Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 263, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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SEPTEMBER 29,
1910.
3
ROADS OF EVERY
Instant Relief
HOTELS AND RESORTS.
CLIFTON
KIND DISCUSSED
for Sore Feet grent6ble
-
VIA
-S.
1,
ii
50 TRANSFER AT FORT WORTH.
has
J
/
GULF & 8NTERSTATE RY.
V
TROUBLE BREWING FOR NEW YORK POLICE HEAD
. Erwr Womaa
xi la iiiteresied and should Know
I
7
!
1
>
*.. »
o
i
(<
■I
n
AT RIGHT, POLICE COMMISSION-
ER. '
that
«
Newton,
Charles
W. Ross,
Louis
1
“,3
t
STAGG’S “MIDWAY STAGGERS.’*
SIX NEW PROFESSORS.
miimmm—rwimi
i
t
of
RHODE ISLAND DEMOCRATS.
KSEES
t
saa
Cook Your
BANKERS
Breakfast!
Serve
NO INTEREST IN FOOTBALL.
Post
4:10 a. m
T oasties
SAPOLIO
• • >w. •
SUNSET ROUTE.
Arrive.
With Cream or milk
has
I
“The Memory Lingers”
LEFT A FORTUNE
TO FIGHT DISEASE
IHDISESTIOH, DYSPEPSIA, STOMACH GAS
MIO OTHER MISERY GOES IN FIVE MINUTES
Sir Thomas Veasy Strong Has
Served as an Aiderman for
Thirteen Years.
George W. Patten, Brother of
“Bull” Operator, Dies of
Consumption.
GEN. FUNSTON WAS
QUITE INDIGNANT
CITY OF LONDON’S
NEW LORD MAYOR
Largely Increased Attendance at
Second Day of National Good
Hoads Convention.
Leading Workers of American
Purity Federation Begin No-
table Tour of Country.
According to Savants of Ameri-
can Fisheries’ Society Who
Have Tried it.
SHARK MEAT IS
A DAINTY FOOD
Rector of Episcopal Church of
Evanston, III., With Failing
Mind, Suicides.
STATE CONTROL
BE RECOGNIZED
i
Depart.
2:40 p. m
Arrive.
9:30 a. m.
TO FIGHT WHITE
SLAVE TRAFFIC
Sore Feet, Tender Feet and Swollen
Feet Cured Every Time. TIZ Makes
Sore Feet Well No Matter
What Ails Thsm.
8:00 a. m
5:00 p. m
7:30 p. m
Depart.
7:00 p. m
4:10 a. m
MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS.
Katy Flyer
.. ..Katy north connections
By Associated. Press.
Kansas City, Mo., Sept.
The manicure girl doesn’t have to
wait till leap year to ask a fellow
for his hand.
11:30 a. m.
8.30 p. m.
7:30 p. m.
Arrive.
8:40 p. m.
6:35 p. m.
right up.
ditiou.
to say:
and notice the pleasure the
family finds in the appetizing
crispness and flavour of this
delightful food.
pre-
It calls for 60-
and
for the
Fane Per Ceat Interest Paid on Savings
Deposits.
NEW JERSEY’S REPUBLICAN CAN*
DIDATE.
J.
C.
VSi orb;
s ’ 1 Cocu
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
L2@c. EOc.
j
f
f
Two Fast Trains
DAILY
BETWEEN
Arrive.
.Dally 10:50 p. m.
.Dally 3:20 p.m.
con-
Dally 8:45 a. m.
.Dally 10:35 a. m.
9.25 a. m.
Schedule of the Arrival
and Departure of Trains
To and From the Galveston Union Station, Corner Strand and 25th Street.
Ayers Pills
Gentle.
Mineralwells
and Return
$11.20
lgll
to
Ed. McCarthy & Co.
(Unincorporated.)
Joe B. Morrow
C. P. & T. A.
Southwest Corner Tremont and
Mechanic Sts.
HAND
4
rz
YOUNG MEN
Pahst’s Okay Specific
Does the work. You al!
know it by reputation Price
For Salo by STAR DRUG STORE
are
•e noted
and
renn
“rtr*
Sight Drafts, Letters of Credit Issued
on All Parts of the World.
■■■■aMm—WM—niea—iTin iiiaiii sasniiirnmnaaenn——n—
The Tenderest Skin Is Benefited
SHOCKING END OF
REV. ARTHUR LITTLE
Because Bellhop in Hotel Wore
Uniform Something Like
Army Officer.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE: THURSDAY,
By Associated Press.
Chicago, Sept. 29.—New light was
thrown on the suicide of Rev. Arthur
W. Little, rector of St. Mark’s Epis-
copal church in Evanston, last night
when it became known that he himself
had been compelled to take treatment
in a sanitarium at Neshota, Wis., for
three weeks last January.
The letter which was found on Dr.
Little’s writing desk read:
1910—Something
I told the doctor
and they would
The
God
5:30 p.m Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)
10:20 p. m Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only)..*..
INTERNATIONAL & GREAT NORTHERN.
Galveston-St. Louis Fast Mall.
St. Louis and Main Line Local...........
....• Fort Worth 7Ivislon
it is true.
is broken.
8:15 p.m.
...... 8:45 a.m.
...... 2:45p.m.
Arrive.
9:10 a.m.
Arrive.
On sale Sept. 2, 9, 18, 23 and 30.
Good to return 10 days from date
of sale.
■I ®l
<
—--------•----------
Miss Virginia Millman. a college girl
of Buffalo, and the daughter of
wealthy parents, is to star in a dra-
matization of Robert W. Chambers’
well known novel, "The Firing Line,”
this season.
Much interest is manifested in Com-
missioner Baker’s letter to Mr. Mitch-
ell, which has so far not been made
public. The question of whether Com-
missioner Baker is to lose his position
or not is to be held in abeyance until
the return of Mayor Gaynor, which
will be within a few days.
"28 Sept.,
broken in my brain,
and the slaymakers
not believe me, but
wireless clothesline
have mercy.
ed the sites for the
bridges and other government
provements. The convention will
elude its business tomorrow.
American Mining Congress is
Against Government Control
of Water Sites.
$15.25
Round Trip
On Sale Daily. Good for 60 Days.
CLIFTON, 2f in. high BEDFORD, Zifa, high
Arrow
Ketch COLLARS
Sit snugly to the neck, the tops meet
in front and there is ample space
for the cravat.
15c.,3 for 25c. Cluett, Peabody & Co..Maken
Special to The Tribune.
London, Sept. 29.—In accordance with
time-honored precedent the livery com-
panies of the city of London met in
convention in Common Hall at Guild-
hall today for the election of a lord
mayor of the city for the coming civic
year. Sir John C. Knill’s term ex-
pires on Nov. 9. In the ordinary course
the election fell on Sir Thomas Vesey
Strong, a wealthy paper manufacturer
who has been an alderman of the city
of London for thirteen years and who
served as senior sheriff in 1904.
Unlike all other great municipal-
ities, London’s lord mayor is not the
choice of the common council or a
political clique. He must needs have
been elected an aiderman of his ward
by the ratemayers many years before
being eligible for the mayoralty. He
must have served as sheriff by the elec-
tion of eight thousand liverymen, rep-
} Hl
xHS tST
AT LEFT, ACTING MAYOR MITCHELL.
ER BAKER.
about the wonderfiil * ” >
MAHVELWhirlingSp/ay
I ThS new Vaginal Syrians.
L Beat—Mogtconven-
cleansee
VIVIAN M. LEWIS.
Special to The Tribune.
Trenton, N. J., Sept. 29.—The. man
who will carry the Republican stand-
ard against the Democratic nominee
for governor, President Woodrow Wil-
son of Princeton, is Vivian M. Lewis.
Mt. Lewis is a comparatively young
man and enters the fight for guberna-
torial honors with vim which does him
credit. He is a conservatively pro-
gressive candidate.
Galveston and Beaumont
Leave- Galveston (Dally).. 8:00a» m.
Leave Galveston (Daily ex-
cept Sunday) 5.00 p. m.
Leave Galveston ('shd-
days) 7:30 p. m.
Arrive Galveston (Dally) .11:30 a. m
Arrive Galveston. (Dally
except Sundays) 8:30 p.m.
Arrive Galveston (Sun-
days) .......... 7:30p.m.
57 Miles the Shortest
Max Naumann, C. P. A.
Depart.
7:05 a. m.. H. & T. C„ G., H. & S. A. connection, New Orleans
Express, T. & N. 0 12:20 p.m.
7:25 p. m. .Southern Pacific (west bound) connection, G„ H. &
S. A., H. & T. C. connection
4:25p.m..... New Orleans Express
10:00p.m...., Iisland City Flyer (Sunday only)...
Depart. TRINITY & BRAZOS VALLEY.
8:20 p. m. Houston-Dallas-Fort Worth..
Depart. GULF & INTERSTATE.
(From New 22d Street Station.)
-Galveston-Beaumont (daily) ....
Galveston-Beaumont (daily except Sunday)
.. ..Galveston-Beaumont (Sundays only)....,
Don’t think a man is foolish be-
cause he thinks you are.
56th St. and 7th Ave.
OPPOSITE CARNEGIE HALL.
New York City.
Located within two blocks of beauti-
ful Central Park and in the city’s most
refined residential district, this exclu-'
sive family and transient hotel offers
mere in real living and comfort thau
many hotels whose accommodations
a,rB JF.14. m<>re expensive. The hotel
is within a few blocks of the theaters
jnd shops and is only 8 minutes,’ ride
from the Grand Central and Pennsyl-
vania H. R. stations. There is no more
lueal stopping place for ladies travel-
ing alone.
^The Restaurant, Cafe and Grill
o< the finest in the city and are ~
for the excellence of their cuisine
service, Well trained servants
dor unobtrusive and perfect service
throughout ths hotel.
.Tfy3 S. Taxicab Co., which gives
the best service of any in the city, 13
connected With the Grenoble.
ROGM WITH USE OF BATH.
$1 per day and up
ROOM WITH PRIVATE BATH.
*1.50 PER DAY AND UP.
APARTMENTS OF PARLOR,
Bedroom and Private Bath.
$3 per day and up
Attractive rates made to those ston>>
p’.ig two weeks or more
GEO. W. O’HARE, Mgr.
1 h
Depart, GULF, COLORADO & SANTA FE.
7:00a.m..,..,.. Kansas City-Chlcago Express...,
1:30 p. m ..Houston-Galveston Express.. ......
4:00 p. m. .Southern Pacific (east bound) and H. & T. C.
nection. H. & T. C., H. & W. T. connection. :
5.30p.m ..Main Line Local ;
7:30 p.m Galveston-St. Louis Limited via Houston.Daily
10:30 a. m Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only),..,.. 9:50p.m.
10:05 p. m .....Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only) ..... 10:15 a. m.
2:40 p. m.
California
$26.45
One Way. On Sale Oet. 1 to Oct. 15.
VIA
SUNSET ROUTE
TOURIST SLEEPERS DAILY.
Phone 87 for Your Reservation.
OIL BURNING LOCOMOTIVES. NO
DIRT. NO CINDERS. NO
DUST.
City Ticket Office 403 Tremont St.
PHONE 87.
H. MILLER, D. P. A.
v. H. COMPTON, C. T. A.
H. K. ROWLEY, Depot T. A.
Meet Toddy at Providence to Nominate
and Adopt Platform.
Special to The Tribune.
Providence, R. y. sept. 29.—The
Democratic state convention of Rhode
Island assembled here today to adopt
a. platform and nominate candidates
for governor and other state officers
to be voted for in November. The
convention opened with the makeup
of the state ticket still undecided. The
platform, it is expected, will declare
against bossism, Aldrich, the tariff
and the property qualification for vot-
ers.
FOR TOILET AND BATH
It has a delicate, velvety touch and con-
tains just the elements necessary to
thoroughly cleanse, invigorate, soften
and clear the skin.
All Grocers and Druggists
Special to The Tribune.
New York, Sept. 29.—The attack,by
Acting Mayor Mitchell upon Police
Commissioner Baker has caused great
excitement. The case is the direct re-
sult of the recent raids on gambling
houses under the personal direction
and knowledge of the acting head of
the local government.
Special to The Tribune.
Chicago, Sept. 29.—A party of twen-
ty leading workers or xne American
Purity Federation, including promi-
nent members of the organization in
many parts of the United States and
Canada, left Chicago today to begin
a notable tour in the interests of the
fight against the white-slave traffic,
and. the general suppression of vice.
The tour will last one month, during
which time the crusaders will travel
more than 7,000 miles. Among the
cities in which they will conduct meet-
ings are Minneapolis, Winnipeg, Re-
gina, Calgary, Vancouver, Spokane, Se-
attle, Portland, San Francisco, San
Jose, Tucson, Houston, New Orleans,
Memphis and St. Louis.
Policemen all over the world use
T I Z. Policemen stand on their feet
all day and know what sore, tender,
sweaty, swollen feet really mean. They
use T IZ because TIZ cures their feet
It keeps feet in perfeC-t esm-
Read what this policeman has
"I was surprised and delighted
with TIZ for tender feet. I hardly
know how to thank you eiw-ugh for it.
It’s superior to powders or plasters. I
can keep iny feet in perfect condition.
Believe in iny earnest gratitude for
TIZ. I am a policeman and ke«p on
my feet all day.”—Emay Harrell, Aus-
tin, Texas.
You never tried anything like TIZ
before for your feet. It is different
from anything ever before sold.
T I Z is not a powder. Powders and
other foot remedies clog up the pores.
TIZ draws out all poisonous exuda-
tions which bring on soreness of the
feet, and is the only remedy that does.
TIZ cleans out every pore and glori-
fies the feet—your feet.
You’ll never limp again or draw up
your face in pain and you’ll forget
about your corns, bunions and cal-
louses. You’ll feel like a new person
TIZ is for sale at all druggists at 25c
per box, or it will be sent yqu direct if
you wish from Walter Luther Dodge
& Co., Chicago, III.
SANTAL-MIttY
q Purifies the Blood
Relieves In 24 Hours
Catarrh of the Bladder
AU Srugi'istt Beware of Counterfeits
SANTAL-MIDY
Special to The Tribune.
St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 29.—Late arriv-
ing delegates resulted in a largely in-
creased attendance this morning at
the opening session of this, the second
day of the National Good Roads Con-
vention. During the forenoon an in-
teresting and instructive program of
addresses and discussions was carried
out. Among the principal speakers and
their topics were the following:
"Town and Lateral Roads,” Frank D.
Lyon, department highway commission-
er of New York state; “Farmers’ In-
terest in Improved Highways,” N. J.
Bachelder, master of the , national
grange, Patrons of Industry; “Across
Missouri,” Curtiss Hill, highway com-
missioner of Missouri; “City Streets
and Boulevards,” James C. Travilla,
street commissioner of St. Louis; “Mod-
ern Surface Treatment of Various
By Associated Press.
New York, Sept. 29.—-Shark meat is a
dainty of high quality according to the
servants who are here attending the
sessions of the American fisheries so-
ciety. They declare that the creatures
are quite edible and that it is only a
foolish prejudice which keeps
from being served as a delicacy.
One scientist said he preferred shark
to lobster. Prof. Theo. Gill declares
that shark meat broiled has “a flavor
as fine as anything which comes from
the water." Several of the delegates
expressed the belief that the cultivation
of the shark as food fish might do much
to solve the problems of the higher
cost of living.
A discussion of caviar occupied one
Dr.
fl
If .ii
-JI
J 2^^
A new opera to be produced at the
Opera Comique in Paris this season Is
M. Pon’s “De Voile de Bonheur,” a
Chinese story. The libretto is from
the pen of the former president of
council, George Clemenceau.
of the sections for three hours.
Hussakoff assistant curator of
Ichthyology of the American museum
of natural history said that most of
the caviar sold in this country was
made from the roe of the Mississippi
spoonbill and not from the sturgeon.
He reassured consumers, however, by
the assertion that the imitation is
“good as or possibly better than the
genuine."
New Football Tricks by Coach of Uni-
versity of Chicago.
By Associated Press.
Chicago, Sept. 29.—'“Midway stag-
gers,” as Coach A. A. Stagg of the Uni-
versity of Chicago terms his latest
gridiron movement was practiced by
his team yesterday.
The first exhibition of the “staggers”
took place as soon as the gates were
opened after secret practice. A large
crowd of rooters witnessed the line
candidates drawn up in the center of
the field, apparently suffering from
some nervous affliction. The forwards
were hopping in quick time, clawing
with their arms and vieing with one
another in manufacturing gridiron
grimaces.
Coach Stagg explained that he had
ordered the exercise and would in-
sist on using it in every game. The
maroons will have the “staggers” regu-
larly on offense, and the rooters be-
lieve their rivals will defend them-
selves. Coach Stagg also asserted the
drill was for the purpose of speeding
up the team.
Your out>of>ardor Stomaoli fools fine
five minutes after taking a
little Dlapepsln.
Every year regularly more than a
million stomach sufferers in the
United States,' England and Canada
take Pape’s Diapepsin, and realize no,;
only immediate, but lasting relief.
This harmless preparation will di-
gest anything you eat and overcome a
sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach
five minutes afterward.
If your meals don’t fit comfortably,
or what you eat lies like a lump of
lead in your stomach, or If you have
heartburn, that is a sign of Indigestion.
Get from your Pharmacist a 50-cent
case of Pape’s Diapepsin and take a
dose just as soon as you can. There
Will be no sour risings, no belching of
Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 29.—How
Brigadier General Frederick A. Funs-
ton became enraged because a bell boy
in a hotel here wore a uniform which
was almost a. replica of a captain in
the regular army and moved from the
hostelry Monday, developed today.
Gen. Funston and Percy Barshfield,
a former lieutenant in the “Twentieth
Kansas,” were together when they no-
ticed the bell boy. They both asked of
the head clerk the reason for the youth
being permitted to wear a uniform of
such a pattern.
"It is an insult to every man who
wears shoulder straps," said Gen. Funs-
ton. “It takes years of waiting and
hard service to earn it and we’ll not
see it degraded by use as the livery of
a servant.”
While the clerk was explaining that
no insult to the army had been intend-
ed Gen. Funston demanded that n
bill be made vut. zi. lew minutes later
he left the hotel.
.Galveston-Houston Special (Sunday only),,.
Galveston-Houstcm 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
4:20p. m. .Southern Pacific New Orleans connection (daily
except Sunday 10:45 a. m.
2:50 p. m.
9:55 p. m.
Arrive.
5:40 a. m.
6:35 p. m.
“A. W. LITTLE.
“Oh, my poor wife, be good to her.”
The sentence “the wireless clothes-
line is broken” is unexplained.
“He was by far the finest Latin
scholar in the diocese,” said the Rev.
W. T. Sumner, dean of the cathedral
of St. Peter and St. Paul, “and in my
opinion one of the most refined, cul-
tured clergymen we had. Personally,
he was charming, a real ‘thoroughbred’
in every day life.
“I have seen a great change in him
in the last few years, since the illness
of his wife and I know he has bee.n
more and more despondent of late,
though I never had any expectation of
this shocking end.”,r
Roads,”
Mass.
No session of the convention was
held this afternoon. Instead the dele-
gates and their families were given
a boat ride on the Mississippi river,
in the course of which they inspect-
proposed new
im-
con-
undigested food mixed with acid, no
stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or
heavy feeling in the stomach, Nausea,
Debilitating Headaches, Dizziness or
Intestinal griping. This will all go,
and, besides, there will be no sour food
left over in the stomach to poison your
breath with nauseous odors.
Pape s Diapepsin is a certain cure
for out-of-order stomachs, because it
takes hold of your food and digests it
just the same as if your stomach
wasn’t there.
Relief in five minutes from all stom-
ach misery is waiting for you at any
drug store.
These large 50-cent cases contain
more than sufficient to thoroughly
cure almost any case of Dyspepsia, In-
digestion or any other stomach dis-
order.
resenting the wealthiest and most in-
fluential i citizens. As sheriff he must
have had the approval of the king, and
to become lord mayer he has to ap-
pear again before the liverymen and
the king, and on lord mayor’s day he.
must visit the law courts and before
the judges the recorder of the city re-
cites his past history.
The Jurisdiction of the lord mayor
is of course confined to the compara-
tively narrow limits of the ancient
city, whose population nowadays hard-
ly amounts to 50,000. The other 6,000,-
000 or more citizens of the metropolis
are governed by the London county
council, which being a modern insti-
tution has acquired none of the pomp
and pageantry of the ancient city.
By Associated Press.
Chicago, Sept. 29.—George W. Pat-
ten, the millionaire grain operator,
who died last night of tuberculosis at
the home of his brother James A. Pat-
ten in Evanston, left a fortune esti-
mated at $5,000,000, the greater part
of which, it is said, will be left to
public charities, including a large do-
nation for the furtherance of the anti-
tuberculosis campaign.
Though relatives have tried to coiij-
ceal from him the belief that he was
dying, it has been known for months
that he was suffering from a disease
from which there was no hope of re-
covery. He spent eight years in Colo-
rado fighting against the malady.
Two weeks ago it was announced
that Mr. Patten had created a fund
of $500,000, known as the “Agnes and
Louisa Patten” fund for the endow-
ment of the Evanston Hospital asso-
ciation, an institute in which the two
brothers took great interest.
Ask your druggist for It.
If he oannot supply the
M A n V jfi L. accept no 'w
«tl)er, ant Send stamp for
filUBtrated boos—sealed. It gives m
full particulars and directions in- £
valuable to ladles- MARVEL CIS.
mat S84 Street, NEW
For Sale at Star Drug Store.
Mail Orders Solicited.
Added! to the Already Large Staff
Yale University.
By Associated Press.
New Havenq, Conn., Sept. 29,—With
the opening of Yale university today
for its two hundred and eleventh year,
six new professors take up the work
of the classes. Of the six three are
connected with the graduate school.
The new professors are Ernest C.
Moore, for many years superintendent
of schools in Los Angeles, who be-
comes professor of education; A. F.
Clay of the University of Pennsylva-
nia, who will be professor of Assyrol-
ogy and Babylonian literature on the
Laffan foundation, established by J.
Pierpont Morgan; Charles McLean An-
drews, from Johns Hopkins university.
f
Let Us
By Associated Press.
Los Angeles, Cal., Sept. 29.—The
problem created by the state versus
national claims for control of water
power sites, which excited the irriga-
tion congress at Pueblo, came before
the resolutions committee of the Amer-
ican Mining Congress today in the
form of a resolution demanding that
state control be recognized and that
forthwith laws be passed which will
enable the sites to be leased and the
power developed, while the revenue
from such leases sholl be devoted to
the protection of watersheds from for-
est fires. D. L. Foster of Colorado
sented the resolution.
year leases of water power sites
declares the power is essential
further development of mining inter-
ests.
Columbia University Students Take No
Interest in Revival.
By Associated Press.
New York, Sept. 29.—Although the
authorities at Columbia University re-
cently indicated their willingness to
consider the reinstatement of football
which was put under the ban there
three years ago, the student body ap-
pears to be indifferent and the hoard
of student representatives has not
only voted against the renewal of the
sport but has voted to curtail even the
mild inter-class games which have
been played heretofore each year.
The action of the student council,
it was announced, resulted principally
from a feeling that there was little in-
terest in football and that the renewal
of the game would only take men from
other college athletic activities, thus
weakening the track, baseball and
rowing squads.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 263, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1910, newspaper, September 29, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1354253/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.