The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 84, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 28, 1917 Page: 3 of 8
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I
>17.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1917.
THE STATESMAN
PAGE T
■xiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiiiniiiijf EDWARDS SAYSHE
OUT TODAY!
ALSO
\
3000 Red Seal Records from $1.00 to $7.00
ii
Priced S16, $17.50, S20 Up to *48
1
h
ISAAC BLEDSOE
i
9th and f ingress
Phone 619
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
4
WOMEN! m it!
T
Theatre Friday and Sat.
BYTERIAN CHURCH:
ditton by acting directly on the vital
V,
I
organs, toning them up and enabling
-
FD
1
Ji
=
$
Let’s
N
Buckle Down to Business
rouctton
HOW
MD
illustrious writers of France,
s
ALEXANDER LINCOLN’S
BASEBALL AT CREIGHTON. .
406 E. Mh St
Phone EMS.
A
AUTOMOBILES
1
AUSTIN NATIONAL BANK
FRANKLIN
MITCHELL
Austin Texas
STANDARD MOTOR CAR CO.
Phone 1847
103 West 5th St
-guiiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
I.......IIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIII.....IHlIIIHimiHHIllIllHHIHIlHHinimiflHG
d
5111
5000 Double Face Records at
2000 Double Face Records at
Austin Man Had Rheu*
matism So Bad He
Couldn’t Turn Over in
His Bed.
Come in now and let us fit you up
with your New Spring Clothes.
A wonderful showing of New Spring Suits
awaits you. Plain, Norfolk and belted back
styles are here by the hundreds.
fant if your Baok Hurte or
Biadder 1. troubling you.
DDY
OTH,
RES. ‘
Our directors are business
men themselves.
a tableepoonful in a
before breakfast and
LESOURCES OVER $6,000,000.00
U. S. GOVERNMENT DEPOSITORY
Whether they bring to us a problem in coat
accounting, or the question of a more profitable
turnover, whether they ask us to find the leak
in their business, whether they wish to know
the condition of a market, whether they apply "
for a loan or seek advice in investments, they
are confident that we can help them.
the most
it has
75c
$1.25
QUIT MEAT WHEN
KIDNEYS BOTHER
■
YES! MAGICALLY!
CORNS LIFT OUT
WITH FINGERS
=
I
Sumnww
workout soon Stewart will choose his
first team largely "by guess.”
Bad Weather Keeps
in Nebraska Team
I
=■
(
1
0
r
Dublin Giant Wins
Bout From Kellar
Stellar Slabmen
Without-Glory of
Hitless Contest
Johnny Neu Changes
His Name to Noye
ss of water
a few days
NEW VICTOR RECORDS
FOR APRIL
Honus Gives Some
Advice On Battery
W
; 2 n
Hear Clarence Eddy, one of the World’s
greatest organists, Friday Night, March
30th, at eight o’clock, at First Presbyterian
Church, West Seventh and Lavaca Streets.
Public cordially invited.
ie fa-
home
dealer
?ar at
o.
I
i
=
=
s
1
I
I
I
=
#
Save five dollar, by dry alMnlng
everything at home
with gasollne. j.
• >
• THEDA BARA A
DIRECTION WILLIAM FOX
Do yon Judge of the ship while it
I. on the atickn."- Itallan proverb.
S
Faulties In Fit, Flawlem In Finiah,
Irreproachable in Style.
parts of the body and produce the
condition known as rhemuatism.
The story upon which the pi
is based was written by one of
Lays Cane Aside and
Can Now Walk About
Like a Young Man.
MUSTEROLE FEELS!
It Gets to That Sore Spot
• Like Magic
weather has not permitted the Univer-
sity of Nebraska baseball team to en-
gage in much outdoor practice and
with the opening of the season at hand
Everything here that a man or boy wears —
Day or Night
Comprising the Full Catalog of Disc
Talking Machine Records at
"Is your wife ecnomical?" .
"Very. Look at the clothes that she
makes me wear?-- Detroit Free Pres:.
| After Taking Tanlac,
K
—--
sticky. It dries in a moment, and sim-
ply shrivels up the corn without in-
flaming or even irritating the sue-
PREMIER
You simply say to the drug store
man, "Give me a quarter of an ounce
of freezone." This will cost very little
but is sufficient to remove every hard
or soft corn from one’s feet.
A few drops of this new ether com-
pound applied directly upon a tender,
aching corn should relieve the sore-
ness instantly, and soon the entire corn
root and all, dries up and can be lifted
Very often, the Detroit manager de-
clares, a baseball manager will recom-
mend to the club owner that several
recruits be released immediately after
they have been looked over at the
training camp. Magnates hesitate to
release them, fearing they may lose
a diamond in the rough and be criti-
cised by fandom. As a result, Jennings
said- many hopeless ball tossers con-
tinue to eat major league meals or find
fine berths with class "A" clubs, at
the expense of the major organization.
Training expenses, and the cost of
traveling, uniforms, equipment. hotel
bills and many minor incidentals would
greatly be reduced, says Jennings, if;
big league ball clubs had the nerve to
employ a squad of twenty men.
. - - „T M
Easter Comes Early; Only Eleven Days Off
r ' — 4.....S *■....... 9 ; ------- ------ ” ■ ’ 11
CHICAGO, March 2«.—JJm Coffey,
the Dublin giant, won from Terry Kel-
lar, of California, in the third round
of a JO-round bout in Brooklyn, when
Kellar’s seconds threw in the sponge.
The men are heavyweights.
and can not be until June.
"You see," Johnny explains," ""Nen‘
is pronounced ’Noye’ and that’s the way
Im going to spell it
Critics say the St. Paul boxer has
prospects of a bright ring future.
K X rE COME in contact daily with so many
VV kinds of business men, we have helped
to solve so many business problems
from the financial end, we are so thoroughly
familiar with the trend of modern business in
all departments that our depositors have come
to depend on us for advice in business matters.
Much speculation among amateur sport
followrshere has been caused by the
possibility of a truck and field mee t
herein May with teems from the Call- ' Take • glac, of Salte before break-
fornia and Deland Stanford Jr., com- 1
616
This new way _ _____
corns was Introduced by a Cincinnati
man, who says that, while freezone is
■
nated from the system in a natural
way. Liniments and external applica-
tions as a general thing only afford
temporary relief. Tanlac is a consti-
tutional treatment and gets right at the
root of the trouble by removing ths
cause.
Tanlac is sold in Austin by Van
Smith Drug Co., under the personal
direction of a special Tanlac represent-
ative
The heart may be broken and the
soul remains unshaken.—Napoleon.
There are some large and exciting
scenes in "The Darling of Paris." There
are more than a thousand people shown
in some of them. This production will
go down in history as one of the most
absorbing In which Miss Theda Bara
has ever been identified. Many of the
episodes are strong, forceful and grip-
ping of the character that makesgpa-
trong rise from their seats when wit -
nessing it. Many of the more important
episodes may be enumerated as fol-
1. Kidnapping the girl.
2. Teaching her to become a pick-
pocket.
2. Charged with committing a crime
rounding tissue or skin.
Don’t let father die of Infection or
lockjaw from whittling at his corns,
but clip this out and make him try it.
Tanlac is a powerful reconstructive
tonic and quickly overcomes this con-
KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 28--
out with the finrera ----- Jennings points out the remarkable
■ the ringers. success of the old Baltimore Orioles.
to rid one s feet of of which he was a member, which won
pennants with a squad that never to-
taled more than eighteen athletes.
Coach Stewart fears he will be forced
to use a bunch of "raw recruits” in
Club’s Waste $50,000
Yearly Says “Hughie”
Kid Williams of Baltimore defeated
Jimmy Murray of New York in a 10-
round bout at New York. Williams
weighed 119%, one pound heavier than
his opponent.
OMAHA. Neb, March 28 —tasebal
will be resumed at Creighton Uni-
vorsity this weamon after a lapse of
three years. Fifty men are out ■ to
make the team. Practice will be held
in the gymnastum until outdoor work
can be started.
Joe Turner. Police Gazette champion
of the middleweight division. will work
out at the Armory this afternoon with
some of the soldiers in preparation for
his match tomorrow night with Pet
Brown of Taylor. Brown, in the mean-
time, is working out at Taylor and will
WAXAHACHIE, Texas, March 28.-
Manager Jennings of the Detroit
Americans declares that major League
clubs waste $50,000 a year. He claims
that magnate* spend a share of this
money knowing it will be wasted. Fear
of being called “cheap skates" by the
baseball populace is the reason for the
wastage, Jennings says.
Jennings, a student of the old school,
believed that the major league player
limit easily could be reduced to twenty
men and that teams could get along
with a squad of eighteen players.
“The ball team, that wins pennants
is the team that has the fewest number
of men,” he decLares.
NEW HATS NEW SHOES NEW SHIRTS
for Easter for Easter for Easter
every sense of the word. Nebraska has ________ ________ .au c.c....0
not had a baseball team in six years them to perform their proper functions
and. unless weather permits an outdoor so that the impurities are soon elim-
peting against Missouri and Kansas.
Tentative approval of the plan already •
has been obtained tut a doubt still ex- |
ists as to whether the proposed ar- . M __
rangements will be consummated. | No man or woman who tats meat
The plans took form at the recent I regularly can make a mistake by flush.
CHICAGO, March 28.—Two of the
greatest pitchers in baseball never have
had the honor of entering the select
circles of no-hit fame. They are Wal-
ter Johnson of the Washington Ameri-
cans and Grover Alexander of the Phil-
adelphia Nationals. Eddie Plank of
the St. Louis Americans, one of the
greatest Southpaw twirlers of all time,
likewise never has pitched a no-hit
game. 4
Very few no-hit games are staged in
the two major leagues, still It is sur-
prising that pitchers of such class as
Plank, Johnson , and Alexander, who
have seen years of service in the “big
show” have been able to go through
nine innings withlut a hit being made
off their deliveries.
Johnson. Plang and Alexander have
neared their goal many times, but al-
ways some opponent nicked them for a
safe tap which shattered their hopes.
They nre credited with many one-hit
and two-hit games.
A-a-h? That’s delicious relief for
those sore muscles, those stiff joints,
that lame back.
Musterole ia a clean, white ointment
made with the oil of mustard and
other home simples.
It, does the work of the old-
fashioned mustard plaster, minus the
plaster and minus the blister I
You simply rub Musterole on the
spot where the pain is—rub it on
briskly-and usually the pain is gone.
No muss, no bother. Just comfort-
ing, soothing relief — first a gentle
glow, then a delightful sense or cool-
ness. And best of all, no blisters like
the old-fsshioned mustard plaster used
to make.
Use Musterole for sore throat, bron-
chitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck,
asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges-
tion. pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago,
paina and aches of the back or joints,
sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil-
blains, frosted feet and colds of the
chest (it often prevents dneumonia).
should take now and then to keep the
kidneys clean and active and the blood
pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney
bomplicationa
"Do you know before I began taking i
Tanlac I hurt so bad with rheumatisi
= at times I couldn't turn over in bed." j
.....................IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.............................. Alice WenUe, Ed HADS, “02109,2
Theda Bara at Majestic
| eating meat and get about four ounces
I of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take
of murder, of which she la innocent.
4. Thran t of executing her unless she
admits having committed the crime.
1. When she is taken to the seaffold
in the cart.
•cones Located in Paris.
4. Protesting her innocence.
7. When she is rescued by the man
who knows she is innocent.
8. The great carnival seenes in the
streets of Paris.
•. Where the girl’s protector throws
Claude Frallo, who is the real mur-
derer, from the belfrey.
10, Great rejoicing by the populace
when It is known that the girl is inno-
cent. . ’
The scenes are all located in Parib.
JOE TURNED
not be in Austin until the evening of
the match.
Mat fans who have given Turner the
“once over” say that he has a chance
of downing the champion from Taylor.
Turner has been on the mat for the
past sixteen years, going into the game
when he was a boy of fifteen. He is
undefeated in the middleweight class
in the North and Northeast, including
indoor meet here between Missouri ane ing the kidneys occasionally, says a
Kansas. The rival coaches- Schulte of. ... Ln.n .Lmi. Man. .Im. .mi.
Missouri and Hamilton of Kansas ' weil-known authority. Meat forms urio
each had been asked to arrange a dual acid which excites the kidnays, they
meet with the athletes of the two coast I become overworked from the strain,
schools The proposal of a joint meet . get sluggish and fail to filter the Waste
was considered favorably. and poisons from the blood, then we
The two Middle Western teams, it is ’ get sick. Nearly all rheumatism,
thought, could turn out n well balancea headaches, liver trouble, nervousness,
squad Missouri, strong in hurdles, : dizziness, wleeplessnens nnd urinary
sprints and weights and relay, would isorders come from sluggish kidneys,
share almost equally with the fast Kan- I The moment you feel a dull ache in
sas long distance runners and capable the kidneys or your back hurts or if 2
jumpers and vaulters. ; the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of * —-------------- ------------------------------------
tendmans, irxqaronor iiiIiiiIIIIIIIunaIIIIIIIIIIIIIIaIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
MINNEAPOLIS, March 21—Johnny : kidney, will act fine. Thia ramoua
Ney. a hi. Paul Iightwelght, ha, chang. : balts Is made from the acld o «rapen
nd his name to Johnny Noye," becauwe, I and lemon jufee, combined with uthin
he My., he want, to do away with the • ana has been uned for senerations to
German patronymic. He waa born in nush and ntimulate the kidneys, also to
Germany, but lent an American citizen ' neutrallze the melds in urine co it no
.....- । longer causes irritation, thus ending i
bieder weaknene,
Jad Balla ia inexpenmtye and can not ■
Injure; makes a delightful etfervencent '
Mt nla- water drink which everyone I
I ,
■ 3
g
THAT
THAD SUFFERED FOR
| NEARLY 3E YEARS
Do YOU get the help you
SHOULD get from your bank-
ing connections?
The
a connplcuous place in French litera-
ture. There is not a arena In it that
la not filled with great dramatic ac-
tion. *
It I. very May and tnexpensive to
dry clean and brighten all the ribbons,
laces, yokes, neckties, alike, net work,
salina, shirtwaists, kid gloves and
shoes, furs, children’s clothe., suits,
caps, woollen garments, fancy vests,
Ewlon, lawn, organdie and chiffon
dresges, draperies, rugs, in fact, any
end everything that would bo ruined
with soap and water.
Get two ounces ot solvite at any
druggist and put It in two gallons at
8a80ne, where it immediately dia.
. solves. Then immerse ths goods ts
be cleaned; rub a little and out they
come loqking bright and fresh as new.
You will find nothing fades, shrinks
or-wrnkles, requiring no pressing.
These few moments’ work saves any
household five to ten dolain. Try It
and you will find dry cleaning just as
easy as laundering. Your grocer or any
garage will supply the gasoline and
the drug store will furnish ths molvit
Which is simply a gasoline soan
Then a wash boiler or large dish PM
completes your home dry eleanins
uttit.
over go after it with all your might.
This rule is about the best advice I
can give to a trtr swinging hitter."
SPRING COLDS ARE DANGEROUS
Sudden changes of temperature and
underwear bring spring colds with
stuffed up head, sore throat and gen-
era! cold symptoms. A dose of Dr.
King's New Discovery is sure relief,
this happy combination of antiseptic
balsams clears the head, soothes the
irritated membranes and what might
have been a lingering cold is broken up.
Don’t stop treatment when relief is
first felt as a half cured cold is dan-
gerous. Take Dr. King's New Discov-
ery till your coldjs.gone.
Middle West May
- Meet Californians
Norman Ross of the Olympic Club,
San Francisco, in winning the National
Amateur Association championship nt
New York, for the 220-yard swim in
a 25-yard tank, set a new world’s rec-
ord for the distance with a mark of
2 minutes 221-zepnds.
A pound of pluck is worth a ton of
luck.—Garfield.
Have Good Hair
and Clean Scalp
Free from dandruff and itching. It's
easy. On retiring rub wpots of dan-
druff and itching with Cuticura Oint-
ment with end of forefinger, got Ung
Ointment on scalp skin, not on hair.
Cover head for night. Next morning
shampoo with Cutleura Soap and hot
water. Rinse with tepid water. Cuti-
cure can do many other things equally
well for the skin and scalp.
Sample Each Free by Mall
With 12 p book gn tho Skis Addrege pont-
eurd Tucure, ept. M, Boston." Bold
every* here
days ago. Mr. Edwards is employed
by the Austin Nursery and is generally
known in the city as "Uncle Bill." “Un-
zle Bill” was in the Van Smith Drug
• Store for more Tanlac when he made
Jie above statement and also said:
"I have suffered, nobody knows how
much, with rheumatism for twenty or
thirty years. I couldn't sleep at night
jn account of pain. I could hardly get
my coat off I hurt so bad. My joints
were swollen and stiff and my fingers
had begun to draw and twist. My
knuckles wre enlarged until my hands
didn’t look like hands. They were
awful and looked more like— I don’t
know what- hams than hands. Foi
months at a time I wasn't able to get
my clothes off and on without hurting
. 50 I would holler like a child being
whipped. No kind of liniments or med-
cines did me any good and I just suf-
'ered agony, especially when I tried to
io my work, and I had to walk with
A stick all the time.
"I saw Tanlac advertised in the pa-
pers and decided to take a chance on 11
aelping me. Well, it proved to be thi
‘ight thing and I have already picked
ip several pounds in weight and feel
better than I have in many years. I
deep good every night, eat hearty
every meal and I don’t feel the fheu-
matism at all. I can get my cost off
as well as I used to and feel ten or
"ifteen years younger. I feel that I am
a well man already but I am going to
keep on taking Tanlac until I am satis-
ried every .seed of that awful rheuma-
tism is out of my system. Tanlac is
the greatest medicine I ever heard of
and I'm now sixty-three years old. Just
to think what a dreadful fix I was in
und now I don’t have to use a walking
। stick. Why, I can get about like a
young man and I just can’t praise Tan-
'lac enough.”
Rheumatism is not only one of the
most prevalent, but one of the most
painful and difficult to treat of all pres-
ent day diseases. When the digestive
SHREVEPORT. Ln.. March 28.—
Hans Wagner, the veteran shortstop
with the Pittsburgh Nationals, 1 a
professor of B. A.—batting art. One of
the recruits with the Cincinnati Na-
tionals, now in training here, had the
nerve to write Hans for a bit of advice
on batting. Wagner good-naturedly
answered. The secret of his battinl
style is out. Here it is:
"You say you are a free swinger,” the
veteran wrote. "Then, whenever you
go up unless under orders to wait it
out, decide before you reach the plate
just which ball you are going to hit-
and stick to your decision.
’ "If you make up your mind to hit
the first ball, do not hesitate, but step
right into it. If you have decided to
wait for the third ball, do not let even
two tempting pitchers make you change
your mind. When the third one comes
Joe Turner Works
Out at Armory
New York and the New’ England states.
Among the heavyweights he has met
__ 'are Zybscko, Hackenschmiat and
organs and bowels are not working j Goteh.
properly, and the kidneys become clog- , —■-■
. FangePhna"hquratatemithecomesscia HEAR CLARENCE EDDY
LINCLON,Neb, March 28..Contrary I polsons and other Impurities, which FRIDAY NIGHT MARCH 30TH
accumulate, in Iha joint, and other (EIGHT O’CLOCK, FIRST PRES-
+4+ 44* 4*+ +*4
+4+ +4• +4+ 444
I
D
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The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 84, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 28, 1917, newspaper, March 28, 1917; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1498310/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .