Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 284, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 23, 1917 Page: 2 of 12
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TWO
GALVESTON TRIBUNE.'
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1817.
"gev
AMUSEMENTS.
Weather Conditions
Tonight at 8:30
This Bottle
Look for
SERVE
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REFRESHING PURE NUTRITIOUS
ri
1
Highest Lowest tation
‘eto
last i last 24
Wum,
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4
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Wet
through you without doing you any
Dodge City ...... 42
70
2
80
Fort Worth ...... 80
“2mABEa2FEE2MEE8
E
Smmar
Today and Tomorrow
... 44
64
, 60
A
41
76
...52
een op-
posed to prescribing advertised reme-
I dies, and for fifteen years, while Ad-
San Francisco..... 86
64
CONTRARY WINDS
72
$
Thirteen
26
I
MUSEMENTS
PRINT PAPER PRODUCTION.
T
(uticura
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Phone 710
I
1
Galveston
3 7
PERSONAL MENTION
6
/
convince or money refunded at Schott i Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.,
for large trial
Drug Co.
pkg.—(Adv.)
$
ukkkkalula
Brewing
Association
Juice of Lemons!
How to Make Skin
ForThe
Skin
. 66
. 50
The funniest play in the
Whole-Wide-Wide-World
Started Out on Raid
Against England.
Nuxated Iron to Make New Age of
Beautiful WomenandVigorous Iron Men
Served at all good
soda fountains, cafes
and restaurants.
The more you drink
it, the better you will
like it.
Keep a case at home
and plenty on ice.
72
70
32
64
28
44
50
460
54
r The Soap to
cleanse and purify,
the Ointment to
soothe and heal
Durango
Edmonton
El Paso .
46
72
60
York
says:
operating
Imports
Santa Fe.....
Savannah ...
Seattle.......
Sheridan ....
Shreveport...
Spokane......
Prince Albert ...
Raleigh ........
Rapid City.....
Roseburg .......
Roswell .......
St. Louis .......
Salt Lake City..
San Antonio......
San Diego......
Pure, Refreshing,
Nutritious
night.
34
24
50
.. 40
40
Temperature.
Observations taken at 8
mer. time.
.. 32
.. 72
,.. 60
A Comedy of Life among the
Apartment Dwellers
Prices: 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50.
ATTORNEY GENERAL
WILL DECIDE POINT
Galveston.....
Green Bay.....
Hatteras ......
Havana .......
Helena .......
Houston .......
Huron ........
Indianapolis ..,
Jacksonville ...
Kamloops .....
Kansas City ....
Key West.....
Knoxville .....
Little Rock ...
Louisville .....
Macon ........
Memphis ......
Miami ........
Minneapolis ...
St. Paul ......
Mobile ........
Modena .......
Montgomery ...
Moorhead ...
Nashville .....
New Orleans ..
New York
North Platte ..
Oklahoma .....
Omaha ........
Palestine ......
Phoenix .......
Pittsburgh ....
A WOMAN’S BURDENS
IN THIS WAR
CATERERS JOIN IN
CONSERVING FOODS
It’s the drink you
have been waiting
for. Care in its
blending of cereals,
with the most expert
workmanship in its
brewing makes
GALVO a beverage
that almost everyone
will drink and appre-
ciate.
The snappy beverage
that quenches and
satisfies the thirst,
that meets every re-
quirement of the
ideal soft drink is
Gregory to Rule on Question
of Allowing Imports of
Spirits.
yester-
day.
...78
... 52
...66
White and Beautiful!
f
Say Physicians—Quickly Puts Roses Into the Cheeks of Women and Most Astonishing Youthful
Vitality Into the Veins of Men—It Often Increases the Strength and Endurance of Deli-
cate, Nervous “Run-Down” Folks 100 Per Cent, in Two Weeks’ Time.
. 74
. 42
. 40
Opinions of Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, Visiting Surgeon of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. New York City; Dr. James Louis
Beyea. for fifteen years Adjunct Professor in the New York Homeopathic Medical College
and Wm. R. Kerr, Former Health Commissioner, City of Chicago.
The first big show of the regular
dramatic season.
22%29
COLO
. 66
. 52
. 64
.. 82
. 80
hours.
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
u
54
26
24
52
32
22
58
38
26
76
26
26
14
24
26
42
36
56
34
56
104
30
54
06
. 30
54
36
32
74
38
36
34
40
36
70
22
52
28
44
6
36
56
46
8
26
26
40
52
42
22
42
16
40
34
30
44
46
58
52
28
50
48
16
42
36
30
30
20
58
42
38
44
38
24
20
46
32
16
ORDER A CASE
TODAY
I
i
2
t
2
San Leon Co. to Martin F. Gilbert,
lots 7 and 8, blk 25, San Leon; $60.00.
San Leon Co. to Detlen Heesch, lot
30, blk 160, San Leon and other, $370.00
San Leon Co. to Al A. Hough, lots 43-6
blk 7, San Leon; $120.00.
Walter McNeel et al to Geo. K. Wes-
terlage, lots 1 and 2, blk 6, section 1,
Mary McNeel subdivision; $450.00. -
W. E. Vogelpohl to G. R. Vogelpohl,
lots 45 and 46, blk 14, San Leon, $10.00.
Mrs. Annie Price and husband to M.
W. Duggan et ux, lots 11 and 12, blk
4, Denver Resurvey, $1250.00.
J. M. McNeel et al to Geo. K. Wester-
lage, lot 3, blk 6, Mary J. McNeel sub-
division; lot 5, Highland; $100.00.
John Stephenson to Alex. Baker, lots
1 and 2, blk 124, Moores Addition to
Dickinson, $85.00.
Springfield, Ill.....
Springfield, Mo.....
Swift Current.....
Tampa.............
Taylor.............
Toledo.............
Vicksburg ........
Washington.......
Wichita...........
Williston..........
Wilmington.......
Winnemucca......
Winnipeg.........
BAFFLED “ZEPS”
.. 74
.. 86
.. 34
.. 64
Dorothy Phillips
in a new Bluebird feature
68
62
860
34
... 64
...80
•• 134
.... 74
...40
... 60
Mildred Manning
in a Five-Reel Vitagraph
Princess of Park Row
At the Crystal
Today
GExfmaGf
DIXIE NO. 1
Today and Tomorrow
I
-os.F50a°eeee
**43255
3*10
Homeopathic Medical College,
“As a physician I have always b
LOSE ONE POSITION.
good. You don’t get the strength out
of it, and as a consequence you become
weak, pale and sickly looking, just
like a plant trying to grow in a soil
deficient in iron. If you are not strong
or well, you owe it to yourself to make
Adjunct Professor in the New
The figures are based
from thirty-six companies
j o r ev
!|F l
TWIN BEDS
on reports
“Bondage”
Added Attraction
UNIVERSAL WEEKLY
with latest war news
By the case of 4 dozen
Splits, $2.60, with re-
bate of $1.00 on return •
of case and bottles.
id
I~"a
k hpA
k g
—
what you eat, your food merely passes I junct Professor in the New York Ho-
+‘---------* —t* • ----- meopathic Medical College, I taught my
medical students that such remedies
i j p
4"
Forecast Till 7 P. M. Wednesday.
For Galveston and vicinity: Fair and
colder tonight, with frost; Wednesday
fair with rising temperature.
For East Texas: Fair and colder to-
night, except the extreme northwest
portion, with frost to coast, except in
the lower Rio Grande valley; freezing
in the interior, with temperature to
30 degrees northern portion of sugar
and trucking region; cold wave Hous-
ton and Port Arthur; Wednesday fair,
with rising temperature.
For West Texas: Fair tonight and
colder in the southeast portion; freez-
ing except the extreme west portion;
Wednesday fair, with rising temper-
ature. ,
For Oklahoma: Tonight fair; not so
cold in the west portion; Wednesday
fair, warmer.
Winds on the Texas coast: Moderate
northerly.
By the case of 3 dozen
Pints, $3.30, with re-
bate of 60c on return
of case and bottles.
---—---
WARNING PUBLISHED.
a
seez
—194*82 9
403/95
. a
were generally valueless, but in the
case of Nuxated Iron severe tests made
on myself and numerous patients, have
absolutely convinced me that it is a
remedy of most extraordinary merit
and one which should be generally pre-
scribed by all physicians. Notwith-
standing the fact that I am nearing
my 80th birthday, a short course of
Nuxated Ironjhas made me feel like a
new man. Friends say, ‘What have you
been doing to yourself, you look so
well and full of life?’ In my opinion
there is nothing like organic iron—
Nuxated Iron—to put youthful strength
and power into the veins of the weak,
run-down, infirm or aged. But beware
of the old forms of metallic iron which
often do more harm than good. To be
absolutely sure that my patients get
real organic iron and not some form of
the metallic variety, I always pre-
scribe Nuxated Iron in its original
packages.”
* NOTE: Nuxated Iron, which is prescribed and
recommended above by physicians in such a great
variety of cases, is not a patent medicine nor se-
cret remedy, but one which is well known to
druggists and whose iron constituents are widely
prescribed by eminent physicians, both in Europe
and America. Unlike the older inorganic iron
products, it is easily assimilated, does not injure
the teeth, make them blak, nor upset the stom-
ach; on the contrary, it is a most potent remedy
in nearly all forms of indigestion as well as for
nervous, run-down conditions. The manufactur-
ers have such great confidence in nuxated iron,
that they offer to forfeit $100 to any charitable
institution if they cannot take any man or woman
under 60 who lacks iron, and increase their
strength 100 per cent, or over in four weeks’ time,
provided they have no serious organic trouble.
They also offer to refund your money if it does
not at least double your strength and endurance
in ten days’ time. It is dispensed in this city by
Witherspoon’s drugstore, Schott Drug Co., Star
Drugstore and all good druggists.
These fragrant, super-creamy emollients
stop itching, clear the skin of pimples,
blotches, redness and roughness, the
scalp of itching and dandruff, and the
hands of chaps and sores. In purity,
delicate medication, refreshing fra- .
grange, convenience and economy,
Cuticura Soap and Ointment meet with
the approval of the most discriminating.
Unlike strongly medicated soaps which
are coarse and harsh, Cuticura Soap is
ideal for every-day use in the toilet,
bath and nursery. For sample each by
mail address post-card: “Cuticura,
Dept. 28, Boston.” Sold everywhere.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c.
Row,” the Greater Vitagraph Blue Rib-
bon feature, which is the attraction at
the Queen today and tomorrow. A den
in the lower .section of a city is shown,
with its tough cafe entrance, panelled
walls and hidden means of escape. Miss
Mildred Manning and Wallace MacDon-
ald are featured in the picture.
Into such a place a princess, a slip
of a girl, here with her father on a
business trip from Bellaria, goes all
alone to rescue her parent’ who has
been kidnapped. That she escapes with
her life is due to the bravery of a
newspaper reporter who also enters the
place and is made a prisoner.
This unusually strong picture tells
how both get away , to save the prince
just as he is about to be murdered.
Miss Mildred Manning and Wallace
MacDonald are featured in the produc-
tion.
British Hold All Others of Thir New
Gains.
London, Oct. 23.—The Germans last
night attacked one of the newly cap-
tured Brtish positions in Flanders and
forced back the troops holding it, the
war office announces. Elsewhere the
British gains of yesterday have been
maintained.
chiefly from Canada for the first eight
months of the present year totalled
358,169 tons, compared with 318,091 for
the same period in 1916, while exports
this year fell from 53,302 to 42,456
tons.
For Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly
Children.
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic,
GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC, arouses the
liver, drives out Malaria and builds up the sys-
tem. A sure Appetizer and aid to digestion. 60c.
ABEVERAG5
49
gh .
Bg is
gr"
T
“‘Ns
e“n X Sa’-XS*-
950,847 Tons Were Produced in the Past
Nine Months.
By Associated Press.
Washington, Oct. 23.—Production of
American news print paper for the nine
months ending Sept. 30 amounted to
950,847 tons as against 923,197 tons
for the same period last year, the
federal trade commission announced to-
day.
Weather Conditions.
The cold wave from fhe northern
Rockies has advanced southeastward
over the Plains states, bringing freez-
ing temperatures as far south as Okla-
homa and the Texas Panhandle, and
colder weather with brisk northerly
winds southward to the west Gulf
coast. It is warmer in the Atlantic
states and the Pacific Northwest, due
to falling barometer in those regions.
Light precipitation occurred during the
last 24 hours in the upper valleys and
the Lake region; elsewhere it was gen-
erally fair.
Fair and colder weather with prob-
ably frost is indicated for this vicinity
tonight. Wednesday will be fair and
warmer.
O. M. HADLEY, Metorologist.
more than fifty-six miles.
Local Record.
Temperature and precipitation record
at Galveston for 24 hours ending at 7
a. m. today. ~
Maximum temperature 74 degrees;
minimum temperature 56 degrees; mean
temperature 65 degrees, which is 5
degrees below the normal; accumulat-
ed deficiency of temperature since first
of month, 69 degrees; accumulated de-
ficiency since Jan. 1st, 3 degrees.
Total precipitation, .00 inch; which is
.15 inch below the normal; accumulat
ed deficiency of precipitation since
first of the month, 1.80 inches; accu-
mulated deficiency of precipitation
since Jan. 1st, 19.15 inches.
the following test: See how long you
can work or how far you can walk
without becoming tired. Next take
two five-grain tablets of ordinary nux-
ated iron three times per day after
meals for two weeks. Then test your
strength again and see how much you
have gained. I have seen dozens of
nervous, run-down people who were ail-
ing all the while double their strength
and endurance and entirely rid them-
selves of all symptoms of dyspepsia,
liver and other troubles in from ten
to fourteen days’ time simply by tak-
ing iron in the proper form. And this,
after they had in some cases been doc-
toring for months without obtaining
any benefit.” .
Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, Visiting Sur-
geon of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, New
York City, said: “I have never before
given out any medical information or
advice for publication as I ordinarily do
not believe in it. But in the case of
Nuxated Iron I feel I would be remiss
in my duty not to mention it. I have
taken it myself and given it to my pa-
tients with most surprising and satis-
factory results. And those who wish
to increase their strength, power and
endurance will find it a most remark-
able and wonderfully effective remedy.”
Dr. James Louis Beyea, for 15 years
Dixie No. 1.
The Dixie No. 1 shows today and to-
morrow a new Bluebird feature, enti-
tled “Bondage," in which Dorothy Phil-
lips plays the leading role. It is a
story of a young lady, with talent for
story writing, who goes to the big city
from her native country town and fi-
nally secures a position writing stories
for a journal of sensational bent. She
makes a success in her new field of en-
deavor, but in doing so is thrown with
that class of people who walk “Bohe-
mia’s” bright light way. She plunges
almost to the brink in this life, but re-
covers herself in time, and turns away
from the mad life, back to the life of
her childhood days, and back to her
first love in her native town. An add-
ed attraction today and tomorrow, at
the Dixie No. 1 will be a new Universal
News Weekly, with latest war and oth-
er news of interest.
Crystal Vaudeville.
Alice Joyce comes to the Crystal to-
morrow in a Vitagraph feature entitled
“The Courage of Silence.” “The Cour-
age of Silence” was originally called
“Who Shall Cast the First Stone?” and
is from the pen of Milton Nobles. Miss
Joyce portrays the character of Mer-
cedes, who, forced into a distasteful
marriage, allows herself to fall in love
with an American, but she is unaware
that he is married and the father of
two children. When she makes the
discovery she eludes him, becoming a
nursing sister in a convent, but when
his child falls ill, Mercedes makes a
supreme sacrifice, brings him back and
reunites the family. She then returns
broken-hearted to the convent. A great
story of renunciation handled in a
masterful manner.
Bessie Love
in
“A Daughter of the Poor”
Tomorrow
ALICE JOYCE
in
“COURAGE OF SILENCE”
At the cost of a small jar of or-
dinary cold cream one can prepare a
full quarter pint of the most wonder-
ful lemon skin softener and com-
plexion beautifier, by squeezing the
juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle
containing three ounces of orchard
white. Care should be taken to strain
the juice through a fine cloth so no
lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion
will keep fresh for months. Every
woman knows that lemon juice is used
to bleach and remove such blemishes
as freckles, sallowness and tan, and is
the ideal skin softener, smoothener and
beautifier.
Just try it! Get three ounces of
orchard white at any pharmacy and
two lemons from the grocer and
make up a quarter pint of this sweetly
fragrant lemon lotion and massage it
daily into the face, neck, arms and
hands. It naturally should help to
soften, freshen, bleach and bring out
the roses and beauty of any skin. It
is wonderful to smoothen rough, red
hands.—(Adv.)
“Twin Beds.”
If a merry comedy that alternates
roars, screams and yells with Gatling-
gun rapidity is what theater-goers
want, they will crowd the Grand to-
night when the funniest play ever
written, “Twin Beds,” will fill its long-
awaited engagement, and judging from
the advance sale it is evident that
everybody is going. “Twin Beds” has
fairly earned the title “the-world’s fun-
niest play.” It ran for one solid year
in New York, played for six months in
Australia, and has reached its second
year in London. All Galveston will
laugh over “Twin Beds.” It goes bob-
bing along delightfully and skilfully
and holds the audience helpless with
mirth. It is roaring, romping fun. In
ingenuity of situation and incident,
comic aspect of character, rapidity of
movement and unfaltering sense of hu-
mor, “Twin Beds” is said to be unique
among the lighter plays that the stage
has ever known. The play really con-
tains so many laughs that it seems as
though the limit would never be
reached, and it is one of those smash-
ing big hits that remain in the public
affection for years.
a. m. 75th
Precipi-
GALVESTONBREWINGASI =
GALVESTON, TEXA ‘
By Associated Press.
Washington, Oct. 23.—The question
of permitting importation into the
United States of distilled spirits pro-
duced abroad prior to Oct. 3 is before
Attorney General Gregory today for
decision. Acting on the interpretation
by Solicitor Becker of the treasury de-
partment of the good bill’s prohibition
on such shipments, Assistant Secretary
Rowe of the treasury department re-
cently notified customs collectors
throughout the country to permit en-
try of all liquors distilled before Oct. 3.
The instructions were recalled yester-
day pending action, by the attorney
general.
Solicitor 'Becker had ruled that the
revenue law passed Oct. 3 amounted
to a repeal of the food bill’s provision
excluding Spirits manufactured abroad.
Farmer Near Galveston Has
Terrible Experience
“I don’t think anybody ever suffered
more pain than I have. Twice I was
operated for gall stones and a third
operation was advised. A friend in
Iowa wrote me how he was cured by
taking Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy. I
took a bottle on his advice with good
results and have also taken the full
course. My pains are all gone and I
feel I am permanently cured. It is a
simple, harmless preparation that re-
moves the Catarrhal mucus from the
intestinal trat, and allays the inflam-
mation which causes practically all
stomach, liver and intestinal ailments,
including appendicitis. One dose will
(A
Manager P. L. Sanders of the Hotel
Galvez, attended a meeting yesterday
afternoon of the hotel and restaurant
men of Houston 'to learn just what
State Food Administrator E. A. Peden
expected of the hotel men of the state.
After hearing talks at the meeting Mr.
Sanders stated that he had already
established a meatless day at his hotel
and was ready to assist the campaign
further in every way he could.
Mr. Sanders stated that he would call
a meeting of the hotel and restaurant
men at once, and form an organization
similar to the one in Houston for the
purpose of conserving the country’s
food supply. He was very enthusiastic
over the plans and came home with
many ideas he wishes to carry out in
Galveston.
At the meeting held yesterday aft-
ernoon the following matters were
agreed upon. Making a general charge
for bread and butter. Reducing the ex-
travagant size now served in cafes.
Adopting beefless, but not meatless
days. As a result of the conference,
J. E. Daly, state chairman of the hotel
and restaurant committee of the food
administration appointed a committee
of two hotel men and three restaurant
men who will meet Friday afternoon
at 4 o’clock in the Rice hotel and draft
resolutions, which will make for a per-
manent organization of caterers in
Houston. E. A. Peden and H. H. Wirt
Steele of Washington, in addressing,
the caterers, assured them that it was
no wish of the administration to coerce
the caterers into co-operation and that
they were confident that no such steps
would be necessary. The caterers of
every sort were represented in the gath-
ering, they were to a man anxious and
willing to do all in their power in the
conservation of foods.
The general verdict was that portions
should be reduced so as to avoid waste,
and war portions served at war prices.
The conference held in Houston will
set the pace for similar conferences to
be held all over Texas. The city men
are to help the men in the smaller
towns, as it was pointed out that the
small town hotels lose aqd waste much
by the American plan of service.
Every woman’s burdens are lightened
when she turns to the right medicine.
If her existence is made gloomy by the
chronic weaknesses, delicate derange-
ments, and painful disorders that af-
flict her sex, she will find relief and
emancipation from her troubles in Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. If she’s
overworked, nervous, or “run-down,”
she finds new life and strength. It’s a
powerful, invigorating tonic and nerv-
ine which was discovered and used by
an eminent physician for many years
in all cases of “female complaints” and
weaknesses. For young girls just en-
tering womanhood; for .women at the
critical “change of life;” in bearing-
down sensations, periodical pains, ul-
ceration, inflammation, and every kin-
dred ailment, the “Favorite Prescrip-
tion” will benefit or cure.
The “Prescription” contains no al-
cohol, and is sold in tablet or liquid
i form. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’
Queen.
Haunts of the most desperate con-
spirators against life and property in
our great cities and how they conceal
and carry out their plots in defiance
of police interference are strikingly
portrayed in “The Princess of Park
' ’ wdn- gmpah gsa ' ,
» I, 2d 11
i j
Lma*.
—
Among the guests at the local hotels
are the following:
Galvez—Mrs. I. M. Rosa and child,
St. Louis; S. A. McMeans, Houston; C.
A. Wharton, Houston; M. T. Richards
and wife, Dallas; R. F. Folks, Hous-
ton.
Tremont—R. L. Walker, New. York;
B. F. Mendell, New York; James B.
Wells, Brownsville; J. Heima, New1
York; L. A, Hartuig, Houston; W. T.
Daniell, Wichita, Kan.; chas. C. Hill,
Grapeland.
Panama—S. A. Darley, San Antonio;
H. H. Home, Hadley, Tex.; V. N. Miller,
Houston; Mrs. H. Roblins, Houston;
Mrs. J. C. Bennett, Minneapolis, Minn.;
R. L. Currey, Waco; J. R. Stives,
Palestine.
Oriental—D. K. Stockton, Houston;
R. Nipprechet, Houston; J. M. John-
stone, Anahuac; Rev. A. T. Fitt,
Humble; W. B. Perry, Dallas; W. Eve-
rett, Arlington; W. Roberts, Goose
Creek; M. Roberts, Goose Creek.
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NEW YORK, N. Y.—Since the re-
markable discovery of organic iron,
Nuxated Iron or “Fer Nuxate,” as the
French call it, has taken the country
by storm. It is conservatively estimat-
ed that over three million people an-
nually are taking it in this country
alone. Most astonishing results are re-
ported from its use by both physicians
and laymen. So much so that doctors
predict that we shall soon have a new
age of far more beautiful, rosy-cheeked
women and vigorous iron men.
Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York Phy-
sician and Medical Author, when inter-
viewed on this subject, said: “There
can be no vigorous iron men without
iron. Pallor means anaemia. Anaemia
means iron deficiency. The skin of
anaemic men and women is pale; the
flesh flabby. The muscles lack tone;
the brain fags and the memory fails
and often they become weak, nervous,
irritable, despondent and melancholy.
When the iron goes from the blood of
women, the roses go from their cheeks.
“In the most common foods of Amer-
ica, the starches, sugars, table syrups,
candies, polished rice, white bread, soda
crackers, biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti,
tapioca, sago, farina, degerminated
cornmeal, no longer is iron to be found ’
Refining processes have removed the
iron of Mother Earth from these impov-
erished foods, and silly methods of
home cookery, by throwing down the
waste pipe the water in which our
Are Women Naturally Despondent?
While there are women who seem
always despondent and depressed and
expecting misfortune, that is not
woman’s natural condition. Such un-
fortunates suffer from ill-health. An
abnormal condition of the system ex-
presses itself in ' nervousness, sleep-
lessness, backaches, headaches and
despondency.
If all ailing women would make
faithful use of that grand remedy for
woman’s ills, Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, there would be
little occasion to ask if despondency is
natural to woman.—(Adv.)
By Associated Press.
Paris, Monday, Oct. 22.—Official
examination of the crews of the Zeppe-
lins captured in France on returning
from the raid over England shows that
the expedition consisted of thirteen
airships, which left singly from three
depots on the night of Oct. 19. The
raid was expected to last from 20 to
25 hours.
The raiders made for the English
coast, which was recognized by light-
houses. They were hampered by the
fire of British antiaircraft guns and
by nuemerous searchlights, which
caused them to drop almost all their
bombs when sailing at a height of
more than 16,000 feet.
They were caught by a strong north-
easterly wind and when they at-
tempted to return to their bases their
speed was slackened by the persistent
head winds. At dawn the L-49, the
airship which fell intact into the
hands of the French, dropped to a
lower altitude, her commander believ-
ing he was over Holland or West-
phalia. The crew waved white flags.
It was not until after 8 o’clock in the
morning that the commander became
certain he was over France and at the
same time the Zeppelin was sighted by
French airplanes which forced it to
land. ' .
A little later the L-50 passed over
the L-49, which was ten on the
ground surrounded by \ French air-
planes. The L-50 maneuvered for a
landing in the neighboring wood to
give the members of the crew as good
an opportunity as possible to save
themselves, but one car was torn off.
Part of the crew escaped by means of
parachutes. The car afterward was
destroyed by means of special pistols
firing inflammable charges.
The L-49 and L-50 belong to the
super-Zeppelin class, measuring 650
feet. Their volume is 55,000 cubic
metres. The crews are made up most-
ly of petty officers, who have under-
gone a special course of instruction.
They were clad warmly in furs and
leather goods.
Abilene .......
Amarillo ......
Atlanta .......
Augusta, Ga. .
Birmingham ..,
Boston ........
Brownsville ..,
Calgary .......
Charles City ..
Charleston ....
Chicago ......
Concordia .....
Corpus Christi .
Dallas ........
Davenport ....
Del Rio .......
Denver .......
Des Moines ....
(Data, furnished by U. S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture Weather
Bureau.)
•_
German Airships
Troops Are Told Not to Use Muddy
Ammunition.
By Associated Press.
Washington, Oct. 23. — Warning
against the use of muddy ammunition
in service rifles is given in army or-
ders published today, based on the ex-
perience of American and other troops
abroad. The order directs officers to
demonstrate to their men the fact that
the burnt mud left in the gun will
soon render it useless.
(Q,(06
—,/0VUF
vegetables are cooked, are responsible
for another grave iron loss.
“Therefore, if you wish to preserve
your youthful vim and vigor to a ripe
old age, you must supply the iron defi-
ciency in your food by using some form
of organic iron, just as you would use
salt when your food has not enough
salt.”
Former Health Commissioner, Wm.
R. Kerr, of the City of Chicago, says:
“I have taken Nuxated Iron myself
and experienced its health giving,
strength-building effect and in the in-
terest of the public welfare, I feel it
my duty to make known the results of
its use. I am well past three score
years and want to say that I believe
my own great physical' activity is
largely due today to my personal use of
Nuxated Iron. From my own experi-
ence with Nuxated Iron, I feel it is
such a valuable remedy that it ought
to be used in every hospital and pre-
scribed by every physician in this
country.”
Dr. E. Sauer, a Boston physician who
has studied both in this country and in
great European medical institutions,
said: “As I have said a hundred times
over, organic iron is the greatest of all
strength builders.
“Not long ago a man came to me who
was nearly half a century old and
asked me to give him a preliminary ex-
amination for life insurance. I was as-
tonished to find him with the blood
pressure of a boy of twenty and as full
of vigor, vim and vitality as a young
man; in fact, a young man he really
was, notwithstanding his age. The se-
cret, he said, was taking iron—Nuxated
Iron had filled him with renewed life.
At 30 he was in bad health; at 46 he
was careworn and nearly all in. Now
at 50, after taking Nuxated Iron, a
miracle of vitality and his face beam-
ing with the buoyancy of youth. Iron
is absolutely necessary to enable your
blood to change food into living tissue.
Without it, no matter how much or
AKTAT m r vA MTTITATAT a ATN Doctor, when you wish to prescribe a true tonic and blood builder,
«DHG IAN I la DHV“EE I M NVe one that puts the real “stay there” strength and youthful vigor
aINUIHLa I of MIiMADIUIHIVa. into the blood and nerves, try Nuxated iron. If you have been
• • using the old forms of metallic iron. without success; if you:
have had patients complain of discolored teeth, upset stomachs, hardened, tied-up secretions, etc., from the use
of metallic iron, again we suggest, try Nuxated Iron. Nuxated Iron will be furnished by any druggist on an
absolute guarantee of success or money refunded. It is highly endorsed by such physicians as Dr. James Louis
Beyea, for fifteen years Adjunct Professor in the New York Homeopathic Medical College; Dr. N. II. Hornstine,
for ten years in the Department of Public Health and Charities of Philadelphia; Dr. A. J. Newman, late Police
Surgeon, of the City of Chicago, former House Surgeon, Jefferson Park Hospital, Chicago; Dr. Ferdinand King,
New York Physician and Medical Author, and others. In most cases physicians direct the use of two five-grain
tablets three times per day after meals. - -
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 284, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 23, 1917, newspaper, October 23, 1917; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510831/m1/2/: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.