The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 6, 1918 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Matagorda County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.
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A BAY CITY MAN’S EXPERIENCE.
endorse-
*
St.
November
Louis,
Episcopal Church,
in. between
“It is
mutilate.
A
is past.
greater
jmond Cookenboo, Mrs. E. H. Highley,
Serrill, Mrs. Roy Shoultz, Mrs. S. R.
-o-
MRS. FRITZ A. SCHORRE.
RESTRICTIONS STILL
APPLY TO DEALERS
HANDLING SUGAR.
Girls! Make This Cheap Beauty Lo-
tion to Clear and Whiten
Your Skin.
LEMON JUICE IS
FRECKLE REMOVER.
like,
tion
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Zedler received
word yesterday from San Antonio that
their daughter, Mrs. Fritz A. Shorre,
had died in that city, leaving an in-
fant two days old.
Mrs. Schorre was Miss Annie Wai-
Mr.
at his store
71
I
caught an
paves the way for scholarly attain-
ments.—Galveston News.
--o—o------
PETITION FOR RETURN
TO DELIVERIES.
.---—e—p----—
DEMOBILIZATION OF S. A. T. C.
TO BE COMPLETED THIS WEEK.
-------------o-
SOLDIERS TO BE ASSISTED
IN SECURING EMPLOYMENT.
li
-----o—o-----
ASHWOOD NEWS.
-----o—o-----
HAD 40 INCHES.
Squeeze the juice cf two lemons in-
to a bottle containing three ounces
of orchard white, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint, of the best freckle
and tan lotion, and complexion beau-
tifier, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter will sup-
ply three ounces of orchard white for
a few cents. Massage this sweetly
fragrant lotion into the face, neck,
which will show o.
community cf i
aspects
petroleum leaders
consideration
organizing ability in every community AN INTERESTING LETTER
iis urged to lend every aid to the em- FROM EVERETT BOND,
ployment service.
riage to Mr. Schorre last December,
just a year ago.
Decedent was
was
very popular.
students’ army
in
in familiarity with so-called classic
literary forms. Culture, of course, is
Culture is purity of
I
ham. I have got a fine body of
for subdivision. Come and let
show you, or phone me and I
come to see you. Act quickly.
J. H. Barber & Son.
Markham, Texas. 4-18d-6-27w
-----o—o-------
COUNTY OFFICERS
QUALIFYING TODAY.
Although the certificate plan for is-
suing sugar to the distributors by the
United States food administration is
abolished, .effective Decembei* 1, the
State fold administrators are advised
from Washington that all manufac-
turers, public eating places, bakers
and dealers are still restricted to the
general rules regarding a 60-day sup-
ply of sugar. Also the general rules
limiting public eating places to four
pound for 90 meals and limiting su-
gar service are still in force. Indi-
vidual cinsumers are still requested
four | arms and hands each day and see how
freckles and blemises disappear and
how clear, soft and white the skin
becomes. Yes. it is harmless.
tice has no place in the world.
“We did not fight the kaiser.
fought the German
lts
after the wav'
no question
industry as
food administration is
upon
spoonfuls at one meal. This is the
service regulation in public
places throughout the United States
and must be observed. The public is
asked to co-operate with restaurant
men in trying to observe these rules
and not be fault-finding because they
cannot get all the sugar they wish.
-----o—o—-----
GETTING SET FOR
AFTER-WAR EXPANSION.
J
R. A. Parker, director of hotels and
restaurants for the food administra-
• tion in Texas, asks that people who
dine in public eating places bear in
mind that the
now depending upon the voluntary
conservation of sugar the same as it
did before sugar certificates were is-
sued when the allowance was three
pounds per person per month.
“One rounding teaspoonful of su-
gar,” states Mr. Parker, “weighs one-
third of an ounce and no person is en-
Mr. J. K. Smith went to Houston
Tuesday on business.
Mr. J. P. Chastun went to Pledger
'Thursday.
F. Smith has on exhibition
<*is city two of the
largest sweet potatoes ever b»nwn in
this district—one weighing sevt«
pounds and five ounces while the oth-
er one weigh -seven pounds. They
were grown about amile from Ash-
wood by a colored farmer, Tom Crock-
rell, and that is only one sample of
what Ashwood can produce.
J. F. Smith went to Wharton Satur-
day on business.
Miss Iszoria Toups went to Palacios
Saturday to spend the week-end, the
guest of Mrs. C. L. Haynes of that
city.
Mr. Jessie Martin of Wharton was
in the city on business one day last
week.
have - c—"
through, plus. You can no more re-
turn ’ to yesterday with your Monroe
doctrine than you can go back 1000
years and seize the stars. You cannot
crawl back into uor American shell
and stick out your head with ‘none of
my business.’ The world owns the
road and if we play the turtle we will
have to get out of the road or get run
over.”
A great deal of discussion is taking
place in official circles now, regard-
ing after-the-war trade, both at home
and abroad.
The department of commerce has
just issued a report based upon ex-
haustive studies of the situation and
plans in foreign countries, showing
the possibilities of trade expansion im-
mediately following the war.
The report states that England,
France, Germany, Austria and Italy
are making preparations to resume
their peaceful economic life, with im-
proved facilities for foreign trade,
with national supervision of the use to the Eastern
ports.
The oil industry is more efficient
than it has ever been. The possibil-
ities for high grade petroleum prod-
ucts were never so great. Tu© fields
in the Southwest have only been tap-
ped. Mexico is a next-door neighbor.
The production from the Mexican
fields, transported by pipe lines to re-
fineries along the gulf coast of Texas,
will make available a supply of oil
which can only be conjectured now.
As to consumption it is only neces-
sary to point ou that motor power
! t:]l reconstruct the shattered nations
the ! five have beeu at war for the laSt
•<3. The day of horse power
The State Medical College unit of
the students’ army training corps will
oegin to uemouiiize within tne next
two days, according to Dr. W. S. Car-
ter, dean. The work should be com-
pleted by the end of the week, he said.
The students have been in barracks
for one week. Many were issued their
uniforms the day the order for de-
mobilization was received. They will
return to their respective fraternity
and boarding housoe and resume their
former mode of living without tb.o ex-
ercises and drills which they took
each day while in the service.
Each student will take a physical
examination prior to his formal dis-
charge from the
training corps. According to
Carter, there will be no changes
the regular curriculum.
______0—0------
ATTENTION, LAND
AND HOME OWNERS.
the less put together it is the farther
it will be apart, which is better.
“Kings must be sentenced, not in
the name of England, nor of Belgium,
nor of Roumania, but in the name of
the human race, so that never again
shall they rise to menace mankind.
“This is America’s day, because the
i whole, world has gone American. We
! have never seen the whole world. The
i men of the world are in this convoca-
’ tion. There is no more ‘verboten.’
Germany never again can intimidate
the world. The world has become a
j thoroughfare. The road is for any-
i body if he chooses to walk as a man.
(Kings can pass as hodcarriers if they
All the dreams of the Declara-
of Indenonden4" have 99mP! j1 school
Up to Monday noon and during 1918
El Campo has had 40.05 inches of
rain.
In the distribution there has been a
poor job of it, according to some of
our farmers and this is not all. Right
now for threshing rice good weather
would be appreciated—no separate? —/
has turned a wheel for a month. Y
We are told by the weather bureau
39 to 40 inches of rainfall is due us
every year and if this is a fact, we
have had all our needs filled for the
balance of the year. A new start may
be made January 1.—El Campo Rec-
ord.
to limit their consumption to
pounds per person per month.
■
Farmers are asked : ------
to make their needs known to the serv- ed a very interesting letter from their
ice so that farmers and farm hands'son, Everett, who is now in France,
in the army may be placed in ag-! and who went “over the top”
We, the undersigned ladies, do here-
by call a mass meeting of all the
housewives of Bay City to be held at
the court house December 7, at 3
o’clock promptly, for the purpose of
i discussing the advisabilitv of urging
around, but it does not take long to! the merchants of the town to reinstate
locate a good shell hole and stay there (deliveries. Mrs w D Wjlson Mrg
until they let up. All of this hand to i Lula parker, Mrg p A McLendon>
hand fighting you hear jo much about | Mrg G R Rurke< Mrg Alb'ert Wadg_
j worth, Mrs. Martin Thompson, Mrs. J.
|W. Gaines, Mrs. C. S. Eidman, Mrs. W.
i — McSparran, Mrs. W. E. Davant,
I Mrs. E. J. Kilbride, Mrs. Jno. R. Rey-
j nolds, Mrs. V. L. LeTulle, Mrs. W. F.
.Gray, Mrs. T. J. Poole Sr., Mrs. John
I Guynn, Mrs. C. Guynn, Mrs. D. P.
; Moore, Mrs. Roy Duncan, Mrs. N. M.
Vogelsang, Mrs. S. S. Taylor, Mrs. Ned
Hawkins, Mrg. W. H. Stinnett, Mrs.
E. N. Gustafson, Mrs. J. W. White,
Mrs. W. R. Franz, Mrs. Myrtle Harris,
Mrs. E. A. Davidson, Mrs. Zack De-
Lano, Mrs. Ack Barnett, Mrs. Paris
Smith, Mrs. S. O. Eidman, Mrs. W. H.
Poole, Mrs. L. W. Brown, Mrs. J. P.
Keller, Mrs. C. M. Ratliff, Mrs. Sid
Creech, Mrs. C. F. Baker, Mrs. Ray-
l some of
I have been undecided as to let- i
as I j
and railway transportation |
will demand all the fuel oil that can
be produced. The future is assured
for the oil industry. It is for Amer-
icans to supply these products to the
world. The opportunity is just open-
ing. It will not be passed up.—The
Oil Weekly.
Can you doubt the evidence of this
Bay City citizen?
You can verify Bay City
ment.
i Read this:
D. O. H. Coston, 2603
■says:
—3 Avenue 1 ,
“f or over 20 years I suffered
i rheumatic pains. My
7 —~ —1 lame and my
F,
ed
_________
joints were stiff and lame and my
limbs swollen. My kidneys acted ir-
I regularly and the secretions were
of people. It is
that until recently,
in, places, our educa-
Uor>al processes have been medieval.
We have imagined culture to consist
of proficiency in dead languages and
ed and I was so miserable I couldn’t
work. I was confined to bed and
though I tried different medicines, I
got but little relief. Doans Kidnev
Pills, however, removed the rheumatic
pains and made my kidneys normal.
The cure has been permanent.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mr. Coston .had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
tried and executed for murder, justice
will not have room to sway in the
world.”
“That is not hate.” he said,
justice. The man who does not as-
sent to that procedure has a mutilated
sense or he has no moral sense to'come out without a scratch although
Justice never hurt any man I at times I was in pretty close places,
and the man who does not talk jus- ■ still it is not as bad as a person would
i imagine and nothing like I expected.
We i really enjoy it; there is plenty of ex-
people and we 1 citement at all times, especially when
must in fealty to the world hold the: they start dropping those big shells I
German people to strict account for
the indecency. Not to be square and
honest to the German people now to
mete out to them justice will be to
mete out injustice to the tomorrows
of the world. Not to mete out pun-
ishment to Germany now is not love,
it is sentimentality.
“Germany won’t be put together
again in the next thousand years, and iy think since Austria has given in it
is only a few days before Germany
will be ready to quit and I may be
able to eat that Xmas dinner at home
after all. I have not heard from any
of you yet but expect there will be
some mail waiting for me when I get
back. I do hope you are all well, and
do not worry over me as I’ll be smok-
ing hack some of these days. Love
to all, Everett E. Bond,
78 Co., 6th Reg., U. S. Marines. A. E. F.
------o—o--
THE TEACHERS.
Commissioners Holding Special Ses-
sion for Purpose.
The commissioners of the county
met today in special session to qualify
all officers of the county, and for all
precincts as well, who were elected
the last general election. Quite a
large iIUciber of offieers from all
over the county- cre in tke cRy. today I
as a consequence.
The first to qualify was th- aOurt'
house janitor, the Hon. W. L. Douglas i
-----o—o—----
The very best Boy War Savings Stamps.
economic readjustments and commer-
cial equilibrium which will follow7 the
cessation of hostilities. Upon the
foreign trade relations to be establish-
ed after the war, depends in a large
wray, the question of prices, supply and
consumption of American petroleum
products.
That America can supply far more
' petroleum than can be used at home
titled to more than two rounding tea-! is evidenced by the amounts of pe-
troleum products that have gone to
eating | our aiiieS) and our own overseas
forces, during the war. The whole
machinery for the production of pe-1
raised in Bay City,
well and favorably knowm and
She w’as an accom-
plished young lady, especially in mu-
sic and w'as much loved by the
younger set of Bay City.
To Mr. and Mrs. Zedler, her bereav-
ed sister and husband is extended the
sympathy of the entire city.
Mr. and Mrs. Zedler are now in San
Antonio.
the American people which does not' white sheets again.
make the German people pay to the! I certainly have had some experi-
uttermost farthing is not a peace com-'ence since I have been here and have
mission of the American people avdj found out what the modern warfare, is
“until such time the kaicor is|iikP; i havP actnallv been in
teacher
Jupiter from
. But there
are not so many dull boys—and no
Say, if you want a rice farm, a cot-(dull girls at an—these days, appar-
ton and corn farm, a stock farm, all | ently The average of culture has
under sure canals for irrigation, I can I |3een ra{Sed, and progressive teachers
fit you up in any sized farm and on, modern minds have wrought in-
good terms, right over here at Mark-1 compntabie values into the woof of
land pOpUiar opinion. The jrimitive Amer-
me' ican with his sneers for “book lamin’,”
wil1 has disapepared even from the hin-
terlands. Education has become a
passion with many, which is not al-
together desirable. The individual
■who absorbs education with an in-
satiable thirst usually becomes a sort
of freak, and, being a freak, he loses
the sympathies and fellowships which
make for completeness. State Press
believes in good students, good
schools and good teachers. He be-
lieves in teaching the arts, crafts and
sciences, in emphasizing the value of
hands as well as of minds in creating
and maintaining a social and indus-
trial structure of sufficient capacity
to shelter a nation
not unfair to say
and even now
of national resources, ami with as-
sistance from the State.
It is pointed out in the report that
all the countries will work towards
economic self-sufficiency, aiid to-
wards nomination of enemy interests
in the devcOpment of their national
resources. ^Vnave no reason to ex-
pett a purely selU- spirit on the part
of our allies, howev< It .g fQr ug
to stand ready to enter Up under-
standing which will s ow o ppre_
elation of th eeommumty ofm-
in the larger aspects of trade
economic intercourse
There is probably
vital to the petroleum
-il
a
------ j Mrs. Jno. Crawford, Mrs. C. G. Hamill,
Account of the teachers’ convention -^rs- A. S. Collins, Mrs. W. E. Austin,
held in Dallas this last week, State ^rs- f Lewis, Mrs. Chas. Lang-
Press was fftri-iinate enough to meet ii®121’ ^Ls. I. H. Castleton, Mrs. Geo.
morP .man his weekly average of Serrill, Mrs. Roy Shoultz, Mrs. S. R.
..^..^L.I teachers, rte of the; Sholars.
opportunity, and, as usual, since his j
A, B, C days, he learned something
from the teachers with whom he came
in contact. Time was when S. P. ex-
pected to carry a life-long animosity
against the whole tribe of teachers.
But the years in their succession have
softened his asperity, and today hei
looks upon the men and women who j
give their lives to the instruction of' dine Zedler and was united in mar-
the young as deserving of the lasting
gratitude of every thoughtful citizen,
especially every parent. If State
Press did not aforetime regard the
teachers as highly as he regards them
now, it may have been because there
was more bitterness in his heart than
there is now. Besides, teachers ap-
pear to have changed in the last twen-
ty years or so. They do not seem to
have been chosen for their muscular
development, their pugnacity, their
'suspicious dispisitions, as was once
the case. Also probably they are bet-
ter educated ■ today than they used to
be, even if less deft with their dukes,
so to speak. It is also true that chil-
dren probably ii^re changed as much
as teachers. It is very ukeiy that not
a few of S. P.’s scholastic difficultly^,
grew out of the fact that he was more
i interested in his lunch than in his les-
sons, and that his regard for the mul-
tiplication table was not unmixed with
contempt. To be a dull boy in a small
school with a high-strung
looking down like
Olympus is no soft snap.
troleum products has been developed
to the highest point of efficiency by
the war demands. This program can-
not be- retracted -without losses and
serious readjustment to the industry.
It is evident that the question of
foreign markets for our products
will be given the closest study for
after-the-war possibilities. The time
to begin that study is now. Trans-
portation conditions, tariffs, needs of
the different foreign countries, and
effective marketing methods will de-
termine largely the amount of petro-
leum products that American prodne-
; ers.will supply to the world.
These are the questions to which
are giving first
now. These are the
considerations behind the system of
transportation being erected within
this country—a system designed to
facilitate th erapid movement of oil
seaboard and gulf
The present standards of ef-
ficiency demand greater speed and
economy than can be sup-'
plied by any other htan -motor power, i
Ocean and railway t
San Antonio, Texas, November 29.—
Soldiers released from the United
States army will be assisted in secur-
i ing employment upon their return to
! civil life by the United States employ- ’
ment service under the order of the
adjutant general of the army, issued
November 23. Federal Director H. W.
Lewis, in anticipation of the work his
division of the department of labor
will be required to do, has issued the 1
fallowing ctatoment to the press of
Texas:
Our plan of operation in connection
with the demobilization of the United
States army, under the adjutant gen-
1
eral’s order, contemplates the estab-
lishment of United States service bu-
reaus in every army camp and in ov- '
ery city and large town so that the
free services of this branch of the fed-
eral government will be available to
the soldiers.
Soldiers being discharged at camp
and sent home will mostly seek em-
ployment at their homes rather than
in the immediate vicinity of the camps
and the task of finding them suitable
occupations will become a community
responsibility. The function of the
United States employment service in
the instance is to concentrate co-oper-
ative local efforts and all information
as to positions at central points. From
these points the soldiers will be advis-
ed before they leave camp how they
may proceed upon reaching their re-
spective homes to obtain employment.
To facilitate this wTork I urge upon
all employers the need of at once ad-
vising the nearest branch of the United
States employment service of their
labir needs so that the service may
be in a position to place the soldiers
in work best suited to the man of the
needs of the employers. Community
labor boards and the public service re-
service will act as agents of the em-
ployment service, wyhere a local office
is not established. The co-operation
of mayors of cities, local councils of
defense, mhor unions, chambers of
commerce, draft hoard members, coun-
ty farm agantc; and oiKnr interested
patriotic citizens and orgaiu^atmns is
sought to the end that the placement
of discharged soldiers into civil life
occupation will proced smoothly and
with all expediency possible. The
United States employment service will
act as a clearing house for the sol-
diers and its entire organization will
be devoted to this task. '
three;
j times. His letter is dated November
; 7, four days before the great armis- ■
■tice was signed. It will be noted that terribly from
( Everett prophecied the end “since
Austria is out of it.” auu Ine secretions were
Somewhere in France. November 7.1 scanty, painful in passage and contain-
Dear Dad: ;e(^ sediment. My back ached and pain-
e oH and T Trrr»ri £ —____i i -r , .
Well, here I am back in the civilized
part of France again at present.
am in the base hospital;
(TVILIZATlON.j awful cold, so they sent me here until
11 get over it; have been here three
28.—Bishop i days; am getting along just fine; will
William A. Quayle of the Methodist j be able to be back with my company
Episcopal Church, speaking at the jn a few days; everything sure is
City Club luncheon Wednesday, de- fixed up nice here and believe me it
dared that any peace commission of'sure feels good ti crawl
is a joke. I have my first Dutchman ■ __
to see that will stand up to an Amer- j —
ican. They are more than willing to ( p
give up by the time you get in three p-
or four hundred yards of them. Well,
; no w i
iricultural pursuit.
I All examiners in the employment
service will report at the office of the
federal director in San Antonio on
Monday morning for a conference with
the federal directors on the army de-
mobilization plans.
-------o—o------
I METHODIST BISHOP ADVOCATE
OF EX-KAISER’S EXECUTION AS
JUSTICE DIE TO
speaking at the jn a few days;
J ~ 1 ... . .. .
no such thing.
mind, kindness of heart, cleanliness*
.of body. To tench these is to impart
j culture, and such culture inevitably
it. 1 _________________________
ting you know for some time
knew it would worry mother, but I ■
have decided it is best for you to!
know. I have been what they call
over the top three times and have
£
A I
• G Y • •
® LOCA1
• • © • ®
From Jb’rid
Dr. C. \
Thanksgivi
where he j
tor H .W.
farm labor
of increase
year, togei
of how mai
return to t
question in
to the wo
Chamber c
the secreta
has, howev
with the B;
Bay City i
terests is i
Weather
nearing thf
and that it
the middle
Foster has
Mrs. Can
Carr and
from a visit
Lockhart.
The unio:
the Baptisl
largely atte
different dt
, Mr. Albe
■night from
Houston.
Mr. Roy
visitor to
yesterday a
Some of
will get clt
at which
from an a<
will majest
heighth of
wisely opin
is the fine
the country
Mrs. W. (
ed through
ton visit he
is in the Q
Mrs. W. 1
Baker of M
children, M
Williams a;
attending f
Thanksgr
day in Bay
allly every
was closed
?ous service
and the da>
From Mond:
Rev. J. F
Grace Chui
at Thirty-’]
veston, is w
son. He w
joined the
to ;Xeach h
sermon 15
church. Hi
and she is
Garrison.
i?n Timpson
entering 1
from Thirl
the best in
mission fun
From Satui
. Mr. A. C.
ad through
home from
Let us pa
er Bay City
war measur
er if short c
itory and a
far removei
as one big
us see how
dently and
please, we <
a better am
Get you;
ready and b
expect the
and buy li
tise early a
ink to mov
yvill have r
Mrs. Burt
the city yesi
legeport aft
husband an
in Little Rc
returned to
assigned to
As we ha
big things ;
and quite a
pie cannot
The war is <
should be >
ments writh
our viewpoi
sufficient,”
ground. Bi
big brains ;
ing close by
and meet tl
Better op
Business M.
Big things :
now’s your
paredness”
The city
the holes or
move the
eral hundrf
be used to
direction.
%
otter you
none can
What Part Does Music Play in
Your Life?
Visit our store and refresh your
sowl with Music’s Re'Crfation
mere cm
resource.
I
1
You enjoy it of course. But how much? Can you
get along without it? For your sake we hope not.
After all, you get out of life only what you put
into it. To be truly happy you must develop the
tastes and interests which bring happiness. And
music is one of the chief of these.
Make music mean more to you than
tertainment. Make it a real and lasting
Make it enrich your life.
Of all musical instruments
such range and variety as
%NEW EDISON
“The Phonograph with a Soul"
No other instrument Rf-Creates right in your own home the voice of a great singer with such
fidelity that anyone standing outside the door would swear that the artist himself was your guest.
No other instrument Re-Creates an artist's voice or instrument so perfectly that when
the living artist sings or plays in direct comparison with it no listener can say when it is
the artist he hears and when the New Edison.
The New7 Edison does exactly this as has been proved, not once, but more than 1500 times
by the famous Edison tone tests. More than 2,000,000 music lovers have attended these
tests. Not one could distinguish artist from instrument.
Let music be a real factor in your life. Put in to life a taste for music; get out of life
the joy this brings.
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HUSTON’S DRUG STORE
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Smith, Carey. The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, December 6, 1918, newspaper, December 6, 1918; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1294523/m1/2/?q=music: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.