Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 278, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 24, 1919 Page: 2 of 20
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PAGE TWO
TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM, TEMPLE, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING,'AUGUST 24, M9L
H' I
White Shoe House
The House of Pride.
mm a//*'
Momentous Declaration
Shoe Bargains
for the People
Children's Brown Mary Janes, worth $4.00 at . $2.95
Children's Nubuck Mary Janes, worth $4.00 at.. $2.95
Child's Patent Mary Janes, worth $4 at $2.95
Child's Playhouse Patent Leather, worth $4.00, $2.95
Young Buster Browns, worth $3.00 .... $2.35
Woman's White Kid Pumps, y?orth $6.00 at $4.35
Black Kid Pump, French heels, value $8.00, at.. ,$6.35
Bronze Kid Pump, value $8.00, at ...... .$6.35
White Reignskin Pump, value $8.00, at $5.35
Woman's Black Kid Pumps, low heels, worth $6.00,
L at .$4.35
500 Pairs of Women's Shoes, Worth $6.00,
to Close Out at
$4.35
The White Shoe House
/
GEO. W. WHITE & CO. •
&
INTEREST IB BEING TAKEN IN
GIVING THE ISOLATED SPOTS
THE ONCE-OVER.
lit HIKM MM
President Ponso» Said To Be Inter-
ested in Sanitation Along Banks of
Mighty Stream hi Order to Enoour-
ago Agricultural .Actlvltlea Va
vkiua Exploring Parties on Ground.
xwuvwyv*!1* '* *
Warning to Fake War Heroes.
(Associated Press Dispatch.)
Washington, Aug. 22.—The at-
tention of the war department was
called today to the fact that dis-
charged soldiers are wearing silver
Mars on victory ribbons in sqme cases
under condition not Justified by the
regulations. An order was Issued
pointing out that these stars must
not be worn unless the soldier had
be& cited in orders from bis head-
quarters for gallantry in action and
tj>at tf other decorations had been
awarded for the same citation the
•tar could not be legally used.
Hearing has been restored to more
than two-thirds of his accidentally
deafened patients by ft French physi-
cian, who massages their ears with
sound waves.
By adding about 12 per cent of
chromium to mild carbon steel an
English inventor has brought out a
metal for tableware that Is said to be
rust and tarnish proof.
The Inventor of a new English wire-
less transmitter claims to project Its
waves in divergent beams, like a
searchlight.
BER IS TO Ion QUESTION IS
SKY III MEXICO
CARRANZA DECIDES NOT TO
SEND EAST ENVOY FKOM
LONDON HOME.
H
An Invitation!
We extend an invitation to the people who are in-
terested in the development of oil in Bell county to
come out and see for themselves the excellent oii In-
dications we are encountering.
We are more hopeful than ever of bringing in a
real oil well on our location on Dog Ridge and believe
it will be only a matter of time when this liquid gold
will be gushing forth from the hole that we are now
putting down. Our geological reports are the most
favorable and tell us we are located over a big pool.
We are offering a limited amount of our stock to
those who want to see the oil resources of Bell county
developed and promise a fair and square deal to all.
If interested see or write
GENE UPSHAW, Sales Manager,
Bell County Oil Co.
Bdton, Texas
(A ■#ociatr * Frew Dispatch.)
Washington, Aug. 23.—After hav-
ing told William Cummlngs, the Brit
Ish charge de archives In Moxlco City
that his presence in Mexico was
deemed "Incompatible with #he state
In which relations between this gov-
ernment and Great Britain have stood
and do now stand,", the Mexican for-
eign office is understood to have re-
lented and Mr. Cummlngs expects to
remain in the Mexican capital.
London, Aug. 23.—In connection
with the expulsion from Mexico of
the British charge de archives It Is
understood that the British govern-
ment Is co-operating with the United
States In an effort to straighten out
the situation.
Th# suggestion hag been made In
high government quarters here that
Mexico possibly presents an oppor-
tunity for application of the princi-
ples of the League of Nations and In
this connection the belief has been
expressed that the United States
might welcome a settlement of the
Mexican problem by the league.
American silk factories are now
turning out products worth $500,000,-
000 yearly, against )2SO,000.000 at
the commencement of thfe war. In
1110 our output of silks was only
$100,000,000.
Eleven hospitals In Philadelphia
now have women as head pharma-
cists, and in other cities, also, women
are rapidly taking the places of men
as pharmacists in the hospitals.
The new Eondon bridge was open-
ed on Aug. 1, 188). This replaced
the celebrated old bridge, built more
than eight centuries before. It had
eighteen solid stone piers, with1 bulky
stone arches and was covered from
end to end with buildings. On the
"Traitor's gate," at one end, the
heads of traitors were shown. It
was removed on account of Its ob-
. sanction to navigation.,
(Continued I'm race Oaf.)
and invite the attention Of Mexican
industrials, professional men and
workmen, In order that they may play
an active and Important part in the
development of this Industry making
it, in a short time, an essentially and
genuinely a Mexican Industry."
This official statement, which It .Is
believed here was inspired by Ca$-
ranza, coupled with the advice of Luis
OaCrera, secretary of the treasury,
urging the supreme court to be In no
haste about considering the petrol-
eum cases now before It has arounsed
great interest in official cicrles here.
The petroleum cases now before the
Mexican supreme court are there on
the advice of the American state de-
partment which asked the American
oil companies to conform to all re-
quirements of the Mexican law stop by
step from the lowest courts to the
highest courts in the land.
On Face in Pimples. Badly
Disfigured. CutkuraHeals.
"My baby had ecxeros. It started
on his face, and his face was badly
disfigured. It broke out in pimples,
and it afterwards came on bis body.
Ha could not sleep but would ay
half the time. He bad this for a
year.
"1 saw an advertisement for Con-
curs and I sent for s free sample. I
bought mow, and when I had used
two twenty-ft**-cent boxes of Oint-
ment with the Catkars Soap, he was
healed." (Signed) Mrs. 8. Rocker,
R. 1, Box 26. Center, Ga.
Make Cvticura Soap, Ointment and
Takomyoor daily toilet preparations.
Sm» 28c, OtataMM* 38 aad SO*. Talma
26c. Sold throughout world. For
sample ssdi free address :' Votfcra Lsb-
•jjjjjjjf, Dept. K. Mahba,
— I i II .era
S«ap ehar** without a
(Correspondence of th* Asssclatsd Frits.)
Para, Brazil, July 25.—The ending
of th eworld war has given a new Im-
petus to the work of opening up the
great reservoirs of natural wealth,
from gold to fruits and valuable
woods, which tie lri the \a!l«y of the
Amazon. Several expeditions of ex-
ploration are being organized here,
one of the most important of which
Is under the direction of Henry 8..
Fleming of New York, United States
Customs receiver at Para, who will
shortly start on a three months' trip
devoted to exploring the commercial
possibilities of the vast region watered
by the Amaaon and Its maze of tribu-
taries.
The advance guard of another im-
portant expedition of scientists, head-
ed by Dr. Hamilton Rice of Boston
and his wife, has passed through here
on Its way to Manaos which will be
headquarters of the venture. A spe-
cially equipped forty-five foot motor
launch will accommodate the party
which plans to navigate the Rio Negro
Co Its Junction with the Orinoco in
Venezuela.
General Rondon, the well-known
Brazilian explorer who accompanied
Colonel Roosevelt on his famous trip
down the River of Doubt, now named
the Rio Teodoro by the Brazilian
government In honor of the former
American president, has returned here
after spending almost two years In
surveying the wilds of the state of
Matto Grosso on tho borders of Bo-
livia. The territory explored by him
lies to the southwest of the Parecis
range, northwest of which lies the Rio
Teodoro. General Rondon reported
finding much evidence of thre* new
mountains and several new river?. He
also reported finding much evidence
of rubber, caoutchouc, Ipecac, cocao
and other valuable forest products Mid
said that he traversed large areas of
gold-bearing country, especially In the
region of the head waters of the Sao
Miguel river.
President Pessoa, the newly-elected
head ot^the Brazilian Republlcals, re-
ported to Intend devoting considerable
attention to the work of sanitation
in the Amazon valley and has express-
ed his Intention of affording every
governments protection to Investors
who help to develop Brazil*. natural
resources and to encourage desirable
colonists. The region comprises an
area of 2,000,000 square miles, almost
five-sixths the extent of Europe, and
Its climatic conditions are almost Iden-
tical to those of Southern Europe.
The only Industry which has been
developed 14 any extent up to the
present has been the production of
rubbed and this Is now In an unsat-
isfactory condition owing to the com-
petition of the Orient which has re-
duced the price of the product below
a profitable margin. In consequence
attention is being paid to the other
resources of the valley, which include
gold, platinum, oil, titanium, vana-
dium, aluminum, tin, rare cabinet
woods, nuts and apparently Inex-
haustible supplies ol cacao, fibres and
kapok.
The banks of the Amazon are In-
undated for three or four months
each year and are said to afford
splendid opportunities for the culti-
vation of sugar cane, mandloca, rice,
maize, beans and other agricultural
products. Back of the rivers and be-
hind the forest walls there are vast
tracts of savannah suitable for cattle
raising. An excessive rainfall at cer-
tain seasons of the year which Is fol-
lowed by a prevalence of fever Is the
chief drawback to the climatic con-
ditions and the hospital accommoda-
tions In the region are very scanty.
The reported Intention of the govern-
ment to tackyle this problem in a
comprehensive manner is expected to
remove one of the principle obsta-
cles to successful colonization.
Horses imported into Argentine are
taught to avoid a poisonous weed that
the native animals shun naturally by
forcing them to Inhale smoke from
burning piles of the weed.
For reviving sod by Introducing air
and moisture an inventor has patent-
ed a spiked roller, the penetration of
the spikes being regulated by small
wheels that help support It.
In a German steel works a hydraul-
ic press that can exert a pressure of
11,000 tons has replaced a steam
hammer tha tshook the earth for a
long distance every time it was used.
(C«atlaaed Froai hft Oh.)
United Statea by way of Nogalw, Ariz.,
on another mission, when captured
by me. On his parson was found a
copy of tha German Imperial code
that came into the possession of the
American government. Wablrskl was
courtmartlaled and from the fact that
his case Is before the president for
review, la believed to have been sen-
tenced to death, the only German spy
to receive such a sentence' In the
Unltd States.
Other Agenlm Captured.
"I also betrayed fifty-eight other
German agents snd thus enabled the
military Intelligence department to
keep effective watch on them, not to
mention some renegade Americans
who were giving aid and comfort to
the enemy."
Other acts for which I)r, Altendorf
claims credit Include:
Discovery'of two German wireless
stations In Mexico, capable of receiv-
ing messages from that country; re-
porting the plan for the German sub-
marine raid along the American coast
in April, 1918, one month before It
actually took place; reporting agents
sent by Germans in Mexico to poison
cattle In the United 9tates and tho
revelation of a plot by four Germans
to blow up the hydro-electric plant
at Niagara Falls.
Mexico Not Neutral In War.
"The American people ought; to
know," he continues, "that Mexico
was not neutrat during the war, but
an enemy, active to the extent of its
limited capacity. Mexlen gave no
fewer than eighty German officer#
commissions in the Mexican army and
assigned them to train troops for
service against th" United States.
German uniforms were so common In
Mexico that even the local Mexican
papers conjectured about It. More-
over, by Carranza's direct orders, Mex-
ican telegraph wires were thrown open
to German code messages. I person-
ally carried orders from Carranza to
Governor Calles to permit the spy//
Wablrskl, to send code messages
freely."
Mrxlcawt On German Payroll.
Prominent Mexican officials are al-
leged by Dr. Altendorf to have been
on the payroll of the German em-
baasy. He says;
"Mario Mendes, minister of tele-
graph, received a salary of $600 .a
month from von EckhardL His
brother, a senator with Influence, re-
ceived thfe same salsry. A third
brother, who held a position ltr the
post office, also received $600 a month
for opening and reading private let-
ters and passing the Information along
to the Germans."
Dr. Altendorf states that he per-
sonally late In November, 1917, car-
ried a request from Governor Calles,
of Sonora, to RademacBer. the Ger-
man consul at Gaymas for $154,004.
saw the money put In a bag and tar-
ried the bag, accompanied by Rade-
macher to Calles.
Continuing, the statement says:
Guarantee* to Carrnnza.
"I was able to discover that von
Eckhardt has guaranteed to Carran-
za an abundance of capital to turn
Mexico into an Industrial country.
"As soon as the treaty Is ratified
there will be a hegira of a quarter of
a million Germans from the United
States, who will take with them to
Mexico four hundred million dollars
capital, '
"The activity of CafTanza In hur-
rying Americans out and confiscating
their property Is explained by the
fact that Germans with plenty of
money stand ready to pick up the
property at bargain rates.
"The full significance of all this
becomes apparent when I tell you
further thit part of the German
scheme provides for great munitions
plants at Mexico City which will make
It unnecessary for Mexico to Import
war-materials In the future.
"German agents are active every-
where In Latin America and the news-
papers have told there is to be ex-
tensive German immigration to that
part of the world in the near future.
The result of the war did not end
the German dream of world con-
quest—it merely delayed it." z
FOR RECIPROCAL GUARD
SERVICE OX ROHDER
Mexico City, Aug. 23.—An impor-
tant step toward the adoption of
measures tending to prevent clashes
between Mexico and the United
States was taken last night, when
Luis Cabrera, secretary of the treas-
ury and generally tegarded as the
mouthpiece of the (Resent adminis-
tration, stated la * pres. interview
that the Mexican and American gov-
ernments should sign an agreement
for a reciprocal border guard ser-
vice. Tgnacio Bonllla's, Mexican am-
bassador at Washington, according to
Senor Cabrera, would be "eminently
fitted" for conducting the negotia-
tions with this purpose in view since
he was a member of the Mexican
commission, which met United States
representatives at Atlantic City in
1916 to dUpMss this plan during the
Pershing expedition into northern
Mexico. Sehor Cabrera was hlmbelf
chairman of the Mexican commission.
Doctor Issues Warning
And Tells How to Stop
Tobaccc Habit
New York: Dr. Connor, formerly of John*
Hopkins Hospital, mys: I am often ulted
If I know anything to atop th* tobacco
habit and ( always recommend Nlcotot,
which I hare prescribed wltli rreat eueee«s.
Nleotol contain* no hablt-foAilnir drags, la
absolutely harmless end produces astonish-
ing result a In & very short time. Tho use
of tobecso saps the vitality, vim, vlgor and
ambition fef the slave »bo Is enthralled by
It* sednctiv* effoctea. It u&dermton th*
health and leaves the victim an eaay prey
to general debility, throat and lung trou-
bles, nervousness. Insomnia, heart trouble,
kidney trouble, headache, tongue and Up
cancer and svap blindness. Physicians the
world ever ofte* trace the start
above diabase and many others
poisoning.
ysicians th*
tart of the I
to ^kotli)*>j
If you want to fr»* yourself from tobacco
go to any drag store and ask for Nicotoi
tablets. Take one tablet sfter each meal
and in a short time yon will have no desire
for tobacco—the craving wll ihave left you.
With the nicotine poisoning out of your sys-
tem year general health wilt qslekty Tm-
pron*
Note: When asked about Nlcitvl tablet*
one of our leading druggists said: "It l*
truly a wonderful remedy for the tobacco
habit—away ahead *f anything we have
ever sold before. We are authorised by th*
manufacturer* to refund the money to every
dissatisfied enstofbr snd ws would not p*r-
th* «s* of ear nam* unless th* remedy
possessed aaasaal sserlt." Ntcotal is seld is
this city under an Iron-clad money-back
guarantee by all up ta date druggists in-
cluding O. L. RevnoM-
*
TRADE mark.
The City of
GOODRICH
Akron.Ohio
Yoa Aye
Treading
On Eggs
u
I
D
0
Just as long as the tubes
in your casings are
not the best you can
get. A chain is no
more at the mercy of
its weakest link than
a tire is at the mercy
. of the tube in Jt.
The beat beginning is
to start with Good-
rich casings. For
Goodrich gives you
the standard by which
you can gauge the
true value of any tire.
Square its pries and adjust-
ment mileage up with
Goodrich List Pricaa, and
th* Goodrich Mora-Mile-
age Adjustment—6,000
miles for Fabrics; 8,000
for SUrttown Cards—
and yon Ma why tha
wise tire user bays Good-
rich casings for the peat-
eat octjer strength.
/You are not 100 per cant,
secure till you're Goodrich
through and through. -
Pot Goodrich Tubas in
Goodrich Casings—Had
Tubes for utmost strength
—or Grey Tubes for long,
lived dependability at lesa
Yea, pot Goodrich Tubea in
Goodrich Casings an<
forget tire worries.
Bay Goodrich Tim
from a Doalrr
III
II
ADJUSTMENT
Fabrics • 6,000 miles
J Cords . 8.000
GOODRICH
f TIRES 1
S "BEST IN THE »
LONG RUN"
f
I
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Williams, E. K. Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 278, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 24, 1919, newspaper, August 24, 1919; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth469514/m1/2/?q=112+cavalry: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.