Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 253, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 30, 1918 Page: 4 of 8
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fEMPLE DAILY TKLEGRAM, TEMPLE, TEXAS, TUESDAY MOUSING, JULY 30,1918.
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titled to (h« un foi r«puMloi*tinn «f all newp
credited to U or not othtrwto*
cr»4ttc4 tii thta paper and also tbo local
•ova pohllah#4 tooratn.
DAILY TKLEGRAM RftablUhed 1»«7
DAILY TRIBtmil Kat«hltsh«4 1994
(OtwHdatad January 1>10.)
KlKCl'Tn E STAFF.
F. K. WILLIAMS Mimagine Kdltoi
WW ITKPHRNS Mm«i Mnnacrr
J. P. BLACK Advertising Manager
PETE ItUTTEXOUTTER
Circulation Manager
PvMl*hed eecry morning bj tha Telegram
Publishing Co, (Inc.), K. K. Williams,
pranldcut.
«i;bsci«iptio> pkice.
Delivered by Carriers Inside City Limits of
Temple.
D»ily and 8unday, ona year $7.S#
Dally and Sunday, una month 75
Ry Mai! Outaida City Llinlta ot Temple
Dally and Sunday, one year 100
Daily and Sunday, six months ......... 2.75
Dally and Suuday, three months ...... I SO
Daily and Sunday, one month 60
Prli e on streets, on trains and at news-
stands, per copy CJ»
TELEPHONES*
Duainens Office Ml
Circulation Pft« Ruttencutter
Managing Editor E. K. Williams
ItSt
W—Advertising J. P.
T —Coin|M>stng Room Printers
Z — Job Printing R. O. Nelson
Office of Publication, 111 and 112 Wast
Avenua A, TcmpJe, Texas.
VWWW\AAA/NAAAAA/VWWWW
have no* even guessed the wonderful
beauties and possibilities of govern-
ment according to law. The women
have a great responsibility which
they gladly face. Long may their
culture survive, long their ambitions
live!
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WOMAN SUFFRAGE.
Having attained partial suffrage In
Texas and proved that they value the
voting privilege, the women of Texas
will be granted full Huffrage just as
aoon as chivalrous men tan make the
constitutional machinery operate to
that end.
This conclusion seems Inevitable
following the experience In the re-
cent party preliminary election In
which the women exercised a potent
If not a predominating Influence. The
women of Texas desire to exercis?
the voting privilege. They have
proved it.
The women have an opportunity
to build fairer than ever the men have
done, having the blunders of the men
to guide them. The women have a
clean white page on which to write
the future history of our great state,
a page so far unmarred by the stains
that have marked the record of the
men as they fought their way up
from the slime.
Tho men came Tnto their present
state of political development by
struggling forward along the path of
pain. The men have pushed forward
from the lower to the higher develop-
ment of tha economic plan, knowing
not the reason why nor the method
but only that while the strength of
manhood pulsed in their veins they
must bo fighting for something.
Great hearted blflhderers that they
are, the men have succeeded wonder-
fully in their Efforts to find the light
All uncomprehending and all blind-
ed by innumerable counter and con-
flicting signs set for their mlsguid
ance along the way, the men have
stumbled onward and upward to the
achievement of the Infinite plan, the
perfection of government under
which the elements of tho human
family might unite in striving for per
fection of the soul.
The men have come a strange way
and devious to the highest heights
ever attained by those who seek the
secrets of good and unterrifled gov
ernment—civilization in its most
Ideally practical form. The men have
come a long way and wonderful from
the chains of slavery to a stage In
which honor binds stronger than
steel, justice is more powerful than
prejudice, sympathy working together
with judgment making the way easy
for the simple and unwary and men
have done all this on their own Initia-
tive, as it were, since no plan made
by the fireside has served to meet the
needs of the ever present emergency
or provided a method to thwart the
scheming of the designing enemy.
To men must be given the praise
for the present development of our
grand government, but to women
must be given the opportunity to
make it so much grander that in the
future we will look upon the present
time as the dawn of the new day
throughout the world, the beginning
of the time when the women set about
cleaning the political house of all
governments to make the home safe
for democracy, tho home encompass-
ing all the hopes of mankind, all his
sources of uplift, all his treasure.
A responsibility greater than a
privilege rests on the women and they
are strong with the gathered strength
of the ages to meet that responsibility
Tnnda*. July M. HIS.
(Copyrighted.)
Astrologer* rrnU thta .. a dnulitful <'*>■
Saturn .ill] Ntptun. sr. »villy Inclined,
whll#» V.tiua an<1 th* sun arc friendly.
There ara p«r»ist<-nt Imitation!! that nien
and women In positions of nuthorlty will be
misrepresented and rrltlelsed unjustly. Nep-
tuna Kivea energy to thoa. »!»» goafctp and
give fnlne testimony.
Trouble oyer ateel and Iron la forvshnd-
n*ed hy the >tur*. Thta niny affert ma-
chinery or artillery. It la well to aafeguard
renin* where power la mipplled, alwi. a»
some danger to a lingo plant la prewired by
i In' aturs.
They who are old In tho aer,li-o of their
country ahould he wlao In protecting health
and in avoiding aeeldent*.
Peril eeenie to Inrlc In public building*,
railway statlona and underground plncea.
Thia la not an auspicious rule for travel
on the sea or tor adventures that take place
on water. It la not a JiKliy »*ay for be-
ginning journeya.
Venus glvia encouragement and pronil*.
to women today, but It Is the prognoetlea-
tion that their succeaa will ho in attending
the scope of their service to their country.
Saturn In l<o la not favorable for either
Italy or Krance, na aatrologers hold the
nsjw'vt foreshadow a great testa, both military
and social.
Far reaching unrest that affecta sailor*,
and results In new naval complications. Is
foretold. Mutinies inay be eipected. owing
to enemy plota.
lloth railway and postal affair* com* un-
der a away that is promiatng, making for
successful service, especially when put to
aeverest tests.
Women will continue subject to a direc-
tion of the atara that develops hidden pow-
ers and opeua many great opiKirtunltles of
work that will aid the nations.
Persona whoso birthdate It Is have rather
a good augury for business. Those who are
employed may meet many difficulties. The
young will court end marry.
Children bom on thla day are likely to
bo very clever siul Intelligent, but Inclined
to be erratic. They are subjects ot Leo
and are ruled principally by the tun.
l BITS OFBY PLAY. J
t By Lake Het.nks. X
The Gossip.
The gossip Is an awful pest,
He never gives his tongue a rest;
And he Is always sure to know
A lot of things that are not so.
Olit
"I heard your wife telling my wife
tht jrou beat her up theh other morn-
ing." said Mr. Gabb. "Did you?"
"Ye*." replied Mr. Naybor. "I not
only heat her up. but I had the coffee
made by the time she got downstairs."
Advice.
"You should play fair," said Uncle
Ben,
"In fact, the least that you can do.
Is: lie as square with other men.
As you want them to be with you."
Famous Hollars.
Silver.
Paper.
•—sign.
—bill
—diplomacy.
—a year.
—an acre.
—down.
-ninety-eight.
— Edgar,
i rippling rhymes. *
liy Watt Mason. J
♦♦♦«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«♦♦♦♦♦<♦♦♦♦♦♦♦$
Women Triumphant.
The woman barber is on deck; to-
day she dyed my sideboards blue, and
brushed some talcum on my neck, as
well as any man could do. Her lily
fingers held my nose, she lathered me
with gueenly grace, and tinted up the
brush that grows around the borders
of my face. Today I took a jitney
ride; a woman driver held the vvheol;
she was as blooming as a bride, and
full of business as an eel. And when
1 offered her in pay a bogus seven-
dollar bill, she threw me o'er a stack
of hay with most surprising strength
and skill. 1 went to shock some
sheaves of wheat, that all the nations
may bo free; anil, as I tolled on weary
feet, a husky dame worked next to
me. As counsel for James Prltchard
Hose, in court I did my very best; a
woman lawyer then arose, and
knocked my logic galley west. While
I was fighting with my wife 1 fell
downstairs and broke a thew; a wo-
man surgeon brought a knife, and
fixed me up good as new. The men
have gone to whip the hun; their
wives and daughters stay behind, to
see that every duty's done, to carry
on the ceaseless grind. Today I
thought, with whoop and song, I'd
celebrate a hun defeat; a woman
peeler came along, and pinched me,
on Commercial street. A woman
jailer saw me kneel contritely on the
prison stones; a woman cadi heard my
spiel, and put me down for fifteen
bones.
The Limit.
A gambling fool is Oswald Hutch,
He loves the pasteboards, I will
state;
In fact, the boob plays cards so much,
That he walks with a shuffling gait.
Knsli Peril Itt
"We farm fellers Is doln' our bit,"
said SI Meddcrgrass. "We manufac-
tured more'n 800 shells on this here
farm this year.
"Eight hundred shells?" exclaimed
the City Boarder. "I didn't know you
had a munition plant concealed
around here."
"We haven't," grinned Si. "There
wuss eggs in them shells."
Wuffi
"How do you like my new silk hose? 1
Demanded pretty Corn Fed Hose.
Said I: "They sure look good to me.
They're fine, as far as 1 can see."
Our Joe Miller Contest.
Bill Fowler claims that the oldest
joke Is the one about the six year old
boy who said to his father: "Daddy,
when I grow up I'm going to marry
Granny."
"Going to marry Granny?" said his
father. "But, my boy, you can't marry
my mother."*
"Why cant 1?" demanded the boy.
"You married mine, didn't you?"
Alia Boy I
Trouble-In-The-Front, a 8ioux In-
dian, has enllstel in the army and Is
now at Camp Funaton.
Avoiding Unpleasant Results.
The death warrant had been read
and the march to the death chair was
about to start.
"Would you like a drink of liquor
before you go In there?" asked the
Warden.
"No," replied the Condemned Man.
"Booie always gives me a headache."
How About lUm?
James B. Kaltsgiver of Middletown,
Ohio, wants a job in the Clob Hospital
Elegy Written In a City Graveyard.
The dry laws toll the knell of passing
booze.
The near-beer on the gloomy bars
we see;
The Prohlb settles down to take a
snooae,
And leaves our thirst to water and
iced tea.
— Luke Mr Luke.
Now fades the glimmering whisky
strajght from sight.
The steins Insipid substitutes now
hold,
Save where bootleggers In successful
flight,
Elude detectives vigilant and hold.
—Newark Advocate.
Names Is Nit men.
Will J tut t le lives in Cleveland,
Ohio.
Our Dally Special.
Don't Lot Your Wishbone Outgrow
Your Backbone.
This is a crool world. The Hair
Remover that a woman uses produces
a downy growth of hair. And the
Hair Restorer that a man uses won't
produce anything.
These be stirring times when a
man's mind wcIIb over with patriotic
thoughts. And, when a girl with an
Invisible skirt gets between him and
the sun, you can't blame him for sing-
ing: "Oh, say, can you sec?"
J U mLELw^ARTNERM!
By Jna« Mnrtimet Lewis. )
CHAPTER 11C.
This wu Thursday when I woke up
and that is a whole lot to be thankful
for because when you go to bed on
Thursday night there la only one more
day to Saturday and we have made it
up that when it ia Saturday we are
going to go out back of the pore house
and see bow the old man's grave Is
getting along and how our slippery
slicks are and everything and maybe
we will go to the breakwater and see
how the lake looks if we do not meet
a lot of mlcks going through lrlsli-
town, God never ought've made mlcks
anyhow. He should not of made them
sutch good fighters, and then maybe
we will go out to Hopper's father's
little house out by the woods and see
how It looks since we tried to roast
the chicken out there, when I had
milked the cow and et breakfast me
and Jubilee went over to the mudholo
and then down to the pond and then
to the lost bag of tripe's and the
buntch was there and the lost bag of
trips mother opened the door and
asted me to come in with the buntch
but I told her no I would stay out and
look through the winndo, if I went in
there and she kissed me in front of
the buntch I would have to lick all
of them but Hopper, he Is used to
being kissed because his mother
kisses him every morning and he does
not care who sees her do it, but I
thought of something and when the
lost bag of tripe's mother went out
into the kitchen for something I snuck
in and put a chair by the fire and I
said to Bunt whose father works In
the stinck factory set down by the
fire and get warm , Bunt hut he did
not want to so Nibs said set down
there by the fire like Thomas Arlstides
says or when I get you outside I will
make your heels break your neck yon
mutt, so Bunt set down and Bunts
father works In the stink factory and
and Buht's new clothes are made out
of his father's old ones and when
Bunt gets warmed up good and plen-
ty he Is something fierce, and pretty
soon tho lost bog of tripe's mother
come In and then she stopped right
In the mitldel of the room and looked
kinda anxshus and then she went out
Luko McLuUo Says
We will have to admit that life Is
an unpreventable disease. Hut it isn't
Incurable, so you could notice it.
A man isn't very observant. And
it makes him feel old when he hap-
pens to notice that the pretty little
school girl who used to smile at him
when she passed his house is now a
portly matron with a couple of husky
children.
When the woman whose husband
hangs around the house all the time
and the woman whose husband never
comes home happen to meet, each
thinks that the other should sympa-
thize with her.
This Is a great country. A year ago
we were a lazy, contented, unprepared
crowd of amusement chasers. Today
we are kicking the lining out of an
army that it took forty years of mili-
tarism to produce.
The noisiest thing In the world Is
the ticking of a clock in a store that
doesn't advertise.
The man who Is kept busy trying
to support one wife can't see where
the hek Solomon was such a wise
gink.
Save the Coupons and Get This Flag
YOUR HEALTH
By ANDREW T. CURRIER, M.D.
Rheinnatigm, No. 1.
RVmmatisia la a disease confined
almost entirely to temperate clim-
ates; In the arctics and the tropica
It is almost unknown.
There are few diseases which
have more victims to their account,
pain and deformity being principal
symptoms. True rheumatism 1*
an affection of the Joints, according
to medical standards; but people
have become so accustomed to ap-
plying the term "rheumatism" to
any painful condition of the musc-
les as well as the Joints, it is not
worth while to try to separate them
&y giving them different names.
There are infectious or parasitic
germs which are causes in both
cases, some, though not all of them.
Identical for both; and there are
plenty of other causes which are
fontributory.
Acute rheumatism, or rheumatic
fever, or inflammatory rheumatism,
may attack any of the Joints and
the tissues adjacdfct to them, but It
attacks by preference the hands,
the elbows, the feet, the knees, and
the shoulders.
It also frequently involves the
tr.embrane covering the heart, call-
ed the "pericardium," and the mem-
brane forming the inner lining of
the heart or endocardium, appear-
ing in the forms of pericarditis and
endocarditis, particularly in chil-
dren and young people
Rheumatic disease, when it takes
these forms, is not only very pain-
ful but often serious and dan-
gerous.
The ear is often painful before
the Joints are attacked, and in those
who toil hard physically, the musc-
les pf the arms may be first at-
tacked and then the Joints of the
fingers and toes.
Rheumatism is also associated
with nervous diseases, tonsllitis,
scarlet fever, Bright's disease, and
diseases of the breathing apparatus.
After two or three days of gen-
eral bad feeling, there are chills,
fever and rapid pulse, often perspir-
ation, blisters and vesicles on tho
skin, and finally the Joint9 get red,
liot.swollen and very painful.
Sometimes this lasts a few days
and sometimes several weeks, re-
covery being usually very gradual.
Men suffer more frequently than
women, especially those who work
in the cold and wet, those who do
hard physical labor, and those who
are dissipated.
One generation of a family after
another, may suuer with the chror
ic form of this disease, the Joint
remaining large, distorted, painfu
and stiff.
Possibly the germs which caus*
It produce poisons which are dis-
tributed throughout the body and
result in the permanent form of
the disease; possibly uric acid in
the blood and tissues may have
something to do in causing It, as
many medical writers have Insist-
ed; but the principal cause is prob-
ably the germs which are found in
the blood, and the fluid in the Joints,
of those who have rheumatism.
Questions and Answer*
B. B.—Would you adviie a daily
enema? Wheat 6ran with the as-
sistance of Mount Clemens Utter
water is required to keep my bow
els open.
Anjioer:—I do not approve of
the enema habit Enemas are US&
ful occasionally; but it they are
used dally, the time will soon come
when the bowels will not respond
without this stimulus, and, after a
while, this also will become inef-
fectual. The plan of using wheat
bran and bitter water is better.
Personally, I am a great believer
In the continued use of caster oil,
C. E. P.—I. What it the cause
of acidosis?
2. What foods are used in over-
coming if? \
Answer:—1, When the glands of
tho stomach secrete an excess of
hydrochloric acid, almost anything
that one eats will result in this
condition, but particularly, of
coursc, those proteid foods which
excite the glands of tha stomach to
increased secretion.
2. A minimum of proteid food—«
that is, meat, fish and eggs and a
diet largely of milk, cereals and
non-acid vegetables. It is also do-
elrablo to use an alkali (like mag-
nesium, or bicarbonate of soda) af-
ter each meal.
. . Currier will only aniwer suitable, sicned letlera accompanied with «tMni>«l
and addreaaed envelope. Ai the rorreapondrnre ii very large, lettera must in nfl
ease exceed fifty words and must be on mattera which are o! general intereit. Tht
•ndeavor ia to educate and Inform the reader and not to take th. place of tK
physician. For diagnoala and preicriptiona, yon shmM eonault your family physician.
Pr. turner may be addreaaed la care of thia nMrt-jper.
AMERICAN FLAG COUPON.
PRESENT SIX OF THESE COUPONS AT THE OFFICE OF THE
TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM with $2.55 cash and get this beautiful Flag, size
four feet by six feet, sewed stripes, guaranteed fast colors to sun and rain, to-
gether with Flag Outfit, including 7-foot jointed pole with brass fittings, iron
staff holder, rope and ball complete. (By mail 10 cents extra.)
again and then she come in and said
to the lost bag of tripe are you feeling
worse darling, and he said no ino;n
1 am feeling fine, and then she turned
kinda pale and went out for it Is
kinda hard to stand till you get used
to him like us fellas are and the lost
bag of tripe wunk at me, and that
showed he Is a better sport than I
thought he was to not give It away,
and then we all went out and told the
lost bag of tripe's mother goodbye
and she was thinking about something
else so hard that she forgot to try
to klsa me, and we all had to hustle
to get to school, and Bunt was still
kinda warmed up so the teacher
moved him farther from the radiator
twice before he got cooled off good
and then she opened the wlnndos and
then she began to hear our lessons.
I bet if she did not know I'.unt we
could sneek him close to the radiator
we would get a holiday every once
In a while. Mebby If we would go to
the stink factory and get some ferdl-
llzer and hide it behind the radiator
or some where we could work it that
way, that is a pretty good ldeee and
we will have to think about that.
When we got out we made it up
that we would go down to the break-
water right then and take a look at
the lake to see how she was getting
along and If anyone was catching any
fish, and then we would have more
time to go out back of the pore house
and maybe out to Hopper's father's
little house by the woods, and . we
would take some potatoes along and
build a fire and maybe knock over a
rabbit with a rock and roast that, we
have never knocked one over yet but
we are getting to be better shots all
the time and we might do It, so we
each will carry a rock and be ready.
Some people eat mushrats and they
say they are good eating but we have
never done that yet, and anyhow we
ain't got no mushrat and you can't
eat what you have not got, maybe
we will katch a mushrat some time
and try it, and the colored people eat
possums and coons and the Indiens
eat dogs and horses, and there Is a
lot of good things we can eat after wo
have et a few and gotten used to it,
I guess a buntch of fellas would not
starve If they was to run away from
home, but we will stick to potatoes
and sutch things till we get used to
horses and dogs and mushrats and
things and even if we do eat a few
dogs some of these days I bet no one
will get a chance at Jubilee. If it
was summer when 1 got out of school
I would have to be going to the pas-
ture for our dain old cow I wish some
one would eat her if we had her made
up into stakes cut thin I would like
to eat her myself, I guess milking her
all the time makes my hands strong
and makes me a good fighter but It
ain't much fun.
When I had gone home and milked
me and Jubilee went to bed, the
breakwater was about the same and
nobuddy had caught any fish but I
didn't think they had, fish would be
foolish to live in that cold water.
Don't believe everything a man says.
For instance, if when a man tells you
that he admires your nerve, he doesn't
mean It that way at all.
Once in a while you will meet a
man who is satisfied if his watch is
within a half hour of the correct time.
But if the average man is In a crowd
of fifty, and the other forty-nine
watches say 6 o'clock, and his watch
sayg five minutes after 6, he'll bet
his eyes against an old pair of socks
that the other forty-nine watches are
five minutes slow.
The Springfield, (Maes.), Chamber
of Commerce is sponsor for a plan to
bring over 100 French girls to study
American business methods at the
Springfield high school of commerce.
BRINGING UP FATHER
By GEORGE McMANUS
j
ma40e oar lin
WOULD ^fOO MIND
IF I WENT TO A
. temperance
h meet in
,H%_, ^qnic,HT-
vvir t TOnvp
lecture an' meet nf at
OlNT-t MOORED
^ NICHT- r*
BT 40LLV-
THWS *
<000 IDEA
1-bN'T THAT
CRAND
THERE'LL OE tOME
great tipeeche'b
AN' THE bEVT
PEOPLE IN TOWN
WILLfcE THERE
i'm 40inc
WITH tOU-
certainl^
not-i'm
clad that
too want
toco- y
Mlllll
Mum
rV.baaaaa&
iiinaaai
Up"
7
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Williams, E. K. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 253, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 30, 1918, newspaper, July 30, 1918; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth470316/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.