Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 16, No. 237, Ed. 1 Monday, January 21, 1918 Page: 8 of 8
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.0. A.
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Father and Son
Week
Feb. 11-17
. C. A.
STORE NEWS
Little Corner Drug 8tore.
♦
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4
4
4
t
♦ LOST. ♦
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4 Ladies’ brooch pin, small 4
4 pearls with chip diamond :.in 4
4 center. Lost on streets last 4
4 Friday afternoon. Reward for 4
4 return to our store. 4
4 4
♦ FOUND. *
yO / 4
4 In front of our store yesterday 4
4 morning, a spot light from an 4
4 automobile. Owner can get it at 4
4 our store WITHOUT paying for 4
4
4
4
4 ad.
♦ LELAND DOUTHIT
4
4 DRUGS.
4 ‘ Telephone 17T.
4 THE BUSY CORNER.
4
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Wi
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Personal Mentions.
Mrs. George Miller has gone
Crockett, for a few days' visit.
Rev. J. C. Oehler left for San-An-
•^W1 > '• V . - ^ ;
tonio today, to visit with his
V fey j Ski _ 1hf V - - * . »
James,* who is at Camp Travis.
son.
Mrs. Munn returned to Tyler to-
day, haying received a message that
her little nephew, Melvin Marshall,
was very ill. He has pneumonia.
John Brown came down from
Nechee this morning, and said he left
«
his town sleeping under a mantle of
snow.
M. Halporn is up from Houston tc
pay his taxes, and visit with his old
Palestine friends. Mr. Halporn re-
ports he has two boys with tho col-
ors now, and both of them are well
pleased with their work.
Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Hughes return-
ed home this morning. Mrs. Hughes
had been hack on a visit to her old
home, and Mr. Hughes met her at
Arp, where they spent ■ yesterday
with relatives.
_ , t
Eggs Are Higher.
Make your hens lay by giving Mar-
tin’s Egg Producer; guaranteed. Get
It from Bratton Drug Co. dwtf.
This Is Our Winter
of Test
^"SERVING food Is a lo-
cal problem for each
community. Prices
and definite rules for
every one cannot be
formulated. It
is a duty for
each one to
eat only so
much as is
necessary to
maintain the
human body
aeanhy and strong. This winter
■)i 1918 is the period when is to
be tested here in America wheth-
er our people are capable of vol-
untary individual sacrifice to
save the world. That ig the pur-
pose of the organization of the
United States Food Administra-.
tion—by voluntary effort to pro-
vide the food that the world
needs, -
G. S. FOOD ADMINISTRATION
NEED BIG HERDS
Europe’s Meat Supply Must Come
f
From America.
Warring Nations Have Depleted' Live
Stock at Enormous Rate, Fvei
Killing Dairy Cattle For Food.
American.stock breeders are being
asked to conserve their flocks and
herds in order to meet Europe’s tre-
mendous demands for meats during
• • -
the war and probably for many years
afterward.
The United States food adtnlnia-.
tration reports that American stock
raisers have shown a disposition to
co-operate with the government In in-
creasing the nation’s supply of live
stock.
Germany today Is probably better
supplied with live stock than any oth-
er European nation. When the Ger-
man armies made their big advance.
Into France and then retreated vir-
tually all the cattle In the kivaded
territory — approximately 1,800,000
head—were driven behind the German
'ines.
Bnt in England—4here 2,400,000
teres of pasture lauds have been turn-
ed Into grain fields—the cattle herds
tre decreasing rapidly. One of the
reasons apparently is the declining
Haaximuna prick scale adopted by the'
English as follows: For September,
$17.76 per 100 pounds; October, $17.28;
Noyember and December, $16.08; Jan-
lary, $14.40. The effect of these prices
was to drive beef animals on the mar-
ket as soon as possible.
In France the number of cattle as
well as the quality have shown an
enormous decline during the war.
Where France had 14,807,000 head of
cattle iq 1913, she now has only 12,-
541,900, a decrease of 16.6 per cent
And France is today producing only
•ne gallon of milk compared to two
and one-half gallons before the war.
Denmark and Holland have been
forced to sacrifice dairy herds for beef
because of the lack of necessary feed.
Close study of the European meat
dtuation has convinced the Food Ad-
ministration that the future problem
bf America lies largely In the produc-
tion of meat producing animals and
dairy products rather than in the pro-
duction of cereals for export when
the war will have ceased.
BRITISH GOVERNMENT
. HELPS PAY FOR BREAD
For the record breaking busi-
ness we have dose during the
year now closing, and, for the
extraordinary Christmas trade
given us.
And we are resolved to
strive dven harder than ever
to serve * you efficiently during
the eoming year. We want to
make this store meet all ef
your requiermenta, and make it
a pleasure to do business here.
J. 8. SWOLLEN & CO
DRUGGISTS.
There has been much misunder-
rtanding about the bread program in
England. It is true that the English,
man buys a loaf of bread for less than
an American can, but it is poorer
bread, and the British government is
paying $200,000,000 a year toward the
cost of iL
All the grain grown In Great Brit-
ain Is taken over by the government
at an arbitrary price and the imported
wheat purchased on the markets at
the prevailing market price. Thjs is
turned over to the mills by the govern-
ment at a price that allows the adul-
terated war bread loaf of four pounds
to sell at 18 cents, the two pound loaf
at 9 cents and the one pound loaf at 5
cents.
In France, under conditions some-
what similar, but with a larger ex-
traction, the four pound loaf sells for
16 cents.
Heat With Gas
•' £ *.;* - Tv - •«
• 'i-
We have a nice line of Gas Heaters
• * . • • ^ * *. • •' *■* . *- -
for sale cheap. Just the thing for
heating your rooms these cold days.
Gas can be used for heating at mod-
erate cost
*...
■ Ai
Gas Company
. ■■■.
Reo
‘The Gold Standard of Values.”
Better get your car while you can, for it is estimated there will
be 40 per cent less Automobiles manufactured during 1918, and 60
per cent greater demand also when the Spring season opens in the
North; we will suffer a great shortage of cars.
J. B. McKERNON
• ' ■ ■’» ' v - j.. ; • •
v-.
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* *
10 CELEBRATE
New York, Jan. 21.—Plans are
under discussion for a. suitable
observance next month o<f the
centenary of William M. Evarts,
the famous statesman and law-
yer, who" was. born February- 6,
was acquitted and he received a fee
of $75,000. Large as this sum ap-
pears, it was small in comparison
• • . . - •; . ; ■ ... - ••
With some of the fees he received In
one railroad case he is said to na e
been given $500,000 for his servi.
1818. The celebration. will likely His practice was great dnd he ac-
cumulated an immense fortune.
In the cbntroversary over the elec-
tion of 1S76 he took sides against his
classmate Tildon, and made the open-
...... u
take the form of a public meet-
ing to be held under the auspices •
of the New York , bar association,
of which Mr. lEvarts was for many
years - a foremost leader.
William M. Evarts played an im-
portant part in the history of his
ing argument before the electoral
commission for Rutherford B. Hayeu,
Who was seated. As secretary of
country. He won distinction as jur-.';
• ~ " ' Vi
broken series of spendid triumphs,
and caused him to be
for
He served as attor-
select^d
'j.- ,.'
cabinet offices,
ney-general under president Johnson
and as secretary of state in the Haye'-
^■dministratiOD —
state Evarts won new laurels by his
treatment of diplomatic questions.
ist, as an orator and as a statesman
In many important crisises he helped I After leaving the cabinet in 1881 he
to shape the policy of the nation, andwas sent to Paris to take part in the
international monetary conference.
He was elected to the United States
eagerly sought, by senate in 1885. At the conclusion of
His his term in 1891 he resumed the prac-
when he Sought retirement, bowed
under the burden of years, nls coun-,
sels were still
leaders in every- field of activity,
career at the bar was an almost un- tice of his profession in this city in
York in the United. States senate in
18S5 and remained a potent factor in
public life until 1894.
Mr. Evarts was born in Boston, of
good puritan ancestry. , His father
was a lawyer and the editor of a re-
ligious magazine published in Boston.
The son was graduated in the famous
class of 1877 at Yale, his classmates
including Chief Justice Waite, Attor-
Tilden. From Yale he went to the
association with Jeseph H. Choate.
His death occurred in ‘New York in
Hi
1901, a few days after he had passed
his eighty-third birthday anniversary.
_
fci i*i iV i-i h i 4-ri v h
w T
4 CALENDAR OF SPORTS. 4
m 4
4 4 4 4 4 4 *. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
l Monday.
Annual bcnspiel of Northwestern
Curling Association opens at Duluth.
Annual January, golf tournament
„ • . . r . . ' y. .
opens at Belleair, Florida.
National Field Trial Chapxpionship
ney-General Pierrepout and Samuel J. ' Association, at Grand Junction, Tenn.
Opening of annual boxing and
Harvard law school and upon the own- wrestling tournament of Denver Ath-
letic Club. i '
MAKING MEATLESS
, DAY8 PERMANENT.
In the meatless menu there is a fer-
tile field for developing new and nour-
ishing dishes, according to-E. H. Niles,
writing in the Hotel Gazette, who be-
lieves that the present shortage sf
meat and fats will not end with the
eoming of peace, but may grow more
acute and continue for five or six
fears, thus making it worth while to
develop menus of grain, vegetables
and fish on a more or less permanent
>asl8. Meat can be replaced by cereals
and other protein foods, or may be
lerved in very small portions as a fls-
rorlng for other food. In making up
neatless menus this author finds our
American Creole and. southern cuisine
i broad field for Investigation.
-■*' - ’ ■ ;> -' -V
nleftion of his studies he came to Nerw ;.
York.
Several cases of vast importance
came before federal courts in the next
four years and gave Mr. Evarts his op-
portunity. One of these involved the
stopping of the Cleopatra expedition
intended to land in Cuba and to start
a rebellion there.
Mr. Evarts entered the field of na-
tional politics in 1860, attending the
republican convention and presenting
the-aame of William H. Seward as a
candidate for the presidency. He
himself became a candidate for Unit-
ed States senator, his principal oppen-
ent being Horace Greeley. After a
prolonged fight he withdrew and the
legislators agreed upon a compromise
candidate.
' ; - '• ■ ’ . • ' . * ‘ ;* ’ . ’ *•' -■ f
He represented the government
when the question of treating captur-
ed vessels as maritime prizes arose
in 1862, and then appeared in the
cases involving th© attack on the
constitutionality of state laws taxing
United States bonds or national bank
stock without the authorization of
congress. He became counsel for
President Andrew Johnson in the im-
peachment proceedings and made tbe
leading argument. The trial resulted
in acquittal and Mr. Evarts became
attorney general. •
When the Alabama claims came up
for arbitration in 1871 President
Grant selected Mr. Evarts to repre-
sent the United States, and the result
Is attribute! greatly to his masterly
t- . . • ■ r .* • - v-t! ^ • i
conduct of the case. He was senior
counsel for Henry Ward Beecher in
the famous Beocher-Tildon case in
1874. In closing the defense he spoke
constanUj for eight days. His client '
10 rounds, at Peoria,
•f | '
c-1'
Chick Brown vs. Battling Kunz, 15
'■ '• 'V i . . * '• '
rounds, at New Haven, Coon.
Roy Moore vs. Pekin Kid Herman,
m. ;
» Tuesday.
National Field Trial Club, Free-for-
all Championship Stake, at Calhoun,
Ala.
JJrf. - - I ■*. .■ - • y r 'v •• •
• Opening of second annual automo-
bile show, at Oklahoma City.
Annual meeting of New- Jersey
State Golf Association, at New York
City.
*
Annual tournament of Ohio State
• • : J; -, ' . •
Bowling Association opens at Cleve-
lahd.
, -r ‘j ■ y..«.
Joey Connolly >s. Terry Brooks, 12
We Have on Hand at Present Parlor, Cast Box,
Coal and Small Sheet Iron Hekters.
We are expecting at any time shipment of Sheet Iron Heaters, in
larger sizes, as they were billed out on Jan. 2.
Buy your War Saving and Thrift Stamps from us. V. Mclimls,
authorized agent.
WYATT, MclNNIS A DENBY
Colorado State Bowling Association, * -
at Dtenver.
Sunday.
National amateur and professional
sking championships, at Cairo, 111.
*•,
rounds, at Boston. ;
•; 1 '• ■ - >• ■■-
Wednesday.
- Annual field trials of Texas Field
Trial' Association, at HempdCead,
Texas.
. i • .
Artie Root vs. Joe Lynch. 15 rounds,
"• } •' " •" •, • •!' ’ * ' ’
at Baltimore. . ;;v
* Annual Indoor games of Millroee
A. C., Madison Square Garden, New
York.
Thursday.
Annual meeting of Women’s Metro-
politan Goilf Association, at New York.
Friday.
kV . ry v ‘ y *-* ■" • . V•<•>/.' . *'7
Annml field- trials of Louisiana
Field Trial Club, at Ruston, La.
Annual meeting of United States
Golf Association, at Philadelphia.
Opening of two-day military ath-
.etic meet, at I^ansas City.
George Chip ys. Jao1 Dilhm, 10
rounds, at Dulutk.
Jch&hy Ertle vs. Jack Wojfe, x 10
rounds, at Cleveland.
8sturiay.
annual tournament of
t Strickland for Hobby.
State Senator J. J. Strickland of
this district was in Dallas Saturday,
attending the conference of the sup-
porters of Governor Hobby. Senator,
Strickland will support Che governor
for re-election, and thinks thousands
of other prohibitionists will ,dd the
same thing. It developed that, the
pros were in the majority of those
present at the Dalias conference.
Attorney A. M. Barton of this city,
and a stairifcb prohibitionist, was
made a member of the committee to
advance the condidacy of Governor
Hobby. Many of the prohibitionists
think Governor Hobby a safe man in
the governor’s offiec, and will sup-
port him. It Is realized that if the
prohibition vote is scattered among
the many candidates, as in "past cam-
paigns. the antis will be able to elect
a man wholly undesirable to the
pros.
■ ■ * ■—-, -* - ■ —— - -
How to Make
~ TeinptingTKsfies
Corn as Bread. .*
Com bread is especially good made
with sour milk and soda; but sweet
milk -and baking powder are satisfac-
tory. Eggs improve tbe flavgy^qnd
add to the food value, but may .he
« ■
omitted if too expensive.
Corn Bread.
(D
2 cups com meal, 2 cups sweet milk
(whole or skimmed). 4 teaspoons
baking powder, 1 tablespoon sugar, 2
tablespoons fat, 1 teaspoon salt, 1
egg (may be omitted).
(2)
2 cups corn meal, 2 cirpe sour milk,
1 teaspoon soda, 1 tablespoon sugar,
2 tablespoons fat, 1 teaspoon salt, 1
egg (may be omitted).
Mix dry ingredients. Add milk,
well-beaten egg and melted fat_
Beat well. Bake in shallow pan for
a bout. 30. -minutes. ■ • •
An Old Southern Recipe.
Here is an old-fashioned soft spoon
bread that southerners like. With
milk or syrup it makes a eatisfying
meal. ’ -
Spoon Bread.
2 cups water, 1 cup milk (whole or
skim), l cup com meal, 1 tablespoon
fat, 2 eggs, 2 teaspoons salt.
r : i
Mix water and com me^l and bring
£> the boiling point and cook 5 min-
utes. Beat egg well and add with
other materials to the mush. Beat
well and bake in a well-greaeed pan.
for 25 minutes in hot oven. Serve
from the same dish with a spoon.
Enough for- six. v ’
WANT ADS, TOO LATE FOR
CLASSIFICATION.
, -3
- — — — — i
LOST—Texas Presbyterian Col-
lege ring, with initial J. B J. on in-
side Reward if returned to Herald
v " V>-*' ,
21-6
FOR SALE!—My share in $MHH
Park Ass’n., cheap if taken at once,/*
or will exchange for a i^pewriter'
first-class condition. J. H. Giddings.
Phone 722.
LOST—Between Dr. Small s
dence and 1108 Conrad St., two ael
rings tied to the comer of a hafljf*
kerchief; finder please return to
Herald and receive reward.
LOST—Saturday afternoon,
tween Sycamore and Lacy, radiator';
cap for Kissel Kar. Mrs. Jno.
man. Phone 156. VIS
DON’T FORI
-US
ANIOMCEMEI
The Herald is authorized to
the following announcements,
candidates announcing all being
ject to the action of the dez
party:
For County Clerk—
CON HARDING.
W. C. QUICK.
For County Treasurer-—
BARNEY HUGHES.
GEORGE SCARBOROUGH.
JOHN A. KELLY.
For Sheriff—
ARCHIE D. BROWN.
W. G. ROGERS.
WALTER McINNI& s HI
W H BLACK.
For Tax Assessor—
W. O. VANDIVER |.5>
W. J. HOLLAND.
OLA M. HARDMAN.
JIM C. BOWEN,
*C. L. DAY.
For Justice of Peace, Prcc. 1, Office 1
J. C. (DAD) HULCY. 3[|
For Justice Peace, Pro. 1, Office 2— o
jW. L HORN (re-election.)
T- M BRITTON, Sr. ' ' ’
For CommissionerHProe. 1-r-
j. b. Wynne.
For Constable, Prec. No. 1—
JOHN T. MIDDLETON.
JOHN Q. OLDHAM, Jr.
For District Attornsy—
B. F. DENT.
Opening of
-. ‘Jit- • ; >
YOUR NAME
Is it on our subscrip-
tion list?
We will guarantee
you full value
FOR YOUR MONEY
Keep pm tod Ir reading The HersM
• - H .
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'■p£'x
44‘h444*4444'l IIH1IIIIHUI '
♦ ♦ ■
*
♦ FOR SALE.
♦ ♦
♦
4 6 and 10 acre tracts near city, A
♦ os nice hi glhocation; port oasl#|^
4 and bal&ase on easy monthly
4 annual payments.
4
♦ M
♦ w
4
♦ : WVSiOH
4444H1MHHHMI
'right-KooilaH Co.
Inoorance and Lands.
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 16, No. 237, Ed. 1 Monday, January 21, 1918, newspaper, January 21, 1918; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1037503/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palestine Public Library.