The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, March 1, 1920 Page: 3 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: San Antonio Light and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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Whether you walk or ride
to the Auto Show
I Wear Hurley Shoes
f Xone So Good |
< Fomby Clothing Co.
“The House of Satisfaction”
i 509-511 East Houston St.
f The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
ii ■ । H ■' ■ M
ENGLAND IS MAKING
PLANS TO RECEIVE
AMERICAN GUESTS
Movement on Foot to Throu
Homes Open to
Tourists.
By WILLIAM E. SAbH.
[ Boecixi ’able to '1 ha ban Antonin Light
F and tna Chicago Daily Neu a.
p Copyright. 1920. by Chicago Daily Newi
Foreign Service.
London March I.—The cultivation o
Anglo-American relations by offering
Lunpitality to Auicrimp tourist* nex
>umruer in a matter which lies very neai
the hearts of many Englishmen. Amoni
other means of welcome Sir Harry Brit
tain member of parliament ba> con
•ented to sponsor a movement to pro
< ire lodgings in cultivated British fam
ilics for Americans of a certain standart
of life. Tourists could thus obtain ai
. insight into British manners ami « ✓
;oms that they could not ever get other
wise.
“It will not be purely philanthrope
enterprise/ said E. 'l'. Sea m mol I. R.G.S.
but at the same time something of i
busineM scheme as well. There an* manj
aristocratic cultured families in Eng
land who have suffered heavily from tin
war and who would be glad to earn i
reasonable amount of money by shelter
ini congenial com|Mmiona from arms'
the sea. Only this morning I receivet
•i letter from a certain peeress offerinj
io take in an American family for
guineas a week. That is rather expen
sivr ami there certainly will be offer
•f n cheaper nature. The actual placini
f tourists and all the special details o
th* scheme probably will be left in th<
hands of the British Young .Men’s Chris
tian Association. Likewise since it i'
partly h business enterprise we shnl
ft ri justified in charging n small com
mission say 10 per cent on the firs 1
veek’s rent to tourists who find ac
<*ommo<bitinns through us.
“Bu*. I do not want you to think thai
’he plan is all worked out ami settled
In truth it is still in the elementary
Dad speaks one word
for me and two for
himself when he tells
Mother to order more
He likes them same
as Ido —;
Mod^by Postum Cereal Co Battle Creek. Mich. •
I
nu 1 » i—n . ■ - 1
MONDAY.
—— —
11 ■■ 1 - j 1 1
.stage. It was conceived at a meeting'
of the Royal Colonia' institute where
the main outlines as I have given them
wen considered. Next week probably
there will be a full meeting in a commit-
-5 ! Jee room of the House of Commons to
settle the details. However we have hl-
icady interested a number of overseas
Hochtira Much as the Victoria League
Kj the British Empire League the Anglo-
American Society and the Overseas
Chib. Presumably they will get track
of some Americans interested in the pro-
j <t through their connections in Can
ada'
Another movement for the entertain-
ment of tourists once they are in Ixm*
fit don was described to me by Evelyn
Wrench Esq. one of the directors of
the English Speaking Cnion. which has
« already done so much in offering hos-
pitality to American soldier students in
*7 British universities. It aims at catab*
x li hing a sort of open club or reading
11 room in offices just above those of the
Chicago Baily News. Hero information
'** < f all sorts would be furnished exeur-
-11 pfities anj up to.visit the country
0 an dlertures giv^n by soine of the'lend-
ing authors scientists and politicians
L in the British Isle*.
m» > »
' ALCHEMY IS BACK
?•’ Oxford Scientist Tells How to Obtain
u (told From Mercury and Mad.
!? Special Cabin to The Fan Antonio Light
and the Philadelphia Public Ledger.
Copyright. 1920 by The Public Ledger Co.
“ Ixmdnn. March I.—The alchemists’
ss dream of producing gold L« in base met-
‘<l tils is not extravagant asserted Prof.
]- Frederick Hoddy head of the physical
Ji' chemistry department in Oxford in a
r*« recent publication. He tells how to do it.
“To got gold from mercury.” he says
( P “expel from the atom of mercury one
is- beta-particle which will make thallium;
’’ then one alpha particle which will turn
p. the thallium into gold. Or to get gold
st from lead expel from the atom of lead
c ‘ one alpha-particle which will turn it
nt into mercury and proceed as before.”
d. Investigators already are working
ry along these lines.
JEWISH I :
L r 1 p
' Superior Corn Hakes :.i
{**- ■ • * /
I
* (Si Ok — f
- --I ( :
Mada of Indian Com. Sugar and Sall " I
Postum Cereal Company
Crwk. MkfclcM. U. • A ‘ | I
j
t
IEAGUE IS NOW
FUNCTIONING
AMONG ALLIES
onferences of Labor Bu-
reau Have Been Held.
Other Meetings Planned.
AMERICA IS MISSED
British Influence Predomi-
nates —Small States Want
No Politics.
IM PAI L M OTT MOW KEIL
Spedal < ab)p to The Sun Antonio Light
and the Chicago Daily News.
< _ j Chicago Daily News
Foreign Service.
Paris March I.—Are the provisions
of President Wihon and Col. E. M.
.House already beginning to be realized?
Is the League of Nations to found
which they sacrificed so much else in
j the peace negotiations destined indeed.
Ito become the salvation of humanity?
I Who now in Europe would venture to
' »ay no? For the league is already in
' operation.
Despite the disappointment caused by
j America’s prolonged abstention it not
lonly exists but fa working. It' couu-
Icil in the first session has satisfactorily
I elaborated stipulations for the govern
| meat of Danzig and the Saar Basin.
It plans in the near future to make a
great international study of the world’s
financial ills while doubtless one of its
most important immediate functions will
i be the interpretation of disputed points
। in connection with the various treaties.
I^abor Conferences Scheduled.
i The international labor bureau whi< h
! is affiliated with the league and w hick
recently held its second meeting in Lon-
don is now fully organized under the
direction of Albert Thomas of France.
1 Inder its auspices and in ternation til
r | seamen’s conference w ill be held in
Genoa Italy on June 15 and a second
j international labor conference is being
planned for the spring of 1921. The
’ local representative of the Polish gov-
j eminent has secured a vote on a mo-
. tiou to make an exhaustive inquiry into
s labor conditions in all European coun-
f tries and particularly Russia. The cou-
. sequences of such a study by such a
. body may be enormous. Up to the.
t present there is every reason to believe
. that organized labor of the allied coun-
• tries is «agp’. ly supporting the bureau’s
work.
While the league thun gradually takes
• form it is possible to >.esee more clear*
i ly its general trend. More than 35.04)0
f articles have been written concerning it]
> within a year in Europe alone and there !
- is much cofusion in the popular mind
i But this much is clear: It is not a '
• super-state. It is more like a perman- j
J ent association of civilized nations for i
• the study of humanity's political social |
i and economic problems with a view to j
• making recommendations for the better- I
ment of human existence. Its inter-!
• nal organization unprecedented in in-i
• tornational afafirs has been aptly liken I
cd to that of a great modern busi-
ness concern the assembly correspond- ■
ing to a meeting of the shareholders. .
the council to the board of director* and |
the permanent secretariat to the tech- [
1 nival personnel. In any case the league i
obviously means business. Some of it* !
warmest supporters esjiecially regret the I
t absence of America from its councils
juat now for this is the formative
’ period.
Within the league four different in-
- fluences can bo distinguished struggling
for dominance:
। British Idea Prevails.
1. The small states want the league
1 to become more economic and less po-
. litical. They are particularly inter-
ested in securing a reduction of their ob-
ligations in case of an armed con-
- flh t.
; 2. The British desire to endow the'
league with a large altruistic policy cal-
। culated to win popular enthusiasm by
not merely judging conflicts but seeking
I to foresee and prevent them. They par-
t hcularly emphasize the educational side i
The League of Nations Union has al-
ready established 1541 regional propa-1
I ganda groups in England for the pur-
pose of developing the sentiment of in-
ternational solidarity by speeches
pamphlets and even moving pictures.
Lord Robert Cecil wants the league to
make up the Russian problem. There
are also British groups who arc much
interested in relieving the distress in
Armenia. All in all it is the British
idea which seems to be prevailing within
the league for at present the Brtish
arc taking a more active part than any
other people.
3. The French idea seems to be to (
make the league largely a judicial body
for the arbitration of threatened con- I
flicts. I
America's Absence Is Kelt.
I. Finally there is the American idea !
which now lacks spokesmen within the (
league but which many think was the (
best of all. This was to make the
league the heritor of the peace confer- i
cnee organisms such as the council of I
ambassadors the reparations commis-
sion the inter allied war council the
guaranty commission the supreme j
economic council the plebiscite com-
mission and adding other bureaus for <
health education and so on gradually as
needcil. It seems to have been the
jealousy of the professional diplomats
which succeeded in defeating this plan.
They seemed to fear that such a league i
would infringe too greatly on their tra-
ditional domain but the partisans of the
American plan still hope that America
will enter the league in time to influ-
ence its definite formation.
In the words of Leon Bourgeois the I
French representative in the council of I
the league: “It is hoped that the I
American people will see that they can- I
not remain foreign to an organization I
destined to treat all great problems I
Wo are certain that this people’s repro- I
seutativoH will soon come to take their I
places beside us.” It should be borne in I
mind however that whether America I
joins or not the present indications are ■
that the league will continue to develop
just the same. ‘
Civil War Veteran Dies.
Palatka. Fla. March I.—Gen. John
A. Rosborough. 78 years old com-
mander of the Stonewall Jackson l amp.
I'nited Confederate Veterans died yes-
terday at his home at Winslow. Flo.
General Rosborough formerly was com-
mander of the Florida Division I’. .C.
V. He was born in Routh t'aro-
lina.
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT.
TURKS GO TO GERMANY
insurrectionary Deputation Received in
Berlin. Seeking Support.
Bp<cial < nb’p to The San Antonio Light
•nd I’iiiimb iphia Public Ledger.
Copyngh*.. 1920 by Tho Public Ledger Co.
Berlin. March I.—The following re*
I port reacheM me from a quarter that
| has previously furnished me with cor-
I: rect information :
A deputation of Turkish officers from
the insurrectionary region in Asin Minor
I has arrived in Berlin to seek communi-
. 'cations with official quarters and give
I information concerning the situation in
Asia Minor. The deputation already ha*
been received and the members wish it
I believed that the insurrectionary move-
ment now has consolidated itself and ex-
[ cits so complete h pressure on the (’on-
(I stantinoplo government that official
I quarters in 4’onstautinople <-ouhl not
I think any more of signing the pea<e
treaty conditions.
The informant add* that according
to his information the tSormnu govern-
j iiwnt is s a rely in a position to develop
! Mlations with Asia Minor. The Ger-
; man press is enjoimd to observe com-
। phte silence concerning the matter.
Sale Of 1K5.000 Arres Ordered.
Wasliinston 1». ( .. Marrh I.—l’llblir I
j sale of IGs.tHto acres of land in the for- j
। - mer 4'heyenne River and Standing Rock ;
j Indian reservations in North ami South ‘
! Dakota was or<i«*re<l yesterday by Secre-
l tary Lane.
! BETTER THAN
j WHISKEY FOR
COLDS AND FLU
New Elixir Called Aapiron.
al Medicated With Latest
Scientific Remedies Used
and Endorsed by Euro*
pean and American Army
Surgeons to Cut Short a
Cold and Prevent Compli-
cations.
Every Druggist in U. S. In-
structed to Refund Price
While You Wait at Count-
er If Relief Does Not Come
Within Two Minutes.
Delightful Taste Immediate
Relief Quick Warm-Up.
The sensation of the year in the drus
trade is Aspironal. the two-minute roll
and cough reliever authoritatively guar-
anteed by the laboratories; tested ap
proved and most enthusiastically en-
dorsed by the highest authorities end
proclaimed by the common pasple as tea
tint's as quick and effective as whiskey
j rock and rye. or any other cold and
; cough remedy they have ever tried.
All drug stores are now supplied with
the wonderful new elixir so all you have
; to do to get rid of that cold is to step
! into the nearest drug store hand the
I clerk half a dollar for a bottle of As-
I pironal and tell him to serve you two
' teaspoonfuls with four teaspoonfuls of
water in a glass. With yonr watch in
i vour hand take the drink at one swal-
I low and call for your money back in j
' two minutes if you cannot feel your
cold fading away like a dream within
the time limit. Don't be bashful for
all druggists invite you and expect yon
to try it. Everybody's doing it.
When your cold or cough is relieved |
rake the remainder of the bottle home ;
I to your wife and babies for Aspironal
Is by fer the safest and most effective
the easiest to take and the most agree-
able cold and cough remedy tog Jpfsßtd
and children.—(Adv.)
Of Utmost Importance
Pure emulsified cod-liver oil
is not medicine as many are
prone to think of medicine.
SCOTT’S
EMULSION
is a form of growth-nourishment;
that is of utmost importance to
many children. That most '
children relith and thrive on
Scott’t is a ‘‘truism”
accepted the world over. (Kn ;
Give Scott’s to the children j
and watch them grow strong! ■
Scott & Downe. Bloomfield N. J. ।
ijURALGIA
y M/ The powerful healing warmth of
A Bunt** Lightning Oli give* toatant
A. and poaltlve relief from throbbing
< 7\ n«ne • racking pains uf Rheuma
V tlem. Neuralgia. Headache etc. At
y° ur druggists »c and 70e a bottle.
JFHUNT’«
LICHTNINC Oil
-I
ASK FOR and GET 1
Horiick’si
The Original
Malted Milk
r
— Wolfson’s ■ M
1
;
Btl
i W A* I
^ ver y Yard VnMI. w JI I
Of Our Spring Silks I
Reduced I
Hr fi
March—when you ara planning for
JW' spring and summer wearables of silk—and
r here is A Sale of Silks—at Wolfson’s.
Every yard of our immense collection at a
Black Silks
$2.50. 40-inch. .Poplin. .$2.19
$1.89. 36-inch. .Poplin. .$1.49
$2.25. .36-inch. .Taffeta. $1.89
$2.50. .36-inch. .Foulard. .$1.98
$3.50. . 36-inch . . Messaline. . $2.89
$3.00. .36-inch. . Satin. .$2.69
$2.75. . 36-inch . . Peau de Soie $2.49
$3.00. . 36-inch . . Peau de Soie. . $2.69
*4.00. 40-inch. .Satin. $3.49
$5.00. .40-inch. .Satin. $4.39
$5.00. .40-inch. . Crepe Meteor $4.39
$5.00. . 40-inch . . Charmeuse. . $4.39
’.50 . 40-inch. .Charmeuse. .$5.98
$7.50. .54-inch. .Satin. $5.98
$B.OO. .36-inch. .Tricolette. .$6.98
$7.50. .40-inch. .“Fan-Ta-Si”. $6.42
00. . 40-inch . . Crepe de Chine . . $2.69
$3.50. . 40-inch. . Crepe de Chine. . $2.98
$4.00. . 40-inch . . Crepe de Chine $3.39
$7.95. .40-inch. .Satin Canton. $6.98
5.50. 40-inch. .Georgette. .$3.19
$4.00. . 40-inch. . Georgette. . $3.49
$4.50. .36-inch. .Taffeta. .$3.98
$3.00. . 36-inch . . Moire. . $2.49
saw (
l|| WWA^Rnljl 91 I
Cfe.—SiKDi AtTltt©l?W© I
■■ ——- . . ! .—I ’
Thoroughbred Stock
Farm Company
CAPITALIZATION $50000.
Breeders of Registered Holstein Cattle Durock
Hogs and Angora Goats. Our enterprise is
endorsed by
Prominent Bankers and Business Men of
this community.
This organization is to incorporate under the
Texas State Laws.
We invite your investigation.
Shares $lOO.O0 —Non-Assessable
508 Gunter Bldg. Cr. 1563.
THRIFT
MEANS READINESS
You Can Start Savings Here With as
Small an Amount as
ONE DOLLAR
THE SAN ANTONIO LOAN & TRUST CO.
’ Incorporated Without Banking Privilege*
21S Weit Commerce Street.
A ' ’’ ’ I
A -
MARCH 1 1920.
reduced price. A Sale of Silks which will I
create a quick and enthusiastic response IS |
The silks for all the requirements of the K I
coming season will very wisely be purchas* |
ed now. |
White Silks'
$1.89. .36-inch. .P0p1in...51.49
$1.39.. 36-inch.. Habutai.. $1.19 '• ’ '■
$1.89. 36-inch. .Habutai. .$1.49 I
$2.00.. 36-inch.. Habutai sl.69 I
1
$2.50. . 36-inch.. Habutai.. $2.19 ■
$3.00.. 36-inch.. Crepe de Chines 2.69 I
$3.50. . 40-inch.. Crepe de Chine.. $2.98 I
$4.00. . 40-inch.. Crepe de Chine. .$3.39 I
$2.50. .36-inch. .Wash Satin..s2.l9 I
$2.89. 36-inch. .Wash Satin. .$2.49 I
$3.00. 36-inch. .Wash Satin. .$2.69 /' I
$3.89. .40-inch Wash Satin... $3.19 I
$5.00. .40-inch. .Wash Satin. .$4.39 I
$4.00. .40-inch. .Crepe Meteor. .$3.59 I
$4.50.. 40-inch.. Crepe Meteor.. $3.98 I
$7.95. . 40-inch.. Satin Canton... $6.98 I
$8.50 40-inch. . “Dew-Kist”.. $7.49 1
$lO. .40-inch..“Kumsi-Kumsa”. $8.89 1
$5.00. . 36-inch.. Charmeuse. . $4.39 I
$3.50. .36-inch. .Liberty Satin..s3.l9 |
M
$3.00. . 36-inch.. Messaline.. $2.49 I
$8.00..36-inch. .Tricolette. .$6.98 I
$B.OO . 40-inch.. Charmeuse. . s6y9^ I
1
i C Since using 7"^
Resinol
I have not worn a veil
“I know you will say a veil is
smart-looking anyway but I
wore one because my skin was so
blotched and rough I was
ashamed of it till Resinol Oint-
ment and Resinol Soap took
away all the soreness and grad-
ually cleared my skin entirely.
Now I can’t bear to wear a veil.
Resinol is fine too for chapped
skins. ” At all druggists.
i
Shelley Undertaking Co.
JOE SHELUT President and Manager.
AMBULANCE SERVICE V®
Corner Miin Avenue and Travis. Phone Crockett t7L ;
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Diehl, Charles S. & Beach, Harrison L. The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, March 1, 1920, newspaper, March 1, 1920; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1616867/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .