Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1914 Page: 4 of 20
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4
GALVESTON RIBUNE
RAILROAD BUILDING
This Is Century of
OVER PHILIPPINES
(Established 1880.)
Emblem That Will
Child; Upon Its Care
3
Not: Be Used For Pur-
Depends Happiness of
Future Generations
! poses
**k*k*k*kk
A A A A A A A A
By Pressdent WILSON In Flag Dau Address
By Dr. WOODS HUTCHINSON
**********************************************
****************** ********************************
VERY child born into the world is entitled to food, clothing, shelter
E
Foreign Representatives and Offices
By CURTIS GUILD. Former Ambassador to Russia
Infinite Patience and Use of Much Time
Necessary For Successful Mediation
By JOHN BARRETT, Director General Pan-American Union
Phone Taylo
I
THE VEGETARIAN VIEW.
They Do Long Prison Term
By J A.MES M. CLANCY, Former Warden of Sing Sing Prison
By E. C. SIMMONS, St. Louis Merchant
T
SANCTUM SIFTINGS
preventable losses
WHY HAIR TURNS GRAY.
Woodmen are planning their annual 0ciation. The journal avers that while
PER WEEK.
PER YEAR.
Photo by American
Press Association.
of
the
.10C
.$5.0c
Eastern Representative
PUTNAM AND RANDALL
171 Madison Ave.
at 33d Street.
New York City.
Any erroneous reflections upon the stand-
ing, character or reputation of any person
firm or corporation, which may appear in
the columns of The Tribune, will be gladly
corrected upon its being brought to the
attention of the management
CLNNINGHAM, Agent.
2161.
Published Every Week Day Afternoon at
The Tribune Building, 22d and Post-
office Sts., Galveston, Texas.
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS
IHE TRIBUNE receives the full day tele
graph report of that great news organizi-
tion for exclusive afternoon publication in
Galveston.
Two Kinds of Big Business—One Is Hon-
est; the Other Needs Regulation
Work on Lines Undertaken in
Accordance With Pre-
vious Plans.
TRIBUNE TELEPHONES.
Business Office.................—
Business Manager_________________1
Circulation Dep’t...............-
Editorial Rooms.__________________
President........................-
City Editor ...................—.
Society Editor ....................
________-83
.83-2 rings
_______1396
________.49
,49-2 rings
______1395
......2524
By KATHERINE BEMENT DAVIS, Commissioner of Correction.
New York City
By MONTGOMERY EVANS, President Pennsylvania State Bankers’
Association
Entered at the Postoffice in Galveston as
Second-Class Mail Matter.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
Delivered by carrier or by mail, postage
prepaid:
OIL AND GAS WASTE.
Beaumont Enterprise.
The United States bureau of mines is
NO TREES TO SPARE.
Corpus Christi Caller.
458882 92*
n"l
West’n Representative
THE S. C. BECKWITH
Agency,
Tribune Bldg., Chicage
fought its way up by honorable methods, has developed by reason
of square dealing with its customers, by reason of economics and
hard work, intelligence, clean thinking and planning. That kind of big
It may be most difficult to find a man whom both sides will readily
accept without any question, but certainly such a man exists, and I al-
ways believed that the mediators would be able to name him.
Bankers Should Give United and Aggres-
sive Aid In Administration of Law
We Need School to Train Diplomatists as
Much as We Need West Point
and a good education. It happens so, however, that not every
child is provided with these things, and it should THEREFORE
DEVOLVE UPON SOCIETY TO TAKE CARE OF IT. There
Women, So Apt at Unearthing Scandal,
Would Detect Crime on Larger Scale
Pigment Hairs Fall Out—Replaced by
Unpigmental Ones.
The old story that the hair of Marie
Antoinette, wife of Louis XVI, grew
gray in a single night, the night after
she was condemned to lose her head
under the sharp blade of the guillotine,
is discussed in a recent number of the
Journal of the American Medical Asso-
© 1914, by American
Press Association.
| T IS MOST UNFORTUNATE THAT THERE SHOULD
BE SUCH WIDESPREAD COMMENT AND OPIN-
ION THAT MEDIATION OF THE MEXICAN SITU-
ATION IS DOOMED TO FAILURE, AND THIS IS DUE
LARGELY TO THE FACT THAT THE MEDIATORS
HAVE NOT IN THE SHORT SPACE OF A FEW
authority for
ment that the
A i
c
at any of
WEEKS SUCCESSFULLY CONCLUDED THEIR LA-
BORS. SUCH A GREAT PROBLEM, IT MUST BE RE.
MEMBERED, REQUIRES ON THE PART OF BOTH
MEDIATORS AND COMMISSIONERS CONSTANT AND
DELIBERATE EXCHANGE OF VIEWS ON BOTH
GENERAL FEATURES AND DETAILED POINTS OF
A PROTOCOL OR AGREEMENT, BUT THIS CAN BE
ACCOMPLISHED SUCCESSFULLY ONLY THROUGH
THE EXERCISE OF INFINITE PATIENCE AND THE
USE OF MUCH TIME.
———
2ee*,gg8
I
— y
..
the astonishing state-
THIS FLAG FOR THE FUTURE IS MEANT TO STAND FOR THE JUST
USE OF UN DISPUTED NATIONAL POWER. NO NATION IS EVER GO-
ING TO DOUBT OUR POWER TO ASSERT ITS RIGHTS, AND WE SHOULD
LAY IT TO HEART THAT NO NATION SHALL EVER HENCEFORTH
DOUBT OUF PURPOSE TO PUT IT TO THE HIGHEST USES TO WHICH
A GREAT EMBLEM OF JUSTICE AND GOVERNMENT CAN BE PUT.
business is not to be feared.
THE OTHER KIND OF BIG BUSINESS I WOULD CALL BAD, AND IT
IS THE ONE THAT NEEDS REGULATION TODAY. THIS IS THE RE-
SULT OF AN UNNATURAL THROWING TOGETHER OF A LOT OF HET-
EROGENEOUS ELEMENTS, ANTIQUATED PLANTS CAPITALIZED AT
HIGH FIGURES, THE PRINCIPAL INGREDIENT OF WHICH IS WATER,
OR UNNATURAL ASSOCIATIONS, BOTH OF MEN AND METHODS, OF
MANUFACTURING SITES AND THE EVIDENT DISPOSITION ON THE
PART OF THE PROMOTERS OR MANAGERS TO GAIN THEIR ENDS BY
MONOPOLY AND COMPETITIONS OF A BRUTAL KIND RATHER THAN
ON MERIT.
Federal regulation, in my opinion, is sure to come. At any rate, I
am sure we are going to give it a trial. It is only a. question of time
when it will come.
TEXAS CITY AGENCY—J. L. HOP.
KINS, AGENT.
Leave Orders at Goodson’s Drus Store
Phone 105.
The Tribune is on Sale a? the Follow-
ing News Stands, Houston, Tex.
Rice Hotel News Stand.
‘Tozy’s News Stand, Main and Texas
Bender Hotel News Stand.
Bristol Hotel News Stand.
Bottler Bros.' News Stand, Main St.
Union Sapply Co., Congress St.
Slilby Hotel News Stand.
Jims Smokery.
Preston Avenue News Stand.
Oriental News Stand.
©Sera House News Stand, Preston
and Fannin.
Cotton Hotel,
Rusk and Fannim.
Lewis News Agency,
Stratford Hotel, Fannin Street.
Orders taken for residence deliverg
,2.. + *
(Et
XA
AyA7
rap
petroleum and natural gases in
Many a man takes advantage of
other people, never having had any
advantages of his own.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE: FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1914.
HERE are two kinds of big business. One has grown naturally,
Ameriican Flag an
The Bryan good roads bill which
has been reported to the senate as a
substitute for .the Shackleford meas-
ure seems to eliminate the objection-
able features of the latter. The Shack-
leford bill did not provide for ade-
quate supervision of the expenditures.
The various states would have been
allowed to expend the money in any
way they saw fit without regard to a
unified system of American roads. The
Bryan bill would give a federal high-
way commission authoritiy to super-
vise the expenditure of the funds. It
provides for the issuance of 50-year 3
per cent bonds to the amount of $500,-
000,000 in lots of 100 million each for
five years. Participating states will be
required to issue equal amounts of
bonds, which will be bought by the
treasury department.
T HAVE already said women have proved their ability in the detective -
departmient. It has been said that the sex that is so apt at smelling
out a ncighborhood scandal will smell out a crime on a larger scale.
Probably th at faculty is an aid. I should like to see the sex well repre-
sented in th e detective department here and in other cities. .
w * w
OPPONENTS of women in public OFFICE SAY THAT WOMAN’S
NATURE, BEING SO MUCH BETTER THAN MAN’S, IS NOT CALCULAT-
ED TO FOLLOW THE DARK AND DEVIOUS WAYS OF CRIME. THAT
SOUNDS VIERY WELL AND MAY HAVE BEEN INTENDED AS A COM-
PLIMENT To OUR BETTER QUALITIES, BUT IT WILL NOT DETER WO-
MEN FROM ENTERING POLICE SERVICE. UNFORTUNATELY WOM-
EN’S NAMES APPEAR IN CRIME ANNALS, AND, TO PARAPHRASE THE
ADAGE “SET A THIEF TO CATCH A THIEF,” YOU WILL DO WELL TO
“SET A WOMAN TO CATCH A WOMAN.” IN OTHER WORDS, A WOMAN
KNOWS MORE OF FEMININE PSYCHOLOGY THAN A MAN CAN HOPE
TO LEARN.
• at •
It is henceforth to stand for self possession, for dignity, for the as-
sertion of tl ie right of one nation to serve the other nations of the Wo]
—an emblei n that WILL NOT CONDESCEND TO BE USED IM
PURPOSES; OF AGGRESSION AND SELF AGGRANDIZEMEM
that is too great to be debased by selfishness; that has vindicated
right to be honored by all nations of the world and feared by none wi
do righteoussness. "
•••
All men are afraid of imprisonment, but few of them who commit
murder are afraid of death. I have not met any of them that did not
face death, with comparative equanimity. This is known throughout the
prison. The man who quails at the thought of the death chair is de-
spised among his fellow prisoners.
w••
I SOLEMNLY BELIEVE THAT NO EXECUTION THAT HAS TAKEN
PLACE IN THIS PRISON SINCE I HAVE BEEN HERE HAS HAD THE
SLIGHTEST DETERRENT EFFECT UPON ANY OF THE REAL CRIMI-
NALS. BUT THE MOST HARDENED OF THEM WILL WINCE AND
PLEAD IF HIE LOSES HIS GOOD CONDUCT COMMUTATION. IT IS FREE-
DOM THEY DESIRE—LIBERTY TO GO AND COME AS THEY PLEASE.
THE PROSFECT OF DEATH IS NOT NEARLY SO DREADFUL TO THEM
AS A LONG SENTENCE.
A MODERN CIVILIZER.
Temple Telegram.
A great naval officer claims that
baseball will civilize the Mexicans.
What it has done in the Philippines it
surely can do in a more civilized coun-
try. Baseball offers opportunity for
the beligerents to work off their sur-
plus energy in a manner similar to war,
but more scientific and less dangerous.
If argument possessed the virtue of
convincing people there would be no
more beef eaten in this United States
and we could begin to snap our fingers
at the high cost of living, for the
vegetarian has proven beyond any
hope of refuting that the direct
products of the soil are the only fit
foodstuffs for consumption by the
genus homo. At a recent meeting in
Washington of the Food Reform so-
ciety Professor M. E. Olsen advanced
the claim that the human race would
be healthier, happier and more con-
tented than it is at present should
everybody eschew flesh and chew gar-
den truck. He asserted that meat was
a stimulant and that according to all
students of such matters, one stimu-
lant created a taste for another and
hence the constant meat eater was en-
couraged to indulge in liquid stimu-
lants. Vegetarians, said he, never be-
come drunkards. Cancer, appendicitis
and many other disease, he affirmed
result through infection or because
the human system is not designed to
use meat as food.
But this gentleman also believes
that meat is responsible 'for most of
the war that have visited the world
and points out that wars come either
primarily or remotely from a desire
of one nation to enlarge its territorial
possession in order to obtain greater
pasturage area; he then points out that
if the land now devoted to grazing
should be employed in producing
vegetable crops it would furnish seven
times more nutrition than if set apart
for the raising of meat bearing ani-
mals. The professor further under-
takes to prove that if the people of
the United States would all become
vegetarians there would be no longer
a problem of the non-employed because
there would be plenty of land to fur-
nish employment to all the people who
desired to work.
About the time that Professor Olsen
was presenting his strong plea for an
all vegetable diet to the Food Reform
society in Washington, Dr. I. Bulkley
over at Atlantic City was telling a
medical convention that the use of
meat, coffee and alcohol caused many
cancers and that the only way in
which the race could be freed from this
disease was to exclude these articles
from our diet; he called attention to
the fact that cancer was absolutely
unknown to the barbaric races who
lived exclusively on the direct products
of the soil. And the doctor had no
idea he was presenting a strong plea
for vegetarianism.
But despite all that has been said
and all that has been proven, there
are so many skeptics left in the land
that the price of beef still remains in
the upper altitudes. Even the advanced
vegetarians are not yet ready to insist
that any sort of vegetables will make
the best food for mankind; the Ve8e
• • 8
It is as essential to successful diplomatic work as to successful elec- 1
trical engineering that the important posts should be filled not only by (
able men, but by men trained for this specific work in language, history I
and international law. You wouldn’t put a successful shoe manufac-
turer without naval knowledge into the turret of a battleship, would I
you? We do almost exactly similar things in our diplomatic service. I
R•* I
IT IS ONLY THROUGH EDUCATIONAL ELIMINATION THAT ABILITY I
IN ANY LINE CAN INVARIABLY BE DISCOVERED. THE EDUCATIONAL I
TESTS DEVISED FOR THE REVELATION OF FITNESS FOR THE CON- •
SULAR AND DIPLOMATIC SERVICE SHOULD BE AS RIGID AS THOSE .
NOW IN USE IN OUR COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES FOR THE REV-
ELATION OF THE UNUSUAL SCIENTIFIC CAPACITIES.
Between the militant suffragettes
and the politicians who are fomenting
the Irish home rule controversy the
outlook for peace in the British Isles
is not encouraging. In both cases
British obstinacy is largely to blame
for the trouble. The same trait cost
England the American colonies. It may
cost the British empire dearly before
final settlement of the existing prob-
lems is reached.
I SOMETI MES wonder why men take this flag and flaunt it. If I am
respecteid I do not have to demand respect. If I am feared I do not
have to ask for fear. If my power is known I do not have to pro-
claim it. I do not understand the temper, neither does this nation un-
derstand the temper, of men who use this flag boastfully.
283
the above stands. W. J.
—
¥ "h
-.8.
of Aggression 4-/
dsgogp-
table diet must be evenly balanced and
in order to bring the proper constitu-
ents into their most effective field of
influence one must be sufficiently well
acquainted with the elements of the
different sorts of vegetables to make
the meal contain the proper quantity
of proteins, fats and carbo-hydrates,
and this would mean nothing less than
a course of study almost equal to that
required in mastering a foreign lan-
guage. As no member of the human
race is born with an overpowering
passion to make a life study of what-
ever affects the physical System, it is
more than probable that the next gen-
eration will follow in the footsteps of
those who are today rocking the
cradles, engineering the gas range and
debating prices with the butcher, fol-
lowing lines of least resistance, and
will leave the physical perfection of
the race to some later generations
while they proceed to satisfy their
hunger with such foods as a limited
income will allow. But this need not
discourage the vegetarian in telling us
what idiots we are.
convention, to be held at Galveston
Aug. 17 to 22. No one7will be able to
cry, sentimentally, “Woodman, spare
that tree.” Galveston hasn’t a tree to
spare. No coast town has. Trees are
at a premium, and should be encour-
aged. Right here in Corpus Christi, be
it admitted, we need several.
Special to The Tribune.
Washington, July 20.—The progress
of railroad building in the Philippines
is outlined in a report from Consul
General George E, Anderson at Hong-
kong, China, printed in the “Daily Con-
sular and Trade-Reports,” Consul An-
derson says:
"Railway construction in the Philip-
pines is being continued only in line
with the plans and prospects outlined
in these reports about a year ago and
new enterprises are not being under-
taken. Within the scope of plans be-
ing realized the chief interest centers
in the approaching- completion of the
Manila railway to Baguio, the moun-
tain capital. On this branch the grad-
ing has been practically finished and
the track has been laid up to the foot
of the first rank grade, where the cog
road section begins.
This, latter section climbs a 14 per
cent grade for 70 miles through mag-
nificent mountain scenery. On the en-
tire branch there are to be five tun-
nels approximately a total length of
0.932 miles, of which the longest is
0.262 mile. One tunnel is practically
completed the heading having been
driven through on three and a start
made on the fifth. All the material
for the cog road is now on the ground
and work started about April 1. It is
expected that the road will be ready
for traffic in 1916.
NNY EXPERIENCE IN SING SING HAS CONVINCED ME THAT CAPI-
• TAL PUNISHMENT DOES NOT ACCOMPLISH THE PURPOSES
1 1 FOR WHICH IT IS SUPPOSED TO BE DESIGNED. IT IS NOT A
DETERRENT—I KNOW THAT NOW FROM MY OWN OBSERVATION AND
CONVERSATIONS WITH PRISONERS IN THE DEATH HOUSE.
) ESPECT FOR THE LAW AND FOR JUDGES ADMINISTERING IT HAS
K DISAPPEARED. NEWSPAPERS, MAGAZINES, POLITICAL ORA-
TORS AND ECONOMICAL THEORISTS VIE WITH DEMAGOGUES IN
PROCLAIMING TO THE PEOPLE THAT JUDGES ARE WRONG IN THEIR
CONCEPTION OF THE LAW OR PERVERTED IN THE ADMINISTRATION
OF IT.
The Ten Commandments are out of date, and the new preaching is
thou shalt not labor six days, thou shalt not honor, thou mayst steal, etc.
LABOR IS LOOKED UPON AS IRKSOME, EQUAL OPPORTUNITY TO
ALL IS THE RULE. THIS ATTITUDE HAS HAD POTENT INFLUENCE
UPON WRITTEN LAW AND ITS ADMINISTRATION. CRITICISM IS
FOUNDED UPON FAILURE TO ADMINISTER ACCORDING TO CRITICS’
WISHES.
The duty of bankers is to have something to do with this in the
choice of men as legislators. They should render jury service, encourage
farmers and give united and aggressive aid in administration of the law.
it is true that her hair was gray at her
death, her biograpns record that her
hair had been gray long before the time
of her execution. The comment is made
that it is quite possible that the change
in her hair while in prison was due to
the fact that she did not have access
to hair dyes and other toilet prepara-
tions.
Accounting for color changes of the
hair, it is explained that this change is
not due to a destruction of pigment
present in the hair, or to a bleaching of
hairs already formed, but that pig-
mented hairs fall out and are replaced
by unpigmented or white ones. Com-
pletely pigmented hairs never turn
gray. They fall out. It has also been
observed that the process of pigment
formation may cease during the de-
velopment of the hair. In such case the
tip of the hair will remain pigmented
though the base appears white.
While the United States is endeavor-
ing to cultivate more cordial relations
with South American countries, it is
interesting to know that the effort is
reciprocal. Argentine is going to
spend more than one and one-half mil-
lion dollars in exhibits at the Panama-
Pacific exposition. Brazil and Chile
have also decided to make a good
showing’. These exhibits will do much
to further relations between North and
South America.
United States during the past ten years
have amounted to a billion dollars. But
the same authority makes the still
more astonishing statement, with which
Secretary Lane agrees, that an annual
economic waste of $150,000,000 can be
prevented by an annual expenditure of
$25,000. During the year ending June
30, 1914, the bureau of mines has
stopped and prevented a waste of
natural gas alone valued at $10,000,000.
An adverse report has been recom-
mended by the Georgia state senate
committee on constiutional amend-
ments on a measure giving Georgia
women the right to vote in state and
county elections. As similar action had
been previously taken by the house
committee one infers that woman suf-
frage is not popular in Georgia. Only
a short while ago a measure which
would have submitted the suffrage is-
sue to the people of Louisiana was de-
feated at Baton Rouge. Southern
“solidarity” is still a grim reality.
-------------•-------------
The motor truck scored signally
during recent artillery maneuvers in
England. Cannon were rushed to the
coast to repel a theoretical invasion
much more rapidly than would, have
been possible on the railways. Where
passably good the motor truck is eas-
ily the most efficient transportation
device yet invented. The army mule,
however, is in no danger of extinction.
For field work under any and all sorts
Of conditions the army mule has no
superior.
The branches of this line also show
progress. The branch line from San
Francisco to Arayet is completed to
Santa Ana>, and will be finished by the
end of April. The branch from Pani-
que to Rosales, San Quintin and Tayug
is complete to about eight miles from
San Quintin. North of Aringay the
track extension is delayed at the Nag-
uillan river, eight miles south of San
Fernando, where a bridge of 11 spans
150 feet each in length is being built.
It will be the largest bridge in the
Phillipines. South of ManHa, running
in a northwesterly direction from Lu-
cena toward Laguimanoc, 12,247 miles
of track have been laid, the expectancy
being that the section will be open to
traffic in July. Between Laguimanoc
and Siasi there are 5000 at work grad-
ing.
Al Albay large forces of men are at
work in both directions on the Albay-
Nueva-Caceras division. From Albay
and Legaspi north to Tabaco the track
is laid to Bacacay. Track has been laid
to Ligao, a distance of 24.85 miles; Iriga
will be reached in about a year. The
line reaches a rich hemp country. The
company has altogether about 10,000
men at work on the various extentions
now in course of construction. The
company ' is placing in service on its
main line a train de luxe of the most
advanced pattern constructed in its
shops near Manila.
Work on the lines of the Philippine
Railway company, the second principal (
system in the islands, has not been
pushed very rapidly in the past few
months and at present is practically at
a standstill; and, in fact, the company
reports that no further extensions are
contemplated at the present time.
In this connection the probable ex-
tension of the use of auto trucks and
automobiles as temporary arrangement
in lieu of railway lines is being dis-
cussed generally, and the plan is un-
derstood to have the indorsement of the
executive department of the island gov-
ernment.
At present there is a considerable
service of such vehicles centering in
Tacloban, the capital of Leyte province,
where motor transportation lines are
operated connecting that city with sev-
eral important towns in the interior
of the province. The splendid provin-
cial roads built since American occu-
pation offer unusual facilities for ex-
tending such service. Railway projects
in Iloilo and Ceba at present are re-
ceiving no further development and the
situation on the whole is considered
unfavorable and unsatisfactory.
T TE NEED A SCHOOL TO TRAIN DIPLOMATISTS AS MUCH AS WE
W NEED WEST POINT OR ANNAPOLIS. YET WHILE OUR MILI-
TARY AND NAVAL ACADEMIES ARE EVERYWHERE ACKNOWL-
EDGED TO BE SECOND TO NONE IN THE WORLD WE HAVE NEVER
MADE THE SLIGHTEST MOVE TOWARD THE ESTABLISHMENT OF
SUCH AN INSTITUTION.
Criminals Fear Death Sentence Less Than
comes a time in the development of the child when its mental horizon
reaches beyond the home. Then the state should step in and guide the
child in its growth.
THE COMPLEXITIES OF MODERN LIFE ARE FAR BEYOND THE
CONTROL OF ANY MOTHER, NO MATTER HOW CAPABLE AND INTEL-
LIGENT SHE MAY BE, AND THE STATE, THROUGH A SPECIAL CORPS
OF TEACHERS AND TRAINERS, IS FAR MORE CAPABLE TO LEAD THE
CHILD. I DO NOT MEAN THAT THE CHILD SHOULD BE TAKEN FROM
THE MOTHER IN ANY CASE. THE BEST WAY WOULD BE TO TRAIN
MOTHERS HOW TO TAKE CARE OF THEIR CHILDREN AFTER THEY
ARE ABOVE THE AGE OF ELEMENTARY DEVELOPMENT. MOTHER-
HOOD IS A GIFT WHICH AMOUNTS ALMOST TO GENIUS, AND NOT
EVERY WOMAN IS FOR IT.
We should give the child the greatest amount of freedom possible,
give it all the food it wants, all the sleep it desires and all the play it
yearns for. The rest of the time spend in instruction. Society is com-
ing to realize that the child is a diminutive man and is entitled to the
same right of liberty every adult demands. I mean that amount of lib- I
erty compatible with the welfare of the individual and society as a whole.
UPON THE EDUCATION, TRAINING AND OPPORTUNI-
TIES OF OUR CHILDREN DEPENDS THE HAPPINESS OF FU-
TURE GENERATIONS. THIS IS THE CENTURY OF. THE
CHILD. ,
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1914, newspaper, July 24, 1914; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1438137/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.