Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 16, No. 168, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1917 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Palestine Daily Herald and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Palestine Public Library.
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PALESTINE DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1917.
THE NON-INTEREST BEARING AND UNSECURED DEPOSITS OF
THIS BANK ARE PROTECTED BY THE STATE
^BANK GUARANTY FUND.
GUARANTY STATE BANK OF PALESTINE
T. M. Campbell, President.
J. E. Angly, Vice-President
T. M. Campbell, Jr., Cashier.
C. E. Williams, ^Asst. Cashier.
_3u
P. H. HUGHES
REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE
AND RENTALS.
We make a Specialty of City Property; Manage
Estates, and Estates in Trust for Minor
Heirs, We make all kinds of Bonds.
Royal! National Bank Building. Palestine, Texas
Some Clippings
And Some Comment
MOORE GROCERY CO.
WHOLESALE GROCERS
TYLER. PITTSBURG. PALESTINE AND LONGVIEW.
J'SDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM
A BILLION TO HELP BUSINESS AND FARMING
The funds gathered into the Federal Reserve Banks now aggregate
over $1,000,000,000. This vast sum was not
membes^^m accumulated to earn profits for private in-
terests, nor can it be controlled by private
interests. Its purpose is to assist its mem-
ber blanks, of which we are one, in helping
the farmers and business men and to make general banking condi-
tions as sound as possible.
ROYALL NATIONAL BANK
, PALESTINE, TEXAS.
RESOURCES OVER $1,000,000.00
For Sale
AT A BARGAIN
Dodge Automobile
Our Soldier Boys.
Down toward the deep blue water,
marching to the throb of drum;
From city street and country lane the
line of khaki come;
The rumbling guns, the sturdy tread-
are full of grim appeal,
While rays of western sunshine flash
back from burnished steel.
With ea^er eyes and cheeks aflame
. the serried ranks advance;
And your dear lad, and my dear lad,
are on their wTay to France.
A sob clings choking in the throat,
as file on file sweep by,
Between those cheering multitudes,
to where the gieat ships lie;
The batteries halt, the columns wheel,
to clear-toned bugle call,
With shoulders squared and faces
front they stand a khaki wall.
Tears shine on every watcher's cheek,
love speaks in every glance; .
For your dear lad, and my dear Jad,
are on their way to France.
Before them, through a mist of years,
in soldier buff or blue,
Brave comrades from a thousand
*
fields watch nowr in proud re-
view;
The same old flag, the same old Faith
—the freedom of the world—
Spells duty in those flapping folds
above long ranks unfurled.
Strong are the hearts which bear
along democracy’s advance,
As your dear lad, and my dear lad, go
on their way to France.
HUE
USED
LOOKS GOOD AS NEW.
*
I The word rings out; a million feet
tramp forward on the road,
Along the path of sacrifice o’er which
our fathers trode.
With eager eyes and cheeks aflame,
with cheers on smiling lips,
Those fighting men of '17 move on-
,ward to their ships.
Nor even love may hold them back,
or halt that stern advance,
i As your dear lad, and my dear lac
on their way to France,
j —Randall Parrish in the Chicago
Tribune.
00
Herman Schmidt &Co
C ASTORIA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
♦WHHIHH I I I I MU I II I'M
Always bears
the
Signature of
I. & G. N. RAILROAD.
7:00 a.m.
5 a.m.
9:35 p.m.
From the North.
Train No. 3 arrives _________
Train No. 1 arrives ..........
Train No. 5 arrives __________
For the North.
Train No. 6 leaves ....... 8:00 a.m. J 4
Train No. 2 leaves ............. 5:30 p.m. 1 4
Train No. 4 leaves ................ 9:35 p.m.
From the South.
Train No. 8 arrives ......*..... 1:55 p.m.
Train No. 2 arrives ......... 5:20 p.m.
Train No. 4 arrives ........ 9:20 p.m.
For the South.
I
Train No. 3 leaves .............. 7:25 a.m. | *
Train No. 1 leaves ................11:51a.m. | *
Train_No. 5 leaves ................10:35 p.m.
From the West.
Train No. 6 arrives .............. 7:00 a.m.
Train No. 4 arrives .............. 5:10 p.m?
Train No. 2 arrive? .............. 5:25 p.m.
For the West.
Train No. 3 leaves ..... 7:20 a.m.
Train No. 1 leaves ................11:50 a.m.
Train No. 5 leaves ............._10:10p.m
State Railroad Schedule.
No. 1 arrives .........................._4:15 p.m.
No. 2 leaves at ......1................9:45 a.m.
Perhaps.
“The man who gives in when he is
wrong.” said the street orator, “is a
wise man, but he who gives in when
he is right is—“
“Married!” said a meek voice in the
crowd.
Inventors Are Busy.
Fifty new ways to end the war are
proposed daily to the war depart-
ment. for that many military inven-
tions are submitted each 24 hours and
nearly every inventor claims his de-
vice will revolutionize warfare. Nine-
ty-nine out of one hundred are dis-
carded as impracticable in the war
emergency but for the sake of the
possibilities all are investigated.
Here are a few of the devices be-
fore the war department's board of
ordnance and fortifications which
gives preliminary investigations to in-
ventions for consideration:
Reflectors to throw sunlight into
the eyes of the enemy and blind him,
sling shots for throwing bombs, land
torpedoes resembling small tractor
engines to run across no man’s land
and explode in the enemy trench,
aerial torpedoes to fly without a
pilot, double shot connected by
chains to entangle airplanes in the
skies, self-propelling bombs resem-
*
bling skyrockets, sabres with pistol
attached to the hilt to inflict double
wounds, coats of mail like medieval
armor to make soldiers shed bullets I
like raindrops, hand grenades with !
trailer strings, the pulling of which I
causes explosion after grenade lands
in the enemy trench; centrifugal I
guns wdiich whirl bullets until they !
gain sufficient momentum and then
feed them out in a steady stream,
safety parachutes to allow aviators
to drop from ' disabled machines,
modernized catapults ror hurling
trench bombs, and smoke bombs to
be thrown by charging infantrymen
a moment before the bayonet clash.
Nearly 10,000 inventions have been
crffered the war department since wrar
was declared.’
For
Weak
Women
I n use for over 40 years!
Thousands of voluntary
letters from women, tell-
^ ing of the good Cardui
has done them. This is
the best proof of the value
of Cardui. It proves that
Cardui is a good medicine
for women.
There are no harmful or
habit - forming drugs in
Cardui. It is composed
only of mild, medicinal
ingredients, with no bad
after-effects.
TAKE
CARDU
The Wsinan’s Tonic
NEW FALL HATS
NOW READY.
PRICES
S2 OO S3 <00
to S5 OO
W. B. FLANAGAN
THE ONE. PRICE CLOTHIER.
Mr. Ultimate Consumer;
My Dear Sir: You are due for
some terrific jolts about the end of
this week, for by November 3 many
of the new war taxes will be in ef-
fect, apd your pocketbook will grow
smaller each day.
Some of the taTes are dated No-
vember 1. Others go into effect 30
days after the passage of the war
revenue act, which would make the
date approximately November 3. *
Many of the new levies ar^^p-j^in
existence. And, while others have
not gone into effect, dealers in the
taxed articles are beginning to pro-
tect themselves. This is noticeably
due in the case of tobacco; which
should not properly be taxed until
November 3.
From and after November 1, these
You cm rely on Cardui.
Surely it will do for you
what it has done for so
many thousands of other
women! It should help.
“I was taken sick,
seemed to be
writes Mrs. Alary E.Veste,
of Madison Heights, Va.
“I got down so weak,
could hardly walk . . .
just staggered around.
... I read of Cardui,
and after taking one bot-
tle, or before taking quite
all, I felt much better. I
took 3 or 4 bottles at
that time, and was able to
do my work. I take it in
the spring when run-
down. 1 had no appetite,
and 1 commenced eating.
It is the best tcric 1 ever
saw.” Try Cardui.
„ ~ All Druggists
; A* 1. to
~4' ’ s V
+
♦
+
+
+
+
*
*
The particular people who
praise our work know that
we have made good. Every-
one in this town \^o de-
lights in fresh linens and
well - laundered clothes
should become acquainted
with the up-to-dateness and
the politeness of this shop.
PHONE 120
BELCHER’S
STEAM LAUNDRY
*
*
+
+
*
+
+
*
+
+
4
*
4
! >■*♦«» i n
Colonel Robt. H. Tyndall
150th Field Artillery,
(Rainbow Division)
* ‘Rolling His Own ’ ’
News From
The Profit
Says Private August
Mattson of Company
D, U. S. Infantry,
now in France, ...
send us a few pack-
ages of ‘BULL’ DUR-
HAM. I have seen
it sell as high as
$4.00 a sack.”
■
We Are
Always Ready
j/ou with good
4
♦ WOOD SAWED •» to serve
4 4 , printing. No matter what
♦ At Customary Price. Phone 1217 4 the nature Qf ^
♦ C. M. COTTON. * be we are ready to do it
♦ ♦
44444444444444444444444444
44444441 l'4444444444444-M"M-
♦ FORD CARS ♦
♦ BOUGHT AND SOLD. +
♦ J. R. COTTON ♦
4 At 8mith’« Cigar Store. 4
44444MMIMMH t Mill HM
at a price that will be
Satisfactory
Ez
Our job printing department is in,
the hands of a most capable printer
Give us a trial order. The Herald.
l/lnuiNE
Bull Durham
TOBACCO
The Makings
of a Mahon
taxfiaJbecoitte operative:
Three per cent upon transportation
of property by freight.
One cent for each 20 cents express
cost.
*
Eight per cent of the cost of rail-
1
way and steamer fares.
Ten per cent of the cost of berths, I
staterooms and chair car seats.
Five cents upon telephone, tele- I
graph and radio messages costing !
more than 15 cents.
Eight cents per $100 or fraction on
amounts of life insurance policies.
One cent per dollar on premium
paid for marine, fire, casualty and in-
land insuarnce.
One cent on ea,ph 10 cents or frac-
tion paid for admissions. Children
under 10 years pay but 1 cent total
tax. Free passes carry a tax equiv-
alent to that paid by the purchaser of
a ticket. Shows where the maximum
:? 5 cents are exempted, as are
amusement parks charging no more
than 10 cents. Charity fairs are ex-
empt. Admissions will include seats
at table.j> and there will be a tax
upon reservations.
First-class mail • will call for 3-cent
j stamps where it now calls for 2-cent j
I ones. Post cards will cost twice as |
i much as at present. However, let- I
tei s delivered by carrier from the
postoffice where sent will be charg-
ed but the present rate. Mail to sol-
diers on foreign duty will go free.
Club dues above $12 per year will
be taxed 10 per cent.
The above, .are all taxes which will
be imposed by the end v. the week.
The tobacco tax will go into effect at
the same time. However, it has. been
imposed already by practically every
retailer. It was put into effect by
the dealers at the same time the
liquor tax was imposed—upon the
passage of the act. October 3. The
automobile taxes, sporting goods
taxes and drug taxes went into effect |
at the same time.
Of course, these taxes are all in
addition to your income tax, upon
which you will have to make a return
before next March. So you had bet-
ter begin your conservation of wealth
* MARTIN STEAM JL
* - -LAJJNDfU^I ‘
+ Newell Kane, Proprietor
* Phone 2
+
White Wagons.
+
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ❖ 4 4 4 4
right now—just at the time you are
planning your Christmas expenses.
Yours respectfully,
Uncle Sam.
A Feat In Itself.
“Edith, I love you.”
“Is—that all you have to
Reggie?”
“Great Scott, Edith, it has taken
me eighteen months to say that."—
Boston Transcript.
Notice.
TEXAS COTTON PALACE EXPOSI-
TION, WACO, NOV. 3-8. EVERY
DAY A FEATURE DAY. POPU-
LAR LOW-RATE. EXCURSIONS
VIA I..& G. N:
Season tickets on sale daily.
“Meet me on the Warpath.” See
ticket agent. I. & G. N. railway for
further particulars. 25dw.
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 16, No. 168, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1917, newspaper, November 1, 1917; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1024641/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palestine Public Library.