The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 26, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
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HAVE YOU TRIED THIS?
L CHANOt
SOM
NEW It
rand
F<
SAMPLES SENT FROM TEXAS
VICTIMS’ BODIES MANGLED
lucaal*.
8
ROCKEFELLER PLAN OPPOSED
118
kJ>
DR.
COOK IS COMING HOME
•tin
OBJECTIONS TO GARNER BILL
FARMER PLOWS WITH DYNAMITE
i.
4
/
t
■Mi
MB*
WOMEN
OF MIDDLE
AGE
FORTY-SEVEN KILLED
FORTY ARE INIURED
For
Lamo
Vi
Steamer
for h
<
Claims This Is Excellent Way of Sub*
Bolling.
NEW FLOUR, PREPARED IN PAU
ATASLE FORM, DELIGHTS
CONGRESSMEN.
continui
able ac
rles.
Const
council*
creed It
DON’T NEGLECT
YOUR KIDNEYS*
Couldn't Nave Hers.
“I hope 1 get a good husband.”
“Well, keep your hands off mine .”
Department of Agriculture Will Issue
a Complete Bulletin on the
Subject.
CONGRESSMEN EAT
COTTOH SEER BR
and p<
pint o
•teaspo
eclal cakes
ted at this
led not only
own to mod-
Lgs to this
beatei
Into w
has tx
flour,
is stlf
cut In
•irea,
»■ 5
whore it
1
BfY A .
thoaaanSe of cnrsa of
help orcrure.
'XR __—
are. SAM-
.*2r&
fc.. J
>Ch.
Plan to Equalize Officers* Pay Meets
Opposition.
The Garner bill to
United
Attor*
lette and others are also asking ques-
tions about the bill.
"If the Rockefeller Foundation,
which means the Rockefeller fortune.
In case his heirs choose to pour his
millions Into that fund, could be^axed,
I should not offer any objection to the
, pending charter,” said Senator Hey*
burn. "But, under the charter as pro-
posed, this fortune can not be taxed.
If this charter is made a law any mil-
lionaire or billionaire may leave his
fortune to be administered to charity,
without taxation, perhaps."
Need Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Brookfield, Mo.—"Two years ago I
was unable to do<hy kind of work and
only weighed 118 poi 1.....
Washington, March 24.—Cottonseed
meal fruit cake, bread and cookies
took the House of Representatives and
the Committee on Agriculture by storm
today and scored a complete hit. A
consignment of these articles was re-
ceived by Representative Beall from
J. W. Allison, president of the. Ennis
Cotton Oil and Ginning Company, and
through Mr. Beall was served at the
fruit tables in the Democratic and Re-
publican cloak rooms of the House,
and also at a meeting of the Agricub
ture Committee, of which Mr. Beall
Is a member.
The availability of cottonseed meal
as the basis for bread, pastry and
cake was a surprise to the Congress-
men, and the excellent quality of cake
which can be baked with cottonseed
meal was a revelation to the Congres-
atonal palate. It is expected that as
a result of the investigations which
the Department of Agriculture Is mak-
ing with the meal that it will In the
near future issue a bulletin on the
subject giving numerous receipts for
the utilization of the meal for culinary
purposes, as It has done in the case of
rice and other foodstuffs.
Ifi
aizing Christ
•festival on t
the Jewish 1
Washington: So serious has the op-
position to the Rockefeller FoundatL .
bill become that Senator Galllnger,
who introduced it, thought it wise tu
ask that it go over for future consid-
eration. Senator Heyburn of Idaho
will make a speech In oj opsitlon nf
the proposed organization and said
that he was not at all satisfied as to
< • .”f.
ROCK ISLAND TRAIN COACHES
TELESCOPED AND PASSEN-
GERS CRUSHED.
Spartanburg, 8. C.: J. H. Caldwell,
a farmer near here, broke up an acre
of land with 800 charges of dynamite,
the explosive being used instead of
the plow. Mr. Caldwell claims that
blasting land with dynamite is the
beat method for subsoiling and that it
can be done more cheaply than by
manual labor. Many persons from the
city and county were present to wit-
ness the experiment.
Btean
In one
an hour
salt to
dish in
ble and
covered
Ing wai
a quart
Plain
rice, or
one qua
Bake ti
the rlc
the mil
half cu
variety,
' Rice
three <
Is soft
one-hali
of thre
spoons
king di
a merli
with fl
Rice
boiled
and pe
onion ;
ted rii
one te
same <
gether
beaten
Are an
enough
quettei
fine br
ing fat
to sau
much i
dellcio
Rice
of boll
milk,
eggs, <
powde
gether
wheat
en wh
king,
cakes.
Rice
as dir
with
peacbf
She Was. (
"Mrs. Gay has been deserted by two
husbands."
"The abandoned creature!"—Clevo
land Leader. j
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gum*. reduces In.
Summation,allay ■ pain, cures wind cojlc. Kc a bolU*.
Father Time was probably nursed
in the lapse of ages.
r
I
‘h_ ■ \ ■
was
In
canons, how-
___Great Day.”
oology of the English
,ght in Eoatre—the
in the spring
„ __ Icing. As every
er to a movable feast,
* the full moon
real equinox, or
I moon ohances
Easter Is held
'; iop
■" 1 "
•m Dally Wrotohednees and Pale
to Normal Health.
An aching back is instantly
relieved by an application of
Sloan’s Liniment.
This liniment takes the place
of massage and is better than
sticky plasters. It penetrate*
—without rubbing—through
the skin and muscular tissue-
right to the bone, quickens the-
blood, relieves congestion, and.
gives permanent as well as
temporary relief.
Here’s the Proof.
Mr. Jamm O. Lxx, of 1100 Sth St*
8.E.,Washington, D.O., writes: “Thirty
year* ago I fell from a scaffold and aerl*
on»ly injured my back. I suffered terri-
bly at times; from the email of my back
all around my stomach wu just as If I
bad been beaten with a club. I used
every plaster I oould get With no relief.
Rloar’s Liniment took the palu right
out, and I can now do as much ladder
work as any mas in the shop, thanks te
Sloan's
Linimeni
Mr. g. T». Bvaws, of Mt. Airy, Os.,
•aysi “After being afflicted for three
years with rheumatism, I used Sloan’s
Liniment, and was eared sound and
well, and am glad to say I haven’t been
troubled with rheumatism since. My
leg was badly swollen from my hip to
my knee. One- half a bottls took the
pain and swelling out."
Sloan’s Liniment
has no equal as a
remedy for Rheu-
matism, Neuralgia
or any pain or
stiffness in the
muscles or joints.
Frtess,26o., 60s. sad 81.08
anoM*e book am
aJTTj^n'r’/'Tal
froo. AaMroee
Dr, Earl 8. Sion,
Bottoo, Mm., U.SX
pounds. My trouble
[dates back to the
time that women
may expect nature
to bring on them
the Change of Life.
I got a bottle of
Lydia B. Pinkham’s
vegetable Oom.
pound and it made
me feel much better,
and I have contin-
ued Its use. I am
very grateful to yoti
If or the good health.
Senators Want Fortuno Subject to
Taxation.
\ A JA r.
first attention was given to the wound-
ed. The cries of these, coming in from
beneath the cars and from places
which were walled in, were pitiable.
Fortunately the wreckage did not take
fire. The rescue party, being rein-
forced later on by trains of wreckers,
nurses and surgeons sent from the
nearest available points, worked all
day and until long after dark.
The injured were taken to a hos-
pital, several of them dying on the
way. Two of the bodies wsre not tak-
en out until last night
Freight Wreck Caused Detour.
An explanation given by the rail-
road officials was that the train was
being detoured on account of a block-
ade due to a freight wreck at Sheila-
burg, Iowa. The section from St
Louis, which left St Louis at 2:15 p.
m. Sunday, and the eectlon from Chi-
cago, which left at 4:15 p. m. Sunday,
had been consolidated at Cedar Rap-
ids, Iowa.
Coroner E. W. Jay, himself a sur-
geon, was hastening in a Red Cross
ambulance to the hospital when he
was thrown to the pavement as the
ambulance rounded a corner and was
rendered unconscious. It is believed
his back is broken and -that he can
not live.
Tow cattlo win quit drinking out of a
trough If they can get the water from a
, Bottomlew Tank. Descriptive Booklet ”A”
Cros. Alamo Iron W'ks, San Antonio, Tex.
A pessimist to always calling your
attention to the unusual amount of
sickness there to in the neighborhood.
8200,000 Fire In Chlekaeha.
Chickasha, Ok.: The Collins Mat-
tress Company’s plant was destroyed
by Are here, entailing a loss of $200,-
000. The buildings consumed Includ-
ed two warehouses, the factory and
offices. Two pieces of machinery, each
valued at >6.000, were ruined.
Simple Prescription Said to Worts
Wonders for Rheumatism.
This has been well known to tbe best
doctors for years and Is now given to
the public. "Get one ounce of syrup of
Sarsaparilla Compound and one ounce
Toris compound. Then get half a pint
of good whiskey and put the other two
Ingredients into It Take a tablespoon-
ful of this mixture before each meal
and at bed* time. Shake the bottlo
before using.*' Good effects are felt
the first day. Many of the worst camo
here have been cured by this. Any
druggist has these Ingredients on hand
or will quickly get them from hlo
wholesale house.
Pou
over
breadi
minut
salt, <
solved
warm
flour I
pour,
about
overnl
and a<
and <
soda <
ful of
as oth
butter
Cite
paste
not si
ver.
get th
ctiamc
embos
soft b
of tar
ly, am
look t
Contends He Discovered the
North Pole.
Many Women and Children Among
the Dead. Scores Unident-
ified.
Bunday afterAflKth of Nisan. This
went on qul«dy 1>r a time. Then con-
troversies Arose about A. D. 158, and
' off and on with consider-
ony during aeveral centu-
Bli^e,pSrtodlc,
narvous prostration.
t If you would like special aAvtos
about your case write a confiden-
tial letter to Mr* Pinkham, at
RHEUMATISM
SAMPLE TREATMENT FREE
If you have Sons polos, selaiica or sboottog
pains op and down Ihi lag, aching back or
•boulder blades, awullen joints or •wollen
muaclea, Slflleulty In stoving around so you
bars to USS erutohee; blood thin or skin pale:
akin Itabas and burns; shifting pains: bad
breath: Iwnbaco, gout, take Botanio Blood
Bals* (B. bTb.) which will remove every
Symptom, toeauao B. B. B. Moda a rich. Ung
Ung Sood of warm, rich pure blood dlreet to
•ba paralyaad narvaa, bonaa and jointa, giving
warmth and atrongth juat where it ia moat
needed, and In thia way making a perfect lao-
it^auroof Rhanmatiamin allItaforma.
theumktUm aftar all othae“m«diclnea, Tlnb
menta and doctor* have failed to hr __ ;
DRUCMlirni, or by expveae, St PXlC LARGS
BOTTLE^ with dlranUona for homo euro. SAM
VLBBKNT PBKB by witting
—----
tine at the Oecumenical
Nice (A. D. 826) had it de-
it tbs day should be cele-
brated£not os the day of the Jewish
Passovir—but on the Sunday follow-
ing. At the iam'e time the bishop of
Alexandria was appointed to give no-
tice of the proper day to the pope and
other patriarchs "because of the Egyp-
tians’ preeminence as astronomers.
This, bowgver, did not permanently
settle the questton, or to be more ac-
curate, otter disputes arose on the
subject in the course of time-
However this may be, Easter be-
came one of the three great Christian
festivals—ths other two being Christ-
mas and Whitsuntide. From the early
days of Christianity Easter has been
accounted, if anything, the greatest of
the three. On Easter morning the
early Christians greeted one another
reverently with the words: “Christ
Is risen," to whfch the man addressed
gravely replied: *_____ ‘
deed,” or "I
This quaint custom has been
served In ths Greek church. I
=
BQwM) MUQ pwlUs
Women everywhere should remem-
nr that there ia no other remedy
iowu to medicine that will so suc-
mfully carry women through thia
ylnff period as Lydia E. Pinkham’s
egeteble Compound, made from na-
ve roots and herbs
For 80 yean it has been curing wo-
ten from the wont forma of female
ulceration, dis-
tumors. irregulari-
as, backache, and
ferred
light I
I and 1
hARtet
1
Bellingham, Wn.: Dr. William A.
Axtell, a personal friend of Frederick
A. Cook, received a letter from Mrs.
Cook, dated Valparaiso,, Chile, in
which she says the explorer is broken
In health, without funds and unable
to continue his fight to establish his
claim that hs discovered the Pole. Dr.
Axtell said: "She writes that It was
her fault that Cook did not appear
publicly at the time he was unfavor-
ably reported on. She says she took
him to Holland, France, Italy, and
then to Spain, where they embarked
for Buenos Ayres. From Buenos Ayres
they went around Cape Horn to Chile.
Cook Is still very 111 and will be in no
condition to take up his fight for the
honors which he still says should have
been his."
Mrs. R. Crouse, Manchester, la,
•ays: “For two years my back was
weak. Rheumatic
pains racked my
lower limbs, day
N and night. The ao-
ff tion of the kidneys
was annoyingly Ir-
regular. When 1
started using Doan’s
KfW’ Kidney Pills, these
Fy'r doubles soon less-
ened and the dull
vanished. The kidneys now
act normally and I give Doan’s Kidney
Pills credit for this wonderful change."
Remember the name—Doan's. For
■ale by all dealers. 60 cents a box,
VtoterMUburB Co, Buffalo, N. T.
I
1
Be-ru-w
rArARRM0fWDHEflffl
Washington:
equalise the salaried of tbe
States Marshals and District
neys in Texas Is booked for a hard
struggle when It comes before the
House on call of ths committee. This
was shown whan the measure was call-
ed up for passage on the unanimous
consent calendar. Representative
Keifer of Ohio, a close friend of Unit-
ed States Marshal Houston* of the
Eastern District of Toxas, whoso sal-
ary it is proposed to cut >1,000, ob-
jected to unanimous consent, and the
bin lost Its place on the calendar. It
to understood that United States Dis-
trict Attorney Ownby, whose salary
would also be affected by tho bill, was
a friend In Repreeentatlve Tawnoy
who intends to fight tho measure when
It to called up by tho judiciary com*
“fittso. V"1''-
Grayson County Romains Dry.
Sherman: Grayson County romaine
In tho dry column by a majority of
478, tho total vote being pro. 4,115.
anti 4,141. The city of Sherman gavo
17 anti majority.
WMMM ASTER—the moat beautiful
- S* *nd poetic of all modern
rellgiouiobuervance*—goea
liUr back to very early times.
In primitive days a spring
festival was associated with
various special nature deities, but
it passed into the Christian ritual
principally through the Jewish feast
of ths Passover. This, in the
early traditions of the wandering
Bedouin Semites, was a sheep-shear-
ing festival, of which tbe principal
feature was the sacrificial offering of
the paschal lamb to Yahwe in tbe
month of Nisan, in the spring, which
marked the beginning of the oriental
summer. In the agricultural stage of
Semitic evolution it underwent corre-
sponding changes, and unleavened
bread—the first bread made of the
early harvest grain which begins to
ripen about the month of April In
Palestine and other Semitic lands—
was added. These primitive agricul-
tural festivities were eventually com-
bined with the beginning of the Jew-
ish national life that followed upon
tho exodus of the Israelites from
Egypt.
Similar spring festivals, associated
with special gods and goddesses and
Involving the sacrifice of lambs, sheep
or cattle, were held among other Se-
mites and even in Cyprus, where such
sacrifices, about April 2, were held
sacred to Astarte. Certain ceremo-
nies were observed in honor of the
renewal of nature’s fertility at this
time; the bonds of kinship were
drawn closer by the meal which
formed a part of the festivities, -and
was accompanied with joyous songs
and other manifestations of an exu-
berant nature-worship.
After the beginning of our era the
churches of Asia Minor, among whose
members was a great number of Jud-
s, kept their paschal
same day as that of
'Ter—that is on the
he churches of the
remembering that
■isRI
bake 1
snlnut
WI
•tl
Oil
have i
W J
“Christ to risen in-
'hath appeared unto Simon.”
( pre_
' *, In the
east the old name was retained and
the festival of the resurrection —
known ae “tbe Paschal Feast”
the sixth of the Anc;
ever. It is c
As for the
Easter, It is
name of a Saxon Sature deity, whose
feast was celebrate/ ‘
with bonfires
one knows, E
changing ace
that comes after the i
March 21. tt tha ft
to come on a Sunda
on the following M
In ‘certain loogMtl
were baked and til
time. Thia ns (MB I
In antiquity but fiMN*
era tlmee—notatiF •
Passover bread Slto
series of snrrhali.
land, the day w«l
great football MMN
were also played, •
Played team gafiBb
a festival M
it is known aa%W
Dances and fardfit
held and even
told funny atstiXH
•rs to laughM^M
This waa patg^H
ams et tho stoto^H
Marshalltown, Iowa, March 22.—
Forty-seven persons were killed and
forty were injured, many of them fa-
tally, In a wreck four and a half miles
north of Green Mountain, Iowa, yester-
day, on a Chicago, Rock Island and
Pacific train.
The train, which was a consolidation
of No. 19 from Chicago and No. 21
from'SL Louis, bound for Minneapolis,
Minn., was being detoured over the
tracks of the Chicago Great Western
Road. Running at about thirty miles
an hour in a cut north of Green Moun-
tain it struck a spread rail, it is be-
lieved.
The pllit locomotive jumped the
track and with terrific force was bur-
ied in an embankment of soft clay. A
second locomotive, coupled behind the
first, rolled over and the impact of
the sudden stop hurled all, the rear
cars forward.
A coach, a smoker and a Pullman
were smashed to splinters, almost all
the occupants being killed or injured.
The supertaructure of tbe Pullman
was literally shaved off and was jam-
med like a ramrod through the smok-
er and day coach.
Many passengers were apparently
killed outright Heads were severed
from bodies and arms and legs were
cut off. The wreckage was almost
crimson with blood, some of the bod-
ies being crushed beyond recognition
by the mass of twisted rails and splln- I
tered cars. A few of the passengers
were found still living with a rod or a
splinter impaling them in the wreck-
age. Decapitated bodies were picked
np, and it was almost impossible to
correctly assort tho dismembered
parts.
The wreck occurred at a point dlffi-
I
I
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Keeling, J. E. The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 26, 1910, newspaper, March 26, 1910; Grapevine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1290873/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarrant County Archives.