Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 210, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1916 Page: 14 of 18
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GALVESTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1916.
FOURTEEN
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De-
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De-
Men’s Oxfords
Worth Double This!
“The
$1.45
$2.75 values
$3.75 values....... .$2.65
$2.45
..$3.95
$1:45
$7.75 values .
1
1
Drummers' Sample Shoe Store
Reliability
Always
THE HOME OF LOW PRICES
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2322 Market Street.
Phone 4594.
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EVERY PAIR A BARGAIN.
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His rebuke inflames the boy still
up.
strikes his superior
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It is the home of Fred Harris, a press-
These countries ase the Rome and
them are the other nations who cannot
I
PROBE ELGIN BOARD.
RECALLS DARING INCIDENT.
obtained,
volunteers,
to get somehow to
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2
L
Q
Chosterfield
“ CIGARETTES
222822082122
iifllllllllil!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMillilMIIIIM8l
Special Lot of
Wash Suits
SUMMER
FO OT W EAR
10 for 5c
Also packed 20 for 10c
unless
Sir
and
five
. The
relief
Ernest
avoid the war—and in casting lots each
ruler and each cabinet will be governed
jackal like, by what can be carried off
in the way of loot from the mighty
conflict.
Your Shoe Money Will
Go Further Here
expedition
could be
avenue, in the block north of Mount
Shackleton’s Trip May Prove
Vain—Left on Short Ra-
tions.
WRITER WHO SAW
CONFLICT COMING
H. B. WARNER AND CLAIRE WILLIAMS IN “THE MARKET OF VAIN
DESIRE,” AT THE QUEEN NEXT TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY.
Charles P. Norcross in 1909
Predicted Great War Now
Raging in Europe.
CRYSTAL NO. 1.
Today, “The Decoy.”
Saturday, “Out of the Rainbow.”
Sunday, “That Gal. of Burke’s.”
QUEEN THEATER.
EXPLORING CREW
MAY HAVE DIED
Spare-room Affinity and Di-
vorced Woman Are Still
Together.
Big Reductions on
Women’s Bathing
Suits—
I'
How to Judge a •
Woman by Her Hair
I । &
Splendid Lot Boys’
$1.00 Sport Shirts
in a great variety of beau-
tiful fast-color patterns—
85c
Girls' White Lin-
gerie Dresses
Worth up to $5.95,
$2.95 '
KANSAS CITY MAN
HAS TWO “WIVES”
waves for temporary quarters.
further, and he
was doomed
Extra Special!
Girls’ Dresses!
Remainder of this season
styles in fancy dresses,
worth up to $3.95—
$2.45
Well made, comfortable stylish
Men’s Gunmetal and Black Kid
Oxfords. The kind of lasts men
really like. They are regular
$4 and $5 values. Tomorrow
and Monday they are specially
priced at only
fhoySA7SEY /
—and yet they’re MILD
Bi
Ladies’ Pumps
Ladies’ handsome White Can-
vas Pumps with White Soles.
Just the shoes to go with your
light summer dresses. Very
stylish. Regular $3 and $4
values for tomorrow and Mon-
day at only
Sacrifice Offerings
From Our Boys’ Dept.
Every Mother, Boy or Girl Interestedin Economy Should
Attend This Sale of Unprecedented Values’
Carthage of the modern day. Flaking Harris. They gather in
- ore H. OtLel nations who cannot ’ and when these groups scatter t
"A
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2: 1
markets, and Germany, from its very !
Seo8rarhicas sndteamamarcapotePshea. st. Mary’s cemetery, is a marked house.
I
ing of hunger and thirst by a caravan
of .settlers, among whom is Mary, a
girl of 17, who speedily loses her heart
to the boy. Attacked by Indians, the
settlers face massacre, when Parker
creeps out, mounts a stray horse and
dashes for the fort. One lone Indian
clings to his trail, finally overtakes
him and leaps from his own horse to
Parker’s. As the two fight in the sad-
dle, the horse plunges over a cliff 70
feet high, and men and horse plunge
and roll to the bottom of the steep
declivity.
The Indian is dead, but Parker and
the horse are still able to travel, and
the fort is reached. The rescuers save
a part of the settlers from slaughter,
among them Mary, who finds, when
she arrives at the fort, the body of a
hero lying under a flag. The boy has
succumbed to his wounds. After his
name in the post records the word “de-
serter” is crossed out, and there re-
mains only the record of his sacrifice
of his .life for others.
In Ray’s supporting cast are Rita
Stanwood as Barbara, Hazel Bedford as
Mary, Wedgwood Nowell as Capt. Tur-
ner and Joseph J. Dowling as Col. Tay-
lor.
H. B. Warner, who already has been
seen in “The Raiders” and “The Beg-
gar of Cawnpore,” will be offered for
the third time on the Triangle program
when he is presented as the star of a
vividly dramatic narrative from the
pen of C. Gardner Sullivan, entitled
“The Market of Vain Desire.” This
will be the attraction Tuesday and
officer. His arrest follows.
Facing court-martial, the young offi-
cer escapes from prison and flees into
the desert. There he is found perish-
Queen Theater.
One of the most interesting features
of “The Destroyers,” which will be
shown at the Queen today and tomor-
row, the new Vitagraph picture star-
ring Lucille Lee Stewart and showing
at the Queen Friday and Saturday, are
the dogs who play an important part
in the action of the play. These dogs
are the true Alaskan breed of Eskimo
dog, used through the North American
continent for drawing sleds loaded with
every conceivable thing that man may
want to transport through the frozen
regions. These dogs are called mala-
mutes, and are friendly and intelligent
with anyone who treats them fairly
and firmly. They make human life in
the Hudson Bay and Alaskan countries
possible, and are rightly greatly prizec
This picture is made from the well-
known novel of James Oliver Curwood,
“Peter God,” and Lucille Lee Stewart
and Huntley Gordon have the leading
roles. Richard Turner also plays an
important part and the work of these
„2
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09 WBOB
Late Rear Admiral Hood Was on_the
Calliope at Apia.
By Associated Press.
Sydney, Australia, July 28.—That
thrilling incident at the height of the
hurricane at Apia, Samoa, in 1889,
when the crew of the foundering Unit-
ed States warship Trenton cheered the
British warship Calliope as the latter
fought her way inch by inch out of
the harbor to the open sea and safety
has been recalled in Sydney by the
death in the Jutland naval battle of
Rear Admiral Horace L. Hood of the
British navy. Hood was a midshipman
on the Calliope on that occasion, as
were other youths who have since been
more or less conspicuously engaged in
this war. Some of them besides Hood
were Frank Brandt, who commanded
the Monmouth when she was sunk by
"the Germans off the coast of Chili;
Wilmot S. Nicholson, who commanded
the Hogue when she was sunk in the
North Sea by mines. John C. T. Glos-
sop, who commanded the Sydney when
she defeated the Emden off Cocos Is-
land, Sidney R. D. Lowe, who command-
ed the Chatham when he “bottle up”
the German cruiser Koenigsberg, and
Cecil H. Fox, who commanded the
Amphion when she was blown up by a
mine and later commanded the Un-
daunted when she was sunk by Ger-
man destroyers.
Special to The Tribune.
New York, July 28.—After failing in
his second attempt to reach Elephant
Island to save twenty-two of the men
of the wrecked Endurance, whom he
left there April 24, Sir Ernest Shackle-
ton says that he has not abandoned
hope of saving them, observes the Sun.
He speculates that by going on half
rations and killing penguins, which
can be done with a club, Frank Wild
and his comrades may be able to hold
out until relief comes. Their case was
from the first as desperate as any to
be found in the annals of polar ex-
ploration.
ENDURANCE BREAKS UP.
The Endurance broke up Oct. 27, 1915,
being then in the clutches of the
grinding ice floes, where New South
Greenland was supposed to be. A hun-
dred cases of food were saved before
the ship went down in 1,900 fathoms of
water Nov. 20. Sir Ernest Shackleton
and his men with three boats drifted
north on the pack with the wreck of
their ship until she foundered. It was
not until April 7, 1916, that “land” was
sighted. It proved to be Clarence Is-
land; the most easterly of the South
Shetlands. Five days later the boats
were slid into the open sea and April
15 a landing was made on the glacial
shore of Elephant Island.
Now it is to be noted that during
the perilous drifting of several months
it was necessary to shoot five of the
seven dog teams, “owing to shortage of
food.” Further, when Elephant Island
was gained, some of the men were on
the verge of mental and physical col-
lapse. High gales made the beach
“untenable,” and a hole had to be cut
in the icy slope above the reach of the
man. The home, too, of Lydia Six, his
affinity. And the home as well of
Hettie Harris, divorced wife of sthe
pressman.
| The neighbors frown when they pass
Germany and England, these are the
great signatory powers to the decree
of unrest. They face each other await- (
ing the inevitable, the final war for i
dominance. Europe is not big enough !
for the two. One must go. Germany j
has made its bid for dominance. Eng- ■
land cannot acquiesce.
For a century England has dominat-
ed the sea. “Britannia rules the wave”
is not the chant of a deluded nation.
It is the daily consecration of a work
that must be sustained. Germany has
put out her hand for that rulership.
Either England must submit supinely
or fight—and unless all signs fail, Eng-
Ian will fight.
A QUESTION OF TRADE.
England is a free country. Its vast
colonies are open to the traders of the
world. Germany is the biggest sales-
man to England and its colonies. Take
a map of the world and look at the
colonies of Germany. They are prac-
tically nil. Germany has a little strip
of three hundred miles of seaboard.
From that congested area ships freight-
ed with German merchandise goforth
to all the golden colonies of England.
This traffic finds a free port and prac-
tically no competition, for the English
merchant and the English manufac-
turer are notoriously inferior in ca-
pacity and enterprise to their German
cousins. * * *.
Again, take the map and study Ger-
many’s markets. America can compete
with it. France has its restrictions.
Youve hear or a cigarette
being mild. Butyou’ve never
known a cigarette to satisfy
—and yet be mila.
Not until Chesterfields came
along!
Shackleton, with
launched a boat
Today and Saturday, “The
stroyers."
Sunday and Monday, “The
serter.”
Tuesday and Wednesday,
Market of Vain Desire.”
Price Fixing Practices Are Alleged in
Complaint.
By Associated Press.
Chicago, July 28.—Investigation of
complaints by farmers and milk deal-
ers against the Elgin Board of Trade
was started by District Attorney Chas.
F. C. Clyne at the direction of the de-
partment of justice. The complaints,
which were sent to Attorney General
Gregory, allege that the Elgin board
is continuing price-fixing practices
which Judge Landis restrained in a de-
creee entered a year, ago in the gov-
ernment’s injunction suit.
ters and put through the “third de-
gree.” Then both are separately re-
leased to further the plans of the po-
lice. Glory suspects Dix, but is not
sure of it. She entices Dix into Jim’s
rooms and pretends to be in love with
him. She is about to obtain a confes-
sion from him when Jim bursts in and
denounces her. Glory is unable to re-
assure Jim of her love for him, as this
will prevent Dix’s confession.
Accordingly she drives him away, ad-
mitting her love for Dix. Dix con-
fesses. Glory then tells him it was all
a trick on her part to save Jim and
find the real murderer. Dix resolves
to silence her forever. He attacks her.
The room is wrecked. But just as he is
about to kill her Jim arrives with the
police inspector. Glory accuses Dix.
Dix jumps from the window and is
killed by the fall into the court be-
low. Glory and Jim are united.
“Weighed in the Balance” is the title
of the twelfth episode of the “Who’s
Guilty?” series, which will be shown
Friday. A rich man’s son grows up in
idleness and luxury, knowing no re-
sponsibility. His father suddenly loses
all his wealth, dies and the son has his
mother and sister to support. He gets
a job in the mills his father owned, and
falls in love with the foreman’s daugh-
ter, who seems to return his affection.
But the girl’s head is light and she
drops the boy for the superintendent
of the mills, known to be a high-flyer.
The boy objects to this, and because of
his objection is fired. But he has the
sympathy of his fellow-workers, who
go out on strike in protest, and furnish
the action for a drama the end of which
is startling.
Germany will not tolerate this. Ger-
many will fight first. The pretext may
not be the adoption of protection, the
intervention against colonies, the con-
tention of superior sea power, the pre-
text will be something else, but the
real reasons will be these cited. * * *.
Italy is safeguarded. The only markets
left to Germany are those of England
and its colonies. Germany is an over-
populated, over-producing country.
Germany practicaly lives off England
today. Close the markets of England
and its colonies to Germany and Ger-
many becomes bankrupt.
There you have a cause—not the only
one, but a great one. Germany today
seeks sea dominance. That England
will not concede. Germany needs col-
onies for immigration and there are
no colonies. Germany feeds at the ex-
pense of England’s markets. Cut off
these markets (as the English protec-
tionistis were aiming to do) and the
whole situation becomes acute, i
No colonies, no sea dominance, no
nae
so
three is thoroughly convincing and
pleasing. Miss Stewart has appeared
in very few pictures, but already she
is gaining as famous a reputation as
her sister, Anita Stewart.
Josephine McCloud, a beautiful wom-
an from the East, goes to the snowy
wastes of the great Northwest, and
there becomes a guest in the home of
Curtis of the Royal Northwest Mounted
Police and his mother, but never re-
veals her mission in the country. For
weeks she stays, then one evening
when Curtis, who has come to love
Josephine dearly, is telling how his life
was saved one night by the appear-
ance of a strange hermit in the snowy
desert, Josephine becomes agitated and
asks to be taken to the hermit’s house
at once. Curtis tells her that is impos-
sible because of the snow, but that he
will risk the danger to take a mes-
sage from her. Then it develops that
the hermit, Peter God,is Josephine’s hus-
band and the story which is disclosed
of the past and the story which comes
from the future is one tense drama and
suspense.
Charles Ray is the star of “The De-
serter,” which is the attraction for
Sunday and Monday, a Triangle fea-
ture to be seen at the Queen theater.
The story deals with stirring events
at a frontier army post in 1868. Ray
has the role of Lieut. Parker, who has
lost his heart to Barbara Taylor,
daughter’of the colonel in charge of
the post. But Barbara’s affections have
been won by Capt. Turner, and when
the handsome young lieutenant asks
her for her hand she has to say no.
Barbara does promise the disconso-
late Parker that she will give him the
first waltz at the'approaching Hallow-
een ball. But when the time comes
the first waltz finds her whirling about
the floor with her intended. The young
lieutenant has a nasty temper, and it
becomes inflamed forthwith with anger
and jealousy. He leaves the ball in a
rage and goes to a dive on the out-
skirts of the post, where he tries to
drown his sorrows in bad whisky and
worse company.
The gamblers at the 'resort try to
cheat him at cards, and a fight starts.
The place is full of soldiers, who come
to the aid of the young officer, and a
general melee follows, which becomes
so violent that a detachment is sent
from the post. Turner leaves the ball
to command them, and is amazed to
find Parker in the middle of the mix-
Boys’ Palm Beach
and Cool Cloth
Suits
Norfolk and Plain Models,
in many serviceable
shades. $5.00 values—
$3.95
Wednesday. The production is totally
I different from either of the young ac-
tor’s previous vehicles, being a force-
ful sociological play, with a dominant
love interest.
Warner appears as a young minister,
who, called to the pastorate of a fash-
ionable city edifice, finds the congre-
gation composed of society leaders
whose views of life’s problems are far
from being in accord with his own.
The story concerns his efforts to show
his congregation the iniquity of mar-
riage without love. “What is the dif-
ference,” he asks, “between the girl
who peddles her pitiful body on the
streets and the girl who barters her
beauty for gain in the market of vain
desire ” The realization of the truth
breaks with force upon the girl who is
the subject of the minister’s attack,
and an unworthy marriage is pre-
vented.
Producer Ince has surrounded War-
ner with a splendid cast. His leading
woman is Clara Williams, who has the
role of the butterfly society girl, sud-
denly brought to a realization of her
contemplated folly. The others include
Charles Miller, Gertrude Claire and Le-
ona Huttom .
Crystal No. 1.
(The Decoy” is the title of the Mu-
tual masterpicture at the Crystal No. 1
today. The story follows:
Glory Moore, a young girl, finds her-
self left unprovided for after her fa-
ther’s death, as the farm has to be
sold to pay his debts. She writes to
her aunt in New York, asking for help
in obtaining employment in the city.
The aunt, Mrs. Lawrence, is in reality
an adventuress, and accomplice of two
card sharps and confidence men, Milt
Bannon and Harvey Dix. They decide
to bring Glory to the city in order to
use her as a decoy in fleecing rich
young men.
Jim Danvers, a rich young fellow
who is going the pace, is one of their
victims. The unsuspecting Glory be-
lieves she has found a loving aunt and
a luxurious home, and is for a time
deceived. She finally realizes the truth.
She exposes the swindlers in a card
game in which they are cheating Jim.
Mrs. Lawrence, infuriated, locks Glory
in her room. Glory, in wild panic, es-
capes through the window, climbs a
fire escape, wanders over adjacent
roofs and accidentally falls through a
skylight into an apartment which
proves to be Jim’s.
Jim, who has fallen in love with
Glory, befriends her, but Dix’s appear-
ance, while Jim is absent, frightens
Glory and she runs away. She hires
a furnished room and advertises for
employment. She is followed by Ban-
non, who, by means of a decoy letter,
brings her to his bachelor apartment.
Meantime Dix and Mrs. Lawrence
have quarreled with Bannon over the
division of their spoils. Dix threatens
revenge; Bannon in turn, threatens to
expose. Dix is an escaped convict.
While Glory is denouncing Bannon for
having tricked her to his rooms, Dix
shoots Bannon through the window and
escapes. By a combination of circum-
stances Jim and Glory are accused of
the crime, taken to police headquar-
Special to The Tribune.
Kansas City, July 28.—in reply to a
request from a reader, the Star has
reprinted an article published on Nov.
29, 1909, by Charles F. Norcross, who
had a singularly clear vision of the
great conflict now raging in Europe.
Charles P. Norcross, the writer of
the article mentioned, was for years a
newspaper correspondent in Washing-
ton, and had been at one time the ed-
itor of the Cosmopolitan Magazine.
Subsequently he was at the head of a
London news bureau. Read in the light
of after events, his analysis of the Eu-
ropean situation, made five years be-
fore the outbreak of the war, is re-
markable for its clarity and startlingly
accurate in its forecast, not only of
the inevitableness of the conflict, but
of the manner in which it probably
would be precipitated. The article, in
part, is as follows:
London, Nov. 29 (1909).—The stage
is being set in the Old World for a
great drama. Within every cabinet in
Europe, behind closely guarded doors,
around great tables, grave' and
thoughtful men are peering anxiously
into a portentous future.
The tension is felt acutely in Down-
ing street and the foreign office, and
it is reflected in the brooding eyes of
Pinchon, the great foreign minister of
France. With phlegmatic calm, Von
Bethmann-Hollweg, the grim chancel-
lor of Germany’s war lord, studies the
statistics of the superb army, the im-
pregnable fortresses and the huge
fighting craft that fly the flag of the
fatherland. * * *
THE OMINOUS HUSH.
You do not see the situation openly
discussed in the newspapers, and you
rarely hear it discussed i public. It
is a subject tabooed, yet it is in every
man’s mind. When the leaders of Eng-
land meet in Downing street or behind
the closed doors of the great houses, it
is the subject that is discussed almost
to the exclusion of everything else.
Once in a while you find some states-
| man that hints at it—this terror that
shadows all Europe. Perhaps the best
expression of the situation was that
by Lord Rosebery, who recently re-
ferred to it as “the ominous hush” that
broods over all Europe. * * *
South Georgia,' 750 miles away. This
was April 24, and blizzards raging al-
most continuously after their depar-
ture the men left behind could have
had no hope that Shackleton would
ever reach South Georgia.
TWO RESCUE ATTEMPTS FAIL.
But May 15 the boat was beached
after a terrible experience. A few
days later a little unprotected whaler
of eighty tons, belonging to the Nor-
wegian station, started south for Ele-
phant Island. This was the first re-
lief expedition. It failed because the
ice was too “formidable.” Sir Ernest
thought, however, that “it would be
easily negotiable for a large protected
vessel.” He decided to turn for assist-
ance to the Falkland Islands, and the
presumption is that for his second at-
tempt he secured a stronger vessel. It
must have been a forlorn hope, for—
mark this—he wrote at the time that
when he left Elephant Island to get
help “the party on the beach had five
weeks’ provisions and full rations, ex-
clusive of the possibilities of obtaining
seals.” That was April 24, more than
two months ago.
Having failed a second time to push
through the ice to, Elephant Island Sir
Ernest talks of how life could be sus-
tained by the castaways on half ra-
tions and on the flesh of penguins,
since he saw some of those ungainly
fowl when he bucked the ice unavail-
ingly on his second relief expedition.
Ultimate* rescue, says he, can be ef-
fected only with a wooden steam ves-
sel or an ice breaker. How is he to
obtain and fit out one in the Falkland
Islands?—he is now at Port Stanley.
And what chance is there that Wild
and his companions, their rations gone,
could survive by living off that deso-
late country until a relief ship appear-
ed in sight? It is to be feared that
they have succumbed already.
There are always the well known
and semi-humorous methods, such as
saying brunettes are quick-tempered
or blondes are keener in their mental
activity. But there is real common
sense in just noticing whether the hair
is well kept to judge a woman’s neat-
ness, or in looking at her style of ar-
ranging her hair, to decide whether or
not she has good taste. If you are one
of the few who try to make the most
of your hair, remember that it is not
advisable to wash the hair with any
cleanser made for all purposes, but
always use some good preparation made
expressly for shampooing. You can
enjoy the very best by getting some
canthrox from your druggist and dis-
solving a teaspoonful in a cup of hot
water when your shampoo is all ready.
After its use the hair dries rapidly
with uniform color, Dandruff, excess
oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely
disappear. Your hair will be so fluffy
that it will look much heavier than it
is. Its lustre and softness will also
delight you, while the stimulated scalp
gains the health which insures hair
growth.
Children’s Shoes That Are Bargains
We dan fit the children’s feet here perfectly at a much less cost than
you can have it done elsewhere. All styles and all sizes here;
priced according to size, from— )
75c to $1.25
Special to The Tribune.
Kansas City, July 28.—On Norton
prosecutor’s office, the juvenile court
authorities and the police begin to re-
ceive telephone calls. It is not moral,
they complain.
The authorities know Harris. An at-
tempt was made to prosecute him when
a queer domestic tangle was disclosed
in his former home last fall. Three
years before he had brought an affin-
ity into his home and installed her in
the spare room. For three years the
wife stayed on, doing the housework
and caring for her little boys. It all
ended in the divorce court last spring.
The Harrises and Lydia Six disap-
peared from the old neighborhood.
BOTH WOMEN ARE MOTHERS.
Now, when the eye of the law again
discerns them, Lydia Six is the mother
of a child 7 months old. A fifth son
was born to Mrs. Harris a few weeks
ago. Her eldest boy is 9.
“Well, it’s about time,” agreed the
neighborhood, in one voice, when a man
with the aspect of an investigator
rapped on the door of Harris’ new
abode the other day.
The investigator was Guy Holmes
from the detention home. The juvenile
court had been aroused to peering into
the wisdom of the Six woman’s keep-
ing her baby.
The investigator asked Mrs. Harris
why she kept house for the man she
had divorced, the man who had shamed
her.
Mrs. Harris is a woman made plain
by care.
STAYS FOR HER CHILDREN.
She made this answer:
“The best reason in the world—I
have five children to support.”
She called a sharp warning to a tod-
dler,
“My former husband gives me $15 a
week to do his housework,” she went
on. “I don’t like it—it’s hell. But
Harris says if I don’t like it that’s just
where I can go.”
The investigator asked Lydia Six
what about it, and she had nothing to
say, except that she and Harris would
be married “some time.”
It was decided to.have an immediate
hearing in the juvenile court, but when
the investigator went out to summon
Mrs. Harris and her children as wit-
nesses it was found that she and her
flock had fled to her own mothers
home. This left the court up in the
a HE “LOVES BOTH WOMEN.”
“I love both women,” Harris said
when brought up against the law last
fall. “I met Lydia Six three years ago
in the shop where I work. We were
mutually attracted. I took her out
home and she lived there. She knew I
couldn’t marry her and she did not ask
me to desert my wife,
“She was always willing that I
should share my affections with my
wife and the two seldom quarrel.
Lydia knew I couldn’t give her child
a name, but she loved me, and where
there is mutual love persons don’t
think of the consequences.”
Harris is a short, heavy-set man,
about • 34, whoneither drinks nor
smokes.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 210, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1916, newspaper, July 28, 1916; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1532234/m1/14/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.