Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 298, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 9, 1915 Page: 2 of 12
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TWO
GALVESTON TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1915.
ARE YOUR IK WEAK?
RESORT TO OPEN
AMUSEMENTS.
DESPITE CONFLICT
Begin with 1c, 2c, 5c, 10c
of kidney disease.
While kiney dis-
orders
have
A GUARANTY FUND BANK
dm
AGsanlavkmiamm
L
FRENCH WAR REPORT.
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47
8—
Emmzamsa
/mM/51
$
DIF
ABANDONS ATHLETICS.
to
Greenwood.
mamen
It’s On the Way
and
Worth
DIXIE NO. 2
TODAY
Waiting
For!
Rex Theater
Then he secures
LAST TIME TODAY
William Elliott
B
—and—
Ruth Roland
27 th
women to a
2901
384.
CLASSIFIED BUSINESS &
2307
TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
UAUTYDID IT!
Prescrip-
Keenen seems to be one
Beach Crystal
TODAY'S BEAUTY HELPS
Tremont-Postoffice.
of the most
ideally complete
TOMORROW ONLY
William Farnum
Instead of
and
—in—
larges the pores, it is far better to
6
Nh
5
Paramount Production.
Phone 559.
*
oc and 10c.
Groceries.
Adet
T
MYSTERIOUS ENVOY.
Added Conveniences
For Their Customers and Friends—Both Present
and Prospective.
1. ' Phone
2128
The Cost is Very Nominal
AMERICAN STAMPS.
Telephone No. 83 or 1396 for Rates.
9
KEATERSI
a faulty or an aging skin,
using powder, which clogs
en-
use
be relied upon to restore
healthy normal condition.
from
may
but that old
characterization
Col.
by
been purchased by a New York dealer.
The collection is said to have cost the
earl $200,000.
or any other amount you wish.
It’s an ideal plan to lay away money without missing it, for Xmas, 1916.
re-
the
Thousands of Men and Women Have Kidney
Trouble and Never Suspect It.
City of Lyons Also Plans Ac-
tivities in Face of Great
War.
lassified Business
Telephhome Dreetory
Hang This Up in Your Home or Office for Quick Reference
It Will Save You Time,
Added Publicity and Profit for the Business and Professional
People of the City.
If You Want Your Business Listed Here Call S3 or 1396
. . . and Ask for the Advertising Department . . .
child and the maid,
the emerald.
In the 5-Part Gold Rooster Pathe,
“COMRADE JOHN.”
SHOE REPAIRING.
CHAMPION SHOE SHOP. Phone' 2937
514 21st St.
Our little book shows you exactly how much you can save. It’s
free—come by and get one.
1914. 405%_TremontSt. _
PALACE THEATER. Phone 384.
Market St.
For Weakness and Loss of Appetite
The Old Standard general strengthen-
ing tonic, GROVE’S TASTELESS chill
TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds
1n the system. A true tonic and sure
Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c
Acme Grocery & Coffee Co.
Corner 25 th and_H.________
J. S. KERSCHNER, Fancy
Phone 3797. 702 23rd St.____
Dixie No. 2.
"Anselo Lee,” a powerful three-act
Vitagraph Broadway star feature,
with Naomi Childers and a noted sup-
porting cast; Charlie Chaplin in “The
Bank,” and “The Rogue Syndicate,” a
Kalem drama with Marguerite Courtot
in the leading role, are included in
the offering for today at the Dixie
No. 2 theater.
“The Coward”
“I am not sure
Winslow, whose
“The Sign of the Cross”
Queen Theater.
John Brisben Walker, the famous edi-
tor, says of “The. Coward,” the Triangle
offering at the Queen tomorrow:
Dixie No. 1 Today
LAST TIME
ROBERT WARWICK
—in—■
“THE FLASH OF AN EMERALD.”
RAYMOND HITCHCOCK
—in—
“MY VALET,”
Keystone Comedy.
Twelve-Piece Symphony Orchestra.
Pipe Organ.
,EVERYBODY’S FANORITE
MESSENGER SERVICE.
r or prompt service, use Peerless Mes-
sengers. Phone 3076, Day or Night.
T PAINTS, WALLPAPER & GLASS.
Deats. Phone 1467. 2213 Post-
office St.
deck. From this point, the play de-
velops in an intensely interesting man-
ner.
indigestion, as
time passes you may
Months later, Victoria and Sonia are
in New York. The former has been
CHAS. CHAPLIN
3-Part Broadway Star Feature,
“ANSELO LEE.”
MARGUERITE COURTOT
—in-—
“THE ROGUE SYNDICATE.”
KODAKS AND SUPPLIES.
C. B. Smith, Trust Building. 422 23rd
St. Expert developing and printing.
with his newest play, “As Years Roll I
On.Y Wilson’s voice has improved !
wonderfully since his last appearance I
in Galveston, he has one of the best |
MUSEMENTS
ever depicted upon
Grand Opera House
Matinee and Night, Wednesday, Nov. 10.
Al. G. FIELD’S
Greater Minstrels
Headed by BERT SWOR.
Prices—Matinee, 25c to 75c; Night, 25c
to $1. Seats on Sale Now.
SATURDAY, MATINEE AND NIGHT,
Nov. 13.
The Big Fun Play With Tunes,
September Morn
Matinee 25c to $1.00. Night 25c to $1.50.
Seats on Sale Thursday.
MONDAY NIGHT, NOV. 15, 8 SHARP.
Farewell of
Forbes Robertson
—in—
“PASSING OF THE THIRD FLOOR
BACK.”
Seats Friday, 50c to $2.00.
MAIL ORDERS NOW.
DRUGGISTS.
Star Drug Store. Phone 438.
WINDOW CLEANERS.
Galveston Window Cleaning Co. Phone
6316. 2109% D. Motto—“Service.”
MEN’S FURNISHINGS.
J- G. Smith. Phone 2969. 2110 Post-
office St.
Sakowitz Bros., Clothiers and Haber-
dashers. Phone 2630. 2113 Market St.
MILK DEPOTS.
Galveston Model Dairy, 706 23rd St
Pasteurized Milk, Phone 984.
Junemann-Hungerford Dairy Co. Phone
6038. 2305 Postoffice St.
CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
, J. A. Peterson, 2504 D. Also books and
stationery.
THEATERS.
CRYSTAL THEATER No.
are among the most common
Nothing excites more criticism than
a woman with her face all daubed
with face powder in her desire to hide
MEAT MARKETS.
Ed Licata. Phone 526. Corner
and H. Meats and Groceries.
Wm. Molhausen. Phone 1192.
Ave. K.
INSURANCE.
G. C. Cuenod, Live Stock Insurance.
Phone 1035.- 2220 Ave. C.
Ed V. Ryan. ^hone 3906. 214-215 Se-
curity Building.
an only comrade of Morton Conway,
a rich young man, who, although he
knows and appreciates the friendship
existing between her and Sonia, is in
love with Phillipa Ford, a mercenary |
young lady. Phillipa has become in- l
terested in a man who represents
himself to be the secret agent of the
Russian revolutionists. The man is Wal-
GRINDING.
Galveston Barber Supply Co. “Grind
and Sharpen Anything.” 2120 Postoffice.
sands of wounded who are welcome
here and who bring gaiety and good
cheer among us.
We will be glad, Mr. Consul, that you
do what is in your power to instruct
the public that the season in Nice will
open more glorious' than ever before
and that the accommodations will be
what they ever were. Respectfully,
(Signed), CH. LAFAYE,
President of the Commercial Associa-
tion of Nice.
Mr. Genoyer has'also received a com-
munication from the chamber of com-
merce at the important manufacturing
center of Lyons, regarding commercial
activities there. In this connection, the
French consul is sending out the fol-
। lowing letter to the commercial organi-
zations of this section:
Gentlemen—The Government of the
French republic invites me today to
call the attention of our local commer-
cia associations to the fact that the
municipality of Lyons, together with
the chamber of commerce of this very
important manufacturing center, have
decided to inaugurate and organize a
“Sample Fair” to be held in the city
of Lyons, from the 1st until the 16th of
March, 1916.
This fair is to be a permanent event
and to take place every following year
on the same date.
You will not ignore that Lyons is the
best known and most important silk
market of the world.
The fair will not only be open to the
foreign buyers but as well to manu-
facturers of all friendly and neutral
countries.
I expect to receive literature and
advertising matter before the end of
the year but have not waited to inform
you of these facts so as to enable you
to bring them to the knowledge of your
members and the business world either
through wyour publications or through
the voice of the press. Yours very truly,
(Signed) GENOYER,
Consul of France.
LAUNDRIES.
Model Laundry & Dye Works. Phone
78-79. 2502-12 Church. P. O. opposite.
Rex Laundry. We clean. 1901-07 Me-
chanic St. Phone 2000.
Dixie No. 1.
“The Flash of An Emerald,” a pow-
erful five act World feaure, is included
in the bill for today at the Dixie No.
1 theater. A short synopsis follows:
The cast: Robert Warwick, Dorothy
Fairchild, Jean Stuart, Julia Stuart,
Georgia May Fursman, Clarissa Sel-
Wynne, June Elvidge and Paul Gordon.
Lucius Waldeck is a social vulture.
In a New York hotel lobby, he is at-
tracted by the porter carrying in a
sickly child. While thus engrossed, he
sees a magnificent emerald pinned in
the dress of the child’s grandmother,
Determining to possess the jewel, he
follows Mrs. Weston, who has gone to
St. Ann de Beaupre, near'Quebec, Can-
ada, in order to appeal for the recovery
of her granddaughter, at the time of
the visit of the pilgrims. Waldeck
trails Mrs. Weston and that night, he
crawls up over the roof of the stable
and gains admittance to Mrs. Weston’s
tion phone 437.
Crystal Theater No. 1.
Earle Williams and Anita Stewart
in the famous Vitagraph serial, “The
Goddess,” chapter 13; Winnifred Green-
wood and Ed Coxen in “The Visitors
and Visitees,” a powerful American
drama; George Ovey, America’s fun-
niest man in “The Little Detective,”
a screamingly funny comedy of the
Cub brand, prepared exclusively for
release on the Mutual program, and
“Vindication,” a remarkably strong
wild animal feature drama, with the
famous Bostock jungle beasts and Cap-
tain Jack Bonivita, the fearless lion
tamer, are included in the offering
for today at the Crystal theater No 1
The premier offering of the season
comes to the Crystal Thursday, when,
in addition to the usual Mutual pro-
gram, Irving Cummings, late star of
numerous Mutual features, will appear
in person and after showing two clev-
er reels of double exposure features,
will make a short talk of interest to
“movie fans” at the end of each show.
Mr. Cummings is enthusiastic about
his work, and has expressed a desire
to greet every person in Galveston
ICE CREAM MANUFACTURERS.
Ford Ice Cream Co. Phone 460. 1021
Tremont St.
, masqueraders. They part, knowing
plays he has ever produced, and his nothing more of each other than that
SPECIAL NOTE—You may obtain a sample size bottle of Swamp-Root by
enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. This gives you
the opportunity to prove the remarkable merit of this medicine. They will also
send you a book of valuable information, containing many of the thousands of
grateful letters received from men and women who say they found Swamp-
Root to be just the remedy needed in kidney, liver and bladder troubles. The
value and success of Swamp-Root are so well known that our readers are ad-
vised to send for a sample size bottle. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton,
N. Y. Be sure to say you read this offer in the Galveston Daily Tribune.
........ > ________________________
health.
Nice is still the wonderful city, the
queen of the “Cote d’Azur,” offering the
most modern accommodations and be-
ing the center for incomparable excur-
sions.
Conditions in Nice are what they al-
ways were, communications are regular
and fast, the cost of living as usual.
Our beach is as wonderful as ever,
the mountain scenery as picturesque as
, before and the pleasure offered by
casinos and theaters more extensive
and glorious than during any of the
former seasons.
As a health resort our region is un-
surpassed as has been admitted and
recognized by the report made by Dr.
Balestre, chief of the hygienic service
of the French government.
Our helpful climate has for months
brought life and happiness to the thou-
The Triangle
PROGRAM OPENS TOMORROW
—with—
FRANK KEENAN
—in—
। “To multiply the capacity of genius
to give pleasure to mankind by a hun-
dred thousand fold, is a work worthy
of the infinite skill and patience being
put into the production, but last even-
ing I was impressed as never before
with the power of the moving picture
to instruct.
“At this hour, when ten million men
stand in the shadow of death in the
trenches in Europe, when putrid corpses
cover a hundred battlefields, when the
suffering of mothers and orphan chil-
dren is infinite, when the hospitals are
overflowing with human misery, slow-
ly seeking the grave, or destined to be-
come wrecks of what once was man-
hood, when whole provinces are be-
ing desolated and nations loaded with
a debt so immense that it will burden
mankind for five hundred years to
come, he is a national benefactor who
will put upon the screen what war
really means.
“Reaching out into every section of
the great cities and into every cillage__
taking in all classes and conditions or
LUMBER AND MILL WORK.
Island City Woodworking Co. Phone
2522. 18th and Mechanic Sts.
L
GROCERS—RETAIL.
Panama Grocery. Phone 4310. Corner
27th and Winnie.____
PAWNBROKERS.
For Loans and Bargains. see NEVE-
LOW BROS.. 2326 D ‛
PHONOGRAPHS AND RECORDS
Agency Phonograph Co Phone 292.
Victors, Edisons and Columbias. 2107 E.
PRINTERS AND STATIONERS.
Keystone, 216 23rd. Phone 99. Qualitv
Printers. On Time and Right.
REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS.
P. J. BELLEW. Phone 515. 2120 Me-
chanic St.
J. S. MONTGOMERY & CO. Phone 9 5fi
512 Tremont St.
Chas. Neynaber. Phone 912. 221 22nd
Street.
Brazee, Harry Jones, Nicholas Basil,
Ernest Marx and fifty others in the
ensemble. The play will be given with
all the original costumes, stage em-
bellishments, and the wonderful chorus
and ballet used in the big Chicago run.
Rex Theater.
William Elliott and Ruth Roland,
famous stars of the screen, with a
noted supporting cast, in the best of
Postoffice St.________________
F. J. Schmidt. Phone 5389. First-class
work only. 614 21st St.
the stage—no creation of Mansfield was
ever more perfect—it is one of the
greatest exhibits against war.
“This old man, proud of the tradi-
tions of barbarism, Keenan has made
the quintessence of human vanity and
j cruelty. With marvelous skill, he makes
I every silent motion of eye and face
and hand and figure tell the story of
this old man’s obsession—ready to cold-
bloodedly sacrifice wife and son if
only incense can be put upon the fires
of his own selfglorification.
“Keenan has given this type of mili-
tary vain-glory in a form so perfect
that it deserves to be carried down to
the day when civilization will have re-
moved the clot of militarism from the
brain of man and when this old colonel
and the man of the stone age will be
relegated to adjoining historial niches.”
Nature warns you when the track of
health is not clear. Kidney and blad-
der troubles cause many annoying
symptoms and great inconvenience
both day and night.
Unhealthy kidneys may cause lum-
bago, rheumatism, catarrh of the blad-
der, pain or dull ache in the back, joints
or muscles, at times have headache or
Jhom |
a sallow complexion, puffy or
pound—a simple remedy made
roots and herbs—is a specific and
mW CLEANING AND PRESSING.
MM Broadway Cleaners. Phone 578. Cor-
■ ner 21st and Broadway.
MH Rex Tailoring Co. Phone 2740. 2223
Ee Ave. C. ______________
9 IH Galveston Up To Date Pressing Club.
I IB 210 23rd St. Phone 322.
AUTO LIVERY.
Galveston Auto Co. Phone 614. Day
■ and night service. 2212 D.
FURNITURE.
O. W. Wilson Furniture Co. Phone 2927.
12109 Postoffice St.___________
.H. L. Nelson. Phone 5672. 310 25th
Street.
CLEANERS AND DYERS.
Model Laundry and Dye Works. Phone
78-79. 2502-12 F. Postoffice opposite.
CONFECTIONERS, Wholesale - Retail.
Royal and Boston Confectionaries. Fine
homemade candies. Phones 1649-4796.
Heavy Artillery Actions Occur On
Western Front.
By Associated Press.
Paris, Nov. 9.—There has been artil-
lery fighting in the region of Loos,
according to the announcement given
out this afternoon by the French war
Interesting communications have been
received from two cities in France- by
L. Genoyer, consular representative of
that nation in this city. Regardless of
the great war now in progress, the
president of the commercial associa-
tion at Nice, France, has written the
consul here, asking him to give pub-
licity to the fact that that great re-
sort will open as usual. The letter
to Consul Genoyer, which has been
translated into English, follows:
We make an appeal to your patriotic
feeling to help us to retain and bring
back to our most beautiful resort the
numerous visitors, who, for years, have
found here an ideal climate and a most
hospitable people.
We should be gl#d, Mr. Consul, that,
through the medium of the- press as
well as through your personal connec-
tions, that you bring to the knowledge
of those who were visitors of our shores
and those who might undertake this
voyage; that the “Cote d’Azur” is still
the land of sunshine, flowers and
It is expected
that eventually
the several hun-
dred- bu s in e ss
and professional
people of this
city will be list-
ed in these col-
umns.
diseases that prevail, they are almost
the last recognized by patients, who
usually content themselves with doc-
toring the effects, while the original
disease may constantly undermine the
system.
If you feel that your kidneys’are the
cause of your sickness or run down
condition, try taking Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root, the famous kidney, liver
and bladder remedy, because as soon as
your kidneys improve, they will help
the other organs to health.
If you are already convinced that
Swamp-Root is what you need, you can
purchase the regular fifty-cent and
one dollar size bottles at all drug stores.
Don’t make any mistake but remember
the name, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
and the address, Binghamton, N. Y.,
which you will find on every bottle.
By Associated Press.
Madison, Wis., Nov. 9.—Malcolm Gal-
vin, fullback of the University of Wis-
consin football team, in an open let-
ter today announced he has decided
to quit all athletics at the university.
Galvin hopes by this means to end the |
investigation now in progress to de-
termine whether he has been guilty of
playing professional baseball during
the summer vacation. He bases his
action on the ground that he does not
want to be subjected to the embarrass-
ment attached to the investigation of
a college athlete’s eligibility. He in-
sists he is an amateur in every sense
of the word.
Wisconsin is the second “big nine”
university to lose a star football play-
er this season because of the summer
baseball rule. Lorin Sloon, of the Uni-
versity of Minnesota, was recently de-
clared ineligible as it is alleged he
accepted money for playing summer
baseball.
Bears Letter to the Pope From Bellig-
erent Power.
By Associated Press.
Rome, Nov. 8.—(Via Paris, Nov. 9.)—•
A mysterious envoy bearing an auto-
graphed document to the pope from the
ruler of one of the belligerent nations
has been in Rome this week, accord-
ing to the Giornale d’ltalia.
WOMEN SHOULD TAKE WARNING
If the statement made at a New York
Assembly of women, that healthy
American women are' so rare that they
are almost extinct, is true, it is time
for the women of America to take
warning and look to their health. It
may be headaches, backaches, dragging
down pains, nervousness, mental de-
pression that are tell-tale symptoms of
some organic derangement for which
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
a good face lotion that will improve
and permanently benefit the skin. By
dissolving four ounces of spurmax in a
half pint of hot water you can make
an inexpensive lotion that will do won-
ders as a skin whitener and com-
plexion beautifier. It removes all shini-
ness, sallowness and roughness, and
gives the skin a smooth, velvety tone,
while it does not rub off easily like
powder, nor does it show on the skin.
By washing the hair with a, tea-
spoonful of canthrox dissolved in a cup
of hot water, afterward rinsing thor-
oughly with clear water, one finds that
it dries quickly and evenly, is un-
streaked, bright, soft and very fluffy,
so fluffy, in fact, that it looks more
abundant than it is and no soft that ar-
ranging it becomes a pleasure. This
simple, inexpensive shampoo cleanses
the hair and scalp thoroughly of all
dandruff and dirt, and leaves a clean,
wholesome feeling. AU scalp irritation
will disappear, and the hair will be
brighter and glossier than ever before.
— (Adv.)
TODAY ONLY |
g Anita Stewart & Earle Williams I
—in—
“THE GODDESS.”
GEORGE OVEY
—-in—
| “THE LITTLE DETECTIVE.” g
Latest Cub Comedy.
“VINDICATION,”
Centaur 2-Act Animal Feature, M
—and—
g “VISITORS AND VISITEES,” ■
8 A Powerful American Drama E
with Ed Coxen and Winnifred _
Crystal Vaudeville Theater.
The popular Clark and Greer Musical
Comedy company continue to reign as
the supreme funmakers of Galveston
at the Crystal Vaudeville theater,
where the current offering is “Casey
Jones at Bunko Beach,” showing for
the last time tonight, with an entirely
new bill tomorrow. The Island City-
trio, as an added attraction, with en-
tirely new songs and jokes, are making
their last week’s appearance for the
present, in Galveston, as an added
attraction at the Crystal Vaudeville.
Their singing is proving exceedingly
popular with theater patrons of the
( city, as is attested by the continuous
applause that greets their every ap-
pearance on the stage. From this city,
the popular trio are scheduled to go to
Austin, where it is expected that they
will sing for a two week’s engage-
ment at the theater of the Wyler and
Morris Amusement company at that
point.
An entirely new bill will be offered
by the Clark and Greer company, be-
ginning tomorrow night, with new
costumes, new songs, and new dances
throughout. The Island City trio will
also be on for the last half of the
week, with everything new in the way
of songs and jokes.
In the operation of the Crystal Vau-
deville theater, this season, it has been
the endeavor of the Wyler and Morris
company, the lessees, who own theaters
I in practically all' the cities of Texas,
to put on high class, clean musical
farce comedy bills. The new bill open-
ing tomorrow night promises to be no
exception to this rule.
her name is Cynthia and his, John.
Cynthia, aboard ship on her way home,
meets Prophet Stein. He sees in her
an ideal High Priestess for his cult,
her beauty appealing to him as a splen-
did advertising proposition. The girl
is credulous and Stein wins her to his
cult. When Chance returns from Eu-
rope he goes to Beechcroft to start his
building and is surprised to find there
the girl he saved in Paris. Here, in
the course of the building construction,
many thrilling episodes ensue, in which
Stein, already married, attempts to
make love to Cynthia and is frustrated
by the watchful Chance. Stein has
been steadily appropriating money en-
trusted to him by his disciples, and,
in the final scene with his followers
clamoring for his life and the Beech-
croft building burning, he attempts an
escape with his people’s funds. He is
felled by a falling beam and buried
in the smouldering ruins. Cynthia is
saved by Chance and finds in him the
unalloyed realization of her ideals.
Collection Owned by British Peer
Brings $200,009.
New York, Nov’ 9.—The famous col- !
lection of American postage stamps
, made by the late Earl of. Crawford has ;
REX THEATER. Phone 5778. 2211
Market St.
“I came away from witnessing “The
Coward” reflecting what a pity it was
that Richard Mansfield could not have
lived to see the wonders of the photo-
play. What a service to the world if
his genius could have been preserved
for future generations, as will the
marvelous characterization by Frank
i Keenan.
interested in motion pictures at the
Crystal on that date.
Although a young man, Mr. Cum-
mings is the oldest leading man with
the Mutual service, having been with
them five years. He has been leading
man with the Thanhouser company,
the Reliance and the Flying A. He
and Crane Wilbur helped start the
Pathe American company six years
ago.
Mr. Cummings is generally credited
with having performed the most dar-
ing stunt in the history of motion pic-
tures. It occurs in the third episode
of “The Diamond From the Sky” when
he drives a big automobile in front
of a fast express and barely gets
across in time to save his life. So
dangerous was his stunt considered
that the railroad refused their per-
mission and the stunt was stolen. That
is, Mr. Cummings took it unknown to
the company.
Schneider Bros. Phone 244. Corner
Winnie and 21st Sts.
dark circles under the eyes, sometimes
feel as though you had heart trouble,
may have plenty ambition but no
strength, get weak and lose flesh.
If such conditions are permitted to
continue, serious results may be ex-
pected; Kidney Trouble in its very
worst form may steal upon you.
Prevalency of Kidney Disease.
Most people do not realize the alarm-
ing increase and remarkable prevalency
aw
HIV
ML
Galveston has
had no telephone
and business di-
rectory of gen-
eral circulation
—a service for
w h i c h the r e
seems to be a
decided need.
Il
Join Our Xmas Banking Club
/‛e=
/(Q98
auj
“September Morn.”
An advance notice says:
At the Grand Opera House next Sat-
urday, matinee and night, November
13, “September Morn” will play a re-
turn engagement. The 'company in-
terpreting the Gillespie-Stauffer mu-
sical comedy comes direct from the La-
Salle Opera House, Chicago, in which
theater it received its premier and be-
came a yogue. The organization is
under the personal management of
Martin & Lemle. It includes among its
principals Vernice Martyn, Mildred
Goodfellow, Harry Fields, Jacque
men, women and growing youth-
working every day and every night
upon the imagination of a hundred mil-
lions, the moving picture constitutes
a force for moral ideals whose accom-
plishment can be made to rival, in a
single year, that of all pulpits of the
world for a hundred years.
"Therefore, I feel grateful for the
important lesson you are putting upon
the screen, in ‘The Coward.’
Palace Pressing Club. Phone
■ 314 22nd St.__________________
? R. A. Bowman & Co. Phone 6273.
"Something Different.”
THE CLARK & GREER MUSICAL
COMEDY COMPANY
in
“CASEY JONES AT BUNCO BEACH”
A Sparkling New Musical Comedy,
Brimful of Life and Vim, with a
Laugh Every Minute,
—and—
THE ISLAND CITY TRIO,
Comedy Harmony Singers.
Two Shows Nightly, 7:30 and 9.
A brand new bill by the same prin-
cipals starts tomorrow night.
Everything new throughout, from
costumes to songs, dances and make-
up.
Wisconsin Football Star Decides
Quit Game.
office; violent bombardments near
Beauvraignes and spirited artillery
firing by the French in the Champagne
district.
The communication follows:
"There has been continued artillery
fighting, in which each side took part,
in the region of Loos; further south
there have been engagements between
patrols, in which we had the advan-
tage.
“Violent bombardments on the part
of the enemy have taken place in the
sector bf Beauvraignes and in the
Champagne district in the region of
‘The Trapeze.’ Qgr artillery every-
where has made rply with great en-
ergy.
“On the remainder of the front the
night passed quietly.”
rooms. He chloroforms her and
peats the same operation with
JUNK DEALERS.
1911 B. J. Block & Co. Phone 319.
The oldest firm in this line in the state
of Texas.
FRUITS AND PRODUCE.
Perthuis Produce Co. Phone 2102.
2105 Strand________________
Phone 3439, Henkel’s, 2107 B. The
Fancy- Fruit House.
The High Grade Meat Market. Phone
2088. 2727 D. Fancy Meats.
L. H. Mabus. Phone 4886. 1911 33d
St. Free delivery. _________
Fischer Bros. Phone 2334-119. 1111
21st St.
Crescent Market. Phone 5642. 2222.
2224 Church St.
Grand Opera House.
Al. H. Wilson, in better form than
he has shown in five years, delighted
a large gathering of his friends and I
admirers at the Grand Opera House
MTFEATREL
Pathe’s latest five act feature produc-
tions, “Comrade John,” from the fam-
ous novel by Samuel Merwin and Hy
Kitchell Webster, is the offering for
today at the Rex theater. A short
synopsis, prepared by the manufactu-
rer of the feature follows:
Herman Stein, leader of a new relig-
ious cult, “Beauty Though Toil,” se-
cures the services of John Chance, an
architect, to build a model community
for him with the stipulation that the
buildings be heralded as the work of
his followers. Before starting on the
work Chance takes a trip to Paris,
where, at a carnival, he rescues a beau-
tiful American girl from the riotous
Al. G. Field Minstrels.
An advance notice says:
The automobile has replaced most
of the old-time subjects for joke-mak-
ing-, but rarely has more laughter been
developed from it than during a scene
in the performance this season of the
Al. G- Field Greater Minstrels, who are
to appear at the Grand Opera House
Wednesday, matinee and night, No-
vember 10.
It is during the travesty “Auntie
Skinner’s Chicken Dinner Party, or
Peace in Mexico,” that the auto is
brought upon the stage. General Bluff-
kins (Bert Swor) and his “aides” are
trying to escape from robbing a hen
roost. The tires “blow” and the
marauders are marooned. Before get-
ting out to hunt for “what’s de mat-
tah,” they throw out a tremendous
anchor, to make sure if the machine
blows up the parts “won’t go up” and
“get lost altogether.”
Then they start looking for the
trouble and their efforts and argu-
ments about the automobile and their
situation are side-splitting in their
comicalities.
quaint humor was at its best. The
enthusiasm with Which the songs of
the play were received Aust have been
Pleasing to- Mr. Wilson, accustomed" as
he is to applause.
The play itself has a full share of
comedy and not a little pathos. It is
well staged, and no detail that would
tend to make it interesting has been
overlooked.
The supporting company is one of
unusual excellence and there is no at-
tempt on the part of the star to as-
sume all the credit for making the
production a distinct success. Includ-
ed in the cast besides Mr. Wilson are
the following: James Moore, Hans J.
Fischer, Joe Errico, Harry Wilkie.
Miss Laura Lemmers, Miss Bertine
Robison, Miss Adelaide Goundre.
Al. H. Wilson is assured of a cor-
dial welcome in Galveston when he
comes this way next year.
The next offering at the Grand will
be the Al. G. Field Minstrels, which
will fill a matinee and night engage-
ment tomorrow.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 298, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 9, 1915, newspaper, November 9, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1458509/m1/2/?rotate=180: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.