Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 82, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 2, 1921 Page: 7 of 12
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SEVEN
TRIBUNE
GALVESTON
P
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1921.
1
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MOTHER!
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Spring Weight
39
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Trousers $4.85
ul
1
(III
lasting valuation in the next
just or
Tor, while the record itself
few years.
The Havana tobacco used is the choicest grown.
215
0 4,25
C cents each
Sold by live dealers everywhere
Fes
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%
Another fine assortment shown—$7.85
See Our Special Window Display
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NEW YORK BASEBALL NOTES.
,7
DODSON KILLING
USE OF CALOMEL
1
chapter in world history.
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79
here. The Tiger regulars are due next
Monday.
6
Thye Defeats Clapham.
PLAYERS ASSEMBLE.
and thirty-four minutes.
did not come to Cincinnati, will go to
GOES TO BEAUMONT.
asked for on the latter player.
I
DIVORCES ROGER BRESNAHAN.
GRANDMOTHER KNEW
FRANCHISES AWARDED.
GUARANTEED
RICKEY INVESTIGATING.
Rheumatism Comes
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9
Orange, Tex.
From Tiny Pain Germs
50c to $1.00
Crowns, Gold or White
R
Fillings, white.....$1.00 to $3.00
Fillings, Silver
50c to $1.00
L
CLAUDE KAVANAUGH, Pres.
MUST KEEP ENGAGEMENT.
I
601 American Nat’l. Ins. Bldg.
Phone 4990 J.
M
2117% Market St.
Phone 2034
Samanae
-meaaid
order Bresnahan must pay his wife’s
attorney fees, which amount to $500.
Mrs. Bresnahan, in her petition, ac-
cused the baseball player of extreme
cruelty, alleging he struck her, threat-
ened to shoot her, and sought the com-
Pleas Judge Johnson today granted a
decree of absolute divorce to Mrs. Ada-
leen M. Bresnahan from Roger Bres-
nahan,. former major league player,
$10.00
.$5.00
manship.
Extractions.....
Plates as low as
Buy two JOHN RUSKINS
today and save the coupon
bands for valuable premiums.
It was said that nothing had been
heard from Daubert, Rousch, Groh or
7
BUILT BY HAND
4
theh spring training season at Dallas
by driving two balls over the fence,
according to advices received here.
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a
Wilson Leaves WhiteHouse
After 8 Years..
5 E8 •
Sm
Treatment Accorded U. S.
Citizens in Orient.
DEMAND THAT JAPAN
FIX DEFINITE DATE
Says Drug is Mercury and Acts
Like Dynamite on Your
Liver.
AMERICAN LABOR
TO INVESTIGATE
FUTURE WILL FIX
PLACE IN HISTORY
Five American League Team Holdouts ;
Surrender.
Office Entrance next to Kress
Store.
939
‘o5y
"California Syrup of Figs"
Child’s Best Laxative
Allegations was made that the Jap-
anese army was “making life unbear-
able for the people residing in terri-
tory where the troops are located" and
that “Russian cities and villages in the
zone of intervention are enveloped in
I. LEWIS CIGAR MFG. CO.
NEWARK, N. J.
Largest Independent Cigar Factory in the World
CASEY SWASEY FIGAR CO.
DISTRIBUTORS
By Associated Press. ting practice, Manager Tris Speaker
New York, March 2.—Five New York I of the Cleveland Indians inaugurated
“If I Could Get the Money
Bob Meusel, utility player, have not j players, the whole New York team is
signed, but Huggins believes they will 1 7 7
years in the White House, probably at-
tained greater heights of personal pow- : than $104000-
er and influence than any other indi- ■
F
k
.
Dr. Drake
DENTIST
BU
Often in your business, or the business you know,
you see chances to make large profits, if you can get
the money to handle the opportunity.
Young fellows in the oil business face this always.
A big well comes in suddenly. They buy the adjoin-
ing lease. They start their well. _ And then they start
“passing the hat” for the rest of the money.
They go to folks they know—folks who know they
are honest, who know they’re really oil men, who
know they are also business men.
Arid when the well comes in, and the oil is pro-
duced and sold, and the dividend checks come back,
those friends who believed are rewarded /or their
faith—because when oil makes, it makes larger than
nearly any other line of business.
I and four young fellows working in the Blue Ridge
field saw the Texas Company’s big Robinson gusher
come in. We bought a lease a few feet away. We start-
ed drilling and “passing the hat.” We are down 2450
feet and about two-thirds of our money has already been
raised.
Another company has brought in a gusher only 50
feet from our lease. We are expecting a 5,000 to 10,-
000 barrel well. ' Our company is the Blue Ridge Pro-
duction Co. No. 2, capital stock $135,000. Shares $10
each. .
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Accept “California” Syrup of Figs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most harm-
less physic for the little stomach, liver
and bowels; Children love its fruity
taste. Full directions on each bottle.
You must say “California.”
Gasser park fence .three times.
The New York Nationals recruit
squad arrived last night at San An-
tonioand was ordered to practice to-
day. Assistant Manager Hugh Jennings
will be in charge until the arrival of
I John McGraw.
Evacuation of Eastern Si-'
beria Sought.-
A-
E ■ N*
Batterymen In Action;
Bv Associated Press.
Detroit, March 2.— Batterymen of the
Detroit Americans were to get in their
Other Work in Proportion.
Painless extraction free when
other work is contracted for.
Special Attention Given
Pyorrhea.
Heads of four departments, big steamship company.
Head of big insurance firm.
A leading jeweler.
An ocean freight broker.
Head of a laundry. -
Head of one of the public service corporations.
Several ship captains.
Cashier, auditor and others in a railroad office.
It’s a real chance to make five or ten times what you
put in, on the least possible chance.
Why not look it over? Can’t you use some profits?
The man who risks nothing accumulates a large supply
of it. *
JUST RECEIVED
A fine big shipment of men’s pure worsted and
cassimere trousers; shown in pleasing stripes, dark
checks and plaid effects; wonderfully tailored—
fabrics light and airy—patterns very desirable. AfJ
ter considering the above features— it will be easy
to surmise the value offered at
hat sport. New York already is in
the circuit, so places for three other
sales already are more
I am raising part of the money in Galveston because
I have friends here. They “chipped in” with me four
years ago and have so far received 450 per cent and
that is 100 per cent a year.
They are coming in withme. You can come in too,
if you have any cash. Some of the Galveston folks who
are in are:
Bv Associated Press.
Portland, Ore., March 2.—Ted Thye,
claimant of the middleweight wrest-
There Was Nothing So Good
for Congestion and Colds
as Mustard
But the old-fashioned mustard-
plaster burned and blistered while it
acted. Get the relief and help that
mustard plasters gave, without the
piaster and without the blister.
Musterole does it. It is a clean,
white ointment, made with oil of mus-
tard. It is scientifically prepared, so
that it works wonders, and yet does
not blister the tenderest skin.
Gently massage Musterole in with the
finger-tips. See how quickly it brings re-
lief—how speedily the pain disappears.
Use Musterole for sore throat, bron-
chitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck,
asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges-
tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago,
pains and aches of the back or joints,
sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil-
blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest
(it often prevents pneumonia).
35c and 65c jars; hospital size $3.00.
a poisonous' atmosphere of robbery,
murder and unspeakable crime.”
By Associated Press.
Peking, Feb. 27.—Demands that Jap-
an fix a definite date for the evacua-
tion of Siberian territory have been
sent to the Tokio foreign office by the
minister of foreign affairs of the Far
Eastern republic, it is said in a dis-
Dr. Henry Cohen is to Address Rotary
Club of That City.
Dr. Henry Cohen left this morning for
Beaument, where he is to be the print,
pal speaker at the weekly luncheon of
the Rotary club of Beaumont. The
Beaumont club several weeks ago in-
vited Dr. Cohen to address a meeting
and he selected today.
IN WORLD OF SPORT
I
means just as much in cigar
quality as it does in anything you
buy. It means a cigar that is free
and even burning---
(852151# 28?
4.851
22222852117222462556122152258
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Wilson and his administration largely
'will be judged. His prewar domestic
record, while on the whole rather suc-
cities are open. Negotiations are pro-
Speaker Starts Well.
Bv Associated Press.
Cleveland, March 2.—With Catcher
Steve O’Neill serving the ball in bat-
that advance
patch received here. !
The note cited a long list of alleged
is one which cleanses the blood of these
germs and routs them entirely out of
the circulation.
This is, why S. S. S., the greatest
known blood purifier is so successful
in the treatment of Rheumatism. It is'
a powerful cleanser of the blood, and
will remove the disease germs that
cause your Rheumatism, affording re-
lief that is genuine.
S. S. S. is sold by all druggists. Free
literture and medical advice can be
had by writing to Chief Medical Adviser
826 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
g-euge
mH
cessful, will be weighed probably on result in the Buffalo boxer being bar- one of the organizers of the new cir-
oneraceomPliahmentrmors. thannking j red from this state, was the ultimatum cuit in the-professional department of
system. But. that period will weigh I sent Kansas Tuesday night by Tom An- ' that sport.
lightly in the scales of the future. j drews promoter of the match, who says
Mr. Wilson, in his period of eight •
Member—Associated Advertising Clubs of the World. J
•
A Special Grouping
of Men’s
report with the other regulars.
Normal McMillan, a Yankee prospect
from the Greenville South Atlantic
club, is performing brilliantly at the
Shreveport camp, it was reported to-
day. Yesterday he hit the ball over
National Baseball League in Process of
Formation. and now president Of the Toledo base-
By Associated Press. j i ball club.
Chicago, March 2.— Franchises in the , In addition, Mrs. Bresnahan was
National Major Basketball League have granted $10,000 alimony and under the
Richie Mitchell here on March 9, or a been awarded to Brooklyn, Philadel-
complaint will be filed with the Wis- phia, Boston and Paterson, it was an-
consin boxing commission that may nounced today by Willfam Hepinthal,
y------------------------------
First of all, get it firmly fixed in
your mind that all the liniments in the
world have no effect whatever on
Rheumatism.
Medical scientists differ as to the
causes of evry form of rheumatism,
but agree that when caused by a tiny
disease germ, the only effective method
of treatment is to attack the disease at
its source, and cleanse the blood of
its cause.
A very common form of Pheumatism
is caused by millions of tiny disease
germs which infest the blood. The ore
and enly sensible treatment, therefore,
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2862
vidual in history, certainly any other
American. But no leadership on the
international stage waned quicker or
received a sharper voice of disapproval :
from home than did his. The future
of the league of nations that he so
closely bound up with his own person-
ality and place in history, of course,
will bring laurels back to or subtract
from this fallen power that leaves the
White House Friday noon. The league’s
future might override the verdict of
the present or it may, on the other j
hand, confirm the correctness of the
Verdict of the people Nov. 2. To that
extent, the Wilson record, ’while al-
ready personally written, is not a closed
'Pitcher Bill Pertica Absent From Car-
dinal’s Camp.
By Associated Press.
, St. Louis, March 2.—Manager Branch
Ricke of the St. Louis Nationals is
investigating the absence of Pitcher
Bill Pertica, according to a dispatch
from the Cardinals’ training camp at
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first work at the San Antonio training _
camp today, according to dispatches re- j the training camp at Cisco, Texas, d-
ceived here. Manager Ty Cobb is ex- rectly from their homes.
pected to reach San Antonio tomor-
row.
American league players who have
been “holding out” have surrendered
and will report to Manager Huggins at
Shreveport, La., next week, it was an-
nounced today.
They are Wally Schang, catcher; Bob
Shawkey and Jack Quinn, pitchers;
Aaron Ward and Wallie Pipp, infield-
ers.
Roger Peckinpaugh, shortstop, and
injuries and impositions suffered by the
people of Eastern Siberia at the hands
of Japanese military forces and closed —-- -- —- ----- 01A ra
with a demand that there be no Japan- ping championship of thewordr,de-
ese intereference in that region. feated Sam Clapham,
'weight title holder'Of England in one
fall here last night after one hour
DENTAL WORK ’
EXAMINATION AND
CONSULTATION FREE
Have your teeth examined by one
who knows what you need. It
will save you time, it will save
you pain, it will save you money,
but the best of all it will save
your health. Good teeth are the
best health insurance one can
have.
All the latest painless methods
used. Best material and work-
Braves Buy Catcher.
By Associated Press.
Columbus, Ohio, March 2.—Purchase
of Catcher Art Wilson from the Boston
Braves was announced today by Ma-
I ager Clarence Rowland of the Colum-
bus American association club.
Gonzales to Join Reds.
By Associated Press.
Havana, March 2.—Miguel Angel
Gonzales, Cuban catcher for the New
York Giants, and Adolfo Luque, pitcher
for the Cincinnati Reds, sailed today
to join their teams for spring train-
ing. -
5,
11
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ram
Mrs. Bresnahan Secures Absolute De-
cree and Alimony.
By Associated Bress.
Toledo, Ohio, March 2.—Common
pany of other women. During the
trial Bresnahan hotly contested his
wife’s suit, and asserted their main
domestic difficulties had been because
he wanted children, -while his wife
showed no desire for them.
Kopf, holdouts. Waivers have been
Special to The Tribune.
Washington March 2.—Eight years
of Wilson end Friday. The much de-
bated record and the more discussed
personality of this man who sat in the
White House during the stormiest per-
iod of the nation’s history, save the
ICivil War era alone, goes into history
then. Historians will pick up at once,
where the politicians leave off, the task
of properly assessing the place in the
annals of the nation that Woodrow
Wilson shall occupy.
It goes without saying that the
events are too near at hand for any
Rain Prevents Practice.
By Associated Press.
San Antonio, Tex., March 2.—Rain
again today prevented the practice of
the New York Giants and Detroit Tig-
ers. With the exception of one or two
Milwaukee Promoter Sends Ultimatium
To Rocky Kansas.
Special to The Tribune.
Milwaukee, March 2.—Rocky Kansas
will keep his engagement to box
By Associated Press.
Washington, March 2.—By direction
of the executive council of the Ameri-
can Federation of Labor, now in ses-
sion here, President Samuel Gompers
is to investigte the whole, Japanese and
Oriental industrial and labor problem
with a view of determining whether
the restrictions imposed upon American
workers and capital in the Far East
are not more severe than those imposed
in this country on Orientals.
Union officials said today they had
received information that the land and
immigration laws in Japan were more
restrictive than those in America and
that American laborers seeking em-
ployment in the Orient were compelled
by law to give up trade secrets.
The question of whether the Ameri-
can Federation shall continue interna-
tional co-operation with European la-
bor through affiliation with the new
international federation - of trades
unions was before the executive coun-
cil today.
Mr. Gompers and Matthew Woll, vice
president of the federation, in a state-
ment recently declared that the Ameri-
can organization could not join with
the European body because of its ap-
peals “to revolutionary violence” and
referred especially to the call for “in-
ternational revolutionary measures by
labor in aid of the soviets in their war
against Poland.” N
ceeding, it was said, with Springfield,
Mass.; Uew Haven, Conn.; Hartford,
Conn., Trenton and Camden, N. J. Sev-
eral applications have been received
from Pittsburgh, it was said, But it is
planned to include that city in an
American league circuit, embracing
Chicago, Cleveland, Cincinnati Detroit,
Akron, Toledo, Louisville, Dayton and
Buffalo.
Dodson is making a hard fight
against calomel in the South. Every
druggist has noticed a great falling off
in the sale of calomel. They all give
the same reason. Dodson’s Liver Tone
is taking its place. “Calomel is dan-
gerous and people know it, while Dod-
son's Liver Tone is perfectly safe and
gives better results,” said a prominent
local druggist. Dodson’s Liver Tone is
personally guaranteed by every drug-
gist. A large bottle costs but. a few
cents, and if it fails to give easy relief
in every case of liver sluggishness and
constipation, you have only to ask for
your money back.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a pleasant-
tasting, purely vegetable remedy, harm-
less to both children and adults. Take
a spoonful at night and wake up feel-
ing fine; no biliousness, sick headache,
acid stomach or constipated bowels. It
doesn’t gripe or cause inconvenience all
the next day like violent calomel. Take
a dose of calomel today and tomorrow
you will feel weak, sick and nauseated.
Don’t lose a day’s work! Take Dod-
son’s Liver Tone instead and feel fine,
full of vigor and ambition.
is written in accomplishment or fail-
ure, the flood of documentary light to
be thrown on the period and from
which chroniclers of future largely will
base their estimations, will begin only
with the passing of Mr. Wilson from
the scenes.
In fact, March 5, will see the first
important document from an ex-cab-
inet member—the story of Robert Lans-
ing, the spurned state secretary, who
has waited only until President Wil-
son became Mr. Wilson again to set
before the public his inner story of
Paris and the peace negotiations. That
Will be the first and the next few years
will see a perfect deluge of literature
’ on the Wilson era, with perhaps the
most valuable from the historical
standpoint to come only after many of
the actors in the world events abroad
likewise have passed from the stage of
public life andMlife itself.
RETIRES A BROKEN MAN.
Any review of the achievements or
failures of the Wilson administration,
as it goes out of office, largely is un-
necessary at this time because the
events with, which it has dealt have,
been so stirring that the public has the
record of the administration written
pretty well in its own recollections.
However, the human side of the story
is the tragedy presented in the Wood-
row . Wilson that entered the White
House eight years ago with the high-
est hopes ahead and the sick nd
broken men who leaves the White
House Friday to grapple for health
more than to write history in the years
ahead. • .
The broken man is typical of the
broken administration. When Wood-
row Wilson entered the White House
eight years ago, the progressive, or
liberal, movement was at its high tide
in the United States. When he leaves
Friday, it is unquestioned that the
forces of conservatism and even re-
action are running stronger that for
several decades. How much the fail-
ures and the policies of the Wilson ad-
ministration have had to do with this
backward swing of public sentiment,
it is for history to assess. But the fact
itself is inescapable. This doesn’t
mean, of course, that all the evidences
of political progress are lost. They
are not, nationwide woman’s suffrage
being the outstanding advance,% with
possibly prohibition, from a moral
standpoint, representing the high mark
of achivement. Neither, however, came
as the direct product of the Wilson ad-
ministration, only during it, and in the
case of prohibition,, in spite of it.
A FALLEN DICTATORSHIP.
Mr. Wilson came to the White House
eight years ago by the biggest plu-
rality any president had ever received,
“with a Stronger party unification be-
hind him; and a more commanding dic-
tatorship over congress than ever a
president had, save possibly Andrew
Jackson. He leaves the White House
with his party broken, defeated by the
largest and hardest wallop any party
ever has received and with his own
personal influence in congress less,
perhaps, than that of any outgoing
president in the annals of the nation.
In fact, the present Wilson influence
is “nil” and a personal bitterness ex-
ists toward him as seldom has been
exhibited in public life. Again it is
for history to record the whys and
wherefores, and to do so is to chronicle
the record of the Wilson administra-
tion and Wilson, the man and his dis-
positio; and the world war and the
forces unleashed by it.
That the Wilson administration will
occupy a large place in history, even if
the historians’ seal of greatness is not
put on Mr. Wilson himself, goes with-
out saying, for any administration that
has been connected with great events
would acquire its pages in history for
no other reason, whether successful
or unsuccessful. And Mr. Wilson has
been connected with the greatest
events of American history, save pos-
sibly the preservation of the nation in
the ’60s. Since Mr. Wilson entered the
White House the greatest of all wars
has been fought and won and the
greatest of all peace conclaves has
been held, and the United States, by
force of events, has occupied the
greatest position in the world, as dis-
tinguished from national history, it
ever has touched.
WILL OUTWEIGH DOMESTIC REC-
ORD.
It is on the part that the adminis-
tration played in these events that Mr.
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Good and big to look at — after dinner shape
Good and mild to taste — with just enough body
Good and big to the very end.
Pertica, who was obtained from the
Los Angeles club of the Pacific Coast
league in exchange for four players,
was recently reported to have for-
warded his signed contract to the
locals, but nothing has been seen eith-
er of the paper or player and Rickey
believes he is a holdout.
The Cardinals are hard at work pre-’
paring for their first game against
the Philadelphia Americans at Hous-
ton Saturday.
Kenneth Williams arrived at the
Browns’ training camp in Bogalusa.
La., yesterday, leaving Sisler and
Pitcher Palmero the only absentees.
Cincinnati Nationals Prepare to Depart
for Camp.
By Associated Press.
Cincinnati, March 2.—Eleven players
of the Cincinnati National league base-
ball club assembled here and departed
for the south today, headed by Man-
ager Pat Moran. Other players who
Williams Vs. Ryan.
By Associated Press. 1
Pittsburgh, March 3.—“Kid” Will-
iams of Baltimore, former bantam-
weight champion, and Tommy Ryan of
McKeesport,, will meet in a ten-round
boxing bout tonight at McKeesport
near here.
RsSTevyCCo
Reliabilityr=KlwgJS
Lynch vs. Burman.
By Associated Press.
Cleveland, March 2.—Joe Lynch, ban-
tamweight champion, has been
matched for a ten-roud bout with Joe
Burman of Chicago, March 10. Bur-
man is to make 118 pounds.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 82, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 2, 1921, newspaper, March 2, 1921; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579661/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.