The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 241, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 17, 1919 Page: 8 of 20
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WrDVESDAt.
8
Orange-crusH
AX 7 H EN your parched
» ’ throat calls for
coldness — say Orange-
Crush
When your palate
seeks a new sensation —
say Orange-Crush.
Orange-Crush is a
sparkling icy cold drink
—delicious refreshing.
You can be sure of its
purity because it is made
from the fruit oil pressed
from fresh ripe oranges
and such other whole-
some ingredients as pure
granulated sugar car-
bonated water and citric
acid which is a natural
acid found in oranges
lemons and grapefruit.
♦
Orange-Crush makes
a delightful flavor for ice
cream sodas sundaes and
malted milk. Always or-
der it by the full name-
Orange- Crush.
Try a drink to-day!
lor sale everywhere
Prepared by
ORANGE-CRUSH CO. CHICAGO
Laboratory Los AnAeles
San Antonio
\ fAr /
\ Bottling Co. /
\ Phones Crockett 455 Trivi* 1198 *
I NINE ON COMMITTEE
■Congressmen to Inspect Kelly Field
I About September SO.
■ The Chamber of Commer. -- I*. b" •
KgUfied from Washington that the sub-
Kwiai’iee of the House committee on
affairs that is coming here
^Kput September 30 to inspect aviation
| There Are a Number of Cities
■B throughout the country that no* have Then a*aln. It Is unfair ant ur.-
^■ordinance* presenting people frun neighborly to one woman ou'
M aiMuditg rug* outdsiota. beating her rugs ana carpets while en-
M There lv amp!* ie*son for this not other ha* her week s washing on the
DH only front the sanitary standpoint Une
||| which io the reason fur It* enactment This method ut e eanloa l« most in
■| but if there is any nu sence on earth Jurlou# Lipan* tell u* that one nurli
■I It’s tho man whe sets up in ths beating d<*s more injury to a rug than
hours of the morning anti proceeds t* a ahok year* wear.
"beat tho tar*' out of his calpets arc* I*l R'l* riran y«ur Rugs and Car
ruga Just under our bedroom window !• a oanitary manner.
s’] Phone Crockett 654
? Rips Transfer and Storage Co.
San Antonio Testa.
y-. a
I ST. MARY’S HALL
K San Pedro and Woodlawn Avenues
Open Air Sdwol of latent methods. Kindergarten to College Preparatory
WSAive teacher* for French and Kpauinb. I3ouri.es in music pointing dramatic
K ■- doiuuatic acience kindergarten training school. Classes 'till 2:30 then
■ riding swimming and study ball offers occupation under supenision
■ to a p. m.
fields will eoBMSt of nine confreiHjinen.
Headed by Anthony of Kansai. the com-
mittee consist* of the following mem-
bera: Crago Pennsylvania ; Hull
Iowa; MIIHcr. Washington; Reran*
Ohio; Fields Kentucky; Harrison. Vir-
rHla; Caldwell New York and Fisher
Tennt-wee.
Leaving Washington September 23
the committee intend* visiting various
places «A here aviation fields are located.
Affording to Congreaaman Anthony the
purpose of the trip in “to eliminate uu
necessary field*."
•••
Howie Affree* to West Amendment
Washington Sept. 17.—The principal
1 Senate amendment liberaliaing the pro-
hibition enforcement bill to permit
heme manufacture for individual con-
sumption of “non-intoxicating” cider and
light nine* was accented late yoster
dav by the House conferee* and placed
filially in the bill subject to action od
the <onfermre repojL
Limit*.
•Prohibition wilt not prevent the moon
from getting fu!!" remarked an rxehang*.
Nor th* bae**. *• may add Neither will
it present the fog from getting dissipated.
— Uoron Transcript
m Fl CtearYocr Skin
I I ■ Save Your Ha ;r
U' I \ With Cuticura
■ ■ ■ Rpap. ^nt - TaJcura
■ ■ Me. earh Sample
JOSE L. MORELOS
H Mataiuurox Tamp.. Mexico
CUBIOM BIIOKER
Kopretcntlag National Hallways 0
Mexico.
Correcpundeat tor Lacaud & Sons
Banker*. of Maico City and Zamhraai
Add re*. Box 808. Brownsville Texas
A Sous Monterrey Mexico.
THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT.
NITTI’S CABINET NEAR
FALL AS OUTCOME OF
POET’S RAID ON FIUME
American British and
French Troops Embark at
D’Annanzio’s Request.
Paris. Sept. 17.—Premier Francisco
Nitd of Italy faces a governmental
crisis as a result of bi* denunciation
ot Captain Gabriele D'Annunzio who
last week entered Flume at thj head
of a strong force of "irregular’' troops
Wnd who since that time ban been re-
! ceivlug reinforcements according to ad-
vices from Rome.
The Supreme Council of the peace
conference under the jurisdiction of
i which Flume stands has decided to
allow Italy to deal with the serious
situation that has arisen in that city
deeming it a purely internal mutter. Ac-
cording to reports from Flume Amer-
ican detachments which have been in
Flume have gone on shipboard while
British and French troop* have been
confined to their barrack. probably to
forestall a clash with the D'Annunzio
force*. General Badoglio deputy chief
of staff of the Italian army has ar-
rived ut Flume and has issued a proc-
lamation to the D'Annunzio soldiers to
return to their r»*l>octive units but
there i" nothing to indicate bis ad-
vice will be followed. Captain D'An-
nunzio according to a Belgrade din-
patch has proclaimed a union of Fluma
and Italy the menage adding that
anarchy reign* in the city and that al-
lied flags have been torn down.
Toma*«o Tittoui Italian foreign min*
iwter and head of Italy'* d«degatiou at
the pear© conference will leave for
Bom'- today.
HEAR TALKS ON TAXES
City CHb Member* to H*v* Addres* by
Gus Reinlnger.
Gua Reinincer aocretgry of th* Ntate
Tax AaaeMsora* AMoeiation will he the
sprak<r of rhe dav at the City Ctub’a
weekly luncheon nt the Gunter Hotel
Thur;day noon. Mr. Reininger will ad-
dreMM the club on “Is the Present Ba»i*
of Taxation E<juitable.” He has given
th© aubjort much *tudy and his addres*
ia exnerted to contain pome interesting
det* on a "poeket bonk-touching bub-
ject. H
Albert V. Huth county *M*eM*or. will
be chairman of the meeting nnd will give
some of bl* own views on taxation.
Chairmain Jack Burke of th© entertain-
ment committee has arranged several
attractive musical numborw.
Ire Deliveries Cancelled.
Georgetown Tex. Sept. 17.—0 n ac-
count of th*i warcity of labor the City
Ice and Bottling Works of Georgetown
which furni*b©» ice for thia community
haa announced that no more deliveries
will be made.
REDUCED ^FREIGHT
RATES
On household goods io pool car*
Phon* Crockett 914.
Scobey Fireproof Storage Co. (Adv.)
PERSHING MD
FIRST IN HUGE
VICTOR WHEN
Half Million People Turn
Out in Washington to See
Imposing Spectacle.
TRIBUTE TO U. S. ARMY
Entire Division of Regulars
With Guns Tanks and
Trains Passes in Review.
Washington Sept. 17.—Ovfr historic
Pennx.vlvania Avenue the American
Way of Victory marked out more than
50 years ago by the returning blue-clad
egions of the Army of the I’otomac the
First Division American Expeditionary
Force inarched today. It was Washing-
ton's first great parade of the war and
it was conceived and carried out as the
ration's tribute not alone to the veter-
in fighting men who marched but to
the whole great nriny the nation created
to make certain the utter defeat of Ger-
nnn dreams of world conquest.
All Washington took a holiday to wel-
'oin« home General Pershing and the
First Division. Every government de-
partment nnd commercial house were
dosed. Hours before the parade up
Pennsylvania Avenue was ready to start
•very street was pouring its thousands
to line the sidewalks and fill the review-
ing stands.
General Pershing followed by his
picked composite regiment which he led
in the Victory Parades in Loudon and
in Paris headed the Victory march. It
was estimated that nearly ."00060 people
would sec the spectacle the only elab-
iratc military display of the war so fur
is the national capital is concerned.
Every train from surrounding towns one
•ities added to the mass of humanity
that poured into the capital for the spec-
tacle.
Marching in mass formation and
equipped with all the guns was throw-
ers and countless other death-dealing
devices of front line service the First
Division: Wash home from France
moved along the broad avenue a living
tide of sunburned fighting manhood that
filled the street from curb to curb. In
their khaki and olive drab uniforms
the men swung l>y as resistlessly as the
spring floods of the Mississippi.
Parade Spectacle Inspiring.
Above each block of infantry rose the
grim line of bayonets the blued steel
glinting dully ns It caught the light.
Farther back came the long Unes of
field guns. French "75’*" to whi®>
French officers have said France owes
her salvation and after nil the trains nnd
wagons bad rumbled by came a battal-
ion of tanks streaked and yellowed with
paint to conceal them from enemy eyes
but now growling nnd clanking their
way behind the troops in noisy response
to the cheers that greeted them.
There was nothing lacking to make
the parade an epitome of the whole vast
army American skill and indomitable
will had created to meet and beat the
enemy nt his own game. There were
guns of all the types used in France that
could be moved through the streets. Ma-
chine guns big and little bristled
among the riflemen: squat mortars to
hurl bombs from the trenches; high
mounted rifles which peered skyward as
though still in search of enemy flyers.
Some of the guns were horse-drawn
some trundled behind panting motor
trucks or tractors. The show was as
complete ns the Ingenuity of the Wai
Department conld make it. a cross see.
tion of the American Expeditionary
Forces.
But it wns to the lines of khaki-dad
brown fnecd meu themselves that first
interest of the thronging crowds al
along the wide avenue turned. Th<
home-coming of this first unit of Amer
lean man power to cross the submarine
HTIU lllnu rr nonn Ilie? nuu.uui smv-
iiife*tf-<l aeon was in marked contrast to
it* silent mysterious unreported* de-
parture end the men nnd women along)
the way seemed to feel the significance
of the spectacle. They recalled the days
when the nution waited in wordless anx-
iety to hoar that these same smiling
free-striding boys had come safely to n
French harbor thmie other days when
the first word filtered back that the
boys had begun to prove their courage
in action and tho slow coming lists that
carried the names of the men who sleep
forever in France.
Sixth Field Artillery Honored. _
To one regiment of long trim
an unusual honor was accorded. The
Sixth Field Artillery was placed be-
tween the two infantry brigades instead
of marching with the rest of the artillery
brigade behind the Infantry for it was
<' battery on the Sixth which fired the
first shot nt the German* on October
23. 1917. A standard told the onlookers
that at Inst they saw the very guns
whose thunder had carrie*! that first
message of defeat into the enemy ranks.
Throughout the long line markers were
frequent telling what the strange imple-
ments of war over whipb they floated
were used for. Among the watchers
were thousands upon thousands of gov-
ernment clerks who have dealt for
CONDUCTION ANESTHESIA
The public is beginning to understand th* value ot ad-
vanced scientific dentistry.
Progression intelligence and skill are necessary to acquire
technique and ability to apply it.
Denta) operation* by the skilled and well informed operator
ot today are fast taking precedence over obsolete method*.
THE PAINLESS EXTRACTION OF TEETH by conduction
U certain at »he hands of the expert.
BRIDGEWORK the type we ar* building require* en-
gineering and art. Mechanical skill and aggressive experience
combined produces the nearest counterpart to natural teeth
embracing efficient mastication hand carved colored and tinted
teeth to perfectly match the natural.
JACKET PORCELAIN CROWNS exactly tike the natural.
Can not be identified among your own teeth. Strong and
durable.
ARTIFICIAL TEETH ON PLATES built or. anatomical
principles perfect three point occlusion sixe color shape and
expression adapted to each individual case.
Fillings inlays and porcelain restoration* of the highest
character. ... . _ .
Price* the most moderate for high quality work. Guaranteed
satisfactory in every detail and demand.
Cleanest most modern and best equipped office you have
•v«r seen. . I
25 Year*' Training end Practice.
Lady Nur**. ’ Heur* » to 8.
Phon* Travl* 3767 Sunday* 9 to 1.
DR. K. L. MAYERS
DENTIST
808 H E. Hou*ton St. Dir*ctly Oppotlt* Guntur H*l*L
month* with endlc** stream* of paper*
talking of bombs nnd guns and mor-
tars of motor machine shop* pontoon
bridges machine guns gas thrower*
flame projectors and all the other com-
plicated war equipment of the trooini.
Never before have these workers at home
seen al! these tool* of warfare in their
own warlike sitting however and the
parade was an education for them.
Vp Gie avenu* at the head of the
division rode Maj. Gen. Edward F.
McGlaehlin commanding and with him
rode two former commanders of the di-
vision. the first to go and the last of]
the divisions to come home. They were
Maj. Gen. William L. Sibert who took
it to France and Lieut. Gen. Robert
L. Bullard who took it into action anti
surrendered command only to take n
higher post. Marching ahead of the
formation also came a host of offi-
cers and men who saw their first service
with the First Division iu France luter
to go to other units as instructors.
Infantry in Mas* Formation.
Then came the First Infantry Bri-
gade marching in the French mass for-
mation 24 men abreast acroas tho ave-
nue led by the Third Machine Guu
Battalion with its motorised guul
The infantry marched in column ot
fours four companies abreast and with
officers nnd file dosers ahead leav-
I Ing the meu to form a solid block of
bayonets for each battalion. The Uith
Infantry veterans of the bitter fight-
ing at Cantigny where France learned
in what fashion America could and
would fight aud breathed free again
after months of strain led the way.
After its three battalion block* had
passed came the 18th Infantry iu simi-
lar formation followed by the First
Machine Gun Battalion of the brigade.
The Sixth Field Artillery came next
followed by the Second Infantry Bri-
gade composed of the 26th and 28th
Infantry and the Second Machine Guu
Battalion then the long Unes of
"75's” and the motor-drawn "155's” of
the First Artillery Brigade tn* Fifth
and the Seventh Field Artillery. The
horse-drawn guns and limbers of the
Fifth rolled by three columns abreast
and the Seventh puffed and panted
along with its heavier guns in the mime
formation.
I The regular trains of the divisions
• followed the First Engineer Regiment
' leading the way with the First En-
I gineer train behind it to be succeeded
by the Second Signal Battalion. Then
came the almost endless wagon and
truck trains of the ammunition supply
and sanitary trains aud the First Com-
pany. military police and finally the
hospital trains the Second Third
Twelfth and Thirteenth Ambulaue*
Companies nnd Field Hosiptal*.
First Had Notable Roconl.
At various points iu the divisional
line and before the wallowing tanks
hammered and clattered in an uproar-
ing conclusion to the five-hour spec-
tacle all manner of additional units not
part of the division itself were inserted.
These included searchlight trucks ord-
nance machine shops units on motor
trucks sound ranging devices for detect-1
ing tho position of hidden guns sound
rangers for spotting air raiders at night
and much other mechanical equipment
that has played a constantly growing
pert in the war.
So far as the First Division itself
lie concerned the official recofd of its
activiti** during the war recently pub-
lished by the War Department speaks
for itself. It stood 93 day* in active
sectors of the front against 123 in
quiet parts of the Jine; it fought its
way forward over 51 kilometers of
sharply contested ground; it captured
HKt German officers and (2104 German
men: it captured also 119 German guns
162 trench mortars and 413 machine
guns. It lists 4411 officers nnd men
I killed or died of wound* aud had 17-
j 201 men wounded or gassed in the days
lit spent at the front and lost only
152 of it* own personnel as prisoners
to the enemy. Its replacements were
greater than its original strength 30-
206 and 336 of it* member* won Dis-
tinguished Service Crosses for con-
spicuous gallantry in action.
Take her to Crockett Hotel for that
chicken dinner. Phone Mooney Cr.
4006.—(Adv.) *
To Hold Revival at Yoakum.
Yoakum Tex. Sept. 17.—Evangelist
J. C. O'Hair of Chicago has arrived in
the city and will conduct a series of
) meetings at the Presbyterian Church
in this city.
* DISCOVERY THAT
BENEFITS MANKIND
Two ditcoveriea have added greatly
.o human welfare.
In 1835 Newton originated the vac-
uum process for condensing milk with
cane sugar to a tenii-liijuid form.
In 1883 Horlick at RacineWis. dis-
covered how to reduce milk to a dr^
novda form with extract of malted
grains vithmit cane sugar.
This product HORLICK named
Malted Milk. (Name since copied
by others.) Its nutritive value
digestibility and ease of preparation
(by simply stirring in water) and the
f act that it keeps in any climate
■as proved of much value to mankind
is an ideal food-drink from infancy
.0 old age
a*k Sot HORLICK'S—Avoid Imitation!
SEPTEMBER 17 1919.
Why Do
Millions
of
Women
use
Pictorial
Review
Patterns
and why are more
and more choosing
them daily in pref-
erence to all others?
It Is Because
Pictorial
Review
Patterns
produce garments that
posses* the Style and
Line* of the latest im-
portatfons.
And beside* — virtually
every woman can make
her own clothe* through
their use—they are so
easy to understand.
There is no question
either a* to the result—-
you are assured of Style
Fit and Charm even be-
fore you purchase ycur
goods.
The great variety of
smart Fall styles illus-
trated in the Quarterly
Fashion Book now on
sale picture what you
can actually make for
yourself with a Pictorial
Review Pattern.
Procure a Fashion Book
today and make your
choice now. Commence
sewing at once erf that
pretty suit or dress.
Come in and see the
latest pattern catalogue.
You will bo sure to find
just what you are look-
ing for.
The wide range of Pic-
torial Review styles en-
ables every woman to
find a design suitable for
her particular figure.
Anything you see in the
Fashion Book or in the
fashion section of Pic-
torial Review Magazine
you can secure at our
pattern department.
And in our dress goods
department are the new-
est materials for Fall
wear.
There you will find the
exquisite Peachblocm—
Bolivia cloth—Silvertone
and Tinseltone — Serge
Velour — Gabardine—
Duvet de laine—Duvetyn
— Tricotine—everything
that the heart could wish
for—out of which to
fashion the latest frocks
and suits.
Wolff & Marx Co.
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Diehl, Charles S. & Beach, Harrison L. The San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 241, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 17, 1919, newspaper, September 17, 1919; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1615242/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .