The Abilene Daily Reporter (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, November 9, 1914 Page: 4 of 6
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THE ABILENE REPORTER ABILENE TEXAS
HMNE WHY REPORTER
Y AHLKNt PRINTING COMPANY
MUM Nerth (Mwni ttreei.
leeM4-4ftM Mall At
OctoW 14. ItH.
Abltotia Texas
UBSCRIPtlON ftATEtl
Da Twr (In adraaea) .
M KmUm (la adraaca -
t -- T jE
-H.00
1.70
US
TrM MSRlM (M ftlIrM4)
Oaa Month (aa araac4)
Bubecrltera faJflngto recctrt thatr frapfira re
4kttly wfll confer A aTar apoa Uia aaaaaffeneflt
ay reporting eama to the bustaftM otOea. 'Phone 67.
TtLIPHONKtl
BoaineM and Clrcalatioa .. ....
-. 67
- 831
1097 or 341
Beclety
(AST eiToneowi rabestlon upon tha character
ataaAlBg or refutable of Mir person firm or con
aoratle irkldi mar appear In the columns of THE
REPORTER Witt be gladly corrected upon Itt
batofT aralBja. t taa attentloa of the firm)
MONDAY NOVEMBER 0 1014.
"A Steady Improvement"
Tht' Memphis Ctoiiimurcial Appeal of Suit-
iln Nov. Hth sounds n liili note of optimism
one Unit wo feel that our readers will enjoy
reading mid hence wo are puhliHliiug the on
tiro editorial. Coin hit' uk it does from one of
tho truly great editors of I fie United States
tlio people have n right to give weight to
what is said regarding the present conditions
or the country. Tho Appeal says:
"The marvelous recuperative powers of this
country are fast overcoming tin; difficulties
brought about by the war.
"This war came on us like an earthquake.
It disturbed evury channel of commerce. It
caused even the most prosperous undertakings
to give pause.
"Hut soldiers must eat and there are just as
many mouths to feed and bodies to clothe us
'there were when (iermauy crossed the Hcl-
gtitu frontier and when the French made their
(lash into Alsace. All those that have heuii
killed have been replaced as food consumers
by the infants passing from a liquid to a
solid diet.
"The western continent is the granary and
the cloak of the world. Intense demand for
certain things lias been sharper in Illinois
Iowa Wisconsin Jlissouri and .Minnesota than
in the south. Europe has eagerly taken the
surplus grain cattle and hog products of
these states.
"In the south cotton is low but it is moving.
It !s fetching money and that money is being
used to pay debts.
"When one man secures money from an
earth product to pay hu debts that money of-
ten pays the debts of half a doon other
people .lust as soon as these settlements are
made the credit of the payers is increased and
they immediately begin consuming more.
"(. otton seed products were loV bufwultiu
the last week there has been an advance in
these articles for the reason that in them is
an element or food for man and beast.
"The activity in cotton came from unexpec-
ted sources. Wo had little hope of Hurope
bujing cotton. Wo thought that domestic
mills would buy enormously. The foreigners
bought established a price and the domestic
mills must come into the market and this dic-
tation or the price will n ' iit theirs.
"The surplus horses in the south are being
sold. These horses go out of the country and
help bring the balance of trado in our favor.
"With the enormous ineruase in exports the
New York bankers will no longer be burden.
d with the load of paying Kuropuan credits
in gold. The money that these bankers have
been gathering to pay I'uropean obligations
can be used for domestic purposes.
"Our southern people are already begin-
ning to profit from the lesson they began to
learn in August
"There are more greon fields in the south
in this the first nvmtk in November than there
have been before for many years.
"In these fields rye ami oats and wheat are
growing and next ear instead of having to
Inn great quantities of animal food from the
north we wil have I ova I supplies.
"Lumber is still on the lift. If the railroads
continue to move grain and cotton ami il the
coal traffic incfe-iises the railroads theiiclvcs
will enter tlic murKot tor part or tiie lumiior
of which the arc the largest consumers.
"The quickening of manufacturing or the
wholesale business will follow the activity
in the demand for fowl products. Tho retail
Imsiness will necessarily improve
"The man who is holding bib money wait
jug to grab up something at a ruinous price
U a drone and a burduu in the community. If
Jic is mdy wku Jic will invust that money
now.
"Jf he has a vaoaut piece of property whiuh
lie intends later to improve he wan improve
Unit property more cheaply now than he eau
tvtclw months hence.
"If people who have money owe large or
small bills and are saving that money for a
rainy day they wilt postpone the rainy day by
paying their bills.
"If the grocer or dry goom merchant col
)ects bis bilU in itnafeoiiablo utnotuitb he U in
u position to extend further uredit for he in
turn pays hU buny and hU wholesaler and
manufacturer who in turn pay their banks.
H'ku bankv then are in u position to cidurge
their credits.
lf wverhod.v then bucks up and doe the
IrtWrt We can everybody tho movumeut al-
nmly atarted toward better thingawill ! -tttfleitttttd
and whim this great war w vir ami
the world )wta m u good humor thec t m ted
Ktat will ht in a commanding position
iuuctftuf ike nation "
Ideas of a Plain Man
T Dti rAK CtAKt
Whenever the season
changes in the temperate
zones women begih to
have n peculiar fever. Its
chief 8mptom is an insa-
tiable craving for a dirfur-
cut kind or clothing. When
Spring comes ami the
Jouug man's fancy fer-
ments and the bins lay
and the birds slug new
songs ami the kittens
gambol the female of the
lltltllim MtlCciCrt L'OtiS to eu l'
mm places where is the lure of millinery ami
noun nvi'i- ImiM. then nfter a breathing sliell
she starts upon the chase of the dressmaker
whom she hates jet loves.
So of Summer Autumn and Winter 'lliosu
each mean Hew clothes. Little does the Sun
as he wobbles to and fro across the equator
iciilize the neculiar effect of his eccentricity
upon the feminine make up.
I understand that ladies in the torrid zono
mill in the nohir circles arc not so affected. In
the one case they wear the same few leaflets
ami in the other the same double thickness of
benr-skln the year 'round.
Personally 1 enjoy the society of ladies of
the temperate zones. 1 enjoy their drc.vMalk.
Tli iu ii wirt of sweet earnestness about it.
in their most extravagant expenditure there
is such an air of bellicose rfasonanieuess uieir
i; i in ominmteu nre sn nicturcsiiuc. their ex
planations why this in id" that are absolutely
necessary are so Alice-in-Wonderlandish.and
the whole performance is so utterly delicious-
ly feminine that to whomsoever it be that
loves women just because they're womanish
nii T .In it ' nheitn t half the price. Of course.
men have no such nonsense Have you a cigar
about you T
Pepper Talk
BT CIORGI UATTHIW ADAMI
SALT
Stir up your Salt.
i.'. Suit .tijinsbited into terms of moral
iic. w id.' stuff that seasons ami balances
one's workkeeps it from swaying intoiuedi-
m.ritv (iiniiimimu.sH and not bunnies') t s grit
courage back bone refined to the crystal de
gree. That's Salt I
Stir up your bait.
A mini wit limit Suit in his system is about
as active a thing as a watch without works.
Neither one goes.
Stir up your Salt.
The blood and body of a man is saturated
with Salt. When a man's Salt runs out tlm
man runs out.
Stir up your Salt.
Salt is the thing that savors Mankind.
Stir up your Salt.
Von hi-. worth iiiir Salt if von have worth
t ...l.l ui vmir Knit. Salt has no value alone.
Salt is a partner ingredient. It's n coiuple
meat to wlmt you aireauy nave io n n
it.
Stir up yiur Salt.
Snli is the inmmoiiest and inrct thing in
all the world. It's almost everywhere and no
where. Hut it s yours to taKo ami use. nan
.. vmiK wnrU i oveiiness of effort. stolidliesS
of purpose and assuredness of Faith in U'o-
u..h Hon.. fni- betlee thint Courage for
better things Courage fon bigger tasks. Vs
you work through the minutes ami tue nours
keep it firmly iu mind that Success must m-eds
have its share of Salt.
Stir up your Salt.
c
Newspaper Talk
The Texas Journalist
The llfiiorter is ill receipt of a cOP of The
TcNits .Journalist published b the School of
.lotirnaliMii of the I mvei-sity o lesas. im
make-up is good ami there is an abundance of
reailiu'g matter of general inturuM inttiuiiyra-
ed throughout the paper.
What The Turks Will Really Do X
Uliun tlmso TurKs got into nwi uiraKiFHuan
i. ..if Miiinw mi nil iivm- Hlll'Olia. uXCCIlt 111 'I'lJl'-
lu'.. and when the start on retrtrtU Wv want
tu'kiimv ir they will "turkey trot f" Knox
Cwiiuty Jtiiirimt. - - -
Vit vi nan tell volt. When thin stall tu
retreat they will not "pull any of that ntuff"
luit will lilt Hie iiall ami run. wo are uupnu;
that thev'uill take that eournw very won
Railroads and a Town
The little park at the depot U a wrft
beitutv spot. Mini reflects miiah erwlil oil IM
taste ami rofincaieiit of tlui Santa r noin.
Those people arc MippQjd u h wit for liw
money and no duuut thy ara wX tkr fl
able to spiuid a little myiuy in Uwmtifiif
their grmimKv Tht v know that it to pud lu-
iueos to make tltet- little bcuuty kpot You
never hear of J he Sulu Ki puoiik msu: that
it is u wjist of wunjfry to mill tr uud
hllltw on Ihcir grounds tcrliii tit h
Ilucord.
What the Saul rV ha doiiv tm .ua. i-
Tun and leiaV hut dune for AtiU-r TV
nght-of wa trumif the freight ii jmmw- n
fcfc dfPoU .ril.rfil. ih uiOfct .i m
ju tliu cit nu. au t n j'loi'lu is
J
made all the time You know it hs not sf
that everyone want to " knock" the rail-
load when ir the toad should rvmf' to run
tliroitffh the town what would it amount to?
What if llle.v are iu for the iliom. will nlij
one show us a biiaiiiiH man in the nmiiirj
who Is net or anyone else for tlmt mat if i f
. It. we aiv not lirttiiijf a "rakctifr" Tor
wrlthiK thtej it is jmf exactly what we he
Itcvc )
Arc You Corfsct About This1?
The sUfi.tmnihJ.honl whlrh was suaacsictl
b Mr. Wade of St. Louis ami worked out by
the tiHiikcrs of New York don't seem to be
tHlriitir ititieh Mrtib tlm bunk Tif tlrr Stmtti.
The Southern banks can't fed that they should
l.c callcil upon to loan one third or almost a
third of the imme.x take a second lien and
then become responsible for the other two
thirds. The drmaml of the New York liank
crs as we see it are unfair unjust ami ruinous
and will result iu the failure of relief lor the
cotton situation from the pool source Ulrica
modified. No director will consent for his
hank lo loan mouev on the terms and the
southern banker w'ill have to loan if he loans
pool funds. Abilene eporter
The tcmuurarv boom to the cotton market
brought about by the announcement ol the
loan filial scheme enabled a raft of .small eo't
Ion boxers to unload their holdiiitfs nt seeu
eiit. but as far as helping the real fanner
is concerned the loan fund has itope and will
do no uood. No larmer will liorrow moiie.v
L'ive n iiiortua&e On it as lonir as he can uct
credit at his grocer's ami most of them can
do that very thimr. It is on the small mer-
chant the blow falls the hardest. The loan
scheme whs very pretty on paper but there
is no way of forciriir a man to borrow when he
can do otherwise. Cotton is down to sla uu
til tin" war ends. lirenham Haniier Press
Sinee you wroti' this prophecy cotton has
been on the eontiliiial upuradc nitd s01ieboiI
else has predicted that it will go to nine cents
before it quits suing up. Mujhe it .will back
down atrain. (N. It. This is not a prophee.O
"The Mansion in The Skies."
A great miiiiv uoial people who make no
effort to own a shack down here have no lies
itatic in siugiip.' about the mansion iu the
skies. Kotau. Advance.
Efficent Housekeeping
Jlv Henrietta I) (.fraud
Roast Pork and Sweet Potatoes.
1 Mease tell me how to prepare work lor a
company tinnier lew .umlays ago my mis-
baud and 1 had a dinner in the cotintr. ami
oiir hostus- bi ought iu a great big platter
with the entire dinner on it.
lu the center was a pork roast but it look
d like a chicken it was so brown and was
covered with bread stuffing that was quite
crisp. There were bakud sweet potatoes
around the sides of the dish but lhe. were
peeled and quite transparent ami vein vellow
lic.sulc tins there was 'plenty ol siruvv. It was
the richest dinner I ever ale ami the apple
pie with cream that caiiiu after seemed just lo
beloug'to it.
1 wish to know what cut of pork to bu
that will slice a.s this' did; caeh slice looked
like a pi irk chop. Also how to bake potatoes
this w.iyf"
TJiis is the season when pork tastes hint mid
there i- no better accompaniment than swnt
potatoes thoiiirh some folk prefer sage and
cutlets.
The cut you refer to is called the loin and it
u the same that cutlets are taken from. Wln-u
on hu( it have the tenderloin left with it
thoMsh this will add to its cost. Im nhiit
loaler will eut the bonus so it can be lned
.u you dtrihc or yon eau du thU wit: m
eleovcr
Yon eau ct the crifcp top with Jrin I fctuf
Him or with .saoucl flour. A v ry kmm? i
is to m.ike the Irtvad ffH'uiti with stw'c bte.ni
jiMuMeiKii with .-old wntur and pri-nwd li .
Heaaou with fcalt 'pjr thyme aid wue.
Mis m one eri aud aftwr dii-dmtiK the jMirk
w il li flour nail ami p''N'r la it iu the 1 o
ter ami rnvw with bread.
I 'our hoiliuu water aroiiml lb- rmt cover
ud tmt in tV oven. A porcI roMtr i re-
ally 1 mwsiuy to well raoked rottsU.
Wwli tk swi4 polataai and roek tucut
imtil half dow in halted water )niu and
jairr t Vtt cud kmf aruiul tV taat Hii
iuu do tM hh mm tMt the rttaM -m! t
itrMMtUin if uewlwl tmt if tkr ivr fit lihttv
tins Anil utu h u-ewir TeSTSm TBi- raT
lo the uwu ami cook until brow it. l.il? wit
tiu fMlttttiMk Hithout hreukuiu I Imio . pl-
tVlH uu a I m 11 unit sirinkl tith kiiL'r nd
let il 111 tu the iiwii lir tn miittitc. Uuh the
roat ud put it tu the wMi-wiiia iiti'ii Strain
IU- t!ru into m Men'.- pH ii'f Mld fluor muts
Uind uitii iHitk to thick a it. Tatc wmI add
IMorc m.I inc. in I
t thU tlliu th Mt..l wUl it' rrjd tt
jlfi' uruuitd th4 m at Pattr tV vr
H-Miut th H hl.' it v iw ir wiv Uk- U It
it h It r to v. i it tn tun Ml H kiam? it:iM
ilrnkkv it ttitu krit.ie ur tla:- have il
lain iut U ur
Tint te .lt'llt hlMU lot Mllhv'
jW it It pork th ir '-n ti.-uiritli. tkr Mlt
tt Jlil-t nf tilt illt.ll If ut! pit II I .. kSU
t .il Wl'l I. lit qfli alld U'dMiUli tin ItMMlt
V( Itii 1 l.i Mi MUll.. il.. ktt.tt J uli a fct'JW
ial'l TtMittt mr ofte htiki I att.l -rvl
ith n.istv n jHitk in 1 ! f .ipt'liH -'i'
' ''I " ll (I I'!" ' S I . I. 11 .. illl
f' n t '1 I. I l.l ' ll
rofessionai
ft Business Directory
E. F. NtCOLDS
Attorney
JW 1.2 Vim Nlrerl
W. H. GRAHAM
.Lawyer
Room 7 Radford Sldg.
i.ons s. wise
AUorner-.W-l.iiif
f
Heat Entntc Ijiw a imeclnltr
14714 Cliodtnut BL
4 4 4 ! 4 44'
IIMI int AMI TllUMIU
JcwvIith anil tlittt'laii.
lto 1'lac Street. i'lioae 1H0. 4-
a 4
.4.4.4.44.44.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.44.
II. lUHi Khllllt.K L.YKIl
? ottll Practice In nil Court
Collections a icciully 4
I- 4 4 4- 4
We
vittii tit
of I'll
44-44'4 4''4 '
4-
4- A KIT IS A IIAII THIXd.
Get out brliiK. hciiiI or ihoue
us your wnntu anil the pre-
ccrlitloiiB iif our i)halclun
thoy will uavo im-thoiihI caro.
4
Aim.KvNK imni comi'A.w
A. II. t'hristniihur Prop.
fr4-4'4"4'4-4'4'4 4'
444- l--i- 4'
4- WILL STITII
NOTARY PUIILIC
Oflleo Our Citizen at Hank
44'4'4-4'44-4'4' 4'
'
lont HtophciiBOu Pluney M. U
Offics Fbon 71
lone Wnney. D. O. M. D.
llouee Phone 1121
DKS. T1N.NKI & l'lMs
RogolHra & Ottoopa 11
Offlco Hours
I to 12 a. m.
I to B p. m.
Offlc
229H Pino St
Abilene.
4.q.4 444'4
4' 4'4"r 4'4' 4'4' 4'
ilUT. n ml Ct'Itlla
MITAItY lH'IILIC
Office over Citizens N'ut'l Hank
4 4 4'4'4'4'4' 4'4'
lilt. L. W HOLMS Sr.
DIM- U. IID1.US Jr.
Pnysloluus & Surneona
Hours : 10 tu VI um. '2 to S p.m.
Snylea ImlldlnK
At The Ilollls .SanltHrlutn
8 to 10 a. ra. 4 to 6 i in.
4 4-4- 4" 4-4' 4-
fr4-4-4' 04.4'.4'
Dtt CVIIUS JT. KAY
ItoKuIar
OSTEOPATHIC L'flYSirU
OBlco VoKstatt HldK.. l'ino SU
HOURS 0-12 and 2-b
Phone 121
44T4tt44
City Drug Store
IJfc Li.ktnul rtlrft
PIh.IW n '"
Drugs Sundry Articles Etc.
I'niN M.iUhih t:iii .n.. I
rruuil a tot wisijil .uhu
OffietW WW Uf r
Dr. Per kin 9
ItMMa PtHattt i'
Dr. Gates
Qtlkm lah. WT
Pf.m Brown
Offtr I 'hw. s;7
Rel4H'i' I'h Vi.
Dr. War nick
iWm Ut rr of atutf
ufftev Itiui '
ink IliitUf ti'"
DU. W. T. 8TEWABT
DBNTIST
Kooma 6 and h Alexuadtr Uidr
Oyer .MoLttwore-Uaa
PH0NB9
Office 69. Ktnldunuo. 191.
iuot.U. br
I t lijLor.B
I 4- 4-
rif&
4.
Wo Havo 'em
tii it as Hi;n: vim
II I. ItllA MMlvlU PHU.
I I l.l. I l M'l ih htltlW
iOI.
Jennings Bros
4- AHILKNK
.
tilt.
4- H? SoHttt
T OaU.
J
P
J 1
CHINAMEL
Demonstration
by
Miss ilrris
fAJuS3&JX
ol' S'eatth an i fjut t
.Mt rw
V
... . .
y
nednesdayiiid jTmnqay
MvniJd 12
4 -'(
icuiSl invitation to thejadies 0
intend
v"
i...! 1 ..1 . .... wv.. .i... .ir. 1
iihivc i.iivs anu'Si'e 1111s uriiiuii.ii
lUf
(f i
is trwrr on a
(rfTiiinist ration
ic best tloor and furjmure varnishes.
y
S
Jiio. B. Neill
1'aint ami I'npr-r Company.
insure Your Property
With
Mofz & Curtis
and be safe
LUCKY
'e pl.iecd our ordera for AKT MATKIJIALS in July. Sinco
tlu 11 all imported goods- have ADVANCMD. Our atoulc iH now
complete tlm large t utouk in tho west at old time pricea
Ralph Paint & Paper Co.
. 4th and Pine Street
Abileae Texan.
fl HTATUD COMMFNICA'
"J? tions Aim. km; i.onni;
v no. r.nu A. F & A.M
tlS& SSa $8& EACH MONTH
Vlailnr Vtlt'omn
C W HOIIKHTS. 8ecrUry
SfATUU L1I.HY0C ATIIIJI
Real Estate
Kxcluolro UatKBlni In Merkl
Country aud West Tezaa.
MOSKY TO LOAN
On Furnis and TUnch Landa la
Tuylor Jonei Nolan and Flitt-
er Counties. : : : t :
JHO. 6. JACKSON
No- lt H. A. U.
Second Friday
clgbt each nioctli
Holourntrt woV
tomi a W.
ftoberU Bh.
4bua CtuivUr
Gunter Hotel
SAN ANTONIO TEXAi
l.iolutely Fire-Proof. Mo4rn Mlfr
Ktntly Furnlohsd. All OutaUa
hqorai with high Celling!
A MoUl Ha lit Par ik CUaia
MATES;
Eiifopsan 11-00 to IS-W Par Day
OFFICIAL IIKAUQI'ARTEKS A. X A
kli A.MOMI) HOTKL CO. Owaera.
Peray Trrrall Ucv
HTATIB
CO .NCI. A YI
Abilene Go
uundery No. IT
K. T. 2nd oa-
day nlsht uk
Knlgbti wolcow.--C-
Itecorder.
WfAl'kkA'
44 4
v
YCTEUI.N.IUY JIOS.
1'ITIL
Paul tht Tiilir I Ci.
Tiilar Matters mI CIiwi
Swur$ll.SSKtSwlg
(. II. OAHXKU
Hit BU Uut. Phooa
I'Uolit) 526 T
.A
Jr 4
f zWileUU to e
T
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The Abilene Daily Reporter (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 213, Ed. 1 Monday, November 9, 1914, newspaper, November 9, 1914; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth332255/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.