Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 209, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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The
Best Rescind
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Bisorte
C. W. Strain, G. P. A.
FORT WORTH
.4* «K«r» f*43Mh,4«Srf*>. ra
THE RIGHT ROAD
ARE YOU
“A few ? ? ? may save you
307 Tremont St.
Phone 250
“Demand the Best—We Beat the Rest”
Made the St. Lawrence river trip?
Seen the Niagara Falls?
The cool resorts of Wisconsin?
Visited the cool resorts of Michigan?
Taken the Hudson river boat trip?
SB”-?
a few ? $ $.*
“Talk it Over” with Johnston
Going to cool Colorado, St. Louis, Kan-
sas City, Chicago, St. Paul, Detroit,
Cincinnati, Buffalo, New York ct
Canada?
to
M.
rr
General
Agt.
SMILE
Seahoard Fire and
Marine Insurance
Through Sleeper
From Galieston
Denver, Cob.
(via Fort Worth)
to
St. Louis, Mo.
(via Dalias)
WITH DINING CAR SERVICE
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Company
Often 3109! MtiranO* PUeno IttOO.
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SU^ER EXCURSION RATES
573.70 Boston and Return.
$75.00 New York and Return.
501.75 California and Return.
$33.05 St. Louis and Return.
$42.95 Chicago and Return.
On Sale to Sept. 30, Inclusive.
For Further Information and
Sleeper Reservation Call
CITY TICKET OFFICE,
Phone S7. 403 Tremont St,
C. H. COMPTON, C. T. A.
J. H. MILLER, D. P. A.
'©©©©®®©©©©©©©©©®C®©©®©©®0
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§
And feel the se^tisfaction which pro-
tection by fire insurance affords. A
little economy here, a little saving
there and the premiums on a good
fire policy are paid, and you’ll have
something with which to begin over
again if your property, real or per-
sonal, is burned. Have this home
company write your policies. Losses
paid with exceeding promptitude.
Naumann,
to
San Antonio, Tex.
(via Houston)
vSx
’xTuTTsPA
. /'OTLBUffWIHel 1
i I LOC2K?V£S f i
73* i
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PRELIMINARIES
DOUBLE HEADER
THE ROAD TO HEALTH
IN BOAT RACE
WITH BUFFALOS
over
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SULPHUR
lo
perverting
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All Yaar’RoundHeaith Resort
4
Wriie for Ftee Illustrated Literature.
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MAKES LONG SWIM.
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Totals
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Burton,
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BRIEF BITS OF WIT
well,
doe-
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Among other things he ad-
“Do as I say,”
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team
BERLIN.
REACHES
3 27 21
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Totals .
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tournament of
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4:10 a. m
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and
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Arrive.
13:15 p. m.
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6:15 a. m
>
Motor Craft Will Compete For
Honor of Defending British Cup
Next Saturday.
bet-
natured
Galveston Takes the First and
Gives Away Second Game.
Were Poor Contests.
a
drink.
5:00 p. m
7:00 p. m
8:00 p. m.
3:00 p. m.
Arrive.
Where They Play Today.
Galveston at Houston.
San Antonid at Austin.
Shreveport at Fort Worth.
Waco at Dallas.
Changes Tomorrow.
Fort Worth at Galveston.
Waco at Houston.
Shreveport at Austin.
Dallas at San Antonio.
1
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4
1
1
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Two-base
Badger.
2
2
2
0
1
3
2
0
0
1
2
2
1
6
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
4
0
0
0
1
0
1
Arrive.
0:30 a. m.
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0
0
1
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3
4
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4
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Depart.
7:00 p. m..
4:10 a. m.
Broke.
48
69
118
81
41
75
74
56
49
49
41
40
31
59
0
1
0
0
0
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Galveston Brewing Co.
4 Phone 710
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8
8
9
Arrive.
7:45 a. m.
6:30 p. m.
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52
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51
37
41
35
SPRINGS, ARK,
“The Beauty Spot of the Ozarks”
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.533
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.500
.471
s. g. Hopkins,
d. p. a., k. c. s. RD.
TEXARKANA, TEXAS,
S. G. WARNER,
G. P. A., K. C. S. RY.,
KANSAS CITY, MO,
.. 5
. . 5
. . 4
.. 4
r?
ill
uMM
By innings—
Houston .....
Hits
Galveston ....
Hits .......
0 1
0
1
0
0
3
3
1
0
0
0
1 .
0 15
2
3
1
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me
Then he
‘Page 90,’ he added,
of numbah foah and one out of numbah
two.”
Jp’
642
640
525
515
505
500
423
357
... 4
.. . 3
.. . 4
... 3
... 3
... 3
... 4
.. . 3
.. . 4
.... 1
THE SAME NUMBER.
Gladstone, a Jamaican negro, was
assistant to a district physician in the
Canal Zone, and, being rather poor in
his Latin, the bottles had been num-
1
1
Results Yesterday.
Galveston 5, Houston 4 (first game);
Houston 16, Galveston 2 (second game).
Fort Worth 4, Shreveport 0 (first
game); Fort Worth 3, Shreveport 0
(3£cond game).
San Antonio 9, Austin 4 (first game) ;
San Antonio 6, Austin 3 (second game).
Dallas 6, Waco 0 (first game); Waco
10, Dallas 3 (second game).
KGS Ry
Uh Vb til l
Passed balls—Dawson, White (2).
Tiipe of game—1.45.
Umpire—Spencer.
Otto, 1 clipped
a newspaper. It
i as an ad-
6:30 p. m.
. . .Southern Pacific New Orleans connection 13:40 a. m.
.Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only) 9:55p.m.
. .Galveston Sea Wall Special (Sunday only) 2:35p. in.
INTERNATIONAL ANn GREAT NORTHERN.
.. .Galveston-St. Louis Fast Mail.
....St. Louis and Main Line Local
Fort Worth Division
The suggestion to'Go’js
unnecessary to the tho-
usand s who have been-
but is urged upon others
in their own behalh
Major League Results.
Results Saturday:
National—Pittsburg 7, New York 2.
Rain prevented games scheduled at
the other places.
American—St. Louis 5. Washington 2;
Detroit 5, New York (j; Boston 3, Cleve-
land 1: Chicago 12, Philadelphia 2.
Results yesterday:
American—St. Louis 8, Washington 3;
Chicago 2, Philadelphia 1; Detroit 8,
New York 2,
National—No games schedule^,
Clubs—
San Antonio.
Dallas
Houston . . . .
Fort Worth.
■lare°vepo-r-f-.-.
Galveston . .
Austin
New $75,000 Kihlberg Hotel
will soon be open. $200,000
in other improvements now
in progress will afford modern
accommodations at this
Illustrated booklets are
free and The Denver Road’
(TheHighland Highway) is
Shortest Quickest, and aff-
ords HewlyEcuiped Double
Daily Thru Trains with
wining and Cafe Carsand
Palace Sleepers.
The Great Colorado Chau-
tauqua, at Boulder, opens
July 4th, for a six weeks
FeUa3t.a lntel,®ctual
'^L
w
i
4
Totals
GALVESTON—
Riley, If
Epler, cf
Smith, ss
Weikart, lb. ...
White, c
Burton, 2b
Badger, 3b
Hickey, rf
Yerkes, p
fl
Ho other Section is so gio-
riously-deiightful oraffords
sack numerous and varied at-
tractions.-with great
giving elements as CwvL"
COLORADO”
Clubs—
Seaboards 15
E. S. Levys 16
Wholesalers ... 16
K.-M 17
... 5
... 5
... 4
.. . 3
... 2
.. . 1
... 3
. . . 4 1
...4 1
doubles tennis
begins at Longwood
Trial races of the Motor
America.
• 1
lit-
■■
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1
AB.R.BH.PO. A. E.
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bered for his benefit, says the Argon-
aut. One day a Spanish laborer came
in for medicine, and the doctor told his
worthy assistant to give him two pills
out of number six. After he .had gone
the doctor asked: “Gladstone, did you
give the man a dose of number six?”
“Oh, no, sah, doctor; numbah six was
finished, so I just give him one pill out
SCHEDULED OF-' THE
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAINS
To and From the Galveston Station, Northwest Corner Stiand anti 25th St.
—
Depart. GULF. COLORADO SANTA FE. Arrive.
8:05 a. m.... ..Houston-Galveston Special (Sunday only)...... 9:50 p.m.
6:40 a. in Kansas City-Chicago Express Dally 10:25 p.m.
1:30 p. m.... Houston-Galveston Expr?ss Daily 3:20p.m.
Houston-Galveston Special Sundays 2:30p.m.
5:00 p. m.. Southern Pacific (east bound) and H. & T. C. con-
nection. P., H. & T. C.. S. A. & a. P„ E. E. & W. T. con-
nection ....Daily 8:45a.m.
5:40 p. in.... ....Main Line Local Dally 10:35a. m
6:45 p. m Galveston-St. Louis Limited, via Houston.Daily 0:25a.m.
10:05 p. m Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only) 10:15a. ni.
Depart. GALVESTON, HOUSTON «fc HENDERSON. Arrive.
4:10 a. m.. Southern Pacific east bound and H. &T. C. connection 8:45 p.m.
8:30 a. m.H. & T. C. and Southern Pacific westbound connection
4:30 p. m . .
10:20 p. m . .
0 5
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food quite
as a drink. The in-
creasing consumption of beer
has been marked by a steady
falling off in the
use of spirituous
liquors which lure
men into sottish-
ness and influence J
them
Where beer is drunk there is
order presiding over good
nature.
Beer is a food. It rein-
forces bodily tissues instead
of disintegrating them.
New Yorker Is Prevented From Getting
Record by Tide.
By Associated Press.
New York, July 27.—A swim of more
than 12 miles was made yesterday by
W. J. Duffy, a well known deputy in
the internal revenue department.
Duffy’s swift swim began at the Brook-
lyn bridge and ended a mile off Coney
Island in the face of a heavy tide that
swept in from the lower bay.
Saturday’s storm had stirred up the
^Atlantic and as a savage tide was run-
ning all day, against which it was diffi-
cult even for launches to set their
noses, and as a result Duffy’s attempt
to make a record swim had to be aban-
doned after he had forced his way
along for 4 hours and 20 minutes.
Mr. Duffy, who is 55 years old, only a
few years ago swam from the Brooklyn
bridge to three miles beyond Shoals
Light, 10 y2 miles, in a hours and 15
minutes, and on a pleasant afternoon,
as a joke on some of the members of
the Crescent Athletic club, swam from
the club landing to Norton’s Point, more
than three miles, fully clad, including
shoes and hat.
ImII
Results Saturday.
Fort Worth 2, Shreveport 1
innings).
Dallas 1, Waco 0.
San Antonio-Austin game postponed,
rain.
Houston-Galveston game postponed,
rain.
AB.R.BH.PO. A. E.
' ~ ' 3
0
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AB.R.BH.PO. A. E.
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AB.R.BH.PO. A. E.
. . . 4
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strict and
Once, when I was a boy
him.
He as usual looked closely into the
book’s condition before marking it off
on my card.
“ ‘Page 89,’ - he said, glaring at
over his spectacles, ‘a hole.’
turned the leaf,
‘another hole.’
♦Batted for Hickey in ninth.
By innings—
Houston
, Hits
Hits'7“ ..'.'.’.'
Stolen bases—Shelton, Wallace, Jack-
son.
Sacrifice hit—Wood.
Double play—Badger to Burton
Weikart.
Bases on balls—Aiken, Shelton.
Struck out—Mowry, Riley, Weikart,
White, Yerkes, Epler, Whiteman.
Wild pitch—Tevis.
Time of game—-2.30.
Umpire—Spencer.
THE GUN CLUB.
Interesting Shoot Held Saturday Even-
ing on Denver Beach.
An interesting and well attended
meeting of the .Galveston . Gun Club
took place Saturday evening on Den-
ver Beach at which were present a
number of visitors. The high score of
the day was by Mr. Spink of the Peters
Cartridge Company, who scored forty-
eight birds out of a possible fifty.
The following is the score:
Shot at.
. . 50
. . 75
. . 125
. . 100
. . 50
. . 100
. . 100
. . 75
. . 75
. . 75
.. 75
. . 75
.. 50
. . 100
♦Replaced Aiken in seventh inning.
♦♦Replaced Shelton in sixth inning.
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SUMMARY.
hits—Truesdale,
Depart.
2:40 p. m....... .
MERCHANTS’ LEAGUE.
Standing o£ Clubs.
Games. Won. Lost. Per ct.
8
8
8
8
Standing of Clubs.
----Games----
Played. Won. Lost. Per ct.
61
62 ■
I
State f
at Austin. Midsummer tourna-
of Michigan Whist association
at St. Clair. Annual tournament
Ifs a grand kaleidoscopic
wonder, filled with
hii Mountain-Glens, Rivulets,
Cascades,Lakes and Vistas
cf Everlasting Snow, arr-
ording numerous Modern
essss^s?
se s*
Mowry, If. .
McCully, 2b.
Wood, c. ....
Tevis, p. ...
Sports for the Week.
Monday—Eastern
championship-
Cricket club.
Boat club of America. Opening of
grand circuit race meeting at Detrdif.
Annual tournament of Mississippi State
Chess association at Castalian Springs.
Philadelphia cricketers vs. Northamp-
tonshire at Northampton. Annual cruise
of St. Louis Power Boat associati-ori.
Tuesday—"Annual 1 - . - -
Texas State Sportsmen’s association . Shelton, Weikart,
opens ' ’ '' —
ment
opens
of Minnesota Golf association opens at
Minikahda. ,
1 Wednesday—Opening of four days’
trotting and pacing-meeting at Spring-
field, Ill. Opening of horse shows at
Long Branch, N. J., and Charlottesville,
Va. Opening of Point Judith Country
club polo tournament at Narragansett
Pier. Annual regatta of Lakewood
Yacht club of Cleveland, O.
Thursday—Opening of eleven days’
race meeting at Saratoga Springs. Phil-
adelphia cricketers vs. Surrey, at the
Oval, London.
Friday—Sam Langford vs. Tony
Ross, TO rounds,- at Bath Beach, N. Y.
Annual regatta of Canadian Association
of Amateur Oarsmen at St. Catherines,
Ont.
Saturday—Annual regatta of South-
western Amateur Rowing association at
St. Louis. Motor boat race for the
Marmsworth cup on Huntington bay,
Long Island sound. Annual regatta of
the Canadian Association of Amateur
Oarsmen at St. Cathernies, Ont.
of disintegrating them. It
soothes the nerves rather than
racks them. It helps the
mental faculties instead of
distorting and perverting
them. All these assertions
need no proof stronger than
the results of ordinary obser-
vation.’
“Well, sir, I don’t know
who Mr. Reedy is, but he
certainly hit the nail on the
head. When a beer is made
right and is pure and mel-
low—like this High Grade—
it will do all that and more
for a man. I have noticed
that among my customers .
the beer drinkers are in
ter health, better
and brighter than all the
others. ’ ’
“Mr. Reedy is
learned man, Otto, and he
wouldn’t say a thing like
that unless he had observed,
too, and knew what he was
talking about. And I have
found that virtually all broad
minded and intelligent men
agree with just what he said. ’ ’
Beer That’s
Liquid Food
. . . 95
. . .. 97
. . .. 99
. . .101
. . .101
:... 96
. . . 97
. . . 98
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____0 1 001 040 1
Galveston 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2— 5
....100010001
SUMMARY.
Two-base hit—White.
Stolen bases—Mowry, McCully, Mc-
Farland, Truesdale, Aiken.
Sacrifice hits—Mowry, Epler, Kane.
Double plays—Hise to Weikart to
Badger, McFarlahd to Shelton, Hickey
to Badger to Smith, Hise to Burton to
Weikart.
Bases on balls—Riley, Whiteman,
Weikart, Wallace (2), Mowry (2)
Hit by Pitcher—White.
Struck out—Kane, Hickey, Hise (2),
Riley, Epler, White, Badger, Truesdale,
<
I
American Car in New York to Paris
Race Reports.
By Associated Press.
Berlin, July 27.—The American
Thomas car in the New York to Paris
race arrived here at three this morn-
ing.
Win One; Lose One.
Special to Th,e Tribune.
Houston, Tex., July 27.—Galveston
and Houston divided honors on the
local field yesterday afternoon by each
team taking one game of a double-
header and Galveston dropping to sec-
ond place (from the bottom) of the
percentage column.
There was a good sized crowd in at-
tendance and the playing was cheer-
fully and (liberally applauded. The
hole left by the departure of Bob Ed-
mondson was very much noticed and
was filled by the substituting of Epler
to the center garden and one of the
pitchers going to the right field.
The first game was a victory for the
visitors, Hise doing the twirling for
the visitors against Chappie McFarland
for the home team, the hits being held
down to seven and three in favor of
the Buffalos, and they making all
their runs in one innning—the seventh
—making four and winding up with
the same number to Galveston’s five.
The score:
HOUSTON—
Aiken, 3b
Truesdale, ss.
Shelton, lb
Whiteman, cf. ..
Wallace, rf. ....
Mowry, If
McCully, 2b. ...
Dawson, c
McFarland, p. . .
Totals .
GALVESTON—
Riley, If
Eplfer, cf. .....
Smith, ss.
Weikart, lb
White, c
Burton, 2b
Badger, 3b
Hickey, rf
Hise, p
♦Yerkes
THE SECOND GAME.
The second game of the double-head-
er* had only one interesting feature at-
tached to i't for the home team and that
was a majority of the scores were en-
tered in favor of the Buffaloes.
For this contest Yerkes did the
twirling against Tevis for the home
guard and it was just one great big
merry-go-round of fun and amusement,
resulting in- Houston landing for 16
runs while Galveston was tallying up
2. The game was utterly without in-
t&re’sf,’ . the . visitors seeming to lose
heart and not caring whether they won
dr not and the Buffalos just romping
along easy like and not putting forth
make any more
MISSOURI, KANSAS AND TEXAS.
Katy Flyer
....Katy north connect ions _-s.
Depnrt. SUNSET ROUTE,
7:25 a.m. .H. & T. C-. II. & S. A. connection. New Orleans Ex-
press ...........................
7:05 p. m. .Southern Pacific (west bound) connection. G„ II. &
S. A. H. ft T. C. connection
5:00 p.m. and 10:00 p. m... .Sunday Specials 8:45 a.m. and
Depart. GULF Jt INTERSTATE.
(Via Ferry to and from Foot of 18th Street.)
Galveston-Beaumont 11:50 a. m.
....(Sunday only) 11:50a. m.
.. (Saturday only) 7:30 p. m.
.... (Monday only )
very much effort to
runs than they did.
It was a walk over from the start
and no one doubted the result after
the first inning was over. Just previous
to the second game a collection was
taken up for the benefit of the little
baby which sertne months back was
adopted by the Houston team. This
little one is, now in the care of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Aiken and the third base-
man has undertaken to see that the
little fellow gets a good raising and an
education. The crowd responded lib-
erally and the sum of $126,300 was col-
lected8.
The score:
HOUSTON—
Aiken, 3b. 4
♦McKay, 3b 1
Truesdale, ss. . 6
Shelton, lb. 3
♦♦ Jackson, lb 2
Whiteman, e£. ...... S
Walla.ce. r£. 5
1W
• <
(H ft
THE STRICT LIBRARIAN.
Postmaster-General Meyer, at a din-
ner in Washington, was advocating
postal banks.
“These banks,” he said, “have so
many good points and so few bad ones
that they who find fault with them
have to exaggerate and dwell on their
defects like an old librarian I used
to know.
“This librarian was very
censorious.
I returned , a volume of Scott to
BREAKING THE NEWS.
At a dinner of “The Fossils,” given
recently, James M. Beck was one of
the speakers. “The Fossils” is an or-
ganization composed of former ama-
teur journalists and Mr. Beck, as one
of the organizers of the National
Philadelphia in 1876, has never lost his
interest in this most admirable train-
ing school for young writers.
“In looking back upon those days
when the publishing of amateur papers
seemed the ..most fascinating things in
the .world,” said Mr. Beck in the
course of his address, “I feel indeed
tha'jt I am quite in the fossil class. The
organization of the National Amateur
Press Association seems almost pre-
historic. In looking back through the
years it is almost as misty as the stonff*1-
age. I ..was a.very small boy when
I took part in those weighty deliber-
ations. I feel like the youngster who
said, to his father.
“ ‘Father, was writing done on tab-
lets of stone in old days’
“ ‘Yes, my son,’ replied the dutiful
parent.
“‘Geel’ mused the boy. ‘Then it
must have taken a crowbar to break
the news.’ ”
CIiamherlain;'s Colic, Cholera
Diarrhoea Remedy Would
Have Saved Him $100.GO
“In 1902 I ho ' a very severe attack of
diarrhoea,” says R. N. Farrar of Cat
Island, La. “For several weeks I was
unable to do anything On Marh 18, 1907,
I had a similar attack, and took Cham-
berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy, whicn gave me prompt relief.
I consider it one of the best medicines
of its kind in the world, and had I used
it in 1902 believe it would have saved me
a hundred dollar doctor’s bill.” Sold, by
all druggists.
Spink
J. Hutchings
Jackson
Osborne . ...
Garbade . ...
Chadick ....
Byrne
Forsgard ...
Sproule
Daniels .. ...
Beissner ....
Otey
Shaw ......
Markwell . ...
Sy Associated Press.
New York, July 27.—Nine high speed
power boats are entered for the elimi-
nation races which begin in Huntington
bay-, today -for the selection of . three
defenders for., -the . British international
cup, formerly known as the Harm.sworth
cup. The . first race will .start today lit
2.30 p. m. at the head of the . Hunting-
ton bay, under the direction of Charles
P. Tower, M. M. Whitaker and Walter M.
Bieling, the regatta committee of the
Motor Boat Club of America. The course
is a triangular one which the boats will,
have to cover three times, making ■ a
(total distance of 30 nautical miles.' There
will be three races. The second will be
started at 10.30 o’clock tomorrow and the
third at 2.30 in the afternoon. The three
boats selected will meet the Duke of
Westminster’s famous Wolseley-Siddeley,
and the Daimler III., owned by Lord
Howard de Wallien, both members of the
Motor Boat Yacht club of England,
whicn is the challenger for the cup,, now
held by E. J. Schroeder’s Dixie, which
won it in Southampton waters last year.
Two interesting games were played
yesterday morning at Athletic park be-
tween the four teams of the Merchants’
league. The first game was a contest
between the E. S. Levys and the Whole-
salers which resulted in a victory for
the former team by a score of 8 to 7.
By innings— 12345678
Wholesalers 0 1 1 0 0 4 0 1— 7
Hits 1 1 1 0 0 4 1 1
E. S. Levys 2 1 0 0 0 3 2 *— S
Hits 1 0 1 0 0 4 1 *
The second game was between the
Seaboards and the Kauffman and
Meyers, the result being in favor of the
Kauffman and Meyers team with an
8 to 7 score.
By innings—
Seaboards ....
Hits
K.-M
Hits
“Here,
this from
should interest you
vocate of beer:
“ ‘William Marion Reedy,
editor of The Mirror, in a
recent address, had this to
say of beer:
“‘It is
much
The Remedy TI»at Does.
“Dr. King’s New Discovery is the
remedy that. does the healing othens
promise but fail to perform,” says Mrs.
E. R. Pierson, of Auburn Center, Pa.
“It is curing me of throat and lung
trouble of long standing, that other
treatments relieved only temporarily.
New Discovery is doing me so much
good that I feel confident its continued
use for a reasonable length of time
will restore me to perfect health.”
This renowned cough and cold remedy
and throat‘and lung healer is sold at
J. J. Schott’s drug store. 50c and $1.00.
Trial bottle free.
DON’T WAIT
For something to turn up. Let a
Tribune “Waut” ad turn up sometliins
NOT IN HIS DEBT.
An old Scotchman, not feeling very
called upon " a well-known
tor, who gave him instructions as to
diet and exercise and rest, says Lip-
pincott’s,
vised the patient to abstain from all
forms of spirits. “Do as I say,” he
added cheerfully, “and you’ll soon feel
better.”
The Scotchman rose silently and
was about to withdraw when the doc-
tor detained him to mention the all-
important topic of the fee.
will cost you $2,” he said.
“Aw, Biebbe,” said the old Scotch-
man, “but I’m nae gaun to tek 'yer
advice.”
Future Great Balltossers.
The unconquerable White Wings met
their Waterloo yesterday before the
hands of the White Sox. The game
was marked with numerable squabbles.
Newsome'suffered greatly from the in-
tense heat but managed to keep them
over well enough to make his op-
ponents feel groggy. His twirling is
due worthy mention and after a few
days’ playing Joe will be right up to
the top notch. Frankovich never
caught a better game, the youngster
makes a good, battery partner for any
twirler. Brooks on first was, as usual,
right on top. Reading on second was
a participant in several sensational
plays. Olsen (captain) at short field
played a game that surprised, himself.
His bullet heaver to the initial sack
went, to deadly effects. Cambeilh at
third was on all the time; his noisyness
was heard throughout the game. Ivy,
Cook and Brown played a star out
field; the trio were in fine form. “Old
Reliable” Bill Schutte received his
drubbing coolly; he allowed just 11
hits, several being for extra bases. Bill
would have done better if his followers
would have played with more team-
work. When the battle was over and
the ninth count was given the tally
stood 12 to 3 in the White Sox’s favor.
The game played Sunday between the
St. Patrick’s and the Budweiser Jrs.
was a fine and interesting game, the
score being 10 to 0 in favor of the St.
Patricks. The St. Patricks would like
to get a game for next Sunday from
the Market Street Sluggers. Following
is the St. Patrick’s lineup: C. Gay,
catcher; B. Kelly, pitcher; R. Mullis,
first base; M. Perussina, second base;
F. Carroll, third base; C. Louie, short-
stop; E. Perussina, left field; J. Heffer-
nan, center field; S. Perich, right field.
Send all challenges to B. Kelly, Mana-
ger, 1102 36th street.
JULY 27,
1908.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE: MONDAY,
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 209, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1908, newspaper, July 27, 1908; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1345983/m1/3/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.