The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1923 Page: 6 of 8
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CARROLLTON CHRONICIJS
IMMIGRANTS KNOCKING
AT AMERICAN PORTS
TWELVE LINERS, BEARING 12,000
ALIENS, ENTER NEW
YORK HARBOR
Condensed Austin News
MANY MUST 60 BACK
Soma Quota* Already Exhausted and
Ellla laland'a Facilities Ar*
Sovoroly Taxed
New York.—America’* pantry door
swung open an inch or two at Ellla
laland and 1,600 lucky European
children of toll aqueesed la breath*
leaaly to clutch at her shelves.
Another 14,000, racing ahoreward
In awlft liners, or aweatlqg In the
ateerage at tbe piers, or palpitant
la tbe Immigrant pen*, prayed In
alternate hope and despair that the
door would not be slammed in their
faces.
Several thousand prayed in rain,
Already, aa they still stared with
strained smiles at their first Amerl,
can sunset, adding unneeded glamour
to Manhattan's sky line, the dreaded
and little understood quota law ha<^
operated to make them losers la the
1923 race for the square meal which
they sought In the melting pot.
Twelve steamers In all crossed the
finish line and were anchored In the
harbor’s calm with 6,971 steerage
passengers aboard and 6.611 In their
second and first cabins. On five of
these Bhlps were 2,074 steerage Im-
migrants who knew that they, due
to the superior skill of their vessel's
captain and apeed of her turbines,
would be the first to enter on the
These five winners in the dramat-
ic trans-Atlantic race of the lmmlr
grant armada were the President
Wilson, carrying 439; the Washing-
ton, with 81; the Canada. 707; the
Polenta, 603, and the King Alexan-
der, 816.
Aa the descendants of Eric the
Red la Iceland might tell the Saga
of the ,Viking'* discovery of Amer-
ica, so no doubt will hundreds of
these passengers some day describe
the midnight sprint across the three-'
mile line which made them Ameri-
cas while their colleagues werej
forced te sail back to their mother-'
lands.
Under an order Issued by the Rail-
road Commission Dallus has been ac-
corded transit privileges on peanut
shipments.
• e e
Saw mills and nitroglycerine plants
ere to be required to observe the new
anti-pollution law, according to an-
nouncement made by Q. F. Simmons,
Deputy Game, Pish and Oyster Com-
missioner.
see
The Railroad Commission will hold
a hearing soon to consider tbe appli-
cation of Greenwood and Burnett to
drill four wells on tbe Port Worth
j* Denver Railroad right of way In
the Electra field In Wichita County.
'Adjoining leaseholders are contesting
It
e e e
State Superintendent Marrs said
the State Board of Education will on
Aug. 10 make an apportionment for
tbe ensuing year and that It will be
313 per capita, unless the December
textbook contracts are held valid by
the Supreme Court In the mandamus
case submitted, in which event it will
be 812, he declared.
• • •
W. W. Boyd, State Game, Pish and
Oyster Commissioner, says that be
will station deputies in 111 fishing dis-
tricts under the new law prohibiting
the sale of bass, crapple and satflah
In thirty-eight counties and in some
districts two deputies will be on duty
to see that the law is not violated.
e e e
W. C. Burns, who was assistant
manager of tbe Texas Compensation
Bureau at Dallas, and seven of tbe
force bave been moved to Austin to-
gether with all records and files, to
first day under the new year's quota, 11 become part of the division of the
WILL SEEK TO AID
WHEAT MARKETING
Recsntly Creatsd Council Will Open
Offioee in Chleage At
Onoe
Chleage, 111.—An approximate bal-
ane* between domeetlc wheat pro-
duction and coaaumptioa will be the
object of efforts of the wheat c*ua-~
dl ef the United States, according
to Congressman Sydney Anderson ef
Minnesota, one of tho directors of
the council, In connection with the
announcement that permanent head-j
quarters will be opened at once in'
the new temple building here.
The council will not confine Its
attention to wheat alone, he said,'
but will co-operate In all sound eco-i
nomlc movements to promote the
general welfare of the farmer.
The wheat council, he said, will
work "to bring the control of the
American wheat market from Liver-
pool to a point In the United States.”
Congressman Anderaon was chair-
man of the recent wheat conference
at which the wheat council was or-
ganized. ,
5J
a
Amsriean-Turklsh Treaty Near
Lausanne. — The American and>
Turkish delegates have appointed a
drafting committee, which Is com-
piling the final text of the classes
of the new treaty already agreed,
upon. The exchange of views con-
tinued on the clauses not settled..
Angora advices have caueed the'
greatest satisfaction In Turkish cir-:
cles, as they show that the Kcmal-;
1st candidates are In a large major-
ity In the new national aasembly.
Van Alatyne Prospects
Van Alstyne, Texas.—Prospects for.
• large cotton arop In thle section'
are extra good. The cotton is be-
ginning to bloom. Thar* are very,
few signs of boll weevils at pres-
ent. Several old time farmers 4e-
dared that they have never seen a!
better prospect for a good cotto^
crop.
Kill Man and Wound Wife
Springfield, III.—Two masked ban-
dlta entered a soft drink establish^
meat at Hendereon, a mining town
th Macoupin oounty, and fired flvd
shots, killing the proprietor, Mario
Vertlco and seriously wounded hla
wife, Mary, who Is In a Litchfield
hospital.
*100,000 Award for Peace Plan
New Tork.—The American peace
award, amounting to 1100,600 an^
created by Edward W. Bok of Phll»
adelpbla to be given in Its entirety
to tbe American who presents thq
beat practical plan by whlrh tint
United Btutes may coopsrate with
other nstioss for the achievement
and preservation of world peace, had
been announced by the policy com-
mittee which haa juat been organlai
ed to administer the award.
State Fire Insurance Commission
which la to make workmen’s compen-
sation rates under the law which be-
came effective June 13.
• e •
The so-called fifty-four-hour law
passed by the Thirty-Fourth Legis-
lature, limiting the working hours
female employes at nine hour* pei
day lu certain lines of business, does'
not apply to county officers, accord-j
Ing to an opinion given by the Attor-I
ney General's Department to Labor
Commiaaloner J. S. Myera.
see
It has been decided to put In oper-
ation on Sept. 1 the two recent acts
separating the State Department of
Banking and Insurance Into two de-
partments, ono of banking and on*
of lnaurance. The laws become op-
erative before then, but the new ap-'
proprlatlona wlil not become avail-'
able until that date.
e * a
State Tax Commisaionar Willacy
haa certified the Intangible tax val-
ue* to tbe varloua counties and the
total la $73,141,160, an lncreaae of
8618,612 over last year. Intangible
value* are based on a five-year aver
age. Seven corporations showed in-
creases over last year and two have
decreased, all the others being tba
same.
see
Tbe State Board of Control has
awarded contracts to the Conttnsntsl
Metal Products Company, Chicago,
for 700,000 motor vehicle eeals, 300,-
000 pairs of number plates, 12,000
pairs of dealers' license plates and
100,000 commercial motor vehicle
seals, to be delivered next Septem-
ber and October for ua# In 1924.
Because of Increasing literary Inter-
est among students at the summer
session of the University of Texas,
the Scribblers’ Club, a writers' ao
clety, Is continuing a* an active or-
ganization tbla summer for the first
time In Its history. There sro thir-
ty-five students of the summer ses-
sion attending tbe weekly meetings
snd taking part In the programs.
• • •
J. D. Fountleroy, State Highway
Engineer, has been appointed mem-
ber of the executive committee of the
American Association of State High-
way Officials. He has also been ap-
pointed chairman of the program com-
mittee for the Decdhiber meeting of
the American Association of State
Highway Officials, to be bold In New
Orleans.
* * *
Oov. Neff haa approved and filed
the bill passed at the third called
session of thv Legislature changing
tbe name of the Department of In-
suranc* and creating tba oflc* of
Commiaaloner of Insurance. ]t be-
comes effective Sept. 12. Tbe aal-
ery of the Commissar of Insurance la
84,000.
a e •
Slat* Reclamation Engineer Arthur
A. Stile* laft for Wichita Falla to re-
sume marking the boundary line
along Red River. He will go to the
river near Bridgetown where are lo-
cated oil wells and where tbe Texas
Rangers were stationed at one time
to prevent the Incursion of Oklahoma
claimants. There la a sharp conflict
In the boundary claims In this area.
• • •
L. J. Polk, Jr., of Pharr haa be*
appointed by Gov. Neff aa Judge o.
the recently created District Court
for Hidalgo county. Mr, Polk la a
graduate of the University of Texas
and the aon of L. J. Polk, frotner vloe
president and general malinger of Ibe
Santa Fe ayatem, and who 1* still
connected with that system In an of-
ficial capacity. Appointment of tba
Judge of the new court had been ten-
dered by tke Governor to Judge Hood
Boone but he declined to eccepL
Texas Items
Elgin 1* enjoying a wave of Improve
ment among the homes aa wall aa the
buslneas bouses.
The annual convention of the Yoa-
kum District Glnners’ association will
be held at Yoakum July 26.
Cbarbon or anthrax is very bad In
the western part of Brazoria County.
Many cattle and horsas ar* dying.
Ground haa been broken and work
started on the Dayton high school
brick building. The structure Is to
coat 817,000.
Tbe oat crop of Navarro county la
turning out from 60 to 60 bushels par
acre, and * few farms report making
from 76 to 30 bushels.
Tba 84.000,000 laau* of Harris Coun-
ty Houston ship cbannal navigation
district bonds have been approved by
the state attorney generel'a depart-
ment.
Tbe I.-Q. N. Railroad company la
making praparatlona to lay heavy rails
on tha Pearsall and of the division.
A work train has laid th* rails and
other necessary equipment beside th*
track.
Reports being received at Wharton
from all surrounding territory la that
tbe proapects for a cotton crop this
year are brighter than alnc* 1918,
when Wharton County produced about
48,000 bales.
Two terracing schools, the first to
be conducted In the state, were held
In Williamson County th# past week.
Instructions being given to a select
number of man who are able to do
terracing for other farmers In their
oommunltles.
The cotton crop around Edna la look-
ing fine now, and th# plants are mak-
ing good growth. However, in some
■ectlona of the county th# leaf worm
has made Its appearance, and should
they become numerous, likely will give
th* farmers quit* a bit ef worry.
Th* cotton leaf worm haa made Ita
appearance near El Campo and al-
though not In numbers sufficient to do
a great deal of damage. It 1* feared
that once they get started It will be
hard to atop them. Many farmers are
buying insecticides for poisoning.
Be* county's application for aid new-
eaaary te top with Uvalde rock as-
phalt tha highway leading from Bee-
vlll* te Berclalr has beeu rejected by
th* State Highway commission. Th*
highway was constructed by Be* ooun-
ty at a coat of 871,000 some three yea re
ego. It la baglnalag to give way lu
place* and M was thought topping
would aavo IL
Private banks oxlatlng continuously
two years prior to June 18. this year,
those operated successfully for twen-
ty years and these organized now li-
quidating another bank ar* exempt
from provisloes of tho act passod by
tho regular legislature prohibiting or-
egulxatlou of privet# banks, tke attor-
ney general's department hold in au
opinion just given to Bank Commis-
sioner Chapman.
Members of th* state board ef
health and th* state board of nurses'
examiner* ware appointed by Govern-
or Neff Friday. Board of health many
bore ere: M. F. Bledsoe, Port Ar-
thur; A. F. Beverly, Auatln; W. H-
Holland, Santa Anna; Frank Paschal,
San Antonio; A. C. Scott, Temple, and
T. B. Fisher, Dallas. Mias Jan* I*.
Duffy of Austin la tbe only new mem-
ber on th# board of nursea.
Aa approved by the railroad com-
mission, Houston will be considered
In direct line of transit on shipments
of auger, carloads, originating at Bug-
arland, to Taxes points. The Dayton-
Ooose Creek railroad Is authorised te
cancel special differential rata# on
rice, rough, and seed, carloads. The
commission suspended its order of
June II applying certain rough log
rates on tha Taxaa Southeastern.
It la estimated that about 8000 balsa
of cotton will be ginned In Laredo this
season Approximately 6000 sores of
cotton ar* .planted in Wabb county,
4000 of which ar* ir. the dry'farming
belt end 8000 In the Irrigated regions.
AU la In good condition and from re-
porta th* Irrigated section will yield
cloae to a bale per acre, while the dry
farming aactlon a bale to each five
acre*. Laredo haa three glna, on* *<
which la for tha exclualv* handling of
long atxpla cotton, planted by a num-
ber of farmer* this season
■even permit* for diversion of watet
from Texas rlvara have boos granted
by th* state board of water engineers
following bearings They Include g.
L. McDowell, Wichita Falla, divert
water from Hrasoa river for farming
purposes; Mutual Oil Company, Fort
Worth, from Brasos, Young oounty!
J. M. gkraganok, Houston, from Fores
bayou, Brnserla oounty, for Irrigation
purposes; Texas A Pacific railroad,
two penults, Trinity river, Tarrant
oounty, and Wagner creek, Bowie
County, for mining purposes.
Fifty-three carloads of Tom Watson
watermelons have bean shipped from
Sandla th* past weak. Th* first oar-
load brought only 8440, but tha prion
ha* climbed steadily until each car of
36-pound average or better Is bringing
around $700.
Not Places but
People
By CORONA REMINGTON
New Depot at Nlxen.
Nixon, Tex.—Dirt has been brokoa
.‘or th* new depot and work I* under
way for tbe erection of n depot aboat
th* capacity of tho on* whloh was d«
atroyed by fir*.
10 Sr MoClurt Nswspspsr Syndics Is.)
“But, Janice, dear, It’a in my blood
and I love It. All my life except the
alx years 1 was at school I’ve lived In
the forest. The trees are my friends
and tbe squirrel* and the rabbit* sum-
mer and winter are events In my life.
The first songbird In the spring, the
flrat snowfall—all these things in na-
ture send a thrill through me. There's
something so marvelous about the dif-
ferent seasons and the changes that
come with them; this great, wonder-
ful, silent force that makes the sap
rise In the trees and the birds mate,
that ripens the fruit and turns the
(Oaves red. What la It7 Sometimes In
my long trampa through the wooda
I’ve been almost overwhelmed by the
wonder of It and I’ve longed for some
one who could teei It as 1 do—and un-
derstand.”
“I do understand. Harvey,” Janice
Weatherby told him ardently, “but you
don't seem to see what It would mean
to me to give up all my friends and
go 'way off there a million miles from
nowhere and rough It with you.”
”1 know, dear. I guess I’ve asked
too much. But you wouldn’t be ex-
actly roughing It. I have a seven-
room house with furnace heat and you
could have all the servants you want-
ed. And after all, It’s only th’rty-flve
miles from Cartervllle, a city of near
ly fifty thousand. We have the car
and the roads are good—you could run
In as often as you liked."
Harvey Turner looked with troubled
eyes at tbe girl by bit side, dainty,
well dressed, charming—a product of
the big city, a hothouse plant. He
felt that It was absurd to ask her to
drop everything and go with him out
to the great forest where all hi* Inter-
eats were. Yet he loved her, he wanted
her, he must have her.
"Can't you get some other kind of
position r she asked after a while.
"It’s the only tort of thing I've ever
done. It’s the only thing I've been
trained to do and besides, Janice, I
love It Do you think you'd be so very
unhappy and lonely? You seemed to
enjoy the elx weeks you spent there
lest summer camping.”
"Yee, but that waa summer time
when tbe wooda were full of Ufa. What
must It be like Id wlnterT”
“In e way It’a more wonderful. I
know alx or seven city families who
live within a dosen miles of us and
they seem perfectly contented. They’re
ell friends of mine and we'd aee them
often. A few miles mean nothing out
there—they'd be practically next-door
neighbors to ua”
“I know, but rm afraid to gd Into It.
8uppoae I simply couldn't stand It.
it's all *o new te me. Can’t yen—
can't you do aomethlag else?”
"That’* my life work, Janice." Her-
vey Turner answered quietly.
"Then I gueas I’ll have to say *00,'”
■he said, her voice trembling.
Turner's face turned white, but he
replied calmly enough. “Then I accept
the Inevitable. I would not persuade
you against your will, for I want you
to be happy, dear.”
“Oh, Harvey, Harvey, don’t be *0
dreadfully gentle with me. If you’d
only call me a little coward or a
Blacker or some of the things that I
really am,” she cried desperately.
“You mustn’t talk like that,” he
soothed, stroking her hand.
Once out of the house Turner did
not eeem to care much where he wns
going. For hours he walked and
walked. For the first time In hla life
he wns tasting defeat, hitter defeat,
and the worst was that he waa
helpless. There wna nothing he could
do. Hla hands were tied.
The next morning he started home
end arriving there the following day
looked about him with strange, staring
eye*. Could this be hla friendly for-
est, the warm welcoming trees, the
chattering birds that he had alwaya
lovedT It wns dreary, quiet, not
comfortable quiet, hut an oppressive
quiet; an odd etlllneaa everywhere
that made him feel like shouting just
for the satisfaction of Rearing a hu-
man sound. He understood now why
the country boy* ynhoodled when go-
ing through th* wooda alkne. It waa
as If everything ha loved In nature
had suddenly died and left Instead
only strange, unfriendly ghoata.
That waa It, h* reflected bitterly.
Homethlng had died, but It waa not
In th* foreat; It waa In him.
"Good morning, Mr. Harvey," It waa
hla own tuan servant greeting him in
hla living room. “Sorter thought you
■night lurn up today, so I got soma
fresh an usage and pancakes ready for
breakfast."
Turner dropped |ila bag on a chair
and thr-»w hi* overcoat on top of It. *
“Mow I come to think of It I am
rather hungry. John," he anld, tgylng
to speek cheerfully, but John did not
fatl'to notice that something had gorte
wrong.
; Turner’* unbounded good heelth
eeme to his rescue, hut aa the day*
passed the blank loneliness of hi* life
seemed to depre* him more and more
and there were limes when ha won-
dered what the end would be.
Three month* passed and he had not
the living romp. The door new open
and Janice stood belore him.
"Oh. Harvey, take me, won’t youT"
she pleaded, advancing toward him. “I
tried to tough It out. but I couldn’t
stand It another second without you.
I know now I’m going to love the for-
eat because you do. I didn't under-
stand. but now I know that It Isn't
the place Itself but the people tu th*
place that make you love It or hat*
It. I'm sure I'd simply adore to*
desert of Sahara If you were there."
Turner swept her Into his arms.
"Oh. my dear, my dear,” he said
brokenly, "are you quite aurel
couldn't stand It If you changed your
mind now.”
“Oh, quite," she laughed happily.
"I've been hoping every day you'd
write and ask me to reconsider, but
aa you didn’t and I couldn't stand It
any longer I had to swallow my pride
and come up here and propose to you
myself. It’s awful!"
“If that's all that’s worrying you
I’ll come down to Newport and for-
mally ask you to marry me all over
again,” he laughed. “I’ll even tackle
your father."
“That reminds roe. Dad's outside In
the taxi and he'a dreadfully hungry.
He said he hoped to heaven you'd ask
him In to breakfast”
“You just bet we will," he ex-
claimed, starting toward the door,
“and we’ll kill the fatted calf, too."
CITY SWALLOWED UP BY SEA
English Town ef Considerable Im-
portance Completely Wiped Out
by the Ocean's Power.
Dunwlch was one of the great cities
of tho early ages of England. The
Romans settled there, and in Saxon
times it rose to eminence, so that it
actually became the seat of a bishop-
ric. Kings were pleased to grant land
and charter* te It, and It even had
royal pelace. It enjoyed the privilege
of coining Ita own money. Within Ita
walls were no fewer than B2 churches
and religious houses, and as a port it
boasted great ship* and small ships.
Its destruction came, not from com-
mercial rivalry, but from tbe all-de-
vouring sea. The low cliff* of loam
and sand on which the famous city
stood were bit by bit worn down by
the wave*. The chropicles of Edward
H’a feign ahow that 400 houses were
•wept away in a single year. Between
1535 and 1000 four churches disap-
peared. In 1677 the sea forced Ita way
Into tlie market-place. In 1792 8t
Peter's waa undermined, and the
churchyard went too.
Lake ef Flea.
Admirers of the old "Hell fire”
preachers will be Interested to learn
that what la known as tha “Lake of
Everlasting Fire" la again to be seen
In tbe Hawaii National park. In May,
1921, the boiling lev* roa* slowly until
within 40 feet of the rim of th* crater.
Then earthquakes opened subter-
ranean vent* and the surface subsided
at the rat* of a foot an hour until th*
whole lake disappeared, leaving a
rumbling, smoking chasm 1,000 feet
deep and nearly 2.000 feet across. Dur-
ing this sinking the walla of the pit,
lacking the support ef the living lava,
began to collapse. During th* sub-
sidence the old craters of Makapuhl
and t’apau became active, but did not
continue long. They are now dried
out again.
heard from Janice, although each day
he secret Ir hoped to get a letter. She'd
probably forgotten hla very existence
by now, ha reflected, na he ran through
hla mall at the breakfast table one
Morning.
| Suddenly he beard th* front door
/isa and quick fast hurrying through
“Hardtack" Fed te Captive Animal*
Ships' blacuft, "hardtack,’’ la bring
fed to the great apes In Regent’s park
zoo, London. The reason for this la
that the animals have been having
trouble with their teeth. The disease
from which they are suffering la aim-
ilnr to pyorrhea or loosening of th#
teeth, and la thought to arise from the
same cause as that from which It does
In human beings—not enough hard
food. Previously the apes hare hern
given a diet of hananaa, orangea, alleed
apples, sliced potatoes and bread—be-
aldea the Innumerable peanut* whlrh
visitors present to them. Hardtack
seemed a plebeian addition to this Hat,
but the apes are delighted and go for
It even before they eat their banana*
John Abernathy's kuccaaaor,
Frank Duroy, living three miles
southwest of Ponca City, haa gone
John Abernathy one hatter Id tbe wey
of catching wolves alive with hla hare
hands. For hla stunt Abernathy wna
made United States marshal of Okla-
homa by President Roosevelt. Thus
far Duroy la not claiming any particu-
lar distinction. After, he bed tracked
with hound* a she wolf to her den.
Duroy made tha opening t# the cave
larger and then crawled In with a rope
In hla hands. When he emerged ha
had the wolf hogtlad and dragged her
out. Re-entering, he brought out nine
whelps.—Oklahoman.
■rltlah Less Preference.
The govarumeut of Brlllah India haa
reduced th* export duty on hides
■hipped te foreign rountrlee from Ul
per cent to 5 per cent ad valorem. By
thle action the preferential advantage
formerly enjoyed by the United King,
dnm la abolished, alnce the rate of 5
per cent ad valorem formerly applying
only to export* to the United Kingdom
16 now In effect on all exports alike.
PlB ■rletle* Important Trad* Item.
Pig bristle* are an Important Hem
In Japanese trade, exports during the
11 months. January 1 to November 30,
1922, nmounting to 68,189 kin (kin la
equivalent to 1.3227 pounds), valued
nt 8K3.204 yen. Approximately 00 per
eent of those shipments are made from
Kobe and Osaka. The bristles nre
prepared for rnnnufneture 'nfi
brushes or mode Inin brushes hefoi
being shipped abroad.
TO RELIEVE MIN
ANDBACKACHE
Women May Depend upon
Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vege-
table Compound
Minneapolis, Minn.—" I hod heard so
much about Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vege-
table Compound that
when 1 realized 1
needed to take some-
thing to relieve my
pains and backache,
and to help build mo
up I began to take
that. I had been
sick off and on for
year* and barely
weighed a hundred
pound*, but now I
nave bod ouch good
results that I am
recommending the Vegetable Compound
to every one. —Mr*. J. J.Bieber, 8939
18th Ave. South, Minneapolis, Minn.
Finds a True Friend
"Every woman who value* her health
should be proud to have a true friend
like the Vegetable Compound,” says
Mrs. W. E. Shaw, 8227 Walnut Street,
Chicago, Illinois. "I hod female weak-
ness so badly that I could not stand on
my feet. Half of my time waa spent in
bed and I had pains in my back which
were unbearable. I tried everything I
could think of to help myself, and when a
friend advised Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound I began taking it at
once. I recommend it without hesi-
tation.”
Healthy, Happy
Babies
The beat way to keep baby
in crowing, contented health
ia Mr* Winslow's Syrup. This
■•fe, pleasant effective reme-
dy regulates the bowels and
quickly overcomes diarrhoea,
colic, flatulency, constipation,
and teething trouble*
MRS.
WINSLOW’S
SYRUP
Ikfafagi’ai (Mfin'i Nqilrin
b beat for baby. Guaranteed free
from narcotic*, opiate*, alcohol
ana ail harmful ingredient*. Open
formula on every label.
Ar mil DraetM*
•* IWM fm*a
Electric Paste
a* the guaranteed
exterminator fee Rat*. Ilia*. Ant*.
Ooekreaahae and Waterbuee.
■to kill thaa* peats
anj saporlmoiiUJ
Don't van*Pin* tiring
rith powder*, liquid! or
uooereuetu.
with
preparsUont.
Reedy for Use-Bettor then Trap*
z-o* bos. He 1*01. box. MJfi
•OLD KVBRYWHSRI
Nujol
^ALUjWCANT
“NOT A l AXATIVC
SWEET DREAMS
lOlfl
Ubtml Il4»t il«fi Mfttt mii.D EVKliYH Util
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Whitmore, R. J. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, July 6, 1923, newspaper, July 6, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth592050/m1/6/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.