The Evening Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, October 6, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
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, 1916.
PAGE THKEE
fATESMAN
THE EVENING
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1916.
YALE COMMITTEE
BROOKLYN FANS
BOSTON EXPECTS
DISAPPROVES OF
GIVE THEIR TEAM
LARGEST CROWD
EXPERT COACHES
GREAT SEND OFF
EVER, SATURDAY
r•-
7
r
FEATHERWEIGHT
FINAL STANDING.
These made to measure
low it.
Priced $3
of t
IK
any superior—
Won. Lost. Pet
Come in and take a look.
\ v
Smhevicoy
6J6 CoMtntaafAmm
wag at the University yesterda;
[ent of the San .An
pur
plans for the Texas-
Union Woolen Mills
Symington, M
ansportation?
A
FRANK LAWS, Manager
720 Congress Ave.
(WORK WHILE YOU SLEEPJ
Otto Pfeiffer, Homer Wil-
School:
(
Football Rally in
\
The Chicago
M. Balch Defended
Americans returned to their own hall
GOING EAST?
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
“e Premier Carrier of the South
Savings Certificates Sold on Easy
BEAUTY is Liver
JTTER.
Deep
NEW YORK
$59
9
Norfolk and all Eastern Points
ALL STEEL — NO EXTRA FARE
TRAINS De LUXE
Double Track, Rook Ballast, Blook Signals
Round Trip All Year Tourist Tloketa on Salo to ASHEVILLE
AUSTIN NATIONAL BANK
The SOUTHERN Serves the South
AUSTIN, TEXAS
r Co.,
W. H. PARNELL, D. P. A, Houston, Texas
WRITE FOR INFORMATION
KNOWS YOUR WANTS AND WANTS YOUR BUSINESS
Alpaiso.Sendhead
emorandum,
to note the
We recommend the clothes
made by the Continental
Tailors of Chicago.
Bank Makes the First Payment
Hundreds of these Savings Cer-
tificates have been sold in the
past few months — hundreds of
people have appreciated the fact
that not only are these Savings
toms I
every
Book
hers!
EAT LESS MEAT
AND TAKE SALTS
IF KIDNEYS HURT
YOU’RE BILIOUS!
CLEAN LIVER ANO
BOWELS TONIGHT
Several Football
Games in Texas Today
Payment Plan
$100 and $50 Savings
Certificates are issued
by this strong Bank and
sold on the easy pay-
ment plan of $1 and $2
a week for fifty weeks,
and the
Soft Hats for Fall are going
strong.
94
in
89
86
67
65
60
60
co
62
63
66
86
89
93
98
Hamilton McGruder of Han Antonio,
former baseball manager at Varsity,
of
toda:
Ion. 11:08
r spolled
lanned .u
result jt
nounts of
tion have
spoil and
ling those
d become
tion con-
hood that
ho write
Dean T. V. Taylor of the engineer-
ing department is the prtncipal speak-
Secretary
Baseball
NEW
Heydier
Very becoming and de-
lightfully comfortable.
Men's
me nts:
410
.693
.AM
.see
.4%8
.413
.393
.393
Shown in a wide range of
new color*
y u
itonio
/
k
Meat forma Uric Acid, which
excites Kidneys and Weakens
Bladder.
sparkling original-
ity of the patterns,
the ruggedness of
the weaves, the at-
tractiveness of the
prices.
W
A
McGraw Will Lead
Giants Next Year
Says a tablespoonful of Salts
flushes Kidneys, stopping
Backache.
Choosing Tennis
Team for Varsity
pose of perfecting
Oklahoma A. & M.
0‘ I
/
Tri
Tact
H. A Express.
Ladies’ entertainment: Miss Edith
y announced the official
the clubs at the conciusto
; Goodwin Carter. George
(This committee with ref-
(/
A
League
standin
of the
I
Jl
SHORTEST, BEST
------TO------
P.FMTaW a Mu
2E0
COAL
GENUINE DEEP SHAFT
McAlester
Best Pennsylvania
Anthracite.
McAlester Coal Co.
Established 1885
Office and Blns: 207 Colo-
rado Street.
BOTH PHONES 246
1
MH
...... .1 mall
er for tonight's program The Rice
game is expected to be A hard one and
a real "pep stirring” rally is plannod
Why Suffer
From Migraine or
Sick Headache?
FOX THROAT AND LUNGS
STUBBORN COUGHS AND COLDS
Eckman’s
Alterative
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
0%
Good health, cheerful
disposition, dear com-
plexion depend upon
an active liver.
follows:
Club:
Brooklyn . ..
Philadelphia
Boston ....
New York .
Chicago .,.
Pittsburgh
Ht. Louis .
Cincinnati .
San Antonio Will -
Welcome the Crowd >
clothes haven’t
we’re sure of it.
Invitation:
Reception:
Maverick.
Advertising
Harris, H. A.
be sure
the advance ag
alumni for the
When you act on
“Beans Is Beans”
— and the cost is soaring
skyward with pork, beef,
eggs and other foods until
the cost of living represents
an increase of from 30 to 50
per cent. While meats and
vegetables are beyond the
reach of many millions of
families, Shredded Wheat
Biscuit continues to sell at
the same old price and re-
tains the same high nutri-
tive quality. Shredded
wheat biscuit contains all
the rich body-building nutri-
ment in the whole wheat
grain, including the bran
coat, which is so useful in
keeping the bowels healthy
and active. Eat it for any meal
with milk or cream or in
combination with fruits.
Made at Niagara Falls, N.Y.
it, enses che pain and bri
Anti-kamnia tahlete p
all druguista Ask for A
nuiekly relleve All Pain.
916 championship season as
son, M. D.;
Maversek. I
Tennis elimmations have already be- I
gun under the direction of Dr. D. A. J
penick of the Uviversity court*. There |
are at present t went/-three candidates
for the first squad. including a number
of men who are ineligible to represent
the University.
It is Dr. Penick’s plan to select the
best players in the. University by the |
Round Robin now in progress and then |
allowing the winners to challenge fhe
twelve men who have been chosen for
the first squad. The final team which
will represent the Unl/erslty in con- j
tests with other collages will cohsist
of four men who will be chosen from |
the twelve on the squad at the present
time.
Four courts have been resurfaced
with blue clay. and six other new ones
near the law building have been given
a coat of white lime in order to pro-
vide for the large number of applicants
for tennis this year.
Enjoy life! Remove the liver and
bowel poison which is keeping your
head dizzy, your tongue coated. breath
offensive, . and stomach sour. Don t
stay bilious. sick, headachy, cone tips ted
and full of cold. Why don't you get a
box of Cascarets from the drug etore
and eat ons or tw• tonight and enjoy
the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel
cleansing you ever experienced. You
Will wake up feeling fit und fine CaB-
carets never gripe or sicken like salts
pills und calomel. They act so gently
that you hard y realise you have taken
a cathartic. Mothers should give gronB
sick, bilious or feverish chlldrh a
whole Cascarct any time -they act
thorongh I v and are harmless.______
Popular since Grand-
ma was a girl. Keep
your liver right and
mos of your trouble*
will never happen.
NEW YORK. Oct. 6—John J. Me-
Graw will continue to manage the
New York National League Club next
year, despite any reports to the con-
trary. says John B. Foster, secretary
of the club.
“MeGraw already has gone over the
plans for “’next year with President
Hempstead,” said Mr. Foster, "and has
high hopes of leading the New York
club to a pennant. His contract with
the New York club has another year
to run and it is not fair to him or the
WASHINGTON, BALTIMORE, PHILADELPHIA, RICHMOND
Owing to the condemnation of the
University main auditorium by the
state building inspector, the football
rally tonight will be held in the law
auditorium.
erence to a half-holiday).
Luncheon: Ed Finck.
Certificates a wise investment, but an easy,
sure way to save $100.
Investigate this plan. Call or write for
further information.
Hylvan Lang.
Eldon Young, Maury
the National
2ao.
a
65-
gvFos}
h SO FAYMINT PLAN
SAVINGS CERTIFICATE
NASHVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 8.—The
American Press Humorists spent today
at the Knapp Country Life farm and
at Peabody College for teachers. The
week's festivities end with a banquet
at the Commercial Club.
headquarters and refresh-
Ed Finek.
DALLAS, Texas, Oct. 8. Texas Ag-
ricultural and Mechanical College,
whose team won the 1915 football
championship of Texas, opens its 1916
football season today with the South-
western University of Georgetown
eleven on the Aggies' home grounds at
College Station. Both teams furnished
spectacular football in Texas gridiron
contests last year. Other Texas games,
of somewhat lesser Importance to-
day are:
Daniel Baker College vs. Howard
Payne College at Brownwood, Texas;
Trinity University vs. University of
Dallas at Waxahachie.
Dr. J. J. Caldwell says that this •iflaadlnsly
distressing disease doss not shorten Um.
but dose not appear to be curable. Bufer-
ere from this amiction are eondemned to
undergo the periodical attacke every few
weeks until they are forty y ears of Age,after
which the at toe to are lass frequent, sad
Anally disappear entirely. Palliliyemees-
the Law Building
he -endemnetinn of the may ofte be prevented by taking two
and -kamnia tahlete when the first symp-
appear, and ono ant-kamni tablet
two hours during the attack shortens
YORK, Oct. 8
BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 8.—Activities
attendant upon the opening here to-
morrow of the world's series between
the Brooklyns, champions of the Na-
tional League, and the Boston Ameri-
can League title holders and world’s
champions, multiplied today.
The Red Sox players at Braves Field
for further and sharper practice, took
part in a conference, which Manager
Carrigan had ordered lust night. It
was called early for the purpose, ap-
parently, of working out signals and
strategy to be tested in a practice game
this afternoon. The Brooklyn team
made no effort to hasten its move-
ment to the scene of the series’ cur-
tain raising and did not plan to arrive
here until late in the day.
Through its series here with the
Boston Nationals, the team had gained
a good working knowledge of condi-
tions at Braves Field, which Manager
Robinson thought '’sufficient prepara-
tion.
The weather man contributed his
part to the arrangements with assur-
ances of fine weather tomorrow. While
it was warm today, there was a prom-
ise of slightly lower tempera* ures for
the game and with no early indications
of rain.
Expect Record Attendance.
The attendance at the first game will
be the largest in the history of baseball,
according to President J. J. Lannin of
the Boston Americans. After working
through the night again to facilitate
distribution of reserved seat tickets,
Lannin sa'd the interest in the series
this year, as indicated in many ways,
was greater by far than last year when
a record crowd of 42,300 saw. the first
game played in this city.
The height of th's Interest was
shown by early morning crowds at
Fenway Park, small in number, but
eager to obtain preference in the pur-
chase of grandstand sea's. The new
system by which successful applicants
were forced to fall in with a policy of
“first come, first served.” at the ticket
lines, instead of having certain tickets
held to their order, caused some con-
fusion yesterday and was responsble
for the early lines today. Prospective
speculators were under surveillance of
police officers and plain clothes men
who had orders to arrest any persons
trading in tickets.
No Kick About Sale.
The time for exercising purchase
privileges on reservations expires at 6
o'clock tonight, after wh’ch uncalled
for tickets will be put together and
prepared for a rush line sale tomor-
row morning. Thi3 will be the only
opportunity for persons not successful
applicants by mail to obtain such seats
except by private transactions at .in-
creased prices.
As far as could be learned today dis-
position of tickets for the games here
has as yet developed no incident re-
quiring the attention of the national
commission.
Members of this board arranged a
meeting here late today at which plans
for the series as already made were
to be approved..
Whether the commission would con.
sider the action of Manager McGraw
of the New York Uationals in quitting
his team a few days g0 with state-
ments that his players did not follow
instructions in the game which Brook-
lyn won, could not be learned.
The only member vof the commission
here this forenoon was August Herr-
mann. who would say nothing on this
subject. President Johnson of the
American League and Presiden’ Tener
of the National League, the other mem-
hers, were expected to arrive on an
efternoon train. The unpires who will
act in the title games arranged a con-
ference to discuss the application of
certain rules of pa ch league to the
game generally, with discussion as to
which shall obtain on each grounds.
C H IC AGO Cify s E RIES.
tion Co. (This refers to trans-
NEW HAVEN, Conn., vOet. 5.—The
move to abolish the system of athletic
coaching by highly paid experts, took
definite form here today with the pub-
lication of the report of the spacial
committee in charge of Yale athletics.
This report. signed by Robert N.
Corwin as chairman of the committee,
asserts that ''unless Yale can, from
her own resources, graduate and un-
der-graduate- develop her teams with-
out such artificial stimulants no that
she ran reasonably compete with her
rival*, it would be best to eliminate
intor collegiate athletics altogether un-
til there comes an era of reasonable-
ness in such things."
“The intensity of this rivalry, if un-
checked. may so increase as to make
inter-collegiate athletics an -unprofit-
able scramble for the raising of huge
sums of money for the payment of
the disproportionate salaries demand-
ed by expert coaches,” adds the re-
port. - _________
game to be played In Hun Antonio one
week from today.
The entire arrangements for the
gume will be in the bunds of McGruder '
and Eddie O’Hair, another former atu- !
dent who was prominent in atheletics
in the University.
Committees consisting of former stut
dents of the niversity, who are resi-
dents of Hun Antonio, have been ap-
pointed us follows:
The finance committee: Dick Ter-
rell.
porlation in San Antonio).
Railroad rates: Sylvan Lang.
Field and team: Frost Woodhull
Tickets eales to schools: Goodwin
Carter.
Ticket sales at FT Ham Houston:
Senator A. F. Barrett.
Jshby-aLexcicon-i,
Arrow
COLLARS
GO WELL WITH BOW OR POUR-
IN-HAND eta each, foretee
cwErt, PEABODV cco INC.MIRENs
and publicity: Eugene
Lght; George Peeler,
park today with two victories In the
city championship series tucked away
and firm determination to make It
three straight today. Manager Row-
land put his faith in Cicotte for to-
day's contest while Joe Tinker sent
Prendergast to the box for the Na-
tionals.
NEW YORK, Oct. 6.— Brooklymgave
the National League pennant winner a
rousing send-off today for the opening
game of the world’s series to be played
in Boston tomorrow. Thousands of
enthusiasts gathered at Ebbetts field
long before the hour for the departure
of the players. In the crowd were
many city officials, business men and
the “Brooklyn boosters” who go to
Boston with the club to cheer the peY-
ers to victory—or to condole them in
defeat.
The band led the big parade from
Ebbetts field to the subway station
and a multitude of funs lined up be-
hind.
"We have more applications for tick-
ets to the Brooklyn games than we can
fill,” said President Ebbetts of the
Brooklyn club.
"Applications have been pouring in
from all parts of the country and as
far south as Cuba."
While the players are in Boston
fighting for the first two games of the
series, carpenters will be busy extend-
ing the seating accommodations at the
Brooklyn field. The additions will
bring the capacity to about 27,000.
HUMORISTS VISIT FARM.
RESOURCES $5,000,000.00
the rm
When you get the
clothes themselves,
let your mirror and
your friends note
the perfect fit, the
splendid tailoring,
the all around
quality and superi-
ority.
2************************
$ LONDON, oct, «. 2:32 p. m. t
4 According to the newspaper ♦
♦ Aeroplane, Orville Wright, the ♦
♦ Dayton, Ohio, aeroplane in ven- ♦
4 tor, has presented his patents to ♦
♦ the British government. ♦
Don’t stay headachy, rick, or
have bad breath and
•our stomach.
Wake up feeling fine I Beat lax-
ative for men, women
and children.
Holman Cartwright,
Will Holden, S. A.
Himself; Convicted A
a —•—
Conducting his own defense in his
trial in the Criminal District Court
today on a charge of burglary with in-
tent to commit criminal assault, Matt
Balch, ft young white man, contended [
ihat he entered the home nt W. R. )
Estes nt night in the mistaken belief ‘
that he wasentering his own residence. I
The jury found him vu’lty and ns-
sessed him punishment at five years in j
the penitentiary.
Balch argued In his own defense to
the jury. The testimony had shown
that he entered a room in which two j
young girls were sleeping and one of ।
them testified that he placed a hand |
over her mouth When she screamed
Balch went into tie hall and was rec- .
og nixed bv Mr. Estes. In his test monv I
Balch said that he stumbled across the I
bed and did not realise until the girl |
screamed that he was not in his own
home. He left the place hurriedly and
without making an explanation,'al-
though Mr Eestes asked him what he
wam doing there, according to the tea- !
timony.
District Attorney Ham’lton and '
Harry B. Barnhart conducted the pros-o
ecution. The jury was out leas than I
ten minutes before returning its ver-
dict, J
club, to have rumors spread that he
will not be with New York next year.'
Despite the roasting he gave them
in the game with Brooklyn Tuesday,
the players of the New York club are
seeking McGraw to present to him a
collection of Shakespeare’s wworks,
which they had purchased before his
flare-up. There will be no public pre-
sentatlon ceremonies. ‘
Eating meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble in some form
or other, says a well-known authority,
because the uric acid in meat excites
the kidneys, they become overworked:
get sluggish; clog up and cause all
sorts of distress, particularly backache
and misery in the kidney region; rheu-‘
matic twinges, severe headaches, acid
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,
sleeplessness, bladder and urinary ir-
ritation.
The moment your back hurts or kid-
neys aren’t acting right, or if bladder
bothers you, get about four ounces of
Jad Halts from any good pharmacy;
take p. tablespoonful in a glass of wa-
ler before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts is made from the
acid of grapes and lemn juice, com-
bined with lithia. and has been used
for generations to flush clogged kid-
neys and stimulate them to normal ne-
tivity; also to neutralise the acids in
the urine go it no longer irritates, thus
ending bladder disorders,
Jad salts can net injure anyone;
makes r. del’ghtful effervescent lithia-
water drink which millions of men and
women take now and then to keep the
kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus
avoiding serious kidney disease.
men look
oming a
• the first
omething
unknown
agony
a time of
days and
ded con-
d," used
vill prove
to those
nature in
I comfort*
our drug-
CHICAGO, Oct.
Make a note of the
iact that it’s time to buy your
Continental Tailored clothes for
fall—make the note and then fol-
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The Evening Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, October 6, 1916, newspaper, October 6, 1916; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1498142/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .