The Junction Eagle (Junction, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
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NmON EAGLE. fH
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^^Qal lun! i t
SKEPTIC
N* A >
>0
If
1 <
V
ss'da
_ _ \ m? T'v v-
you've Stmck it Right
' when you Light a C
CAMEL
Your taste will tell you that! For Camels
have the flavor and fragrance of choicest tobaccos,
perfectly blended. They’re smooth and mellow-
mild.
And there’s NO CIGARETTY AFTER
TASTE.
We put the utmost quality into this one brand.
Camels are as good as it’s possible for skill, money
and lifelong knowledge of fine tobaccos to make a
cigarette.
That’s why Camels are THE QUALITY
CIGARETTE.
tnvff.-'
R. J. REYNOLDS T* »c<» C*.
Wi»Oo»-S«l«», M. C.
TEXAS GAME LAWS
FOR 1921 AND 1922.
Fifteen Doves in one day,
from September 1st to Decem-
ber 15th, inclusive.
Three Buck Deer during the
season from November 1st to
December 31st., inclusive, each
year.
Three Wild Turkey Gobblers
during any one year, from No-
have in your possession nor ship
at any one time more than the
aggregate of seventy-five ducks
geese, brant and birds.
You must not catch, kill or
have in your possession any wild
! song birds. You must not hunt
! any wild game or w:!d game
j birds at night wilih any Kind of
1 light or lantern.
was reported at the time to
have been a great success.
GRAND JURORS’ IN-
STRUCTION COVER KKK.
WEST TEXAS NOTES
A fire at a cotton yard in
vember 1st, to December 31st, Ballinger burned eight bales
inclusive, in the iollowing coun- before it could be put oUt Mon-
ies: Dimmitt, Uvalde, Medina, day, according to the Ballinger
Zavalla, Gillespie, Blanco, Llano, i Leader.
Kendall, KIMBLE, Kerr, Real, Runnels county gets $69,958
Mason, Edwards, Menard, Sut- from the state aid fund after
ton, Crockett, Comal, Hays, Frio the reduction from $14.50 for
Maverick, Kinney, Val Verde, each scholastic to $13 for this
Terrell, Brewster, Presidio, Jeff year, says the Ballinger Ledger
Davis, Schleicher, Tom Green, a program of fast trotting
Po«rla%*fi i • i I
otciiing, i“u«, «**« «nu running races nas oeen pre-
ln all other counties the open pared for the Lampasas Fair on
season shall be lrom March 1st, September 8 and 9.
to April 30th inclusive. The first shipment of 1921
Fifteen quail and Mexican cotton from Ballinger has been
pheasants (known as “Chacala- billed out to Italy. The sihip-
ca”) in one day, December 1st, nient comprised fifty bales,
to January 31st. Eighty-three couples in
Twenty-five ducks in one day, Brownwood during the last 3
from October 16th to January months secured licenses to wed.
31st.
Twenty-five snipe per
Twenty-six took the leap
day> August, the same number
from October 16th to January July, while the month of brides
claimed a total thirty-one.
The grand jury at Ballinger
during the season just closed
31st.
Eight geese per day, from
October 16th, to Janary 31st.
I
Eight brant per day, from Oc- found twelve indictments, ac-
tober 16th, to January 31st. cording to the report Thursday
You are not allowed to kill afternoon. The grand jury was
more than an aggregate of jn session tihree days. The bills
ducks, geese, brant, plovers, returned consisted of five felo-
snipe or short-birds. nies and seven misdemeanors.
You are not allowed to kill at Most of those indicted have al-
any time of the year any ante-' ready been arrested and some
lope, mountain sheep, jrairie jn jail while others are out
chickens, pheasants (except Cha-
caiaca) wood-chuck or wood
duck.
You may kill rabbits, hawks,
Georgetown, Sept. 6.—Judge
James R. Hamilton of the Cri-
minal District Court, impaneled
and charged the grand jury
here this morning for the regu-
lar September term. After pre-
senting to the grand jury those
matters prescribed by law,
Judge Hamilton further charged
the investigation body to inves-
tigate fully any activities of
secret societies that might be
found violating the laws of tflie
land and called upon any man
who had been accepted on the
grand jury, arid who was a
member of any society that had
for its purpose the enforcement
of the laws outside of the con-
stituted authorized tribunals
in violation of law, to so state
i and he would be excused from
j service. One man on this chal-
j lerige was excused. Judge
I Hamilton presented a letter re-
ceived by a citizen of the coun-
ty in which he had been told to
leave or improve his conduct and
instructed investigation as to
its origin. Judge Hamilton
made it clear that he attacked
no man personally but stated
that organizations should not
exist that are contrary to con-
stituted authority under a free
government.
oi bond.
From different parts of
Brown County information
comes that in places where for-
» ‘Tis said that an eagle can
live without food for twenty
! days. But even that would not
reconcile us to an exchange.
We don’t care to sport an
eagle’s beak.
crows, buzzards, owls, English has been very scarce on ac
sparrows, rice birds and black
bird* in any number and all
f ■ ' |
iik
count of dry w eather cattle have
been faring very well.on mes-
quite beans. In Bee county a
years ago farmers ground
it with other
No, we have decided not to
mention the latest sensational
murder. It is difficult to tell
which is the latest.
LUCKY
.STRIKE,1? V
^N^iGAneTTrA
BIG LIVESTOCK
YEAH INDICATION
AT STATE FAIR
Deep!*
world, (hot tHitiiHK
and
other vet err
auk of M'ieuee were tin
huts Hut
crying Tmvalllfcr:
toot j
Raisers
.trie, of Tex-
ii a meat t>r«
,lumi. >na fur-'
V work of the!
taken ii evl-
tcpartment is
master of
to t’uri' tirwl the
not wine, (lion dll'
thou a formidable
Hum tut* of tin*
cattle.
Notice this delicious
flavor when you
smoke Lucky Strike
— it’s sealed in by
the toasting process
jour- tniivi
llttMU Mil
"Vlckltesa" of beer
"silkworm disease."
I**ul t r> [h*s( i U*iH‘4»,
dwdlleit plague* oi
Having thus wurkml hi* way up in
the scale of life, ho iddrenNNl him
sulf by the same methods to the salva
turn of man from what hail boon re-
garded as the most hopeleMs ami hor
rible of disease*., rallies, and thus
opened the way of 1.later, of Koch, of
Finlay and Harrell, ami to all the un-
speakably beneficent wonder* of the
science of bacterial therapeutic*. If
thus Pasteur found hi an atom of yeast
the cure for rabies, typhoid, cholera,
malaria, yellow fever, diphtheria and
bubonic plague, there Is no occasion
for skepticism when his disciple, Metal- , r, ,,
ulkow, suggests that In the larva of Negotiate Lo&llS, makt.’ ( OuCt-
a butterfly may Is* found the cure (ions aild Furnish Abstrcts ot
for other pestilence# Title t© All Kimble County
$)) %
KIMBLE COUNTY
ABSTRACT COMPANY
E. Holekamp, Prop.
We Buv and Sell all Kinds of
REAL ESTATE
—and—
LIVE STOCK.
m
Texas ha* * big forage crop and live-
stock interest* are booming.
TOBACCO USERS NOT IMMUNE Wants.
Lands. Lot us Know you
Only Germs of Cholera and Meningltla t
Succumb to Smoke or Juice
of Nicotine.
Professor Puntonl of the University j
of Rome has performed a series of ex- j
perl men ts by way of determining
whether tobacco, smoked or chewed, (
would act ns n disinfectant against dls- !
ease germs. For the purpose he used
Tuscany cigars, Macedonian cigar-
ettes and ‘‘very strong chewing to-
bacco." lie placed a piece of paper
covered with a salve which contained
the germs of cholera, influenza, diph-
theria, typhoid and meningitis In a
glass jar and then filled the Jar with
smoke or covered the paper with to-
bacco juice, says New York Evening
I ‘ost.
He bus arrived at the depressing con-
clusion that, except In the case of
cholera and meningitis, tobacco Is pow-
erless In the presence of germs. As to
typhoid ami diphtheria, he exposed the
hucllll to the strongest of smoke from
Tuscany cigars for one hour, und
they were as mlmst at the end of the
ex]>ertiuent as at the beginning.
As to tuberculosis. Professor Pun-
toni says that the most inveterate
smoker or chewer can hope for no pro-
tection from his Indulgence. The ele-
ments of tobacco that disinfect In the
case of cholera and meningitis are
tar, nicotine and formaldehyde.
Junction. Texas.
MUST USE FOUR LANGUAGES
Silk Chemises for Dusky Belles.
Lurid purple silk chemise*, size 52.
are becoming popular with the dusky
belle* along the African Congo, ac-
cording to an announcement by u Chi-
cago mail order house.
The Arm’s foreign department an-
nounced the not ill cation of safe ar-
rival from Chief Arigogo In the Bel-
gian Congo of a recent order for such
undergarments for 12 of the chief’s
favorite wives. Because of the color
and size, It was necessary to have
them made to order.
“The results are quite satisfactory,
however," the chief wrote.
With the chemise order came funds
for “shoes with watches in their toes,”
rtibho;* tiiuila with <jnnni>p (m>« nlnk
silk stockings and several hundred
pounds of heads and brightly-colored
cotton goods.
Advertiser* in Turkey Nece*»arlly
Under a Handicap That Amount*
to a Good Deal.
Tn order to advertise in Constanti-
nople It is necessary to use four lan-
guages. The market is hard to culti-
vate, but newspapers give good results
there. The population of Constanti-
nople Is very cosmopolitan, and all the
foreigners speak their own language
and read their own newspapers, writes
Trade Commissioner Eliot G. Menrs.
To reach the public In general, adver-
tisements should he published In news-
papers of at least four languages.
However, the best results are ob-
tained hy publication in Turkish news-
papers, for, on the one hand, the Turk-
ish population Is most numerous, and
on flu* other the Turkish reader Is more
susceptible to the claims of advertise-
ments than are Europeans and Ar-
menians. It has been found by expe-
dience that advertising In newspapers
gives very good results in Constanti-
nople. especially if It I* pushed vig-
orously.
No advertising 1* <T.!*ried on t. tn-
cars, street advertising I* not pro-
.ectcd hy law and cannot be recom-
mended to foreign concerns. The dr-
illation of newspapers Is not great.
French newspapers have an approxi-
mate Issue of fl.'MM) to 8,(mm), Greek 4.-
000 to 12,001), Armenian 4.(MM) to 8.000.
and Turkish 10,(MM) to 15,000.
seeing its most promising advance sea-
son, with the Interest very' general all
over the State.
The cause of this U found in the
splendid forage crop of 1921 in all
parts of the State, in the opinion ot
Col. Frank P. Holland, State Fair di-
rector in charge of cattle, and one of
the most experienced men In the State
In the livestock line. “Texas has tun*
ed to forage crops generally," he
says. “And the farmers are being
more richly rewarded than they ever
dreamed they would be. Now the
problem is to get the most profitable
consumption of these crops, and the
development of email, but well-bred,
herds of livestock on every farm it
the proper answer."
The State Fair season of 1921, Octo-
ber 8 to 23, will be a liberal education
for the farmer and prospective stock-
raiser. Premiums in livestock and
agriculture total more than $50 000,
and this will bring the finest bred ani-
mals In America into the show com-
petitions. The opportunity to buy im-
proved strains will be unexcelled.
Early entries In the agricultural de-
partment of the State Fair are bear-!
lng out the fact that good orops are
being mnde over the State. Over a1
dozen counties have reserved spaces
for competitive exhibits. This Is an'
unusually large number for this season
of the year.
FAMOUS MEXICAN BAND
TO RETURN FOR 1921 FAIR
Those hundreds of thousands of visi-
tors of the State Fair of Texas and
International Exposition of 1920 who
Twenty Year* in Forestry.
The Yale forest school has Just
celebrated Its second decennial re-
union and the twentieth anniversary
of Its founding, says the American
Forestry Magazine. Over one hun-
dred alumni und students, or approx-
imately 20 per cent of those Who have
received professional Instruction at the
school attended the reunion. Of the
twelve leading forest schools ten are
under the direction of Yale men, and
MONOPOLY LOST BY GERMANY
American Chemists Are Now Produc-
ing the Rare Sugars Required
for Scientific Purposes.
Not least among the triumphs of
the new American chemical Industry
hns been the production of the rare
sugars, so long n Herman monopoly.
The sugars were called for by the
urmll hospitals, ns they are required
In small amount In bacteriological
laboratories—one of them, for In-
stance, being the most sensitive stlm-
nlrnt of typhoid growth, while oth-
ers serve In the detection of cholera
germ. The Infinite care necessary to
prepare them In a stnte of absolute
purity makes their cost seemingly
enormous. The most expensive rare
Itignr catalogued Is stated by Drug
and Chemical Markets to he dulcltol.
at *375 a pound, while mannose Is
worth *140 a pound. This Is a dell-
rate and delicious sweet derived from
manna, which Is secreted In thin scales
from certain trees and shrubs, and
CAPT. MEL. CAMPOS
Director.
eleven have Yale graduates In their with which the children of Israel were
miraculously fed during their wander-
ings In the wilderness. Xylose, quoted
at *120 n pound, Is mnde from the com
cob; Innlln Is obtained from the bulb
of the dahlia at certain seasons of the
yenr. Other rare sugars are—nrlbl-
nose. nt *100 at pound; levulose, *80
a pound, and rsfflnose, *75 a pound.
faculties. In addition, forestry Is
taught as a subject at four other In-
stitutions by Yale graduates. In all,
43 men from this Institution arc en-
gaged iu training professional for-
esters In America.
Motion Pictures In Java.
The motion picture businem In Java
appears to be expanding rapidly, ac-
cording to the American consul at Ba-
tavia. American pictures are Increas-
ingly popular; the types best liked are
big femur***, comedy, news and travel
films. No film of less than five reels
make* * great miccen*. The pictures
which attract the native audience* are I
thou*- of
type, while the Knropenn und Amerl
can audlefcce* usually prefer well-
Better Weather Forecasts.
Weather forecasts for months ahead
will be possible within a few years as
a direct result of solar observations,
U. M. Stewart, assistant director of
the Dominion observatory, told the
Royal Astronomical Society of Canada.
reca'.l with delight the splendid musl
cal programs of the Estado Mayor
Band, will be glad indeed to learn
that it will return for the State Fair,
season of 1921. October 8 to 28, as
Guard of Honor for the Mexican Na-
tional Exhibit. This military band of
Mexico is one of the premier musical
organizations of the world. It is under
the direction of Captain Melqniades;
Campos, a noted leader and composer
of the Southern republic. Captain
Campos Indicate* that he will prepare
program* of particular interest to the
State Fair \IMtor of 1821, so that new
musical diversion of the finest charac*
ter awaits us all.
The sun I* tin? great Influence over
the action aud adventure j varying weather conditions on the
earth, and recent observation* of It
h*ve led to the hellef that observa-
»cted drama of the type tnoat popular j tortw, will be able to predict with ac-
In America
Some
arc naitl rwtver to
Rebuked.
The preapertive employer looked the
applicant over carefully.
"And now." he said “shout the sal-
ary; what mould you expert f*
m too food
2
ii, 11
J J. .Ji,
curacy the general trend of weather
for *d\ month* or even a year ahead,
he aald.
To he able »« foretell the amount
of precipitation and the general
temperature for sever*? month* In
~ T-n.iL”.”.
flM) f»u»We«irr in*
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE AT
STATE FAIR GOOD ONE
Seldom hui> a State Fair tu
offered a football pt _
poDance a* that which the
of Tesaa will give "
Oct I to
Vi
’* 11 II jy
~
a;, MAfeiL
aSMSc-
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Perry, H. Grady. The Junction Eagle (Junction, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1921, newspaper, September 16, 1921; Junction, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth801123/m1/3/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .