Upshur County Echo. (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1913 Page: 7 of 8
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Upshur County Echo, Thursday, January 16, 1913.
7
eedeed G3dea
CHANCE FORECASTS.
THE CUTTLEFISH.
---
$
GINNERY
Absolutely Essential to Satis-
Is
and Profitable Operation
ne
factory
174 l:obert Hooke published n
glasses
seems to be a fair
ai •
iember of the ouitietish
J
xment ‘
forins a dark cloud of aky Water.
it I
I. M. BURNETT.
• kih i
BROKE IT GENTLY.
SYSTEMS 1’1 GASBLING.
3 !
ous rebuke.
GILMER, TEXAS
PHONE 185
2@@20?@ @
I
City Oklahoman.
' It
Ore City
Gilmer
TEXAS
' 2b
INDER.
1
did notkiei what i
miserally that
Her Master Was a Gentleman.
stay took a great fancy to an old
1
I 1
t i
1
J T
WK
she accepted with the under-
standing ti a- they were to pay
ents of N
eights, to
1, are anw
litions toil
i of Clebam
taken up
of the c
ard of Trad
rganizad
red at a u
cells are
body be
‘2
•ft
nr •
DRYAGE and TRANSFER
MOVING A SPECIALTY
Prompt work and courteous
treatment.
of a party who is going to buy
a gin in 1913.
you
you
i uruup
ink sue
in
work
@
Q
he d
ziris
comes darkl spotted, tnt as they
A. L.. EIDPIELD,
C unty Superintendent.
omrr8
l iL
" t
1i
-
I
J
Te “LUMUS" AIR. BLAST
SYSTEM
•!
MODERN MACHINERY t
FOR THE
Gracetorn.
botheEcho:
The health of this place is good
t present.
Mr. J. E. Crabb and little
aughter, Ella, is visiting rela-
vesin Georgia and Alabama.
Miss Virgie Oliver was called
2 the bedside of her brother,
h. Tom Oliver, at Gilmer this
lorning.
Mr. Council Pummer was in
maceton Sunday evening.
Miss Sallie Beavers is teaching
-I
ery
r cores i
oubles, ■
abetes, «
uunatism,
the kidne
th men *
t bladdi
]
will be
mnontbs t
ils to M
Luls.
4 “
For anything you want in the Real Es-
! tate line see me.
SAM J. WAGHALTER,
Upshur County Real Estate & Development Co
i 11
■ ,
. ■■ ? i)
J
■
TUSH
Skin Due
ingworm, e
: Of "Hun
guaranteed
r prompti
taildruggi
behind ■
roar drup
tee with e
sk anythtn
dv.
agrecablefang
ected of itm
estorativeprocg
ry weakheasgt
sleep sound “
Bottle,
MISSOUg
1 i
sqneezed <>r rompress
” so that it formed a
Thist clearly sugusts
5
1e
.4
1
d.
i
-
q
• • is
49
s id
ai
i .12
-88
$ 4
11
1i,
3
Thedy of low price eggs and
other pro luce has passed until
the slogan “Buck to the Soil"
shall have had its effects, -
1%
. HO
, rLoT J
] plot 5
welst J
to get, I
e Pils"
rour *58"
right
bovelb,
nd
t E t.B“
- -a
rante tS
yice em
ss l
w m0105,
. 1 : -03 ",
yforits
arge 52
ected 35
Katy de?
pease. 3.
WRITE, WIRE OR PHONE US, AND WE WILL CALL ;
E. B. HAYES MACHINERY COMPANY ;
MARSHALL, TEXAS ;
e Cat Sp
mposed of jJ
en organa
e al ready be
ity, and U
nstructed f
ral miles ■
erritory.
sesses an ink :
tains the dark
spet ial gland
pursned by an
charies some
GGG€GEG6 EGEGEE G(
©
dollar to any girl or boy under
15 years of age in lpshur coan-
Mr Weatherby has moved on
vj-B. Woodfin’s farm.
n Pack Collier left here
A morning to make a bust-
^wPto Abiline.
Ajoe Arnold has moved to
1 and Mr. Butler has
Lentohishome place.
ci Mildred Hall has been
She is improving now.
Heliotrope.
Vary 11th.
The farmer has already begun
to look serious in contemplation
of the time when new crop op-
orations will be in order. He
has his plain laid, and soon the
ctool here. We are glad to have
etinonr community.
Mrs. R. L. Oliver is attending
•thin Gilmer this week. ; A Boston couple visited near
Myra Burford came home this’Augusta, Ga , and during their
oning from school at Harlton.
e young people enjoyed a
irat Mrs. Lev Covin’s Satur-
night. Everybody reported
nicetime.
check for one dollar if we make
the sale, and we will make it if
the highest degree of ginning
efficiency and lowest degree of
economy in operation will sell
There is only one condition,
that is—that the party whose
name is sent in buys a gin from
some one in 1913.
Where two or more send in
the same name, the one received
at our oflice first will get the
money.
E. B. HAYES, Machinery Co.
Marshall, Texas.
V'l
1 1147
' ■< s
»
Old Time School Hours.
In Scotiane, up to the middle of the
eighteenth century, the usuni school
hours were from G a, m. till 6 p. m..
with two breaks of an hour each. Some
schools, openei an hour earlier and
18
1
’ 432
! I <
“ jcj
■ $"
. Sid 7
i pc
' 9
111
c H
■} f
■■ 1 ■ 2
III!-, will eplin to bim all future com-
manels After this comes the lesson to
tie down when you command "Down"
and to stay down while you leave him
For this latter it is best to tie him to
somethig ond then if he does not drop
। when you call • Down" from a distance
return quickly and. scolding, push him
down forcibly. A caress and a taste of
food should be his reward if he does
rirtt.
I
pg
■■ Bl
c 4
"i.
lo stop anythin he may be doing when
We indulge the hope that the
new president will adhere firmly
to this policy. He may rest as-
sured that in doing so he will
have the great bulk of the Amer-
icn people behind him, not
only passively, but assertivey
and • unmistakably.—Oklahoma
said, “I reckon if the whole stat ‘
is aglnst this one poor negro
he mought as well plead guilty."
—Exchange.
and the prettier of the 1wo girl nshers
approachei him. a little emiarr-s l.
a little shy. determinmi to do her duty
expanded the surface of the
P. M. and will remain over
night. This train will carry a
number of prominent agriculturi-
al speakers and demonstrators
as well as experts in Domestic
Science. Everyone, both ladies
and gentlemen are invited to
meet the train. It is suggested
that the school children march
to the train in charge of their
teachers, as there will be talks
and exhibits of special interest
to them.
Is a money-maker for the ginner
and his customers. It does more 2
work, better work and quicker >
work, with less trouble and ex- i
fl J
e-
-
, L1
' ■ 1
A nd I hen there wa-
, principal and 1 mov
J. C. McDonald,
Clerk County Court, Upshur
County, Texas.
January 9, 1913. - i
worked so long as daylight lasted. No
alteration in the hours was made on
Saturday, and even on Sunday a cer-
tain amount of school work was done.
. ,, ,,, , The.bolidays were restricted to a day
plowlineswill resound upon the I „ candiemas and at Whitsu, and a
the plump sides of old "Beck:’ fortnight intheautumu... ...
> ee i lc retlete
id not plow 1l,
-Bm1 a nyliw
: -izna! from the
> in theaneliemer.
ntaining a
Colored woman. They invited
her to pay them a visit. which
- 1 fl
" t
r w
•Stop" and to continue when
"All right." If well learned
body a number of cells. <
dark pigment When the
• ■!
2
mixes with water very enirkly am
of driving them out of business,
or out of the country in disgrace,
when he stated that any attempt
on their part toward disturbing
business conditions when he
took up his new duties would
meet with prompt and eficaci-
yond which the sepia will dirt inte
safety. |
Sepias are often caught in nets witit
fish The tishermen, despising tlc-
cuttles, throw them out upon thei
beach, and then they may be seen 'y >
lug, in tiny pools of dense black liqnht
and continuany oozing out more ink ii?
a vain attempt at < one ealment.—t ‘hi }
cago Tribune .
contracted the creature looks paler
Though best developed in tie se]
;n, its nearest allies, nearly en
) began to fidget. bnt 10 one spoke
The young man hane inpfegsantly
aware that he w:- expected to 1
something and to do it at one e. Ii h
its Queer Ink Sac and Its Ability to
Change i.s Cclor. (
Sepia is a pecuilar am.ual substance,
obtained from the ink bags or ink sacs
of cuttlefish.
The cuttletish are a group of singu-
lar sea creatures allied to slugs, snails,
oysters and other so ealled ."shell tish."1
The euttlefish has a sort of shell lie
nenth the skin (sold under the name of'
"euttleboue"). a pair of large eyes and
a horny beak, like all molluscs, they
have no real limbs at all. but from
around the head there spring eight or
ten long tentacles, each armed with
numerous suckers
By forcibly squirting out the sea wa-
ter which it has taken in the sepla
can shoot back ward through t lie water
with great speed The sepia is inter
esting, too. as being able to chanze its
color in a measure so as to harmonize
with its surroundings just under the
topmost layer of skin there are dis
triluted all over the surface of the
nefarious ends. If a panic was
necessary to intimidate the high-
est authority and cause him to
hesitate in carrying out the
policies for which the people
had spoken in unmistakable
tones, they would not scruple to
precipitate it.
The president-elect seems to
have had them squarely in mind
werein he observ that as
Improve the vision so ways
reesbez
or ceta t
ugh Eemed;
ended uponi
e to take, |
’• aiv, J
A Fighting President.
President-elect Wilson isstart-
i ng off well. His statement upon
his return from Bermuda, and
again on the evening of the same
day at the banquet in New York
city, in whic he breathes deti
ance to the tory element who
would precipitate a panic in or-
der to thwart policies, evinces
that his square underjaw means
just what it looks.
We take it that the American
people have elected another
righting man to the chief execu-
tiveship. And that is precisely
the kind of a man for whom they
have been looking.
We have in this country a cer
tain element which stops at
nothing save promoting their
own welfare. Tbey would plunge
the nation into all sorts of dis
sac The
Buanee they like Sir Hiram Maxim
il zwee of all systems when he shat-
reed 1 popular demsion in these words:
H ic I has come up twenty times in
oheession it is just as likely to come
• P at i he two.ity first time a--, it would
H* d it haul ; it come up before for a
Bach p ifi h ular coup is govern-
Good Time Coming.
"I tell yen. links." -.lid the million
alre. wil great gusto, "talk about your
fun' There’s none to equal that of
earning a million, dollar by dollar
"By ginger," said little links, "what
» lot of fun there is ahead of me"-
Hari.ers Week I v
might be found to improve our other
seises "it is not impossible." says he,
"I > hear n whisper a distance of a fur
ng. and perhaps the nture of the
thing would not make it impossible al
thoghrihat furlong should be ten times
Writers of Old Who Dimly Pointed to
Modern Inventions.
Chance phrases in the literary works
of other days describe with uncanny
exactness inventions of far later times.
Fer instance, we find in the “Prolu-
sions'" of Strada the Itoman, which
wers published in the yeur 101”, what
might be held to embody a crude de-
scription of wireless telegraphy
Strada represents two friends us car-
rying on a correspondence by means of
a "certain loadstone which has such
virtue li it that, if it tpuches two nee-
dles when one of the needles begins to
move. the other, although at ever so
gre: a distance, moves ut the sume
rimne and in the same manner "
eihei by the physical < ondi
istl. at Hint particular in
He Didn’t Know Exactly What to Do,,
So They Camo to His Rescue.
A young author and critic who has
come to tie an authority upon a certain ]
modern phase of educaion, went a few •
days ago to deliver his first lecture at
a girls’ school. He had lectured before,
but never at a young ladies' semi-
nary, and as two white frocked, curly j
haired ushers led him out to the plat-
form mid he sat down beside the ma- i
tronly principal among the women wh-
made up the faculty ami fuced a sea of
girls" faces be was young enough to
feel a bit of embarrassment himself
it was rather dificult at first, but omne
the let ture was started things went ali
right. ,
He finished what he had to say and
sat down. The audience and tin* ma-
tronly principal and the women wh
made up the faculty elapped theh.
hands enthnsiastically. Then the nn-
plause died down and silence settl
upon the lertore hail Tli<* young mini
sat on waitin for some one to say
somethinz. dimly consciuns that i
move of one L.in or antier was ex
pet led of him But iis lecture was
tinisher lie had said all lie bad to
say. Then* were no questions t, n
faculty or sf intents A few of the gills
Wonte Carlo Just Smiles at Them and
Ker pa on Winning.
There are only two games played at
Mtre < a r.- roulette and a simple
.1-1 game alle. t rente vet quaraute.
me is assured that these games are
•Li.' I-1 quite fntriy und that the per
itaze in favor of the bank is tn
• whateyer it may be. this certain
rientage in favor of the tables over
on # mH systems that human ingenuity '
ui work ont by any law of nterageu '
t Blanc will permit you to play any
vay you like, and to double your bet
is ofen as you like until it reaches
i,6n% francs at roulette or *0,000 franca
it trente et qunrante. Then you munt
iegin over again, for It is quite clear
hilt if one were permitted to double
ndeffnitely it, would only tie a ques-
ion of time and sufliclent money to
mt M Blanc out of business
Thus it hap:wns that M Blanc, who
i! e no chanee, wins against all those
1. are permlttei to take any sort of
! 1-1 air
i h" ' ime writer in “Vern IIistorin"
1’ 'Hid at some lensth de.
.■ ril i :n aerial ship the sails of which
vep in" Ui*d by a whirlwind, thus im
,,l'jnu if through space to the moon.—
la mer’s
---------- York l'imes
Eringing Up a Dog
A w iter in t'ountry l.ife in America
give somne a!vice on Hie bringing up 1
or a chov As he tells it. Ilie process '
1o<d.s easy enough The first and most
important lesson for a pup to lern Is
1
.1
. I
Notice of Final Settlement.
This is t<) certify that B. T.
Croley has filed his final exhibit,
as administrator of the estate
of Mrs. T. A. Croley, deceased. ,
and requests to be discharged.
All parties are notified, that
this application will come on to
be heard at the next term of the
probate court of this county,
which will be held in the court
house in the town of Gilmer on
the 3rd Monday in February
1913.
pigment serrete by
Vhen elisronerel
enemy the -pia d
of its ink throngl
nitip!ed." 'I
' * g
t y a
29
We will mail an additional)
'•ant ‛ie ball spins round a great
nny tiince in :: groove When its mo
meat 1i i 1: (1 up it comes in contact
__ ci severnl plopes of bras - and tinaliy.
A Chance lor rhe Boys Andltnmu inte • let in the wherl
VI It 1- i •t:111111, in an (»>!»*
(i i r I S. I
' iie it 11 i s :1 nihl 111:1(11iter1tenl
We will mail a chesk for one1 1: :i0 I of elean e, and it is not in
■ ■ • • bi<*iH c.1 in Ihe least by nnything that
inas ever 1ikea place Iefore or that ' ln‛*srr} ’D I'. .’ 'be murmur
wii: take place, jfi. the future --Mel Mlnt 1‛n afraid 01211 hne
tv who will send us the address' \ ire !visso; i‛,lt in Saturday Iven | 11 laVe te start right this muinnle
‘ ng r if von want to make your trait ’
"1 drunk "ai:
when he announced his intention ' 1 "" ‛iet
. Hid of cew
AEricultural Train
i Coming.
opedebove special train, to be
neoeobzthe A. & M. College
Betpration with the Cotton
Mond i d will be in Gilmer
‛ January 27, at 2:35
etionette of n
tress in order to carry out their covn t of ihe telephone
sort of funnel or tube The pi
her expenses. She was given a
good room and had her meals
at the same table w:th her host
and hostess. When fit a meal
the hostess said: “You were a
slave, weren’t you?” The darky
replied in the afirmative. "I
suppose your master never in-
vited you to eat at his table?’’
queried the Boston waman. ‘‘No,
honey, dat he didn't. My mas-
ter was a gentleman. He ain't
never let no nigger set at the
table ‘longside of him.”—Popular
Magazine.
As Well Plend Gulity.
Silas Houston was arrested
on the charge of having broken
he lock on a hen Ifbuse door and
having taken a number of chick-
ens from within. Ha was brought
into court and the clerk of the
court was told to read the charge.
“The state of---vs. Silas
Houston, charged with stealing
chickens,” he read. The judge
then asked the prisoner whether
he pleaded guilty or not guilty.
Silas had assume 1 a most de-
jected expression. “Woll.” he
in "Gulliver’s Trnvels" Swift causes
is hero to relnte in the voyage t Ln
mta t'l.it the n-tronomer there have
e,pise f-overed the two lesser stars
c' -+t- lite ? whit li revolveabont Mars "
I his ‘I: u. been held to constitute a sa
i ii sh.m scinee Nevertheless
) i Asaph Hall a few years ago
iso, the i wo tinystelliies.
li w is more than 1.700 years ago
1t !,/oin g'l* e an acrount of the
inter vherein ihe inhabitants of the
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Upshur County Echo. (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1913, newspaper, January 16, 1913; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1431349/m1/7/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.