Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 279, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1913 Page: 4 of 16
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muraszpnasesvezaseaszazssamreanaani
HAT’S about as good a way of expressing it as
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HOME MAKER STORE,’’ and it’s money you not
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LOOK BACK AT IN AFTER YEARS AS MONEY
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YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD!
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Music Cabinets
Miw
$6.75
11
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(With Seat)
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It’s only a short time when cool weather will
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Why not add to this
then much in demand.
$7.25
$6.75
{«
75 C
s
%
-
Blankets and Comforts!
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8
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Plate Rails
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At 55c
Chiffoniers!
$
p
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2
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87.50
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!
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$12.95
945
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4
SEGREGATION
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FOR CONVICTS
By WILLIAM T. ELIS
V
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the
I
4
TANGO IS PERMITTED.
V
STREET PAVING
IS PROGRESSING
East, declare that mis-
been in the
4
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A
S
back with a smile if it
5
—your money
Price, 50 cents a
fails to satisfy you.
1
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4
{
smi
i !
0
homes
remind
five,
point.
will
you
Oak, solidly
built and beau-
tifully finished
They are great
bargains at
this price
Need of Special Treat-
ment indicated.
I
I
1
1
CRIMINAL TENDENCY
MAY BE CORRECTED
Telephone
Stands
Broadway Is Open to Traffic
As Far East as Fifteenth
Street.
Z
(yuz
Don’t Let Periodical Spells of Lazy
Liver Ruin Your Temper and
Spoil Your Work.
Hall Racks
The first furniture greeting of a home is a
Hall Rack. That greeting will be a pleasant
one if you secure one of the handsome Solid
oak ones we are showing, at only.., .$7.50
Now Is the Time to Prepare Yourself
For the cool northers that can be expected.. You'll
find a whole lot of comfort in any one of the excel-
lent Blankets we have in a large assortment of pat-
terns, of the down and wool filled Comforts with
silk or sateen coverings in many different designs,
and the prices will appeal to you—
Comforts $1.50 to $15.00
Blankets $2.50 to $18.00
FEEL RIGHT
ALL THE TIME
FOR YOU
| only get the immediate benefit of in home comfort, but money you can
aya.
bottle, and you money is as safe as if
you had it in your pocket if you need
the medicine you need it badly—if it
doesn’t satisfy you—your money back.
Buy a bottle from any druggist today
under this guarantee.
)
restores the courage of health to make life bright
g Scott's Emulsion sets in action
46g the very forces that promote
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t
*
pleasure, and at the same time, help beautify
your home by having one of these hand-
some Music Cabinets in mahogany or oak we
have in prices ranging as low as—
6
7
4
1
I
t
that music, among other pleasures, is
= “mEe
Square Post
Beds
M9 N worth for every dollar you spend at “THE HAPPY
Foreign missions are a case in
One set of trav'elers who have
STOVES!
YOU WON’T MAKE A MISTAKE
If you purchase and one of the
Stoves from the big line we are
now showing, including Cres-
cents, for every one comes to us
with a guarantee for baking and
fuel-saving qualities only found
in Stoves and Ranges of the
highest standard. We can offer
you anything from the largest
Range down to the No. 7 Cook
Stove we are selling at—
E-N
$4.25, $6.50,
$7.50
be upon us and the interior of our
I a
-
1
-
It is a pathetic mistake to accept drugs or alcoholic
mixtures when nature craves nourishment to repair
the wasted body and restore the vigor of health.
For forty years the best physicians have relied on
the wholesome predigested nourishment in SCOTTS
EMULSION which is totally free from alcohol or opiates.
Scott's Emulsion sharpens the appetite—renews
blood—nourishes nerves—strengthens bones and
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was that there was little chance to
go on with the paving with brick.
While the fact that there is no fund I
for the paving of streets at this time
has for the present held the matter of, P
paving East Post Office street from
egRBeh.
5nFsf
SAVED.
we know; for you positively get a full 100 cents
1gX2
2a
“Give Me ZEMO, Quick! It is Guaranteed
to Stop this Terrible Itching Instantly:
fiery, unreachable itching, scorching,
raw eczema, prickly heat, rash, tetter,
irritated or inflamed skin, blotches,
pimples or blackheads, you will mar-
vel at the results of ZEMO.
ZEMO is a clean, antiseptic solutioni
not a grease or ointment. Itching
vanishes at the first application;, this
is absolutely guaranteed or money re-
funded. Use it on the baby, too it
gives immediate relief in all skin tor-;
fures. Dandruff and scalp itching vanish.
“Suffered 23 years with eczema. Fin-
ally tried ZEMO. It cured me sound
and well. That was 15 months ago.
ZEMO is a blessing.” Mrs. S. Eason,
Hope, Ark.
First-class druggists everywhere sell
ZEMO for 25c a sealed bottle, or sent
direct on receipt of price by E. W.
Bose Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Sold and guaranteed in Galveston by
J. J. Schott, Chas. E. Witherspoon, Sea-
wall Drug Store, F. Geo. Leinbach, D.
Scott Keene; Star Drug Store, Red
Cross Pharmacy.
den or superintendent advocates more
and more earnestly that when practic-
able every effort be put forth to save
offenders of the law from further evil-
doing without committing to prison or
reformatory. There is no class so op-
posed to prisons, by whatever name
called, as those whose duty it is to su-
perintend them; it is the indifferent
public who stolidly look on while their
members drift into prison.”
Recommendations.
The report recommends that the pres-
ent system of medical inspection of
schools be extended so that the state
shall not resign supervision over the
; 2.
1
25
52: Wl‘
s-WK8
85
This handsome solid oak Chiffonier with French
bevel plate mirror, 19x12, five roomy drawers with
wood knobs, all highly polished and beautifully fin-
ished, now goes as a special at-
8s
259
■
3788
Y2)
Real beauties—exactly the same
design as shown in cut — in
either double or single size, fin-
ished with four coats of enamel
in white or Vernis Martin. Don’t
miss seeing ’em. They’re hum-
ming good values at this price.
Only—
GALVESTON TRIBUNE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1913.
defective class after they pass
LPMMAL
22 8 9333
stallation will be begun upon their ar-
rival. The cable for the lighting has
been laid.
The work of paving Church street
between Twenty-second and Tremont
streets was completed a few days ago
and the street opened to traffic. Just
what is being done wit reference to
paving this street between Tremont
and Twenty-fourth street has not been
learned. So far as could be ascertained
there is little change in the situation
as presented some time ago, and that
Don’t miss seeing th d ones in Earl Eng-
lish we are now offering as long as they
last—
$22
2
See These Fine Heaters
Now is the time to protect your home from these northers.
Of course you want to do so at the least possible cost for
fuel, and you are assuring yourself of this if you buy the
kind of Heaters we are offering at—
$3 25 Up Airtishts 81.25 and Ur
355
29
Cleveland Judge So Rules After Wit-
nessing Exhibition.
Bv Associated Press
Cleveland, O.. Oct. 17.—Convinced by,,
a demonstration in his courtroom,
Judge Willis Vickery of common pleas
court ruled*that the tango dance is
permissible. A dancing teacher who
sought an injunction against an order
which barred the teaching of the dance
at his hall brought pupils to court.
They glided and dipped through the
tango and Judge Vickery ordered the
city dance hall inspector to not inter-
fere with the teacher.
IN
8295223xBe
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d847
sions are a farce and a failure. An-
other set of travelers aver that they
are the most potent social and political
factor now at work in the non-Chris-
tian world. How shall w'e decide, ex-
cept we consider the equipment, tem-
perament and creditability of the wit-
nesses Out of Canaan the twelve mis-
sionaries brought two diametrically
opposite reports. Ten said the land
could not be possessed; two said go up
Accoring to the announcements made
from the office of the city engineer ex-
cellent progress has been made on the
Broadway paving. The thoroughfare
has been opened to traffic as far east
as Fifteenth street and the matter of
laying the concrete paving from Fif-
teenth to Eleventh street is well under
way. It is predicted that the work
of paving the street will be completed
during the year and formally opened to
traffic.
Contractor Isaac Heffron during the
past few days of excellent weather has
had a large force of men at work on
the job and states that he is well
pleased with the progress being made.
The recent rains caused a delay in the
work but this has been overcome dur-
ing the present week.
In most cases the street crossings
have been paved with brick as the pav-
ing with concrete went along. There
is at this time but one place where this
work has not been completed and that
is at the crossing of Twenty-first and
Broadway.
There is yet some delay in the mat-
ter of installing the $7,500 ornamental
lighting system which will be used
jointly by the city of Galveston and the
Galveston Electric company. It is un-
derstood that the poles will be in the
city shortly and that the work of in-
be mostly used. This should
। p
: THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
and conquer it. And, as often, the mi-
nority report was right.
WITH EYE OF TERROR.
The art of seeing straight is rare.
Few persons have unimpaired vision
for comprehending life in its whole-
ness. The youths who talk glibly of
“seeing life” confessedly mean seeing
only th'e dirty side of life. The pessi-
mist is a man who needs th’e attention
of a spiritual occulist: he is not seeing
things in their relationship.
Because their own eyes were filled
with terror, ten of the spies of Moses
cam'e back scared. Fear had nipped
their manhood. Courage gone, they
were as unreasonable as a mob in a
burning building. The fortified cities
of Canaan looked big to them, and the
inhabitants seemed giants. That was
because they had grasshopper minds,
and entertained contemptible thoughts
of themselves. Had they been brave
and big in their own souls, the alti-
tude of their difficulties would have
appeared less.
Cowardice is contagious. The fear-
some and faithless words of the ter-
rified ten revealed the heart of th'e
crowd as craven to the core. They
went all to pieces, and began to rave
and rail in a madness of panic. They
wanted to go back to Egypt. Their
standard was th’eir own miserable
past, rather than Jehovah’s promised
future. They were not forward-look-
ing people. They longed for death;
they cursed their leaders; and, in short,
they had a first-class attack of hys-
teria. Of all the pitiable sights on
earth, the angels never see anything
worse han men in the clutch of cow-
ardice. Can we wonder that even a
Patient God was ready to spew th’em
out of his mouth?
THE HEROES SPEAK.
As a life rule, it is better to follow
optimism than pessimism; to heed the
Words of courage rather than those of
fear. Every age, and our own, day in
particular, is clamant with th'e two
contending summonses. Let us have
hearts of faith, and dare to go for-
ward. What matter if the cautious
and “conservative” ones seem in the
majority? God’s best lies ahead, along
the untrodden ways. Give 'ear to the
voice that dares call us thither.
“He alone is great, Who, by life
heroic, conquers fate.”
Two of the twelve young men sent
out by Moses wer’e armed with confi-
dence and courage. They had been
over the same ground as the other
ten. They had seen the sons of Anak,
the walled cities, the dangers of the
land, the Jebusites and the Hittites
and the Amorites and the Cananites,
and all the other affrights. But they
had also seen the grapes of Eschol, the
fruitful fields, th’e-pleasant valleys, and
all the prospects of prosperity. Also
they had carried with them the sense
of God. They thought more about his
greatness than about their own grass-
hopperishness.
So their ringing summons was, “Let
us go up at once and poss’ess it; for
we are well able to overcome it.”
That is the way to talk. Such was
the spirit of our fathers, who over-
came the obstacles of this western
wilderness. One of the phras’es of the
doughty pair, as they amplified their
message of courage was, “neither fear
ye the people of the land; for they
are br'ead for us.” That sounds like
modern slang: “They are our meat.”
“We can eat them up.” What the Lord
Almighty thinks of this sort of spirit
is shown by the record that of all the
the newspaper man, for it was upon
the basis of the reports of the men
sent to find out the facts that the
craven decision was made. Even today
the world is depend'ent upon the find-
ings of newspaper reporters for its
judgment of events, great and small.
A careless, timorous or unfaithful
newspaper writer may cause world-
wide harm. Little did the t'en scared
spies realize the tremendous result
that would follow their panicky tid-
ings.
Everything should be done on a basis
of carefully ascertained facts. That is
as true in war as in law, in social
service as in neighborhood conversa-
tion. Moses chose twelve leading men,
one from each tribe, to go up into the
Promised Land to learn conditions,
while the host, which had been out
from Egypt for a year and a half,
waited amid the sweet springs of Ka-
desh. Care was exercised to secure re-
liable scouts. Everything would de-
pend upon their word.
From whatever angle they are ap-
proached, facts ar'e facts. The discrep-
ancies are not in history, but in his-
torians. The reporter’s eyes and ears
are an essential factor in every narra-
men who assembled that day to hear
the report, these two alon’e were per-
mitted, nearly forty years later, to en-
ter the Promised Land which they had
surveyed.
STONING THE NEWS-BEARERS.
The frantic mob, fear-bitten to th'e
extent of mania, would have none of
their message of courage, and they
cried out, like the rabble at Calvary,
“Stone them! Stone th'em!” The mes-
sage was not suited to their mood;
therefore, forsooth, they would slay
the messenger! Not very logical, that,
but historically human.
Wholly disgusted, the Lord would
have wiped out the whimpering, whin-
ing crew. But his own honor was
at stake, as Moses pointed out. Many
things God must do for his name’s
sake. Like a gentleman, his honor
is his first concern. So he forebore
to smite the people with destruction.
But he decreed that no coward should
inherit the kingdom of Canaan. Their
unreasonable timidity, their hearken-
ing to he counsel of the frightened,
shut these weary pilgrims forever from
a sight of the Promised Land, which
had been their dream while in Egypt,
and their goal on the long wilderness
pilgrimage. Verily, cowardice costs.
2
YAFTER SICKNESS OR OPERATION
Me
.Muuil
N
If your liver doesn’t behave right all
the time—if it sometimes stops work-
ing and you become bilious and “head-
achy”—don’t take calomel, but try Dod-
son’s Liver Tone.
You are safe in taking Dodson’s Liver
tone. It’s a harmless, pleasant vege-
table remedy that starts the liver with-
out stirring up your whole system as
calomel often does. It is especially
good for children who need a liver
tonic once in a while, but who should
not be dosed with strong drugs.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is sold by all
druggists. These stores guarantee it
with a clean open and shut guarantee
-g-g
age of compulsory education.
“This is the time when all our ma-
chinery should be perfected to safe-
guard our children—especially do I
plead it for our girls1—the community
knows, it needs no repetition here, that
the unprotected feeble-minded girl is
a greater source of evil in a commun-
ity than a youth of the same class.
“Institutions for women of .which I
have any knowledge, if the lamentable
results of neglect of this class were
taken out of them, would show an
amazing decrease in their population.
Even with careful provision for suffi-
cient custodial care of this class of
weak-minded, there will be a percent-
age that will slip through, and for this
reason, if no other, there should be the
examination into the social, mental and
moral conditions of those brought be-
fore the courts before sentence is pass-
ed upon them by the magistrate or
judge.”
Young Offenders Should Not
Come in Contact With
Hardened Criminals.
In a number of dif-
ferent designs in
Golden Oak, early
English or Mission,
all substantially
built and beauti-
fully finished.
They’re excellent
values at these
prices
Twelfth street to the Seawall boule-
vard somewhat in check, yet the inter-
est in the proposition is being kept
alive. Marion Douglas has appointed
E. C. Lossow and H. J. Peterson to
work with him in keeping the matter
before the property owners along this
street. They are keeping everlastingly
at it and feel sure that early during
the coming year the paving of the sec-
tion mentioned will be begun.
“0! 0! That Itching!”
Stopped Imsanily
' e
Try ZEMO; Skin Troubles Vanish.
Buy a 25c Bottle Today and Prove It.
Glory! A remedy for skin tortures
that makes everybody smile and say
“Hoo-ray!” If you have that terrible
The International Sunday School
Lesson for October 19th. “The Report
of the Spies.” Numbers 13:1-3,
17-14:25.
When the devil sent forth his var-
ied army of servants to do their worst
to the human rac’e, the messenger from
whom he expected the most was called
Fear.
And that black visitant has ever
since been one of the most diligent and
successful of his emissaries. Cowardice
has conquered more lives than has
the sword. Sheer, crass panic, fright,
shameless and wide-eyed, is only one
phase of the effects of fear; indecis-
ion. a timorous excess of prudence,
and a dread of untried ways is the
commoner manifestation of fear by
which individuals and nations are often,
destroyed. They who ar'e afraid to go
forward are always with us, hindering
the noblest possibilities of life, even
in our own land today, as well as in
the history of the Hebrew emigrants
from Egypt.
Great teachings concerning patriot-
ism. as w'ell as concerning the char-
acter-equipment of youth, are bound
up in this tragedy of old Israel, halted
on the very edge of the Promised Land,
to await the report of the twelve ex-
Dlorers or investigators sent ahead of
the host. The moral of it all is the
cost of cowardice. The Jews took
counsel of their fears, instead of heed-
ing the brave words of Caleb and
Joshua; and so they were kept in th'e
wilderness for thirty-eight years long-
er. until the crop of cowards had died
off, and a people of somewhat b’etter
stuff had been raised up.
TWO KINDS OF REPORTING.
The story is rath'er solemnizing for
health. Its purity,
richness and strength ,
has stood the test T
of forty years.
E96
ml
Ss
By Associated Press.
Indianapolis, Oct. 17.—The committee
on reformatory work and parole, in its
report to the annual meeting of the
American Prison Association today,
dwelt upon the need of greater special-
ism in criminal work and the segrega-
tion of different classes of law break-
ers. The petty offender, often young,
weak and impressionable, it recom-
mends, should not be subjected to the
dangers of association with hardened
criminals.
“There is an insidious danger,” says
the report, “that must be insisted upon
in the classification and treatment of
offenders. It is admitted that in a per-
centage of evil doers certain ameliorat-
ing circumstances limit the responsibil-
ity of the individual, though they make
him none the less dangerous to society;
most important of these is an inherent
pathological condition of the body,
especially of the central nervous sys-
tem—a condition either hereditary or
accidental; secondly, an unfavorable en-
vironment, especially in early life. It
is particularly in these cases that class-
ification and isolation is desirable. Our
। danger lies in accepting a criminal
type, in looking upon pathological, en-
vironmental and hereditary factors as
the sole causes of criminality—certain-
ly they are predisposing causes, but in
most cases they are not the necessary
causes.
Criminal Tendency.
“The necessary cause of the majority
of criminal acts is the choice of the
individual’s free will. Therefore to
correct the criminal tendency the only
method of approach is by way of the
individual’s higher faculties. In the
philosophical aspect this is the province
of morality, and the practical applica-
tion of morality is the function of re-
ligion. Religion appeals to the person-
al responsibility of the individual; un-
less this feeling is awakened any hope
for a permanent cure is futile.”
The committee emphasized the bene-
fits of the probation system, the inde-
terminate sentence, and the parole.
Each year, it was said, endorsed the
wisdom of these reforms. “The war-
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 279, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1913, newspaper, October 17, 1913; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1410096/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.