Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 57, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 31, 1914 Page: 3 of 10
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3
LAXATIVE FOR OLD
who have gone wrong through drink or
WHO SLEW
CRIMINALS
(9
IUIIIIITITTITIIIIIIIITT
ED, DROOD?
NOT HEROES
Q
on
ITALIAN SURGEON
MAKES A REPORT
Abnormal Man Unfit for Disci-
TtWg-N’h
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Doll
E
Dr. Consiglio
Charge.
Galveston and Beaumont
7
price, one year....
AND RETURN
SIM
J. C. Ayer Co.,
Lowell, Maso.
b a
MORTUARY REPORT.
=3.
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... .7 :oo A. M.
Leave Galveston ...
58
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FREE ADVICE
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34003
TO SICK sm
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City Ticket Office: 21st and Market
2.3
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Phone 4600.
American Building.
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C. H. COMPTON, C. P. & T. A.
J. H. MILLER, D. P. A.
09
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Mr. and Mrs. Gunboat Smith.
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Galveston Union Station, Corner Strand and 25th Street.
Arrive.
GULF, COLORADO & SANTA FE.
'■
HONORS FOR MILITIA.
AN9
0
REMEDYFORMEN.
AG YOUR DRUGGIST.
ha
3:40 a. m
KANSAS 538- NAVY.
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COLLECTORSHIP DISCUSSED.
To and From Station Adjoining Wharf, 22d Street and Avenue A.
INTERURBAN
Depart.
GALVESTON-HOUSTON INTERURBAN.
Arrive.
Houston
Galveston
To Houston Every Hour
12:40 a. m.
UI W
J 0 .
K
1
Children of 3 and 4 Haled Into
Juvenile Court on Woman’s
1:15 p. m
10:15 p. m
Depart.
2:40 p. m
4:00 p. m
5:30 p. m
7:45 p. m
Women suffering from any form of
female ills are invited to communicate
To and From
Depart.
7:00 a. m.....
8:10 a. ......
Generally Cowards
the Battlefield.
dis-
But
into
use-
Depart.
0:30 p. m
TRINITY & BRAZOS VALLEY.
. .Houston-Dallas-Fort Worth...
GULF & INTERSTATE.
Depart.
8:00 a. m
4:30 p. m
Arrive.
9:15 a. m.
is
Arrive.
11:05 a. m.
Mh
a9
Verdict of Literary Jury
Unsatisfactory.
We all learn enough, but we don’t
remember enough.
•D
D
Depart.
4:25 p. m. . .
3:40 a. m. . .
Arrive.
.. .11:35 a. m.
... 8:20p.m.
CABINET MINISTER’S
PENSION A RECORD
GULFSINTERSIATE RY.
THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Drew $10,000 a Year for 21
Years for Having Once
Served England.
Schedule of the Arrival
and Departure of Trains
WOMAN COMPLAINS;
BABIES ARRESTED
Texas Bank & Trust Co.
MARKET AT TWENTY-SECOND.
The Bank of Satisfactory Service.
4 Per Cent Compounded Semi-
Annually.
years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliabie
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
pline Required by Military
Rules.
Distance 75 Miles
Fare 52.35
WALTER KLEBERG, M. D.,
City Health Officer.
----------e-----------
Thousands Have Been Helped
By Common Sense
Suggestions.
Stewart Title Guaranty Company
GUARANTEES LAND TITLE
Capital $300,000.00
regular
.............
regular
........$5.00
GUNBOAT SMITH ON COMBINATION
VAUDEVILLE AND HONEYMOON TOUR
PEOPLE— “GASGARETS”
2,$
/%
iWTrnrrnrrTM
SHORTEST LINE.
QUICKEST TIME.
ASHLEY POYNOR, C. P. A.
Leave Galveston (Daily).. 8:00a.m.
Leave Galveston (Daily) . . 4:30 p. m.
(Instead of 6:15 p. m.)
Arrive Galveston (Daily) . .11:35 a. m.
Arrive Galveston (Daily) . . 8:20 p. m.
MAX NAUMANN, C. P. A.
a
V
and arrive 40 minutes after each hour until—
11:00 p. m................. Last Train..............
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Accompanied by his bride, who was the former Miss Remley of New
York, Gunboat Smith, white heavyweight champ of the world, is now on
his way to Saskatoon, Canada, where he will appear in vaudeville until
the end of the month. From there he will journey to many other cities
in the West on a combination vaudeville and honeymoon tour, which will
last until some time in May.
Ask Your Doctor,
mzzsussunzzas-mammsaazmazzama
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Egg:
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MISSOURI, KANSAS A TEXAS.
.............Katy Flyer...........
......Katy north connections......
'North Texas and Kansas City Ltd via Houston. (Daily) 9:25 a.m.
Gal eston-Houston Special. (Sunday only)......9:45 p.m.
......Houston-Galveston Special. (Sunday only)......2:45 p.m.
......Galveston-Houston Special. (Sunday only)......
u
3
5337
301 Tremont St.
““ RELIABLE’"
To and From Interurban Station, 21 st Between Church and Postoffice Sts
6:00 a. m..................First Train. (Daily)......... 7:40 a. m,
Interurban trains leave daily every hour, on the hour
W
5
96034290
\S
-826
IYDALPINK
“Pape’s Cold Compound” ends cold
and grippe in a few hours—
Don’t stay stuffed-up!
Phone 2220^
In LOVENBEMG
INSURANCE
Established 1881. Cor. Strand & 22d Si
Tne American Boy,
price, one year....
T.&B.V
On Sale Feb. 9 to 24. Limit 25.
,73:33
-
Use SWANSONS STROPS99
For Quick Permanent Relief Front
(Aeumaliorz
The Standard Remedy for Nearly Twenty Years
Sold by all Druggists
--
- ■
GALVESTON TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, ANUARY 31, 1914.
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Did you know that CALOMEL IS
MERCURY, and that its mercurious ef-
fects will ruin the system, while
GRIGSBY'S LIV-VER-LAX is purely
vegetable and can be used with perfect
safety? Ask Chas. E. Witherspoon,
F
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sic
promptly with the
woman’s private
correspondence de-
1 partment of the Ly-
dia E. Pinkham Med-
icine Co., Lynn,
"Mass. Your letter
will be opened, read
and answered by a
woman and held in
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= emm5/e===nh,
HgOMMON SENSEI
CHICHESTER S PILLS
Wm- THE DIAMOND BRAND. A
4 Ladies! Ask your Druggist for /A
€«( E Chi-ches-ter s Diamond Brand/A%
EE PIIIs in Red and Gold metallic NV?
- " -".At? boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. N/
■ 6 = V Take no other. Buy of your V
'l ~ m Druggist Ask for CHI-CHES-TER 8
“ e‛? DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 25
Fred C. Pabst, Applicant for Galveston
Place, Interviews Culberson.
Special to The Tribune.
San Antonio, Tex., Jan. 31.— Accom-
panied by James B. Stubbs, Fred C.
Pabst of Galveston, applicant for the
post of collector of customs in his
home city, came to San Antonio to in-
terview United States Senator Charles
A. Culberson, Mr. Culberson and his
Kansas City-Chicago Express. (Daily)........ 9:55 p.m.
.Houston-Galveston Express. (Daily)......... 6:45 p.m.
Houston-Galveston Express. (Daily)......... 8:45 a.m.
....Main Line Local. (Daily)...............19:20a.m.
Must prompt every man to save part of the
money he earns.
It is his first duty to himself, his family
and his friends.
We invite small or large amounts—an ac-
count may be opened with a deposit of one
dollar or more.
Galveston Tribune,
By Associated Press.
Berlin, Jan. 31.—Criminals generally
turn out to be cowards on the battle-
field, according to observations in the
cases of 225 men with jail or prison
sentences in. their record made during
the campaign of Italy in Tripoli by Dr.
Consiglio, chief of staff surgeon with
the Italian army, and reported in a
love of adventure, many who
tinguish themselves in warfare,
even these relapsed regularly
breaches of discipline and were
less for ordered effort.
By Associated Press.
Philadelphia, Jan. 31.—Two children,
three and four years old, and said tc
be the youngest defendants ever before
the court, were arraigned in the juve-
nile court here on charges of malicious
mischief.
“Where are the defendants?” inquired
Judge Gorman when the case was
called.
“Here they are,” said the mother,
carrying the younger child in her
arms and leading the other by the
hand.
“You do not mean to say those
babies have been charged with any-
thing and arrested for it?” exclaimed
the judge.
“Yes,” replied the mother, glancing
scornfully at the complainant, a wom-
an neighbor, who explained that the
children’ had broken a window in her
house.
The court reprimanded the complain-
ant, adding that he would see if meas-
ures could not be taken to precent other
children of such tender years being ar-
rested in the future.
39
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THE ABLE SOLDIER.
“The soldier adapted to modern war-
fare, capable of continued effort, able
to retain his cool presence of mind in
battle, is a man who has shown him-
self in time of peace to be an able,
well-disciplined citizen. The time seems
to be past when the blind courage of
the adventurer, unconscious of danger,
constitutes an especially valuable ele-
ment in deciding the fate of nations.”
Claims of the German army officer
to the possession of a higher grade of
personal honor than that of the ordi-
nary civilian, emphasized in so many
ways since the Zabern affair, and to
a certain preferential treatment before
the law is found to have recognition in
the police regulations of Cologne, and
it is probable that an interpellation
will be brought in the diet asking
whether similar police regulations are
in force in other cities in Prussia.
In Cologne the policeman renders
himself liable to punishment if he dis-
regards “the consideration due the mil-
itary calling.” In cases of misdemean-
or he is, under no circumstances, to
arrest an officer, “since it is more con-
sonant with the general interest that
a violation of police ordinances re-
main for the time unpunished and be
later the subject of a reprimand than
that a conflict should be occasioned be-
tween officers and police officials.”
An officer may be arrested for felony,
but even in this case the policeman is
empowered to leave the offender at
liberty. “The police officials must con-
sider carefully that in arresting an of-
ficer they are not dealing merely with
a person, but that by the compromis-
ing of the officer’s uniform of the
army of his majesty the king is in-
volved, and that only extraordinary
circumstances justify such an arrest
and absolve the policeman for it.” It
is even provided that members of the
so-called vice-squad whose duty it is
to control women of the streets, shall
not molest such women if these are in
the company of officers.
BUILDING PALACES.
Duke Ernest of Brunswick, son-in-
law of Emperor William, and two
months a sovereign, has lost no time
in starting a career of palace build-
ing. One new place for which designs
are now ready is planned as a summer
residence for the duke and Princess
Victoria Luise, and will stand in a
magnificent forest belonging to him
near Brunswick city. Another palace
near Blankenburg will be rebuilt for a
hunting seat. The duke’s building ac-
tivity is probably due in part to rivalry
with the crown prince, whose protest
against allowing Ernst August to
ascend the throne of Brunswick has
not been forgotten. The crown prince
and crown princess are now building
a residence at Potsdam, but Ernst
August, with his great personal for-
tune, will be able to eclipse this.
The town of Friedrichshafen, on the
German side of Lake Constance, has
decided to commemorate Count Zeppe-
lin’s seventy-fifth birthday by found-
ing a museum to show everything
available concerning aerial navigation
by dirigible balloons. Many of Count-
Zeppelin’s manuscripts, drawings from
books, and reduced models of his air-
ships will be placed on exhibition.
Count Zeppelin made his first balloon
ascension in the United States during
the civil war.
. The Swiss estate of August Bebel, the
late German socialist leader, has been
appraised by the tax office at Zurich
at $250,000. He had other property
in Germany, probably worth $50,000.
The terms of his will have not been
made public.
Official Report of Galveston Health
Department.
Official mortuary report issued by the
Galveston health department for week
ending at 5 o’clock p. m., Friday, Jan.
30, 1914:
Jan. 21.—Edward Jenkins, aged 29
years, male, married, negro, knife stab,
homicidal (inquest); Adam Meister,
aged 60 years, male, white; apoplexy
(inquest).
Jan. 22.—Mittie Jackson, aged 34
years, female, single, negro, drowning,
accidental. (inquest); Henry Wilson
aged 52 years, male, single, white,
chronic ulcerative pulmonary tubercu-
losis; John Clark, aged 62 years, white,
organic heart disease (inquest).
Jan. 25.—Ernest Potthoff, aged 16
years, male, single, white, lodar pneu-
monia; John Johnson, aged 64 years,
male, single, Russian, chronic ulcera-
tive pulmonary tuberculosis; Mrs. Car-
rie, Kusch, aged 32 years, female, mar-
ried, Germanic, heart failure.
Jan. 26.—John Tinsley, aged 51 years,
male, single, white, chronic pulmonary
tuberculosis and chronic interstial ne-
phritis.
Jan. 27.—Will Jones, aged 21 years,
male, single, negro, meningo myelitis;
Mrs. E. Armstrong, aged 66 years, fe-
male, divorced, Irish, ’lobar pneumonia;
Moussie White, aged 1 year, female,
Anglo-Saxon; lobar pneumonia; Mrs.
Johanna Hayes, aged 61 years, female,
widow, Irish; acute pneumonia;; Louis,
G. Hasselmeier, aged 60 years, male,
married, Germanic, Carcinoma of Pan-
creas; E. G. Rosenquist, aged 27 years,
male, single, Swedish, typhoid fever
with intestinal hemorrhage; James
David Cranston, aged 5 weeks, male
white, broncho pneumonia.
Jan. 29.—Frances Woods, aged 73
years, female, widow, negro, chronic
interstitial nephritis.
Deaths occurring within the city lim-
its and reported for the week ending
5 p. m., Friday, Jan. 30, 1914; Negroes,
4; other races, 12; total 16. Stillbirths
nonviable premature births and bodies
shipped here for interment not includ-
ed. Populallon estimated at 50,000.
Death rate per 1,000 current week,
16.64.
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You can end grippe and break up
a severe cold either in head, chest, body
or limbs by taking a dose of "Pape’s
Cold Compound” every two hours until
three doses are taken.
It promptly opens clogged-up nostrils
and air passages in the head, stops
nasty discharge or nose running, re-
lieves sick headache, dullness, feverish-
ness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and
stiffness.
Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing
and snuffling! Ease your throbbing
head—nothing else in the world gives
such prompt relief as “Pape’s Cold
Compound," which costs only 25 cents
at any drug store. It acts without
assistance, tastes nice, and causes no
inconvenience. Be sure you get the
genuine.
callers discussed the matter an hour
or more.
The Galveston collectorship is one of
the choicest appointments the national
administration has to make in the
state and is one of the very few worth
while not already made. Since his
stay in San Antonio began Mr. Culber-
son has conferred with a number of
men who sought his endorsement for
this honor and the concomitants.
San Antonians are displaying inter-
est in the place. This city is in the
customs district of which Galveston is
the center and there are many Dem-
ocrats of this city who are giving the
appointment attention. Incidentally,
all employes of the local office are
naturally showing concern over th‛e
situation. The term of Collector- Lee
expires next March.
Dallas - Can Antonio
How to Break Up a Bad Cold.
Geo. P. Pflung, of Hamburg, N. Y.,
says: “Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
will break up a cold the quickest of
anything I have ever used.” This
remedy contains no opium of other
narcotic. It is most effectual and is
pleasant and safe to take. Try it. For
sale by all dealers.
I
strict confidence. A woman can freely
talk of her private illness to a woman ;
thus has been established a confidential
correspondence which has extended over
many years and which has never been
broken. Never have they published a
testimonial or used a letter without the
written consent of the writer, and never
has the Company allowed these confi-
dential letters to get out of their pos-
session, as the hundreds of thousands
of them in their files will attest.
Out of the vast volume of experience
which they have to draw from, it is more
than possible that they possess the very
knowledge needed in your case. Noth-
ing is asked in return except your good
will, and their advice has helped thou-
sands. Surely any woman, rich or poor,
should be glad to take advantage of this
generous offer of assistance. Address
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (con-
fidential) Lynn, Mass.
Every woman ought to have
Lydia E. Pinkham’s 80-page
Text Book. It is not a book for
general distribution, as it is too
expensive. It is free and only
obtainable by mail. Write for
it today.
Get a 10-cent box now.
Most old people must give to the
bowels some regular help, else they
suffer from constipation. The condi-
tion is perfectly natural. It is just as
natural as it is for old people to walk
slowly. For age is never so active as
youth. The muscles are less elastic.
And the bowels are muscles.
So all old people need Cascarets.
One might as well refuse to aid weak
eyes with glasses as to neglect this
gentle aid to weak bowels. The bow-
els must be kept active. This is im-
portant at all ages, but never so much
as at fifty.
Age is not a time for harsh physics,
Youth may occasionally whip the bow-
els into activity. But a lash can’t be
used every day. What the bowels of
the old need is a gentle and natural
tonic. One that can be constantly used
without harm. The only such tonic is
Cascarets, and they cost only 10 cents
Per box at any drug store. They work
while you sleep.
Eam
P
Target Practice Awards Are Made
From Washington Headquarters.
By Associated Press.
Washington, Jan. 31.—Geographical
honors were fairly distributed in the
militia organizations which made prac-
tice with the big guns of the coast de-
fenses last year.
The Marine Coast Artillery militia,
with Captain E. A. Read’s battery had
the highest figure of merit with
twelve-inch rifles, North Carolina,
with Captain F. L. Page’s battery, took
the lead with the twelve-inch mortars;
Captain Clarence Parker’s Washington
battery scored first with ten-inch
rifles; Captain E. A. Metts, North Caro-
lina battery, took the lead with eight-
inch rifles, and Captain George W.
Mock’s Washington battery made the
best record with the six-inch rifles.
is unfit for
methodically disciplined effort in times
of peace. In war, where the demands
of discipline and the strain of sys-
tematic preparations increases, he dis-
plays invariably sooner or later a re-
action against his surroundings, which
manifests itself chiefly in morbid lack
of discipline, disobedience, insubordi-
nation or even desertion. The moral
strain and the violent manifestations of
war induce in such men physical dis-
turbances, excitative crisis, hysteric
' and epileptic attacks and acute in-
sanity. They lack the possibility of
methodic action, the iron will‘to re-
spond to the multiple demands of the
instant and to the continued physical
and intellectual strain.
“While the habitual criminal, al-
though impulsive and aggressive
toward superiors and comrades, gen-
erally is cowardly in battle, there are
among the occasional criminals, those
ss===
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.s,
Galveston-Beaumont. (Daily) .....
Galveston-Beaumont. (Daily)
Other trains leave 8:30 A. M., 5:30 P. M. and 9:35 P, M.
Dining Car Service on Through Trains.
•2 GIL BURNING, f
Arrive New Orleans............. ....
Leave New Orleans........ ..9:35 P. M.
*Gfgm/ Arrive Washington..........7:30 A.M.
4moV Arrive New York ..........1:40 Noon
Ayer’s Vigor
Glad to know you have used it. Tell
your friends how it stopped your falling
hair and greatly promoted its growth.
Hay'sHair-Hoalth
Never Fails to Restore Gray Hair to Ms
Natural Color an Beauty. Stops its falling
out, and positively removes Dandruff. Es not a
Dye. Refuse all substitutes. $1.00 and 50c.
Bottles by Mail or at Drug-gists. PDEP
Send 10c for large sample Bottle M KEM
Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N, J. U.S.A.
Pp
As
DALLAS
Ship Had Best Engineering Record of
Them All.
By Associated Press.
Washington, Jan. 31.—The battleship
Kansas, with a record of 134,602, led
in the navy department's engineering
competition for the six months ending
December 31 last, the department an-
nounced today. Th’e Iowa was second
and the New Jersey last. The depart-
ment regards the steaming efficiency
of a navel vessel second only in im-
pprtance to accuracy of fire, and re-
cently began standardizing and plac-
ing in competition the engineering
forces of the service. The results thus
far have been highly gratifying.
3′83
Wiggs
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’ " umermpy Regular price for both.....$6.00
v/ Special price for both on new
” - ; y or renewal subscriptions. . .$5.00
' Address GALVESTON TRIBUNE you
BREAKS A BAD COLD
IN A JIFFY! TRY IT
........
^ApericanRoy
M AM , ,
8 n The SAFE boys magazine ' H
KMSloo’I Only $1 a year L«
All boy for all boys, not a child’s paper. Clean as L
a whistle, full of pictures, 86 to 52 pages every
month. Manly, inspiring stories of travel, adven-
ture, athletics, history, school life, written by
most popular boys’ authors. Instructive special
articles. Fine articles on football and other sports.
Departments of Mechanics, Electricity, Photogra-
phy, Popular Science, Howto Make Things, Stamp
Collecting, Chickens, Pets, Gardening, Inventions
and Natural Wonders.
German medical paper.
I says:
“The abnormal man
By Associated Press
London, Jan. 31.—Th'ere is talk of
appeal from the verdict of manslaugh-
ter found by the literary jury which
recently tried John Jasper for the
murder of Edwin Drood. The more
serious-minded members of the Dick-
ens Soci’ety who expected a careful
weighing of evidence with the hope of
ending the controversy over Dickens’
unfinished novel in which Jasper and
Drood were the chief characters are
disgruntled because the trial developed
into such a farce, “and such a dull
farce at that.”
There were many who did not appre-
ciate the humor which G. K. Chester-
ton. as judge, and George Bernard,
Shaw, as foreman of the jury, tried
to inject, and the convicted defendant,
whose part was taken seriously by F.
T. Harry, asserts that there are ample
grounds for an appeal if for no other
reason than that the verdict was sole-
ly the decision of Foreman Shaw “ar-
rived at during the luncheon interval”
nearly three hours b’efore the end of
the trial, as the foreman himself ad-
mitted. Most of the jurors had left
before the trial ended.
“TYPICALLY SHAVIAN.”
Walter Crotch, one of the counsel
for the defense, is even more severe
with Shaw. He declares that the ver-
dict was “typically Shavian and there-
fore typically farcical and unsatisfac-
tory. It also had the more flagrant
defect of being absolutely untrue, for
the jurors were not consulted as to
its terms.”
A letter from the Bolivian Survey
Commission dated Abuna River, No-
vember 25, announces that the expedi-
tion commended by Herbert A. Ed-
wards of the British army has com-
pleted over 209 miles of the frontier
survey and incidentally “inaugurated;
a new era in exploratory surveying.”
The expedition fixed all of its longi-
tudes by wireless telegraphy from
Porto Vallo, situated 120 miles from
the base of operations. Time signals
were received every night by means of
a rough receiving set and a long wire
which was ribbed up on trees. Com-
mand’er Edward declares that these
methods will enable the explorer to
dispense with chronometers and easily
and accurately fix all longitudes.
A RECORD PENSION.
A record in state pensions is estab-
lished in the case of Viscount Ross,
form’er cabinet minister, whose death
occurred recently. He drew a pension
of $10,000 yearly for twenty-one years,
his total of $210,000 in pension money
having been approached only by C. P.
Villiers, who established the former
record of $150,000 at his death in 1898.
There are now only three former
ministers drawing pensions, Lord-
George Hamilton, who receives $10,-
009 a year; Henry Chaplin, whose pen-
sion is $6,000 yearly, and Lord Balfour
of Burleigh, who also receives $6,000.
These pensions are. drawn under the.
act o fparliament which provides that
a former member of cabinet who has
no means to maintain his dignity as
an ex-minister may apply for state aid.
WOMEN’S RIGHTS.
A bill is to be introduced in the
House of Commons next session which
aims at giving English women the
right to practice as lawyers. It is a
question whether it will receive the
support of the government, without
which it stands little chance of suc-
cess. f
The matter has been fought in the
courts for several years and the de-
cision to introduce a bill results from
the judgment of the Court of Appeal,
which in December decided that the
present law did not give women the.
right to practice, and that the only
tribunal which could give women such)
ri~hts was parliament. The grounds
for this judgment were not that there
was any inherent unfitness among
women which prevented them from ap-
pearing in law practice, but merely
that there never has, in fact, been a
woman lawyer in England. The court
held that this common law disability
was further supported by a dictum of
Lord Coke, issued over 300 years
ago concerning those who had become
entitled to practice law from tim'e im-
memorial. As old as it is this dictum
is still binding in English law.
Walter Hines Page, the American
ambassador, has tentatively arranged
to unveil at Weymouth in. June the
memorial erected in that town toRich-
ard Clark and John Endicott, two
Weymouth men who took part in the
early colonization of America. Mrs.
Joseph Chamberlain is a decendant of
John Endicott and she assisted con-
siderably in the movement inaugur-
ated by the town council for the mem-
orial. The town of Weymouth, Massa-
chusetts, U. S. A., and the city of Bos-
ton. and towns in Newfoundland have
been asked to send representatives to
the unveiling. The Chamberlain fam-
ily will also be represented.
." ‘3 " f
Po Quickest Time and
Ch Best Service
Salts, Calomel and Pills Act on Liver
and Bowels Like Pepper Acts in
Nostrils—Danger!
4. — ■
art GALVESTON, HOUSTON & HENDERSON. Arrive.
"n So Pacific (east bound) and H. & T. C. connections.
5:4 a m Galveston-Houston Express, connects at Houston S.
8:S0a-mp (west bound) and H. & T. C. (north bound)........
m ’ ........I. & G. N. St. Louis................. 5:40 a.m.
2:40Pm........ Katy Flyer .................... 9:55 a.m.
4:°......‘Galveston-Houston. (Sunday only).......... 2:0p.m.
......... ....... .Houston Local. .................... 6:35 p.m.
22 "....Gaiveston-Houston. (Sunday only)..........10:45 a.m.
10:30 p m......Galveston-Houston Special. (Sunday only)......10:00 p.m.
INTERNATIONAL & GREAT NORTHERN. Arrive.
......Galveston-St Louis Fast Mail............ 5:40 a. m.
.St. Louis and Main Line Local............ 6:35p.m.
..........Fort Worth Division................
SOUTHERN PACIFIC.
Depart. Sunset Route—G., H. & S. A. Railway. Arrive.
7:05 a. m. .California Express, H. & T. C. and T. & N. O. con-
nections. (Daily)...............-tntt;nn,. 9:30p.m.
5:30p.m..New Orleans Express, H. E. & W. T. and H. & T. C.
connection. (Daily).................... 1:45 p.m.
9:35 p. m.-California Limited. H. & T. C. connections. (Daily)., 9:10 a.m.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 57, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 31, 1914, newspaper, January 31, 1914; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1410187/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.