The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 13, 1912 Page: 5 of 8
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sattkday MORXWG THE TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM. JASl*K* 13
I
CENTRAL TRADES
AND LABOR COUNCIL
Rfotftniitiktii of lxx-al « ouiuil Ef-
fected by IHUrirt OrKtuUrr
J. A- McCaUuuul.
Th« local Central Trades and Labor
Council was -^organized thin week by
IHstrtot Organiser i. A. MeCalaion',
la lb* office of Judge O. W. Word,
with delegate of all affiliated local
union* p'resc.t. The following offi-
cers war* elected and installed:
President, J. K. Kersey of the electri-
cal union; vice president, Charles
Stevens of the carpenters' union;
corresponding secretary, J. A. ilc-
Calmont of the barbers' union
Much enthusiasm was shown and a
great deal it work was planned for
the future.
The offlSers state thpt the object
of the organisation is to settle by ar-
bitration differences between employ-
ers'and employes, and also ^to more
solidly organise Temple and the neur-
by towns and to further the demand
for the union label and the union-
made goods. Kaeh delegate pi e<Ue J
the support of his local union in this
effort to create the proper ► plrit u!
unionism.
The locals affiliated are the Klee-
trlcal Work«us, Barbers. Carpenters
and Joiners and Musicians unions.
How's This?
We offer one hundred dollar* re
w ard for any case of Catarrh that < 4n
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure-
F. J. CHENEY « CO..
Toledo, Ohio.
We, the undersigned, have known
F. J Cheney for the last IS years, and
believe him perfectly honest In all
business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligations made
by his firm,
( Walding, Ktnnan A Marvin,
Wholesale Druggist*. Toledo, O.
Hall'a Catarrh Cure is taken Inter-
nally, acting directly upon *h« bloo-J
and mucous surfaces of the system
Testimonials sent free Price 75 cents
per bottle. Sold by all druggists
Take Hall's Family Pills for con-
stipation.
First Pr.-bbyterlan Church.
Acting upon the advice of both the
City and county health officers, there
wiU be no services held In this church
tomorrow.
J A3. E. QUEEN, Pastor.
-—— • m
A Hero lu a lighthouse.
For year* J. H. Donahue, So. Haven.
Mich., a civil war captain, as a light-
house keep;^'averted awful wrecks,
but a queer fact Is, he might have
been a wreck, himself, if Electric Bit-
ters had not prevented. "They cured
me of kidney trouble arid chills," he
writes, "after 1 had taken other so-
called cures for years, without benefit
and they also Improved my sight
Now, at seventy, 1 am feeling fine."
For dyspepsia, Indigestion, all stom-
ach. liver and kidney trouble*, they're
without equal. Try them. Only 50
cents at all dealers.
Representing tlx) Santa Fe.
(Bruwnwood Bulletin.)
H. T. Will ims of Temple is In the
rlty today in the interest of the San-
ta Fe. He says the Texas Land Show
at Houston this month should be
p-^>gely attended, because It promises
to be of great benefit to th« state.
te dates for this show are January
to 29. Mr. Williams la trying to
work up an Interest In the west. Ho
will go to Sat Angelo today and from
p.:
|<-
W;
Bp
4©
12
Miss
Minerva
and
William
Green
Hill
****•' >
Are Coming ¥
to Town •
You will meet
them in these
columns in a
few days and
thereafter for a
deliciously
funny period.
4 4
Yon will laogb
fill yon cry when
yon read "Miss
Minerva and
William Green
Hill**
•y *
frances boyd calhoun
Our New Serial
INCIDENTALLY—A De-
lighthall Little Love Story
PRINCIPALLY — Whole-
•mm Perennial flnnor
DISINFECTION
In view of the very general uneasiness
prevailing in the public mind over the
meningitis situation, the jCity National
Bank of Temple has deemed it the part of
wisdom to make use of every precaution
to allay apprehension of infection on or
through its premises. \ \ \_ Acting on
the suggestion of a number of prominent
physicians of the city, they have adopted
the most approved methods of disinfec-
tion, and every day the entire banking
floor, with all furniture and fixtures
thereon, are treated with the most pow-
erful and effective disinfectants known
to medical science. \ *. \ Not only the
quarters of the bank are thus treated,
but the corridors and toilets of the upper
floors of the building are similarly sub-
jected. \ \ The bank invites its
friends and the general public to call at
its offices as usual, with the assurance
that no effort has been spared to prevent
contraction of any infection whatever.
there goes on to Sterling City. He
will probably .- top off a day on his re-
turn trip, lie say» the Santa Fe pas-
senger traffic has been unusually
good during the holidays and the first
few days of :he new year.
NOTICE—SHERIFF'S SALE.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
County .'f Bell.
By virtue of an order of sale, is-
sued out of the honorable district
court of Bell county, on the 8th day
of January. A. D. 1912, by the clerk
thereof, in the case of George J. Hes-
seleia versus A G. Watson et al., No.
8247, and to me, as sheriff, directed
and delivered, 1 wtll proceed to sell
for cash, withla the hours prescribed
by law for sheriffs sales, on the first
Tuesday In February A. D. 1912, It
being the sixth day of said month,
before the court house door of said
Bell county, in the state of Texas, the
following described property, to-wit:
A certain lot or parcel of land .n
Kllleen, Bell county, Texas, being all
of block 68 In the town of Kllleen.
being the same block of land sold and
conveyed to the plaintiff, George J.
Hesselein, by Frederick J. Miller by
deed dated October 22nd, 1894, re-
corded In Volume 101, pages 63 and
54, of the deed records of said Bell
county, Texas, except that portion of
said block heretofore sold and con-
veyed by th» plaintiff, Hesseleln, and
his wife to tne Evangelical Associa-
tion of North America, as shown by
deed recorded In Volume 117, on pane
4T et seq., of said Bell county rec-
ords;
Beginning at the N. E., corner of
Mid block «8; thente south along Its
east Mine <R feet to comer; thence In
a westerly ^direction parallel with the
north linifflOO feet to beginning..
corner: thence IrT~9 "MorfKeTT?" trlrtC-
tlon 45 feet to corner in north line
of said blork; thence east with said
north line 100>4o beginnlgg^
This order of"SKWr""Teclte8 that this
said Judgment is a foreclosure of a
vendor's lien on the above described
property.
Levied on the 10th day of January.
1912, as the oroperty of A. G. Watson
and Mark Hutigens, jointly and sever-
ally, to satisfy a Judgment amounting
to *657,75 in favor of George J. Hes-
selein, and costs of suit.
Given undif my hand, this 16th day
of January, A. I"). 1912.
J. B. BLATR, Sheriff,
By Haskel Smith. Deputy.
Tlie Spirit of Wiuter.
The, Spirit of Winter is with us.
making Its presence known In many
different ways—sometimes by cheery
sunshine and glistening snow, and
sometimes by driving winds and
blinding storms. To many people it
seems to take a delight in making
bad things worse, for rheumatism
twists harder, twinges sharper, ca-
tarrh becomes more annqylng, and the
many symptoms of scrofula are de-
veloped and aggravated There Is nut
much poetry In this, but there is truth
and it Is a wonder that more people
dot»'t get rid of these ailments. The
medicine that cures them-—Hood f
Sarsaparllla—is easily obtained and
there Is abundant proof that its cures
are radical and permanent.
How's Your Liver?
Clogged Up Liver Causes Count! pation
and Otlier Serious AlUuenta.
Cured for a warier.
Did you know, dear reader, that C.
L Reynolds, druggist, is the agfent for
the Famous Hot Springs Liver But-
tons and that this Is the first time
they have even been sold in a drug
store in Temple?
In Hot Springs and the southwest
these wonderful little Buttons are al-
most a* well known as the bey1"
waters. _ t \
Without* any doubt
most perfect. Joyfji].
tive evst jgpjMVOtihded,
I>o»'f miss the supri
relief that comes fro
Springs Liver Buttons.
will prove to you
X
therft «•
•MK
■erne %nd ti
the
laxa-
rem
■°k
' !
happy
using Hot
'A single dose
they are Just
what you need-^fojJAsonstipation, In-
active ljver, dt*S^di-red stomach or
bowelaf headache, nervousness, dlx-
ziness^f fipf'a general cleaning out
of the-itOisdb* in the blood. Box for
04 tsnf^. As&C. L. Reynolds, drug-
gist. Mall ~2HNMi.« from Hot Spring*
Chamicsl -Co-, Hot Springs, Ark.
Old Meningitis Remedy Good.
Mrs. F. M. Bigham, who read the
meningitis (remedy reproduced in the
Telegram yesterday from the Galves-
ton News of thirty years ago, state*
that the remedy Is a good one and
that it was used by her father in his
practice with good results.
Notice.
1 I have opened a new wagon yard
In the old Hobbs stand on South Sec-
ond street. Your patronage will bo
appreciated. m
>▼
45-6x
PAT HUNT'
A fresh s ippl; of Crotropin table, s
nt Hamlirs, (et a supply and keep off
I Meningitis. * _
1
Real Estate Loans at 5 Per Cent ' Interest
UNITED FRIENDLY EQUITABLE SOCIETY
INCORPORATED.
BALTIMORE, MO.
MAKES LOANS
To buy Homes,
To buy Farms,
To take up Mortgages or Vendors' Lien Notes, either on a
monthly payment b^is or straight loan, interest payable semi-
annually.
«•
Why continue to pay 8 to 12 per cent interest exacted in
this section of the country, when you can get it at 5 per cent in-
terest, giving you from 10 to 11 years to repay the loan, with the
privilege of repaying the whoel loan or any substantial part at
ANY TIME?
-YOU PAY 5 per cent for the money you use, for the time you
# use it, and NO MORE.
Get literature and sample Certificate. , ,
ASHBY & WILLIAMS, Special Agents
Fairmount House, corner First and Barton.
Temple, Texas.
CLUB DIRECTORS'
MEETING POSTPONED
of IuimIku mating T wo <«»»•»-
tuerrial boilio ttill B« Tukru
Ip Hi li*l»T Male.
Sroreturie* W M Wood*all and
UdD G. YViuton staled v after-
noon that th# .netriing of the director*
of the Tempi'* Commercial club and
the Youug J4cYs club, which
*a* caU«-4 for ionium had beea in-
definitely postponed at the request of
iir. ft. W. N'jble. cit> health officer.
The tne«*tiiitf earned for the pur-
poHt <jf < oruiiieriiig ih»- proposition of
arnalcamatinc the two club#. arid
there no doubt thai the nubje^'t
will receive the attertion and thor-
ough consideration of t&« officers and
members of he organisations pending
the time when the conference can be
hoki tor the diRCU»* ^n ut' the propo-
sition.
I*XJK 1>YN|"|,|»s| \.
You Kink ao Mo»t'» il iuu Try TUis
Itemed).
We want every »t<« troubled with
indigeart-ion and d>>l>*l/»!u to come to
our store and obtain . of Kexali
Dyspepsia Tablets They contain
Hispiutli Subnitrate at.d Pepsin care-
fully combined so as to develop their
greatest power to o\er.'ome digestive
disturbance.
Kexali Dyspepsia Tablets are very
pleasant to take, The> le'.d to soothe
the irritable, weak stomach, to
sireosthen and invigorats the digest-
ive organs, to rell» « nausea and in-
digestion. thus pr««t,utHig nutrition
and bringing about i feeling of corn
I urt
If you give Rexall l'\*pepsia Tab-
lets a reasonable tru we will return
your money if you ;ir^ not satisfied
with the result. Thr*e slses, 25
cents. t»e>tits and J t)0 Kerneinber
you can obtain llsb I Itemedios onlv
at out store---The Kejtall Store. C.
I. Heysolda, i'h O. dniggist.
Tlss^Vowt lurk Party.
tStanwood t'obb, in Vorth American
Review I
Even If the Youiik 1 jrk party hold^
control of the gov xrnment. It has
eaormous difficwltie^ o face by rea
son of the heterogeneous composition
of its empire One of the greatest
oauses of the Turkish conquests and
rapid rise In ptywer^was in the po
lltlcal and geoifraphi' al nature of the
territory they mad. war agalnxt
Western Asia and eastern Europe
wore composed of small, weak na-
tions, jeabras of one another, which
were unable to offer a unitefl resist-
ance to the foe. it remained lor them
to be united by foree trom without
in the shape of Turkish domination
Wlille the Turks were possessed ol'
wonderful gifts as com|ucrora. they
are not successful rulers, and the
many races they have ruled over they
have never been able to assimilate.
Unlike Russia, which. In a similar
difficulty, has succeeded In forging
out a coherent empire, Turkey has
not welded Its parts together. fti
empire exists today, as it did three
hundred years ago. txy force of arms
alona—in spite of constltuUonal pro-
clamation.
To all appearances, the late Turk-
ish revolution was an effort to estab-
lish a free Turkey with constitutional
government. In reality It was merely
a substitution of a strong military
party for a single absolute ruler. It
stands to reason that there can be no
constitutional freedom In an Otto-
man empire which Is onlv one-third
Ottoman, and of which the remaining
two-thirds desire nothing so much
as complete separation and autonomy.
Therefore the Young Turks were
obliged to have recourse to tricks In
order to keep the upper Hand. They
pretended to give free ballot, but
packed their parliament with Young
Turk deputies so *» to win a major-
ity when the entire Turkish popula-
tion of the Ottoman empire was only
one-third of the whole population,
and out of this one-third only a small
proportion were Young Turks.
, Tolsio> « Voice.
(Ourr. m Literature.)
Death has not diminished the stat-
ure of 1 ,eo Toi-1o> The peasantry o1'
the Russian province# of Tula, Kazan
and Kursk are said to believe in bis
bodily return to eartli before April.
ISIS. Israel Zangwill introduces the
figure of Tolstoy thinly disguised as
FritMof in his sensational recent
play,^"The War Ood." produced by
Sir Herbert Tree. The great Rus-
sian appears wearing his peasant's
smock and leaning on his pilgrim's
staff, preaching ths doctrine of non-
resistance.
Almost simultaneously the voice of
Tolstoy himself is heard in his last
play, "The Diving Oorpsa,'' published
by his daughter according to her
father's instructions. The play, pro-
duced with eclat In Moscow, Saint
Petersburg and at the Hurg theater
of Vienna, will shortly be published
In Knglish. The publishers compare
the play to To 1sto.'s powerful "Pow-
ers of Darkness ' Herman Bernstein,
who saw Tolstoy a< late as last spring,
regrets that the play seems to lack
the final finish.
"After careful revision," he says.
"The Diving Corpse* would have
ranked with Tolstoy's earlier master-
pieces, which established his interna-
tional fame as an artist." Tolstoy,
however, was more concerned with
his message than with his art. "As
the reader turns tne pages," remarks
a writer in the Boston Transcript,
"the piece less sui^ests tjie work of
an old man than that of a man who
wished much to say all that the play
contains, and so wrote In concentrated
haste."
The play symbol call? embodies the
belief of Tolstoy's linal .years. "Tliey
came too late to be translate^ into
deeds He could enly write of them,
ha could only testify in print and on
the #tage to his fsith In the natural
man, unspoiled b> social prejudices,
unconstrained by legal institution*,
living, doing, sacrificing out of a wtefc,
generous, discerning soul."
I • 1
PAGE PIY£
BLIZZARD NO. 3
Is reported on the way and is scheduled to reach Temple abQut
9:30 this p. m.
WE WANT YOU TO HAVE
PLENTY OF GOOD WARM COVER
Hence this great sale for TODAY ONLY
We place on sale our entire stock of
BED COMFORTS
AT
HALF PRICE
This is an unusual offer remember HALF PRICE
for any comfort in stock-
Si .00 Comfort 50c
$1.26 Gomfort 63c
$1.50 Gomfort. 75c
$2.00 Gomfort $1.00
$2.50 Comfort $K25
$3.00 Gomfort $1.50
$4.00 Gomfort $2.00
$5.00 Gomfort $2.50
$6,00 Comfort.....' $3.00
$7.00 Comfort $3.50
s 8.00 Gomfort $4.00
On up to
$12.50 Gomfort $6.25
M
ture. A hope, or a prophecy, so very
optimistic, from souie writers who
lia\« a way of predicting what they
would like to see come to pass in the
future, without much regard for the
actual probabilities, would not have
niiteh Weight with the public; would
be, perhaps dismissed as a natural
example of American brag, about
which we hear so much, but, coining
from Mr t'ox, It has weight Mr.
Cox is not a matt who says such
tilings without having carefully ex-
amined the evidence. ills statements,
which are very positive, will not star-
tle those readers who have not kept
up with the march of events In the
recant Arvelopment of American art.
Kenyufi Cox on American Art.
(Boston Transcript.)
Kenyon Cox is optimistic In his vffew
of the American School of Painting,
In the December Serlbner. He not
only finds that th<re Is such a thing
aa an American -chool. which had
been somewhat a matter of doubt In
the minds of othef students of the
question, but he finds that !t Is. of
all existing schocls. that which is
most likely to ba the art of the fu-
Friglitful Polar Winds.
blow with terrifit force at the far
north and play havoc with the skin,
causing red. rough or sore chapped
hands and lips, that need Bucklen's
Arnica Salve to heal them. It wakes
the skin soft and smooth. Unrivaled
for cold-sores, also burns, bolls, soles,
ulcers, cuts, bruises and piles. Only
26 cents at all dealers.
BARTLETT NEWS NOTES.
Two In port«nt Realty Deals Made
Bauk Declare* Dividend.
(Special to The Telegram}
Bartlett, Tex.. Jan. IS—A. W. Stock-
ton and Miss Mary Emily Knight were
married at the bride's home in Lam-
pasas Tuesday. Mr. Stockton is a
large land owner of this place and
Miss Knight*was a trained nufse. The
romance thus ended was begun a few
months ago when Miss Knight was
in tlin Stockton home uursiug the
aged lather.
Mrs. Ben Brown who lived near
Salado died »t the home ut her
daughter, Mrs. I.egar Jones, yester-
day after an illness of two weeks
Mr and Mrs, Brown were spending
the holidays with their daughter
when Sirs Uronu became ill with a
co d that developed into pneumonia.
At the shareholders' meeting of the
First National bank this week the old
officers were re-elected and a semi-
annual dividend of b per cent on
tlOO.OOO was declared and $6,000
placed to undivided profits
Two Important realty deals were
made here this week In which two of
the best homes here exchanged hands.
A. Corsbach, Jr., traded his home for
4 9 acres of land Just outside the city
limits. The land brought $'.'00 par
acre; the house $8,000. The hand-
some home belonging to J. D. Slaw-
son was sold to Frank Joiner; con-
sideration $4,900.
GOOD HEAVY
Sound Ear Corn
In Stock.
A. 8. Crouch Grain Co.
Orowtli of Nt. I'eterburg.
(Consular and Trade Reports
That St. Peter burg is rapidly grow-
ing In population Is evidenced by the
census taken In December, 1S10,
which showed the population. Includ-
ing certain suburban villages former-
ly not covered, to be 1,907,708. It is
pre-eminently an "office town" and
also a seaport for six or eight months
of the year.
The principal industry Is the manu-
facture of cot:on textiles, although Its
advantage as a port of entry for the
interior is gaining recognition. A
line of steamers has been established
to I.lbau, connecting there with i
Beneficial,
Gentle and Effective,
NOTE THE NAME
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
in the Circle,
oneverij/ Package of the Genuine.1
DO NOT LET ANY DEALER
DECEIVE YOU
1
SYRU* Of FICS AND tilXIIt OF SENNA HAS GIVEN
UNIVERSAL SATISFACTION FOR MORE THAN THIRTY YEARS
PAST, AND ITS WONDERFUL SUCCESS HAS LED UN-
SCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS OF IMITATIONS TO OFFER
INFERIOR PREPARATIONS UNDER SIMILAR NAMES AND
COSTING THE DEALER LESS. THEREFORE, WHEN BUYING,
Note tkeM Name of the Gompan
CALIFORNIA FIC SYRUP CO.
CENT, or AL
Attftiwt cossnwm*,
... .11 ...I *. ..,
■jUmMATOSYWO
PRINTED STRAICHT ACROSS, NEAR THE BOTTOM. AND IN IK "»k
THE CIRCLE. NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACK AGE,OF THE 1*^®®
GENUINE REGULAR PRICE SOc PER BOTTLfc ONE SIZE
ONLY, FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA IS THE MOST PLEASANT, WHOLE-
SOME AND EFFECTIVE REMEDY FOR STOMACH TROUBLES, HEADACHES
AND BILIOUSNESS DUE TO CONSTIPATION, AND TO GET ITS BENEFKJA1.
EFFECTS IT IS NECESSARY TO BUY THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE,
WHICH IS MANUFACTURED BY THE
California Fig Syrup Co.
transatlantic line te New York. Thil
enables American shippers to send
goods direct to this port without the,
delays of transportation In foreign
porta.
It Is reported that new road la to
be built from I^a Orange to Araasas
lass. v
I
THE TEMPLE SANITARIUM
A private institution built and equipped especially for
patients requiring surgical attention. One hundred
rooms. Thirty-five nurses.
MISS WILMA CARLT0S
Superintendent of Ifurs**.
MRS. A. H. PARSONS.
Superintendent
TEMPLE texAS.
*J Were you over a
victim sf Peck's Bad
Boy?
9 Did you ever hug
behind a school desk,
or inside a school
geography, Tom Saw**
yer or Huckleberry*
Finn? *
Were you ever up
o' nights with Aid-
rich's Tom Bailey?
<J Have you enjoyed
the acquaintance tf
oMrs. Wiggs?
•J Did you ever witb>
Helen's Babies watch
the wheels go round?
<] If you are a part in |
the fun-loving world,
read about BILLYj
and his friends,
JIMMY, FRANCES]
and LIN A, in
Miss
oTWinerva
/ William
Green
Hill
A deliciously humor-
ous serial SOON TO
APPEAR IN THIS
PAPER s* Don't
miss it if you enjoy
genuine
humor. J/
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Williams, E. K. The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 13, 1912, newspaper, January 13, 1912; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth471993/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.