Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 236, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 28, 1915 Page: 5 of 8
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GALVESTON, TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1915.
FIVE
4
25232212253
An Ideal Complexion
(
DID YOU EVER NOTICE
Hotel Galvez
I
I ■
■WATER PLENTIFUL
xamazmamuzzuza •
audauau
130
Pier 19.
G. C. HURLEY.
Savings Department
It makes you
PERSONAL AND SOCIAL
g
ill Nllillll Bank
H
J
u
A. J. Witt
The Home of Savings.
724 23rd St.
Phone 3531.
ESKEESES
azra
Telephone 1698.
418 Tremont St.
Phone 584
1915 Market St.
This se-
has
even the most ardent advocate of
25c
LEGE IN CHARGE
OF MAIN REPAIR
.....25c
3
NIE UPORT-B AINS.
1
25c
toes
Vu
folly.
n
25c
25c
GERMANS DENY LOSS.
Insurance
Security Building)
ZERWEKH’S
409 21st St.
Phone 2608.
sammssuxena
mmm
S
I
S
r C e
Ean
ARRANGE PERSHING FUNERAL.
Louis Werner Stave
Company
To Our
"=
•)
t
Operators
0
/
-/
FLOOD RELIEF FUND.
BISHOP RESTS EASY.
I can go all day just
\
Miller Bros.
I am
)
HIRED TO DESTROY PLANT.
TO TEACH NEGRO JEWS.
)
our man.
ft
l
pConceal8e
KecpinYour
Bollinger’s
CANNED GOODS SPECIALS
4 2-lb. cans Red Beans... .25c
4 2-lb. Numsen’s Toma-
Take ten per cent out of your salary or
income each month and put it in our
tend to my farm,
like I used to.
so thankful to
good remedy to
a big old fat turkey gobbler come tum-
bling and flopping down out of a tree?
Made an awful "to-do" about it, and
you thought he would kill himself;
but he shook his ruffled feathers a lit-
tle and went walking off, happy and
serene.
4 2-lb. cans Clipper Corn..25c
3 1-lb. cans Little Fellow
given
peace
Maj. James M. Bourke, medical corps,
United States army, and family, leave
tomorrow for Fort Wayne, U. S. A.,
Maj. Bourke’s new post of duty.
Causeway Main Will Be Re-
paired at Once-—Several
Days Will Be Required.
Pulp ..............
4 1-lb. cans Campbell’s
&
Had Pellagra;
Is Now Cured
Peas ...........
3 1-lb. cans Griffin
Preserves .......
stirring you up inside,
salivate.
Don’t take calomel!
Miss Elizabeth Fontaine is visiting in
New York.
If it’s service you want in the drug
line, phone 108.
We all have our ups and downs, even
those of us who are on the level.
Prof. E. G. Littlejohn has returned
from Austin.
Mr. Harry Garrett has returned from
a trip to California.
voamasamenaaeazzaanezsenvazzaz
E. R. Henck & Son
2220 Strand.
Phone 505 now for
No Increase in Prices
for the
Same Quality Work
(=
66
Ryan & Douglas
Fire and Tornado
America Needs Reserve Army
of 2,000,090 Citizen Sol-
diers., Says Dunne.
0
—•—
vasion would be unopposed,
rious situation of affairs :
Calomel is quicksilver and acts
like dynamite on
your liver.
It will be a little hard on you coming
down to the new level—but you will
get accustomed to it, and in your old
days it will make you happy and
independent.
EVER SALIVATED BY
CALOMEL? HORRIBLE!
7 bars Octagon Soap......25c
7 pkgs. Octagon Powder.‘25c
8 boxes Red Seal Lye.....25c
Major General Franklin J. Bell has
been visiting in Houston as the guest
of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Washington.
.. Soups ....
i
0
J. F. Seimsheimer 8 Co.
WithCuticuraSoa)
Assisted when necessary by Cuticura Oint-
ment. They keep the skin fresh and clear.
Samples Free by Mail
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold everywhere.
Liberal sample of each mailed free with 32-p. book.
Address post-card ‘’Cuticura,” Dept. 6G, Boston.
know there is such a
1
i
I
• mmNOTICEmm
BRING US YOUR
Kodak Films
ORDERS RECEIVED BEFORE 6 P. M.
FINISHED NEXT DAY AT 5 P. M.
Maurer Studio
c
2
K. G. JOHNSON
L REAL ESTATE.
Notary Public—Accountant.
Eve. C. Phone 1552.
Your Properties With Me.
),
2,000,000 men.
Come Down a Little Yourself.
4=
To Buyers of Croskett and
Fannin Place Lots:
Use your money for necessities for
the present, as no lots will be forfeited
.or non-payments until further notice.
John Adriance & Sons
N
V
ADEQUATE NATIONAL
DEFENSE IS URGED
,5
2
Much of the loss occasioned by the recent storm may be averted
by Galvestonians pulling together. In rehabilitating your office
or place of business
BUY FROM GALVESTONIANS
and keep Galveston money in Galveston. Every dollar spent in
the city will contribute its share towards restoring normal condi-
tions and it will further help to demonstrate to the world that
Galveston is triumphant in the face of Disaster.
Our plant is already in operation and all orders will be taken care
of the usual thorough manner.
Gives that snowy 3,
white complexion which*,
fashion requires the well
Agroomed woman to possess. %
A At Druggists and %
2 Department Stores s
S' We will send a complexion 8
f chamois and bookofPow- |
‛ der leaves for 15c. to cover s
cost of mailing and g
wrrapping, /
_ FERD. T. fOPKINS & SON /
% 37 Great Jones St., New York City A
3Gouraud’s 4
Oriental Cream |
Misses Mildred, Jessie and Margaret
Thornton, who have been the guests
of their aunt, Miss I Minnie Thornton,
will leave for their home in Los An-
geles, Cal., on Tuesday.
and can not
power would be an act
i
Telephone 759
Even the weather man should put
a few predictions by for a rainy day.
of supreme
sick the next day; it loses you a day’s
work. Dodson’s Liver Tone straightens
you right up and you feel great. Give
it to the children, because it is per-
fectly harmless and doesn’t gripe,
------
Mrs. George M. Courts has returned
form a six weeks visit in Los Angeles.
Mrs. Charles P. Guthrie and little
son, Master Courts Guthrie, who have
been the guests of Mrs. Guthrie’s pa-
rents for the summer, left for Dallash
for a visit with friends en route to
their home in San Antonio.
•AH
a
62
fall me up
Phone755 «2/8Temon
valvStO.
My Heavy
Construction Crew
is again organized and I am ready
to take care of all kinds of plumb-
ing.
Repair work taken care of at
once.
DAIRY LUNCH
388
eBek2
For Your Watch and
Jewelry Repairing
See
HOCHMAN
2406 Market Street.
Highest Prices Paid for Old Gold, Sil-
ver, Platinum, etc.
between the nations grave concern.
, “The present militia of all of the
different states of the United States
is wholly inadequate for the defense
of the nation. In 1913, the total
militia of the National Guard of all
the states aggregated approximately
120,000 men. Such a number of men
would be wholly inadequate for the
defense of the nation in case of war
with any first-class power.
“To rely upon the regular army of
100,000 men, and a militia of 120,000
men in case of war with a first-class
public must be reorganized, regener-
ated and enormously increased. There
should be at least a body of citizen-
soldiery trained to the use of arms,
organized and maintained throughout
the different states of the United
States in the aggregate of at least
DR. MOFFETTS
TEETH INA
TEETHING POWDERS
FULL DIRECTIONS IN EACH BOX FOR
Cholera Infantum, Dysentery
Cholera Morbus, Worms
Diarrhoea and Constipation.
WRITE FOR OUR FREE
MOTHER’S BOOK All About
■■ —------- the Baby
C. J. MOFFETT MEDICINE CO.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
By Associated Press.
Boston, Aug. 28.-—After discussion
of the naval and military resources of
the country in which it was generally
agreed that' the United States was
hot adequately prepared against for-
eign invasion, the conference of gov-
ernors ended its annual sessions last
43
Miss Marie Bridewell is visiting in
Houston, the guest of Mrs. C. D. Gold-
ing.
The Service Office”
(MANUFACTURING! TEXAS] STATIONERS?
------ ~HQUS6/------------"
GALVESTON
Lieutenant and Mrs. Carl Cogswell
Oakes are spending today in Dallas as
the guests of Misses Sophie and Eileen
Goggan, en route to California.
EAST END PHARMACY
KnMaKSKmaBEmamvnaBBHaHWKBiHBBaBiHKaaHawaBBuaECsraesassBnB
Dr. R. R. D. Cline and daughter, An-,
no Cline, have returned from an ex-
tended sojourn at Blanco and Austin.
Miss Lenora Grace Keith, who has
been residing in this city at 1803
Twenty-ninth street with her uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Kirsch,
was quietly married Wednesday even-
ing, at the Rice hotel in Houston, to
Mr. Kemp Hawthorne of San Antonio.
The young couple have departed for
San Antonio.
Joseph Kramer Tells Story in Murder
Probe.
Gary, Ind., Aug. 28.—Joseph Kramer,
questioned by the police today in their
investigation of the murder of the Rev.
Edmund Kayser, German pastor of a
Tolleston church, said two men, one
of whom “looked something like Kay-
ser,” recently approached him with a
proposition to blow up the Aetna
powder manufacturing plant, where he
is employed.
“They questioned me cautiously for
a while,” Kramer is reported as telling
the police. “Finally, one of them asked
YES. SIR!
Doing Business
‘ 999 Messenger
Service
Staves washed off by the recent storm are
the exclusive property of the Louis Werner
Stave Co., no matter where they are now.
Communicate with us at Piers 10 or 11, or
write P. O. Box 281.
AWNINGS! |
See us when you
need anything in
the way of Awn-
ings, Tents or
Sails.
Mrs. George Henderson Lee and
daughters and Son, Misses Emma, Cora,
Mary Ashley, and Mr. George T. Lee
are sojourning in San Antonio.
We are only waiting for power to
start our plant. As soon as you
hear power is on come prepared to
work.
1
Mrs. Robert McAlpine Hall and
daughters, Miss Nellie and Ruth Evelyn
Hall, will leave on Thursday for
Durant, Oklahoma, where Miss Nellie
Hall will enter the Oklahoma Presby-
terian college.
Launch Patsy
for Fishing
and pleasure parties. All kinds of light
tewing; dispatch and harbor work, A
good, safe, fast launch. Will go any
time.
Mrs. William A. McVitie and daugh-
ter, Miss Mabel McVitie and Mr. and
Mrs. W. R. A. Rogers and Miss Priscil-
la Rogers, after a tour of the west, are
now in Seattle, Washn., en route to
Lake Louise. Mr. McVitie returnee!
home several weeks ago.
Mrs. Walter Chatfield, wife of Col-
onel Chatfield of the Seventh Infantry,
U. S. A., stationed at Galveston, who
has been the guest of Hotel Galvez, is
visiting in Houston, the guest of the
Rice Hotel, until the transport Buford
sails for Honolulu, to which point the
Seventh Infantry has been transferred.
Mrs. Chatfield has as her guest her
sister, Mrs. E. R. Tupper of Charles-
ton, S. C., who arrived Wednesday
from Fort Sheridan, where she has
been visiting another sister in army
circles. Mrs. Tupper will accompany
Colonel and Mrs. Chatfield to Honolulu.
(69
82
g
—
The citizen-soldiery of the re-
25
p
s
28282, I
M23MK
Bishop Heffron Was Shot Yesterday by
Priest.
Winona, Minn., Aug. 28.—Bishop Pat-
rick R. Heffron, who was shot yester-
day by the demented priest, Father
Lesches, was resting easy today.
cure people of pellagra.”
There is no longer any doubt that
pellagra can be cured. Don’t delay
until it is too late. It is your duty to
consult the resourceful Baughn.
The symptoms—hands red like sun-
burn, skin peeling off, sore mouth, the
lips, throat and tongue a flaming red,
with much mucus and choking; indi-
gestion and nausea, either diarrhoea or
constipation.
There is hope; get Baughn’s big Free
book on Pellagra and learn about the
remedy for Pellagra that has at last
been found. Address American Com-
pounding Co., box 3016, Jasper, Ala.,
remembering money is refunded in any
case where the remedy fails to cure.
(Adv.)
A new plan of attack on the water
problem was decided upon yesterday
afternoon. Forces necessary to carry
into effect this new plan were being
marshaled today, with a view of begin-
ning actual work tomorrow morning
under the generalship of F. M. Lege,
Jr., general manager of the Galveston
Gas company and Brush Electric com-
pany.
To repair the duplicate 30-inch water
main across the causeway is the new
plan, the newest break discovered in
the submerged main being so large
hope of repairing it in sufficient time
for immediate relief was abandoned
late yesterday. Therefore it seemed
early this morning that for four or.five
more days Galveston would have to de-
pend for water upon the inadequate
supply forced through the temporary
8-inch main, though meanwhile work
of repairing the underwater main was
to go forward.
On the arched part of the causeway
that portion of the 30-inch main re-
mained intact after the storm. At the
ends of the arches, where formerly was
sand fill, the main fell to the bases of
the causeway. Though having some
breaks, it was thought these portions
could be repaired. Connections and re-
pairs completed, the entire 30-inch main
will be put in use by disconnecting
that part now being used, because it
remains intact, with the temporary
8-inch main.
City authorities prevailed upon Mr.
Lege to take charge of the work.
dining room in full operation
with our usual good cuisine andser-
vice beginning dinner, Sunday, 29.
8 '
I
€
Burial Will Be Made at Mrs. Pershing’s
Home.
San Francisco, Aug. 28.'—Friends of
Brigadier General John J. Pershing,
whose wife and three children per-
ished in a fire at Presidio military
reservation here yesterday, completed
arrangements today to have the bodies)
sent to Cheyenne, Wyo., tomorrow for
burial. Cheyenne is the home of Mrs.
Pershing’s father, United States Sen-
ator Francis E. Warren.
General Pershing will meet the fu-
neral party across the bay in Oakland,
as his friends do not want him to view
the blackened ruins of his former
home. Mrs. Pershing was a popular
matron at the post, and the tragedy
has plunged the reservation in mourn-
ing.
General Pershing will arrive tomor-
row morning from El Paso.
Total of 82036 Has Been Collected by
Governor.
Austin, Tex., Aug. 28.—With $66.50 in
contributions received by Gov. Fergu-
son on Thursday, makes a total of
$2036 so far received by the executive
for the relief of the needy and desti?-
tute in the storm stricken portion-of
the state. Citizens of Quitman contrib-
uted $23.50, and the Ennis civic league,
$22. P. P. Martinez of Dallas sent or-
ders for the distribution of 1000 loaves
of bread for the needy.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wilkens have
returned from a sojourn at Sweet
Chalybeate Springs, Va., and San An-
tonio, Tex.
Mrs. Minor in a few days will re-
join Miss Marjorie and Masters Henry
Jr., and Lincoln Minor Wilkens and
maid, who remained in San Antonio as
guests of the Argyle hotel.
Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Colby are en route
home from a delightful tour of the
Pacific coast.
1
why I didn’t do something for thg
fatherland. I told them I was an
American citizen. Finally, we reached
a sort of agreement whereby I was to
get $1,500 for destroying the works. As
soon as I got by myself again, I knew
I couldn’t do anything like that, and I
determined to tell the police.”
The police today gave their principal
attention to the theory that the pastor
was murdered as a result of his pro-
German sympathies.
Nolan-O’Neill Plumbing Co.
at 210-212 21st St., are prepared to take
care of any class of
Plumbing, Gas Fitting and Marine Work
No job too large or small to receive
our best attention.
Estimates Cheerfully Furnished.
All Work Guaranteed. Phone 20.
whirls them into the little cottages
back from the shore. The Yser, that
most contested of tiny streams, runs
just to the north of the resort and its
waters provided excellent fishing for
the reflective summer guests who
passed by Ostend, to the south.
“Nieuport-Bains was quite a modern
resort, its foundation going back only
to 1869. It possessed a fine pier, ex-
tending from the mouth of the Yser
1,500 yards out to sea, and from a cafe
that stood nearby fine views could be
obtained of Dunkirk and Ostend, those
two towns that now might just as well
be in separate planets for all the com-
munication that is possible between
them.”
Sleepy Belgian Resort Has Been De-
stroyed by Shell Fire,
Washington, Aug. 28.—“Nieuport-
Bains was as sleepy and cozy, as trim
and as indifferent to what went on in
the world, as a seaside vacation resort
well might be,” begins a war primer
issued by the National Geographic so-
ciety today, which tells of the modest
little North sea bath that shell fire has
utterly swept away. “Ostend, up the
coast to the north, strove for the cos-
mopolitan air, the high-tension vivacity
proper for the modern, go-ahead sum-
mer resort, and left to little Nieuport-
Bains, 12 miles down the strand, the
business of being a rest-cure and an
abode of peace. For nearly a year now
shells have been screaming through
this still retreat.
“Nieuport, where the great battle
lines through France and Flanders rest
their flanks upon the North sea sands,
lies two miles southwest of the bath-
ing resort. Here is the terminus for
the railway from Dixmude, a brisk
morning’s walk distant. The beach
shelves out very slowly, and at low tide
the waters slip back for a great stretch,
while the prevalent west wind drives
the uncovered sands into dunes, or
lieve you need a dose of dangerous
calomel just remember that your drug-
gist sells for 50 cents a large bottle of
Dodson’s Liver Tone, which is entirely
vegetable and pleasant to take, and is
a perfect substitute for calomel. It is
guaranteed to start your liver without
Miss Maggie Howell, a Baptist school
missionary in Cuba, who has been on
a visit to her sister, Mrs. Sam Hol-
land, at 1211-12th street, left for Cuba
this morning. She took a run to
Brownsville from Galveston to see oth-
er relatives there; came in contact with
bandits; returned to Galveston just in
time to encounter the full force of the
storm of Aug. 16th.
7 1-lb. cans Corn.........25c
7 1-lb. cans R. Tomatoes. .25c
7 1-lb. cans R. Tomato
Palace
Meat Market
still- doing business at the same old
stand. If it’s
Quality
you want we can please you.
Phone Your Orders to 5268
Hillsboro, Ala.—J. W. Turner, of this
place, says: “I ought to have written
you two weeks ago, but failed to do so.
I got well and then forgot to write you.
I can get about like a 10-year-old boy;
you ought to see me run around and
400-01 American National Bldg,
Those having sustained losses under policies is-
sued by us will kindly have estimates made and
advise us. As we have lost our records by fire,
please, if possible, bring policies when filing claim.
===s^^ ... --------JJ
Say Submarine Was Attacked Off Os-
tend, but Not Lost.
By Associated Press.
Berlin, Aug. 28.—Via London.—The
admiralty today made denial of the of-
ficial British statement that a German
submarine had been sunk this week by
a British aviator off the Belgian coast
near Ostend. The admiralty also made
a report on the attack on Aug. 16 by a
German submarine on the English
coast. The announcement is as follows:
“One of our submarines on Aug. 16
destroyed, by gunfire, the benzol fac-
tory with the attached benzol ware-
houses and coke furnaces near Har-
rington, England. The statement of
the British press that the submarine
attacked the open towns of Harrington,
Parton and Whitehaven is inexact.
“The same submarine, on Aug. 15,
was fired at from a great distance in
the Irish sea by a large passenger
steamer, probably a Royal Mail steam
packet, but was not hit.
“The British admiralty announced on
Aug. 27 that a German submarine had
been destroyed and-sunk off Ostend by
a British seaplane. This is inexact.
The submarine was attacked, but not
hit, and returned to port undamaged.”
Calomel loses you a day! You know
‘what calomel is. It’s mercury; quick-
silver. Calomel is dangerous. It
crashes into sour bile like dynamite,
cramping and sickening you. Calomel
attacks the bones and should never be
put into your system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish, con-
The British statement referred to
by the German admiralty was
made on Aug. 26. It stated Squadron
Commander Arthur Bigsworth had de-
stroyed, single handed, a German sub-
marine off Ostend. The announcement
contained these words:. “The subma-
rine was observed to be completely
wrecked and sank off Ostend.”
Eememmmwem
TEAMWORK IS THE WORD
72228022323102223/2121
50,000 Jewish Negroes in Abyssinia to
Be Taught.
New York, Aug. 28.—Dr. Jacques
Failtlovitch, who sailed for Naples to-
day, will carry $6,000 he has collected
in this country to aid in teaching He-
brew language to the black Jews of
Abyssinia. Dr. Failtlovitch says there
are 50,600 Jewish negroes in Abyssinia
who no longer speak the Jewish lan-
guage.
were proposed, but several of the ex-
ecutives said they felt certain that all
the governors would return to their
states with the intention of demanding
from their congressmen support in any
program for strengthening the forces
of defense.
The governors chose Salt Lake City,
Utah, as the place for next year’s
meeting and elected the governor of
Utah, William Spry, as chairman of
the executive committee. Other com-
mittee members elected were Governor
Henry C. Stuart of Virginia, and Gov-
ernor Arthur Capper of Kansas. For-
mer Governor J. Franklin Fort of New
Jersey was again chosen, treasurer, and
Miles C. Riley of Madison, Wis., was
reelected secretary.
Governor Edward F. Dunne, of
Illinois advised greater military and
naval preparedness in his address at
the conference. In part. Governor
Dunne said:
“Since the commencement of the tre-
mendous war now waging in Europe,
and the danger of our country being
embroiled therein, all classes of peo-
ple in the republic have been seriously
considering the unpreparedness for
war which seems to exist in our coun-
try.
r “If war were to be declared against
this country by one of the six greatest
nations of Europe it must be conceded
that the United States in its present
condition of land and naval forces
would be in a sorry predicament. For
offensive warfare our land forces are
so small as to be regarded with ridi-
cule. Our naval armament might suc-
ceed for a time in damaging cities and
fortifications upon the seacoast of a
possible enemy in Europe, but separat-
ed so far as we would be from the
base of supplies such offensive naval
warfare could not be of lasting dura-
tion.
“In defensive naval warfare, we
might for a time make a creditable
showing upon our own coasts; but if
any of these great natjons should ef-
fect a landing of any considerable
army, for weeks at least such an in-
stipated and all knocked out and be- night. No resolutions on the subject
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 236, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 28, 1915, newspaper, August 28, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1454066/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.