Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 11, No. 306, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1913 Page: 3 of 8
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STINE DAILY HER
15
CTS. A Week P
ALESTINB, TBXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGU5T
4--—:---—---
! 11
-- * - . y. 1 \ *
Our Bank
Your Bank
Also
WBenever x>u venture within our banking , room
dfn’t speak ki an undertone, walk on tiptoe ,and
iel that yoiLare in the way. Take it <£or gTahted
t This Your Bank, that the business (you
ring us or wikh to discuss with us, is of as much
importance as any other. The only individul tjhat
rould be considered an intruder is the yeggmaa or
fe blower and we are armed against fyim wit
irglary Insur»ce^Policy.
WeNwuit te lowed to explain to you t hpCbnten-
ience with which you can transact all yoifr financial
business througmthis bank, thfe secunt;r it offers
you against theft\ and the record i>6ffer$ you of all
the business transacted throu
The best time to se\us is rigpc now, and
tation is hereby extemledj^you.
Dicky Likes His
Bath.
Daddy’s Bedtime
Story—
How the
. ' Little Birds
Keep Clean.
Aeroplane Beats
Train From Long
Islandto Baltimore
GUARANTY STATE BANK OF P,
P. W. Ex ell, Pres. J; E. Angly, Acti
T. M. Campbell, Jr., Casbi^r.
INE
It Up T
We possess the knowled
and the means to use t
to make use of them, too.
V
Watki
Makers of Fine Poi
-T— —'—
WHAT'S THE USE IN
About what you shall hare to eat? This is an every day
You can set what you want at the MEW OAK STREI
Fro* h fish daily, new potatoes, Map beans, English peas,
fruit, celery; all kinds of bunch foods all the time.
A car of fancy apples cheap, by the box or dozen. Sprin
nice country butter. Can goods of all kinds. Extra ni
tomato*. Don’t fail to ring 3S1.
NEW OAK STREET MARK
Corner Oak and John Streets
OMETIMES Jack thought his mother was too particular about the way
he looked in vacation time. Once a day he said was often enough for
a Little boy to wash his face and hands Mother did not agree with
him..
“Nobody sees me.” Jack grumbled one evening as he and Evelyn came
in to where daddy was sitting.
“Sees you?” daddy inquired. When he heard Jack was grumbling because
he had to wash before going to bed he said: “Why, mother sees you, Evelyn
sees you and I aee you. If you look in the glass you will yourself see how
nice you lopir' Why, even the little birds clean up before they go to sleep.
ve never seen them? Well, Just watch the canary some day and see
bombing his hair, washing his face and cleaning bis feathers.
with his bill he will pick and shake at the feathers until he has
got all the dirt out of them. Then he will gently pick and pat into place
every little quill and feather.
“Yes, onr little bird combs his hair. Of course he has no nice brush and
comb as little boys and girls have, but the sharp claws on his little feet do
Just as well. With them he combs down every little feather In his crest and
dresses his head as carefully as any hairdresser could do.
“If he thinks his face is not all it should be he rubs it against the wires
of his cage or on bis perch. If his feet are soiled he cleans' them off with
his bill.
“This Is what I should call the little bird’s dry bath. He takes a tubbing
every morning when the little china bird bathtub Is freshly filled with watef
and placed in his cage.
“You know how he loves to dip and. splutter about in it Sometimes he
shakes the water out of his wings right in the face of whoever may be stand-
ing near him. Perhaps he does not wish any. one to watch him when be
makes his toilet. After he has washed and shaken out his feathers and has
combed and picked them out till he is as yellow and fluffy as a sporige cake
he will burst into song.'
Te know from this that Dicky enjoys his bath. Wild birds are fond of
g too Out in the woods, where there are little brooks or quiet little
ools. you will sometimes come upon a little flock of them chattering and
splashing on the edge of the water. Some people who like the birds put out
on their lawns and fill them with water. Then they have the
sement of watching the birds taking their baths on the lawns.”
The Palace of Peace To
Be Formally Dedicated
■ '
w -
Mt
msmW- ^
it t jf
Any Fancy Pattern
Spring and
Summer
SUIT OF CLOTHES
in our htiuse
~at!
20 PE)
HA. FLANAGAN
!Y>A'
THE LEADING Cl
vse-fwmi*:
Wood, the
aviator,
Mat
fket j
In connect!
mi with oun
GrOi
cjeryL'
yfe
Xjet^fYQi
From Orfe
ir Supplies
PliiCeJ
SO)
fji’S
Either
(Special to The Herald.)
Hague, Aug. 22.—The lazy
%
ital is all astir in anticipa-
n of the great ceremony here next
week, whep. the Palace of Peace, the
$1,500,000 gift of Andrew Carnegie to
the nations of the world, is to be for-
mally dedicated as the
balustrade of carved mahogany, are
tables for lawyers, and hack of them
the remainder of the room and the
several galleries may be occupied by
delegates^ or visitors.
In the corner of the main floor, at
the base of the tower., is a smaller
court room which is to be used for
permanent or^jnarv arbitrations, which are us-
home of the international court of
Tomorrow is the Day of
Young Men
TOMORROW—Don't forget it. Doi
tomorrow you are going to strike
clothes path.
Devote a trifling half hour to viewing an
brisk and bully Spring models of the L System
Gentlemen- Sola only by
WRIGHT & CQ^
Man’s Outfitters
arbitration. The event will bring to-
gether representatives of all the
civilized nations. In addition to the
tjpecial envoys the attendance will in-
wclnde the delegates to the world’s
Peace Congress, which has been hold'!
ing its sessions here this week, and
J ually conducted without spectators,
j Connected with the small court room
are reading rooms, consultation
((rooms, a reference librarf and other
conveniences. The basement will
contain the offices of the secretary
and staff of the permanent organiza-
C. Murvin
proved that he could fly from New
York to Baltimore in faster time tha
one of the regular trains. Hetneant
to beat the train to Washington, but
he lost his way outside Baltimore,
and later his engine stopped and he
found it necessary to alight. The DON'T WAIT*
* I
distance was about 225 miles. f_ , • , . „ .
jTake Advantage of a Palestine CltL
He left Hempstead, L. I., where the Experience.
Molsant aviators, of whom he is one, when the back begins to ache,
Don’t wait until ba kache becomes
chronic;
'
tion, a room for newspaper corre-
many of the delegatee to the approach-j 8pondents> a telegraph office, a large
restaurant and the heating"^and light-
“meeting Of the Interparliament-
ary Union.
The notable participants in the
dedication ceremonies will include
Queen Wilhelmina and the Prince
Consort and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
See .Us For
I] J
Surries; "HarnesL^ad-
Balli Gpocts, Guns,
Ammunition and Bicycles
AllN^inds of t^ardwarA and
Automobile Supples
Herman Schmidt & Co.
Carnegie. The many judges of the
international arbitration court, the
foreign diplomats in The Hague and
all the prominent officials of tne gov-
ernment of the Netherlands will take
part.
The president of the Carnegie Foun-
datiQft^-Nf^vo'n Karuebeck, will make :
speech in French formally trans-
ferring the palace to the International
court, and the minister of foreign af- j
I fairg^jwtt make a brief speech of ac-
* t€eptance. At the conclusion of the
ceremonies the hundreds of guests
will make a tour of inspection of the
building and its grounds.
Tnose who have already been priv-
ileged to inspect the palace pronounce
ing plants. The upper floor of the
building, which is reached by a monu-
mental stairway, contains the rooms
of the administrative council and oth-
er officials of the permanent court,
and several rooms which may be
used as offices by the counsel in ar-
bitration cases.
At the time of the laying of the
corner stone of the Palace of Peace,
in 1907, a resolution was passed in-
viting the forty-six nations which
signed the treaty for the permanent
court to contribute material and ob-
jects of a/rt for the decoration of the
edifice. Many of them responded in
-a generous manner. The government
of the United States contributed a
! large marble group of statuary repre-
| senting in allegory’ the purpose of the
building. Brazil furnished the ma-
hogany for finishing the great court
have their headquarters, and caught
and passed a train which left Jersey
City on the wav to the capital. Wood
said:
“I started out fine. The motor
hummed along at 1000 revolutions a
minutes, and I must have covered at
least eighty miles the first hour. Then
I had trouble with the motor all
aloirg and had to keep at a very hie
altitude in case she should get
stalled on me. That is why you
lost sight of me.
“Most of the time I flew above the
clouds and my vision was hardly
more than five miles radius on ac-
count of the fog. The highest alU-
tude registered is 7350 feet, which I
reached at Havre de Grace. Finally
near Gaithersburg my engine stalled
and I had, to volplane to the ground.”
rabbles
Al Fult<
ft SL,
■- £
j *
' • 1
ys: “I ws
k rare-
le and I.J
bew it
: m
irdered U
lidneya,
general!#
accom-
’Till kidney troubles^ develop;]
'Till urinary t
night’s rest
Mrs. W. B. Rose,
Palestine, Texas,
ly free from back
was caused btf d
for a bad spell w,
panied by tro jble
cretions. I was/ of£&a»~eyijR>ct to
spells of_jii»sln«36 and pafn in. the
top qymy head. /So m after
I began taky Doan’s Kidn< y Pills,
procured fronylthe Bratton Dqug Co,
this annoyanqeV ceased /Lnd L
much better
conrflm my/ former
have not to usef Doan’s
Pills of lai
For sale by all Aealers. PHce 50
cents. Fdfeter-Mllbnrn Co*, Buffalo,
New Yorl£ sole agents for the jUnlted
States.
Remember the name—Doan’
take ao/other.
17-se Adv.
It an edifice of unusual beauty and j and Mexico contributed the onyx for
magnificence. It occupies a com- ,the monumental stairway. Great Bri-
manding site on the broad avenue con- tain four magnificent stained-
neeting The Hague with the popular *lass windows which to' afford
seaside resort of Scheveningen. Tne liffht to the S"*1 col,Tt room- Nor’
way gave the granite for the arcade;
Sweden the granite for the basement;
belonging to the late Princess Anna Gerraany the two mon ft mental gates
Paulowna. the grandmother of Queen at tae France to the grounds, and
Wilhelmina j Belgium the bronze doors for the
front entrance of the building. The
Melville E. Stone’s 65th Birthday.
(Special to The Herald.)
New York, Aug. 22.—Many con-
gratulatory messages were received
at 195 Broadway today . to remind
Melville E. eStone of his sixty-fifth
birthday anniversary. Mr. Stone who
has been the active head of the Asso-
ciated Press for the past twenty
years, is a product of the west, hav-
ing been born in the town of Hudson.
111. His boyhood was spent In Chi-
cago and in that city he started his
career a9 a newspaper reporter in
1864. After rising to the editor’s desk
Mr. Stone helped to found the Chicago
Daily News in 1875. He disposed of
his interests in 1888 and after a three
years’ vacation in Europe he return-
ed to join the forces of the Associated
Press..
Want column mow printed
Herald get what yon want.
/
DOES THIS CATCH
YOUR EYE?
grounds comprise sixteen acres, which
once were the garden of the palace t
W
The plans for the palace were
drawn by M. L. M. Cordonnier, a cele-
brated French architect. The design
of the exterior is pure Dutch. The i
{building is 260 feet square and is con- j
structed of brick and stone.. In front
is a broad terrace and in the rear is i
ia magnificent grove of trees. The !
IJmain entrance is approached by an
Inclined plane instead of a flight of
gift of France consists of a set of
priceless Gobelin tapestries which
the smal er court room and one or
more of the consultation rooms will
be hung.
GO THE RJGHT WAY.
The Hill, though high, f covet to
The difficulty will not me offend,
For I pferceive the way to life lie*
here.
Come, pluck up heart; let’* neither
faint nor fear.
Better, though difficult, the right
way to go
Than wrong, though easy, where
the end u woe.
—John Bunyan.
Getting It All Together.
“Where’s my breakfast?” Inquired
the star boarder.
"Well, sir.” replied the landlady, “1
got a nice bit of fish for you. but. I’m
sorry- to say, sir. tbe cat”—
“Confound the cat! Then let me
bave cold chicken.”
”1 regret to say. sir, the cat”—
“Well, then, some eggs.”
“There are no eggs in, sir. The
cat”—
“Hang it all tbenl Cook the cat and
we’ll have it all together,’*
Winona Bible Conference.
(Special to The Herald.)
Warsaw, lnd., Aug. 22.—The nine-
lsteps. At one corner of the building teenth annual Bible conference at
jis an imposing clock tower 260 feet Lake Winona was inaugurated today
fiiigh. * (under conditions that promise the
j The main floor is to be given over ; most notable session in the history of
entirely to court rooms and cousulta- the famous organization. The
“Ned” Green Is 45.
(Special to The Herald.)
New York, Aug. 22.—E. H. R. Green,
only son of Mrs. Hetty Green and
prospective heir to the bulk of the |
enormous fortune possessed by his
mother, reached1 his forty-fifth birth-
day anniversal^y today. Despjte the
fact that some day in all probability | BClChCr
be will be one of the wealthiest men ■ ■■
of America, Mr. Green is a modest 1
and unassuming mati who works hard
and indulges in few hobbies. The past
few years he has made his home in'
this city, looking after some of the ^
great financial interests of his mother, |
though he cotniniles to spend a part of
each year' in Texas, where he is inter-;
ested in railroads'and other enter-^
prises. Mr. Green is unmarried.
Well, it’s meant to call your attention
to the fact that we know bow to do
good laundry work, that we try to do
good laundry work, that we do good
laundry work. You m«y safely en-
trust your linens and other wa6hables
to us. We call for ’em if you like—
deliver ’em, too.
\team Laundry
;---- Lio con-
jltion rooms. The great court, in which , ference' will continue until the end or
the meetings of the international per-1 the month. The list of speakers is
nianent court of arbitration and sira- headed by Secretary of State William
liar conferences are to be held, is a j. Bryan. Other persons ,of note on
Splendid apartment of a monumental, the program are Dr. G. Campbell
character. It is readied through a i Morgan of I>ondon, “Gypsy” Smith,
Wide corridor lined with Greek and Rev.' J. Wilbur Chapman, Bishop
Italian marble. On one side of the (‘Hughes of San Francisco, Bishop
chamber Is a platform' and bench for Bell of 1x>a Angeles, Rev. Dan Craw-
the tribunal. For a srace of thirty j ford of Africa, and Rev. Robert J.
Bob
tobacco,,
Deliver
part o]
re)
Al^tfve li test peri
a Ad news >apers.
ovj
ade
He city.
any
R. A. Garner, Prop.
L1
feet in front of iV protected by a , (Catch-My-Pal) Patterson of
Notice to Public.
I have sold out this day my market
business to Dietz Brothers, and thank
all my customers for their .libera*
patronage in the past- The firm will
hereafter be known as Dietz Brothers
& Co.’s Sanitary Market, and the busi-
ness will he conducted same as in the
past. . Fred Neuberger.
Palestine, Aug. 14, 1913.
Ireland. J14-6 Adv.
1. R. COTTON
The
/ ^an
Pborte 1164
get It through a Herald
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 11, No. 306, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1913, newspaper, August 22, 1913; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth990857/m1/3/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palestine Public Library.