The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 77, Ed. 2 Wednesday, March 15, 1916 Page: 3 of 10
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THE AUSTIN STATESMAN AND TRIBUNE
Siglhof er Bakery
MEN’S SHOES
H. H. PLUMEYER, PROP.
!
SALT RISING
See the Smith-Wilcox Special at 34.
Fits the knot of a four-in- hand
BAKERY
.1
or bow perfectly.
2 for 25 c,
>
Cluett, Peabody &Co.. Inc., Makers
616 CoNdnaaa^MBfue
Salt Rising Bakery
• H. H. PLUMEYER, PROP.
tem of these vile
Both Phones 248.
>vent the
Auto Delivery.
219 Congress Ave.
like youn
Missouri
you felt before your
received
BUILDING PERMITS.
I
ig
lively
BONDS APPROVED.
B. M. Whitaker. referee;
Coes Straight to
MAY GET THE CHARTER.
SENATE FOR LARGER ARMY.
the Point
5
$
corking - fine - fun!
is
3s*
diA
A
S
5-
/79
6,
THE
RCKee
4
♦,
Why those Pains?
Her. I* a testimonial unsollelted
I
|| ij
Kingsbury Manufacturing
Port
■
HU
Liniment
MH
at
llllllllllll"I
ger
3
)
/
1
U
SpRAIN
■
88
Sore
us
red
53,751
Fa.
••••••••••
a
mm
■
Southwestern Telegraph
and Telephone Company
Bell lines reach almost ev-
erywhere. Why not use the
quickest and surest route to
satisfactory results?
A Long Distance Bell Tele-
phone call, whether it brings
a business or social message,
has that faculty of going
straight to the point — to the
bottom of things admitting
no chance of delay or misun-
derstanding.
■
V
Everyone Should
Drink Hot Water
in the Morning
Slater & Morrill’s
Famous *5 Shoes
Here Exclusively
Polt vault
Petmecky, 1
R. James.
Officials:
It will pay you to try Long
Distance. _ *
Texas Delicacies
Are On This Menu
■
■
or
R
■
■
■
Oklahoma Varsity
to Meet Longhorns
Wireless Stations
for the Invaders
Heavyweights Are
Working Very Hard
Business Conditions
Here Substantial
Ised his sparring partners
session.
Carranza Can Still
Get Ammunition
REORGANIZATION
MANAGERS WILL
NOT ACCEPT PLAN
TRACK ATHLETES
OF HIGH SCHOOL
TO MEET SATURDAY
Interesting Suits
Set for next Week
$4, $5 Up to $8
. Our Shoe department is now showing the
newest and best Spring styles.
(,7
U 1
\ 1
Stacy- Adams
Fino Shoes
Here Exclusively A
Union
». from
Ry. Co.
; Mag-
Davis
Worth
n. from
The Attorney General’s Department
today approved a 325,000 bond issue of
the city of Paris for public schools,
SO-10s. 5 per cent. .
■
a
■
a
■
.5
And the sooner you know that yourself the quicker
you’ll get down to the real rolling joy or jimmy pipe
joy, for P. A. just beats-the-band for pipe-peace as
well as makin's peace I
Has moved from 1006 Congress Ave. to 219 Congress Ave.,
and will be known in the future as the
ig folks feel; like
blood, nerves and
Wash away all the stomach, liver,
and bowel poisons before
breakfast
JEFFERSON CITY. Mo., March 15 —
The reorganization managers of the St.
Louis & San Francisco Railroad, it was
formally announced today, will not at-
tempt to reorganize the road under* the
“December, 1916.”
Was a Bad Guess
H. H. PLUMEYER, PROP.
The plant has been enlarged and equipped with modern
machinery, making it one of the cleanest and most sanitary
bakeries in the city. Both phones have been installed, Nos.
248. Prompt deliveries made to all parts of city. Give ua
your next order.
IRRINGE ALBERT
824 4 / EE\ the national joy smoke
41 "44
the reverse side of thje
g
k
also to pre'
To feel I
poisons and toxins;
eir formation.
Jll
s
Coprriehtame
ig 1.
obaccoCo.
zmm €5 I 1
gans become more active and in a little
while you feel like new. Don’t neg-
----- —— Take
. 50c
VEDNESDAY, MARCH 15,1916.
t of a splen-
20. when the
O. J. Merrell, judge at the finish; (1. A.
Porter, field judge (weights); I. I. Nel-
son, field judge (jumps); P. Clark,
starter, Levi, announcer.
WASHINGTON, March 15. The Ren -
Sts today approved unanimouslv the
SLOANs
INI MEN
4EnE
7
)
-
conditions imposed by the
Public Service Commission.
Notice to this effect was
joint resolution adopted by the House
yesterday to bring the mobile army up
to its full strength, which would add
about 20,000 men to ths present es-
tablishment.
GOTHIC
ARROW
Collar
880-yard run, 10:15
st the banquet some 7
smoke.
There Is every prospec
did attendance on March
week opens.
other place quite like Austin.** he said.
"And this is not merely the prejudice
of an Austin man. Austin’s growth is
substantiai and its business conditions
are good. We have great natural ad-
vantages and, above all, this city is
clean. It is. I believe, the best place
in Texas to live.”
Dr. Wilmot went to Houston to at-
tend a meeting of the Great Southern
Insurance Company, of which he is
vice president. _ _______
Get the personal experience with Prince Albert!
Fire up a few rolls for what ails your smoking-division
and you’ll get a new idea of just what tip-top-tobacco (
really is! It’s a fact, you and P. A will be pals
before the day winds up 1
Get your Ityovf of hinet Albert eherever tobacco ia sold. Toppy
red begs, #C/ tidy red ttna, IQtl handoome pound and hatf-pound f
tin humidoro and that fine cryrid-liou humidor toith orange
moisten er top that heepe the tobacco in each bang-up trim.
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston Salem, N. G
It, 10 a. m.: First team, F.
L. Brill; second, R. Roark,
LAREDO, Texas, March 15 —Am am-
munition embargo, which was received
here last night by customs authorities,
expressly exempts munitions destinel
fur Carranza forces from selzure, ac-
cording to announcement today. All
shipments of arms or munitions which
are not thus clearly identified are to
be held up at the border.
TAKE PO-DOLAX IN SPRING
In winter our blood gets thick. our
pores close, we feel tired and dull when
hot days come. What we need is a
spring liver tonic, something to rid our
system of winter’s accumulated waste.
Po-Do-Lax will do it.« It stimulates
the bile, empties the bowels. The or-
3
Civil cases set for call on the jury
docket of the Fifty-third District Court
for the March term. which will begin
next Monday, Include a number of In-
teresting suits. The suit of the State
against the Rock Island Railroad sys-
tem is on call Monday. Retrial of the
case of the Concrete Investment Comy
pany vs. International & Great North-
ern Railway, involving a construction
of the International & Great Northern
bill passed by the Thirty-first Legis-
lature is set for March 27. The dam-
age suits growing out of the sinking of
a boat on Lake Austin by Major G. W.
Littlefield’s launch Terry Ranger are
on call for April 17.
Among the other cases of Interest
on call are the Byrne will contest, the
suits of A. B. Dieterick, Henry Sauer
and Neely G- Landrum against the
city, the suit of former Senator W. O.
Murray against the Austin street rail-
way and several suits against railroads
for personal injuries.
lect cleaning out your aysjem
Po-Do-Lax and you will feel fine,
at your Druggist.
The track athletes of the Austin High
School have been divided into two sec-
tions for the purposes of a meet to be
held Saturday forenoon on Clark Field.
The first section of fourteen men will
have E. Gathright for captain and the
second of thirteen man will have R
Cooke. The meet will be in the nature
of an elimination contest, the success-
ful men to represent the High School
in a meet with St. Edward’s College
the Friday following. Prizes will be
awarded the highest individual point
winners. First prise will be a pair of
track shoes, donated by Caswell &
Smith; second prize. a basebull glove,
by J. A. Jackson.
Following are the events, with the
scheduled time, and the names of the
contestants, Gathright’s team being
called first team and Cooke’s second:
120-yard hurdles. 9 a. m.: First team,
E Lawhon, F. Stacy; second team. IL
Harris.
one-mile run. 9:15 a. m.: First team,
Lockney. J. Mulkelroy, B. Greig, Max-
well; second. Von St rue.
100-yard dash. 9:30 a. m.: First
team. F. Stacy, P. Smith; second, G.
Smith, R. Roark, B. Yarrington, F.
Henderson, S. Johnson, R. Day, R
Cooke.
440-yard dash. 9 45 a. m-: First team.
Lockney, T. Gathright, R. Blackwell, P.
Smith; second. G. Smith, R. Cooke.
320-yard hurdles, 10 a. m.: First
team. E. Lawhon, F. Stacy; second. R.
Harris.
Rolling ’em with P. A.
FOR YOUR CHILD’S COUGH.
If your child has a cold, nose, runs
or coughs much get a small bottle of
Dr. Bell’s Pine-lar-Honey. its a
pleasant Pine-Tar-Honey syrup, just
what children like and just the medi-
cine to soothe the cough and check
the cold. After taking, children stop
fretting, sleep good and are soon en-
tirely well. Insist on Dr. Bell’s Pine-
Tar-Honey. 25c at^ your Druggist.
Mary Hello, Seventh Street, two
dwellings; 3750.
Mrs. Jennie Proctor, 4103 Avenue O,
dwelling; 31500.
ST. LOUIS, Mo., March 15 —The re-
fusal of the reorganization managers
of the St. Louis & San Francisco Rail-
road to form a new company under the
conditions imposed by the Missouri
Public Service Commission caused dis-
cussion in railroad and legal circles
here today as to whether the manager*
I would follow the example of the Wa-
bash and secure a charter for the com-
pany in some other State.
j The Wabash. which before the re-
ceivership was a Missouri corporation,
took out an Indiana charter when a
■ new company bought it at foreclosure
sale Business men of Lttle Rock al-
ready have invited the Frisco to or-
l ganize under the laws of Arkansas.
Foreclosure proceedmgs aaginst the
Frisco are set for hearing in the Fed-
eral court here March 29.
The athletic department of the Uni-
versity is In receipt of a communiea-
l tion from the University of Oklahoma
i in which the challenge for a contest
'between gym teams is accepted. The
meet will be staged at Norman, Okla.,
the latter part of next month and a
’ return contest will be held in Austin
i next year. The meet will be held on
(the horizontal bars, the parallel bars,
the horse and the mat Five men will
go lo Norman to represent Texas, ac-
companied by Conch Henderson.
I The members of last year’s team
1 who returned this year are Penny-
■ backer. Tennyson, Hargrove, Dinwid-
dle and Jones, all of whom are ex-
perienced gym men and arc in good
form. The team this year loses Kelly,
I Broad and Deathridge.
The contest with Oklahoma will be
the only one of the season for the
i Longhorns.
HACHITA. N. M.. March 15.—In or-
der that the columns' bases shall be
in constant communication with each
other by wireless, a station has been
erected here by the signal corps. The
advancing columns are constantly to
know the location of various detach-
ments and movements of supply trains-
Large numbers of men who know the
interior of Chihuahua and Sonora as
well as the Mexicans have presented
themselves for the dangerous work of
guiding the troops. Capture, it is be-
lieved. means death for the scouts.
The border from Culberson’s ranch,
west of Douglas. is guarded by patrols
of infantrymen. Numerous patrol camps
also are located along the railroad for
a considerable distance east of Doug-
las.
Citizens of every county along the
border in this district are also being
organized by the Sheriffs. For the
present they are preparing to act as
home guards, but if a call comes they
expect to volunteer for patrol or any
other duty requested by the Govern-
ment.
Worth other articles that have been
added to the souvenir basket since last
accounts are: Proomns from the Round
Rock Broom Co., C’rusto front th*
Magnolia Cotton Oil Co., candy from
the King Candy Cn. Fort Worth. pen-
nut butler from Walker-Smith Co.,
Brownwood, and pickles from the
Price -Booker Company. Houston.
One novel and interesting feature of
the menu will be cottonseed wafers
made by th* girls of th* home eco-
nomics department of th* University,
made from cottonseed flour sent in
by C H BCM nt. Fort Worth Texas
made paper has been furnished for
printing the programs upon, furnished
by the Magnolla Paper Co , Houston.
No Texas made cigar has as yet
shown up, but Mr Brown, who has
the banquet in charge, herh not dls-
spalred jet of being able to prodnce
Gaining hia liberty for the second
time on a legal technicality. Tom
Smothers, a negro, was discharged by
Judge Fisher late Tuesday when it was
found, after Smothers trial on a charge
of burglary had been started. that the
indictment against him was defective
A mistake in one typewritten figure
was responsible, It being discovered
that the grand jury's indictment
charged the negro with burglary in
"December, lilt."
The error in the indictment was dis-
covered after the jury had been im-
paneled and testimony had been taken.
For this reason Judge Fisher stated
that ths State’s motion for dismissal
would be granted, but that the court
had no authority to order the negro
held for the tiling of another charge.
Smothers was rearrested, however. On
leaving the courtroom and a complaint
filed against him in Justice Johnson’s
court, last year a charge against the
negro wun quashed on a tehnicallty.
by the commission today from J. and
W. Seligman A Co. and Speyer & Co.,
the New York banking firms that had
undertaken to finance the reorganiza-
tion.
The commission had rejected the plan
for a voting trust to hold the stock of
the road for five years, and this plan
was deemed vital by the reorganiza-
tion managers. At the recent hearings
on the original reorganisation plan It
was stated on behalf of the Eastern
bankers that it would be impossible to
fin.m g the rm d if the voting trust was
eliminated or if B. F. Yoakum, who
holds a large part of the stock, was one
of the voting trustees or chairman of
the executive committee.
Under the voting trust plan as orig-
inally presented the banking interests,
representing the bondholders, would
control the road for five years through
the voting trust. This plan was re-
jected by the Missouri commission on
the grounds that it was illegal in that
it took control of the road from the
stockholders.
A modified plan substituted by Fes-
tus J. Wade of St. Louis provides that
four voting trustees should represent
the stockholders and three the bond-
holders, but it was provided any vacan-
cies in the voting should be filled by
the reorganization managers or by the
remaining trustees. This plan also was
rejected. _______
muscles became saturated with an ac-
cumulation of body poisons, begin this
treatment and above all, keep it up!
As soap and hot water act on the skin,
cleansing, sweetening and purifying,
so limestone phosphate and hot water
before breakfast, act on the stomach,
liver, kidneys and bowels.
That Austin is enjoying business con-
ditions which do not suffer by com-
parison with those in larger cities was
the opinion expressed by Dr. K. P. Wil-
mt on his return from Houston. Dr
Wilmot said conditions in Houston are
very good and the city appeared to be
growing. Then he spoke of Austin.
“Whenever I take a trip I am im-
pressed with the fact that there is no
687
NEW YORK. March 16 —Both Wil-
lard and Moran worked hard today at
their training quarters. The big Kan-
aan was early afoot in Central Park.
He intended to take on his three spar-
ring partner a, Monahan, Hemple and
Rodel. for a few rounds this afternoon
and. haa arranged .for another tussle
with Hussane, the Turkish wrestler.
In addition he wilt have ful turns at
gymnastic work and the medicine ball,
by which he hopes to reduce his weight
to less than 245 pounds before the date
of his meeting with Moran.
The Pittsburgh man was up early
today looking fresh and full of energy
offer his almost complete day of rent
yesterday. He mapped out a full quota
of road running for the day and prom-
Texas made
And you let that say-so filter-in at
lOOt because you’ll find it’s a fact
quick as you loosen up a nickel or a
dime for a test supply. For Prince
Albert is manufactured by a pat-
ented process controlled exclusively
by us that makes all that possible,
besides cuttin/l out bite and parch.
No other tobacco ever was or can
be' like
%
3
4 xtai
•‘If I had my will it would
be ndvertised on every street
corner. The man or woman
that haa rheumatism and faila
to keen end dve Sloan's Lini-
mepis like a drowning man
refusing a rope.’*—/. J. Von
Pyke, Leheevoed, N. J.
Sloan’s
To feel your beat day in and day
out, to feel clean inside; no sour bile
to coat youc tongue and aicken your
breath or dull your head; no constipa-
tion, bilious attacks, sick headache,
colds, rheumatism or gassy, add stom-
ach, you must bathe on the inside like
you bathe outside. This is vastly more
important, because the skin pores do
not absorb impurities into the blood,
while the bowel pores do, says a well-
known physician.
To keep these poison* and toxins
well flushed from the stomach, live*,
kidneys and bowels, drink before
breakfast each day, a glass of hot
water with a teaspoonful of limestone
phosphate in it. This will cleanse,
purify and freshen the entire alimen-
tary tract, before putting more food
into the stomach.
Get a quarter pound of limestone
phosphate from your pharmacist. It
is inexpensive and almost tasteless,
except a sourish twinge which is not
unpleasant. Drink phosphated hot
water every morning to rid your ays-
The fact that Prince Albert tobacco
stays put, can’t bite, can’t parch
and is long burning and long on
satisfaction isn’t any stronger tip
to your smokeappetite than its
bang-up flavor and fragrance! Why,
there's such a combination of
makin's joy in P. A you’ll never
grow weary talking about it!
m.: First
The Made-in-Texas banquet to be
given Texas editors in nttendance
Newspaper Week has been elab-
orated by the addit’on t< the menu of
Rockport cocktail, oysters for which
nr* furnished by the Rockport Fish
and Oyster Company, and by fresh
etrawberrles from Alvin, Texas.
The souvenir basket which will be
presented ench editor continues also
to grow in bulk and value and prod-
nets representative of the industrial
progress of the Stnte. In addition to
the products already mentioned, there
will be nestled down near th* bottom
of the baskets, printers aprons from
th* Texas Cotton Mills at McKinney.
Texas; sample sacks of flour from the
Wichita M & E Co from which flour
will be made several of the pastries
of the banquet ; and overalls from the
team, E. Gathright, J. Muckleroy, B.
Graig, Maxwell; second, D. Bradford.
Von Strue. R. Cooke.
220-yard dash, 10:30 a. m First
team, F. Stacy, P. Smith, E. Gathright;
second, G. Smith, R. Harris, F. Hen-
derson, H. Johnson, R. Day.
Ona mile relay, 11 «. m . First team,
E. Gathright, E. Iawhon, R. Blackwell,
Lockney; second. G. Smith, R. Harris.
R Roark, R. Cooke.
Shot put, 0 a. m.: First team. D.
Beno. D. Flegel, H. Holton; second. S.
Gardner, R. James, D. Winn.
Hammer throw, 1:30 a. m.: First
team, D. Pena, D. Flegel, H. Holton;
second. D. Winn, R. James, R. Gardner.
Discus throw. 10 a. m.: First team,
D Pena. D. Hiegel, McCallum, B. Hol-
ton; secund, H. Gardner, R James, D.
Winn.
High jump, 9 a. m.: First team, R
Blackwell, F. Petmecky, L Brill, Mc-
Callum; second, D Bradford, R. Day
Broad jump, 9.30 a. m : First team,
E. Lawhon, R. Blackwell, L Brill, F.
Petmecky; second. B. Yarrington, F.
Henderson, Von Strue.
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Lochridge, Lloyd P. The Austin Statesman and Tribune (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 77, Ed. 2 Wednesday, March 15, 1916, newspaper, March 15, 1916; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1449178/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .