The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 17, 1923 Page: 2 of 4
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incline to full feejlng after eat-
ing, gassy pains, constipation
Relieved and digestion improved by
CHAMBERLAIN’S
TABLETS
Cleansing and comforting - only 25e
STRESEMANNS PAST
EXPERIENCE HELPS IN
NEW DIFFICULT TASK
THE DAILY HERALD
By Associated Tress
Berlin, Oct. 16.—Dr. Gustav Strese-
No cure for it, but welcome
relief is cftc-i brought by—
ASTHMA
No cure foi
bTJ relief is eft
VICKS
Over 17 Million Jan
liver the paper to approximately 6,000
Bntered at the Post Office at Weather
ford, Texas as second class matter.
Published every day except Sunday at
Weatherford, Texas, by The Herald
Publishing Co., Inc., Herald Building,
121 York Avenue. Telephone No. 860
A. C. MacNELLY, Pres, and Mgr.
mu nil.
the hew chancellor of the Ger- rural homes on just one Sunday."
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which
may appear In the columns of The TOCt so thoroughly characterized
man republic, is a thoroughly exper-
ienced. catch as catch can politician.
He i? a ready stumper, and a facile
writer cn political subjects.
Unlike nian> of the German leaders,
who are heavy with degrees, long on
politial theories and inexperienced In
the ways of mankind, Chancellor
Stresemann has had much training in
practical politics.
He speaks the language of the ordi-
nary man and makes extemporaneous
speeches which are so terse and di-
Daily Herald will be gladly corrected I iiv a ia, (j 0f i,igi jaw breaking words
R brought to attention of publishers. tj,at one would never suspect him of
having passed through many of *the
MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRES8
The Associated Press Is exclusively
entitled to the use for re-publlcatlon
of all news credited to it or not other-
wise credited in this paper and also
to the local news published herein.
All rights of re-publication of special
dispatches are also reserved.
One year .......................................$4.00
Six months ...................-................ 2.00
‘Mont of our carriers are owners of
automobiles; but a few use motor-
cycles iu the delivery of the papers.
When roads are impassable because
of heavy rains, we deliver by airplane.
Mr. Williams said that practically
evory week-day subscriber of the pa-
per is a Sunday subscriber, also. To
simplify the work of delvery on Sun-
day, each rural letter box which re-
ceives the Sunday Telegram is tagged
with a red twine tag.
Mr. Williams stated that the sub-
scription price of the paper has not
been increased to meet the added ex-
pense of the Sunday delivery.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1923
[ 1 BIBLE THOUGHT]
■SOW BOUNTIFULLY: —He which
toughest courses of Berlin and Lelp-
sig Universities offer aspirants for
doctorates.
But Stresemann has had a lot of
hard experience since he deserted the
universities. His first job was secre-
tary to the Saxonian Association of
Industrials. He became a deputy of
the Dresden town council and In 1907
was first elected a member of the
j Reichstag. He was a long time a man-
: aging member of the German-Ameri-
|cau Commercial Association and serv-
ed as head of the German Association
of industrials. __
His work has thrown him with em-
ployers and employees alike. In the
universities he specialized in econom-
ics and history and in active life he
ha^ had abundant opportunity to
study tne basic commercial and in-
BEXAR COUNTY GRAND JURY
ACQUITS FIVE OFFICIALS
soweth sparingly shall reap also spar- emg which Germany is
inefully shall reap also bountifully.—
2 Corinthians 9:6.
WORKING HIS WAY THROUGH
facing.
Stresemann has been a receptive
candidate for high political honors for
six years. He had an important part
in the removal of Bethmann-Hollweg.
Years ago the chap who worked his
way through college was considered a'and since that time his name has al-
sort of seven day's wonder. The fact wavs been among “those mentioned”
that he shook down a furnace at night
to pav for his room rent, gave him
in the eyes of the world a standing mentary system even when it was re
fo>‘ prominent cabinet positions.
He was an adherent of the parlia-
similar to that which a presidential warded as impossible in Germany, but
candidate used to acquire by having i he held himself in the background till
been born in a leg cabin. If in addi- j 'he plan for the great coalition came
tiou to his evening’s performance at to the fore. He was too canny a polt-
tiij furnace he waited on a table at tician to let himself be the victim of
a student boarding house for his ?n improvised government patched up
meals, It was admitted that some dayjw’ihout support from the more libeia!
this young man would get into the | elements.
president's cabinet. That, however, j Immediately after the revolution,
was before table-waiting and furnace Stresemann became the leader of the
shaking became so popular among German People s Party. Backed by
college students as these honest and the main industries, that party man-
lowly endeavors are today. 'aged to gain a strong position, btin-
The point is that if any young manjnes and other magnates stood behind
or woman considers a college educa-jit, hut Streseman had many tiffs with
tion of sufficient value to be willingJ purely industrial sections of his own
to put in anywhere from cne to four group.
hours a day at remunerative work to | He has always fought vigorously for
help nay college expenses, there isn't the unity of the Reich, but has stood
the least doubt, in the world that such j insistent’y for an understanding with
a student wili appreciate his college | Germany’s former enemies, even if
work. For it is as true of education heavy financial sacrifices must be the
as of anything else in the world that price.
we value most whatever has taken! Stresemann was born in Berlin May
us some liftle effort to acquire.
Brock
; 10, 1878. He is above medium height,
j stackilv built, wears a closely crop-
j nod moustache, is erect and well set-
in p. has firm blue eyes and carries
himself with the pose and Assurance
and That, characterizes business men of
He
Brock Toxjis Oct. IT.-“Mr.
Mrs. Olen Gilbert of Fort Worth, spent wi(le experience the- world over
Sunday with their parents, Mr. and is I>art:-V and has a lar^e *haPely
M’-- R M Dent | head. In every way he has the ap-
Schcol started here Monday. We Pearance of a man of action who en-
hone to have a good school this win-1,!0*" excellent helth and radiates en-
, thusiasm.
Mr and Mrs. George Kelly of Dallas
spent Sunday with their parents, Mr.' NEWSPAPER INAUGURATES
and Mrs. P. H. Fleming. | SUNDAY RURAL DELIVERY
Miss Eunice Jones of Davis, is visit-:
ing tills week with her sister, Mrs. i AS80C,ate<l Pres*
. , " j Temple, Texas, Oct. 15.—Residents
Audrey Doss. '
Solid com ':r; end ease when
EDISON l.IAZDA LAMPS
are used.
! of most rural communities in Texas
land other states are required to wait
until Monday morning to read their
Sunday newspaper. But this is not
true in Bel! and surrounding Central
Texas counties. Many country folk
hc-ro read tiieir Sunday newspaper on
Sunday, as do their city cousins,
through a system of rural Sunday de-
livery which is now operated by the
Temple Daily Telegram.
Rural subscribers of tlie Telegram
receive ilieir paper seven days a week.
Or Sundays, the papers are delivered
by carriers employed by the newspa-
per, a service which lias no connection
with the government mail service.
The Sunday service was started by
E. K. Williams, present publisher of
the Daily Telegram. As far as it is
known, few other daily newspapers of j
Texas attempt to deliver the
inouiug Issue to their rural
Phone us your orders
for Lamps—We Deliver!
Water & Light Co.
PHONE 275 i
San Antonio, Oct. 13.—Mayor J. W.
Tobin. County Attorney; T. J. New-
ton, County Tax Collector J. A. Bitter,
County Clerk J. R. Burke and District
Clerk Osceola Archer, against whom
charges of misapplication of funds
were made by State Adjutant Gener-
al T. D. Barton last Wednesday were
“no billed” by the 94th district court
grand jury Friday. The action of the
grand jury completely exonerates all
defendants.
The complaints filed by Adjutant
General Barton, who inaugurated a
“clean-up” campaign in San Antonio
several months ago, were based on the
collection of ex-officio fees dating
back as far as 1921. Several previous
grand juries had investigated this
matter and refused to return indict-
ments.
A friendly civil suit, to establish the
ownership of these excess fees is now
pending in the 57th district court, the
county commissioners having admit-
ted that it was a matter for civil and
no criminal action. Those against
SCIENTISTS START
ON LONG VOYAGE
TO ANTARCTIC
By Associated Press
New London, Conn., Oct. 15.—While
whom complaints were filed charge
Adjutant General Barton with having
played politics.
HOW FROST IS FORMED
Frost, as the term is commonly us-
ed, means a temperature below freeze
ing at the surface of the ground, and
if the point of saturation of the atmos-
phere is reached below 32 degrees,
moisture will be changed from a gas
to a solid in much the same way as
snow is formed, except that the frost
will be deposited on those objects that
are good radiators of heat and close
to the surface 0f the earth, while
snow is formed at the higher altitudes
and falls to the earth through the in-
fluence of gravity. The great regula-
tor of temperature of the air is mois-
ture, and the change between the tem-
perature of the air in the daytime and
at r,.ght depends in large measure on
the relative amount of moisture pres-
ent. As stated before, the air increas-
es its waterholding capacity as it ris-
es in temperature, and it has been de-
termined that as the air is cooled, its
capacity for holding water vapor i3
•diminished, and at a certain temper-
ature it reaches a point of saturation
which is called “dew point.” At this
temperature the moisture in the air
will change from a gas to a liquid in
the form of dew or fog, or to a solid
i:i the form of frost or snow, but in
making this change, it wili give up the
great amount of heat that it took
up when it evaporated, and this latent
heat given off wni tend to warm the
air, and the temperature will not fall
much lower.—C H. Alvord, in The
Progressive Farmer.
Capt. George Finlay Simmons has been
scouring the country for a staff and
crew to take the schooner “Blossom”
into the South Atlantic and Indian
Oceans, the ship itself has been pre-
pared for one 0f the longest cruises
ever undertaken by a vessel her size.
The e^edition to the Antarctic is-
lands which starts from New London
this week for the Cleveland Museum
of Natural History is said to be one
of the largest ever undertaken for
purely scientific purposes. Every one
of the 16 men aboard ship, except the
three ship’s officers, is trained in
some ine that wll ad n the collect-
ng of animal and bird specimens and
in taking notes on the geology, plant
life, sometimes human life, and cli-
matic conditions in the regions that
will bn visited.
The Blossim will visit the least
known portions of the world on her
two year cruise. Explorers have gone
over the Pacific islands and other
tropic regions with fair thoroughness.
Even the polar regions have been vis-
ited in recent years by men who have
taken accurate observations of the
lands through which they traveled.
The South Atlantci islands, however,
have been visited only by seal and
sea elephant hunters, who brought
back romantic stories, but little accu-
rate information of scientific value.
At the helm of the ship will be J::hn
da Lomba, a Cape Verde Portugese
who has sailed the seven seas for 32
years under one master, Capt. John
Cleveland of New Bedford, said to be
the “last of the old sealing captains." ^
Da Lomba is reputed to knew "every 1
rotk in the Atlantic,” and has made
several voyages to the islands which
he will now visit for the purpose of
aidin in a search for knowledge of
rhe world we live in.
WEATHERFORD
Thursday, Oct.
Grand Stand Chair* Re*erved on Circus Day
at Braselton-Smith Drug Store
-J ,
- J
n
THZ. TClYcRING
MONARCH Of
A MIGHTY j
RACE
r’oo animals
i viJO PEOPLE
>50 ,’tOKSES
SfX BANOS
TM^KKWN
SCIENTISTS
OLD
'/ OWING TO MIS
> MASSIYf SOM
TUSha CANNOT
PARADE
NE. . .oniwn wr M
LICB IN jaNCLELANd
olTION OF
GORGEOUS EXTRAVAGANZA WITH HUNDREDS
1 MILE MNC. OPEN DEM PARADE
collected.
At the head of the ships staff is E. evur addmonai capacity they were se- will ship home the specimens already
H. Gray, sailing master, who carries a j ^ f0 tj|j
certificate as master 0f sail and sec- The BIossom ls a three master, bum
end mate of steam in any ocean and criginallv for thc COastwise cargo. The
for any tonnage. Capt. Simmons will expediUcn wi!, 8pend the comln|f ^
command both the navigating and the artjc summer in the South AtlantiCf
then cruise along the West African
scientific personnel of the vessel. The
members of the crew are all college . • . .. ,
6 coast visiting the islands of that reg-
trained men, who will, in between du-
ion. and then make for the Indian
ties of hoisting sail and scrubbing ^
decks, carry cut their additional du-
ties of surveyor, ship’s clerk or what-
Sho will re-stock twice at
Cape Town, possibly a third time on
the return voyage, and at each stop
No. 6—Leaves Weatherford..5:50 a.m.
No. 12—Leaves ........................9:40 a.m.
.No. 2—Leaves .................... 1:41 p.m.
No. 4—Leaves ........ ....5:25 p.m.
West Bound—
No. 3—Arrives W'lord..........10:56 a.m. ’A
No. 1—Arrives ........................4:80 p.m. 1
No. 5—Arrives ......................11:81 p.m.
No. 11—Arrives ....................12:56 a.m.
It Never Rains
But It Pours
FELT TIRED, SO TIRED
Indiana Lady Says She Was Run*
Down, Suffered With Her Back,
Took Cardui, and
Got Well
Richmond, Ind.—‘‘I thought 1 v;ou!d
write a line or so, to say that I owe my
good health and strength to Cardui," says
a letter from Mrs. Cora Courtney, 31
Railroad Street, this city.
take Cardui, so, to please him, 1 did, and
TT takes money, the saying goes, to make money.
The same might be said of health. Good health
means bodily energy. Energy inspires exertion and
exercise. Exercise improves health and builds more
strength and vigor.
Always back of good health is nourishing food—
foods rich in energy producing elements. One
of these essential elements is called Dextrose, which
supplies much strength and vitality.
There b a large percentage of Dextrose in deli-
cious Karo, which makes Karo an especially nourish-
ing food for growing children. They love its sweet
and delightful flavor. Serve plenty of Karo. The Blue
Label and Red Label Karo are equally nutritious.
j
will say 1 do not regret it, for I am able
; to do all my work and do my shopping.
, "I have five children, four in school,
Sunday, my husband and a boarder to do for, and
l sub- 1 do all my own work for all of us, and
scribers on Sunday. The Dallas Times j |^”fcMyJown
! take this wonderful medicine.
Every sick and run-down woman should
Herald is one of the few.
“We deliver the Sunday Telegram | "| suffered with my back; a very weak
only on rural routes where we have . feeling in my limbs.
109 or more subscribers," Mr. Wil-' “I felt hardly able to drag; just
tired—so bred all the time.
liams explained. “Rural people yearn ■
for something to read on
they enjoy most of all
newspaper. We employ carriers for
forty rural routes, and at an average
cost of four dollars for each route per
Sunday. Thus, it costs us f!60 to de-
; "it was in effort for me to do any-
Sunday, and f^igg, but Cardui helped me so I felt like
the family a different woman.”
If you are in a rdn-down physical
condition, suffering: as this-Indiana lady
nays she did, give Cardui a fair trial. It
should help you.
Take Cardui.
NC-I47
Get this Beautiful
Aluminum Syrup Pitcher
Worth *I00 for 40c
and S Karo Labels
Buy 5 cans of Karo from
your grocer, send labels to
address below with 40c and
you will reoeive the Syrup
Pitcher by paroel post.
Write Kingsbury Broker-
age Co., 309 N. Preston
St., Dallas, Tex.
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The Daily Herald (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 17, 1923, newspaper, October 17, 1923; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth645470/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .