Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1910 Page: 3 of 14
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Fred Harvey Meals
Ask for Our California Literature—It’s Free.
(From Galveston)
via
•I
■
■
I
$26.45
TO
California
Stopover Allowed at the Grand Canyon of Arizona,
Th© World’s Wonder
Call on or phone me for particulars
MAX NAUMANN, G. A. P. D., 224 Tremont St. Phone No. 768
"All the Way”
One Way Colonist Tickets On Sale Daily
Aug. 25 to Sept. 9, and Oct. 1 to 15
Thru Sleeper to Los Angeles „
Every Tuesday, on Our Train 6 from Galveston 7 a. m.
1
ISSUE OUT
IN OREGON
S2
$3
STATEWIDE PRIMARY
THREE WEEKS AWAY
Sg|
secure
Lumber
Sash.
Blinds.
Phone 430.
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THIRD DEGREE INQUISITOR BEGINS PROBING THE PERRIN CASE.
EEE3ESS
9
BIBS
&
Li—ilV
i
Assembly and Anti-As-
sembly are Factors.
Queer Fact About Republicans
Choosing Democratic Gov-
ernors and Senators.
Mrs. Caroline Simdheimer, Clarks,
Louisiana, writes:
“I am feeling quite well now. I can
work again and am stronger than I
have been for years, and I do believe
that Peruna saved my life. I will ad-
vise all I can to take your medicine.” ,
Man-a-lin an Ideal Laxative. J
SEABOARD LUMBER
<£ MILLING CO.
27th and Church Sta<
.........................L
United States district attorney;C. H. Martin, clerk of the committee;
was
of E.
John
Senator
of the
. Bran-
PROMPT DELIVERY.
Best Quality. Lowest Prices.
MILL WORK.
Doors.
1
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district attorney.
Special to The Tribune.
San Francisco, Sept. 2. — United
States Senator W. J. Stone of the “se-
lect committee” apointed at Washing-
ton, to investigate the administration
of the criminal law by federal offi-
cials,” and to inquire into the “third
degree” practices of the police in va-
F '
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SALL LINSEED MEAL
ANAiarszs
Protein ... 12
Fat.....3.4 1%
Carbohydrates . 55.19%
Crude Fiber . . 13 %
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■
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For sale by Wisrodt Grain Co., phone
242; C. G. Crumhorn, phone 333; A. W<
Leifert, phone 324. J
I
/
^TFEEL well, never felt better;
1 thanks for your attention, and Pe-
runa.
“I will be glad to do all I can in the
way of advancing the sale of your yah
uable medicine.
“I do think Peruna the best medicine
I have tried at any time.
“Since I began taking Peruna we
have never been without it.
“I really believe that every woman in
the world ought to have Peruna on
hand all the time; for if she gets tired,
Peruna refreshes her; if she gets nerv-
ous, it soothes her; if despondent, it
cheers and invigorates.
“It is a constant friend to the nursing
mother, both for herself and for her
child, and finally when old age comes
on, no medicine on earth is of greater
efficacy to the woman.
“Sjirely, Peruna is the woman’s
friend.”—Mrs. E. 0. Everly, 2108
Franklin St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Stronger Than for Years.
HOPPITY HOP.
Are you just barely getting around
by the aid of crutches or a cane? Un-
less you have lost a limb or have a
deformity-^-if your trouble is rheuma-
tism, lumbago, sprain, stiff joints, or
anything of like nature use Ballard’s
Snow Liniment and in no time you can
throw away your crutches and be as
well as anyone. Price 25c, 50c and
51.00. Sold by J. J. Schott
J
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1A
roail
J
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/
rious American cities, has been busily
engaged in this city. Senator William
E. Borah being ill, the coast investi-
gation falls entirely upon >
Stone. The other members
committee, Senators Frank B.
dege, Norris Brown and Lee B. Over-
man, are engaged in carrying on in-
)
men.
large.
Hebrew race has not been lost,
longer is the conserver and dissemina-
tor of the truth of monotheism. It
has ceased to be at all a missionary
religion. The lament of the rabbis, in
which all thoughtful Christians join,
is that the young men are slipping
away from the faith of their fathers.
The Jews of New York city, alone who
never attend synagogue, or who open-
ly avow their indifference to all reli-
gion number tens of thousands.
The dire thought of national rejec-
tion has entered the minds of many
American and British, Christians. Eng-
land today may be said to be in a
state of self-examination. She is ask-
ing herself if the scepter of world
leadership and of religious liberty is
to pass from her hands. Other nations
have had “Icabod” written over their
gates.. The glory has departed from
Rome and Greece and Turkey and
Spain. What of Britain and the Unitr
ed States? At present tney are the
spiritual pioneers among nations. In
no spirit of boastfulness it may be
recognized that they have been a cho-
sen people, with a world destiny. Yet
selfishness, blindness, materialism and
mere lipservice of the ideals which
once ruled their hearts may rob them
of their mission as truly as ever Is-
rael was deprived'of her peculiar place
among the peoples of earth.
For God is just. He deals with na-
tions as well as with individuals.
Spiritual excellence is not an entailed
inheritance. Each generation must tend
its own altar fires Each must know
God for itself. His requirements must
be met, not by the repetition of an-
cient formulas and shibboleths, but
by vital, loyal service in the forms of
the present. Happy is that people
whose thoughts of God and service of
God are couched in the terms of the
living now.
g:W
tag
so
they
lines bodily with
I have
often
Z ALFALFA. CORN. BRAN SHORTS
From left to right, Robert T. Derlin, _______ ______ ______—U1 Lllt) uummiue»i
Senator William J. Stone. Charles W.Moore stenographer for the committee: A. P. Black, assistant United States
quiries in the eastern cities.
Senator Stone’s first work was to .....
Investigate the prosecution of E. B.
Perrin, who, together with John A.
Benson, was convicted of conspiracy
to defraud the government in land
deals, but who upon appeal was ac-
quitted.
<■ -Ja
It Saved His Leg.
"All thought I’d lose my leg,” writes
J. A. Swensen of Watertown, Wis.
“Ten years of eczema, that 15 doctors
could not cure, had at last laid me up.
Then Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured it,
sound and well.” Infallible for Skin
Eruptions, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Boils,
Fever Sores, Burns, Scalds, Cuts and
Piles. 25c at J. J.’ Schott’s.
. GUARANTEED AZS?
Special to The Tribune.
Salem, Ore.. Sept. 2.—-"Assembly”
and “anti-assembly” are the principal
factors in the Oregon campaign, which
will culminate in the statewide pri-
mary three weeks from tomorrow.
“Statement No. 1” is also coming in
for a share of the discussion. Oregon
for the past few years has presented
the anomaly of a Republican state
electing a ' Democratic governor, and
then electing him United States sen-
ator before his term as governor ex-
pired.
Republicans charge this state of af-
fairs up to the form of primary law
in effect in Oregon, asserting that
Democrats registered as Republicans
so they might vote in the Republican
primaries, cause the selection of weak
Republican candidates, and later bring
about their defeat at the polls. The
Democrats, on the other hand, declare
they provided the better candidates in
every instance, and their election was
the logical sequence.
This year the Republicans deter-
mined to make an effort to maintain
party unity within the state, and to
this end the state central committee
called “assemblies” tor the counties
and the state. The state assembly,
which was held at Portland in July,
. adopted a platform and suggested a
list of candidates for state officers
from governor down. In the same
month assemblies were held in a num-
ber of counties, and in several in-
stances county assemblies will hold
adjourned sessions tomorrow to pass
on candidates.' Suggestion of candi-
dates by the assembly, of course, does
not do away with the necessity for
their circulating petitions under the
provisions of the direct primary law.
Considerable opposition to the as-
sembly plan arose early in the cam-
paign, coming at first from the Dem-
ocratic party organs, but a consider-
able number of Republicans joined the
Democrats in branding the assembly*
as unlawful in that it was not provid-
ed for in the direct primary law, and
condemning it as limiting in a meas-
ure the freedom of the voter in select-
ing the candidates. As a consequence
of this sentiment there are numerous
“anti-assembly” candidates for the va-
rious offices to be filled at the No-
vember election.
For governor the Republican state
assembly recommended Jay Bower-
man, who, by virtue of his office as
president of the senate, became act-
ing governor when Gov. Chamberlain
resigned to accept the United States
senatorship. Opposed to Mr. Bower-
man early in the game were Col. E.
Hofer, a Salem newspaper man, and
Judge Grant Dimick of Clackamas
county. The Democrats also have at
least" three avowed candidates for the
governorship.
ANOTHER PHASE.
Another phase Was given the political
situation by the nomination of candi-
dates for, supreme court judge by a
mass meeting of the lawyers of the
state—three Republicans and two
Democrats. The Republicans on the
lawyers’ ticket were indorsed by thw
state assembly and the Democrats
mentioned filed their petition for nom-
ination on the Democratic ticket.
“Statement No. 1” is not a prominent
factor in the campaign this year, as
the next legislature will not be called
upon to choose a United States sena-
tor. A section of the direct primary
law permits candidates for the legisla-
ture to sign statement No. 1 or state-
ment No 2, or neither, but agitation
brought to bear two years ago made
the signing of statement No. 1 the
popular course for the legislative can-
didate to follow. In signing state-
ment No. 1 the prospective legislator
promises to vote for United States sen-
ator only for that person receiving the
highest number of votes at the gener-
al election, without regard to party
affiliations. Statement Nol. 2 is a
promise to regard simply as advisory
the people’s vote for United States
senator.
National politics has entered very
little into the Oregon campaign tills
year, the assembly problem being par-
amount. Congressmen Ellis and Haw-
ley, Oregon’s two representatives in
the lower house, were suggested for
renomination by the Republican state
assembly. Both are regulars and both
will have ‘opposition for renomination
by candidates with progressive, lean-
ings.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON I
sion of this teaching, which strips the
deity of all his divine attributes and
makes him a characterless creature
of man’s vagrant will, is debasing and
dangerous to the last degree. It needs
to be met with such terrific parables
of warding as Jesus spoke to the self-
satisfied Jews of his day.
A story is often the best form of
argument. So Jesus depicted the whole
history of the chosen people in tl:e
parable of the householder, who, after
making teady his vineyard, let it to
certain husbandmen. But when he
sent to receive his rental of the icrops
the husbandmen beat the servants and
otherwise ill-treat4d them, even t®
death. A second deputation of serv-
ants received like treatment. Then,
confident of the respect that his own
son’s person would receive,, he sent
him. Then the wicked husbandmen
crowned all by murdering the son,
hoping thereby to secure the prop-
erty.
The graphic story ended with the
question, “What will he do unto those
husbandmen?”
Quick came the answer from the in-
terested hearers, moved by a Hebrew
sense of justice and of the sacredness
of property rights, “He will miserably
destroy those miserable men, and will
let out the vineyard unto other hus-
bandmen, who shall render him the
fruits in their season.” Then upon
their startled and incredulous ears fell
the application.
WHEN A NATION IS REJECTED.
The imagination of the race has been
gripped by the story of the handwrit-
ing on the wall—a rejected nation. So
also by the similar case of the Jews
“The kingdom of God shall be taken
away from you, and shall be given to
a nation bringing forth the fruits
thereof,” boldly declared Jesus in the
teeth of the pharisees, as his appli-
cation of the parable of the husband-
History has written that lesson
The peculiar function of the
It no
EYESOL INSURANCE
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST.
| By WILLIAM T.E&UO.
The International Sunday school les-
son for Sept. 4, is, “Two Parables of
Judgment," Matt, xxi, 23-46.
Before typesetting machines became
common in newspaper offices, it was
the practice of some compositors to
keep standing certain common lines
and phrases. They knew that,
stereotyped is human speech,
could insert these
some saving of time and labor,
thought of these compositors
when attending some religious meet-
ings. For these seemed made up of
left-over, shop-worn phrases. The
freshness and life have gone out of
them. They have all unwittingly be-
come that odious thing, cant.
Religion has a tendency to run to
words. Certain stock phrases become
common. Glibness in conventional
speech is a blight upon religious life.
It was the same fatal facility in
stereotyped phraseology that afflicted
the active members of the Jewish
church, and gave rise to the parable
which the Sunday schools are now to
study. The story of the two sons is a
story of lip-service versus life service.
The first son was told by his father to
go work in the vineyard, but refused.
Afterward he repented and went. The
second son, with promptness and po-
liteness said, “I go sir”—but went not.
PIOUS VERBOSITY.
The auditors of the parable praised
the first son—until the Teacher point-
ed out that the second son represented
their own cast. They had been wond-
rously proficient in professions: never
had religious phraseology been more
luxurious than with them. But, lo,
all the while they had been making
this pious verbosity a test of ecclesias-
tical standing the publicans and the
postitutes had been going into the
kingdom of heaven ahead of them.
What a shattering blow to self-com-
placency!
The shock was meant to be whole-
some. What if somebody should arise
in prayer-meeting and interrupt every-
one who used carelessly the sublime
phrases of Christian devotion with the
challenge, “Do you mean that?” Would
not the effort be as beneficial as it
would be startling? We are very care-
less in the use of speech in this west-
ern world. We are in quite as much
danger as those old Pharisees of put-
ting words in the place of works. We
are fond of taking religious pledges,
and repeating solemn consecrations
and lifting our hands in meetings in
renewed vows. The peril that always
awaits the glib and the stereotyped
and conventional, of putting the form
in the place of the substance lurks be-
fore our feet. The danger of becom-
ing like the second son in the parable
is a real one.
A story was told the other day of a
South Carolina Scotchman who was an
austere and reserved man. One of
his descendants says that the only
word of endearment he was ever heard
to utter concerning his wife was on
his death bed when he commended her
to the care of his adult sons in the
words, “Margaret is a good woman,
and I like her." We smile at the
meagerness and caution of the utter-
ance, but remembering that they had
been proceeded by a life of consistent
devotion, are not the simple phrases
more beautiful than the tropical ardor
of the passages commonly read from
letters in the divorce courts? Let us
be a little slower to speak the great
words, and a great deal more heed-
ful to insure reality behind them. It
is not “The most beautiful prayer ever
addressed to a Boston audience,” that
moves God, but ttye sincere cry of an
honest heart.
A DIRE WARNING.
Kipling derides the modern thought
which substitutes for our first parents
“the yelk of an addled egg.” Far
worse than this tendency to make man
of jellyfish origin is that which—if
one may speak' plainly without irrev-
erence—would give to the universe a
jellyfish God, without character or
convictions, and easily to be placated
and cajoled with cheap and sugary
phrases. The teaching of Jesus that
God is love is a strong and noble and
divine conception; a popular perver-
I
cy
Mrs. E. C. Everly.
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s
*.
NO DIRT
II. Miller, D. P. A.
NO TRANSFER AT FORT WORTH.
J
I
CASE CAPITAL, $250,000.00
GULF S INTERSTATE RY.
BETWEEN
3.00 p. m.
('sa»-
7:30 p. m.
7:30 p. in.
57 Miles the Shortest
Mnx Naumann, C. P. A.
4:10 a. m...,
SUNSET ROUTE.
Arrive.
i
(Agents
Phone 804.
25c
l
Leave
«i?tys)
Arrive.
... 5:40 a. m.
... 0:35 p.m.
Two Fast Trains
DAILY
Arrive.
... 9:30 a. m.
Depart.
2:40 p. m....
Depart.
7:00 p. m....
4:10 a. m..
Is All Bolton Chargee
to Haul Your Trunk
Best Rubber-Tired Cagw
riatfes in the City.
BOLTON’S TRANSFER
PHONE 237
and Return
VIA
SH.2O
—TO—
MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS.
...........Katy Flyer............
.....Katy north connections......
Joe B. Morrow
C. P. & T. A.
Southwest Corner Tremont and
Mechanic Sts.
YOUNG MEN
Pabst’s Okay Specific
Does the work. You aS!
know it by reputation Priced
for Saio by STAR DRUG STORE
Stolz & Peterson, Inc.
Foooi
Schedule ot the
Arrival
and Departure of Trains
To and From the Galveston Union Station, Corner Strand and 25th Street.
(Daily
......8:30 p. m.
(Sun-
... 8:15 p.m.
... 8:45 a.m.
... 2:45 p.m.
Arrive.
... 9:10 a. m.
Arrive.
Gatatoii and Beaumont
Leave Galveston (Daily).. 8:00a.m.
jLcave Galveston (Dally ex-
cept Sunday). ..
Galveston
T. (&. B. V.
Our new specialties of our own
manufacture for little chicks and _u.y-
ing hens—the kind that makea them
grow and bring results.
Seahoard Fira and Marina Insurance Co.
“Eureka” “Eureka”
Chick Feed Hen Food
CITY TICKET OFFICE 403 TREMONT STREET
Phone 87 ♦ C. H. Compton, C. T. A.
H. K. Rowley, Depot T. A.
On sale Sept. 2, 9, 16, 23 and 30,
Good to return 10 days from date
of sale.
SOMETHING GOOD"
' VIA
<& S. A. Ry.
“SUNSET ROUTE”
Only Line Running Through Standard Electric Lighted and
Fan Cooled Pullman Sleepers
California $26.45
ONE WAY—On sale Aug. 25 to Sept. 9 and Sept. 15 to Oct. 15
MEXICO CITY AND RETURN $33.80
On sale Sept. 1 to 14, limited Oct. 10.
New Orleans
12:20 p. m.
PHONE 87 FOR YOUR RESERVATION
OIL BURNING LOCOMOTIVES
NO CINDERS NO DUST
International Poultry
and Remedies.)
24th & A.
Galveston, Tex.
$15.25
Round Trip
On Sale Daily. Good for 60 Days.
B. ADOIJE, Pres. II. WILKENS, Vice Pres. JOHN SEALY, Tre?.s-
J. H. LANGMEHN, Sec. C. C. BOWEN, Ass’t See.
Through promptness In dispatch of business, fair and liberal treatment
of customers, accommodating facilities for local representatives and reliability
of the indemnity offered by this company, our service to agents and policy-
holders is nearly perfect and stands as the Seaboard “trade mark.”
REMEMBER THESE FACTS WHEN YOU HAVE BUSINESS TO PLAuE
2102 Strand Phone 1290.
Arrive Galveston (Dally) .11:30 a. iu
Arrive Galveston
except Sundays)..
Arrive Galveston
days) ............
Depart.
7:05a. m.-H. & T. C., G„ H. & S. A connection,
Express, T. & N. O....................... ....
7:25 p. m. .Southern Pacific (west bound) connection, G., H. &
S. A., H. & T. C. connection...................
4:25 p.m.......... New Orleans Express.........
10:00p.m...........Island City Flyer (Sunday only)....
Depart. TRINITY & BRAZOS VALLEY.
8:20 p. m.............Houston-Dallas-Fort Worth.......
Depart. GULF & INTERSTATE.
(From New 22d Street Station.)
8:00 a. m.............Galveston-Beaumont (daily)......... 11:30 a. m.
5:00 p.m.....Galveston-Beaumont (dally except Sunday)..... 8.30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.........Galveston-Beaumont (Sundays only)......... 7»30 p. m.
H. & T. C., H. & V/. T. connection.
.........Main Line Local....:.........Daily 10:35 a.
7:30 p.m......Galveston-St. Louis Limited via Houston .Daily 9.25 a.m.
10:30 a. m.......Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)...... 9:50 p.m.
10:05 p.m......Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)......20:15 a.m.
......Houston-Galveston Special (Sunday only)...... 2:40 p.m.
Depart. GALVESTON, HOUSTON & HENDERSON. Arrive.
4:10 a. m. .Southern Pacific eastbound and H. & T. C. connection 8:40 p.m.
8:30 a. m. H. & T. C. and Southern Pacific westbound connection 0:35 p. m.
4:20 p. m. .Southern Pacific New Orleans connection (daily
except Sunday........................................10:45 a. m.
5:30 p. m..... .Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)...... 2:50 p.m.
10:20 p.m......Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)...... 0:55 n m.
INTERNATIONAL & GREAT NORTHERN.
......Galveston-St. Louis Fast Mail........
.....St. Louis and Main Line Local....
............Fort Worth Division.....
Depart. GULF, COLORADO & SANTA FH. Arrive.
7i00a. m.............Kansas City-Chicago Express...... .Daily 10:50 p. m.
1:30p.m..............Houston-Galveston Express. ......Dails- 3:20p.m.
4:00 p. m. .Southern Pacific (east bound) and H. & T. C. con-
nection. H. & T. C., H. & W. T. connection. Daily 8:45 a. m.
5.30 p. m...................Main Line Local....:.........Daily 10:35 a. m.
GALVESTON TOIBCTNE:
FRTDAT.
SEPTEMBER 2,
1910.
3
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1910, newspaper, September 2, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1354231/m1/3/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.