San Antonio Daily Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 57, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 17, 1907 Page: 16 of 24
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16
SAN ANTONIO LIGHT
•AN ANTONIO LIGHT PUB. CO.
Publishers.
202-206 Crockett Street.
Both Tolophonei:
But Inui Office
editorial Room* • 176
irtE «. C. BECKWITH SPECIAL
AGENCY Side Agema Foreign Adver-
Off 11 1!.
Eastern Office: 48-49 Tribune Bllg
New York City.
Western Office: 510-512 Tribune
Bldg. Chicago.
(Entered at the Postoffice in San An-
tonio aa Mail Matter of the Second
CIAB*. I
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Daily 50c
per month. *5 per year Sunday.
»3 per year always payable in ad-
rance
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC:—Any er-
roneous reflection upon the charac-
ter. standing or reputation of any
person firm or corporation which
may appear in the columns of The
Dally Light will be gladly correct-
ed upon it being brought to the at-
tention of the management
THE HUMANE SOCIETY.
The work of rescuing children from
surroundings which will lead to either
disease or moral perversion or both
is a noble work and one that should
be encouraged morally and financially
by every citizen who would assist in I
making the world better. This is one
of the works undertaKen oy tne yaw
Antonio Humane Society and which Is I
being prosecuted as vigorously as the I
means at hand will permit In its
work the society has the assistance of i
the three district judges and the peace '
officers of the county whose aid Is
almost Indispensable. To see that
every child born into the world is
given an opportunity to grow up |
healthy and honest and to start in .
the battle of life equipped with an ed-
ucation is something the state has
provided for to a limited extent It |
has given to the courts the authority
to take from unfit parents their chil- '
dren and has provided schools at
which children may be educated with-
out cost of tuition. Here the state
has stopped. To go further in the
eyes of lawmakers threatened a pa-
ternalism calculated to do more injury ■
than good. The state does not pro-
vide a substitute for the objectionable j
parent or guardian. It does not pro-
vide a home for the *lt
merely provides a whereby
those Interested in the improvement
of the race may/from either charita-
ble or patriot purposes take charge
of the chirfen and place them where 1
these «ißBvantages are obtainable.
glory of a nation is not in its
r«es of brick apd steel its armies or
but in the superiority of !
its people. That nation which has
the most healthy intelligent and
moral people though it possess little
else is the most glorious nation and
the nation to which others whose
wealth is measured in armament and
bankable collateral must bow low
whenever a question of superiority
arises. History ancient and modern
testifies to the truth of the proposi-
tion. In San Antonio as in other
great cities there are children whose
parents are of the lowest type and
who will train up their offspring by
the same standard to later provide
trouble for good citizens and business
for the criminal courts. These chil-
dren if removed in time to a Bigner
atmosphere will have an opportunity
of becoming noble useful men and
women—a part of the good citizen-
ship of the future. To the task of car-
ing for these the Humane Society has
Bet its hand and the full value of Its
(work will be seen in years to come.
In hundreds of filthy hovels there
Bre children growing up in an atmos-
phere of disease and of immorality
little girls to lead lives of shame lit-
tle boys to lead lives of crime. Many
of these have been rescued and plac-
ed in homes where they will be ena-
bled to see some of the sunshine and
happiness of life and it is all due to
the Humane Society.
THE GRINSTEAD SANITARIUM.
Representative Grinstead from the
eounty of Kerr bids fair to win out
in his effort to secure an appropriation
for the purpose of building a tubercu-
losis sanitarium somewhere in the
best part of Texas. If he does the in-
stitution will be a monument that will
keep bis memory green in the hearts
of those who come into the world after
he is gathered to his fathers. The
legislature has looked with an indul-
gent eye upon the plans of the gen-
tleman from Kerr and has attended to
its own business while he worked the
bill up from the bottom of the calen-
dar and it is wholly probable that it
will just go ahead and pass it without
any fuss and feathers. It isn't a plat-
form demand anyway and there is no
necessity of debating whether the
platform intended it should be built
of granite brownstone or brick. All
Mr. Grinstead has asked is that the
legislature appropriate the money.
The location of the sanitarium has
been carefully kept out of the matter
and to those for whose benefit it is
intended the subject has little interest
further than that it shall be located
in a locality favorable to the cure of
the disease. In the territory from
which Mr. Grinstead hails are many
ideal locations for an institution of
this kind and when the time comes to
talk location he will doubtless be found
talking to the proper authorities about
it. The author of this bill is the own
er editor and business manager of
the Mountain Sun which rises at
Kerrville once a week for those who
are willing to pay the price which is
to say that it rises for all in Kerr
county who can read English. This Is
his first term in the Texas lawmaking
body and he has forged rapidly to the
front along with the able intellects
of which the body possesses so few.
He has been safe and sane on every
proposition which came up for consid-
eration. which is to say that he has
voted •nay” oftener than otherwise.
For a newspaper man in a crowd
which hates newspaper men worse
than the devil hates holy water and
for the same reason Representative
Grinstead has done remarkably well.
If as Success says: "True merit
is like a river; the deeper it Is ths
less noise it makes" the gumshoe man
must be at the top of the heap.
EUROPE'S POSTAL SUPERIORITY.
Swift America may look to Europe
and learn. "In New York it takes two
hours to send a special-delivery letter
from Harlem to Twenty-third street.
In Berlin through the Rohrpost a
letter can be sent a similar distance
in two minutes” says Harold Boice
in Appleton's Magazine.
"It would be advantageous to all
people if the statesmen of the world
foregoing for a season their provincial
boasting would convene in interna-
tional session and exchange ideas re-
garding the world's progress. I was
impressed with this fact when I had
occasion in Budapest to send a regis-
tered letter. Instead of having to wait
for a clerk to copy the superscription
and hand me a receipt I had simply
to show the letter stamped
and then drop it in a mechanical con-
trivance which immediately issues a
receipt card automatically dated and
numbered. It makes the system of
registering a letter in Hungary as slm-
•ple as dropping a piece of mail in a
letter box is in America. I desired
to test this innovation and so I mail-
ed a letter in Budapest addressed to
myself in a hotel at Munich. Two
hours later I took the train to the
Bavarian capital and the day after I
arrived in the hotel I received word
that there was a registered letter for
me at the postoffice. The German
system of postal money orders Is far
superior it seems to me to the Am-
erican. You hand the money into a
German postoffice give the address
of the person to whom it is to be sent
and walk away with the receipt. That
ends your responsibility. The govern-
ment carries the money to the house
and even to the room of the
addressee.”
We of San Antonio would be satis-
fied did the federal government grant
Postmaster Stevens those ten addi-
tional carriers he has been asking for.
SALVATION IN THE LABORATORY.
Overpopulated and exhausted Europe
may rejoice at the discovery of Sir
William Crookes but it will be re
ceived with indifference here. “Salva-
tion may be averted through the labo-
ratory" writes F. A. Talbot in the
Technical World Magazine for April
and ascribes the prophetic words to
the eminent scientist Sir William
Crookes. “Sir William made the state-
ment" says the writer "before the an-
nual congress of the British associa-
tion in 1898 and he ventured the
prophesy also that it would be the
combination of chemical research and
the hydraulic forces of nature as ex-
emplified in the numerous w-ater-falls
that would at no distant time be used
to produce an adequate food-supply for
the growing population of the world.
“The one great question that has
been directing the closest research of
the whole scientific world for more
than a century past has been the solv-
ing of the problem as to how to meet
the growing demand that has resulted
from the extensive developments of
agriculture for nitrogenous foods. The
population of the globe is rapidly be-
coming more and more dependent for
its vital forces upon what the scien-
tists generally term bread—that is
those foodstuffs essentially of a highly
nitrogenous character. The existence
of all life both animal and plant is
absolutely dependent upon a certain
number of substances generally known
as the ailments and the presence of
nitrogen in some form in these ali-
ment is indispensable. It Is the atmo-
sphere which directly or indirectly
furnishes to all living things the nitro-
gen necessary for its life and it is
from the air moreover that the two
principal forms of nourishment which
agriculture demands in the combina-
tions of its fertilizers nitrate of soda
and sulphate of ammonia are derived.”
'As long as artesian water holds out
Soitthwest Texas will not go wild
overNSir William's prophecy.
EDITORIAL POINTERS.
King Edward's chef it is stated
earns 40.000 francs —more than an ad-
miral receives. The old statement
that vou reach a man's heart through
his stomach is evidently equally true
in this case with regard to his pock-
etbook.—Austin Tribune.
Now that congress has adjourned
and we have more time in which to
ponder just what appropriations to
the amount of 12000000000 mean we
tie expecting some populistic econo-
mist to spring the idea of government
ownership of congress.—Galveston
Tribune.
One of the perquisities of a sena-
torial job is the lyceum course be-
tween sessions. Tillman of South
Carolina draws >7500 as senator and
?43.000 as lecturer.—Shreveport Jour-
nal .
The London press insists that
America is suffering from an over-
dose of humor. It is delightful to
know that the London journalists call
it humor and can take so pleasant a
view of it.—El Paso Herald.
There is still talk of modifying the
tariff for the benefit of the Filipinos
but nobody proposed to modify it for
the benefit of the Americans.—klalves-
ton Tribune.
“Young girls hear a lot of nonsense
from lovers that widows never hear.
The men know that widows know bet-
ter. Widows have a knowledge of
men that shows in their faces.” The
Sunflower Philosopher is wrong.
Widows are as giddy as girls as a
rule and less particular. They are
tweeter and more accomplished.
’I hey are past the season of verdan-
cy and have deeper compassion for
men. Time passes more swiftly as
we grow older. They know that op-
]x>rtunities like blessings take their
flight. They know that there is not
much to expect from any man. So
tliev take the first clever decent fel-
low who comes along while the vis-
ionary young girls wait for bigger
game so long that many of them get
qulrer.
FRIVOLITIES.
Prospective Pa-in-Law —You under-
stand that you do not get the dowry
until the end of the first year?
Suitor—Oh all right. I will post-
pone the wedding until then —Meg-
gendorfer Blatter.
Teacher—" Harry a mother has five
children and but four potatoes. How
can she divide the potatoes so that
each will receive an equal portion?”
Harry (quickly) — “Mash ’em.”—
Harper’s Weekly.
“Ah!” he sighed. “I have long wor-
shiped you at a distance.”
“Well” she replied coldly “if it is
necessary for you to worship me at
all I prefer it that way.”
And it was back to the boarding
house for him.”—Chicago Daily News.
Nell —"Maud says she has had sev-
enteen proposals this year.”
Belle —“I didn’t think she knew so
many men.”
Nell —"Oh. sixteen of them were
from Chollie Saphedde.”—Philadel-
phia Record.
“I’m not going near that restaurant
again.”
“Why not?”
“Some fool took my umbrella and
left his in its place.”
"But you might run across him.”
“That’s the trouble. I don't want
to. I’ve got the best umbrella.” —
Milwaukee Sentinel.
“Grigson what make is your auto-
mobile?”
“It’s a Berkman-Jandorf-Lichenstein-
Smith - - Brown-Wittenmey-
er-Berkenhead-Sampson-Billhoover.”
“Gee! That’s one I never heard of
before.”
"Probably not. Those are the names
of the different repawmen who have
worked on it since I gbt it.” —Chicago
Tilbune.
"Yesh m’ dear” began Luschman
“I’m rather late tonight but you—eh—-
see I —”
“Come now” said his wife “be hon-
est for once. Why don’t you tell the
truth?”
“Well m’ dear I’m ’fraid you
wouldn’t believe me. Truth’s stran-
ger’n fiction y’ know.”—Philadelphia
Press.
“No” said the candid kleptomaniac
“when I’m arrested for pilfering I
never give my real name. It would
compromise too many people.”
“Indeed: and what is your name?”
inquired the magistrate.
“John Smith." —Tit-Bits.
A little girl in Cleveland was play-
ing with her trinkets on the parlor
floor while an older sister was drum-
ming with much persistency on the
piano.
• "Play louder Elora” spoke the
child.
The girl at the keys felt flattered
and with an elated smile asked? "So
you like to hear me play do you darl-
ing?”
“No I don’t." came the unexpected
and emphatic reply. "I wanted you to
play louder so papa would tell you to
stop."—Everybody’s.
BRING ON YOUR GERMS.
If germs do lurk
On every lip
To give the kissing
Man the grip
Where is the man
Who'd care to be
Gripless through all
Eternity?
Why such a man
Is but a worm!
True men will cry
"Bring on your germ!”
—J. M. Lewis in Houston Post
The celebrated "CITY" Bock beer
on tan at all saloons today! Nothing
tuperior. Try It!
O Puppe orchestra new 2593 or 785.
BAN ANTONIO DAILY LIGHT SAN ANTONIO TEXAS SUNDAY MARCH 17 1907.
j EUROPEAN NEWS
Publishers' Press.
London March 16.—Strong opposi-
tion is beink shown in Swiss military
circles to the new law voted In De-
cember by the national council but
which ere it comes into force must
be submitted to the state council.
The Swiss officers have addressed a
petition to the Federal Assembly beg-
ging it to revert to the figures pro-
posed and considered necessary by
the Federal Council in regard to the
recruits’ course of Instruction and
that of the Landwehr. They ask that
in the case of the recruits instead of
a period of 65 days one of 70 days
should be fixed and that the Land-
wehr’s course of instruction should
be of eleven instead of six days.
The petitioners base their argu-
ments which may be of interest in
England to those who advocate the
creation of a militia army on the les-
sons taught by the Russo-Japanese
war on which Colonel Gadke the
delegate of the Federal Council has
; drawn up a report communicated on-
ly to military circles and it is possi-
ble that the petitioners have more or
less drawn their inspiration from it.
Swiss officers consider that 10 days
constitute “a very brief period for in-
structing recruits.’’ Recent wars and
especially the Russo-Japanese war
have demonstrated that the taking
advantage of the nature of the coun-
try is an important factor of success
but one demanding of the soldiers an
amount of attention and intelligence
which can only be developed by long
training. Again it is necessary that
the troops should know how to en-
trench themselves during an attack.
Now the use of the pioneer s tools
is almost unknown to the Swiss ar-
my and instruction in this matter al-
so requires a long period. The troops
should moreover ever be ready to re-
pel a night attack a thing little at-
tention has been paid to hitbertl in
order not to exhaust men already tir-
ed out with the many things which
have had to be taught them in a short
period. The Swiss officers also de-
mand that the engineers the sani-
tary service and the army service
corps should receive proper instruc-
tion. and not merely a hurried one.
Ite reports of the outbreak of cer-
ebro-spinal meningitis are satisfactory
so far as F.ugland and Scotland are
concerned but In Ireland the disease
seems to b/ stlh spreading. In Wales
—despite the ciuwded conditions of
the poorer qua-u-rs of some o fihs
large towns —not a single caw has
been reported as yet. The solitary
case in London —that of a little girl
in Lambeth —has not been fodowed
by others.
But Belfast letorts two deaths two
new cases and one suspected case of
cerebro-spinal meningitis bringing the
patients in hospital to 22 and ruling
the total numbe’ of cases to 92. with
54 deaths. Another case is repotted
from Ballinodo near Monaghan the
eldest daughter o£ Constable Fleuns
whose youngest child died on Satur-
day night from the disease being re-
moved to the fever hospital. By order
of the local medical officer the other
members of the family have been re-
moved to the same Institution. An-
other death has been reported from
Dublin—-that of a child this being the
seventh death from the disease in the
Irish capital.
According to a dispatch from Tehe-
ran the final rules have now been laid
down for the Persian National Bank
the creation of which was settled oy
the recent signing of the concession.
The capital is fifteen million tomans
(about <25000000). Foreigners are
excluded from participation. All gov-
ernment revenues not mortgaged are
to be collected and all expenditure
paid by the bank on behalf of the gov-
ernment.
The bank is empowered to contract
mortgages and loans local and foreign
in accordance with the Sacred Law.
The bank wiil have priority over all
other institutions which may offer
the same terms in regard to mines
the pearl fishery in the Persian gulf
and the construction of roads and rail-
ways and will have the right to issue
bank notes when the Imperial Bank
of Persia ceases operations or from
any other cause. A separate agree-
ment is to be concluded between the
bank and the government under
which the latter borrows from the
bank two million tomans (13330300)
at 9 per cent one-half of the amount
being payable before and one-half af-
ter March 21.
An additional clause stipulates that
the bank concession shall be annulled
if the money is not forthcoming.
Tlfb news of King Victor Emman-
uel 111 of Italy will pay a return visit
to the king of the Hellenes towards
the end of April is a good sign of the
Improved relations between the two
countries which have prevailed since
King George’s very successful visit
to Rome last November. It will not
be the king of Italy's first journey to
Greece for he was In that country at
the time of his father's assassination
and I remember being told by the
monks of Meteora that he climbed up
the swinging ladders of the Monastery
of Barlaam —a feat which shows that
he must have a very good head. This
however will be his first official visit.
Since M. Zaime replaced Prince
George in Crete the Italian foreign
office has regarded the state of
things in that Island with much more
satisfaction for the preslut high
commissioner is known to be an ex-
perienced statesman of tried modera-
tion. Apart from the Cretan question
in which Italy has less direct inter-
est since the return of the Italian
gendarmerie there are only two po-
litical matters in regard to which
sho is likely to run counter to Hell-
enic sentiment. On the ohe hand
Greece will always insist upon her
just rights In Epiros whenever that
country ceases to be Turkish —rights
which received only partial recogni-
tion when the district of Arta was
ceded to her In 1881. On the other
Italy will probably support the Rou-
manian claims on behalf of the Kutso-
Wallachs of Macedonia in conse-
ouence of the ancient connection be-
tween Rome and Roumania of which
Traia’s Column Is the enduring mon-
ument. Otherwise there is no rea-
son whv the two classic lands should
not be political friends.
JTwintefT
N COLDS
need
not fear
them if you
BALLARD’S
_ JOREHOUND
SYRUP
A cough or cold is generally a forerunner of many serious
sick spells. It should not be neglected the human breathing
system Is a combination of tubes and cells which must be
kept in order to insure good health.
Ballard’s Horehound Syrup
ri ID EQ COUGHS COLDS BRONCHITIS
UUKLC WHOOPING COUGH CROUP
AND ALL PULMONARY DISEASES.
Cured of a Chronic Cough.
J. H. Ellis Butte Mont. writes: “j cheerfully recom-
mend Ballard’s Horehound Syrup to all people afflicted
with chronic coughs. I suffered for years with a chronic
cough which would last all winter. Ballard’s Horehound
Syrup effected an immediate and permanent cure."
25c 50c and $l.OO.
BeHard Snow Liniment Co.
500-502 North Second Street ST. LOUIS MO.
Sold and Recommended by
PENNSYLVANIA STRIVING
TO BUILD NOISELESS “L”
Elimination of Nerve Wrecking Vibration a Feature of Plans on Which
Extensive Improvements at Wilmington Del. Have
Been Nearly Completed
Special to The Light
Wilmington Del. March 16.—Ef-
forts to solve the r-roblepi of building
a noiseless elevated railroad are be-
ing made by the Pennsylvania rail-
road. which is rushing to completion
its elevation of tracks and building of
a new passenger station in this city.
One of the tracks has just been placed
in commission and within a few
weeks the other will be in service so
that instead of the old-fashioned meth-
od of going through Wilmington at
grade trains will now go through
with as much safety and comfort at
al New Brunswick or Newark.
A leading feature in the; plans for
this track elevation has been a special
effort to make such ap elevation as
noiseless as possible thus reducing to
a minimum the annoyance to persons
living or doing business near the
tracks.
There are 24 bridges in all carry-
ing the main tracks over the street
aid railroad crossings. The floors of
the bridges are of steel and of the
form krown as the solid trough con-
struction. The steel work is covered
with concrete which is thoroughly
waterproofed with five layers of felt
and asphalt compound. This in turn
is covered with a layer of protecting
bricks laid in sand and grouted. Upon
ihe bricks is tamped the stone ballast
carrlyng the wooden ties and the
rails forming the roadbed.
If this form or construction accom-
plishes what is expected of it it will
be utilized at other places where like
improvements are being made.
The total elevation is about three
miles long. W’hen the improvements
are completed they will probably re-
sult In the saving of several minutes
in the. running time between Philadel-
phia and Baltimore—markin" another
step in the accomplishment of the
purpose of the Pennsylvania railroad
Uncle Sam’s Ginger Ale
Has received the unqualified endorsement of thou-
sands who have learned that the only difference be-
tween it and the “imported”
- kind is the price—alone.
• None better purer nor finer
wH? fl avore d can be produced—and
Y Ol1 ’ 11 KNOW this as well as
we do when you try it.
G. A. Dvierler Mfg. Co.
Bottler* of Pure Non-Alcoholic Beverage*.
J. N. Brown Pre*. Ernest Steves. V-Pres. O. MeerscheidL Cashier.
Ala.mo National Bank
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS.
Capital and Surplus Paid In $600000.00
Directors—G. Schmeltzer Geo. C. Vaughan Ernest Steves J. N. Brown
C. C. Gibbs G. A. C. Halff Wm. Negley. Joseph Courand Otto Meerscheidt
CHAS. ZOLLER. PAUL INGENHUTH. H. R. SCHMELTZER.
President A Gen. Mgr. Vice President Sec’y and Treat
MERCHANTS’ TRANSFER COMPANY
(INCORPORATED)
Receiving Forwarding. Storage. Eto. Hauling and Placlnn Safa* and
Machinery a Specialty. Both Phonaa 359.
Office and Warehouse*: 010 to 514 Dolorosa Street
BEXAR DRUG CO.
eventually to reduce its running time
between New York and Washington
to four hours
An interesting’ feature of the track
elevation is thaA it was originally
planned to use a dirt fill enclosed by
sione retaining walls for the greater
tart of the distance. It was found
however that the southern portion of
the work would rest upon soft mud
six to eight feet below the surface of
the ground which would render the
construction of retaining walls diffi-
cult. To avoid this the tracks are
carried for a distance of 2300 feet up-
on a brick arched viaduct of sufficient
height to raise the tracks about 16
feet above their former grade.
In addition to these improvements
the company has erected a new pas-
sjnger station of modern fireproof
construction; built new repair shops
at Tod's Cut new freight yards at
Edgemoor and in fact entirely made-
over Wilmington from a transporta-
tion standpoint.
NEW POSTOFFICE.
Palestine Federal Building is to Cost
Fifty Thousand Dollars.
Palestine Tex.. March 16. —The
award for the public building site in
this city on which a new |50000 post-
office is to be erected was announced
by the treasury department Thursday.
The lots chosen are located at the
northeast comer of North Sycamore
and Oak streets and are the property
of St. Phillips church and W. H. Dick.
The price to be paid is $9900. This is
a mest central and a very desirable
location and the selection will give
general satisfaction.
The purchase will most likely enable
the church to build the house of wor-
ship it has had in contemplation for a
long time and will give Palestine an-
other handsome church edifice.
The Oldest and Best House In
San Antonio
For Teas Coffees Spices
Baking Powder and
Extracts is
HOLLAND’S
227 West Commerce Street.
—Both phones 311—
"Holland's Blend” Is King of Cof-
fees. Three pounds for |l.OO.
«PATR ICIAN"
SHOES FOR WOMEN.
AM Stylet—All Leathern
Price $3.50
WOLFF A MARX CO.
Thos. Goggan&Bros.
PIANOS ORGANS
Musical Merchandise
VELVET ICE CREAM
Made By
Creamery fairy Co.
Correr Austin and
Eighth Sts.
We handle only pure unadulterated
good*. Butter cream and oasturlzed
milk. Visitor* to our Sanitary plant
always welcome.
Spring Cleaning
Will soon start. In looking over
your furniture rugs house fur-
nishing goods etc. you will no
doubt come to the conclusion that
you would invest in new to take
place of old —would add to that
you already have or exchange the
old for new and pay the differ-
ence. If so consult the "Old Re-
liable”
MAX. KAROTKIN
119-123 Main Ave.
Queen Quality
Footwear
Sole Agency
JOSKE BROS CO.
F. J. Scudder
F. J. SCUDDER & CO.
Agents Germania Fire Ins. Co. of New
York.—We represnt leading companies
of the world assets over $80000000.
Fire Marine Tornado Plate Glasa
Office corner Navarro & Crockett Sts.
E.HERTZBERR JEWELRY CO
Expert Opticians
Our doctor who la a graduate exam*
Ines your eyes free. Z 7 years leading
cptlcians In San Antonio tells the
a‘cry of our success as opticians. We
■enow bow to fit ere*. Come and oo»
vince yourself.
HOTELS
The Menger
San Antonio Tex.
Located opposite the beautiful
Alamo Plazx
American Plan $3.00 and up.
None better for comfort and
service.
McLEAN 4 MUDGE Managers
BexarHotel
All Modern Conveniences.
American and European Plan.
First-class a la Carte Service.
ALFRED SANNER. Prop.
MAHNCKE HOTEL
Cor. Houston and St. Mary's Streets.
(Center of City.)
SAN ANTONIO TEXAS.
Rates $2.00 per day. Modern con-
veniences. Special apartment (en
suite.) Large Sample Rooms. Cuisine
a specialty. L. MAHNCKE Prop.
PLAZA HOTEL
Newly furnished. Free bath and
Sample Room.
CHAS. KOCH Proprietor.
Headquarters for traveling men
NEW BRAUNFELS TEXA& '
Rates $2.00 per day.
Ed Torrey.
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San Antonio Daily Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 57, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 17, 1907, newspaper, March 17, 1907; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1691353/m1/16/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .