The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 189, Ed. 1 Monday, June 17, 1918 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Matagorda County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.
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The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■EW4l-
■■
—
fr
She
1
BUU1-
1!
of
trend
nd
our
at *
r J
tai
<1
nut
nt
should that
)er
uin
ir
work
mi
-
de pen
and everything that goes with it
have
11!
I
threat
f the
ri
t
n
n
and
CH
yr.
h
f.
m
per
n
Get O U Prices
done
ent
interned
timh
ilr
re
I'K H I It t IIIHit T
F
to th*1
tai
ut
and we’-I get
her share
Sa
Till KI !
In
of razor
II
k Ind*
for
e girl with a cute I
url
on i
YOUR Business
•url. I
hl
a nd
the
*
1 "
VOtcO
from
A
niello wy
1 \i:w
Je we/e r
Alamo Lumber
the
in
on
J
Company
in
once
The Daily Tribune <
f Bay
her
llttfOl (l
1 In
Every buy Except Sunday
I'uldlrbed
John Sutherland, Mgr.
Phone 23
>
MJ
We
Editor and Bun. Mgt
CAREY
SMITH
. x.~- ~~
Carload of
a
We
BUICK Automobiles
before ’
of
a
of
i letieral
SI 50
Year
One
ill <<ot hurt
Some of the (lernian
papers
among .
f
S. C. CREECH
If. F. IMHKSIH
bought before we had
I ho
KEII \k-IO\ES.
w* •
a
to
BUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS NOW
W
and |
of
War Savings Stamps
better than
are
money in the pocket-book
Li
PRICES FOR JUNE:
worth
FIRST NATIONAL BANK BAY CITY BANK & TRUST CO
FIRST STATE BANK
=
—~
fc 3
1
__
»bav«<
•n4* with
o:i m Hm
rnou
the .
Ever-Ready
Safety Razors
i have q lite a number of used cars which
I offer at a bargain. All in good condition
One
Mix
Buy War Si
Stump
Buy War Savior*
Stamps
never
blow
I X»t
Buy War Havlth
Stamp*
In mui
human
» ptlllK
cause
I li<*
Now
times
the
URO
It
you
w i n
worth
worth
»
a
da
•a r
to
for next
rk
t<
wintry
naught
.. 417.00
, ... S3.40
BUICK
Dealer
• <ll
va
bl
on
J
■ I
I
1
-----o—o---
Buy War Savings Stamps. .
I Ilk 1 It I III M. Pit I >11 Mi < tiHP AAV
I'uhlixlierx
11 on
2 01!
in
but
any
, of
it
situation
■t Ion
ifl.IHMI.IHI
500.00
100.00
for...
for...
for...
W Ill'll
look
year
hould
* '1
ba
th
Is
l"
' I
III
wd
m rt
1
wnw
Pat
naked
eight
the
r
girl.
—o—o—..—..... ~
pi. or fob Ft hr tn.
flare:
s the
self.
I'm.I
< in
SI IIM KII’ I |O> RAUH:
The Hall) Tribune
Yaut ... ........ ...
Month* ..................
gfcM *
• method of
f thu coun-
.......gMEMB
P3:
» ,
it by the time J Ou her
over Attorne
e rendered hi
iffraij
is said
in
<• tic
An eye
he riff
uild B
AR Sayings Stamps represent the highest and best form of Government
security offered to the people today. They bear four per cent interest
compounded quarterly and mature January 1, 1923. Stamps may be cash-
ed at the postoffice at anytime on ten days notice with three per cent sim-
ple interest for the time outstanding. They are exempt from all taxation, except
super income and inheritance tax. They may be registered at the postoffice in
your own name without any charge as a protection against loss.
The MntaRordii County Tribune
(Weekly!
B.
in
parsonage
I planning for
I txtudlv like an .'
Pershing ohjorti*
from home so ns
| I'ram'f he
•Id
In addition to this Ger
estates in the United I
representing millions upon top
stocks of cop
turn
11. nry
a repilldl-
ca!.ira< t
safety razor. «
Thrift Stamp
to be
That’s
General
away
is ho got to
situation, de-
set a time
G. Secrest,
JUST Received
Sunday afternoon, Rev. J. P. Gilliam
officating The ceremony was wit-
nessed by a few friends.
yourself
our
PEW
def«
or gr
def
Huy you a
and buy
money
Blades
a lock
g
sincere, bon
be will amo
followed bv
work
, for that Is her "t»lr..”
di of the land:
fir rumors ami fires I
pi;1, through her.
LUMBER^
I mt men t
In my new place of business, formerly oc-
cupied by Jno. A. Crawford
pomp
lion, as
A )>hi ger he is
\ plueger for
any
is their long
Pershing
! men lookout for
march to Beilin.
I
f
If you’re on the lookout for
medium weight work »hoe that Will give •
ccptional comfort and wear, get a pair
50/ T \.N1) GOOD
SHOES
<1 Neat looking, easy wearing
or burn the fr«-t. You know how romfort-
al4a shore help you get through your work
M. Built <4 wound, honest bather the strong -
cat kind aewing. A layer <»f ground cork
mi<l rubber cement between outer and inner
aolra keep* out dampness.
stands at the center, both
mer and winter.
And directs the
tii
ItbU’H
he i»
I
uro
rcuimning along very sune lines They
foresee and foretell disaster for Ger
many from a commerciul point of
view, some of them even going a i far
us to say that this has already liven
Now let uh see how
In their analysis of
they are Preshlvnt
I Several days uro this paper called
‘lie attention of its readers to the
po dlillity of the reha bil it .it ion of the
Ifni lun army under the German gov-
'•inment and predl' ted that It would
I be reorganized and officered by Ger-
man <>’*i<<'rs in which pvent that
which was once our ally
uni be'in to fight
associated pros
di.svlm'ed the f;ict that thia
is now being done .lapan’a
seems Inevlt-
intr rest ing I
to pull i
prittv
i When
Pershing
vli'tori, in I9l!»
American
to staying
i soon
ized up the
I on what he had to do
to complete lite iob ami will deliver it
properlv finished on time
iIrocts
uriits.
her, alas
• uiners of the
in many of hix
I one liumati being
bunds pulls the sti)
posts several fed
wire h< Is pulling
| dvr the ground ii
<ill right enough
chapter said he did it
rtiti't be did, not by any one man who
has ever lived from Sant-on on down
to pet Brown
Ev<
to the
for pu
>een terlivtli
. If we
haver it in t
it M
that spaikies with fire
• lie an-wvr- tlie call of the great
and the small
That perchance comes
wire
t*>r w*> it
annot du thi
n to realize
es( w
»», From I
san Obtain
■ i lean I Her
' war, too
rnt rcnchi’d
iuad
A cute little girl urn! u dear little
Be it brown, or yellow, or red
it»
event
would be-1 a hearer of hears.
And calls that
hand.
hre not an alarmi t by
. but if the republican party
had the right leadership
IntereHf Inp
flection Hoot
off and sav
Just re-
Prmddcnt AA’ilsnn
Inst week indorsed
Henry Ford It*
yOli see the
If Kaiser Bill llapaburg Hohtnzol-1
rn could only • >«< bis blood shot I
w over the verdant fields of Texas I
aw and see the magnificent crop*!
in!
city
lieot'le than now
WU needed more extended
never has tlwre been a
continued, virile
ould have done
now Wh arc
very promising
way of
mt art-
accomplished
nearly correct
the situation
Wilson act out to crush the German
elements commercially uh well ua
from a military standpoint, knowing
thnt Getinanx could never recover
from u well delivered blow upitlnst
such vital ipmrterH la>t uh sec how
Mi< ceHsful PreMident AA’ihion has been
In delivering thin blow The (lermati
press in the I nlte.l StntoM Ih nlreudy
crushed The greater part of the
German hi hoots are closed The Ger
man HMMiu-latlojiH are having to strip
themselves of all veatlges of German
lam Insofar :ih iIiIh Ih concerned It
it all a complete debacle and far
reaching If Germany has gained (
any military victories upon which she
can rely they have been completely
overcome and balanced by the adroit.
> oinmerh'.iI vi. torien attained bv
President Wilson Put this in not all
tin- torv After the war Germans
sill no longer lu< aide to enter Amer I
na. the Hamburg American mid North
Grrm.n Lloyd lines are entered In the
"td'n k biMik.” Shipbuilding yards and
office- have been sold with it prohlbl
tion ng linHt reselling to Germany j
after the war Amt now the Great j
American pre-s speaks of forbidding:
Gernetns to buy shipbuilding (yards
President Wilsnn has ended German
cirtnmerco in the I nited States
fvrhaps in the whole of the Western (
Hemisphere
•tan owned
Stater
millions of dollnrn
per nickel cotton, leather and chem-l
teal products, all war necessities, have .
’•een seized and utilized to fabricate:
American war materials upon the or
der of President Wilson When there
fore. «e view with alarm ot apprehen-
sion tlie military Muccettses of Ger- ■
many, even though we do so from the
German point of view, that Is taking
alt their claim* for granted we should
take Into consideration (he great com-
mercial victory already won by our.
president German' merely sought
suicide and President Wilson produc-,
ed the mean* a half century will t>e
required to put Germany back. If In-
deed, she can ever cotne back
Entereil uh second cluse matter at
the posluffica In Bay t'ity under u< l
of Congress
Mr. F. J. Relink and .Alisa Clara
Line up and sign up on national war Jones of Wadsworth were united
savings day. marriage at the Baptist
H an;
eeps to her line While we fight
on the Rhine
helps the good jo
rws how 1
blanket
narratives
with hiH
• les otit Of
when
inches nn
Hre puller
last
<! When we mv they
SI AH BRAND *
StlOfCS you know the
value.
ten our land we
Ilers in the I ntU
best Informattoi
many Is otijcctini
»rt
Sometime ago v asked why tt war,
that the inactive allies of the world '
were not In the war with their man:
power. Only recentlv military writ '
ers are showing the need <>f this very
thing and pointing out the value of
Japan’s entry from the oust as •
friend Instead of an enemv of Russia
The war will take on a different caste
the moment Japan and Chinn begin
to mobilize at Vladivostok We can
think of no greater stroke for victory
than this, for Japan is fresh, power-
ful «nd anxious to come in The Rus-
sian situation Is looking much more j
encouraging, and there l« hut little |
douH but that Japan will swing west-
ward aw soon as she Is convinced that
whatever she shall find to do will
met with Russia’s approbation It's
s «1nw nrnrpHs. hot the pendulum Is
•winging tMs time toward Berlin
All hall to the ,-irl with the wonderful
curl,
No matter the color or hue.
Who does this great work without
whimper or shirk
For the Red. the White
Blue.
I The telephone
nature and : ________________
mm I fil'd crawl out from under the
bushel of penury ami settle down
Eight times the Huns have
UKithi i the .Americans ami
limes they nave been defeated
washing in tiny game
Aineri, Ulis
Getter .1
lookout
c<>< ir our enem
tv Yesterday’•*
di“patehe:
ver. thhr
entry into the war now
a hie.
Your common sense will tell you !
that yon cannot buy now all the tilings |
a war to :
Your buying must be restricted ,
■ nd your savings invested in war sav-
ings stamps.
menns
Texas
iould cause an
before th,- No* euiiier
mon! Now don’t go
•ire against tlm government
member that
only
and
Can’t
>11 ihe.nl ’
f»r service is true and
through and through,
Without any
loyal dev
•wean.
Give- all that she has a
gone
eight
White-
phtyed by !
suit. When
gets his million
straightforward
Scenario writers, playwrights ami
dramatic critics have many times
wagged their heads In despair and
declared, "There are no new plots.
All of the great themes in the world
i have been exhausted Give us some :
tiling new! Love and war and the
domestic triangle: oppression, crime,
■ tories of detectives and the wild I
west everything has been done What I
“iein we do that is different?” 2
Some time ago 1) AV Griffith, who I
is now an Artcraft producer, demon- I
' ■ trated the fact that there is some- ■
th.inc new under the sun of dramatic '
themes by producing a stupendous j
| film based on the theme of Intoler- j
iinee through the ages Now comes >
Cecil DcMillo and the Lanky Company
introducing Geraldine Farrar in a big i
theme >nd a mw one Superstition
■ systematic bus!net*-Ilk
letting the other parts «
Nover la-fun- tn the history
l if) t,.< (he future been more propi
tloiiH th.m now Never botoie has
there been a better reason or a more
convincing general condition for uc-
Itive work to plan* this city before the
eyes of outside peof.le than
Never have
publicity nor
time when publH ity
and strong publicity
more good than tight
entering a lull of a
year ami what is done in the
publicity should he done wit!
other moment's hesitation
reaching that time of the
people everywhere begin
ut>oi)l timl make plans
Bin I'll* and Matagorda I 'minty
be placed before those people without
aliotfior day's delay II , ill <uil> be'
done l,v a campairii ol intelligent ad
vertlsiinf The cilv rhould, at Illis
moment, be currying live wile awake
ohI'lti nient i in both I’ho I’ally and
Weekly Tribune ami di tributiio'. well
written well printed and well worded
literature over all the counit'* !••»• it .
I imt>"H ible Io tin Hie coveted i ll !
In any enlerptd <• without ailverft dug
There In no ea e on record wher. ntiv
thin.' w :i • ai compll' bed oth- rw l e, -.i,
if we reiillv wunl l>» for ••• to
front and Heeuro (tie ver* be t re will ;
from concerted and honest efforts
--------------° °............—
lining l.'urope for three and a half
months on fifty dollars was one ofj
Douglas Fairbunks "stunts" 1
lie undertook to enteriatn millions of,
screen fans with his unique feats i
Being robbed and left alone in an i
Arizona desert, In the Triangle play,
The Lamb," was a comparaf Ivelv >
simple situation, for he couldn't spend '
i cent if he had It He did have i
plenty of excitement, however, dis
Pitting the right of way with a hun-
gry wolf and other animals,
them a vicious mountain lion
4
1
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 189, Ed. 1 Monday, June 17, 1918, newspaper, June 17, 1918; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1292839/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.