Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 166, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1923 Page: 4 of 22
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FKIDAY, JUNE 8, 1923.
G A L V jS S toy TRI BU N E
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Dress and
Grouped at
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Boys' Suits, Special $1.65
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Gardlen and Sport Mlodlels at $5.95
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STORE
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STORE
CLOSES
OPENS
9:00 P. M.
8:30 A. M.
GOFISHING
TEXAS GROCERY SPECIALS
PHONE 890
FOR
SATURDAY and MONDAY
45c
10c
Styleplus Clothes
.29c
$20.00
29
$22.50
.......11c
$25.00
Will you please come and see them?
Phone 643
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Phone 440
1602 G
MENU HINT
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Luncheon.
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Swiss Cheese.
Sandwiches made of
on Rye
Fdavoe
String Beans.
Coffee.
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TODAY’S RECIPES
VETERAN PRINTER DIES.
of
PASS DEPARTMENTAL BILL.
until recently has been at
—
s
Neat fancy patterns and plain fabrics.
Well made and neatly trimmed. Sizes 2
to 8, at $1.65—100 suits to select from.
The Style
You Want
Specials for Friday
Saturday — Monday
■ n
Men’s Oxfords,
Sale Price $5.45
Sport hats In White and colors,
also dark tailored hats and strip-
ed felt models just unpacked.
Vacation hats that you will like
to wear at a price you’ll forget.
grand opera.
Her home
MME. MELBA MAKES
DEBUT IN POLITICS
We have the exclusive sale in Galveston.
All new spring goods are here and the
fabrics are beautiful.
Sport Mlodlels
Grouped at
Fancy Table Apricots,
Large can a.........
Country Boy Corn,
Cari, 8c; 2 for.--a.
Sturdy and Attractive Wash Suits for Boys
Made of materials that are tested for service and by manufac-
turers who make suits worthy a label. Middy and Oliver Twist
models.
Picnic Hams,
’Pound .....
Oleander Butter,
Pound -----
Sugar with order,
Pound wa..
McCORMICK Q co
Baltimore, Md.
Bartlett Pears,
No. 3 can.....
Three
Attractive
Groups
.10c
.. 5c
... 5c
. 19c
16c
1
Phone
Number
896
Rice Hotel Milk,
Can ...
U. S. AVIATORS
NOW HOLD 17
WORLD RECORDS
This is a most attractive assortment of new models, straw, leghorn and silk combinations.
In this lot are new sport and white felt models all temptingly priced at—
JI_______
PLEn
OOI ■
New Potatoes,
-6 lbs.............
Idaho Potatoes,
10. lbs. .............
California Burbanks,
10 lbs. .............
Extra Fine Prunes,
2 lbs................
Bull Head Catsup
16 .................
Argo Corn Starch,
Box ................
Tomato Paste, 5
Can ................
Sliced Peaches,
Can ...............
Second
Floor
Postoffice
300 Pairs Men’s Shoes and Oxfords
Specially Priced
________25c
.......27c
.......39c
........25c
........19c
........10c
________6c
.......13c
15c
.......18c
Branches Must
Not Interfere
With Traffic
COLLEGE CELEBRATES
WITH BIG PAGEANT
50th Year of Southwest-
ern As University.
Reasonable prices on all fresh
vegetables.
At Your Service
Boiled Potatoes.
Lettuce.
Strawberry Shortcake.
Georgette and
SiIk Hate
Naval Airmen Set More
New Marks.
.a6
Bread with Mustard.
Cake with Chocolate Sauce.
Tea.
Meat Balls en casserole.
The Mecca
of
Shoppers
Quaker Oatmeal,' Grits and 1 e
Cornmeal, package ........IUU
Dr. Price’s Baking Powder, OK,
2 cans ....................4•-
Seedless Raisins, 1 Q A
11-oz. pkg., 15c; 15-oz. pkg.IOv
ORANGE
PEKOE
ICED
TEA
Men’s Walk-Over
Oxfords, sale price
$7.95
A
Wonderfial
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By Associated Press.
Austin, June 8.—The departmental
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-ANANTA"
BANOUET
Rosedale Sliced Pineapples, 91/
No. 3 can......
Salmon, 1 Q.
Tall can •................. HeC
2 for 25c.
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closed the celebration last night
the Golden Jubilee.
G. NOVELLI
Formerly Senechal's
H. BLANKFIELD
2413 Market Street
Boys’ Suits, Priced at $2.48
Tom Sawyer and Paul Jones labels are
sewed on these suits. Enough said.
Choose Middy or Oliver Twist models. In
white or any wanted combination, 2 to
8, at ......... .i. .010:0.010.000 0:00- 10. ..$2.48
By Associated Press.
Dallas, June 8— Employed as com-
positor, printer and proof reader for
forty years by A. H. Belo & Co., Wil-
liam H. Hall, pr2of reader on the Dal-
las News, died Inursday at the age of
71. Printers throughout the state
knew him well.
The Style-Line of America. All medium
prices. No clothes could be finer at any
price. All wool of course.
-uxeraencemas-ea™ ■ n-as
Wedding Rings
In Green, Yellow
and White Gold.
Reasonable Prices
S. NEVELOW
2313 Market St.
Mgx5
a
Boiled Ham and Lettuce
•/$
1
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Thompson
Mme. Nellie Melba.
BvSentra1,Pnas“_vme. Nellie Melba
the famous opera singer, was reported
to have remarked some time ago that
she was going to retire to make room
for younger singers. This was after
a concert at which she sang at Mel-
bourne. Australia, her birthplace. Now,
however, it is rumored that she is
about to make another debut and in an
entirely different line—that of politics.
It is said that she is planning to cam-
paign for election to parliament in
England.
Mme Melba was born and educated
in Australia and is of Scotch and Span-
ish descent. She studied in Paris under
Mme. Marchesi, and made her operatic
debut in Brussels as Gilda in Rigoletto.
This was on Oct. 15, 1887. Her career
in London began on May 24, the fol-
lowing year, with a performance of
Lucia. Sir Arthur Sullivan formerly
promised her a part in “The Mikado”
“if her performance accorded with her
promise,” but it was only a short time
before she made a brilliant success in
North Jetty
Fishing Pier
Launch Bohemian
will leave Pier 22 (Gulf Fisheries
wharf) daily at 5:30 A. M. and
1:30 P. M., returning at 11 A. M.
and 5:00 P. M.
Balt, Tackle and Lunch can be
had at pier.
W. J. CHAPMAN, Prop.
If you are 1 of the 95 in every 100
■who suffer from Dandruff or some
scalp trouble, just try Mahdeen, for
if it fails to give you perfect satisfaction,
your dealer is authorized to cheerfully re-
fund your $1.00, the cost of a 12-oz. bottle.
At all Barber Shops, Hair Dressing Parlor,
Drug and Devartment Stores. Note “18
"Something Different."
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Men’s Brown Kid and. Brown Calf
Oxfords. also Patent Colt Dancing
Oxfords in flexible and welt soles.
Rubber heel taps. A complete as-
sortment of sizes. Made by one of
the most reliable manufacturers.
......27c
a
basin, put the dish over the top, re-
verse it, and remove the basin care-
fully. If steaming a pudding, do not
quite fill the basin, or there will not
be room for it to rise, but in boiling
one nee that it Is quite full, or the
water will get in. Crusts of bread may
be used to fill up a gap, but must be
removed before the pudding is turned
out.
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Boys’ Hats
Two groups of nobby wash hats for small boys, spe-
cially priced at 50c, and a choice group at ..$1.35
appropriation bill, carrying appropria-
tions of $6,568,000, was passed finally
by the senate late Thursday on sus-
pension of rules. The appropriations
were reduced $102,000 over those car-
ried by the measure which was vetoed
by Gov. Neff. Today’s deliberations
resulted in increases tg the measure
of $6,000.
Boys’ Suits, All Silk Pongee $3.95
These are the coolest and most satisfactory hot
weather suits it is possible to buy. Oliver Twist model,
2 to 6 sizes. Contrast trimmings at .,.,.$3.95
Boys’ Palm Beach Suits
Specially Priced at $5.95
Also Panama cloth a dncool Kenney crash. Sizes 8 to
14. Your choice ... ./.... .j0j0 00,0.01. $5.95
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BS8GIHQUEEHQLDHINT
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I
“The Sam club is anxiously awaiting
an Invitation from supply men to attend
a mammoth seafood dinner with all the
trimmings—near beer—included, said
big Sam Fore, Jr., Floresville Chron-
icle-Journal, as he lounged in the par-
lors of Hotel Galvez Friday morning
waiting for the convention of the Tex-
as Press association to open. “What
I mean boy is the Sam club is waiting
patiently for this dinner, every one of
us, especially me,” he added.
Mr. Fore who weighs not less than
three hundred and not more than five
hundred pounds, was asked to eluci-
date.
“Listen Lester and learn,” Sam slow-
ly said. “The Sam club is a distinct
part of the Texas Press association.
We have Sam’s on every hand. Sam
Fore, that’s me, is president of the
club; Sam Miller, Mineral Wells is v. p.;
Sam Braswell, Clarendon, is secretary;
Sam Holloway, Deport, is treasurer;
Sam Chestnutt, Jr., son of the asso-
ciation president, is mascot and last
but not least, Sam Harben is our
worthy publicity man.”
There are twenty Sams who are
members of the association and all be-
long to the Sam club. Sam Fore, while
he will not admit it, is the biggest man
in the club. Sam Harben declared Sam
Fore was still young and had not at-
tained his full weight as yet.
Goldstream, Mel-
This group contains garden hats
of Silk and Georgette. Also
smaller sport models in an at-
tractive color assortment.
You will like the hats and price.
250 pairs seven styles. Men’s Walk-
Overs, in high and low cuts. Lasts
in semi-brogue models. Welt soles.
All up-to-date models. A good as-
sortment of sizes and widths.
M/
F (§3
beerde,.
By Associated Press.
San Diego, Cal., June 8.—With sev-
enteen new world’s records for sea-
planes, most of them in events never
before programmed, established he
by naval fliers Wednesday and yes-
terday, the schedule of tests had been
concluded today.
Several spectacular feats were wit-
nessed yesterday. Lieut. H. E. Ha -
land, piloting a plane of the coastal
mail type, lifted an extra weight of
4,400 pounds to a height of 5,200 feet.
The total weight of the machine and
load was 14,400 pounds. This record
flight was made with a liberty mo-
tor. . . .
Lieut. Ralph Ofstie, in a single-seated
T-5 battle plane, soared to a height
of 18,400 feet, where he encountered
a temperature of two degrees below
zero. The atmosphere was so rarified
that the air in the pontoons of the
machine was sucked out and when the
plane began to descend the exterior
pressure caved in the pontoons. Lieut.
Ofstie made an altitude record for a
machine of the type.
Lieut. Earl Brix, ascending in a tor-
pedo plane to 12,050 feet, carried an ex-
tra weight of 250 kilograms and thus
made a record. Several other naval
aviators made remarkable altitude
flights n planes burdened by heavy
weights.
The only speed test of the day, flown
in competition, was won by Boats-
wain E. E. Reber, who, piloting a tor-
pedo plane with a 400 horsepower lib-
erty motor, made an average time of
102.88 miles an hour for three different
laps.
Coombe Cottage,
bourne, Australia.
Strawberry Shortcake—A rich bis-
cuit dough is generally preferred for
shortcake, say four tablespoons of fat
to two cups of flour and a quarter of
a cup of sugar. An egg may be added if
desired. Four teaspoons .(level) baking
powder, one teaspoon salt and milk
enough to make a soft dough. I seldom
roll out shortcake dough. Put it on
the fl'ured boa.d and pat into a large
Wedding Cake—The real wedding
cake is not a fruit cake, as is general-
ly supposed, but a cake made of sever-
al cakes put together in steeple form-
each one smaller than the one below,
and held together with almond paste
and sugar icing. The cake itself is a
white cake or of the silver angle vari-
ety This makes a very elaborate look-
ing cake and for the bride who cuts the.
cake with her husband’s or father’s
swerd, as is frequently done at mili-
tary weddings, it calls for a good deal
of skill to make a clean cut without
disturbing the tower-like structure.
ond portion of salt and the pepper
chopped fine. Have casserole deep
enough so that the tomatoes will not
boil over. Bake one to one and a half
hours in a moderate oven. Serve on
platter with sauce poured over and
potatoes or cooked spaghetti or maca-
roni around it.
A
--8802*8
Overhanging trees and shrubbery
along various streets and alleys of
the city which interferes with the free
movement of traffic must be re-
moved.
This is the decree Of Ed M. Owens,
commissioner of streets and public
property, who declares he will invoke
the law in the event owners refuse to
co-operate.
“In many sections of the city trees
and plants have exerted such a tre-
mendous growth this season that over-
hanging branches interfere with not
only the movement of pedestrians, but
vehicles as well,” said Mr. Owens.
“Property owners have been requested
to co-operate with this department in
the general clean-up campaign and ply
the pruning knife where needed. There ,
are instances where no attempt at
trimming has been undertaken and we
again ask that citizens assist us as far
as possible before it becomes neces-
sary to adopt stern measures.”
Campbell’s Pork
and Beans -...... ... •
Armours Pure Washing
Soap, 2 bars for .. .0.0 ..
Moellers Macaroni
Sauce, one can t0a0o*Gata
Eagle Brand
Milk .......e---c'otazeceoge'e
Fresh Salt Pork
Pound ................
a «
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“Sam Club” is
Keenly Anxious
For Fish Dinner
Spanish Meat Balls en Casserole.. One
pound ground beef, one-half pound
ground porta, one cup crumbs, one
teaspoon salt, one-half teaspoon papri-
ka, one teaspoon parsley (finely chop-
ped). Sauce—One and one-half cups
cooked tomatoes, one-half teaspoon
salt, slice of green or red pepper chop-
ped’ fine. Mix together meat, crumbs,
salt paprika and parsley. Balls will
hold together better if the crumbs are
moist ned nd wrung dry. Shape into
about eight balls, rolling portion of
the mixture in the hands. Roll balls in
flour, brown in hot fat and place in a
covered casserole. add tomatoes, sec- l
», /
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By Associated Press.
Georgetown, Tex., June 8.—The pag-
eant of progress depicting the history
of Southwestern university, held on
the spacious lawn of the women’s build-
ing here at 6 o’clock Thursday eve-
ning was viewed by 8,000 persons from
all over Texas and especially from
the cities and towns of Central Texas j
Hearty applause greeted the review,
the scenes, costumes and performance
of which was arranged and directed by
Miss Laura Kuykendall, dean of wom-
en.
A great mass meeting in the audi-
torium of the administration building
—
Wllfd
battery HEADQUARTERS
Dixie Battery Shop
2210 Church Phone 6011
Scott KRmaee
Free Delivery
606 23rd Street
SUGGESTIONS.
. .When Making a Pudding—Always
grease basins, moulds, etc., to prevent
sticking. Leave a pudding to shrink a
few minutes before turning it out.
Loosen it gently from the sides of the
2 for 25c.
Early June Peas, 1 Qe
Small can.....................
Large can, 15c.
Tomatoes, fin
No. 1 .......... CV
No. 2, lies No. 3, 15c.
Clipper Corn, I Op
Large can .................—•V
2 for 25c.
Del Monte Peaches, .......21c
cake, or, if individual cakes are de-
sired of course roll out and cut With a
biscuit cutter. Bake in quick oven. Cut
in half, butter each half, cover one
with sweetened berries, lightly mashed,
if liked, put the other half on top and
serve with whatever the family like,'
cream and sugar, whipped cream, or
plain.
Breakfast.
Prunes.
Cereal and Cream.
Soft-boiled Eggs.
Muffins. Coffee.
5
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 166, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1923, newspaper, June 8, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1597079/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.