The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 182, Ed. 1 Monday, September 1, 1919 Page: 1 of 4
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VOL. XX.
WEATHERFORD. TEXAU, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1919.
kmm '
mm
s? ■■ ■- ■A
far m ■
Bi
ICIATCD PRIM
>w Autumn Suits
for Little Boys—
V .r-fl..! .M —.— ■■■■. —.I ■•■" ............... ■ ■ ■ ■■ -
Sizes from 3 to 8, in models Just like his “big
brother’s”—fancy slash pockets, belts, etc.
Materials are as varied as one could desire and
the prices’are very moderate—
$5.00, $6.95, $9.95
and $12.50
Autumn Hats, in very becoming shapes
that makes any boy look his best, in the velvet
ahd fancy mixed patterns, at—
75c, $1.00, $1.25
WM. BAAS
ifPi's?
MARSHAL FOCH MAKES FEELlM&i i
Sa 1 SPEECH ON DEPARTURE OF.,
fiH 10 HI
vii
U. 8. COMMANDER.
John
dAT on
; Pi
afternoon.']
aboard
i fetling address to
Wlcaiy commander.
By Associated PnM*.
Brest, France, Sept. 1.—General
dm J. Pershing sailed from here to-
tranfeport Leviathan for
States at 3 o'clock this
Marshal Foch came
.. art shortly before it
saUAd arid nikde
the departing A
in-chief. <- ' Mjf •
Marshal Foch sadi: ‘‘In leaving
France you leave your dend. In our
hands; on our soil we will care for
them religiously and zealously as bear-
W. wtnaBB of the powerful aid you
tS|)yght to us. These dead will bring
from America many thoughts of re-
membrance and pious visits and will
----L. I II I"
bind still more'strongly our close un-
ion. If the clouds of war gather
again in the future would not these
dead rise from their tombs and make
their voices heard once more by the
world, which already knows that the
same cause of liberty has united us
Washington and
General Pershing replied, bidding
farewell to France, “to her gallant
poilus, her patriotic men and her
n.oble women.” Then General Pershing
ahd Foch walked arm in arm to the
gang plank, exchanging final salutes
as the marshal stepped ashore.
MAKES APPEAL FOR AID IN PRE-
VENTING INCREASE IN
STRIFE.
%1
.ook! Look!
• .W y ' • •
—Freeh and cored MEATS
of all kinds. ; ^
—that good, boneless Bar-
becue every day.
• >
—Guarantee satisfaction.
A
Central Market
8. W. 118- —Home 819
204H. Main Street -
QUIET PREVAILS IN KNOX.
VILLE; NEGROES LEAVE CITY
By Associated Press,
noxville, Tenn., Sept. 1.—Quiet pre-
vailed throughout the city suburbs
this morning after the race rioting of
Saturday night and Sunday; The city
tentatively was under martial law
last night, with military patrols in
all the business section and in the
negro quarters. Groups were not per-
mitted to gather today. The known
dead as a result of the disorders tot-
als two. Hundreds. of negroes are
leaving the city.
WIL80N WILL NOT GiylE
DRAFTS AUSTRIAN TREATY
By Associated Press.
Washington, Sept. I.—President
Wilson has declined to give the sen-
ate foreign relations committee the
tentative drafts of the treaties with
Austria, Hungary, Turkey and Bulga-
ria, as the committee requested, be-
cause “it would tend to take the func-
tion of negotiation of treaties out of
the hands of the executive.”
Get your ICE at Frank Browder’s
PKWtH—y. *<•»,
aiWiliil'.iii'.iur.r.v.'.i'.ii
, •* .' .:
'v’
»UUm
8t
v Where Two Heads
iWeHetter Than None
-r-in our
^fUto mec
repair shop, for instance. Two skilled
______cbttnics 'consulting oyer a repair job can
certainly do a better job than yourself, unskilled,
^iraoine novice wlfco has not mastered the intricate
of auto mechanisms. We know,
auto troubles consult us.
■age
'Prop*.
W By Associated fmi.
^ Washington, Sejt. 1 — President
Wilson in a Labor day message to
American workers announced that he
would call in the near future a con-
ference of labor and industry “to dis-
cuss fundamental means of bettering
the whole relationship of capital and
labor and putting the whole question
of wages upon another footing.”
The Labor day message as made
public at the White House follows:
“I am encouraged and gratified by
tbe progress which is being made in
the controlling the cost of living. The
support of the movement is wide-
spread and I confidently look for sub-
stantial results, although I must con-
trol patience as well as vigilance be-
cause such results will not come in-
stantly or without team work.
Let mo again emphasize my appeal
to every citizen of the country to con-
tinue to give his personal support in
this matter and to make it as active
as possible. Let him not only refrain
from doing anything which at the
moment will tend to increase the cost
of living but let him do all in his
power to increase the production and
further than that let him at the same
time himself carefully economize in
the latter consumption.
"By united action in this direction
we .shall overcome a danger greater
than the danger of war. We will hold
steady a situation which is fraught
with possibilities of hardship and suf-
fering to a large part of our popula-
tion; we will enable the processes of
production to overtake the processes
of consumption and we will speed
the restoration of an adequate pur-
chasing power of wages.
“I am particularly gratified at the
support the government policy has
received from the representatives of
organized labor and I earnestly hope
that the workers generally will em-
phatically indorse the position of
their leaders and thereby, move with
the government instead of against it
in the solution of this greatest domes-
tic problem.”
*r*\.
£i
r"
lT I
L ■
*»&
s
Authentic Presentation of lit
■ New Pall Fashions *
* „ ' ’
^jDistinctlively original inodes, new lines, glowing Autumnal colorings, eboseeslt "i
fabrics and the best workmanship, characterize these smartest Fall wearables
’
HHere are modes as full of charm as the season by which they are inspired—torn?
in daily increasing quantities is the cream of Autumnjs fashion offerings. * .
51 Today we rececived large shipments of Fall coat suits, dresses, fine blouses,
arate skirts, ladies’ and misses’ coats, and a wonderful lot o: newest Fall millinery. '
CGme see the New Apparel.
CHARGES FRELINGHAUSEN AND
CALDERrAIDED GERMAN
PROPERTY OWNERS. ,
Washington, Sept. 1.—A. Mitchell
Palmer, whose nomination as Attor-
ney General was confirmed Friday by
tbe Senate, came back vigorously at
Senator Frelingbuysen (Rep:) of New
Jersey, leader of the fortes in the
Senate which bad for a number of
Weeks held up confirmation of the
nomination. . M
Charging that Mr. Frelingbuysen
Was constantly acting on behalf of
German property* owners in the Unit-
ed StateB during the war and attempt-
ed to influence legislation which
would affect adversely companies in
which he personally was interested
financially, the Attorney General gave
a detailed account of alleged activities
of the New Jersey Senator while this
country was at war with Germany.
Senator Calder (Rep.) of New York
also was referred to fli Mr. Palmer's
statement.
"Senators FVeliUghuysen and Cal-
der are pleasfihg Germany in this bus-
iness," MC. Palmer said. "They have
received special mention by the Ger-
man Foreign Office for their activi-
ties, which Germany hopes may re-
sult in the Germans getting all their
property back."
Mr. Palmer quoted from a copy of
the alien property report printed in
Berlin as follows: “That the adminis-
tration of alien property is consider-
ed not without suspicion in the Unit-
ed States herself it evident in the ac-
tion taken by the Senate because of
tbe resolution presented last Febru-
ary by Senators Frelingbuysen and
Calder, demanding an investigation
of the alien property custodian be-
' favor-
cause of
here
itina.
THE STORE WITH TUT GOODS
agement of the alien property and to
a ffffpsr judgment of German meas-
ures."
Mr. Palmer said the Senator pro-
tested to him against interferences of
the sale of the big German-owned
woolen mills in Passaic, N. J.
In liquidating the business of Ger-
man-owned insurance companies Mr.
Palmer said he received patriotic co-
operation from all except one Amer-
ican company which had reinsurance
contracts with the enemy corpora-
tions. Mr. Palmer said this company
was the Stuyvesant Insurance com-
pany, of which the preseident is Sen-
ator Joseph S. Frelinghuysen of New
Jersey."
Mr. Palmer quoted the congression-
al record to show that Senator Fre-
linghuysen was the only one of the
526 members of tbe Congress who vot-
ed against tb<# passage of tbe amend-
ment to the trading with the enemy
act, which gave the allet property
custodian power "to sell German-
owned properties which bad been spy
centers and nests of sedition, and
to permit these! great properties to be
put in American bands."
NEGRO PAYS PENALTY FOR.
ATTACK ON WHITE WOMAN.
AMERICAN CITIZEN KILLED
BY MEXICANS AUGUST 2•
By Associated
Ei Paso, Testa*, Sept. 1 —Adam
Schaeffer, an American citizen was
killed by Mexican bandits at his mine
in the state of Zacatecas, August Si,
according to a telegram received by
the American Smelting ft Refining
Company here today. Schaeffer was
an independent mining operator, 55
years old.
Schaeffer
By Associated Pi-m*.
Bogalusa, La., 8ept. 1.—After Lu-
ciottB McCarty, discharged negro sol*
dier, had been trailed by bloodhounds,
caught and Identified by a white wo-
man as the man who attacked her
Saturday night, a mob of more than
1,000 men lynched the negro in day-
light, tied him to his automobile,
dragged him through the principal
streets and burned him in front of
the woman here Sunday.
The married woman beat her as-
sailant off at home, seized a gun and
fired several shots as he fled. His
shoes, which were left at the bbuse,
wete used to give the bloodhounds
the trail. He and six other negro men
were taken in custody in the negro
quarters after the dogs led the auth-
rities to the house. McCarty was later
identified by the woman as her as-
sailant. Before the officers could get
the negro to Jail a mob overpowered
them and shot the prisoner to death.
The body waa then tied behind the
automobile and the procession began
with the dead ‘inan dragging behind
in the dirt. No arrests in connection
with the lynching have been made.
is said to be either an
American or British citizen; The news
Of his killing was received from the
smelting company's official in Aguaa
Calientes, Mexico. The American
consul is seeking to ascertain the
facts. * -
FRENCH CONTROL 8ITUA-
TION AT LUDWIGSHAFEN
By Associated Preas.
Coblenz, 8ept. 1.—French troops
are in complete control of the situa-
tion at Ludwlgshafen, where an at-
tempt waft made to establish an inde-
pendent republic in Palatinate, ap-
pears to have come to a head Friday.
According to German newspapers, a
number of adherents of Dr. Haas of
Landau attacked the postolflce at
Ludwlgshafen and after a four hours
fight succeeded in overpowering the
resistance of the postoffice officials.
The followers of Dr. Haas are seeking
to make Palatinate independent from
Prussia. '. -4-i-
re
=
MEXICAN SECRETARY
CRITICI8E8 NEWSPAPERS
By associated Press.
Mexico City; Sept. 1— In announc-
ing that President Carranza’s address
to congress tonight would be excep-
tionally interesting, and intimating
that it would outline the international
\ policy, Secretary of the Interior Ber-
langa severely criticised the news-
papers for demanding dally official
statements from the government on
"matters it sometimes takes weeks
to arrange," and asserted that they*
"aided Interventionists by publishing
news stories containing errors in facts
and editorials based on erroneous
premises.”
/
Get Your
-- •—.............
—Schlitz •
■HEievo '
*—Reifs Special
—Grain**
—Tanfio
—Minnehaha Ala
—Ginger Ale
At Pearson &
Winsett’s
\
Complete line of Cigar*.
Watch our windows Sum-
day, Monday and Tueadsy*
IP
t'M
■...... ■
BOLSHEVIKS LOBE LARGE '
NUMBER OF PRISONERS*
M
«i
Copenhagen, Sept. L—LettlUfc writ
Lithuanian troops have
Bolsheviki from Novo AJ _ _ _
fourteen miles southwest Of Ovf—M,,
capturing a large number of pUfW
era and guns, aad axe «o*tinuiBr
advance, the Lettish
pouncs.
Nice
price.
fresh table grapes,
CITY PRODUCE CO.
special
KOLCHAK TRANSFERS HEAD.
QUARTERS TO NIKOLAYEVBlC
j irate* ***"
By A—ortatea Ptcm.
London,' Sept,
evacuated and Admiral
headquarters are being transferred t® •
Nikolayevsk, according t». a: IToiehevfk
wireless message, tt ib, state* 1
in the direction of Tiaritazr the kw
shevik forces are advancing
Volga and Ilavia ’rivers.
Eat a slice of celd melon mrHMk
Browder’s.
ANNOUNCEMENT
IflWi
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The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 182, Ed. 1 Monday, September 1, 1919, newspaper, September 1, 1919; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth644951/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .