Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 12, No. 211, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1914 Page: 5 of 8
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PALESTINE DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY. MAY 7, 1914
STOMACH TROUBLE
WILL OPEN 400,000 ACRES
FOR SETTLERS THIS SPRING
THE DOWNWARD TREND.
H FIVE YEARS
Government to Reduce Large Reserves
In Oregon.
Hughes Would Die, But
One Helped Him to
Recovery.
>r
Majority of Friends Thought Mr. takinS other medicines. I decided tc
| take his advice, although I did not have
any confidence in it.
• . ■ *
1 have now been taking Black-Draught
for three months, and it has cured me—
haven’t had those awful sick headaches
since I began using it.
I am sc thankful for v.hat Elack-
Draught has done for me.’*
Thedford’s BI&ck-Draught has been
found a very valuable medicine for de-
rangements of the stomach and liver. It
is composed of pure, vegetable herbs,
contains no dangerous ingredients, and
acts gently, yet surely. It can be freely
used by young and old, and should be
kept in every family chest.
Get a package today.
Only a quarter. mi
Pomeroyton, Ky.—In interesting ad-
vices from this place, Mr. A. J. Hughes
writes as follows: “I was down wiL*
stomach trouble for five (5) years, and
would have sick headache so bad, at
times, that I thought surely I would die.
I tried different treatments, but they,
did not seem to do me any good.
I got so bad, 1 could not eat or sleep,
tnd all my friends, except one, thou^it I
would die. He advised me to try
Thedford’s Black-Draught, and quit
Belle of Wichita
take no substitute
(Adverrwcment.)
❖ POLITICS
*
AND POLITICIANS. *
*
Amusements
THE BEST.
“In Tangled Webs,” strong two reel
Pathe drama.
“A Deal in Real Estate,” Lubin
comedy.
One other good reel.
Tomorrow, “Perils of Pauline,”
three reels, featuring Pearl White,
Crane Wilbur and Paul Panzer.
Saturday, “The Cruel Crown,” the
eighth story of Adventures of Kath-
lyn.
The Nebraska progressive party
will hold its state convention in Lin-
i coin July 28.
T _
M. L. Christian, of Clinton, is the
prohibition candidate for the seat of
Senator Cummins of Iowa.
District Attorney Charles S. Whit- ;
man is now formally in the field for
the republican nomination for gover-
nor of New York.
More than 400.00O acres of splendid
land in' the Deschutes and Paulina
national forests, in Crook. Lake and
Klamath counties, Ore., will be throwu
open for settlement early in May
through an order signed, by President
Wilson .withdrawing this 1 au.L froui
the forest reservations. It is reported
that tilings will be permitted yn and
after June S.
• Officials of the forestry bureau in
Portland estimate that of the aggfc-
gate of 410.703 acres thrown -.pen ap-
proximately 120,000•’acre's- are occupied
by settlers These settlers will be
permitted to remain. Settlers on the
remaining 200,000 acres will be per
mitted -to taiie up homesteads of 100
acres each ,n accordance with the fed
era! land laws.
The entire area will be placed under
jurisdiction of the local land offices at
Lakevie-y and The Dalles. Int“ndinsr
settlers tire instructed to make in
'Piirtes^' >n eruing the lands' at those
offices. 1
Vn aggregate of 170.040 acres of the
gross- elimination lies covered with
lodgepole pine, a timber spe ies which
in its locality is of low commercial
value. Some of1 this land, however,
has already been settled.
An aggregate of 221,070 acres, which
also includes lands that have been set
tied and lauds- not settled, is in the
bills about th** Fort Rock valley and is
covered with a sparse growth of juni
per trees and sagebrush
The plan was outlined nearly a year
ago. when Chief Forester Graves made
a personal inspection of the territory.
He declared then that the policy of the
present administration would be to
withdraw from the forest reservations
all land that has no commercial timber
value It is understood that other
areas in various other forests of Or-
egon will be withdrawn within the
next few months.
Come, Nora, Nance and Nellie,
Let us study Botticelli
When we feel the gnawing craving to be
smart.
If we want to be de rigueur
We must educate the figure
To show the downward trend of “plastic
art.”
The outline shjrukl be slack,
Slippy-8lopp$Cfront and back,
Till bodice, skirt and tunic— --very stitch—
Seem to call for the, supp. rt
Of the Untidy man's resort—
That naval gesture termed ti.e “double
hitch”
The shoulders must be dr .ping,
The knees a t; b sto<* pin
\nd the widest w^ist, rente: 'her, takes th
prize.
When motoring or -shopping ,
The coatee must be flopping
Through a belt that’s sagging downward
to the thighs.
But the evening toilet scheme
Shows the opposite extreme.
And when for dance . or .dinner you’re
equipped
A clinging “mermaid’s tail”
The nether limbs must veil,
vVhile the cc.-sase is the only part that’s
^ slipped
— Punch.
Opens Up Nostrils, Clears Head,
Ends Colds or Catarrh at Once
Instantly'Relieves Swollen, Inflamed
Nose. Head. Throat—You Breathe
Freely—Dull Headache Goes—Nasty
Discharge Stops.
Try "Ely’s Cream oaim.
Get a small bottle anyway just to
try It—Apply a little in the nostrils
and instantly your clogged r se amt
Rtopped-up air passages rf tee uea
will open; you will breatne ieely;
dullness and neadache disappear. B
morning! the catarrh, -rdd-in-hea 1 • ’
catarrhal sore throat will oe rone.
End such misery now: uet
small bottle of -Ely’s Cream Pz'.m"
at anv drug s*oro +-r,
grant baim dissolves by the heat of
the nostrils; penetrates and heais :h*
inflamed, swollen membrane which
lines the nose, head ano throat;
clears the air passages; stops nrsty
‘dischargee and a feeling of cleansing;,
soothing relief comes Immediately
Don’t lay awake tonight -truggim*
for breatn, with head stuffed no trill
closed, uawking and blowing. Ca tarrh
or a coid, with its running*** st. ft R
mucous dropping into the throat, and
raw drynear is distressing hut truly
needless.
Put your faith—just once in Ely**
Cream Balm” and your cold or 'A-
tarri* win ■upoiy disappear
QUALITY OF “CHAfllT
RECORD OF TOWER OF BABEL
reels.
terpiecie and gTeat success. Tully j himself.
I^rshall and the original Broadway j
Deeds of Nebuchadnezzar Told on
Cylinders at Yale Now Redeciphered.
Inscriptions 90 clay cylinders pur-
chased for the Babylonian collection
at Yale university have beeD redeci-
phered. and much information for stu-
dents of Biblical chronology has been
obtained.
The minds of many politicians in
Vermont have been set at rest by the
Coming Monday, “Paid in Pull,” five [announcement that Senator Dilling-
This is Eugene Walter's mas- ham will be a candidate to succeed One cylinder inscribed for Xebuchad-
nezzar. who reigned B C. 605 to 561,
recounts his deeds with reference to
_, , . . , _ _ . . .. » restoration * and enlargement of the
cast are featured in the picture. Casper- Scheak, a young attorney of1
(Advertisement.) - Des Moines, is a candidate for the
- | progressive nomination for United
THE LYRIC. (States senator to succeed Senator
"Doctor Polly,” special two reel Cummins. -
medy .drama y the Vitagraph Co.,; .
Is a storv of shattered aerves, reliev- ^ stat* 6f 1Uinois has elected its
ed in a peculiar and original manner, j firgt woman ma>or in Mrs- Kate
Any one afTlicted with nervous pros- Yc:k’ *as successful in the re-
lation take a look at this photoplay <*nt electiOD in her candidacy for
<fr a new cure. Miss Lillian Walker mayor of Kingston Mines.
and Wallie Van are the leading char-
acters. Senator William E. Borah of Idaho
“King Baby’s Birthday,” by the has accepted an invitation to be the
walls aud moats of Babylon aDd of
temples and sanctuaries thereabout
He records the rebuilding of Marchuk
which he calls Etemenanki, recognized
as the ancient tower of Babel of the
hook of Genesis.
Nebuchadnezzar said, according to
the translation, that be sought and
found the foundation stone of the tem-
ple of Lugal-Nlarada, his deity, and
laid it upon the foundation stone of
Xaram-Sin. king, his ancient ancestor.
This ancestor presumably lived 3,000
years before Nebuchadnezzar. The
foundation stone of Naram-Sin was
Selig Co., is a clean little comedy and jehief speaker at the “welfare confer- haB*^^Twhen"‘he're
worthy of being seen. ence” of Michigan republicans to he
Also one other good reel. held in Detroit May 26.
Tomorrow, “Selig two reel drama,
MOST DESIRABLE, BUT SOME-
WHAT ELUSIVE ELEMENT.
Little Grace, a most polite little child
was cue day dining with her aunt
when she found a hair in her fish.
“Aunt Ella.” she said sweetly, “what
kind of fish is that?”
“Mackerel, dear.”
“Oh." replied Grace, “I thought per-
haps it was a mermaid.”—Philadelphia
Press.
Catering to All.
A Boston merchant tells of an old
grocer in Massachusetts who was about
as “slick” an article as one would care
to meet
“One day.” sayg the Bostonian, “1
stopped before his shop and looked
curiously at a long line of barrels of
apples, some marked with an ‘A,’ some
marked with a ‘Z.’
“ ‘What is the meaning of these
markings?* 1 asked. ‘The barrels seem
to contain the same kind of apples.’
“ ‘They are the same kind., son,’ the
old gentleman replied, 'but some cus-
tomers want a barrel opened at the top
and some at the bottom.’ ’’—New York
Times.
Her Clever Trap.
Polly—Father told me today that yon
get $3,500 a year, Paul.
Paul--Correct to a penny!
Polly—Why, you’ll have to pay an
income yon?
Paul (grabbing her)—Darling, they
don’t tax a married mah until his In-
come is $4,000 a year. Save me from
being taxed, won’t you, dearest?—
Puck.
Simplest cf Touches May Produce It,
Where Elaboration Fails—Mistake
to Have Too Much Furniture
in the Room.
Charm is a subtle thing. Occasion-
ally it is accidental, when old heir-
loom furniture forms the keynote of
the room, and when no hideous mod-
ern touches have crept in to spoil its
spirit. But mostly it i^ the result of
long study and a discarding of,the su-
perficial things, an outgrowing of the
childish love of “pretty” flowers such
as are unsuitable in paint and paper,
a repudiating of the temptation to
have a red, a green and a blue room
on the same floor, a realization that
the grayish plaster,' which we have
just read of, may be more austere and
lovely than the finest of gold paper.
The charm of a spinning wheel; the
charm of a beautifully polished floor;
the beauty of a faded red brick hearth
—these things and hundreds more are
to be realized and practiced before
charm can be hoped for. It Is never
possible to obtain it with a red carpet
or a splashy rug, garish wallpaper and
shiny oak furniture, for the fundamen-
tals would then be all wrong to begin
with.
But It would be possible to obtain It
with painted furniture of good design,
no matter how cheap, a delightfully
plain rug which harmonizes with the
tone of the furniture and cream walls.
In this case the beginnings are all
right, and one is allowed more leeway
In working out the details.
And If you hope for a charming din-
ing room, never clutter It If you can’t
be no
j :¥ reel reason for
im losing fish if you
ii J oil your fishing
re el with the one and only
Teal reel oil — 3-in-One.
Prevents sticking, jerk-
ing, back-lashing.
A Dictionary of a hun-
dred other uses with
kevery bottle. 10c, 25c,
k50c—all dealers.
3-in-One Oil Co.
42 N. Bdwy.
N. Y.
TWO OVERFLOWS IN
ONE WEEK; COTTON WILL
HAVE TO BE REPLANTED.
‘The Parasites.”
(Advertisement.}
Barbecued Meat. Phone 463.
7-12 Adv.
stored the temple of Slppara.
The Herald glTcn the news while
It is news.
v S- N- Q>. ,
U
R. M. s. “ellenca:
BREAKFAST
--------------
jfeorihnLI ......
nr... CV
Oh S. &.
^TL'LartJtAJS
Cfgl&Csoo£Zol
Wherever the wnite man ^oes—for fun, fame or fortune—wherever
maximum food value and minimum bulk are prime factors—there you’ll
find this sturdy, appetizing food, made of whole wheat and barley.
Grape-Nuts
is probably the longest baked, the most thoroughly dextrimzed, and the
most easily digested of cereal foods. (Digests generally in about one
hour.)
Because of this quality, Grape Nuts produces great energy with little
effort in digestion, and so furnishes a most admirab’e diet for hot weather
or tropical climes
Ready to eat from the package, fresh and crisp Served with cream,
milk or fruits, and sugar if desired. Keeps indefinitely anywhere.
“There’s a Reason” for Grape-Nuts
—sold by Grocers everywhere.
Free Rein.
.“You want to win your case, don’t
you?” asked the lawyer of his balky
client.
“Certainly I do.” replied the client
“Well, then, listen to me. There (
must be some lying done.”
“Well, I’ll leave everything to yon.
counselor!”—Yonkers Statesman.
Cameron, Texas, May 7.—During
the past week the farmers in the Lit-
tle river bottoms have witnessed th©
overflow of the river twice. The first
rise caused considerable damage, but
the present one will not be so dam-
aging, although the river was about
two feet higher than before. North
and Big Elm creeks north of town
were considerably out of banks and
much damage was the result
On the W. T. Watt plantation some
900 acres on North Elm creek was
under water. Farmers are of the
opinion that all cotton covered by
water will have to be replanted. To a
great extent the business of Cameron
is* dependent upon the river bottom
farms and when the crops in the bot-
toms are destroyed, business in every
line suffers.
LAWN MOWERS
Love and Pity.
Mr. Sapbead (during the honeymoon)
—When did my little duckie darling
first discover, that she loved me?
Bride (sweetly)—When I found my-
self getting mad every time any one
called yon a fool.—New York Weekly.
Fifty Per Cent Job.
Child—I want you to cut my hair,
and here is 10 cents.
Barber—But a haircut costs 20 cents.
Child—My mother cut half of It al-
ready.—Meggendorfer Blatter.
Most Remarkable.
“She’s awfully happy, isn’t she?”
“Well, why shouldn’t she be? Every
time she’s married for love.”—SL Lou-
is Republic
Correct.
Sunday School Teacher- Benny, can
you tell me what a prophet Is?
Benny—Buying something for a dime
and selling It for a quarter.—Judge-
have one or two good—really good—
pictures on the wall, have none.
Never have a whole lot of little ones.
Be sparing of your display of silver—
one or two beautiful pieces are more
effective than a dozen. Put your cut-
glass away—hide it! Simplify your
ctirtains—above all, don’t have lace;
but a plain thin silk in old blue, old
rose, old gold—all the “old” colors are
wonderful. A chintz is a good design.
If you feel doubtful about what con-
stitutes a good design, take a peep
into a reputable interior decorating
shop, where all the designs would be
of th% best, though, of course, all
would not be suited to just your room.
And if the prices in such a shop were
too high, you would start out for the
lower prices w tth a good idea of what
The illustration shows a fine side-
board of Adam design. It is of ma-
hogany, with crotch mahogany doors.
These slender leg sideboards are
among the most charming we have,
and can also be got In Shearer, Hep-
plewhlte and Sheraton designs.
The Blue Grass Lawn Mower ap-
proaches this ideal as nearly as human
ingenuity and skill can make it The
ball bearings, the perfect adjustments,
the crucible cast steel cutter blades,
combine to make the Blue Grass tha
lightest running and smoothest cutting
| of all high grade mowers. Fiactically
noiseless in operation. The material and
workmanship are of the highest possible
Lstandard. Built to last a geners ion—
; and longer.
We’d like to prove to you why the
Blue Grass maintains the lead among the
high grade mowers. We’ll thank you for
the opportunity whether or not you wish
to purchase. .
#
BUY IN PALESTINE.
See us for your wants in Garden Hess,
Lawn Ranes, ami otter requisites Lur
1 V wn and garden.
Silliman Hdw. Co.
Belle of Wichita
cnce tried always used
(Advertise men t*>
1 PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
Nasal Catarrah.
The most common cause of
nasal catarrh is chroui^ inflam-
mation of the nasal mucous
membrane. Undoubtedly it af-
fects the general health and ab-
sorbs certain nutriment that
should go to other parts of the
body Moreover, it affects tbe
other nerves that lie in its
region.
Simple remedies are often
more efficacious than pretentions
ones. Try this: Obtain some
Ivoraeic acid powder and an ordi-
nary glass nasal douche, i’ut a
teaspoonful of the powder into a
pint-of hot. water When dis
solved thoroughly douche the
nose. After this is done sniff a
little of the powder itself up
each nostril.
This should be done unremit-
tingly night and morning anti it
w ill not he long before the won-
derful healing powers of the
T borsch’ powder will t** felt.
1 •>
>
4-
*
>
V
*>
.+
t
Only -kUie must persevere
TEMH IS RESTORED B! MflYR’S '
WONDERFUL S10MCH REMEDY
__ •
Alvarado Man Gets Appetite Snd taken Mayr's Wonderful Stomach
r_ . . -a . * 1 .. V ______— ff'V,
Comfort Back After Taking
First Dose.
T. A. Hensley of Alvarado, Texas.
’ suffered for a long time from de-
rangements of the digestive tract. He onous matter. ------a- ,----
had colic attacks and indigestion. His to sufferers from stomach, live- and
' liver was inactive and he was in pain bowel troubles. Many declare .t
Remedy with such success. The first
dose proves.
Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Rem-
edy clears the digestive tract of
mucoid accretions and removes pois-
It brings quick relief
has
saved them from dangerous opera-
tions and many are sure that it has
_______ success of this
remedy has caused many fmitator9, so
be cautious. Be sure it’s Mayr’s.
Probably it is known among your
4* -1—:—;-J- *> 4- i 4- -> •> *;• 4- •> 4- 4- -m- 4-
j after eating.-
He took Mayr's Wonderful’ Stom-
ach Remedy. From the very first saved their lives,
dose it brought swift results. He The remarkable
wrote:
j “I have taken your treatment for
-torr.ach trouble and consider it a 1^1
Godsend to suffering humanity. I own neighbors. Ask them. Go to
have been suffering from stomach City Drug Store, 210 Main St., and
troubles for a long time, such as colic ask about the wonderful results it
attacks, bloating after eating, sick has been accomplishing in case- they
spells, indigestion, constipation and know—or send to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg.
inactive liver and gall stones Now Chemist. 154-156 Whiting St., Chicago,
I do not Pjel like the same man. I III., for free book cn stomach ^ ail-
' can cheerfully commend this remedy ments and many grateful letter- from
; to all stomach sufferers.” 'people wh& have been restored. Any
Mr. Hensley's experience is typical1 druggist will tell you its wonderful
1 . e ____,4 ^ w-Virv Co VA t.ffk.'**'*
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 12, No. 211, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 7, 1914, newspaper, May 7, 1914; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth992057/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palestine Public Library.