Corsicana Democrat and Truth (Corsicana, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 29, 1926 Page: 3 of 8
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1
MAS NEWS
Farming hao been very much delay.
*d in Waller County due to con-
tinued rains.
Heavily weighted with young buds,
fig trees in East Texas promise a pro-
lific yield of fruit this year.
This week Ib designated in a procla-
mation issued by Governor Miriam A.
Ferguson as "Be Kind to Animals
Week." v
Strawberries are moving from Al-
vln now in large quantities, more than
250 crates going out by local express
in one day. The berries are large and
of fine quality.
Construction of an 18-foot concrete
highway Involving an expenditure of
41,200,000, for 35 miles across Liberty
County, is well under way, states
Judge & a. Pickett, Jr., of Liberty
County.
Interest received by the state on
funds deposited in state and reserve
feanks in 1925 amounted to $256,000,
W. Gregory Hatcher, tate treasurer,
says. He predicts the interest will be
greater this year.
p.a ordinance putting in effect a 7-
cent street car tare and giving the
Dallas Railway Company 10 days in
which to accept it was passed by the
city commission receutly. The fare
heretofore has been 6 conts.
A surveyor 20 tomato farms where
tomatoes are being grown for the mar-
ket near Palestine, shows that the
plants now in the fields are getting a
good 3tart In growth, and that the re-
cent cold spell did very little damage,
if any.
During the cotton season of 1925-26
the Texas prison system produced 10,-
500 bales of cotton which was sold for
$903,134, according to a report com-
piled by George B. Terrell, state com-,
mlssioner of agriculture, and released
Saturday.
A "normal boll weevil" season is
anticipated by H. H. Schultz, federal
statistician for Texas. He has Just is-
sued a warning to farmers in the
cpastul region to prepare for a "com-
paratively light initial infestation" of
the weevil.
No damage has resulted this sea-
son to the bean crop in the Lower Rio
Grande Valley from freezes, and pres-
ent indications are that with continued
good weather yields above the average
may he looked for from the 4200
acres planted. ^
Nearly one-fourth of the corn crop
in Nacogdoches County will have to
l)e planted over because of the killing
frost recently, according to reports
reaching the office of County Agent
Montague at Nacogdoches. The freeze
did not injure the fruit.
Potatoes were moving out of the
Lower Rio Grande Valley toward the
close of the past week at the rate of
more than 20 carloads a day, with ex-
pectations of the shipments this year
Teaching a total of 1300 cars, includ-
ing mixed carlot shipments.
Friends of long ago, some of whom,
as early settlers of Texas, prepared
the way for the state's mllllous of in-
habitants today, will be reunited at
San Antonio April 19, to live for a
day in the memories of the past. The
occasion will be the eighth annual
meeting of the State Association of
Texas Pioneers.
In the Texas prison system there
are 3560 inmates, Governor Miriam A.
Ferguson was informed last week by
prison commission. Of the inmates 27
are in asylums and 357 are in the main
prison at Huntsville. The distribution
on prison farms is as follows: Ram-
sey, 513; Blue Ridge, 303; Clemens,
298; Darrington, 188; Eastham, 294;
Ferguson, 141; Gpree, 67; Harlem,
286; Imperial, 348; Retrieve, 189;
Shaw, 135; Senor, 18; Wynne, 111, and
' Oil Mill, 154.
The state board of cbntrol has com-
pleted the awarding of contracts for
supplying approximately . 8100,000
worth of dry goods and notions for
the various .state eleemosynary lnsti-
tutlohs for a period of three months.
The prices paid for the merchandise
are practically the same as were paid
under a previous contract of•< three
months.
By refusing a writ^of error in,,the
case of the International-Great Nor-
thern Railroad Company against the
Texas Company, of Houston, the Su-
preme Court in effect upheld a Judg-
ment obtained in the District Court
at Austin by the Texas Company
against the railroad for upward 'of
$300,000 on a claim for fuel oil sup-
plied the railroad.
Increase in quantity and Improve-
ment in the quality in the oyster in-
dustry of Texas, is the goal of the
game, fish, and oyster commission,
Judge J. R. Smith, chief deputy, stat-
ed at Austin at a conference with
George Britz and Glen R. Peck, bo^h
of Galveston, deputies in charge of
scientific investigation of the oyster
Industry on the coast.
Income tax receipts of the first
quarter of 1920 on incomes of 1925, a
drouth year in Central Texas, showed
an increase of $1,191,106 over the to-
celpts for the same quarter of 1925,
according to records announced by
James W. Bass, collector of Internal
revenue for the. first district of Tex-
as, which embraces more than one-
half of the state. The unexpected in-
crease Indicates "healthy" conditions
and prosperity regardless of the drouth
losses to farmers and business in-
terests generally, in the opinion of
Collector Bass
mum
QUAMNQS
SOIL TREATMENT
BEFORE PLANTING
THE
HOOLIGAN
CLAIM
By H. A. CRAFTS
A common problem at planting time
Is the treatment the land should have
berore the trees are planted. Tills, of
| course, will depend upon Its previous
treatment, says J. H. Gourley, chief in
, horticulture at the Ohio Experiment
station. If It has been In sod for a
j period of time, it Is usually wise to
plow the land and plant a tilled crop
j (such as potatoes, or corn) one year
i before It Is set out to tw «s, or better
{ yet, to grow and turn under a green
crop, as clover or alfalfa, if such a
crop can be established In a short
time. If this is not feasible It would
certainly be well to plow the land the
fall previous to planting and let It lie
in the rough over winter, unless the
topography Is such that the soil would
wash badly from this procedure. All
this Is to glfe the trees tl>e best pos-
sible start, or as one old horticulturist
•aid, to "make the hole for the tree
as big as the orchnrd." When the soil
Is prepared It Is then ready to be
Staked out for setting the trees in
some systematic fashion. A common
error is to plant the trees too close
together, a mistake which presents an
almost lnsolvable problem a few years
later. Standard /fruits should be set
about the following distances, defend-
ing Bomewhut upon the soil and va-
riety : j
Apple S5—40 ft
Pear 20—30 ft.
Quince ................. 12—14 ft.
Peach 20—20 ft
Plum 19—20 ft
Cherry 18—25 ft
The trees may be planted in any ot
the following systems of arrangement:
the square, rectungle, qnincunx or hex-
agonal system. In the square system
the trees are spaced In rows, equi-
distant In both directions. A "filler''
tree may be set between the perma-
nent trees and one In the middle of
the square, until they begin to crowd,
which would place the trees 20 by 20
feet apart or 108 trees per acre, in-
stead of 27 as would be (ihe case if the
trees stood 40 feet apart.
In the quincunx plan the trees are
set as for the square system, with a
tree In the middle of the square. The
' hexagonal plan calls for the setting
' of the trees equidistant friftm one tin-
other ( In all directions, or one In each
angle of equilateral triangles. Fifteen
per cent more trees can be set to an
acre with this system than with the
"square" plan j*hen the trees are set
at the same distance apart. In an or-
chard so set, It Is, however, not so
easy to cultivate and care for the trees
aB lq the more open squares.
The variety question Is one that is
so Intimately associated'with the per-
sonal tastes and preferences of the In.
dividual that It is difficult to offer ad-
vice. Many fine varieties of. all, the
fruits are available but space does not
permit listing them. It Is safe to say,
however, that novelties should not be
planted without advising with a com-
petent horticultural authority.
Avoid Wormy Peaches by
Attention to Spraying
Why raise wormy peaches when you
can have good sound fruit by giving a
little attention to spraying? It is Just
about time for the first fruit spray on
pouches. This should be applied Just
as the last of the blossom petals are
falling.
If you want to apply a liquid spray,
use one pound of arsenate of lead and
three pounds hydrated lime to 50 gal-
lons of water. Dust Is easier to apply
and is just about as effective as liquid.
Use the following dust mixture: Su-
perfine flowers of sulphur, 80 pounds;
hydrated lime, 15 pounds^ arsenate
of lead, 5 pounds.
Other applications should also be
made when the calyces or shucks are
shedding; again two weleks later; and
again about four weeks before the
peaches ripen.
Keep Trees Strong and
Vigorous at All Times
Only the experienced orchardlst can
realize the value of a strong, vigorous
tree, for weakness is manifest in sub-
tle ways that often lead to misinter-
pretation. The peach grower knows
that It is the weak tree that Is at-
tacked by the fruit bark beetle or pin-
hole borer, and the apple orchardlst
has seen how trees that are not up to
normal are much more seriously in-
jured by spray burn, a severe drought,
or other untoward conditions. This Is
an observation that should be brought
to the attention of the beginner and
he will not be so ready to neglect his
fertilizer application or spray because
the trees are not carrying a crop.
Sence It should be our aim to keep the
ees young by whatever sound prac
tlce Is available for our use.
Treating Peach Borers
It you failed to use the paradlchloro-
benzene treatment for peach borers
last fall you should use it this spring.
However, the results from spring
treatment are not as good as those
from fall treatment, according to ex-
periments conducted In Georgia by the
•United States Department of Agricul-
ture. The poorer results from spring
treatment are probably due to the
larger size of the larvae at that time
and to t|ie fact that the borers are lo-
cated deeper In the trees.
iffi by Short Story Pub. CV)
THB county Jail at Graycllff was
an old affair. By some its
architectural conception was
considered a stroke of genius.
The plan was suggested by Commis-
sioner Boyd,' who was something of a
crank. However, his worst enemies
admitted that he had a good Idea now
and then. Mr. Boyd In his lifetime
had seen rock quarried from the moun-
tains at an immense expenditure of
labor, transported long distances,
shaped Into blocks by much tooling,
and then lkld up Into masonry walla
Seeing that the town of Graycllff Jut-
ted up against a fine, large ledge of
limestone he did not see the utility of
quarrying eat a great mass of stone
and shaping It Into a Jail, while* the
same amount of labor would quarry a
Jail Into the ledge Just as well, and
the Jail would be so much stronger
that there would be no comparison
whatever with the ordinary. Jail.
The ledge had given the town Its
name. Ij was In fact a cliff, with Its
perpendicular face fronting the east,
and Its crest towering at least a hun-
dred feet above the level ground that
formed the town site of Graycllff.
When^pommlssioner Boyd unfolded
his scheme before the board, It was re-
ceived with but slight favor. The
otljer members smiled at first, then
shook their heads slowly and sagely.
The plan was so novel that the mind
of an ordinary county official was
hardly capable of absorbing It But
Mr. Boyd expatiated so brilliantly
upon the mgny advantages of the plan
that be finally brought his fellow-
commlssloners over to his way of
thinking, and by some Judicious sound-
ing of public opinion It was found
that the citizens of the county were
also favorable to the plan. The im-
mense superiority of such a Jail over
one constructed In the usual manner
was at once recognized, and the board,
fortified by the almost universal ap-
proval of their constituents, submit-
ted Mr. Boyd's plan to the county
attorney. That official returned an
elaborate opinion, to the effect that
the cliff was clearly a portion of the
public domain, but could not very well
be filed upon as agricultural land, as
there was not a foot of arable soil
upon it He accordingly suggested,
and was duly authorized by the board,
to file a mineral claim upon it, run-
ning to John Smith, the then acting
sheriff of Carbonate county.
The rock which composed Graydiff
was found upon trial to be easily quar-
ried. At first a circular room about
ten feet Jn diameter was excavated.
This was called "the Rotunda," and
for a time It served for the Incar-
ceration of such malefactors as found
themselves ensnared within the
meshes of the law In Carbonate coun-
ty. Then, as the demand for room
increased, "Corridor No. 1 North" was
started, and as-this progressed, cells
were excavated one after another as
they were needed. The cells were lo-
cated between the corridor and the
outer fac«> of ihe cliff, the walls on all
sides being left at a thickness «f two
feet. An opening between each cell
and the face of the cliff, about
two feet square, was cut, in.order
to admit light and air. These were
heavily grated with steel bars In
order 'to make them secitre. The
entrances from the corridor were
Jail became all that Mr. Boyd's fervid
Imagination hud pictured for it. It
was convenient and secure, and no
culprit, once incarcerated within Its
adamantine walls, had ever escaped.
This class of individuals were face-
tiously called "cliff-dweller^,!.'.-
The cost of construction was great-
ly reduced by the large amount of
penal labcrr expended upon It. While
the law did not Impose hard labor
upon the Involuntary Inmates of Gray-
cllff Jail, those who expiated their
crimes within Its walls were permit-
ted to shorten their time of service
by a little wholesome muscular ex-
ercise, and as It happened that many
miners and quarryinen were numbered
among (hem. much skilled labor was
seAired without expense to the coun-
ty. Whenever there occurred an ex-
tra demand for cells, contracts were
made with professional stone work-
ers, and executed wkh due dlllgcnce.
Among those who had more than
once suffered duress? In this substan-
tial bulwark of the law was an In-
corrigible namei Tim Hooligan, a bur-
ly son of the Emerald Isle. Tim was
a miner and, when not in the clutches
of the law, worked in the mines in a
distant part of the county. In a brawl
he had knocked down a man and was
now serving a sentence of six months
in .expiation, Tim was tractable
enough when In Jail but, like the ma-
jority of his kind, was "agin the gov-
'ment" and always went around with
a chip upon his shoulder. While
suffering incarceration, Tim always
preferred work to Idleness; not that
lie was particularly desirous of short-
ening his term of service, but be-
cause the ennui of prison life becafne
almost unbearable unless he had some
occupation. S° he was set to work
on the extension of the north corridor.
As the work progressed the debris
was hauled out at the mala entrance
of the Jail and thrown over the dump.
Tim was an expert miner and could
Judge of the nature of a piece of rock
by external appearances about as well
as any man living. He was now work-
ing almost alone, for a spasm of vir-
tue bad oboot Emptied the Carbonate
esanty Jail. He worked In t leisure-
ly way, smoking his short pipe and
breaking out now and then In a stave
of some rollicking Irish ballad. From
time to time, as he dumped his car,
he would examine a piece of rock, but
this was largely from force of habit
One day Tim made certain meas-
urements at the end of the corridor,
and Informed the sheriff that the ex-
cavation had progressed far enough
for the beginning of another cell, and
that official, to oblige Tim, told the
latter to go ahead on the cell. But
before the work had proceeded far
It was discovered that Tim's time was
out, so he shook bands with the sheriff
and walked away. It was noticed,
however, that he did not depart as
usual for the mines, but hung about
town. He was seen loitering about the
courthouse, where he spent some time
poring over records. Oos day he
offered a document for record, which
proved to be what is known In min-
ing law as a "location certificate."
This certified that one Timothy Hooli-
gan had on that day located and
claimed a certain mining claim, by
right of discovery and location, to be
known as the "Hooligan Lode," with
all its "dips, spurs, angles and varia-
tions," with all the metes and bounds
duly specified. But the recording of
4)>is class of documents was such a
common occurrence that Tlra's filing
caused not so much aa a single com-
ment, the clerk receiving and record-
ing the document In the moat per-
functory manner possible.
But when Tim appeared at the
sheriff's office the next day the sheriff
was not a little surprised to see him.
Tim greeted the official with some-
what studied formality and requested
his ear In private. When the door
of the Inner sanctum had been closed
the sheriff motioned Tim to a chair.
"Mr. Cheruff," said Tim, quite
solemnly, "It becomes me onpleasant
Job to requlst ye to vacate."
"Vacate! Vacate what?", cried the
astonished official.
"The couuthy bashtlle."
"The county what?"
"The counthy hash tile; the counthy
Jail, Mr. Cheruff."
"Why, Tim I what do you mean?
Have you gone crazy?"
Divll a bit of It. Mr. Cheruff; I've
Joomped the claim." %
"Oh! I guess not."
"An' I guess yls."
"But the claim's all right, I tell
you," cried the sheriff emphatically.
"Have you a patent?" asked Tim,
not a bit disconcerted.
"Why, yes; that Is, I suppose the
county attorney has one In my name."
"Hadn't yez bettber moke shure nv
ttr
"Well! Well! Tim, I must look into
this. Please excuse me," and the
sheriff seized his hat and rushed out.
Sure enough, Tim had Jumped the
claim whereon the Jail was located,
and In law his claim was valid, for
the county attorney had neglected to
carry out the commissioners' instruc-
tions. So the next thing was to se-
cure some kind of a compromise; and
aft£r considerable Jangling Tim con-
sented to lease the Jail privileges to
the county at an annual rental of
one thousand dollars, reserving the
privilege himself of operating Ills mine
for the first year through Corridor No.
1, and a contract was entered into
to that effect.
Hooligan, while at work on the ex-
tension of Corridor .No. t, had struck
one of the richest veins of copper
ore In the West, and a year after-
wards sold out to the great copper
trust, for the nent sum of one hundred
thousand dollars and Is now leading
the life of a "thrue Irish gintleman."
Greatly to Be Pitied
It Elderly Bachelor
"Then let us look at that distin-
guished bachelor, Herbert Spencer,'*
"H. W." writes. In the London Times.
He confessed In hla memoirs that all
through his life he had never known
any real happiness. Even after he
had finished his "Synthetic Philoso-
phy," he felt no glow of exhilaration.
Despite his wonderful friendship, life
to him seemed fiat stale and unprofit-
able—the natural result of cutting
himself off from the normal relations
with wife and family. Philosophy
may engross a man during his work-
ing hours but It won't mak$ him a
enp of ten when he's ill in bed ors
smooth his hair for him when he's
tired and discouraged.
"An elderly bachelor of any station
In life is about the most pathetic
thing that ever bloomed on this
broad-bosomed planet. His thoughts .
turn more and more to himself as the
years go on until at last the sun
seems to rise in his stomuch and set
just west of his liver. V
"Of course I realize that many
young men today cannot afford mar-
riage unless the wife continues work-
ing. In that case I'd say let her con-
tinue."
HoweAbout-
L
$r ED HOWE
J
< Copyright by The Bell Syndicate, tno. >
A certain man makes his living as
a writer, and la better than the aver-
age. As be Is young, and steadily Im-
proving. probably lie will soon be on*
of the -first-raters. In a letter to me,
he say : "I am convinced writing la a
poor business; writers a poor lot. If
I could make an equally good living
In any other -way I wouldn't be a
writer long." ... In an older day
writers had a tremendously good opin-
ion of themselves. But lately men
who do things In engineering, mechan-
ics, manufacturing, agriculture, etc..
are being recognised as the real force
In the world. People are lately point-
ing with pride to those who have built
* railroad, a tunnel, a bridge, a tall
building, or done some other practical
thing of real use to mankind. Instead
of to those who have written a book.
We have been trying for centuries
to get rid of files, but so' far as I can
see, flies are as numerous as ever, and
as regularly find their way into every
ointment
Law and custom have both decided
that men and women of a certain age
are too young to marry. . . . There
should be an agreed age, also, when
men and women are too old to mairy.
The old should be protected, not
laughed at, as Is our way.
♦
What Is the thing we call common
sense?
It Is prayer practically applied, as-
sistance given hope.
Life Is like a game of cards. Re-
liability is the ace, Industry the king,
politeness the queen, thrift the Jack;
common sense Is playing to best ad-
vantage the cards you draw.
And every day, as the game pro-
ceeds, you will find the ace, king,
queen, Jack in your band and oppor-
tunity to use them.
&
Some men seem to wish to run wild,
and associate with wild people. Ber-
nard Shaw, possibly the wisest man
writing today, is tame, and believes
others should be: he believes that
wild men drift; civilized men steer.
* £
Fll not combat selfishness. I'm self-
ish and never knew a decent man who
was not. .
The greatest trouble with teachers
of morality Is too many of them teach
morality Is unselfishness.
Morality Is rank selfishness.
Why does a man prefer to bo at lib-
erty rather than In Jail? It Is selfish-
ness: the fact that freedom Is more
comfortable than imprisonment.
Why have we progressed from bar-
barism? Because pure selfishness
finds civilization more agreeable.
ta Kansas City recently a man died
as a result of slow starvation. As he
suffered he kept moaning: .v
"Oh, my heart 1 Oh, the disgrace 1"
He had been a respectable, popular
young man, but suddenly changed to
a thief. The change was so great he
could not face a frowning world, and
starved himself to death, moaning as
he suffered: "Oh, my heart! Oh, the
disgrace!"
Had this man been decently selfish
would he have suffered so tragic an
experience?
When first arrested he said: "I so
loved my town I attempted too much."
Bvt the people he loved <fldn't come
to his rescue; they were selfishly look-
ing after themselves, and trying to
keep their records straight
It Is known that at birth one child
may have more intelligence than an-
other; that while one child's disposi-
tion will be toward honesty, another's
will be toward Idleness and mischief.
. . . There Is no helping It: God
has so ordered: perfectly respectable
parents of the human kind may pro-
duce "black sheep" through accident
or freak in the process of reproduc-
tion. Scientists are trying to find out
why this Is the case but make no prog-
ress: it is one of the human facts we
must accept with blushes.
French influence Felt
The French Influences of Mary of
Guise and the close association of the
Scotch and French courts in the Four-
teenth and Fifteenth centuries, are
said to seem to have left something
of the quaint beauty of old Paris on
the houses and streets of Kdlnburgh,
Scotland, and the tragedies of the
Stewarts seem to give Its gayest mo-
ments the same somber seconds that
the Robespierre days yet give to
every visitor who muses on the past
of the French cspltal.—Detroit News.
Coming Great Man
"John," said Mrs. Norrls te her
husband, "I really believe oar Junior
Is lazy. He persuades little Freddy
to do all his work."
"Lasy!" exclaimed Norrls. "ThtCi
executive ability."—Lesion Weokly.
Writers are always saying there Is
no aim In life.
It Is a weak, senseless observation.
There Is an aim in life, written over
everything In large letters.
It Is to be as comfortable, as well
behaved, as useful, as successful as
possible. It is a waste of time to say
you should be born differently and Into
a different world. You were not, so
that's the end of that. Don't sit
around and grumble. Get busy at
Borne useful, practical thing, always
easily within reach, and you will find
more comfort in It than In being idle
and silly.
And the Jumping-off place?
Well. Jump off. Every one had to
do it; there Is co remedy.
Jump off like a gentleman, and leave
something behind to be remembered
pleasantly.
Your future? That has been taken
care of, too, and millions and millions
have found It bearable.
There Is said to be nothing new un-
der th« sun. . . . Maybe not, but
I heard the other day of a man who
was compelled to bury so many poor
kin that he bought tombstones by the
car load. . . . Also this seemed
new to me: A man called at a neigh-
bor's house one evening and said to
those he found there: "I want to do
the talking, and U. not permitted tUl*
privilege will go bomsu"
J
ALA'. ,INE
mm
Alabasfiiie
instead of
Kalsomine
or Wall Paper
Pound for pound Alnbastine
covers more wall surface than
any substitute.
So easy to apply you can do a
satisfactory job yourself. Ask
your dealer for colorcard or
write Miss Ruby Brandon, tbe
Alabastine Company, Grand
Rapids, Michigan.
AUbsstiae—apowds-in whitMkad
tint*. Picked ia 5-pound pacltaf s,
ready for we* by mixing with cold
or warn water. Full direction* oa
every peciwye. Apply with an or-
dinary wall brush. Suitable for all
interior eurfaeee—plaster, wall
board.briek.eeme t.oreanvae,WiH
not rub off when properly applied.
all colors
for all rooms
Florida JUmhI, 98* Acres Unimproved on psvod
highway sad beeutlful lakes in scenic high-
lands. Florida's beet. Bxch. l'or northern In-
oorae. A. J. McColl, Hotel D« Soto, Tampa, Fla.
KANOY HALL AN POBTO BICAN
Sweet Potato Plants; tomato and pepper
plant*—100 60a* thousand lots. less.
BOKHOMA PLANT, CO.. BoHhoma, Okla.
Plants From Guaranteed Inspected, Selected
red Porto Elcan potatoes. ti.!t M. delivered.
Orders filled. Jan A. Chauncey, Screven. Oa.
DARN FROM
$10 TO $15 PER WEEK
on your sewing machine at home, mak-
ing cloth working gloves, either from
new or old material. Complete in-
structions and patterns 25c. Agents
wunted. TAYLOR SPECIALTY CO.,
Dallas, Texas.
Youth and Beauty for Every Woman
The Mary Hunter Contour Restorer, a mar-
velous Invention, lilts up and holds In place
sagging facial muscles. Ten 10 twenty years
Immediately removed from your appearance.
Business, professional and aooiety women
delighted! Special low price by mail for
limited time only $1.00. MARY ROBINSON,
P. O. Bo* 6 «. SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS.
STOP H1.AVINO — OBI INTO UUHINK8H
(or yourself. Karn real money. My secret
IX plans, described fully, it cents. KIRSCH.
■TO East 141, New York.
SHOW CASES
Drug, Dru Goods h Jewelry Fixtures
Soda Fountains
tmremecr mqn manufacture
SOUTBM Fountain m ftnrnMrc.Gx
Dallas. Texas
JTL
Slightly Twitted
Ralph Hellman, dean of the school of
commerce of Northwestern university,
says he has discovered the best toegue
twister. He credlts It to an office /As-
sistant Recently, he relates, the
young woman was bewildered bj' a
crowd of people waiting to see the
dean at a time when ho was busy
with some Important work. Deter-
mined to sparo him, she faced the
waiting group and announced:
"I'm sorry, bat I can make n'o ap-
pointments. The bean is dir.zy."
C^uick
f
relief
CORNS
til one tnlnnta your misery from corns la
endsd. Thst's what Dr. Scholl'i Zlno-
psds do seA/y by removing the cause—
pressing or rubbing of shoes. You rleli no
Infection from amateur cattiog.nodanger
from "drops" (acid). Zlno-pads are thin,
medicated, antiseptic, protective, heal-
ing Got a bos at your druggist's or shoe
dealer's today—35s.
For fret SaxtpUutiu Tits Sdioll Mfg. Co., Chicago
DXScholt's
XinO'pads
Put out on—the pain is goMf
Boschee's Syrup
HAS BEEN
ReOeving Coughs
for 59 Years
Carry a bottle in
your car and always keep it in the
house. 30c and 90c at all druggists.
omghf
Tomorrow Alright
I
M
W. N. U, DALLAS, NO. 11-1926.
w.
# 'of) buri#r 4 t<m*f
ar mii'jiwj trw hu i f s<wh r< r syring, j gyjig JULIA >|| r«,
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Corsicana Democrat and Truth (Corsicana, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 29, 1926, newspaper, April 29, 1926; Corsicana, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth292877/m1/3/?q=b-58: accessed June 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.