Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 134, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 12, 1915 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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-
NOTICE
TO MEN
At $25
(Continued from Page One.)
V,
Not a drop.
What is a dose?
SCARBROUGH’S
4
CCCCCC
CCCCCC
S
Reeinol
MINISTER KILLS MAN
HE FINDS IN STUDY
lDe
V
Rumanian
"Both got-so choked up they could
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nothing else and
it
entirely cured
fashionable congregations In the city.
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POPE WRIrES TO SUI/TAN.
-i
6,0)
Seek Injunction to Prevent Mu-
tual Life Company From
. Contributing $10,000,000.
Document Submitted Declares
Great Britain Makes “Con-
traband” of All Exports.
Resinol
makes sick 49
skins well A
WILSON RAPS 'VOCAL'
HYPHENATED CITIZENS:
FIANCEE HEARS TALK
GERMANS WILL AVOID
ATTACK ALONG DVINSK
GARY’S AUTO DRIVER
ARRESTED AS SPEEDER
ITALY IS NOT LIKELY
TO ASSIST ALLIES IN
BALKAN EXPEDITION
About New Earth Product, Vi-
talitas — Inquiries Cornea
From Everywhere. /
Wilson now has before him the text
of the reply of the State Department
to Great Britain on her oppression of
American and neutral commerce and
GERMAN-AMERICANS
MAKE COURT PROTEST
AGAINST ALLIES’LOAN
WILSON MAY SOFTEN
TONE OF NOTE WHICH
WILL GO TO ENGLAND
At
in
the
and
27-A ARMCO IRON
The Rigid Metal Lath
ihie at times laid ma up an-
I read of Foley Kidney Pilis
MAIL YOUR ORDERS DIRECI 10 US
Barton Springs, bottled in bond,
sist all of us who are tr
America conscious of not
back,
tirely.
2%:.
3
In the case of the William P. Frye.
The Frye note is said to be satisfac-
tory to the President and will be sent
without delay as Germany has met the
views of the State Department, both
on the principles of law and the terms
only one
Texas.
a vastly different effect
combined by science.
Any alcohol in it?
Frank S. Taylor Company
COXsUETING ENGINEERS
CHINAMAN AND NEGRO
FLEE LYNCHING POSSE
Adriatic will certainly vanish and she
will therefore fall in the primary ob-
ject with which she attacked Ausiria.
On the other hand. If she invaded
Bosnia she would not only win Dal-
matia but also. In turn, Istria, with
Pola and Trieste.
PERSONNEL OF FRENCH
LEGATION AT SOFIA
canic origin.
Where is the substance found?
It has
Ferdinand
g
2
ta
in
hu
so
w}
ch
of
ini
Four quarts ..
One quart ....
First Lover of Wilson’s
Fiancee Is Discovered
which it 1* to be asked to take decis-
ions and make fresh sacrifices.
Resentment with the conduct of the
censorship is especially strong and
the government will be asked at the
earliest opportunity to put that house
in order.
Spec
F
Near
BREF REPLIES TO
SOME QUESTIONS
"CASCARETS” FOR
HEADACHE, COLDS,
LIVER, ROWELS
COMMONS Will
DEMAND TRUTH
ABOUT ENGLAND
/
Petrograd Asserts Many
of Kaiser’s Men Desert
French Critics Impatient at
Italy’s Holding 1,000,000 to
Face 300,000 Austrians.
....$4.40
....$1.10
Tying to make
th
ALBANIAN EX-KING
IS FIGHTING SERBS
Bpeni
EL
rapiu
when
rathe
1916
Enjoy life! Don’t stay bilious,
sick, headachy and
constipated.
the winter deadlock in the Alpa fight-
ing near, she is in a better position
to send an expeditionary force against
Turkey or Bulgaria than any of the
allies.
main an ignomy in history and dwelt
on the fact that Russia liberated Bul-
Talk with your local Wactom Union Manager
THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO.
I At $12-50 $15-00 $18 00
The greatest suit surprise of the
Scarbrough store—more style, more
value, better quality than you have
seen in many a day.
to sit in Judgment upon anybody but
ourselves and to challenge you to as-
_ ------ One teaspoonful
in a half glass of water, either hot or
cold.
Nor are there any
drugs of any kind.
“2*49,, The Best Lath
"eeetiwFor Stucco
For etucco you need lath that is fire-resisting, lasting and
omicaL
diate relief from colds, coughs and
croup, heals raw inflamed throat and
loosents phlegm
VAN SMITH DRUG CO.
entI
Ire 'I
nee
bo J
■ (‘o.
has wrtten Ul autograph lt-
• Suit— pt Turkey. interced-
W. R. BILLINGSLEY
400 East Sixth Street.
—RCC
CANp
MARric
Just So.
"Now nomebody ounMU that The
Hague pence palace open a subsidiary
department in this country. ”
"An olive branch, co to apeak."
and after trying
without remuit I
)
/
Bpe
F
Fot
the
the
and
be i
O
beci
PC
him
Iran
pro!
fact that I used only 1% bottles 1-
all of ths pains dtaappaarsd Iam-
years of ede and now feel llks a young
one or two, Uke candy, before going
to bed and in the morning your head
is clear, tongue clean. stomach sweet,
breath right and cold gone. Get e
box from your druggist and enjoy the
nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleans-
ing you ever experienced. Cascarets
Shirts... $1,$ 1.50, $2 to $6
Shoo... $3.50, $4, $5 to $8
Sweaters $1, $1.50, $3 to $5
See Our $3.00 HATS
They’re fine! Cascarets liven your
• liver, clean your thirty feet of bowels
and sweeten your stomach. You eat
sossl
Orde
open
Frida
to at
The Walter Tips Co.
Austin, Texas
I
IE
5 stop sick headache, biliousness, indi-
L gestion, bad breath and constipation.
Mothers should give a whole Casca-
f ret to cross, bilious, sick, feverish chil-
5 ren any time. They are harmless
. end never gripe or sicken.
No matter how long you have been tortured
and disfigured by itching, burning, raw or scaly
akin humors, just put a little of that soothing,
antiseptic Resinol Ointment on the sores and
the suffering stops right there! Healing begin*
that very minute, and in almost every case your
lion gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of
the money you threw away on ..
useless treatments. E
Resinol Ointment containsnorhing that . 3.
ouldinjureor irritate the tenderestskin. r
it clears away pimples and blackheada, € -
andisa most reliable household dressing
dorsore,chaaga,cuts,burna,ete. Sozd "
hyall drugriata. Fortrial free,witeto "kum
Pept M Realnol, Baltimore, ma "9
-7- apostolic elegate at Constantinople,
whep having reported to the holy see on
55 the sufYerlngs of the Armenians. Pipe
French military critics point out
a that Italy is facing 300,000 Austrians
ie with at least a million men and with
Gasnine16c
the principle of retaliation can justify
the blockade, or the equivalent of L
blockade, of neutral porta against the
B
th
dl
m
known spot and that
become known that King
YONKERS. N. Y.. Oct 11.—Judge
E. H. Gary, chairman of the United
States Steel Corporation, occupied a
seat in the rear of the police court
room today while his chauffeur. Sid-
ney Darren of Teaneck. N. J., was
arraigned on the charge of speeding.
Judge Gary had been in the auto-
mobile at the time of the chauffeur's
arrest, and accompanied him to court.
follows: I
“According to private diplomatic
papers we have seen. Germany and
Bulgaria signed on July 4 at Sofia a
treaty by which Bulgaria was to par-
ticipate in the war. Thia treaty,
which had been approved by Austria
and Turkey, gives to Bulgaria all Al-
bania and all new Serbia. Including
the district south of Prisendand.
Tharibrod. Monastir, Guevgely and
Dot ran. Greek Macedonia, with Ca-
valla, Serres, Florian and Castoria."
A Havas dispatch from Athens filed
CA
Geor
■. A
#
Interior Minister Retires.
LONDON. Oct 11.—For the first
time in the history of the Duma, one
of its members has been appointed to
the ministry.
Prince Charbatoff, minister of the
interior; has been allowed to retire.
He will be succeeded by Alexer Khvo-
stoff, court chamberlain and leader of
the extreme right in the uma. accord-
ing to a Reuter dispatch from Petro-
grad Alexander Samarin, procurator
general of the holy synod. has also re-
tired.
„ garia. The minister announced he
Maurice Barres warns her that if would return to Bulgaria regardless of
Austria and Germany crush Serbia the danger of having expressed his
her ambition to become queen of the
everywhere about Vitalitas. Here are
a few answers to some of the ques-
tions:
What is Vitalitas? It is a natural
product extracted in condensed liquid
form from an earth stratum of vol-
(Continued from Page One.)
was a time when we needed more
clearly to conserve the principles of
our own patriotism than this present
First National Duty.
than when
but was not recognized until the pro-
ceedings were virtually over. Judge
Bell suspended sentence on the chauf-
feur.
pan and to carry the country with it
as little as did the attack on Earl
Kitchener. Sir Edward Grey is the
most popular civilian in the country.
The weakness of the British diplo-
matic service is not a new discovery.
The diplomatic staff is largely com-
posed of the old school aristocracy who
are unequal to dealing with the shift-
ing and complicated problems and pol-
iticians such as they encountered in
the Balkans. The general disposition
is to credit Sir Edward Grey with do-
ing as well as possible with the lieu- also the text of the reply to Germany
tenants at his disposal.
Nevertheless, the diplomatic failure
in the Balkans has given great impetus
to the movement to throw overboard
Virginia Fire Loss $500,000.
RICHMOND, Va., Oct 11.—While
firemen were at work among the ruins
of buildings destroyed by fire early
today a brick wall toppled over and
buried them. R. M. Norment was
killed instantly. C. L. Atkinson and
W. R. O'Delt wore so badly injured
they died soon after reaching the hos-
pital and two others were perhaps fa-
tally injured. The fire did damage
estimated at $500,000.
under which arbitration may be em-
ployed.
Officials of the State Department,
however, are uncertain how the Presi-
dent will deal with the text of the note
to Great Britain. Some of them think
its tone, after all, will be moderate.
These pivotal points were agreed
upon by all who had part in the writ-
ing of the note which is now before
him for revision:
First. Neither international law nor
i We show the most extraordinary
| value in men’s fine suits—They are
■ unquestionably smart and up-to-the-
1 minute in style, workmanship and
.patterns—
opinions.
Takie Jonescu. former
might of America in some matter not
of America’s originative and they have
forgotten that the first duty of a na-
tion is to express its principles in the
action of the family of nations and
‘y not to seek to aid and abet any rival
a or contrary ideal.
The London Telegraph’s correspon-
dent at Petrograd quotes Bulgarian
Minister Mabiaroff as saying the Bul-
various remedies
decided to try the
minister, is quoted in a dispatch from
Milan, via Paris, as saying it will be
impossible for Rumania to stay out of
the war.
Another dispatch from Athens,
dated Oct. 10, quotes ex-Premier
Venizelos’ own paper, the Patris, as
War Loan Subscribed.
BERLIN, Oct 11.—(Wireless.)—
Payments on subscription to the third
German war lnan up to Oct 7
amounted to $1,605225,000.
the study is a mystery. Dr. Holley
says that he had never seen Pearsall --------
—----- before. though he lived in an adjoin- Kave them Foley’s Honey and Tar and
- _ —----Jng so much ing block. — ---*---“ “ ------*- ----
as her own principles and her own, pearsail is well known here, and Dr
duty. I Ionk rorware * •he -a----*- i .... . .
recently summoned
[By C. F. Bertelli.]
PARIS, Oct 11.—I learn tonight
that in spite of earlier reports that
Italy was preparing to join with the
other allies in repelling the Austro-
German and Bulgarian invasion of.
Serbia she has finally decided not to
participate in the Balkan expedition.
The opinion of the Italian general
staff is that Italy can not spare a
contingent to aid the allies in the
orient. All the men who have been
mobilized, it is said, will be needed
for the coming winter campaign in the
Alps.
Italy’s anomalous in the quadruple
entente is the subject of much re-
strained comment here. It is point-
ed out that she could not even sink
a German submarine if one should be
encountered in the Adriatic because
she has not declared war on Ger-
many.
French opinion is that the contin-
uance of such a state of things is
inconceivable, because of all the facts
of this war the most glaring is that
Germany and Austria are one, with
the Kaiser the supreme master.
While this is Italy’s position regard-
ing Germany, her situation with re-
spect to Turkey and Bulgaria is not
so anomalous. She actually declared
war on Turkey without striking a
blow, and she took common action
with France, Russia and England in
severing diplomatic relations with
Bulgaria.
is believed he was picked up
friends.
. . — [ r-eursan ir weu known nere, anu ur. them ’ This reliable medicine should
- 100K.1orwardt the necessity Holley is pastor of one of the most be in every home for it gives imme-
In every political agitation in the - ..... “*-* - --
years which are immediately at hand
of calling upon every man to declare
French minister to the palace
There have been some among us
who have not thought first of Amer-
ica. who have thought to use the
. . r . . . •
AUSTIN AMERICAN: TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, W15.
LEXINGTON, Ky . Oct 11- Here
he is. He had tn be found. A dispatch
from Ashland. Ky., says that at Bar-
boursville, W. Va . Just across the State
line from there. is living F. J Updike,
a leading mere hant, who modestly
confesses that he was the first sweet-
heart of Mrs Norman Galt, fiancee of
{•resident Wilson.
Updike claims to have carried her
books tn and from school: that he even
toted her lunch basket and that full
many a time and often he has placed
red apples on her desk when she was
not look ins
All this happened when they lived
at Wythevi}e, Va The childish ro-
mance vanished many years ago, Up-
dike admits, but says he has never for*
gotten the rosy cheeked little girl.
Foley treatment I was relieved al-
most with the first dose and It is a
habit forming
MINISTER GIVES TESTIMONY.
The Rev. C. M. Knighton, Havanna,
Fla., writes: "Por three months I suf-
fered intense pain in kidneys and
Beat for bad breath, sour
stomach, coated tongue
’ . or indigestion.
The stratum is reached
The cabinet is now confronted with
the question: Shall Great Britain
and France throw all the forces they
can command into the Balkans for
the protection of Serbia and Greece,
or shall they let events there take
their course?
The Globe today hinted that Anglo-
French troops would be withdrawn
from Gallipoli and dispatched to
Serbia. Under no circumstanoes, said
the paper, must the Austro-Germans
be allowed to link themselves up with
the Turks.
A dispatch from Athens to the Ex-
change Telegram Company says there
have been some changes in the origi-
nal plan connected with the landing of
the allies at Salonika. This is prob-
ably due to the changed situation
caused by the resignation of Premier
Venizelos.
Instead of small parties of troops
being sent forward in a steady stream
large numbers are being massed at
Salonika. It is believed this policy
will be continued until the general
Balkan situation changes in favor of
the entente powers.
Notwithstanding reports that troops
were being landed at the rate of 14,-
000 a day, another dispatch from
Athens says only a total of 30,000 have
disembarked to date.
The Westminster Gazette seconds
the protest of the Times’ military ex-
pert against submitting to German
dictation in the initiative, saying:
"If there is to be an expedition it
must be on a sufficient scale, and we
must not weaken the west. The gov-
ernment, in other words, must have a
clear idea of how to get new men in
addition to those on whom it had
previously counted."
The attack on Sir Edward Grey, the
Foreign Minister, and the Foreign
Office promises to be a flash in the
will meet every requirement it is rigid—It goesep fast; requires
no wiring between studs. Has interlocking selvage edges. Takes
less plaster than other laths. It is being universally used. Costs
IMP than galvanised steel and lasts longer. .
Wrme as ata
through an opening in a mound.
When was it discovered ? Ages ago.
It was used in a crude way by Amer-
ican Aborigines who traveled long
distances to get it
How is it put up? In liquid form—
full strength in 12-oz. bottles.
What are its properties? Sulphur,
iron, sodium, magnesium, aluminum
and others, and with them some un-
known force of nature. As blended
within the earth these properties have
! commerce of the United States or any
neutral nation.
Second. Great Britain with the mis-
use of the word "contraband" has util-
ized It to justify the interception of
commerce with such neutral ports.
Third. Great Britain has from time
to time so extended her absolute con-
traband list that she has substantially
declared all the prime articles of com-
merce to be "munitions of war."
Fourth. This view of the case by
the United States is justified because
Great Britain by assuming that all im-
portant articles of commerce through
neutral ports will get to the German
army, has made them theoretically and
actually munitions of war.
Firth. The specific acts of Great
Britain in establishing the prize courts
as the judge of what are munitions of
war and in actually seizing articles of
commerce on that basis, have put her
outside all the rules of International
law and the spirit of the declaration of
London.
The State Department holds that a
blockade can only be established
against a belligerent port by a suffi-
cient naval or land force.
It holds, also, that the extension of
the character of contraband to cotton
is unjustifiable for the same reason,
and in addition because Great Brit-
ain herself has heretofore held that it
should not be considered.
Other features of the reply are:
That the ships of Americans or oth-
er neutrals which have been seize
and detained and thrown into prize
courts are held despite the well es-
tablished principle that international
law prescribes the manner in which
visitation and search shall be made,
and that Great Britain has Ignored
that respect the rights of neutrals
everywhere and in almost every case.
That Great Britain's contention that
the burden of proof of innocence of
destination is on the American ship-
per. Is contrary to all precedents and
ROME, Oct 11--Mgr. Dolci, the
What is it good for? Many de-
rangements of stomach, liver, kidneys,
bowels and blood. It is nature’s
greatest tonic.
Vitalitas is pleasant to take and is
constantly bringing about cures where
all other remedies have failed.
For sale by Van Smith’s Drug Store
and all other druggists.
thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for
constipation, biliousness, headache
and sluggish bowels.
VAN SMITH DRUG CO.
strongly urges the bringing in of Ja-
pan. It says the appearance of a quar-
ter million of Japanese troops in the
Turkish empire would correspond with
the vital interests which Japan has
indirectly at stake, as German expan-
sion threatens that Germany, once tri-
umphant in the Near East, would re-
appear in the Far East to create a
mighty power in China.
Denial From Germany.
A dispatch from Benin says:
"Details regarding a treaty between
Germany and Bulgaria, countersigned
by Austria-Hungary and Turkey, re-
ported by a foreign news agency, are
officially declared here to be untrue."
“JUST THE THING."
A tailor’s work is sedentary. That
is why most tailors suffer from con-
stipation. G. W. Roberson, Wichita
Falls, Texas, flays: "I find Foley Ca-
thartic Tablets the most delightful,
cleansing cathartic I have ever taken.
They are just the thing " They keep
the stomach sweet and the liver active,
drive away headache, dullness, tired
feeling. biliousness, bloat and other re-
sults of dogged bowels Prompt and
effective, without gripe or pain. Stout
people praise them for the light, free
feeling they give.
VAN SMITH DRUG CO.
Be next door to every customer
Your customers three thousand miles off
think of you as nearly a week’s journey
away. By the sun you are only three
hours apart. By Western Union you are
just around the corner.
You can accustom distant trade to think
of you in terms of minutes instead of miles
by frequent use of Western Union Day and
Night Letters.
(Special to Austin American, Inter-
national News Service and London
Daily Tele graph J
ROME, Oct. 11.—An Albanian apt-
rial to La Naclone says:
Prince William of Wied, former
King of Albania, is serving with the
German army now engaged against
Serbia. His plans are to return to
Albania when Serbia is crushed. dis-
perse the Montenegrins and then make
for Durrazzo with the object of re-
constructing the Albanian kingdom
(Special to the Austi Acerican, In-
ternational News Hervice and Lon-
don Daily Telegraph.)
BUCHAREST, Oct. 11 - -TW per-
sonnel of the French legation at Softa
has arrived here in state.
to international law and that the
United States, even in the Civil War
cases cited by the British foreign of-
fice. has ever held other than that
the raptor should present sufficient
proof to hold the vessel.
The whole argument of the United
States is one of denial of all the points
which are set up in the notes of Sir
Edward Crewe. The main point in the
last British communications was that
Great Britain had a right to "no longer
consider” seizures as diplomatic
questions and to remit them* at once
without diplomatic remedy into a prize
court.
This principle is viciously denied on
the ground that the sole basis for its
adoption is the assumption that goods
seized and sent to the prize court were
Intended for the German army and
were therefore “munitions of war.”
The State Department does not ad-
mit the British figures of increase of
commerce with Holland and The
Netherlands as proofs that the com-
merce was for the benefit of the Ger-
man army.
The United States admits an in-
crease but explains it on the ground
that all neutral ports have been cut
off for more than a year from the
commerce of Germany and her allies.
(By Frederick Rennet]
PETROGRAD, Oct. 11.—The stub-
f bornness of the troops under General
Ruszky is still a match for tne at-
I tempts of the Germans under General
t von Buelow to secure Dvinsk and the
[• Mom of the Dvina A new German
E offepsive baa been noted moving
northward from Gorbunovka, in
E'wU h, in order to protect the ap-
F Breach to the river, the Russians met
I the Germans with machine gunfire of
such terrific violemce that whole col-
WW were flung back Similar fruit-
less attacks were made in the Smor-
EEonizeginnre Heavy fighting is con-
It is reported that in the marshes
of the Plask bands of German desert-
ers are plundering right and left. The
। local pas santa are forming flying com-1
l manda armed with rifles and are con-
i ducting a succesaful guerrilla warfare
■ agminst these German irregulars.
OUR JITNEY OFFER—This and 5c.
DON’T MISS THIS. Cut out this
slip, enclose with Sc and mail it to
Foley & Co., Chicago, III., writing your
name and address clearly. You will
rereive in return a trial package con-
taining Foley's Honey and Tar Com-
pound, for coughs, colds and croup;
Foley Kidney Pills, for pain in sides
and back, rheumatism, backache, kid-
ney and bladder ailments; and Foley
Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and
CHICAGO, Oct 11. — German-
Americana emphatically protested in
the United States District Court to-
day against the Anglo-French com-
mission’s $500,000,000 loan in the
United States to finance the war of
the allies.
They filed a petition seeking an in-
junction to prevent the Mutual Life
Insurance Company of New York
from contributing $10,000,000 toward
this loan.
All the members of the allies’ com-
mission, its agents, J. P. Morgan & Co.
and the officers of the insurance com-
pany were named as defendants.
The loan is declared illegal and a
violation of neutrality. Charles A.
Peabody, president; George F. Baker.
A trustee, and various other officers of
the insurance company are accused of
"conspiring with the commission and
assisting in negotiating said illegal se-
curities."
A Chicago woman is the plaintiff.
She is Mrs. Olga H. 8. Walsh. Her
attorney. Frank S. Monnett, former
Attorney General of Ohio, and one of
the original prosecutors of Standard
Oil, said that she was supported by
many of the wealthiest Germans in
ths United States.
Monnett asserted that the injunc-
tion suit was the forerunner of still
another "war suit" that will be filed
r riday and will involve the liability of
tne Cunard Steamship Company for
the injury and death of hundreds of
passengers of the steamship Lusitania,
which was torpedoed May 7, 1915.
Mrs. Walsh’s injunction suit, which
will be heard by Federal Judge Car-
penter. Is based upon a profit sharing
life insurance policy issued to her by
the Mutual Life. The policy was for
$2000 and with accrued dividends she
claims an equity of $3330
Upon the ground that 22 per cent
of the insurance company's policy-
holders in the United States are Ger-
mans or German-Americana, and that
through contribution to the foreign
loan the company is losing their good
will and loyalty, the petition insists
that the insurance concern’s officers
should be enjoined from participating
in the loan.
TWO CHILDREN HAD CROUP.
The two children of J. W. Nix. mer.
chant, Cleveland. Ga., had croup last
winter. One was a boy of •. the other
a girl of I years. Mr Nix write*:
WASHINGTON, Oct 11.— President
I
I
lit
34,
an atmosphere of opinion. I have my-
self in part yielded to the influences
of that atmosphere, for it took me a
long time to observe how I was going
to vote in New Jersey."
Mrs. Story, the president general of
the society. In a birthday message,
asked the Daughters of the American
Revolution to work as Individuals In
the cause of national defense, which
she declared the most pressing duty
before American women today.
“America ought not to allow itself
to be drawn, so far as its heart is
concerned, into anybody’s quarrel.
"We are not trying to keep out of
trouble; we are trying to preserve the
foundations upon which peace can be
builL Peace can be rebuilt only upon
the ancient and accepted principles of
international law, only upon those
things which remind nations of their
duties to each other and deeper than
that, of their duties to mankind and
to humanity.
"America has a great cause which
is not confined to the American con-
tinent. It is the cause of humanity
itself. I do not mean in anything that
I say even to imply a judgment upon
any nation or upon any policy, for
my object hero this afternoon is not
Floods of Inquiries pour in from *
Special to Ths American.
NEW ORLEANS, La. Oct. 11.-
Early this morning Rev. Byron Hol-
ley, rector of St. George's Church, shot
and killed a young man In his study
whom he claimed he thought to be a
burglar. After lying in the morgue
for a few hours the body was identi-
fied as that of I sensing Pearsall, 22-
year-old son of Nathan G. Pearsall,
claim agent for the Texas A Pacific
railroad.
The shooting occurred at about 5:40.
Dr. Holley told the police that he en-
tered his study at 1500 Cadix Street
and heard someone in an adjoining
room. Pit king up a pistol he stepped
to the door and saw a man whom he
did not know.
"He would not answer my question
as to who he was and what he want-
ed.” sald Dr. Holley, "and when I or-
dered him to do so. he made a motion
as if to draw a gun and I fired upon
him.”
The presence of the young man in
himself where he stands it is Amer-
ica first or it is not
”I am not deceived as to the bal-
ance of opinion among the foreign
born citizens of the United Staten, but
I am in a hurry to have an opportunity
to have a line up and let the men who
are thinking first of other countries
stand on one side—biblically, it should
be the left—and all those that are for
America first, last and all tho time on
the other side.
Prefers Beating to Ostracism.
”I would a great deal rather be
obliged to draw pepper up my nose
than to observe the hostile glances of
my neighbors. I would a great deal
rather be beaten than ostracized. I
would a great deal rather endure any
sort of physical hardship if I might
have the affection of my fellowmen.
W€ • onstantly discipline our fellow
citizens by having an opinion about
them. That is the sort of discipline
we ought now to administer to every-
body who is not to the very core of his
heart an American.
“Just have an opinion about him
and let him experience the atmos-
pheric effects of that opinion. And I
know of nobody of persons compara-
ble to a body of ladies for creating
Sunday says:
“The text of the declaration which
the government will submit tomorrow
to the chamber has been completed
by the Council of Ministers and will
be submitted by Premier Zaimis to
King Constantine today for his signa-
ture.
"The liberal eputies will meet to-
morrow in the home of former
Premier Venizelos to decide what
shall be the attitude of the party in
the chamber. It is understood that
Venizelos will endeavor to bring about
a fresh crisis, but will refuse to as-
sumo responsibility for the acts of
Zaimis.”
CLARKSDALE, Miss, Oct. 11.—Ed
Moy, a Chinaman, and Yancey Dean
a negro, accused of complicity in the
murder of Albert H. Cage, cashier of
the Planters* Bank, reported to have
been lynched Monday morring. were
not killed or lynched, according to re-
ports received here tonight.
The Chinaman, after having been
pursued by a posse all oay, crawled
on his hands and knees back to
town tonight, and the negro, Yancey
Dean, accused of having entered
Cage's home, has apparently eluded
arrest.
Posses with bloodhounds trailed
Dean for over thirty miles, but the
dogs lost the trail In a road wnere It
hardly breathe and couldn't talk. I
S"exTMeemn,,.
secret diplomacy and rebuild the staff
of the diplomatic corps on a more
democratic basis, which undoubtedly
will be one of the foremost demands
of the liberal masses after the war.
The English newspapers are taking
the ground that all resources should be
used. The Observer in an editorial.
Regal Springs, full quart,
blend.....................
All bulk goods, per quart. .11.00
F. O. B. Austin
Send P. O. money order. Orders
filled and shipped same day re-
ceived.
We do not solicit orders in
violation of the Texas laws, in
try territories.
said: "I am inconsolable at seeing you
leave Bulgaria, because French blood
flows in my veins I am grieved that
things have come to this between my-
self and France, but what else can I
do? Germany will be victorious. I
ask you to convey to France my ad-
vice “Be prudent.’”
The French minister replied
"I will adv-lee my government to be
prudent after a decisive battle."
(Gy Frederick Rennet)
PETROGRAD, Oct 10.—The
Germans apparently now have de-
cided to avoid a frontal attack be-
fore the Dvinsk In view of the re-
cent heavy losses and are endeavor-
ing to turn the Russian position from
the northwest.
After two days of furious fighting
the village of Gorbunovka. eight miles
from the town and four miles from
the fortress, changed hands several
times and was finally occupied by the
Germans.
Engagements near Pinsk and in the
Pripet marshes, owing to the nature
of the, locality, are unconnected, the
Teutons making desperate efforts to
reach the Luninetz-Barny-Rovno rail-
road which they evidently consider a
fitting resting place for the present
""St or ssu;
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Sevier, H. H. Austin American (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 134, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 12, 1915, newspaper, October 12, 1915; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1464597/m1/2/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .