Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 250, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 13, 1917 Page: 3 of 10
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2
B
THREE
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1917.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE.
MONKEY IS BEST
NEMY TRADING
/
MENAGERIE ACTOR
ACT IS PASSED
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Fall Wear
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COHEN SPECIAL HATS AT $2.00 AND $3.00.
DIXIE
2210 Church Street.
Phone 6011.
wa
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1
FINLAND’S , FLOUR SUPPLY )
185
"299
has been planned to please the
gram
Punch and Judy, two of
little folks.
the dozen trained bears the champion
“Willard Threaded Rubber Insulation!
if
WORK TO BEGIN ON
greater than it is today.
AVIATION SCHOOL
9828258
8
DON’T FORGET
EczemaFiveYears
J
Cuticura Heals
Phone 455.
22d and Strand.
I
CD
demand from their retail dis-
are concerned.
Texas Garage
. 25th and Church Sts.
Phone 123.
/
A
$
4
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{
$
A bright, cheery and
competent young lady
STORAGE
BATTERY
Eczema On Hands* Intense Itch-
ing and Burning. Could not Rest,
Used One Cake Soap and One
Box Ointment, Cost Only 75c*
This young woman is typical of the thousands of girls who
earn their livelihood in offices—as typists, bookkeepers,
filing clerks, telephone operators, etc. They are invalu-
able to modern business.
If you are on the lookout for a bright, capable girl, tell of
your need in a Tribune help wanted ad. It’s the best way
to fill the ranks of your office staff satisfactorily.
profit in raising meat animals if the
supply is to keep pace with the demand.
The world demand for food was never
munes containing 1,600,000 inhabitants,
(of a total Finnish population of 3,200,-
000), have reported that their supplies
of flour will run out at least a month
before the reaping of this year’s crops.
Telephone Your Ads to Miss Classified
Phone 83
Had Attack of Diarrhoea Cured.
“About two years ago I had an at-
De-
from
About the only thing a pretty girl
has to know is that she is pretty
TO FAT PEOPLE
OF GALVESTON
Thus Willard Threaded Rubber Insulation means a better in-
sulated battery, a more durable, more efficient battery.
of the camp and while 1
corps is in training.
Capt. Luckie came here
Captain Luckie, Sanitary En-
gineer, Now on the Ground
at Genoa.
Senate Finally Enacts House
Measure With Many
Amendments.
i
PEOPLE OUGHT TO
KNOW THE FACTS
DARWIN, FAMOUS MONKEY COMING
WITH CIRCUS.
BATTERY SHOP
G. E. Koehler, Prop.
7 See them now.
DUNLAPS AT $6.00. STETSONS AT $4.50 AND $5.00.
Every part of your electrical system must be made leak proof
by insula tion.
Army Trunks $6.50
R. H. JOHN
Trunk Factory
2218 Market St.
S>J
We take charge of Planos by the year
at a small cost.
Will Run Short Before New Harvest, is
Indication.
Helsingfors, Finland, Sept. 12.—Ac-
cording to the Hufvudstadsblad, com-
can not exist without the consent of
the people, and ought not exist with-
out their approval.”
In conformity with these new ethics,
Mr. Armour discusses “The Truth About
the Price of Meat” in an article in a
Ask us about the remarkable service achievement of Still Better
Willards on 35,000 cars.
Full Stock of Batteries and Parts.
At All Times.
Galveston Piano Co.
HIGH GRADE PIANOS
Tuning and Repairing.
T
A display of new fall men’s
Hats that truly does credit to .
this great store.
Dunlaps, Stetsons and Cohen
Specials in a great variety of
new blocks and colors.
*-* .
Inside your battery is the most important insulation of all—
that which separates the positive from the negative plates, for
this prevents the battery from “short circuiting,” and thus put-
ting the whole system out of commission.
In the Still Better Willard, the insulation is made of durable,
acid-resisting rubber.
on the costly service which American
mand, in short, has run away
supply.
A min’s clothes are now cut in such
a fashion that the fellow who turns
up his trousers only shows his ignor-
ance.
always pleased by the prompt cures
which -this remedy effects. The recom-
mendations of those who have used it
have done much to make it the most
popular medicine in use for bowel com-
plaints.
■
E. C. Northen ®. Co.
All Kinds of Insurance.
Fire, Life, Accident, Burglary, Plate
Glass, Liability and Automobile Insur-
ance; Fidelity, Judicial, Contract, and
Official Bonds.
Room 220, Am. Natl. Ins. Bldg. Phone 57
Galveston, Texas.
Quie a good many revolutionists
have been known to confuse liberty
with a government job.
d i2
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:00,
■
M
I American Non-Skid Automobile
Casings
GUARANTEED 6,000 MILES.
30x3......$13.50
30x3%.... $18.25
We Also Carry Puncture-Proof Inner Tubes.
John Christensen (g Co.
714-16 Tremont St.
29*
the aviation
2*82,2
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skaters and expert bicycle riders. There
are dogs that' walk slack ropes, ride
ponies or pose with snowy white horses
in imitation of marble statues. As for
the grown-up auditors there will be a
great deal to interest them. The story
of “Cinderella,” with its hundreds of
dancing girls in the ballet of the fair-
ies, promises to recall “childhood’s hap-
py hours,” while the feats of horse-
manship, aerial numbers and scores of
foreign attractions contribute to what
is said to be the biggest circus program
yet offered by Ringling Brothers.
A
Galveston’s Leading Style Shop.
his article
“I suffered for five years with eczema
on my hands. At first there was intense
itching and burning, then became dry
and scaly. The skin was i September magazine. He lays the re-
very sore and red. My face I sponsibility for high prices on the ad-
wwas also affected and the | vancing cost of the raw material and
R # 9 emotion caused disfigure- ,
) ment. I could not rest at all. : consumers
from Fort
tack of bowel trouble and was in a
serious condition when I began using
Chamberlain’s Colic and Diarrhoea
Remedy,” writes Mrs. J. Rogan, Fair-
port, N. Y. “This medicine relieved me
at once and after taking three or four I
doses of it I was cured.” People are
ing machine is to keep the men in per-
fect physical condition, To insure the
men at the aviation camp the best of
care a fully equipped hospital is to be
installed, and requisitions for its equip-
ment are now being prepared, accord-
ing to Col. Lyster’s letter.
Asked when his real duties would be-
gin, Capt. Luckie said: “Sanitation be-
gins when the construction begins. My
work will start when the first work is
done at the camp.” He said that so far
as he had been informed, he will be here
permanently—through the construction
\/ “Then I wrote for a free
sample of Cuticura Soap and .
Aop Ointment. The itching and
-F burning ceased so I bought
a twenty-five-cent cake of Cuticura Soap
and a fifty-cent box of Ointment and I
had not used them all when I was healed.”
(Signed) Mrs. R. D. Layne, Cardwell, Va.
Some think that because Cuticura does
such wonderful work in soothing and
healing severe eczemas it is not adapted
to toilet uses. But that is just where it
is most effective in preventing little skin
troubles becoming serious.
For Free Sample Each by Return
Mail address post-card: “Cuticura,
Dept. H, Boston.” Sold everywhere.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c.
sotz,3
ysaakve
* *
J. Ogden Armour proclaims as the
new ethics of big pusiness that the peo-
ple have a 'right to know the factors
that enter into determination of prices
and that “it is up to the purveyors of
food to fully explain the causes of high
prices and to rely on the American peo-
ple to approve those advances which
are shown to be justifiable apd un-
avoidable.”
“For after all,” he says, “business
Q)4n and Upward
•LeU Buys a Good
USED CAR
*443
SB W
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Special to The Tribune.
Houston, Sept. 13.—Work on the avia-
tion camp to be constructed at Genoa,
is expected to begin at once.
This information, was given out on
Wednesday afternoon by Capt. L. F.
Luckie, U. S. R., who has been sent here
to look after the sanitation of the camp
during its construction and to furnish
medical aid to the workmen.
Capt. Luckie based his statement on
a letter which he received from Lieut.
Col. T. C. Lyster of Washington, who
has charge of the medical department
of the signal corps camps, under which
heading' the aviation schools come. The
letter was dated Aug 30, and in giving
Capt. Luckie instruction as to his duties
here stated that constructing engineers
would be sent to Houston at once and
might be here upon his arrival.
Cap. Luckie said that the war de-
partment has learned by experience
that the only way to perfect a fight-
g5
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a fact that the fresh meat from the
steer or hog or sheep is sold by the
packer to the retailer at a figure which
often fails to pay for the raw product
—that is, the animal on the hoof. The
profits which enable the packer to
handle meat at less than cost are due
to the utilization of those portions of
the animals which, until recent years,
were wasted or destroyed.
“It is necessary that there be a
Riley, Kansas, where he took a course
in the medical officers’ training camp
and later acted as instructor in the
same capacity. He said that the benefit
derived at such a camp is wonderful
and that he saw physicians come there
for the three months course who at its
expiration were entirely different in
appearance. The course is purely one
of military training—a knowledge of
medicine being a prerequisite for ad-
mittance.
Capt. Luckie, who in private life is a
physician, has only been in the service
since June of this year, although he
served during the Spanish-American
war in the infantry and in the quarter-
master department. He lived at Birm-
ingham, Ala., until three years ago,
when he moved to Los Angeles, Cal. He
■ was at the latter place at the time of
his entry into service. His wife will ar-
rive Friday from Los Angeles and will
remain in Houston so long as he is sta-
■ tioned here. .
He (the retailer) is com-
"6 I
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g.
Numerous Galveston persons have
been reducing their weight at the rate
of one to five pounds weekly by the ;
use of a wonderful vegetable oil. I
Men and women who were bverstout I
and who were distressed in their heart
action, in breathing and in other ways,
have found delightful relief in over-
coming their obesity.
There , is distinct satisfaction, too I
in bringing the figure down to more
normal, graceful proportions. The hap-
py losers of burdensome fat have not
complained at being compelled to pay
their dressmakers or tailors for remod- ■
eling clothing to smaller sizes. One 1
business man reports a loss of eight 1
inches in girth, a lady states that her |
measurement around the waist is now
11 inches less and that her double chin ,
is gone and that she feels as lively as
I in girlhood.
Doctors agree that obesity shortens
I life and that if the fatness is properly
overcome, life is likely to be lengthened
■ by several years through the improve-
ment in health.
. The secret of this weight reduction is
oil of korein, a combination of effica-
aa—
s •• —la
‘SS
2.5 (9 gga
l®
i cious vegetable oils in capsule form. It
1 is obtainable at almost every drugstore
in this city as well as throughout the
state. It is a perfectly safe remedy,
often prescribed 'by physicians, as it
acts upon the abnormal €n* aanlv and
easily.—(Adv.)
80ecaa-a 2022
By Associated Press.
Washington, Sept. 13.—The adminis-
tration trading-with-the-enemy bill,
which passed the house without a dis-
senting vote, last July, was passed by
the senate with many amendments, in-
cluding one giving the president power
to embargo imports and prohibiting
publication of war comment in the
German language unless accompanied
in a parallel column by a translation
in English.
Other important provisions interdict
commerce between Americans and Ger-
mans or the latter’s allies, give the
president broad powers to regulate op-
erations of enemy insurance companies
in this country and extend espionage
powers.
The import embargo, adopted yes-
terday at the administration’s request,
would extend present presidential pow-
ers over export trade to* imports as
well.
The amendment restricting publica-
tions in German, adopted by a viva
voce vote, was offered by Senator
King and is subjected to elimination
in conferences.
Senator King agreed to the adoption
of his amendment as a “curb against
the traitors in our midst trying to cre-
ate dissension.”
“There is no question,” said the Utah
senator, “that the press—the German
press—but I don’t mean to say all—has
done all it could to stir up sedition and
strife and make this war unpopular and
those newspapers ought to be Sup-
pressed.”
Prior to adoption of the King amend-
ment the senate rejected an amendment
by Senator Meyers designed to curb
I. W. W. activities, proposing to pen-
alize seditious discussion Or action and
interference with production.
In a letter to Senator Ransdale of
Louisiana who offered the import em-
bargo amendment, Secretary McAdoo
said the authority was needed to “con-
trol essential raw materials necessary
in the prosecution of the war,” as well
as to meet conditions of gold importa-
tions and foreign exchange. He also
said it was desirable in order to “deal
with governments imposing restrictions
on the export of materials needed in
this country,” .
An amendment by Senator Reed was
accepted limiting’the bill’s operations
to ninety days after the war.
Supplementing the insurance provi-
sions which in effect would permit ene-
my insurance companies to continue
operations in this country under presi-
dential licenses, but prohibit their
sending funds abroad, the senate adopt-
ed an amendment by Senator Heed
giving the president the broadest au-
thority over all foreign insurance com-
panies, of all -description, enemy, neu-
tral, or allied. ' -1
The bill retains authority for licensed
use at prices fixed by the president
of enemy patents, copyright and simi-
lar privileges. ’
What animal attracts the greatest
amount of attention when the circus
comes to town?
According to such authorities as the
keepers who attend the thousand and
more jungle beasts and birds in the
Ringling Brothers’ menagerie, it is not
the giraffe family, the two-horned
rhinoceros, the giant hippopotamus, the
ostriches, the polar bears, the ele-
phants, nor yet the lions or the tigers.
These and scores of other interesting
creatures arouse much interest, but
it is the monkey families that hold
the biggest audiences for the longest
time.
Realizing this truth, the Ringling
Brothers have this season gathered the
greatest variety and largest number
of simians ever traveled with a tented
88232328
09
■
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28559
Fred M. Burton
& Company
Now Writing
TORNADO INSURANCE
in the
FIREMEN’S INSURANCE CO.
of Newark.
enterprise. It embraces more than 100
monkeys. These will be exhibited here
when the circus comes to Galveston,
Monday, Oct. 1. 1
Scores of the monkeys do nothing
but cut capers in their cages, but many
take part in the main tent program.
These will make their appearance
shortly after the conclusion of the big
fairyland spectacle, “Cinderella.” There
are monkeys that turn backward and
foreward somersaults. on galloping
Shetlands, roll hoops, play base ball,
sit at table and play upon musical in-
strumentsi Much of this season’s pro-
“It is my opinion, however, that be-
fore the price of meat, and of other food
products as well, can be materially re-
duced there will have to be a far
reaching change in the demands made
by the public upon the retail trade.
USING IRISH WOOL.
Ireland Replaces German Product
With Native Supply.
By Associated Ppess.
Dublin, Ireland, Sept. 12.—The Coun-
cil of the Dublin Chamber of Commerce
reports that Berlin wool has now been
almost entirely replaced inIreland by
Blarney fingering- wool.
,,
5
29207
ife
A Safe, Pleasant, Wonderful
Weight Reducing Secret Has
’ Been Revealed.
v
29382
! tributors. Excerpts from
follow:
pelled to charge in the neighborhood
of 20 per cent of the cost price of each
article or each pound of* meat in order
to cover the cost of , doing business.
*** The retailers will welcome a
change in the national methods of re-
tailing which will enable them to re-
duce their cost of doing business.
“If the people of today would adopt
the cash and carry system of purchas-
ing instead of clinging to the credit and
delivery plan, it would be a boon to
both retailer and consumer.”
“In a word, when the buying public
permits the retailer to dispense with
frequent and costly deliveries, when
consumers pay their bills promptly so
that the merchant can meet his obliga-
tions before having to pay interest, and
when the quick-moving, advertised and,
standardized foods crowd the slow-
moving stuff'Off the shelves, then, and
not till then, will the retailer be able
to pass meat and other foods along to
the consumer at a price Which will not
seem high when compared with the
wholesale price thereof."
“Meat is such an important item on
the American table that its increased
cost has attracted attention and com-
ment somewhat of proportion to the
rate of advance.”
“Meat prices' are not due to big
profits, so far as the meat purveyors
b
* * * It is actually
Your choice of Cadillac, Hudson.
Apperson, Studebaker, Overland,
Haynes and Others.
REASONABLE TERMS.
56
1 5
2 5
ml
Even the promoter isn’t always
faithful to his Trust.
AMReFa5
5725
6
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938
MTems*-*
#4
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 250, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 13, 1917, newspaper, September 13, 1917; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1510796/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.