanglennonts.
1, and bunldinge
— _ ______ condition by th,
storm betne top- An,w Raliroad traf-
it into th. city hit been
•4, it ... reported, and
RATE HEARING
HAS RESULTED
IN TWO "POMES”
FA RIB. Oet. 1—The number of Aug-
tro-German troops coneentratd on the
Serbian frontier is estimated by the
Nish correspondent of the Tempe at
500,000, He says that 830,000 of thesa
are Germans.
- a ■-
MARSHALL, Texas, Oct. —Dam
I
General Nafarett said he had report-
ed this to American Consul Jesse K.
Johnson at Matamoros, as well as the
fact that five arranza soldiers with
an officers had deserted, and joined
the Texas bandts. He said he still
•was watching to catch these men on
the Mexican side of the river. Gen-
eral Nafarette spoke freely about re-
ports that he is connected with smug-
glers in this region, denying any such
connection. He said that ne has re-
r
. Oct. 1.—The
urt today de-
ssolution suit
Hu re Patent
government.
Latent j Com-
ern. It was
It that it con-
bring picture
hies and also
I he American
^28^^ I WHlra Dr. Plerce, XecTha yf
- EL lastereeung lettera ir ns totms and *e1 hi. mediea opinie
"nwouw* . awithdut charu and abmolutey I
tnera couiniana a. far west ••
-€tty and especially in the vi-
hf Houma, was the fear ex-
I by many here today.
had men arriving from Morgan
ported no loss of life a-that
tepclared the damage Ws se-
J.hhurricane struck that point
Y<Veqday night and attained a
".eiixty miles an hour by 1
kj.4 E1Indications the full force
-X aparenty swept over the
F>A‘of Houma, a city of 5000
A and as the country is low
■ was feared that section
k jb severely than any other
■ received from Houma
■ 7 clock Wednesday morning
JI many refugees were arriv-
A rom gulf coast points. St
PPat,joining New Orleans patah,
Feal’by a tidal wave to a depth
Kherp to eight feet in the lower
P,athe parish, couriers arriving
reported The-property loss
do‘y. Crops throughout the dis-
ted by the hurricane were al-
I nily destroyed. It was reported
kirlso were felt for the safety
yOats along both banks of the
nai south of here. The, last
4, the sectin around Tw
the river came today in a
tock. here.
Mop un-
Iingpnd
-------- --------- WAany
freight cars were on the track"near-
...................../
FIVE CENTS THE COPY
V an Border Patrol
4 Commands Mex-
ran Trenchse
HOUSTON. Tex., Oct. 1-- The Wol.
vln Un- steamship company has heard
no word from the paesenger and freight
steamer City of Tumpico, one of the
biggest bonts in the Texas City-Mexi-
can $ervice.
The City of Tampico was proceeding
up the Mi mI Mi ppi river when the hur.
r ma ne broks.
Six Midshipmen
Ordered Dismissed
“In defiance of years as time rolls on,
"Til all the planets have spun
Through space and are lost in the great
unknown.
Will live the "O-Sixty-One.’
f:tory for the
u of justice.
2Ezed that the
gnts"comany and
Be engaged in in-
Scommerce in mo-
cameras, exhibit-
Pther articles and
Bis motion picture
The anti-trust law.
med In the original
It, besides the mo*
i company, are the
ny, Biograph Com-
A«lo boy. killed in falling house.
Phill roes • killed in collapse of
■ Bosta Poydras and Rampart
Balu in the ruins of a building
I Adaiwr front.
grk: storu caused hevy prop-
$ L-aana possibly many casualties
MORI FRENCH GAIN!.
PARIS, Oct. 1 2137 p m. Yu the
great batile in the Artois distriet the
French have mhde further progress by
means of attacks wlh hand grenaes
on German trenches. Announcement to
this effect was made today by the war
office. Im the c"hampagne a German
counter attack near Ma leone de Cham-
pagne was checked, ibe Germans vio-
lently bombarded French trenches near
Foupir, north of Anns, tut made noin-
fantry attck.
The communication follows:
“In the Artois district we have made
progress by the use of hand grenades
In the trenches and underground pas-
Mgea exit and southeast of Neuville.
“Two German punter attacks have
been delivered, one against a fort
which we conquered yesterday in the
forest of Givenchy, the other against
the trenchrw to the south of hill No.
119, where French troops had Inatailed
themselven. Hach one of these attacks
wan ( onelusively repulsed.
"North of the Alone, near Boupir,
the eneinv conducted a violent demon,
stration against our trenches. The fir-
Ing of their artillery and their Infnntry
wan not followed by an infantry at-
tack.
“Is the C’hampngne district our firs
put a deflnlto check to a erman coun-
te attack near Maisons de cham.
pagne.
""The number of prisoners made yeg-
terdny evening during our advance to
the north of Masaiges ig 280, including
six officers."
Has message from the steamer
cashich was anchored off Fort St.
ravaiting for the storm to abate
arJacobs reported that the water
"U~ing over the levees and that
htuses along the banks had been
I say by the floods it was pre-’
nzam this report that a number
hih ‘s in these houses had lost
| ' Captain Jacobs denied that
EeFers of the Creole's crew had
IT ned or that he had seen bod-
[ < down the river. Captain
M W three members of the crew
MA Corsair acre drowned in the
Edriyer off Nine-Mile Point 1n
Isuburb, when the < orsair
Mdbgatsof barges sank while
by a break. ’» *1
"aonefptaTthRtomat
i ut no life losn.W“
w were rend er
the storm and "
n Poge Two)
stroyed the paint and coach shop,
storeroom and several coaches and
freight cars of .the Texas & Pacific
railway and damaged adjoining prop-
erty. The fire, which started shortly
after midnig t, is believed to have been
caused . by spontaneous combustion
originating in the paint shop. The
coach and paint shop was a large two.
story building, with basement and con-
structed of galvanised iron and wood
framing. The storeroom was a wood-
en structure. Stores for the entire
They show the confidence of America
in the ultimate victory of the"allles."
11 Along Atlantic
Oct. 1 Thetrovuca
as sweeping through Hi*
■nhey In a northeastward
q4 endary storm had de-
5 southeastern Virginia,
as *i oving northeastward,
nies are a ompanied by
hortheast gles and the
Pau .today ordred storm
played on the Atlantic
orfolk to Portland, Main*
■ hose eatiy iminiahert in
Ece It p< wed inland over
■>m the Ilf of Mexico. It
lowed b, warmer weather
gh Atlant I' States. In the
■ and extreme southwest,
Soler weather prevails.
yards by a 77-
firing. It neon
Ese"prmnghtasi night
beesergvenanepoate 1
geaoai valued at •• •
W men saldnuiy ana vustnean
Wa neDF Kay. th* cicarina
Ked bor.tort, -*• berun
Virom heunt5 Sssume che
[ tion, rap: ‘worker" walked
-
nurricane anrihe a Prioa
"alMadenta
eleavcenpedwim g 2
grcmu MgRe J
MXoOdea fodaytromo
Ml "throuih,mont,ct1on
Ni rivers Lo" ’
t outskirts alao ”1
American cavalry
just arrived in Paris nays: "Never
could I have imagined the awful havoe
chune4 Ip the Ger man trenches by our
artillery. It was no longer a rumbling
gun fire we heard In, the distance, but
a terrifying roar. Shells were fired in
a stendy wfrenm."_.
98/TION
the Selig PolyL-.- .
graph Company Jand eleven individuals.
The Melies Company, in the decision.
ONLY DALY PAPER PUBLISHED IN AUSTIN CARRYING THE COMPLETE ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORT
_______w Cqmpany, the
‘(Inc.). Gerrge Kleine,
Hug Com^ny, Melies
ompany, Pthe Freres,
pe Comparly, the Vita-
PHILADELPHf, I
United States Dith
elded the anti-(del
against the Motuig
Company in favo/kt
The Motion. Feul
commanding the
patrol districts.
French Exploded
Seven Huge Mines
In Sonchez Battle
.L-a A ■ -
VOLUME 1, NUMBER 84
As an evidence of terrific mental
strain the railroad commission rate
hearing has put upon its participants.
R. D. Parker, chief engineer of the
State commission, has been driven to
the expression of his thoughts in poetic
meter. Throughout the course of the
hearing there has been a continued
disposition on the part of attorneys for
the railroads and members and at-
taches of the commission to indulge in
argument and the effort of Mr. Parker
authorised for publication the first
time today. Is in rebuttal to a poem
written recently by Judge H. M. Gar-
wood of general counsel for the Sun-
cot-Central lines.
In order that his own version might
be more emphatic and demand greater
attention from the devotees to the com-
mission jargon, Mr. Parker submitted
with his poem a mechanical drawingot
a gyrating man pulled by a string. The
poem by Judge Garwood entitled "Em-
erson’s Lament," on depreciated equip-
ment* is answered by Mr. Parker’s
"Jeremiad of the Mechanical Man-.’’
The poem follows:
I am a railroad Mechanical Man:
When "the powers" pull the string.
I wiggje my arms and waggle my legs
Andsay most anything.
WASIIINQTON, Oct 1.—Dismissal
of six midshipmen, suspension of four
others for one year without pay and
the demotion 4o the next lowest claas
of fifteen others was announced by
Secretary Daniels today as the result
of the recent hexing Inveatigation a|
Annapolis naval ardomy n
ad Is Open
I to New Orleans
l k h .. .. Oct. 1 Main
WA siaToN, Ot. t President
Wileon today began examining the an-
nual appropriation estimat es "prepared
by cabinet members for presentation to
congresa in December. He had issued
instructions that strict economy be gb-
BROWNSVILLE, Texas, Oct. i.—
One battery of mountain guns moved
into the Progreso district, thirty -five
miles up the Rio Grands at daylight
today. Its presence served the double
purpose of an experiment as a moral
restraint upon bandit smugglers and
other lawless elements from Mexico
and of commanding the fortifications
on the Mexican bank of the Rio' Grand e
whence organised raids have recemntiy
been launched into American terri-
tory.
It was learned today that the re-
cently established cavalry patrol camp
between here und the mouth of the
Rio Grande has been under surveillance
of Mexicans. To sereen this camp
from view a hedge of willows was built
in front of the tents. After the hedge
was erected the cavalrymen noticed
an unusual agitation in branches of a
tree on the other side, and presently
a Mexican fell to the ground from s
tree top, having climbed too high for
safety in an effort to see into the
American camp.
General E. P. Nafarette, Carranza
commander at Matamoros, today com-
menting on reports in the United
States that he is either unable to con-
trol his army or is lu sympathy with
attacks on the American side of the
river, said he has arrested to date all
the Mexicans 'be eould find who are
suspected of joining in the alleged re-
volutionary plot aga st the United
States. Ho aald he attempted to catch
Louie de la Rosa and Aniceto Piznno,
Mexicans whose names were signec
to revolutionary clrculars distributed
in South Texas, but thst they were
gohe by the ttme Informnation that they
the hurricane that swept
ha coast Wednesday and
aenger service is being
without a detour,
h-the Sunset Central and
trains are leaving Houston
its tolling tickets to New
by. Owing to the character of the
construction ot the buildings and aid-
ed by a north wind the buildings burn-
ed rapidly. The property waa fully
insured.
As the insurance policy waa carried
in the North, the amount of insurance
is not known here, officials of the
railroad in Dallas and New Orleans
have been notifled. of the loan and
their orders regarding rebuilding have
been sought. Nothing of this nature
has been heard from them, however.
NEW YORK. Oet. d.—Members of
the bank'ng syndicate which will man-
age the $500,000,000 bond issue nego-
tiated here by the Anglo-French loan
commission lied received today a flood
of applications from banks and indi-
viduals for permission to participate
underwriting the loan. The subscrip-
tion books have not yet been opened.
A maximum estimate of the total sub-
scriptions already offered placed the
amount as high aw tUO.OOO/iQO
French Comment
On Terms of Loan
PARIS, Oct. 1, 12: 20 a. m. -lhe cap-
ital is being thrilled by sories of the
fighting on the western front related
by soldiers wounded in the desperate
combats,
"For several days the Germans had
been getting agrensive," said one of
the men who charged st Souchen.
"They shouted insults st us and flung
into our trenches notes wrapped around
pebbles. One of their favorite taunts
was, 'You are too cowardly tn come
over bere." This ended by getting on
oufderves. It Heemey that we had
ionly France to defend, but a per-
sonal insult to wipe out.
| "Thue, when at 12:45 on the 28th,
the order-came which sent us.against
hill No. lit, we were filled with joy
I was in the first wave’ We jumped
over the first trench ■Without stopping
We knew the second "wave’ which fol-
lowed would oecupy the trench we
. pasned.
; "What struck me about this rush
was the emallness of our lonnes. per-
sonally. I saw no one killed. Things
'hanged, however, when we got be
tween the first and second line of
trenches. Until our supporting 'wave*
[arrived we underwent the united fire
'of both lines."
i Another man, wounded in the fight-
ing between Perthes and Ta hur*. ml J:
"We took the offensive at » 30. I
expected for New. Orleans.
Reports re hing the capital from,
the Louisiam coast south of New Or-
leans were meager, but indications
were that the luxe of life was not
heavy, owing to the ample warnings of
the ap; rose, ef the storm sent out by
Federal awl State authorities.
LONDON, Oct. 1.—The French are
bearing the brunt of the fighting now
in prosress on the western front. They
ere hammering at the second German
line in Champagne, in the direction of
the Grand Pre railway and at the
same time dropping bombs on the line
and statione to prevent the Germans
trom bringing up reinforcements. Ab-
sence of news from the British front
apparently indicates that these forces
are occupied with onsolidating their
positions in the strip of territory re-
cently won.
The Hritish forces new in France
are estmated st a round million men,
which will be increased by 600,006,
Dali> lengthening of the obituary col- '
umns of the London newspapers is be-
ginning to measure the price paid by
the. British for their recent offensive.
There is no notable change on the
battle, front of the east.
Vienna announces that a third Aus-
train loan will bear 6% per cent in-
terest.
Bulgaria has not replied to the nug-
gestlon of Groece that ehe demobilise
charged by the gF
q trolled most of11
Destroyed by the - Eatgntsanghmnten
rights in foreigr
The suit was
mines, each containing 1600 pounds of
powder, were exploded as soon as the
signal was given for the first advance
at Souchez, according to the story of
an eye witness of the batie.
"Simultaneously." he sald, "our men
leaped out of their trenches and made
for the German trenches situated be-
fore a forest.
'The Germans bolted through the
wood*, pursued by our first wave.’
•ections of the wave" exploded the
ruined trenches and underground shel-
ters, which often wore twenty foot
deep. Our men dropped bombs and
fired shotguns through the openings.
This effectually provented the occu-
pants from coming out and attacking
us.
"The bulk of our men followed the
Germans through the woods. They soon
raptured the second line of trenches
in the middle of the forest and went,
on, some oven crossing the Souchez
brook or going up the sunken road
leading to Angrea, but the Germans
brought up reserves and tried to sur-
round us. This maneuver was foiled,
however, by our officers, who drew
our men back to the first line cap-
tured. .
"During the n’ght the Germans for-
tified themselves In the woods, but at
daybreak our artillery stopped their
work by a furious bombardment. One
after snot her the trees were mowed
down by sheila and soon the woods
were traneformed in a field of stumps.
"The German artillery sent at us a
steady stream of explosive shells, va-
rted occasionally by shrapnel. This
fire was borne philosophically, for
since our men have had their new
steel helmets they do not fear wounds
in the head.
"At 1 o’clock in the afternoon the
guns ceased firing and we were order-
ed to attack again. Machine guns,
which the Germans had placed on their
flanks, soon were put out of action.
These guns were cunningly concealed
in pits covered with (seel pistes. The
barrels, protruding through narrow
slits, were invinible end they sont at
us a withering fire. But our men did
not hesitate. From behind tree stumps
nnd from the pits they kept hurling
’ Trust is
PARIS, Oct. 1, 5:15
clmaned f
muemew-zzz Gr,
BATON ROUGE, La., Oct 1.—The
death list resulting from the hurricane
which swept the New Orleans section
and the Misstisippi gulf coast wednes-
day la expected to reach sixty-five or
seventy, while property damnge will
mount Into the millions, according to
the lavest reports compiled here today.
The losses are distributed as follows:
New Orlean Nineteen dead; 300 in-
jured; property lues more than
$2,000,000.
Mississippl coast - Thirteen dead,
scores injured or missing, property loss
estimated at 82 000,000.
Frenier, La.—Twenty-five dead,
about twenty Injured, heavy damage to
railroads
Automobilists arriving here from
New Orleans early today reported that
LONDON, Oct 1, 11 34 a. n—The
eelling vessel Helen Beyon has been
sunk. Her crew was saved.
1ONDON, Oct 1, 9:57 a. m.-Gen-
eral A lex Ig Kuropatkin has been ap-
pointed chief of ths Hvsnian grengdler
corps, according to a Reuter dispatch
from PetrograC
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Lochridge, Lloyd P. The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 84, Ed. 2 Friday, October 1, 1915, newspaper, October 1, 1915; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449018/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .