The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 259, Ed. 1 Monday, October 4, 1920 Page: 10 of 18
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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10
COXFXPWS
M ISSUE
FOB fOMEI
Leaders of Progress in the
World Should Support
Covenant.
COMPACT MEANS PEACE
Candidate Outlines Program
to Which Members Are
Committed.
Dayton. Ohio. Oct. 4—At home from
r campaign tour that took him more
than 11.660 miles an<] into every state
west of the Mississippi river save three
Gov. James M. Cox. though supposed to
rest for two days before going into Ken-
tucky and Tennessee today continued
bis plea for adoption of the League of
Nations the paramount issue of the
campaign.
In an addre-« to a body of women the
governor went into considerable detail
why women should support the league
cause asserting mat throughout the
years they have been ”the leaders of
progress in the world.” and declaring
that wrath of the women who were made
to suffer in the war will pursue Franz
Joseph. William Hohouzollcrn ami
Nicholas Romauuff ’’through all cter-
nity.”
Though asserting that the monetary
rost cf the war. direct and indirect was
fc.3000000060i >0 it is the women Gov-
enter Cox declared who km»w what the
war really cost ’for they paid the
price in personal suffering to provide
the rulers of the eat th with 10.600.000
men which were thrown into the gauges
of battle to placate the anger of the
gods of war.”
League Will Promote Progress.
The leagu*. Governor Cox said n d
only will prevent war. which he avert-
ed is its primary purpose birt also will
promote progress and “will set up. or
itself become a clearing house for in-
ternational justice and social service.”
“Tho*'’ who want to keep on dream-
ing of *a new heaven and a new earth.*
an perhaps afford to stay out of the
eague. ’’ the candidate said ’ but those
who really want to make their dreams
ome true and make this world a tit
■jabitat for the human spirit uill want
o join the league without delay.”
The governor detailed the following
social service and justice trigram which
ic asserted member nations of the I
cague will endeavor to carry out:
‘’Try to secure and maintain fair
ind humane conditions nf labor for men.
vomeu and children—thus lifting the
tandards of living everywhere.
“Try to secure ju 4 t treatment of the
ative inhabitants of territories under
heir control.
"Try to secure and maintain freedom
*1 communication and of trau-it and
RSI
We Say the War Is Over
But the war is not over for the Salvation
Army Lassie who is battling the sins and
vices 365 days in the year. Would you do
her work as willingly as she?
When the Committee Calls on You Pon t Turn a Deaf Ear to Tk::r Appeal Be as Liberal as You Can
TO THE PUBLIC OF THE SOUTHWEST
The year that ha* pa»ed since you contributed so willingly to the 1919 Home Service Fund ha. seen the Sal
ration Army carrying on in a larger more effective way than ever before it. work of inducing men to love anc
honor God binding wound. assuaging hunger banishing nakedness squalor and misery restoring the Magdalene re
constructing men motherng neglected children re.toring fire hope light and joy to the fireside battling those force
that tend to undermine our nation and making the world a fit and desirable place in which to liv«.
MONDAY
equitable treatment of the commerce of
member* of the league.
’’Labor together in the effort to con-
trol. and ultimately eradicate di-case.
“Set up rommissions for the preven-
tion of the illicit traffic in arms in dan-
gerous <lrug>. mid in women for im
moral purposes.”
Know* Hou Women Will Vote.
Asserting that the issue “is not fun-
damentally a legal or diplomatic” one.
bit a moral one. and declaring it for-
tunate that women for the first time
hold tin balance of power and the Jc-
. iding vote the governor said he hn« no
doubt in hi- mind how the women’s vote
will be ca«t. he continued:
■ The women of America will vote to
I L«. p our pledge to heroes whose
blond ha- crimsoned the poppies of Flan-
d< r- fields. They will vote for the limi-
tation of armament- the arbitration of
deputes the publication of .-ecret
treaties the amelioration of distress am]
the elevation of labor conditions to high-
er standard?. In a word they will vote
for a league which will convert Chris-
tian idealism into the statutes of sound
statesmanship and bring to the sons of
men a pence that -hall cover the earth
I ar the water* cover the -on.”
POLICE MAY*HAVE
CLEW TO EXPLOSION
IN WALL STREET
One Zelenaka Is Arrested
With Dynamite in His
Possession.
Pittsburg Pa. Oct. 4.—lnformation
obtained from Florvan Zelenaka ci’
Broklyn. arrested here last night with
a quantity of dynamite in his posses-
sion. may lead to a solution of the Wall
street explosion according to local po-
lice ami government agents.
Questioning of Zelenaka. who was
taken at a hotel after a fight with the
police continued until early this morn-
ing. Authorities were reticent as to
the result but it was claimed clews
Zelenaka furnished may lead to scores
of arrests in Brooklyn and New
York.
He could furni?h d<. good reason po-
lice said f.-r having the explosiv.- in
his possession and i- alleged tu have
remarked to a companion : “See what
we d d in Wall street. Next time it
will be bigger and more terrible. The
la?t was only a start.”
Known io Department of Justice.
New York. Oct. 4.—Floreau Zelenaka
left Brooklyn on September 16 it was
announced by Department of Justice
agent- today. This was the day of the
explosion in Wall street. According to
the federal agents. Zelenaka left his
rooming place between 10 and 11 o’clock
in the morning carrying a largo brown
bag Th** explosion occurred at noon.
Zelenaka. according to the federal
inve-tigators. was formerly employed by
a powder company. Examination of his
room in a cheap lodging house in
Brooklyn today disclosed radical litera-
ture. crammed in a trunk it was said.
Another document found the agents
-aid. was a Ku^ian passport made out
n Zelenaka’- name.
Leon Konkel. a st* am fitter the man
who gave the Pittsburg authorities the
information which led to the arrest here
la-t night of Horan Zelanaka in Block
lyn in connection with the Wall street
bomb explosion arrived here today from
Pittsburg to tell his story to the federal
authorities.
Won’t You Help the Army
Help Humanity?
U. S. SUPREME COURT
RECONVENES TO ACT
ON CROWDED DOCKET
Anti-trast Saits and Tests ol
Dry Law Are on the
Calendar.
Washington. I). (’. Oct- 4.—The Unit-
ed States supreme court reconvened for
it? regular term to find a docket crowd-
ed with important cases. Besides halt
a dozen anti-trust suits matters ponding
include fur’her attacks on the prohibi-
tion amendment suits to test the consti-
tutionality of the antUprofiteering sec-
tion of the food '•ontrol act ami of the
federal farm loan act. appeals in the
Ne wherry election case and many others
With the federal suffrage act ratifi?d
and proclaimed since the court adjourned
• arly in the summer court officials ex-
pect that rases designed to test the com
-titutionality of that amendment also
v ill reach the court during the present
session. •
The first case to be argued at thb
term will be government appeals in the
• dissolution suit against the Lehigh Vai
■ । y Railroad Company part of the al-
| legod anthracite coal trust. This ease
i< set for tomorrow. By agreement ol
। counsel argument of the other five anti-
Itru-t suits will be postponed tempo
I rarily. These suits are those against thf
Eastman Kodak Company the Associat-
ed Bill Posters and Distributors of the
United States and Canada; American
i an Company; Southern Pacific Com-
pany and the Keystone Watch Uas<
Company.
The prohibition amendment will reach
the court again through petitions askin#
tor a reconsideration of the decision ol
last June 7 sustaining the amendment
ami portions of the enforcement act. ren-
dered in appeals of Christian Fiegen-
-pan. brewer of Newark. N. J. and
George C. Dempsey a Boston liquor
wholesaler. A decision on these peti-
tions is expected within a few weeks. A
number of other cases involving inter-
pretation- of the enforcement act still
are pending and further decisions am-
plifying the court’s original opinion are
looked for at this term.
thher cases of consequence before the
court are those involving the ronstit^-
tionality of provisions in the 1919 • ar
revenue act levying an excise tax “D
profits derived from child labor; the
boundary dispute between Oklahoma and
Texas and the case of the United Shoe
Machinery Company which come* up
from proceedings originally instituted
by the government in St. Louis under
the Clayton act.
President Receives Justices.
Washington. D. <’. Oct. 4.—For the
first time since 1918 President Wil-on
received today tbc justices of the United
States supreme court who called to
pay their respect-. The court convened
at noon after its summer recess and
immediately adjourned until tomorrow
so the justices might visit the White
House.
The annual visit to the President
wa« omitted last year because of Mr.
Wikon’s illness
G. O. P. Women Form Motor Corps.
New York. Oct. 4.—Organization of
a Republican woman’s national motor
corps was announced at Republican
headquarters Sunday. Miss Maude
Wetmore of New Point. R. 1. is chair-
man. The organization is composed of
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT.
"omen who offered their cars and pci-
sonal service during the remainder of
the presidential campaign to transport
speakers for parades and for other ser-
vices in 4000 counties of th v United
| States.
Says Building Prices Arc Higher.
' Chicago. Ort. 4.—The seventh Federal
Reserve Board's report of September 3d
stating that building prices have drop
ped fifteen to twenty per cent in Chi-
cago is not based on fact? according t-
a statement issued here by I-’. G. David
son. president of the Illinois Institution
of Architects. Ou the contrary the cosi
of many building materials is inerra-inj
and further increases arc in line. In
said.
Farmers Want Standard Crons.
Corpus Christi. Tex.. Ort. 4.—lnter
est in the standardization of the <-o»ton
crop in the gulf roast district cf Texa?
is widespnad. according to Roy Miller.
?ceretnry of the Rural Land Owners'
Association.
HOW DOCTORS
TREAT COLDS
AND THE FLU
Fir. in Treatment Is a
■ Brisk Purgative With Calo-
tabs the Purified and Re-
; fined Calomel Tablets
That Are Nausealess Safe
and Sure.
Ductors have found by experience
that no medicine fur colds and influ-
enza can be depended upon for full ef-
fectiveness until the liver is made thor-
oughly active. That is why the fir-t
step in the treatment is the new. nan-
sealess calomel tablet called Calotab?.
vh’ih are free from tl - g ami
weakening effects of the old style calo-
mel. Doctors also point out the fact
that an active liver may go a long way
towards preventing ieftuenza and is one
of the most important factor- in en-
abling the patient to successfully with-
stand and attack and ward eff pneu-
monia.
(Jne f’a'otab on the t< ngee at bed
time with a swallow of waier—that'*
all. No salt no nausea nor tv slight-
est interference with your eat^ig. pleas-
ure or work. Neat morning fuur cold
has vanished your liver is cc^rc. your
syttefti is purified and you afe feeling
fin? with a hearty appetite f?r break-
fast. Druggists sell Calotab* only in
^•riginM sealed packages pri'e thirty-
five cents. Your money will ba cheer-
fully ref Faded if you do not Had them
delightful.—(Adv.)
——M——
BLOO PROM ALL CAR LINTS
DAWSSSTZ
net rroMt ovt ev th mjqi muck OLrrawT
' I
leconomy BA/EMENTI
IB FOR ALL THE PEOPLE I
Our second offering of four Extra Specials listed below for Tuesday's selling will more than ■
make your visit to our Economy Basement profitable. This event is made possible only through our B
|H determination to demonstrate our ability to undersell as the result of selling for cash only having B
;■ no rent to pay etc. and the fact that our business is increasing so that our cost of operation has B
IB been reduced to a point where only a small’ profit is needed for our sustenance. Our stocks at pres- H
B ent are the largest in our history—in fashion goods as well as staple merchandise—and to thrifty H
g shoppers it offers an endless opportunity to economize on needs for the new season. jl
1 300 New Hats
Values to $12.50
Individuality of style zh BsyMWMB -
and originality of crea- A ‘
tion are certainly repre- BFgM*. Wp'
sented in this shipment of
new millinery. Large hats. KK
small hats plain and ■■ BQ
fancy creations are here
offered. The trimmings
and colorings are so va-
ried that we shall make
no effort to describe them. Every hat in the lot is
absolutely' new. While the lot lasts $5.95 each.
| Women’s Suits
I $30.00 to $35.00 Values
These suits were pur-A
IB chased about six w eeks\g^ A
B a "° t° be made up out^ - Jf
B of cloth of our own se-
lection and models and
styles which we select- '
B suit our patrons. They smsKSK
B arc certainly the best obtainable for anything near
B the price we ask for them. The materials are all-
B wool poplin and serge. In navy blue and black with
B suitable trimmings in new ideas of buttons belt.
B pocket collar and lining.
n
The Salvation Army Reaches a Class of People That Is
Reached by No Other Organizaion
THEIR SLOGAN IS: A MAN MAY BE
DOWN BUT HE IS NEVER OUT
This Also Applies to Women and Children Equally
True to its promise The Salvation Army during that year has abstained from promiscuous solicitation of
funds and has carried on its labors in accordance with the budget presented to the public at the time the 1919
Home-Service I und was raised and within the limitations of that fund.
fhe saving in time has enabled The Salvation Army workers to devote greater efforts to performing larger
talks and the public has been earnestly and effectively served. More efficient operation of the sixteen major activi-
ties of The Salvation Army has been another result of the budget system.
fHE FINANCIAL STATEMENT FOR 1919 AND OUR BOOKS ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. WE WELCOME
YOUR INSPECTION.
Antiseptic Birds Eye I
Diaper Cloth I
in soft absorbent weave. Finished soft and ab- ra
solutely non-initant. Specially priced— m
10-yd. bolt 18 inches wide reg. $3.50 for $2.69
10-yd. bolt 20 inches wide reg. $3.75 for $2.88
10-yd. bolt 24 inches wide reg. $4.00 for $3.10 M
10-yd. bolt 27 inches wide reg. $4.50 for $3.45 M
10-yd. bolt 30 inches wide reg. $5.00 for $3.95 II
•>
Women’s Misses’ and I
Children’s Hose 5 Pair *
Another new arrival is /h
a lot of lathes’ misses’ <P 3B I?
and children’s hose. A 8 V
complete line of sizes in Ka t
black and white. This is BB 0
a heavy ribbed hose of p
wonderful wearing oual- SB f »
ity because they are reinforced where they need
it most in the heel and toe. Regular price up n
to 39c for 5 pairs for .$l.OO. p
OCTOBER 4 1920.
Wgl
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Diehl, Charles S. & Beach, Harrison L. The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 259, Ed. 1 Monday, October 4, 1920, newspaper, October 4, 1920; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1617080/m1/10/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .