Jefferson Jimplecute. (Jefferson, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, September 1, 1911 Page: 1 of 4
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•« ^ ' «
livxpltiuti.
ESTABLISHED IN 1886.
VOL. 44.
INDEPENDENT IN ALI. THINGS—NEUTRAL IN NOTHING.
JEFFERSON. TEXAS FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER i 1911
91.00 PER ANNUM.
NO 11
Tie dap oi tie
Is Rapidly Coming
IN ORDER TO MAKE ROOM
FOR FALL PURCHASES WE
PUT A KNIFE INTO PRICES OF
All Summer Goods.
COME AND GET PRICES BE-
FORE BUYING ELSEWHERE.
YOURS TO SERVE
ROSENFELD'S
C.I.
1
Funeral Director
HHP EMBALMER.
COMPLETE SLOCK OP J
Cotli ns
Caskets _
Burial Suits
And Robes. '
Prompt Attention Given to
Calls Day or Night
PHONKS. Store - - t>7
Residence • - 58
An estimate of tne annual ex-
]>enditures for art education in
the United States complied by
Henry Turner Hailey in 1908 is
given as a total of £l 1565241.
Best ever I'seil
A. B. lleinlien Harrison Idaho says:
1 have used Or. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey
for coughs an colds anil it is the heat
1 have ever tried Look for the Bell
on the Bottle.
Of *1 locomotives recently or
dered by a prominent railroad
in tlu* United States 51 are to
us»« coal as fuel and .'it) to use oil
What to Do in I'a lie of Aeciileut
If akin is broken apply l»r. Bed's anti-
lain at once aud the wound will heal
<|uicki.v ahil never get sore. I'sed intar-
iiallv and externally.
Over 30 cities have adopted the
commission plan of government
>ince the lirst of the year
To feel stroni; have a good appetite
dtgMtion. sleep soundly aud enjoy life
um Burdock Blood Bitters the great
hfitem tonic and huilder.
There are over 12.000 dairies I
n London and suburiis.
YOUR MONEY BACK
If not satisfied with what
You >f**t for
25 CENTS
lite Restaurant!
Mri.i from 5 o'clock k m.
To V 30 p. m.
>h«rt Order All ilat
rOt'R PATRONAGE SOLICITED.
MRS. M. B. GARDNER
CitixtB* KaaL Klk. WaJautM.
Ph r.«. 1ST. P <>. Bo* tft
Well Educated.
What goes to make up an edu-
cation depends largely upon the
point of view. A Henery county
negro carrying a very large ami
ful of books which brought forth
the inquiry:
"Going to school?"
"Yas sar boss."
'"Doyoustudy all those books?"
'"No s%r dey's my brudder's.
I'se a ignoranj kind of nigger
'side him boss. Yer just oughter
see dat nigger figgering. He
lone gone and ciphered clean
through addition partition sub-
traction abomination justitica
tion creation amputation and
Adoption.—Ex.
A High tirade Blood Purifier.
Go to Allen Urqunart's drug stole
mid buy a bottle of B U. B. (Botanic
Blooil Balm.) it will purify and enrich
your blood and build up your weakened
brokendown system. B. B. B is guar-
anteed to cure all blood diseases and
skin humors such an
Rheumatism Eating Sores
Syphilitic Blood Poison
Catarrh
Ecxema.
Itching Humors.
Risings and bumps
Bone Fains
l'imples. Old Sores
Scrofula or Kernels
Superating Sores. Boils Carbuncles
B B B. cures all these blood troubles
by killing the poison humor and ex-
pelling it from the system. B. B B. is
the oulv blood remedy that can do this
—therefore it cures and heals all sores
when all else fails (1 per large bottle
with directions for home cure. Sam-
ple free bv writing Blood Balm Co.
Atlanta Ua.
The city authoritiesof A Ulster
dam are considering a plan by
which street rubbish uiay be
converted into combustible bri
quets for heating boilers
Nut a Wurd of Srandl?
marred the call of * neighbor on Mrs
W Spang of Mauville. Wyo. who
■ aid "the tola me I>r King h Nee; Life
Fills had cured her of an obstinate
Kidney trouble and made her feel tike
a new wotuan." Easy but sure reriiody
for stomach liver and kidney trouble*
Only 25c at W J Sedberry's
The city council of Bouhaui
Tex . hns passed an ordinance
that no one may j>eddW» jieanut*
in 11>»■ -trtft* unl»*>s li" had
l«>tii awdutaUnl
Blood INtison
1* prevent*; by ap( lying I'r hell o
Auti-I'am to i 11U ■>' rati he* aii t Iran*
es It ildttrava all *eptit matter en
»• r» the wound to l ea without tore-
iiMt. lie «are to get Lr Keil's
T!n' tirst system "t je-.u . wa-
raujferat< ii :n Km/' i* <i by S.
Robert IVh-1 m 1 -1J
Children Cry
FOR FIETCHEIS
CASXO.RIA
The Value of Agitation.
All Progress Goes by Agitation. It Takes Churning to the Better.
There Can Be No Peace Till Right Prevails. J. B. Gambrell Editor.
2«a5rtmanatr.: — —
All of the whiskey people are
deploring any further agitation
on the whiskey question. Iu
that they are particularly con-
sistent. There never was a time I
in the world when the evil forces
of society wanted any agitation
concerning what they were do
ing. In the olden dajy s the devil
greatly deplored the fact that
Jesus had come to disturbs them
before the time. The time to
agitate evil never comes with
the friends of evil.
It is noteworthy that the same
papers which are now deploring
further agitation on a great mor1
al issue are perfectly willing to
agitate on at any length over
personal issues in i>olitics. One
of the outstanding facts concern-
ing the recent campaign is that
for once the people were largely j
lifted above personal politics and
rallied to a great moral issue. 11;
must be apparent to every one
that one of the efforts of the re-
cent campaign was to move the
people away from pesky person-
alities in jMjlitics a thing greatly
to be desired.
Another result which is
worthy of deep consideration on
the part of all good people is the
fact that the negro vote was car-
ried overwhelmingly for the sal-
oons. It is coming out more
and more the specious and lying
devices employed to deceive the
negroes. The white people may
get a great and important lesson
spelt large for them in the pres-
ent situation as it has now de
veloped and is developing more
and more under the investiga
tion going on in Austin. It is
perfectly clear that agents
were sent out to secretly fix the
negro vote by telling them all
manner of falsehoods concerning
prohibition and the intentions
of the prohibitionists. It is
equally certain that not a few
white people were hood-winked
by adroit gum-shoe whiskey
agents telling one man this was
a movement to down Joe Bailey
| and another it was a movement
to boost Joe Bailey and on and
| on in the same way. The lesson
is that we must carry forward
the work of education in which
we have been engaged for years.
We must carry it forward
among the negroes and among
the white people warning them
against the insidious villanies
I which have misled them in the
past.
Once when there was a great
prohibiton campaign in Hines
County Mississippi in which
Jackson the capitol is located
at a great rally Professor Knsley
of Alcorn University an educa
ted negro made [this statement
and appeal to the white people.
"You white people make a mis-
take with the negroes. You
leave them in the hands of the
saloon men and had element un-
til you want them in a great mor-
al campaign like this and then
you expect them to rise to the
same moral level as yourselves."
It was a great statement of truth
which ought to go home to us in
Texas. People are always pun-
ished for neglecting their duty.
It is not worth while for the
white people now to expend any
great amount of temper and
time abusing the negro. Many
of them did deplorably. Their
religious leaders in the main did
heroically. If a majority of the
negroes did wretchedly it i ^ not
worth while for us to expend our
indignation on them but rather
on the men who concocted the)
villanies manufactured lies and 1
furnished the money to bu.v the!
negroes. There is not in Texas
today >i negro who is ascon temp |
tible and dungeroes and mean to
the commonwealth as the white1
men who will corrupt tin- negro
with whiskey and buy his vote
bo i»erjK*tuaU* the saloon rule in
thi> state Let us turn tin- edge
of the sword on the main tin
tors to a higher civilization. It
is ;m]>os.sihie for a right think
ing p«*. .so! to h»\ »• unj r»\Hpe<?
for men who will furnish mone.\
I and win* and lies to rmsh id
I the ignorant and weak wm low
j in 'he iot' rest of barrooms
I And tins lesson may en fore
; upon i-> another l< *s.>n < lo«.«
I related to it. We are in tl. - I
country with negroe* It is no
us>- !>• *.n that 'hey • 1.• I i
bring themselves here Tie
| A me i". ii. negroes have been ai 1
i ire now inu will l»e hereaft'
I very in i< '■ whatt!.e white |»« ■
1 pie DiaKi' them We t tnr. " .
•»l«rtt< ".ir interest* fr
thel I s a: we >e -a rate o
. : !*• tli'
lin^ ol... i iA-s- \\ «• live
riti»*s together in neiifhborh • . ■»
1 togelli" If i O'gro ■ ate • -
the small pox a white man may
catch it from him. If negroes
degrade citizenship while they
have citizenship rights they low
er the level of civitization. We
must help the negro up not for
our sake only but for hurs and
all the generations to come. It
is easy enough for a strong man
to hold a weak one dOwn on the
ground but while he is doing
it the strong man is down too.
Before we go ink) another cam-
paign we must look this matter
straight in the face and meet it
like the Angele Saxon race bus
met every groat issue.
But there is still another lesson
which is important to the whole
country. It is good that It is
undergoing illuminating and in
vestigations in Austin. The
methods of corrupting the bal
lot in this State make a paradise
for the saloon craft and other
]>oliticians. What we want now
is to g»>t out of the election all
that can be had for the better-
ment of the state. One great
thing to be done is to safeguard
the ballot. Mississippi settled
this great matter years ago and
Texas can settle it. No man
who cannot read his ballot can
really vote. Somebody can vote
him but ignorance cannot vote.
Staatesmanship in Texas has
lost all of its wits if it cannot de-
vise a method by which the in-
telligent and moral element of
this state can rule through the
ballot. As long as a brewer can
buy an indefinite number of poll
tax receipts and have them mail-
ed out to men to be voted at the
will of the brewer or to be given
out to men who can be corrup-
ted to do the will of the liquor
interest just that long will the
foundation of civil government
of Texas will be in the mud.
Out of the election and out of
the investigation certainly should
come a great movement for
better politics in Texas.
It is for more pleasant to turn
to a final lesson which emerges
l I uiu iiii^ uuau Ui cuts uabiic
mural upheavals are in the in-
terest of religion. George
Wasington uttered a great truth
when he warned his countrymen
to beware of believing there
could be maintained sound poli-
tic morals without religion. It
is just as true to say that you
can maintain religion without
promoting morals. The two go
together. We have a great mor-
al uplift. The effect of it is mani-
fest. The moral tone of Texas
has been changed. The arro-
gant spirit of the liquor interest
and allied interest is subdued.
Thousands of men who have
been carried forward in their
moral thinking until they can
never be again be counted on to
help the barrom forces to domi-
nate Texas. The great upas
tree has not been cut up by the
roots yet but it has been so
belted around that it has wilted
and the chances for moral and
religious development are greatly
improved.
We are to expect as one of the
results of the campaign a wide-
spread revival of religion. Al-
ready it is setting in. A revi-
vival has broken out in San An-
tonio which promises much for
that center of wiekekness. 11
we go forward as we .^hould in
preaching and working there is
every reason t<> ex[>ect that Tex-
as will be blessed with a revival
ol religion widespread and genu
me which will gather into the
kingdom multiplied thousands
who have been delivered by the
great campaign from the clutch
es of the evil one. The universe
is so organized morally and re-
lii/iotisl v t i 11 l t evei-vthinw l'Odd
helps every otiier tiling tfood so
tluit we may j^atlm■ r the fruits of
moral campaign in a gpnuin.'
revival of reliui"n. Preaching
will be (-iiMn-r and hearing will he
easier and acting wiil he easier
when the deadly sjw'll of evil has
been broko fI'M: the minds and
the hearts of n en
How's lhl»?
\\ . (f O |( r I • > • «r« fU-WAr-1 for a:iy !
r»M- of '«tarr!i tl.nt n: f • »urnl t.v Mi.. I
* ** trr V J. Cffh NKY A < <» 1 U ft.
W. t'.» ifi'ter*.* . «1 ' *'1 known h J ■ /
t r U\t a*?' .-n't 4ii i him ;»» rf.-« t.y
b<>:.or*ti . a.! Mm.:»«•** trauma- lions ami f. -to
. n • • arr> tlAtioniIM<!' J
« - 4 K • •< Al M a at \ i *
\S I; i»! 1 «.* •' 0
II*- • Catarrh •» i^i u-rntllj tltif
•1 i r• • .l- 'U Itir ' 1 IOU(1)UI «»f
♦. ». ..•'.m i. it 'rt- rru•
: t- ?t;. - .1.1 * hrui(K>»t«
• i ^ • :»r •tiuttipi
The Kren ent«»r Dionert
... > ording t" " Scientitic
American ontrivi ii an applit a
t <»f lit.> !•«>•!!•• ■ 'o the (lis
of .ixl. .ti i wat«*r
h.r n.f no Fair aii'l Hands
i>r. Hr « \ ut: »»•;!C It) thr » r«t.
M • * ' rrttii • *!. <* whit* ' itituirnt
■ lil D* *- 'mi WI 1 i»t t hrtf inoolh*
A MESSAGE
To Ambitious Young Men and
Women
I have a message for those
who have a ilesirt1 to improve
their condition by increasing
their efficiency.
There was never so great a
demand for first-class office men
as at the present time the de-
mand is greater than the supply
there are plenty of applicants for
the i>ositiou hut they are from
those who can't make good the
world is full of such people what
the business world wants is top
notch Kits people who can do
the tiling and do it Now.
The Marshall Business College
was created to train bright boys
and girls for office work Short
hand Typewriting Bookkeep-
ing Telegraphy and Railroad
office work. There are hundreds
of schools teaching these things
yet quite a per cent of the gradu-
ates from most of these schools
are jokes haven't the ability to
hold a position when they leave
school.
Since the Marshall Business
College is a select school work
ing for quality instead of quan-
tity we limit the number of pu-
pils and give personal attention
to each of them and get them
fit to hold a position on leaving
schoolthere is no necessity of go
ing into an office without payjust
toiret iirart.iep nnr rvvnrd i« tlin.1.
every graduate of this school
has gone from the college to an
office position and made good
from the first day and got pay
for their work too.
YVe teach stenographic stu
dents to spell and paragraphcor
rectly we employ a special tea
clier for this and our system is
easy to learn.
It is our ambition to make as
thorough graduates of each of
our students as possible and we
spare nothing in doing so the
result is our graduates are of a
higher grade than the average
business school and for this rea-
son are always in demand by the
business world.
The II. S. Government wants
stenographers and are advertis
ing for them they pay from $8-10
to S'.MK) to start with. We pre-
pare you for this work. Hail
way office work is a large field
there is a constant demand for
office men those that are tele-
graphers stand the best chance
for the position we are going to
make a capable man out of every
one that we take in this depart-
ment we can give; you actual
Kail Road Work a wire from the
dispatcher's office for you to re-
ceive from regular freight and
ticket office work we work night
and day those who want to can
take advantage of the night class
in addition to the day work no
extra charge.
We guarantee to finish you as
quickly and more thoroughly
than any other school we guar-
antee your ability to hold a po-
sition on graduating and we will
assist you into a good paying po-
sition.
We make every graduate a liv-
ing aduertisementof the quality
of our college. For particulars'
write
Thukman C. Gakiinku
Head Master
Marshall. Texas.
The current year marks the
centenary of LJunsen of Oswald
speaks as the greatest inorganic
chemist of the nineteenth centu-
ry since Berzelius.
Herbina m the medicine that cures
biliousneas malaria and constipation
The tirst done makes you feel better a
few additional doses i urts completely.
I'rire 50c. Sold by W J Medberry
(ieiu.'raJ (iarabaldi hit tin- bulls
eye unerringly for half an hour
at tli<* Coney Island Galleries.
SHE COULD SHOUI. SAYS
Mrs. JOHN W. PITCHFORD OF
ASPEN N. C.
1 will a.ways use Hunt's Cure for
it >iitiie trouble. and I tell all 1 sec
about it. I could shout now to kn >w
that we are all well of that lre»iful
trouble The first of last fall m> little
hoy broke out with some kind uf iti li-
mit trouble. Thinking his blond
bad I gave him a bloo 1 tonic >ut he
gut » me aud colli I not sleep atnigti:
>ome *aid he bad itch and lol I me
wiiat was t! <1 for it. 1 used what
[*• p.e sa.ll w <Ul(l rure it but nothing
lid any g " d Mv ithertwo children
alio tu> «e f 1 • I the dim *-e fr• • I. him
n January 1911. 1 «a* Hunt's Cure
a!i ri.-ed and I purrhaf-d a VK b
It I.e. | • 1 in . tt.e 'p \ - mil' !| 1 JJ it a
t> \ for each one of the family and
Dow we are all well of that awfu tr i-
•..e Hunt's Cure will cure t. •< i. a
abort time if ycu will go by directions
we had it in .ts *nr»t form an I u.-ed
II .nt'e Cure an 1 we are n w a. *e:
I ' ank» ti H Hi bar U Medu <ne
<«f "•tiern.aii leia# manufai turet»
of such bea-ng medicine.
Mr«. John W Pitehf •n)
^•(■ea. N C
TEXAS AND NATION
MAKING WAR ON FLY
With one and a quarter mil-
lion tties killed in a short cam-
paign in San Antonio Texas six
millions slain in a two weeks'
contest in the National capital
and ten barrels of them put to
death by children struggling for
a prize in Worcester Mass. the
slogan of "Swat the fly!" is no
longer to be taken as a mere
pleasantry.
These are only isolated cases.
The whole Nation is engaged in
a mighty effort to rid the coun-
try of what was only a few years
ago considered an annoying but
harmless pest. Nor is America
alone in the determination to de-
stroy the insect. Canada is
moving as vigoroul.v against the
common enemy and in England
a general movement to render
the enemy extinct is well under
way.
All this intense activity di-
rected toward the destruction
of the musa domestica is due to
the discovery that the fiy the
common house fiy once treated
almost as a pet- is one of the
most deadly of all menaces to
tlx1 human race. It is the great-
est passenger carrying biplane
known to man. With its wings
buzzing like a runaway electric
fan it can and does carry on its
long and hairy legs millions of
germs of wasting and fatal dis-
ease including according to a
list issued by the United States
Department of Agriculture ty-
phoid Asiatic cholera tubercu-
losis and small pox and to this
list some of the leading physi
eians are adding infantile paraly
sis.
The logic of the theory that
the accusers of the fly are urg-
ing upon the public is irresisti
hie. They point out that the fly
is the most democratic of in-
sects. It is no respecter of per
sons things or places. Horn
and bred in the foulest and most
loathsome of places it is ready
as soon as its tiny wings will
bear its tiny weight to hasten to
the home or hotel or eating place
of the fairest and noblest and
there leave its messenger of dis
ease and death. There can be
no compromise with the insect.
If admitted no matter how
slightly it unloads its pestilen-
tial burden. It takes buta touch
less than a moment for it to
leave the summons of the tomb.
Today the attitude of the whole
world is well represilted by the
State Board of Health of Florida
which under the direction of Dr.
JoMeph Y. Porter Secretary and
Health Ofticer has printed in red
ink on a muslin poster twelve
inches wide and eighteen inches
long a warning to all and sun
dry that flies are disease carriers
a deadly danger to young and
old the sick and well and fol
lows this with instructions as to
the best methods of preventing
their ravages. Sketches in
black around the red warning
show how the flies gather the
germs and distribute them.
The American Civic League
Association has issued 100.000
copies of a pamphlat entitled
"Kill Plies and Save Lives."
Another method is the publica
tion and issuance of postcards
the kind which give out their
message only when rubbed with
a coin or pencil. Ou one called
'"The Writing on the Wall." a
dainty paper design changes to
a fly specked wall with the word
"Contagious./ Another with
the legend "Reasons why you
should kill every fly" illustrates
tin- fly s progress from the dust
bin to tla* sick room. A third
named "Tlit' Murderous Fly"
bears the picture of a baby in
the clutches of an insect as large
! as itself. The warning on this
[card reads. "A fly in the milk
may mean a baby in the grave."
Yet after all it is the general
conclusion that the fly is more
the sign of menacing conditions
than a menace in itself. Dr.
<; Gordon Hewitt Dominion
Kntomologist declares house
Mies indicate the presence of re-
fuse garbage and other unsam
tary conditions. The house fly
is useful therefore because it is
of the greatest use as a danger
signal as a red flag."
John li Smith the New .Jer
se entomologist says the "swat
the fly campaign should be di
rected nut. so iucuIi .'i: oust the
fly as against the conditions
that require the fly .is a natural
scavenger
MfrrhautN 1'rai^
I>r. U«tt'a Pine-T*r-Hon«»Y J. W. M -
Daniel. Ktherton. 111. »*>» Thtrt* >»
no luvilii-lne which t j I* *ii* * im CO11 »'h»
c'liia aaU.atna mi ! Jtlronchitia
1. >ok for tne Bell on th« bottle.
Austraiiia and the Argentina
bftwisju them pasture one third
•if d! ti e sh»*et> ill the world
JEFFERSON PUBLIC SCHOOLS
C. (i. TKUITT SI I'KKINTKNDENT
Interest Depends Upon Regular
Attendance.
School opens September lltli.
Every pupil should endeavor to
be present the first day and at-
tend regular throughout the
term. Nothing kills interest in
school work quicker than irre-
gular attendance.
The school is maintained not
for the benefit of the future hut
for the present. Education is
for the now as well as for the
hereafter. If the boy and girl
can afford to attend school at all
and no one will doubt it they
should attend regularly. Irre-
gular attendance not only hinders
progress in education but tends
to form habits of irregularity
which will int»-rfere with pro
^ress in any line of work under
taken.
Objection to Short Course Schools.
The objection to many of the
the so-called colleges is that they
have no standards of admission
anyone can enter "at any
time" complete a course and bo
gurranteed a position in a given
number oi weeks or inontlis.
Every standard institution has
certain entrance requirements.
The high school requires a cer-
tificate of graduation from the
grammar school and the unive
sity demands evidence of gradua
tion from an approved high
school (14 units in Texas) but
the get-through quick schools
require nothing but the tuition
in advance.
Education cannot be obtained
in a few weeks or months no
more than a child can grow to
manhood in a few weeks or
months. Education is a growth
a systematic development of all
the powers and capabilities men
tal. moral and physical. Hence
to know the mechanical opera-
tions of a typwriter oi to keep a
set of books good as they may
lie per set is not an education
because It is partial development
or a "lopsided" education to say
tin" least. The aim and end of
an education should not be to
get a dollar per day nor to es-
cape work; the educated man
should earn more than a dollar
a day and his labor should have
less of the drudgery in it but
the real purpose of an education
should be all round development
so that one may act well his part
wherever his lot may be cast.
It Pays to Go to School.
If an uneducated man earns
$1.50 a day for !500days in ayear
lie does very well and il he keeps
it up for forty years he will earn
$1.00x;KXbcH> or *18000. An
educated man is not generally
paid by the day but by the
month and by the year. If you
will strike an average of tlx1
earnings of educated men be
ginning with the president of
the United States who earns
$f)0(KK) a year and run down the
scale until you come to the lower
walks in point of earnings among
educated men you will admit
that $1000 a year is a low aver-
age for the earnings of educated
labor. For forty years you have
$10(XX) as the earnings of an
educated man. Subtract $ lb000
from $10000 and the difference
or S'J'J000 must represent the
value of a boy's time spent in
school getting an education.
You will admit that a man who
works with his hands at un
skilled labor puts forth as much
muscular effort as a man who
earns a livlihood by his wits and
education. Now if S-'-.OOO rep
resents the value of time a buy
spends at school getting mi t'du
cation wliat is the value of a
day spent at. school.
Tin; average school life of ev-
ery boy and girl in Missouri is
less than eight years ol' 175 days
each; let us say that it takes four
more at 2(X) days you will find
that the days at school are
equal to $J2IXK) and a simple
division will bring it home to the
coniprenension of every school
boy that each day at school prop
erly sin iit must be worth $10.
Forced t«> Leave Home
Kvery rear a Urge number of poor
autlerers win se luii;s are - .re and
racked with c ugbs art- urgetl to go to
another climate. But this u easily an i
not .tlway* sure rhere'a a better
way. Let I'r king's N'ew Piacoverj
curt* yt> 11 at home. "It cure.I we of
UUK trouble. wr.teH W K Netgou. of
Calamine Ark "when ei^e faced
and I gamed 4i" founds in weight. Its
anrelv the king of ail cough and lung
cures. Thousand# wo their Uvea
and health to it It'# [v sitively guar-
anteed i «r I'l Uthi Coida l.aiinppv
Aithn.a Cr iif i.1 thi at an: l.aag
tr uNtea >0c and $1. Trla' battle
fret' a' W } ^edberry'f.
Keel ant- do tot I ke parsley
It stH'm> It is said they wti 1
d.-vipju'ur lilce uiagie if bits of
the herb are scattered in their
famous haunts.
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Taylor, M. I. Jefferson Jimplecute. (Jefferson, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, September 1, 1911, newspaper, September 1, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1078936/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .