Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 104, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1919 Page: 3 of 12
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THREE
GALVESTON TRIBUNE.
THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1919.
Copyright 1919, The House of Kuppenheimer
cluding your clothes
You are
8 a. mn.. 75th
meridian time:
yester- last
night.
You want
young men.
your ap-
56
vail along the coast.
the new spirit of things.
50
A. IT. SCOTT.
the war.
70
***, 34
30
variations.
It won’t do for you, or for us.
70
All America knows the grow-
51
ing ascendency of Kuppen-
26
CHICAGO U. S. A
Kuppenheimer Clothes are Sold in Galveston by
In the New Spirit
of Things
.00
.10
68
48
last 24
hours.
Springfield, Mo. .
Swift Current ...
Tampa ..........
■ Taylor ..........
Vicksburg .......
Washington .....
Wichita .........
Williston........
Wilmington......
Winnemucca.....
Winnipeg .......
66
26
54
70
the month, 1.33 inch; accumulated ex-
cess of precipitation since Jan. 1, .81
inch.
day.
56
52
68
64
74
Del Rio .......
Denver .........
Des Moines .....
Dodge City ....
Edmonton ......
Fort Worth ....
Galveston ____..
Green Bay .....
Hatteras........
Helena ........
Houston ........
Huron..........
Jacksonville ....
Kansas City ...
Key West .....
Knoxville ......
Little Rock .....
Louisville ......
Macon ..........
Memphis .......
Miami ......___.
28
80
Precipi-
Highest Lowest tation
20
58
32
52
43
58
28
38
52
52-
56
36
32
40
44
54
50.
30
64
40
20
42
30
34
74
48
48
26
56
30
46
24
64
32
74
46
42
40
60
42
3 6
52
62
46
48
24
64
34
48
36
18
3 8
28
32
8
.00
.30
.08
1.40
.00
.00
.02
.00
.08
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.02
heimer Clothes for young men?
This is the fastest growing cloth-
ing business in America; more
than doubled in the last four years.
RRebtICohen
“Galveston's Accepted Style Shop for Men”
70
38
48
56
34
12
. 62
40
14
no longer buying “just clothes.”
It’s the way you look in your
clothes that interests you and her
and everybody.
.01
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.02
.00
.00
1.56
.00
.00
.30
.00
.00
.00
1.26
.00
1.62
1.08
.44
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.10
.30
.00
.06
.00
.00
.00
.14.
.00
.06
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
J. J. Schott Drug Co., and leading
druggists everywhere.—(Adv.)
It means the thing you have
been looking for and that you
will surely find at the “House
of Kuppenheimer Clothes'' in
this city and in every metro-
politan center in America.
St. Paul..:..
Minneapolis
Mobile .....
Modena .....
Montgomery
Nashville ...
New Orleans
New York .
North Platte
Oklahoma ..
Omaha .....
Palestine ...
Phoenix ....
Pittsburgh ..
Raleigh ....
Roswell ....
allow dealers to give you pills or tab-
lets. Insist on capsules.
Temperature.
Observation taken at
DERWILLO
Whitens the skin. Stays
on all day; instantly beau-
tifies the complexion. A
dip in the ocean will not
effect it. Not only abso-
lutely harmless, but is an
excellent tonic for the
skin. Druggists refund the
money if it fails.—Adv.
IERVOUSNESS
ON THE DECLINE
OU young men have a new
. slant on life and things, in-
She HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER
National Clothes Seroice
It’s a great thing to keep the
spirit of a business young. It
means vigor and vitality and
punch in the product. It means
grace and life in the design. It
means a happy creation of style
that reflects itself in a feeling of
confidence when you wear the
clothes.
The old idea, the old tune, is
something ’way back there before
You will see when you look
around that the height of most of
the clothes-making enterprise is
merely the old tune with
. 38
. 70
HUNS CAN’T DUMP
GOODS IN AMERICA
STOCK SALESMEN
DISGORGE GAINS
Alien Property Custodian
Issues Decision.
NAVAL SALVAGE.
Judge Recovers Money for
, Their Victims.
pearance to
be in tune with the new life and
. 62
. 62
. 76
Tobt I Cohen
0—7—
“Galveston’s Accepted Style Shop for Men”
.. 60
.. 68
.. 72
.. 58
.. 46
.. 52
. 66
.. 78
.. 70
Local Record.
Temperature and precipitation at
Galveston for twenty-four hours end-
ing at 7 a. m. today:
Maximum temperature, 70 degrees;
minimum temperature, 49 degrees;
mean temperature, 60 degrees, which is
5 degrees below the normal; accumu-
lated deficiency of temperature since
first of month, 42 degrees; accumulated
deficiency since Jan. 1, 114 degrees.
Total precipitation, .01 inch, which is
.06 inch below the normal; accumulated
deficiency of precipitation since first of
St. Louis ........56
Salt Lake City ... 60
These Men Will Want Civilian Clothes
in Tune With the Times and New Spirit
Weather Conditions
(Data furnished by U. S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture Weather
Bureau.)
directed that his wife come too, but
she was not present.
“When I told her you wanted her in
court, Judge, it made her sick,” said
Cohen. At this point the deputy mar-
shal turned in a munition bond for
$1,000 and a liberty bond for $100 which
he obtained at Cohen’s home.
"I am convinced now that the com-
pany was a fake,” said Cohen nervous-
ly.
"Now comes Mr. Cohen, voluntarily,”
said Judge Landis with marked irony,
"and offers to let go of this money,
The court accepts.”
Hyman W. Wold, whose commission
amounted to $612, wanted to compro-
mise with the court.
“What property have you, anyway?”
asked the judge.
“I have only $650 cash, $150 in lib-
erty bonds and $125 in thrift stamps.
Its all I have,” pleaded the salesman.
“Why, goodness gracious, that’s more
than I’ve got," said the court. "Sit
down and think it over. We want it
all.'
Doctors Encouraged, They
Hold Out Hope for All
“Nothing wrong but my nerves". We
hear it at home, at work and every-
where. Certainly, nervousness is a dis-
ease. A man or woman might better
have a broken leg than a shattered, run
down nervous system.
Overwork and worry drains the
nerve cells and centers of all their
strength and vitality, then you get
your sleepless nights, poor blood, ner-
vousness, worry and fear. The better
doctors of today know just what to do
in cases of this kind. A few weeks’ use
of Phosphated Iron rarely fails to
strengthen and feed the Phosphate-
hungry nerve centers. 1
Phosphated Iron certainly does ' take
hold. The way the majority of pa-
tients come back is remarkable.
What a change in appearance, too.
The cheeks become filled out and flush-
ed with the healthy ruddy glow that
only pure, red ironized blood can give,
eyes sparkle, their step has the spring
and swing of youth and their whole
system seems to be alive with energy
and good spirits.
Mr. Nervous Man or Woman, Phos-
phated Iron will do all this for you if
you will give it a chance. Do not drag
around, all in and half dead another
day when help is so near. Get busy!
and be a live one once again!
Weather Conditions.
Rains were general during the last
twenty-four hours in the cotton region
east of the Mississippi river, being es-
pecially heavy at points in Tennessee
and Alabama. The rains extended north-
ward over the’Ohio valley. A few
showers were also reported in the Tex-
as coast section, and it is raining on
the California coast. Elsewhere faii-
weather prevailed. Mild temperatures
are noted in the more eastern districts,
but there has been a fall in tempera-
ture in the western lake region, the
Mississippi, Lower Ohio and Lower Mis-
souri valleys, and the greater portion
of the Middle and West Gulf states,
frost being reported in Oklahoma and
at points in Northern Texas.
The indications are for fair weather
in this vicinity tonight and Friday,
with slowly rising temperature. Light
northeast to southeast winds will pre-
San Antonio .
San Diego ..
San Francisco
Santa Fe ..
Savannah ....
Seattle ......
Sheridan ....
Shreveport ..
Forecast Till 7 p. m. Friday.
For Galveston and vicinity: Fair to-
night and Friday. Slowly rising tem-
perature.
For East Texas: Fair tonight and
Friday; slowly rising temperature; frost
in exposed places in northeast portion
tonight.
For W est Texas: Fair tonight, warm-
er. Friday, fair; warmer, except in
southeast portion.
For Oklahoma: Fair tonight and
Friday; rising temperature. Frost in
east portion tonight.
Winds on Texas coast: Light north-
east to southeast.
By Associated Press.
Washington, March 27. — German
hopes of reconquering American mar-
kets received another blow today. Users
of dyes, chemicals, fertilizers and oth-
er products originated by German sci-
ence were notified by the alien prop-
erty custodian that importations from
Germany hereafter would be subject
to prosecution as infringement of pat-
ents licensed under the trading-with-
the-enemy act for use by American
manufacturers.
Possibility of a dumping of great
surplus stocks which Germany was
reported to have accumulated with the
intention of underselling and perhaps
stifling the infant American industries
in the same line thus has been blocked
effectually before shipments could be-
gin. Government officials regarded the
decision as of far-reaching importance
to business in this country. The deci-
sion was announced in a letter from
Alien Property Custodian Garvan to
Burwell S. Cutler, chief of the bureau
of foreign and domestic commerce.
Abilene .....
Amarillo ....
Atlanta .....
Augusta, Ga.
Birmingham.....66
Brownsville .....84
Calgary .........36
Charleston ......68
Chicago .........56
Corpus Christi .. 78
Dallas.............
It is more than a A House Of
YoungMen’s House Young Men
— it is a house of
By Associated Press.
Chicago, March 27.—Judge Landis’
drive to recover money for deluded in-
vestors who bought stock of the Con-
turners Packing Company continued,
with a perturbed lot of stock salesmen
and sub-salesmen in court. The judge
Was alternately ferocious, ironical, sar-
castic, but always insistent. It did not
matter whether the agent had spent
his commission—the court would ac-
rept anything that was left, or could
be turned into money. He was not
averse to installment payments, as in
the case of John Markel, janitor.
Markel, it appeared, was a janitor
who was acquainted with a widowed
waitress, one Mrs. Kate Schmidt, and
as a sub-agent Markel persuaded her
to invest her entire savings of $665 in
the company. Judge Landis ordered
the janitor salesman to turn in the en-
tire sum to the court" on the install-
ment plan, as Markel had no money.
Harry Cohen, a salesman who was in
To insure doctors and their patients
court but demurred at returning $3,700 i getting the genuine Phosphated Iron
which was the price of stock that was ' we.have.nut in casulesonthedoans
sold, was again present. The court had
Novel Example Now On Duty With the
British Fleet.
Washington. March 27.—A novel ex-
ample of naval salvage is now on duty
with the British fleet in H. M. S. Zu-
bian, an almost modern destroyen,
which instructure as well as in name
is successor of two destroyers damaged
during the war.
When H. M. S. Nubian was run down
and almost cut in half, it was learned
today at the navy department, the
after portion of the ship, less than two-
thirds of the original vessel, was
brought into port and the work of re-
building undertaken. Before great
progress had been made, however, the
destroyer Zulu, a sister ship, was simi-
larly run down and more than a third
of her stern sheared away.
The British engineers were prompt .
to see the opportunity, and within a
short time the stern of the Nubian had
been compined with the undamaged
bow of the Zula and the complete de-
stroyer launched and commissioned as
the Zubian.
TSERETELLIS REQUEST.
Asks Peace Congress to Grant Recog-
nition to Georgia.
Paris, March 27.—-M. Tseretelli, who
was president of the first soviet sys-
tem in Russia before the bolshevik
revolution there, has presented to the
peace conference a request on behalf
of Georgia that recognition be given
that country, which he represents as an
independent republic and "bulwark
against bolshevism.”
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 104, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1919, newspaper, March 27, 1919; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1618636/m1/3/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.