Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 121, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 29, 1917 Page: 1 of 8
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#
Au
ican
WEATHER FO]
• East Texas:
Saturday and I
' fair;
moderate temperature.
ND
VOLUME 6, NO. 121,
PRICE FIVE
FIST FIGHT STIRS CONGRE
- 5
FRISCO EXPRESS
ANDTROOP SUPPLY
TRAINS COLLIDE EXCEEDINGLYHEAVY
CALLED SESSION
4
/
* 4
ARION HIC
K G AINS FINAL ADJJURNMENT TODAY
FEELING, HOWEVER, IS RUNNING HI<
an Antonio.
—.— —.—
Hospitals at Tulsa, Okla., Are Sir Douglas Haig Reports Teu-
4
a
i
4
k
the smoker.
riding in the front end of the
h sg
The third called session of the Thir-
only the enroliment of a few bills that
suppiie
Justice Daniel F. Cohalan of the New York
supreme court
ddles
m3
elsewhere
ay, but alway
there
main track when it shoul have taken
KORNLOFF REOLT
officials of
road
and engineers of hot
1100TAXPAYERSTO
“Big Bill” Haywood and Eight Exports Board Willing to Ex-
FIND INCREASE IN
the
ond
ASSESSED VALUES
CHICAGO,
and
Dkla.;
4 fficiai
pride
its
of
I
Capital of South American Re-
(Continued on Page Two.)
(Continuea on Pago Two)
mobile owners will be asked to
pay
(Continued on Page Two)
taxes on their machines.
The board
JAPANREITERATES
RIFFIT
la
Court-
UNDYING FEALTY'
10 ALLIED CAUSE
Baer, thinking t
ide hi
D-:ga
(Continued on Page Two)
€,
tcmuinsnu _____*- iis
P
$e
LEGISLATURE NOW
AT END Of THIRD
GERMAN LOSSES
IN YPRES BATTLE
public Suddenly Shut Off
From Outside World.
TWENTY PERSONS KILLED; 80
HURT IN RAIL WA Y DISASTER
of His Principal Assistants
Charged With Sedition.
tons Have Been Unable to
Recover Lost Ground.
z
REE PERSONS KILLED
WHEN TRAIN HITS AUTO
Board of Equalization Sending
Out 2200 Notices to Prop-
erty Owners in Austin.
Aires, the capital of
11:25 o'clock tonight
JUSTICE
COHALAI
change Raw Products for
Nipponese Steamers.
MERICA AND ENGLAND
BOUND TOGETHER BY
ABSOLUTE UNITY OF AIM
Haywood
of the 1.
made us
approa
W ere
chair
Crowded to Capacity With
Victims of Accident.
met 1
theat
ARGENTINA STRIKE
SPREADS; MARTIAL ‘
LAW IS PROBABLE
OFFICIALS THROW OUT
SCREEN OF SECRECY
Three Alleged Leaders of German
Propaganda in United States
th
And
on
I
the
de-
Misinterpretation of orders is
as the cause of the coilision
PARTISANS TAKE HAND
WHEN NORTON ATTAC
HEFLIN OF ALABA
Zack
Ivory .
>25,090,
Tb. y
lowing
Kerensky Government Re-
mains in Doubt.
Th
ngin
Hindenburg Sacrifices Thou-
sands of Men in Effort to
Dislodge British.
o'clock this urter-
al Lei escoped into
Chair Car Telescopes Smoker,
Killing and Maiming All
on the Former.
- r
■
ITCHEL LOSES LEAD
IN MAYORALTY RACE
oreing to
• firemen
Tuesduy .
assigned
/ I
r •|
when a quorum was
was one member ab-
. I
h
cM
,1‘
Eleven hundred taxpayers in Austin
are due for a rude awakening Mon-
day morning when they receive notice
of an increase in the assessed values
( asino—-< harlie Chap! in
Champion."
MajestioVaudeville.
Princess—Wm. S. Hart
Dawn Maker."
4°
crater positions along the line of their
latest attack.
Texne—"The End of the Rainbow,"
101 Rena. Show.
Queen—Harold Lockwood in "Un-
dor Handicup."
Deep Eddy HlnkDanoing.
ke
8,
."e
d...
I " h
//
k //
Mh s 1 / /
W. //
Attractions at Austin
Theaters Today
Crescent—Clara Kimball Young in
"Her Husband."
man for a local wholesle house, suf-
fered a broken arm.
Of the known dead, eleven ire ne-
watch with k
among the
ns in the cH
t office, althe
cks, made on
a member oi
rendy to
i cached
tec, the
mBk
k-
to the west of Meri.
The Austrinn official stntement
serts Pallan reconnoitering thrusts on
Representative Mason of Illinois Threatens
Put Brand on Member From Alabama 1
Will Never Lose Unless Charge Is Retract
... 1
Viscount Ishii Also Renews
Pledge of Firm Friendship
to the United States.
3* '
: J I
-
\ . 4
main line 1
herc t.might
JAlLED AT CHICAGO JAPAN MUST give
BY U. S. OFFICERS AMERICA SHIPS
House Struggles to Get and
Keep Quorum—Rev. W. D.
Bradfield Criticized.
wan completely
_2
8
27
, T9
...... 3W ;
German Manpower BATTLESHIP STRANDED
Reduced One-Half
LEFT:--
i WOIFF
4VoN IGEI,.
I
RIGHT: -
‘JEREMJAH
.O IEARY.
In “The
where yo belong,” said Henin,
to*.
■'I’ll go when I get good and rea
answered Norton.
Heflin took hold of Norton**
as he spoke and pushed him k
across an aisle. Norton rallied,
drove Heflin back over two seat*
the cornor of a tabla, landing on
of him in a row of seats. Baer,
lowed by the white-haired Coo
41
a
< rushing ull w no
being mobilized,
here loaded with
WASHINGTON, Sept. 28.—Congress tonight is an am
camp. Just at the moment when it appeared as if the invest!
tion into the Bernstorff $50,000 slush fund would be pige
holed a personal combat broke out on the floor between Rep
sentative Thomas Heflin of Alabama and Patrick D. Norton
North Dakota. Republican representatives, including Baer
North Dakota and Cooper of Wisconsin, rushed to Norton’s 1
Half a dozen southern democrats rallied around Heflin. Foi
moment a pitched battle was threatened. It required the s
geant at arms to pry the belligerents apart and restore order."
The fight came after a bitter parliamentary battle in whi
the democratic leaders had succeeded in quashing talk of an
vesigation. Republicans demanded a probe but had given up ho
of “putting it over.”
Republican leaders tonight plan concerted action. They I
dare they will not permit the administration to hush1 up 1
probe into the “slush fund" and Heflin's charges against “th
teen or fourteen suspicious congressmen.”
The biggest attendance in weeks was on hand when tl
house convened to hear the report of the rules committee, whi
was expected to report favorably on a resolution to probet
whole slush fund affair. Chairman Pou surprised everybody I
announcing the committee had decided to hold up all resolutioj
He was booed and hooted by several members when he ma
the following statement:
"In view of information which the committee has received,
a nation-wide investigation of the use of money furnished 1
the German government now being conducted by the departme
of justice, the committee on rules has decided to take no mm
on the several resolutions before it."
Storm of Indignation. •
No reflection on the house or any member thereof was eta
tained in Mr. Heflin’s charges of the Lansing revelation, he sal
and no action would be taken Immediately a storm of indigm
tion burst around him. Questions were hurled from both sid
of the house.
in chief of the Russian nrmies a se-
ries of exchanges was begun between
the new commander anti the govern-
ment in Petrograd with a view tn in-
stituting measures for strengthening
the fighting power of the army, cen-
and passed through
General Mix-Up Between Members, Preci
tated by Discussion of Bernstorff Corrupt
Fund, Ends With No Serious Casualties.
ranging from
Buenon I Since War Began
were many
en their way
at Oklahoma
in default
>10.000 to
AUETIN AMERIOAN
Solicit, and aecepta adyertimne
-gNaftoRuel 2
in Austin and Austin’s trad ter.
ritor that of any other hewe-
ruEMSrgax CKALLaxams A
OOMPARISON
authorities tonight
PEORIA, in., Sept, n.—mim Ruth
—W, the aviatrix, it wad announced
today, broke her own altitude record
by 1900 feet, ascending to a hervtrt
of 14,700 feet. Misa LaWs pre
Vlous record of 12,800 feet wu the
woman’n, record for height
near the Sereth river.
W. W. were jailed by ted-
of bonds
. Of aclent
i nt marine
s relatives
from mis |
i for 150 I
most her I
without a I
rine, and I
pollute t
het, erer ■
City
Bo far as is now known only one
Tulsa man was injured, none from
rlble rood'
Jemuna r
s. Before
at one-half
nsing were
do not su|
the city to
Heflin, dislodged their holda and
his colleague from North Dakota
Representative Johnson of
tucky, in the chair, appeared he
7, and they J
Miss Ann A
Hicks. His 1
ghty tarpon!
e big fish.
es no preten
very home li
racious resg i
Norton and Heflin. Clash.
After a few moments, hr it oral
Norton arose from his seat on th
republican side and walked over t
Heflin, sitting at a desk on thi
democratic side.
X X
41 1=2.5
NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—"The peo-
ple of Japan are with you as your
allies, your comrades and your part-
ners in the winning of this wer,
which means so much to the world,"
was the declaration of Viscount Ishii
today.
Viscount Ishii, head of Japan’s
war mission to America, greatly im-
pressed a large gathering at a
luncheon tendered members of the
missioi today by the Chamber of
Commerce.
"Since ou r arival in America,” con-
tinned the viscount. "‘We have n6t
only been impressed but com pressed
by the giganti measure of your
resources and your preparations to
stop the war by providing the only
means by which it can be stopped-
(Continued on Page Two)
(Continued on Page Three )
W ASHINCTON. Hept.
in which the federal grand jury ac-
cused 166 officers and members of
the society of conspiring against the
government.
These are the men arrested:
dicial inquiry to fix responsibility for
the attempt to overthrow the provis
ional government has been begun and
the authorities in Petrograd will be
guided by the result of this investiga.
tion.
The following dispatch from the
Russian minister of foreign affairs.
Terztchenke, was given out today by
the committee on public information
"After the appointment of (eneral
Korniloff to the post of commander
LONDON, Sept. 28.—German losses
in the battle of Ypres are described
by British ront correspondents as the
heaviest the Teutons have sui. cd in
an single drive in the war. German
C0 P es are piled high in front or the
British tienches. Undeterred, how-
ever, by the heavy toll of life on the
two preceding days, the Teutons con-
tinue their vicious counter thrusts,
thus far without having regained any
ground except at one si.tall redoubt
’ fathers
m to d
at any
ey are I
»pist and
in the ]
water d
e or ■
rs of tr
• immedi
will be I
ho sien
ow, gen
he publ
or I I
justice. I
unneces I
n it I
ute'. notice if the situation should ne- runhed to the democratc-aa.
cessitate an illustration of golldarity. eral democrats had grasped Mr
Train, running y special conces- " • • • -dad Eraspod N
■Ion of the strikers to carry milk to
the hospitals have been derailed.
On board the train
Tulspeople who were
to attnd the State fan
the st stem
nt of the
land were
below my
gs, and be
al level-hea
Hence, I
it. I rathe I
ted it 1
gain why I
t among t I
drink ch fl
ntha at a I
men seldo |
e not sure
sight not r|
goitre an I
wel troubl I
l troubles i|
Kellyville at 2:30
noon. The chair
must be signed is awaited. It is pos-
sible that both house and senate will
adjourn today before noon, but some-
thing may cause a delay which will
carry the nessioa on for u few more
hour. Many members already have ------.. U U. _ I iuin gp
cult to obtain and keoporong. dimn- and Jeremiah O’Leary, Irish-American, of the American Truth
The senate will hold an executivesociety and editor of the Bull, recently forbidden the use of the
onrirmominationsrorinomoresng.so/mails, both of whom are accused by the United States govern-
iN, ahe nomination sent to the senate ment or complicity in German propaganda inspired by the Ger-
man spy, Wolf von Igel, designed to harm England. Justice
Cohalan is alleged to have recommended to Berlin at a time be-
fore the United States got into the war that Zeppelin raids be
made on England and the furtherance of rebellion in Ireland by
means of German money and men. Justice Cohalan has long
been identified with Irish affairs in New York. He is a Tam-
many Hall man and has nine years more to serve on the bench.
WASHING’TN, Sept
were the first arrested fol-
the return of indictments
By a Staff Correspondent of the In-
ternational News Service.
BUENOS AIRES, Sept. 28.—The
strike situation is growing worse
hourly and far oversnadows the In-
ternational controversy. The chauf-
feurs and bakers today joined the
strike. All trades have voluntarily
pledged themselves to the national la-
bor federation to walk out at a min-
in "The
Loyas and troops have been
Isolated skirmishes be-
bra and soldiers are report-
r y sections. The federa- .
Ana to take over the op-
all railroads if an agree-
l reached shortly. I
pus Anrarion. fireman 407
, Slighuy: w H Milla. Monett. Mo ; 1
jb. F . W atts, Tulsa . J F Ftichareson. )
Sapulpa: Harry Bievins, Oklahoma
City; Zeke Lowe, colored, Tallah asse.
AUSTIN, TEXAS, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 29, 1917.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 28.—-Vane*
McCormick, chairman of the exports
administrative hoard, today took under
consideration the application of Japan
for license to export steel plates. It
is stated that there is a strong prob-
abiliy of Japan getting a limited
nII--pA‘A
impafRIIR"S T CU!TING OF CABLES
NEW YORK. Hept 27.—Mayor
tchel is running still further behind
the recount of the ballots cast in
e recent primary for the mayoralty
mtnation on the republican ticket.
I* opponent. William M. Bennett, at
[©•clock tonight was leading the
kyor by 488 votes. Bennett gained
ty-five votes in the HIxth assembly
ttrlet of Brooklyn and two votes in
k first assembly district of kich-
bnd.
Sept. 28.—William D.
I eight other leaders
Knn ; Earl Ad ms. Broken
Dkla.; Jesse Abney, colored, Bristow,
Pkla ; J W Samnels, Oklahoma City,
And B. I*. MMurrongh, Sapulpa
I Engineer John Ruhl of train No
7 was later found about two miles
from the wreck, having completely
lost his mind, and was tnken to okla-
lers to meet an i
it Tabor riding 1
of equalization has received a list of
automobile owners from the state
highway commission.
The lists will be mailed out Satur-
day night, and will be a good pre-
election gift to the taxpayers.
The present bonded lebt of the city
is >2.802,000, according to figures ob-
tained from Mayor Wooldridge yes-
terday. The bonded dbt of the city
In 1810 was >1.547,000. and in 1812.
>2,287,000. The purposed increase. If
the bonds are voted, will bring the
bonded indebtedness to $3,167,000.
equalisation Of the 2200 notices be-
ing sent out by the board, very few
show a decrease in valuation of real
estate and ‘personal property, and
about 1100 show big increases. The
board will meet on Oct. 8 to listen to
complaints, and if past action is any
critericn the board will have a large
number of complaints to hear.
Owners of automobiles will also be
notified that cheir machines have not
yet been rendered. About 800 auto-
to stop the brawl. Speaker (
Clark, happening in from a
room, called for the sergeant a
c’Ned to Eo to the circus during the
afternopn nd many of the members
or the house were unable even to get
n sandwich. These memhers were
hunE) and they didn’t hesitate to ex-
The empty supply train or umed the '
Construction of Three New
Normals Deferred—Impeach-
ment Law Enacted.
i were dll
1mimng 1
robably all
every kn i
han can J
orado wa I
neigh bo I
ooking al l
n an op |
out the 1
rder to fl
our bar
afflicted fl
Ilmina, w I
derable |
• disease I
-venous I
l le gentlc
nust anal
■ ormiN I
the cl l
ustic e ll
ise you ■
grave I
1 ui of I
at or neui bl. Julien, according to the
wrtsiianhgamrau Jr
STANWOOD, Iowa, Hept. 2 8.—
btt Hamilton, n wealthy retired
mer; -a- Miss GIbson of CIInton
2 a Miss Reed of Lowmoor, Town.
Itois at the Hamilton home, were
led instantly by westbound pas-
ger train No. 18, on the Chicago
Northwestern, here late today,
[he parly was riding.In an auto-
bile, and it is thought Hamil-
I attempted An cross the track
ad of the fast trin.
L
martial of the officers responible for
the grounding of a United States bat-
t leehip in home waters loomed up as
a practical certainty tonight, follow-
ing receipts by the navy department
of dispatches giving details of the ac-
cident.
The closest censorship has been
placed on all reports. All that the
public may know ts contained in th*
following statement, authorized by the
department through the committee on
public information after numerous In-
quiries concerning the affair had been
received:
"The navy department has received
an official report stating that a bat-
tieship of the United States navy In
aground in home waters. The ship
is resting easily and Mt is expected
that she will be floated without diffi-
culty.
"The newspapers are urgently re-
quested not to print any information
which might lead to the establishing
of the identity or location of the
stranded vessel."
IONDON, Hept. 28 --England and
merica are now united by "something
Lr stronger than nny written pact or '
[Hance—namely, an nbsolute unity
r motive and atm," Viscount Milner,
ember of the war council, told the
merican Luncheon club today. He
kc la red peace with Germany’s pres-
bt "unrepentant rulers" was Impos-
pie A law other thnn "th? law of
e jungle” must dominate the world
[tar tho war, he added.
VETERAN RACE DRIVER HIRT.
TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 28 —
"Knapsack" McCarthy, the veteran
reinsman, surtered a fracture of the
5kun when ha was thrown from
his sulky in a race at Carrollto--
III, today. It is believed
die The accident hav ayu l
a woman race drwa./ /
sulky agalnst hla«Ka
Mo : Mar
aoma city undei a physician’s care
Th* identified dead are hr follows
I JOHN CI:OWNOVF:I:, Shamrock,
klA.
I W. H TRACY, address unknown.
M. T WHITNFY
F. M HUTC’HINSON, address un-
known.
I JOHN TIMER Bristow, Okla.
I Two white men died while in an
mbulance on the way to a hospital
t Bristow
to aart
a siding near Kellyville,
TULSA, uklo*. Sept. 28.—Twenty
persons were killed and at least tighty
were injured whe Frisco passenger
train No. 7 crashed head-on into a
troop supply train two miles west of
i amount of sleel in return for the use
. of cargo space on Japanese vessels
‘ It is imperauive for Japan to get
i steel: it is lmnperative that the United
States get more ships. Each can help
the other. In the view of officials here.
Whatever arrangement is made for
giving Japan steel will entil an ex-
change in the form of ships, it was
declared today. While no statement
Was made by the exports board mem- of their property from the boa.rd
bers, it is known that Japan's envoys • ‘ -
are willing to go to almost any lengths
to get the necessary materials for
Completing her shlpbuildfng program,
nhey are said to have given bints, un-
"Did you infer at any time th
I am disloyal?" Norton miked.
"I did not," Heflin replied. J
Norton remained in front of Herh
a moment.
“Go on back to your own mid
it was reported late last night
that Giovernor Hobby is likely to
veto the bill just passed by the
legislature extending the time in
which construction of the three
new normal schools is to Im- be-
gun. It is claimed that the bill
as enacted does not fulfill the
conditions of „thie message sent
by Governor Hobby to the legis-
lature and he is not satisfied
with it.
—A.
j The serge ant nt arms of the house
isucceeded in getting ninety-five mem-
| bers into the house on several occa.
sinus, but each time that he dM some
| mo in her wouid crawi through a win-
MYSTERY UNSOLVED maai
mafhed in their seats became wrought
BY INVESTIGATION . s
___ Flon continwonsly from 9 a. m to 6 !
P m . and memhers nte sandwiches in
Mead of cooked dinner* All pages of
the house and senate had been ex-
Longworth of Ohio asked if
report was agreed to by all
committee. Gillette of Massacnus
demanded to know whether the cc
mittee thought no charges wer© ©
tained in Heflin's remarks about a
picious members.
“Did the committee conclude t
when a gentleman expressed a s
plot on of disloyalty, that was not
reflection on a man?" asked G
don of Ohio.
Chairman Pou parried thee© a
a hundred other question* as b
he could, and finally said:
“If the house wants an inver
gation the rule* committee willg
it to you."
Cooper Scores Heflin.
Cooper of Wisconsin got the fu
and bitterly denounced the ru
committee and Heflin.
“If there is one thing I detest ms
than another," he declared, "ft
a man who will slander anot
and then deliberately attempt JI
have someone else attempt to pi
vent an honest investigation." 3
Cooper went on to char*© th
Heflin had sought to "terroris
congressmen and prevent them tre
voting their honest convictiors ।
ga rd less of the ad min iat rati on** zd
sires on questions affectin* th© wi
He ridiculed Heflin's denials )
statements made to newspaper m
regarding a gambling house whe
Heflin said he had heard congre
men might get German money ]
winning easily at cards. \
Moore of Pennsylvania ask
whether the newspaper man
whom Heflin made statements h
been permitted to testify before 1
committee. « 7
Others repeated the question fre
time to time, but it was not a
swered. The reporters earlier in t
day had been denied a haaArir
Just as it began to app^y &
th© republicans would seriously er
barrass the majority leader*, oth
business was brought up. Norta
of North Dakota, against whom a
insinuation was made by Hartl© ye
terday before the committee, endea
ored to get the floor. He ank
unanimous consent to speak ten mb
utes. but Garrett of Tennessee at
others objected. Consideration of
bill was begun and me house sul
sided.
Monte San Gabriele
E.nmenniva nezro won n and Rustans were captured, it ifAAeinFed
Em"priw Nt -h"Rer-oiuip" tarnqlctets -"8 #:
mrcaped unhurt .and It wan here that (AlNtrfan tronner
mont of the deaths occurred 1 ___
Train No. 7 had or
[empty supply train •
[Arriving nt Kellyville
Ing the description w
leave Thinking this ti
KeKllyville sooner if .
pnssenger train proc
I The Injured brought
follow
I Serlously: (eorge |»
^toma City; Orma Bari
■William Iagtwein, Mone
blame for the recent uprising A ju-
W hat are m»I<! to be authentic
figur compiled b the Freneh
high command ami cabled yes-
tenlay from the west front show
German man power reduced from
its original strength of 1 4,000,-
000 to 6,800,000, or 200,000 less
than one-half. Details are AM
follows:
Present Gierman man power:
Soldiers at tin* front or In
cantonment, 5,500,000.
Soldiers composing the reserve,
stationed at depots, 600,000.
Clas~es of 1919 and 1920, not
yet in uniform. 700,000.
Total, 6,800,000.
Decline of German man power:
( asnalties, 4,300,000.
Reservists in foreign countries
(50,000 in America alone), 200,-
000.
I nfit for military service,
2,100,000. ,
Indispensable -to industries,
500,000.
Total, 7,100,000.
car. Passengers in the reaz coacn ..
were thrown against seats, causing
internal injuries from vhich many
will die.
The supply train was returning on
a "deadheud ' from buri Sill, wnere
troops from Missouri an I Kansas are
NEW YORK, Sept.
with no success - On the eastern
uy, Sapulpa: M Franklin,
Argentina, at
here being killed \ F Watts, sales-
with only minor injuries 1%
baggag*- and smoking ear
mollahrd
cut oft from telegraphie communica-
lion with the outnide world, according
to » "flaxh" sent to the Commercial
and South American Telegraph com-
panydy Ite manager at Valparaiso.
The novar, did not atate what had
happened to interrupt the communica
tion with the United States whieh
leads via the Chilean city. It is the
hecond time within four days that thin
connection has been cut off The rirst
limo coincided with the vote of the
ArEentine houso of representatives in
nupport of tho nenate resolution ure.
nE * preak with Germany. Buenos
Aires dizpatches on the following day
quoted leading Argentine officials as
expresninE the suspicion that German
plotters behind the railroad strike
had caused the interruption so as to
prevent.word from Ambaasador Naon
at Washington reaching the Argentine
government.
The latest dispatch received from
the Internntionai News Service corres-
pondent at Buenos Aires prior to the
new telexraph tie-up was to the effect
that the strike situmalon was extremely
Erave, overshadowing the controversy
with Germany. "
RUTH LAW BREAKS
ALTITUDE RECORD FOR
WOMEN AIR PILOTS
Glaze Okie. Blame for Uprising Against
ISOLATES BUENOS
AIRES,ARGENTINA
Vladimir Lossieff of Chicago.
Sir boug:as Haig reported today the
srepulse of a violent onslaught against
, , > the Bi itish Zonnebeke positions and
nurses on train, with phynie ans and local gains by the Australians
nurses on board was rushed to th. Aircraft or both mides i ticking a
Sn"hrreturnpuizaaca wvalqnizoin pruminentpurtm the Mande " pikht
atsupuipa ana the mjur.,1 wereginnes
brouga hospit o" flume's °on.henon: anlow autusaA"Eeil iti • Im
gitarhas, more han ,nr"' vatientsEhi Teutons. While the latter dow rI
kuccrexnzusrama,nhtokanttoantali or which wer...... Jown out-of senator James A -or
Injuries that will probably fesuit tn TI„. Pari’orrie. rpor. the renu. *‘"n to. be adjutant general of Texas,
death. ' or all German attack., on the Aisne!who'hi ? Gen Henry Hutchins.
ana in the Argonne iwho h , made a brigadier gen.
Tho Hugsian, gim,,q « .Z n the federal army, and any
CM. tn the Mcasu" rapturing SMelpther, appointments that Governor
town of rr,am.ru twentv-Fou’ miles , M y maz send up this morning
- -■ - I StruEEle to Get Quorum.
Most of the Cay Friday was spent
©V the house of representatives try.
ing to secure a quorum Every time
•i roll call was demanded there-was
•al W. W. LEADERS 10 SECURE SIEEL
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Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 121, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 29, 1917, newspaper, September 29, 1917; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1464948/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .