The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1918 Page: 5 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
/■
<
SUPPLIES FROM ARCTIC ZONE
1
to
E5>
fM
A
TO
if
«s*
a
OUR LINE OF DEFENSE
Mrs. Ben Roberts spent from
,A
Dallas.
News came first of the week
*
4
YOU
K
i
ARE INVITED
Notice
BRITAIN’S ARMY NEEDS.
If it is to Wear we
1
COMPARING NOTES.
Have it in Stock
Service Car
EARLY TO RISE, QUICK TO FIGHT.
J. F. LILLEY
MAIN RESULT.
Outfitter for the Entire Family
I
Miss Lucile Clayton, who is
attending the Ivy Business Cob
lege at Sherman, spent Saturday
and Sunday with her father,
A. L. Clayton.
I have bought the blacksmith
shop which I formerly owned
and am aga^a in active charge of
the businesi and giving all my
I *
z
I
1______
4
e»?
:■ ■ ... ;
WAR GARDENS WERE SUCCESS
Home Vegetable Patches Yielded $350,-
000,000 and Expected to Do Better
Next Summer.
iiMi
[ *
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Medicine.
Hall’s Catarrh Medicine has been taken
by catarrh sufferers for the past thirty-
five years, and has become knov/u as tho
most reliable remedy for Catarrh. Hall’s
Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood on
the Mucous surfaces, expelling the Poi-
son from the Blood and healing the dis-
eased portions.
After you have taken Hall’s Catarrh
Medicine for a short time you will see a
great improvement in your general
health. Start taking Hall’s Catarrh Medi-
cine at once and get rid of catarrh. Send
for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
“Why do they make you soldiers
get up at 5 :15 in the morning?” in-
quired the training-camp visitor.
“Because that makes us feel like
fighting,” grinfly responded the for-
mer young man about town.
the shop, I will appreciate any
and all favors and will do my
best to please on every job en-
trusted to me. Give me a liberal
share of your blacksmithing.
W. H. Stedham.
“I heard Billy had a bad smagh-
up wlien he took his fiancee out in
his automobile for a joy ride.”
“Yes; even the engagement was
broken,”
< ■
V
In Case of Pneumonia.
A physician said this is one of the
best aids to a speedy recovery front
pneumonia. Make a tight-fitting jack-
et of cheesecloth, sleeveless, and inter-
line with two thicknesses of sheet cot-
ton. Line with the cheesecloth. Fast-
en in front with snaps; it is worn next
the skin. It is best to have two of
these little coots. They protect the
patient from any chance draft when
changing the clothes or bedding.
Professor of Archeology—Did you
ever see so fine an ivory carving of
the human figure?
The Professor of Mathematics—
Never. In my classes the ivory
doesn’t extend below the chin. The
spines are cartilagenous.
Our Jitney Offer—This and Five Cents
Dont miss this. Cut out this slip,
enclose with 5c to Foley & Co.
2835 Sheffield Ave. Chicago, I1I|
writing your name and address
clearly. You will recieve in re-
turn a trial package containing
Foley’ Honey and Tar Compound
for coughs, colds and croup; Fo-
ley Kidney Pills and Foley Ca-
thartic Tablets.—Sold by Dyer
& Jones,
I am at your service night and
day with a good automobile.
Prices reasonable,.careful driver.
Residence phone No, 96, office 39.
J. H. Garner.
R. C. Sullenger of Tom Bean
has been appointed constable of
this precinct by the Commission-
ers’ Court, succeeding Constable
Floyd Simmons, who resigned to pated bowels. ijjTpesW gripe
become a deputy sheriff under'
Sheriff Tom Roberts.
confined to the hospital at Camp
Travis, but later information
comes that his condition is not
serious and he is probably back
at his post of duty by this time.
To Mend Coat Pocket.
When mending the corner of a man’s
side coat pocket, thread sewing ma-
chine with black thread, lay coat un-
der machine foot, fix each piece of
cloth straight and with a pin push
little threads under: wj-f machine
time and attention to the work of sew ziz-zag back up; cut mread, put
down pocket flap and see what a neat
job you have done.
Eskimo Slaughters and Allows
Waste Many Valuable Animals,
Declares an Explorer.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam McMillin: Mrs. Ben Roberts spent from
have moved back to Whitewright | Friday till Sunday visiting in
from McKinney. They are
domiciled at the Fleming resid-
ence near the business district
and Mr. McMillin has accepted
employment at T. H. Lively’s dry
goods store.
Mrs. B. F. Gafford and children
returned Monday from Rogers,
Texas, to which place they ac-
companied the body of their hus-
band and father, B. F. Gafford,
for interment. Mr. Gafford’s
son, Alton Gafford, returned with
them.
The Quinine That Dess Not Affect the Head
Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAXA-
TIVE BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary
Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor
ringing in head. Remember the full name and
look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 30c.
Buy your Suit and Overcoat at Lilley’s, because you
can get more VALUE and more Style for the money
than elsewhere. Don’t fail to see our Raincoats and
Sweaters. Mothers who purchase clothes for their
boys are more than pleased with our All Wool Suits.
If you get quality in the goods you buy and the price
is reasonable you are satisfied. Now these are ex-
actly the things you get when you trade here.
JI Natural Fortification
If you catch colds easily, if troubled with catarrh,
if subject to headaches, nervousness or listlessness,
by all means start today to build your strength with
ffl II! SUBSTITUTE
FOR RM MU®
Starts your liver without making.
you sick and can not
salivate.
Every druggist in town—your
druggist and everybody’s druggist
has noticed a great falling-off in the
sale of calomel. They all give the
same reason. Dodson’^ Liver Tone
is taking its place.
“Calomel is dangerous and people
know it, while Dodson’s Liver Tone
is perfectly, safe and gives better re-
sults,” said a prominent local drug-
gist. Dodson’s Liver Tone is per-
sonally guaranteed by every drug-
gist who sells it. A large bottle
costs but a few cents, and if it fails to
give easy relief in every case of liver
sluggishness and constipation, you
have only to ask for your money
back.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a plcasant-
tasting, purely vegetable remedy,
harmless to both children and adults.
Take a spoonful at night and wake
up feeling fine; no biliousness, sick
headache, acid stomach or consti-
_ i or
cause inconvenience all the next
day like violent calomel.
TERRIBLE, TERRIBLE.
“The demands for money now-
adays are simply enormous.”
“Terrible, terrible! Here’s the
government wanting $2,000,000,000,
and only this morning Jones .asked
me to lend him a V.”
It is a moment of tense nerves—ready
to slip out of the trench at the word of
command—and at the enemy. Our men
on the firing line are physically fit for
military service because only about one
man out of five was chosen to endure
the hardships of this fearful war. But
we must not be content with 20 per
cent, in physical health of our American
youth. We cannot afford to lose four
men out of five because of physical un-
fitness. Such weaknesses can be cured.
Many times the kidneys are to blame.
If the kidneys are clogged with toxic
poisons you suffer from stiffness in the ,
knees in the morning on arising, your that Frank King was sick and
joints seem "rusty,” you may have rheu-,
matic pains, pain in the back, stiff neck,
headaches, sometimes swollen feet, or
neuralgic pains—all due to uric acid or
toxic poisons stored in the blood and
which should be swept out.
Then procure at your nearest drug
store Anuric (double strength). The cost
is 60 cents. This An-u-ric drives the
uric acid out. Drink plenty of pure
water, take Anuric three times a day
for a month.
■ Send Doctor Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel,
Buffalo, N. Y., 10 cts. for trial package.
Dawson, Texas.—•" For the benefit of
others, I gladly give this statement re-
garding the merits of Dr. Pierce’s Anuric
Tablets. Am nearly 76 years of age. I
suffered from backache, weak back, rheu-
matism, and could not control the kidneys.
I can safely say that / Anuric,’ the new
discovery of Dr. Pierce, has done me more
real good than anything I have ever taken
for these ailments.”—Mrs. N. M. Flint.
Quay, Okla.—"My bowels were con-
stipated, joints were stiff, ankles and
feet swollen, and I had pain in hips and
knees. I realized that I had uric acid
in the system and sent for a trial package
of Anuric. I then get three or four
packages of the Anuric Tablets and also
started taking the ‘Pleasant Pellets’
regularly. Now I am free from pain, the
joints have limbered up, and I am enjoying
very good health for an old man seventy-
nine years of age.”—Marion Spencer.
What about the war gardens of
1917 ? Did they amount to anything?
Did they yield any profits? Will
there be war gardens in 1918?
The national emergency food gar-
den commission declares the war
gardens were a success, and gives the
greatest . encouragement for next
year’s war gardens. -
In 1917 there were nearly 3,000,-
900 gardens, aggregating 1,150,000
acres of city and town land under
cultivation. As these gardens were
tilled intensively, .the products had
relatively high value, being figured
in terms of retail prices which would
have otherwise been paid for food
purchased elsewhere, it is estimated
-that their yield was valued at $350,-
000,000, or $17.50 per family.
The glass jar manufacturers sold
about 119,000,000 canning jars and
a survey of the household canning
in 20 typical towns throughout the
qeuntry showed that housewives used
but one new jar to ove? three and
one- quarter old jars already on
hand.
On this basis the housewives of the
country put up nearly 500,000,000
quart jars of vegetables and fruits,
which is believed to be three times as
much as was ever packed before.
To Lilley’s store, where you can buy everything
needed to keep the body warm this cold weather.
Every member oLthe family can be clothed at this
Big Store—and at prices that are low enough when
QUALITY is considered. Quality Goods are the only
kind we sell, and this is why you are sure of one
C•
hundred per cent value with every purchase made
at this store. -
Vegetarian i est.
Dr. C. Decker’s veget trian test is
as follows: Take an apple and a piece
of steak. Set them aside for a week
in a fairly warm temperature and note
what happens. The steak will smell
to heaven, the appple not so. Place
the steak under a microscope and you
will find it swarming with horrors.
ter ‘added to it,
produced
Aunt Caroline Murphy, a good
old antebellum§'negress, known
and respected by the people of
this city both white and colored,
died one day last week and was
buried at Pilob(Grove. She was
about 86 years old.
which is a concentrated medicinal food and building-
tonic to put power in the blood, strengthen
Zf® the life forces and tone up the appetite.
No alcohol in SCOTT’S.
The imported Norwegian cod liver oil used in Scott’s Emulsion is now refined
in our own American laboratories which guarantees it free from impurities.
Scott & Bovrae, Bloomfield, N. J. 17-13
The British armies in France
alone each month require 95,000 tons
of oats; 4,000,000 gallons of gaso-
line, 20,000 tons of flour, 10,000,000
pounds of jam, and 75,000 tons of
hay. Ponder on these figures, pyrites
Isaac F. Marcosson in the Saturday
Evening Post, and you begin to real-
ize that demands are written on ten-
league canvases with brushes of
comet’s hair!
A can of condensed milk is not only
friend in need, but, with a little wa-
the
3 things produced -are
® lighter, often, and more
tender than when fresh
?s milk is used.
q Oorn Bread. — Take
f three-fourths of a cup-
■3 ful of cornmeal, one and
fl one-fourth cupfuls of
flour, four tablespoon-
fuls of sugar, four ta-
blespoonfuls of baking
powder, one egg, a teaspoonful of salt,
one cupful of water, one tablespoonful
of condensed milk and one tablespoon-
ful of drippings or other sweet fat.
Mix the milk and water, add egg, well-
beaten, the dry ingredients and, last,
the melted fat. Beat well and bake in
a well-greased shallow pan.
The powdered milk may also be used
in these recipes*in the proportion of
one teaspoonful to a'cupful of water.
White Bread.—Take a pint of boil-
ing water, two tablespoonfuls of con-
densed milk, two tablespoonfuls of fat,
one and one-half teaspoonfuls of salt,
a tables'poonAil of sugar, one-half cup-
ful of home-made yeast and three cup-
fuls of flour. Prepare and bake as
usual. This makes two loaves.
Dainty Muffins.—Take a third of a
cupful of shortening, one tablespoonful
of sugar, one egg. pne cupful of water
and a tea spoonful of powdered milk,
two cupfuls of barley flour and four
teaspoonfuls of baking powder, with a
half-teaspoonful of salt. Mix gradual-
ly with the water, beat well and drop
by spoonfuls in well-buttered muffin
pans. Bake twenty minutes in a hot
oven.
If tea leaves are ground they will
make twice the amount of tea.
Hermits.—Cream one-third of a cup-
ful of shortening with two-thirds of a
cupful of sugar, add two tablespoon-
fuls of water with a teaspoonful of
condensed milk, one egg, one and
three-fourths of a cupful of flour, two
teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a
third of a cupful of finely cut raisins.
Cream the fat and sugar and cinna-
mon, clove, nutmeg and allspice, the
raisins w’ell floured, and mix with the
remaining ingredients. Roll out and
cut with a cooky cutter.
Break your cold or LaGrippe
with a few doses of 666. M29
it appears that the Eskimo is just
as coiisistent and conscientious in
killing animals as his civilized broth-
er of warmer climes is in killing
men, observes the Detroit News.
He. kills, therefore, in the course
of the year, many more animals
than he has any use for, butrfis he
has no idea of an export market, he
merely throws the carcasses out to
the wolves,^.or lets them sink in the
sea.
“The actual amount of meat, fish,
fat, oil and leather that could be
brought in by t^ie Eskimos is enor-
mous,” says Christian Leden, whe
has been an Arctic explorer for many
years. “By utilizing only the seven
tribes I visited in my last exploring
expedition, we could have 300,000
pounds of caribou meat, 300,000
pounds of caribou fat, 9,000,000
pounds of walrus meat, 12,000,000
pounds of baluga or white whale
meat, 1,800,000 pounds of salmon,
13,800,000 pounds of oil from wal-
rus, seal ‘and bulaga, 3,000,000
pounds of walrus leather, 4,000,000
pounds of whale leather, 150,000
pounds of sealskins and 40,000
pounds of walrus and narwhal
ivory.”
This is obviously no mean addition
to the failing supplies the tem-
perate zone.
JAMES BOYD DENISON
NO L.KB OURS. '
And see our cities at midnight i
lighted as bright as day, hear!
the whirl of the electrict car, talk
over a wireless telephone, send a
message by wireless to a ship'
far out at sea, examine his dyn \
bones with an X-ray. view the ;
snowy fields, sunny plains and
canals of Mars through a tele-i
I
scope, take a flight from ocean to
ocean in an air ship, cross the ■
ocean in a submarine, get run,
over by an automobile going
ninety miles an hour but what’s
the use going back a hundred
years? A system of shorthand
and bookkeeping twenty years
old is of little use today.
As the steam ship has crowded
out the sail boat, as the .type-
writer, the goose quill pen and
polkberry ink, so have the fam-
ous Byrne systems of Bookkeep-
ing and Business Training and
Shorthand taken the place of the
old systems. The reason is
plain; these systems cut in half
the time and cost of becoming an
expert accountant or stenograph-
er; they teach business as well
as bookkeeping, they make it
possible for the students to
graduate and begin earning
while the student of the other
systems is less-that half through
his course; they give the student
a better practical working know-
ledge, which means a higher
salary.
These practical, modern, time-
saving systems can be had in
this section only in the Tyler
Commercial College. You wTould
not think of riding in an ox cart
in preference to an automobile.
Then why think of studying the
old ox cart systems of accounting
and stenography when you can
get the Byrne systems which
possess such wonderful advant-
ages that they enabled the
management of the Tyler Com-
mercial College to build the larg-
est business training school in
America, with an annual enroll-
ment of more than 2500.
For free catalogue, address
Tyler Commercial College, Tyler,
Texas.
°e£:i •The KITCAm
From HU Cm,. ! jgajg
z
Red cloud of the sunset, tell it abroad;
I am victor. Greet me, O Sun,
Dominant master and absolute lord
Over the soul of one!
—Kipling.
DISHES OF CONDENSED MILK.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Waggoner, J. H. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1918, newspaper, January 25, 1918; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1240194/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.