The Teague Chronicle. (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 25, 1919 Page: 4 of 6
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THE CHRONICLE, TEAGUE, TEXAS, JULY 26, 1019..
.
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Copyright MU
i. H J Srjmaldt
1 otracou Co.
LAY the smokegame with a jimmy
pipe if you’re hankering for a hand-
out for what ails your smokeappetite!
For, with Prince Albert, you’ve got a new listen on the pipe question
that cuts you loose from old stung tongue and dry throat worries!
Made by our exclusive patented process, Prince Albert is scot free
from bite and parch and hands you about the biggest lot of smokefun
that ever was scheduled in your direction!
Prince Albert is a pippin of a pipe-pal; rolled into a cigarette it
beats the band! Get the slant that P. A is simply everything any
man ever longed for in tobacco! You never will be willing to
figure up the sport you’ve slipped-on once you get that Prince
Albert quality flavor and quality satisfaction into your smoke&yatem!
You’ll talk kind words every time you get on the firing line!
Toppy red bags. tidy red tins. handsome pound and half-pound tin humi-
dors and — that 'ita say, practical pound crystal glass humidor with
sponge moistener top that keeps the tobacco in such perfect cosed it ion.
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
I NSHAKEN TESTIMONY.
Time is the test of truth.
i *
And Doan's Kidney Pills have
stood the test in Teague. No
Teague resident who suffers
baekhche, or, annoying urinary
ills can remain unconvinced by
this twice-told testimony. I
„ Mrs. Hufstedler, Eighth Ave-
GirLs and Hoys, Read the Com-
pliments Business Men Pass
On Our Graduates.
T
Here are
from letters fronf prominent
business men whb have had the
proof as to the ability of our
graduates: /
“Having employed several of
you)- graduates, I think your
and
• •j institution the best of its kind
,Oak St., Teague, says:
have found Doan’s Kidney Pills. *n this country
to be just as represented. They I “Of the seven men you have
are a quick and positive cure
for that tired languid feeling,
dull heavy pains in the small
of the back and irregular ac-
tion of the kidneys. 1 have
used them for such trouble
ar.d T have recommended them
to my friends who have takeir "we cannot refrain from writing
them with the same benefit.
The above statement was
given November 27, ini'?, and
on April IS, 11)19, Mrs. Ilijf-
stedler said: “1 think Doan’s
Kidney Pills are wonderful
kidney remedy, l have always
foilnd them to give me lienefi-
ciaMVesuIts. I am glad to re-
new nay past statement be-
cause of the benefit others may
derive from it.”
60c. at all dealers. Foster-
Milburn Co., Mfgrs., P.uffalo,
N. Y.
LIFT OFF CORNS!
Apply few drops then lift sore.
touchy corns off with
fingers
• i
|
!
sent us, six remain in our ser-
vice, an,d,J.he other has just
joined the Navy. All are mak-
ing go<ftl.”
“There is such a scarcity of
business colleges who fit- their
students for real business, that
n’t hart * bit! Drop m little
~ com, insl**"*-
r you
and endorsing your college,
since several of your students
have proven competent in our
office.”
“As you know, I have had a
number of your students in my
office. I take this opportunity
of saying that every student
that I have had from your
school shows superiority of
training over students that I
have had from other schools.”
“I have given your graduates
a thorough test and have found
them to be accurate and . quick
with their work. The thor-
ough and practical training
you give fits them for any kind
of a position.”
“We have one of your grad-
uates as stenographer in our
legal department at a hand-
some salary giving entire sat-
isfaction. The work is extreme-
ly difficult, requiring the great-
est skill and accuracy. She
reads her notes like print. We
wish to commend your school
for turning out such excellent
graduates.”
“If all your graduates are as
proficient as the three young
men we h^ve in our office, you
are certainly doing a great
work ft>r not only the young
people, but the business men as
well.”
A large firm of cotton buyers
•n Mhing com, in.untr, o/ Texas says:
“We predict continued
students arid all of them un-
derstand their business. Your
courses are thorough, or they
could not take hold as they
have done for us.”
“If the several graduates of
your school that have been in
our employ are fair samples, I
cannot recommend your institu-
tion too highly.” *
Write for catalogue contain-
ing hundreds of indorsements,
together with name and ad-
dress of business men who pay
our graduates good salaries.
With our modern systems, aye
can give you-a better course of
Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Cot-
ton Classing, Business Adminis-
tration and Finance, or Teleg-
raphy in half the time and at
half the expense of any senool
teaching .other Systems. Ad-
dress Tyler- Commercial
fege, Tyler, Texas.
Col-
dis-
FIRE SIGNALS.
Ward No. 1.—Business
trict.
Wa,rd No. 2.—North of Main
street and east of the main lline
of the railroad.
Ward No. 3.^-South of Main
street and east of the main line
of the railroad.
Ward No. 4.—South of Fort
Worth branch and west of the
main line of the railroad.
Ward No. 5.—tyarth of the
Fort Worth branch and west of
the main line of the railroad.
SIGNALS.—The signal blasts
following the fire alarm will
correspond with the number of
the ward.
An Opportunity!
The Chronicle has one ${>0.00
Life Scholarship in the l>est
Commercial College in the
South, for sale, and can save
some young man or woman
some money on the purchase of
a scholarship in this celebrated
school. Now is the time to
enter. Make these long sum-
mer days count towards pre-
paring your self to draw a bet-
ter salary with an easier posi-
tion next winter. See Wm. J.
Stringer today)
ALPS HAD THEIR REVENGE
Famous Airman Who Ha«l Defied
Groff Mountain* at Laat Moots
“ Mi* Death Thors.
few of the men who have flrni their
Uvea to the air have met ■ more Im-
pressive end titan the handsome, gold-
en haired ymqi# Cuptain. Natale rani.
He.was the favOrite pllqt during the
war of MaJ. (i'ahriel d'Anniinzio, the
Italian poet who becafue one of the
greatest airmen. ; *. '"
I’alli evidently had I motor trouble
when right over the lips.- With ex-
traordinary skill he landed his machine
on a glucler 9.000 feej high, (letting
out of It unhurt, he Jtarted to climb
down the mountain able. A snowstorm
soon set )ln around him.; hut on he plod-
ded through ihe floundering drift* to-
wards/the little villagb of Bourg St.
Moritz, In the valley below. For a
whole day at least he atumbled for-
ward, without food and plen-ed by the
bitter cold.
Then, when he was i!(J0 yards from
A mountain hut, and within sight of
the Alpine vintage. hla strength ga-e
out and he sank down into the snow.
Hla murage urged him to another ef-
fort; the snow was found with tlRt;
marks of his struggles to rise again.
But he could do no more, and there,
two days later, a passing peasant
found the gallant young Italian pilot
lying with his head on hia arm as If
asleep, half-covered by the snow, and
without a bruise on his body.
So did the Alps which he had con-
quered revenge themselves upon Na-
tale Falll. who had escaped death In
140 raid* over the enemy lines In war.
Beethoven’s Courage.
Ludwig vop Beethoven. Ihe eminent
Composer, plaiust ^?io was born at
Bonn. Austria. In . 1770, was perhapr
one of the greatest examples of pa-
tlence ever known. At the age of
thirty he was afflicted with deafness,
yet struggled on, completing master-
pieces and living exclusively in his art.
“Until a Itspluiel he struck with blind-
ness in the full freshness of his pow-
ers, Boetho.ven is without a compeer in
the history of all ages, either in misery
or iri MlRg." So said his dearest
friend, who knew him during hi* years
of affliction and also sm eeas, the 1st- -
ter of which came to him mostly in
Austria’s capital.
Humorous Lapses.
Not every commencement speaker
has said precisely what he wished to
»ay to the young people before him.
One was tripped by a most unhappy
lapsus linguae at a young ladles' semi-
nary.
He meant to say: “But I
have talked too long, and I do
not wish to speak to weary
benches.” Instead of which he said
"beery wenches.” Therebvj’emlndlng
us of Tntor Spooner of (fiford. who
thus addressed a meeting m farmers:
"It is gratifying to me fa behold so
many tons of soil."
But a university lecturer lately
matched thes^ infelicities when he
Mid: “I’m not going to talk very
long, but If you get what I’m itolng to
say In your head* you'll have the
whole thing In a nutshell." ,
There’s many a true word spoken in
EASY TO IMPROVE MEMORY
Whol* Secret la to Concentrate the
Mind Entirely on the On*
Thing In Hand.
People of poor memory are general-
ly inattentive and'fall to eoueentrate.
Systems like Pel maoism help to good
memory in that they focus the mind
on the thing at hand, itreamers read,
and for the life of them cannot tell
What the last sentence was, unless it
whs Moiuethlug 1n which they were
vividly Interested waking them out of
their droatn, und then U Is fixed 'for
good, thus showing that memory is
conditioned on attention aqd. concen-
tration. To cure tliis requires heroic
treatment^ Make It a religious resolve
to attend only to -tiie.Jhing in hand,
if it Is reading, concentrate on the
book so thoroughly that every sen-
tence takes clearly defined meaning in
the mind, (me cannot think of some-
thing else and at the same time un-
derstand and remember what .he l«
rending. The trick iij the game of
memory Is fo overcome dreaming, ab-
straction. inattention. I It can be done
by |iersistent, patient, iong-Conttnued
effort.
Getting Acquainted With America.
The United Stales lias been getting
the greatest advertising during the
last two yeiirs that any nation has
ever received, and the results of this
should lie reaped In foreign trade, just
as any merchant-obtained custom from
an advertising campaign. , / /.\
Since the beginning of the war lihwe
has been a steady stream otl f«Wign
missions on tour in the United States,
headed by men of prominencet/in their
respective codntrles. They -lline vis-
ited the,shipyards, the steel mills, Ihe
camps and the industrial cities, and
they have sepn the miles of fertile
farm lands and gained a new concep-
tion of-die vaxtness of America and
Its aldllty,to put over big tilings on a
big scale. A contention of the LoAgiie
of Nations in Washington will add
still more to this world knowledge of
•■America's resources. The chief tiling
now to be sought is the holding of the
advantage gained.—Forbes Magazine.
Big Brother Movement.
The “Big Brother” movement was
started In 1904, by Krnest K. Coulter,
In New York city. Since that time the
work has been taken up In over TOO
cities. Then* Is a staff Of paid work-
ers, " supplemented by volunteers—
lawyers, physicians, merchants, etc.
The object Is to obtain Ihe cause of
the boy's troubles—whether It be tru-
V
ancy, stealing, lying, running away
from home. etc. Then with the co-
operation of parents, through the
medium of (he “Big Brothers." an ef-
fort Is made to build up. within the
boy a sense of honor and good citizen-
ship. The headquarters are at 200
Fifth avenue, New York city.
Discharging a Cook.
Ope result of the bolshevist law
that person* who are employed can-
not he removed arbltrartly Is Instanced
by ihe Bulletin Russe, published by
the League for the Regeneration of
Russia at I-ausanne, Switzerland. It
declares that at Smolensk a bachelor
had a cook whom he wished to dis-
charge. She refused to ledve her
place and he was unable to turn her
out. On the advice of a bolshevist
friend the bachelor married his cook
and Immediately afterward divorced
her. As a divorced woman she was
legally compelled to leave the prem-
ises.
Prevalency of Deafness.
The last census showed that there
Eacl
When
this conn
irly Indian ,
(he white ni
ifr.v they for
Agriculture,
en first arrived In
found an aboriginal
population mainly sedentary and agri-
cultkrtp. The Indians were mostly
farmers, peacefully disposed and dwell-
ing in villages. Predatory and unscrupu-
lous, gfter thd manner of his kind, the
Intruding Uaucasian drpve them to war
and forced them to adopt a roving and
unsettled mode of existence.
Corn was their prlnicpal crop—a ce-
real unknown to Kurope. How ex-
tensively they gfew- 1( may be judged
from the. fact that In 16S5 the British
destroyed 12.000 acres of maize plant-
ed by tlie Senecas.
The Indians of pre-Columbian, days
pursued agriculture on a co-opehitlve
plan. Large Helds of corn were made
up of hundreds of individual fields.
The sq»(.-nvs stirred the fruitful earth
iiml t.l inUol Fi’tiin \t 'linrvpct
and pliintfd the grain. At ’harvest
lime the men and boys helped to gath-
er tlie ripe ears. i
Practice of Laying Cornerstones.
At tlie northeast corner of the CreaT
Pyramid of Cheops Is a stone bigger
and more symmetrically cut than any
other in 1 hat gigantic structure. It is
Rupisjscd to have been meant as n
“cornerstone.”
The practice of laying cornerstones
for Important buildings Is certainly
very ancient, and many -very old ones
have yielded most' Interesting relics—
coins, documents, etc.—placed within
them evidently as memorials likely
to he Instructive to subsequent gen-
erations. j jv
Tlie Great /Pyramid, which was de-
signed as a tomb for a monarch, war
expeetedyto endure forever, and so Its
cornerstone could not have b.ecn ex-
pected to contain any such memora-
bilia.
Indian* Were First Dentist*?
Why do Americans have the best
teeth In the world? Why did tlie. dan-
dified kaiser Insist oit' an American
dentist? The Indians taught ns.
Iir. Marshall If. Savllle of Colum-
bus university digs Into ruins, discov-
ers: Long in-fore Columbus Was horn,
even fifteen hundred years ago, th«
Aztecs hud perfected dentistry to an
art. They filled cavities, made crowns
and bridge work. Aztec dudes had
conspicuous holes In iludr teeth filled
with gold or turquofxes- ns perfect fit-
ting a job ns you could- get today.
ft I’llCllP/lo lIioII iiwr flirt* (tin**
They left records showing that they
>ven used coca, from which cocaine
Is extracted, as a local unesthetlc.
ACID TEST OF p0Ui
Small Girl's Act Might Ala
SaiS to Com* Undor th.
of Htroitm.
Frances was spending th« ,
her friend, Jane WatkJp*
taken one spooufal of th«
Hdrperis Magazine, whm.
floating on top caught her
II black pepper or was It a ha
What should she do with it)
At that moment Fraon*
scrutiny of her soup attracted i
tent Ion of Jane, lu a stage
plainly heard round the table.,
Jane's “Oh, mother! There's an,'
Frances’ soup!”
That wag It. an ant. Of co„
Watkins would take th*- *,u„
How relieved France* wa*! "
“The very Idea ! An unt |n iwrJ
I am surprised at you, Jane.; it.J|
per!” said Mrs. Watkins severelij
she looked reproachfully at bothid
Tlirough Frances’ mind flail *
the Instructlpns.on politeness,
ever heard; hever contradict j«
era; In all rircumstuncea, be i
table manners show one'a
What must she do? “Never coob
your elders!’’ She *poke up «j
trying her best to make her tone a
tlve:
“Oh, yes! I think It 1* pepper,']
“Of course it la,” said Mra. W«
Frances stirred h*>r soup,
Jane's attention would be <-tile4a
that she might catch the swlnm
transfer it to the dinner piata.^
there was no such luck. Dp i
speck more like an ant than ever!
per was pue speck; here wm|
specks close together. It wai u]
and Jane, perslsten.y ttaelf,
over for one more lool), and i
“It Is an ant.”
France* glanced hopefully n j
head of the table; but Mr*. Wd*
had not changed her opinion; tt |
pepper. “Be polite,” ran thn
brain again, and. taking up the r
ful of soup upon which thgt sin
double flert floated, France*
the qnestloiU forever befpre
faintly:
“It was pepper. I know
taste.”
TYPICAL OF GOLDEN
Little Montana Town of Willow(
Has Something of Which Ea
Cannot BoaaL
Willow (’reck , is tlie ordinary I
of un ordinary sluall town in ti
Bear Creek, Roundup and Slott
have more of the Western J*ri
Willow Creek Is a typical little!
eni town in spife of its name,
so in tlie midst of a vast tract of«
prairie land that It cannot hcips
by tlie yurd-wlde rule of eUlr*jj
the distance towering rnountal*i
a paternal watch over if.
Kven when the early morning B
hide the mountains and pratrlhj
low Creek stand* out spimkily***)
nite spot on the landscape.
♦ion near tlie railroad track*
smajll, quite square and Very red. I
uriant groves of trees H'l the i
Jidween the pretty little w bite,I
house’s. A road that- looks
swept shows to all comers n «r
and narrow way rancliwaril.
large willows dip their finger* Hi
current'of the little creek that j"
behind tlie white houses.
As tlie train from tlie west i
few minutes at Willow Creek,
early dawn, a middle-aged man *
off and starts down the roadutl
puce. One would know him anjr
for a mining man.
The ipctrnpnlltnn doing the Inti
thientul trip may smile at little C
Creek from his roTnfortable I'tflJ
bu) there Is one tiling here «f *
tlie Fast cannot boud—ell*,w 1
Tlie great readies of space are I
fifing unknown mid bewilderingtl
Eastern strap-banger and cliff-*™
As tlie mining mail swaggers dfl*
road toward Ills great ontdoer*.]
Is something about him which f
domain.
——
DRINK
La Perlai
TheJDrink That Satisfies
it dynamite
fjjver and 7°
day 'i w<
no roit.-wM
[take sicken1 tq
L w
[of Hudson's
l.m:
alti
| iubidituto
nlcuRutt,
[will Sturt
calomel
Lou sick un8
Ijrcii un.! ”r<)
|’g Liver Ton
■jv-luiniiles.*.
.] ‘is a ’ -
ry and
(iso of nast
will foci
| tomorrow
rk. I nkc
‘ Liver To
lj wuke ll|) ft
plum-mess, eoi
L, hewjaclie, t
pnincli. Yotir
Jl’t.tind I bids
than
Bonev is wait
How’s
|er On,- Hundrt
Tc**t>nf Catar
L Hull's (’ ilar
(Catarrh Medici
grb aurtsPer* ffl
s, anil lias beo
jable rrnie.lv ft
Kgfedlrlne acta
(oils surfaces.
(i the Blood an
(rtlons
[you have tnk.
* for a short ti
jnprovemenf
Start tnkjne: Hr
(nee and get rl
Imonluls. fr«e
PHENEY & C<
t all Unigglsti
bu can’t wo
4ake Pri
purifies
^I)d bowels
dy to resii
hfluenee of
Ine for
11.25 pel- b
specia
uc Encamp
I. O.
t 1st and
Jpfhts of e;
lows Hall,
lotel. Yisil
py invited.
\sa M. Ha
In. w. sm
f»u pay $12
automobi
new Ch
(Baby Gra
lo regret
Itringer M(
LIFORD &
I Attorneys
[illifnrd
■eld
red Da
Ids and Cii
| Insurance
We appr
Riven us.
AGUE,
p. p. Ci
PENT
over Kirs
TKAtilK,
N J. R.
I'D, BELL
Utorneys
|>staiis old
Buildi
| TEAGUE,
rle &
LAW'Y
teague,
[Vey
fVEY &
UWY
over Fiy
teague,
|0. BAl
"f*idan i
|TEAGUE|,
10 to
nt- Ph
7«. Offlc
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Stringer, William J. The Teague Chronicle. (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 25, 1919, newspaper, July 25, 1919; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1048426/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fairfield Library.