Texas City Daily Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 150, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1914 Page: 2 of 4
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Robtl. Cohen
NO MAN
Marketat 22nd
Galveston
No. 5
BOTTLE-FED BABY
HOW TO GUARD THE
This bank receives small as well as large accounts.
BAD COMPANY.
I
ASK FOR
Purity Brand
ICE CREAM
Red's Place
ELECTRIC FAN
FOR FIRST CLASS BARBER WORK
CALL AT
Jas. B. Davis, Prop.
TRUSSELL BROS.
ties.
0
Malin Bldg.
6th St.
W. L. Richardson
A. J. JANSON Prop.
Real Estate
ing, wash the nipple thoroughly with hot the bottles holding the baby’s milk inside
RELIABLE BLACKSMITHING
WEEK DAYS
1
THE UNSCIENTIFIC SCIENTIST
In The Third of His Weekly Letters Back Home.
Tel. 102
Texas City
SCOTTY ON THE DESERT.
MAURER’S STUDIO.
San Diego Exposition, July 25, 1914.
Texas.
(Advt) •
MOTOR CAR SCHEDULE.
RED CROSS HOLIDAY STAMP
9
‘h
Amber Glasses
PHONE THE TIMES
Talboy Bld’g.
6th St.
Everything just right. The best of ev;
erything and everything the best. Try it.
Picture framing of all kinds. Kodaks, fin-
ishing, supplies, 418 Tremont, Galveston,
Every year the American Red Cross
places on sale all over the United
States its Christmas seals, the pro-
P. O. Bldg.
Room 218
Office Phone 325
Res. Phone 23
Men’s Genuine
Palm Beach Suits
Texas City Daily Times
TIMES PRINTING COMPANY, Publishers
Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday
GWant ads
Insurance"" at
low rate.
Now Let’s Forget the election
and all pull together for a bigger
better Texas City.
should be without a savings account, regardless of
any other investment he may hove.
Perhaps important things
have HAPPENED in your favo-
rite store since your last visit.
Turn to the “ads” in The Times
and find out.
Entered at the postoffice at Texas City,
Texas, as second class matter.
WM. A. GUILLEMET, Active V. P.
W. R. WHEELER, Cashier.
A
I
H. B. MOORE, Pres.
I. H. KEMPNER, Vice Pres.
< 33
Fred Warner
FURNITURE MOVING
Hauling of Every Kind
PIANOS A SPECIALTY
Phone 349
Leave Galveston
8 :00 a. m.
2:30 p. m.
Boatdoes not run on 1st Monday and
Tuesday in each month.
SUNDAYS
Business locations on Sixth St.
Desirable Resident lots.
Nice Country Home.
All at attractive Prices.
Declaration of Intention.
The following declaration on the part of
an alien to become a naturalized citizen of
the United States was filed Saturday in he
office of District Clerk James C. Gengler:
Karl Johann Wicklein, aged 25 years;
occupation, sailor; was born in Nurnberg,
Bavaria, Germany, and came to the United
States July 22, 1914; resides at 2720 Ave-
nue D.
Leave Texas Ctiy.
9:15 a. m.
8 :00 a. m.
*11:30 a. m.
3:45 p. m.
Thursday.
Leave Texas City.
9:15 a. m.
3:45 p. m.
COUNTY COURT PROCEDINGS
Fifty-Sixth District Court.
Robert G. Street, Judge.
Jeff C. Clark vs. Nellie Clark, divorce;
I divorce granted.
Our customers are treated
right and their pat-
ronage is appre-
ciated.
Tenth District Court.
John J. Neis vs. Frank James, note
Ex parte Frank Louis Pastore, naturali-
zation.
4th. Street and Second Avenue South
All that is Best in
Drinkables.
County Court-
Thomas Goggan & Bros. vs. R. G. Bron-
son, contract and chattel mortgage.
Thomas Goggan & Bros. vs. Dr. M. T.
Griffin, contract and chattel mortgage.
Thomas Goggan & Bros vs. J. F. Ethe-
redge, contract and chattel mortgage.
SUITS FILED.
Probate Court.
M. Lucy, deceased; application for pro-
bate of will and letters.
Leave Galveston.
8:00 a. m.
5 :45 a. m.
*10:00 a. m.
2:30 p. m.
*Except Tuesday and
Shoeing of horses and fitting first rate,
Here is work to cure lameness and faults
in the gait.
Of experience long in Blacksmithing line,
Proper work is done at Mayes’ shop every
time.
M. G. MAYES
27th INFANTRY
Moving Picture Show
Corner 2d St. and 11th Ave.
6:30 to 10:00 p. m.
Texas City National Bank
Capital $100,000.00
M G. Mayes does all work in Blacksmith*
ing way,
Good jobs turned out at his shop every day.
Makes new wagons, too, or old ones repair.
All work is done with experienced care,
You get satisfaction at rates very fair.
Excellent Buggy work and machinery too,
Superior service for many and few.
Elite Barber Shop
HARPER HOTEL
erassaznscd
from
Long Supply Co.
Phone 281
Why Take a Vacation
Save that Expense by buying
an
Texas City Barber Shop
HOT AND COLD BATHS
Real Estate Transfers.
The following transfers of real estate
were recorded Saturday in the office of
County Clerk George F. Burgess:
Maco Stewart to Quash Bennett and wife,
lots 5 ann 6, block 20, Denver resurvey;
$700.
Maci Stewart to Dan Bradley, lot 24,
block 20, Denver resurvey, $325.
Maco Stewart to Samuel H. Huff and
wife, lot 22, block 44, Denver resurvey;
$365.
Fifty-Sixth District Court.
Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word
vs. W. H. Young et al, bill of Interpleader.
Frank E. Levy vs Ada E. Levy, divorce.
A savings account means safety for him when
alive and it is an investment which can be de-
pended upon to provide his family with comforts
and necessities after his death.
mg.
WHAT EVERY MOTHER WANTS
TO KNOW ABOUT HER BABY
BY ANNA STEESE RICHARDSON
Director of the Setter Babies Bureau of the Woman’s Home Companion
•N5 - WAIT A M -You MST,
SA-I OUNNO,w, IS A WOMAN
LIKE ।
SA-’BECAvSE sues NO 6000 0*1
EARTH- NOW
7 • ■ : 2 333288338588
, --3 ,3
soapsuds made from white soap. Rinse in
borax water, then in cool, pure water, shake
stand on a small plate or saucer, and cover
with an inverted glass. This is considered
1 a better method than leaving it to soak in
borax water.
Never test the temperature of the milk by
putting the nipple in your own mouth, and
never handle it with your fingers nor allow
flies to light on it.
( These articles are based on questions
asked by mothers who have turned to the
Woman’s Home Companion for assistance
in the difficult and delicate task of rearing
their babies. Each question presented and
answered here was asked not by one but by
many mothers. They represent the general
questions and problems of the average moth-
er. Mrs. Richardson is entirely willing to
answer personally any further questions that
readers may wish to send to her.)
GneYo,
F5°YOUR chance:
$7.50
If fashion is your advisor—Quality
your Guide and Economy your Aim,
I come to our store aud inspect these
3 wonderful Suits.
ties or more will be needed. You should
I also have a wire rack for holding the bot-
the smaller pail, and cover it tightly. Line
the lid of other box with newspapers, cover-
ing them with oilcloth to keep dry. This
keeps out heat and prevents melting of ice.
The pails can be bought at a five and ten
cent store. This homemade ice chest finds
favor with country mothers in particular.
It can be run for five cents a day or less
and is a real baby-saver. Copyright, 1914,
by Woman’s Home Companion.
3 .—What are the best nipples?
Plain dark rubber, without glass tubes.
Bacteria lodge in glass tubes. They rank
among baby-killers. As the size of the hole
is important, some physicians recommend
buying nipples without holes, and piercing
them with hot needles. The hole should be
just large enough to permit the milk to drop
or drip through when the bottle is inverted.
It must not flow. If the hole is too small,
the baby is exhausted by the effort to draw
out the milk; if too large, it suffers from
choking or gulping down the milk.
4 .—How are nipples kept clean?
They may be boiled for a minute or two
when new. After that, boiling is not neces-
sary and rots the rubber. After each feed-
SCHEDULE OF THE GOVERNMENT
BOAT POE.
a4e)
-Eum.24
285
5 .—Should bottles be boiled?
Not necessarily, but they must be thor-
oughly cleaned. If the baby does not take
all the milk in the bottle, throw away what
is left, and immediately scrub the bottle i
inside and out, using a brush which comes
for the purpose, and suds made from pure
soap. Rinse with hot water, then fill with
water in which borax or bicarbonate of
soda has been dissolved. Stand in a rack
until the food is prepared the next morning.
Then turn upside’down to drain, rinse thor-
oughly with clear water, to remove the bo-
rax. Turn upside down to drain and cool,
ready for refilling.
6 .—Is there any special equipment for mod-
ifying milk?
9. Sdess
W N 822
8 V - kkgg55i6AB5•3.
F 2 • 2598; • • ' X,
We Cannot all agree on politi-
cal measures nor on the proper
men for offices, but all Texas
Cityians can agree on proposi-
tions for the betterment of the
town. Let us devote as much
time, energy and money to the
upbuilding of the city as we do
for candidates for office, and we
will have a second New York
right here on the mainland of
Galveston county in a few years.
If you'have a boy that you see
is going to the bad make it your -
object in life to set him right.
What if you have to sacrifice .
business; what if you have to
move somewhere where the asso-
ciations will be better; what if
you have to give up making a
gentleman of him and be content J
to make him simply a man; what i
if you have to sacrifice yourself ■
and give the best there is in you 1
to save him :
No matter what the cost it ;
will be a good investment in com-
parison with letting him go on 1
“I thought you couldn’t understand Eng-
lish,” I remarked. His reply was some-
what disconcerting: “I can’t. But I can
read it.”
Casually I sidled toward the exit, while
the guide explained that Mr. Red-Man-Who-
Flees-Not is a graduate of Harvard.
We walked around the pueblo and later
came upon one of the braves whom I had
met. He was sitting in the shade of an
adobe hut industriously reading that same
paper. I noticed that it was up-side down.
“For the love of Mike! Look at that
overgrown child pretending to read that
paper,” I exclaimed to the guide- “What
are you reading about that’s so interesting,
Mr. Rain-In-The-Face?”
The gentleman in question looked at me
sadly and remarked: “I read here, Mr.
Scotty, where every man he ‘tend to his
own dam business.”
The deuce of associating with Indians is
that “you never can tell till you’ve tried .
’em. And then you’re likely to be wrong!” 1
This fellow who bosses the Indians says :
they are going to perform their ceremonial i
give him an entire change of!
surroundings. Tomato plants do
better after being transplanted.
Few boys are born vicious; and
though nearly all parents mean
well we cannot dodge the fact
that in most cases bad boys are
made so by their fathers an
mothers — through indulgence,
or false notions, or self- aosorp-
tion, of thoughtlessness oftener
than through simple ignorance.
Good advice, coaxing, entreat-
ies, threats have about as much
effect on a wayward boy as wat-
er has on a duck’s back, and
more radical methods of rescue
must be adopted. If your boy
in the wrong road. Keep with
him, and have him keep with
you; work with him and get him
interested; take him for a trip;
goes in bad company root him
out of it and keep him out of it,
even if you have to shut up shop
and give your whole time to the
work. If every parent felt his
responsibility and looked after
his own boys there would be no
“bad company.”
Take time to keep your, boy in
the right road; you owe it to
him, and to the world, and it will
save you from the commonest
cause of misery there is in this
world. General advise is not
worth a picayune; no two cases
are alike; but there are few boys
so bad that they cannot be res-
cued if you will set your mind
on it and act. Oh, how many
crimes do we commit on the plea
of lack of time; but where a soul
is involved we must break our
fetters and speed to the rescue.
1)
535
2(
Mi
-N, ’
gc8sEankedeb3
L T * EC U
ceed going to a fund to fight tubercu-
losis. The design for the coming hol-
day season has just been selected and
is shown above. Since 1908, when
these stamps were first placed on sale,
the Red Cross has raised more than
$1,800,000 for the crusade against the
white plague
Leave Tenth street depot at 6:05, 6:50,
8:30 and 10:50 a- m., 12:50, 1:50, 2:50,
3:50, 5:30, 6:50, 9:50 and 10:50 p. m.
Arrive at Tenth street depot at 6:45, 7:45,
9:45 and 11:45 a. m., 1:45, 2:45, 3:45,
4:45, 6:45, 7:45, 10:45 and 11:45 p. m.
Direct connections are made at Texas
City Junction with interurban cars leaving
Galveston at 6, 7, 9 and 11 a. m., 1, 2, 3,
4, 6, 7, 10 and 11 p. m., and Houston at 6,
8, 10 and 12 a- m., 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 9 and 10
p. m.
a very
ties. This is economy as it saves break-
age. There should be absorbent cotton or
sterile cotton-wool for stoppering the bot-
efficient workman who
has learned the use of
classified advertising.
are “Joi
bearcat dancers, but these look to me more |
like sitters. There are many other inter- j
esting features about the Desert, but I guess ,
they’ll keep till my next letter
Yours for the noble white man,
SCOTTY.
P. S. Cut out the our in the first para-
graph. They’re only loaned to us, Ive
since discovered.
Automobile Licenses.
The following automobile licenses were
issued Saturday out of the office of County
Clerk Clerk George F. Burgess:
No. 1684, to M. E. Taylor, 2128 Avenue
J.
No. 1685, to M. E. Taylor, 2128 Avenue
J.
No. 1686, to Claude Villet, 2802 Ave. F.
€ The loss or a position
has no terrors to the
For Autoist, Marksmen,
Soldier or Civilian
FROM
25c to $2.00
See our window displav.
S. H. WELLBORN, Jeweler
Dear Herb:
Have you heard about our Indians (Note
the our,I ? We’ve got a bunch of them in
the Painted Desert that the Santa Fe is
building on the Isthmus. Not the regular
Isthmus, you know, but the “Isthmus” at
the San Dinego Exposition. It’s the amuse-
ment street—lots more fun than the regular
Itshmus.
Well, I went out to see poor Lo on the
Painted Desert the otner day and was for-
mally introduced to the chief, Napeshnee-
duta (Red-Man-Who-Flees-Not), and to
some of his braves. I struggled to entertain
him with airy persiflage but he just gazed
at me stolidly and didn’t seem to appreciate
my efforts. I thought maybe he was hu-
man enough to be interested in his own
affairs so I asked him how many squaws he
had—it seems to me that they have poly-
gamous tendencies—but he just looked at
me disgustedly and grunted, “No sabe. No
speak English.”
Feeling that my intellectual sweetness was
being wasted on the desert heir, I turned
to the guide and very frankly expressed my
views on Indians in general. I showed him
a copy of a local paper containing a write-
up about these particular ones. He glanc-
ed at it and then handed it to Mr. Red-
Man-Who-Flees-Not. Five minutes later I
glanced at Mr. Red-Man-Who-Flees-Not and
he was still earnestly scrutinizing the paper.
Nade KAHN-SCHAPER ICE CREAM CO
“3
-ji
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
| year ...........................$5.00
1 months ........................$2.50
1 months .........................$1.25
1 month ...........................45
I week .............................15
sy MAIL OR DELIVERED BY CARRIER
1.—I must wean my four-months-old baby.
What sort of bottle is best?
The perfectly round or cylindrical bottle
is best. It comes in two styles, with a neck
as large as the bottle, requiring a very large
nipple, and a small tapering neck which
will accommodate a smaller nipple. The
latter is more comfortabe for the baby to
nurse. Never buy a bottle with “corners”
in which particles of stale milk can settle,
and never use an old medicine bottle for
the same reason. The bottle with measure-
ments, by ounces, blown into the glass, is
best. These hold up to 8 ounces.
2.—How many bottles should I buy ?
As many as the baby has feedings in 24
hours, and one or two extra in case of
breakage, At 4 months, the baby is fed
every three hours, starting with 6 a. m. and
ending at 9 or 10 p. m. Therefore six bot-
You can secure the equipment from any
first-class house, furnishing store. You need
six graduated bottles, three nipples, a gra-
duate or measuring glass holding sixteen
ounces, for measuring milk and water, a
rites and dances—whatever that is. Maybe ESaMs.caa-gaa
the next batch of red men will include some | "BiLL M/ BOY WH IS A WOMAN
Galveston, Texas. Phone 162
wide-necked porcelain or glass pitcher hold-
ing two quarts and pouring easily, a glass
funnel fitting easily into the neck of the
bottles, a sauce pan and tablespoon of en-
ameled ware, a quart preserving jar for gruel
or boiled water, wire bottle racks and a
clean ice chest.
7 .—How should the milk be heated?
By placing the bottle, still stoppered with
cotton, in a pan of warm water and letting
it stand until it reaches body temperature.
Test by dropping on the bare forearm. Never
boil the milk and return it to the bottle.
8 .—I have only an old-fashioned ice chest,
with ice and food mixed. The bottles of
milk are often broken. Can you tell me of
an inexpesive little refrigerator for milk
alone ?
Any house furnishing or department store
can supply a nursery refrigerator at §5.00
or more. This uses about 5 cents’ worth of
ice per day. A husband or son handy with
tools can -make a little ice chest for the
I
baby’s milk as follows:
Get a wooden box large enough to hold
an ordinary zinc or tin water pail. Fasten
a lid on this box with hinges and a stout
hook or clasp. Set a large pail in the cen-
’ ter and pack it all around with sawdust.
Set a much smaller pail inside the first one,
and pack ice between the two pails. Place
4,
3
—-L '33
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Texas City Daily Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 150, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1914, newspaper, July 27, 1914; Texas City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1576613/m1/2/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.