Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 16, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, June 1, 1917 Page: 7 of 8
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PALESTINE DAILY HERALlj FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1917.
ial Cards. J
HHIIIIMHW
in..................
DR. JOE BOYD ♦
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. ♦
... 2 and 3 TJnfr Building. 4
Hear* ) to 12;* 1 jo 5. ♦
i 694. Residence 403. 4
4 O- N. Hospital, 7 to 9 a. m. ♦
Palestine, Texas.
I Buy All Kinds of
Man's Second-Hand
Clothing and Shoes.
DIXIE MASON
>♦91111111949III9444
9 a. m. to 12 m., 2 p. m. 4
m. Phone 836. ♦
w. F. Murphy ♦
Doctor of Dental Surgery. ♦
Main SL, otst The Fashion ♦
Palestine, Taxaa. ‘ » ♦
'♦uiii mu............
■ ■■
^IHIIUHIHHIHHWt
Dr. E. B. P*r#on» ♦
i
4tur TOP* wmtaltmmt. ♦
**4.»o^r **" '
MV.......
I R. N. BUSH
lines of insurance,
♦
kL ESTATE and S9NRS- 4
. St. 4
iMIlllllllllimiHW*
44444444444444
C. D. SMALL M. D. *
Ear, Noee and Throat. 4
smsi
Office Hours: 4
9 to 12 a. bl, 2 to 6 p. m. 4
4444444444444
LjT
i
■M .
PALESTINE ♦
SEWER SYSTEM ♦
lee: Cor. John and Oak Bu. ♦
■iML 4
Ikt<J __£
1999199449lllllllll#♦♦♦
................
SAM ROLLINS
dture and Platte leaving. 4
We Haul Beerytkleg. 4
. Phonea: 4
696. . Residence 497 4
. ... ...............
H. M. JONES
Professional Piano Tuner 4
Repairing and Action Regulat- 4
406. Phone 441. 4
♦ 999111141*999 999194444
----— :
4444444444444444
m ♦
♦ The Food Value ♦
* and Economy of Bread ♦
4
t npw bread is the best and 4
food for you to buy, 4
it be white, whole 4
or rye bread, for nowhere 4
i* you purchase for the same 4
unt of money the quantity 4
nutritions and wholesome 4
food which ten cents will buy 4
*!n bread. 4
a 4
♦"Blue Ribbon Milk Bread ♦
or Quaker Bread *
4
AMERICAN HOME BAKERY. 4
*99119914991999444944
'
P
r
a
jHM9 l II I 99411 III*94444
Palestine Wood Yard *
4 Wood Delivered to Any 4
4 Part .oi City. 4
► Wood Sawed BOc Cord. 4
PHONE 258. 4
>94499944444444944444444
>MM*M444414444444444
fE GIVE ♦
&9C
' Green Trading Stamps ♦
Save UP Jour Laundry bills
and exchange them at our
office for Stamps.
MARTIN STEAM
LAUNDRY
Newell Katoe, Proprietor.
White Wagons
* Phone 2
►444444944444444444
CLASSIFIED
| ADVERTISEMENTSj
4
4 If You Have Anything to Sell, 4
4 Anything to Buy, Exchange, 4
4 Pent or Trade, Try a HERALD 4
4 WANT AD—One Cent a Ward 4
4 First Issue; 1-2 Cent a Word 4
4 Each Succeeding Issue. 4
4 4
♦99944449199999944^4444444
WANTED.
WANTED—Work by boy age 16;
knows town thoroughly. Phone 1198.
31-3
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT—Two adjoining store
rooms in Opera House building.
Terms very reasonable. Apply to W.
E. Swift. 5-28-tf
/__*
FOR RENT—My home place, two
cloors west Presbyterian church; goo,d
well of water and new garage; also a
good garden. Mrs. M. A. Goodrich.
I*one 243. ' 5-30-tf
Ft)R RENT—June to September, 2
unfurnished, or two to four furnished
rooms, 497 S. May. Phone 1286.
(29-3t) R. A. Caraway-
. * r?4»"«
FOR RENT—2 furnished rooms for
light housekeeping. 109 Dallas street
Phone 929. m t (29-6t)
FOR RENT—Southeast rooms for
light housekeeping, 110 Dallas street,
phpue 1031. (25j6t)
FOR SALE—Horse colt, 3 years
old, will work anywhere. Julius
Schwab, 1125 Royall. (5-21-lm)
FOR RENT—9 room house, all or
partly furnished after June 1st. Own-
er leaving city. Phone 455. (31-3)
FOR SALE OR RENT—Six room
house, with modern improvements;
1 1-2 acres of ground attached; barn
and garden. 1307 S. Magnolia street,
or phone 1126. 28-6
MUSIC—The Besanso* 6-piece
string orchestra furnishes music for
all occasions; especially for dances.
For particulars call 1098 Louisiana
street; phone 571. . (5-4-lm)
Free Russia.
The following significant extracts
are drawn from a message sent
throuh Everybody’s Magazine for
June to the American people by Rus
sia’a premier, Lvoff:
“The newest of democracies greets
America with peculiar fervor, because
it feels that the American people can
readily understand what tlie great
Russian Revolution means. Autoc-
racy in Russia i3 dead forever, fn its
stead will soon rise a Republic of
Peace. !
“We wish America to realize thor-
oughly that therij can be but one re-
sult of the great upheaval, and that
result a real democracy modeled
along the lines ol the American re-
public, creating a government by and
for the whole people. It will mean
justice and opportunity to everybody-
“The name Russia once meant
darkness and oppression. It will now
mean light and freedom. The new
Russia will be the frankest and most
liberal of republics.
“America should feel great interest
in Russian emancipation, because
many of us Peceired our first inspira-
tion for freedom from ner.
“Fundamentally, Russia has always
been democratic. Only the outer
shell of autocratic rule was imperial
and despotic.
"We want America to know that
Russia will continue the‘war to a
peace dictated by the allied victory
Only on complete victory can a Re-
public of Peace be reared.
“In that struggle we are proud to
have America as an ally.
“It would be sentimentally fine to
send American troops to the Russian
front, but we need machinery more.
Send locomotives, cars, safeguards for
ships. Develop Archangel, Vladivo-
stok, Kola. . -
“At last we are comrades of Liber
ty.”
MM*
■Jhr
4
,
COL. ROOSEVELT
SOUNDQ’TRUMPET
CALL TO BATTLE
i~ l ’ J
Mineola, N. Y., June 1.—€<jl<V»el
Theodore Roosevelt, addressing fijKjjLf
eral thousand of his Nassau county
neighbors here Wednesday, appealed
to the wealthy among them not to
employ labor to beautify their es-
tates while the country is at war.
Lifting his hat and pointing to a huge
American flag nearby, he urged those
present to "come to the front in an
eager desire to serve -with their
bodies, with every quality of their
souls and spirit and mind; with their
service, labor and military skill and
not stand upon words, but in deeds
for the one flag that floats over us—
that flag which holds in its folds the
future glory of mankind.”
The former president reviewed the
sheriff’s reserve corps, composed of
many of the most prominent citizens
of his home county.
Urges Pupils to
Continue in SchMl
An urgent appeal to pupils to re-
main in high school next fall as a pa-
triotic duty has been issued by Dr.
P. P. Claxton, United States commis-
sioner of education. Dr. Claxton
points out that there are in the high
schools of the United States this year
more than one and one-half millions
of boys and girls, and somewhat more
than 200,000 of them will graduate
this month and next. In an ordinary
year 90,000 or more of these would
next fall enter college, normal school
or technical school to be prepared for
such service to society, state and na-
tion as can be rendered only by those
who have received education beyond
that which the high schools can give.
He says “Many college presidents and
others fear that on account of our
entrance into the war few boys and
Turning to the audience, Colonel S^Hs enter college next fall and
t&at the total college attendance will
? be very small. The number ought,
however, to be much larger than
Roosevelt declared that if there was
any man in th4 country who was not
prepared to do everything in bis
now when the nation calfiffli?
•vi
power
•fee had better go away.
“Do not think in terms of
sacrifice, but in terms of sei
said the colonel. “I do not
man who has a chance to risk his
for his country; I envy him.
“There musthbe absolute and
divided loyalty to our flag,
events of the past two years
shown that no man can any
bo loyal to two flags than he
to two wives.
“Any man who is not a good
band is not a good citizen.
“A man must- be loyal to his
and to fiis country. Now that ‘
many stands as the most effi
military autocracy the world
1 ' xp
ever seen, no man is a good As
ican who does not stand against
many and for this country with
his heart."
The former president asserted t]
“universal service is a neces
corollary to universal suffrage."
“I believe in suffrage." he
“but not for suffrage for any
shirking her duty and I will
for the disfranchisement of any mhljS
or woman who does not wark aST
peace or in war in any chance of se^
vice the government may demand.
/‘If any man is
to fight he ought to take his
science out and look at it, for it cer-
tainly is sick.” ML
The first rtity of a man, the dofl
onel added, “is to be a man’s mup
not just a sexless creature who wants
somebody to fight for him.” *
He urged those preesnt as a Pa-
triotic duty to subscribe for Liberty
Loan bonds.
“The bonds will be safe un
Uncle Sam smashes up,” said thl|
former president, “and if the United
1 'Jgg&j
States smashes up we will all be
smashed up aud it won’t make ua
difference whether the bonds be gbow
or bad.1”
The more mature young men are,
the more serviceable they are in the
fhrmy. The selective draft will take
only those between twenty-one and
Irty. In the total of 60,000,000 peo-
ie of productive age in the United
•tes the 350,000 students in colleges
d normal schools and technical and
ional schools of high grade con-
ute only about one-half of one per
cent. More than half of these live in
es and cannot be employed in ag-
cUltural produation except as a few
t them may find work on the farms
ing the summer. Their going to
liege will not lower the productive
pacity of the country as a whole
any appreciable degree. The col-
es, normal schools, and technical
:hools will all be open with undimin-
hed income from public funds and
dowments, and the expense of their
ntenance will continue. It is
te probable that many of the older
dents will not return next fall and
Fhigher classes will be smaller
- usual. The graduates from the
t boo Is should see to it that the
>wer classes more than make up for
loo conscientious 'trained men and women
' a* xMl
CCBfet
L
this deficiency.
Hold your dollars to a strict ac
countability by trading at Fregrt;,
man’s. 28-6-wl Adv
SEEK KIDNAPERS
OF MISSOURI BABY
Springfield, Mo., May 31.—An all
night search, which was continued to-
day, had by noon failed to reveal any
tangible clue which might lead to the
arrest of the kidnapers of Lloyd Keet,
the 14-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. H. Keet of this city.
It was said that Mr. Keet had re-
l *
ceived a letter this morning which
supposedly contained information re-
garding the child’s disappearance, but
he refused to divulge its contents. The
little boy was kidnaped last night,
while the father and mother were at-
tending a dance at a club-a short dis-
tance from the home.
Freedman's Sale helps you solve
the high cost of liYing. 28-6-wl Adv
Freedman is certainly cutting dry
goods priced during the Mid-Summer
Sale, now on. 28-6-wl Adv.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
“This appeal is' made on the basis
of patriotic duty. If the war should
ba long the country will need all the
jj 4 ,
it can get—
many more than it now has. There
will be men in abundance to fight in
the trenches but there will be a
dearth of officers, engineers, and men
of scientific knowledge and skill in
all the industries, in transportation,
and in many other places where skill
and daring are just as necessary for
success as in the trenches. The first
call of the allies is for 12,000 engi-
neers and skilled men to repair the
railroads of France and England; and*
other thousands will be needed later.
Russia will probably want thousands
of men to repair and build her rail-
<r©ads. The increase in transportation
and the tax on our own roads Will call
for large numbers of men of the same
kind. New industrial plants, ship-
yards, and qur armies abroad will call
for highly trained men beyond all pos-
sible supply unless our colleges and
technical schools remain open and in-
crease their attendance and output.
“When the war is over there will
be made upon us such demands for
men and women of knowledge and
training as have never before come
to any country. There will be equal
need for a much higher average of
general intelligence for citizenship
than has been necessary until now.
The world will have to be rebuilt and
American college men and women
must assume a large part of the task.
In all international affairs we must
play a more important part than we
have in the-past. For years we must
feed our own industrial population and
a large part of the population cf west-
ern and central Europe. We must re-
adjust our industrial and social and
civic life and institutions. We must
extend our foreign commerce. We
must increase our production to pay
our large war debts and to carry on
all the enterprises for the general
welfare which have been begun but
many of which will be retarded as the
war continues. China and Russia with
their new democracies and their new
aN m&k
It Plcweg the Taste »nd B*llda the Body
a
tmm siu ■■nisfsn
HOUSTON ICE*aIllllEWING ASS’PL
BfiHaaianizrama
9c tj? !
STM B9TTLIK9 WOftKS
* .v r v *• .i
WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS PALESTINE.
developments which will cojne as a
result will need and ask our help in
many ways. England, France, Italy
and the Central Powers will all be
going through a process of reconstruc-
tion and we should be ready to give
them generously eyery possible help.
Their colleges and universities are
now almost empty. Their older stu-
dents, their recent graduates, and
their younger professors are fighting
and dying in the t enches, or are
already dead; as a:*e many of their
J
older scientific and literary men,
artists, and others Vrnose work is
necessary for the enlargement of the
cultural and spiritual life and for all
that makes for higher civilization. For
many years after tie war is over
•*
some of these countries will be un-
able to support their colleges Bnd uni-
versities as they have supported them
in the past. America must come to
the rescue. We must be ready to as-
sume all the responsibilities and per-
form thoroughly and well all the du-
ties that will come to us in the new
and more closely relatid world which
will rise out of the ruins of the old
world which is now passing away in
the destruction of* the war. To whai
extent and hew well w 3 may be abb
to do this will depend upon you ysaqg
men and women who are this pear
graduating from our high schools
upon those who will lolloir is Mbs
next few years to a larger
than upon any other nice numberdtf
people.”
Biggest values on earth «CBa
during Freedman’s Sale, now on.
28-6-wl Adv.
-Establishes Pine Quarantine
(tipeci&i te The BermlAj
Washington, D. C., June 1 ^ 'Tmm
impotant quarantine regukAous ws-
0
lating to the white pine blister in-
come effective today, on ordered? JM»-
retary of Agriculture Houston. tQmm
prohibits the further Importation At
current and gooseberry plants dm
Europe and Asia. The other ijinrns
tines all the states -east at anA in-
cluding Minnesota, Iowa, MiaseedL
Arkansas and Louisiana, and 'jaw
« 9 •
Mbits the movement from these stobn
to points outside the quarantined sno.
of all five-leafed pines and ail ear
rant and gooseberry plants.
fl
—r—
Unusual values during Freedsaa%
Mid-Sommer Sale, now on. 28-6-wl Mr
Mliiertir^T Narcotic
ert: 4!
Itsi*. -
Harm Sad 1
''ic ' fux--
A helpful Remedy for
^i^fOMisUpatipnandDian^
ptm and Feverishness ^1
resulting iherefrCT^!-*1*^
facsimile Signatarof
C^
Ih£ GENTMTR CtJKPASX.
YOKE:
mu
Fbr Infants anfrtlhiidreiL
Mothers Knew 1M
Genuine Gastoria
Always ^
•ears the
(ignature
of
If
Mi
Is
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
Ill
llsi
For Over
Thirty Tears
CASTORIA
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 16, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, June 1, 1917, newspaper, June 1, 1917; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1025337/m1/7/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Palestine Public Library.