Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 243, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 6, 1921 Page: 4 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Galveston Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rosenberg Library.
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1921.
GALVESTON
TRIBUNE
FOUR
MTHEBEACH—COME EVERY NIGHT
The New In
Hotel Galvez
Fall Hats
NS
/)
Cafeteria
Are Here
At a New Low Price
J
“THE BEST PLACE IN
13
GALVESTON TO EAT”
See Window Display
I
OPENALL 7HE Y4A
Open Daily, 12:00 Noon
to 8:30 P. M.
Self Serve
$ •
Popular Prices
PHONE 1931
allowed
15c
19c
only, a yard
Longsdale Muslin
Your
had,
Flannel, good grad
le,
h,
and
standaid,
27-ine
nerves is sold by all drug-gists.
25c
BROOMS
None delivered.
Regular Values That Sell for 50c
Daidson.Dry Goods Company
1
“The Store That Satisfies”
Ave. C at 24th
(
I
Barfield’s Beach Enterprises
GREAT AMERICAN RAC-
/pm
ING DERBY,
21 ST AND BEACH
Texas News Briefs
9
1,000 Rooms
UMiOn,
Phone 368
Dancing
66
232885
0
e
"6
»
W. J. Chapman, Owner
Phones 379 or 1447
Tablet Form—Bring- MAN WAS SLAIN
NEAR STATE LINE
I
on the Missouri side of the line.
The
Mo., police support this
MARKET AT 222 '
■ Ironized Yeast will keep indefinitely
and costs no more per dose than com-
SAVED
DOLLAR
tomer is
10 yards
36-inch,
yards,
a yard .
tory settlement of the petroleum ques-
tion in Mexico is causing a number of
Americans to prepare for a return to
Tampico and other oil sections, where
they lost their jobs owing to the shut-
down of many of the producing com-
The
be
Best grade Paja-
ma Check, limited
offering, 10 yards
Nuxated Iron we shall
ave you write us what it
in Pimples On Face. Very
Disfiguring. CouldNotRest.
Open to Bathers in
Bathing Costumes
CUT WHEALS
ITCHING ECZEMA
limit,
a yard
does for
name will
Nuxated
SOCIETY CIRCUS
September 11 to 18
By Associated Press.
Washington, Sept. 6.
Tarpon Fishing Pier
On North Jetty—7 Miles from City
Amarillo,—A cafeteria has been in-
stalled in the Amarillo high school for
the pupils this winter. A patronage of
about 1,200 pupils is expected.
ing Amazing Results
Everywhere. ’ .
f
almost exclusively out of a revolving
fund automatically established by re-
payments being, made or. the approxi-
mately $100,000,000 in advance now out-
standing.
library, reception room, dining room,
and kitchen.
News of Specials for the First Wednesday
in September
Special trips made by notifying us the day before
Cold Lunch, Bait and Tackle Can Be Obtained at Pier.
498
MUSIC EVENINGS
DANCING
36-in. Indian
Head
JOYLAND PARK
GARDEN OF TOKIO
OPERATORS BLAME
UNION OFFICIALS
Galveston’s Newest and Most Thrilling
Amusement Device.
DR. HADLEY DENIES
CONFESSING CRIME
36-in. Pajama
Check (
The Home of Good
Sea Foods
Open every day in the year.
Every towel used in this house
is first washed in our own
steam Laundry
Charge Them With Invasion
By Miners.
Medico Is Charged With
Wife Murder.
ARCADE BUILDING
Furnished Apartments
Amusements,
23D AND BEACH
If you are weak, P
are nervous, irritabl
Creations’ That Every
Woman Adores
Plans For Advances Are
Completed.
Officials in Controversy as
to Location.
Trsde
9. ThrFty
Mark
WEAK MEN
AND WOMEN
NEED YEAST
Entrance on 22d Street
Across the Street from Joyland Park.
Boat Leaves Tarpon Pier
’ 11 A. M. and 5:30 P. M.
Round trip $1.10, including war tax
BROOMS
No Phone Orders
Filled
After using
be pleased to h;
druggists everywhere.
(RONIZEDEEAsr
HIGHLY CONCENTRATED VITAMINS TONIC
Boats Leave Pier 22.
6:00 A. M. and 1:30 P. M..
Extra Trip Sundays and Holidays
8:00 A. M.
of ,
best
F
■Officials of the
on the Beach at Tremont St.
IN
For the best Sea Food and
Chicken Oinners.
Special rates for banquets and
large parties
35th and Boulevard
(33d Street Car Line)
“Ask the Man Who Banks Here*'
TEXAS BANK AndYrust (OMPANY
- CAPITAL AND, SURPLUS ONE MILLION DOLLARS
Galveston
46
kg®
j shooting they surrendered to the Kan-
eopie ‘ sas City, Kan., police, and a charge of
first degree murder has been filed
SPENT
DOLLAR
0
before their time,
weak, nervous and
Fish Chowder and Crab Gumbo, at
Kaphan’s.
By Associated Press.
Austin, Sept. 6.—That President and
Mrs. Warren G. Harding will name a
young woman to represent the District
of Columbia at the Cotton Palace at
Waco, Texas, in October was assured
Governor Neff recently in a telegram
from George B. Christian, Jr. secretary
to the president.
“ The Saved Dollar always gets
the decision over the Spent
Dollar in the fight for a place
in the world. 33
A WEEK OF PLEASURE
Special Dances in the Pavillion each night. Free Circus Acts,
Rides and Concessions in the Park.
WATCH-THE PROGRAMME.
2egemdaeasmaaE
J. J. Schott Drug Co., Inc.
against them in that city. Rhea died,
however, in Missouri, eft route to a hos-
pital, and his sons insist he was shot
San Angelo,—Sutton county ranchmen
have just sold approximately 3,650 head
of sheep and goats for shipment to
Mexico at prices ranging from $2.75 to
$3 a head. The demand in Mexico for
such stock is good, buyers in El Paso
said.
United Mine Workers of America were
charged with responsibility “for the in-
vasion of Logan county and proposed
Invasion of Mingo county by armed
miners", in a statement issued here by
Harry Olmsted, chairman of the Oper-
ators’ Association of the Williamson
field. The statement was declared to be
an answer to that of Samuel Gompers,
president of the American Federation
of Labor, which Mr. Olmsted described
as hypocritical and in many instances
false and misleading.
Mine guards and private detectives
are not employed by operators in the
Williamson field, Mr. Olmsted said, ad-
ding that Mr. Gompers had “deliberate-
ly misrepresented conditions that have
preceded and surrounded the attempt at
an armed invasion." The charge of Mr.
Gompers that the uprising had been
caused by failure of the operators to
put into effect the award of the gov-
ernment wage board was characterized
as "another falsehood.”
“The mine operators were under no
obligation to do so,” the statement said
“they having no sort of connection with
the coal fields covered by that award.
' “Nevertheless, the increases allowed
by the United States government were
adoptd in their field promptly after
the amount of increase had been fixed.
It has never before been alleged that the
strike in the Williamson field was due
to wage adjustments or any cause other
than to compel recognition of the Unit-
ed Mine, Workers’ organization.
“Coal is measured rather than weigh-
ed in this field because it is the easiest
and most satisfactory method of ac-
counting between the miners and the
employers; the men have never asked to
‘ have the system changed! They don’t
want it changed.
“The earnings per day, or week, or
month, is the real test. Such a state-
ment comparing the earnings in the
Williamson field with those in the un-
ionized Kanawha field was submitted
to the senatorial investigating commit-
tee in July. Possibly it was envy arous-
ed by that exposure that caused the
Kanawha miners to attempt an invas-
ion of the non-union coal fields.
“Mr. Gompers makes himself,too ri-
diculous to West Virginians when he
makes his plea about the miners pro-
testing lawlessness insofar at least, as
best Muslin to
Best When Taken With
I pdlllcb.
Iron in Convenient!
was shot and killed Saturday night, was
slain in Kansas or Missouri threatened
to complicate the case of men charged
with first degree murder in connection
1 with the killing.
Rhea operated a hog feeding yard
on the .bottom lands of the Missouri
river, close to the Missouri and Kansas
state line. Rhea’s two sons, who were
with him when he was slain, contend he
was killed in Missouri. William Buck-
ner, a rilroad detective, and Peter Lar-
kin, a special agent, who admit they
I fired the shots which killed Rhea, says
| he was killed in Kansas. Following the
BILLION DOLLARS
FOR FARM CREDITS
HUXATEPIRONSnaas
FISHIIT("”
This supply of In-
dian Head is lim-
ited, as each cus-
he refers to the United Mine Workers.
The miners themselves are generally
law-abiding. Every disorder that has
ever occurred in the mining fields of
West Virginia has been occasioned by
the thugs and outlaws of the United
Mine Workers organization who came
into the state to compel the unioniza-
tion of these coal fields.
“The invasion of Logan county and
the threatened invasion of Mingo coun-
ty was not a spontaneous uprising. It
was threatened by the United Mine
Workers organization in the William-
son field as early as April and May
1920.
“In the counties of Logan and Mingo
W. Va., and Pike county, Ky., having
an aggregate area of 1,633 square miles
and an aggregate population of 116,847
there were not employed as many as
100 peace officers prior to the invasion
by the organizers of the United Mine
Workers. They were not needed.
“Not any o fthese peace officers were
Baldwin-Felts employes, but included
only regularly chosen deputy sheriffs
and constables and other officers.
“When the United Mine workers of
America was formed in 1890 it was
recognized as a lawful organization and
continued as such until 1898, when
they entered into a conspiracy with the
central competitive field to control the
bituminous coal market of the United
States.
“Since 1912 it has been the policy of
the United Mine workers to compel, by
use of force in every conceivable way,
all persons engaged in the mining in-
dustry to join the union and it has
likewise been its policy to destroy all
business of non union operators. The
end of which would mean the subjec-
tion of the coal industry of the United
States to such an unjust and unlawful
demands it might desire to put into
force.”
plies run-down bodies with the two
elements which have been found abso-
lutely essential to health and strength
—vitamines and iron. Most people’s
systems, due to modern living condi-
tions, are sadly lacking in these two
substances, and that is why so many
thousands of men and women grow old
If you want to put on good solid
flesh, if you want to increase your
strength so that you can tackle hard
work and enjoy it, if you want to put
good healthy color in your cheeks and
feel “fit” all the time—then try Iron-
ized Yeast, the great new vitamine and
iron tonic. ' .
Thousands of run-down and sickly
men and women are now taking Iron-
you for publication.
be withheld.
Iron for the blood
Bath Towels
Heavy, weight
‘ bath towels, plain
border, size 18x34,
limit 6, 1 K,
each ..........
nights—if your vitality is low and you
are getting old before your time—then
try this remarkable new tonic. You
will notice a good improvement in your
condition even after the first few days’
use. Pimples, boils, and other skin
•blemishes usually disappear entirely
within two weeks. Everywhere p<
are saying that Ironized Yeast is just
the tonic they needed.
Pepperell
Sheets
98c
■ Sheets made
the world’s 1
ized Yeast, and the results in many
cases are nothing short of astonishing. ...
This is because Ironized Yeast sup- J whether Clifford Rhea, stock buyer, who
Face Towels
Good quality Face
Towels, size 18x
36, limit 6 1 K,
towels, each LeC
Pillow Cases
Train yourself to save. The
habit grows with practice. A
dollar is an easy start.
.Fall Millinery that represents the styles of the last minute.
They are hats of individuality, thus you will love to wear one
of them. They are Davidson’s standard, in style, quality
and price.
Tomorrow
Alrighi
Mfr A vegetable
RvtS aperient, adds
tone and vigor to
the digestive and
eliminative system,
improves the appe-
tite, relieves Sick
Headache and Bil-
iousness, corrects
Constipation.
asU sed for over
MURDOCH’S Rogers
BATH HOUSE ”
Longsdale,
limit 10
......19c
El Paso.—Althuogh the fruit crop
near here was not large, the melon crop
this year was tremendous. The latter
part of the melon season turned out
especially good. Now the market is
flooded with watermelons which sell at
cheap prices.
El Paso.—Pioneers as regular mem-
bers and sons of pioneer residents as
honorary members have rejuvenated the
El Paso County Pioneers association
until it has 500 members, a piano, a
vampire bat and other stuffed birds
and animals and a library ‘of 500 vol-
umes are among the possessions of the
association, which has rooms in the
basement of the courthouse.
and become thin,
run-down.
in Missouri, they will file charges
against Buckner and Larkin and ask
for their extradition to Missouri.
Missouri law provides a penalty of
hanging for persons convicted of first
degree murder, the imposition of the
penalty being optional with the jury.
In Kansas the only punishment for first
degree murder is life imprisonment.
How I Was Wrecking the
Lives of My Children
And Suffering Indescribable Tortures Myself Day and Night.
A Mother’s Terrible Confession.
Temple.—Miss Bess Denison, formerly
a public school teacher in Temple, has
left for the Hawaiian islands, where
she will teach in the government
schools at Lahaina on the island of
Maui. She was accompanied by Miss
Annie Wade of Belton, Texas.
other name until the day of his arrest.
“Yes, I tried in every way to conceal
my identity,” said Hadley. “It was a
good thing, too, for the way the people
are acting about gthe matter leads me
to believe I might have gone west if
they had found me.”
By Associated Press.
Washington, Sept. 6.—Preparations
for advancing upwards of a billion dol-
lars in agricultural and livestock cred-
its under recent legislation have vir-
tually been completed by the war fi-
nance corporation, officials said to-
night. The corporation probably will
be ready within the next week or so to
function under its enlarged powers
designed to afford needed credit relief
to the farmers, it was said.
To expedite the ' advances executive
committees are being' formed in agri-
cultural and stock raising sections of
the West and South, and will attend to
preliminary details of applications.
The corporation’s policy for financ-
ing advances, officials asserted, has
not yet been definitely decided, but it is
believed that little of the $400,000,000
balance with the treasury will be used
for agricultural credits. Demands may
be’ made on the treasury to make the
first loan, it was said, but as soon as
the volume of needed credits 'can be
gauged, it is believed the corporation
will begin issuing its own bonds. Cur-
rent operations of this corporation in
financing exports are being carried on
mon yeast. Each package contains 10 c t. 211000
days’ treatment and cost only $1.00— Kansas Mitv
or just 10c a day. Special directions j mnl S,1 E‛. .0t en1otioc , ..
for children in each package. Sold at View, and state that, following a cor-
all druggists. For sale by the Star oner s inquiry today over Rhea’s death
Drug Store, J. J. Schott and by good
limit 10 yards, 1 Ke
a yard .........LeC
“ I had been bothered with eczema
for about two years. The appearance
of the breaking out was little pim-
ples, and when I rubbed them a
watery substance ran out. I could
not rest at night, the burning and
itching were so great, and at times I
would have to fan my face. It spread
all over my face and was very dis-
figuring.
“ I began using Cuticura Soap and
Ointment, which gave me almost in-
stant relief, and when I had used two
cakes of Soap and nearly two boxes
of Ointment I was healed.” (Signed)
Mrs. Andrew Ingram, Alston, N. C.
Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes.
Simple Each Free by Mall. Address: "CuticuraLad-
eratories. Dept. H, Malden 48, Mass.” Sold every-
where. Snap 25c. Ointment 25 and 60c. Talcum 25c.
M Cuticura Soap shaves without mug.
highly sensitive nervous organizations
and lives, and made them what they
were—that what my children needed
was not a reform school, but a re-
formed mother, and later all this I
found out to be true, because after I
regained my own nervous poise, and
revitalized my worn out,. exhausted
nerve centers, and the same was done
for my children, I found them to be the
nicest, sweetest children in the world
—their whole dispositions entirely
changed.
The above is a hypothetical case,
which a physician says may well il-
lustrate thousands which exist today.
Homes are wrecked, children ruined,
suicides caused, all through exhausted
nerve force, or neurasthenic conditions.
Very few people realize the awful suf-
fering and terrible physical and mental
tortures which may be caused by a de-
pletion of the nervo-yital fluid. y
In such cases, it is often worse than
foolish to take mere stimulating medi-
cines or narcotic drugs, which only
whip up your fagging vital powers for
the moment, may be at the expense of
your life later on. What you need is to
put more nerve force into your nerves
and more iron into your blood. This is
most effectively accomplished by the
free use of Nuxated Iron. This valuable
product contains the principal chemical
constituent of active living nerve force
in a form which most nearly resembles
that in the nerve and brain sells of
man.
It also contains organic iron like the
iron in your blood and like the iron in
spinach, lentils and apples. This form
of iron will not blacken nor injure the
teeth nor upset the stomach. It is an
entirely different thing from metallic
iron which people usually take. Nux-
ated Iron may therefore be termed both
a blood' and a nerve food, as it feeds
strength—giving iron to your blood
and the principal chemical ingredient
of active living nerve force to your
brain and nerve cells.
Over four million people are using
Nuxated Iron annually, and from hte
remarkable beneficial results which it
has produced, the manufacturers feel
so certain of its efficacy that they
guarantee satisfactory results to every
purchaser or they will refund your
money. Beware of substitutes, look
for the word “Nuxated” on every pack-
age.
By Associated Press.
Kansas City, Sept. 6.—The question of
Size 42x36 Pillow
Case, excellent made,
best quality, 1 O.
limit 6, each...IJC
Canton Flannel
Unbleached Canton
El Paso.—The American Legion has
entered its permanent home in El Paso.
It has a large rock house with terrac-
ed lawn and large trees. The home has
several bedrooms, a swimming pool, a
*//
fe
ale, sickly—if you
e, and can’t sleep
3227574*22230
Vkgezgegp
MBMil
For some time I had noticed that my
two chlidren, a boy of seven and a girl
of ten, were becoming highly nervous,
irritable and very disobedient—at times
even “sassy.” I tried various punish-
ments, even whipping, but they kept
growing worse. I fought and struggled
with the situation. My own nerves were
all “on edge”—the least thing put me
into a rage. I quarreled and had most
awful “fusses” with my husband over
nothing as I now look back on them.
I was too weak to work or enjoy life,
and too nervous and irritable to go
anywhere. I was horribly impatient
and ugly if I did not get just what I
wanted when I wanted it. I often suf-
fered from severe heart palpitation and
indigestion. I could not sleep at night;
I had an almost constant dull aching
pain in*the back of my neck and head,
and frequently a very disagreeable
sense of fullness in the front part of
my head. I often had severe pains
across my back, which made me think
I had kidney trouble. I also had tender
spots along the spine, which convinced
me that a fall I had had several years
ago had caused permanent spinal in-
jury which later proved to be only “a
case of nerves.” I could not begin to
describe all ..the tortures’, terrible pains,
and great devttalizing weakness which
I endured. Nobody, not even my hus-
band, seemed to appreciate or realize
my condition, and very few offered
any sympathy, which irritated me all
the more.
Finally I went to a doctor and told
him my story; what awful children I
had, and asked his advice as to what
to do with them, and whether or not I
should send them to a reform school.
After studying my case and talking
with me and my children, to my sur-
prise and disgust he told me I was the
cause of my children’s condition; that
it was all my fault. At this I flew into
a rage, but after I had quieted down
somewhat, he explained to me the ter-
rible condition of my nerve cells. He
told me how the system only manu-
factured so much nerve force, and that
this vital fluid of life was stored in the
nerve cells, much like electricity is
stored in a storage battery, and that' I
was like an electric automobile after
the electricity in the storage batteries
had nearly all been used up, and the
car could therefore, hardly move. He
said my own highly nervous condition
had been a constant drain on the nerve
force of my children, and that the con-
stant nervous strain to which I had
subjected them had wrecked their
Laredo.—Expectation of a satisfac-
By Associated Press.
Denver, Sept. 6.—Dr. Wilmer A. Had-
ley, charged with the murder of his
wife, Mrs. Sue Tinsley Hadley, in Rich-
mond, Va,., denied he had confessed the
killing, although George A. Fuller, su-
perintendent of a nationally known de-
tective agency, reiterated his statement
that the physician had made a confes-
sion admitting the crime and giving de-
tails of it. L
Dr. Hadley is on his way back to
Richmond, Va., to stand trial. He was
apprehended in Farmington, N. M., last
week after a two- year search.
“I have waived extradition and will
probably leave Denver tonight,” said
Dr. Hadley at the county jail. “I must
refuse to answer any . questions which
involve the charges against me. I have
not employed legal counsel and I have
not confessed to any crime.
“I can say I went back to my father’s I
place in December, 1918, after being
discharged from the medical corps of
the army and took up the practice of
medicine. The first intimation I had
of my wife being dead was when a
detective approached me and said, T
am looking for Dr. Wilmer Hadley, who
is wanted in Virginia for the murder of
his wife.’
“ ‘I am Dr. Hadley,’ I replied, ‘and am
willing to answer any questions the law
may deem necessary.’ ”
He admitted he had lived under an-
dlKielEm:
N JUNIORS-Little Ns
One-third the regular dose.
• Made of same ingredi-
89 ents, then candy
M coated. For children
and adults.
sheeting, Pepper-
ell brand, size 72x
98, limit 2, 0Q,
each ..........
F €/
7
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 243, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 6, 1921, newspaper, September 6, 1921; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579058/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.