Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 19, No. 132, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 24, 1920 Page: 7 of 8
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■I
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
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THEO. 6. MAFFITT
Architect
510 North Sycamore St-
WRIQHT-KENDALL CO,
Insurance and Lands
Room 4, Gregg-LInk Bldg,
i Phone $07
!'DAILY HERALQ, MOV
STOKER NO LODGER NEEDED
'■ '-Sp : '
Use of Oil Instead pf Coal Has Ren-
ih Character on
dered Picturesqu
Shipboard Unnecessary.
“The Passing of the Fiery Fur-
nace” might some day appear as the f
j j ods of traveling by sea, with emphasis
on the bunkering of ships with fuel i
I oil instead of coal, thus elinvfnating
' the stoker who, day and night, shov-
eled that coal into the ever-yawning
elers who used to fee! sorry for the
stoker’s plight will join In the pleas-
ures of the trip with greater equanimi-
ty on the oii-bnrDing boats. One of
. the most interesting of recent sights
in the kaleidoscopic harbor of New
I York was the hunkering with fuel oil
| of the Cunard liner Aqultama directly
from an oil tanker. In about twenty.
hours 45.0W barrels of oil was stored,
by means of an 8i>6*1ncfi flexible metal
hose, the services of but three men
being required. Had all four connec-
tions been • used, the bunkering could
have been completed In six,hours by
seven ruen. this Including both proc-
esses of discharging and receiving.
Thus the modern 'tpethod means a
saving of time, labor and expense.,
since the coal bunkerlflg of an ocean
liner usually requires the services of
many men for several days. It Is also
j| interesting -to note that the. liner’s
| first run with oil as a fuel resulted
(n the cbnsuraptlon of approximately
3,900 tons; as against the usual 5,840
tons of coal.—Christian Science Moni-
tor- ~ '•
•lightly ased pla-
it bo reasonable
Brook Mays ft Co.,
H. Padgett, man a-
- i7-tf
--
load of Pandeon
/ M;* OUT
pritW Don’t delay,
that you may
■For gale
Seven-room, 2-8tory dwelling, close
kt on sonth Bide; $1590 cash, balance
$76 per month. This is an extra
good business stand.
Bight-room duplex home, close In
on north side; 2500 cash, balance $65
per month.
Fifty-one acres level land, new four-
room dwelling, barn, garage, well
water, fenced; two miles from town;
$125 per acre, one-third cash, balance
8 per cent.
Five-room bungalow, large lot, ga-
rage .modem; $1000 cash, balance 8
pw cent—$3500.
Twenty acres, 3 miles from town,
right at school, 3-room house, barn,
trail; fenced—$1800.
Wrlght-Kendall Co.
Room 4, Gregg-Link Bldg.
18-tf Phone 307.
HOeSes for Sale.
A splendid, 8-room, two-story, north
side, $3,600.00. , j
- Nice 5-room pottage, south side,
limoe. ?*: /
Elegant modern six-room cottage,
$4£O0.6O.
One of Ihe best six-room cottages in
the city, $7,760.00.
■So ahinghs on Lacy street, each,
$1,760.60.
This ft only part of my list.
■ip V. t>. Wilson, Phone 241.
OR. CHARLES CARD
Eye- Ea», Nose and Throat
Office over Bratton's Spring
Street Pharmacy
--•
Hentfr Wood.
Plenty of short cut heater wood for
the teall Wflson heaters. $3.50 per
Phone 259 of leave order at
elections of music. 4°9 Texas avenue. 26-tf
DR. C. C- NASH
Office—First National Bank
Building
Entrance over Western Union.
Hours—2-6 p. m.. and by appoint-
ment Nash Sanitarium—-8-9 a
m. end ey appointment
Office Phone It, Res. Phone 395.
OR. E. W. HUNG ATE
Dentist
Suite 2, Link Bldg.
Over Bratton’s Oak St. Pharmacy
Hours: 8 to 12, 2 to 5 p. m.
DR. B. PARSON8
Office Ovar Bratton's Spring
Street Drug Stare
Office Boors:
19 to 12 a. m., 2 ce 6 p. m.
After Supper by Appointment
Ctrola with
- Wrtft go with
for Vlctrola and
at once. Terms
ft Co., 401
freight depot,
large beautiful
^L'janke & Cp
tor $250. on
St once if you
•Brook Mays & Co.
■tee*, opposite freight
23-tf
Bad digestion roDs Qrn body of the
nourishment It needs to maintain
■eaith an a strength To restore tone
the dtgeative organ* there is ub bet-
r remedy than PricKly Ash Bitters
i improves digestion and cleanses the
stomach, liver and bowels. frigs
$1.25 per bottle. Bruton Drug Com-
pany special agents.—adv.
-0---
Strawberry Plants.
I have for sale a few hundred
strawberry plants; the famous Klon-
dyke variety, very large and fine
Davor. Three hundred plants will
produce berries enough for a family.
Now is the time to plant Will de-
liver at 60c a hundred. Lamar Ham-
ilton, phone 833. tf
Urge front room,
tot 916 N. Queen
* - * ■■
|T 1 ■»
GUARANTEED GOLD SEAL CON-
GOLEUM RUG, 9x12, FOR $1046.
SPENCER'S, AVENUE A. 184
’ih
22-3
Bee’ brown fur neckpiece
Magnolia street. Return
^ street and receive
ik containing
arfe about $5.00 in
to Herald; reward.
Br. hogs, two red and
£ Have same In pen. Ow-
i*» same by paying for this
|M. Apply J. T. Bur
oar phone 747. 10-tf
-.--
WANTED
y 16 years old wants
W. Spring street. 22-3
Pjj_
pher who can
Hr^and do genend^bookkeep-
> to Texas Power ft Light
;:v . 22-tf
ItiMiBY, $35 per
to man or woman
to introduce Eureka Egg
Eureka Mfg. Co., East St.
22-6
sealed cans, 90c
per half gallon. All
fresh fish this
22-3
GUARANTEED GOLD SEAL CON-
GOLEUM RUG, 9x12, FOR $16.t5.
AVENUE A.
WM. F. MURPHY.
Doctor of Dental Surgery
Dental Examiner for the United
States Public Health Service
i Hours:
j 9 a. ra. to 12 m.; 2 p. m.Jo 6 p. m.
184
__
I
An entertainment consisting of mu-
sical selections and a play entitled
“The House Party on the Styx” will
be given by the high school pupils
of St. Mary's Academy for the bene-
fit of the academy library, on Tues-
day, Nov. 23, at 8 p. m., and again on
Wednesday, Nov. 24, at 8 p. m. Ad-
mission 26c. St. Mary’s Auditorinm.
20-2
We will receive 100 young fat tur-
kejto Tuesday, and can furnish them
either dressed or alive for Thanks-
giving. Diets Bros. 18-0t
PR.S. O. SMALL
Ey*, Ear, Nose and Throat
Office Ro.ma 3, 4, 5 6. Ritnor
, \ Bldg., 10344 Mtun St
Office Phone 295, Res. Phone 1291
■v'-v Office Hours:
3 to 12 a a s to 5 p. m
Office phone 336; Res. Phone 335
20714 Main St, Palestine, Texas
OR. G. L. RYE
Dentist
Office, First National Bank Bldg.
Hours: 9 to 12; 1 to 5
Phones: Office, 18; Residence 714
DR. A. ARTHUR SPEEGLE
Physician and Surgeo^
Palestine, Texas ..
- Hours:
Speegle Sanitarium 8-10 a. m.
Evenings by Appointment
Phones: Office 165; Residence 164;
Sanitarium 185.
i__I
PHONE
214
PHONE t
234
PALESTINE SEWER SY8TEM
Office 210 Main 8tr«**
°honr ?4i
SAM ROLLINS
Furniture and Piano Moving
We Haul Everything
Residence Phone 467
F. H. Eilcuberger, Prey.
Loaf
-Two refined young la-
to 22,. to travel south this
I|p9-)w. Chicago advertising
^f75 to $100 per week.
Liberty, room 203. Pales-
TUf 0:30. ajyi 11:30 to
tomorrow! 23-2 j
BLACK-DRAUGHT
r
Printing
Atq You in Need of
BUI Bab
Iurttsttai
Picket Besdf
Letter Heidi
CaO at this qfflea
Good Work Is
Our Specialty
MOSTLY OF HUMAN ORIGIN
Twenty.Five of the Forty-Eight Staten
of the Country Have Practically
Native Names.
Of our 48 states we find that 25 bear
names of Indian origin, while 12 are
English, six Spanish and three French,
Two states may be said to have Amer-
ican names. The first Is Washington,
named after the Father of our Coun-
try, ^od the second. Indiana, so called
on account of the purchase and sub-
sequent settlement by various Indian
tribes of large tracta of land north* of
the Ohio river and -within the present
boundaries of the statf.
When we review Indian stat^names,
we- must remember *hat there-’was no
one Indian tongue; Instead* there
were several separate and distinct. lan-
guages, and each, of-these was divided
into many dialects.- Hence the wide
variance^ in Indian names in different
sections. i;-"
Wisconsin, written by early Frc.jch
explorers of.the region as Ouisconsln
and named for its chief stream. Is
thought to have conie from a Sac In-
dian word translated as Wild Rusb-
<ug Channel, and also as havlDg ref-“
.erence fo holes M the banks of
streams where birds nest. However,
neither of these interpretations can be
confirmed — National Geographic
Magazine. ’ - •
Artificer Wool.
The artificial wool which has been
nnder test at I-eeds (Eng.) university
is produced from cotton waste. Its
basis being cellulose acetate. It Is
claimed that the product is an even
better insulator against beat and cold
than wool, Jhat it takes dyes success-
fully. and that It will wear well. In
the experiments made, it has been sat-
isfactorily converted Into fabrics.
Equal parts of artificial wool and
natural wool gave a doth resembling
tweed, and the head of the university’s
Textile department has suggested that
this should be useful for men or wo-
men fancying homespun effects in
clothing. Cheapness and p<y?sibls
wearing qualities constitute the special
appeal of the material. Its defects are
said to include Inelasticity and lia-
bility to break, and these unfit It for
yarns of the worsted type, requiring a
combing length of two inches or more,
though it may serve well for yarn and
cloth where short fibers are suitable.
ftftftft-ftftftftftftftftftftftft
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New Aircraft Rises Vertically.
Stimulated by recent offers of large
money prizes a number of French aero-
nautical engireers are busy with the
construction of vertically rising, heav- j
ier-than-air machines. The largest of f
these Is a helicopter, characterized by
its unusually large size and substan-
tial construction, says Popular Me-
chanics Magazine. The wings resem-
ble in plain the leaves of a four-leaf
clover, and are carried on metal tubes
which radiate from a central upright
This upright Is mounted on the mid-
dle of jhe metal fuselage and is re-
volved by a. nine-cylinder radial en-
gine.
Had a Home-Made Lock.
A few years ago we were enjoying a
vacation trip In a little car of ancient,
vintage. This little car had been
built originally without a windshield;'
later we had improvised one, using a
bent wood franie. One day while I
was waiting for my wife another mo-
torist walked up to me and shirt:*
“Do.you know that car of yours doesn’t
look so had until one sees the wind
shield, and then any one can tef1 you
made the whole thing yourself.”- Ex-
change.
; Inside the Line3.
As we were .driving through the city
we were forced'to come suddenly to a
halt. Two old ladles were■-walking
across the busiest thoroughfare as if
It were the most uninhabited place an
earth. ( sounded my horn just as
they got in front" of the car. One of
them stopped dead still apd, giving riV
u very defiant look, said-: “Yon don’t
dare run over ore. V-'hy, \ye are In-
side the linest”—Ohicago Tribune. ■ |
Get today's news today. n?e Herald
If every man was a man who be-
lieved in his fellow-man, and always *
stood ready to help him;
If every man believed in his town
—believed it was just die very best
little old town on the map
• V.
;.t.
.
-9m
If every man believed in his job
- ‘ . ■ "
-that it was an opportunity for fen
not only to help hiihself, but oppor-
tuntfy to serve
his fell
[ Vv
ow-men;
* i
:w, Jn-t
li *
*
If every man sought few: the truth,
and would not so eagerly accept raise- *
hood as the truth.
.
If every man just strived to please
in all he says and does, and there wa§
no hypocracy about him;
■'.•SVJ ^
lfl
If every man was a 100-per cent
good American and good citizen,
' ; - - w- j
there would be no cause for strife or
misunderstanding; and we would M
■ *’ ' • y -*k ’• "r-’ ■ '•*
be found pulling for our communify.
And we would have a
worthy of the good people we would
be, and a place altogether desirable.
V H . . ' ,/
And Vte could have
just that sort of town.
WHY NOT?
The Herald can supply your
i « - H*.
every printing want, and your type-
writer supplies. And the prices are
♦
right.
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 19, No. 132, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 24, 1920, newspaper, November 24, 1920; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1014962/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palestine Public Library.