The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 347, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 12, 1921 Page: 2 of 4
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A PRETTY BOX OF GOOD
STATIONERY MAKES A
NICE VALENTINE
STATE HEALTH OFFICER DIS-
CUSSES MATTER AFFECT.
ING HEALTH.
See the New Sh pment We
Have Just Unpacked
BRASELTON-SMITH DRUG CO.
Dorothy Watt, Jeweler
iminim...... --- ■HtwtwwwwttfHtw
Associated Press
Austin, Texas. Feb. 12.-Front the’
health legislation, it
within the palo of possibility that j
Texas women will soon be asking
at government inspected shoe stores
HEELS AND
D LOW SHOES
AMERICAN LEAGUE
PLAYS 154 GAMES
SEASON OPENS WEDNESDAY,
APRIL 13 AND CLOSES
OCTOBER 2.
Associated Trees
Chicago, Feb. 12.—The American
number and tenor of reforms -already j League Baseball season will open
undertaken in the way of proposed:0” 'Vedheeday, April 13, and close
I A«* O AAaAiwl inn- tn thn
is entirely !on SundaY Oct. 2, according to the
'official 1921 schedule released by
| U B. .lobhson, president of the
! league The schedule calls for 154
for "statutory heels” or “legalized , each c,ub playing halt this
low cut” shoes, according to Dr. | number on the home grounds.
, Manton M. Carriek, state health of-1
Sunday games at Washington and
The Daily Herald
Published every day except Sunday by
THE HERALD PUBLISHING CO.
121 York Avenue
Entered at the Post Office at Weather-
ford, Texas as second class matter
Member of the Associated Press
Tho Associated Press is exclusively en-
titled to the use for republication of all
ntvn dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in this paper and
also the local news herein.
HARDING INAUGURATION
ficer, who advanced the startling‘New York* which were Introduced
US theory that if high-heeled, ahavnllnto the league at the end ot the
toed shoes continue to be
PLANNED AFTER LINCOLN’S people, may, in due "process of eva-!became- a part ot the regular sche-
sharp
worn 8eason two years ago, and which
of "
Assoclatod Pres*-
duie last year, again - have been
scheduled, with the Wshington club
Chicago, Feb. 12.—While Senator sevent j, incarnation,* go* clattering!drawing 17 Sundays and 13 Sabbath
Harding’s inauguration as President itjong jn m0st ungainly fashion. I games each being awarded to New
, lution. develop into a one-toed,, or i
perhaps, in
hoofed, nice and
of the Cnited States is designed to
follow arrangements of Abraham
'Seriously,”
said
Hr Carriek York* Chicago and St. Louis, while
Lincoln’s inaugural, there are tea- ,]e
■while the French heel may add a Detroit has been given twelve-
the height and make a
All the cities in the league permit
tures of 1861 that fortunately will numbPl. six took llke ;l ,hree. baseball on Sunday except Boston
be missing in 1921.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY
; steals the freedom from the ankle.and Philadelphia,
Instead of veterans of North undinloljon, shifts tile greater part-of! *n P'ay'nS the full schedule it will j
j South marching side by side as they; the bodv weight to the ball of the |bc uccossary for each club to make;
| will next month, the only military : foot and cramps and crowds the *hiee swings aiound the circuit.
|forces in the inaugural i>arade of joes so ihat a most unbecoming peg-! i'ho season uiil open with western;
12, 1921 11861 were the sappers and miners, iike gait is the result. j clubs playing western clubs and the
—~ j Tho rest of the U. S. troops in the^ “Army records show a shamefully astern es meeting eaeh
j capital were stationed in different high percentage of rejections onjotb*''
_____ j parts of the city to provide against account of painful feet, fallen arches1 0pening ®ames arc lis,ed
Only a little while ago evei>bod> emergencies. As the nation hovered and fool deformities, among theMows;
supposed the railroads were straight- j ()Il tbe brink of civil war. the great jin,s and pills and Joes who never! Chicago at Detroit,
ened out for good, and off the public jfear ot- ,be authorities was that ef- WOre French heels in their lives," Cleveland at St. Louis.
Philadelphia at New lork.
THE SUFFERING RAILROADS j«
fol-
mind—and here they are again, plead- torts would be made to interfere with asserted the new health offices
—THE PEE-WAR PRICES ARE OOMUTCM
—Commencing Monday morning, February 14th, we1
cut all prices to a pre-war basis. Here are a few of our lead- ;<
ing prices:
—REGULAR DINNERS, 50 CENTS.
—PLATE LUNCH, 40 CENTS.
STEAKS AND CHOPS
Veal Chops ............35c
- m
1
Potatoes, any old style , .'4f
Catfish ................. .fljjj
Pork Chops ............35c Trout —.................
T-Bone Steak ..........50c Red Snapper........
Eggs, any stylo ......
Loin Steak .. -•.........50c
Brains and Eggs .......40c
Ham and Eggs - .. ,40c
Sausage....... 35c
Roast Pork ...... 35c
Irish Stew 25c
Toast (dry) .............
•*
Buttered Toast —
Milk, Coffee, Tea
Oysters, any style
Other Prices Ae
■ ..
—I have been in business in Weatherford 28 years r
have always treated my customers right. We are not 0
prices, but keeping in line with the decline in the cost of <
BUSY BEE CAFE
mm
&
ft
NORTH MAIN ST,
-OEO BAVOUSETT, Prop .
_i
k-» -.
AMERICAN WRITER HELD IN
! tion.
Lenine finely beard hlu
r.
HIGH ESTEEM BY SOVIETS through—and revoked the resolution
Ing poverty as of yore, and demanding the ceremonies.
s Texas, whose service during the!
Boston at Washington.
help. They are filling the country jf president Harding follows Lin- war as maor in the medical corps, II. j All the clubs which start the sea
Berlin,
Associated Pres*
Jan. 24.—The late
and mttde English one of «J»e offi-
cial convention languages.” , ,
*>bn | When Heed fell Uf of typhus h»
with lamentation. The chairman of coin’s first inaugural address in com- s. Army, gave him every opportunity!son awaT lroni home, will return j Heed, American magazine w titer, Kjven every possible attention,
tiie Association of Railway Executives pjuss. he wifi do it in less than 3,000 for observation along this line. Or.!t0 ,heir °'vn >'ards 00 April 21 and newspaper correspondent and a lead- Mr Schwartz said, and
says 36 lines failed to earn their oper- words. In that space Lincoln made Carriek went on to say: | give the home folks their first op-!«r of Communists in America, won ,
and 28 his plea for the Union and declared "From the heel to the front the i P01'Utnit.v to see their clubs in
when «t
funeral was re-
, last he died, his ,
a ting expenses lust month, and 28 his plea for the Union and declared "From the heel to the front the; P°™u«ity to see their clubs in tc-ja place in boviet Russia second only markabiy resplendent. He was buried
others, while barely paying for opera- his intention to maintain it. bones of the foot form an arch, **on- !to lenine and rrt>tljhy, M. Schwartz,;under the K^mlin walla,
tkm, did not have enough left over for j Four years later Lincoln's second . which gives strength and springiness f Chicago after the opening games jot San Francisco, Socialist and labor ( “Bolshevism was his life’s work,’"
fixed charges and taxes. They have inaugural was overshadowed by the . to ihe gait. A second shorter arch iat Bvtroit with the Tigers, will'organizer, told the correspondent Schwartz concluded. “He was t«r-
laid off 200,000 men, and economized precession of victories. The crowds bows from one side to the other, j juvnp down to St. Louis and i tekle j The Associated Press upon his a,‘ ribly In earnest about it, Ud would,
la every other way in their power, were smaller than those in ’61. Vet- The second arch is supported only j,he browns in a series, aRer* which j rival here iron) Moscow whete he j be)jevo willingly have died tor
they say, and still they are facing ruin, erans marched in the parade and on the outer side, like inner edge!1*10 "bile Sox will come back lionir-jhad been tour months in piison fol- tbjg jr0ftm 0f (be Soviet.”
They want first of all. to reduce there was a brilliant array of olfi- running high and free is responsible jand uieet T-v 0obl»‘K ll'io agnin. j lowing his dttendance as delegate to j --—. -----——
After that, they may ask for cers in the city. A much comment- for the hollow space on the inner j L’ievcland- the world’s champions- tli« second congress of the Third [ Ladies and misses middle feMMN.-
The hone " bo start the season at Si Louis Intcinatlonale. Reed died in Mos- j regular $2.50 value* on safe at Mjc.
wages,
various rate changes.
ed on feature of the parade was a side of the normal foot.
' A. M.
went to Moscow ;
Yates 9c. 19e and 99e Wars.
- . .Ti..
Railroad wages, on the whole, are. battalion of colored troops and a arches are held in place by iiga- ’llluVl' “P to Detroit for the second I cow last autumn,
liberal. Inasmuch as they were raised’colored lodge of Masons. Phtladel-1 ments supported bv muscles. When | scries and then Tris Speaker will I "When I first
to their present level to adjust them to phia was represented by several fire : those muscles are weakened by pi >! Like his Indians home to meet, the |some triends told me John Reed
.taut year’s cost of living it is not un companies with engines and two traded Illness, disuse or over strain, Browns in the first game on their!was there,” said Mr. Schwartz.
reasonable to expect that they will be hose companies. i 'he ligaments are apt to stretch and i borne grounds at St. Louis. ."" but of it,' I asked, for l had seen Mrs. uuo rscmeaei. wno lives near y g
I.incoin's second inaugural address permit the arches to sink. Thisj *n the East, "Ilnbe" Ruth and the,Reed in Chicago, when, as a big. Robstowm. Nueces county, was gath- #
Finds ’N*st R«tllssn«ks Eggs.
Corpus ChrKtX Texas, Feb. 12.—
scaled down somewhat sooner or later.
along with the wages in other indus- done in a thousand words, but condition
tries, to fit the new price levels. As r°nwing part of it is still echo- pull of
President Wilson pointed out recently, ing iu American thought
m I * a. * L r\ %« - ,-i *-l rl ,i oiluilW
the railroad labor board is capable of
taking care of that matter, and may
doubtless be trusted to do so fairly.
is called Hat foo'. The I Yankees will be the first opixments! good-natured, sincere fellow ho hadlering egga in the barn and in ft bay.*“; . >
the ligaments on Ihe outer!*® Play at Philadelphia alter the split the Socialist Party over she rack found a large number of egga.
as peril- shell or the bone causes severe | Athletics have finished their series! issue of communism, and his brine but not of hen or guletra variety,
non! to the world's affairs of today, pain In some instances flat fooi ;a* A'ew York and Washington; llos ‘in Russia did not particularly in Puzzled as to their nature she broke
“With malice toward none, with causes little inconvenience—in the!lon Ians will get their first glimpse terest me. It soon did interest ine one and out crawled two tiny, r&ttle-
churity for all, with firmness in negro race ii is almost a normal j of the Red Sox in action when the) "Some of tho Russians hail askeil snakes'. Mrs. Tschledel gathered the
m
As for rates, they, are more likely to
the right, as God gives ms to see condition, but ihe condition known: Washington Senators come to the,me about the Communist party in remainder of the eggs, 38 in all.
be scaled down with wages than
the right, let us strive to finish the as painful feet, which results from ■ Hub city to raise the curtain April: America and 1 had replied we had and pouring kerosene over them set
work we are in, to bind up tlie na- muscular weakness, is not only dis-! 21.
te be jacked up furthei There is a (jol,.s ^rounds, and care for him who i tossing but a serious handicap.
widespread impression that lower pas-
senger rates will provide more revenue
by stimulating travel, and the same
principal probably bolds true of
least some of the freight schedules.
Along with these considerations it
may be said, in all kindliness, that the
railroads seem to be doing an unneces-
‘Headaches from eye strain
arc
Tlie eastern dubs will b.'
to Lif the trail for the f-.n
!no real, organized Communist party .them
he first!there, although we had communists, she killed
afire. Out of the 38 eggs
65 young reptiles. The
i-nd of
This apparently, did not jibe with bggs are believed to have contained
for
his widow and orphans—to do familiar, nervous disturbances from : the circuit. The invasion
ill-- the impression Reed had m ule., the offspring of but
one mother
gary amount of “hollering”. They are
all which may achieve and cherish constant foot strain are just as com-; West will open on May It), when That some day lie came, coatless and snake.
"i* a just and lasting peace among our- men but noi so generally under-; Boston will be at Chicago: Philadel- angry, into the dining room where i ———-~ ■
selves and with all nations” stood. phia ai St. Louis: New York at we were all eating and walking up; Good Johnson grass hay, a litti*
On this great day the President’s "They used to say, toes out,’ I’ac.; Detroit and Washington at
thought, ns Ihe thought of the Na- enl* Teacher, Dancing Master, ihe land. The west goes east June 2, and in a
generals. The A*my and all. Then it
tion. was 'With
Cleve- lo me put his haud on my shoulder, daj’k, good sound fine straw,
in a voice which everyone in j hale. H. J. Brudfisb.
was diseov- with Chicago at ,Washington, Detroit the room could hear said:
30c a
hard hit
industry
great news on the day that Lincoln eivd ,hat ,()H‘*ig out meant an ex- at Philadelphia, St. Louis at New, “Schwartz did you say there was
NEW METHOD OF MEA8-
but so is almost every other inaugurated the second time was tra strain on the supporting muscles, j York and Cleveland at Boston. no Communist party in America?"
URING EMPLOYES VALUE
They are suffering like the (ha( Qenera] Sherman had captured a side on ihe longer arch and! Chicago, Detroit, Washington and "I was surprised and answered that!
AMnctited Pres*
rest, from a temporary business slump c‘™'era', Early, occupied Charlottes M tendency to fallen arches. Fiat feet New -York have been awarded 13 I bad not said we had no common * Cleveland, Ohio, Feb. 12.—An en-
and must take their medicine with the xjlle y.t aru, wag last hpftr<1 IIOln are rare among strait toe walkers. Saturdays each, while the other four ists but that we had no legal com- jtirely new method of measuring the
rest, if they fall to make a living af- Staunton, where nine years be-
ter the business revival conies and the fore< a war presWen, ,0 be, Wood- -v°1"'
v
-obvious readjustments have been ,.ow u-pHOn was bora
now the leacliing is, walk withfclubs—Cleveland, St. Louis, Philadel- inunist parly. I am glad you did value of an employe's work is re-
fect parallel-toes straight phia and Boston have been given a not say it. Heed declared, still in ifciving its first test in the garment
ahead. dozen each. ,a loud voice, and walked out of the industry here. Scientifically determ-
made, it will be time then to appeal. _ "If you have painful feet, you Double headers will la* ployed in room. .* ined standards of work have been
for more help from the government. 'Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be CuCee r"Uui'a,lv 11,111 *" your doctor for all cities on holidays. Independence: "Shortly after this I was given Installed.
—-•— - i ny local applications, as they cilnno' J advice. He will icll you that tho Day—July 4th. Chicago will play at an exhibition of the power he held, The wage standards, as they
’’Our position", says the Dallas reach the diseased portion of the ear * patent artificial devices for the cor- Cleveland, Detroit will be al St. over the administration. I had seen called, were determined after elx
.. _. ----- --
are
the Dallas reach the diseased portion of the ear . patent artificial devices for the cor- Cleveland, Detroit will be ai St. over ihe administration. I had seen called, were determined after air
News, "is that a married man should Y b,P jgajn°^y a°,"j by lection of foot defects are for the Louis; Washington at Boston and him tearing through the streets j months of intensive time studies Of
finish washing the dishes before be|tutlol)a, rPm’,4v Catarrhal Deafness Imos* P»« unreliable, and as iniprop Philadelphia ai New York. iwith Lenine and Trotzky and Zino^ actual opei-ations. The Cleveland
takes his smoke." Nonsense. Ileii* caused by an inflamed condition ef erly fitting shoes have largely eon-. I^ibor Day—Sept. G, Chicago isivieff in official automobiles, evident- Garment Manufacturers’ Association .
should have his smoke first, and then ,ributwl lo .V0U1' condition, lie will scheduled to be at Detroit, while St.;iy on the best of terms. Then I-en 1 and the six locals of the Internation-
he won't care whether the dishes are r”a baTe Crumbling sound or imper- adv,8<‘ 'he right kind of shoes and I-ou1s will be at Cleveland, Wash- ine put through a resolution at the al Garment Workers Union Is pay-
washed or not.
feet hearing, and when it Is entirely foot exercise. One of the Tail Mc-!ington at Philadelphia and New York congress that only Russian, German ing the expense.
closed. Deafness is the result, Un- Kenzie exercises which has proved .ut Boston.
|
m
less the inflamation can be reduced, : ... . , ,
__j i*„ ; taiuable is to iai.se the heel about
The Swiss merchant marine, start- and th!s tube restored to its norma).
Decoration Day. May 30-
work an average
and French should be spoken. Reed I The amount of ____
________________ __________ Chicago I heard about this an hour or so after J employe can do in a week is COUMl'
ed a couple of years ago, is said to condition, hearing will be destroyed |aa inch from the ground and walk will play at home witli St. Louis !'h® resolution was pa.ssed and he ered 1,000 points for which a stfpu-
have turned out a failure. The Swiss,! torever. Many cases of deafness Mj»;on the ball of the foot as if the heel as lts opponent; Cleveland will became stamping into the convention|la^ed weekly wage is paid. For All
*to be sure, have not had much sea ex- condttion' ofrte mucous sui :wer* palnful Tbis exerciw' should at Detroit; Washington will be at!in » rage. He was a dramatic fig-j that an employe doe» l
_ . .*, ... .____I- ... .____. _______ - a 1____ hP DrjlCt P minihpl’ rtf Htnou aool. .. , ... . . ...... ! ,. .... skiri ! __________ j___.
does above the
perience. But maybe they did not use faces Hail's Catarrh Cure acts thru he practiced a number ot times each homo to New York and the Athletics *ure- He wore no coat and his shirt; average standard he is paid extra,
,
jk “cheesebox on a raft?”
-«-
‘'be blood on the mucous surfaces H ■ day and
the system.
We will give
lor a hundred steps at a will meet Boston at Philadelphia. was °Pen «•* Ihe collar, He walked ’according to a regulated scale.
, £■ " '‘T" ■
... ... i
to guaranteeing thd
the; Lenine, who was in the chair, in [worker a minimum weekly w»«*
Very like the Germans deserve pity that cannot be cwred by Hall’s Ca- ed by an experienced physician sel-' league—Bunker Hill Day, June 17,|the meantime speaking rapidly ln'and paying him for all he produces " r
from the rest of the world, but a tHretiitrs free. A nw dom tails to cure the condition and wjn piay before the home folks 'English. !above that the plan provides for
F. J. CHENEY * CO.. Toledo. O |knt>wn as painful feel. In connee- w-ph the Detroit Tigers as an op-: “English is not to be spoken here",' paying the worker during whatever
One Hundred Dollars.'Umti' Proper shoeing a,*d regular The Boston R£d Sox have been given down 'he aisle pointing his finger at in addition
for any case of Catarrhal Deafness systematic toot exercise as prescrib- the other holiday listed by
i
point1 sometimes overlooked by senti-
mentalists is that the rest of the world
deserves pity from the Germans for
what they have done to it The Ger-
mans deserve pity chiefly because they
are incapatok* of realizing what they
Jest
jMb
■
ition with this the
foot covering ponent.
The Allies present their reparation bears an important relation.
dates
the
i Lenine
chair.
shouted, rising from the
idle time there may be in his work
have done.
j "Reed continued in English, de-
And then what do the Allies do?
nfllllf -------— — . ., J.J.J .... Inl,!.*****,
COTTON SEED
—I am handling for the Banks
ACALA AND LONE STAR PEDIGREED COTTON SEED
Acala, Per Bushel $2.50 Lone Star, per bushel $2*00
_Get your seed at once so the banks will know just
how muoh more seed to order.
. , , . .. ... There are three
demands to Germany with the nltmw- **The ^ 8hou,d conform to the schedule which conflict with the Na-,
turn, “Take etn or leave em. ; shape of the foot-broad at the toe. (jonai league sche.dule and all three c,arlng "*el'e weif 27 delegates who
many promptly proceeds to leave em. fjeP)„ should be long and low. conflicts are in Chicago The dates I Knslmh and English must be
: Laced shoes are better than any au 0f wi,ich fall on Sundays are 0,le ol ,be lanKuaKCs of the conven-
|®‘her kind because they can not May x June 26 and Sept il.
only be more accurately adapted to while the White Sox are playing
the foot, but because they afford Cleveland in Chicago on May 1
1 better ventilation. Patent leather Pittsburg and Chicago will be the,
and rubber overshoes should not be Nationa| league attraction In the!
i worn for long periods. ^ Windy City. On June 26, Detroit
“Shoes that fit is the answer. We and Chicago will be the attraction
I must have horse sense if we would at Comiskey Park while Pittsburg
. BULLOCK ii
^___ - " /
AI1 M0d’ on “••’ 461 AH
15c gawi^r seed, on sale, 13c. A. M.
Yates, 9, 19, and 99c Store.
Ifilte:
avoid imny feet.
Canvas glovea on sale at 9c. A.
M. Yates 9e, 19e and 99c Store.
The quagga. the striped wild hores
’ pf South Atrica is virtually extinct, THE HERALD FOR JOS printing
I again meets the Cubs. The last con-
flicting date. Sept. 11, will nee De-
troit meeting the White Sox while
the St. Louis Cardinals will play
the Cube.
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The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 347, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 12, 1921, newspaper, February 12, 1921; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth642626/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .