The Evening Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1916 Page: 4 of 8
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1916.
FRI
A STOCK TICKER PEACE.
j With the Exchanges
W
4
W
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5
INVOKING UNCLE SAM.
4
New
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$
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F
23
V
the Balkans is not at all our business.
the war in
we could
0-
V
1
jewels.
We have just received
$15.00 to $200.00 Every finish.
From
Be
Ct
Hit bNew Rates
8
Among the
leading colleges, but considerable drilling
in our
)
SENIORS ADOPT REGALIA.
the curriers.
P
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17
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nearby boi
Tariff 2)
of the 01
merce C<
e Texas Commission has
ontractor to furnish woo
tion, an
advised
to feder
his coq
roops that he must make
lit to the biterstate Com-
mission if he expects re-
contract wa« based on the
mission wood rates which
superseded by the tariff
s built on the authority
of the Interstate Com-
ssion, a federal institu-
Lydia
bleC
A 5845
12-inch
$1.50
KLGI
MePher
‘Wednes
She wa
end in ’
the
E. Moot
day.
W. M
Interna
Mars
Warehi
ment, I
officia!
A 5844
12-inch
$1.50
J. 1).
of the
Wedne:
pany.
Char
agent
headqu
Ausiin
XEW
Porras,
and re
the tin
on ills
merce
lief
Texas
have I
made
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and it d
the hou
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Danby,
Sleep
ity, bac
sations,
ments v
E. Pink
This
ingredi
nativo
years p
and inv
Womer
mony t
EPink
Born
Columbia Grafonola
Price $200
v
NER
STATE BUSINESS
SHOWS GROWTH
(
g
7
Charters Granted by
Secretary of State
Comptroller Makes His
Annual Report to M e
Governor.
7
S
€
I
becomFective
rs lines tariff 2-B.
cainants is the man
8
48,
some who suffer in it probably will believe
and shonld have saved them.
—----o--—
A LATIN LOCHINVAR.
_. w.n-a amtasion Is recelv-
under the
ISAAC BLEDSOE
7 0 A.. Phone619
Ninth and Congress Ave.
1
k )
Austin City Council. Here 11
brought out that the milk that goes
into the meking of Texas ks cream is
brought here by carloads from Wis-
WEDDING MARCH. (Mendelssohn.) Chicago
Symphony'Orchestra. Frederick Stock, conductor
SPRING. (Grieg) Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Frederick Stock, conductor.
CARNAVAL. (1) PREAMBULE, (2)
C NOBLE. (3) COQUETTE. (Schumann.)
NaetSerieg. Under the directionrofEimes;
AnSermet, Conductor of Serge de Diagbilet*
Russian Ballet Orchestra.
CARNAVAL. (1) RECONNAISSANCE. (2)
PAGANINI, (3) VALSE. !42 AVEM:
(Schumann. 3 Ballet Series. Underthedirectian
of Ernest Ansermet, Conductor of Serge de
Diaghileff's Russian Ballet Orchestra.
Listen to them, or to the
field of orchestral recording.
GRAFONOLAS and DOUBLE-DISC
RECORDS
FOR SALE BY
ISAAC BLEDSOE, Austin, Texas
COLUMBIA GRAPH0PH0NE CO., Dallas, Texas
When the late but not universally lamented Vic-
toriano Huerta bade farewell to the scenes of his
triumphs and wended his way to Vera Cruz and
safety, Don Francisco was bold enough to become
president of Mexico in Huerta’s place. He even
attempted to keep the job at a time when in his
the stage.
Unfortunately there isn’t any way to make the
belligerent nations accept the peace society's quo-
tations.”
------0—-----
At the request of the American committee for
Armenian and Syrian relief, the Evening States-
man will receive contributions October 21 and 22
for the Armenian and Syrian sufferers. The sup-
plies for these sufferers will be sent to Beirut on
a government collier which is expected to arrive at
New York to receive them October 24. All funds
will be promptly cabled to the distribution centers.
--0--
Mr. Hughes’ friends are seeking to organize the
lawyers, college men and big business men of the
country in his interest. They are not having any
great degree of success even at this, and perhaps
they will finally decide to appeal to the ordinary
kind of folk who are going .to do the voting in
the coming election.
yare," worship at her shrine. The fat drummer
and the slender literary genius alike fall before
her. To defy all her admirers and at the same time
bring down upon oneself the resentment of such
fair ones of society as may have thought of being
a Mrs. ex-President desirable requires a courage
almost amounting to recklessness.
Walter Scott wished to know who was so bold
as the Young Lochinvar. The Don appears to be
the answer.
------—o----•---
The Du Pont powder works have forbidden their
employes to wear Wilson buttons. It is too bad
the story got into print. Some of our citizens who
are opposing Wilson because of his international
policy have no great admiration for the Du Ponts.
----.-------0------------
The straw vote taker is a busy as ever, and it is
reliably reported that a straw vote taken at Re-
publican National headquarters resulted in the
unanimous indorsement of Mr. Hughes.
___.________o---------------
A New York man lost his chance to register as
a voter because he was busy rocking the baby.
Friend wife probably was too busy with political
or social problems to relieve him of the rocking.
-----,---------0---------------
Iowa State college now has a course in janitor-
ship. It hardly seems fair to the janitors to make
“professional men" of them. Some of them are
fairly well paid.
Columbia Records of a
Symphony Orchestra!
THE EVENING STATESMAN-
(0
NG —e
P Note
nesday.
w. 1
agent '
visited
Total receipts and transers to the
credit of the general revenue account
during the fiscal year ending Aug. 31,
amounted to $17,978,089.82, according
to figures just compiled by the Comp-
troller’s Department to be embodied in
the department’s annual report to the
Governor. This amount is $5,089, 194.59
more than was received during the
previous year.
The largest portion of the moneys
received during the past year and
placed to the credit of the general
revenue account was received from
county tax collectors, this amount be-
ing $15,593,126.56. The balance con-
sisted of special collections by the
Comptroller and Treasurer, miscella-
neous receipts from various depart-
ments, assessments, etc.
Disbursements during the same pe-
riod amounted to $15,020,201.77 as com-
pared to 114.055.401.83 for the previous
year. When the fiscal year of 1916
started there remained in the State
Treosnry to the credit of the general
revenue fund 3555.103.13. The fiscal
year of 1917 starting Sept. 1, opened
with a credit of of $3,512,991.24, the
largest amount which has been on
hand at the start of any fiscal year
for some time.
The account of the vailable school
fund during the fiscal year 1916 liket
wise showed an Increase in receipts
from the figures just compiled by
Comptroller Terrell, a total of 38.701,
93.6.36 bring placed to the credit of
this account as compared to $7,992,-
053.17 for the previous year, an in-
crease of 3702.877 10. Disbursements
amounted to $7,896,627.18, leaving abal,
ance to the credit of this account of
31,123,233.8" on Sept. 1. »
Army School Not
to Open This Year
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.- The army
service school at Fort Riley, where
1 cavalry officers are sent for special
instruction and that at Fort Leaven,
worth. Kan., where they are given final
our Christmas stock of Columbia Grafonolas, all sizes.
Every vibration of the strings, every faint
sigh of wood-winds and reeds is engraved
on these Columbia Records with a preci-
sion, beauty and brilliancy that mirror
reality in every note.
The music-note trade-mark has come to
be the “mark of achievement” in music-
recording. Look for it on all records
you buy.
Naw ColumUa Record, or ‘ale the e01* efeey mooli.
Columbia Record, in all Foreign Language.
Hi, advertiiement ma, dictated te Ue Dicta Rhone.
COLUMBIA
—Greenville Banner.
This is a matter that was discussed
in a rather illuminating way at a re-
cent hearing of dairymen before tbs
negotiations.
It isa stock market seheme, and, perhaps, worthy
of consideration in this day when American busi-
ness men are perfectly willing to attend to Europe .
affairs as well as their own. The peace society s
ticker will show just where France’s stock stands,
and whether “Germany preferred” is higher than
“Austria common.” The plan might even furnish
Wall Street with something else to gamble on. 10-
day one could “put up a margin” on Rumania
and next week when the peace society's balance
sheet showed a tremendous slump in this stock,
could dash around shouting “Ruined” or
“ Curses” just like a regular speculator does—on
$
With
la an e
remove
h from fa
the po
mixed
on the
utes, t
washed
halr, bi
the del
ETVAGEFOUT..
THE EVENING STATESMAN
*’ . -' '■ -------1
FUBLsMED DAlLx, AFTERNOON AND NIGHT—AND
/ SUNDAY MORNING—BY
CAPITAL PRINTING COMPANY
2 j owFce or eunicaToX
Hr Burrata mnd Demzon street"
F TELErHOSES:
Business orlea all. Aepertmentzs both Pnone"
Editorial Rooms. Old Phene .1215
Editorial Room.. Ne Phons.243.
Solt ttor. Old Phone 1242
ocleey Editor. New Phone 1*- ..
Pentera as wocond-clasa matter at thepostofnie: “8sAu8
(la. rotas, under th. act st Congress oe M --—---
* ' suuscawnion RATEs
Austin sad suburba by carrier, dan, and suneMIs 12
por ok tratririiiiin: ii
By malt per month....................... ........
By mall per year.................... HO
Bnday edition. one year.................* _—_--------
FThe S. C Beckwith Special Agensxzoirurspressutsine.
for freign aaverisine. Eesters, oriee: Bulldins Ehica0
New York City. Western etflco. Tribune betr3it
BL Louis orrfee. Third Nauonal Ban Bulldins
E&ce, Ford Building.--------------------
NOTICE TO THE PeBLIC: .tnaine
Aar erroneous reflection upon the, chorastertot which
hr reputation at any personfiruoT.P8E gladly cor-
zztea"afhca e"me attentlnPFIhpubilser.--
4 rAPEn DELIVERY.
sybseribers in the city who,, notracaerthrnisg’wi
by 6:15 on week days and by 7.33 on sunaay » circula-
Enfer a favor o> the management by calling in
||gil manager at either phone let- ____________________
------ Gold pins are being given servant girls who have
me Framcisco Carbajal is . man of iron nerve.
woman knows a good servant is a jewel, but this
is the first attempt to provide gold settings for such
3 ®
Full dress collars and bat wing ties
anan fnexacn "aranotedcaeths
at their meeting yesterday afternoon.
The class insignia must be worn on
Tuesdays and Fridays of each week.
I
who has the cact toafurnish.wood
..1 rniAtes soldiers stationed
t th s- bridge west ot
.... it from being blown
Rio to pret 122
up by Me? -mareuders from the
Si? ArmyContrtor
nx401fet. "oct 10.01916; $760.
Fannie Polk. Individually and as de
visee under the will of Lee l olk. de-
ceased, to Effie and oscar Qverton,
2 acres of land in part of 125 acre
tract in part of Walker Wilson league
Oct. 14, 1916, other considerations and
Texas is a great consumer of dalry,
products. Several hundred thousand
dollars go out of the State monthly for.
what the people of leva, can produce
at a considerable profit. It is said that
although 100 carloads of dairy cows
bays been shipped into the eection
about El Paso that city is buyin
weekly 250,000 pounds of butter. E
is vouched for by the State Dairy F
pert Patterson. It is astounding to
think of a city like El Paso spending
some $5,000,000 annually for dairy
products. Texas people can, with Soe
little expense and some effort, nnve
the enormous sums going out of th
Stat® and assist in feeding the Stm5
consin in the form of butter. Th® dairy
industry in Wisconsin is carried on on
a great and profitable scale, notwith-
standing the dirficelties to be over-
come were far greater than they are
in Texas. Local creameries. it was
said, do not grow and multiply for
the reason that they can not buy the
milk to supply their present demands.
If it is laws and ordinances that are
needed to encourage the industry, they
should be enacted. In the meantime,
the situation calls for men who know
th® business and who have initiative
and courage.
II has occurred to a great many Am-
ericans that the Republican candidate
for the presidency is badly scared
about something. He refuses to even
answer plain. simple. civil questions
directly and plainly. He generalizes
and thus evades every issue that ap-
pears to have votes in it. Michacl
Czuba, a master barber of Fulton..M•
Y. (New York being a close Stale), has
written a letter to Candidate Hughes
warning him that he’d b® in.greater
favor with the "tonsorial artists if
he clipped a pound or two ot.th.14-
mens Hwghes chin adornment " an”
didates Hughes’ ahlverful apprehen-
sions may come of his whiskers and
those of his running mate. He cer-
tainly will not pretend that he is treat-
ing the barbers fairly. As he knows,
the election may turn on the barber
vote, and tonsorial artists are good
talker, and are meeting voters con-
nually. Thinge have run on now un-
til Candidate Hughes can not afford
to cut them off leet some ot the vot-
era might consider him a scared cat.
-Galveston News.
It is just possible that Hughes has
deliberately chosen to flout the barber
vote, having calculated that there is
mor® to gain hy pleasing that class in
certain of the States which likes the
"feel” of a glossy beard.
orficers nnd nun being unnble to at-
tend school.
---—--o—---:—
The reported destruction of some of England’s
dreaded “tanks” is not surprising. In this war
it is to be expected that one side will meet the in-
ventions of others very quiekly. The Romans were
terrorized by Pyrrhus’ elephants, but when their
terror passed they crippled the elephants and
Pyrrhus had nothing new to defeat them wit i.
in this war there are ‘ Romans” on both sides.
Zeppelins, air cruisers, gas, submarines and tanks
hav each had their turn and each has been met.
and its destructiveness diminished.
-------------O
Greek newspapers are to be censored by the al-
lies. This is a further extension of their kindness
to the Greeks. With allied soldiers policing the
country, allied sailors in charge of its navy and
allied censors running its newspapers, Greece is
relieved of many burdens Still, the Greeks do not
appear to like the new conditions and rioting is
reported in Athens. Perhaps it is because the allies
have been so kind. They have left the Greeks noth-
ing else to do.
Uncle Sam has been made to play the part of the
puzzled teacher for the last two years, while the
European nations were “telling on” each other.
He has been bombarded by both sides in the war
with tons of literature and drayloads of protests.
One nation’s “white book” has been followed by
nnother nation's “red book,” and a third nation’s
ablue book.” until Uncle Sam didn’t know whether
Ks was receiving protests or new short-story mag-
azines.
One result of all this protesting and appealing
to the United States has been to build up in the
Kinds of many of the people of Europe as well as
the people of this country an idea that it really
is our business to lay down rules for the warring
nations to follow. Thus, we read that some of the
people of Athens believe an American fleet is on
the way to Greece to protect that country from
frther violations of its neutrality. Whether the
report from Athens is true or not, such a belief
would not be remarkable in view of all that has
been said of our “duty” toward Belgium. Even
one of our former Presidents has declared we
should have protected Belgian neutrality, and
scores of editors have written article apparently
based on a belief that thia country is a species of
friendly giant existing for the purpose of seeing
that no country violates another country's neutral-
ity and laying down rules of warfare for all the
world.
It is rather embarrassing to have small nations
think we are shirking our duty, and to realize that
we have contributed to this belief. While we know
country at least “Who’s whot" was a question
instead of an explanation, and being president of
Mexico was about as pleasant as umpiring in
West Texas.
Of course, the Don eventually was bounced and
became an ex-, but his days of adventure were not
ended. Far from it.
Coming to the United States, as every good
Latin-American politician eventually does, Don
Francisco became a bit of a social lion in that de-
lightful country known of old as the "Creole
coast,” Hie exile was made very pleasant, and
he might in time have married some beautiful de-
scendant of the old Latin-American aristocracy of
New Orleans, where he located. But not for the
Don. Something more romantic, more daring, was
required. At last, it would appear so, for he has
recently slipped away with a beautiful manicurist
and married her. This is no small feat. Men it
all walks of life are the rivals of whoever seeks
to wed the beautiful manicurist "whose habitat is
Thia latest peace plan is an ingenious little thing.
It is proposed to have each country poet its peace
terms, and then, as the tide of victory ebbs and
flows, the "‘cash value” of each country’s demands
will be changed, according to its failure or success.
Finally, when all the nations are war-weary the
peace clearing house, or whatever it is to be called,
win come to the front with its balance sheet, show-
ing just how many of its demands each nation is
entitled to, and this will provide a basis for peace
West
nervous
Hi
a large hotel, and the Don’s charmer was one of
these. Truly “the young and fare, the old and I Military training has not yet been established
Chartered today:
United Production Company ,of
Houston; capital ,.10.000. A I;
corporators: W. H precarty. A. F
Purdy and P. A. Heisig.
Certinient, ot aissolution was riled
by the Fort Worth-Denton Aracton
ompany of Fort Worth.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
1 H. W. Williams ot nl. to Juan Po.
in nco, lota 29 and 20 in block B of
priving Park addition No. 2 of Austin.
In part of outlot 62 in dtvision O. Oct.
kugie kuStac. and wife to Becker
$
rf TRADE snoTcoUNciL}
Em
MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PRESS
PIHE first recordings of the Chicago Symphony
I Orchestra, especially the recording of Grieg’s ex
quisite “Spring”, are transcendent triumphs of tone-
reproduction, achievements never before thought possible.
Ballet Series recorded under the personal
thileff’s Russian Ballet Orches-
has accomplished in the
oral R. Pott to Becker Lumber Com-
pany. 6x10 feet out of the northwest j
corner of block 2 of C. R. .ohna &
cempany’s subdivislon of outlot M in
aivison B of Austin. Oct 10. l»t«.
32. J. wright and wife to AR. Oer-
many. tote 28 and 29 in divislon 0 o
AlNIh, being Bituated In Canterbury
sqare. Oct. 17, 1010; POiO-.Z.
Blackmail la described as “Americn’s
moat popular crime." Ita principal field
is among wealthy people who have
akeletons In their closets whish.re-
quire concealment at any coat Ther:
ar®, however, other forms of blackmail
which ar® growing in fashion, and
which are quit® as profitable as the
direct method. If the extent to which
the courts are misused for this pur-
pos® was fully understood by the Pub-
He a reform-of the courts could speed-
ily be made one of the first planks in
th® platform of every decent man and
party. — Waco News.
Every man or, woman who indulges
in practices which he or she is
ashamed for the neighbors to know, is
paying blackmail in one form or an-
other. If not in money, then it may
be in something far more preclous,
in self-respect, freedom, self-control,
in the capacity to enjoy the Innocent
and beautiful things which make life
worth while. Ther® is no way for the
transgressor to avoid it; unless, in
fact, he is willing to face his delin-
quency boldly and rrpudlat® it.
is being done in the dental schools.
------o —
Jane Addams is among the latest recruits to the
Wilson cause.' But it doesn’t necessarily follow
that Wilson will lose.
—-------o .........-
This is the season when the iceman becomes a
coal man.
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The Evening Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1916, newspaper, October 20, 1916; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1498156/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .