The Texas City Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 104, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 15, 1915 Page: 1 of 4
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TEXAS 01
1
The Port of Oppor.
*4
Wed
i 909.
No. 104.
nt
TO EUROPE
MEDIATION IS $214,500,000
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CORA
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ing to the boats all
ere scratched consider
der to save the lives
21
companions clinging to upturned '
V. Angele, tailor of the Twen-
332,05
accc
cb}iehp
a
99
Expression Dead
friendship of the United States.
them which did not come until ss then tried to
Washington, D. C., June 15.
with the row boat
the next morning about 9 o’clock
the mewing of
plane,. and the th ree
S
fisking but about five minutes,
The bodies of the four
Cav-
come to recognize.
sis.
0
CAPTAINSAYS
pean conflict is over, I expect to bag. Sometimes a German bul-
til it ’stops. Passing close by
a
today that the Lusitania carried Rush Medical College’s Tubercu-
losis Dispensary, told the Clini-
Sir Edward Carson
says he will
be possible by any other method.
in hu body.
11
moam
r had
ous, athletic type of American
near
(
Mr. Ben Moore of El Paso, but
is here
i
treating the consumptive is food
and its assimilation, Dr. Ethan
A. Gray, of Chicago, ' declared
POSSIBLE IN
THE NEAR
FUTURE
Dr. William Charles White,
medical director of the Tuber-
culosis League of Rittsburg, de-
AFTER
END OF
WAR
K4g
9t.
SHIP HAD
NO GUNS
a I
A a), I
I
A H
15 -
A
nch, or | BANK CLEARINGS SHOW
tangle- j . INCREASE
LOSS EACH
YEAR FROM
WHITE
PLAGUE
, 1915.
BIG CAR STRIKE
IS STILL ON
President of Waterworks
Association Speaks -
Highly of Texas City
had it not been for the war.
By United Press.
London, Jum 15.—Captain
Turner of the Lusitania swore
oansonazeraxo
VOL. Ilf.
swim back went out in a row boat with
to get some detachable motor and
j "
. I
' A
• /-
A ■
L
-
in the United States, which ac-
cording to Dr. Kober, signifies
the presence of about 1,430,000
consumptives in this country.
"Grreat and grave as the prob-
--- ——---=
i CANADA SENDS MORE MEN
To put spirit in the campaign ed ust
d also to typify the strength withou
eud
TEXAS CITY, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JUNE 15
. The Canadian contingent has been suffering severely in the fierce fight-marine warfare
tag in Flanders, and a few days ago 3,000 more men were sent over on the I
new liner Metagaina to fill gaps in the ranks.
~l1II ano
aversed I
ggg2gg3
■
if
lines is probabl in the
of violence thus
' e ‘
A
Who Wants to
Be ^Elettra^^
trying' to go to the rescue
Asserting that the most fre-
quent problem to be solved in
E
homeless cats i
break the stillness.
sents the patting of clay with a
spade; distant rapid .reminds
one e the purring of a powerful
ear hag
He is not only
By United Press
Berlin, June 15.—American
Ambassador Gerard is expected
to see the Kaiser before the
United States note is answered.
The Kaiser will be back from the
when they saw the
thousa
sou
[ Distan
ay appear, there is cer-
girl you have a chance • other-
“So soon as
tionship of state and local work
in fighting the deadly disease.
individual fire repre-
four infantrymen and a
tainly hope when we consider
that the death rate from this
disease has been reduced from
326 per 1000 population in 1880
to 147.6 in 1913,” stated Dr. Ko-
ber. “This means that if the
former rate has been continued
the number of deaths from this
case would have been 322,027
instead of 143,000 in 1912, equiv-
alent to a saving of 179,027 dur-
ing one year.”
Dr. Kober made some recom-
mendatpns for drastic action by
the National Association hat
would lead to lusher deesease in
the deata rate from tuberculo-
gard to the relaxation of the , George M. Kober, of Washington
German starvation blockade in !
was a peaceful un-
+"0s 21,
'O' 4g .b
“ • 1*u
All night long, clinging to had their accident, the row boat spy glass and looked for signs of!
their capsized boat, and with big also being capsized. One of the [the boat. He discerned some ;
case Germany stops its sub-
While attempting to
from the first beacon
C3SI gfVTe
6 47
g5,024 /a
here today. In 1.913, 143,000
/
• EBF
“I can see a great future a-
head for Texas City,” declared
H. L. McDuffie of Sherman, Tex-
as,” President of the Southwest-
ern Waterworks Association,
while in Texas City 3 esterday af-
ternoon. “Had it not been for
the European war, it would be
E2. Rosenberg Library
a -,4% - M A
/dak) 3 A i W1A ga
Berlin, June 15.—A delayed
message quotes high officials,
as saying that Bexlin did not
want to fight the entire world,
j clared the universality of the
disease established it as a fed-.
tall. Some authorities say she and also weight.
eral problem, in which the ob-
stacle “states rights” should not
be allowed to enter. He advis-
ed the adoption by all states of
the laws affecting tuberculosis
prevention enacted in New York
and Massachusetts.
Discussing the medical pro-
fession’s responsibility in the
battle against tuberculosis, Dr.
John Htter, of Chicago, who is
the physician in charge of the
swim boat turn over. They hastily who had to c
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32:60338263 22*
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i . e
Seattle, Wash., June 15—That
this country suffers an economic
loss of $214,500,000, every year
through the death’ of «berculo-
sis victims and persons of con-
sumptive tendencies was the
startling statement made by Dr.
see Texas City develope faster
than any other Texas city. The
Panama canal i sbound to aid
Texas City materially, when the
traffic through the canal increas.
when a motor boat from the j , '
_ but the current was so swift that
1weuby-third infantry arrived.
on the went to the rescue of the men [night
cally wrong, for overfeeding of-
ten results in complete loss of
resumption appetite and very little gain in
“The sounds of shell fire are of the Commonwealth of Mass-
varied. The German’s “pipe achusetts, on “The Control of
< A
ne)
his body wind. Anti-aircra.
[Germany wife meet her half way
by stopping the submarining of persons died from tuberculosis
merchant ships. 5
The police are surprised at
of the other men to the beacon, the men.
prove conclusively cal section of the convention
that “by the method of percu-
a
_ visiting friends for a few days.
the union, with a strike as I Mr. Moore says Texas City is
| the alternative. much talked of
in El Paso.
nited Cross. L , ithe enemy’s trench is near and Tail.
204, — • . . - . . ------- Pet ograd, June 15. 1 he ’denotes that he is driving a sap, I
weight, -he sencer, tangoing Amrica in exploiting the cam- Austro-Germans have been halt-; digging an advanced trench ‘l-
sylph-like girl of the cabaret paign. If you would be"Electra, ed in their efforts to reach Lem-’constructing wire
need not apply—she is too deli- goddess of America’s peace and berg from the south by
cate in mould for Electra, twin prosperity and heralded through ing their drive from the
sister of Juno and daughter of out the land, hasten to send your along the 40-miel front.
Jupiter ruler of a meagre five photograph to the Society wth tide of battle is again turning in
feet, four inches will not do. your nare and address and,
E’ectra was statuesque even possible, your
and that every reasonable con- Jem
„ es as it should. Some b ig in- Uil il piopos. 1 assing ci
the great Euro-dustries will come to Texas City bullet gives a “crack”
pean conflict ieosv r nqsig.nfb n due time, I believe.” mo- -n-f- ________
“Din of Battle
the human voice. The sentry
is sometimes greeted with good
English from German trenches .
or with a song. The strange -he South is irritated
| The novice has often been rude-surely be asked if Great Britin
greet the lonely sentry at nrght Coes deside to take such a
of a soldier-pal at peace with the iEngland, it is understood, is pre-
whole world, the Gentians in-FIT®? note denying the Unit-
eluded. ed States’ contentions in the
____________ • bleekede matter.
assist-I London, May 22. (By mail to their lines, it is generally pos-
and ancer and told Sergeant Richard New York.)—That old expres- sible to hear sounds of guns or
15 *5 himi T transport being moved. On a,
quiet night this sound is audible cession compatible with national
for smiles? It’s the same with honor will be made to keep the
ough the air like
fisiagiatthe Houston ship chan- - _ _____ _
nel. Fha Cavalrymen had been remane on the beacon all night yards east of the Texas City
ShoutiBg at intervals for help.
hiing any vital or- but if it is lyddi
yed three miles
, "If any one could properly de- lly scared by the snoring
The body of Corporal Sellers scribe a modern battle Dante’s ‘ ■ • - -
*“MMfbund fidating about 2000 pieture of Inferno would repre-
is eas 01 me lexas Ct ar sent peace in confrast," he add-
my camp yesterdya morning. It ed, explaining the sounds that
, --------- — --u -u. was taken to the undertaking fhe modern soldier’s
Insentry airy men and three infantrymen/ establishment of H. B. Emken. come to recognize.
waves washing in upen them, [Infantrymen who could not swim of the men waving for
Cook De Barberie, and Privates got on top of the row boat, and —d Nulguani 1uili
Robert Parsons, Marion Wilker- Parsons pushed the boat along Denton of the Twenty-third In- ‘sion, “The Din of Battle” is
son and Sam Schwaier, all. of by swimming, landing the sol- ““WZ Privates I C Farrell dead.
Troop B, Sixth Cavalry, waited Mier at the beacon, which was and W. GlGardor the rwerty ' It‘s a blatter and crash, a spit
and waited for help to reach about 500 yards distant. Par-[third Infantry, Sergeant Denton and screech, and “Hell let loose”
Ixyon+ n - ------1—1 —1, a doesn’t half describe the noise
rescued of combined rifle, machine gun
.shell fire and bombs in this day
,-E
TO
ZW1
A’ .,
, aasi- l--
is ' airy men found it exceedingly
men difficult to hang onto the boat.
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: 5 22 A - » b’ b* -gg1
---— 3V.au 6_)
Those that were rescued from and age, said a soldier back
he found it impossible to do so-the Infantry boat were Privates from the battlefield of Northern
Booth the -nantry and Cav- and had to turn back. Another' J. B. Quinlan, P.Ohhey, A. R. France today. 4, •
aka pares lef Texas City af- one-of the Infantrymen got toRazner and A. Payton.’
ter supner for the purpose of the beacon with the aid of
0V
£ j.
Houston ship channel to the in the other boat, but in turning ably as a result of their efforts
army camp at Texas City in or-sharply their own boat turned [to hang on to the capsized boat,
of nine over. [That of the Infantry party turn-
Corporal Sellers .was an ev-ed completely over and the men
boats, Corporal Henry Sellers pert swimmer, and he started 4vere able to get on top of it,
of Troop L, Sixth Cavalry, wasswim to shore to get assistancewhile that of the Cavalry party
drowned ' : for the men in the two capsized turned on its side and the Cav-
boats. When he went down
The accident occurred Mon- not known, as none of the
day night between 6:30 and < saw him go under. It is believed
o’clork, after the boat in which however, that he had swum a ty-sixth Infantry, and father of
Sellers and three companions couple of .thousand yards before 12-year-old Frank Angele, who
was in capsized while they were 'drowning, either after becoming was in the boat with the Infan-
-------- H s
i Go To Church
Sunday
ESTABLISHED JUNE 1
San Francisco, June 15.—In
ol exhausted or getting a cramp, trymen, became alarmed when
. . DoX Private Parsons swam to a his boy’did not show up, and at
whose boat had capsized • short small row boat behind the sail- 6 o’clock in the morning he went!
distance away. boat in whichhe Infantrymen down to the bay-shore with a
D. C., President of the Nation-
marine warfare. It is generally al Association for the Study and
[believed that if England will call revention of Tuberculosis, be-
half to its starvation campaign fore that body in convention
that “even since the campaign
against tuberculosis attained
full headway, forced feeding of
highly nutritious food has been
the comomn practice.”
This, Dr. Gray said, was radi-
‘motor car. The German bullet
“cracks” and the British sounds
like the bursting'of a soft paper
let richocheting in the sand
“bizzessometimes it lightning
flight sounds like a man half
whistling, half hissing through
his teeth. Glancing off metal it
“pings” then “schreeches" un-
New York, June 15.—Would was Amazonian in physical at-
you like to be pictured on 100,- trbutes. progressing satisfactorily, but
000, 000 posters, cards, postals/ This new maid of America will 442 never even been placed on
stamps, bill-boards and litera- grace the design and emblems of 05 g 5 ie oc -squeak” and sometimes scream Asiatic Cholera on Intedrnation-
ture as the goddess Electra?te. nationa. prospe rity move-,., , n , “ Little Wilie." High explosive al Trade Routes.”
Would you like to have your pho-loicctrieal companie/of America khat piereed his paws, destroy-shells are fickle; sometimes
tograph reproduced in thousands to rid the country of the calam- ing all his teeth; but his tongue
of newspapers, on theifront cov- ity howler and to impress on the was not even touched, and the
ers of magazines and in pamph- ation the benefits of being at net result of his wound was
lets, books and trade papers peace and possessing a prosper- swollen fi ice.
from corner to corner of Ameri-1 ity which is by no means psy-.
ca ? If you are a robustfi vigor- cholegical.
■ 48" 4 AI
a M •.
weight. The best diet is that
which appeals to the patient
even if it is' plain corned beef
and cabbage, said the physician.
Drs. John B. Manning and
Howard James Knott, of Seattle
GOMPERS AND DARROW AD- madea report on a clinical study
DRESS CLEVELAND GAR- ° • children they examined
MENT WORKERS inning the last two years in re-
___ - ation to tuberculosis exposure.
Cleveland, June 15.— Samue;Dr. Charles J. Hartfield, execu
Gompers, Clarence Darrow and tive secretary of the National
! Association, discussed the rela-
. . . The report included a consid-
tthey burst with a blinding flash eration of the prevention of
and little sound and again they [the introduction of the disease By.nited Press.
.crack kike a thunder-bolt. Some by sea routes and land routes L . Chicago, III., June 15.—The
shells “whirtie” and some pass through the establishment of bi8car strike is still on. Partial
frontier-quarantine stations. The service will be resumed , on a
. , i , +4 . ------------- guns “ping-1 essentials of successful quaran- couple of lines. No 1
..baiiet that pass- ping" and the bursting of their tine were fully discussed, and a!01 service on any of the surface
te 6" the heart shrapnel most often “clatters;” considerable portion of’the re-
ite it crashes like port was devoted to the tech- future.
...... r , i . , a collapsing bi\k smoke stack, nique of bacteriological examina-'
, „ to the nearest feld hospital; “Night sounds in the trenches tionB for the determination dtthe absence
for .Electrical Develop- there an antiseptic bandage was are and varied. A sen- cholera vibrio, the dtusdtivefar.
In fact, the ar- street. New York city, has ar- next day he retumned’tothe bat- trvsstrainedsarsmayzcatchthe azent of cholera. Several time-
who will ranged a competition out of tiefield. ‘ nd"0hoyeins.tthsPades saving measures were suggested
choose Electra from the girls of whichgiri will be chosen who i --- ' an sthktap osmaleteonwgod- and tests wihch could be rapidly
America on June 19 will pay willl pose for the designs andByTInitodD-ace IL 95s. ihis comes when, applied were considered in de-
heed to height and er, anem photographs used throughout I I
Benamin Schlosinger interna-
renew- ments. Sometimes comes the By United press ' tional president of the Garment
west whir of a dynamo. It is a sure kansas"city,Mo., June 15."" invited to
hesignthatstheenemyis working Kansas City bank clearings Cleveland gartment workers to- .......................
if favor of the Russians, despite the trenches are close one may shpwentaniney /ove faoyer,39 day. Plans were to be laid for formerly of Texas City, i
correct height the reports from Berlin and Lear the movements of enemy fig^es
, lenna that great victories have reliefs or reinforcements bhind with a 23.5 per cent increase
I been won by the Teutonic alliesj ' <>.□ pei cent inci ease.
at the
sacred cries of flying lapwings, suggestion of some British pa-
the mewing of homeless cats pers that an embargo be placed
andhhe whinning of dogs but against the United States dbt-
teWoftKe wierd sounds that-ton to neutral countries. An in-
- - ' vstigation by Congress will
surprising to have seen the
great difference in the size of
Texas City. It is my honest
opinion that Texas City would
have had a stupendous growth
"*" "* M 642
• ' s : . '
and it view of the increase in immigra- o guns,
may deafen the nearest ear fortion which will in all probality ’
_____days. Like their rifle shots the [succeed the close of the war in [that she
FARIS—Some queer stunts German machine guns soundless Europe, delegates in attendance armed vessel. In opening the taneous, or skin vaccination, a
performed by bullets are de-mu ed.t an th e. British ‘ They at the American Society of Tro-[formal inquiry into the sinking larger cutaneous surace may be
scribed in the current number Souna Z- 1e in finitely swift pical Medicine, which is meeting of the Lusitania, Carson stated exposed for the production of
of Gazelte Medicale. rapping o.a door knocker. Ours here today, rereived with great that the submarine commanders these defense agencies than may
One wounded man in the Cam- 8 .be ened o a carpet interest the report of Surgeon attacking the vessel were mur- be nossihle hv anv nther mathnA
brai hospital has eleven bullets being ea en. Y very dexterous Anan J. McLaughlin of the Unit- derers and violated every law of
i- and energetic spring cleaners ed States Public Health Service, humanity. '
armed with canes. ■ now the Commissioner of Health • __________
s, ,q Font to read Dr. Gerard’s report
Ee’e-st.. * ' A shortly.
1. ' j a.many believes there is a
g9n.--.-- chance of mediation between
--- “ ■ cV"pa England and Germany in re-
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“German fire sounds different vgam-A, ------
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TOBEGREAT
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More winsome than Venus—and achievement of Electricity gan. He
as imperial as statuesque Juno,” in hitting at hard times, the So-
wise not. ciety - I
are the qualifications set down ment, No. 29 West Thirty-ninth I applied to his wound,
foi Electra. In fact, the ar- 'street, New York City, has ar- next day he returned
tists and scientists who will [ranged a competition out <
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The Texas City Times (Texas City, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 104, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 15, 1915, newspaper, June 15, 1915; Texas City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1594367/m1/1/: accessed June 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Moore Memorial Public Library.