Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 147, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 11, 1916 Page: 4 of 10
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I
PAGE FOUR
TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM, TEMPLE, TEXAS, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 11,1916.
temple daily telegram!;:
Member at the ASSOCIATED PKE88 and ol ;
Th. AMERtCAM PKE8S ASSOCIATION. 1
MILT TELEGRAM.. ®at«bll»li«a 1M7
UA1L.T TRIBUNE E#t»bltahe<l 1114
(CMuelidatad January. >>10.)
VabliahrA «**ry a>orut*« by th* T*l««ram
Vnbllablac Co. (Inc.) B. K. WlUlama
Editor Had llaeastr.
FOREIGS BErRBSENTATlVES.
CHICAGO—C. J. Anderson 8ptclal Atenvjr,
MBPQoatte Building.
|nw YORK—Ralph R. Mulligan, 18 P»rk
OKIcT »l Publication. 110 ana HI
Avenue A, Temple, Texas.
Vut
THE TEXAS PRESS
By Andrew McBeatH.
Pig Wells, April 8, 1916.
Friend Mc:—I returned here last
night from Carrizo Springs, in the
Ford with Old Timer and two onion
buyers from Big Wells. I remarked
to Old Timer as we started that while
I wanted no more rattlesnake ex-
perience, I hoped something exciting
would happen on the trip over, as
otherwise 1 would have no material
for a ' story" to relate to my friend
McBeath, up at Temple.
We breezed i long down the road
for four or
BITS OF BYPLAY
By LuKe McLuke.
(Copyright. 1916, by Cincinnati En'iulrer.)
Hull!
Of course he is an ornery pup,
And this is why I scold him:
He likes to hold a Rood man up,
But he will not uphold him.
tl
He Knew.
"Why is our form of government
the most desirable in the world?"
asked the Teacher.
"Because it furnishes the most
B K. WILLIAMS Managing Editor
4k.,V. WILLIAMS ....News Ed tor
OKAS. W. INGRAM A««>c ate Editor
ic C.OOCH ••••.. .Society Editor
ANDREW McBEATH Exch\ng« Editor
ADA LASATEHf. .^"??..^r.Bflton Reporter J happened except that Old Timer |dady was holding one.
Ichased several jackrabbits, and rani
five miles and nothing' political jobs," replied the boy whose
I'-aSSSHST'li! "rSST1 ! How It Happened
t LIVING" CLUB
t
Constitution and By-lJHn
K with pleaaure yuu ara viewing ui work
a roau la doing,
U yon Ilk* him or yon lore blm. tell
blm now;
Don't withhold your approbation till tba
pnrnon makes oration
As he lies with ano-y lilies o'er his brow;
For, no matter how you ehout It, h« won't
really care about It:
Be won't know how many tear-4Uops
you ha*e ehed;
It you think some pralee le due him, »ori
the tiwie to allp It to blm.
for he can not read hte tombitona when
he's dead I
—Masonic Obeere^r. Minneapolis.
TELEPHONES.
No. Ml
No. 1»»
lover two or three cotton tails. ^ on j
j see they would run out in the road . T.lk<1 this a<jvic<., you'll find it's true,
from the brush which lines it on both, n may keep you jn'clover;
sides-, become blinded by the head- pon-t overdo a thing or you
lights and Old Timer would "let her w'ill have to do it over.
out,'' and before he knew what was
happening, it was good night Mr.
Bunny.
Finally we spied what we thought
was a bunny, and Old Timer made for
him. When we were right on top of
it and it was too late to turn aside,
the realization struck us all at once
that it was not a rabbit we were deal-
ing with this time, No, it was, we
were sure, one of those little nocturnal
prowlers with a bushy tail and a white
streak down the hack, avoided by all
men. Old Timer ducked his head and
hollered "There's jour dam 'story.' "
We felt the wheels pass over some-
thing soft, and expected the next min-
ute to be forcefully reminded of hav-
ing wrecked a glue factory. But as
no such condition obtained. Old Timer
turned the Ford around and we re-
turned to investigate. And do you
know it was a little old possum. Old
Timer kept him blindeJ with the
headlights while one of the onion
kings captured him by the tail. We
put him in the box under the rear
seat, and when we got to Big Wells
we robbed a hennery of a small cage,
named the possum "Mack," and this
is to inform you that your namesake
is doing fine
Cordially yours.
POKElt PETE.
Advice.
K SrBSCRIl'TlON PRICE.
«• Temple end Belton.
Delivered hy Carriers, Imtde City
Pally and Sunday, per
Dally and Sunday, per year
Dally and Sunday, by mall..
.Daily and Sur.:'.ay. t>y mall. 3 months
(Dally and Sunday, by mall.
Price on street*, on trains and at neas-
atands, pej crpy
LI mlts
e.l
* 00
8 00
1 00
6 months. . 1.76
a-
.•6
The Telcginm Is a
member of the
AUDIT
R1KKAV OP
CIRCULATIONS
Oucti!
"It says here that a New York
scientist is in Africa compiling a dic-
tionary of the monkey language," said
the Old Fogy.
"But why didn't he stay at home
and do it?" asked the Grouch.
A fact, unadorned,
«ral interest.
js of little gen-
Lightnins may not strike twice in
the same place but flies do.
Socialism stands for the common
ownership of common things.
idea
The Temple Tree Club has the right
man is working on the job.
Even those who are n
believe that the world is
pace that kills.
,t religious
^..ing at a
the
Paste This in Your Hat.
Some men are always being stung,
And to hard luck are prone;
But he who learns to hold his tongue
Will always hold his own.
"But I must tell about my
trymen anci women and what they
have" been doing in their generosity.
I must pay a tribute to it.
"It has been unparalleled in his-
tory. Think of the millions which
have poured in a steady stream across
the sea, contributed to from every
crossroads in the United States! Think
of Mr. Rockefeller's feeding of the
Belgians! Think of the work of Mr.
Carnegie!
"What would this warring hemis-
phere have done, what would it have
come to. how would it have suffered,
if America had not remained jit
peace and able to yield to its big-
By Charles W. Ingram.
Q. What is the origin of "that's the
ticket," meaning all right?—Questioner.
A. It is derived from the French "eti-
quette "—that which Is coed form. Strange-
ly enough, the word etiquette Is in Itself
derived from ticket. The rulea and regu-
lations for ladies and gentlemen at coartI
were written or printed on pieces of cards'
called tickets tor etiquette In French), and i
from this came the word etiquette, meaning
proper conduct for all persons.
"J By Andrew McBeath [
Q. When a person subscribe* for a per-
iodica) for a stated length of time and
upon the expiration of the time the «\ib-
seriber rontinueH to receive the publication,
can he be compelled to pay fcr the paper?
coun- j —Interested.
A. The post office requires subscript ions
to be paid in advance. Since this order was
tasued it Is generally understood that there
can be no recovery fur sending a pr.per or
periodical in violation of it.
Q. How Is the name
nounced ?—Republican.
Tunrulty pro-
A. Tum-ulty, accenting the first syllable.
Q. Are United States postal deposits sub-
ject to state, county and city taxes? (2).
Can they be attached for debts of any char-
acter In any of the states?—Financier.
A. There is no difference between postal
savings accounts and any other savings.
other than the guaranty of safety given by i spread by mosquitoes. We doil't f?et
the government. They are taxable lust ' geared now about yellow fever, do
the same as any other savings and a |»er- J „ , __ . ,
son owing a debt and having; property be- I• That is because the doctors
yonil the amount <>f exemption can he re- ] killed Out the yellow fever by killing
Yesterday I had a visit or who says
that he always reads the fly story
and he realizes more than ever that
the fly is a nuisance. We dlscuaaed
the subject and agreed that since
the fly and the mosquito had been
routed in other places, such as the
I'inama Canal and Havana, not to
mention New Orleans, It seems rea-
sonable to suppose that it can be
routed from Temple. We can remem-
ber the time when Texas people
were frightened at the possibility
of the yellow fever invading this
country. A quarantine was put on
and guards would get out on the
railroad track to keep people from
slipping into town from some infest-
ed district. The mails came in with
little pinholes punched in It to fa-
cilitate disinfection. And the whole
country was aroused over the dan-
ger. That was before one of those
skinny doctors discovered and proved
that the yellow fever germs were
Tin* Vint' Fool.
"There is something lacking in this
country today," observed the Sage.
"Yes." agreed the Fool. "What it
needs is a Fool Killer who will stay
on the job."
Sure!
Appearances will fool, I ween.
Let caution be your motto:
A man can smell of gasoline
And yet not own an at'to.
Slow Rut Sure.
Dear Luke: When in need of as-
jsistunce call on A. Crabb. our effi-
cient policeman.—Marion, Ohio.
Ik nrted impulses toward aiding those
who need, and comforting those who th' , n
j paralleled nec- I saving*. Perhaps if we couldn t stop dis-
ease by killing out the fly we could
Will these fellows being wrote up in Ket rid 0f an infernal nuisance that
Publicity received free from
newspapers is w hat makes baseball the
great American game.
No principle can lie made a living
issue except through the personality
of those who uphold it.
A college education is valuable to
the man who expects to do some-
thing more than earn a living.
Probably later on when the flies be-
come a little more numerous Andrew Mr-
Heath of the Temple Telegram will be
made cap'n of the Fly Swatters of his
home town. From what they spy, he must
1-e a finished fly swatter.— LorenA Register.
suffer? Think of the uparalleled
essity for more help from America!
"I sent one paragraph to the
American newspapers—just one para-
graph. In effect it asked every
I American woman to knit one pair of
j socks to comfort, warworn, some-
[ times freezing soldiers.
I "What was the response? Bid as
many as a thousand of my eountry-
' women do as I requested? As many
'as a thousand: Listen! One hun-
dred and twenty thousand pairs of
socks were sent to me from the
United States, together with thou-
sands of other things—shirts and un-
dergarments. all of the best and
, warmest sort*, mufflers—every kind j
: of needed comfort. j
i "I have been tremulous with pride ; dark
! about my countrymen and women
ever since. Just those few words
sent in appeal and a response like
Aw, Gwan! that! T always have been proud of
Aggie is a classy girl. my stupendous country, but never be-
She always looks real swell; ! fore have I had such reason to be
She wears rings upon her fingers, for I )lrml,i ,,f jt.-—Lady Paget. English-
She wants to be a belle. American, in San Antonio Express
— B. T. Longfellow.
Q-
the matrimonial Y. M. li. L. column re-
ceive a proposal from a giggly little girl
with your H. S. V. P. eyes?—One of Them.
A. Can't tell, but unless your giggles
are gnrgly enough to smooth out the grat-
ing of your grammar, you had *l«etter
not try any of the high school teachers.
RIPPLING RHYMES 1
By Wait Maaon.
WWWW W
will come and alt on the ear of a
total stranger and do It with such
an air of familiarity that It la a
•ham* and disgrace upon the person
who ia extending the hospitality.
This man who visited me suggested
that I would have to adopt the tact-
ics of the man who found a boy In
his apple tree. I believe that story
is told in Webster's Blue" Back
Speller. Can anyone send me a copy
of It so that X can tell what the man
told me ?
FLOOD IN IOWA.
Upper Ke#oh<» of Mfatetsslppi River
Mill Rising.
Dubuque, Iowa, April 10.—The
Mississippi river today is sixteen feet
above the low water stage, with In-
dications that It will rise two feet
more before Wednesday morning.
Many thousand of acres of farm land
are under water.
lacrosse, Wis., April 10.—The Mis-
sissippi river stood at 13.1 feet above
low water mark. The weather bu-
reau predicted it would go no higher.
The water from the north, however,
will keep the river here above the
flood stage for the entire week.
grieves a successful man because
understand the working of
st son's wireless telegraph.
It
he cannot
his younge
Many a man lost his garden from
frost "when he could have saved it
hy burning baled hay to the wind-
ward.
The folks all say that the corn
sprouted from selected seed with-
stood the frost better than that from
untested seed.
A device has been put into use
•which increases the value of the gas-
oline when used in an internal com-
husion engine.
School children should be taught
to write local history, to describe
events. And this to cause them to de-
pend upv'i observation rather than
Imagination.
If you would conform to the law
that is shaping our destinies fit
yourself for co-operating with your
fellows. This is the power that will
make us great.
The people will have confidence
in the umpire who has confidence in
himself—that is. if he has good .judg-
ment. He shouldn't be an umpire if
he is not gifted with good judgment.
I am just the bugle that is sounded
to warn the people of invasion. 1
make the noise. That is all that I do.
If the people can get along harmoni-
ously with the flies it is all right with
me. 1 won't blame them so much.
They have been raised up on flies and
it is hard for them to go back on
their raising. 1 am depending upon
the newspaper men everywhere to
help me in the fight against the fly.
1 don't want any office. Intend go-
ing on the bum just as soon as I get j (Owenton (Ky.l News-Herald.)
so 1 can live by my wits. Just ant j|1(, |a)ties things will be exhib- j him.
enemy of the fly, hating them and | Ued in owenton tomorrow and Satur-
fighting them and will continue s<i 1 tjay
to do for some time. I
T- That So!
Prat- Luke: A man tried to tell
me that you came from Boston, but I
1 informed him that I knew better and
Itha' you were from Mis ouri.—Day-
! ion.
Heir's a Fresh <«uy.
Guy Kister, of Shreve. Ohio, wants
to meet some of the Club Corn Feds.
What's tlie Xcxt Train To Owenton?
The Yellow Jycaf.
My step is feeble and slow, that
was once so bold; my hair, once
is like the snow, and my feet
] are cold; my legs are thin, my waist ,
is fat, 1 have an ache in every slat, I
II cannot run or skin the cat, I am
waxing old. I look around with
gloomy eyes, at the growing lads; |
' 1 like to sit and moralize, with the '
j ancient dads, and tell how boys of
j other days were better than the mod-|
i ^ —. jern jays, of higher aims and nobler
i ways, shunning foolish fads. "With
The Hern Id is in receipt of a sack 1 such a bunch of skates on decks,"
cotton seed sent us by Congress- sadly 1 lament, "this poor old world
niiii. Cyclone Davis from Uncle Sam's 1 will go to wreck, I will stake a cent;"
store (if free seeds. We can't plant the gray beards all agree I'm right;
it, but it calls to our mind things we and say the country's in a plight,
have heard said about the congress-! with all these giddy youths in sight,
Health is Weauh
hy JoKi\ B. H\iber. A.M.M. D.
Vhecrfuhu'it i* the bett promoter of health.—Auuiso.n.
Wage Earners' Sickness Insurance.
0
lional seed distribution business being ion amusements bent. There is, alas,
ivote raisers. If Cyclone sent this! no surer sign, that I'm out of date,
seed here for that purpose, he has ! than arc these mournful words of
made a mistake, for we ain't going, mine, which 1 her^ relate; for when
to vote for him since he made that a rain talks bunk at last, compares
bad break in congress, and are not j the present with the past, and finds
]going to ask anybody else to vote for degeneration vast, he should pull his
-Toaknm Herald.
I Groat Idea.
McBeath in the Temple Telegram gay* j Dear Luke: WThy npt put Pfelen
that "he who entertains a fly is ncceMwry Hunt, of Louisville, Kv„ in charge
after the fact to murder committed by the, ,
fly." True He who suffer* a fly to live j of the Lost and Found department in
is as guilty as he who. under the Mosaic | the Club? Then in case a member
law suffered a witch to live. Hut is not j anything, you can tell him to go
; freight.
• •▼▼▼▼ WWWWWWW^WWVWWWWWWWW^
tTELEGRAM
t BOOMERANGS t\:
FARMERS' FORUM
t
ME tblrty-fiv* million of our people are wage-earners. There la
au average of nine days per worker loit on account of sickness. Es-
timating the daily wage at $2, and the daily cost of doctoring at $1,
the annual loss from such Illness would be 1945,000,000, about
the Federal Government's annual expenditure. Nor in this monetary esti-
mate is account taken, except by way of connotation, of the human suffer-
ing, the anxieties of those nursing the bread-winner and of those normally
dependent on blm; nor of the losses due to death and to deficiency Increase.
The causes of sickness. In the worker are many. There Is the vicious circle
constructed of the poverty whicb Induces disease and of the disease which
induces poverty. Ignorance of hygiene and sanitation is responsible for
much sickness among workmen. For some Illnesses the "dangerous trades"
are responsible, especially where much fume and dust have to be encoun-
tered. For other cases the workers alone are responsible. And there are
also community conditions for which the public Is responsible. Dr. B. S.
Warner calculates In the Journal of the American Medical Association the
ordinary cost and maintenance of a wage earner's family; and conclude*
tbat the larger part of the wage-earners are unable to maintain healthful
home conditions. It would seem then tbat tbe living wage does not gen-
erally obtain. It has been held that the majority of workmen have not
a single week's wages ahead.
Such considerations led to the introduction, January 24 last, Into the
New York Slate Legislature, by Senator Ogden L. Mills, of a compulsory
health Insurance bill, the passage of which would mean the establishment
within the United Statee of the compulsory health Insurance of Great.,
4 > Britain which is akin to the sickness insurance of Germany. By the
•} terms of Mr. Mills' bill every wage-earner whose income does not exceed
♦' X X
he who provides a place for the lady fly
to lay her eggs even more guilty?—The
Parson in Brownwood bulletin.
Guilty as hell; that Ts, if he knows
and realizes the truth and its terri-
ble consequences. Those who give
help and aid to the fly in any way are
guilty of whatever deaths come from
the acts of the fly. guilty in the meas-
ure and to the extent to which they
give help and aid. If a little child
dies in Hrovvnweocl from the effects)
of contact with a typhoid fly those!
people of Brown wood who have ex-1
tended hospitality to the fly are guilty
of that murder in the degree to which j
they have helped the fly to live. The
same is true in Temple and every-
where. Pretty serious state of affairs,
is it not
1
I
Control Sweet Potato Hots.
The control of disease in the field
Wilyl Robb. the Hellena Station
with fuel this summer.
IU\er or Rye?
In the Questions and Answers col- j
Parson and in the storage bins will enable j
—as to 1 sweet potato growers to extend the,
"Com- j marketing season and to dispose of
at |
to Helen Hunt for it. I'. S. W.
_ i umn of the same paper the
We'll Take a Chance. | found this: "Opinions differ
(Kv.) coal dealer, will supply the Club [ whether the 'rye in the song,
ing Through the Rye," is a vegeta- j a greater portion of their
and there are argu-I higher prices. At present many
crop
$100 would, on becoming 111, be entitled to the services of a physician,
attendance, medicines, surgical appliances, hospital benefits; and for six
months, should his disability continue, he would receive a weekly allow-
ance for himself and his family—Including, If need be, death and fnneral
benefits. Should this plan become obligatory in New York U is considered
that Massachusetts will institute a like one. It Is hoped indeed by ita Intro-
ducers that this plan will eventually be incorporated with the statutes of
every State in the Union. One-fifth of tbe expenses of maintaining this
Ho Should.
Dear I.uke: Shouldn't Herman
been the frist member of the Club?
hie or a river—and there are argu- | nigner prices prcsrni nmny; compulsory sickness insurance Is to be borne by the State, which would
j ments on both sides. There is a_ river, groweis. «M>e^ v ^L^Tt 'die^r' supervise its administration; the remaining four-fifths would be shared
Rve in Kntrland. The souk jh at-' sen tneir entire crop at aipripnK . ..... « . , , . , , ... ,
Itributed to Burns" It is the first! time when prices are low, while those ! equa.ly by the employer and his employee. Such health Insurance exceeds
the Parson has heard the tpies- j who store their potatoes lose heavily! the Workman's Compensation act. which provide* for employees Injured In
One of the particular features that
add to the worth of the pub'icj
echool athletic contests is that the
student must make the required
grade in regular studies in order to
(be accepted in the games.
The poor man should be consoled
|,y the fact that the man who gets a
big salary must live according to the
salary or lose the job. Salaries are
based largely upon the expenses at-
tached to the position.
Queer how gkiom and despondency make
for filth arid how hope ami prosperity set
the elean-up-pftint-up germ to work. Sure-
ly Han Angelo ought to he the cleanest town
1 in Texap and it will he in a couple of
weeks.—San Angelo Standard.
Furst-
— V.
John I
Ohio.
of Fond du I.ac., have
Is XanicK.
. Awfuldish lives at Dayton,
time
Our Daily Spcoinl.
A Man Never Hits the Mark When .
He Shoots Off His Mouth.
I.ukc MHUifcc Says
Kvery rose has its thorn. Summer j
brings balmy
weather, but it
The cost of the movement will be
brings the Sport Shirt.
It has just about gotton so that a j
| tlon raised, and he would be glad i
j to see the arguments that are put!
forward to establish that two people (
are likely to meet and kiss as they
(come through a river. If the argu- j
'ments are as sound as the informa- j
11ion that there is a river Rye in •
j Kngland, they do not amount to j
'much There Is a town Rye on the leases—stem r(y, black rot, loot rot,
(mouth of the river Rother, but there j scurf and root
lis no such river. Besides what did j and
J Bobby: Burns want making two peo- j given.
pie meet in the midst of
also! river?—The Parson
; Bulletin.
from the various storage rots. i the "hazardous" occupations.
Farmers' Bulletin No. 714, a new i
publication of the I'nited States de-' HRADACHK OR NERVE FATIGUE,
partment of agriculture, offers sug- |
gestions for the Improvement of this i
situation by protecting the stock:
from disease, both in the field and ;
in the storage bin. Five field dis- i
-are described
T. It. M. ivrlles: I have a feeling
of pressure or weight at the back of
my head and neck; 11 Is this rather
than a real pain. It comes on when
I am very tired, as indeed I often am.
It is relieved somewhat when I lie
What may be the cause of
in
This is the headache of
of brain fag, of
to the property. It is a good invest- I Cheese Shrit waists are getting an air-
intnt from a monetary standpoint.
The negative won in the interscho-
lastic debate on the question of plac- ^
ing a constitutional tax of one mill on |
nrnrwrtv for the support of Texas i"
Woman suffrage doesn't «*em to he mak-
ing much progress in Texas, or for that
miter unywhere else. Probably the warn
* * And rumors of wars have had n deleterious ,
property for the support of lexas I effect cu thia fad and fancy. Toakum |way
institutions of higher education, but j Herald.
It wasn't a victory against the impo-
sition of such a tax. The negative I
ing.
One of the most narrow-minded
women we ever knew was built so
that she had to turn sideways when
she wanted to pass through a door-
debaters argued that the tax
be imposed by statute.
«bould
No vegetable substance lighter than
the dried pith of the sunflower stalk.
People who have wondered as to the
probable value of sunflowers should
know that they could carry a life-
saver of this substance that would
keep them afloat in water and still
be so light that they would not notice
the weight. Everything is good for
eomething.
mother is regarded as old-fashioned j RIVERS AND HARBORS HI . j.
added to the v alue of the property, if j if she doesn't have to warm up aj
everybody co-operates in the move- three-months-old baby's supper on the j Measure Is E*pe«te«l to Come to \ote
mcnt. An example of like importance j gas range. j In House Today.
is to be found in an effort that is to) If you are wearing it, it is an Im-i
be made to stamp out malaria in eastjperial. But if the other fellow is! 'Washington. April 10.—The long
Texas. The campaign will cost muchlwearing it. it is a Goatee. Idebate in the house over the annual
money but it will add millions of value j Spring sure is here. The Swiss I rivers and harbors appropriation bill
virtually was completed today and
house leaders expect the measure to
pass tomorrow.
All the items have been approved
practically as franked in committee
and only some minor points involving
methods of survey and contract details
remain to be threshed out.
Moijt of today was occupied with
discussion of the Mississippi river ap-
propriations which amount to $8,-
000,000 and those for the Missouri ag-
gregating $1,750,000.
Various unsuccessful efforts were
made to cut down the totals, repub-
licans charging the majority with
"pork barrel" methouls and Chair-
man Spark man of the river and har-
bor committee defending the measure.
The bill carries a total of about $40,-
000,600.
and root rot
directions for their control1 down
They are caused by fungi this?
an English 1 which invade the plants and their J Answer
Brown wood ! roots, and infest not only the plants, i nervous exhaustion,
I but the soil itself, and may be car- , anemia (weak blood), with It go pal-
— " 1 ried to new areas and plants bv in- ■ face and lips, shortness of
sects, farm animals, inrected Imple- i breath, weakness and heart pal pita-
ments, drainage water, wind, or dis- j tlon. Rest, sleep, change of scene,
cased roots or tubers. The fungi are outdoor life, nourishing food and Iron
also often spread in manure used as ! for medicine are Indicated.
fertilizer. The bulletin can be ob- j OZOENA.
tained on application to the I'nited
States department
Washington, D. C.
of agriculture,
is almost a constant discharge from
my head to my throat. I often feel
sick and vomit, then 1 feel better; my
breath Is offensive. I will be truly
grateful If you will tell me what will
help this.
Answer: Oxoena, a very persistent
and disagreeable form of catarrh,
seems to be your trouble. It is posi-
tively necessary In such cases for a
competent physician to make local ap-
plications of various medicines. In-
ternal remedies and hygienic living
will help; but the cure will not be ac-
complished by these latter mean*
alone.
SCSPECT ARRESTED.
The ^var in Europe has temporarily |
cheated women of their rights in Kng-1
land but that is no reason why it
should stop the course of justice in
this country. After the war is ended
Kngland will find that the women
have taken such large part in the in-
dustrial affairs of that country that |
they must be called to the common j
counsel in the regulation of Indus- t
trial affairs. As the world grows old- I
er women are granted iheir rights. It j
is only in savage countries that men
are considered superior to women.
At the spelling contest In Temple
a young man and a young woman ;
won the honors and will represent j
Bell county in the state contests.
They were left standing alone on the I
stage for the crowd to admire, while j
the pronounccr stated: "Now we ,
have arranged to spell one of them
down for ten dollars in gold." The |
young man lost out on "enfranchise- j
ment" and the young woman got the |
honor and the gold. Votes for wom-
en.
If the people of Texas would demand tiiftt
I the women of the *tate were given a fair
; deal hy the legislature, there would soon
; he no more talk of dumping the Indies Into
j the political slop-bucket. Tliere Is no more
reason why women should he made to
dabble in politics than there in-to demand
that they heave coal or dig ditches.—
Corficana News.
What has become of the old-fash-
ioned woman who used to blow her
nose in her gingham apron?
Once Upon a Time there was a girl
who was so Modest that she was
ashamed to undress in front of a
Booking Glass. All All Fariy Tales
begin with Once-upon-a-time.
If most men would take as much
interest in their Families as they do
in their Political Parties there
wouldn't be so many divorces.
A Corn Fed can go without cor-
sets and look Comfy. But when a
fat woman tries it she merely suc-
ceeds in looking Sloppy.
Six months before they are tnar-
j ried you couldn't get a straw in be-
tween them when they are walking
jon the street. But six months after
I they are married you could drive
Is moving van In between them when
they are walking on the street.
Man Held For Murder Htid Robbery
(VaimilWil at Si. I»uK
I^ist year the United States pro-
duced &G0.H00 tons of ginc.
St. I A) u is, Mo., April 10.—The Si.
T.ouis police were informed by tele-
graph today that Ix>uis Sonnenschein
is under arrest in New York on the
charge of having been implicated in ]
the theft of $10,000 worth of bonds
from Henry Jost, a cobler, last Oc-
tober.
Jost disappeared soon after the
theft and on Jan. 24. it was learned
that he had been found dead at Jef-
ferson Barracks south of here and
buried without an attempt at identifi-
cation.
The bonds were located in the pos-
session of a Chicago brokerage firm
and it was stated that as they had
been acquired by Innocent purchasers
suit would be necessary to recover
them.
R. H. writes: I have been troubled
for a long time with catarrh. There
Thia column it devoted to diteote prevention; to physical and mental
hygiene; to domeitic, induitriol and public sanitation; to the promotion of
health efficiency and long life. The latest developments in medical scunce
will be presented. Questions of general interest trill be answered here, space
permitting;—others by mail if stamped return envelope is enclosed. Requests
for persvnal diagnosis or treatment cannot, however, be considered in any way.
GET IT FIRST—NOT LAST
V. S. AVIATION INSTRUCTION.
Buenos Aires Is the capital of the
Argentine Republic. It is the fourth
city in sine on the American con-
tinents. A meeting Is now being
held there by representatives from
eighteen republics. Tbe object of the
meeting is to carry out plans for a
confederation of the Commercial in-
terests of North. South and Central
America. William G. McAdoo is at
the head of the United States section
of the conference, which Is composed
ef some of the strongest men of this
Country. This Is big news that Is not
attracting much attention In Texas.
Suppose you undertake td have the
legislature give the women a fair deal
and do your little bit at staving off
the necessity of granting them equal
suffrage along with the men.
When a cold grips your system it is Cltango Made In Personnel of Army
Some men seem to i
magine that convincing proof that your condition is
Flying S»J»oobi.
Since thp Civic league's reprcsentntive
went to DhIIhs on .Inn. 1? to tell how the
"Vacant Lot Problem" could lie nolved ami
some of the ways Mineral Wells had solved
It 127 letters hove heen received from every-
where. ask I tiff for help, su Kfrest Ions. dats.
and we have answered theni all at night and
helped all In our jKiwer for the "key nole
of tlie Texas Federation of Women's Clubs
Is service." Mrs. l. Young in Mlnernl
| Wells Index.
We print this paragraph, from a
long report made by Mrs. Yoting, in
the hope that it will cause some more
letters to be ",-itten to her for her to
answer at night. Enclose postage for
reply.
they were given Heads so they could
have something to Butt In with.
And what has become of the old
tad who took snuff and blew his
nose on a big red bandanna?
There are a whole lot of ways to
acquire a Black Eve. But you ca ivt! enjngCathartics andstimulatingsyrups
make a man believe that you 11 are often depressing and dangerous.
get yours Ihe way he thinks you did. j ' ° , , "
Most of our women folks are so; 1 he one best treatment for any cold
busy rocking the Auto that they —the one so often relied on when others
haven't time to rock the Cradle. i fail,isthe powerful blood-nourishment
There was a time when a Fool was . jn J-jnillsion, which feeds the
anyih iv. sources of bodily strength tosup-
press the present cold and generate
! strength to thwart further sickness.
The leading steel companies have j Get Sco.tt's first, not last—and insist
in hand contracts which w ill enable qh orenuine—always frc.from al-
them to run to capacity In the more , ® . . . i„__
Important product* for ihe full year cohol and injurious drop.
of 1 y 1«. J fccoHA Buwne. llloo«o»rtrf| N. J.
in v...
But nowadays a Fool is usually a man j
who Knows It All.
weakened - remember that. It is risky; ^ Ca) ^prJ| 10_Captain
indeed to simply trust yourstrength to , Frank j { ),m pioneer army aviator
throw it off, because neglected colds I and winner of the James Gordon Ben-
have brought more serious sickness nett aeronautical trophy for balloons
than any other one thing, while weak- 'he International eompetltion ln
' Paris in 1906, reported today to Co!.
Wm. M. Glassford, commandant of
the signal corps aviation school here.
During tb% last year, he has been sta-
tioned with the Sixth cavalry on the
Mexican border.
It is understood Captain Uhm will
be retained at the North Island school
as instructor, taking the place of
Lieut. Thomas de W. Milling, who has
been appointed aeronautical adviser to
Lieut. Col. Geo. S. Sljuier. Colonel
Squier Is en route from Ixindon to
San Diego to become adminHtratlve
head of the army aviaUon service. He
Is «x beet (Ml Ueiy about Hay !•.
. Vk i,Kl; V i
The Union Stamp
Is the Peaceful, Uplifting, Educa-
tional, Economic Emblem of the
Organized Shoe Workers.
333T&5
WORKERS UNION
It aims to secure bigger, better and happier working
and living conditions for Union Shoe Workers by Pro-
gressive means; never by destructive measures.
BUY UNION STAMP SHOES
Boot and Shoe Workers'
Union
246 Summer Street, Boston, Mass.
Write for list of union shoe factories.
Affiliated with American Federation of Labor.
liiNir *" j"""'
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Williams, E. K. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 147, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 11, 1916, newspaper, April 11, 1916; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth470856/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.