Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 183, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1919 Page: 5 of 18
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FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1919.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE.
FIVE
ROASTED
a well man
$55.00
$70.00 value, only.
WOMAN GIVEN MEDAL.
$35.00
value, only
He has the new Kellogg Food-
Full of “roastin’ ear” flavor—
.$125.00
only
FRECKLES
STAINED GLASS ART.
Your children deserve Kellogg's Roasted Korn Krisp
The window
PASSENGERS SLAUGHTERED.
Himurasoifi
I
cd
Summer Days
IMOMIA HER
la VARY 41 7
it keeps them happy and healthy.
would clear her skin
C&Rq-Ad
So
■res
orial which the Duke of Connaught is
putting up in Ottawa to the memory
of the eight members of his' Canadian
for sometime wasn’t able
work at all.
‘Tanlac is fast making-
One fine White Diamond Ring;
$175.00 value, only.... $125.00
THOUSANDS SPENT
ARE THROWN AWAY
One Brilliant White Cluster
Diamond Scarf Pin; $50.00
We deliver in 5-gallon demijohns. Our prices are low, but
Polar quality is high. Our wagons are only a phone call away.
We deliver all over the city.
Serve it at meals—its refreshing, palatable taste carries the
tang of mountain streams—and its use bespeaks the good
taste of the clever housekeeper.
in the package with the "roastin’
ear” on it
Resinol Soap and Resinol
Ointment are excellent, too,
for the care cf the hair, dis
pelling dandruff and keeping
the hair live and lustrous. .All
druggists sell Resinol Soap
and Resinol Ointment.
The Resinol Treatment con-
fainsnothing thatcotldinjure
or irritate the most sensitive
skin.
“She would be a pretty girl, if it wasn’t
for that pimply, blotchy complexion!"
But the regular use of Resinol Soap, aided
at first by a little Resinol Ointment, would
probably make it clear, fresh and charm-
ing. If a poor skin is your handicap, begin
using- the Resinol treatment and see how
quickly it improves.
Kellogg’s keep it there and
make it better-
Plump, sweet, rich krisps-
Roasted to a toothsome brown-
Give the boys and girls lots of
them-
You can’t get "fed up” on these
krisps—
Nature put the goodness in the
com-
Heap their dishes high-
They deserve food like this-
And they are happy because
of it-
MIGEL’S
2325-27 Market St.
Established 1880.
Tell your grocer-
• “Kellogg’s Roasted Korn
Krisp”—
Electric Garage
311 Tremont St.
Phone 270
a "Exide" 1
W Batteries
assure a sure start all the
year around.
"Exide’ Service
assures freedom from many of
your battery troubles.
Come see us—we’ll test
your battery and give
expert advice free
of cost.
. We repair all makes of .
A. batteries. 0
AMERICAN LOSSES
LIGHTEST OF ALL
BEER CONTROVERSY
ENTERS NEW PHASE
PRESIDENT WILSON
SPEAKS AT DINNER
Tanlac Restores Health After
Twenty Years of
Suffering
CWhat a bity
she doesn’t know
• ...........•
Both Sides Claim Victory in
Opinion.
Conflict Casualties Given
in Report.
Expresses Regret at Leav-
ing France.
Kellogg Toasted Corn Flake Co.
Battle Creek, Mich.
the
‘ Signature of
SAVE 20%
Bring Your Bundle to The
Galvez Cash and
Carry Laundry
711 Tremont. Phone 842 for
special delivery.
Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing.
Suits pressed on short notice.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
TEXAS BOTTLING WORKS
PHONE 922.
== every spoonful tastes better
streng-th Othine as this is sold under
guarantee of money back if it fails to staff who fell in the war.
remove freckles, was designed by a young Belfast artist,
of me. I’m already feeling better than
I have in over seven years. I wouldn’t
take anything on earth for the good
it has done me and I’m so glad to see
my health being restored that I feel
like telling everybody about Tanlac.”
Tanlac is sold in Galveston by Gal-
veston-Star Drug Co. and Schott’s Drug
Co.— (Advertisement.)
to do any
•1 can recommend Tanlac because
since taking it I feel better than I have
in years and I believe if it helps me it
will help others,” said S. W. Curlin of
202 King William street, San Antonio,
Texas.
suffered with malaria, chills and fever,
“For twenty years,” he continued, “I
and while this seemed to be all, it was
enough to put me out of commission.
I made seven trips to Hot Springs, be-
sides spending thousands of dollars for
other treatment and medicines, but got
no results. It was just money thrown
away. I kept getting worse until I had
to give up my position with the Gulf
Refining Company at Beaumont and
to propose as you have proposed, the
continued and increasing friendship of
the two nations, the safety and pros-
perity of France, the closer, and closer
communion of free peoples and the
strengthening of every influence which
instructs the mind and the purpose of
humanity"»
MomSEKne 79/
^^
DISTILLED WATEI
is the children's health protector-
Give them plenty of Polar—keep their systems, in order—
it saves doctors’ bills. After playing, children are always
thirsty—give them Polar.
One handsome Diamond Lav-
alliere, set with seven Dia-
monds; $100.00 value,
only ...... $75.00
One Platinum and Diamond
Watch Bracelet, 'high grade
movement; $175.00 value.
attorney as in effect preventing that
official* from asking at the hands of a
grand jury indictments for offenses
created only by the act of Nov. 21 it-
self. Such possible indictments would
not involve preliminary seizure of plant
and tools and they should' be left to
their course, at common law, except un-
der circumstances of extreme necessity
not here shown. This dissent then, is
limited to the reason assigned for a re-
sult to which I agree.”
Judge Rogers, who joined with Judge
Hough in a partial dissent, discussed
the question of "nonintoxicating" beer.
He said that for more than twenty
’years the department of internal rev-
enue had treated beer containing one-
half of one per cent or more of alcohol
as a malt liquor and that during that
time the brewers of the country had
Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These
Ugly Spots.
There’s no longer the slightest need
of feeling ashamed of your freckles,
as Othine—double strength—is guar-
anteed to remove these homely spots.
Simply get an ounce of Othine-
double strength—from any druggist
and apply a little of it night and morn-
ing and you should soon see that even
the worst freckles have begun to dis-
appear, while the lighter ones have
vanished entirely. It is seldom that
more than an ounce is needed to com-
pletely clear the skin and gain a beau-
tiful, clear complexion.
Be sure to ask for , the double
Dublin Develops Industry to a High
Degree.
Dublin, June 27.—Dublin has devel-
oped greatly the stained glass art in-
dustry’and many churches which used
to get stained glass from Munich now
get it at home. The reputation of
Irish glass has been grown and ex-
tended beyond the borders of Ireland
and windows have been supplied not
only to churches in England but across
the Atlantic.
A remarkable window has just been
on exhibition in Dublin. It is the mem-
Mexican Bandits Take. Revenge for
Blanquet’s Death.
Vera Cruz, Mexico, June 1.—-(Cor-
respondence of the Associated Press).— 1
The death of seventy-five defenseless
passengers was one phase of the revenge
taken by the rebel bands, under the
nominal command of Felix Diaz for the
death of Aureliano Blanquet and Fran-
cisco Alvarez.
A train on the Interocean line, bear-
ing persons being armed only with in-
struments of labor was dynamited be-
tween Pino and Las Vigas, the greater
number of the passengers killed by
rifle fire and their bodies, together
with the living wounded, burned when
the train was fired.
Within a few days a party of bandits,
commanded by the Arellano brothers,
burned a large part of the village of
Tlapocoyan, causing an undetermined
number of casualties. Another attack
by Pedo Gabay, falsely reported killed,
on the Alvarado railway near Salinas,
claimed fifteen passengers and fifteen
soldiers as victims.
The only military success registered
was the attack on a military train near
Tierra Blanca, on the Isthmus railway,
at a point known as “Devil’s Back-
bone.” by forces under the rebel lead- ’
ers, Villegas and Lagunes. The young
Gen. Ernesto Damy, Major Cirilo
Gamboa and fifty soldiers were killed.
Damy fighting to the last.
States district attorney, one of the
drafters of the government’s brief in
the pending litigation, maintained the
appellate court decision gave the brew-
i ers less of an advantage than they
possessed under the original injunc-
tion. He characterized as “optimistic”
the statements by counsel for the brew-
ers that the latter could continue man-
ufacturing 2.75 per cent beer.
The decision, he pointed out, would
not exempt the brewers or retailers
from prosecution under the federal
war-time prohibition act, which pro-
vides a year’s imprisonment or $1,000
fine or both, in event of conviction.
Judge Hough, one of the appellate
judges in a partly dissenting opinion,
discussed the operation of the internal
revenue department of the treasury and
the “intent to enforce a strained con-
struction of the act of Nov. 21, 1918,
by preventing brewers from complying
with pre-existing and unrepealed laws.”
“So far as I can now see, the injunc-
tion against the acting collector stops 1
that plan and I regard the relief ob- |
. tained below against the United States j
acquiesced in that definition. Congress
had not yet defined what percentage
of alcohol made beer “intoxicating,”
he said, but it was reasonable to expect
it would do so.
"But in the absence of Some definite
legislation,” said Judge Rogers, “the
meaning of the term ‘intoxicating liq-
uors’ must be a question of fact and
not of law. The court cannot under-
take to say, as a matter of law, that
liquor which contained 2.75 per cent
of alcohol by weight, is hot intoxicat-
ing.”
Paris, June 26.—(By the Associated
Press).—president Poincare tonight
gave a dinner to President Wilson and
the delegates to the peace conference.
Mrs. Wilson accompanied the president.
Responding to an address made by
President Poincare, Mr. Wilson said:
“I thank you most sincerely for the
words that you have uttered. I can-
not pretend, sir, that the prospect of
going home is not very delightful to
me, but I can say with the greatest
sincerity that the prospect of leaving
France as very painful to me.
“I have received a peculiarly gen-
erous welcome here, and it has been
pleasing for me to feel that the wel-
come was intended not so much for
myself as for the people whom I rep-
resented. And the people of France
know how ,to give a welcome that
makes a man’s heart glad. They have
a spontaneity about them, a simplicity
of friendship which is altogether de-
lightful.
“I feel that my stay here, sir, has
enlightened both my heart and my
mind. It has enabled me personally
to see the evidence of the suffering and
the sacrifices of France. It has en-
abled me to come into personal touch
with the leaders of the French peo-
ple and through the medium of inter-
course with them to understand bet-
ter, I hope, than I understood before,
the motives, the ambitions and prin-
ciples which actuate this great na-
tion.
“Sometimes the work of the confer-
ence has seemed to go very slowly
indeed. Sometimes it has seemed as
if there were unnecessary obstacles to
agreement; but as the weeks have
lengthened I have, seemed to see the
profit that came out of that. Quick
conclusions would not have produced
that intimate knowledge of each oth-
er’s mind which I think has come out
of these daily conferences.
“We" have been constantly in the
presence of each other’s minds and mo-
tives and characters, and the comrade-
ships which are based upon that sort
of knowledge are sure to be much
more intelligent not only, but to breed
a much more intimate sympathy, and
comprehension than could otherwise be
created.
“These six months have been six
months which have woven new fibers of
connection between the hearts of our
people. And something more than
friendship and intimate sympathy has
come out of this intercourse.
"Friendship is a very good thing. In-
timacy is a very enlightening thing.
But friendship may end with sentiment.
A new thing that has happened is that
we have translated our common prin-
ciples arid our common purposes into
a.common plan. When we part we are
not going to part with a finished work,
but with a work one portion of which
is finished and the other portion of
which is only begun.
“We have finished the formulation of
the peace, but we have begun a plan
of co-operation which I believe will
broaden and strengthen as the years
go by so that this grip of the hand that
we have taken now will not need to be
relaxed. We have been and shall con-
tinue to be comrades. If it be true
that that has been accomplished it is a
very great thing.
“As I go away from these scenes, I
think I shall realize that I have been
present at one of the most vital things
that.has happened in the history of na-
tions. Nations have formed contracts
with each other before, but they never
have formed partnerships. They have
associated themselves temporarily, but
they have never before associated them,
selves permanently.
“The wrong that was done in the
waging of this war was a great wrong,
but it wakened the world to a great
moral necessity of seeing that it was
necessary that men should band them-
selves together in order that such a
wrong should never be perpetrated
again.
“Merely to beat a nation that was
wrong once is not enough. There must
follow the warning to all other na-
tions that would do like things, that
they in turn will be vanquished and
shamed if they attempt a dishonorable
purpose.
“You can see, therefore, sir, with
what deep feelings those of us who
must now for a little while turn away
from France shall leave your shores;
and though the occasion is broad it
will seem very narrow in the future. It
will be easier to understand each oth-
er than it ever was before, and with the
confident intercourse of co-operation
the understanding will be strengthened
into action and action will itself edu-
cate alike our purpose and our thought.
So, sir, in saying good-bye to France
I’m merely a sort of physical good-bye,
not a spiritual good-bye. I shall re-
tain in my heart always the warm
feelings which the generous treatment
of this sent people has generated in
my heart. And I wish in my turn, sir,
Miss Geddes.
It represents a procession of soldier
saints, Longinus, Sebastian, Martin,
Edmund, Joan of Arc and King Louis
led by St. Michael and, St. George and
followed by King Arthur’s knights,
meeting a warrior escorted by the Arch-
angle Gabriel and Raphael and the
Angels of Death and of Peace.
By Associated Press
New York, June 27.—Attorneys for
both the brewers and the federal gov-
ernment claimed to have gained a vic-
tory through an opinion handed down
by the United States circuit court of
appeals modifying Judge Mayer’s pre-
liminary injunction against interfer-
ence with or prosecution for the pro-
duction and sale of beer containing no
more than 2.75 per cent alcoholic con-
tents.
The original order restrained Richard
J. McElligott, acting collector of in-
ternal revenue, from interfering with
the manufacture or sale of 2.75 per
cent beer pending a legal decision as
to whether it was “intoxicating.” It
also forbade United States Attorney
F. G. Caffey from prosecuting the
brewers and retailers of such beer.
The appellate court decision strikes out
the injunction “pendente lite” against
the federal prosecutor, making it pos-
sible for him to proceed as he sees fit,
but continues in force the injunction
against McElligott, regarding whom
the court makes this observation:
“The injunction against the acting
collector of internal revenue can do no
harm.”
Emory R. Buckner of counsel for
the brewing interests declared the ap-
pellate court decision was a clear vic-
tory for his clients and that the right
to manufacture and sell 2.75 per cent
beer after July 1 was assured. The
brewers were ready to prove, he said,
that beer of'that potency was “non-
intoxicating” and it was now up to the
courts to decide whether war-time pro-
hibition forbade the sale of all beer or
merely intoxicating beer.
Cornelius J. Smyth, assistant United
Summer days are days full of sport—in MICHIGAN.
Full of the breath of fragrant forest—of the cool air
of the Great Lakes; full of the urge of rod and reel;
paddle and portage, sail or motor, dive and splash.’
Full, too, of romantic trails through woods, along
the shores of inland lakes, following romping streams.
Full of things to do and gay, interesting people from
all over the country to do them with.
A beautiful land for your summer holidays’is Michigan—a
land out of the fairybook of the things you like best to do—a
land which satisfies that hunger for the great out-of-doors, for
Nature, for sport, for rest. (
Michigan this summer for your vacation.
The United States Railroad Administration invites you to travel and offers
Summer Excursion fares. Ask your local ticket agent to help you plan your
trip or apply to nearest Consolidated Ticket Office, or write
for illustrated booklet—"Michigan Summer Resorts’”
€ —to nearest Travel Bureau.
& UNTIED-SIATES ; RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION-
Travel Bureau Travel Bureau Travel Bureau
143 Liberty Street 646 Transportation Building 602 Healey Building
New York City Chicago Atlanta
QiniminsmomemtarmamsmimuIEmmHIDTHAA
In Recognition of Food Production Ef-
forts.
By Associated Press.
Alma, Mich, June 27.—In recognition
of work in encouraging food produc-
tion Muring the war, the National War
Garden Commission has awarded a med-
al to Mrs. Francis King of this city, the
president of the Women’s National
Farm and Garden Association. The
presentation was made by Charles
Lathrop Pack, president of the com-
mission. A similar medal has been
presented to the heads of the govern-
ments of the United States, England,
France, Belgium and Italy, and to the
world leaders in food control.
The medal was designed with the
object of representing the country’s
military service and the support given
to it by those who worked in their war
garden. On the obverse is the figure
of a young woman working over gar-
den plants. In low relief are soldiers
marching. The decorative motive for
the reverse is a basket hamper filled
with the varied product of a war gar-
den. Under the basket appear the
words: “The seeds of victory insure
the fruits of peace," a hoe and a rifle
crossed and the dates 1914-1919.
DIAMONDS
We can sell you a diamond
cheaper than they can be
bought wholesale today. Our
large stock, bought early, and
for cash, enables us to save you
the difference between the
wholesale cost and the retail
selling price.
One beautiful pair of fine
White Diamond Ear Screws;
$2 50.0 0 value, only... .$17 5.00
One fine White Diamond Ring;
By Associated Press.
Washington, June 27.—American
casualties during the 47-day Meuse-
Argonne offensive aggregated .120,000
men, or 10 per cent of the total of
1,200,000 engaged, according to a “sta-
tistical summary of the war with Ger-
many,” prepared by Col. Leonard P.
Ayers, chief of the statistical branch
of the general staff, and published by
the war department.
“Of every 100 American soldiers and
sailors who took part in the war with
Germany,” the report said, “two were
killed or died of disease during the
period of hostilities. In the Northern
army, during the civil war, the number
was about 10. Among the other great
nations in this war between 20 and 25
in each 100 called to the colors were
killed or died.”
Best information obtainable by the
general staff, places the total battle
deaths for all belligerents at 7,450,200,
divided as follows:
Russia, 1,700,000. • ,
Germany, 1,600,000.
France, 1,385,300.
Great Britain, 900,000.
Aussria, 900,000.
Italy, 330,000.
Turkey, 250,000.
Serbia and Montenegro, 125,000.
Belgium, 102,000. 1
Rumania, 10,000.
Bulgaria, 100,000.
United States, 48,900.
Greece, 7,000.
Portugal, 2,000.
American participation is summarized
in the report as follows:
Total armed forces, including army,
navy, marine corps, 4,800,000.
Total men in the army, 4,000,000.
Men who went overseas, 2,086,000.
Men who fought in France, 1,390,00b.
Tons of supplies shipped from Amer-
ica to France, 7,500,000.
Total registered in draft, 24,234,021.
Total draft inductions, 2,8 10,296.
Cost of war to April 30, 1919, $21,-
850,000,000.
Battles fought by American troops,
13.
Days of battle, 200.
Days of duration of Meuse-Argonne
battle, 47.
American battle deaths in war, 236,-
000.
American deaths from disease, 56,991.
Total deaths in the army, 112,422.
Under the head of “Sources of the
Army,” the report shows that 13 per
cent came from the regular army, 10
per cent from the national guard and
77 per cent from the draft.
A concise story of the military opera-
tions in which American troops took
part is given in a chapter headed "Two
Hundred Days of Battle." Attention
was called to the fact that “two of
every three American soldiers who
reached France took part in battle.”
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 183, Ed. 1 Friday, June 27, 1919, newspaper, June 27, 1919; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1618720/m1/5/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.