The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, March 9, 1917 Page: 5 of 8
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I
*
(
bBIj
4
TO
Non-Alcoholic
A
Mitt/
<»
ship. Its delightful,“hoppy” flavor adds
/t is healthful and refreshing.
I»u-
iojii
I
<I il'l I Its FOKI l ISIS.
LAST NIGHT AT
Thus.
!
anec-
SEPTENBER MOHN.
enza,"
but
12
le 14th
4110.
Portland. Ore., March 4
16.
Mrs.
Better
and push
that
committee of congrcHH j
>er the
K. W.
Send Your
recent
ment. so
LAUNDRY
v<>
IM tM IS PROHI IBM.
cation.
Parcel Post
local
P.
Enclose 3c for each collar. 25o
for two shirts, and 6c for mail-
ing
o
( <lRRENPONI)ENTS WANTES.
LEWIS
You good people In
LAUNDRY
Bay City
't
’ If'*
\
■■I
Huin
■■
===
J
progressive farmers related his
We will return to you In
a couple of days. Suits cleaned
and pressed (1 00. mall 10c.
Increased Prices Bring Prodact
Lake Charles Market.
WHEAT FORWARD MOVEMEM'
FOR SI NBA 1 SCHOOLS.
other f0r other uses, produced hay to the a spiendid electric light is attach-
2600 bags, {towns owe it to your community to amount of $25 and sold of the crop
Macle by Pabst
at Milwaukee
MAN ABOUT THE SAME
25.IMM1 YEARS
•Mi
visitoi
Smith and Holman,
Austm Saturday. Iinvi
nd.
Court
i-orda,
I
I Of the
I
I bv the
I shall
Is elec-
I hereby
I to be
Iblisheri
ere br-
1 Coun-
week*
In. and
|i road
bounty
week-:
lire an-
-> hbld
ivor- n
r. pre
r given
I: pub-
I !'■ i.i .
I
I
Lite of
I l.-r.-to
i rorda
-----o—o------
RICE BELLING FAST.
last
gave forecasts of warm
ever
says
i are
040
I
lunty.
-!M6w
ring - t*n"
last
CiwupiindbigcanBakingPowdarsdonot
save you money. Calumet does it'uPurq
ami far superior to sour milk and Bodfc
B i
•iON-ALCOHOUC
*004 PT »IB$T AT MU,WAU«»
Yam
.1 E.
:> !•<! ttw p
■o—o----
hummer
a snap and zest that everyone enjoys.
Get PABLO, ice cold, at any place
that sells drinks -or by the case from
your grocer. You’ll like PABLO.
County-
■ Coun-
it d for
ite of
e fore-
d cor-
tice of
rgorda.
ppears y
Com- A
jes 699
county
xas.
eal of
ruary.
yesterday in the city.
Henry Reineke was a business
to the city Saturday
Methodist Sunday school with
officers and teachers and 57,997
During 1917 a great effort is j
cradle rolls and home de- [
. Rev. R. E. Ledbetter, of
.. Although .
some sort of man has been inhabiting
Terms or cash,
land, close lu.
■ SUFFRAGE SPEAKER
• I the Texas Methodist Conference
Under Way.
V.
»5t toio
I
B< h of
k the
X*
are
said
as
I it :
Id roatU
I *
■nil ..I
I
I
I <$• t -. -
|nd* of
I
I
I i|3i-
l r cent
I
I
I levied
[district
I
I
Is. and
[he re-
kmized.
•npikes
“*-< Ti htI
The
Happy
“Hoppy”
Drink
I
I'-: > •
I
I
|:-r
I' '
r
i
I - ha v -
I
I
If said
I ini-il.i.
led to
Io sup-
I bonds.
In their
Is mi nee
iv men'
I shall
ir bal-
suance
ayment
from his office,
services of W.
Sunday school
traveled 1000
addresses,
drr.lrrr .-.nd now that the question has
, reached congress we owe it to agri-
culture to assist. "Short selling" is
selling that which one does not bold
or own. It is the great trick used
by big speculators and Is the principal
cause of unsteady, uaatfllable. danger-
lour markets and the producers and
consumers are the greatest losers. All
agricultural societies should press
this question. The "hedge" used by
millers io ont so bad. It Is short
selling, but the millers can find some
other protection. If "short selling" Is
will not ao
Houston, Texas, March 4.—A great I
forward movement in the Sunday j
schools of the Texas Methodist Con- I
ference is under way, under the direc-1
tion of the field secretary of the[
Conference Sunday School Board. '
Rev. Walter G. Harbin. In the 57
Put up
awhile.
"September Morn." the best of the
season's musical comedy offerings,
cornea to the Grand March 9, with
William Moore. Ruth Wilkins, and a
lolly crew of nearly fifty usaiatant en-
tertainers, 3
"September Morn" is not. of the old
school farce comedy but rather of the
present day fun show, with an elab-
orate costumed and graceful, dancing,
spirited and charming chorus of good-
i looking girls who muster the big en-
sembles in a way that lends a general
I swing to the performance that la de-
lightfully new and refreshing.
Ruth Wilkins, "The American Gaby
Iicslys," is seen In this revel of fun,
songs and tangos in a serins of dances
now the rage, assisted by the smartest
company of the season, who wore the
originals in tho parts at the M Salle
(Ipcra House. Chicago, where "Sep-
tember Morn" recently enjoyed one of
the most successful runs ever record-
ed in that popular homo of musical
comedy.
k soil,
r gating
r. also
id Jfat-
colinty
unaller
ds, ru-
ite. es-
natism.
Value
Might
ir good
Owner,
Texas,
ran.
8-tf-dw *"
r Here is
a real treat that you
will enjoy. A cold bot-
tle or two of PABLO, cheese.
ggtiOggl
1 ♦
- k
1
y
IllWr
-----o—o-----
Seed Potatoes: Seed sweet potato*
of the choicest varieties, yellow yams.
. \t>ply to T. M Culberson at the cur-
ling plant Per bushel. $1 26. 27-tfdw
Millions of .
housewives know this is the
truth- they realize the cost of a
single b.ike-day failure. 'That’s
why they stick to Calumet.
fit costs but little and sheds a ray of | t|on and as it concerns agriculture
Plagermann «rites
friends in th, city tliat. upon her ar
Mr. and Mr . .Tames R. Cox, of
Junction <'it,' Tenn., are expected to-
Iday to bn the guests of Mr, and Mrs.
(Thomas H. Ixtwjs.
i
in the
profess
tlii ■ is that man has bad more
with which to work.
"Suffrage, is nothing ' R'^d College, this city.
-t--";-; Opportunity |
And wo live in a Christian {during tho last 26.000 years and
i feet that the fearsome ballot might
'have upon the manners and morals
Harbin. !°^ t'1'5 sister’ daughter or mother who
wishes to voice her preference as to
|the official who does (or does not)
clean her street and premises, regu-
Thnt committee'
developed tho Importance of I
"shortselling” In the stock market and .
< ongrci'H seems to be moving for pro-
hibition of "soiling short.” We will
I not discuss tho stock market, but If
! to prohibit "short soiling" In tho j
find us such a person, ono who Is $150 worth of peanuts, thus realizing
willing to devote his or her time to close to |50 per acre for the crop
.grown. What Mr. M^lander has done I passed through
I others can do on the same kind of
ground. Try It.—El Campo Citizen.
along.
Messrs. Scott,
who motored to
returned home.
M is. \\ . II.
st rong
March 3 to 10.
.’>. when the president Is to bn Inmi-
wc do not forecast for
D The United
answer
The Tribune wants a good live cor-
respondent from every town in the pounds on the nuts that were too dirty lhe puhiic and an ornament as well.
crackers and some sandwiches.
PABLO added to the lunch or
dinner means more happy follow-
ed. which will contribute its share
to the street light system.
Mr. H. A. Clapp, of Collegeport.
the city today en
route Port Lavaca, where he will prohibited the millers
spend a few days la the interest of much need protection by the "hedge."
educational campaign after t
measure failed of passage in this leg-
islature.
Let no one be deceived, Miss
Stearns tells us, for the handwriting
1 is on the wall.
! more than Opportunity;
Int<) is Democracy; Democracy
jtianity." i—- - — -
, nation.
■ , The constant reference to the part
movement of rice into J’lBJed by women in
lllEN FRANKLIN ON “FRESH AIR."
—
{(Letter from Hen Franklin. VGGl.'.i
j The gentry of England are remark-
;ably afraid of moisture and of air;
I but seamen, who live in perpetually'
I T-iT- Pill IDT Ufll ICC ,nuist !l*rs’ ar,! 1,lw!,ys healthy if they
riL uUUlil nUUuL i,av' good i,r<,Tisi,,ns- ■ • •1 hav‘!'
I long thought that more moist air lias 1
1 rm ill tlvrv rvrxvx ci ♦ 11 is firm Hut {
keeping your place before the public grown,
by weekly contributions. Write *o« [others
stationery.
j I I [ ■ IL
* j I. 14 " 1 J <1 11 • I < l • • It "rllli’lllo I I I 11 I I 11 I
changes hope in every household that it enters. and is not a partisan question it be-|
the1 Mr N M Vogelsang and son, Mer- Jongs to our line,
for their cattle ranch ijias
ft: the neighborhood of Palacios. Mer-
j lin has entered the cattle business
I with a good bunch of cattle and will |
apply himself henceforth to that
prUIHMIV nillll L RVIIIIIK •»» I
This brilliant light of liberty blazes market jH important it is still
more Important in the grain and cot-
ton markets. We have long known
that “short selling" Is immensely
''an you afford to miss its searching damaging to producers and legitimate
rays of sunshine, happiness and hope 'dealers and now that the question
for such an insignificant sum? / . . ...
The Jas W. Rtigeley Co. has in:
Miss Gladiola Willard left on an
generally. I apprehend, extended visit in Brenham and Waco
they are the effects of too full living this afternoon.
in proportion to our exercise.
39(0
SEssutf"'''1
Be on the safe side- avoid dis-
np|>ointniciits ute Calumet next baits-
tiny- br sure of imifetm tesuha learn
why Calumet i> the moM economical 1
to nuv and to use It's pure in tha
can pine in the baking. Order now'
Received Hiiiheat
Award*
_________ 0 . A’*w CmJ fitti
FOR - trick vnMred
home two squares from court bouse,
two full lots This home is new and 1
strictly modern in every respect. Will
be sold at a bargain if sold soon
Also 176 acres choice
G. R Keller. 24-lfdW
corn
alternate rows. From the yield he
has 30 bushels, left for seed, raised
five pigs to a weight of 50 to 150
gurated. but
Washington.
Slates weirther bureau must
all weather question for this city. But 1
people coming to tho Inauguration
from northeastern sections and the!
middle West will probably encounter !
some rough weather before they get
hero.
Next
couver
at urea
slope.
M»lander, one of our
n>« Quinine That Doe* Not Aflec* Th* HsU
Reenurieof lf« tonic and l ixative effect, I.AXA
TIVR BROMO Qt’lNtNH i - better than oiAiaary
; Quinine and doe* not cause nervouanean nos
ringing in head R-member the lull unrue and
I look lor the signature of H. W. GROVE. 2SC.
al the home of bis parents, Mr
Mrs. John Sutherland.
Messrs. B ,E. Norvell and O. E
Wild came over from Rosenbci-, Sat-
urday' 10 cast thoir vote in the city
primaries. They returned Io Rosen
berg Ibis morning.
Frank Denman, of El Maton. was
a business visitor to the city Satur
day. Ho reports farming operations
in this splendid community well under
way and all the farmers ready for ths
planting of crops as soon as suitable
weather prevails.
Alva Grant ham w ill leave In a few
days for the North and East where he
will enter the Dodge automobile fac-
tory to learn the automobile mechan-
isms, preparatory to taking up the
work of mechanician for tho Jas. W.
Rugeley Company.
Adolph Mezrath has a quantity of
consisting of tomatoes,
. H<>
a large
Tribune read
■IlgH
L
L I !ll 1
6
Washington. Mari h 4 List bulle-
tin gave forecasts of warm wave to
cross continent February 26 Io Marell
I and March 5 to 9. storm waves
March 1 to 5 and 6 to 10. cool waives
March 3 to 7 and R to 12. These
storms will not. be gnat, but of great
or force Ilian preceding. Early March
is noted for weather extremes and 11
average is expected from
Tills includes March
' 0__
4Wij
Woodrow Wilson, flanked by con- ’
vincing figures, and the advocacy of j
tile presidential polity, tuet with cor-
dial approval by her hearers. So tea-,
sonabh was the advance of the argu-
fully covered was the ground
fthat neither suffragist nor anti found!
I suggestive queries available though 1
i repeatedly asked by Miss Stearns to ,
,, . . .. I rm, at her with ammunition from any
The prices obtained range *“
I quarter. Taking any ligure one
wishes, such leaven must expand
'such seed must propagate, such hand-
! writing must be read even by him
who runs. Suffrage has an assured
Contributed.
forth in matchless radiance every
twenty-four hours at the tremendous-
pertence with the lowly peanuts to tbe ly low price of ,t0 t.,.nts th(. month.
Citizen man Saturday. We think it
; worth while to give our reader’s the
benefit of it, as Mr. Malander is well
some better, but not out of danger.
'Ir and Mrs. Ixmnje McDonald 'on lids new and popular form of gov
were in the city Saturday and Sunday lernment. watch this paper from da'
from M.irkliaiu. the guests of their'to day.
parents.
You h:ive not the slightest idea how
much genuine happiness and content
ment you arc missing when you fall
to get your ncighlmr to subscribe for
thth scintillating star of hope.
Warren Baker is homo from
moil's Mound.
Mr. and Mrs. Sain Whitley spent
I yesterday with Mrs. Whitley's parents
Ion their farm near Wadsworth.
i Mellin Vogelsaug. who has been al-
ltending A. and M. College, has re-
Iturned homo.
I Mr George Sutherland spent Satur- ;
day and Sunday in the city visiting I
at tlic home of bis jmrents, Mr and
warm wave will reach Vnn-
about March 10 and temper-
will rise on all tho Pacific.
It will cross crest of Rockies
by close of March 11. plains section
March 12. meridian 90, Great Lakes
and Ohio valleys March 13, eastern
sections March 14. reaching vicinity
of Newfoundland about March 15.
Storm wave will follow- about one
day behind warm wave and cool wave
about ono day behind storm wave.
Temperatures preceding this storm
will go higher than usual and fol-
lowing it will come a cold wave in
northern sections and n marked cool
wave In tho cotton States. Exten-
sive rains will accompany this storm
but they wilj bo light, leaving some
sections in the cotton States in need
of moisture. Northern sections, gen-
erally. have sufficient moisture for
present needs, frozen in their soil
and that moisture will be unusually
valuable.
A sudden Increase in storm forces
is expected about March 15 and
at which time the storms are expect-
ed to bo east of meridian 90.
look out for a squall. Wo are not ex-
pecting much precipitation In March,
but we are expecting to observe an
uneasiness in the. cotton States about
! moisture before end of this month.
Right now is the best time on earth [The crop season of 1917 will
greater interest than any that has or- I
Lake Charles. La.. March 4.—There
has been a i.,u. . ... -. ~~.
I,ako Charles within the past few days
which Indicates a wholesome and sat-
isfactory market
It is due to tho recent. Jump in
prices that tho remnant of the
crop is coming to the local mills The
movement of rice comes from tho
south principally Into Lake Charles,
though there is some from tho east
and west.
around $3 65 per barrel for Japan and
from $3.75 t" $3.80 for the Blue Rose.
Ben Beardsley, the Lake Charles ■
manager of tho Southern Rice Grow-
ers Association, sold another lot of
3800 bags of rice to the Ixtko Charles future
Rice Milling Company and the local
j mill of the Louisiana State Rico Mlll-
%mg Company. This tale makes a to-
tal of 15.300 bags, bringing $60000
or more through the growers associa-
tion within tho present wonk
The sales referred tn were three in ■ county
number. 6000. 5700 and
For 1917 the farmers along the Sabine
canal and Calcasieu Parish will plant
15.000 acres in rice and are planning
for 120.000 bags, as against 85.000 tn
1116.
to subscribe for this matchless sheet |(
, '"f perfection. We guarantee unquali- curred for 10 years.
7., t'.„ part [,lorn :it the beginning of this period fied liberty, life and the pursuit of hap-1 The "leak” <
the re-election of!'11 " habiliments of modernity with- piness to all who come into the fold {has developed a most important qiM
out attracting especial attention.
Cn'Cire has shown many’ <
last few centuries ,savt) the I Mr. N'
>r. He believes the reason for lin. left today
tool*
For Sal,' Genuine Yellow
seed pot.Hues, at 73c a bushel.
Thompson. Bay City.
-------o—o-
Eggs for Sale: Kellei strnss strain
White <'rplimgton eggs. $1 50 per sol
ting of L>. .1 A Brown. Buckeye.
5-10d-9w-p
no ill effect on the constitution but
field secretary of the{ w Budicn(.e of Huffl.agi8t8 ln ^ abound in absurdity and inconsist-
Sunday bchooi Board, ency Thus, - ------•»--
Harbin. In tho 57lour town is uot Yet to a very |
counties in Hast and South I<*xas in [ Iuikc ^athcrin^, it has the satisfuo thinp, j’ct what caution aejninst air!
the Texas Conference bounds are 556 tory quality of knowing the faith that ! what stopping of crevices; what wrap-1
4946 j |a jn ft- an(j wag sucij a c
pu-
.11. iH.en !Qt7 . t , |ablc g*»)up of men and women
Hile. During 191< a great effort is1
to be made to enlist many thousands wl“,h listeud with appreciation
i night to Miss Lutie Stearns, of Wis-
consin.
Unless a few good-natured
i and illustrations aroused the
’*♦♦■•*■*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ the r,>vis Industrial Congr..... Mr
T1 1 I I'ISPP has recently spent eight weeks
41W*POTI I c W ln Amarl,,° iUld ,hat section of tho
1, vl dvFllcllo t 8tM,’> Knnwl"< <l,at •'«' city IS in
. - J forested in n commission form of gov
ernment, Mr. Clapp brought The Tri-
Froni Monday’* Daily. jbune s copy of the Amarillo charter.
There wasn't much shouting after {which we begin to rejuoduce today.
a(l. was there'.' Owing to the length of the charter we
H ugo Spv, <>f Markham, spent are compelled to give it to our read
era in convenient installments Those,
therefore, w ho arc interested should
carefully pieserve each copy of The
Ami still the old world rocks right I l iibuno in order to thoroughly ac
{quaint lheiiiselvt*e with whul is said
i to be the most perfect charter <
tlrntted in Texas. Mr. Clapp i
many other (owns in North Toxas
adopting the commission form and I
—" - W.. ... . ... 'without an exception each one is pat I
rival 11! Shiner, she found her f 11 hei t erning after the \maiillo charter. If!
you cate to thoroughly post yourself
known as a conservative gentleman. I
lie planted 10 acres In peanuts and 8ta|je)] a filling station for automo-
last year, each crop occupying, t,|jf.8 in front of tll0 place of busi-
ness on Avenue O. It is one of the
highest priced and best equipped
Bowser system, is quite convenient to !
The last freeze got a good part of
our garden but not our "goat." We
[will plant again, and so should you.
i W, H Plagermann left yesterday
'for El Campo, where lie will take up
a quantity of rice for the Standard
[Milling Co of Houston.
Mr. W. s. Delaney, of Wharton, Is
in the city , an inmate of the Bay City
has been only recently -26.000 years Hospital. Mi Delaney visited him
moro pupils and to put the schools
upon the most efficient working basis j
possible.
It is estimated that over 500.0001 ^otea
white persons in the Texas Confer-i 8p*een of the of whom there
enco bounds do not attend Sunday | were 80,1,0 Present, the speaker said
school. To interest this half million I nothln8 t(> antagonize the must sensi-
in the study of the Bible is the big ! Prochivalrous mind an to the ef-
job the Sunday School Board has en- |
tered upon.
The field secretary. Mr.
has traveled over 2500 miles 7>iuce
conference, conducted 12 Sunday
school institutes. More than 20001
pieces of literature have been mailed Ilate the previsions under which is sold
He has enlisted the'tho food ahe 8lves hel fa,uily- “nd
w Thomas « rnr.<i i controls the board which does (or
specialist, who has!does ,10t> '“ucute the children dear!
miles, made over 25 It0 hor- who wil1 be the voters oI t0-
organizod 12 Wesley morrow.
classes and a number of workers'I i’iss Stearns is one of
councils, <
partmen ts.
Houston, has been appointed super-
intendent of teacher training. Twen-
ty five classes for training Sunday
school teachers have been formed [
and a number of individual students
unlisted. Other departments for in-
creasing the efficiency of the Sunday
schools are to be added as rapidly
possible.
fine plants
though it is generally cabbage, egg plants and lettuce,
agreed that, taking the air is a good jH aj8n w,.j| supplied with
quantity of pot plants.
....... <uwv;nl,av v, vivvn.'is,, r. , prtl ))iay ll'lVC tllCR OrdCIS With tllli
consider-1 Ping up in warm clothes, what, shut- office.
The Mlllis-Brown Theatrical Com-
pany. which lias been here for the past,
two weeks, left today for Palacios.
.. The
manager stated Saturday night that
the show would return here next Mon
day for another week's engagement.
Col. Sol J. Cleveland spent Satur-
day in the city and interested watcher
■’.of the results of the election and rc-
mained over to get the returns. He
[told ns to tell the good people that
I everything on the ranch is lovely and
j the managers of tho ranch enjoying
good health. Col. Cleveland is engag-
wrong scent in supposing [ed jn extensive, stock raising and Is
of doors and windows, even in the ’
midst of summer!
Many London families go out oncn w,.clv„, ,,
a day to take the air, three or four where it will show this week,
persons in a coach, one perhaps sick: I
these go three or four miles, or as
many turns in Hyde Park, with the I
glasses both up close, all breathing. [
over and over again, the same air they '
brought out of town with them in the
coach, with the least change possible
and rendered worse every moment:
and this they call "taking the air!"
From many years' observation on
myself and others. I am persuaded we
are on a
most or cold air the cause <
order we call a “cold.” Some un-
known quantity in the air may some-
who has|
made over 25
Wesley
workers' i Miss Stearns is one of the most
[distinguished women of public affairs
[in our country, being an authority on
jhome economics as well as all others
affecting the progress of her sex, and
her mission at this time in Texas was
to assist toward the passage of the
submission of woman's suffrage, and
| an educational campaign after that [IN* e®’th for some <00.000 years, it
'has been only recently--25.000 years
or sc that lie has directed his in-[today,
ti lligence toward progress, according !
tn Prof. William Fielding Ogburn of
The professor declares little physi- I
cal change has taken place in man
that
one might dress an ancient personage
Be |
Safe-1
Use-.
|b»
good health.
of that dis- meeting with good success
; - - -■■-<>—<>--
From Tuesday's Daily.
times produce cold, as in the "influ- [ MIhh Gladiola Willard
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Smith, Carey. The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, March 9, 1917, newspaper, March 9, 1917; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1346251/m1/5/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.