The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 8, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
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♦♦♦♦♦
fdbuff
fluffy ane
bottlt
that gH«-
liaat with
ftneaa and
ublea the
it imtn>-
irtieie o<
dee heavy,
ruff. Th:»
tir of ita
very life,
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Dander.- •
■ry it.
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THE COMMERCE JOURNAL, COMMERCE, TEXAS, APRIL 8, 1921.
r-
WHITE LEGHORN
riK’
or
WRITES A BOOK FOR FRANCE STARTS
CANCER PATIENTS
WAR ON DRESS
half
free
NEED GLASSES?
Relieves Rheumatic Pains.
a.
the
ASPIRIN FOR COLDS
REAL ESTATE
exchange
operation at the Cotton
city
pital.
I have
Time:
Do You Know
is
13
a
Try This for Indigestion.
I
TO BE MARRIED.
SAVES AND BUYS HOME WITH SAVINGS STAMPS
3;
DR. H. H. WHITLEY
-s’
♦
Miss Gussie Lee Swearingen
Jo.
Juris/, Franca.
%ITCH!
hum, ai nini
SAVE YOUR LIFE
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ home folks.
I
! BAPTIST WORKERS
AT GREENVILLE
Hopes Women Will
Adopt This Habit
As Well As Men
100 Eggs $6.50
Incubator settings a specialty
m.—Devotional.
tn.—Reports from
First American Newspaper a
Prolific Parent.
or malicious reports,
Then followed the news or "Occur-
ences." which—considering that I his
A
A
the
to
of
Paris
a
has &ore
w » ft
‘California Syrup of
Commerce Battery Co.
Phone 244
CLAUD LIIVDLEV
Phone 251.________________ Commerce, Texas
if
which
over
HATCHING EGGS SALE
J have tin- famous Ferris strain of Single Comb White
alotaLs
lap
r *
when I have a spell of it one or
applications of Chamberlain’s Lini-
ment i
rest and sleep poss'ble.
i<L- --
id pur-
8. 8..“ h«
EhLucky Tiger
Th* H*H*at’* Hair (b
<1 jUWjjC CNMMCV BY WOSMTALS AMD
r*oe* WM0 **®w-
V Positively eradicates
dandruff—corrects erze-
mateous scalps - stops falling hair—
promotes luxuriant growth-adds lustre,
beauty, health — action immediate and
certain. Money-Back Guarantee.
At ftmtVMs sad bwtert.erwM Me
for ftsssrsae sample.
LDOTTKHCft^ fames City. Ma.
Willard
Batteries
From “Publick Occurrences,’’ Published
In 1690, Are Descended All Pres-
ent-Day American Organs of
Public Opinion.
I.vgiioio>, ol Grund Kapitls, Mich., and all mv hens have
• This strain have been winners at all the
my
(VE -.£TRUP OF FIGS”
TO CONSTIPATED CHILD
tic Tablets for
good results.
out them.”
_
Dfillclous "Fruit Laxative** can’t harm
tender little Stomach, Liver
and Bowel*.
Operative and Mechanical
DENTISTRY
Over P. & M. Bank, Comerce, Texas
Office Phone 201 3R. Res. 220
—
Foley Cathartic Tablets are just
the thing for headache, biliousness,
bloating, gas, bad breath and other»
symptoms of indigestion. Mrs. H. J.
Marchard, 36 Lawrence St., Salem,
Mass., writes: “I used Foley Cathar-
constipation with
I will never be with-
now called news sense. We are Inform-
ed that the christianized Indians In
Plymouth had appointed a day of
thanksgiving and their example is
commended to other non-Indian neigh-
bors in a line that seems sarcastic.
There Is a brief mention of the fact
that two children had been stolen by
Indians from the settlement of Chelms-
ford. the correspondent and notHhe ed-
itor being responsible for the fact that
the names are not given.
From Watertown there Is communi-
cated the news that an eld man (again
the correspondent neglects to give the
name), "having lost his wife, fell Into
a fit of melancholy, during which the
devil took possession of him, with the
result that one morning early in the
month he was found hanging in the
cowbarn.” It Is noted that the small-
|m»x Is abating in Boston, but that an- ;
other disease—seeming to he more or
loss of a malignant fever, not unlike •
the influenza with which this genera- '
lion is acquainted—is growing Into a
common tiling, and the report state* |
that 320 people had died by the last
visitation of smaFpox.
Two fires are reported, and with
much feeling It Is noted that in one o*
them a PRINTING PRESS (the cap-
itals are Harris') had been destroyed.
It was In his account of the battle
with the French and Indians that Har-
ris printed news which was to be his
undoing. Head even today his report
of the expedition against the French
and the use of the friendly Maquas by
Gov. Winthrop Is not bad reporting
when one considers that reporting had
yet to be developed or even inaug- I
urated. It was a report, however, that
contained matters that the authorities
were not desirous of having printed,
for It told how the Indian allies of
the colonists had treated the French
prisoners with great barbarity.
Rub the joints with Ballard’s
Snow L’niment to relieve rheumatism
It penetrates the flesh to the bone
conveying its soothing and restora-
tive influence to the spot where the
pain exists. Sold by The New Drug
Store.
mu
Mon., back without qaaMlon
R HUNT* Salva Cail. In tba
Irntmwl of ITCH. BCZBMA.
RINGWORM, TBTTBR or
otb.r Itcblna akin diaaaaan
Try a N cant boa ai aw ria/
Machine to Sack Potatoes.
Now that machines for digging po-
tatoes are in common use. the next
step Is to provide automatic mean"
for loading them Into sacks. An Ohio
Inventor has just developed such a
mechanism. In the shape of a three
wheeled trailer which attaches to the
hack of the digger, according to Pop-
ular Mechanics Magazine. The front
wheel hits a caster mounting, en
ahllug It to follow the digger in turn
Ing at the end of a row. An elevated
Inclined screen receives the potatoes
from the conveyor of the digger. The
sacks are hung on four hooks at the
rear, their boUoms supported by a
small platform.
A degree
miles.
A barley-corn is one-third of
inch.
A kilometer is 3,280 feet and
inches.
A statute mile is 5.?a9 feet;
nautical mile, 6,080 feet.
A barrel of flour weighs 196
pounds; a barrel of pork 200 pounds.
I would not, erer or
I think of doing without it,”
| Mr- C. Owsley, Moberly, Mo.
See Dr. Armfield, optical expert,
at McNatt & Wheeler's Drug Store
again next Monday. Headache and
eye strain relieved.
POULTRY AND EGGS wanted at
the Mattress Factory, Commerce,
Texas. ’w!6.
♦ I
*
EVANS & MvCOY
Attorneya-at-Law
Office on Eact Lee street in
Odd Fellows Block.
wealthy law-
name
has not been made public yet. Af-
ter a trip to Hawaii they will make
♦I r..... -
_ | and hope she will make
Planet Polar Caps.
A contributor to the English Me-
chanic states that polar caps were
plainly visible on Venus In June. 1919.
through his three-inch refracting tel-
escope. which has a magnifying power
of 100. The cape appeared to he of
an Intense whiteness that resembled
one of the large craters on the moon.
The Scientific American announces
that a similar observation Is reported
from M. Flamtuariou s observatory at
Insist on “Raver Tablets of Aspirin-
in a "Bayer package,” contaiaiag propel
. iLreetona tor Colls, Pam, Headache,
Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism.
Name “Bayer” means genuine Aspirin
proscribed br physicians tor nineteen
yearn. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablet*
coat few cents. Aspirin is trade mask
of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeotim
aaidaatar of Salicylicacid.
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain-
ed*and improved. Sold
only in sealer packages.
Price 35c.
another Belgian "Tragedy.”
A London nine house has received
a considerable stock of wine from Bel- I
glum tinder what are described as ex-
traordinary Olr-ir-.-taniea. In the first |
two years of the war, the chronicler
says, the Gormans did not requisition
much of th.* Belgian wine except at
certain points, but they made Inven-
tory of all there was In sight or of
which they learned, and as time wore
i on they grabbed It. One family near
Blegc had a large quantity of fine vint-
age Burgundy and the owner decided
to take a desperate chance It some-
times Is wise to do opehly what would
be perilous to do secretly, so he cased
up his wine, loaded ft an trucks and
I carted It through the streets In broad
I daylight to an Ice factory Ho expect-
| ed every moment he would he halted
and called to military headquarters,
but he was not. lie got his treasure
to the ice house and hid It away so
well that It remained undiscovered un-
til after the close of the war. Then,
when ho was Impoverished otherwise,
he dug It up and sold It at a glorious
price, and now Londoners are sma- k-
Ing their lips and blessing him for Ida
cleverness.—<'ommerce anil Financ*
and
dfswtf!
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McWilliams of
Dallas are visiting relatives here.
The object of this is to instruct
.people in the early symptoms of
tuberculosis or consumption so that
they will go to physicians before it
is too late.
Suapicioua Symptom*.
Cough or expectoration, even
only a little in the morning
you hardly notice, if continued
two months.
Frequent “bronchial,” “grip”
fever attacks very suspicious.
Blood spitting. If blood is cough-
ed up the cause is tuberculosis nine
times in ten.
Pleurisy. Caused by tuberculosis
about seven times in ten.
Night-sweats. Very suspicious.
Loss of we-'ght and strength. Very
suspicious, especially if there is a
111 his opening statement, announced j sl*ghl cough,
that he would take pains to trace
yes-
She was accompanied to
Greenville by several of her dearest '
friends who will miss her more than
anyone in Commerce.
She was one of the most popular
Mrs. Kate Ward spent Sunday
with home folks in Greenville.
10:00
10:30
_ Field.
~| 11:00
♦ DR. J. A. ELLARD ♦
♦ Dant let ♦
♦ Upstairs over New Drug Store ♦> Miss Gussie Lee Swearingen of
’ ■_ _ _ ♦(Greenville spent the week end with
The first newspaper to be printed on
this continent made Its ap. earance on
Sept. 25. 1690. It was Benjamin liar-
Publick Occurrences, published
hum the London Coffee house lu Bos
ton.
An account of Its first Issue Is out-
lined by George Henry Payne. In his
History of American Journalism.
The author is a young man of long (
newspaper experience, having until re-
cently served the New York Evening
Telegram In the capacity of dramatic
editor. Mr. Payne is now a New York
tax commissioner.
The publisher of our first newspaper.
Do you want to
property for farm property or farm
glad to know he is improving daily property for city property?
and will soon be able to be out again. a strong list of property to sell and ■
__exchange. See, phone or write
J. M. Monroe,
Commerce, Texas.
Miss Alto E. Grundberg returned
to her home in Boston, Mass.,
terday.
Glatt of hot water each morn-
ing helps ua look and feel
clean, tweet, freth.
friend. Delay should be
Address Dr. O. A. Johnson,
m—“A Pivotal Church”
—Dr. Joseph P. Boone.
Noon—Lunch served in church.
1 00 p. m.—Board Meeting—Wo-
men and men.
2:00 p. ni.—“Church Ordinances"
—Dr. M. T. Tucker.
2:50 p. m.—Special music.
3:00 p. m.—“Heart to Heart
Talk with Sunday School Workers.”
—W. P. Phillips.
Place—Burleson College.
Tuesday, April 12, 10 o’clock.
virile, optimistic throng of rosy*
cheeked people everywhere.
An Inside bath is had by drinking,
each morning before breakfast, a
glass of real hot water with a tea-
spoonful of limestone phosphate in it
to wash from the stomach, liver, kid-
neys and ten yards of bowels the pre-
vious day's Indigestible waste, sour
fermentations and poisons, thus
cleansing, sweetening and fr< aliening
the entire alimentary canal before
putting more food Into the stomach.
Those subject to sick headache, bil-
iousness, nuaty breath, rheumatism,
colds; and particular/ those who have
a pallid, sallow complexion and who
are constipated very often, aro
urged to obtain a quarter pound of
limestone phosphate at the drug store
which will cost but a trifle but is
sufficient to demonstrate the quick
and remarkable change In both health
and appearance awaiting those who
practice Internal sanitation We must
remember that inside cleanliness Is
more important than outside, be-
causs^thu skin does not absorb impure
fties to contaminate the blood, while
the pores la the thirty feet of bowel*
The first serious attack
growing immorality of the stage and
women’s clothes was made Saturday
afternoon when the French Govern-
ment announced that it is about to
introduce a bill in Parliament im-
posing severe penalties on the ultra-
risque.
The Cabinet Saturday devoted an
a sen-
Lamar
the
Paris
To abort a cold
and prevent com-
plications, take
Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and
vivacious—a good clear skin; a nat-
ural. rosy complexion and freedom
from illness are assured only by
clean, healthy blood. If only every
woman and likewise every man could
realize the wonders of the morning
inside bath, what a gratifying change
would take place.
Instead of the thousands of sickly,
anaemic looking men. women and
girls with pasty or muddy complex-
ions; Instead of the multitudes of
_____ ____ “nerve wrecks," “rundowns,'’ "brain
members of the faculty of the East faKs” aad pessimists we should see a
and
Her
There was a large crowd in town
Saturday and the stores all did a
good business.
two Laboratory.
“Cancer Truths,” Dr. Johnson's
relieves the pain and makes book, will be sent free to any suff-
_j _i--------:vi . .J n(). lerer ol. rv.,1.... _i----u i—
writes avoided.
Suite 560. 1324 Main Street, Kansas
City, Mo.
"There Is no place like your own home'"
,,ho,l«h' on* of 'he reporters of The Dallas Morning News From thia
thought grew the desire to get ahead, to have a home The picture showe the re
terly at maturity, will do for anyona who want* to ahead M
Blampe and Registered Treasury Havings Certincates. bought at
the postoffice every pay day. made It posslkle for this reporter to save an*
ehaee thts home, now •.—-th twice the purchase price
“I could not have aavtd the money except for Cncla Sam and W F
says, f-hrlft and Savings Stamps and t2S. 1100 and »lO0« Registered Treasury SavT
Ings Cartlflcatee are readily ebtalrr*'. our postoffice here.
If any of these symptoms are
down the disseminators of any false I present, no matter how well you look
ex-
Y'ou can be cured
if you begin in time. Hundreds of
patients who have been treated at
the State Tuberculosis Sanatorium
are well to-
' or feel, go to your physician and
| plain your case.
was seventy years after the landing I
of the Pilgrims on Plymouth rock and
two hundred years after the Invention
of printing—shows that our pioneer , at Sanatorium, Texas,
journalist was not lacking In whai Is i day.
If you have tuberculosis learn it
J early. Early diagnosis means
the battle won in the cure.
For further information and
instructive literature on the preven-
tion and cure, write to the State
Tuberculos s Sanatorium, Bureau of
Correspondence, Sanatorium, Texas.
Which Battery?
You won’t be satisfied
with a car unless you are
satisfied with the battery.
The Willard Threaded Rub-
ber Battery not only gives the
right service to begin with, but
keeps on giving it, and actually
outlasts the battery plates.
The plates are insulated—
not merely separated. And the
Threaded Rubber Insulation
neither warps, cracks, nor punc-
tures, because unlike wood
separators, it is not affected by
battery acid.
Drive around. Ask questions.
We give authorized, Willard
Service.
egg records. This strain have been winners at all
principnl shows of the South. 1 have alwavs sold
eggs at $2.00 but this season am making the followin '-
special prices:
15 Eggs $1.00
A book which should be read by
every person suffering from
has been published by Dr. O.
Johnson, eminent
Miss Anna Pearle White vis,ted in
Greenville the past week.
PARIS, April 4.—The limit of the
cancer undress in Paris has been reached.
A. | The first serious attack on the
cancer specialist
This remarkable book tells the truth
about cancer and its treatment
without cutting.
Dr. Johnson is today one of the
foremost in the study of cancer. He
conducts in Kansas City, Mo.,
large, fully equipped
Laboratory, and has treated many-
sufferers in the past twenty years. I
This treatment is entirely non-surg-
ical, as the knife is not used at anv
stage. Purely medicinal measures
only are employed; that is, external
applications to destroy the cancer
and internal medication to purify
the blood. Hundreds of patients
“I ant subject to rheumatism and pest*fy t° the success of the Johnson
— I I,...... „ .. f za. ... a___ I o htir utiiri'
Name “Bayer” is on Genuine
Aspirin—say Bayer
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Brownrigg
have returned front Texarkana,
where Mr. Brownrigg underwent an
” 1 Belt hos-
His many friends will be
Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Abernathy
and children visited his sister in La- "tf.
donia the past week.
Lock at the tongue, mother! If
joated, your little one’s stomach, liver
»nd bowels need cleansing at once,
linen peevish, cross, listless, doesn’t
sleep, eat or act naturally, or is fever-
ish, stomach sour, breath bad:
I throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give
teaspoonful of “f.
I Figs,” and in a few hours all the‘foul,
constipated waste, undigested food and
liowels without griping, and you have a
an well, playful child again. Ask your
druggist for a bottle of “California
Syrup of Figs,” which contains fu).
4 rections for babies, children of all ay
1 for grown-upa
Texas State Normal College
was beloved by all of them.
work was very efficient and the stu-
dents regret very much to see her
leave.
It has been learned that she is to
__become the bride of a
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + ■v"' 1 ! N,,'v Y,,rk c''.v. whose
♦ B. Q. Evans Marvin P. McCoy ♦
' their home in New Y’ork.
We wish her a happy married life
------j as success-
ful wife as she did physical educa-
tion teacher.
Reasearch
hour to the subject, following
sational speech by Senator
Selle, who pointed out that in
last review in the biggest
music hall there are ten nude women
in one scene.
He added that the whole city is
plastered with immoral theatrical
posters and that the dancing clubs
are filled with half-dressed women.
Even the street costumes of the
French women, the Senator declar-
ed, are immoral and he predicted
that France will fall like Rome un-
less the present tendencies are stop-
ped.
It became known Saturday that
the King of Sweden, visiting
recently, unwittingly attended
theatre in which an artiste was danc-
ing in the nude. The King, it is de-
clared, was incensed and left the
house at the end of the first act.
fathom is six feet.
cubit is eighteen inches.
A span is nine inches.
A palm is three inches.
A rod is five and a half yards.
A league is three miles.
A meter is 39.37 inches.
A cable length is 128 fathoms.
A furlong is 40 rods or 660 feet.
sixty geographical sour bile gently moves out of ita little
gF*.
:hild again. __
bottle of “Callfom ic
A
WE OFFER THE
SERVICE
t
State bonk of Commerce
P. E. MALONEY, Cashier.
Commerce. Texas
E. E. MALONEY, Pres.
bank
cour-
en-
and
ap-
special
your
of a bank well versed in the finan-
cial needs of the country, with ac-
commondations capable of taking
care of your business along the lines
of safe and sane banking—a
managed by men experienced,
teous and accommodating. We
courage thrift, urge economy
safeguard the interest of every de-
positor. The smallest account
predated, the largest given
consideration. We solicit
business.
1
■
■4
4
y
d.
I
Inert an 1
Xpert. Dr.
it specia
Jewelery
>y phon-
i 11:00 a
V
(XTXXXZXIM
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Hart, Sterling. The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 8, 1921, newspaper, April 8, 1921; Commerce, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1359792/m1/3/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .