The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 27, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 3, 1918 Page: 3 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Austin American-Statesman Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE TERE
THE STATESMAN
, SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 1918.
PLANS DRAWN
TO REHABILITATE
.J
DISABLED MEN
i
A,
America.
}
Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes for Spring
d 5
r.
13
•G
r
1
f
CMITH 8 WILCOX
O 616 CONGRESS AVENUE
bladder bothers
YANK AT HOME
IN GAS MASK
t
IT
=se
m-
FARMER BEATEN
3
ver
BY OWLS, 29-21
- -1-
)
bad
pin
T
ML48238
| ATTENTION j|
ee-
I
2.
-
■
GOLD IN
1
SCHUPP JOINS GIANTS.
A HURRY
4
. I,
troin
Real Clothes Are Tailor Made Clothes
r.
-
I
M
a field large enough here in France for all.
* Again,
/
1
EYES
7
9
GENERAL COMMITTEE
1
EXAMINED
GLASSES
Judge Wm. Blakeslee Q. F. Zimmerman
I
Stelfox Co.
!
40 )
Now Who Says Newlyweds
Will Have To Go To War?
Stebbins & James
The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes.
We respectfully ask the citizens of Austin to contribute to
this worthy and necessary war work.
Stream of Injured Will
Soon Be Returning to
eorrnwer •*
eav.omcsaco
sion-
. and
thout
PITCHER KIESERLINQ
DIES AT MEMPHIS.
By Associted Press.
STEUBENVILLE. Ohio, Narch 2
HARRY LAJOIE GOES
TO INDIANAPOLIS
get
rets
Cet
on’t
this
all
ron
phase accept my sincere thanks and appreciation for the kind
ofter of the supremo board of the Knignts of Columbus."
-
i
STBTSON
. HATS
and sell all kinds of books.
H. P. N. GAMMEL
no gae in this particular section, but
he did not know it-
i
W. T. Magne
J. R. Reed
K. L. Steck
1
,<2
ra
8. K. Rosengren
A. J. Fliers
Tom I*. Smith
Walter Bremond
('. J. Schneider
Walter Graham
Jud James
Robt. Mueller .
C. B. Anderson
Rev. P. J. O’Reilly
Joe Koen
Sebe F. Byrne
A. W. Griffith
John H. Tobin
W. J. McNamara
re of
n; it
of A
areat,
Dla-
centa
it's
urtng
/ and
hing.
neala
Fred Rightor
K. J. Druebert
Geo. W. Walling
J. W. Radio
M. F. Burkhalter
Henry N. Michelson
T. J. Butler
T. H. wuitams
Simon GUUa
John Byrne
Rev. K. J. Mitch
W. If. FOL/Ts, Treasurer.
Bev. J. K. Roas ’
Judge It. B. Tarlton .
H. J. Baner 1
OUR MILITARY UNIFORMS ARE MADE TO FIT—THE OFFICER DESIRING THE BEST
IN MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP SHOULD
Come Here for His Outfit
Bargain Hunters
Smash Sidewalk
Depend on the label; it means the fabrics are all-wool; the style is the best, the tailoring
is for service. The label is a small thing to look for, a big thing to find.
Secretary Houston
Will Visit Texas
}
7
2
10-MILE ZONE BILL
PASSED 10 THIRD
READING IN HOUSE
- ■ i
any
ver-
and
son
will
our
rork
reg-
our,
take
rry
and
Would Allow Poles
to Become Citizens
Meat Cause o
STUIN-BLOCH
CLOTHUS
Mr. Aviator and
legislator
You are invited to call at
President Indorses
8-Hour Day
Kidney
8134
EAadee
rouble
date
rans
sum -
man
om -
had
inIto
time
posi -
n to
ac-
STACY-ADAMS
SHOUS
J. THOMAE WARD
Optowetrist
General Pershing Says:
"I am pleased to receive your letter conveying the interest
of the Knights of Columbus in the soldlers of this command
and note the very generous aid proposed by the supreme board
♦ ♦ • We are all Interested in your endeavor and there is
Walter Staehely
Francis Fincher
D. F. Kelleher
K. A. Reno
Arthur I. Skelley
T. H. Davis
Fred Fisher
T. R. McKeever
James Helger Hr.
James Belger Jr.
Jos. A. O'Reilly
Negro Officer Refuses
To Ride in “Jim Crowf>
The Knights of Columbus
Are now operating and have under construc-
tion in the UNITED STATES and FRANCE
for use and benefit of ALL soldiers and sailors—
FITTED
To Relieve Eye
■train
•'When a mon bath taken a new wife
he shall not go out to war, neither
shall he be charged w ith any business;
Wash That
Itch Away
We know of no sutferer from Eczema
who ever used the simple wash D. D. D.
and did not feel immediately that won-
derfully calm, cool censation that comee
when the Itch ii taken away. Thle tooth*
inf wash penetrates the pores, fleet in-
stant relief from the most dietreceina
srin dineases. eSc,cocand$1.00.
D. D. D.
UA SHION-PARK
CLOTHUS
"Pape’s Cold Compound”
is pleasant and affords
Instant Relief.
108 Recreation Buildings
In France training camps are smaller but more numerous than
in this country. There is great need for more recreation build-
ings and huts, and to meet the demand THE KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS have issued a call for funds by popular subscrip-
tion. These buildings are for use of all soldiers and sailors,
regardless of creed or nationality, the motto of all Knights of
Columbus Buildings being
Everybody Welcome
•.mMA MSB .
adeenk.
I
rally
r-
the
ourt
lb»
ind -
e of
Take Salts to flush Kidneys if Back hurts or
4 Union Woolen Mills
pulled it off and yelled
it hppened there was
f •
New York to Fort SIH and had board-
ed the train at Oklahoma City*
Efforts of the Pulman conductor to
have the negro leave the car were fu-
tile, the soldier contending he hal a
right to ride in the car. When arraigned
in police ourt Tribbett entered n plea
of guilty, was fined $5 and coats and
promised to ride in the Jim Crow car
the remainder of the journey.
Help win—save in clothes
Buy them right and you 7/ buy less
%
• t 3
Ee-==Kd."
March winds and breezes are just
about as raw as winter's.
The lightweight overcoat is a
real necessity, not a luxury, and
it’s the best antedote for the doc-
tor’s bills.
We offer our entire line of over-
coats at
25 FER CENT OFF
Get yours now.
Our reduction on all winter suits
will remain on for a few days
longer.
OU get it everywhere—“save to win;” it’s the right idea. In clothes the
best way to save money and material is to buy for quality. Such clothes
cost less because of the more they give—in wear and looks.
We are showing this season an excellent line of new Spring
fabrics that will meet the wishes and tastes of the man who is par.
ticular about his dress. Come in and look them over.
chance when the German Infantry at-
tacked, pulling off their maske for
Southern and International Leagues
ing of .700; the Longhorns have -667,
and the Farmers have .500.
The winning of Saturday night's
game made the championship of the
Southwest Conference doubly sine for
the Rice boys.
A ome taken every two hours until
three ones are taken will end gripDe
misery and break up a cold
it promptly opens dogged-up noetrlls
and air passages in the head, stops
nasty discharge or nose running, re*
Hevea sick headache, dullnens, feverinh-
nena, sore throat, aheezing, Borenewa and
stiffnese.
life to give commands to his nun
during the roar of explosions- He was
unable. through his mask, to make his
his orders. As
$100 Reward, $100
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that sicence has
j been able to cure in all its stages and
I that is catarrh, Catarrh being greatly
influenced by constitutional conditions
1 reqyires constitutional treatment. Hall's
Caarrh Medicine :s taken internally
and nets thru the Blood on the Mu-
cous Surfaces of the System thereby
destroying the foundation of the d‘s-
case, giving the patient strength by
building up the constitution and as-
sisting nature in doing its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in the
curative powers of Hall’s Catarrh Med.
ic!ne that they offer One Hundred Dol-
lars for any case that it falls to cure,
fiend for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY A CO., To-
ledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 7Bc,
basketball season closed here Satur-‘ George Kieserling. age 29. pitcher of
. . . . .. r ..nc1 +L, the Memphis (Tenn.) Southern league
das.nishtwhen.theoyis,drubhed Bv baseball club, did at his home here
Harmers ! a / 29.1 .211 1 today following an extended illness.
this victor) thci finish «i.h a stajid- ; KtpHernng pillSed proresslonat base-
ball for nine years, during which time;............--9
' i i i imu i । i i i i i ini t ii • suunughe held berths in the Three-I, Central, men hear, so no
By Associated Frees.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March
nirii nt i ruri ii » uno-r im ?i ini imii ii.
If you must have your meat every
day, eat it, but flush your kidneys
with salts occasionally, says a noted
authority who tells us that meat forms
uric acid which almost paralyzes the
kidneys in their - efforts to expel it
from the blood. They become slug-
gish and weaken, then you suffer with
a dull misery in the kidney regon.
sharp pains in the back or sick head-
ache, dizziness, your stomach sours,
tongue is coated and when the weather
is bad you have rheumatic twinges.
The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment,
the channels often get sore and irri-
tated, obliging you to seek relief two or
three times during the night.
By Associated Press.
ST. LOUIS, Mo. March 2—A quota-
tion from the Bible— Deuteronomy,
: Gammel’s Book Store :
Z 911 Congress Ave. Free read- “
- ing of any book—100,000 vol- Z
Z times to select from—-a place -
- to get information. Tell your |
= friends to meet you at Gam- f
- mel’s Book Store. We furnish “
T you a place to sit down and -
Z read, write or talk. Open every 2
- night till 10 o’clock. We buy -
A dandy radio wrist watch, 112- O.
I. Koock, jeweler.
Secretary of War Baker
says.
"• • • While this so-
ciety is a fraternal organi-
zation It will sustain ex-
actly the same relation to
the camps as is sustained
by the Young Men's Chris-
tian Association and will
hold no meetings to which
ALL the troops In the camp
are not invited, regardless
of religious or other pref-
erence.”
President Wilson says:
“It only remains for me
to speak of the sincere
gratification with which I
have learned of the co-op-
eration of the Young Men's
Christian Association and
the Knights of Columbus
and their harmonious and
successful work In the
training camps.”
tematically information about the war,
especially to the fanner and laborer.
“Members of councils of defense In
Texas, women's clubs, four-minute
men, war savings societies and all kin-
tired organizations are expected to at-
tend either the Dallas or Houston
meeting.
Don’t stay stuffed up! Quit blowing
and snuffling- Fase your throbbing
head' Nothing else in the world gives
such prompt relief as "F’ape’s Cold
Compound.’* which costs only a few
cents at any drug store it acts with-
tastes nice, causes no
inconvenience Be sure you get the
genuine Don't accept something else
T T NTIL you get the habit of having your suit tailor-made, you 'll
• never know the value of clothes service. It is folly to buy
cheap clothes these days, when wool is at its highest price;
it is impossible to get a good suit cheap. When you buy a suit
cheap you are sure to get a cheap suit—CHEAP in QUALITY and
CHEAP in CONSTRUCTION. Our prices may be a trifle more than
some other places ask you, but when you let us take your measure
you are certain of getting a first-class suit in every respect. We
represent the country’s best tailors and every garment goes out
backed by an ironclad guarantee for durability, fit and style. If
any suit made by any of our tailors fails to "stand up” you get
your money back.
Secret a <v Houston and party are
coming under the auspices of the
Council of National Defense for the । out asnistanc
! purpose of impressing the need of a
statewide campaign to spread sys-
freer action- One officer risked his
By Associted Press. *1
HOUSTON, Texas, Mavch 2.~As far
as the big teams are concerned (ho
BREAKS A
e
Harry Iajoie, manager of the Toronto
International League Club, will play
first base ami m inage the Indianapo-
lis American Association team the
coming- season, provided he van ob-
tain his release from Toronto, it was
announced here today.
By Associted Pressa
PORTLAND, ore, March 2-—A tele-
gram from President Wilson indorsing
the action of the lumbermen of the
Northwest in voluntarily granting a
basic eight-hour day in the umber in-
dustry was received today by (ol-
Bryce C Disque. head of the airplane
spruce production campaign.
By Associated Prees,
WASHINGTON, March 2.- Before
the end of the coming summer the
tide of wounded fighting men, many
of whom will require special voca-
tional re-education before returning to
industrial life, will be returning from
Europe
in making this prediction tonight
the Federal board for vocational edu-
cation emphasized the need of con-
gressional leg.elation authorising es-
tablishment of an adequate system for
rehabilitation of disabled men.
In estimates already submitted to
Congress the board pointed out that
100,000 out of every million soldiers
sent to France will be returned dur-
in- the first year of fighting and that
instruction in new lines of Industry
will be needed for 20,000 annually who
will be physically unable to return to
their pre-war occupations
The disabled are divided by the
board into (or claeses:
Those permanently invalided; those
able to work but who can not engage
in competitive occupations; those who
must learn new occupations because
of their physical handicaps, and those
able to return to their pre-war tusks
About 80 per cent are expected to fall
into the fourth vroup and the remain-
der with few exceptions into the third
group.
( Continued from Page One)
He congratulated the membership The
statutory prohibition bill in the House
is made a special • orer fur ‘ next
Wednesday.
In th© Senate a brief session was
held, during which the State deposi-
tory bill by Senator Hopkins was
passed finally, after being amended
so as to permit banks to give surety
bonds as security for the safekeeping
of SUU© funds. There was also elim-
inated from the measure the require-
ment that vendore’ lien notes offered
as security shall bear 6 per cent in-
trest.
The resolujlon by Senator Bee pro-
hiding for the appointment of a com-
mittee of five Senators to make an
in vestigation_into charges that have
been made’ against Senator W. S
Woodward of Erath County in con
nection with the taking of the moving
pictures of the Ferguson impeachment
(rial came up, but was postponed un-
til next week because of the absence
of Senator Woodward. Senator Dean's
anti-vice bill, anti-bootlegging bills
and the loyalt • bill and other meas-
ures came up for cousideration, but
action was deferred. as the plan is
to substitute next week the House bills
on these subjects, As that will expe-
dite the legislation The Senate zone
bill and statutory hill also are to be
considered early next week.
By Assoc’ated Press.
WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN
FRANCE. March 2 -Three recent
raids, one in the Toul sector and two
along the Chemin des Dames, have
demonstrated that the American sol-
dier, notwithstanding his previous ex-
perience, now is perfectly at home in
a gas mask and able to fight just as
well with as without it. In so quickly
reaching this stage the Americans
have shown their usual adaptability
Gao was used in all three attacks in
just sufficient quantities to ake
masks necessary, as the Germans in
their later attacks did not desire to en-
counter quantities-of their own gas.
When the engagement at Tout be-
gan virtually all the Americans were
masked. Some few of the men, how-
ever, are reported to have taken a
To neutralize these irritating acids,
to cleanse the kidneys and flush off
the body's urinous waste get four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar-
macy here; take a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for a
few days and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acid of grapes and lemon
juice, combined with lithia, and has
been used for generations to flush and
stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neu-
tralize the acids in urine, so it no long-
er irritates, thus ending bladder ehk-
ness-
Jad Salts is inexpensive; can not
injure, and makes , a delightful effer-
vescent lithia-water drink.
By Associated Press.
CHICKASHA, Okla., Mareh ’ 2.—
Charles Tribbet, n negro first lieuten-
ant, 367th Infantry, National army, was
taken from a Frisco train here today on
a charge of violating the Oklahoma
Jim Crow laws when ho refused to
move from the Pullman to the negro
coach. Tribbett was en route from
but he shall be free at home for one
chapter 24. verse 5—is cited by a St. year and shall cheer up his wife which
Louis man in his appeal for exemption, » he hath taken.”
which the district board here now has i This Is the first time a quotation if
under consideration. This portion 1 this kind from old Hebraic law has
says: • been so cited in St. Louis.
By Associated Press
DALLAS, Toxas, March 2. -Secre-
tary of Agriculture David F Houston,
accompanied by Lieutenant Teiigord,
representing the French army. and
'several other prominent speakers, in
coming to Texas next week The party
will be in Dallae on March 12 and in
Houston on ‘the following night, ac-
cording to information received here
tonight by W. Il Atwell, from Joseph
Hirsch of Corpus Christi, chairman
of the State Pound I of Defense.
A. F. MARTIN, Chairman. A. C. GOETH, Vice Chairman.
By Associated Press.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. March 1.—Fer-
dinand Schupp of Louisville will again
be a member of the New York Na-
Qonds‛ pitching staff according to
announcement here today Schupp, it
is said unofficially, will receive $10,-
000 for the season
A gold filled wrist watch, and gold
bracelet for >10 O. I. Knock, 513
(‘ongress.
By Associated Press.
WASHINGTON, March 2.—The
House immigration committee today
recommended adotion of a resolution
by Representative Slayden of Texas,
authorizing readmission to the United
Slates of aliens who were ‘’Unscripted
or have volunteered for service with
the United States or the Allies.
"Theirs is a double hazard,” says
the report. "They take the peril of
being killed in battle and of being shot
as traitors if captured. When the call
to anna came in 1914 many Poles,
Czecho-Slavaks and Slavs went to Eu-
rope and joined the forces of Serbia,
Britain or France to fight the gov-
ernments they regarded as oppressors
of their people.
"This resolution purposes to give
these aliens the sin (us and rights they
held as lawful resident of the United
States prior to April C ,1917. but in
recognition of their service to waive
the immigrant head (ax that other-
wise would be collected when they re-
turn.”
By Associated Press
ST. JAHTS. Mo, March 2—A lone
man was caught in a swirl of bargain
hunters today as they attempted to
enter a store through a side entrance
to attend a "clearing out” sale and
when the paving gave way was among
a number of persons precipitated into
th© basement Ten women were
slightly injured and the man suffered
bruises. An excavation had weakened
the support of the sidewalk and caused
the cave-in.
The man explained he was a passer-
by-—not a prospective buyer
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 27, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 3, 1918, newspaper, March 3, 1918; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1456074/m1/3/?q=technical+manual: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .