The Daily Tribune. (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 50, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 1, 1913 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
3
THE TURNING POINT
'ft
d
‘
1
111
.1
FIRST STATE BANK
First National Bank
t
The Usefulness of a Hot Water Bottle
THE
DIRECTORS
BRIGHTEST
SPOT
9999————————————
9999999999——99—99999———————————C
Don’t Get Excited
See Me!
Get Busy and
i
i
(Conti n nod to page 4)
-99999999999—9999999999—9—99—99999—9——9—9999—9—9—99—9999—9999—99999999999—999999999—999999999999—999999999999999—99—999—i
Ladies’ and Misses’ Slippers
New Madras Cloth and Ginghams
Muslin Underwear and Embroidery
Ladies’ Shirt Waists,
hands going at 25 to 50 per cent off.
Few odds and ends which
left
were
on
Many Extra Good Goods in This Lot
& REYNOLDS
MOORE
WATCH OUR SHOW WINDOWS
THE PARTICULAR PLACE FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE
r
1 1
‘ 4'
3ay City Bank & 1 rusft: Co.
Guaranty Fund Bank
Fred S. Robbins
John W. Gaines
Harry Burkhart
Guy M. Bryan
S. A. Foote
M. S. Perry
I
I
ERTL, The Optician
At Matagorda Pharmacy
CAPITAL AND PROFITS $ 70,000
RESOURCES - - - - $240,000
The ti'ternoon Discourse on the Heal-
ing of the Citral) tic Bus Another
Awakening linlietinenl of thu
Slothful Church
Members
lake him to Jvhuh that Jle might try
expectation
I For Jesnit)
M HOK SI TIIEIILAXD YIELDS
I’EKHISSIOX TO USE HIS NAME.
I
?
l!
1
u- •
9
i
Thos. H. Lewis
B. A. Ryman
E. L. Perry
d,,U'T ■
VT al
SMITH-LOCHART DRUG CO.
The Obliging Druggists
; DAY PHONE 127 NIGHT PHONES 119 & 148
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
no i
V;...............................................t........................rru
the world by the instrumentality
the people who had
taught the way of life,
mission. brethren,
are true to It?
Ing false?
To choose a hot water bottle
from our large slock of quality
rubber goods is to be assured
of the greatest usefulness and
satisfaction. Our hot waler
bottles are sold to you under a
reliable guarantee, for wo hold
an agreement with the manu-
facturer to take back any piece
of rubber goods that proves de-
fective before a reasonable time
HUSTON DRUG STORE
The Rcxnll Store Phone 51
’ '1*
1
B
ij
‘i"
M
i' -w
■
51|& 1
I
of such style,
titre, from
best rubber.
prices
ITfS SAEZ fN
OuR BABB ,
Six new big reels of films at Pastime I
and everyone are headliners. Tonight
5 and 10 cents. |x§
Six now big reels of films at Pastime
and everyone are headliners. Tonight
5 and 10 cents.
CONDEMNED BY
OWN VOTARIES
11 “1
IB1'1
■J!
j
yx
F t.a 'I
1
till
The turning point in many a farmer’s or business
man’s bistory is the moment when he and his
bankePcome to a perfect understanding.
With character, capacity and some capital, that
other essential to success, credit is easily attained.
The officers of the Bay City Bank & I rust
Company desire to know the business men and
farmers of this community in order that they may
become accquainted with their character, capacity
| and resources, and be in position to add to their
l enterprise the co-operation which a consertive
bank is permitted to give.
life
ji lit.
LINT Xlt.llCS SEKMOX IXitHIIEIt
I'tlW Hil l L DELIA I K VNCK
I POX MH I IL CON.
III TH t> X
IN TEXAS IS BAY CITY
-—Progressive, Aggressive,
liberal, and 1 have the best
business corner in the city to
sell for the owner, and you
deal with the owner. There
is a good tenent in the build-
ing, and it offers a fine
INVESTMENT
But give your orders for Pure and Good
Drugs to us. The same price and same
treatment to all, the year round.
<J First Class Druggists are hard to find
—what time there isn’t two in our store
there is one. .*. .*• • *.
han elapsed. Our hot water
bottles hold their shape and re-
tain their pliability. Their
general appearance alone speaks
well for their value because it
hi Impossible to make a bottle
finish and tex-
anythlng but the
Many stylos aud
>1.25 and up.
' 5SS
/><.'/»<>.•</( your money hi
tweiitv fievxttiNt? If is hi ti siul'e plttoo.
you hnppy to know flint some tiny,
.VESS arfrwM, yon turn a»o to the hunk
nml i'itul your nioiivy vv /»<•!■<• ynn h'it it. I'lu' ptJft-
MifMMiun <>F n hntik iicu-ooof nut only i>iwi^ you
pri'nt iy<' in your eoiiiiiiiinlt y but with yourulf,
Hi'l>in tit ono*' to pot tiwuy jimt n portion of wlmt
yon mv now lott Inp, t£o in extniinniiiiue.
Do YOl li hnnkinu with US.
"
- ■Mil
-j’.l ■ \1M|
onr Him kt you Feo
It will ttmko
a A m:si-^
First Showing of Spring Goods
How many of you |edtable.
How many tire prov- btx>k.
It's up to you Are you
a worker or a blocker of the way?
Put these questions on your con-
sciences and resolve before God no
longer to tie a drone in the hiva
of the paralytic,
cotints of thia mlracal agree in saj
ing lliat .li'siis i
tliut is tile faith of those
brought him—healed the man hi
another noted case, tiu* father etled
out, ‘‘laird have mercy upon me, that
my child may be healed.”
In other words, while we are de-
pendent upon God, He is depending on
us. He Is not dependent on us, Imt
chooses to depend on us. We don't
h..ow why, but it is a fact that He has
chosen to save men by the Interven-
tion of men. Tile very first convert
to the Christian Church, the Ethio-
pian Eunuch, was saved by means of
Philip whom the Holy Spirit directed
to go join himself to tlie eunuch's
chariot. Cornelius was not saved by
the Holy Spirit direct, but was direct-
ed to send for Peter. From those days
to tlie present, God has chosen to save teaches hypocrisy. Therefore
of change of conditions or reformation
already been of the character of ills plays remedy
That is your an evil that is fundamentally Irretu-
Fnrther along in the same
Dr. Trumbull says; A man
may portray evil in literature, In poi-
try, in music, In sculpture, without
putting himself Into tlie exhibit of
evil; but the actor must merge Ills
personality with tlie murderer, the
seducer, the thief, the betrayer so ns
to become for the moment tlie verita-
ble evil doer himself."
An English writer has computed that
Henry Irving, one of the very best,
morally as well as professionally, of
tlie actors of our day, had committed
15,<100 murders on the stage, while
Harry Sullivan had committed 17,000;
tiiat Chas Wynliam had been divorced
front 2,KOO wives on the stage; that
Mis. Bancroft had been seduced nml
abducted 3,200 times; Adn Cavendish
I had been betrayed and deserted 5,600
times, and so on through a long list
of like evil exhibition*.
To illustrate the effect of such dra-
mas upon the people who witness
them, tlie preacher cited the moral
corruption of modern society and gave
just one of hundreds of like cases
happening every day While he was
holding a meeting in Lawrence, Kan.,
a youth who was a member of a Sun-
day school class in the First Baptist
Church went to see a moving picture
show demonstrating the Dalton gang’s
raid on an Oklahoma bank So much
more powerful was the bad teaching
of the show than the good teaching of
the Sunday school that tills boy went
to Girard, a town near by, held up
the cashier and robbed the bank, made
| his escape, returned to Lawrence and
killed the officer who tried to arrest
him, again escaped imt again returned
and was fatally wounded while re-
sisting arrest.
Having this basis of reason against
the theater, the preacher took up the
history of the stage to show that from
Io Messrs. M .N. Perry and Others:
Gentlemen: Your call upon mo,
through the columns of The Tribune,
to permit you to use my name as a
<andldate for reelection to the office
oi mayor of Bay t’ity, came as a sur-
prise to mo; as I had already deter-
mined not t<> run again and had so
announced to you and to my company.
But your appeal to my patriotism
fa no touching and kind, not. to say
flattering, that I cannot find it. in my
heart to refuse.
However, I cannot permit your
klndcnsR In aftribnting Io me all credit
, for the splendid growth and develop-
ment of our city, and the large amount
of municipal improvement done under
my administration, to pass without
protest I Insist thaj...jtou remember
that I have had the benefit of the ad-
vice. counsel and co-operation of a
board of aidermen always composed
of men of at least equal wisdom and
good judgment as myself ,and they
are entitled to a full share of what-
ever honor you may think our achieve-
ments deserve. And back of both the
aldermen and myself have always
stood In almost solid phalanx, a citi-
izenshlp ho progressive in spirit that
they have generously voted us the
means needed to keep our fair city
abreast of the times,
I am sure you will believe me sln-
cae wlw>n I assure you that I am not
moved to accept tills call by any Itch
for offlee; for it carries no emolu-
ments, and you have already heaped
its honors upon mo four successive
times No; I am moved by two
considerations alone gratitude to you
and a d< > Ir«- to serve you In return for
tlie honor you have done me. Having
seen our city provided with a splen-
did water system and supply, improved
streets and splendid sidewalks, I hope
during one mors term to see these
tilings supplemented by a much-need-
ed sewer system, and possibly other
progn'sslvo measures.
Sincerely yours,
JOHN SUTHERLAND.
. -----o—q .......
Mr Geo. B. Culver of Matagorda and
Capt. Jacobson who lias the contract
for the Intercoastal Canal from Mat-
agorda Bay to Galveston were in tho
city today. They report work on tho
big ditch progressing rapidly.
.............. —•— i nua
Found anything? Find tlie owner
with a Tribune want ad.
|
At the afternoon service yesterday
Evangelist Ham again removed large
areas of cuticle from the unfaithful
church members and sprinkled gcn\ <■-
ous quantities of salt upon the raw
places But when in closing he com-
forted them with a renewal of the as-
surance given several times before
that they shall yet see penitents
flocking to tlie altar in great numbers
before these meetings close, they felt
the truth of St. Paula saying that "No
I chastening for the present seemeth to
[ j be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless
i afterwards it yleldeth the peaceable
j fruit of righteousness, to them that
• are exercised thereby.”
i The preacher said that there are
i six actors in Gils little scene. The
[jailing paralytic, the healing Savior
» and tlie four who brought tlie Impotent
I, man to Christ. And the first thing
j that arrests our attention is that
1 wlille there were many people there,
i, such a throng, indeed, that those who
[ brought tin1 man needing Christ's
1 healing touch could not get him into
i the house, there were only four of
j them at work! Several hundred stund-
1 Ing around Idle and in the way, and
i just four doing something! Isn’t that
j a faithful picture of many a church
[ in this da> ? Some of the penitent;
who come to this altar have to squeeze
their way through and around a lot
of idle church members who stand and
block the way.
Jesus had been to Caporniutn on an-
other visit before this visit and had
then healed many of all manner of
diseases, and it is altogether probable
that the four men who came bearing
this parlytic on his mattress were of
the number who had been healed at
that time. Hence they had great
faith in tho ypwor of Jesus to heal.
Probably they had much difficulty in
convincing the parlytic that Jesus
could heal him;just as every Christian
worker of this day finds it necessary
to argue, quote scripture and persuade
even their own friends to come and
try the saving grace of the Savior that
they have already proven in their own
cases. Probably the poor fellow had
been so long afflicted that lie had
abandoned hope, and only yielded suf-
ficient assent to permit his friends to
its very beginning the stage had prov-
en the truth of tills philosophy. It
has always been and is today Just
what, reason teaches we might expect
It to bo, In its effects.
Dr. Herrick Johnson says: "Dram-
atic representation had Its origin
among the Greeks with a troupe of
Bacchanalians In rude and boisterous
rT'HE NUMBER ol new accounts which we are receiving
* is most gratifying, and with our increasing facilities we
are prepared to take care of all the further business which
may come to us, and solicit your patronage.
______W.i-K-.-.
hrg that the schools lay tint the fouu-
t>ut without mucli cxpectuiion that dation for education, merely touching
hw would be healed For Jesus did how to study and to think, but the I
not recognize any faith on the part three great educative Institutions
Ail the Gospel ac- are the t'lwieli, tlie lUess and the |
Theater. The speaker proceeded to
seeing their faith," discuss the philosophy of education at
... ;!.ose four who: some length, shoeing that It may be
beueftctiU or baneful, etc., and his
find intnctnieni against the theater
was that it was a baneful adueationul
force. After discussing tiie psycholo-
gical reasons for lids assertion, lie
quoted the following authorities in
substantiation of his opinion:
Dr. H Blay Trumbull says: "The
chief and all-prevallling objection to
tlie theater Ih that the profession of
an actor Is In and of Itself unnatural,
lialeful, and radically wrong. ••*His
I main purixise and endeavor is to ap-
pear and seem what lie Is not." And
Dr Trumbull goes on to say that be-
cause the actor must become in all
things a false pretense his art neces-
sarily inculcates and encourages and
hypocrisy. Therefore no
5, verse 22:
pearance of evil."
I say it was a great discourse, be-
cause it fully measured up to that es-
timate. It was scholarly, argumenta-
tive, logical, eloquent, convincing.
Tho preacher commenced by say-
J999999—
The Meeting nt Xight,
The discourse on the theater was
preached from Thessalonians Chapter
"Abstain from all ap-
r
f
NOW GOING ON
i EVERYTHING AT
iSjoUROWN PRICE
jbADOUH BROS.:
«••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
| Slaughtered Sale
1
THE DAILY TRIBUNE.
BAV CITY, TEXAN, NATI HDAY, EEltKI IKY 1, (HIX
FIVE CENTS THE COPY
BEFORE YOU BUY
BIG BARGAIN ON
EVERYTHING
■
IBADOUH BROS.
| Get Our Sale Prices
YOI.I ME VIII
XI MBEK 50.
r
hogwal-
own on
Eidman.
k good
’, Bay
Lmd-w
les at
homo
■ and
I 2t
h-rl.
Ide
|-place,
Ld and
t<>dats
Is with
on cor-
Terms
month,
ilty Co.
■
•.
f
>
aderu.
I
11 located
D. Hens-
2wd-ltw
liett Cot-
LfMobene
imt year,
per cent
I, easy to
It> makes
ono-’six-
Jr., Eagle
tf w
he thor-
. A. D.
2wd-ltw
Ml.e northwest
Morthmist one-
fl of the south-
Hon No. 14 In
H R Co., land,
■tent No. 277,
■>wn by F. J.
■corded in tho
Hlerk of Mata-
Bid on the 4th
■1!B3, being the
month, between
■k a. m. and 4
liy, at tho court
litv I will offer
lilic auction, for
lie and interest
Ike and Bernard
property.
ITexas, this the
k. D. 1913.
K RUGELEY,
I County, Texas.
................ ■ t f r I
■ execution
I of the dls-
lity, Texas,
Ba judgment
Ki the 22nd
112, in favor
■Hocker and
Id Barnhard
I. 16, pag^k -
Iket of said
■day of Jan-
I'clock a. m.,
ng described
Id situate in
state of Tex-
I* said A. H.
Lemcke, to-
■the attention of
■f!u ‘1“r,nK
H tno paper will
■ home In Bay City
■ regular subscrib-
■ hosc who are not
Ito read the paper
■tially and see. W
■0 your adv:,.-'*
■ r the
I Is only
Ii can, very often,
■by reading one of
rchunts and buying '
Ins. Give it a fair
Ing and see If ws
lual benefit to tho
Iwe can.
(building of the city,
THE TRIBUNE.
j—O...........
have been tnaugur-
lefit. Try them and
>C
1-
ile
J
und;
tl for
iress.
trav-
[ 3td
I. H.
. of-
' tfd
iW '
•» 1 ■- •
i ,
L.ji-'.
f
L:-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, Carey. The Daily Tribune. (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 50, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 1, 1913, newspaper, February 1, 1913; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1361958/m1/1/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.