Texas City Daily Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 1, 1914 Page: 4 of 4
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THE NUT CLUB
No Use Talkin’, Nut-Scout Pete Ain’t Got No Taste!
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THE COUNTY COURTS
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Made from the
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You Are Sure to
Heart of the Wheat
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and sold on its merits
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PROCEEDINGS
for the last thirty years.
Every sack guaranteed.
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Standard Brands for
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Made from Distilled Artesian Water
Buy eoupon beeka and receive the discount. Two sizes, $3.50 and 5Oc
177
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Telephone 55
DRINK
T2XA8 CTY, TMA8
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REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
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For the Ladies
AT THE EMPIRE TONIGHT.
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From the
Long Supply Co
Long Distance Rates are Surprisingly Low?
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Texas City, Tex^
7 elephone 281
“Practice the Telephone Smile.” <
THE TRAP
IllllillIIlllIlllilllIllIIIIIIlIlllilIlIlIIllltllllllllllllillllllIlITIlllUIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIliItIIIIIIIllIIII
Mary O’Toole
Ramona Radcliff
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Sergeant O’Toole .... Harrington Reynolds
Try the want ad column.
wants.
Tou Will Obtain Results
ov-SAY T#AT ou DESIGNED
ALL “TAESE GOWNS YORSELF?J
Tom Chatterton
• •William Ehfre
• Crazy Thunder
Corporal Stone
Sergeant Perry
One Feather ..
be pleased with the manner in which your
checking account will be handled by this
bank.
Every officer and employee of this bank
is courteous and attentive to depositors and
your requirements will be handled indi-
vidually and promptly.
Whether your account is large or small,
this bank invites your business-
OH,WEE:
MONSIEUQ'
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New York, April 1.—The annual deficit
of the symphony orchestra, cf which Walter
Damrosch is the director, which in the
past has run from $56,000 to $50,000 a year
and has been met by subscriptions, will in
the future, be paid by Henry Harkness Fla-
gler, president of the Symphony Society
fo New York.
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Physician’s Certificate Filed
A physician and surgeon’s certificate to
practice medicine in Galveston County was
filed Tuesday in the office of District Clerk
Gengler as follows:
Dr. William Edward Dodge of El Paso.
TENTH DISTRICT COURT
William F. Miller vs. Bella Miller, di-
vorce .
J. M. McNeil et al vs- A. James, to re-
move cloud.
Marriage License Issued.
The following license to marry was issu-
ed Tuesday out of the office of County
Clerk Burgess:
John Charles Kirschner and Mary El-
meter Casentini.
By F. R. MORGAN
(Copyright, 1913, Western Newspaper Union.)
adame
Stng-Em
Quim-Sid
Comvs
Suits Filed.
FIFTY-SIXTH DISTRICT COURT
Edith Rizzo vs. John Rizzo, divorce-
Julia Lewallen vs. A- H- Lewallen, di-
—
Probate Court-
George E. Mann, Judge-
Estate of Ferdinand Heidet, deceased, W-
T. Armstrong, administrator; report of sale
of real estate confirmed as per decree filed-
Tenth District Coutr
Clay S- Briggs, Judge.
Georgia Bridge vs. Robert Bridge, di-
vorce; divorce decreed-
THE B^ER THAT'S
LIQUID FOOD
GALVESTON BREWING COMPANY
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-TAEN, BeFoRE IGO. PLEASET
AcEpr NY CONGRATULATONSAND
MY COMPLIMENTS:•J
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Pitas
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A Stirring Kay-Bee Drama of Military Life
on the Frontier, in Two Reels.
By Thomas H. Ince and R. V. Spencer.
CAST
HOMPSON
Phones
“HIGH GRADE”
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able in vast numbers for the extraction of
fiber for industrial purposes. As the sup-
plies of other fiber materials of the world
become exhausted more and more atten-
tion to the development of these plants and
their fibrous stems will undoubtedly be
given.
A Warner Feature Film “The Queen of
the Sun Worshipers,” in three parts. “The
Joy Riders,” a single reel joker comedy.
O
when taken to task. He is reduced to tha
ranks. I
sergeant then plots with One Feather, V
treacherous scout, to join with the youn2
braves of a neighboring Indian tribe in *4
attack on the fort. d
Perry cuts the telegraph wires conned]
ing the station near the fort with the outsid
world and then plans to blow up the powder
magazine while the Indians are attacking
the fort. Perry hides behind several bar-
rels of gunpowder when two soldiers enter
the powder storehouse. He then lights a
fuse and tries to get out of the magazine.
He finds, however, that the soldiers have
locked the outside door and before he can
extinguish the fuse the magazine is blown
up and Perry is killed.
The Indians are routed and One Feather
is shot.
Artesian Ice & Cold Storage Co.
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Sergeant Perry and Corporal Stone are
both in love with Mary O’Toole, daughter of
Sergeant O’Toole- At a dance in the home
of one of the officers, Mary shows her prefer-
ence for Stone- Perry forces his attentions
upon her and assaults his superior officer
Smarting under his disgrace, the former
Automobile Licenses Issued-
The following automobile licenses were
issued Tuesday out of the office of County
Clerk Burgess:
No. 1438 to George Webb, Texas City.
No. 1439 to George Webb, Texas City.
No. 1440 to Dr. H. O. Sappington.
No. 1441 to City of Galveston, city hall.
No. 1442 to City of Galveston, city hall.
No. 1443 to City of Galveston, city hall.
No- 1444 to W. 0- Tschumy, Galveston.
No. 1445 to G- R. Baugh, League City.
No. 1446 to M. M. Robertson, Galves-
ton.
The Southwestern
‘Telegraph & Telephone Go.
A-5-14.
/AA, ModSigo. i AM SoGLAODcomE.
Noo wSKTo see 2€GoAS He? - I
AGOWM 0%
v_______________ •AT- i CAL-J
vzE MAHIKIN: c—
iejTCUB
T*° MR.. NUTT.'
H E Res Your Chance!
on The DOTTED Lines BELow/
JoT Cro'Tue LimiT and
TELL os EXACTL How
BUGHOUSeMoD REALLY ARE
AS ALL CoRRESPONDENCE IS
STRICTLY CONRDENAL
We will give away a Five Piece
Household necessity to every lady
who makes a cash purchase wheth-
er great or small.
--‘ - NoV- wof you SAY- ARE 2€
/ GowN$ NoT REAL WORKS OF °adT" HA? I
—— DESIGN THEM all n^elf- l ALone!
-----A \MONS‘EUR! C"
The following transfers of real estate were
recorded Tuesday in the office of County
Clerk Burgess:
Mrs. Magnolia W. Sealy, John Sealy and
George Sealy to Fields Moore, lot 11, block
87, with improvements; $1,700.
B. A. Eastham and Mrs. Helen M.
Jones and husband to James A. Hawkins
and George E. Robinson, southwest quarter
of outlot 12; $11,000.
Causeway Investment Company to Baldo
Jutan, lots 13 and 14, block 1, Denver sur-
vey; $653.40.
San Leon Company to George T. Sweet,
lots 7 and 8, block 174, San Leon; $550.
James A. Hawkins and George E. Robin-
son to Security Home Investment Company,
lot 9, Hawkins-Robinson subdivision of
southwest quarter of outlot 12; $1,000-
Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Com-
pany to Henry Bickford, lot 1, block 8,
League City; $175.
----e-«s-. -----
AT THE CRYSTAL TONIGHT
tion to its frut. The flower heads of
many species are cooked and eaten and the
inner portion of the stem, which is called
“thor,” is also edible- Shoots and tops
of young plants are frequently eaten as a
vegetable and are also used as fodder for
cattle and sheep- Various other parts of
the plant are used as food for elephants
and other animals-
The natives have long used the fiber of
the Indian plaintain for making cordage,
mats and coarse paper- This fiber resem-
bles Manila hemp in appearance but it is
not nearly so strong as the latter- The
stems 9 the common plantain are avail-
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It pays to advertise for your
fuce>x.
HAMILTON CASH GROCERY Mcllvaine Building
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WeLuNgTOnUansas.
E.ZEHUNTERS CREAM"m *
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The new jury commissioners—V- E. Aus-
tin, Henry Schoreder and Charles A- Vet-
ter—met Tuesday and drew a near grand
jury to serve in the tenth district court for
the next two months. The talesmen will
be examined and sworn in when the court
convenes for the new term.
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AGRL THE THEATS, 4=/~
Ano THEN HoMEINLAT # Ank (
Not.Yve“
Done enough FoQ HE •"
THE RURAL DEMON (Keystone),—
Here is one of Mack Sennett’s comedy pic-
tures. It is a hummer in every way. It
has a regular rural twang and never hesi-
tates from start to the finish. It embraces
all kinds of characters, including a fracti-
ous goose- There is a bomb effect, a chase
and a wind-up where everybody gets soaked
but the cameraman, in the river- If yov
want a good laugh see it.
1
; BANANAS AS FOOD IN INDIA.
The banana, or plantain, is a staple cul-
tivated crop in all parts of India except in
1 the extreme northwest. It is even grown
at altitudes of 5,000 to 6,000 feet above sea
level. In some cases large gardens are
planted exclusively with the fruit but in
general it grows in small patches around
homesteads for home consumption. The |
natives of the country seldom use the 1
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meg
if ies on the Map
It’s on the Bell System
These are the days when time is the all-important
factor-—when pressure of business puts a
premium on dispatch..
The man with goods to buycustomers to see,
business tangles to unsnarl, consults his Bell
directory, calls the waiting operator and laughs
at the limits of time and of distance.
name “banana.” All fruits of this kind
are indiscriminately called “plantains” and
those eaten raw as dessert are known as
“table plantains.”
Next to mangoes, plantains are the com-
monest and most highly prized of all the
fruits in India- There are numerous varie-
ties - The coarser kinds form a staple ar-
ticle of diet in many parts of India and
the Malay pen.nsula, where usually they are
cooked before being eaten. It has been
demonstrated chat a given area devoted to
growing plantains will support a much
larger population than a similar area de-
voted to any other known crop, and the
fiuit may be preserved for an indefinite
period by drying it in the sun.
The dried product is used for making
a sort of meal; this is done by stripping off
the husk and slicing the core, which is to
be dried in the sun, reduced to a powder
and sifted- The fresh core of the fruit, it
is calculated, will yield 40 per cent of
meal so that the total yield per acre will
be more than s ton of meal-
The plant furnishes other food in addi-
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Texas City National Bank
Capital $100,000.00
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Texas City Daily Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 50, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 1, 1914, newspaper, April 1, 1914; Texas City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1576516/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Moore Memorial Public Library.