Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 64, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 9, 1915 Page: 2 of 10
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GALVESTON TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1915.
TWO
Children Have Kidney Trouble
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Crystal No. 1
TODAY:
TheGneThingWeDo
the ambition of
real service in
O. K. LAUNDRY
ROCK ISLAND OPERATIONS.
TOMORROW:
REGULAR PRICES.
9
QUEEN
GIRL BURNED TO DEATH.
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Best Theater
emaneaEaEEA
Mrs. W iggs of the Cabbage Patch
CARNEGIE’S PLANS UPSET.
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Piles Cured in 6 to 14 D:
Protruding- Piles.
First application gives relief. 50c.
The Fair’s Specials for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday
577
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Specials for Men
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At The Queen Theater Tomorrow (Adv.)
39c
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In Five Parts
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FOR MARDI GRAS
years.
as
39c
5c
DRUNKENNESS
7
19c
69c
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82325168228822325232552222
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dresses run as high
Special sale price
is only ...........
grouchy Major Pepper (W. F. Bowker),
and the young woman apparently ac-
cepts this arrangement, although she
loves Windom. “Go in and win her,
boy, and copper the pile,” says Uncle
Special sale
price......
sell regularly for 75c, special
here at.....................
values which we offer
special at............
When a woman says all men are alike
she isn’t bragging on our sterner sex.
ket. We offer them
special, per yard ...
They clean Liver; sweeten Stomash
end Sick Headache, Bad Breath,
Indigestion, Constipation.
these
$1.00.
BOTTOMLESS PIT,
Kay Bee, and
I
Crystal Vaudeville
Today
E.)-,
To excel in one particular line is
any going, growing concern.
Our ambition is to render. you
UGH. CALOMEL MAKES
YOU DEATHLY SICK
BEST LAXATIVE FOR
BOWELS—“CASGARETS’
Colored Villainy
Keystone Comedy
Dear Uncle Dudley
An Exceptionally Good Musical
Comedy; Lots of Laughs and Music,
Besides Stunning Girls.
Matinees Tuesday, Thursday, Satur-
day and Sunday.
Prices, Matinee 10c and 20e; Night,
15c and 25c.
g"
“25.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y.
AT EIGHT O’CLOCK
AT SCOTTISH RITE AUDITORIUM
CORNER CHURCH AND 22ND STREETS
THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED.
MRS. WIGGS OF THE CABBAGE
PATCH,
In Five Parts.
Negro Girl Received Fatal Injury While
Cooking Meal.
By Associated Press.
Waco, Tex., Feb. 9.—Burns received
at noon yesterday, while she was pre-
paring dinner on the McLennan ranch,
eleven miles west of here, caused the
death in a local sanitarium of Stella
Walker, a negro girl eleven years old.
Cambrics for Mardi Gras Suits.
Any color desired. These cam-
brics are the best on the mar-
THE VOLUNTEER FIREMAN,
Thanhcuser.
Tomorrow;
Mutual Weekly No. 3-1915.
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FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
ANNOUNCES
A FREE LECTURE ON
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49
7)
lays.
if PAZO
Itching,
BEATRIZ
MICHELENA
—IN—
CONCERT
for the
BENEFIT OF THE BELGIAN SUFFER-
ERS UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE
DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA
At Cathedral Kall, Thursday Evening,
Feb. 11,,1315, at 8 o’clock, sharp.
Admission’, 50e.
MEN’S SHIRTS—French Flannel Shirts
with double cuffs and military 6)4
collars; 75c values, special at. ..
The Home of the Universal
Program First Run
TODAY:
The Mysterious Woman
Two-part 101 Bison, Featuring Cleo
Madison.
Charlie Chaplain, Keystone Comedy,
—IN—
CAUGHT IN A CABARET.
*4 ! >
30
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
—BY—
William R. Rathvon, C. S. B.
OF DENVER, COLORADO
MEMBER OF THE BOARD OF LECTURESHIP OF THE MOTHER CHURCH
THE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, IN BOSTON, MASS.
TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY NINTH
0
Crystal Majestie.
One of the brightest bits of dialogue
the DeAtley company has offered this
season occurs in an amusing scene in
the present offering at the Crystal Ma-
jestic theater, “Uncle Dudley,” when
Greatest Opportunity,” Edison drama,
“Winning the Old Man Over,” and “The
Club Pest,” Biograph comedies.
A Wonderful Play of Fact and Fancy
by Eleanor Gates.
Humor—Humanity—Poetry—Pathos-
Satire.
Company of Thirty—Three Carloads of
Scenic Effects. . _
Not a Motion Picture—Only Company
Presenting This Play.
EVENINGS, 50c to §2.00; TUESDAY
MATINEE, 50c to §1.50.
Seats on sale now.
DIXIE NO. 1 Today
“For Another’s Crime”
Two-part Vitagraph, with Leo Delaney
and E. Rogers Lytton.
THE CLUB PEST,
Biograph Comedy, and
OLIVE’S GREATEST OPPORTUNITY,
Edison, Featuring Mabel Trunelle.
2,3
Elinor Glyn’s
"Three Weeks"
1__)
- .36
MEN’S SWEATERS—Jersey Sweaters
in grey. Good $1.00 values, now 60.
special at .................... 0e C
AMUSEMENTS.
AS-oAooawoesaeso-oena-AN-ne-N~-nnanaAAeAMJ
056
55 s,
Ladies’ Satin Evening Slippers, in
white, tan, pink, black and red. Reg-
ular 83,00 values, special $1.49
/8e
AA
SCIENTIST I
MEN’S UNDERWEAR—Fleece Lined
or Ribbed Underwear, in all sizes. The
kind that sells for 75c a garment 6)0-
elsewhere. Special here at..... ebe •
4
Queen Theater.
For tomorrow the Queen theater an-
nounces as the main attraction “Mrs.
Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch.” The
story has been reproduced in this in-
teresting picture with far greater at-
tention to detail than it was possible
to give it when it firt appeared on the
stage.
An entire circus was hired and trans-
ported to San Rafael. Theodore Roche,
(Continued on Page Seven.)
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Bo For You
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size
bottle. It will convince anyone. You
will also receive a booklet of valuable
information, telling about the kidneys
and bladder. When writing; be sure and
mention the Galveston Daily Tribune.
Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size
bottles for sale at all drug stores.
MEN’S FLANNEL NIGHT SHIRTS—
Flannel or Cambric Night Shirts, .that
money i:
to cure
Women’s Specials
W
Will Be Unable to Spend the Summer
at Skibo Castle.
New York, Feb. 9.—The war has
spoiled Andrew Carnegie’s vacation
plans this summer. For the first time
in many summers he will be absent
from Skibo Castle, his Scottish estate.
Instead, he will occupy Point d’Acadie,
Mrs. George Vanderbilt’s place at Bar
Harbor, which he has just leased.
KIMONOS—New lot just received of 50 dozen Ladies’ Outing
Kimonos, in all the latest patterns. Excellent gar- A
ments, worth up to 98c each. Special at............ keC
HOUSE DRESSES—The kind of dresses that will make you
come back for more; sizes to 44. These dresses sell 0Q
for $2 elsewhere. Our special price is as low as... •OC
Ladies’ Outing Skirts, in pinks, blues and white; stripes
and colors. Regular 50c values. Special for these 6)4 _
days at.................•......................... 4tC
APRON DRESSES—Ladies’ All-over Apron Dresses, just the
thing to save your good dresses. Regular 75c values. 6)4
Special at .......'.................... •eC
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s.
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic properties of QUI-
NINE and IRON. Drives out Malaria,
enriches Blood, Builds up the Whole
System. 50c.
4
WAISTS AND BLOUSES—100 dozen New Waists and L
Middy. Blouses, in all sizes, styles and colors. Ex- (Q, {
5 cellent values at $2.00, but we offer them at........ •OC
-mumazanamazazzamaeaauzanzsnmzezmanza-n
/
Druggists refund
OINTMENT fails
Blind, Bleeding or
CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
DRESSES—in all colors and
latest styles. All kinds of
patterns, in sizes 2 to 14
is one of Nature’s own comedians. In
fact, it is to laugh when one mere-
ly looks at him. Those feet, those
clothes, those grimaces! When Billie
Ritchie is slammed bead-on into three
reels of rib-tickling, side-splitting and
back-breaking comedy, it’s time to
draw the curtain. Human nature just
can’t stand it. Dislocated jaws are
bound to follow the exhibition of this
picture, and the Universal feels like a
criminal caught in flagrante delicto
when it knowingly releases such a fea-
ture.
charming Gwendolyn, the poor, little
rich girl who longs for the woods and George Murdock, in the title role, tells
the birds and the pleasant green places Harry Windom (Blanchard McKee)
of the country. Cooped up in a lux- | how to embark upon the seas of matri-
urious mansion, surrounded by all of mony. Uncle Dudley ’ has arranged to
the comforts that money and science > marry his daughter (Daisy Dean) to
can provide, Gwendolyn still lacks the
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ii
Dixie No. 1.
Mabel Taliaferro will be seen at
Dixie No. 1 theater Wednesday in
“Three of Us.” Rhy MacChesney and
her two brothers, Clem and Sonnie, live
with their father and servant, Maggie,
is a curable disease, which requires
treatment. The ORRINE treatment can
be used with absolute confidence. It
destroys all desire for whiskey, beer, or
other intoxicants. Can be given in the
home. No sanitarium expense. No loss
of time from work. Can be given
secretly. If after a trial you fail to
get any benefit from its use your
money will be refunded.'
ORRINE is prepared in two forms:
No. 1, secret treatment, a powder; OR-
RINE No. 2, in pill form, for those who
desire to take voluntary treatment.
Costs only $1.00 a box. Come in and
talk over the matter with us. Ask for
booklet. J. J. Schott, 2017 Market St.
Investigation of Road’s Financial Ac-
tivities Is Made.
By Associated Press.
Washington, Feb. 9.—Investigation
into the financial operations of the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific rail-
way will be resumed Feb. 25 by the in-
terstate commerce commission in Wash-
ington. Hearings will be held before
Commissioner Clements. A list of wit-
nesses has not been prepared, but it is
expected that Daniel, G. Reid, former
chairman of the board, and some of the
directors of the road will be summoned.
Grand Opera House.
Eleanor Gates’ beautiful fantasy,
“The Poor Little Rich Girl,” delighted
a large crowd at the Grand last night
on the occasion of its initial perform-
ance here this season. Brimming with
light and laughter, the spontaneous, ir-
responsible joys of youth, mingled with
the pathos of a starved and neglected
childhood, the plot makes the same
powerful appeal to the child in all of
us that “The Blue Bird” and “Peter
Pan” arouse.
Leonie Dana made a sweet and
Crystal Feature House.
“Three Weeks” continues to crowd
the Crystal Feature House. The story
runs this way: Sonia runs away from
her castle and her king. She encoun-
ters Paul in the restaurant in Lucerne,
Switzerland, precisely as recounted in
the novel. The two, a queen without
a country and a king without a throne,
fall madly in love. She struggles
against her enthrallment and seeks to
flee from temptation. But an accident
halts her flight and the inevitable next
meeting occurs. In the photoplay vers-
ion all these incidehts are idealized.
The tiger rug tryst of the pair in the
queen’s apartment in Lucerne is repro-
duced as in the novel. The thrilling
and tragic denouncement of the ro-
mance of the pair is shown in all its
original gripping power. The revels
in the palace, the plots and counter-
plots of the cabal of royal counselors
to dethrone the queen are all graphi-
• cally indicated. Miss Madeline Trav-
erse, who appears in the role of the
temperamental queen, is regarded as
one of the most attractive of the coun-
try’s younger stars. Mr. Mahlon Ham-
ilton, who plays the role of Paul, is one
of the most popular of leading players
of the native stage.
4W‘
fN
DIXIE NO. 2 Today
“For Love of Princess
Yolande”
Two-part Drama, Featuring Elsie
Albert, and
REUBEN'S BUSY DAY,.
A Unique Comedy..
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh with
Cascarets, or merely forcing a passage-
way every few days with Salts, Ca-
thartic Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative
Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg-
ulate the stomach, remove the sour and
fermenting food and foul gases, take
the excess bile from the liver and carry
out of the system all the constipated
waste matter and poisons in the bowels.
A Cascaret tonight will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken or
cause any inconvenience, and cost only
10 cents a box from your druggist. Mil-
lions of men and women take a Cas-
caret now and then and never have
Headache, Biliousness Coated Tongue,
Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Consti-
pated Bowels. Cascarets belong in
every household. Children just love to
take them.
Stop Using Dangerous drug before
it salivates you! It’s
horrible!
Three years ago my little girl, An-
gela, was taken sick with scarlet fever
and later dropsy set in; her face and
limbs swelled and her eyes puffed. A
leading physician here at the time,
treated her without the slightest suc-
cess. A sample of your Swamp-Root,
having been left at the house at the
time, I resolved to try it, and as it
agreed with her stomach I continued
using it with gratifying results. The
inflammation began to subside after
she had taken the first fifty-cent bottle,
and after she took two large bottles
she was pronounced cured by the doc-
tor and has been in good health ever
since. The doctor came to see her every
day and examined her every second
day until he pronounced her kidneys in
perfect condition.
Now then the doctor was under the
impression that I was giving my girl
his medicine, but as his medicine had
failed to do a bit of good, and desiring
not to offend him, I did not tell him
I was giving her Swamp-Root and he
did not know the difference. I did not
use one drop of his medicine after I
started my girl on Swamp-Root, and
have always felt that Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root saved my girl’s life, for
■which I am grateful.
I cannot praise it too highly.
Very truly,
MRS. MARY BYRNE,
New Brunswick, N. J.
State of New Jersey ) ss
County of Middlesex, f
Mrs. Mary Byrne, being duly sworn
by me, according to law, on her oath
saith that the above statement made
by me is just and true.
MRS. MARY BYRNE.
Sworn and subscribed to before me,
this 16th day of July, A. D., 1909.
MARGARET P. O’DONNELL,
Notary Public.
Best Theater.
Marguerite Clark, appearing at the
Best theater today in a return engage-
ment of “Wildflower,” has a confes-
sion to make:
“After my first work in photo-drama
I wandered, into the projection room
with mild interest to watch the fin-
ished film of ‘Wildflower.’ I had al-
ways self-indulgently believed that I
possessed a certain effectiveness in my
stage impersonations. The flash of my
7 ’
Ladies’ Boudoir Slippers in black,
red, tan, brown, blues and pink. Sizes
2% to 8. This is a lot of odds and
ends which are regular $1.00
Dixie No. 2.
Wednesday’s bill at Dixie No. 2 thea-
ter: “Broncho Billy’s Greaser Deputy,”
Essanay drama with G. M. Anderson;
“The Leopard’s Lair,” Selig drama;
“The Stone Heart,” Edison drama;
“The Hickville Tragedy Troupe,” Ka-
lem comedy.
Values of
3. Regular sellers at 35c.
Crystal No. 1,
At the “home of the Keystone” today
these features are offered: “Colored
Villainy" (Keystone); “The Bottomless
Pit,” Kay-Bee drama; “The Volunteer
Fireman” (Thanhouser).
Wednesday: Mutual Weekly 3; “The
Love Pirate,” two-part Reliance drama.
The Mutual Weekly Shows:
Indian soldiers land in Europe. Eng-
lish cavalry enters Scarborough to do
police duty after the German bombard-
ment.
Territorials cooking on the march.
Wulpin church near Dunkirk de-
stroyed. Note the crucifix came
through the bombardment unharmed..
Scarcity of rubber in Europe compels
England and France to buy old auto
tires in America.
Dr. Frank Crane, eminent advocate
of international peace, sends a message
to the readers of the Mutual Weekly.
The east and west entrances to the
Celilo Canal are opened, making the
Columbia river navigable for several
hundred miles.
Democratic women urge President
Wilson to support nation-wide wom-
an’s suffrage.
Racing is resumed at New Orleans
after a seven years’ lapse of the kingly
sport.
The only original grand opera baby
poses with her parents for the Mutual
Weekly.
A visit to Uncle Sam’s big gun fac-
tory at Watervliet, N. Y.
San Francisco’s Olympic clubmen en-
joy mid-winter' dip in the Pacific
ocean’s cheering warmth.
While the Boston “Brownies” shiver
and freeze amid cakes of ice in the
I Atlantic’s biting coldness.
Japanese Red Cross sends doctors
and nurses to Europe.
Annual tournament of roses at Pasa-
dena, Cal., awes 150,000 beholders.
This new auto sleigh skims over the
snow at a 35 mile per hour clip.
laundry work.
The mere matter of laundering your garments is
but a part of O. K.’s Service.
Regularity of collections; quick response on special
calls ; modern machinery, methods of efficiency, experts
in every department, mending and darning, inspection
and delivery; are other essentials to S-E-R-V-I-C-E as
it is spelled and meant here. *
We’ll welcome an opportunity to demonstrate just
what real laundry service means.
Call 65 now, “that’s all.” .
C=
kam
p”=L=
2624*632
INFANTS’ DRESSES —
Outing or Gingham Dresses
for the little ones, sizes 1 to
The Palace
4/
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869
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Grand Opera House
Tonight 8:15
Klaw & Erlanger Bring to Galveston
Their Most Beautiful and Elaborate
Productioa Since “Ben Hur.”
“The Poor Little
Rich Girl”
You’re bilious, sluggish, constipated
and believe you need vile, dangerous
calomel to start your liver and clean
your bowels.
Here’s my guarantee! Ask your
druggist for a 50 cent bottle of Dod-
son’s Liver Tone and take a spoonful
tonight. If it doesn’t start your liver
and straighten you right up better than
calomel and without griping or making
you sick I want you to go back to the
store and get your money.
Take calomel today and tomorrow
you will feel weak and sick and nau-
seated. Don’t lose a day’s work. Take
a spoonful of harmless, vegetable Dod-
son’s Liver Tone tonight and wake up
feeling great. It’s perfectly harmless,
so give it to your children any time.
It can’t salivate, so let them eat any-
thing- afterwards.
performance on the screen jolted me
out of my complacency with such a
rude shock that I am still suffering
from its effects. To my intense dismay
I discovered that I was conceited—that
I had been inordinately vain. All the
little secret errors that steal unnoticed
into the portrayal of a character
shrieked condemnation at me. This
creature impersonating me on the
screen brought the flush of mortifica-
tion to my cheeks. I felt humble un-
der the chastisement of this intangible,
but relentless mentor. It seemed to
take advantage of our intimate rela-
tionship to point out my mistakes with
pitiless accuracy. It was a cruel
experience; for I had always imagined
myself ever so much nicer. But that
is the bitter cost of motion picture
work—the abrupt realization of the
staggering number of unsuspecting
faults. Of course, I am surprised and
delighted with the way ‘Wildflower’
was received by the public; but—and
here is the evidence of my chastened
spirit—I honestly attribute it to the
charm and beauty of the story, and the
commendable work of my associates.”
Wednesday: Mary Pickford in “Be-
hind the Scenes.”
cheerful companionship of playfellows
of her own age. Her father is too
busy piling up money, and her mother
too busy spending it in the whirl of
society to give her the attention she
needs.
A “two-faced” nurse, cheated out
of a promised evening off by the wiles
of a "snake-in-the-grass" governess,
gives the child an overdose of sleeping
medicine, and in the delirium that fol-
lows Gwendolyn wanders happily
through a glorious wonderland, where
candles are burned at both ends, and
she sees her father making ducks and
drakes of his fortune. After a time
the dream begins to fade, and Gwen-
dolyn awakens in her nursery with her
father and mother by her side, over-
whelmed with gratitude because of her
recovery, and determined to live a
saner and better life.
The production was staged with all
of the elaborate perfection of detail
and costuming usually found in first
class productions, with a large and
thoroughly competent cast. It is a play
that should live long, and one that
fills the heart with the joy and ten-
derness of youth.
“The Poor Little Rich Girl” is the
offering at’ »the Grand again today,
matinee and night.
Dudley in high glee, and gives the
young man $500, little suspecting he
will use the advice and money to wed
Rose. Uncle Dudley’s wish that he
may “see the face of that old fool, the
girl’s father, when he learns how he
has been fooled,” is fulfilled. Uncle
Dudley’s wife (Clo Lanphere), who
rules him with an iron hand, has some
lively set-tos with the Major Pepper.
“Uncle Dudley” is quite capable of
standing on its feet alone as a farce,
. but an excellent'program of music and
dances makes it a sure-fire winner
The feature of this part of the bill is
the Texas Tommy dance by Miss Dean
and Mr. Martin. Miss Dean also sings,
her number being “Down on Tampa
Bay,” and Mr. Martin has a Nancified
warble, “I Don’t Want to Go to War.”
Mr. McKee’s number, “Goodbye, Girls,
I’m Through,” is a tremendous suc-
cess. Wanda Darracq sings “Hands
Off.” In the opening, “Southern Hos-
pitality,” and in the choruses Olive
Ende, Bob Rogers, Maud West, Anna
Ray, Gladys McKee and Florence Ray
are togged out in smashing style. The
piece is nicely staged.
Palace Theater.
The Palace theater offers today:
“The Mystery Woman,” Cleo Madison
in a two-act Bison drama; “Jed’s Little
Elopement,” Nestor comedy.
Wednesday: Billy Ritchie in a
three-part L-Ko comedy, “After Her
Millions.”
It’s here! “After Her Millions,” the
wildest comedy riot that ever was per-
mitted to escape from a producing
studio. It’s all jammed into three reels
—three reels of hilarious fun. Three
reels of force—farce which makes one
choke and gasp in a vain effort to give
expression to the laughter which runs
over while Billie Ritchie, PatheLehr-
man and Gertrude Selby are on the
screen. It’s no laughing matter to
laugh one’s self sick, but “After Her
Millions” literally makes one giddy
headed with unrefined and unre-
strained mirth. It will cause a riot in
ever theater in which it is exhibited.
Theater-owners should warn the cop
on the corner, for the yowls and howls
which will go up when this seat-rock-
ing comedy is flashed on the screen
will make police headquarters send
out the reserves. Billie Ritchie
n
THF F A IP Ben Bonart, Prop.
A Me 2 AE 2518 Market St., Near 26th St.
HOME OF THE PARAMOUNT.
Marguerite Clark
-IN—
“Wildflower”
Famous Player Feature.
Tomorrow:
Mary Pickford in “Behind the
Scenes.”
Friday and Saturday:
Marguerite Clark in “The Goose
Girl.”
in a small boom mining town in Col-
orado. The boom has passed to the
camps further on, leaving their little
camp ' practically deserted. Rhy still
has faith in the claim her father
worked up to the time he was killed,
some five years before, but her brother
hates the life of the camp, and wants
to sell for what they can get and go
back to New York, where he feels he
can have a chance to make something
of himself. Their neighbor across the
street is Lewis Beresford, whose ob-
vious mission in the camp is one of
pleasure, but who is in reality a min-
ing expert, connected with big mining
interests. He has ingratiated himself
into the affection of the people of this
little camp, and shows a great liking
for Rhy and her brothers. Steve Tow-
ney, the -.former mine superintendent
for “The Three of Us,” is in love with
Rhy and is jealous of Beresford, as he
has been accepted as suitor for Rhy’s
hand, up to the time of Beresford's
coming. Mr. and-Mrs. Bix, Rhy’s closest
friends in the camp, give a Hallowe’en
dinner, which is to be the biggest event
of the year. On the day that the din-
ner is to be given Steve strikes, by
accident, mineral. This assures the
success of the mine on which he holds
an option, and which adjoins “The
Three of Us.” Overjoyed, he rushes to
Rhy to tell the good news, informing
her it will be - impossible for him to
attend the Bix dinner, as his option
expires the next day at noon. Rhy
confesses her love for him, and asks
him to wait until next morning. She
will then go with him. He consents,
giving her the option and samples of
ore. The closing scenes are dramatic.
Today: “For Another’s Crime,” Vita-
graph drama in two acts: “Olive’s
Crystal Majestic
High-Class Musical Company To-
night, 7:30 and 9 P. M.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 64, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 9, 1915, newspaper, February 9, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1438307/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.