The Decatur News (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, November 6, 1925 Page: 3 of 8
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THE DECATUR NEWS
Texas News
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ITEMS OF INTEREST TO ALL
DOMESTIC
w__- *****
for
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There is usually a vast difference
la worth.
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FOREIGN
*4
,7
Tells Girls and Women
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tv
A Remedy for Piles
Expenditure of >550.000 for a mem-
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®WF»»_
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BRIEFS BY CABLE,
WIRE, WIRELESS
H
Tanlac Vegetable Pine for constipation;
made and recommended by the manufao
turera of Tanlac.
jrest Events That Are Chang-
ing the World’s Destiny Told
in Paragraphs.
Mod Comi»tMi«ner J. T. RoMaon is
st Perna, where he wfll resume the
rrvalaattea aC about >00,800 acres of
state land forfeited for nonpayaaeat of
interest. He plans to rsappnUse land
in U eeaatlae aad expects to bo oe
this asisstea sat* Dsssaabsr.
K rWLlJ
Conceit of a young man of twenty
between a man’s worth and what he doesn’t disappear when he’s forty; he
has only hit it.
Ask your Druggist (whom you know) what
he knows about PAZO OINTMENT as a
Remedy for Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Pro
trading Piles. 60c.
Nursing a grouch is a poor way to
make It get well.
Faultless Starch Company
Kansas City, Mo.
^Cuticura
Loveliness
A Gear
Healthy Skin
chronically constipated. Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin not ouiy causes a gratia
easy bowel movement but, best of all.
It is often months before another dose
is necessary. Besides, it is absolutely
harmless and so pleasant that even a
cross, feverish, bilious, sick child glad>
ly takes it
Buy a large flO-cent bottle at any
store that sells medicine and just sop
for yourself.
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*5*5
Dr. Caldwell's
SYRUP
PEPSIN
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WASHINGTON
- ...i. * J
km
XsteArtta
F’
The attorney general has approved
a >360,000 issue of bonds for the Ta-
basco consolidated independent school
district in Hidalgo county. The bonds
bear 6 per cent interest and mature
serially.
The fire Insurance key rate of Wes-
laco has been lowered from $1 to 66
cents by the fire insurance commis-
sion because of installation of a water
works.
Old Standby
BL I —
TAN LAC
roa your health
A bond issue of >300,000 for the
construction of a hard surfaced high-
way in Brazoria Road District No.
26. was carried in Saturday's elec-
tion.
OIXIElPOWDER
./{educes fever 2SC Produces Red
outlsst the uppers? II
never worn USKIDE
write that they can’t
out. It Is the Wonder
Made by the world’s
manufacturer, the United
ber Company. C—. _C_1'
waterproof, good-looking,
repairman to pt..
your shoes. Buy new
USKIDE Z.Z— ~ZZ~~~
shoe bills down. Get genuine
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Pl
P|
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About 8,000 church bells, "evacu-
ated” during the war from Poland
by the retreating Russian Army to
prevent their being captured by the
Germans, have been returned by the
Soviets. Most of them were taken
from the churches in the Eastern
districts of Poland, and are now
back in their old home*. But ■
number of churches were destroyed
during the war so that over 2,«oo
bolla remain "hoineleea." The bells
which were taken by the German?
were molted down for the menu
tteteaw of aranttlona.
Terryville, rural community 12
miles southeast of Yoakum, baa or-
ganised a tomato-growers association,
which will bo one of the locals of
tlio Toakam Tomato-Growers Associa-
tion.
’ S’
Children
Cry
Did you ever have a pair of soles
’ If not, you have
~ Soles. People
wear USKIDE
Sole for Weari
largest rubber
____ ______J States Rub-
Comfortable, healthful,
_ 2 Tell your
put USKIDE Soles on
____ Buy new shoes with
Soles. USKIDE will cut your
________________ S.L _____USKIDE,
The name is on the sole.—Adv.
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The New Package
Seate 4 Caata lea teeMat te —sera ee the
Fa ra-aa Ceaagaay, Cstesa>as, CMa
J: doesn't fatten a hungry man to I
rm re him laugh.
CAU that the
name implies
Faultless
starch
FAULTLESS STARCH in-
eures faultless results. Either
as a cold or a boiled water
preparation you are certain to
get faultless results with this
wonderful all-purpose starch.
To make a boiled atarch with
FAULTLESS just add boiling water
to your cold water starch mixture.
No cooking required. FAULTLESS
STARCH ia always ready for in-
stant use.
For more than 35 years FAULT-
LESS STARCH has been the fav-
orite in millions of homes.
orial to President Harding In Marion.
O„ was authorized at a meeting of
the Harding Memorial Association.
Grading will start next month and
construction of the memorial in the
Spring. About two yean will be re-
quired to complete the work.
Appointment of Owen D. Young
of New York as chairman of the
American committee of the Inter-
national Chamber of Commerce wm
annouaced by the American section
of the chamber. He i ucoseda the late
A C Bedford.
, ■' J*..
Indispensable
A •aeada. yW"d hssMes
rot-h^d. ’chappid .kin
and for cobmaos ifcfo tMoewnM,
‘s-ESsSSjgfe:
torr. Kaap ajar or a rte.h.niy.
caxsmuKKKni uro. compamy
lamiiinif)
ITtototoMt Ifovfek
i Vaseline ,
1 ■■■*•>• Mt aw l
1 ftrtMIMMU
to Avoid “Physics”
I foNAP1^
’ EAR OIL
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The proposed >280,000 road bond
issue for the Smithville precinct was
defeated by a large majority in the
election held Saturday. The bond is-
sue wus intended for the Giddings-
Waelder highway.
To Dt. W. B. Caldwell, of Monti-
cello, DI., a practicing physician for
47 years. It seemed cruel that so
many women bad to be kept constant-
ly "stirred up” and half sick by tak-
ing cathartic pills, tablets, salts,
calomel and nasty oils.
While he knew that constipation
wee the cause of nearly ail headaches,
btltouMieM. sallow skin. Indigestion
and stomach misery, he <ll<t not be-
lieve that a sickening “purge" or
“phyaic” every day or two was neces-
sary.
Iq Dr. Caldwell’s Ryrnp Pepsin he
discovered a laxative which regulates
the bowels. A single dose will estab-
lish natural, healthy bowel movement
for weeks at a time even for those
“THE FOUNDATION
OF HIS HEALTH”
r
Among the thousands who have publicly
expressed indebtedness to Tanlac for
normal weight, health and strength, is A.
R. White, who recently said:
"The foundation for my present excel-
lent health was laid by Tanlac. For months
I had been run-down. I had lost all enjoy-
ment for food and suffered great discom-
fort from indigestion. My liver was slug-
gish and that tired feeling was on me all
the time.
"Three bottles of Tanlac relieved my
troubles and started me off with a system
so thoroughly toned up and renewed that
I soon found myself feeling like a new man.”
Tanlac ia for sale by all good druggists.
Accept no substitute.
Nicaragua Is again torn by political
revolt, the State Department has
been advised. Conservatives headed
by Gen. Chamarro, have token pos-
session of the fortress La Oma and
demanded expulsion of the Liberal
members of the President Solora-
zno’s Cabinet. Street fighting has
broken out and two persons have
been killed.
Appointment of Hanford MacNider
of Mason City, Iowa, lieutenant colo-
nel in the World war, and former
national commander of the American
Legion as assistant Secretory of
War, regarded as probable in some
quarters here. MacNider would fill
the vacancy left by promotion of
Dwight P. Davis of Missouri to be
Secretory of War No official word
of the appointment was forthcom-
ing from the White Honse, however.
Baa» Doubly Hooked
While fishing near I’lquu, Ohio,
Walley Gensinger and Miss Belle
O’Brien both hooked the same bass.
It is believed that the two minnow
baits were within a few inches of
each other and the fish got them both
at one strike. >
New Dress
the same dependable remedy
that over a period of more than
fiftv vears ha» been found so
reliable in the treatment of
catarrh and diseases of catarrhal
nature.
The outside of the package
only has been altered. To facil-
itate packing and reduce break-
age in shipping, the paper wrap-
per which has identified the
Pe-ru-na bottle for many years
has been displaced by a substan-
tial pasteboard carton.
Pe-ru-na cannot be made any
better. Three generations of
users testify that Pc-ru-na is the
best remedy in the world for
catarrh and diseases of catarrhal
origin.
The remedy our fathers and
grandfathers used with so much
satisfaction is still the standby
for the ills of everyday in
thousands of American homes.
PE-RU-NA
Tko Ovtgtasl MMl RsttAMto
toe Catarrli
Tetetoco ee LfoiwMI
DR. W. D. CALDWXLJ-
AT THB ADR OF •»
i^^ji . i|
■Ite
“No girl or woman should
‘purge’ and ‘physic* herself
every few days. This is very
injurious. Besides, it isn’t
necessary.’’
—DR. CALDWELL
People of China now prefer Am-
erican eggs to those of other coun-
tries.
A combined wrist watch and mem-
orandum has been patented in this
country by a Buenos Aires Inventor.
So great has grown the demands
for Persian rugs and carpets in Tur-
key that 1,200 bales of them were
received in Constantinople in a re-
cent month.
The school year in Csecho-Slovakls
comprises 230 days, according to the
schedule recently fixed by the Min-
istry of Education. Sunday is ths
only day of the week on which the
schools are closed.
Charged at Baw Street Polios
Court with causing an obstruction by
plying his trade as a peddler of choc-
olates, Charles F. Hollaway, who de
dared that he was the late Csar
Nicholas’ race horse trainer, was
warned to be more careful in the
future.
Martial law has been proclaimed tn
the Provinces of Santiago, Valpa-
raiso and Aconcagua following the
general strike ordered by labor lead-
ers in protest against the defeat of
Jose Salas, labor candidate for the
presidency.
The Japanese government Is work-
ing on a plan for State aid for per-
fectnres in the building of national
systems of motor highways, accord-
ing to the scheme of Federal aid
which has worked successfully
the United States.
As. Princess Ileanan of Ronmania
was selling charity ticket* in Lon
don while disguised as a Ku Klux
Klansman, she unknowingly bore on
her back a card giving her rank
and name, it having beau placed
there by another Miler.
\Z zF / MOTHER:- Letcher’s Cas-
z y toria is a pleasant, harmless
Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared
for Infants in arms and Children all ages.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it
When money talks a man seldom
troubles himself to investigate the
truth of ita remarks.
Short Chronicle ot Past Occurrences
Throughout the Union anti Our
Colonies—News From Kuropo
That Will interest.
Ores of manganese have been mined
and shipped from Burnet County and
from seme of the western counties
the past year. The greatest produc-
tion was in 1918 when about three
hundred tons were shipped under the
stimulus of high prices.
Flood waters from the Colorado
River will be used to irrigate thou-
sands of acres of land in the Austin-
Webberville section, if plans indorsed
by the Austin Young Men's Business
League and also adopted for an
active campaign, are worked out.
Many deposits of copper ores occur
in the Burnett-Llano region and the
trans Pecos counties. There has been
but one deposit of Importance, the
Hazel mine, west of Van Horn, ever
opened up, but there are many places
in Western Texas well worth exploita-
tion.
Cotton shipments originating at Al-
pine may be handled in ten or more
bale lots and may be transported via
Marfa and allowed a stop-over there
for fumigation to kill the pink boll
weevil, the railroad commission has
ordered. A 25c stop-over charge will
be assessed.
A valuation of >2000 a mile for tax-
ation purposes on the Orient Railway
in West Texas was recommended in a
resolution passed last week by county
judges representing a majority of coun-
ties traversed by that system, as an
aid in reorganization and rehabilita-
tion of the road.
The Gregg County soil improvement
committee has joined a campaign to
Induce Gregg County farmers to plant
a large number of winter cover crops
in the county. The county agent has
announced that tests will be conducted
on a number of Gregg County farms
thia winter in order to determine the
varietiea of cover cropa beat adapted
to soils.
Permits to irrigate 711 acres were
granted recently by the state board of
water engineers. Those granted per-
mits, together with description of the
projects, follow: T. B. Hay, 20 acres
in McLennan, by pumping from Bosque
river; F. E. Goodman, 51 acres in
McLennan county, by pumping from
the Brazos, and W. I. Pill, 240 acres
in Austin county, by pumping from
Mill creek.
An application has been filed with
the railroad commission by the Texas
Cottonseed Crushers Association for a
revision of existing rule covering mix-
ed cars of oottoasood cake, meals,
hulls, etc., so as to provide that the
weight properties of each commodity
shall be subject to the straight carload
ratea applicable thereto. The commis-
sion has gives notice that the applica-
tion will be considered at the regular
bearing November 10.
East Toxas farmers who planted tbs
Larede soy bean for the first time thia
year have made big yields and their
feed supply for live stock this winter
is thereby greatly increased, accord-
ing to P. T. Cole, agricultural commls-
el osar of the Cotton Belt Railway.
"Farmers growing thio bean as a feed
crop are highly pleased with It," Mr.
Cola said, “and the indications are
that the acreage planted will be in-
creased next year.”
An almost continuous stream of
trucks is wending its way through the
bills of Kimble County during the fall
days this year, loaded with pecans
from the virgin groves ot the Junc-
tion territory, en route fer Menard
and Kerrville, the nearest railroad
points. This little post village, long
recognised by pecan buyers as one of
the largest markets for the nut tn the
world, has already shipped more than
350,000 pounds of pecans.
Fifty men are in the field rushing
to completion Cameron county flood
control surveys so that contract may
be let early In January. The project
will cost >1,500,000.
Gen. Stovall Jackson would not
read nor write a letter on Sunday
A device that prevents the escape
of dust in taking ashes, from furnace
or stove has been patented by a
Michigan man.
Gen. Sam Houston attended the
Liberation convention at San Felipe,
Texas, clad In Indian Buckskin
breeches and a Mexican blanket.
As an officer in the engineering
corps of the army, Robt. E. Lee had
much to do with the work of con-
trolling the course of the Mississippi
river.
The nucleus of Ohio’s first Japan-
ese colony has arrived here from the
Imperial Valley, California, and taken
possession of a large tract of rich
swamp land which they intend to
develop into a vegatable garden.
Net earnings of the Bethlehem
Steel corporation for the third quart-
er of the year totalled >8,337,762,
compared with >9,7-08,528 in the -pre-
ceding quarter and >6,495,731 in the
corresponding quarter of 1924.
The State Board of Agriculture re-
ported that this year’s Kansas corn
crop will be 108,195,00 bushels. It was
130,905.000 bushels last year. Grain
sorghums are Improved. Pastures
are greening up from late rains.
Free distribution of textbooks to [
students will be discontinued in the
Bellingham (Wash.) high schools
this year because of lack of funds.
Books will be bought by the school
authorities and sold to students at
cost. *
Sixteen hundred buffalos from the
Dominion National Park at Wain-
Wright, shipped into the far north-
ern part of U»e province this Sum-
mer to mix with the wood bi’son, are
treking back for home as fast as
they can travel.
Many of the transient harvest hands
who follow the harvest each season
from Texas to the Brittisl. ’Northwest
travel in their own cars, most of
which are of ancient vintage, but
still capable of carrying the families
of the owners and their possessions.
William SnoW, who has been sex-
ton of the Brick Presbyterian Church
in East Orange. N. J., for sixty-four
years is 95 years old. He tolled the
church bell at the death of Lincoln,
Garfield, McKinley and Harding and
received congratulations from Pres-
ident Coolidge on the sixty-seventh
anniversay of his marriage.
John Gibson, at Yoakum, Texas,
77-year-old Confederate veteran, prac-
tically penniless and who lost his
household goods not many months
ago in a fire, without Insurance, has
inherited |25,00« by the death of a
brother in Ashville. North Carolina.
Gibson has been a resident of Yoar
turn for the past thirty-one years.
Does it pay to advertise? Paul
Armstrong, director of the California
Fruit Growers’ Exchange, says it
does, and backs his opinion with fig-
ures. California orange growers are
investing more than one million dol-
lars per year In advertising, accord-;
Ing to the director’s report. During
a period of six years their total in-
vestment in advertising was in ex-
cess of >6,000,000. The sale of citrus
fruits by the exchange averages
>80,000,000 per year.
Ing the last year indicates that it
is not only regaining Ito prewar
position in the Indian market but
has in some instances already sur- j
passed its 1914 business, eccording
to a report to the Department of
Commerce by the consulate general,
Calcutta. - «
Acting Secretary of War Davis
is in Pittsburgh, where be will be
guest of honor at the thirty-first
annual convention of the Ohio River
Improvement Association. The asso-
ciation will celebrate the recent open-
ing of three new dams and locks on
the Ohio.
Charles W. Waterman of Denver.’
one of the Coolidge lieutenants in
the West in 1924, is expected in
administration circles here to pre-
cipitate a campaign of unusual in-
terest by becoming a candidate for
Senator next year against Senator
Rice W. Means.
Deigurer to the indictment of form-
er Secretory of the Interior Albert
B. Fall and Harry F. Sinclair, oil
manate for alleged conspiracy in
connection with the Teapot Dome
lease, has beeu filed in District
Supreme Court by George P. ■ Hoover
counsel for Sinclair.
George Goller, a farmer, living
twelve miles from Washington, N. J.
while plowing his field, found a pot
filled with old coins. Dates and in-
scriptions indicated that the coins
had been brought over by the colo-
nists from England. Some bore the
inscription, ’Rex, Georgeus Third.”
Two enlisted men of the Milwaukee
were killed recently when a sea-
plane from the cruiser crashed in
a tail spin near Guantanamo, Cuba.
The men were Sidney N. Smith,
chief aviation pilot, of Norfolk, Va.
and A. M. Summey, aviation machin-
ist’s mate, first class, of Barberton,
Ohio.
Countess Karolyi, wife of Count
Michael Karolyi, former President
of the Hungarian Republic, has been
denied permission to visit the United
States on a lecture tour. The Am-
erican Consul General in Paris re-
fused to approve her passports, and
the action has been approved by the
State Department. The refusal was
based upoti the law which bars per-
sons of known revolutionary views.
The number of private owned I
American vessels engaged in over-
seas tarde increased from 117 to 134
during the quarter from July 1 to
Oct. 1, the shipping board’s bureau
of research announced, while the
number in coastwise traffic advanced
from 671 to 683. The gain was re-
gistered despite the withdrawal of
eleven general cargo carriers and
23 tankers, from the Mexican trade
in consequence of business depression.
Commerce department records
maintained as an index of general
conditions showed increases in Sep-
tember over August, in the produc- j
tion of automobiles, newsprint pa-
per, coke, in structural steel sales
and architectural terra cotta, and
in cotton spindle activity, while de-
clines were recorded in the output
of lead anti Wes’em pine lumber,
in iron ore coqoumption and the
awarding of building contracts.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Tyler, L. W. The Decatur News (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, November 6, 1925, newspaper, November 6, 1925; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1322937/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .