Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 258, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1911 Page: 3 of 16
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GALVESTON TBIBUKBi
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22
19’1.
3
FEDERAL CAPITAL
&
OF AUSTRALIA
are tiny chocolate-coated tablets made purely V
1
J/,
tel
to
Go to your druggist and ask for a 25c package of Ra-ba-netes.
California
THE RABEN CO.
>
>a
* '
MYRON STRATTON
GREAT NIMRODS
HOME IS PLANNED
ON TEXAS’ ROLL
»
J
J
i
At
Chair car daily
k
and
3)
NOTED SPORTSMEN COMING.
The Best Service
Old
To
To
A
J.
“Shortest Line—Quickest Time”
Is Via
c
8
ENTIRE BRIGADE FOR PANAMA.
/
Through Sleepers from Galveston
'll)
via H. & T. C. R. R.
are
8
GULF i INTERSTATE RY.
Write Me About Them.
THREE GIRLS DROWNED.
L
THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
There is nothing new under the sun.
I
a
M. NAUMANN, G. P. & T. A.
I
in
SAVE NINE
With a Stitch in Time.
j
AND CARTRIDGES
is
of Baltimore, who
Grape-Nuts
t >
*
FOOD
ONE WAY
Colonist
RATES
o
I
To
t
Arrive.
FOR
Points
i
»
___
Dallas
Ft. Worth
Galveston a"<< Beaumont
Fare 52.35
The better the thought,
The better the achievement.
Government is Pushing on W. h
the Preliminary Work at
Sidney.
Lew Dockstader,AIG. Fialds and
Peerless Bryan Take Out
Licenses Each Year.v
Kansas City
St. Louis
Chicago
Adjutant-General Hutchins Ex-
plains Away at Kick Comp-
troller Lane Made.
A good working brain is built up from food which
contains the things brain is made of.
ness Vanish and Your Stomach
Will Feel Fine.
An old man can’t prove how young
he is by riding a bicycle.
8 iOO a. m
4 >30 p. m
Galveston-Beaumont.
Galveston-Beaumont.
Tourist Sleeper
thru to
Los Angeles
7:00 am every Tuesday
Summer Round Trip Rates
Still in Effect.
11:35 a. m.
8 >20 p. m.
3:00 p. m.
8 >35 a. m.
USUALLY ONE OOSE
ENDS INDIGESTION
If he hasn’t them in stock ask him
to order for you.
5:30 p. m.
10:30 p. m.
Depart.
3:40 p. m
One Way Colonist Tickets
on sale daily
Sept. 15 to Oct. 15, inc
Arrive.
10:20 a. m.
Arrive.
0:45 p. m.
Tourist Sleepers Daily
For Full Particulars See
Many a fast young man comes home
on the slow freight.
best
a
For Tickets and Reservations
call or Phone
MAX NAUMANN. G. A. P. D.
224 Tremont Street
Phone 768
The thought copies first.
—5- ■■ ■—
The better the brain,
J. F. GOVAN,
Div. Pass. Agt., Frisco Lines,
Houston, Texas.
Low ONE-WAY Colonist Rates
$26.45 to California
Via Northern Route
Grape-Nuts
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.
T.®B.V. Ry.
"The Short Line”
1
$2645
is skillfully and scientifically prepared from wheat and
barley and contains the “vital” phosphate of potash
essential in building up
brain.
Proprietors.
Houston, Texas.
Last Work is Soon to Start
Wtiich Will Aid the
Worthy Poor.
Ra-ba-nete Tablets ; ’ ______________
of p£etable matter. For this reason they are safer than calomel
They are pleasant in action, rapidly
. 8:35 p. m.
. 8:00 p.m.
. 9:20 a.m.
. 2:55 p. m.
Arrive.
. 9:15 a. m.
Arrive.
California
On Sale
Sept. 15 to Oct. 15
i
i
I Heartburn, Gas, Dyspepsia and Sour*
.................. 9:25 a. m.
(Sunday only)...... 9:50 p. m.
(Sunday only.......10:20 a. m.
(Sunday only)...... 2,45 p. m.
(Daily)......... 6:40 p.m.
Arrive.
Schedule of the Arrival
and Departure of Trains
To and From the Galveston Union Station, Corner Strand and 25tfe Street.
Ra-ba-netes
*
To
so
training
go forth from
self-sus-
open to them
been for- this
9
s
r
sued by the game warden or one of his
deputies. This character of licenses
are not issued by the county clerks
over the state; they only issue li-
i censes for Texans who wish to hunt
in counties other than that of their
residence.
Three of the most noted non-resident
hunters are Lew Dockstader, and Ai G.
Fields, the famous minstrels, and Col.
William J. Bryan, the noted Nebras-
kan. Ever since there has been a law
in Texas requiring these licenses, these
celebrities have been regular custom-
ers of the state, each paying $15 for
his permit to hunt the elusive game in
the hunting grounds of Texas. A con-
siderable sum is annually derived by
the state from these hunters.
r
F
J. H. MILLER, D. P. A.
C. H. COMPTON, C. T. A.
H. K. ROWLEY, Depot T. A.
PHONE 87
City Ticket Office, 403 Tremont St.
Special to The Tribune.
Austin, Tex;, Sept.- 22.—From the
number of inquiries being received al-
most daily by the game warden’s de-
partment here from hunters and sports-
men from the east and north, Texas
this fall promeses to be the 'happy
hunting grounds” for these disciples
of Nimrod. It is evident from the na-
ture of these inquiries that the writ-
ers are not familiar with the law on
the subject which provides that non-
resident hunting licenses are only is-
sportsman and he is seeking a place |
where duck, geese and other wild fowl j
Leave Galveston daily.... StOOtum.
(Motor Car Service.)
Arrive Beaumont ........11:50 a.m.
Leave Galveston daily.... 4:30p.m.
Arrive Beaumont......... 8:15 p.m.
Leave Beaumont daily.... 4:80p.m.
(Motor Car Service.)
Arrive Galveston ......... 8:2op. m.
Leave Beaumont daily.... SsW a. m.
Arrive Galveston .........11:35 a, m.
Vegetable
I Substitute
nor Calomel
w
w
M
eliminate i
red. Ra-ba-netes
Bowel Troubles.
promote robust and lasting health.
of its kind in the world, is apparent to
everyone who reads this report. It
ASHLEY POYNOR.
City P. (& T. A.
301 Tremont Phone 2220
WAPLES LUMBER CO.
(Successors to D. M. Wilson A Co.)
31ST AND WINNIE STS.
PHONE 793.
LUMBER
New Location. New Stock.
Agents for Texaco Roofing.
-
5
Doing Things
By Clear Thinking
T wk.
FAMOUS WILDER BRIGADE.
Veterans Unveiled Monument to
Colonel at Lebanon, Ind.
By Associated Press.
Lebanon, Ind., Sept. 22.—Gen. John
T. Wilder of Knoxville, Tenn., and 200
survivors of the famous Wilder brig-
ade, comprising the Seventeenth and
Twenty-second Indiana and the Nine-
ty-eighth and One Hundred and Twen-
ty-thirdr Illinois regiments and the
Eighteenth Indiana battery in the civil
war, yesterday unveiled a monument to
Col. Abram O. Miller, who succeeded
Gen. Wilder in command.
—
Special to The Tribune.
Sydney, Australia, Sept. 22.—The fed-
eral government is pushing on with
the preliminary work of building the
federal capital. The commonwealth
took over the area at the beginning
of the year, and since that time has
made great progress in the work. Sur-
veys have been made for railway lines,
routes, reservoirs and engineering
works. Roads have been built and the
culverts and causeways along seventy
miles of road cleared. The military
college at Duntoon is now in working
order, $110,000 having been spent on it.
The Duntroon homestead, where the
college is situated, has been altered
and additional buildings have been
erected to meet the requirements of
the students and the teaching staff. A
site has been selected for a national
observatory, and the requisite build-
ings are in course of erection. Engi-
neers are being employed to test the
various deposits in the territory with a
view to ascertaining their value as re-
gards building material. A brick-mak-
ing plant is to be erected at a cost of
about $100,000. It is proposed to work
the brickworks, the lime kilns
other undertakings by electric power.
An estimate of the cost of the neces-
sary power plant has now been receiv-
ed from an expert, and tenders are
likely to be called very soon. Alto-
gether it is estimated that within the
financial year $565,000 will have been
spent on works alone in the territory.
This does not include the purchase
price of the Acton estate, on which
the administrative offices are to be
erected. The idea of the home depart-
ment is that preparations must be
made for the supply of the needs of
the large number of workmen required
to build the future parliament house,
administrative offices and official res-
idences. The above expenditure is, of
course, preliminary to this end, and.
much more will have to be expended
before the place is ready for the build-
ers to commence. In order that the
proposed federal capital shall be built
on the latest approved ideas, the home
department has invited designs from
architects from all parts of the world.
BUILDINGS AND PUBLIC WORKS.
The plans embody houses of parlia-
ment (for which the suggested dimen-
sions are 600 feet frontage and 200
feet depth}, so placed as to become a
dominating feature of the city, resi-
dences for the governor general and
the prime minister, and also public of-
fices comprising departments of the
prime minister, external affairs, attor-
ney general, home affairs, treasury,
•trade and customs, defense and post-
master general; courts of justice,
places of worship, mint, national art
gallery and library, statehouse, print-
ing office, government factories, uni-
versity, technical colleges, city hall,
general postoffice, museum, central
railway station, railway marshaling
yards, military barracks, criminal and
“ police courts, jail, hospitals, national
theater, central power station, gas
works, markets, stadium and parks
•and gardens. In addition areas are to
be laid out within the city for com-
mercial, residential and industrial pur-
poses. Provision is to be made for
tramways, ornamental water, a water
supply on the basis of 100 gallons per
.head per diem, which will be delivered
from a service reservoir at an eleva-
tion of about 2,250 feet aboVe sealevel,
and sewerage and sewage works. For
the purposes of the design the- popu-
lation is assumed to be 25,000.
Granite is said to be available in
large quantities in the territory, but
sandstone is not obtainable except at
a distance of about 100 miles. Railway
transport, however, will be provided.
It is anticipated that bricks of good
quality can be made locally, and there
is an ample supply of material for
road construction.
also will be unique in home institu-
tions.
In reality the home will be a form of
colony, with about sixty buildings and
an ultimate population of approxi-
mately 1,000. Present plans for the
home estimate its income at $200,000,
growing to $300,000.
“If the Myron Stratton home is not
a success,” says Mr. Barton, “if it
does not do good, it will do much harm
—to the inmates, the country at large,
for it is of national importance. Its
birth and growth will be studied by
everyone who has the betterment of
his fellow man at heart. The amount
of good it may do is beyond calcula-
tion. With an enormous income unre-
stricted by small or petty provisions
by the benefactors the home trustees
are free to deal with individual need
in an almost unique manner.”
home for deserving •
abound in order that he may see for i
J. E. Savage of Field ami Stream
Visit Te:as This Winter.
City Passenger Agent Max Naumann
of the Santa Fe is iir receipt of ad-
vice telling of a visit to this city in
November of J. E. Savage and a party
of friends. Mr. Savage is a noted
Canal Zone Placed in Eastern Division
of Our Army.
By Associated Press.
Washington, Sept. 22.—For military
purposes, President Taft has placed the
Panama canal zone in the Eastern
division of the army. The Tenth In-
fantry has already b'een ordered to
Panama and before the canal is com-
pleted an entire brigade will be sta-
tioned on the zone for the protection
of the waterway.
Now Is the Time
have Malitz overhaul your heating
that you may have comfort and
! health amid the cold blasts of winter.
! If you want everything first-class
plumbing and heating call at
2018-2020 AVENUE G
Phone 660
They Were in Small Canoe Which
Overturned at Houghton, Wis.
By Associated Press.
Bayfield, Wis., Sept. 22.—Mary Hen-
derson, Rose Ferten and Ellen Lum-
berg were drowned at Houghton, Wis.,
last night. Th’ey were out in a small
! canoe which overturned.
(f>
Special to The Tribune.
Austin, Tex., Sept. 22.—An explana-
tion was given last evening by Adju-
tant General Hutchings, concerning the
purchase of such a large amount of
cartridges and ammunition, the account
for which caused Comptroller Lane to
hesitate in approving the claim and is-
suing the warrant, mention of which
was made recently. General Hutchings
says that on Aug. 29 he purchased
cartridges and ammunition to the
amount of $1836.35 because he had an
unexpended balance from the amount
appropriated for state ranger service.
The legislature reduced the appropria-
tion for the ranger service from $25,-
000 to $29,000 and he had about $5000
left and he purchased the ammunition,
which he says will last for two or
three years. The comptroller in the
meantime had investigated and found
that during the past five years only
$1261.15 had been expended for ammu-
nition.
.-3 dvulii ui me uity, will oe me I
greatest and most complete institution i _________________„
■ Even our mistakes have generally been
; made before.
himself something of South’ern shoot-
ing. Field and Stream, the publica-
tion represented by Mr. Savage, is a
leading sporting publication, and the
advertising that Texas will get from
the visit of Mr. Savage will be of
great advantag’e.
To know of and use a food that will
feed and restore brain and nerves be-
fore slight nervous troubles end in
complete nervous prostration or brain-
fag is wise, for unless proper food ia
supplied daily it is unreasonable to ex-
pect the nervous system to answer the
demands made upon it.
There is a food, Grape-Nuts, for the
particular purpose of restoring weak-
ened nerves or fagged brain to health
and strength.
A business man
made the trjal, says:
“Two years ago my health had be-
come so- seriously impaired it was im-
possible for me to attend to business.
At the least exertion my nerves would
give way and the condition of my sys-
tem allowed me little or no rest or
sleep at night. Stomach trouble soon
followed and I could take no solid food.
I tried the best tonics and medicines
but they all failed.
“Finally Grape-Nuts food was recom-
mended and after using it for 10 days
I began to feel its good results and at
the end of three months I was again a
well man—nerves restored to their nor-
mal condition, strength renewed, and 1
was able to do any amount of both
mental and physical work without feel-
ing unduly fatigued.
“I know Grape-Nuts built up my
brain and nerves and still keep them
strong and vigorous just exactly as
food builds up muscles or fat, for in-
stance, and I am glad to have learned
this valuable lesson.” Name given by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Trial 10 days proves things when
Grape-Nuts food is used. “There’s a
Reason.”
Look in pkgs for the famous little
book, “The Road to Wellville.”
OIL BURNING ifU
LOCOMOTIVES J
“There
and they cannot salivate. '
poisons from the impoverished blood, making it rich and
1 are specjgcs for Llver> Kidney> Stomach and
They create a natural appetite, clear the skin,
IK
Depart. GULF, COLORADO & SANTA FE.
7:00a. m........Kansas City-Chicago Express. (Dally)........
8:25a. m.-Houston-Galveston Eixpress. (Dally).........
. .Houston-Galveston Express. (Daily except Sunday)..
4:00p. m.........Houston-Galveston Express. (Dally).........
5:30 p. m..............Main Line Local, (Daily).............. 10:35 a. m.
7:30p. m..North Texas and Kansas City Limited via Houston
(Dally)........ ................
......Galveston-Houston Special.
10:05 p. m......Galveston-Houston Special.
1:15 p. m......Houston-Galveston Special.
8:00 p. m.........Houston-Galveston Special.
Depart. GALVESTON, HOUSTON & HENDERSON.
4:10 a. m..Southern Pacific eastbound H. & T. C. connection
8:30 a. m. .Galveston-Houston Express, connects at- Houston S.
P. (west bound) and H. & T. C. (north bound).......
1:25 p. m.H. & T. C. and Sout^rn Pacific westbound connection 0:35 p. m.
. .............Houston Local....................10:45a.m.
.... Galveston-Houston (Sunday only).......... 2,50 p. m,
Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)...... 9:55 p.nx
INTERNATIONAL & GREAT NORTHERN. Arrives.
.......Galveston-St Lou’s Fast Mall............ 5s40a. tn.
.....A St Louis and Main Line Local............ 6«35 p. m.
4:10 a.m..................Fort Worth Cvlslon.....
Depart. MISSOURI, KANSAS * TEXAS.
6:25 p. m.....................Katy Flyer........
'4:10 a. in... .’.r...........Kat? north connections.
Depart. SUNSET ROUTE.
5:55a.m..H. & T. C., G., H. & S. A. connection, New Orleans
Express, T. & N. 0....................................12:20 p. m.
7:00 p. m. .Southern Pacific (west bound) connection, G.. H. &
S. A, H. & T. C. connection...... ..............
8:15 a. m...............To Houston connections..........
4:45p.m.................New Orleans Express............
10:00 p.m...........Island City Flyer (Sunday only)......
Depart. TRINITY & BRAZOS VALLEY.
9:30 p m..............Houston-Dallas-Fort Worth........
Depart. GULF & INTERSTATE.
(Fropi New 22d Street Station.)
(Daily)........
(Dally)........
a well-balanced body and
If your meals don’t fit comfortably,
or your feel bloated after eating, and
you believe it is the food which fills
you; if what little you eat lies like a
lump of lead on your stomach; if there
is difficulty in breathing after eating,
: eructations of sour, undigested food
and acid, heartburn, brash or a belch-
ing of gas, you can make up -your
mind that you need something to stop
■ food fermentation and cure Indiges-
I tion.
! To make every bite of food you eat
aid in the nourishment and strength
of your body you must rid your Stom-
ach of poisons, excessive acid and
stomach gas, which sours your entire
meal—interferes with digestion and
causes so many sufferers of Dyspepsia,
Sick Headache, Biliousness, Constipa-
tion, Griping, etc. Your case is no dif-
ferent—you are a stomach sufferer,
though you may call it by some other
name; your real and only trouble is
that which you eat does not digest, but
quickly ferments and sours, producing
almost any unhealthy condition.
A case of Pape’s Diapepsin will cost
fifty cents at any Pharmacy here and
will convince any stomach sufferer five
minutes after taking a single dose that
Fermentation and Sour Stomach
causing the misery of Indigestion.
No matter if you call your trouble
Catarrh of the Stomach, Nervousness or
Gastritis, or by any other name—al-
ways remember that a certain cure is
waiting at any drug store the moment
you decide to begin its use.
Pape’s Diapepsin will regulate any
out-of-order Stomach within five min-
utes, and digest promptly, without any
fuss or discomfort, all of any kind of
food you eat.
a Reason”
Nothing strange that Golf Ball
should be lost. Yet the New York po-
lice were most fussy when they were
informed that this valuable racehorse
had strayed from its stable.
Special to The Tribune.
Colorado Springs, Sept. 22.—The
great Myron Stratton home of Colora-
do Springs, provided for iA the will of
Winfield Stratton, the Colorado
Springs millionaire, who made his mil-
lions out of Cripple Creek in its
days, seems at last about to become
reality.
After years of litigation and months
of study ana investigation on the part
of the executors, detailed plans have
now been formulated which will make
this institution a model of its kind tor !
the whole world.
It is to be a
poor, but the plans make it clear that
it is not an institution which will fos-
ter the establishment of a large pan- *
per colony. In the words of George !
ICowin Barton, architect of the home, j
who has prepared and published an ex-
haustive analysis of the unique condi-
tions influencing its building, together
with recommendations for the founda-
tion and development of the institu-
tion, “it was the intention of the tes-
tator and will be one of the main fea-
tures of the Myron Stratton home, that
the industrial training of the young of
both sexes should be undertaken and
perfected, so as to give the worthy
poor instruction and training that
would enable them to
this home independent and
taining, with a future
impossible had it not
charity.”
That the home, to be built on the j
highlands south of the city, will be the 1
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 258, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1911, newspaper, September 22, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1351123/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.