Waxahachie Daily Light (Waxahachie, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 276, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1913 Page: 3 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Scanned from 35 mm. microfilm.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:
rnx v. .x a1 Rfu cm ■ uu-i
■ m
MOTHER
ARRAIGNS THE MODERN CHAIR
RAISING PEARLS ON
HtO HAIR Al d'ATl Dr.I IKED
I ARM"
usa.
New Long Distance
SO POORLY
Dallas Automatic
hid- ->■ nth-tit
Ion
iers
b
< < »mp Im.
"farm" on a paying basis
tmg I
tect them from the- cold.
ini
red. almost
Ellis County Independent
nd clirr.
Telephone Company
Patron
V MISSICJ
EL-CO BRAND OE CREAMERY BUTTER
h III till.
"IT BETTERS THE BREAD."
M \IH
w \ \ \in< hii
XX|» SOI.II |{\
B. HINES. Grocery.
BEDFORD CAFE.
Restaurant
M DUITIE GROCERY CO.
BOYD GOU NAH Grocery.
♦
WARD BROS . Grocery
Hound.
Lm
LEE LASSW I’LL Grocery
SATCHEL MEAT MARKET
BANK
♦
NYCU’.I MEAT MARKET
Business.
WE GUARANTEE EVERY PACKAGE
THE EL-CO CREAMERY CO.
♦
X< ISL
<»l’l X
\ I
III.
nostrils
he
and
Ilea In
nu nil.r i in-
ind a
Ely
90
it.
nal ft
-
Too Lafe to <’a**if,v.
caret!
< ’
I !<•< I io|i.
-><»i 1111 i:\
11: \< i !< >\
< < >
in
By
••The
< oimeriiuiH
\\ ts ’
W
Ft
I
• H. M
h
Crand Opera
at the Dalias Coliseum
28 and
Fob.
Mar. 1
\ I terii'H>ii nml X iix111
1.
great romancer
IK >X I
Ml.s
«»Pl’i H; i I x-
I
t.
I
I tuna w ay
I
J
tf
caddy
cut
s
Indt-
II
iW ar
A
es
$3(10,000
)LICITED
Could Hardly Care for Chil-
dren — Finds Health in
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound.
rk>
Illi
Connection
With the
has not affected our job
printing prices. We're still
doing commercial work
of all kinds at prices sat-
isfactory to you.
"I should probably have died.”
'Goodness! When did It happen—
It was
compared
FOR
eggs
1 I'd take It up to the hotel to practice
on, sir.'”—New Orbans Daily States.
W-th ths Facepoon .f the Ron an*.
Ancient People* Had S'rung
Aversion to It.
Election will be held
East
as
THE HIGH
COST OF
LIVING
fiery
Wife Couldn't See the Idea.
That few men know how to make
the most of their time was the asser-
tion of Governor Deneen. To prove his
»* • • ii
< >>|.
1 rees
'tc.
I III
I n.
I3IG
time I
building
to I
j
Al,..
hut
Put
Ely's
r i atarrh will
urlin's Two Dru
exas.
$350,000
I
age«;
feeling
And south wi-
fi*, Temple. Tay III
points.
PLASTER
take
SYRUP
rqj;
refund your 50c
C. K. CHAI
Mil Elm 8t.
pem f rate;
wolf- n
| ate the prejudice existing in
GAMP OF THEMiNERS
his clothes.
"Why, John, what on earth are you
doing? Are you goinf to bed?"
"Of course I in going to bi d,” said
John.
over here like you are yours.
Gives the Real Facts In Regard to
Her Case and Tells How She
Suffered.
I see persons try to adjust themselves
to chairs manifestly unfitted to them
to auy other person of normal
ana
structure.
As a friend and apostle of health
I arraign the chair as one of the dis
ease makers of the age
A ehair. to be healthful and rest-
ful should be adapted to the human
figure, but an intelligent glance at
a chair will prove that it is far from '
Japanese Ha* Decided He Can Pro
dues Them on Land Laid Out
in Ocean * Bed.
> “Notre I
t'ociir " and h»- found In her tho hero-
>. And
Powder in the Sea.
It is calculated that in the depths of
a
dollar
get a
each bottle.
Co.
V --
D. usswa
Caouier
PLUMMER* MIDDLETON. Grocery
Special to the Daily Light.
Charleston, W. Va., Feb
CaUforBia Mull Ha- Perlci led Inti'll-
tina Which He Claims U ill Itev.
alutioiii/i- 'loving I'll lure-.
Berkeley, Cal. Feb IS. i:
Amet, tin inventor.
MOVING PH I < Rl -" III tl
Wil I M l IXI. -I I \|.
i i <>iii I iik rm--
. I olllllleri >*
In-ing
front tie
the whistle mixed clear and milky product,
sap is placed in tubs or similar ves-
sels, which are set in the sun to evapo-
rate all moisture. It separates Into a
clear, almost colorless, resinous liquid,
which rises to the top and into a thick-
er. more resinous, and darker liquid
mass, which settles to the bottom.
The qualities are then separated by
decanting, the top representing the
finer grades and the bottom the lowest
tiseil for ordinary paints.
| Th* wife conceived the notion that
she might eave time by wearing on
each trip to the new home one of her
numerous coats and leaving it. It
would be easier than packing them.
She was surprised, however, to find,
on the occasion of one visit to the fu-
Writsr Declare* It a Menace to
Health a* Well a* Uncomfortable
to the Occupant.
EGGS FOR HATCHING
white eggs from hist strain
and w liite Runner .ducks,
the egg machines. $2
deliver'd
’own of the bay. where the larva' of
the pearl oyster abound during the
months of July and August
He merely deposits a large number
of small stones, to wjjich the oyster
spat naturally attach themselv s
| Then his diving women transplant the
SI XT' -XI X I Ol- I HE s I HIM RS
tRRI sl I II T<> HE III I H
FOR TRIAL.
Oc. Address,
-Jl’MAX. .levveler,
Dallas.
I IK 'I
OR < I I Mt HII
to at once.
PEPPER
; the chest
Na tionali# *
al
Thoughts.
Red la the fashionable color <if wom-
an's hair just now, hut In manv p»
> rloda and countries to have red hair
meant to teat tin- depths of misfor-
tune. even of death
Prejudice against red hair runs back
even to Egyptian timer, for in that
land of decided opinions and strong
prejudices it was the custom to burn
alive some unfortunate individual
■nirsed with red hair, so It was decid-
We All Read ’Em.
Albert B. Kelley, an advertising ex-
pert of Philadelphia, sat In the Mark-
________________ ham club, turning the seventy or
Jack Johnson has had somn trou- eighty pages mostly advertising mat-
hie, but he still manages t v live
without work.
as the engine comes into view
full roar of the train,
and the clang of the bell are heard
as the engine and coaches flash by,
and the sound gradually diminishes
as the machine is turned in the op-
posite direction and the train disap-
pears in the distance
With a singer in a garden, photo-
graphed at a distance of a few feet,
the possibilities of dramatic enter-
tainment through the
phone are illustrated.
2 Sun miles and
cold
They cause pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful
drugs, and today holds the record of
being the most successful remedy we
know for woman's ills. If you n--ed such
a medicine why don’t you try it ?
If you have the slighte-t iloiii.f
that Lydia E. I*inkli:ini's Vegeta-
I > 15' ( < > 1111M H 11H I \ I 11 I IF * 111 \ Ol I, 1*1 1
to Lydia E.Pinkhum Medicine* <>.
(confidential Lynn. Hass., lorad-
vice. Vonr letter ulll lo-o-o-i.ed
read and answered hv a woriar
ami held in strict conlioeta e.
’IS, v ' A C -J
’res.
Cashier.
. t. Hipp.^I
Spt t in! <':ir i t v«-!iitnirm
Iwith iiti’lii'-. Icuvinu h .ifit i
• hi*
to Hillsboro, W’a-
Aniob <) .‘ii I all .rii* i . re
Pure
fawn point the governor told of friends of
They are his who were moving
machines. $2 per setting
Fertility guaranteed. Al-
so eggs from carefully seb-<t< d Pen
R. I. Reds. $1.50 per setting, deliv-
ered. I. R. Campbell, Italy. Tex-
es. • f
MRS. McGILL
BROKE DOWN
once >n
d your < dd
disapp- ar.
,S\
a
to k ii o v; that
one of those
it.
if a chair were adapted to the fig- |
a re the seat would be hollow, but ,
it is fiat. No person was ever so
constructed as to sit with ease, on a
chair seat as chair seats are made. :
Tie back of a chair is straight
That is contrary, too, to the lines of
the human figure.
little
the visitor
New and modern
have just b<-eri completed Into Dulins, and enable i
■l> I, |o\l. lihHM I t'liXXI i IlnXs o
scriber- to tlu
can gm- li.nu
Au.-iin, S >
Bovina Center N.Y. “Forsix years
I have not had as gtssi health a 1 have
——- now. I was very
I young when my first
I baby was bunt and !
my health was w-ry
1 bad after that. I
was not regular and
'll hud pains in my
I back and was so
! poorly that I could
I hardly take care of
ci my two children. 1
1 doctored with sev-
---- eral doctors but got
1^1
These new indepeiidettl I
wire, coristrmted m tin- most
offer the best l.n-||il >
I r phone st-rv ie< transmission.
I independent toll li
I That Satisfie.- ”
| It's
| the
i you
One Hundred ami Twenl)-I ive X<>« tempered in the 1 of our fellow b-
Iteinu Hehl for I’arti< ipation
in a Riot Earlv in tin
Week.
xArtn irjitrri*<i
D„ on receipt of r0t subject to ex-1 “Mercy! And if the snake woods
amination; if not enthttaeiory. w.ll bit you we d all have had to be born
In an orphan asylum, wouldn't we’"—
Cleveland Plain Dealer
... <Vill
Wil) last (long ago?”
"Before I was married
"Mercy! i— - — .
His Car.
"And what, is that
lover there?' asked
Tompy’s place
"That?
garage.” aid I'ompy.
"Oh—what is your car?” asked the
visitor.
"Oh, that's a mirage,'
—•Harper's W. kly.
Long Trips in Small Craft.
The Atlantic ocean, which this year
has robbed the mercantile marine of i
its proudest and largest vessel, has
in turn been conquered by a compura
tively small boat, and one driven by >
motor power at that
A few days ago Captain Day arrived
at Queenstown in command ol the mo-
tor launch Detroit, in which he jour- ;
neved from New York This little
vessel, only 25 feet in length crossed
the vast Atlantic In twenty-four days, -topped up air pa».i
. having covered 2 kmt miles ami on- ! will >
countered stormy, cold weather the lulln
greater part of the journey morning' tlie >rih.
The Detroit, however, is by no , ,,r (.;1,.irr|1.,| ,1,,.,
misery
That look of Deep Yearn in in
the dear girl's eyes may be due to
instead of Soulful
W<- are also now prepared to give prompt s> rvire to other North
Texas points, in. Inding Gron\file. Galnesvilb-, Fort Worth. M-Kin-
m y, Denton. Den son, Botili.-ilii, I’ai s and ini' rniediute stations.
“ periodicals as much for the advertise-
ments as for the reading matter.”
Mr. Kelley smiled
"I sat. in an editor s office the other
day.” he continued, "when a poet en-
tered.
" 'Glad to see you've accepted that
sonnet of mine,' the poet said, fever
Ishly pushing back his long hair. 'I
do bopi it will be widely read '
•• 'It’s sure to be.’ said the editor
It's sure to be I've placed it next
fo one of our most striking ads ' ”
Jonesboro, Ark.—“I suffered n com-
plete break down in health, some time
ago," writes Mrs. A. McGill, from this
place. "I was very weak and could
not do any work. I tried different
remedies, but they did me no good.
One day, I got a bottle of Cardul. It
did me so much good, I was surprised,
and took some more.
Before I took Cardul. I had headache
and backache, and sometimes I would
cry for hours. Now I am over all that,
and can do all kinds of housework. I
think it is the greatest medicine on
earth.”
In the past fifty- years, thousand of
ladies have written, like Mr . McGill,
to tell of the benefit received from
Cardul.
Such testimony, from earnest women,
surely indicates the great value of this
tonic, remedy, for diseases peculiar to
women. Are you a sufferer? Yes’
Cardul is the medicine you need.
We urge you to try it.
N B — tlrbefo- I 11 ’ AJ\lsorv f'er' fl
neucj M-J me Co , < - . I
Infructioni, end M sere t* A. "Hom*- lre.,-men*
lor Women " *enl In pldin wt^nner. on tequva.
work. So powerful and penetrating is
the varnish that persons often eon-
' trad poisoning from passing through
a grove of the trees while they uro
j being tapped
‘ 1» that chair comfortable?*' tu*k»
we bare an-
truthfully or otherwise »bu
light heart and a clear conscience.
Rut the world lias created a tradition
that tin- cres of i.-nponsibility must
be marked by a furrowed brow. It
finds the women with a merry laugh.
In business hours certainly, a woman
to be treated with caution This
I woman laughs." says tho world, in of
line*
to now furnish
han ~,5«i<> sub-
I I 1.1 I'lltiXI
Snppnires.
$350.00 'diamond for $1 u" \ ,h". r^lld^n2
real atone, and so hard they .vill
stand fire, file or acid tost,
never lose their beniRy. V.
SIX I'"" a lifetime. Sent on approval, O.
D., on receipt of ’’•>< subject to cv-
Lighl othi'
no
, K X F-.-w ;
iner. I A-D; tf
• 'hairs have committed < me IS?* 'I',.' :,‘l women,
of curvature of the spine. Spines, ea-
That Furrowed Brow.
It FM-ins almost as if we modern
folk studied deliberately to appear ill-
. ..... .. — >. ..... /..I i. *>..
. Ihrveused
; Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
! pound and it has helped me wonderfully.
1 do most of my own work now and take
i care of my children. I recommend your
I —___ J! A >1 _/W _____ »»
_ ______ _ ! Mrs. Willard A. Graham, Care of
pecially those of children, are twist- El -worth 1 i t tLE,Bovina Center, NX .
ed out of place tar to one side, in
an effort ut adjustment. '*'*-*• -------
a crowding and displacement of the
vital organs by forcing persons to slip
down at an angle upon them, thrust
out the abdomen and commit that vul-
garity which la called "sitting on the
spine.’—Chicago American
Xol ......I
I' ' .
Dalia-
is by
means the first small vessel to master
the Atlantic. la*st summer Captain
Day. in command of the Seabird, a
2S-foot yawl, crossed from Rhode
i-land to Gibraltar In 19117 the Cath-
erine, also a yawl, voyaged from Liv-
erpool to New York
In the early part of this year six
men in a 65-foot motor boat sailed
from Wevmouth, England, to P‘ rnam
in co. Brazil, a Journey of 4.5<m miles.
—Answers.
Balm tn-
De.ol j,mt
< .il l i eh a I
H*-aila< lie <i<h -
"Varnish Tree" of the Orient.
One of the most unusual trees in the
Orient is the "varnish tree," the Rhus
vernicifera, cultivated in many parts
of China or Japan. In general it is
the basis of all lacquering in these
countries. This tree in many respects
resembles an ash. It grows fifteen to
eighteen feet high and can be tapped
after seven years. The varnish is oh- :
tained by making incisions in the bark i
of the tree near its base before day- I
: during July and August and
The j catching the sap. which exudes as a
. This
the humau figure. The lower part
of a chair back to conform to human n” '’' it' "• • u'y told me thi r>- wa- no
anatomy, should be hollowed out for h'dp without an operation. 1 hi ve u e I
a depth of six or more inches To fit
tlu'back, the upper half of it should
be straight and torm a support for
tho back
built with heavy copper
i i-.. with ample circuits,
point . for quick tel-
i- ismiabl". Try the
i I i j
; she is too frivolous "
Dull, dour and unbending, the world,
our world, plods on its way, hoarding
(its smiles for fear of its dignity, nn-
til at last it forgets to smile alto-
: get her. Generations of scowling
faces have taught us to ussp< > ♦ the
i smiling ones. We fear their owners
are endeavoring to ingratiate them-
selves with us for no good purpose.
To regard
tray a lack of solidarity and worth.
distance t e |e | > h i > Il'
'WfiFl lI \ 1 'V\ Their Eecape From Hard Fate.
' / I' ' x Meg. Edmund Vance Cooke was tell-
__■* Ing her children of an adventure she
had a number of years ago She had
pnupfBBWBtrucfeil While Saphire
~' Cfnnae nf ValiiP pp<1 down ,0 P,ck up what Bhp thought
OIUIIGO Ul IC1IUG waB a Httck when Io lt moved’ It
14K. Solid Gold Ladles Tiffany er was a deadly water moecasln.
Gent’s Setting, set with finest 2'2Ki "Would you have died if the snake
diamond cut Whit.- .Snppnires. hftd b(t mother'" asked one of
This ring has the appearance of i --
tor $ 1 5.00.
J'rj Kly < i earn Balm "
Gel a small bollb- anyway, just to
try it. Apply a little in the nos’ril
•.iml instantly your dogged nose ami
the head
open; you will breathe if ly
less and headache disappear By
file ialarrli. 'Old-in-head
ill he gone.
End -ii'h misery now' Get tin-
small bottle of Ely's Ci'-aui Balm
at any drug .store. This sweet, fra-
grant halm dissolves by the lusit of
toll lines,
tlie most modern
S po.-'ibie b< twei'ii tin
Tlth rates ar
ami yon .-ne certain
finished, he remembered that he was
_.. „ . , to be a guest at a luncheon party at
an uptown hotel. He had barely time
to keep that engagement. It was a
struggle eating his way through this
second luncheon for politeness sake,
but he got through it, though feeling
like a stuffed owl.
"Well," says he to himself, ‘Til at
least not eat again for a day or so "
But he hadn't any more than thought
that til ho remembered a dinner en-
gagement. It was a course dinner
and each course looked as big to Mc-
Kinley as a bale of excelelor.
All he ate the next day was part
of an olive —Pittaburg Dispatch.
WANTED You to know that if
you fail to get one of those $4.00 I
Modern English Dictionaries for on- I
|y US cents at tile Daily Light of-
fice, you will regret it. This hook
is right up to-date, with limp leath-
er binding, color' d illu. trillion ..
latest I'. S. census, and many other
vain,-till- feat ui's that oilier di<
tionaries do not < ont'lin. Money-
back if not satisfied. 2s4pd
W -5S » »
H
,,ul bostesa, and when
and perfected an invention which hi- swered,
claims will conipleicly revoliitionizi ceualdera her duty done
an.| l» ibut chair deadly?" is a question
I,. 1 have tiegun asking myself when 1
r< -
Then
Ward No. 3 Election will lie h'd I
at the city hall, with J. B
as presiding officer.
Dated this 20th day of January,
1913. H. N. PETERS,
Lifting this | the sea. under 6.00o meters of water, cliairnl.in Citv Ext. utiV(, <-,,t..:u;. f
bout a foot there Is a stratum of powder so infin Waxahachie Tex ,<
red-haired Danes, who could not
regarded save as Invaders and
barians.
To prevent pneumonia, a cold set-
tled in the lungs should be attended
Put a HERRICK S RED
POROUS PLASTER on
and take BALLARDS
IllOREHOl ND SYRUP internally
winning combination. Buy ,
size Horehound Syrup:
porous plaster free with
So'd by Curlln Drut!
adv '
Gms will I'
han liiiil ling.
s(re«t. ample
for patrons to get
i-i-iini to the Stalion.
ube E,
I- i.RD I IX
Each cubic centimeter of slime (or i__
mud) that covers the bottom of tlie
ocean contains the remains of ten j
thousand millions of organisms, each
one of which Is structurally as
vidua) as Hie human body
virtue of authority vested
line as chairman of the city executive
cotnn ittee, I hereby give notice
that there will be held in the city
of Waxahachie. Texas, on Tuesday,
Lthc 25th day of February, 191::, a
white man s primary for tie purpi
of selecting candidates for the fol-
I lowing city offices for Waxahachie,
"the unknown" Is a I Texas
Mayor.
One Alderman for Ward No
One Aiderman for Ward No
One Alderman for Ward No
The following parties shall be pre-
officers at the following
boxes::
Ward No. 1-
at John F. Wyatt’s office on
She was, it is said. ! Main Street, with John F. Wyatt
presiding officer.
Ward No. 2 Election will be held
at R. E. Moore Furniture Co , on
College street, with R H Conally as
whleli will doubt- I presiding officer.
less be sufficiently highly llavorcd to
meet the Parisian taste
\Xli HI \D Slori'l |> | l-
I OLD
Dill's 'I lo'l ' I H
stops im.stv I
ot cleansing
immediately.
Don’t lay awake tonight struggling
for breath, with head stuffed, nos-
tril closed hawking ind blowing.
Catarrh or a cold, with its running
nose, foul mucous dropping Into the
throat, and raw dryness is distre—
ing hut trul' needles:.
your faith jin
’re in Balm" an
a rely
Store
in Egypt, as no one knew whose turn
vould come next
That 'he Chinese shared this pre a
dice against red hair >s proved by
their epithet for the English, whom
they called "red haired barbarians"
or "red haired des Is."
The great exception to this rule
among ancient nations Is the Romans,
for since the time of Nero they have
praised red hair In the highest terms.
They preferred a dark
brown, such at. we term auburn, and
modern Romans share this liking It is
said that among the patrician families
of Rome and Florence there Is an ab
normally large number of red haired
women. Modern (Sr'-eks share this pre-
dilection with the Romans and they
htghten the reddi. h effect of the hair
by wearing dull gold ornaments
One of the most frequent causes of
the prejudice against red hair In Chris-
tian countries undo-ibtedly goes back
tradition that Judas, the be-
trayer of Jesus, had red hair, and most
of the artists paint him thus Shakes
' peare refers to this in "As You Ylke
j it," when Rosalind says of Orlando,
His very hair is of the dissembling
color.” and Celia answers: "Some-
thing browner than Judas
The Brahmins were forbidden to
• marry red-haired women and, as has
jbeen said: "The populace of most
countries, confounding moral with es
thetlc Impressions accuse red haired
; people of various shortcomings "
Besides the old tradition of Judas
I having b« en red iiair'-d aiding to ere-
i many
lands the fact of the feeling against
red hair in England is set down to the
be
bar-
Oh. my wife calls that the Husband's Love Set at $175.
I Mrs. Stu mi M Singer of Lebanon,
Pa., was awarded by a jury $175 dam-
iages from Miss Carrie E. Coldren for
said Tompy. I the alienation of the affections of John
(Singer.
young oysters to deeper waters to pn
Here they lie on carefully pri pui - a
beds until in their third year they be-
come full grown and have firmly at-
tached themselves to the stones by
means of "necks” which they secret'
At this time the diving women bring
the mollusks to the surface and they (
undergo an operation A small seed
pearl is introduced Into tin enter of !
the shell Then the oysters are re-
planted in the bed and left alone for
four years
When they are again brought to the
surface It is found that the seed pearl
nucleus has been covered with many
layers of the nacre, a secretion of the
mollusk, and the large, brilliant trans-
lucent pearl of commerce has been ♦
formed ♦
But I' ■ t-i'"' eat la n< aa >
It appears During the seven yeai !
that the farmer must wait f, : his rop * .
mature * large ......ntage of the •'
oysters <lie The oyster beds are
raided by such enemies as the o< topus *
and the starfish. *
Occasionally the "red current"
sweeps over them and ill a day de-
stroys the entire crop At all times I
th' farmer must keep his oyster bed a
free of ' ndruno," a seaw i-d which
will smother the crop
Women divers trained from girl (
hood to long Immersions in the seal
are engaged at 20 cents a day to care
for the farm. In this work they war
nothing but a head cloth a white shirt
and diving goggles At each dive
i they can gather several oysters and
return to the surface
A dive occupies about, one minute, :
ami a day's work Is from four to six
hours. An expert can readily gather
500 oysters a day in a depth of water
ranging from two to six fathoms Io i
keep at the work for a day they must '
frequently come up and warm them
selves at n fire.
square—he said to his caddy rue- ' Itely fine that, were It broken in the
fully: fingers, it would penvtrate the pores |
" What on earth am I to do with of the skin, this powib-r being made up n„
inanweribiri 3 uougn heniecy
"'If 1 was you,’ tho boy answered, etons of little animals and plants cwr- c-.id« o -i .,- t w > -
My < leati-iiig. Healing
sliiiilly .Char- X
Tliroal —Stops
I Hm hargi-s—I hill
Meals Came Too Swiftly.
Representative McKinley of Illinois
is a man
tite. ... .....
cations. One noon recently he went Hie famuy nie<liciiie in thoosatias woman laughs.” says tho world, in ef
into tho restaurant at the White homes for 52 years—i>t <”] ac e* a I>ve» fPft • Hn, cannot be a scend woman;
House end of the capitol and ate a <tni Blood «•■•••,>
, rather hearty meal It was not an
elaborate meal compared to the
Fur- amount of rations that Ollie James,
the sound-producing ap- for example, might consume, but it
paratus heightens the delusion by was all McKinley caroq for. And
Tendering the notes dear ot indis- here was the tragedy: Just as he had
tfnet, as the place of their origin is
close or distant.
tained by a system of electrical < on-
nections with alt parts of the screen,
with the orchestra pit and with any
portion of nn auditorium where de-
velopments may be expected or ar-
ranged. It may be so managed that
a duet, with one singer on the stage
and another in the topmost balcony
reproduced with startling effect
—- In this event, necessarily, the only
-- picture given would lie that of lin-
age performer.
I ings, fearing lest a relaxation from
lour habitual frown should lower us in
' the esteem of those we meet. Yet
! surely the opfiosile should be the case.
| The sour expression is that of the
I beaten woman, the failure. The well-
' to-do. the suce< ssfui, should, of all peo-
coinpany of militia today surround-j jj,, p,, the happier
ed the st rik'-i" imp at I lolly Grove 'll. - I. ' I ii i; i • Ji' i ' i i
on I'ain't creek and ca pt u re<l sixtv ; smile; one should not be usiiatned of
nine men They will he tried for a
participation in a riot early in the
week when a dozen men were killed.
There are now one hundred and
with only an average appe- ' twenty-five strikers awaiting trial
He is also absent-minded on oc-
One noon recently he went
restaurant at the White
Chamberlain s uougn Hemefl)
vU»u* a »!•' • k ano ’A t»i>• •$•’«< i i-ttgrh.
the moving picture business
make It possible for actors to
photographed and their dialogue
corded at the same instant,
when the pictures are thrown on th •
screen the voices will also be heard
by means of a phonographic record
For five years Amet lias been work-
ing on his invention, anw nod claims
to have It perfected. Officials of
the Panama-Pacific exposition were
guests of the inventor at a recent
trial and so impressed were they that
one of the first machim ■ put on tho
market probably will be used to
boost the exposition and to also pr<
serve a record of the big show dur-
ing all of 19 1 5.
This is the manner in which the
audo-moto-phone, as it is called,
works. With motion picture enmera
and phonographic receiver mounted
on a common tripod, which may be
whirled in any direction, film reel
and record revolve on one axis,
which is controlled by the operator.
W h a t e e v e r sound is registered
through the medium of the latest
phonographic receiver, warranted to
register sounds inaudible to the hu
man ear, is caught at the in tant of
its arrival, and within the same fan-
tlon of the same second one of the
tiny oblong strips of film record the
attitude of the actors and the ap
hachie L pearance of the set-nery
In reproduction the film and rec-
ord are mechanically connected, so
that neither impression may be < <>n-
— _ veyed to an audience in advance of
the other. The eye beholds motion
— that is entirely consistent with the
In the approach of a rail-
road train, the smoke of the loco-
motive is seen before the haudience
hears a faint humming and tho
click of the rails becomes audible |iF>,.
auto-moto- grades
The lips of "Ningpo varnish." and similar ordinary
the performer move n exact accord
with the utterance of the phono-.
Amet bases his claim to succe-
upon an added improvement bavin--:
to do with the distribution of sound
- An automatic switch attached to Hi-
revolving phonographic cylinder, h-
claims will reproduce th proper vol-
ume and effect from the relative po-
sition when it originated A an ac-
tor walks about and hi position on
the screen is changed in the motion
pictures, the voice comes from his
apparent place on the stage
thermore.
Mr Mlkinoto's oyster farm in th-
Bay of Ago, off the coast of Japan
is one of Hie few successful attempts
at the d'-lllierute production of p-atls
Mlkinoto spent several years In costly 1
expei iinents befon he perfecteil |> - I
scheme g
Then h«t secured government pat I
< fits and. according to Popular Me- -I
chunk's, has succeeded in getting his I
He first I
e'ily uncomfortable to have r d hair makes a bed for his crop in t! • si . I
Maupassant's Friend.
Who is and was the unknown
friend of tho gifted !>• Maupassant?
She has just confided to a French re- I
view some prudent pages touching
upon her relations with him Le Cri (
de Paris says
Slav, essentially French in culture, a
queen in the society Paris and of
ture dwelling, her busband removing St Petersburg She was the chosen
' confidant of his heart and of his genl
us. Among her fervent admirers was
a prince, the younger son to a great
name. He paid assiduous court to ' illin”
"I'm going to get my clothes her and finally asked her hand in mar-
Now, 1 riage But "the unknown" renounced
then, you see, 1 will just go over to the tho prince to remain faithful to her
I house and get on another suit."
. NCedlesa to say his wife soon settled the inspirer of his romance
that. ( ...... >>.- ......... >>■ ..
---— — - Jnn of this masterpiece And now,
I "the unknown” will turn her rccollec
Hons into coin by her book "Guy de
! Maupassant Intime." v.. .. ... - ---
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
jto the
MILITIA SURROUNDS
ter—of a weekly
"Advertising is such an art.” he
said, "that many people actually buy
Caddy's Mean Suggestion.
Mrs. R. II. Barlow. the eastern cham-
pion. said at the Cape May Golf club,
nodding toward a c< rtain man:
"Yes, he is a very poor player. Even
his caddy, for all his liberal tips,
scorns him.
"One afternoon he made n wretched
foozle and tore up a sod. I
sod in his hand—-it was about a foot
his
rue-
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.
McKnight, G. W. Waxahachie Daily Light (Waxahachie, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 276, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1913, newspaper, February 13, 1913; Waxahachie, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1288165/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .