The Daily Herald. (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 306, Ed. 1 Monday, January 5, 1914 Page: 3 of 4
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. President
4. 8. WHITE, Vl^Preeiden*1<ieC*
J. 0. TUCKEK. CkaUer
J. P. OWENS, AssUUint Cashier
BARNEY HOLLAND, Ain't Cashier
C C*" BARTHOLC
h. 8. WHITE, Vic* ..
ESTABLISHED 1868
Bp.r tK'-S*...■
Citizens National Ban!
<
Weatherford, Tex it
Directors—G. A. Holland, C. C. Barthold, O. Tucker. G. White,
C. C. Littleton, Barney Holland, H. 0. Barthold
A lady told me the other
day she was in love—
with the repair work thfe-shop is turn-
ing out. A lot of other people in town
leel the same way about It. Fact is,
our repair business is growing by
leaps and bounds. The reason is we
make It a rule to.use only the kind of
materials and do only the kind of
Work that will make you always think
Of us When your shoes get disabled.
TOM DAWSON, The Shoe Man
South Side Square.
&P '
MASONIC LODGE
Stated ''meeting of Phoeaii
Lodge No. 275, A. F. ft A. M.
Saturday night on or before
full moon In each month.
W. G. GIBBS, W M
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J
t. 8. SHARP, Secretary.
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JUST ARRIVED!
ESPECIALLY FOR YOLK BENEFIT
—THE YE BY LATEST WAGNER
RECTIFIER.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
Lone Star Lodge No. A
K. of P., meets every Tues-
day night. Knights visit
lug always welcome. Ctu. j
tie Hall West Side Squart
J. H. ENDACOTT. C C !
•/ V. HENSLEY, K. R. & S.
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L 0. 0. F.
Weatherford Lodgt
, |M<r No. 77, ( I. 0. O. F. meek
avory Thursday night in Odd Fellows
Mall, N, Main street, over Waldock.’.'
0UMrt market.
' W. H. LANCASTER, N. G.
WM. HAAS, Secretary.
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'»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
, ii Si L. Moseley G. W. Bsroo*
i: Moseley & Barcus
Attorney s-at-Law
! WILL eSACTICE IN ALL THC COUNT*
, CIVIL LAW AND COLLECTIONS
' >■ ~ '
/ > <*rOffloe—over Citizens National Rank
> Weatherford, Texas
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■ ; R. L. Stennls E. H.;Grtnd»UB «»
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,$tennis & firindstaff
Attorneys andJCounselors-at-Law Z
1 ’ Offloe—KUTEMAN BUILDING )’
Weatherford. Texas j,
Prompt attention girenLto aU business <>
. M entrusted to us.
: *♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦»»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦»♦♦»
. M. Alexander Judge A J. Power
R. Bonna Rldgway
Alexander, Power
& Ridgway
GENERAL LAW PRACTICE
7081-3 Main St. Ft. Worth, Texas
No one has been prepared lor charg-
ing storage batteries, and as you know
, the most of these batteries which have
been tilled are not giving perfect sat-
isfaction to the automobile owners,
we want you to give us that battery
next time and then you will be pleas-
ed with the results. We guarantee
our machine to give entire satisfac-
tion.
\Ve also have installed a new up-to-
date CASING VI LCAMZER and will
vulcanize your old easing so tHey will
be as good as new.
We have nice, clean cars for rent-
day and night—at reasonable rates.
We are also pleasing some of the
automobile owners by repairing their
old ears so that they run like new
ones. Let us demonstrate that this is
a fact.
E. &. L. Garage
The New Independent Garage That
Appreciates Your Business
S. W. PHONE llili HOME
NEGRO EATS SELF TO DEATH:
FRIED CHICKEN IS CAI SE.
St. Ixniis, Mo., Jan. 5.—Robert Ed-
munds, an 18-year-old Kentucky ne-
gro, is dying in the hospital because
he at fortyttwo pieces of a fowl. The
feast was spread as a surprise. When
Edmunds entered the dining room
there was platter after platter of
fried chicken and he was told to go
to it. He has been unconscious since
taken to the hospital.
Frank Fisher, an employe of the
Planters Hotel, is dead from drink-
ink twelve glasses of sweet milk to
wash down one rabbit. He was ill
only forty minutes.
| lacked four or five votes of being adop-
• ted. In other words, it lacked four or
five votes only of having two-thirds of
all the members present, and my rec-
ollection is that there were a very
large number of members who vot^d
-- on that occasion.
FEDERALS IN BORDER TOWN EX- “The demand for the passage of an
TEND BARRICADES TO PRO- j immigration restriction bill comes
TECT NONCOMBAT ANTS. from all over the country and unques-
_ tioaabiy a very large majority of the
Laredo, Texas, Jan. 5.-The federal ! |,eoDie the L'nited States demand
garrison of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico,! suc1' legislation. Congress may oeca-
was busy with pick and shovel on the s'ona*'-' mistake the popular will, but
when two-thirds of all the members
field where a forty-eight hours battle
was ended Saturday by the withdraw-
al of the attacking Constitutionalist
forces. Barricades were thrown up
several hundred yards otuside ,th
city proper anti beyond the zone of
recent lighting, with the evident in
Mention of forcing the next
where non-combatants am! properly
would be less menaced
Thirty-five miles down the river the
Constitutionalists awaited reinforce-
ments from Matamoras. The rebel
leaders asserted that the assault on
Nuevo Laredo would be renewed soon.
Twelve thousand rounds of ammu-
nition, said to be intended for the
Constitutionalists was seized by L'nit-
ed States authorities in the Laredo
railroad yards.
The Constitutionalists used two au-
tomobiles to deliver ammunition to
threatened points. They were found
on the field demolished by cannon fire.
A river skiffman, captured by a
concealed federal force as he landed
on the Mexican side with smuggled
ammunition for the Constitutionalists
was hanged.
Glimpses of fires on the outskirts
of the battlefield gave rise to reports
that the federal and rebel dead had
concur in an opinion as to what that
will is a mistake in the reading oi
the minds of the people is, to say the
least of it, very unlikely.
"The American Federation of Labor
with more than 2,000,000 members,
attack 1 asks the enactment of the bill. They
are strongly supported in this request
by the Farmers’ unions, with more
than J.ooo.ooi) members represented in
thirty-two states. The Grange, an as-
sociation of farmers largely confined
to the northern part of the country,
which claims l.ooo.non 'members, lias
joined in the demand for the restric-
tion of immigration. The three broth-
erhoods associated with the operation
of railways, that is to say, the con-
ductors’ association and those of the
locomotive engineers and firemen,
support the demand for restrictive leg-
islation, and some of their represen-
tatives before the committee demand-
ed even more than the committee was
willing to concede. One spokesman
for one of the labor associations, in
addressing the committee, suggested
that for a period of years immigration
should be absolutely discontinued. Of
course that view is too ra ileal and
the committee did not entertain it.
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Scene in “The Traffic,” Opera House Tonight*
Unman in Pulpit.
j Two splendid services were held et '
, the Central Christian church Sunday, i
| ’’A number of other associations In the morning Mrs Berg, wife 6f the
been burned. One man from across . , , . . ,
the river claimed to Have a(.lllally ,'^v.ng a member a:p in toe aggrcgate| p:lstor> delivered the chief address
for
seen the funeral pyres.
The Mexican officials added to the
United States immigration officers’
problems "by refusing to allow thirty
Syrians to reercss the border because ........... ......
* , , ent session of congress as
they had tracoma. The Syrians were
originally excluded from the l'nited
States, but from humanitarian mo-
tives were allowed to enter when the
fighting began, if was expected that
they would return to Mexico when
the danger was over.
Four hundred Federal cavalry ar-
rived from the south to reinforce the
Nuevo Laredo garrison.
Colonel Abel Serratos, a Japanese
officer on the staff of General f’lhlo
Gonzales, the constitutionalist com-
mander, died in a local hospital from
j wounds. His Japanese name was un-
known.
! or subject war "America, G id’a Melt
|ing Pot.” She drew the picture of.
of about a milli* men *vrro present
I by representative ind joined in th*
clamor for res’-' !ve legislation
There is very litt.e d mbt that such! America as a molting pot,*, with God
a law will be enacted , the tires-las tlie alchemist, and the nations of
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T. A. Henderson
With Sadler Company
Funeral Director::
Embalmer|
Jjhiy Akatstaot for Women and Children ^,
BOTH PHONES—Day and Night , >
i. «< • i"e earth ns the ore which is i^ei \
renter than it ever has bcc.i poured into the mcitiua poi.
and a sort of poll of the two houses quoted statistics to show wliat a
of congress indicates that the meas- large proportion of the population 61
lire will have more votes in each our large cities tu foreign born, stat-
house than it had when it o^y lacked Ing that Chicago's population is about
four or five votes of passing by a two- Mi per cent foreign born. The inipojy-
ibirds majority in February. adoe Of ibis condition as a great
“There is a mistaken impression ional problem was then set forth, and
that it is aimed at any particular Eu- the need on the part of the country <>*
ropean people or directed against any a better handling of this element of
particular religious faith. The thought our citizenship. She spoke of the
which seemed io control the members necessity of not only educating these
of the committee and which appears immigrants but of christianizing them,
also to have controlled the votes of She called attention to the responsb-
the two houses of congress in Fcbru- bility of the church toward reaching
ary is that until the country shall out after and helping tills important
have time lo digest and assimilate the part of our country’s population, cle-
enormous number of immigrants from scribing what was already being done,
all parts of Europe who ltave been especially through the Christian Wo-
flocking into the United States for the men's Board of Missions, and what
last twenty years, it is better to call ought to be done. It was a splendid
a halt. Personally, I feel that .that message, and the comment it created
should Ijc done. The fact is I do not among those who heard" it, proved
believe it. wise economically, socially bow deeply it had impresesd them,
or politically to fill up the country to Mrs Berg must be given mention as
I its capacity at once. We have pecu- a platform speaker of unusual aiililty.
liar political institutions wltich incur Her voice and delivery have a charm
_ j exact form do not nourish anywhere which holds the attention of the Ms-
Washlngton, Jan. ■>.—The commit- in Europe and without the risk of tener so thoroughly that not a word
tee on immigration recently has re- breaking down those institutions we is lest. When the opportuhiy to near
ported a bill to regulate immigration cannot take into political partnership iter against presents itself, she cm
into the United States, and has added with us an unlimited number of peo- count on a crowded house,
to the law new provisions which will pie who do not comprehend them and Those present at tills service were
have the effect ot reducing the num-! who rnay not even sympathize w ith also favored with a beautiful solo by
her of immigrants. The bill that the them. Mrs. Cnhoou, vocal instructor at tex-
committee has reported is substanti- The people of this country own a as Christian University,
ally the same measure which Presi- vast estate to which we have given in the evening the pastor filled the
dent Taft vetoed In February of the the name of the United .-’t tea. Every pulpit arid gave a splendid sermon on
current year, it contains the same man who conies into the country be- ”i»oking Backward and Forward,
provision, the literacy test, which comes our partner in that estate and Taking the church as the Important
President Taft assigned as a reason for our own well-teing arid that of factor of concern to the c trtirch-goltjg
for his veto, it contains a new pro-! the country, 1 think v. e might to select people of today, he led his listeners
vision which members have called the our future partners with greup-r care up to a mountain top from which they
sahbotnge clause, and which under-' than we have exercised in the past, could look down the past years and
ili come a tine, and It will <■ <tcli a glimpse oi the upward march
If you should meet anyone varnishing _
lore with a ointment, your«best *<V ,
vice would be to quit such things a#*
attend to the blood.
’[Yj successfully light any blood troubfo
*wn* eruptive skin disease-—call It ee
lupus, psoriasis, malaria or scrofula,—,
your blood under the tulluence of 8. 8. i
It Is pm- ot tiu.se rare medicsforce* whle
netdn ti1" blood with the same degree t
rerfslmy that is found in all natural, tea-
The.maimer In which it domlnaroa,
HOUSE COMMITTEE REPORTS A
BILL DESIGNED TO RESTRICT
IMMIGRATION.
Worms the Cause of Your Child’s Pains
A foul, disagreeable breath, dark
circles around the eyes, at times fev-
I oriiS;mr|U '/hen f * swollen takes to deny admission to the l'nited ' There «
I with sharp cramping pains are all in-j States of immigrants who advocate or come quickly, too. , when even our; of the church through the centuries,
dications of worms. Don’t let your jteactj th*t destruction of proper) It; great eonntry will be fnmhiy j mu her great triumphs He then
Ugly Sores
Quickly Banished
You Marvel How Worst Sldn
* Eruptions Disappear as Result
of Famous Remedy
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OgcjM.' T.e.aaEin r in width It domlnaruu,
antf, c>>nti I* the myscrloa* tr*n*fer«uc«
of irini,. red. pure arterial blood, for th*
CIscHiud Vtn.r:* blvtid la tuArveloua. i
Out through every tAln pore acids, (term*
tied a(hfr hlwd l-npurltie* are forced 1*
the-torn* of Iiivldhlc vapor; the bowel*,
h'diicy*. b!Add' r and ell cmunctorle* of the
huily arc marshalled Into a fighting force
to expel every vestige of eruptive disease.
'fieri, !* renreefy r e^mmunlty anywhere
hut vrhnt ha* it* living example of the
wonderful cu-stive efret* of 8. 8. 8. Get
lot tie < f this famous remedy to-day, and
your rax el* stubborn or pecnllar. write
to the'swIff; gpfclflc Co.. 21fl Swift Bldg,
At'entn, On
tv, not permit anyone to t*tk yon tnta
some useless comnonnd they pnt no at a
s»b*tltnte for 8, 8. 8. No honest drogslal
will do this.
'>*•'
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Mill BALES (IF COTTON
DHTROYED AT BOWIBi
attention to the condition of
child suffer—Kickapoo \Vorm Killeri haf, tip>in guggegtc^| that this measure filled. In several countries In Europe called
-JLJ^WhflHta Lx-diTe effect adds!was aimed at the militant female suf- and in most Asiatic countries govern-J the church throughout the world to-
greatly to the health of your child by|fragist* of Great Britain. Hepresen- menta are confronted v.;ti. tie prob-jda;. and showed her future aucceae
removing the dangerous and disagree-; tative B lay den. who is a member of letn of what to do with * urpius pop i j depended upon a change in th-- ‘’har-
able effect of worms and parasitesjth(J comIniUee> 3ay8 that the clause lation. for us that problem is yet larjacter of her Individual members H
KUIer’as heaUh produeer°sho.dd ’™!| waa nor aimed particularly at the mil-; off
in every household. Perfectly safe.| itant suffragists, but Is intended to, future and it Is tb«* du»> 6f e-.ery man
!!##♦♦♦<♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦. Buy a box today. Price 25c. All drug-J ):cep cut ail people who advocate w ho is charged w ith the idmlni ra-
O i *• moil
but a pru^lonr man look* to
t * -m
Bowie, Texas, Jan. 5—Four hundra4
bales of cotton were destroyed and
200 bales seriously damaged by tyf
which started on the platform ot thf
Northwestern compress here at 9:SO
a. tn Sunday. A considerable part ot
the south side of the platform waa
burned. The loss is estimated at be*
tween I.’Ei.'bM and 140,000.
A Fort Worth and Denver locomo-
tive pulled out of danger ail the cars
belonging to that road and the Rock
island.
11
'M
IE. Clyde Whitlock:
* Teacher of Violin |
P*P’l «t Wylie. Kansas Cfityj Weldl*.
Chicago’, Barm a*. Berlin
Will be m Weatherford
f:p,[ "Wednesday.
...................
m 1 ■aMagBBBHgB-gsea-L-^ijmu:-
gists or by mail. Kickapoo Indian Med.
j Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis—Adv.
Hniilinc and Plowing.
j When in need of hauling, plowing
tend grading, see cr phone me. and 1
will be glad to do your work.
X L. PBRKINSON,
3. W Phone 3T1-R.
m
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Begin at the Bottom—
That’s good advice. First, bminse it is the sure way;
second, because, for the most of us, it is the ONLY’ way. A
step ;it s time, one dollar piled up beside another, careful,
conservative, saving—these things will bring you gradually
but surely up the ladder of success.
Men fail because they get in too big a hurry, too anx-
ious to grab at the golden apples hanging just out of reach.
STICK TO YOUR LADDER! Stick to your job, stick
"to your determination to save. The Tello^ who goes up like
a sky rocket usually come* down like a thousand of brick.
Start an account with —
& FARMERS STATE BANK
crimes like the destruction of prop- tiori of public attain to consider the
ultimate effect of legislation anS in
the claimed
Jehu rch
J baptism
ness, her indifference, tier low scrip-
A A > t HELD FAILS
TO ATTEND HEARING,
New York. Jan. '.—Anna Held ftd!
erty by fire or otberw iae.
In spanking about this important
bill, Mr Slay den said:
the discharge fit that dutv I imvc
thought it better to do what i couid to
that the great need of the
todav was repentance and
repentance for her worldli-J ^ to jn t|jc supreme court to
submit to ai\^ oral examination before
•’TUc'ceslre of the committee is tot prevent th.p problem b«*ing presented
keep all criminals out of the country. J to us for settlement unL! an oppor-
I1
!t does not believe that any class of it unity shall have been given to s*-e
should go un-|what sort of person the American of
individuals anywhere should go
punished if they are guilty of arson
should be permitted to come into the
United States.
ic fu>nre, who is an
j ft is
tural plant, and her loose hold upon
Christ: and baptism into reconsecra-
tlon, that would bring on such fruit
as would be acceptable to God.
Henceforth there will be preaching
at this church every Sunday Thj
congregation is looking and working
amalgam, will I toward great -improvements for the
}future under the leadership of their
new pastor >
lamentable fact that noi-
*‘The literacy test to which Mr. Taft. withstanding our great domain tenant
objected last spring was the most farmers are Increasing rapidly ft is
hotly contested in the commitee of vastly better for us in every way to
any provision of the bill, yet"iTwas "have our cittaSfi^ljeetTme jrroprfetors
adopted by a large majority of th«- of land and certainly it is deraons?ra-
members who were present and vot- bie thst the greater the number cr
ing and there is no reason to doubt: people we admit the less land, rcla-
that it will be agreed to by the bouse! tive to population, there will be for
of representatives when a vote shall j our own people. I believe that my
be taken. You will remember. I sup- ■ view of this problem is concurred in
pose, that the senate, in February last, by 1*0 per cent of the people of Texas
passed the bill over the president’s
veto and in doing so gave an over-
whelming support to the idea of the
literacy test. No doubt you will also
remember that when the bouse voted
on the question of again passing the
immigration bill, notwithstanding the
and by far more than half of those of
the United States.
“I am informed by Chairman Bur-
nett that he has asked for a special
rule to provide for the early consider-
ation of the bill and 1 think before
Feb. 1 the senate will be required to
i|»w»
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objectioni of President Taft, it only take it up.'
& - -iAVi#>rSy
Special Rate* Continue.
1 villas, Texas, Jan 5.—Texas and
Louisiana will continue to draw pro^
peetors and hoineseekers In large
numbers due to the fact that special
rate's over railroads wiH be continued
! i was decided last year to discontinue
the low fares, hot L!«W$h the ener-
getic efforts of the"'^tild lines, the
Texas & Pacific, the Missouri Pacific
and Iron Mountain and the Interna-
tional & Great’ Northern, the old
schedules will be in effect. This means
a great deal to the campaign of de-
veloping the broad and ferUfaLjggres
In Louisiana and Texas, M&'W' eon-
ildered a signal victory for Northern
" ers. land men' and.-Others.
Vi' 'Ilk ^
trial in pro* eeilings supplementary to
a judgn-ent of $2,438 due Collifia
Marsh, a decorator. -iTlivpsr
Miss Held was ordered to appaar
t^x* weeks ago and testify as to “
hen 1
financial condition. She did not obey.
There is more Catarrh In this M0«
tlon of the country than all other Aft*
eases put together, and until the last
few years was supposed to M-tncar»
able. For a great many yean doeton
pronounced it a local disease and fro-
scribed local remedies, and by ,oon-
stantiy failing to care with loos)
treatment pronounced it Incurable.
Science has proven Catarrh to bo a
constitutional disease, and thotoflQta
requires constitutional treatment, p
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactalro4 kf
F. J. Cheney •& Co., Toledo, Ohio, la
the only constitutional outre on On ,
market. It is taken internally
doses ftom 10 drops to a teaspoonful.
It acts directly on the blood
cons surfaces of the system,
fer one hundred dollars for
It fails to earn. Send for
and testimonials. Address;
F. J. CHENEY ft CO, T»
75o.
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The Daily Herald. (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 306, Ed. 1 Monday, January 5, 1914, newspaper, January 5, 1914; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth647248/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .