Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 280, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1916 Page: 2 of 12
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*
GALVESTON TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1916.
TWO
AMUSEMENTS.
NO ACTION
Grand Opera House
N
IS LIKELY
13c
22428
Majestic Vaudeville
• •
Great Britain Will Await
Developments.
)
VISCOUNT GREY
MAKES STATEMENT
Sixty Years the Standard
NO ALUM
5c
EVERYBODY’S FAVORITE
4
in Main
Dodge Bros.
Motor Cars
Chalmers
COMPULSORY LAW
PHONE 178.
FILLING SCHOOLS
MUSEMENTS
JAgaa
TRIAL IS BEGUN.
BRYAN IN TENNESSEE.'
TO HIGHER COURT.
TO FILE ANSWER.
GOLD INFLOWING.
GUARDSMAN DIES.
MAKING STAND.
By Associated Press.
London.—Ru-
18.—Via
RUMANIANS HOLDING.
MEN WELL EQUIPPED.
The Proof Is In the Use
For
greatly i
in the hi
benefited me.
ouse for use in cases of
A
We carry the largest line of
Tire and
0
Auto Accessories
02‘(0
I
TO CHICAGO.
in the city. We sell for less.
I
Ki?
Columbus, Ohio
ER
Increased Attendance on Some
Schools Is Unprecedented.
Says State Superintendent.
an-
are
the
Peruna
I keep it
reputable people the country over might be told in quantity to fill
this newspaper. It’s evidence like this that
Generating hot air is easier than get-
ting up steam.
An apology is seldom satisfactory to
either side of the controversy.
SUNDAY AND MONDAY, OCT. 22-23.
Matinees 3 P. M. and Nights 8:30.
IRISH QUESTION
AGAIN IN FRONT
Thousands have willingly told of the benefits they have derived from the use of Peruna. Its helpfulness
has been marked in many varieties of ailments. You may be helped as these people have been.
HARD BATTLES
BEING FOUGHT
Outlines Situation on Patrol of
Warships off the Amer-
ican Coast.
A CHILD GETS CROSS,
•SICK AND FEVERISH
WHEN CONSTIPATED
Eastern Front Is Very Active,
With Both Sides Fighting
With All Power.
Look, Mother! If tongue is coated
clean little liver and
bowels.
CREAM
Baking Powder
dorse it.”
Stories like these from
Fans,Motors
FIXTURES SUPPLIES
Or Anything
TODAY AND TOMORROW
H. B. Warner
with
Dorothy Dalton
in a New Triangle Romance,
"The Vagabond Prince”
Also New Keystone Komedy.
49
€99
(97
PRICES—Lower Floor, 75 and 50c;
Balcony, 50c and 25c; Gallery, 15c.
Monday Matinee—Adults, 50c and 25c;
Children, Any Seat, 15c.
-
Seats on Sale Now—9 A. M. to 6 P. M.
()
Old bachelors are men who never
gave marriage a serious thought.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears -7 p,gse=s---
the AA .42/—.
Simnature of *e. 4ccece
O better way to satisfy an
enthusiastic appetite than
with Uneeda Biscuit. A delight-
ful food, as appetizing as it is
nourishing and wholesome. Per-
fect baking, perfect protection,
they come to you with oven-
■ freshness.
Clarke Electric Co.
Phone 583.
2316 Postoffice Street.
REPAIR WORK A SPECIALTY.
THEATRE
E
ELECTRICAL
See
Galveston Motor Car Co
2219 CHURCH ST.
“A Service Station, Not a Garage.”
The average man is usually polite
when he has something to sell.
making a stand in the frontier passes
against the Teutonic armies, Germany
army headquarters announced today.
No notable change is reported.
PRICES
Peruna in liquid or tablet form can be had of all druggists.
ManMin—the ideal laxative and liver tonic—in either liquid or candy tablets,
is a wonderful help to constipated people, working pleasantly, effectively and
safely, without forming a habit. Try a 10-cent box.
THE PERUNA COMPANY
my throat and nose.
Proves Peruna’s Value
You needn’t hesitate to try Peruna yourself for any catarrhal
trouble, no matter how it manifests itself. No medicine can ever be
guaranteed to cure, of course, but the evidence of what Peruna has
done for others is the best guarantee of what it will do for you.
cruits of all ages who lack arms, am-
munition and mounts, General Trevino
stated yesterday. He said Villa is not
paying his men and is holding them
through fear. Secret agents report that
Villa is organizing an expedition to re-
cover military supplies that had been,
cached in the Sierras.
Denial was made by General Trevino
of the reprt circulated in El Paso
that four thousand men had seized the
southern section of the Mexico North-
western railroad and were running its
trains and were in complete control
of the territory northwest of San An-
tonio.
Villa Reported to Have About SOO
Troops.
By Associated Press.
Chihuahua City, Mex., Oct. 18.—Villa
is in the neighborhood of Ternosachic
with about eight hundred well equipped
soldiers and a thousand impressed re-
in Transylvania are
He plans to return here at midnight
Friday. The Chicago journey will be
made by way of Albany and Buffalo
and the return trip by way of Pitts-
burgh. Mrs. Wilson and Secretary Tu-
multy will accompany him.
Berlin, Oct.
manian troops
Gilmore Will Appeal His Injunetion
Case.
By Associated Press. '
Fort Worth, Oct. 17.—The applica-
tion of C. E. Gilmore of Willis Point
for a rehearing in his injunction suit
against the Texes Democratic execu-
tive committee was refused this after-
noon by the court of civil appeals.
Gilmore sought to enjoin the commit-
tee -from putting the name of C. H.
Hurdleston on the official ballot as
the party nominee for railroad com-
missioner. He won his contention in
the district court, but lost on the ap-
peal. Now he in turn will appeal to
the state supreme court.
Never Regains Consciousness After
Being Hit by Train.
By Associated Press.
Brownsville, Tex., Oct. 18.—Private
John Mahady, E battery, First Minne-
sota artillery, who was found uncon-
scious on a railroad track 25 miles
north of here Monday night, died at
a hospital here late last night without
having regained consciousness. The
body will'be shipped to his father,
James Mahady, at Minneapolis.
Mahady is supposed to have been
struck by a train.
85,009,000 in Yellow Metal Received in
New York Today.
By Associated Press.
New York, Oct. 18.—After a lapse of
several weeks, gold imports from Can-
ada were resumed today, J. P. Morgan
& Co. depositing at the assay office
$5,000,000 received from Ottawa. This
makes a total of about $115,000,000 re-
ceived from various foreign sources,
chiefly British, since the beginning of
the inflow last May.
Kays Wilson Will be Swept Back Into
Office.
By Associated Press.
Memphis, Tenn., Oct. 18.—William
Jennings Bryan rache Memphis this
morning for a day’s campaign in Ten-
nessee in behalf of the Democratic
ticket. He was joined here by Gover-
nor T. C. Rye, K. D. McKellar, candidate
for United States senator; Hubert Fish-
er. candidate for congress to succeed
Mr. McKellar, and other prominent
Democrats of the state. , .e
While waiting for their special train
to be prepared Mr. Bryan addressed a
large crowd in front of the Union sta-
tion.
“I have been on the firing line in
the Middle West where the campaign
is the hottest,” said the former secre-
tary of state. “I have spoken in twelve
states so far, and the Democrats of
Tennessee and the South may be as-
sured there is a mighty current of pub-
lic sentiment, continually growing,
that will sweep President Wilson to a
victorious re-election."
The “campaign special” was sched-
uled. to make ten or twelve stops be-
fore reaching Nashville tonight.
was at ‘that time difficult of access
from the mainland, it was fortified,
and also they had hope of being res-
cued by passing boats.
These four scenes will be followed
by a curtain drop, arid’ music by El
Mina band, while the stage is pre-
pared for the next number. This will
be a ball-room scene during the early
’60s, and the dancing of the Virginia
reel in costume of that day.
After more music by the band the
curtain will rise upon Galveston
once again and Galvie Stone will be
seen looking for the treasure of the
island. Sarah Ellen Davidge will take
the part of Galvie Stone. The good
fairy of the island will appear and
point out the treasure and a sand fid-
dler will help dig it up. Miss Evelyn
Wolfe will be the good fairy and the
dance of the oleanders will typify the
rejoicing over the discovery of the
(treasure.
This treasure materializes into all
the attributes of Galveston island;
Beauty, represented by flowers; Indus-
try by shipping, and so on. Helen
Dolson will give a gypsy dance to rep-
resent the immigration feature of the
port. Galvie Stone and Foreign Com-
merce in this scene dance the new
military one-step and this will be fol-
lowed by the grand march, with Wilma
Burrell as Lafitte, and Evelyn Wolfe
as the good fairy, leading.
This will complete the children’s
part'in the pageant, and Mr. C. C. Hard
will take the children, and without re-,
hearsal, show practical playground
work for 15 minutes.
The program is expected to end
about 9 o’clock and from that time on
the floor will be open to dancing to
the strains of orchestra music.
Cotton Belt’s Attorney Sees Officials
in Austin.
By Associated Press.
Austin, Oct. 18.—Judge E. B. Perkins,
general attorney of the Cotton Belt
reached here today to confer with the
railroad commission and the attorney-
general’s department relative to the
injunction applied for by the state to
restrain the thirty-four railroads in
Texas, that did not participate in the
injunction suit at Atlanta, Ga., from
operating after Nov. 1, under the new
freight rates promulgated by the rail-
roads. Judge Perkins said that an
answer will be filed in the Fifty-third
district court here on next Thursday.
The Cotton Belt is the largest of the
thirty-four roads against which a re-
straining order is desired.
If your little one’s tongue is coated,
it is a sure sign the stomach, liver and
bowels need a gentle, thorough cleans-
ing at once. When your child is cross,
peevish, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, eat
or act naturally;, if breath is bad,
stomach sour, system full of cold,
throat sore, or if feverish, give a tea-
spoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,”
and in a few hours all the clogged-up,
constipated waste, sour bile and undi-
gested food will gently move out of
the bowels, and you have a well, play-
ful child again.
Sick children needn’t be coaxed to
take this harmless “fruit laxative."
Millions of mothers keep it handy be-
cause they know its action on the
stomach, liver and bowels is prompt
and sure. They also know a little
given today saves a sick child tomor-
row.
Ask your druggist for a 50-cent
bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,”
which contains directions for babies,
children of all ages and for grown-ups
plainly on the bottle. Beware of coun-
terfeits sold here. Get the genuine
made by “California Fig Syrup Com-
pany.”
the Rumanians, the war office
nounced today. The Rumanians
holding their positions west of
frontier.
Galveston will celebrate her 100th
birthday on Friday evening in the city
auditorium with an elaborate pageant
staged by the children of the city for
the children of the city.
While it is not to be supposed that
the wonderful history through which
the island and city have passed in the
last 100 years will be set- forth in
detail, there will be presented many
interesting and some amusing features
of past times and customs.
The opening scene will show Galves-
ton island as it appeared 100 years
ago. This will be historically correct
in so far as history records conditions
of that time. The vegetation will be
represented and the general outline of
the island. As the only inhabitants at
that time were the sand fiddlers, they
will naturally be the actors in this
scene.
* The first known humans who came
to the island were the Caroncahua In-
dians, a tribe who traveled nearly 200
miles to get fresh fruit such as pine-
apples, oranges and strawberries,
which then grew in great profusion on
Galveston island. They also gathered
and ate oysters, crabs, fish—and an
occasional shipwrecked sailor. These
Indians will occupy the stage during
the second scene and among other cus-
toms of the tribe will be shown a
wild dance by a Caroncahua belle, a
cannibal feast and a religious dance.
Lafitte and his crew will arrive and
entertain the audience for the third
scene, and will be followed »by the real
settlers of the island, who were refu-
gees from the mainland who came to
escape the marauding Mexican army
-which was invading the state precea-
ing the battle of San Jacinto. These
people came to the island because it
By Associated Press.
London, Oct. 18.—The Irish question
was again brought to the fore in the
house of commons today with the in-
troduction by John Redmond of a mo-
tion criticising the system of govern-
ment of the island. The motion reads:
“That the system of government at
present maintained in Ireland is in-
consistent with the principles where-
for the allies are fighting in Europe,
and is, or has been, mainly responsi-
ble for the recent unhappy events and
for the present state of feeling in that
country."
Mr. Redmond gave notice. of his in-
tention to attack the government. The
Irish leaders have held a number of
conferences with Baron Wimborne, lord
lieutenant of Ireland, but these prob-
ably had more to do with the sugges-
tion of extension of conscription to
Ireland than with the grievances aris-
ing from continuance of marital law
and the failure to release all those ar-
rested during the uprising in Ireland
last spring.
Mrs. E. Malmgren, of 133
Frederick St., West Manchester,
N. H., writes “For eleven years
I was troubled with catarrh in
Galveston History Will
Be Given in Pageantry
4
Redmond Introduces Motion
Criticising Government For
Present System on Island.
Oscar D. McDaniel is Accused of Kill-
ing Wife. -
By Associated Press.
St. Joseph, Mo., Oct. 18.—Oscar D.
McDaniel, prosecuting attorney of Bu-
chanan county, was put on trial in
the criminal court here today under an
indictment charging him with the mur-
der of his wife. The courtroom was
crowded.
A motion to quash the indictment
was filed by attorneys for the defense,
and Bart M: Lockwood, special prose-
cutor,. was instructed to answer it this
afternoon. Judge Ryan started ques-
tioning veniremen concerning their
qualifications for the jury.
Miss Ivy Gray, Fairview,
Kentucky, writes: “I have
taken Peruna and would say
that it is the best medicine for
coughs and colds I ever saw.”
Mr. M. Van Buren, Engineer,
Crand Rapids and Indiana Rail-
way, 828 S. Division St., Grand
Itapids, Mich., writes: “Peruna
has positively done for me what
many doctors failed to do. I
consider myself entirely free
from catarrh of the stomach,
the trouble from which I suf-
fered for so long before taking
this remedy.”
Mrs. A. J. Netkows, 37th Ave.
and Central, N. E., Minneapolis,
Minn., writes: “I have had ca-
tarrh of the lungs in the worst
way, and went to different doc-
tors, but without success. I
gave Peruna a trial, took fif-
teen bottles and am entirely
cured. Before I started to take
Peruna I weighed 89 pounds,
now I weigh 135.”
6—Other Feature Acts—6
By Associated Press.
Petrograd, Oct. 15.—(Via London, Oct.
18).—The whole of General Brussiloff’s
front from the district of Kovel to
Rumania presents an almost continu-
ous battle line, with Russia and Aus-
tro-German forces constantly engaged
in attacks and counterattacks, each
side successfully defending its position,
but making no lasting progress against
its opponent.
It has become evident that the in-
tention of breaking through the north-
ern sector of General Brussiloff’s line
and recapturing Lutsk has been supple-
mented, since Rumania’s entry into the
war by a more audacious plan—a move
at the extreme southern flank by the
Austro-Germans in the hope of separ-
ating the Russian armies from their
new allies.
To' this end the Austro-Germans
have concentrated heavy forces at the
southern tip of Bukowina, where the
southern flank of the Russians joins
the northern flank of the Rumanians,
and have begun an advance south of
Dornawatra, accompanying this with
a vigorous. attack slightly further
north, near Korosmezo and Kirlibaba
and a parallel movement against the
Rumanians in Transylvania.
Thus far the drive of the Teutonic
allies against the Rumanians has been
more successful than that against the
Russians, for while the former are re-
tiring toward their own frontier, the
Russians have not, as far as is, known
at present, been compelled to give way
before the power of the offensive di-
rected against them.
The Austro-German movement, how-
ever, is still in its early stages, and
a tremendous struggle is expected on
this part, of the front. Already the
Russians have begun countermaneu-
vers. as is attested by the number of
prisoners taken in the Kirlibaba re-
gion, where the first attack of the
Austro-Germans, in the view of mili-
tary observers, bears little semblance
of success.
Fierce fighting continues southeast
of Vladimir-Volyniski in Volhynia and
south of Brazezany in Galicia. At
these two points, covering respectively
the roads to Vladimir-Valynski and
Lemberg, a continuous battle is being
carried on at close range, leading often
to bayonet encounters, but without pro-
ducing any decisive results.
Special to The Tribune.
Austin, Oct. 18.—The compulsory
school attendance law is now in force
in many school districts of Texas. “Cor-
respondence received at the state de-
partment of education from cities and
towns in which the compulsory attend-
ance period has begun shows,” accord-
ing to a statement of Supt. Doughty,
“an unprecedented increase in attend-
ance.
“As a typical illustration of the
school conditions now prevailing in
most of the cities and towns of Texas
due to the compulsory school attend-
ance law, Mr. Doughty said, “that in
a recent communication received at the
department from a prominent super-
intendent in one of the leading city
school systems qf the state, in a town
of ten thousand inhabitants, the state-
ment is made that the enrollment in
the schools of that city last Friday was
approximately 900 more than for the
same date last year; that it was neces-
sary for the school board of that city
to employ ten additional teachers and
provide additional school furniture and
equipment.
“The superintendent of school from
whom the communication was received
stated that the school board, as the
result of the crowded condition, was
at a loss to know how to provide funds
to take care of the great increase. This
city, like many others,” said Mr.
Doughty, “has been for some time levy-
ing and collecting the maximum rate
allowed under the constitution for
school purposes."
Gasoline’ GM Electric
Grand Opera House.
Of the New Majestic vaudeville,
which comes to the Grand opera house
Sunday and Monday, matinees and
nights, Oct. 22nd and 23rd, the Hous-
ton Chronicle of Oct. 17 says:
“Playing the role of a rich young
clubman who, for the love of a beau-
tiful young woman, enlists in the reg-
ular army as a private soldier to prove
that he is a real man, Victor Morley,
declared by many to be America’s star
of light opera, is the headliner extraor-
dinary of. the vaudeville bill of seven
acts of superlative merit at the Majes-
tic theater this week. Upon every
appearance thus far Morley and the
company of fifteen splendid artists who
support him in the pr esentation of ‘A
Regular Amy Man’ have scored an
unqualified success. ‘A Regular Army
Man,’ from the pens of Channing Pol-
lock and Rennold Wolg, is a condensa-
tion of ‘My Best Girl,’ the brilliant New
York musical comedy hit of two years
ago. Morley is surrounded by the
same artists who* supported him as a
$2 star in ‘My Best Girl.’ Morley is
recalled by Houston theater-goers as
the star of ‘The Three Twins’ and ‘The
Quaker Girl,’ the brilliant light operas
in which he won signal favor here five
and three years ago. ‘A Regular Army
Man’ is described as a musical military
march of mirth. It is staged elabor-
ately. Willing, Bentley and Willing,
‘Those Scrappy Coons,’ one of last sea-
son’s biggest hits, are playing a re-
turn engagement as an extra added at-
traction on' this program. Other acts
are Lillian Herlein, the celebrated
prima donna, presenting ‘The One Wom-
an Fashion Show’; Eddie Carr and com-
pany, in the farce comedy playlet, ‘The
Office Boy’; Fred and Adele Astair,
new songs and distinctive dances; the
Three Stewart Sisters, in a character-
istic dance cycle; Heras and Preston,
acrobats ‘Fast and Funny.’ ”
Rumanians Holding Passes Against
Teutonic Armies.
Queen Theater.
The beautiful Ince production, "The
Vagabond Prince,” showing at the
Queen theater today and tomorrow, is
like a sweet melody that appeals to the
heart loving romance, a, haunting after
strain that speaks of unfulfilled long-
ing, but everlasting hope that can not
be downed as long as life can last. In
the depths of the human heart, no mat-
ter how rough, how seemingly hard-
ened and uncouth outward appearances,
there springs eternal a bubbling foun-
tain of young. romance, an unsatisfied
yearning for th joys life promises and
an impulse to seek in the open spaces
of the wqrld, untrammelled, true hap-
piness and contentment. This is why
“The Vagabond Prince” finds its way
quietly and unobtrusively into the af-
fections of every one who sees it and
lives in memory long after many
stormier pictures are forgotten things.
H. B. Warner makes the lonesome
prince who “puts the world in his
pocket” a lovable character and a
manly one, and Dorothy Dalton has a
beautiful appeal as Fluffy, the girl
who danced for the enjoyment of Bo-
hemian habitues at the cheap cabaret,
but whose heart longed for the sweet
things of life—and found them. Ray
Laidlow, as the wandering artist is one
of the splendid characterizations of
the unpretentious film, a likable char-
acter and one free from artificialities.
Prince Tonio, after his betrothal to
a princess for matters of state, seeks
solace in his grounds and aloud longs
for happiness. A wandering artist
resting under a tree hears the wish
and tells the prince to seek romance
on the open road, to “put the world in
his pocket,” and among the poor and
lighthearted he will find the happiness
he wishes for. Following the advice,
Prince Tonio slips away and when, a
vagabond, he meets Fluffy, there be-
gins the appealing story that will
touch a responsive chord in every
heart.
By Associated Press.
London, Oct. 18.—The British gov-
ernment will not make any official
representation to the United States
concerning the German submarine
U-53 pending an announcement of its
attitude by the American government,
said Viscount Grey, secretary of state
for foreign affairs, in the house of
lords today.
The foreign secretary said in reply
to Lord Beresford’s question:
“The best thing I can do is to read
a summary of what actually passed
between the United States government
and his majesty’s government on this
subject since the war began and what
we understand the view of the United
States government to be.”
Viscount Grey then read the follow-
ing statement:
“On Sept. 14, 1914, the British am-
bassador at Washington telegraphed
that the United States authorities had
intercepted wireless communications
from H. M. S. Suffolk to New York
asking for supplies and newspapers,
and he informed us that the United
States government considered that this
would be making use of United States
territory as a base for supplies and
information as to shipping movements
through the newspapers.
“The proceeding was as far as I am
aware not repeated and no official pro-
test was received, so far as I have
been able to discover in the foreign
office.
PRIVATE MESSAGE.
“On Oct. 5, 1914, we had a private
communication respecting the presence
of British ships near New York har-
bor. We had an unofficial communi-
cation later on deprecating the same
thing and saying that in the past such
hovering of foreign vessels in the vi-
cinity of the great ports of the United
States had forced that government,
owing to the public feeling aroused,
to take a very strong line and that if
the practice continued it might be
construed into an act of unfriendli-
ness requiring some action on the part
of the United States government.
“There was later , an official com-
plaint on the 16th of December, 1914
(1915?), founded on the shadowing by
a British warship for some distance
along the American coast; though from
a position admittedly beyond the ter-
ritorial limits of a vessel named the
Vinland, and this complaint referred
to the seriousness with which the
United States government regarded
the hovering of belligerent warships
about American ports and coasts.
The official complaint that the Brit-
ish government was aware that the
United States government had always
regarded the practice of belligerent
cruisers patrolling the American coast
in close proximity to the territorial
waters of the United States and mak-
ing the neighborhood a station for
their observations as inconsistent with
the treatment to be expected from the
naval vessels of a friendly power in
time of war and had maintained that
the consequent menace of such pro-
ceedings to the freedom of American
commerce was vexatious and uncour-
teous to the United States.
ASSUME IT SAME.
“We assume that the view of the
United States government is still that
contained in their previous dispatch."
Viscount Grey quoted this to the ef-
fect that the United States government
would regard as an unfriendly act the
hovering of belligerent vessels near
the American coast in the track of
commerce to American ports with in-
tent to intercept entente merchant-
men, and continued:
“In reply to these various requests,
private and semiofficial and official
from the United States government we
asked to be informed on what ground
the claim was made that belligerent
operations which are legitimate in one
part of the high seas were illegitimate
in another, admitting that the British
ships were not accused of exceeding
their strict legal rights under inter-
national law and that the complaints
made by the United States government
were not based on any actual legality,
but on irritation which the presence of
belligerent vessels in close proximity
to the United States ports naturally
caused to a neutral country.
“Lord Beresford asks what we did.
As a matter of fact, though, we have
contended that according to the strict
prineim* of international law, British
warships were entitled to operate free-
ly anywhere outside of territorial wa-
ters and the United States had not
based their request on us on interna-
tional law, but on the ground of cour-
tesy and friendliness and the annoy-
ance it would cause if vessels were
close to their coast, instructions were
sent by the admiralty to British ves-
sels of war at the time with a view
to meeting as far as possible the views
of the United States government and
it was impressed upon them that no
acts should be committed which would
be liable to cause unnecessary irrita-
tion.
“That, I believe, is a fair summary
of what has passed between the
• United States government and our-
selves and of what we know of their
views. It amounts to this:
“That the United States government
did request us very emphatically not
to patrol near their coast and that in-
structions were sent to British ships
of war to avoid causing any unneces-
sary irritation and so far as possible
to comply with the request of the
United States government. That dis-
poses of what has passed so far’as we
are concerned."
A child’s’first impression is usually
made by the maternal slipper.
eda
g2
Mr. George Atkinson, 323 E.
8th Ave., Topeka, Kans., writes:
“I am pleased to recommend
Peruna, as it was beneficial in
restoring my health when I was
all run down from overwork
and nervous worry and was un-
able to take up my regular
work."
Mrs. E. M. Harris, R. R. 3,
Ashland, Wisconsin, writes:
"After following your advice
and using Peruna and Manalin,
I was cured of catarrh of the
nose, throat and stomach, from
which I had suffered for several
years.”
Miss Rieka Ieopold, 436 Wa-
ter St., Menasha, Wis, writes:
“Three years ago my system
was in a terrible run down con-
dition and I was broken out all
over my body. I owe my resto-
ration to health and strength to
Peruna. I am glad to en-
President Wilson Will Start on Trip
Tomorrow.
By Associated Press.
Long Branch, N. J., Oct. 18.—Presi-
dent Wilson will leave here tomorrow
at 11 a. m. for Chicago, where on
Thursday he will speak three times.
CHAS. NEWDING
Overland and Hupmobile.
2216 Postoffice St. Phone 1139.
Austro-German Attacks in Transyl-
vania Repulsed, Says Bucharest.
By Associated Press.
Bucharest, Oct. 18.—Cia London, 4:31
p. m.—Austro-German attacks in
Transylvania have been repulsed by
7—Big All-Star Acts—7
VICTOR MORLEY
"A Regular Army Man"
A Musical Military March of Mirth
Presented by Fifteen Brilliant Artists.
Accessories GOOPReH Supplies
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
colds, coughs,, or other catarrhal
troubles."
Mrs. Charles Atkinson, Pine
City, Minn., writes : “I have
had catarrh* of the throat and
have been using different kinds
of medicine, which did me no
good. A friend advised me to
take Peruna, and after taking
two bottles I was cured."
Mrs. Pauline Winters Hansen,
R. R. 3, Alta Ave., Nana, Cal.,
writes: “I was troubled for
five years with eczema on the
hands, and a severe internal
trouble, combined with nerv-
ousness. Four bottles of Pe-
runa • cured both my troubles
entirely, so Nthat no trace of
them is left.”
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 280, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1916, newspaper, October 18, 1916; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1481591/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.