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San Antonio light and gazette. [volume] (San Antonio, Tex.) 1909-1911, February 18, 1910, Image 5

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86090238/1910-02-18/ed-1/seq-5/

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INDIGESTION
WILL VANISH
A Little Diapepsin Makes Your
Out-of-order Stomach Fine
In Five Minutes.
Take your sour, ont-of order atom
nya —nr maybe you cal] it ludiges
i<>u. Dyspepsia, Gastritis or Catarrh
of Stomach; it doesn’t matter —
take your stomach trouble right
with you to your Pharmacist and
ask him to open a 50-cent case of
Tape's Diapepeiu and let you eat one
22-grain Triangule and see if withie
fire minutes there is left any trace of
your former m.M-ry
The correct name for yonr trouble is
Food Fermentation—food souring; the
Digestive organs become weak, there is
lack of gastric juice; your food is only
half digested, and you become affected
wi h loss of appetite, pressvere and full
ness after eating, vomiting, nausea,
heartburn, griping in bowels, tender
ness in the pit of stomach, bad taste in
mouth, constipation, pain in limbs,
sleeplessness, belching of gas, bilious
ness. sick headache, nervousness, dixxi
nes or many other similar symptoms.
If your appetite is fickle, and noth
ing tempts you, or you belch gas or if
you feel bloated after eating, or your
food 1 ies like a lump of lead on your
stomach, you can make up your mind
that at the bottom of all this there is
but' one cause—fermentation of undi
gestod food.
Prove to yonrself in five minutes
that your stomach is as good as
any; that there is nothing really
wrong. Stop this fermentation and be-
eating what you want without fear
of discomfort or misery.
■ Almost instant relief is waiting for
yon. It is merely a matter of how
soon you take a little Diapepsin.
"MAYOR GAYNOR
ASSASSINATED"
Cry of News Vendors Startles
New Yorkers Who Buy
Papers and Are Duped.
Associated Press.
New York, Feb. 18. —Crowds in the
theater district wore startled last
night by the cry of two men, with arms
laden with newspapers, shouting: “Ex
tin! Extra! AU about Mayor Gaynor’s
assassination.”
The two rogues had apparently
adzed on this sensational method of
disposing of their papers, realizing that
many would not wait for change.
At his home, the mayor denied, both
officially and individually, that lie was
dead.
Dr. S. S. Beaklcy, Gib be Bl.lg. Eye,
ear, nose and throat.
GEN. CARTER DETAILED
ON THE GENERAL STAFF
Associated Press.
Washington, Feb. 18. —Major General
William H. Carter, U. S. A., has been
detailed by the president as ar member
of the general staff corps to take tho
place of Brigadier General William
Witherspoon, who is at the head of the
army' war college. General Carter has
been relieved from duty in the Philip
pines and will at once proceed to this
city for duty with the general staff.
WAS POSTMASTER FOR
OVER HALF A CENTURY
Associated Press.
Gardner, Mass., Feb. 18.—Simon W.
A. tScveua, who was appointed post
master here by President Franklin
Fierce in 1854 and had received succes
sive appointments ever since, is dead
at his home in South Gardner. He was
91 vears old. .
Some syrups are sweet —some are sick
ening sweet —some are just sticky. A little
too muck of tkese once is muck too muck
always. A You never will get tired of
Made in tke P. 4 F. way from tke pure juice of Louisiana
sugar cane. Its taste is simply delicious.
FRIDAY,
SAFETY DEVICES
CAUSE DECREASE
IN ACCIDENTS
Fewer Men Killed in Coupling
and Uncoupling of Cars
Where They Are in Use.
FIGURES SHOW RESULTS
While Accidents in Other Lines
Increase Coupling Injuries
and Deaths Are Fewer.
Associated Press.
Washington. 1). C„ Feb. IS. —The in
erstate commerce commission issued to
ay figures relating to railroad acci
lents due to coupling and uncoupling
f cars, as showing beneficial results of
he operation of the safety appliance
aw.
The figures show that, in 1893 the
umber of men employed in coupling
nd uncoupling cars in the United
tates was 349 for each man killed in
le service while in 1908 the number
nployed for each man killed was 983,
n increase in the factor of safety
mounting to 181.66 per cent.
The number employed for each in
med in the coupling of cars in 1893
as 13, while in 1908 the number was
2. an increase in the factor of safety
... far as injuries are concerned of
76.92 per cent.
flic number killed for each thousand
employed in 1893 was three and but
one in 1908, showing a decrease in tho
hazard of railroad employment amount
ingt o 66.67 per cent. Tho number
of injured for each thousand employed
in the service in 1893 was 77; in 1908
it was 16. a decrease in this hazard
amounting to 79.22 per cent.
The department has issued tables on
railroad accidents from all causes and
in this report shows that while deaths
and injuries to trainmen in all acci
dents other than coupling, have stead
ily increased, the deaths and injuries
to trainmen from coupling accidents
have progressively decreased.
ARMY LOSES NOTED
MEDICAL OFFICER
Colonel Valery Havard of Med
ical Corps Placed on the
Retired List Today.
Special Dispatcn.
Washington. Feb. 18. —By operation
of law. Colonel Valery Havard, of the
medical corps of the United States nr
my, was placed on the retired list to
day. Colonel Havard, who is among
Hie best kuown officers in the service,
is a native of France and received his
education in that, country. He joined
the medical corps of the army in 1874.
In the Santiago campaign he was the
chief medical officer of the fifth corps,
and in 1900-1901 he was with the de
partment of Cuba under Genera) Wood.
During the recent war in the Far East
he was one of the military attaches to
the Russian army in Manchuria. Later
CoJone] Havard became chief surgeon
of the department of the east, with
headquarters in New York.
loins io n
* MIFCIIIIB UK
New York, New Haven & Hart
ford and Pennsylvania Lines
Will Spend $15,000,000.
Associated Press.
New Haven, Conn., Feb. 18.—It is
stated authoritatively that the New
York, New Haven & Hartford and
*1 eat and eat and eat —I swear ’ *
—KING HENRY V.
Velva
Breakfast Syrup
For talc by all groctn.
Strvtd by hotth and dining cart.
Penick & Ford, Ltd.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
SAN ANTONIO LIGHT AND GAZETTE
AFTER-AFFECTS
OF MALARIA
TONIO TREATMENT REOOMMEN DEI*
affek acute diseases.
A Kanaa* Woman Talia How She
Grew Stronger Every Day While
Taking Dr. Willlame’ Pink Pltla.
As in scarlet and typhoid fever, so it>
the grip, the after-effects <f the disease
are often worse than the disease itself
The sufferer is left with a debilitated
system, is short of breath upon the
slightest exertion and is affected by
ezery chang*. of weather Thesystena is
in such a weakened condition that it v
powerless to resist the attack of speh
diseases, as pneumonia and bronchitis.
This is a condition which emphatically
calls for a tonic for the blood. Dr Wil
liains' Pink Pills are the best medicine
for tins pur; os. for they act directly on
the blood w l.icli they cleanse of all iin
purities. They tone up the nerves and
give health and strength to the debili
tated system.
That the best tonic for n run-down
condition is Dr. Williams’ Pink Fills
has lieen proved in thousands of cases
similar to thal of Miss R C. Brickey
of Pratt. Kansas. She says:
“Some years ago 1 was troubled al
most dailx with chills which tho doctors
said were due to malarial fever 1
would get cold and numb all over my
body and would shake for hours witbeut
getting relief. 1 wonld become so ner
vous that I could not stand. My blood
was poor and i hin. My complexion was
yellow and I kept losing in weight until
I was a mere skeleton I was feverish a
good deal of the time and was often con
fined to led for a day or to. These
s;»ells lasted for about two years.
“The doctor’s medicine did not seem
to do me any good aud upon t ho advice oi
my grandmother 1 lx gau taking Dr Wil
liains' Pink Pills. 1 grew strongcrevery
day while taking the pills. The fever
subsided and finally the chills left me
entirely. I used the pills until 1 was
strong and entirely well. ’’
It is of the utmost importance to your
health, if you have suffered from an
attack of the grip or fever, that yen
cleanse tho blood of tl.e lingering genus
and put it in condition to resist disease
A valuable booklet, “Di: eases of the
Blood. ’’ containing fuller inforniati, u
Will be sent free upon request
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all druggists, or will be mailed, post
paid.ou receipt of price. 50 cents per box,
six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams
Medicine Cotcram . Schenectady. N Y
SPANISH BARK
DRIVEN ASHORE
Crew of Thirteen Men Rescued
by Life Savers and Taken
to Pensacola, Fla.
1 Associated Press.
Pensacola, Fla.. Feb. 18. —Driven
ashore iu a gale of sixty miles an hour,
; the Spanish bark Triumfo, from Ha-
I vans for Pensacola, is rapidly going to
pieces five miles west of Pensacola
light. The crew of thirteen men were
taken off last night by the life-saving
erew and brought to the city in a tow
boat. The effort to rescue the men was
a perilous undertaking for the waves
were running mountain high. Several
times members of the crew went over
board as they were leaving the ship,
but all were finally rescued.
The captain reports that he anchor
ed off Pensacola early yesterday but
that both cables parted and his vessel
was driven five miles to the westward
and went ashore.
Doctors Curry & Waganer,
Dentists—Gibbs Building
— 0,0
— Wrnted—Extra carrier boys with
horse and ?art. S. A. Light and Gazette
Pennsylvania Railroad companies have
made almost the final arrangements for
the construction of the connecting line
via Hell Gate bridge, practically o'l
the rights of way having been secured.
The new line, which will take about two
years in its construction, and will cost
not less than $15,000,000. will be built
through a third corporation, tho New
York Connecting company, financed bv
the two larger corporations.
HAS SCHEME TO
MAKE P. 0. J
LABOR BUREAU
Pennsylvanian Would Have ar
Employment Bureau in Every
Postoffice in the Land.
SUPPLY DAILY LISTS
Give Employers Information or
Men Wanting Work and Lat
ter on Possible Employer.
Associated Tress.
Washington. Feb. Is. —Employment
for the unemployed is the subject of a
bill that has been introduced by Rep
resentative Gamer, republican, of Penn
Sylvania, -vho proposes, through the me
diimi of the postofflcc department, to
bring ti c employers and the cntpl'-ye ii
touch so that the labor market, may be
i< adored normal at all times
lie preposes to authorize the
master genera] to establish in the de
partment and in every postofhee Hie
United States an “information la' o'
office.” whose duty it slud) be to sup
ply daily io employers lists of pusons
wanting work, and to the latter lists
of employers wanting laborers. Each
county sent is to he a di-tributing cen
ter for the county in which located, ap
plications for labor nnd for laborers
being sent from there daily to all points
in the county.
GRAIN MEN ARE
PRESENTING CASE
Their Views on Anti-Option Bil
Presented to House Com
mittee on Agriculture.
Associated Tress.
Washington. Feb. 18.—The views of
the grain exchange interests in oppo
sition to the proposed legislation to
abolish transactions in futures in the
cotton, grain and other exchanges nnd
boards, were presented to the house
committee on agriculture today.
The wide interest aroused in tho
United States in the pending bills
which threaten a sweeping reorganiza
tion and readjustment of the trading
operations of the country, resulted in
the attendance of a large delegation
ftom the various exchanges that are
members of the council of North Amer
ican grain exchanges, aud Chicago,
Philadelphia. Duluth and Minneapolis
were represented. They presented writ
ten argument against the passage of the
legislation contemplated and testified .'s
tc different phases of the work of the
grain mart.
PILOI CHART IS
WORK FOR SAILORS
So Declare Shipping Interests
Who Protest Against Weath
er Bureau Getting It Out.
Associated Press.
Washington, Feb. 18.—From the num
i I or of protests pouring into the navy
| department and upon congressional
i committees against the proposed trans
, fer of the publication of the pilot chart
■ from the naval hydrograph office to th?
, weather bureau, it would appear that
; the maritime interests of the country
1 arc thoroughly aroused. These inter
i ests are insisting that the data which
. they require to be included in this im
portant aid to navigation can be se
cured and collated properly only by
sailors, and object decidedly to entrust
ing this work to civilians.
A point made by the hydrographic of
fice in favor of the protection of the
work in that office is that the navy de
pnrtment receives a va«t amount of
data regarding icebergs, wrecks, storms,
geological observations and ether mV.
ter. outside of that actually used in tho
preparation of the pilot chart, but
which is of the utmost value to navi
gators. from ship captains and other ob
servers. without further cost to the gov
eminent and the mere supply to them of
a copy of the pilot chart.
AUTO TRADE SHOWS
A GREAT GROWTH
Washington, Feb. 18.—Automobiles
entering the world's markets in the
y ear 1909 bad a value in excess of $5O, ।
000,000 as compared with an aggregate*
value of $9,000,000 for the year 1902, j
striking evidence, according to the on-1
reau of statistics of the department of
commerce and labor, that the automo- I
bile is an important and rapidly in-!
creasing factor in international com- ;
merce.
The value of automobiles exported in
1908 from France. the United States,
tho United Kingdom. Italy and Ger i
many, the live leading countries in thei '
manufacture and sale, was more than ■
4i45.000.000. or a growth of 400 per eeni
vinre 1902.
THIS IS THE STORE /
THAT MUST RAISE A
$l5OO BY TOMOR-
ROW NIGHT
I
S >*lllll,9' ~"~ * (X 1 "~ “ t
la* _ _, . «
YOUR LAST OPPORTUNITY
TOMORROW, SATURDAY, LAST DAY OF REGENT’S COMPULSORY SALE
Tomorrow is the last day of the greatest profit sacrificing sale ever held in
this city or vicinity. Never has the shoe-buying public seen the like. To
date we have raised $8500.00 leaving a deficit of slsoo.oo—that, we are de
termined to raise by tomorrow night. We will accomplish this if the shoe
buying public appreciates the still further reductions we have made on our
entire stock. WE ARE GOING TO REFUND EVERY 19th SALE REGARD
LESS OF THE AfIOUNT UNTIL NOON SATAURDAY—THE LAST DAY.
BIGGER, GREATER REDUCTIONS THAN EVER
MEN’S SHOES
Such lines as Stacy-Adams, Florsheini, Johnston & Mur
phy—and the Regent—lines that stand pre-eminent in
the shoe world—that must be sacrificed to raise this
$1500.00.
Every pair $6.00 aud $7.00
shoes, compul- /| QCJ
pulsory price..
Evers' pair $6.00 and $6.50
shoes, all sizes, all widths,
all leathers, must go. Com
pulsory 4 O
price “ **
Every pr. $5.00-$5.50 shoes,
tans, patents and gunmetal,
button and lace, all sizes.
Compulsory 3.84
House slippers, and
blacks. Compul E
sorv price
MUSI ANSWER 10
CHARGE OF FRAUD
Special Dispatch.
New York. Fob. 18.—A transplanted
farmer from Huntersville. Minn., who
pasaea under the name of Sycou* M
Drake, and declares he is n descendant
of Sir Francis Drake, was arraigned
before United States Commissioner
All Sizes—But One Quality White. Flawless Gems
UPS DOWNS
Whether times are good or bad. during the ups and downs of prosperity or depression. DIAMONDS, above all
other assets one mav have, remain at par. Our reputation as diamond dealers has stood the test for .8 years.
Zealously and tenaciously OBOWB w VALUE EVKBY TBAR
PRITZER BROC And ood Jewelry Associated
V Diamond Merchants 28 Years
Every pair of $4.00 shoes,
in patents, tans, gunmetals
and viei kids, all sizes and
all widths. Com 4
pulsory price . w» A
Every pair of the celebrated
“Regent $3.50 Shoe,” pat
ents, tans, v ieis and gun
metals. Com
pulsory price. •a'OsJ
Odds and ends in high grade
shoes, your size may be
among them. Call and see.
Tho compulsory Ort
price is . - 4b a AM
Shields today to answer to a charge of ,
fraud preferred him by the pos
tal authorities. The Minnesotan is ac-1
cused of working the familiar game of ।
sending word to his namesakes around :
the country that he had discovered rec-!
ords here proving the existence of a '
$260,000,000 estate distributable to the i
heirs of the valiant admiral. That he
was successful in enlisting the inter-!
est of the Drakes throughout the coun
try is svidonced by the fnet that mom
hers of the family had taken steps to |
hold a meeting today iu Niles, Ohio, to
organize and employ attorneys to fight
FEBRUAKY 18. 1010.
WOMEN’S SHOES
Our entire stock of women’s shoes—NO restrictions—
at sacrifices from 15 to 50 per cent—in patent kid, tans
and gunmetals. All this season's newest styles.
Every pair $5.00 shoes, all
widths. Com- g
pulsory price..
Every pair women's $4.00
high shoes go 2.95
.Every pair women’s $3.50
high shoes go 2.80
Every pair women’s $3.00
high shoes go 2.20
Gilt Edgs Shoe Polish 19c
1 he celebrated Shinola Sc
for the estate believed to be theirs. Ad
vices from the Minnesota home of the
promoter hint that he may not be alto
gether mentally responsible for his acts,
owing to long brooding over the mythi
cal millions which he now claims.
If you are a tobaceo ehewer who
weighs cost and comfort in the same
scale you probably have a piees of
piper Heidtiock iu your pocket right
now.
o। » —
Drs. R. H. Nettle G. Gray.
Homeopaths. Hicks Building.
Every pair women’s $2.50
high shoes go 1.85
Every pair women’s $2.00
high shoes go 1.55
Our entire stock of felt, fur
top Julietts, all sizes and all
colors. Compul- Q —
sorv price
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