The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 43, Ed. 2 Thursday, February 10, 1916 Page: 2 of 8
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1916.
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN AND TRIBUNE
T
9
ROSNER’S
ROSNER’S
NW
P
A
Price
Desirable lengths of Plain and Fancy
Le:
\
fons,Messalines,Washable Dress Fabrics,
Curtain
Voiles, Poplins, Madras, etc.
H
ROSNER’S
••
M.WLLAMS8l%
Poj
program will be of-
)
morning I want you to go
•tore and get
/
School
Dodson’s Liver Tono is e
Mr. Collins has taken part in more
Here’s
store
an<
Dodson's Liver Tone. Tako a spoonful
and they like its pleasant taste.
....Joe Moore
Lee Richardson Sulphur because it darkens so natur-
)
K
I
one-fourth of Spain's foreign com- to continue.
and boils usually re-
low" .
... Kucken
9
CROUP AND COLDS PROMPTLY
the very ducts
ily nourishment
Grieg
$2.85
thousands
yes
the
8m the window.
#
704 Congress Ato.
a
Silks, Crepe de Chines, Meteors, Satins,
Woolen Dress Goods, Flowered Chif-
Goods, Nets, Silkolines, Table Linens,
all go at xactly one-half price Friday.
Got Rid of My Carns
With Magic “Gets-It"
Don't neglect your first cold, cough
or any Bronchial affection this fall, but
commence treatment immediately, and
through using the proper medicine. It
can be checked from the very start
and promptly cured, but if neglected
probably will hang on all winter; if
It does not develop Into something more
serlous, such as Pneumonia or Con*
Barcelona is Spain's principal port
of entry on the Mediterranean. Almost
re hall ai
The folk
Pimples,
suit froi
ties
and
• 00
$ 0
Only the newest and smartest styles shown.
Many beautiful styles in serge, gaber-
dine and other fashionable materials,
in blue and bright fashionable spring
colors, and plenty of checks.
A wonderful saving on every suit, when you buy one
of these at $12.75 or $15.00. We have others up to
$35.00 (second floor).
through
absorb <
body.
Spring Suits at $12.75 and $15.00
To Establish Another Supremacy In Style and Economy
We have established a remarkable standard for suits
at $12.75 and $15.00, having them made up in the bet-
ter-than-usual fabrics — more carefully tailored.
I
Norwegians Order
Ships From U. S.
"The
Store
of
Service
Marshall Willing
to Be Candidate
W.
seph
A me:
died
Seen
apop
recei
Garr
and
SAGE TEA TURKS
GRAY HUR DIRK
Barcelona to Be
Made Free Port
Arthur Childress
.....Miles Erpler
.......Carl Faulk
......Otis Hulsey
4a Grendmothere recipe to bring
oolor, lustre and thickness to hair
when faded, etreaked sr gray.
2
Songs:
(a) "Two Brown Eyes"
Blind Children
to Give Concert
The New for Spring
Mr. Rosner has been in New York for the past five weeks, and has
sent us the greatest line of popular price Ready-to-Wear we have
ever shown; values that are unsurpassable. They are the season’s
last word in women’s wearing appareL Our silk dress goods and
staple departments are brim full of new Spring Goods. Ready-to-
wear and cotton goods are getting higher and higher every day.
BUY NOW AT A SAVING
FEEL BILIOUS? CALOMEL SICKENS!
CLEAN LIVER AND BOWELS MY WAY
Women’s Togs at Prices That
Encourage Buying
alm School Boys
Repeat Entertainment
•'Th.
Store
of
Service"
RECIPE 10 CLEAR
PIMPLY SKIN
sale of calomel because it is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
it can not salivate or make you sick.
Spring Dresses
$8.50 and $15.00
A large assortment of colon,
styles and materials. Those pop-
line at $8.60 are great, and yon
must see those $16.00 silk dresses.
Come down tomorrow.
About 30 pair ladies’ patent
white top lace shoes--thia
season’s style; to close them
out we say
Songs:
(a)"The Swan" ........
(b)"The Wanderer".....
Mr. Wayland.
Coi
catar
tri is
head
freel
muco
ache;
Gel
Bahn
little
in yo
every
and
muco
relief
like t
miser
world's best corn remedy by Van Smith
Drug Company, Morley Bros, and Grif-
fith Drug Company.
Pimples are Impurities Seeking
an Outlet Through Skin
Pores.
(b)"The Trout"....................
Miao Inna Conner.
$5.00 SHOES FOR
82.86
Part song, "Hunting Song""......... *
.................... Mendelssohn
tonight and if it doesn"t straighten y6
right up and make you fool fine and
: your money,
lestroying the
(a) "Harte! How ..............Fran,
(b)"The Garland”................
vigorous my
back to the i
WHAT’S WRONG WITH
THE WORLD, SUBJECT
OF LECTURE FEB. 28
______________ (
io, there are hundreds,
of cough remedies on
„4
gan .....................Mietzke
Messrs. Pope, Wayland and Pennington.
Songa:..
i and Impurl-
I in the bowels
ito the blood
। Which should
t
Yov are the best judge. Let Footer
Rankin have your laundry packages
and then compare it with others
Song by fifty Palm boys.
(a) "MUI Song."
(b)"Boola Song” (Palm
Members of the Collins Music Club
of the Blind Institute will give a free
concert at the institute tomorrow night
at 1:18 o’clock. The club is made up
of the pupils of Prof. H. Guest Collina,
head of the music department at the
school The concert Friday night will
mark the first open meeting of tho
club’s sixth season. The program is as
follows:
Chorus "Hunting Song"......Gilchrist
All Members of Club.
Horn solo, ........................
Lonnie Alsup.
Vocal duet. MO Swallow, Happy Swal-
Roses Ligustrums,
Etc.
At 250 or $2,50 por dozen. Finest
field arown rm. fruit trees, flow:
wing shrube and vines. Japan
Liguntrums 5c to $1.00. Gladiolus,
strawberries, dewberries, ovororoona
and all hardy nureery etpek Land-
Kapa wark oofreotl dona, Ovary
plant fresh end true to name. Froo
delivery. Phone 3050. I
EUGENE HOWARD
Double Quartet to
Meditation for violin, piano and or-
toxins, poisona
are generated
absorbed in!
week. This will prevent the formation
of toxins in the bovels. It also stimu-
lates the kidneys to normal activity,
thus coaxing them to filter the blood
of impurities and clearing the skin of
It is the function f the kidneys to
filter impurittes- from the blood and
east them out in the form of urine, but
in many instances the bowels create
more toxins and impurities than the
kidneys can ellminat, then the blood
uses the skin pores as the next best
LL
FRIDAY at 1/2
merce passes through Barcelona, which
ig exceeded only by Cadis in the vol-
ume of this business. In the year 1910,
1662 steamships of 2,463,000 tons bur-
den entered this port, exclusive of
coastwise steamers. The principal im-
ports are coal, grain and cotton. The
chief exports are wtoe, oil and cork.
was specially blessed by His Holiness
Pope Pius the Tenth.
His efforts have always been for
—money will be refunded by them If it
is not found the best remedy ever used
in Severe Coughs, Colds, Whooping
Cough or Croup, and it will also be
found excellent for Bronchial Asthma,
and Bronchitis. Besides thee drug-
gists guaranteeing "that it will be the
best remedy ever used," It will likewise
be found the most economical, because
one bottle (BO cents' worth* makes a
full pint (131 teaspoosful) of the most
excellent medicine for any of the above
affections, when mixed at home with;
one pint of granulated sugar and one-,
half pint of water it makes ae muche
or mors, than would cost you $2.00 to
11.08 of almost any of ths ordinary]
ready-mode kinds, sold in bottlef
holding only 24 to 11 teaspoonsful You
will be the sole Judge yoursef and
under the same postively "Money
Bark" guarantee which the Arusgst
make for the famous Asthmador. Ab-|
solutely no risk is run in buying thin
ramev
at Manitowoc, Wis.
According to shipping men, the Nor-
wegians have been purchasing as many
steamers as were available for several
months. When they were unable to
make any further purchases they
placed orders with American builders.
C. Ravn, Norwegian consul geferal
here, said today In (explanation of the
placing of the orders here that for-
merly Norway obtained' many of her
steamships from England, but that now
British ship yards are busy building
British ships.
A Norwegian agent here said that
prices for vessels were at least 50 per
J cent higher than before the war.
m , I When corns make you almost "die
WASHINGTON, Feb. ( 10.— Secretary I with your boots on, when you’ve
Lansing announced today that he had soaked them and picked them and
sent to the Austro-Hungarian govern- | sliced them, when corn-swelling salves
ment, through Ambassador Penfield, a
sumption. True
Investigation of
Disaster Resumed
WASlfitNGTr.lt, xeb. 10.—Tnvestiga-
t'.on st the explosion which wrecked
the Hubmarine E-2 Th the New York
market While some are good.
Why Have Corna At All When "etn-I
Removes Them the New,Dendue Way T
and tapes. bandages and plasters that
make corns pop-eyed have only made
your corns grow faster. just hold your
heart a moment and figure this: Put
two drops of "Gets-It" on the corn. It
dries at once. You can put your shoe
and stocking on right over it The
com la doomed. it makes ths corn
oome off clear and clean. It's the new,
easy way. Nothing to stick or press
on the corn. You can wear smaller
shoes You’ll be a joy-walker. No
That beautiful, even shade of dark,
glossy hair can only be had by brew-
ing a mixture of Bago Tea and Sul-
phur. Tour hair is your charm. It
makes or mars the fees When it
fades, turns gray, streaked and looks
dry, wispy and scraggy, just an appli-
cation or two of Sage and Sulphur en-
hances its appearance a hundredfold.
Don’t bother to prepare the tonio;
you can get from any durg store a 50-
cent bottle of "Wyeth’s Sage and Sul-
phur Compound.** ready to use. This
I can always be depended upon to bring
back the natural color, "thlckness and
lustre of your hair and remove dan-
druff, stop scalp itching and falling
hair.
Bvorybody uses "Wyeth’s" Sago and
Whenever You Need a General Tonio
Tako Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because It contains the
well known tonic properties of QUIN-
INE and IRON. It acts on the Liver.
Drives out Malaria. Enriches the Blood
and Builds up the Whole System. it
cents.
By special request the boys of the
alm School will repeat tonight the
tertainmnt given at the Tenth Ward
PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 10.- Vice
President Marshall is willing to run
for re-election, according to a letter
made public here today by Postmaster
Frank S. Myers of Portland, from Mark
Thistlewaite, secretary to the Vice
President.
Postmaster Myers wrote to the Vice
President asking if he would permit
the use of his name to go on the pri-
mary ballot. Mr. Thistlewaite’s letter
says:
"The Vice President could not ask
any one to file petitions for him, but if
the petitions are filed for him he cer-
tainly will not repudiate the action."
to sustain the I pain, no trouble. Accept no substitutes
"Gets-It" is sold by druggists every-
where, 25c a bottle, or sent direct, by
E. Lawrence A Co., Chicago, Ill Bold
in Austin and recommended as the
ally and evenly that nobody can tell it
has boon applied. You simply dampen
a spong or soft brush with it and
draw this through the hair. taking one
small strand at a time; by morning
the gray hair has disappeare, and
after another application it becomes
beautifully dark and appears glossy,
lustrous and abundant.
W. E. Allen.
Part songs:
(a) "His Sweet Guitar...
(b) "Obituaries".........
Boys of Club.
Don’t lose a day’s work! If Constipated, Sluggish, Headachy,
take a spoonful of “Dodson’s Liver Tone.”
BREAK up bronchial coughs
Picayune.
Burt Shoe Co.
Misses Conner and Casiana,
Song, "Ave Maria”......• ....Schubert
W. Pennington.
Piano, "Staccato Caprice". . .Rubinstein
Ernest Wayland.
Part songs:
(a) The A wen Ing of the Rone"...
........................ Mease
(b) "La ..........................
..............Vincenzo di Chiara
Girls of Club.
Organ, overture to "William Tell"..
.........................Rossini
William Pennington.
Lansing Takes Up Simplest Corn Cure in the World,
the Petrolite Case Ho PatsuMoway. Bew,
NEW YORK, Feb. 10.—The total
number of steamships to be built in
this country for Norwegian interests
this year was brought up to twenty-
seven today by the announcement that
contracts have just been awarded for
building six vessels of 3000 tons each
there are many which are not but
are positively harmful, due to the nar-
cotics which they contain. But why
experiment with these different reme-
dies purely on the strength prhaps of
some testimonials or on the exagger-
ated clalme of manufacturers, when
Schiftmann’s New Concent rated Ex-
pectorant is sold by Van Smith Drug
Co. on such a positive guarantee to
glve perfect satisfaction. yes even more
my guarantee—Go to any drug ing fine for months. Give it to your
nd get a 60 cent bottle of children. It is harmless; doesn’t gripe
dispatch asking for an investigation
and an explanation of the attack by
an Austrian submarine on the Ameri-
can tank steamer Petrolite. The Sec-
retary said published statements that
demands had been made upon the
Vienna government "were not true."
but demands of some sort might be
made.
b Muff (defendant) .Harold Schmitt
Whiffles (witness) .Bcmlee Bierce
__Gump (witness)......Lyle Riddle
be Snooks (witness) Lewis McDonald
- Poddie...........William Lawson
Jurors: Carl Meredith, foreman;!
Permah Becker, Paul Fembacker. Er-
ohest Austin, Grant Garber and Charlie
Palcone.
After the entertainment the Mothers’
Elub will have a taffy pulling.
public platform debates than any man
in America, and during the past two
years alone has had fourteen public
joint debates from Massachusetts to
Louisiana, and from Iowa, Minnesota
and Ohio. to New York and New Jer-
sey, besides meeting thousands of oth-
era in in impromptu discussions at
his lectures.
At all Mr. Collins' lectures the open
forum prevails and every one in his
audience is afforded the privilege of
asking any questions and being assured
of an always courteous, prompt and
convincing answer.
The Iowa City Press of the Univer-
sity City of Iowa, where Peter Collins
spoke to the Commercial Club, the
university fraternity society and a
great public meeting, said:
"Peter Collins is a real orafor and
this man of toil outstrips many schol-
ars as platform publicists for K. of C.
He is a thinker and an orator. All in
all, his address was one of the best
ever delivered in Iowa City. Mr. Col-
lins will always be welcomed by the
general public In the University City
of Iowa."
The press of the Nation has been
most glowing in editorial appreciation
of Mr. Collins and has everywhere de-
voted many columns of news space to
his message. The following are but a
few of the thousands of press com-
ments:
"Peter 'Collins Is doing a great con-
structive service for his country."—
Milwaukee Journal
"Mr. Collins' record lends serious
weight to his opinions."—New York
World.
"Peter Collins is an eloquent orator.
His oratory and seal caused him to be
recognised as a leader."—Boston Daily
Post.
"He has few peers as an orator and
Is a mun of brilliant attainments."—
Herald, Pawnee, IIL
"Peter Collins was taught In school
that honesty is not merely a policy
but a duty to conscience, and ho has
made this principle his guilding star."
— Citizen, Chelsea. Maas.
MADRID, Spain, Feb 9, via Paris,
13:05 p. m.—The government is about
to make Barcelona a free port.
" Listen to met Take no more slok-
ening. salivating calomel when bilious
or constipated. Don’t lose a day’s work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when It comes into contact
with sour biles crashes into it, breaking
it up. This is when you feel that awful
nausea and cramping. If you are slug-
gish and "all knocked out," if your
liver is torpid and bowels constipated
or you have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, if breath is bad or stomach
sour just take a spoonful of harmless
Dodson's Liver Tone.
'I ■ 1
/ ......._ ..... ..... ......- _______
"What’s Wrong With the World"
will be the bubject ot the lecture here
under the auspices of Council No. 1017.
Knights of Columbus, at Knights of
Columbus Hall Feb. 28, by Peter Col-
ling of Massachusetts. Mr. Collins is
well qualified to discuss in a broad,
: comprehensive manner the great prob-
lama of our day, and to set forth con-
structive remedies that aid in the ad-
vancement and progress of civilization.
He lectured here two years ago on
Socialism at the Knights of Columbus
Hall. He is well known not only to
members of the local council of f nights
of Columbus, who heard him but to
others as well. The lecture here the
latter part of the month will be free
and the public is invited.
During the past five years Mr. Col-
lins has spoken to over 1,080,000 people
in the United States and Canada and
has traveled nearly 100,000 miles.
Peter Collins needs no introduction
to the men and women of America
interested in the great constructive
movements of Christian democracy and
social reform. His experience and
activity In the cause of social legisla-
tion well qualifies him for his plat-
form work, having served for many
years as international secretary of the
International Brotherhood of Electri-
cal Workers, editor of the Ilictrical
Workers, and as a member of the Illi-
nois Industrial Commission, one of the
first commissions in the United States
that made possible a great code of laws
for the health, safety and comfort of
the workers in that State. This code of
laws has been copied by many States
and has received the approval of so-
ciologists and statesmen the world
over.
This commission also reported to the
Legislature, the recommendation for
legislation limiting the hours of w’men
workers,.
The bill adopted to cover the recom-
mendation has stood the test of the
Illinois Supreme Court and tho Su-
preme Court of the United States.
In conjunction with the signing of
the bill Governor Deneen of Illir 9
wrote the following letter to Mr. Col-
lins:
"In connection with the approval of
the bill relative to the use of hazardous
and dangerous machinery, I wish to
congratulate you as a member of the
comuission which prepared this excel-
lent measure and to thank you fdr the
valuable services rendered to the State
by you as a member of the commis-
sion."
Mr. Collins has been an active work-
er for many years in the cause of so-
|clal reform and Christian democracy.
His work for the cause of social re-
form and the advancement of the In-
terest and welfare of the workingmen
ty dry.
Ed Johnson was elected chairman of
the campaign committee; W. P. Mab-
son, secretary, and T. J. Smith, trees- l
urer. The advisory board Is composed |
of William White, chairman; Ben Wil-
lams, W. P. Mabson, C. G. Meroney
and a W. Collins. All the officers
were elected to serve for two years.
means of getting rid of these impuri-
ties which often break out all over the
skin in the form of pimples.
The surest way to clear the skin of
these eruptions^ says a noted authority,
....Grieg le to get from any pharmacy about
Schubert four ounces of Jad Balts and take a
tablespoonful tn a glass of hot water
each morning before breakfast for one
Make the Best Remedy at Home—128 Teaspoonsful for 50 Cents.
, Navy. Yard recently, killing four men
: and briously injurijg nine today was
• ordered resumed. ^Secretary Daniela
said theyconditiom"o Electrician Miles,
: one of thecinued men, had improved
t sufficiently to permit the investigation
son’s Liver Tono win put your sluggish
liver to work and clean your bowels of
that sour bile and constipated waste
which is dogging your system and
making you feel miserable. I guaran-
tee that a bottle of Dodson’s Liver
Tone will keep your entire family feel-
athletic version).
“The obstinate Family."
Cast of Characters,
3k’ . Harwood (Hartford’s father-in-
iaw) .............John La Franze
--Mrs. Harwrd (Hartford’s mother-
in-law) ................James Miller
HHenry Hartford........Marcus Eppler
Jesale Hartford (his wife).......... I
....................Shelton Goldman
pomes (Hartford’s servant).........
[ ........................Floyd Rogen
E uucy (a servant).. .Clarence Koenche
Physical culture drill.
“The Great Pumpkin Case"
Cost of Characters.
Rosner s “$3.98”
Trimmed Hats
Dozens of spring styles and col-
ors—some turbans, others sailors.
They’re great ‘‘$3.98” values.
You’ll like. them.
constructive service, and his life has
------ : been devoted to this work. He is a
AT.,., A „42. G. consistent and untiring advocate of the
V68IO AILUIS 366 (cause of the workers, and has devoted
1.42,, (tz. years of his life in fighting the work-
Elecclon COming ers‛ greatest enemy- Socia Hem.
He has delivered lectures and ad-
’ dresses in many parts of the country
Believing that an election on the- before schools, colleges and universi-
prohibition question, elther local or ties bustness men’s 4snoclation.cham-
State, I to be souknt b, th. “Srya-
the negro anti-prohibitlonists of Austin I Councils, legislative committees and
have reorganised their campaign com- many other bodies and assocations and
mitts* Ana nAontaa recniti." acclarine at Fordham University. Notre Dame
mittee and adopted resolution declaring University Oberlin University. unIver-
present laws on th. liquor queation mtles of kentucky. Iowa. Georkta, Mln.
satisfactory. Resolutions adopted alsonesota, etc. President Barker of the
declare that anti counties are more University of Kentucky said: "Mr.
prosperous than pro counties and Collins has a wonderful message. It
pledge the members of the organisation was one of the ablest addresses I have
to fight any attempt to vote this coun- lever heard."
"He gave a stirring and able ad-
drees."— St. Louis Gazette,
"Peter Collins is one of the best
known lecturers in America. His mes.
sage appealed strongly to every one
who heard him.”—Quincy Daily Jour-
nal. Ill.
"His audience could hold its enthu-
siasm no longer and broke forth in
hearty applause."-Ely ria, Ohio, Re-
publican.
"Brainy, conservative, energetic and
practical, Peter Collins combines an
education that fits him to battle men-
tally with the biggest of problems and
the biggest of men."—The Republic,
Boston.
"Peter Collins is a master of his sub-
jects."—Norwich Record, Connecticut.
"When Peter Collins stepped upon
the platform, looking to perfection the
unassuming electrical worker he is, few
.......
-------in an imon Jufea, cmbln.5 with lithiA.
Here you have 4 pleasant, etferyencent
t a Pork, drink which umuaily make. ptmptes aqn-
"t A FaF. WP—r; eleannen th. blood .nd ia «x-
• **" cflent for th. kigneya M wen.
jor Sqaion.u:
'gST poantnb;
T
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Lochridge, Lloyd P. The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 43, Ed. 2 Thursday, February 10, 1916, newspaper, February 10, 1916; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449144/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .