The Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1924 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.
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THE JACKSBORO GAZETTE
Thursday, August 21, 1924
DEMAND
Over 100,000 people have
testified that TANLAC
has relieved them of:
Stomach Trouble,
Rheumatism,
Mai-Nutrition,
Sleeplessness,
Nervousness,
Loss of Appetite,
Loss of Weight,
Torpid Liver or
Constipation.
"Aik Anyone Who Han
Taken TANLAC*
OVER 4* MILLION BOTTLES
SOLO
Pm 8sls Br AH Good Unsafe*
OCXXXXX)OOCOOOCXXXXXXXXXXXX3
CThe Kitchen
Cabinet
oooooocooooooooooooooooooo
laz-i. Weatoin Newapaper Union.)
It flt fetter to say. “This one
thing I do." than to say, “These
forty things I dabble In."—Wash-
ington Gladden.
BOBBED HAIR HAS
MISSES’ APPROVAL
MORE FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Perishable Stock
Bing—“Have you any cold chisels?"
Bang—“No, we can’t 'keep them cold
tills hot weather."—Good Hardware.
Hardly Probable
Tecrher—“Why were you late get-
ting here?" Billy—“I must have
©verwashed myself.”
If You Need a Medicine
You Should Have the Best-
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root
Have you ever stopped to reason why
it is that so many products that are ex-
tensively advertised all rX once drop out
of sight and are soon forgotten? The
reason is plain—the article did not fulfill
the promises of the manufacturer. This
applies inore particularly to a medicine.
A medicinal preparation that has real
curative value- almost sells itself, as like
•n endless chain system the remedy is
recommended by those who have been
benefited to those who are in need of it.
A prominent druggist says, “Take for
example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a
preparation I have sold for many years
and never hesitate to recommend, for in
almost every case it shows excellent re-
sults, as many of my customers testify.
No other kidney remedy has so large a
sale”
i According to sworn statements and
Verified testimony of thousands who have
used the preparation, the success of Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is due to the fact,
►o many people claim, that it fulfills almost
every wish in overcoming kidney, liver
and bladder ailments, corrects urinary
troubles and neutralizes the uric acid
which causes rheumatism.
You may receive a sample bottle of
Swamp-Root by parcel post. Address Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and
enclose ten cents; also mention this paper,
liarge and medium size bottles for sale
at all drug stores.—Advertisement.
Virtue Suspended
He—Is your uncle good at golf?
She-—Mercy, no! He’s very profane.
•—Boston Transcript.
When we learn as the French na-
tion has learned, because of necessity,
to use meats as
flavors and in
combination with
other foods for
nourishment, we
will And less high
blood pressure,
fewer surgical
operations and
much better health. The saving on
meats will save worry about high
prices.
A small amount of meat will flavor
a large amount of vegetables. The ex-
tractives of meat which give it the
flavor are the appetizing part of the
meat and the reason for our desire to
indulge in that food.
For example, a pound of beet cut Into
small bits, browned and then covered-
with boiling water and enough vege-
tables such as onion, carrot and pota-
toes added to satisfy the appetites of
the family, makes a much more whole-
some meal and sufficiently filling, than
a large amount of meat with a few
vegetables. Overeating is the cause
of cancer, so our physicians tell us.
Too rich food, and too much of it will
cause various serious troubles, fatty
heart, sluggish liver, ulcers In the
stomach and intestines and other
equally serious diseases. A cheap cut
of meat tltat seems full of tough fibers
may be softened and made tender by
long, slow cooking, adding a table-
spoonful of vinegar to the water.
Mutton With Vegetables.—Take a
pound of the shoulder of mutton, cut
into serving-size pieces, brown in hot
fat after rolling in seasoned flour, cover
with boiling water to which a table-
spoonful of vinegar has been added,
add a cupful of diced carrots, one
minced onion and a cupful or more
of diced potatoes. Cover and cook
slowly until the stew is thick and the
vegetables well done.
When preparing hamburger steak
add a cupful or more (depending upon
the amount of meat to serve) of
cooked oatmeal, one cupful to a pound
of meat, adding a pinch of clove, a bit
of chopped green pepper and a little
scraped onion, with salt and pepper to
season. Mnke Into a long flat loaf and
broil. Serve with a brown or tomato
sauce.
Style Combining Charm and
Youth May Never Pass,
Writer Asserts. -
Dissenting prophets have entered
Into the even existence of the bobbed
mode with dire predictions for its fu-
ture, notes a fashion correspondent in
the New York Herald-Tribune. From
London come advices that the long
tressed lady is coming back to her
own and that, of all the bobbed styles,
only the boyish bob is retaining its
place in the domains of fashion. In
Paris the modiste is waging a savage
attack against shorn locks inasmuch as
short hair means small hats and small
hats sharply limit the scope of the in-
genious milliner. And in many quar-
ters of this country numerous self-
constituted authorities have taken it
unto themselves to emphatically an-
nounce that the knell of the bob has
sounded.
In nearly every instance these
prophecies may be set down as pure
propaganda, emanating from the most
obvious sources. Milliners and manu-
facturers of many coiffure accessories
have set their faces firmly against
bobbed hair and not from artistic mo-
tives. And their declarations to the
effect that the mode is passing fall
on fertile ground when they reach the
ears of the lady who is either too
limid to take a radical step which, If
ansuecessful, would take many months
lo retrieve, or else is frankly unat-
tractive in the youthful clipped coif.
The truth of the matter is that the
bobbed mode has not passed nor in all
orobability will it ever pass. Any
style which has charm and youth—
particularly youth—to commend it is
not easily dislodged from the ranks
nf fashion. It reaches the danger
point when it descends from a fashion
to a fad at which time a temporary re-
action usually sets in against it, but if
Its vogue has been predicated upon
substantial grounds the reaction
passes and the mode becomes a fix-
ture. The bob has arrived at this
rritical stage and counter currents are
nevitable, but these will be transient
and momentary for bobbed hair is
secure as a permanent type of coiffure
particularly adaptable to youth.
The boyish bob is the outstanding
vogue of the moment and it is sub-
Fur Coat Trimming Is
Again Fashion Favorite
;v.
h'-'
m
m
ale
A- -TAAPY • GRAHAM • BONNER
- - • vtsrttN Nivjtmi union - ■ -... —
recovery From Influenza
Hastened by
PE-RU-NA
THE TRAIN
mmiim
it^rryrr;
Cocoa colored garment with gold
thread embroidery, having plaid vest
of tans and reds with fox trimming.
Black Silk Beaver Is
New Fashion for Fall
Puts One on. Edge
“You always seem on edge!”
“Well, it’s the dally grind.”—Detroit
Free Press.
When I'm away a little while.
Things all go wrong at home;
Each crab-grassed lawn plot
shrieks for me,
Each weed-choked onion reeks for
me.
And every spigot leaks for me,
When I am on the roam.
ECONOMICAL FOODS
When there is a pork chop, a piece
of ha in and steak too small to serve
ugain put the
21
Seaplanes are being used in an at-
tempt lo discover the wrecks of some
©f the ancient galleys lost in engage-
ments off the const of Carthage.
Sure Relief
■ FOR INDIGESTION I
■v:
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
■ELL-ANS
AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
^COMPLEXION
ail
UWnuM.u a. Or.
DR-CJtBEARY CO,2975A Mlch.AveXhica
FAMOUS FOH4Q YE A AS
STRENGTH!
Get It Back. Quickly
Strength is your best “life pre-
server”. If your strength is fail-
ing — your vitality lagging,
be-warned f Gets bottle of Bull's
Herbs and Iron from your drug-
gist and begin taking it regularly.
You will see an immediate im-
provement in your appetite, di-
gestion, sleep, strength, endur-
ance and general health. For
the last half-century this restor-
ative tonic has helped thousands.
Its wonderful success has encour-
aged many imitators. Refusecoun-
terfeits or substitutes. Demand—
W.H.BULL'S
i^lRON
v ITCH!
Ucuey back without question
!> ‘jmwr-s hat.vw fail,
ii yuirrs salve f»n» in th«
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA,
MiNU WORM,TETTER or other
Itching skin diseases. Price
T5e at druggists, or direct from
ttlWadi Meet else Cs.. Shtmeajes
three small pieces
of meat through
the meat grinder,
add a cupful of
cooked rice, a lit-
tle minced olive,
using two or
three, a table-
spoonful of peanut butter, and moisten
ail with tomato catsup. Place in a
baking dish and cover the top with a
spoonful or two of left-over peas. Bake
until heated through. This makes a
most tasty hot dish and does not sa-
vor of leftovers.
A nice dish for mother’s busy day
is prepared thus; Slice the amount of
potatoes that the family will consume.
In a deep granite baking dish; add a
layer of thinly-sliced onions, if the
family is trained to enjoy such de-
lightful flavor; over this place a layer
of small pork chops, one for each; sea-
son potatoes and chops well; add
enough milk to moisten and bake in a
hot oven until vegetables and meat
are done.
Spanish Meat Dish,—Arrange a lay-
er of thinly-sliced potatoes in a baking
dish, then one onion, thinly-sliced, and
a layer of cold roast beef, with any
gravy; add a cupful of stewed toma-
toes; place in the oven and cook for
an hour; uncover, sprinkle with a
spoonful of cooked green peas and
serve hot from the dish.
Dumplings.—Take one cupful of
buttermilk, one beaten egg, one cupful
of sifted flour, one teaspoonfui of bak-
ing powder and one-half teaspoonfui
of salt; mix and drop by teaspoonfuls
into boiling stew; cover and cook eigiit
minutes.
For desserts in hot weather a little
fruit, a piece of melon or cantaloupe,
a dish of berries with a cooky or two
will be satisfying.
Ice creams of util kinds are enjoyed
at this time and if one cares to make
the serving more elaborate a chocolate
or maple sauce, with a spoonful of
nuts over each, may be served.
A delicious dish of veal, fT cooked
as follows, will be enjoyed by the
fatally at this season: Take a slice
of veal steak, brown it well and place
on a layer of carrots, turnip, onion
and potato. Sprinkle with minced
celery and pour over a thickened
brown gravy. Bake slowly in a cas-
serole until tender.
w
if
mi
ject to many interesting modifications.
But for the woman who is contemplat-
ing her first venture into the short
hair cut, this type of coiffure is inad-
visable. And for this reason: The
many years of long hair have trained
the hair to grow straight out and the
shingle cut will not permit the hair
to lie smoothly at first.. The straight
cut should be the initial boh and a
few weeks of this mode are sufficient
to distract the hair from its habit of
years and cause it to become more
tractable.
The boyish and the ultra-boyish cuts
are varied in numerous and diverse
ways. The hair may be so clipped
that it reaches below the lobes of the
ears or it may be sheared so closely
that the ears are partially visible. The
part may wander from one side to
the other, or it may rest conservatively
lo the center. In some instances the
bam replaces the part. It is imma-
terial whether the hair is straight or
wavy fot the boyish hob as this type
of coiffure ran be achieved with hail
of either character.
The train was dashing along
through the country, but had stopped
for a few minutes.
“Some people,” said the train, “only
travel in the summer time. They stay
home all the rest of the year, but in
the summer they go off for trips.
“They visit each other or they see
other parts of the country. But I
travel all the time.
“Of course there are some people
who travel at all times of the year
and at Christmas time many people
take little trips so as to go home for
Christmas dinner.
“But I travel after Christmas and
before Christmas and at all times.
“I see the country at all times of
the year. I see it when there is snow
and ice and when the spring flowers
are coming out and when the colum-
bines along the sides of my tracks
look so gay and bright and pretty.
“I see the country in the summer
time when the fields are bright with
golden rods and asters and Black-eyed
Susans.
“And I see the country when the
autumn comes and when the trees
dress themselves In, most gorgeously
gay coloring.
“But I never change my style. I am
alw’ays the same sensible train all
through the year.
“At times in the winter I do deco-
rate myself with some snow and ice,
just to show that I’m not above such
things. But not often do I go in for
such vanities.
“You never see me in the spring with
blossoms all over me, nor do you see
me now with summer flowers decorat-
ing my cars.
“To me my coal car is a thing of
beauty for It helps to make me go.
My passenger cars are so nice as they
offer hospitality to people and people
can travel.
“True, people have to buy tickets in
order to travel, but that is not my
fault.
“I don’t take In the money so they
shouldn’t blame me. I haven't any
pocket money as I have no pockets
and my baggage car Is taken up with
the baggage of others.
“My mail car is the same way. I
haven’t any place for my own posses-
mm
al-i
One of the newest hats for fall is of
(lack silk beaver with a cockade of
•lack “striped” ribbon.
Red With Blue Is Used
for Children’s Clothes
With materials so varied in texture
and so lovely in color it is not sur ' v
ing to find children’s clothes more in-
teresting than they have ever been.
There is a marked penchant for red
used with navy blue or combined with
white. Both green and yellow are
chosen for wee frocks, while powder
blue Is the shade in whicli several dif-
ferent models of coats are developed.
These are of homespun and are fash-
ioned on the simplest of tailored lines.
To wear with a coat of this type there
are hats of the same tone made of
straw or silk.
Mr. C. A. Allen, R. R. No. 2,
Bondurant, Iowa, gives testimony
to the healing power of Pe-ru-na.
Influenza left him much run down
in health with catarrh of the nose,
throat and bronichal tubes punct-
uated with attacks of asthma. He
writes:
“While recovering from the In-
fluenza I was so weak I could not
gain any strength for two months.
The latter part of the winter, I
bought six bottles of Pe-ru-na and
began taking it. My weight in-
creased to 175 pounds, the most I
ever weighed.
My usual winter weight is 155.
If you can use this letter for any
good, you are perfectly welcome.”
Such evidence cannot fail to con-
vince the rankest unbeliever of the
merits of Pe-ru-na.
Insist upon having the old and
original remedy for catarrhal coa-
litions.
Sold Everywhere
Tablets or Liquid
Home Golf
A man was languidly beating a rug
with a golf club when his wife came
out and said: “That doesn’t call for a
putter, John. Use your driver.”—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
Fresh, sweet, white, dainty clothes
for baby, if you use Red Cross Ball
Blue. Never streaks or injures them.
All good grocers sell it.—Advertise-
ment.
The Lord*s Miracles
The Lord’s miracles do not go con-
trary to the laws of nature, they rath-
er make use of them.—Evangelical
Teacher.
Tastes in Sweets
Blonds of Sweden prefer to eat light-
colored sirups, while people of darker
complexions favor sweets of more som-
ber tints.
No eraser wipes out a lie.
Hand-Painted Ribbons Used for Trimmings
Hand-painted ribbons are the latest
‘ultra” among the extravagant trlin-
nings. These, in fine grades of satin
,nd taffeta, are sash width, the de-
sign being done in bold flower und
nouveau-art patterns. A charming
ribbon intended to be used as the elab-
orating part of a gown of soft mate-
rial is painted in a softened sugges-
tion of peacock feathers. The gor-
geous bit costs several dollars the
yard.
Narrower ribbons, hand-pafnted in
delicate flowers or figures, are to be
bad for hat bands or as a dainty fin-
ishing touch on the neck and sleeves
of soft gowns and blouses.
A great variety of trimming is be-
ing featured, repeating the new note
in many of the imported models. An
absolute novelty is a bund of narrow
crisp ribbon loosely braided in geo-
metric or conventional patterns, to be
used on the more elaborate crepe
goyns and wraps. It may he had in
widths from 1 to 5 inches. It is shown
in black und white, black and silver
or gold and in the rich combination
of color seen in the European peasaut
needlework. Jet, pnlllets, steel, sil-
ver and dull gold on net are among
the other kinds of trimming that have
Just arrived.
Handbags May Match or
Contrast With Costume
The ensemble idea is responsible for
the close conformity which exists be-
tween handbag styles and '.he mode.
The recurrence of the costume motif
upon the purse is not the only mani-
fest a Lon of this tendency—it is equally
important that the outline of th^ bag
coincide with the silhouette of the
coat or dress. Thus in the days*of
the bouffant silhouette the ample
pouch bag was en regie, while today
and ever since the vogue of the
straight, slender outline, the large, flat
enveioi>e bag with or without a handle
has been the leading style.
Tilers* is no set color scheme for
the handbag this season. It may
match the rest of the outfit or it
may vividly contrast with it. This
easy interpretation enables the wo-
man who is anxious to inject a strik-
ing color note into her costume but
who is a little timorous about em-
ploying coat or frock therefor, to se-
lect a bag of garish hue and thus
gratify her urge toward lively color-
ings.
One prominent Paris dealer has a
full collection of new purses, card
cases and handbags made of basket
woven strips of metal and black moire
ribbon rortning alternating squares.
The ribbons are about half an inch
wide. The metal effects are in both
antique gold and platinum. The bags
are exquisitely designed and look more
like Jewelry than fabric. Another
novelty purse by this designer is a
white linen In a poplin weave fasten-
ing with a tongue buckle of colored
enamel. A third Is of white faille em-
broidered In pure Persian bird and
flower designs in multi-colored silks.
People Have to Buy Tickets.
slons. And so I don’t own a lot of
things and so 1 don’t need money.
“It may be true that money is need-
ed in order to keep me in good order.
“I really believe this Is true. And
too. I must have people to look after
me and to attend to my fire needs and
all such things.
“I am just as glad 1 don't need to
carry baggage of my own for it would
only be a nuisance.
“And though I carry sleeping-cars I
don’t go to sleep myself, but travel on
right through the night.
“I don’t get sleepy. My headlight
is so bright and I can see what is
ahead of me.
“My engine driver will stop me it
there Is danger ahead and there are
signals at various point's to tell us if
we can go ahead or not.
“But now it is summer and the win-
dows of my cars are opened.
“I’m afraid I make the people’s
faces dirty, but I can’t help that.
“Anyway, 1 don’t tell them that
their faces are dirty. I’m not rude to
them. If they find it out’themselves
that is nil right.
“No one objects to their washing
their faces.
“It Is beautiful through the country
now. I love to hurry along.
“I whistle out to some of my friends
as I pass them by and as I come near
the stations 1 whistle to them and
say:
“ ‘I a in coming. The train is com-
ing. It is not far away.’
“Oh, yes, I always greet my friends.
“It is splendid to be a train and to
travel and to see what Is going on in
the country.
“They are haying now. Beautiful
sight to see them haying. Well. I can’t
talk any more. I've an engagement
to start off again at three-fifteen
promptly."
lenuuie
In White and Black
Smart-looking white buckskin shoes
have patent leather Ups, heels and
aui.p* in black.
Puzzlers
If I had an apple and yon had a bite
what would you do? Scratch it.
• »
Did you hear the latest? No; what
is It? It’s not out yet.
• • •
Why has a ditch-digger always a
pretty wife? Because he always hat
his pick.
• • •
If you saw a girl sitting on the law©
with her stockings on wrong side out,
what would you do? Turn the hose on
her.
Pam
Say “Bayer”- Insist I
For Pain Headache
Neuralgia Rheumatism
Lumbago Colds
0,A^-Acce Ptonfrj
t Bayer package
which contains proven directions
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manu-
facture of Monoace Ueacldeater of Salley Ucacld
Grove's
Tasteless
CMU Tonic
Invigorates, Purifies and
Enriches the Blood. 60c
BATHE YOUR EYES
Dae Dr. Thompson’a Dye water. 1
Buy at roar druggist’a or
lies River. Troy. N.T.
Booklet.
Better Than Pills
Tor Liver 111$$
You can’t
feel so good
but what 1ft
will make you
feel better*
p.pifct
\
(
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Dennis, J. R. The Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1924, newspaper, August 21, 1924; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth731135/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.