San Antonio Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 229, Ed. 1 Friday, August 16, 1912 Page: 2 of 14
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AN ANTONIO EXPRESS; FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 16. 1912.
IE
basis upon which they had
framing the schedules.
AUDR1CH RECEIVES CKN
'One of the gentlemen who
SPEECH IS A HI!
governor makes a vigorous
attack on old doctrine
of pr otection.
spi
I n»OSt
thing hi > i
drawn tr<
Aldrich, 1
credit
At
laj
usly
■ent v
l ubh
•a st t
had
airs pr
Mr Aldnch t <
i large \\ - .the
prosecutor admits he is
match for defendant
before jl'ry.
no
in
Continued from rage One.
islation. And one of the greatest
dlize
AHGilMEIUTS CLOSE TOU
impositions up<
try that his
present tariff
States
"1 havp no
for a hearing
Vays and Me;
i: the farmer of this eoun-
■nu been devised is tho
legislation of tin I'nittd
I OS
word
whoil:
jur\ i
i'i.e
dose .
half,
AN
its
fte
Clarence S.
were held be!
t the 1'arrow bribery trla
iist, by Darrow himself
.i re narkal'le plea In his
-T h >
Darrow,
.•re the
today,
at Hit
)wn be-
iited
tl
3 long friend
j1 the poor and oppressed, read.\ to sacri-
fice himself to better their condition
The other, drawn at. the beginning of
the final argument by District Attorney
John D Fredericks, presented barrow
fts an ei emy of aoctoty "inciting class
hi.tltd and shedding maudlin tears of
sympathy for murderers and dynamit-
ers "
The prosacutoi will consume all of to-
morrow in concluding.
Hundreds thronged the »ourt room at
the afternoon sessiou to hear Mr Fred-
ericks make the dosing argument for
the prosecution in the trial which be-
gan its fouMh month toua) He said he
would not attempt to compete hi oratory
with barrow, whose persuasive eloquence
and pathetic pleas had caused jury, court
officials and spectators to weep.
"iou have listened," said Fredericks,
"to one of ti e most marvelous addresses
or orations ever delivered in any court
room when you heard Mr. Darrow. But
tha only reflects upon the ability of
the man and has mighty little to do with
his- guilt or innocence. His story teaches
us that the most brainy men have gone
wrong.
"This defendant's unfortunate predica-
ment is the result of those peculiar philo-
sophical views which go to make up his
>ery nature. His insiduous nand entered
into bribwy Iroin th \ -ry oegiiiLing of
the jVi'Na-naia cum; bribery is in his
very nature 1-Ie h:ul the idea that th$»e
ffrity that could nol be
was no int
bought."
1 lie AlcNamara crise figured stronglv in
ine closing argument ot Mr. barrow."
I know, he said, ' i could have tried ' ', }^K is l'lc onl-v
that case and a large number of people
ot America would have believed hori'Stlv
if these men had been hanged that t.hev
were guiltless. And | could have saved
myself nad 1 done it and 1 could have
made money. I know if you had hanged
those men and other men .sou would not
have changed the opinion of hardly «t
man in America, extent to > ttle in the oliect
hearts of a gnat mass of men a hatr.d
so deep, so profound that it would never
die out
So it W'pjld have ended and what
could have been the result. Men would
havt taken their lives in their hands to
enge a w rong to their class.
"And I took the responsibility, geitle-
i'* "■ Maybe J did wrong. I took it and
the mattei was disposed of and the ques-
tion set at rest. Here and there I got
prabv for v'. ' at was called a heroic act,
alti-ough I did not deserve the praise i
iolloweii tin law of my being that fa
all. Put where I got one word of praise
J got a thousand words of blame and I
stood under ihat for a* year
"This trial has helped to'clear it up. It
will ie cleared up; if not in time for nw
' 1 pi'"fi» i\\ it. in time tor my descend-
ants to know it Sometime we will know
the truth, but 1 have gone on my wav
a; I always have gone, regardless of this.
without explanations, without begging.
w Hiout asking anything of anyone, and
1 will go on that way to the end.
"J knew the crowds and. in a wiy, I
love them: in a way | despise them. I
know the unreasoning, unthinking mass.
J have been their idol and I have gone
d< wn into the depths of the valley' ind
r.eurd them hiss at my name, hut I have
summoned some devotion and such cour-
age as God has given me, and I have
gone on my path."
heard of farmers waiting (
before the Committee of j
ins jf the House and tht i
K.ranee Committee of the Senate in or- |
dcr to take part in determining what f
| the tariff schedules should be. While I
j you were feeding the world, Congress
I was feeding the trusts Nobody doubt*
what the process of tariff legislation ha
been, because every bod > who has been
curious enough to inquire knows what
vhe process of tariff legislation has been
"I would be ashamed of nnself if I
tried t.o stir up any feeling on the part
of an* class against an\ other class.
1 wish to disavow all intention of sug-
gesting to the farmer that he gro in and
do somebody up. Hint is not the point.
All that 1 am modestly suggesting to
you is that you break into your own
house and live there.
"And I want you to examine very
critically the character of the tenants
who have been occupying it. It is a very
big house and very few people have been
living in it and the rent has been de-
manded of you and not of them. You
have paid the money which enabled
them to live in jour own house and dom-
inate your own premises.
"One of the great objects in cutting
that great ditch across the isthmus of
Panama is to allow farmers wno are near
the Atlantic to ship to the Pacific coast
by wa> of the Atlantic ports. And one
of the bills pending, just passed by Con-
gress. provides for free tolls for Ameri-
can ships through that canal and pro-
hibits any ship from passing through that
• anal which is owned by any American
railway company. You see the object of
that.
NO BOGUS COMPETITION.
"We don't want the railways to com-
pete with themselves, because we under-
stand that kind of competition. We want
the water carriage to compete with the
land carriage, so as to be perfectly sur-
that you are going to get better rates
around by the canal than you would
across the continent.
"Then there is another thing in which
you ought to be deepb interested, which
is in the programme of the great party
j 1 belong to. That is the parcels post
eye lit saw t at weathei was chai.g
in Rhode Island js well as in the r
ot the Union, that men who ha I so
known that he was imposing up.»n th
felt thai tnt limit had ben reached a
tho> w > re not going to be imposed ut
an> long.' Til-\ saw that be w s i
even doing what lie pretended to 1
namely, t«' serve the special interests
Rhode Island, because he was <er\l
oc!\ some of toe special inter .-is
Rhode Island. ,
Now there are various q
which you gentlemen ought to
are pending, questions that direct!> *on- (
tern the farmer. The tariff intimately I
concerns the farmer of this country. It ,
makes a great deal of difference to you ,
that Mr Taft the other day vetoed the
>u«I bill. It makes a difterm t to you!
m the cost of practicallv every tool that
you use anil it ought to be very signiti-
i ant to you that a Democratic House
of Representatives 1ms jus* passed the
steel tariff reduction bill over the Pit si- ^
dent's veio a thing, I am informed, is
unprecedented m the history of the i
country that a house should have passed
two tariff measures over the veto of the
President.
FARMERS ARK INTERESTED-
"Tariff measures are not measures for
the met chant merely and the manufac-
turer The farmer pays just as bifc a
proportion of the tariff duties as any-
body else. Indeed, sometimes when we
are challenged to say who the consume!
is. as* contrasted with the producer,
far as the tariff is concerned, I am
tempted to answer 'the farmer.' because
he does not produce any ot the tilings ,
that get any material benelit troin i>u*
tariff and he consumes all of the things
which are taxed under the tarlft s>s-
The Governor explained the benefits
that might accrue to the farmer H'0"1
the Panama Canal if the merchant ma-
rine were restored. He continued.
"You see," he remarked, "the men in
the House are not waiting until you f
National officers on their platform, i
ate going ahead with their dut.v new
because our platform ir- not molasses to
catch flies; it means business.
"if prosperity is not to be checked in
this country we must broaden our
ders and make conquests of the mai-
kets of the world. That is the reason
that America is so deeply interested m
the question of which I ha\
spoken, the merchant marine,
is also the reason why America is so
much interested in breaking down that
dam against which ail the tides ol out
prosperity have banked up, that great
dam that runs around all our coasts and
which we call the protective tariff.
would prefer to call It the
WIDOW OF PREACHER'S SON IN
NASHVILLE SHOT BY MRS.
I.KOLA JONES.
witness en route from hot
springs in custody may
know much.
FR\NK BROS \lI INS BEST"
Realize Early 1 oday on
These Unusual Clothing Offers
Just take your choice of any suit in
our store at the following prices:
NASHVILLE, Tenn , Aug
a stody did not operate to
• of Mrs. Leola Hooper
Jo
A day
seal the
es, who
• t Instantly killed
already
and that
I
ivilized country in the
world where the Government does not
see to It thai rates established by the
government enable men to ship their
goods, large and small, as they please
from one end of the continent to the
other. We have no parcels post because
—may I conjecture the reason—because
there are certain express companies which
... restrictive
tariff, i would prefer to caU it the tariff ;
that holds us back. I
"I should prefer to call it the tariff
that hems us in. the tariff that chokes ,
us. the tariff that smothers us, because I
the great unmatched energy of America j
is now waiting for a field greater than I
America itself in which to prove that .
Americans can take care of themselves.
PROTECTION IS DOOMED.
"There was a time not many years
ago when I would have uttered senti-
ments like thefe with a certain degree
of heat, because I would have known,
I would have felt, at any rate, that 1
was against an almost irresistible force.
Hut 1 don't feci the least heat now. We
have got them on the run now and toe
resistance Is very little. The friction is
going to come when they try to put
on brakes and try to stop. There is no
last night shot and ;
Mrs-. Alva Cave, widow of Sieve Cave, a
con ol the venerable and widely beloved
Kev. K. Lin Cave of Nashville, who is
the chaplain general of the United Con-
federate Veterans Mrs. Jones appeared
in the city court this afternoon, accom-
panied by her father and by her attorney
and formally waived examination and
was bound over to the criminal court on
a charge of murder. Justice Jake Levlne
was on the city court bench, acting tem-
porarily for Judge Killen. and would not
undertake the responsibility of fixing
bond, so Mrs. Jones .was sent to jail.
! iowever, It is expected that bond will
l)e fixed by tomorrow morning.
in court Mrs. Jones was collected. She
wore a white dress, the same she had on j
w hen apested last night while on her
waj to the police station to surrender.
Jealousy is generally accepted as the
cause of the tragedy.
Alls. Caves husband died about two
years ago and at the time of the shoot-
ing she and her children, a girl of 5 and
a bo) "r' 2» were making their homo w<th
her mother, Mrs. Sopniu Leinhos.
Mis. Cave was noted tor her beauty.
Other members of the family were in
the rear of the house when the tragedy
occurred, the little boy having climbed
doWn from his mother's lap just as
Mrs. Jones entered the gate.
Mrs. Jones heard at tl e police station
that her aim had been fatal. She raised
her head a nd asked
"Is ^he dead?"
When told that Mrs. Cave was dead,
a slight frown crossed her face. She
was perfectly cool as she answered ques-
tions.
At a late hour this morning Jones had
not been at the station house to see
his Wife.
NKW YORK, Aug. 15.—At the request
of District Attorney Whitman the gran a
jur\ today withheld the filing of Its
pending indictments against the murder-
ers of Horman Rosenthal »o as to hear
the testimony of Hani Scheppe, now or.
his way hero from Hot Spring?, Ark ,
in custody. While the county prosecutor
believes the evidence thus far submitted
to the jury is sufficient for Indictments. '
he advised the jury today it would be
bes. to heai the testimony of Bchepps j
to further strengthen the case.
I he District Attorney expects Schepps,
who is said to have been a passenge*"
in tie astassinatfem ear, will add inter-
esting details to the manner in which the
murder was plai ned, which will strength-
en tlie true bills contemplated against I
Gyp the Blood, Dago Frank Ciroficl,
" hitey Lewis and Lefty Louie, the al-
leged murder crew.
Mi. Whitman believes Hchepps will be
abL also to throw light upon the man-
ner in which the alleged murderers were
paid, thus corrouoratlng 'he testimony of
Jai k Rose and Hridgle W ebber that Lieu
tei ant Churles Becker, charged with in
stigating the murder, was responsible
for payment.
f-hepps is expected here Saturday anfl
will go before the grand jur.v Tuesday
material witness unless, in the
All $18.50 Suits
Now . . $12.34
All $20.00 Suits
Now . . $13.34
All $25.00 Suits
Now . . $16.67
All $30.00 Suits
Now . . $20.00
Manhattan Reductions Still
I' il Continue
$1.50 and $1.75 Man-
hattans now . $1.15
$2.00 Manhattans
now . . . $1.38
$2.50 and $3.00 Man-
hattans now . $1.88
$3.50 Manhattans
now . . . $2.45
as a
I,
Provident of Sunset-Central Lines I
Will Quit Railroading', He
Announces.
meant'.iic, he disappoints the expectations
01 the .Mate bv refusing to tell Ills story.
hv t '' jt was Intimated tonight
foj th' Dlstraet Attorney, that Scheppa
»-ou d be indicted on the charge of corn-
plle.ty in the murder.
News that the Wrund jury had failed to
, Its expected indictments to-
? v sav<1, i,s<' to reports that there had
neen a clash among the jurors growing
out of doubts expressed hv several thai
tho stories told by Rose, Webber and I
Valloii were to be credited
Impi tient over what he regards as the
peculiarly unprtcedent falltne of anv
city authority" to offer a reward for
the capture of Gyp the Blood and Lefty
Louie, who tomorrow will have been nr
hrge one month sir.ee Rosenthal was
slain. District Attorney Whitman declar-
ed tonight that he would offer next a
reward of $5,000 for the capture of the
two men dead or alive. Mr. Whitman
said he expected to obtain the $5,000 front
certain public subscriptions.
Straw Hat Clearance Sale
$3 Straws now $1.45 $ 5 Panamas $3.45
$5 Straws now $3.45 $10 Panamas $6.45
MAIN /YrankBros^ alamo
============= /9AM ANTONIO, TCX. " =======
PLAZA
PLAZA
Six
macummmhmmm
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
C«n quietly be overcome by
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegttaiJc
—act turdy and
gently on the
liver. Cure
Biliousness,
Hesd-
•che,
Dizzi*
neu, and Indigestion.
ITTLt
They do their duty.
Small Pill, Small Do#©, Small Price.
Genuine mutt bear bignature
mm
rmn
heat in the business now; there Is hope- j I -
l'ul confidence that the people of t he ! hi
Now, I move that the objections of all United State:- at last realize their oppor- | it Ks in Louisiana .and Texas, announ
private enterprises be overruled. 1 move tunlt>, know what It Is they want and
that we establish a parliamentary proced- i are ('ul ,u set it.
ure by which they will not even be con- 1 1 haV(' never known anything like the
sirlered, not in order that men who have j awakening that lia.s (K-curred in the I.nit-
made legitimate InvestineuiR of capital I States in recent years. It is just as
may not have their proper return for it, if WP 1,11,1 al1 beeu taking a long and
but in order that they may not look to I comfy, table sleep, with sometimes very
the Government for their proper return
for it. The trouble with the business of
the United t-*fytes under the tariff is that
men think they can not make money
without the assistance of the Government.
ial Telegram to Tho l'xpress.
Jl'STOX, Tex.. Aug. 15.—1Thorn well
, president of the Sunset-Central
mbracing all the llarriman hold*
..... ... Louisiana and Texas, announced
'ti.iluy thai September I he would resign
I.'niianently Horn railroad service.
Mr Fav only issued a brief statement
making the plain announcement, and
u;i\. as his r« anon that after thirty-five
.•ears of active, continual service he
let Is ne is < u tit led to a rest, lie diJ not
sd\ what his plans are or whore he ■will
make his home He was positive in his
statement, howevod, that he is retiring:
Ivimarirntly from railroad activities. He
discuss the matter of his suc-
And as long as you allow them to think
that, then every mother's son of us is tied
to the apron strings of the old grand-
mother sitting in the capitol at Wash-
ington.
"Hut I want at every turn of every ar-
gument that I make of this nature to say
that the legitimate business enterprises
of this country have absolutely nothing to
fear provided they will stand on their
own bottoms, but they have everything
to fear it all ihey have under them is the
prop of a tax which everybody is obliged
to pay in order that thej may be able to
conduct their business, and I believe that
that is the just principle of government
EDIJCATIONAL PROGRESS.
"There is another matter in which I am
deeply interested. There arc only three
lines devoted to it in the Democratic
platform, but there are no lines devoted
to it in the Republican platform, and
there are so many lines in the Bull Moose
platform that I haven't, found it yet. But
in the Democratic platform there are
three lines in w hich I he party declares
It to he its duty to devote such funds of
the National Government as it may con-
stitutionally devote to such purposes to
the promotion of industrial, agricultural
arid vocational education."
The Governor explained that the plat-
form in this connection meant a system
of university extension to the farmer,
making scientific knowledge available
to the tanner. He referred to a pending
bill to promote agricultural development
in that way.
I regard this campaign as 1 regarded
every campaign in which people have
taken part since the world began, as
simply a continued struggle to see to it
that the people were taken 'are of by
their own government. And my indict-
ment against the tariff is that it rep-
resents special partnerships and does
not represent the general interest.
"It is a long time since tariffs were
made by men who even supposed they
were seeking to serve the general In-
terests because tariffs are not made by
the general body of members of either
house of Congress. They have in the
past been made by very small groups
of individuals in certain committees of
those houses who even refused informa-
tion to their fellow members as to the
utile Hayiman holdings.
disturbing dreams, we would wake up
once in a while in a nightmare and say,
'Who is this sitting on my chest? And
then we would turn over and go to sleep ll0(
again, and at last, we waked up anu lltssor.
found there was somebody sitting on J though his plans were made in secret
our chests. And now we have come en- land his action came as a surprise, he lias
tlreiy to the consciousness of the new ; I ten contemplating the move, he said,
day. There is not going to be any more for some time. He has tendered his res-
nightmare It is going to be daytime all Ignation to the higher officials at New
the time and somebody is going to be Vork and It has been accepted.
on the lookout all the time to see that this The appointment of his successor will
thing does not happen again. A.id what he; made from the Xew York offices. It
we are trying for in this campaign is will be announced by Robert 8. Lovett,
mereb this; Who of you, how many of |a. former Houston man, who now heads
you, which of you, have enlisted for the
fight? I believe that it Is going to be
one of those general recruitments when
you don t need to have recruiting offi-
cers.
HJG CHANGE COMING.
"1 believe that there is going to be* a
great, handsome, peaceful, 'iopeful revo-
lution on the 5th day of November, J^i2,
and that after that revolution has b« « n
accomplished men will go about their
business saying, 'What was it that we
feared? We feared chains and we have
won liberty. We feared to touch any-
thing for fear we should mar it, and now
ever> thing wears the bright face of pros-
perity and we know that the right is also
| the profitable thing, and that nobody can
serve a nation without serving also him-
self.' "
nf.<;roes warned to leave
CONDITIONS BETTER IN TOLCCA
(ienoral Truiillo's Federals Have a
Quieting Effect.
IOIAiA, Mexico, Aug, 16.—Conditions
sorth of here appear unproved today, but
residents of the nearby villages continue
arriving in order to bp under flip immedi-
ate protection of General Truiillo's force
the krenter jwrt of which Is concen-
trated here. No encounters of conse-
quence occurred todav and reports to
General Trujlilo are that the villages of
Alta and Guerrero have been evacuated
b> the Zapatistas and art occupied hv
government troops.
Senate Military Affairs Committee Re-
ports on Army Promo-
tions.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 15.—The
Senate Military Affairs Committee today
voted to recommend Immediate confirma-
tion of (lie following military appoint-
ments, made some time ago by President
Taft:
Clarence R. Edwards, Chief of the Bu-
reau of Insular Affairs, to be Brigadier
General in the line of the army.
Col. Frank Mclntyre to be Chief of the
Bureau of Insular Affairs, with the rank
of Brigadier General during a term of
four years.
Col. Edgar 'A. gteever to be Brigadier
General,
As a result of opposition by Senator
Brlstow and others no action was taken
on the President's appointment of Brig.
Geo. W. W. Wltherspoon to succeed the
late Gen. Frederick I>. Grant, a Major
General.
The opposliton lo General Witherspoon
wfts based. It is understood, on tha
ground that he had not sufficient Una
duty to qualify him for the appointment.
WEAR AMERICAN GOODS
The "Made in Germany" Tags on
Clothing Are Not Seen Now.
We don't know how it affects you,
but it used to rile us all up to pick up
a pair of socks and read: "Made In Ger-
many.''
Pick up a comb, ditto!
Made in Germany, in Germany, In
Germany!
Where were our boasted protected in-
dustries? What were our people doing?
But It's all right now. David Stern,
an American business man, says so. Wa
are being avenged all right, all right.
How? List to the glorious taie:
We are outfitting every dude in Ger-
many!
No lie chatnier prancing Unter-den-
i'inden in Berlin is complete nowadays
unless lie wears a \ amity-cut suit—nuid»
in America, with a pair of club-footed
shoes with large bows--inudy in Amcri-
ca—and displays a pair of garish aniline-
dyed socks-made in America
Guess that will hold Dei Kaiser for a
while, eh?—Milwaukee Journal.
President of the International Typo-
graphical Union Still Wields Whip.
Nashville (rets Next Session.
j l.'LKVKLANl), Ohio, Aug. 3r».• rhara.*-
I teri/.ing the administration of President
j .lames M. Lynch as "autocratic." anti-
| administration delegates to the Jnterna-
! Uomtl T\ [Higr"aphical 1'nion Convention
at the Gray's Armory this afternoon bat-
— iled against overwhelming odds in an of-
Louisianans Shoot l'p Lumber Camp' f"!'.t |,iHS '''Relation that would cur-
4 "I fill llo> I.,.11... rtt tl,A Avn..<l»ll \a dl-
After Posting Notices.
CAMPTI, La., Aug. 15.—"Nigger, read
ant' run. and if you can't read, run any-
Wi. y!"
Thus reads the note of warning that
negroes in the logging camp at Creston,
six miles from here, found the other
morning posted on the doors of their
tabins and in conspicuous places in the
voods. A night or two later, the negroes,
nor having vacated, a party of men rode
into the camp and fired into the cabins.
No one was hurt, hut the black men
were thoroughly demoralized.
The negroes are now being quartered
here at night with the hope of prevent-
ing further trouble.
vei of the executives,
was selected for the eonven-
Electric-lighted Sleeper Daily
TO
International &
Great Northern
Railway Co.
ST. LOUIS
all the
! ville, Tenn
tion in J;ti;{
flushed with t lie success of their tight
Wednesday on the proposed l'our-year
icrm of office, the antladininlstration
for. es concentrated this afternoon on the
appointment oi a board of directors, com-
posed of eighteen members, which would
be given much of the power now held by
the president nd the executive council
of three.
For the first time since the antis opened
*heli attack Monday President Lynch
turond over the convention reins to Vice
President George A. Tracy and took the
floor to answer the attacks upon his ad-
inlnistration. For fifteen minutes after ;
Lynch stepped speaking the hall re- '
sounded with cheers and applause. At-
tempts on the part of aiitiadininistration
delegates lo reply were met with hoots,
boos and catcalls.
I ht \(t'- that followed the restoring of
order d it. i the proposal amendment
to ti e constitution and efforts to bring a
roll all tail, ,|.
The pi opest ti amendment was offered
by I 'elegHte .innies W. Mullen of San
Francisf'i. 11 provided for sweeping
changes i i official procedure ami offi-
cers duties, out the fight-starting para- ! 11''"J"*0'1-, 4V',"1, '
1 >I'mph was one which created a board of ! ^I,M£ !l :;;r, !'" NVl1'1 r "V'
I direct.ms. uripo^d of eighteen members. 1 lhe Count|y C1»b mainUini cne tho
I win'.-e diiie would divide responsibility
and vastly Increase expenses.
WHERE SHALL I SPEND MY S(j|«E.t Ol'TlKC!
A Few Suggestions Met the Fans Spots lor to Summer Oiling
llie following announcements of California's Hotels, Sanitariums, Health and Summer Re-
sorts will solve the vacation question. Literature and valuable information will be
furnished promptly at our FREE Information Bureau or by writing direct.
Thf. ENCHANTING /5Lt
OF THE PACIFIC—
&ANVA.
JNA
In the Heart of Los Angeles N
HOTEL LANKERSniM
Broadway at Sevenrh—in the shopping and thea-
ter district. European plan. Rates: Rooms with-
out bath, one occupant, $1.50 and upward per day.
Rooms with private hath, one occupant, $2.00 and
upward per day. Restaurant a la carte and table
d'hote at popular prices.
Automobile Bus Service From All Trains.
COOPER & DAVIS, Lessees
E»cape the heat, of
August arid S&p-
temb&r. Leave now for Hi''
Counties! Wonders" mid 'i
equulde, cool, dry hUHUUcl
the c"imtler»fc otUttnor KptH'ts und many
dlvr,slon«. Tnke » swiiu In tin gdm
crystal waters «f Avsioo Buy. where
yiielillug. motor boat lug alid many otliei
THE "K-T" IRRIGATION SYSTEM
modern plant, »nd see miniature J
Whon in I.03 An<
tr^l'a this ram>
, . x . , , mer InsDeot ou«
Irrigation system In actual operation. Visitors we!>
come at all time«. Write (or our Brown Book—Free. TH2 KELLAR-THOHAKOW
VtFG. CO. 1228 East 28th St.. Los Angoleo Central or Hooper Ave Cars.
THE CENTER OF AIX SUMMER ATTRAC- *
TIONS AND (SOCIAL ACTIVITIES."
(Absolutely Fireproof.)
1 Ten 1 lavs'
1 iitornattoiiaI
Great Northern
Hull WAV Co.
i sportiosl nine hole golf links in the West.
, Tennis, mountain coachirg and clinibi y
j Hemic trails for linrm'hack riding: hmul
| concert & every cN'nlng by Halltn I'alnliiia
Island Marine Hand. Plenty "f r»«>111 in
the canvHn <•!ty; inotlerHtc rates; I
Encampment in Louisiana j""""" n'r"" Ba:irir's: F,c'rlc lIec'
(loses.
TEX \S (a'AKI)S Q'.'IT CAMP
Connecting En Route With Through Sleepers lor Mempliis arid Chicag.)
Reduced Rates to Northern and Eastern
Cities and Lesorts
Detailed Information Gladly Furnished on Application
City Office 4'Jl East Houston Street. Phones 425
W. E, Fitch, Dist. Fass. Agt. G. M. Bynum, Pass, and Hit. Agt.
(.'AMP ST A! fORD, near Alexandria, j
^'£l • •^llK i The Texas National Guard I
ivnnp .-teii its ten days' encampment at i
Cninp Staffoctl, receiving Instructions uri- ,
dor the regular army men at the camp.
Tl-e Texas iroojis h'-;;;tn leaving' the camp
<>n trains at j.■ ..'clock p. ni. and every
comi iw en 1 oute hoiue\vard. 'I ue
i e;{u!aih, und- ;• c0l. Millard Waltz, will
remain in « >.nip ;i few days longer until
they i<i;ei\t the!,* annual Inspection 1»\
General Potty of the central division of i
the regular arri y, who is expected to ar-
rive tomorrow or next day.
('apt. Kenneth W. Walker of the regu-
lars will leave tonight for Fort D A. j
Russell, Wyo ; Captain Justice and Cap- i
tan Rerr.v will leave tonight for Fort
Ssam Houston, Tex.; Lieutenant Wilson
will leave tonight for New Orleans on a
vacation.
A telegram fi nu t nited States Senator
1'hornton, at \\ * hipgton, was received
i 1!s eveniii>; li ihe president of the Pro-
gre?five l nion. stating that, the maneu-
vers would not only he continued here,
but that the Government contemplated
j tsxluj-1.!mi-rovemen»« at th® camp
trie Building, Los *\ngeles, Cal.
r-. AfNrsiING C
I'licitie \: 11
HOTEL VlKblNIA
LOMS BEACH CAL.
WAS VANDERBII.T's CHAUFFEUR
Boston Vagrant First lo Drive Motor
Car in New Vork.
Once proud chauffeur for Cornelius
Y'anderb.lt, now a tramp, Charles H.
Naderse, uJ years old, no home, after
$ pi'lid August and September ut ttiy S«»utli i
laail'K inoni luugnlflecctly hltuuted report, but
a Rtone's tjirow from breakers. Noted fbe world |
over for it* exeelh jue lu cult*!iit> »ud wrvlee. ,
Tennis courts on grounds; beautiful roads for i
inoloring; surf batblwg. and every ouhejor dl- '
vernon. WHlTi; OH U' IKU for iPservHtlons to I
CARL STANLEY. Mpr.
walking here from Butte, Mont., ap-
peared in the municipal court on a
charge of being a vagrant. He was sen-
tenced to the State farm by Judge
Went worth.
He was arrested by Special Officer
Patrick Grant of Station 5. The man
had almost no skin on hie feet from
walking with worn-out shoes, and wore
a celluloid collar which he picked out of
■in ash barrel two years ago.
He sought arrest himself, stepping to
Officer Urunt and telling him he needed
medical assistance, and showing several
large blister* on his feet.
Naderse has the distinction of being,
it Is said, the first man to drive a mo-
tor car through the streets of New York
City.—Boston Herald.
$60.00
California an d Ba ck
Vh
Diverse Rou;es Stopovers
Graiid Canyon Kouie
Harvey Meals
Oil-burning Locomoiiies
E. H. DALLAS, 1). |». A.,
101 West Commerce Street.
Phones: Old, 144; new, 105.
|
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9jn
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
San Antonio Express. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 229, Ed. 1 Friday, August 16, 1912, newspaper, August 16, 1912; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth432027/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.