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San Antonio light and gazette. [volume] (San Antonio, Tex.) 1909-1911, March 09, 1910, Image 3

Image and text provided by University of North Texas; Denton, TX

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86090238/1910-03-09/ed-1/seq-3/

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Not any Milk Trust
The Original and Genuine
HORLICK’S
MALTED MILK
The Food Drink for All Agee.
For Infant*, Invalid*,»nd Growing children
Pure Nutrition, upbuilding the whole body.
Invigorate* the nuning mother and the aged.
Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form.
A qiick lunch prepared ia a miaata.
Take ao aabttttate. Atk far HORLICK’S.
Others art. imitations.
AUTO TIRES GET
JUNK MAN IN COURT
They Had Been Stolen From
N. H, Larry, But the Junk
Dealer Did Not Know It,
Because a pair of automobile tires
was found at his junk shop, which had
been stolen from the home of N. H.
Larry, 104 Fountain street, last Satur- ;
day, Ike Shklar was arraigned before
Judge Buckley in the police court yes
terday to answer an affidavit filed'
against him, adeging that he had bar- 1
tered and traded in stolen property.
The tires were produced in court and '
identified by Mr. Larry as having been
stolen from him last Saturday. He tes
tified further unat it,was while he was
endeavoring to buy some tires that he
located his own in the shop conducted ;
by the defendant. Upon complaint by
Mr. Larry, Shklar was placed under ar
rest by Detective Stowe and released on
bond for his appearance before the
court.
The defendant testified that it was j
his business to buy old rubber and that
when he bought, the tires in question he |
did not know they had been stolen and
had paid the same price for them as
he did for all rubber goods.
Counse] for the defense argued that
the defendant in no way had violated ,
a law, in that a question of law was in- I
volved in the term “bartered and trad
ed,” as used in the vagrancy law; !
whereas the defendant had merely made
a purchase in the regular transaction of
business.
Judge Buckley imposed a $lO fine in
the case, saying that it would give the
defense an opportunity of testing that
feature of the new state vagrancy law.
A notice of appeal was immediately
filed.
A Single Cup
Correctly Brewed
Proves the merit and satisfaction there is in Postuni. But it is often only half brewed and
the result is often unjust condemnation. ,
There are no “grades” of Postum. Every package is the same. It is jhe steady boiling,
for at least fifteen minutes after boiling begins, that gives a cup of Postum its fine, snappy
flavour.
If your first cup of
POSTUM
Was not satisfactory, the fault was in the brewing— have~it right
Have Your Beverages Made Good
it must be boiled until it is dark and rich—don't at- Enough to Win You.
tempt to make it as you would make coffee, but re- The rule about not boiling coffee
leads many persons to prepare Postum
member— in the same way.
This is a mistake and. of course, is
unfair to Postum. Have it just right
The longer Postum is boiled the better it is! a "d it has much the same flavour as
the mild and high-prieed Java coffee,
but never causes the troubles that cof-
Well-made Postum served with good cream, has fee do ®";. .
An Illinois man found out how to
a flavour distinctly its own, and not unlike that of ™. akp Postum so it tasted as good to
him as his old-time coffee. He writes:
mild, high-grade Java coffee. ‘‘For years I could not breaklast
without my cup of coffee.
“During this time I was troubled
The best proof of the value of Postum is found with palpitation of the heart, with
smothering and nervous spells. The
in the clear brain and steady nerves which follow its doctor told me to quit coffee, but I
did not.
use as the regular daily beverage in place of coffee “Finally, one time, while visiting, I
was given Postum for breakfast. I
or tea. can’t say I enjoyed it at first—they
only guessed how to make it.' But
when we followed the directions on
Postum—made of clean hard wheat (including * h, ‘ ™ a " a 8 rped ,ha * ' Poh
v turn was fine.
the bran-coat with its “vital phosphates," grown in 'iV’T I '. * kf 8 ®" ,o pn i°. v niv n,pa, ’‘-
11 ’ o ( ould take plenty of substantial food
tine grain)—quickly assists in rebuilding the worn-out besides the Postum and telt good af-
“ terwards. My headaches were gone,
bodv cells, because it contains these valuable elements and gradually I forgot I ever had heart
1 ’• trouble.
in liquid form;-in fact, it is a very palatable liquid “I have told persons we used Pos-
J turn at our house and they remarked
food. they did not know how we could ‘use
the stuff.’ They did not get at its
goodness because it was not made right.
»r. n _ . . • , ~ • , “A ladv tried to give Postum to a lot
Alter all arguments, io days trial proves o f hired men, but they would not take
it. I tasted it as she made it and
didn’t wonder —it didn’t taste like ours.
“There’s a Reason” for Postum
the package.
“The next time I saw her she had
-■ —■ — learned how to make Postum right anil
said the men folks asked for the second
cup. Follow directions and you'll have
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. good Postum.” Have it right!
WEDNESDAY,
W FLYS ON j
PM CANAL
SAIS TDUBIST
Thomas Weeks, Back From a
! Visit, Praises Swift Work
of Joining Oceans.
FINISH TASK ABOUT 1915
Giant Undertaking Employs:
Over 37,000 Men to .Con
clude It at Time Set.
I ———
A very interesting description of the
Panama canal is given by Thomas
Weeks of Pontiac. Hl., who. with his
wife and daughter, spent two months
sightseeing in Panama. Central America
। and Mexico.
will speud a week or two in
Hau Antonio before returning home.
Mr. Weeks and family are at the Mav
erick.
“We started our trip.” said Mr.
; Weeks, “along the Panama canal from
Colon, which is the north end on the
[ Atlantic side. Fortunately we made the
' trip with an army officer who is one
j of the engineers. He furnished me
I with a lot of valuable information
I which I put down in my diary. The
railroad runs along the line of the!
canal from northeast, to southwest, a
distance of 43 miles.
“Leaving Colon the country is flat
and level, heavily covered with forests,
■ that are a virtual jungle for a distance i
I of twenty miles. The balance of the |
Pacific side is rolling and it is in this
end of the canal that the big work is!
being carried on of making the Cule .
J bra cut. It will be 390 feet deep and >
| when we were there it was already 300 I
I feet.
“The dry season, which is on now, is
the healthiest time of the year. There ,
are about 37,000 people employed on;
the canal and are of all races. There ;
are many Americans, but most of them
are bosses or engineers. The Americans [
! have built up little towns which have !
| modern and up-to-date dwellings with [
. large galleries running around the;
■ house. entirely screened in. You can,
pick them out easily from the native j
homes.
“The Gatun dam. which is being,
built seven miles from Colon, will be
85 feet high. When the dam is com
pleted and the water turned in from I
the Chagres river, the present railroad 1
will he 45 feet water and a new
line will have to built on higher ground.
SAN ANTONIO LIGHT AND GAZETTE
CHIEF FOE OF THE
HOUSE OF LORDS
President Kier-Hardie of the Labor
conference now going on in England
to determine the policy to be pursued
by labor leaders at the coming session
of parliament. Mr. Kier-Hardie in an
opening speech at. the conference, de
clared that at all costs the labor party
must maintain complete freedom of
action both in the house of commons
and in the constituencies. The policy
of the labor party with respect to the
house of lords, the speaker declared,
was to sweep the lords into oblivion.
I judge that the work will be finished
I by 1915.
“The government has also started
the erection of a strong fort at the
I Panama end of the canal which will
i overlook the town and the canal.” ,
MORTGAGES WIPED OUT.
| Associated Press.
New York. March 9.—Mortgages.
| some of them sixty years oid. amount
ing to approximately $350,000. held by
the Trinity corporation against fifty
i eight parishes of the church in greater
i New York, have been voluntarily wiped
out by the mother church, according to
announcement just made .
MISERY FROM
STOMACH GOES
No Indigestion, Heartburn, Gas
or Dyspepsia Five Minutes
After Taking Diapepsin-.
Every year regularly more thaa a
million stomach sufferers in the United
States, England and Canada taka
Pape's Diapepsin and realize not only
immediate but lasting relief.
This harmless preparation will di
geat anything you eat and overcome a
sour, ga’sv or out-of-order stnmoeh five
minutes afterwards.
If your meals don't fit comfortably
or what you eat lays like a lump of lead
in your stomach, or if yon have heart
burn, that is a sign of Indigestion.
Get from your Pharmacist a 50-eent
case of Pape's Diapepsin and taka
a dose just as soon as yon can.
There will be no sour risings, no belch
ing of undigested food mixed with
acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fell
ness or heavy feeling in the stomach.
Nausea. Debilitating Headaches. Dizzi
ness or Intestinal griping. This will
ill go. and besides, there will be ’io
sour food left, over in the stomach
to poison your breath with nauseous
adors.
Pape's Diapepsin ia ■ certain cure for
aut-of order stomachs, because it takes
j hold of yonr food and digests It just
I the same as if your stomach wasn’t
I there.
Relief in five minntes from all stom
ach misery is waiting for yon nt any
drug store.
These large 50-eent eases contain
more than suffietont to thoroughly curs
' almost anv eass of Dyspepsia. Tndiges
tie* sr any other stomach disorder.
DALLAS NAN HELD
UP BY NEGRUES
<
Robbers Secured $6OO and Es
caped Though Pursued
By Bloodhounds.
Associated Press.
Dallas, Tex.. March 9. —W. D. Trent,
notified the police by telephone last,
night that he had been held up by two
negroes near his home, 393 Gould street,
an<l robbed of something over $5OO.
Motorcycle officers responded at once
and later dogs were put on the trail,
which was followed into the river bot
toms and lost near Oakcliff, a su
burb. The officers think the high
waymen caught an interurban car at
Oakcliff and-made good their escape.
Trent told the officers he had just
arrived front Denton, where he had ’
completed a business deal and taken
cash instead of a meek.
THINKS AMERICAN
YACHTS ARE BETTER

Associated Press.
Kiel, Prussia, March 9.—Admiral
[Brandon, who attended thg German and
American yaeht contest at Marblehead
last year in September, contributes an
! interesting account of it for the new
volume of the year book of the Ini
pcrial Yacht club of Kiel. The writer
I was formerly superintendent of Krupp’s
। Germania ship building yards at Kiel,
[which built some of the best German
[ yachts, and is thus in a position to 1
i speak with authority on the compara I
> live merits of these craft. In regard I
[to the handling of the contesting boats, i
! the admiral thinks the Americans were -
I not superior to the German and in the
ease of the Havelia he thinks they were j
decidedly outclassed. The German i
I boats were superior to the American :
I only when their sails were carried com- |
i pletely erect, that is. when sailing be
[ fore a light wind, but as soon as the
American yachts heeled over before the
[wind they showed themselves consider-
I ably faster than the Germans. The ad
' miral thus sums up his judgment:
“It seems to me, therefore, that the
American boats except in really bad I
weather are considerably better than j
the German ones.”
TAXICAB AND AUTO
COLLIDE AND ARE WRECKED
Taxicab No. 417-471, driven by El ।
Neri and auto No. 357, operated by R.
Aue. of Aue station, on the Aransas
Pass, met Monday afternoon at 5
o’clock in a head-on collision at the
corner of Avenue C and Third street,
while running at a speed of twenty-five
miles per hour, the impact resulting in I
the wrecking of both machines. Both
of the drivers were thrown from their
seats when the autos crashed together,
but fortunately neither of them were
injured. Persons on the street at that
point say it would be a hard matter to
say who was to blame for the wreck
from the faet that both men were try
ing to dodge each other when they
collided.

MUST SUE PULLMAN
COMPANY IN ILLINOIS)
Associated Press.
Raleigh, N. C., March 9—ln the case
of Edward Freiburg and wife of Paris,
France/ who entered suit against the
Pullman Car company for $lO,OOO for
jewelry alleged to have been stolen,
Judge C6nnor, in the federal court here,
has sustained a demurrer that he was j
without jurisdiction and that the suit
must be entered in Illinois, the home of
the Pullman company.
The Freiburgs last year were en
route from Jersey City to Wilmington,
N. C., when the jewels were missed.
COCKS DISTURB
WALSH’S SLEEP;
ARE DISMISSED
Haughty Chanticleers Shall No
Longer Keep the Mining
King From His Slumber.
PRICE OF EGGS GOES UP
Hen House Has Been Supply
ing Them to the Millionaire.
But Now Has io Buy,

Because certain arrogant and ob
itrcpcrous roosters insisted on
crowing most any time between
midnight and daylight, thus dis
turbing the siuntber of Thomas F.
Walsh, the Denver mining king,
who is here, convalescing from a
serious attack of pneumonia, fol
lowed by bronchitis, every fowl in
the her. roost of his son-in iaw, Ed
ward McLean, has been bsnished.
.And whereas the McLean and the
Walsh households have heretofore
been supplied with eggs direct from
this hen house, now they will have
to pay the egg price demanded by
dealers. It is not believed, how
ever, that this will have much ef
fect on the bank account of either.

Mr. Walsh’s nerves could not .stand
tin- ehanricleering which began in the
heu house, to the rear of the McLean
j residence, about 3 in the morning and
11 went on until the high and mighty
rooster descended from his perch to
'preen himself and start on a still hunt
[ for grubs and earthworms. A hint was
dropped to Mr. McLean yesterday and
the loud-lunged roosters and cackling
bens were dismissed in disgrace. The
: price of eggs went up immediately in
i the Walsh household.
Sleeps During Day.
The condition of Mr. Walsh continues
to improve and his strength is rapid
ly returning. Great care is being ex
ercised by Dr. Wainwright, his private
physician, to see that his patient docs
not over exert himself. Mr. Walsh is
; kept as quiet as possible and sleeps a
great deal during the day. He was
awake early this morning and spent
about an hour sitting out of doors. Al
though considerably improved, Mr.
i Walsh still requires his physician to be
constantly near him and besides his
, wife, who is always with him, he has
i a corps of nurses to wait upon him.
Mr. Walsh expressed himself as be
, ing so pleased with the climate that he
said he wished to stay until the warm
! weather set in. lie then wishes to move
'to the mountains until about June 1.
! but has not yet selected his place. It is
I more than likely that Mr. Walsh will
' spend the summer some place in the
l Adirondacks iu New York state.
McLeans Take Trips.
Mr. McLean, accompanied by his
wife, rode out to Mitchell's lake Mon
day afternoon in their machine, where
Mr. McLean tried his hand at duck!
shooting. He is a great sportsman, and
i besides being a devoted autoist, is a
good shot with both shotgun and rifle.
With Mr. Walsh, his father in-law, i
out of danger and recovering his I
strength daily, Mr. and Mrs. McLean |
will spend more of their time autoing
in the country.
Preparations are being made in Wash- ,
ington to get Vinson Walsh McLean,
the $25,000,000 baby, started for Texas
in his private car, “Ohio.’’ Mr. Mc-
Lean. his father, will leave here in about
fifteen days and meet his son enroute
, at St. Louis.
Mr. Walsh this morning received a
! wire from the Aero club of Washington, I
of which be is president, asking bis
condition. A reply was sent, stating
that he was materially improved and ।
) stronger than at any time since leav
■ ing Washington.
come in every leather, color and stvle approved by tills season s fashions as shown in the most exclusive
Fifth Avenue and Broadway shops. The one difference between Beacon Shoes and five dollar shoes is
yo or $2.00 and nothing more.
They are sold direct ti yen with jnt ent profit a«ed to ce»t of ■akii|. We Make eix theeued pain every weriuey day
BEACON BHOEB MEAN Latut Modal*. Poptact Fit, Beat Qualify, Long Sluice. Laar Prise bccauaa
acid through 3,000 Author trod Dealer a. Ne other Bhoe la Better.
She Store, in Memphis Ue Moi G
Fort Worth. Honoton, »a'»nnab. Hartford. Rochester. Little Rock. Oklahoma (tty. Mobile. Baltimore. uacMosvium
Beacon Shoe Store 103 Alamo Plaza. Opera House Blk.. San Antonio. Tex. g
We know of no other medicine which has been so suo
cessful in relieving the suffering of women, or secured so
many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
In almost every community you will find women who
have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound. Almost every woman you meet has
either been benefited by it, or knows some one who has.
In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files con
taining over one million one hundred thousand letters from
women seeking health, in which many openly state over
their own signatures that they have regained their health by
taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has saved
many women from surgical operations.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is made ex
clusively from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmless.
1 he reason why it is so successful is because it contains
ingredients which act directly upon the female organism,
restoring it to healthy and normal activity.
1 housands Of unsolicited and genuine testimonials such
as the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedy.
Minneapolis, Minn.:—“ I was a great sufferer
from female troubles which causetl a weakness
an d broken down condition of the system. I
gw i read so much of what Lydia F. Pinkham’s Veg-
Wiy etable Compound had done for other suffering
w ’S* F ' women, I felt sure it would help me. and I must
-JR ** d '*t help me wonderfully. Within three
A “T'.y months 1 was a perfectly well woman.
> this letter made public to show the
: benefits to be derived from Lvdia E. Pinkham’s
vito. Vegetable Compound.” —Sirs. John G. Moldau,
yl /"w » Second St., North
—/.\ ■ 5 Women who are suffering from those dis
tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of
these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound to restore their health.
SHUBERTS 10 BUILD H TOOK lIIOUH
Mil of mains ms ws, in n mi
[Will Spend $6,000,000 and
Buildines Are to Be Ready
for evening Next Season.
Asioclated Press.
New York, March 9.—The Shubert
theatrical iuterexts have confirmed a
report that they are to expend $6,-
000,000 In the erection of a chain of
theaters between St. Paul and San
Francisco. The cities in which they
will erect at are as follows: Denver,
San Francisco, Portland. Winnipeg, Los
Angelos, Fresno, San Diego, San Jose,
Butte, Spokane. Salt Ijke City and
Sacramento.
It is planned to have the theaters
ready for opening early next season.
TIED TO THE TRACK.
“Then you think motormen are more
cautious than chauffeurs!” *
“They have to be. They ran t swerve
if the pedestrian loses his head.” —
Pittsburg Post. •
.MARCH V, ivio.
J Largest and Heaviest Gem o?
Its Kind Imported to This
Country In Years.
New York, March 9.—A pear-shaped
t [ pearl, valued by the appraisers at
1 I $165,000, has been received at the cns
‘ ■ toms house consigned to a Fifth avenue
1 [jewelry firm. It is said to be the largest
1 1 and heaviest gem of its kind brought
' into this country for several years. The
• pearl, though in the rough, is cut to be
1 i worn as a pendant. It was said it was
■ 1 purchased bv a New York woman.
Sent to Rockpile- Herman Rundsei,
‘ Morris Irby and Ivan • Driskell, three
white men. charged with vagrancy
failed to give Judge Buckley a good
account of why they were iu the city
■ out of employment and he assessed each
one of the defendants a fine of $lO in
1 : order that they might have time tc
- think over the matter while serving ox
the rock pile.
3

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