The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 76, Ed. 1 Friday, August 6, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Page two
FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1920.
F
Price on These
ETI
UNABLE TO STEM TIDE
Baby Girl Wins
“$. -
Men's Hot Weather Suits
OF BOLSHEVIK INVASION
3 First Prizes
Come Down
1
(Continued From Page One.)
y=o.
The Walker farm of 1100 acres, about
»Ae
4
A }
1~ -4
f l
«4
agement of the farm, as the growing
i
A
I
OF FREIGHT CARS ELKS WILL INITIATE
reported the abandonment
$19.50to $22.50Palm Beach Suits
I
Genuine Loraine Seersucker
A
Cool Serviceable Palmeto Cloth
Men s " Thread Silk’ Phoenix Hose
At $1.15 Pair
WOMEN LOOK AT THESE PRICES
Clearing Out Menrs
I
2’
f
B. M. Scarbrough d Sons
$18.00 Low Shoes.________$12.00
$12.00 Low Shoes
.$ 8.00
I
$ 7.35
$ 6.70
$ 8.00 Low Shoes_______$ 5.35
f
Bitro- Phosphate a Godsend.
T
nerves.
tn the original package with
I
7
E
$11.00 Low Shoes
$10.00 Low Shoes
Charge of Spinach Plantation
at Once, It Is Announced.
SOLD TO ELLIS CD.
MAN FOR $105,000
LIGNITE PRODUCERS
COMPLAIN OF SHORTAGE
$17.00 Low Shoes
$16.00 Low Shoes
$15.00 Low Shoes
$14.00 Low Shoes
1
$11.35
$10.70
$10.00
$ 9.35
HOM
SAL
At
after
prog
Salva
to Tr
Re
vatio
orgar
ested
Arm]
Keen Minded Men, Energetic and Successful
Rely on It Asserts Prominent M. Y. Physician.
Men Here Is Your Chance
All Low Shoes—Blacks, Browns and White
at 33 1-3 Per Cent Discount
$15.00 Low Shoes .. .
$14.00 Low Shoes ....
$13.00 Low Shoes ....
$12.00 Low Shoes ....
$11.00 Low Shoes ....
$10.00 Low Shoes ......
$ 9.00 Low Shoes ....
$ 8.00 Low Shoes _______
$ 6.00 Low Shoes ....
the purpose of'holding wekly dances
as soon as the hot season ends, is also
to be organized.
JOY RIDERS ABANDON
ANOTHER AUTOMOBILE
........$10.00
..... $ 9.35
___________$ 8.70
________$ 8.00
.......$ 7.35
______$ 6.70
..... $ 6.00
_________$ 5.35
.....$ 4.00
.......$2.70
....$2.00
SHOE PRICES SMASHED AT BURT’S
33>:r DISCOUNT FOR CASH
Over 4000 Pair of Men’s, Women’s and Child-
ren’s Low Shoes at a Saving of One-Third
Austin people will be amazed at the saving on Shoes at Burt’s -Clean, stylish Summer
sty les at less than wholesale cost.
AMERICAN AVIATORS CALLED
TO DEFENSE OF WARSAW
Men who wear Phoenix Silk Hose know the quality,
know the wearing quality—and travel in fine luxury
and.wiee economy—in colors—Cordovan, Tan. Black and
White, and in all sizes.
DESPERATE FIGHTING
TO THE EAST OF WARSAW
High-Grade Low Shoes
Men, there is always two ways of doing things—the right or
the wrong way—and we feel we are doing right by offering
these fine Shoes to our eustomers at these greatly lowered
prices—Over 400 pairs at these prices—
Men’s $14.00 Oxfords for $ 9.50
Men’s $15.00 Oxfords for $11.50
Men’s $18.00 Oxfords for $14.00
Hot weather is Arended hr men nna
women who are weak, thin, nervous
mid In Vioro™ develop-
ment because it seps their vitailty Al-
most to the breeking poimE
Mon and women, nervous and tret-
M. enelly apart and otten fatiguea,
need plenty of organic phosphate, and
the sooner they hoed this advice the
better their health W1U be.
FEED WES Pim OF
PHOSPHATE IN SUNNIER
BURT SHOE CO
606 CONGRESS AVENUE
7
helped make it possible, they write, for
Dorothy to be a prize-winning baby.
You can obtain a bottle of Dr
well's Syrup Pepsin at any drug store.
You will find it pleasant to take, aud.t.
does not gripe or weaken.
11 1 T9 | V Millions of people of all ages suffer from occasional or
h K K H ^^^.name and address fb
l l\ Ka 11 Dr. W. B. Caldwell,512 Washington Street, Monticello,.
P»J™ a sample bottle of his wonderful Syrup Pepsin.
8 million bottles were bought at drug stores last year, the largest sale inthe world.
RADICAL LABORITES
DRAW BAILEY’S FIRE
AS PRINCIPAL ISSUE
hurry sala isatlettalknoftthetown-.Why not get your share of this feast of bargains? Better
SAVE ONE-THIRD of YOUR MONEY at BURT’S
everybody's business and are now bold
enough to demand the rignt to govern
this State.”
&
This includes White kid Oxiords and Pumps—Tho
White Canvas Oxfords are reserved.
-w I had my way. Bitro- Phosphat.
shoula ba prencribed by every doctor
and used la every hospitalr
Later. Dr. Kolle said: "When the
peace. It would save us from that
situation, and the only way I know of
we can do that is for the unions them-
selves to repudiate the leaders who be-
Ean by demanding the right to run
Thursday evening was found Friday
morning in front of 56 East avenue,
where it had been abandoned by Joy
riders. A Studebaker atmobile, -
which was stolen from C.. E. Gerner
Wednesday evening by joy ridens, was
found in the same place-(huraday
morning. Mr. Fisher's Packard was
taken from in front of the-Western
i—
«X*em. will supply tbs
Tour nervous system, your brain,
your Mood and even your bones must
have a sutricient supply of phosphorus
or weariness, nervovummess and a gen-
eral run-down condition, as wetl as
As the Mercury Goes Up!
Facts which leave nothing to be desired in the way of genuine
sale news! Yes—one word—we must add in justice to the
suits that qualities are superior and tailoring excellent, while
we remind you that a Summer Suit of light material NEEDS
good tailoring more than any other suit if it is to live through
the Summer looking like a gentleman’s suit
R.
\ r
of the car in front of his resiehee on
East avenue Friday merning.“It was
he who also reported the abandonment
of the Studebaker the mornngbrore.
That both cars were taken by joy
riders is the belief of the police, who
have been unable to apprehend the un-
lawful users of either car.
B. A. Cox, 205 West Fifteenth street,
repotred the theft of headlights from
his Ford automobile while parked in
front of the entrance to the Deep Eddy
grounds. .
A Packard automobile which was
reported stolen from W. W. Fisher
7 DOROTHY BOYLAN
a Thai IUAEA TTUeOndav
Men!
K - voun .
•Upind,
eV -hoesl
Complaint was made to the railroad
commission by a delegation of lignite
operators of Bastrop, headed by E. S.
Orsain, at the failure of the Katy to
supply an adequate number of cars for
immediate transportation of lignite.
The operators needed forty cars and
told the commission that only nine
were forthcoming. The matter was
taken up by the commission with the
Katy officials with the result that the
railroad company promised to Immed-
lately supply the necessary number of
cara
Mr. Orgain said that the shortage of
cars has been a grmat source of in-
convenience to the Basrtop lignite op-
erators.
tween the two teams, according to,
Tour aruein h.. nu. _ Captain w a. Stacy of the Lone la I
mn‘nuromrunzi"t.henaritroPhosphate a previons game the Um d Heated the
inatheconindipackaee wiIh compiete Young Men's Business League team by
instructions ter besk reauita—(av. a score of • to i in a five-inning game.
Physiinne’ "Who's Who- ana nna-
MT”* known author of medical teat
books, in a most emphatic statement
said
AMERICAN DIPLOMAT TO
LEAVE WARSAW IMEDIATELY
WARSAW, AuE 5— The American
consulate in Warsaw will be cloned
Friday and Conant Rankin is making
preparations to depart Friday night I
Mont at the records already hays been
shipped away. ®
The American legation here alee is
prepared to clome within a very few
daya The Mention employes have
:htpped their bagpage to Camp Grappe,
the emergency hendquarters of the
Amerienn typhus expeditiom.
FOR $15.50
bend if more men and women were
--------------------------- the efdicacy of Bitro-Fo-
lack of normal mental power is sure to phate."
the semi-monthly meetings will be re-
sumed, according to Secretary Ander-
son.
Billiard tables in the clubrooms have
been recovered and repaired and mem-
bers now have first class tables on
which to play, the secretary says. The
bowling alley and athletic rooms are
r—nit.
Big men of afaira mighty men who
centrol industries becauss nt sheer
wu power and nervous force, know
tMa. or. If they donX are clever enough
to have a phiysician who does
Physicinns more and more are real-
Mng that Bitro-Phosphate, ae dle-
pensod at drug stores, is a necessity to
ver forty per cent of men and women,
becmume prement day foods do not con-
tain enough phospbiate to rh. the body
ena empecially the nervous aystem the
wupoly M need a
■peaking an this very subject. Dr.
yreerick & Kolle, Editor-In-Chief of
with me in this position and they
"ill vote for me despite a systematic
attempt to prevent them doing so.
I hey know as well as I do that thes:
new and extreme demands by the
present leaders of organised labor are
. -------------- alienatinx public sympathy from their
three miles outheast of Austin, lias i orderi and if the leaders were wise
been sola to R. W DIlara. or Euia ! cnough to.take counsel with themselves
c,, . / -iuard of —llj would see on every hand that
County, for a consideration of $105,000, should desist. y
according to a report of the transaction ' "Ten years ago you could not find a
given out Fruay morning. The trade elcptonswhiEt Xa^pVveX rare
waz broughtt about by Hal Halley, as who had anything to say against labor
slated by Guy A. Collet, local real unions.
estate man. —
The Walker tarm, owned by tho Wal- |
ker Properties Association, has been j
under the management of W. F. Gohl-
ke. for the past year, and is one of the
largest spinach- ‘farms in this locality.
The pumping plant use fur irrigation
will go with the farm, it is said. and
this, with other fixtures on the prop-
erty, is included in the purchase.
Mr. Dilliard will move to' Austin in
the near future to assume active man-
THE STATESMAN
BROKEN POLISH ARMIES'BIG WALKER FARM
Parents of Louisiana’. "Champion
Baby" raised her on Dr. Cald-
well's Syrup Pepein
THERE is always a good deal
A of sickness io the summer
months, due to the hot weather. The heat
is especially severe on babies and chil-
dren. and often it interferes with their
development and growth. They lose ap-
petite, pass restless nights, sutler from
indigestion, and finally constipation.
In the hot Southern States mothers
give a combination of simple laxative
herbs wish pepsin, st ths Arst symptom
of constipation. This formula is knowa
to druggists as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin, and they have sold it underthat
name for a quarter of a century. I is
now the sole medicinal reliance in
thousands of families
Little Dorothy Boylan knows what
real hot weather is ten months of the
year. She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry H. Boylan, and lives at 216
North Alexander St. in New Orleans.
- She has won three suecessive first
prises as the "Grand Champion Baby of
Louisiana.” and her parents say the
only medicine they have ever given her
crops go to the new owner, according
to the terms of sale, It was said.
„mmez.omeortho.mitiomssotcellsinerve tissue begin, to km it. Vitality.
Amoumprnt PE’ Phosphorus to woman begins to lose her youth and
“The union men must know that this
condition must be due to what the
labor leaders have been doing. The
public would not have changed its at-
titude toward the union except that
the unions have changed its attitude
toward the public. . They are forcing
i the public to oppose them or else
I acquiesce in their unreasonable de-
mands, which is another way of say-
ing that they have yet to go a little
further until they will convince most
thoughtful men in this country that
the union is a menace to domestic
CHILDREN’S SLIPPERS
$6.00 Styles............. $4.00 $4.00 Styles .
$5.00 Styles ...... $3.35 $3.00 Styles
$2.50 Styles ________.... .$1.70
R. W. Dilliard Will Assume
Union office between the hours of 9
. — . - . - - --------and 10 o’clock on Thursday evening,
being put into shape and will soon be ' Joe Mercer -------- ■ - --- b
ready for use. A cotillion club, for
The Lons" Club and Young Men’s
— — vvuy uue Business League baseball teams will
menrapednzazknmnooraswrez
GERMANS DENY REPORT OF
TREATY WITH BOLSHEVIKI
PARI&, Aug. C —Heporta emanatine
in London that Germany ana th. moviet
«overnment of Ruskia coneludea „
»grr^m. n< relatiye to Poland before
the beginning at the boviet ottenaive
against that country ar. denied by the
memi-orcicial,Wolrr mews bureau, ne-
•ordIng to a’Berln.diapatch.
LIONS AND V. *'£. L WILL
STAGE 6ECOND •ALL GAME
DOZEN CANDIDATES
’ Twelve candidate, for membership
■ in the Austin Elks' Lodge No. 201 will
be initiated Wednesday night at the
regular meeting of the club, according
• to an announcement by Secretary C.
B. Anderson Friday morning. With
the initiation of this group of candi-
dates the total of new members for
the Elks acquired during the past four
months has passed the fifty mark. The
membership of the lodge now numbers
approximately 400, according to the
rolls in the secretary’s office.
Wednesday's meeting of the lodge
will be the last for the month of Au-
gust. Only one meeting will be held
in September. this to be on the evening
of the second Wednesday. The change
has been made in order to avoid the
summer hot weather. With October
dlspohetonfhaes"anayyi. Elgoomn;
irratabie. uncompanionabie, moody mi
despondent. U would imded b, 2 and-
Suita $ 13.50
Suite 514.00
(Continued From Page One.)
pressed and the soviet government, it
to asserted, has declared its readiness
to grant Poland complete independ-
ence. Moscow, however, has insisted
upon arranging the terms of peace
by direct negotiations between Poland
and Russia, and partic ipation by ele-
ments led by General WrangeL and
the Russian border states, has been
refused. rhe reply is also said to
contain a statement that the terms
Russia will present to Poland are al-
ready in the hands of M.Kameneff and
M. Krassin, heads of the bolsheviki
trade commission now in Lop don.
Russian Terms Moderate.
These terms, according to some re-
ports, include the condition that com-
plete protection shall be secured for
all Jews and that free passage across
Poland shall be allowed for goods ex-
changed between Germany and Rus-
sia. Moderate newspaper opinion re-
fleets the impression that the tone of
the reply is reasonable and cannot be
objectionable in official quarters. It
is said the situation will be favorably
affected by the communication.
Suspicion that Germany is acting in
collusion with the bolsheviki persists
and it is not lessened by reports of
the address made by Dr. Walter Si-
mons, German foreign minister before
the Reichstag yesterday, during which
be declared Germany would seek to
prevent the Entente from sending
troops to Poland across Germany.
Among the suggestions advanced for
evading Germany's opposition to the
dispatch of allied troops to Poland is
one that the men might be sent by I
aircraft. Such a step, it is claimed,
would be justifiable under the treaty
Of Versailles.
WARSAW, Aug. 6.—Reports from
I the front indicate that the military'
I situation is growing more serious, the
I Russians having pierced the Poles’ de-
I fensive lines at several places east of
the Vistula.
No announcement has been made as
to what place the government would
move to, but it is reported it would
be Posen Czestochowa, 143 miles south-
I west of Warsaw near the .Silesian t run -
I tier.
I Of the developments along the east-
I era defense line, the Word from the
I front shows that after a halt of sev-
I eral days, while reinforcements were
I brought up and supplies forwarded
I along the river, the bolsheviki forced
I crossings of the Bug at a number of
I places. At one point southeast of Os-
I trov the soviet troops are reported to
I have crossed the river in large num-
I bers.
Russians Force ths Bug.
I Tonight’s communique from head-
I quarters announced that the Russians
I had forced the Bug in the region of
I Drohiezyn, (about 70 miles east of the i
capital) this being part of the soviet
movement to outflank the defenders of
Warsaw and push on toward the Vis-
tula. The Poles coutnter attacked and
fierce fighting is continuing.
Between Drohiezyn and Brest-Li-
I tovsk, the communique continues, the
I Poles launched a counter attack against i
I the Russians who had crossed the Bug ‘
below Brest-Ltavsk a in the region of j
I Brest - Uto vuk, which is in the hands
I of the Russians, they recoiled for an
attack which compelled the Poles to
evacuate Terespol, just to the west of
the river.
There was fighting at various points
to the south, but without gains for the .
I Russians.
The soviet troops have been checked
in their westward push along the
Prussian border, the statement an-
l nounces. They bare reached Mysz-
niec in an advance partly designed to
bring them to the Warsaw-Den sig rail-
way obeservers assert that this is part I
of the Russian outflanking movement ’
planned to encircle the capital, thus
saving the heavy losses Which would
result if Warsaw were attacked direct-
ly
Russian gains are conceded north
and east of Warsaw where the soviet
forces are re-greuping for what may
be the final drive on Poland's capital
in the center of the front bearing
down upon Warsaw from the northeast
the Russians, according to the com-
munique are being held along the
Ostrov-Czerwony Une to the Rug
I By Associnte Press.
WARSAW, Aug 5—Owing to the
desperate situation on the front near-
eat Warsaw, the Kosciusko Squadron,
the air force composed for the most
part of Americans, attached to the
Polish army, ia bring transferred from
the southern front. The squadron will
aid in the defense of the Polish capital.
The deefnsive line east of Warsaw
has been pierced in several places
according to reports from the front.
Preparations have begun for transfer-
ring the government, if that move is
necessitated by the Russian advance
The officials, however, still hope the
soviet forces will be checked some-
where east of the Vistula.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 76, Ed. 1 Friday, August 6, 1920, newspaper, August 6, 1920; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1457020/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .