The Bryan Daily Eagle and Pilot (Bryan, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 55, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1915 Page: 4 of 4
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THE 1SKYAN DAILY KAflLK
FRIDAY MAflCH G .1015.
CLASSIFIED ADS
WANTED.
WANTEU l-'O to 935 per montli ex-
tra money to any employed person
without Interfering with regular work.
No selllnK. No canvassing. Positive-
ly no Investment. 1'nemployed need
not spply. Address the Silver Mirror
Co. Inc. 123 W. Madison St. Chicago
111.
FOR RENT.
FOK KENT Nicely fiirnlHhed rooms;
lights bath and seweraKe; across
street from Fast Side school; one
Work from car line. Mrs. J. F. Parks
phone 391 rlnfi.
FOR RENT Two unfurnished rooms.
Apply to Miss Munday 709 East
Anderson street.
FOR RENT A good six-room house.
with outhouses and hest Harden
not In the city in the northern part
of the city known as the Ellis place
Reasonable rent to a good long time
tenant. J. II. 8tevenson.. Phone i.
FOR RENT . Eight-room house;
water and lights'. ""Phone 131.
NEW YORK DAY BY DAY.
By CHARLES HENRT ADAMS.
What chance has a New York girl?
Does the wheel of destiny which
she spins stop for her at success or
failure protection or danger happi
ness or misery? Father Knickerbocker
has begun to watch anxiously but
doeo he give her a fair show at the
game she must play? What chance
and what use does she make of It?
Those are some of the questions
considered by Miss Harriet McDougal
Daniels In her moBt Interesting and
comprehensive little book "The Girl
and Her Chance." A study made pri-
marily for the Association of Neigh-
borhood Workers of New York it has
been published recently and has won
wide acceptance as a sympathetic
constructive treatment of the problem
of the young girl.
It Is the girl between the ages of
fourteen and eighteen that Interests
MUs Daniels. A graduate of Barnard
College for twelve years she taught
this girl in city high schools in coun-
try academies in expensive finishing
AS THE
NEWS BREAKS
t un.n.ru'i.ru'Lnnili"..i"ii
By Awiclalfd TreM.
AUSTIN. Tex. March 5. Present
Indications are the first !utform de-
mand which will reach the Governor
for his signature will be a law for
compulsory education. Such a bill has
passed the House and Is pending In
the Senate where action Is dally ex-
pected. The Governor's educational
program will be carried out It In
stated and In addition to the vompul-
sory education bill tliere Is also in
un advanced stage of legislation a
rural school bill. The latter pre
pared by W. F. Doughty State Super
Intendent of Public Instruction Is n
comprehensive measure and Is looked
upon with favor by many legislator
Still another school measure under
consideration which has the endorse
ment of Governor Ferguson and Prof
Doughty Is one which would provide
that school superintendents be elected
by the trustees Instead of by vote of
the people.
. ' .7 'schools and In settlement classes.
FOR RENT-WHI locate bouse east . 'o''
side bath lights s.werage. Thone get.
617 or 253. 1' ' ' i.. anA t.r flv varn Rhe devot-
l IT; 1 1 it- if wn '
ed herself entirely to settlement work.
JiiKt now she Is living at College Set-
FOR SALB Ten lots In Ruber addl- tieinent and It was there that I talk-
- ii A ritwppn rtrvan and j hi. .iu hpnunoiUioH amll
HUM Ull " - t?U Willi Dl.ti. wiw".-. J . -
Hlllcrest; $r.O each cash for next ( defender and Interpreter of girl-
. . . . ...... .r' t tr . .
FOR SALE.
thirty days
Suber
Apply
to Mrs. L. II
I
At'STIX Tex. March 5. Proposed
constitutional amendments are not
meeting with great favor in the Thirty-fourth
Legislature and from pres-
ent indications few. If any of the
many Joint resolutions Introduced will
he adopted. At the beginning of this
week there had been sixty-five point
resolutions Introduced fifty In the
House and fifteen In the Senate seek-
ing various changes In the organic
I . .. . r. I Tnvnm Vnt nnfi tt tllOMA ll II fl
' mma Ul i c a a o. ... .. ......
"The girl In New lorK nasn i me iio . ... ... n
- r navn ii f til f I'liii i
WILSON GIVES OUT
EXPOSITION TRIP
By AanrUld rr 1
Washington March 5. President
Wilson virtually lias decided not to
ttend the San Francisco Exposition
this month on account of the war.
WIT AND HUMOR.
Octopus.
(to class)-
What is an
hood.
Teacher
octopus?
Small Floy (who had Just begun
Latin eagerly I Please sir I know
s!r. It's an eight sided cat. Life.
Fatal Frankness.
One day says the Philadelphia Pub
lie Ledger a seedy-looking Individual
In a railway carriage got Into conver
sation with a fellow-traveler. lie had
a good tale to tell.
-"Ah. sir" he said sadly. "I've seen
clianges. I was once a doctor with a
large practice but owing to one little
slip' my patients began lo leave me.
anil now I'm Just living from hand to
mouth."
"What was the slip?" was the nat
ural question.
"Well sir." replied the other "In
filling a death certificate for a patient
who had died I absent-mindedly sign
ed mv name In the space headed
'Cause of Death."'
i thirty-cent meal" suld one girl who
was earning $8 a week. "Hut I never
have the price of it In my pocket-
book. "I get so tired of those twenly-
cent dinners year In und year out
that often I think I'd rather not eat
at all."
It was this hopeless attitude to
wards life the feeling that expendi-
ture must forever be hedged about
by petty saving which to me stood
out most prominently In the stories
gathered from the working girls by
the New York Slate Fuctory Investi-
gating Commission. Esther Packard
In the Survey.
act rnnv i uhi iv . Mature. A few of them have been
elusion Miss Daniels has UHeA in the Semte tni tvo or thne
LOST-Slnger sewng machine receipt "The city should see that she Is train- n Jouie but Jont apUon hHS bwm
book with black cover with rubber ed for self-support that her working I on none of hem The onM
band around it.
terwhite.
Return to T. A. Sat- conditions and wages are fair "nd m MptraIfe rei()ut
HOTEL BRYAN ARRIVALS
F. E. Zellner Rogers. ...
E. M. Mouraund Dallas.
W. J. Rllej;' Paris. - '
C. A. Dodson Vernon.
B. D. Moore' Fort Worth.
T. H. Macklc Nav'asota.
W. Lemm Brenham.
E. B. Corbeltfiibiiston.
H. M. Dick; Nashville Tenn.
J. Saper IloiisttitiJ'
W. S. Ongmap Vtpona Kan.
O. S. Cox. Houston.
Jesse Edmondson Dallas.
It. H. Grant' Myers."' '
R. A. Belts. Dallas.
S. D. Burt Orange.
T. B. Williams Vsew York.
Abe Edel.' Houston. ''
F. W. Kofppe' Dallas.
J. Van Steeawyk. Stamford.
Lee Frances Fort Worth.
B. F. Fiiser Afton Okla.
that she has clean play. 1 ne laci uiai ermltted counties
ir.iunl- nf irlrln are making so much I . .. .
of themselves under present condl
DRUNKENNESS
la a curablQ disease' which re-
quires treatment. The ORRINE
treatment can be used with ab-
tions Is simply a bully tribute to the
girls. The way in which they're tak-
Ing hold of woman suffrage and
unions and the other big forward
' movements oil on 13 a week. In many
' cases Is wonderful.
I "The worst feature of the home life
I of the New York girl Is the complete!
i lock of friendship between mother
and daughter. It Is to the mother
I that the growing girl Bhould come for
heln and advice yet the social work
ers of the city are unanimously agreed
on the utter lack of understanding
between the two. This is due. of
course to the conflict between the
traditions of the old country and the
conditions of the new."
Let's Take a Chsnc.
The president of the Chicago Board
of Trade Is sure speculation has noth-
ing to do with high priced wheat
Also he dislikes investigations now
t going on because they "tend to con
fuse."
Just the same wheat prices began
to get nearer earth going down seven
points. Maybe we can risk a little
moreeonfuslon along the same line.
to vote a tax for the creation of a
students' loan fund while the Senate
has killed the Mercalfe resolution
place the recall of all State and other
public officials In the constitution.
The proposal for a constitutional con-
vention also Is dead.
11.
SLUMP
IH 1 1 VALUES
l By AMWlHlnl i'rrM.
Chicago. ' III. March 5. Festus
Wade a St. Iiils banker told the
Western railroad rate hearing that the
savings banks charged off 9125.000.000
the past year on account of railroad
values depreciating.
COTTON REPORT.
Very little cotton was received In
the local warehouses today according
to report. '
Cottonseed $22 per ton.
Bryan spots 7 '4c middling basis.
The price of cottonseed dropped 1
I er ton today.
Professional Cards
P A R k
JIWIllS AND OPTICIAk
Tm ana wua lias staa um
DR. ALfiie BENIOW.
DENTIST.
OV1R riMT NATIONAL IANK
BRYAN TEXAS.
SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT
"Come ye blessed of my Father in
herit the kingdom prepared for you
from the foundation of the world: for
I was an hungered and ye gave me
meat: I was thirsty and ye" gave me
drink: I was a stranger and ye took
me in: naked and ye clothed me: I
was sick and ye visited mp. ... In-
asmuch as ye have done It unto one
of the least of these my brthren ye
have done It unto me. . . . Inasmuch
as ye did it not to one of the leas: of
these ye did It not to me."
"He that hath pity upon the poor
lendeth unto the Lord; and that which
he hath given will He pay him again."
The Federated Christian Charlt'es
cannot discharge this responsibility
for you and does not pretend to. We
do not pretend to assist you In finding
those who really need your help. By
Indlscrimnate giving you may encour-
age a man to perjure his soul wh'le
at the same time you mav never hear
of those who most need your sym-
pathy and support. Any bounden duty
Imnlles the obligation to perform that
duty intelligently. The Federated
THE BRICKLAYER.
I
From the Russian of V. Brussoff.
"llrlcklayer. bricklayer what are you
building
Bending there high. In the gale?
"Hey don't disturb us we're busily
working
We're building we're fculldlnr a
Jail." 0
"Bricklayer bricklayer wielding the
trowel
.Who shall there helplessly reel?"
"None of the kin of your rich wealthy
brthren
Nothing compels you to steal."
"Rrlcklayer. bricklayer weeping and
groaning
Who shall there wallow till late?"
"Maybe my son who's a toller as I
am;
Such Is the worklngman's fate."
'Bricklayer bricklayer maybe he'll
curse then
Those who the walls helped to
swell ?-
"Hey tliere! Ileware of the scaffold'
He silent
I know It. I know It too well."
Elbert Aldline In the Survey.
MEALS OF A SALESGIRL.
SECOND WEEK JURORS.
tvllnn-1nir la a list nf the fietl' llirv
n innflilnnM. HoUtrnVH fn lh. mainrtii nnplr nf the Mnr.'tl
oil Aaatva'tnr uMkUpv. VlPPr Or larm nf the illstrlct court to appenr
all utativ " v " - j
n- ntwimnta Pnn ho flv. Mnnav Marcli R- C S. Msrtln. T. 'Charities are orennized to serve yon
UlUCl IIUUAItUHIU. " O ' - .....
en In the home. No Sanitarium P.. Locke. .T. D. Battle. Cus MasvBl ( Here are our watchwords Informa-
expense. NO loss Of time from F. M. Ar-iii. E. C.rlesser C. B. Hen- tion. Efficiency Discretion. You may
work. ' Can be given secretly snrlln. R O. Huckabv. .1. M. Atk!ns. trust us to do our best. May we serve
If after a trial you fall tO get Mike Wlsnosky Herman Schrsm H. j you?
nnv liPtipfit from its use your C. llortnn. Antone Zark. W. T. " "
money will be refunded. locv. t. h. wehe-men. b. a. HnKhin.
ORRINE is prepared in two J. T. Pate. A. W. Stevener Leonard
forms' No 1 PPfret treatment. McDonald. W. B. Barron. .1. A. Henrv.
a powder; ORRINE No. 2 in pill J. A. c.andv. .i. r. sia.iBhter. o. w.
form for those who desire to Snmn. X. L. Outlaw. W. P. McPwaln.
take voluntary treatment. Costs I. m. fnk x. a. Cotnam. w. K. ki-
only $1 00 a box." Come in and Hott c. h. b. Grphnm. Leroy Gnn-v.
talk Over the matter With US. T. L. Tobias. J. W. Crenshaw. R. L.
Ask for a booklet. E. J. Jenkins Davidson J. C. Lloyd W. J. Lang.
THE CITY TRANSFER
Will take you to any part of
the city day or night. Phone
178 up to 9:30 p. m. Later
phone 454.
SILAS BROWN. MGR.
- r
jjuuui-nnr a-.-.-
"When I pay seven cents for lunch
I'm extravagant" remarked a girl
clerk In a large department store In
Buffalo.
A five six or seven-cent lunch day
In and day out month upon month
year upon year! A sandwich perhaps
washed down by a cup of coffee every
day In the week! Can those of us
whose lunch is seldom so restricted
comprehend this mode of living? Can
our minds grasp in the faintest de-
gree the meaning of this pinching
economy? If we experimented with
a seven-cent lunch for a week "Just
i to see how It reully felt" should we
even then comprehend? Is It not the
I psychological reaction of hopelessness
and grubbiness that we cannot sense
rather than emptiness from a meager
meal the certain knowledge which
seven cents in one's pocketbook
brings that lunch can never go be-
yond the limits of bread and butter
and a cup of coffee?
"Sometimes I Just long for a good
THE ELECTION.
The election today was lively and
the Indications are the full city vote
will be polled. When The Eagle went
to press there had been 350 votes
polled in the city primary and 347 In
the pool hall election.
MANY CULTIVATED PLUMS
FROM WILD VARIETIES
New Bulletin Records Achievements
of American Horticulturists.
Washington. March G. The wild
North American plum has given rise
to more cultivated varieties than any
other of the native fruits except the
grape. These varieties have mainly
originated In the Mississippi valley
Iowa alone having furnished 170 Mln-
tieanta 71 and South Dakota 44. In
Texas 97 varieties have originated. In
these Western and Southern regloiiB.
where several of the species apiear
to have reached their greatest perfec
tion In the wild condition the greatest
development In the future under cul
tivation may probably also be expect-
ed to take place according to a new-
bulletin of the t'nited States Depart
ment of Agriculture (No. 172) entitled
The Varieties of Plums Derived From
the Native American Species."
The new publication Is a profession-
al paper which should be of especial
Interest to the growers of fruit par-
ticularly those engaged In plum breed-
ing. It gives a list of native varieties
and hybrids showing the origin of
each vsrlety and the species to which
It belongs which should be of con-
fciderable value to the nurseryman
and orchardlst. It also gives credit
to the various State experiment sta-
tions and private Individuals who
have furnished material used In In-
vestigating the origin and relation-
ships of the varieties under considera-
tion. With few fruits has there been an
equal opportunity to report step by
step the advance which has been made
since the original of the first named
variety was planted and cultivated In
a garden. The new bulletin there-
fore places on record a distinct
achievement of American horticultur
ists who have developed a fruit the
value of which was long overlooked.
Interested horticulturists may re-
ceive the bulletin If they will apply
to the editor and chief Division of
Publications. 1'nlted States Depart-
ment of Agriculture. Washington
D. C.
DR. W. H. LAWRENCE
DENTIST
Phones Residence 651; Offlot) IM.
Com.me.r jaulldlng
Bryan - Texas.
Glasses. Fitted.
Eyes Scientifically Examln4
J. W. I'AlINli
Optometrist
with J. M. Caldwell
MISS MARY C. KNOWLES
Public Stenographer
Multigraphing and Insurance
Phone 573
Bryan. Texas
H.&T.C.
$52.50. Bound Trip Call-
fornila Fanama-Faclflc
International Exposition
San Francisco; on sale be
ginning March 1st three
months limit; diverse
routes.
s. ii. iuraus
Ticket Agent.
Bryan Feb. 17th.
Whole soled an entire
bottom including heels
sewed
Half soled sewed and
heels
Half soled only
sewed '. i
wssl.
i jar r.
AO
a
1 ?i) ! x ' $ imM s (nil
new
$1.50
$1.00
75c
SYSTEM
Your old footwear can be made
to look like new by K. C. Jones
' Expert Shoemaker
BRYAN SHOE HOSPITAL
A. J. WAGNER Prop.
Phone 251-1 Ring
March 9. Prices $1.50 $1.00 75c 50c. Seat sale now on.Tango Girls With "September Morn" Colonial Theatre Tu
WIT AND HUMOR.
Worn Near His Heart. '
Just as the-happy husband of a few
months was about to leave home for
the dally office grind his wife pluced
a hand upon his arm.
"Hurry dear" she softly said
"haven't you a lock of my hair some-
where In your pocket?"
"I have indeed sweetheart" was
(he prompt response of hubby nnd
be affectionately embraced the sharer
of his sorrows nnd Joys. "I have it
rlKht here in the pocket closest to my
heart!"
"That's fine Harry" delightedly re-
turned little wlfey. "Won't you please
take it and see if you can match me
some puffs when you get down tpwn?"
Philadelphia Telegraph.
The Test Supreme.
"You say that women haven't the
endurance of men?"
"They haven't."
"That they cannot successfully re
sist unusual mental strain or physi
cal fatigue that they lack nerve and
patience and endurance?"
"Yes."
"Do you see thnt little woman over
there?"
"Yes."
"Yon have nerer known a man who
could endure what she hns endured."
"Eh! Why what Is she?"
"She's the reader of the love stories
submitted to a popular magazine."
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
I Will Breed
Foxhall's Fair Lad
119060 to limited number of good
cows this season. This young
bull Is extra well bred a fine in-
dividual and will be profitable to
nny one that wants to breed to
him. My ehnrges will be $10 for
guaranteed calf. See J. M.
CALDWELL Bryan Texas and
look over his pedigree.
STEVENSON MACHINE
WORKS
MILL SUPPLIES
PHONE NO. 7-2 RINGS
UNION BARBER SHOP
Two First Clnss Workmen
Hot nnil CnM nUths
SCISSORS KNIVES. CLIPPERS
AND RAZORS
Orounil Tlnneil nn.l Slinrpinot
P. J. PALASOTA. PROP.
I Am Tutting On a
DELIVERY WAGON
and will deliver Groceries to any part
of the city at a very small margin for
cash only.
G. W. BUCKHAULTS
Phone 617.
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Buchanan, A. J. The Bryan Daily Eagle and Pilot (Bryan, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 55, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1915, newspaper, March 5, 1915; Bryan, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth324991/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .