The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 192, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1911 Page: 7 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Austin American-Statesman Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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7
rowded East Side Suffers Most
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The Southwestern Telegraph and
a
Telephone Company
Since yesterday afternoon we
know
It;
2
■ant to know who is be-
communii
addressed the
28
,,
♦
3
EAST SIDE Fire Escape
THE PEOPLE’S F«RUM
luncheon to all the shool children.
they
the
ily.
receipt
onis
lld
ing up in
Hundredth
and
public
Owen Bush Says
account
them
suppose
■
Ian
There Were boys am
wide heart from n lecture
in
or a reception at a settiement house.
let at
of our
In
business instituti 8 alien-
DR.
BR00K$ IN NAMID.
He
OTTUMWA
The pros
)
don’t
Kit!
bul
/
WOMAN
contribu -
roming
and somehow he preferred to t
ransaot
of the
people ?
Delicious—Refreshing— Thirst-Quench ing
5c Everywhere
ni
ted
of the
»
I
T
States Senate
EDITOR MAY HE CINDIDATF.
ble Compound has
mashed melon rinds, th crown of an
iow:
KERMAN PRESSLER a co.. Local Agents
j. a. WORNBERGER, General Agent.
but it is underutood that n
of hi
Ina
out
5
Newent 7eppelin‘ Dirigible Lenves.
mn
3
SAr
i
e w}
gra
ecg
2
78
\
tial adjunct to the satisf
transaction of businesa."
ists to
seem
and
imate
emselves
oth ends
Place Your Fire Insurance in Your
Home Company
feel the
to keep
An old man with a beard to his waist
was pushing a little stoye in front of
je Terrell,1
uld mak
he quite
Whenever
you wee M
-Arrow think
of Coca-Cola
SHOWER
I Ar
weather
There
SrKeTACI LAR INQIRi coMHS To
MND I NTIL AFTER ELRCTION.
need
little
it and
y will
fact.
meet.
The renson is very simple.
€
On AN
PAT Side.
Tenement
Roof -
buttermiik
is a ten ta-
li' the dis-
• ‘hole n
Front n fonfernte V
TtheTiterofheFtate
parallel with
Mast River
t mu
libei
in Houston street near Christie there
l» the fashionable hairdressing place
The Southern Nation.
or AuSrIN, TEXAS, “
MP rather
< y goodB
windows
H***. ..
^71
<1111
Bend 2e stamp for our booklet. “The Truth
About Coca-Cola" and the clever and use-
full scring device, the Coca-Cola Perpetual
Counter.
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
Atlanta, Ga.
3D
of newsboys up
extras-the Russi
ral spenders in all e
’ birniness, while th
through
tion te
Han't i
to soihe
46 - '
fl ’ j
Stifling Rooms Deserted for
Doorways and Curbs in Day-
time, for Roofs at Night.
him.
"What
coals
DROP POLL TH PROBE
paste n
y do not .
.%5
' €
! a district ।
swing the
la for Meu-
Invariably pure and wholesome—thirst-quenching to the limit of
satisfaction. You will enjoy Coca-Cola from every standpoint of
healthfulness and goodness. >
the stand yesterday.
Wash Harrow told a
It is all like certain narrow, erowd.
ed streets in Napa- —“
only thet
even
A Supreme. Court.
Justice Says:
“It is a matter of common
knowledge that in modern
commercial conditions, the use
of the telephone » an eaeon*
TAE HOKEy
POKEy M4
and. next, we w:
hind him. The
I feel it my duty to tell you these
farts. My heart is full of gratitude to
you for my cure."—Mrs. MAIIKT E. !
WaAxPLEK, 524 S. Ransom Street,
Ottumwa, Iowa.
kdentity.
have hai
that "this thing of changing drinking
water is a mighty serious handicap to a
. ball player’s health and activity.” He
R plays safe—combines health and pleasure
• by drinking
sunny side
great enst
these extending to the
dreadful forms:
ahooting pains all
over my body, sick |
headache, spinal
weakness, dizziness,
depression, and
everything that was
horrid. I tried many
doctors in different
las Tn. July an ___
Ine Honey Gfoy Hlgnal. n naw
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Insurance Co.
id abundant reason
t
vbuld Nil
he remark
women, and the:
through the mall. without cost to him.
nnd he had always supposed it came
as a gift from one of his many white
Has moved its general office from Dallas to Anitin. Thia great company is the only one be-
sides your home company which makes headquarters in your town. This deserves your
consideration.
While going back to the Third ave
re_________
lone more for me than all the doctors, eukh
Have You-A , Bell Telephone?
It Is Endorsed By Eighty Million Users
(This column is for the te of the
public generally and the suberibers of
the States an in particular.iny eom.
munication upon any subjectf eneral
Interest and not objectienao in na-
ture. is entitled to a posit? in this
column. The fact that it ispublished
should not be construed aslefleetins
any personal views of the maagement
as this column is the people column,
I and is intended to reflect the personai
views at all times.)
at reets
one season
legitimate
kV»
until all is revealed and
deeper guilt are brousrh
Judge A. W. Terrell
BEDEOOM*
pperations on the
street. Both sides
to suit him. he hopes to
support of the prohibitionisti
4enant Governor.
old hat, onion peelinga and a collec
tion of simple gariaze.
was a sidewalk business man.
In that stove he had ....... tatoes
which he served at a penny a ।
15
2320*, /
the street, shouting
riends have cnferred with him abmit
the advisability of his making the
papers were out.
id old men in the
ing a bluff in
really after Josepl
seat in the United
y eat Very
Friday high
are mosquitoes, too, so it’s no wonder
we go and get the ice for nothing in
the morning."
Her name was Mrs. Isaac Goldberg,
and she has eight little Goldbergs, all
of whom appeared to be hot over 7 nor
under 3. "Weget milk and the ice
keeps the milk cold for the children,
but it ain't going to be hot forever,
is itr‘
Possible Candidat to
Colquitrs Re-Electton.
for a penny from a pushear t Hpe imJ
istdand a piece of ice for another cent,
put it in his hat and walked along eall-
ing for customera
One thing amatedimer-the sale of.
penny mirrors. "Why". I. asked a
Regarded as Tentative Cnndidnte
- oppone Randell/
NOT OYIBDRESSED,
Nobody overdresses in this locality.
Children rarely wear more than their
undershirts I didn’t see one woman
who wore stays and never a man with
a collar.
FRUGAIMFAIS.
fAt night what do they eat? Green
Waves of a certain vegetable—nobody
could tell lust which vegetable—boiled
with milk. On Friday night there is
meat for dinner and meat again on
Saturday. . •
The homes are deserted during the
day in favor of the doorways and curb
—at night the positions don’t change
much until about 12 o’clock, when all
the families gather up the bedding that
y 42
.5
testified to having paid bls own po
tax. and denied having told Loou
Lyons that he got it for nothing Whi
pie stated that he lost his last wee
Tom Pipkin wan placed on the stg
asuin nnd declared that he h
nearehed for his receipt hon
hae heen unable to find it. —
Bill Williams, a negro, swore that .hez
haq ho receipt and knew of ho ne
who had received one.
The County Attorney insisted that
Wash Harrow should be detained un-
tu his testimony would be transcribed,
so that he could sign it.
woman in a hakeshop,
"They don’t have time'to go hothe,
and the roome are too" hot, anyway.
Why shouldn’t they want to see how
ilk of
During the Torrid Days of Jily
prevements in their toilet.
There were palm leaf fans being sold
also for n penny, and bought by men
as well ne women
, ___ sunny, and the shady side of lkouston
AI THITh "ror.aronarFtrttgg"omja"navkep
UUKED
, I He stopped, bought a handkerchief
ate the patronage of prohit ion oym-
pathizers and thes w1 find
Oppose sitting, tip nights to make
In a journey east In Houston street,
south In Essex street to Grand. up
Christie' or Allen street, across De-
lancey street to the Williamsburg
Bridge one never hears the boast. "I
Mve the coolest flat in town" or "We
h4ye a wonderful sea breeze on bur
font porch." In this human furnace,
geographically designated as the East
Side, there is little of earthly misery
not encountered. It is betrayed by the
torrid roofs and bricks, soore hingwave-
meats, the parched tenements. crying,
lng babies, worried mothers, un-
olesome smells from ellrs, decay-
Hr fruit and garbage that evidently
nssed the night wagons. all contrib-
uting to the living panorama of smells,
disease, heartache and physical dis-
comfort.
Pushcart men and women are at
their posts nil day and night. There
are huge dill pickles, sliced, a penny a
slie, which the neighborhood buys and
phis between pieces of bread. This is
their luncheon. There are slices of
pineapple, watermelon, carts with ice
cream, lemonade a penny a glass—
there are the luxuries.
Consider Thin Advice.
No woman sbould submit to a surgi-
Ml operation, which may mean death,
until shehasgiven Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound a fair trial.
Thia famous medicine, made only
from roots and herbs, han for thirty
years proved to be the most valuable
tonic and inyigorator of the female
organism. Women residing in almost
every city and town in “he United
States bear willing testimony to the
Hqnderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink-
Barn's Vegetable Compound.
Mrs. Pikham,at Lynn, Mass,
invites all sick women to write
her for advice. Her advice In free,
totdential and always heiprul.
..._____... ....... uation so intolerable migh, le ereated
iron. v-w and other oities in that woula torce the prondi r —
I.urope onl. there Ie ao much more i retaliate in kind, and It Hr ll
thia* mm,"van.2 an. another aitow.ok m sehov" wom waion ermi hiner to
n nth it,K.."Dain "ant '!l"»‘r- atop and think a mile.
ninth, one Hundredth and streets Vof instane it our er+t bank-
ing institutions, who give thir
indorsement to the saloons.
< T1ZEN
eeran.
•shah.
parts of the United
L • Staten, but Lydia E.
N Pinkham's Vegeta-
nventigators Brig Out Nothing Deli-
miee—-Myaterious White Man of Un-
known Name Preely Mentiened.
THE FREE DISPINSARV.,
From the house next door a woman
came carrying i child she saw the
hearae, quickened her steys. and I fol:
J lowed her in the Fvee Viapensary of
i the Good Samaritan. Im the Rasian
language she aald th* cbild hadn't
moved for four days- -hadn’t even
cried. She hadn't told anyone besaune .
she was afraid they would take it
away from her.
I was Informed at the dispensary tves,
that in these hot days the average [ tate
number of calls for assi stance reached '
friends to whom he had applied for
help on this very thing.
"I sat down and laughted and felt
gud over it," he said. .
He declared, however, that he had
never furnished anyone information
coneerning himself to fill ont 4 blank.
He had no idea from whieh of his
friends the poll tax receipt came He
produced the paper in court. .
Charley Barber, a negro 57 years
old, testified that Bob Johnwon, another
negro, told him last week 9 u man
who had paald poll tax receipts down
on Sixth street. Johnson told him, he
said, that this man furnished him.
Johnson, with money with which to
put his pMi tax. 20..".-..
Jas per Jones, eolored, sald that Don
(Wash) Barrow, came to him and’ asked
if he wanted his poll tax paid. He
answered yes, and gave the necessary
da tn. but did not receive the receipt
K, R. Rogers, a negro upholsterer,
denied knowledge, by hearsay or oth-
erwise. of illegal practiees in poll tax
matters, except that wubsenuent to
February 1, he had heard a negro tell
other negroes in the back of h saloon
that they could get , their poll taxes
paid. Also he had hea»*d that money
for taxes could have been obtained a
few yeura ago at u paloon near the
courthouse. Witness declared that he
took an active interest in politieni and
religious matters. nnd made a politjea1
speech on the prohibition issue Wedt
nesday night. ______
HAH) HE ORGANIZHD NwaTORB.
James Grumble, u negro of Fort
Prairie, said that he organized the col*
ored antis of the county and had his
expenses paid by the maln county or.
ganization, in addition to a small
run, calling the paper and the news in
their native language. Men with
beards kept pace with youth, shouting
and running.
And by. the way. beards are just as
fashionable in this guarter as ever,
with never a trim fur a hot day
baldheads, yea. and shaveri neek#, but
those whiskers have not been checked
in growth.
court, laying emphasis on the gravity
of the offenses committed and the im-
portance of going to the bottom of the
whole matter He thought the court
should be adjourned from day to day.
or from week to week, until such time
as the needed evidence could he ob-
tained.
In this district there is no dearth of
4 ongresSlonal timbher. Spesker Ham I
Reyburn of the House of Fepresenta- .
Ivan Edwin of Honey Grove,
State Senator Tom W, Perkins. Mr ...... - - -___
Jones of Sherman, and a half dozen carg of livestpck have been mhipped___
> more bave already entered the Hats ' ef hero in the past week; J. r. Bus*
Should Lamar County come into thisi ley; on* < nr of sheep to Fort Worth;
district under redistricting. State Sen-, William Schmidt one car cattle to
ator K. B Sturgeon is spoiling for a Austin; Baumann d‛ osborb, one car
scrap. If he does not get a district , of cattle to Austin: Dave Reed, one
t Ar of cattle to Austin, W. J. Rogers
. . car of calves to Fort Worth;
George Clinger, one car of rattle to
Fort Worth; tvs cars
of sheep to Fort Worth;Dave Reed,
one car of sheep to Fort.Worth; L H
Fckert, one rar of cattle to Fort
Worth; Dan Hasne, one ear of calvew
to Fort Wurth, Aleg Ptyt, throe cars
of cattle and calves to Mort Worth.
they lookaishe safd.
There were packerE of hairpins, also
a cent each, and many women who had
dressed in a slight of-hand sort of
fashion invested in the hairpins, went
back to the door step and started im-
of an Essex street shop. "They would
rather have a piece of it than money
or toxa, dolls or anything like that.
We don't any of us sleep much, not
until we are too tired to keep our
eyes open any longer—it ‘may be 3
o'clock when we go to sleep—bt it's
best perhaps, because We don’t f
bugs that bite us. it is hard
bedbugs out of the flats in hot
and the children nonce them.
Llano. Tex . July 20 —The followi
By Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
ttumwa, low a— “For years I was
-almost a constant zuerer ‛rnm female
"He is quite mud. ' I thourrht
If those whiskers should hit the
He was not mad, it proved; he
Saturday, when they have meat din-
ners—tea in the morning, pickle sand-
wiches at noon and the leaves of a
'green vegetable, boiled with milk for
dinner.*
latter I Went up the stairs to the
floors of a tenement in Orchard street.
No wonder they nil go to the streets
• in the day and to the streets and roofs
at night. It was deserted, except for a
sick woman and child here and there,
v ho lay on,the floor. They couldn’t ap-
propriate the bedding. because thes
have a superstitious belief that if it
hangs out th* windowi all day it will
invite repose at night.
Friederickshafen Germany, July 20
The Schwaben, the newest Zeppelin
dirigible balloon, left this morning for
Luzerne. Switzerland, eoerving eight
passengersi
’the saloon
there nmdher "thin “
dared that he received
"Ioe is the one thing
same general effect of his first testi-
mony, though it varied in certain de-
tails. He told of having heard other
negroes tell of m white man on Sixth
street who was paying poll taxes, and
of having gone to this man himnetf
with a request for help. He also told
Hie white man, he said, that he had
friends who would like to have their
taxes paid rhe white man furnished
him application blanks, he aald, and he
returned a donen or more of them to
him filled out. Home of the negroes
later received their receipts, he maid,
and some did not Witness himself did
not. He declared that he did not know
the white man's name and would not
know him if he should see him again.
Moss Mason, a negro, 56 years ola,
living nt 1206 East Fifth street, de*
JIDGE AGREES TO RENEWAL.
Justice Mendell readily assented in
this, and the date above mentioned was
agreed upon, County Attorney Shelton
and District Attorney Hamilton pledg-
ing their free and hearty co-oprratl«m.
Not much that was new was bronght
out by the eleven witnesses placed on
it notice on their doors that thy
/desire the buainess of any v ohibition
n sympathizers, and the hole t it would
lie made in their deposit at—-*
within thrty days would m ke
of men
ity can't rest
the parties of
to justice."
go " roke '
that when these four or five asent
witnesses are found they will divulge
the truth.
"We want to know who this man is.
,D
Randell. He hum not openy an
paper man famous for his
elvb, is regarded by mans
five candidate forongre -
trict now represemnted by
For the present, the quest of that
“nysterious white man" has been dis-
continued, his parsuers still remaining
buff led. Court adjourned to Tuesday,
August 1, at which time the inqiy
will be prosecuted further in case eer
tain important witnesses, who have not
yet been found are discovered:
Several times, according to Attorney
E. C Gaines, the investigation has led
almost within reach of certain of the
guilty parties, and their identity shoule
have been disclosed, if the witnesses
could have been made to tall what they I
knew But the "pinch hit" didn't coms
when it was due. ,
When one witness had been examined
at yesterday afternoon's session—Was
Barrow, the negro who was first on
the abend Iasi week—Mr.-Geinee
nouneed that the officers had been
unable to locate four or five of th.
most important witnesses, and sine
there was no telling how soon they
might be located he thought that the
investigation might be called off
for the present. He declared that the
testimony already brought out bad
shown unmistakably the commission ui
an offense. and had indicated the
enormity, and the far-reaching effects
of it.
"But we do not yet know the name
of this ‘mysterieus white man.' who
is the moving figure in this drama. We
had every reason to believe the wit-
nemses knew and would disclone his
has sprawled by day over the fire es-
capes and take it to the roof
Other families are also; there, but
nobody cares, nobody explains. They
sleep if they can until the sun gives
them an early start, with the promise
of a visit to the Herald free ie sta-
tions. which open at 6 o'clock, distrib-
uting large pfeces to all who call for
them.
"It's the babies the ice saves most."
said a large, corsetless woman in front.
• >r anti, and no man or set >f men or
wonien or children run btldose me I
, into their way vf thinking or voting.
and I nward the sums right to all ,
men and women I voted Against i
Ftatewide prnhibitlon in 1897, as be-I
in undemocrutie and I mhall vote;
at the neighborhood. The hair dresser
an manicure sat in front and worked
at "mbr oidering forget-me-nots on a
sofa pillow
A harse stood at fin under’ aker’s
the forward wheels resting en
RECEIVING CALLERS.
Then I asked Mrs. Goldberg where
the young women in th* neighborhood
received their suitors or their young
men
"There are benches on the Williams-
burg Bridge,” she replied. 'They do
the 11 coilrting there ”
Every few minutes there wns a rush
THE AUSTIN DAILY STATESMAN, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY Zl. 1911
Dallas Tex. July 30 -During the
present day of politics the name of are 1
Dr. 8. P: Brooks, president of Bk Slor , lines ........
I niversity, is often being hdara. In the liquor lovers have jrret ou little
Iaet, some of his admirers im the pres. ' h ft for the genera) trade ari r getting
otaroes । ont prohibition campaien are caning through with their weekls c
potato, himn the Woodrow Wise in of rexas —
politics They predict th.it he will be
a candidate for Governor against o
B,olquitt for re-glection
Iha guternatorfal boom is probnhly
nat„wAdeapread-as--+hi——+4+n--hu+-+----
to Im* noted that this is the second , I
00m- which he hnsrotten for pubii । A prorhinent minister of he gospel
RF1P Pn!'el - “atlat Cunt de ate Hlo - atonde nvan'ne
Vention he was menHoned an a eanqj.,in making announe oment (hat there I '
date for the Ugited Htates senate woule be epeakirig at 7 p.m in the1
AEqinst Se ator Bariley and his name igjchapel at the home, by Jd
I' hnard in that donnectior ' thni he, the pracher, w
1,0,0 timf tove In net friend- an addresn that there woui
of this educator M, em dtermined to a number of . nilar n to mar > over the
Fft.him ,n politiex at one place nr bom* firing fiags also
aother. At .pregent he urging for the old soldiers. But
Ptatewide prohibition. . that he had heard that gohe .. ....
A.An resard to a candidate to opposelold men woule not go out trihear him.
GoVernor . Colqutt. it fs to be noted Inf he hoped nil wouid pi- that he
. hat. Htor *** .egpearing In thehe col- was the won of a-t onfeerge soldter,
gomie tin? aro to fhe eff ’ th nt and those of the ole solllers who
1 M < ampbeer and William f’oindex- would .not go out to the spescing were
ter.wpre. both being groomed have i unworthy to be eallec.a (pnfederate
Deen thoroushl!. borne out by the soldier J was a onfederae soldier,
campaign developments in mant volunteered in April 1861, got homea
Pia,e8 It is regarded As n fact that : in June, 1866 and intended to go out
Doth Are laying their plane to oppose , tjw. epeaking that evenins; but aftei
,0guit, thorh there are mnpy who hearing him make the rehark that
think .M.Fampbell fe mab 1h • who .. i" wergnot wor-
that direction nnd inithy tn bei called fl confederate sol- |
.h Weldon Bnlkeysdier it created an awe in n- for the
pre u her.So I did pul go I have as J
many rights under a free Democratie
Government as he has nnd l purpose
i to exercise my franchise, let it be pro |
uzzle their money 1 vay
amount for his time aetuaty p in Tle
sald that he received a pofi tax re-
cefpt through the mall, for which he
pH id the deputy at the Dripkill Hotel
II 75, He denied any knowiedge what-
ever of illegal practees/i this con-
nection.
Claude Walker, the egro porter nt
Max I Hi vis Aaloon, denied that he ever
Haw a white man in that saloon tak-
ing applieations for receipts from
pegrroes, He sald that he paid his own
poll tax to Ell H. Miller, the Tax Col-
lector, in person,
Jake Smith, former Justice f ’ho
peace in the Del Valle precinct, who
said that he was running a saloon undi
grocery store last January, testified
that Will Melean wastabout bis place
of business rather often about that
time McLean would assist occasional-
ly with a sale or on the witness’ books.
Smith denied emphatically that he
ever told anyone that Mekean wan
"working for the antis at $2.50 a day.
and anserted that Melean was not do-
"It "rt Whipple and Fravia Moore, two
negroes, who said they were working
for W M ‘Pours last January, each
most," said he. "The;
in summer except on I
7 44125
nue elevated atation I saw a famC
dispossesed by the landlord. Even t,e
quilts and pillows were taken off the
fire escape and thrown into the street.
I couldn't but wonder what Jamest., . . ,7, 4
Huneker meant when he one toid" me. i’!' up.nnd..takn nutice.."
arher in no ea.t .Id*. Il "Xist- onl. In I noma , ’ *""•>•- ......,
the Imagnation or tfose who don't ; thouid .orxant*e In Ity ."National
know. The people then* are like azi • rohibition Rank wouldn’t 11
Other people. Their wav of living isn't I popular’. Or. let our great 1
quite the same, that's all stores placard their show -..........
Others get their knowledge nt the with the information that thb do not
---* —— -4- . . - . desire the trade of Any p ohibition
arainst it on the 22nd inst on thel
some principles Tin re are great and
gon men on either side, then there
are fanatical en thusiams wild with ।
vision*, that will never come to pass.
Ho I don’t nor will not be cherced into ।
their way of thinking and voting
J RICHARD R
Austin, Texas. July 1* 191.
( )
from 1500 to 2000 a day, nearly all
women whose great anxiety was the
health of the little ones.
"We need a roof garden here, a place
where patients, especially the tubercu-
lar ones, may alt," said the chief
apothecary. "Can you imagine what it
is to be Hl in this part of the city? If
the Herald did not alleviate so much
suffering through its free ice stations
the effect would be tragic to a de-
gree"
Down in Grand street I found Adolph
Iorber, who for several winters has
distributed hot soup and a substantial
The Threntened Boyptt.
To The Statesman:
I notice from the pressdispatches
that the liquor interests, wh their ac-
customed arrogance, threan to boy-
cott nil prohibition sympnhizers The
boycott is a, weapon, no popd citizen
cn afford to countenance, ut a sit-
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Briggs, George Waverley. The Austin Statesman. (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 192, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1911, newspaper, July 21, 1911; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1533580/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .