The Texas City Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 73, Ed. 1 Monday, May 3, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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9
TL H"E )
TEXAS CITY TIMES, MAY 3, 1915.
i
University Station, April 29. stayed within the price-limit set.
The menus are planned entire-
I And call it a road to the tomb,
I
For the world will not believe it
TH
»
the mirror
some human diet.
Phone 20.
5th St. and 2nd Ave. N.
Next Door Southern Tea & Coffee Co.
STORIES OF THE DAY
—
with?”
HATS
GENTS FURNISHINGS
A. H. STEIN
!
I must, positively stop attending per and which his successor also
o
Notice
i
kzusagzuzasaes
ly stupid,” he queried.
Calvoson
Texas City
better be called the Muddle law,
AST!
zi
That’s Our
O
Business
so easy that they have become
too
503 Second Ave.
Tel. 20
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
dress AMBURN & GILBERT
78
FOR RENT—Furnished room for gentle-
75p
BEST THEATRE
2
&4
First Run Universal Pictures, Six Reels
Baltimore American.
FIRST SEVEN DAYS
I
Remodeled.
U. S. CAFE
■■■■■■■■■I
M
We Have just Received a large shipment of new
Straw and Panama
Hats!
Hats!
Hats!
Sixth Street between
Eighth & Ninth Ave.
charge an opportunity to plan
and order the work of the others.
successfully yesterday had nev-
er attempted to prepare a meal
he
na-
“These principles” he continu-
ed, “belong to antediluvian times
and have no place in the econom-
ics of our present reconstruction
Lieutenants. C. Williams 26th
Infantry, left for South Carolina
on a six weeks leave of absence.
intelectually lazy talking
much and thinking too little.
Of the Democratic party
said that the south and the
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O
business of the lawyers.
"We have been given a num-
ber of laws telling us how we'
the Sherman law through its ef-
forts to restrict cotton acreage
this year.
“I ask you hard headed busi-
ness men if such a situation is
not perfectly ridiculous absolute-
Palm Beach Suits Made to Order, in Plain,
Tan, Stripes or Blue, at $10.00 Only
trate.
“Bigotry,” Judge,” said the of-,
fleer; “he’s got three wives.”
PERKINS TAKES
A FALL OUT OF
THE OLD PARTIES
Old Orpheum
********* • * -
• TODAY’S ODDEST STORY •
bloom
don’t knock the route and the
journey
*
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❖
❖
e‘0
Guilty of Bigotry
( From the New York Times.)
A San Francisco man tells this
one:
“In a police court of my town a
policeman rose to make a charge
against his prisoner.
“What’s the feller charged
»E ~
A fine Selection of Arrow Brand Shirts.
New Neckwear. ‘
Let us fit you with a Pair of FLORSHIEM
SHOES or anything you need in. —
UNIVERSITY GIRLS LEARN
HOW TO ECONOMIZE
Press association here.
59
********** • • •• 3 2- • A i
A
WHY NOT OWN YOUR OWN HOME?
WHY pay big rent when a small cash
payment and small monthly payments
will pay for your home?
See WEBB & JOHNSTON,
Phone 327.
Scotch Woolen Mills Co
2620 Market St., Galveston
TO HIM THAT HATH
By Rose O’Leary
If on the highway of living
You see not the flowers that
your section of the country,”
“We are Perkins said that it “still pro-
told that the Clayton law will fesses to believe in states rights,
“WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY”
Down on the Farm”
dn
At The Crystal Theatre Tonight
TODAY IN HISTORY
Columbus discovered the
Island of Jamaica 421 years
ago today.
President Lincoln issued a
. . call for 42,054 volunteers for
three years’ service 54 years
ago today.
Today is the 95th anniver-
sary of the organization of
the first Congressional com-
mittee on Agriculture.
“The Black Pearl”
tertained Saturday night with an
auto ride given by the boys. Mrs.
Avera and Mrs. Mohler chaper-
oning.
The merry crowd left town at
eight headed for Dickinson. On |
Chop Susy
"Ths Real 1 hing"
6th St. het. 8 & 9th Ave
any more Red Cross balls.”—
Life.
ALTERATIONS, CLEANING - PRESSING
Civilian and Military Clothes Made-in the City.
TEXAS CITY CIVILIAN
& MILITARY TAILORS
Here is a typical fifteen cent
demanded the magis-
period.”
“The only way for the new
South to have her proper place
in the great new world is by de-
man. Apply 808 8th Ave.
FOR RENT—14-room house and store
room • Third street & Texas avenue • Ad-
15 cents for each guest at the
midday meal and ten cents for
each' afternoon meal served. The
students do their own buying
and submit the receipted bills to
the instructor as proof that they
BACHELOR GIRLS ENTER-
— TAINED
The Bachelor Girls were en-
—The ability to serve ten and The menus are planned entire-,
fifteen cent meals for six people ly by the students and must pass I
It might an old fashioned methods in bus-
iness and in a tarriff made on log
noon meal. Other students act
cake. Here is a typical ten-cent
meal served by students in the
cooking laboratory: Cream po-
tatoes, soup with croutons, meat
pie, lettuce and cheese salad, or-
ange ice.
a republican president deemed
improper. He suggested, too,
that the cotton loan stipulations
last fall might involve in the
opinion of some a violation of
operation, for a tariff for pros-
perity only, prosperity for one
and all.
Senator Fletcher of Florida,
president of the congress, wel-
comed the delegates to the gath-
ering. He held that ideas are
the fundamental things that the
congress needs, and the things on
which its past meetings have ob-
tained their great success. He
pictured the Southland as a thri-
ving growing country with limit-
less resources. “We must take
our eyes off the past and turn
them to the future he urged.”
cannot do business; it is high
time we had at least one law that
will tell us how we can do busi-
ness.” Perkins held that the
way each day, two serving a jin her life before coming to the
noon luncheon and two an after- University last fall.
"Reginald, what did you study
in school today?” “We had two
films of history and one reel of
geography, ma.”—Kansas City
Journal.
students: Hamburger, cream-
ed potatoes, hot rolls, apple and
amammaamnFki-aaEE=92 Ens3Es 7
meaw/wazceucaEaazacnnsu
Houston
“Doctor,” groaned the sick
man. “I am so tired! I can only
lie on one side.” “Oh, come,” said
the doctor, cheerfully. “Y uo be-
Probably the worst thing a-
bout rich relations is the way
they look down on you because
you are not rich enough to look
down on them. — Pittsburg h
Chronicle-Telegraph.
CANDY OF QUALITY
KINGS
‘Tor American
Queens"
ALWAYS FRESH
Texas City Drug Co.
facilitate business.
eemmnegnr--rEe-aeameazraneranssrenemanmzaeuaaazsnzmesssenm
Emewmewunzanaannnz-cznnamumen mtan-nespumrav ewrcnnim=mma ~ —ni
ussuusnneanesnnrcmassesmuzmumsuasazzsnaz
die Law” and taking a fall out of
the old line parties, George W.
Perkins, Progressive and capital-
ist, today called upon the dele-
gates to the Southern Commer-
cial Congress convention here to
institute a new era of coopera-
tion. He bitterly attacked pres-
ent day legislation and called at-
tention to the Tennessee Coal &
Iron Co., ransaction and the cot-
ton relief measures of last fall as
instances of business situations
which meet with conflicting opin-
ion as to their legality from
various politicians. The Ten-
nessee Coal & Iron deal, he said,
was a transaction which one re-
publican president deemed pro-
muster with the instructor as' a
“ balanced” meal, that is as a
2
25
- odl2
in the opening of a three day
lieve that, and you a lawyer?”— session of the T xas Woman’s
She—“o you think it possible
for a man to love two women at
once?” He—“Yes, twenty at
once, if they were all like you.”
—Boston Transcript.
LADIES FREE
We never heard of a man who
tried to free himself of a man-
slaughter charge by pleading
guilty to murder, but an up-state
man tried to prove he wasn’t
crazy the other day by claiming
he was in love.— Milwaukee Jour-
nal.
I
and cold drinks served them.
The joy riders then started for
home going by the way of Alta
Loma.
Those enjoying the moonlight
ride were Misses Louise Avera,
Zula Terry, Margaret Terry, and
Eleta McLean. Messrs, Mills, F.
French, Claude Avera, and L.
Avera. Chaperons, Mrs. Avera
and Mrs. Mohler.
Muskogee, Okla. May 3.—Call-
arriving there lunch was prepar- ing the Clayton Taw the “Mud-
ed by the girls and was spread
J-- - o
WOMEN JOURNALISTS
MEET
Waco, Texas, May 3—Prob-
lems of interest to the journalis-
tic craft, as seen through wo-
men’s eyes, were discussed today
tion as a whole could “shake off
the domination of the incompet-
ent, inefficient representatives
that you and the country gener-
ally are sending to the national
capital.” In this connection, he
declared, that the nation needs
some business statesmen. The
Chinese loan two years ago he
said was a striking example of
this lack of business statesman-
ship. He criticized the govern-
ment for not adopting a policy of
business statesmanship at that
time.
The new tariff he called “an-
other affair where a sad lack of
business statesmanship is bring-
ing industrial chaos to all sec-
tions of our country.” A tarriff
I board would remedy such condi-
tions, Perkins maintained.
Taking a clap at the Democrat-
party, “the party representing
For Sale
The Place You Get Your Money’s Worth—Give Us A Call.
Lettuce, Beets, Carrots, Onions, English Peas, Snap Beans,
Squash, Cabbage, Celery, Potatoes, Parsley.
Strawberries, Apples, Oranges, Grapefruit,
Poultry, Eggs and Butter. Hens $5.00 dozen while they last.
Eggs and Butter spring old Cocks, Turkeys, Ducks, Geese,
Guineas.
Clark & Hennessey Produce Co.
654-9th St. Phone 305
FOR SALE—1712 acres Block 2 Subdivi-
sion P Johnson Survey $1500; East 15-96
acres Block one Subdivision “F” Ferguson,
$125 acre, fourth cash • SAM KINSEY,
313 Union Station. Houston Texas 78
One girl who passed this test Is the one that s reflected to you.
If you see not truth and beauty
But only deceit and shame
Don’t censure the other fellow
For he doesn’t deserve the blame
Because your mind is narrow
And your soul’s in need of a bath,
But just you remember this pro-
verb :
’Tis given to him who hath.
If you hike about the city,
Like Diogenese of old,
Looking for a man who’s honest;
One whose word’s as good as gold
And don’t find the thing you look
for
Don’t you ever, ever tell
For the world will “get your
number”;
You will sound your own death
knell,
For all men will know for cer-
tain
Just the reason why ’twas so
(They have gleaned a lot of wis-
dom
From the laws of the echo)
If your friends are false or fickle;
All your loved ones quite untrue,
Guard it as a dark state secret,
for
“As you measure to your neigh-
bor
Thus he measures back to you.”
OREGON CELEBRATES ITS
ANNEXATION TO UNION
Champoeg, Ore. May 1.—The
seventy-second anniversary of
the annexation of Oregon was
celebrated here today by pio-
neers from all parts of the state.
The memories of some of the
gray haired old men and women
carried them back to the days
when the Oregon territory was
considered so wild and remote
from Washington, the seat of
American government, that
many statesmen believed that
to annex it would be to acquire a
staggering burden.
It was at Champoeg where a
small group of settlers gathered
seventy-two years ago and with
a majority of one voted that the
Oregon territory should become
a part of the United States, and
not of Canada.
Up to the time for the last
settler of the group to vote, a
tie existed, the adherens of the
U. S. and Canada being equally
divided. The remaining voter
was Xavier Matthiou, a French-
man.
There was breathless sus-
penses as Matthieu stood irreso-
lute detached from the two
groups. Matthieu died a few
months ago, revered by all as the
man who saved Oregon to the
Union.
say that’s some head for a
baby. The only trouble
with, the child is hydroce-
phalus (which in United
States means water . on
the brain). Some diminu-
tion in size has followed
American people have had things slaring for nationalism, forge co-
• ;
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for, in my judgment the only rolling basis only,
business it will facilittate is the
as helpers, giving the girls in menu served to six people by two
in an hour and a half is the fin-
al test given girls in one domes-
tic science course at the Univer-
sity of Texas to determine
whether or not they receive a
passing grade on the laboratory
work of the course. There are
twenty-two girls in the class,
and four girls are tested in this
2 -e- V-. -5 -s——
SAFETY FIRST
Inspect our line of Spring and Summer goods
before purchasing your suit.
SILK LINING IN ANY SUIT ORDERED OF US FREE
The girls invite guests, charging celery salad, strawberry short-
“You look tired, Elsie, I’m a-
fraid this. terrible war is telling
on you.” “Yes; my doctors say
meal containing approximately But they will grow “wise to
the proper proportion of various you
elements that go to make whole- For “The face you present to
High Class Union Made Clothing. Tailored to fit you or “no sale.” Mr.
El. C.Cunningham is our represen ative in Texas City.
For Appointment, Phone 240.
DISPLAY ROOM, SOU FHERN HOTEL
____? MASTER KEY
'Ay JOHN FLEM I NG WlLSOhL
Thrill ing
L Mystenhanc. manMe:
Had A Personal Sound
In a town in the west there is
a church that has a bright young
pastor, but the attendance is un-
fortunately small. Among the
parishioners there is a beautiful
young widow. One evening, just
as the little widow was about to
leave the edifice, she was ad-
dressed by the deacon.
“Good-evening, sister!” he
cordially remarked, with the
usual handshake. “How did you
like the sermon this evening?”
“I think that it was just too
perfectly lovely for anything!”
“It was, indeed!” heartily re-
turned the deacon. “I only wish
that larger congregations would
come to hear him.”
“So do I,” declared the pretty
little widow. “The congrega-
tion was so small tonight that
every time the parson said ‘dear-
ly beloved,’ I positively blushed.’
Southern Tea & Coffee Co.
treatment, but doctors
hold no hope for recovery. <•
1
* a Galveston, Texas, May
* 3.—Hang this up for an-
* other Texas record. A
* pickaninny here has a
* head just two inches less
than a yard in circumfer-
* ference. Medical experts
For convenience and to
1 obtain better service to our
h patrons at Texas City, we
: ’ have requested Mr. W. D.
! Thompson to act as our
’ agent. We assure you his
§ services will be prompt and
4 efficient. Phone 27, Texas
City.
TEXAS
I BOTTLING
WORKS
Galveston, Texas
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The Texas City Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 73, Ed. 1 Monday, May 3, 1915, newspaper, May 3, 1915; Texas City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1576815/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.