Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 25, 1912 Page: 3 of 8
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Eat Less Meat-More Fish
TRADE EXCURSION.
MOTHERS’ CONGRESS
- *
*
Announced to Leave Fort Worth First District. Resolutions Adopt-
On May 13th, Over Rock Island
for Jacksboro,
[^eaFpoasi
River
We can furnish you
with a fine assortment
,of fish in season. Salt-
ed, canned and smok-
ed fish all the time.
ed Tending to Bettter Health
and Compulsory Education.
j The Scar-Telegram announces The permanent organization of the
that the Fort Worth business men First District of Texas Congress of
wUl invade West Texas in a trade Mothers and Parent-Teachers’ asso-
excursion. After negotiations with ciations was accomplished in Fort
merchants, bankers and the railroads Worth last Friday, the district being
the chamber of commerce announc- composed of ninety counties in
^pjg
Order Some Fish Next Time
You send in an order. Get the habit—
It’s a good habit in warm weather
F. P. POOLE & SON
JACKSBORO,
PHONE 40
TEXAS
SOUTH SIDE SQUARE.
THE ELECTRIC LIGHTS ICE PLANT
AT JACKSBORO
Has Installed New and TJp-to-Date Ma-
chinery. and Will be Able to Give the
Public First Class Service.
We Ask and Solicit Your Patronage,
HENSLEY BROS.
ed Saturday that the trip is assur-
ed.
A special train of Pullmans with
band and dining car will leave Fort
Worth May 13 and will visit all im-
[ po.'tant trade centers in West Tex-
! as. The special will return the
| night of May 18.
Fifty reservations had been made
up to Saturday night and Secretary
R. O. McCormack of the Chamber
of Commerce hopes to have at least
eighty before the trip.
List of Reservations.
McCormacK announced Saturday
he had made all arrangements
wiih the Pullman company and the
railroads for the >trip and chat the
following so far had been obtained
for che party: ^
A. G. Carter, E, E. Bewley, Will-
iam Monnig, C.' A. Wheeler, W. D.
Reynolds, L. H. McKee, Leon Gross,
Swift & Co., John P. King, Armour
& Co., Rufus Coy, Walter Sloan, A.
J. Sandegard, Hub Diggs, W. Holt
Harris, J. F. Henderson, A. E.
Sehenecker, A. J. Duncan, Nash
Hardware Co.,' Ben O. Smith, How-
ard Peak, S. P. Berry, C. D. Reim-
ers, Een Keith, W. G. Burton, El-
mo Sledd, R. S. Wakefield, Parker
Brown Co., T. B. Yarbrough, Will-
iam Reeves, G. H. Clifford, W. G.
Turner, Mile Eppstein, J. W. Mitch-
ell, R. H. Foster, C. Hightower, H.
C. Meacham, Sam Levy, R. Carnrike,
Bert K. Smiih, John Sparks, L. P.
Robertscn, Coke Harkrider, W. C.
<
JACKSBORO GAZETTE
Telephone 71.
vV
For your Mid-Summer hats, light
and airy and beautiful, call on Miss
A’lie Calvert.
I have a sack salt at 50c per
cwt. the strongest and best stock
salt on the market. E. L. Douglass.
Rexall Kidney Remedy stimulates,
regulates and tones up the kidneys,
50c and $1.00.
It is reported that 40,000 mutton
.sheep will be shipped out of the
San Angelo country in the month of
April.
For rheumatism you will find
nothing better than Chamberlain’s
Liniment. Try it and see how
quickly it gives relief. F or sale
by All Dealers.
No mattter what—no matter when
—if you get it at the New Drug*
Store, it’s right.
You can say goodbye to constipa-
tion with a clear conscience if you
use Chamberlain’s Tablets. Many
have been permanently cured by
their use. For sale by All Dealers.
Rexall Rheumatism Remedy brings
relief in some of the worst cases of
rheumatism.
“My little son had a very severe
cold. I was recommended to try!
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, and
before a small bottle was finished
he was as well as ever,” writes Mrs. 1
H. Silks, 29 Dowling Street, Sydney,
Australia. This remedy is for sale
by All Dealers.
Mrs. J. C. Oliver, Tickfaw, La., !
says she can recommend Foley Kid-1
ney Pills and tells why. “I suffer- !
ed with kidney trouble for eighteen I
months ahd got relief three days
after I began taking Foley Kidney i
Pills. I know from personal expe- |
rience that they are fine.” j. H. '
Waltres. I
i
Mrs. A. L. Vap Ankenbauer, 3216
Marshall St., Little Rock, Ark., a
descendant of one of our finestt
Southern colonial families, writes,
‘T suffered greatly with kidney
trouble, had severe pains across my
back, and felt altogether miserable.
After taking Foley Kidney Pills for
a few days the pains left me and
now I have no kidney trouble. In
fact, Foley Kidney Pills have cured
me completely.” J. H. Walters.
Rexall Shaving Lotion, An abso-
lute necessity to every man who
shaves. 25c and 50c.
Of the unveiling ceremony by the
Jacksboro W. O. W. and W. C.
camps, the Jermyn News says) the
visitors “report it having been quite
a nice affair' and an enjoyable time.
The ritualistic work was good, es-
pecially that of the Circle.”
North and West Texas.
Resolut ons Adopted,
i The resolutions as read by Super-
intendent of Schools J. W. Cantrell
were adopted. They follow:
1 We> your committee on resolu-
tions, have agreed upon the follow-
ing as indicative of the atttitude: of
the First District Congress of Moth-
ers toward some educational and
soc al questions now confronting us:
j, 1. We favor such laws as will
provide for both state and municipal
child welfare commissions.
2. We believe the time has ar-
rived when school boards of Texas
should have the option of enforcing
attendance at school of all the chil-
dren between the ages of 7 and 14.
j 3. We favor medical inspection of
schools as soon as financial condi-
t:ons will justify.
1 4- We most hearttily commend the
College of Industrial Arts for Young
\\ orhen to the serious consideration
of mo-hers and guardians as an in-^
s itution which prepares our young
women for the practical duties of
life. Incmded in its curriculum is ’
a course in personal hygiene, care
of children, home nursing and sani-
tation, which instruction is given by
a competent woman physician.
The usual resolutions of thanks
to the press and local organizations
were adopted.
L3
To Wifi the Race
Nowadays when an emergency occurs,
whether it be fire, illness or other trou-
ble, the Southwestern Telephone is the
swift messenger to neighbors and town.
any crises the telephone will cover
miles of country and deliver your erv
for help in a flash.
Wif- wiU ,*end y°u a booklet on request,
telling all about our Rural Line Plan,
adopted by so many farmers.
Address our nearest Manager or
The Southwestern
Telegraph & Telephone
Company
Dallas, Texas
Cotton Mills
i
President Bizzell Speaks.
Pre.-Jdenc W. B. Bizzell of
' the
Presion, James-Mickle-Schow Co • a m ^ °f Indus;riaI Arts made an
Clarence Miller, Ireland Hampton!
S. L. Johnson and the 'lexas Build-
ing Co.
The excursion committee consists
of H. E. Finney, E. L. White;' Ben
O. Smith and William Monnig.
Itinerary of Tourists.
The itinerary of the trip follows:
Fort Worth to Jacksboro, over the
on “Inius rial Education.”
He said, by way of condensation:
Indus.rial education is not separate
and apait from other education—it"
is just simply education. Among ■
the best evidences of educational !
progress is the greater attention1
now being given to moral education, I
to- physical training, and especially
to industrial education. Our ideas
- * w tire --------- vui
Rock Island, 71.8 miles; Jacksboro and conceptions of morals are being
|10 £«ymcur, over the Gulf, Texas broadened by the process of sociali-
: & Wes ern, 74.9; miles; §eymour to za^on- We are demanding more
j Wich;ta Falls, over ' the Wichita than the morality of the past. Any
j Va ley, 52.2 miles; Wichita Falls to 1113,11 bbat foRows a course of action
Chillicothe, over the Fort Worth
Hi
■:vv
. ■ ,f
WE MANUFACTURE ONLY ONE BALE OUT OF EVERY
SEVENTY PRODUCED.
W ‘ ^
'• • >•
County' Examination For May.
In view of the fact that a great
many teachers in the State holding
certificates which will expire before
the regular June examination de-
sire to build upon these certificates,
in accordance with the law, before
their expiration, and in view of the
further face that the time for grad-
ing and reporting upon the papers
of the June examination before the
summer rformals examinations are
held is veiy limited, it has been
deetmed wise and proper to call a
special examination at each of the
county seats on May 2, 3, and 4,
1912. This examination will not
take tthe place of the June exami-
nation which will be held on the
6th, 7th, and 8th of June in accord-
ance with the requirements of the
law. The papers of applicants from
each of these examinatitons will be
reported upon before the beginning
of the first series of Summer Nor-
mal examinations.
ial examination for May is authoriz-
It should be noted that the spec-
ed for the issuance qf State certif-
icates only. The same rules and
regulations which govern the regu-
lar examinations wi’l also govern
in this instance.
The following is the schedule of
the examination: Thursday, perma-
nent work; Friday, Second grade
subjects; Saturday, First grade sub-
jects.
This notice is given by order of
the State Superintendent.
Respectfully,
C. C. Bock, Co. Supt.
— ------» &
Denver, 64.6 miles; Chillicothe to
Hamlin, over the Orient, 108.4
miles; Hamlin to Cisco, over the
Texas Centra’,' 91.7 miles; Cisco to
Sweetwater, over the Texas & Pa-
cific, 86.9 miles; „ Sweetwater to
San Angelo, over the * Orient, 77.6
miles; San Angelo to Brownwood,
osier the Santa Fe, 97.4 miles;'
Brownwood to Menard, over the
Frisco, 85.1 miles, and Menard‘ to
(Fort Worth, also over the Frisco,
,227.9 miles. The total mileage of
.the trip will be 1,038.5 miles.
! Secretary McCormack has made
j arrangements for a band of sixteen
pieces and literature of Fort
Worth’s.advantages will be distrib-
uted at points alcng the journey.
McCormack announces accommo-
dations will be provided for all who
desire to make the trip and a spe- ________
cial effort will be made to get as ed man is tbe ideally educated man.
many Fort Worth business men as! . “Peo£le dTfer widely in capacity
• i • » - >= v.r * - v-.-v
The factory is the farmer’s market house and he must travel
,until he reaches it and pay the freight to destination. The
that indicates he is doing less than ^exas farmers ship their crop ten thousand miles to reach the
his best is now considered immoral. ^ac^orY- We have 15 cotton factories in Texas valued at $2,22&,~
“This question of morals on effi- We manufacture approximately 60,000 bales of cotton per
ciency in moral education, physical annum- Building factories in Texas to manufacture the cotton
t.aining and indus:riai education, we. Produce wou^d require an investment of $850,000,000. To
and these together constitute one f3411 control of the cotton industry, we must build factories,
problem of general efficiency. | The Texas Welfare Commission is investigating the Fabrica-
“We now have good school build- tion of Cotton into Cloth and the establishment of Cotton Mills,
ings and medical inspection to pro- 0. E. Dunlap of Waxahachie is chairman of the sub-commit-
ect the physical efficiency of the tee having the investigation in charge.
cniici. • j • i
“There is
no antagonism between
culture and industrial education, .teaching the children how to read,
Matihew Arnold and Emerson, two 1 *
whom the world holds cultured, held
that there was need of learning a
trade or an art.
Not all that is called education
is equally effective. Our aim is so-
Notice to Creditors.
but what to read. She said that The State of Texas,
the best educators are now enlisted County of Jack '
in the solution of this problem of j To the creditors of Mullinax Wp-
appieciating good literature; that lis & Company, a firm composed 6t
home, school and library should j. D. Mullinax, F. B. Willis, and F.,
counsel together and unite upon m. Burkholder;
Prospect* for Grapes
Mission, Tex., April 12.—The
grape industry is growing rapidly in
this section of the state and large
quantities of California grapes will
be shipped from here this season.
Conditions are excellent! and reports
from Raymondville and Sarita also
give promise of bumper crops.
Puts End to Bad Habit.
Things never look bright to one
with the blues. Ten to one the
trouble is a sluggish liver, filling
the system with bilious poison, that
Dr. King’s New Life Pills would
expel. Try them. Let the Joy of
better feelings end the blues. Best
for stomach, liver and kidneys. 25c j
at All Druggists.
i efJiciei!cy- The educator that some plan to surround children | You are hereby notified that said
ains for that must do his work from the period ,of infancy with the Mullinax, WiUis & Company, of the
consciously and plan his, courses of Koc+ ---~ - -
study with that in view. The skill-
POSjble.
Jacksboro Board of Trade, it is
stated, will take steps to give the
excursionists a cordial welcome to
Jacksboro and extend to them the
courtesies and hospitality of the
city. Announcement of definite
Plans wiu be made by the Board of
trade.
best of books for their needs. The County of Jack, on the 25th day of
study of children’s books, she said, March, Al D. 1912, executed a deed
should be a part of the work of o^ assignment, conveying to the un-
- —----v-eachers’ instituttes and of mothers’ dersigned al’ of their property for
to do things. A boy in East Texas cIubsj that to do the best of work the benefit of such of their credi-
the library should have the intelli- tors as will consent to accept their
gent co-operation of the home and
school.
The" Child’s Health.
Dr. I. C. Chase spoke upon
Notice, Singers.
The next quarterly session of the
Jack County singing Convention
convenes with, the singing class at
Beans Prairie, seven miles northeast
°f Jacksboro, and five miles south
raised upon one acre of ground a
corn crop that. j=o!d for six times
as much as that raised by his fath-
er on an acre beside it. It was a 1
qU“NotVf SkU1 ^ capacity- I Dr. I. C. Chase spoke upon “What
tria^TourZ7°nTe take indU8‘ tthe Parents-Teachers Clubs Cap
Pie *forVtihe nl ® “h 18 t0 m Pe°“ 130 Wlth ReSard to the Health of
worses P Ce 6 ^ CaD ihe Chlld ” He said tbat the hope
“Fpw " of the American people, -so far as
pacity Wp ail *'e to their ca- their lives, health and efficiency are
enerav not aVf, reservoirs concerned, is determined by tihe
si ion m! ° “ !ed iDt° requi" teaching the children are getting
wiLd ” r,f- ge‘. „hls seco"‘i -a ters ot health. He spoke
Ilf the uroDer St:m I ’’ ■and fou.rth of ths difference between the atti-
1 We admire *he u us is applied, tude of Europeans and Americans
well of hi a man Wh° Can the toward physicians, and attributed 8ides at Jacksboro, Texas, which is
well of his deeper energy. He is the lack of confidence of the Amer- ---------
proportional share of said estate*
and discharge said debtors from
their respective claims; and the un-
dersigned accepted said trust, and
has duly qualified as required by
law.
All creditors consenting to said
assignment must, within four montii
after the publication of this notice,
make known to the assignee their
consent in writing, and within six
months from the date of this notice
file their claim, as prescribed by
law, with the undersigned, who re-
days of the
12th
day before
the llth and
month.
All singing classes that are mem
hers of “ ’
work than o hers. The fundamen-
tal question is not the conservation
of our natural resources; it is the
ili„ . I 1L la Lilt?
his convention are request- j question of developing and conserv-
ed to at once elect your delegates
and be represented at this session
as there are several matters of
to be
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
Tin Kind You Han Always BongM
Bears the
Signature of i
business that are important
attend to at this time.
Any other communities that have
singing classes are allowed three
elegates to this convention, and
we earnestly solicit any who see this
notice to be sure and join us in this
convention this time. This means
any class anywhere from over the
county. v-
Everybody interested in good
singing come and be with us and
don’t forget that it meets at 10
° c*ock Saturday morning, instead of
2 p. m., as usual. Now, let’s every-
body be there. Yours in song,
W. T. Sumner.
ing the skill and capacity of our
boys and girls. The wealth of the
country-is the skill and intelligence
ican in the physician to the poor
education that many so-called physi-
cians have, to the ease with which
license to practice may be obtained,
and to our lack of centralized gov-*
ernment. He thought the discover-
ies in medical science as of infinite-
ly more value than those made in
al’ other branches of science, say-
ing that antitoxin alone saves the
In tte m “tL UC"i ^ ‘eaSt
his post office address.
Witness my hand this 26th day of
March, A. D. 1912. %
J. W. Knox. '
------- pre-
par ng the way to save our country
from disaster.”
Compulsory Education.
Mrs. Charles Scheuber of the
Carneg:e library read a paper on
“What Our Children Should Read.”
She stated as her creed that the
problem of the educational forces of
Texas is
and many thousand lives He warm-
ly advocated medical inspection in
schools, and the teaching of some
of the fundamental things of health
and what to do in emergencies.
The Commercial Secretaries say,
you can usually tell the condition
of a county by the conditions of its
the fullest development of public roads,
the lowest of these, our brethren.
She incidentally advocated compul-
sory school attendance, but said The commissioners of Abilene
that the great questtlon to which, have ordered an election to be held
w« should now set ourselves Is not May 6th, to determine the issuance
Foley Kidney Pills
TONIC IN ACTION - QUICK IN RESULTS
Give prompt relief from BACKACHE,
KIDNEY and BLADDER TROUBLE,
RHEUMATISM, CONGESTION of the
KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION of the
BLADDER and all annoying URINARY
IRREGULARITIES. A positive boon to
MIDDLE AGED and ELDERLY
PEOPLE and for WOMEN.
HAVE HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION
Au^?l11,.’^lWashinStonS.t” Connenrrill*,
5®?*’ me to lose much «l«e»
i*^fe5i'aS;rteKsrfflsf
have m#
J. H. WALTERS
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Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 25, 1912, newspaper, April 25, 1912; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth730090/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.