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MH PEARCE FIAYS CARD PLAYERS AND SAYS DANCING CHEAPENS WOMEN Says Girls Who Play Bridge Whist Are the Kind Who Elope With Coachmen, WOMAN WHO DANCES SUFFERS LIBERTIES AiwciaM Preu New Orlen us, La., Oct. (I.—“ Bridge whiat is a thing we can do very well without and I am willing to stake my reputation that the class of girls who elope with their father’s coachman spend must of their time playing bridge ” No declared W. C. Pearee, superin tendent of the fduit department of the International Sunday Behool associa tion, here last night at the concluding greaion of the Rundav school conference. Further on hia address Mr. Pearce said: “I don’t care who the woman in, If she dances, she suffers liberties from men which she would not tolerate at any other time. When one of my Fun day aehool teachers asked me if !t would be wrong for her to attend a dance I responded: ‘Do you want to become a cheap'woman!’” In concluding his address Mr. Pearce declared: “If the average saloon were open to its customers as little as is the chnreh to its followers, it would soon be oblig ed to go out of business.” FIRE AT GAINESVILLE. Good Work of the Tiremen Saves East ern Part of Town—Lose 1100,000. Gainesville, Tex., Oct. 6.—Fire orig inating in the Gainesville iron works at 0:30 o’clock last night burned furiously for two hours and a half, de stroying $lOO,OOO , worth of property before it was checked. But for extra good work by the fire department the whole of the eastern part of town would have been destroyed or badly dninaged. The fire, the cause of whieh is un known, was discovered in the iron works between 9:30 and 10 o’clock, the wjiole interior of the building be ing in flames when the alarm was turn ed in. When the roof and walls of the iron foundry fell in, the flames spread to the Gainesville Tee company's plant, adjoining on the north, and this was , soon wrapped in fire and within a few । minutes was completely destroyed. The Gainesville roller mills, adjoining, to gether with its stock of 100,000 bushels of wheat, was damaged by smoke and ' water, but the loss here will not be ; heavy. The insurance is estimated at about $50,000. FOLEYS KIDNEY CURE Cures Kidney and Blad der Diseases In Every Form —Many People Have Kidney Trouble and Do Not Know It. HOW TO FIND OUT. It is the function of the kidneys to filter and purify the blood which is constantly passing through them. When the kidneys are out of order the other organs are affected immediately and you may have symptons of heart trouble, stomach and liver trouble, and other ailments, which are all owing to the kidneys being weak and out of order. If you arc sick Foley'* Kidney Cure will strengthen and build up the worn out tissues of the kidneys so they will act properly and the symptons of weakness, heart, .stomach and liver trouble will disappear and you will be restored to perfect health. Haw to Tell If You Have Kidney Trouble. You can easily determine <f your kid neys are ouf of order by setting aside for 24 hours a bottle of the urine passed upon If upon examination it is cloudy or milky or has a brick-dust sdH- Iment or small particles float about in it, your kidneys are diseased and Foley’* Kidney Cure should be taken at once. Foley’* kidney Cure is pleasant to take and acts directly upon the parts affected and you begin to feel better at once. ~ It corrects slight disorders in a few days and it has cured many obstinate cases after other treatment had failed. Doctors Said Ho Would Not Uvo. Peter Frey, of Woodruff, Pa., writes: “After doctoring for two years with the best physicians in Waynesburg, and still getting worse, the doctors advised me if I had any business to attend to l had bet ter attend to it at once, as I could not possibly live another month, as there was no cure for me. Foley’s Kidney Cure was recommended to me by a friend, and I immediately sent my son to the store for it and aftyr taking three bottles I be gan to get better and continued to im prove until I was entirely well.’’ Two Sizes, 500 and SI.OO. SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY BEXAB DRUG CO.- vuUMiESDAY, New York, Oct. fl.—Before leaving yesterday for Washington, Wilbur Wright doctored that besides making arrangements for the extensive manu facturr of a<r<rplane« in Ohio, he would establish a school for the instruction of aviators. He sees n great future ahead for flying machines, both for pleasure and practical uaaa, bat he does not believe that any one should be per mitted to operate one of them without careful training and thin is one of the reasons why he han hesitated to build machines for enthusiastic novices, The Wright brothers have received many orders for flying machines, but only n few have been accepted. While Wilbur Wright wan here hn received offers from not lens than 50 different persons, ail of them offering large sums If he would agree to make certain airship flights. Mr. Wright looked upon n flying'exhibition for money an a cir cun font and he refused to aecopt any of them. These offers have eome from nearly every western city. It is ( certain, however, that the Wrights will greatly improve their Day ton factory and incorporate in it a school for training operator*. This will he done an soon as Orville Wright re turns from Germany. Extraordinary Ceremony Took Place When Birth Is Announced to Fleet. Associated Press Never before in this country did the birth of a baby receive such a tremen dous demonstration. Admirals and oth er officers in gold braid and medals hurried' from their respective vessels to the German flagship, where they ex tended their congratulations to the’Ger man commander and these were prompt ly cab'ed to Germany. All of the warships remaining in the river today were taking eoa) in prepa ration for their departure. By the end of the week few will remain. HAS A BROKEN NECK i Statue of Martin Van Buren at White House Has a Tempestuous Life. Associated Press. Washington, Oct. 6.—Able in the flesh 1 | to remain president of the United j States but for four tempestuous years. 1 > Martin Van Buren in marble is having . | an equally discouraging enreer in the । white house. No matter what the fu ' tore lias in store, his chiseled likeness can expect no better than to remain there with a broken neck for the rest of time. j A bit of untold white house history links itself with the marble bust of Martin Van Buren. All that is known I generally now is that some one some years ago did what many whigs wanted i to do in the thirties —knock Martin Van ■ Buren's head right off his shoulders. It is said that President Roosevelt, - likewise a New Yorker, who had risen from the vice presidency to the white house, had he decapitated bust removed from the attic, together with the classic feature of the kinderhook statesman and turned over to a seulptor. At any rate, some one stuck the head into place and now the bust with a mark around flic neck like a necklace is given a post of honor just at the foot of the stairway that leads from the eastern entrance of the white house to the main floor. VETERANS PREPARE PART IN PROGRAM The Confederate and Grand Army veterans are making active prepara tions for the part they will take in the reception to President Taft when the latter visits San Antonio. Special meet ings of the two organizations will be held next Sunday for the purpose of making final arrangements. Within the next day or so Luther R. Hare camp, of the United Spanish War Veterans, will request an assignment vbith the older organizations in the reception to President Taft, and a special meeting will be held with that object in view. DENY REPORT OF FIREMEN’S STRIKE V. - At. a special meeting of the Brother hood of Locomotive Firemen and En gineenien, held yesterday, a committee composed of W. A. Miles, A. Sherrill and W. Duffy, was appointed to deny the report that trouble was brewing on the Southern Pacific between the members of the firemen and the com pany. They also stated that they had no trouble with the Brotherhood of Lo comotive Engineers and the strike ru mor was without -foundation. WILL ESTABLISH A SCHOOL FOR AVIATORS Wilbur Wright Sees Great Fu ture for Airships for Pleas ure and Practical Uses. Associatefl Tress. FIRE SALUTE TO BABY. New York, Oct. 6.—When the official hut belated news that the German crown princess Cecile had given birth to a son reached the German flagship Viktoria Luise, the glad tidings were signalled to all the other warships in the Hudson river and immediately a cannonading such as was never heard there before broke forth. Each warship of every nation represented fired a royal salute of 21 guns. While this unusual salute was being fired, all of the vessels, from the small Gorman gun boat Morales, off Sixtieth street, to the flagship off One Hundred and .Seven tieth street, dressed themselves in gay colors fn celebration of the event. BAN AN IUN IO LI (j H T i Tremendous Value Giving — IN THE — Sale of the Dullnig Stock ’ . r- * ' A sale of Reliable and Dependable Merchandise that is giving the shoppers of San Antonio and vicinity enormous savings on their fall and winter wants. This tremendous sacrifice of Dress Goods, Ready to-Wear.Apparel, Muslin Wear, Millinery, Etc., offers you induce ments you cannot well afford to miss taking advantage of. Remember, Dullnig’s Loss is Your Gain * We must dispose of this-stock. If you need the goods, we’ll see to it that you double your dollars by attending this sale. SALE OF REMNANTS AND ODDS AND ENDSFOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Watch For Ad Tomorrow. A Most Sensational Lot of Prices Will Be Quoted Dalkowitz Bros. & N. Becker —- r AT DULLNIG’S OLD STAND — FORM COMPANY TO BUILD AEROPLANES Wrights Will Control American End and Organizer the For eign End of Busines . New York, Oct. 6. —A company to manufacture the Wright aeroplane on a large scale, with factories in Dayton, St. Petersburg, Berlin and Paris is to be organized by Charles K. Flint, for mer head of the United States Rubber company, according to the World today. While the Wrights will hold a controll ing interest in the American company, it is understood that the Flint interests will be supreme in those abroad. FIRE DAMAGE $lOO,OOO. Chicago, Oct. 6. —Fire, which attack ed the plant of the Golden Novelty Manufacturing company here late yes terday, damaged the building and con tents to the extent of. $lOO,OOO. Several workmen, trapped in the burning build ing. were rescued by firemen and two who leaped front windows were injured. There were no fatalities. It’s Just Pure Juice Louisiana sugar cane juice —crushed out and clarified. Nothing added nothing taken away. We call it Velva Breakfast Syrup You’ll call it the best syrup you ever tasted! There’s really nothing like it in th® whole world. for Salo by all Grocers. Penick a Ford. Ltd. NEW ORLEANS, LA. “BATTLE HAS ONLY BEGUN!” SAID BANKER WALSH, WHEN CONVICTED Chicago, II)., Oet. H. —A year last January a beat, broken old man, hear ing the word of a jury that sentenced him to prison, Jost the fire that blazed in his eyes, and John R. Walsh, “Chi cago’s anarchist of finance,” broke down and wept in the grim court room of Federal Judge Anderson. The decision handed down yesterday by the United States circuit court of appeals marks another step in Walsh’s long tight against his foes, who includ ed every powerful financier and many .railroad men in Chicago. The verdict of the jury, which the higher court passed on, carried with it. a possible aggregate penalty of 540 years in the federal prison at Fort Leavenworth. Ever since Jan. IS, 1908, a bitter fight has been waged to keep Walsh out of prison. The government, lawyers, opposing the moves of Walsh’s coun sel, headed by Johp S. Miller of “im munity bath - ' fame, used their every effort to land Walsh in the famous lino of cells at Lravensworth known as “bankers’ row.” Borne up by the iron nerve he al ways had shown in finance, the grief of Walsh was short lived. He was not crushed by his fate, though the court room scene when first he was found guilty was one of the most dramatic In Chicago's history. “It’s only one skirmish lost; the battle has just begun,” the old bank er said as he left the court room. The counts of the indictment on which Walsh was convicted involved nine distinct series of transactions. These are the loaning of the bank’s money on memorandum notes and the purchase of bonds of the Illinois South ern and Wisconsin & Michigan rail roads. The jury decided when its ver dict was handed down that Walsh had misappropriated $1,000,000. The full 'indictment charged the diversion of $7,000,000. It was on Dec. 18. 1905, that the doors of the three Walsh institutions — the Chicago National bank, the Home Savings bank and the Equitable Trust company-—closed their doors. The ac tion was taken after a simultaneous inquiry made into the hanks of C. 11. Bosworth, national bank examiner, and State Bank Examiner C. C. Jones. When the excitement subsided and the depositors were paid off, the long negotiations concerning the building of the Walsh railroads, particularly the Chicago Southern into Chicago, were taken up. Most of the readily salable assets-of these roads were disposed of by the clearing house bankers. Eor many years previous to the. fall I of his hanks. John R. Walsh had been 1 recognized as one of the typical “self made" men in the country. He was a man of many friends and many foes. He has been a fighter all his life. Tlis temper has been violent at times, but his friends say that he can be as gentle as a child. z j ID GAZETTE TO BECOME MUSEUMS. Half Moon and Clermont to Be placed on Lakes in Parks. Associated Press. New York, Oct. 6. —The reproduetion of Henry Hudson'; exploring vessel, the Half Moon, which took a central part in the Hudson-Fulton celebration, will be permanently placed in a lake in Prospect park, Brooklyn, where it will continue in exhibition. The Clermont will probably be given to the Manhattan 1 park department and may be placed in ! a lake in Central park. The two vessels will become museums containing relies । of the first exploration of the Hudson ; river and of the first application of steam to navigation. WRIGHT IS RELEASED. Associated Press. Portland, Ore., Oet. 6. —Arthur G. I Wright, who was arrested last Satur - day during the visit of President Taft | to this city while-attempt ing to take a photograph of the president, pleaded guilty yesterday to the charge of car- JOHN R. WALSH. rying concealed weapons and was re leased. Wright, when arrested, had a | revolver in his. possession. It is non-secret, non-alcoholic and has a record of forty years of cures. Ast Your Neighbors. They probably know of some of its many cures. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to cur* them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of moiling onty, and he will send you a fret copy of his great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser—revised, up-to date edition, in paper cover*. In handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. OCTOBER fl, IMV. Despair and Despondency No one but a woman can tell the story of the suffering, the despair, and the despondency endured by women who carry a daily burden of ill-health and pain because of disorders and derangements of the delicate and important organs that are distinctly feminine. The tortures so bravely endured com* pletely upset the nen es if long continued. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a positive cure for weakness and disease of the feminine organism. IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WEI.L. * It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pein. It tones and builds up the nerves. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell it, and have nothing to urge upon you as “ just as good.'* HO COUffSSES 10 MEO OF WHITE Robbed Victim and Then Threw the Body Into Oconee River, He Implicates Another, Associated Preas. Athens, Ga.. Oct. 6.—After confess ing that he murdered and robbed Von derail Kennon, a young‘white man of । this eity and then threw the body into the Oconee river. Bud Whiteman, a ne gro, who is in jail here on a minor charge. The partially decomposed body of Kennon was found in the river near here early thia week. He had been missing for some days and his friends, fearing that he had met with foul play, dragged the river, finding the body weighed down with rocks. The skull had been crushed with some heavy instrument, presumably an axe. Hoarseness in a child subject to croujf is a sure indication of the approach of the disease. If Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is given at once or even after the croup cough has appeared, it will prevent the attack. Contains no poi son. Sold by all druggists. Lobert. 208 S. Alamo street, makes suits that ratisfy; prices right. • < a - - ■ .’ MAY IMPORT LIQUOR FROM OTHER STATES < Associated Press. Wellington. Kas., Oct. 6.—lt is not s violation of the state prohibition law to import liquor from other states, ac cording to a ruling by Judge C. L. Swarts, hr the district court here yes terday. The ruling refused to permit the test case to go to a jury. 11