The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 37, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 15, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rescuing Texas History, 2019 and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Tarrant County Archives.
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ION GAIN
8YNOP8I8.
CHAPTER 11.
CARING FOR TURBERCULOSIS
OD ROADS
I
I.
5
■
!!
i
HO
ac-
“°‘h
big bo
It
*«
er
MM*
T’“Y
',*58 Wl
:
CES
FINEEY
Government'!
tetlng Gen-
reval.
|, according to
rould create a
Btltig of engin-
s, to carry out
(re, he explain-
vhat after the
puces Measure
vement.
nual approprla-
five years to
and rural de-
government la
Mr. Swanson
K that despite
ts In many dl-
it Is notorious
has the poor-
jhwaye of any
Ire than a mil
I tn the Treaa
n ho resigned
and was sue-
ro. Sinoe that
|s expended the
vpriations, one
ther for 6,000/
»nt of expense*
of the revolu-
over
tor a
F
l tone, and
matter tn
I him the
Main
I in Wash-
j.'"Now I
1K of that
I, but the
is aoll can
*e to that.
WRONG SORT
Perhaps Plain Old Moat, Potatoes and
Broad May Bo Against You
for a Timo.
p that his plan
11,000,000 miles
aid; that the
fes would fur
to. that appro
>: On June 3Q
al year, Mex
to 63,070,001
atement mad*
■ /.st.
»w bun-
»•—wa«
Mently
he mu-
ll but a
tt’t help
tests is
If their
ou see!
ower to
bases of
Mas, Mr.
tUy. “a Span-
hench boy
it an Eng-
•toat, and an
s tent That
Naess tn the
lorenco.
he reorganiza-
Florenco Rail
the name to '
Railway, the
iced that ths
rlblo Death,
bey, a twelve-
as burned to
ght while try-
pll. The girt’s
med from the
horrible sight
, throwing the
inistration
PIT.
wonaerruny. ru
Rank,
lean Contrac-
■ uf
£
3
a and Minister
apparent gain
,000 pesos not
t by the adop-
nomy. A por-
retrenchment,
art by avoiding
e.
-Yr ■ »• ■ <3
Mi
Mr. Grimm
a question,
it userr-
V U
■^.IIISIVL
W ISABEL
^ly JACQUES EUTRELLE
mwnsAnow HCi.Krtwr
COPYRIGHT 1906 THE ASSOCIATED SUNDAY MAGAZINES
• Benedetto
11 went on
ant in Wash-
»te«, for that
ich a mission,
Bent That I 8hoSM
?diPl±d
telephone, com
Count dt Roalni, th* Italian ambas-
sador, is at dinner with diplomata in
the national capita] when a meaaenger
bnnga a note directing him to come to
the embassy at once. Here a beautiful
young woman asks that she be given
a ticket to the embassy ball. The tick-
et ts made out in the name of Miss Is-
abel Thorne.
1 tetereei
_r: id 7^®
to Speaking on Maxims.
i The spender, with an ill-concealed
sheer, handed this maxim to the
? saver: “Borno people are so stingy
• that they are dishonest"
; > “And by the same token," responded
> the saver, with a raw- laugh, "some
people are so liberal that they are
11 dishonest Count them up, please, and
, see, in these days of liberal spending,
, which side has tho majority “—Judge
different, £
A 1 «■;'
- ■ f
-
ady
JMF''
Ips.
Ha..
Tho Modest Inventor.
Thomas A. Edison, in a recent in-
terview in New York, declined, with
a laugh, to talk about the soul.
"No, no!” ho said. “Tho preachers
have put mo In my place. 1*11 never
open my mouth about the soul again.**
“Well, then, Mr. Edison," said the
reporter, “will you please give me
your theory of the universe T“
-Why," said Mr. Edison, "I haven’t
Oven a theory of electricity, lot alone
the universe."
Thirty-Nine State and 114 Local Sana-
to ria Provided, but Those Aro
Only a Beginning.
-----
Large Irrigate
iroJecL* about being
low south Wales, *
00 acres of land and
to 70,000 persona
-
tn spite of the fact that state sana-
toria and hospitals for tuberculosis
lave been established in 11 states, and
114 municipal or county hospitals in
It states, vastly more public provision
lg needed to stamp out consumption,
says the National Association for the
Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis.
Nearly every state east of the Missis*
stppl river has provided a state saner
torium, and west of th* Mississippi
river, state sanatoria have been es-
tablished in Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri,
ArWnsae, Texas, Kansas, Nebraska,
North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana
and Oregon. There aro 81 sanatoria
provided by these states. Massacbu-
setts having four, Connecticut and
(Pes^j^vs^aUu^w^Texa^^
fcousos# -
county hospitals for
cuiosls patients. t
Apart from these institutions, how.
over, and a few special pavilions at
prisons, hospitals for tho insane, and
some other public institutions, a grand
total of hardly 200. the institutional
care of tho consumptive is left to priv-
veto philanthropy.
Not for Mr. Hercules.
Hercules had finished bis twelfth
labor.
"That’s tho last!" ho exclaimed. 1
positively refuse to do another one!"
Thus we see that even Hercules
was not free from the "18" superstl-
"THREE hours
1 after the first dose.
That’s all the time it
takes for Oxidine to
“get busy” with a tor-
pid liver, sluggish bow-
els and kidneys and a
weak stomach.
Tones and strength-
ens vital organs.
Try just one bottleof
OXIDINE
—a bottle proves.
TlwSpoafia lor Malaria, OHL aad
Fever and a tollable remedy for
all diemme due to di»order.
sad kidney*.
' tfOe. At reen- DraggMe
■■■ eaesssa m* oo..
Wave, Taxa*.______
pression
gle for,w
tired yea
stripped
the Unit
alon that Spa:
shell: and Fra
but wonder If
not principally
forces are Oo
It would bo i
reckon with
supplies rlgl
He rose *
to the wind
momenL st
eyes-
"Given s
Grimm," ho
ish boy will west
will paint a picti
llsh boy will build
American boy will
fully illustrates th
races."
He abandoned tl
returned to the
hand. Mr. Grim:
despatch and ho I
‘Will soon sig
Ington,’" ho read
don’t know that ’
compact can be
signing of it on Ui
be prevented. Y<
Mr. Grimm."
“Very well," ths
carelessly. Tho
a task made, i
slightest imprest
languidly drew oi
"And meanwhi:
to ascertain tho
and Japanese rep
city."
Mr. Grimm nodd
“And now, for
d’Abruxzi,” Mr. C
slowly. "Officially
ington, nor the Us
matter. Naturally,
"If Any Other Man Than Gault Had |
Was Craxy."
he would not co:
credited agent, I
ho is to be son
name."
“Of course." M
"And ho wool
tela."
"Certainly."
Mr. Campbell
less blue eyes I
upon those of th*
a minute. Ho oa
Ing, sometimes, I
tho deliberate 1M
Mr. Grimm
his admiral
It is not too much to construe it into
the first step toward a world-war—a
war of reprisal and conquest beside
which the other great wars of tho
world would soem trival. For the
fact has at last come home to tho na-
tions of the world that ultimately the
English-speaking peoples will domi-
nate it—dominate It because they aro
tho practical peoples. They have given
to, the world all its great practical In-
vention*—tho railroads, the steam-
ship, electricity, tho telegraph and
cable—all of thorn; they aro the great
civilising forces, rounding the world
up to new moral understanding, for
what England has done In Africa and
India wo have done in a smaller way
in the Philippines and Cuba and Por-
to Rico; they aro the great commer-
cial peoples, slowly but surely wtnnli
tho market-places of the earth; wh<
ever tho English or the An
Is planted there tho Engl
are being taught "*■- —
living and squan
Il rvl|ui* w u<
lmaginatlont Mr.
Ibu <U, wbM t
hone, combed by the i
hid.
"An* the m
*na tno
BGnorita Dant©rfngijr* r ■
For an instant Mr. Grtmm continued
to stare, and then bis listless eyes
swept the ballroom, passing involun-
tarily at the scarlet splendor of the
minister from Turkey. '
"I beg your pardon," he apologised,
contritely. There was a pause. “The
minister from Turkey looks like a bare
on fire, doesn’t he?”
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
, *
The Nervous Hostess.
The hostess with a highly strung
temperament is to be pitied, and so
are her guests, even though her words
be honey sweet Bho transmits her
nervousness to the, very atmosphere
of the house and makes all therein
feel that they aro hovering on the
brink of a volcano. Would you know
at once the woman who has this un-
fortunate falling! Then watch any
pet dog or cat that she encounters. If
it shrinks from her touch, though she
may bo in a calm mood, you may
Judge that something amiss in her
nature has been detected by the sen-
sitive being. Animals and children
discover such irritability instinctively,
and there are some grownup human
beings who retain this Insight. The
only thing to do when tho hospital-
ity of the nervous ono has to be ac-
cepted Is to cut the visit as short as
possible and to yield as much as po»
slblo to all her whims.
minister from Venezuela, the while
be permitted his listless eyes to wan-
der aimlessly about the spacious ball-
room of the German embassy, ablaso
with festooned lights, and brilliant
with a multi-colored chaos of uni-
forms. Gleaming pearl-white, translu-
cent In the mass, were tho bare
shoulders of woman; and from far off
came the plaintive whine of an or-
chestra, a pulsing sense rather than a
i living sound, of music, pointed here
and there by tho staccato cry of a
flute. A zephyr, perfumed with tho
clean, fresh odor of lilacs, stirred tho
draperies of tho archway which led
into the conservatory and rustled tho
bending branches of palms and ferns.
For a scant instant Mr. Grimm's
eyes rested on a young woman who
sat a dozen feet away, talking, in play-
ful animation, with an undersecretary
of the British embassy—a young wom-
an severely gowned in some glitterlni I
stuff which fell away sheerly from her
splendid bare shoulders. She glanced
up, as if in acknowledgment of bls
look, and her eyes met his. Frank,
blue-gray eyes they were, stirred to
their depths now by amusement She
smiled at Senorita Rodrigues, in token
of recognition.
"Aren’t they wonderful?" asked
I Senorita Rodrigues with the quick,
bubbling enthusiasm-of her race.
"What?" asked Mr. Grimm.
"Her eyes,” was the reply. "Every
person has one dominant feature—
with Miss Thorne it Is her eyes.”
"Miss Thorne?" Mr. Grimm repeated.
"Haven’t you met her?" the senorita
went on. “Miss Isabel Thorne? She
I only arrived a few days ago—the night
of the state ball. She’s my guest at
the legation. When an opportunity
comes I shall present you to her."
She ran on, about other things, with
I only an occasional remark from Mr. -
Grimm, who was thoughtfully nursing
his knee. Somewhere through the
chatter and effervescent gaiety, min-
gling with the sound of the pulsing
music, he had a singular impression of
a rhythmical beat, an indistinct tattoo,
noticeable, perhaps, only because of
its monotony. After a moment he
shot a quick glance at Miss Thorne
and understood; it was tho tapping of
an exquisitely wrought Ivory fan
against one of her tapering, gloved
I fingers. Sho was talking and smiling.
“Dot-dash-dot I Dot-dash-dot! Dotr
dash-dot!" said the fan.
Mr. Grimm twisted around in his
I seat and regaled his listless eyes with
a long look into the senorlta’s pretty
face. Behind the careless ease of re-
I pose ho was mechanically isolating the
taint clatter of the fan.
“Dot-dash-dot! Dot-dash-dotl Dot-
I dash-dot!”
Mr. Campbell and the Cable.
Just as it is one man's business to
manufacture watches, and another
man’s business to peddle shoe-strings,
so it was Mr. Campbell’s business to
know things. He was a human card
Index, a governmental ready reference
posted to the minute and backed by
•11 the tremendous resources of a na-
tion. From the little office in the Se-
cret Service Bureau, where he sat day
after day, radiating threads connected
with the huge outer world, and en-
abled him to keep a firm hand on the
diplomatic and departmental pulse of
Washington. Perhaps he came near-
er knowing everything that happened
there than any other man living; and
no man realized morg perfectly than
he just how little of all of it he did
know.
In person Mr. Campbell wks not un-
like a retired grocer who had shaken
the butter and eggs from his soul and
•ettled back to enjoy a life of placid
Idleness. He was a little beyond mid-
dle age. pleasant of face, white of
hair, and blessed with guileless blue
-eyes. His genius Had no sparkle to
M; it consisted solely of detail and
•ystem and indefatigability, coufiled
with a memory that was well nigh in-
fallible. His brain was as serene and
wrderly as a cash register; one almost
expected to hear it click.
He sat at his desk intently studying
• cable despatch which lay before him.
It was In the Secret Service code.-
Leaning over his shoulder was Mr.
Grimm—the Mr. Grimm of the bureau.
Mr, Grimm w«* ad utterly
typa from his chief. He was . ____ .
perhaps thirty-one or two, physically
well proportioned, a little above the
average height, with regular features
•nd listless, purposeless eyes— a re-
plica of a hundred other young men
who dawdle idly in the windows of
their clubs and watch the world hurry
by. His -manner was languid; his
dress showed fastidious care.
Sentence by sentence the bewilder-
ing intricacies of the code gave way
before the placid understanding of
Chief Campbell, and word by word,
from the chaos of IL a translation
took Intelligible form upon a sheet
•of paper under his right hand. Mr.
Grimm, looking on, exhibited only a
most perfunctory interest In the ex-
traordinary message he was reading:
the listless eyes narrowed a little, that
was all. It was a special despatch
from Lisbon dated that morning, and
eigned simply “Gault" Completely
translated it ran thus:
"Secret offensive and defensive al-
liance of the Latin against the Eng-
lish-speaking nations Of tho world is
planned. Italy, France, Spain and
two South American republics will
•oon sign compact In Washington.
Proposition just made to Portugal,
•nd may be accepted. Special en-
voys now working in Mexico and Cen-
tral and South America. Germany In-
vited to join, but refuses as yet, giv-
ing, however, tacit support; attitude
of Russia and Japan unknown to me.
Prince Benedetto d’Abruzzi, believed
to be In Washington at present has
absolute power to sign for Italy,
France and Spain. Profound secrecy
nod and preserved. I learned of
underground. Shall I Inform our
minister ? Cable instructions.”
“So much!” commented Mr. Camp-
He clasped bis hands behind his
bead, lay back In bls chair and sat
for a long time, staring with steadfast
thoughtful eyes into tho impassive
face of his subordinate. Mr. Grimm
perched himself on tho edge of tho
dock and with his legs dangling read
tho despatch a ssoond time, and a
third
"IL" ho observed slowly, "If any oth-
er man than Gault had sent that I
should have said ho was craxy."
“Tho peace of tho world is in peril,
Mr. Grimm." sal “
, at last '
A change to tho right kfnd of food
san lift ono from a sick bod. A lady
in Weldon, Ill., says:
“Last spring I became bed-fast with
severe stomach troubles accompanied
by sick headache. • got worse and
worse until I became so low I could
scarcely retain any food at all, al-
though I tried about every kind.
“I had become completely discour-
aged, and given up all hope, and
thought I was doomed to starve to
death, until ono day my husband, try-
ing to find something I could retain,
brought homo some Grape-Nuts.
“To my surprise thp food agreed
with mo, digested perfectly and with-
out distress. I began to gain strength
at once. My flesh (which had boon
flabby), grow firmer, my health Im-
proved in every way and every day,
and In a very few woeka I gained 10
pounds in wight,
“I liked Grape-Nuta so well that for
four months I ate no other food, and
always felt as well satisfied after eat-
> Ing as If I had ant down to a fine ban-
t ■■ V -
quite
ak of
k In the large
pie past six
b the similar
ks Dallas first
June Dallas
ilnnati 191 and
rst siv months
las gained 56
S8 per cent
* COPYRIGHT 1909 iy THE B0DB3 - MERRILL COMWWX
Immediately. Yes, Mr. Campbell of
the Secret Service.” There was a
pause. Mr. Grimm removed his im-
maculate person from tho desk, and
took a chair. "Hello! In half an hour?
So much!”
The pages of the Almanac de Gotlo
fluttered through his fingers, and final-
ly he leaned forward and studied a
paragraph of it closely, When he
raised his eyes again there was that
in them which Mr. Grimm had never
seen before—a settled, darkening
shadow.
“The world|-war has long been a
chimera, Mr. Grimm,” he remarked at
last “but now—now! Think of it! Of
course, the Central and South Ameri-
can countries, taken separately, aro
inconsequential, and that is true, too,
of the Latin countries of Europe, ex-
cept France, but taken in combination,
under one directing mind, tho allied
navies would be—would be formid-
able, at least Backed by thd moral
support of Germany, and perhaps Ja-
pan—! Don’t you see? Don’t you
see?”
He lapsed into silence,
opened his lips to ask
Mr. Campbell anticipated
ingly:
“The purpose of such an alliance?
man agreed
Ide of such
| not the
him. He
I take steps
of Russian
Ives in this
vs Bsld
J
yi'TFTF' ■
rurmoll.
I A report lg
Lstro has land-
coast of Vene-
government la
port and it. is
the former
pas secured »
has been able
le number of
th el ess, troops
itched to Gulf
Is reported to
in the Goajlra
ich forms the
Gulf of Mar*
“I had no return of the miserable
sfok stomach nor of tho headache*,
that I used to havo when I ate other
food. I ajn now a well worn*-
aU my own work again, and
of right
'•
11
KS j
I
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Keeling, J. E. The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 37, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 15, 1911, newspaper, July 15, 1911; Grapevine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1290670/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarrant County Archives.