Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 245, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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GALVESTON TBIBUNE: THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 8,
1910.
3
IS LARGEST
(r
IN WORLD
H
and
I
*
J
A
NIGHT SCHOOL
icorset comfort until.they wore the ADJUSTO.
AT DRAUGHON’S COLLEGE
W
i
&
flit
K
I
I
FA1
day.
IE
1
CONVICTS MUTINY.
one
j. !
A
??
SPECIAL VENIRE ORDERED.
5ES
CLIFTON
FIRE AT SAN ANTONIO.
Shopping Dis-
VIA
®. B. V.
0
7A
NO TRANSFER AT FORT WORTH.
GULF & INTERSTATE RY.
:®a
SB
(’sun-
brunette
never
won
in giving- to
the
DICKINSON HOMEWARD BOUND.
4:10a. m...,
>
on
re-
Depart.
Arrive.
k
AMERICANISTS IN
12:20 p. m.
MEXICO.
7:25 p. m
you
age.
/ I
1
t a- ^*#£35551
Pennsylvania Road’s Sta-
tion in Gotham.
INDIGESTION, STOMACH GAS, DYSPEPSIA
AND SOURNESS FROM STOMACH VANISHES
One of Chicago’s Finest Lost
Ten Days’ Pay for Loafing
on His Job.
POLICEMAN DID
NOT KNOW CHIEF
Too Far Away From Washington
to Be Successfully Handled
by Bureau Heads.
ENGINEER KILLED
ON G. & I. ROAD
Dedicated a Month Ago but Opens
Today to Regularly Handle
Public Traffic.
MAGNIFICENT IN
SIZE AND STYLE
NEW PRESIDENT OF
POSTOFFICE CLERKS
Arrive.
9:30 a. m.
Depart.
7:00 p. m
4:10 a. m
10:45 a. m.
2:50 p. m.
9:55 p. m.
Arrive.
5:40 a. m.
6:35 p. m.
$3 TO $15
$1 TO $3
Variety is the spice of life—espe-
cially in the matter of kisses.
Special
San Antonio,
Guarantee Shoe
night.
23 and 30.
from date
Arrive.
S :40 p. m.
6:35 p. m.
feet under the street
reached by numerous stairways
a
cen-
the
277
SELF-GOVERNMENT
NEEDED IN ALASKA
Phone 87 <
H. K. Rowley, Depot T. A,
W)‘
By Associated Press.
Seattle, Wash., Sept. 8.—Speaking at
$11.20
—TO—
Ayers Cherry Pectoral
Lungs
Joe B Morrow
C. P. & T. A.
Southwest Corner Tremont and
Mechanic Sts.
. 1A a. m
(Daily
••••■• 8 :30 in*
(Sun-
7:30 p.m.
57 Mlles the Shortest
Max Naumann, C. ,P. A.
ijffi
Was Dismissed From Service
Because of Pernicious
Activity for Clerks.
. 11:30 a. m.
. 8.30 p. m.
. 7:30 p. m.
’ III I
„ PATENTED
/i I *u.sJa/P
///^caInada
W , ______
ING BANDS and; SUPPORTER LOOPS,* the
down smooth and flat-nniformfo ®
Shoe Store in Heart of £L„,
trict Was Gutted,
to The Tribune.
Tex.,
Mineral Wells
and Return
t/f 1.
[fit //
I Ay Z/j
SAFE MEDICINE FOR CHILDREN
I1 oiey s Honey and Tar is a safe and
effective medicine for children as it
does not contain opiates or harmful
drugs. Get only the genuine Foley’s
Honey and Tar in the yellow pack-
age. For sale by J. J. Schott.
/.fi
/
[f/
MM
Depart.
7 :0» am....
1:30 p. m....
4:00 p. m. .Southern Pacific (east bound) and E
nection.
5.30 p. m..
7:30 p. m.,
10:30 a. m..
10:05 p. m..
On sale Sept. 2, 9, 16,
Good to return 10 days
of sale.
;;
■i
fWiSWA ®ia the_stout, never“experienced the joy of real
W porset comfort until they,wore the ADJUSTO.J J
and.shaping th^formlthelADJUSTOI
way fc thejmodemway^hetorre^>ay.!.Trv it;^
J
■
A
S
jij
ini? ®;
I
GULF, COLORADO & SANTA IE.
......Kansas City-Chicago Express ;
Houston-Galveston Express ;
_______, _______ & T. q
■H*. & C., H. & W. T. connection.
Main Line Local....
.Galveston-St. ■ Louis Limited via
..Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only).
.Galveston-Houston Special' (Sunday only).
.Houston’-Galveston Special (Sunday only).
Depart. GALVESTON, HOUSTON & HENDERSON.
4:10 a. m. .Southern Pacific eastbound and H. & T. C. connection
8:30 a. m.H. & T. C. and Southern Pacific westbound connection
4:20 p. m.. Southern Pacific New Orleans connection (daily
except Sunday
5:30 p. m Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)...."..'
10:20 p.m Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only).'”*.'.'
Depart. INTERNATIONAL & GREAT NORTHERN.
2:40 p.m Galveston-St. Louis Fast Mail
....St. Louis and Main Line Local
......Fort Worth Division
MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS.
Katy Flyer
....Katy north connections
i Aa
Sffw.
Special to The Tribune.
New York, Sept. 8.—The new Penn-
sylvania terminal station in this city,
the largest and most magnificent
structure of ifts kind in the world,
con-
one
$15.25
Round Trip
On Sale Daily. Good for 60 Days.
Secretary off War Will Return to Wash-
ington in November.
By Associated Press.
Washington, D.VC„ Sept. 8.—Secretary
of War Dickinson, who has been mak-
ing a tour of inspection to the Philip-
pines, will return to Washington about
the first week of November. General
Oliver, the assistant secretary of war,
will return here and resume charge of
the war department* on Sept. 10.
Secretary Dickinson and party left
Hong Kong for Shanghai yesterday.
General Edwards cabled to Acting
Chief McIntyre that all of the party
are well.
8:15 p. m.
8:45 a. m.
2:45 p. m.
Arrive.
9:10 a. m.
Arrive.
“SOMETHING GOOD"
VIA
G. H. S. A. RY.
“SUNSET ROUTE”
Only Lin® Running Through Standard Electric Lighted
Fan Cooled Pullman Sleepers
CALIFORNIA $26.45
ONE WAY—On sale Aug. 25 to Sept. 9 and Oct. 1 to Oct. 15
MEXICO CITY and retvm ^33.30
On sale Sept. 1 to 14, limited Oct. 10.
WACO AND RETURN $9.35
On Sale Sept. 12 and 13. Limited Sept. 15.
PHONE 87 FOR YOUR RESERVATION
OHL BURNING LOCOMOTIVES
NO DIRT NO CINDERS NO DUST
CITY TICKET OFFICE 403 TREMONT STREET
J- H- D- P- ... . «• H- . <=• ® a;
Thirty-four Ou Farm in Hill County
Refuse to Work.
Special to The Tribune.
Kopperl, Tex., Sept. 8.—Thirty-four
convicts on the Burleson and Jones
farm in this (Hill) county are in the
dormitory building and refuse to'come
out to work. They are armed with
pocket knives and razors and threaten
bodily harm to any who might at-
tempt to coerce them. It is proposed
to starve them out and thus bring them
to terms.
Locomotive Boiler Exploded
While on Sidetrack Having
Some Repairs Made.
P. E. COOPER, Manager
Galveston, Cor. Tremont and Postoffice Sts. Phone 607.
Ssahoard Fira and Marina tara w Co.
CASH CAPITAL, $250,000.00
B. ADGUE, Pres. II. WILKENS, Vice Pres. JOHN SEALY n’re^a.
J. H. LANGREHN, Sec. C. C. BOWEN, Ass’t Sec? '
. Through promptness In dispatch of business, fair and liberal treatment
Of customers, accommodating facilities for local representatives and reliability
^enmity 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 PLAJF
2102 Strand Phone 1290. *
will direct you to nearest dealer,
Royal Worcester Corset Co.
186 Market St., CHICAGO
Send for our 1910 Corset Catalogue
Sulphur, the Best Skin Remedy
There is no drug or medicine that has
been used for skin diseases as long as
Sulphur. The trouble has been that
sulphur in crude or powder form can
not be readily applied to the germ that
causes Eczema, Tetter, Acne, Hives
Barber’s Itch and the many other skin
diseases. Littell’s Liquid Sulphur Com
pound overcomes this difficulty being
liquid, and if applied with soft brush
reaches the seat of the Trouble at once
killing the germs and giving instant
relief to intense itching caused by skin
disorders. A few applications accord
ng to directions will cure any skin
iisease, no matter of what character
tend 10c for sample bottle. Rhuma-
Julphur Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Com-
l hu-
events that
in their six weeks’
Mr. Nagel said he
the new Republi-
Two Fast Trains
DAILY
BETWEEN
Galveston and Beaumont
Leave- Galveston (Daily) .. 8:00 a. m.
Leave Galveston (Daily ex-
cept Sunday) 5.00 p. in.
Leave Galveston (aur>-
days) 7:30 p.m.
Arrive Galveston (Daily) .11:30 a. m
Arrive Galveston ' “
except Sundays),.
Arrive Galveston
days)
Faint heart
lady, either.
Special to The Tribune.
Beaumont, Tex., Sept. 8.—Engineer L.
B. Borders was killed and his fireman,
Malcolm Ceburn, severely injured yes-
terday afternoon by the explosion ol
a locomotive on the Gulf and Inter-
state at Seabreeze. Borders had both
legs broken, right arm broken, his
head badly cut and was scalded by es-
caping steam. He died two hours after
the explosion.
The engine which was hauling a
north-bound freight train, had stopped
at a switch to have some repairs made .
when both the front and rear end of
the boiler blew out, hurling the en-
gineer against the oil tank and throw-
ing the fireman from the cab. A
brakeman a hundred feet in advance
of the engine was thrown to the
ground by the force of the concussion,
but not hurt.
A relief train sent from here brought
in the lifeless body ofx the engineer
and the wounded fireman. Borders’
home is at Hamlin, where the body
has been sent for burial. He leaves '
al wife and two children.
tL COMFORTABLE
nnd niTRARI n—‘____________ o
Sept. 8.—The
company lost $7003 by
fire last night. The building was
gutted by the flames and the water
made the loss to the stock a total one.
For a time the fire, which was in the
heart of the shopping district, threat-
ened adjoining property. Both build-
ing and stock carried, insurance.
-------
relieve sour, out-of-order stomachs or
Indigestion in five minutes. Diapepsin
is harmless and tastes like candy:
though each dose contains power suf-
ficient to digest and prepare for as-
similation into- the blood all the food
you eat; besides, it makes you go to
the table with a healthy appetite; but
what will please you most, is that you
will feel ithat your stomach and in-
testines are clean and fresh, and you
will not need to resort to laxatives or
liver pills for Biliousness or Constipa-
tion.
This city will have many Diapepsin
cranks, as some people will call them,
but you will be cranky about this
splendid stomach preparation, too, if
you ever try a little for Indigestion or
Gastritis or any other Stomach misery.
Get some now, this minute, and for-
ever rid yourself of Stomach Trouble
and Indigestion.
through Humbolt park on their way to
the Shakespeare avenue station, Air,
Lower pointed his finger at a recum-
bent form on a park bench,and said;
“Pretty soft for that policeman over
there, chief. Looks like he is enjoying
himself.”
“Must be off duty,” responded the
chief.' “No policeman in Chicago would
be sitting on a park bench reading a
paper when he is on duty. It can’t be
possible.”
So the chief told his chauffeur to
stop and alighting saluted and asked:
“Officer, are you on duty?”
“Naw,” replied OConnor, “I’m watch-
ing the swan boat.”
When Chief Steward returned to his
office and learned that Patrolman
O’Connor was on duty he preferred
charges against him and the board yes-
terday fined him 10 days’ pay.
“Sure and I thought the chief was a
reporter,” said O’Connor. “He asked
me questions just like some of the
newspaper boys do and I didn’t see fit
to hear him.”
PRACTICAL,STYLISH,COMFORTABLE
and, DURABLE—these, words“summed up
tefl you the story of the ADJUSTOlTliis match-}
Jess corset Jsjhe final result of years of study, re**
(searchand the scientific application of a thoroughly'
gractical idea, . ‘ ■
Thousands of womenfthe average, the slender
Two Hundred Men to Be Summoned
for McFarlane Case Sept. 20.
Special to The Tribune.
Houston, Tex., Sept. 8.—Judge Rob-
inson of the criminal district court has
ordered a special venire of 200 men
for the trial of the McFarlane case,
set for Sept. 2 0. McFarlane is charged
with the killing of Deputy Chief of
Police William Murphy.
I Schedule of the Arrival
and Departure of Trains
? To and From the Galveston Union Station, Corner Strand and 25th Street.
SUNSET ROUTE.
7:05 a. m..H. & T. C., G„ H. & S. A. connection, New Orleans
Express, T. & N. O
'• ■s?ut?Tero -Pacific (west bound) connection, G., H. &
S. A., H. & T. C. connection
4:25 p. m New Orleans Express
10:00 p.m...., Island City Flyer (Sunday only)
Depart. TRINITY & BRAZOS VALLEY.
8:20 p. m Houston-Dallaa-Fort Worth
Depart. GULF Jt INTERSTATE.
(From New 22d Street Station.)
8:00 a. m ...... Galveston-Beaumont (daily)
5:00 p.m Galveston-Beaumont (daily except Sunday)....
7:30 p.m Galveston-Beaumont (Sundays only)
WILL BEGIN WEDNESDAY, SEPT 7, 1910.
By Associated Press.
Chicago, Sept. 8.—Because Patrolman
Michael F. O’Connor mistook Chief of
Police Leroy T. Steward for a newspa-
per reporter and talked to him like
policeman sometimes talk to reporters,
the civil service trial board yesterday
assessed him 10 days pay. While the
chief and President Elton Lower of the'
civil service commission were touring
Arrive.
Daily 10:50 p. m.
Daily 3:20 p. m.
. con-
Daily 8:45 a.m.
Daily 10:35 a. m.
Houston. Daily 9.25 a. m.
. 9:50 p. m.
. 10:15 a. m.
. 2 ;40 p. m.
a smoker given in his honor last night
by the Arctic club, Attorney General
Wickersham and Secretary of (
merce and Labor Nagel referred
morously to the poltical
had taken jjlace :
absence in Alaska,
hoped that none of
can platforms contained' a declaration
in favor of the free coinage of silver.
Mr. Wickersham said that Alaska had
not received proper consideration at
the hands of congress. The question
of the development of Alaska’s re-
sources was not for him to decide, but
for congress. The time for giving
away national assets ha< passed, he
said.
Mr. Nagel spoke of the need of lopal
self government in Alaska. He favored
represetnatives with authority and dis-
cretion, because in a country so far re-
moved, long distance government was
peculiarly dangerous and ineffective.
He would have officials who could say
yes or no without asking Washington.
After the smoker Mr. Nagel and Mr.
Wickersham departed for Portland,
whence Mr. Wickersham will go to
Butte and Mr. Nagel to San Francisco.
CEMENTKOTE
A WATERPROOF COATING FOR BRICK. STONE
OR CONCRETE. Elastic, Durable and Economical
S..sx SB I nine COLONS 1
GUARANTEED to Giv© Perfect Satisfaction
Sol d By WM. PARR Co.
Crystal Vaudeville Theater.
Pegging along at the same old gait
good houses at every performance in
other words—the Crystal Vaudeville
theater maintains a most satisfactory
average in the way of business. Man-
ager Jorgensen is back from the north,
and though he was delighted at the
record-breaking business of last week
he finds nothing to cavil at in the at-
ttndance for the present week. Mons
Torcat and Flor d’Alizer are a most
delightful pair of performers and their
turn, which has a flavor of novelty, is
amusing, even though the patrons’do
not always understand their Anglo-
French patter. Myrtle Deloy is a vo-
calist with a strong but sweet voice
that appeals pleasingly to the ear and
her “coon shouting” is excellent in its
way. Norine Holmes and her company
in “A Disappointed Father” handle's
that clever little playlet most accepta-
bly and her singing is a most attrac-
tive feature of the sketch. The Two
Deloys have a brisk act fullxof fun
that appeals strongly to the auditors
and wins many laughs. The moving
pictures are also a winning feature of
the show. All week at 3.30, 7.30 and
9 p. m.
together with the tunnels wnich
nect it with New Jersey on the
Side, with Long Island on the other,
were opened to the public traffic to-
The formal dedication of the sta-
tion and tunnels took place about
month ago, but actual traffic through
the tubes and in the terminal was not
inaugurated until today. The event,
Which marks the beginning of a new
and important epoch in the develop-
ment of New York’s transportation fa-
cilities, was duly celebrated in Man-
hattan, in Brooklyn, in Long Island
City and other Long Island towns by
enthusiastic popular demonstrations
today. \
The work on this gigantic undertak-
ing, which was originally planned by
the late Alexander J. Cassett, then
president of the Pennsylvania Railroad
company, and which will constitute a
lasting memorial to his name, was be-
gun about six years ago. The con-
struction of the tunnels under the Hud-
son and the East river was a remark-
able engineering feat. The tunnels are
continuous tubes of steel, nearly seven
miles long, are lined with concrete and
accommodate each but a single track.
The erection of the terminal sta-
tion itself was a tremendous under-
taking. Before the first stone of the
masonry work of the building could be
laid, which was on June 15, 1908, an
enormous amount of work had to be
done. About five hundred buildings,
occupying the area bounded by 7th and
8th avenues, 31st and 33d streets, had
to be torn down, the entire area ex-
cavated to a great depth, and not until
then could the actual erection of the
magnificent structure be begun.
LARGEST IN WORLD.
The New York station of the Penn-
sylvania railroad is the largest build-
ing ever constructed at one time, in
the history of the world. It covers
an area of 28 acres, of which eight
acies are taken up by the terminal
building itself, the rest by the yards.
The station is a beautiful structure
built after the Roman-Doric style of
architecture. It is constructed of pink
granite, quarried at Milford, Mass.,
steel and brick, and is divided into
three levels. The lowest part con-
tains the tracks, which are fully forty
feet under the street level and are
reached by numerous stairways con-
necting the tracks with the waiting
rooms and corridors, etc., on the ground
floor.
The main entrance is in the center of
the 7th avenue facade,, which extends
430 feet, but all four of the fronts are
practically of thq same design, those on
31st and 33d streets being 740 feet
long, nearly twenty feet longer than
the capitol in Washington. The maxi-
mum height of the building, above
the street level is 153 feet. From the
street level the outside walls rise to
height of sixty feet, except in the
ter, where a lofty dome covers
general waiting room, which is
by 103 feet and is approached by a con-
course 340 feet long and 210 feet wide.
At the corner of 8th avenue and 33d
street there is an elevation of four
stories, accommodating the offices of
the railroad company. The interior
structure is a skeleton framework of
steel resting upon 650 concrete piers,
each capable of carrying a load of
1600 tons. There are entrances on all
sides, giving ample access to the
monumental structure.
The main waiting room on the con-
course is the largest in the world. It
has windows of semicircular shape,
nearly 67 feet wide at the base. In
addition to the general waiting room
there are smaller waiting rooms for
men and women, which open into retir-
The main waiting room
ticket offices, bagg-age
— -jr-i and tele-
^HE^ADJUSTO/^has^many^timesrproven'itself
inestimable valuedhot only as a reducing'
corset, but as a^grfetf abdominal support?. Then,
too, with, the aid of the IMPROVED REDUC-'
•■!ri ' u' j”2i SUPPORTER LOOPS,.the corset skirt ss held.
down, smooth and flat, uniformly reducing hips and ’upper limbs.,
3eal? for &e ^D!USTa V “nnof procure it we
, or send postpaid on receipt of price.
- —MAKERS ALSO OF
BON TON Corsets
ROYAL WORCESTER Corsets
CLIFTON, 2^ in. high BEDFORD, 2i in. high
j. The'bCeto
Arrow
Notch COLLARS
Sit snugly to the neck, the tops meet
in front and there is ample space
for the cravat.
15c.,2for2Sc, Gluctt. Peabody £c Go„Maken
A little Diapepsin makes your out-
of-order Stomach feel fine
in five minutes.
If what you just ate is souring
your stomach or lies like a lump of
lead, refusing to digest, or ybu belch
Gas and Eructate sour, undigested
food, or have a feeling of Dizziness^,
Heartburn, Fullness, Nausea, Bad taste
in mouth and stomach headache—this
, is Indigestion.
A full case of Pape’s Diapepsin costs
only 50 cents and will thoroughly cure
your out-of-order stomach, and leave
sufficient about the house in case some
one else in the family may suffer from
stomach trouble or Indigestion.
Ask your pharmacist to show
the formula plainly printed on these
50-cent cases, then you will under-
stand why Dyspeptic trouble of all
kinds must go, and why they usually I
tention would be a detriment to the
service.”
The next convention will be held at
Des Moines, la.
By Associated Press.
Chicago, Sept. 8.—Oscar E. Nelson of
Chicago, discharged from the govern-
ment service July 18 on the ground
that he indirectly influenced legislation
In favor of the post office clerks, was
yesterday elected president of the Na-
tional Federation of Post Office Clerks.
The specific charges on which Nelson
was dismissed from the service were
the placing on the bulletin boards in
four divisions of the Chicago post of-
fice a circular letter showing that the
legislative committee of the American
Federation of Labor was trying to se-
cure legislation favorable to post office
employes; introducing resolutions in
the Chicago Federation of Labor pro-
testing against the overtime being
worked by the clerks in the post office
and of insubordination
Chicago newspapers information rela-
tive to unsanitary conditions in
federal building.
The department at Washington, in
notifying Postmaster Campbell of Chi-
cago to remove Nelson, the first as-
sistant postmaster general, said:
“The department deems that his
Learn to say no when you mean no
—unless you are a woman.
Discussing Ethnology, Archaeology
and History of New World.
Special to The Tribune.
City of Mexico, Sept. 8.—The second
session of the seventeenth interna-
tional congress of Americanists was
formally opened today at the National
Museum in this city. The sessions
will last five days and will be devoted
to the discussion of questions relating
to ethnology, archaeology and history
of the new world.
ing rooms.
contains the
checking windows, telegraph
Phone offices, etc., and everything is
so perefectly arranged that all confus-
ion is practically avoided. The trains
may also be reached direct from the
outside by means of wide stairs lead-
ing down from the street level.
Il
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 245, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1910, newspaper, September 8, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1354236/m1/3/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.