The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 206, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 16, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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'•- T
fHE TEMPLE DAILY TELEGRAM
I
I
After Breakfast Sale
This a. m. from 8:30 to 11:30 at
-Hartmann D. G. Co's. j
THE TEMPLE OWLY TELEGRAM
DAILY TKW2GIIAM Established WOT
DAILY ^KIBUNE Established 1SS1
CONSOLIDATED JANUARY 1311
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT MON-
DAY, BY THE TELEGRAM PUB-
LISHING COMPANY.
m m m. m, . .g y,!-, ^-[XixiArLI-UXflJV »* I* - ~ • m m mm
will sell
say After
Between the hours of 8:30 and 11:30 o'clock this morning, we
you merchandise at real After Breakfast Sale Prices, When we :
Breakfast Prices, we mean that you can buy goods at from 33 1-3 per cent to J
50 per cent cheaper than the regular prices. So if you want anything today,
don't fail to make your purchase here during our After Breakfast Sale,
V/onderful Price Reductions During Our
After Breakfast Sale
From 8:30 to 11:30 this a. m.
Entered at the Postoftice In Tempo.
Texas, as Second-clabs Mail Matter.
E. K. Williams Managing Editor
Nettie Gooch Society Editor
Mrs- Henrietta Sweeney Business Of-
fice Manager.
Office o' Publication 123 South First
Street, Temple, Texas.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE.
Delivered by Carriers. Inside City Limits
Dally and Sunday, per month 500
Daily and Sunday per year $6 00
single Copies 6c
Dally and Sunday by mail. In Ball county
outside oi' Temple, per year, in ad-
vance $3.00
1 he Dally Telegram Is the Largest and
Most Widely Read Newspaper Publish-
ed In Bell County.
TELEPHONES.
Business Office and Circulation Depart-
ment: Old Phone f>M
New phone 19s
NOTES FROM THE NATIONAL
C0PIT0L.
Ladies' Full Taped
Vests, 4 for 25c
Extra good quality ladies' full taped Vests, regular 10c «r
quality, on sale for our After Breakfast Sale four for ^OC
Children's Lace Hose
For 10c
Between the hours of 8:30 and 11:30 o'clock this a m. we will
give you choice of our children's regular 20c and 25c >1 ft-
Lace or Drop Stitched Hose in black only for per pair | UG
Table Linen at After
Breakfast Prices
If low prices will sell Table Linens our Linen department
will be full up of buyers today from 8:30 to 11:30 o'clock. Don't
fail to buy your Table Linen during this sale.
Regular 35c Table Linen for 23c
Regular 50c Table Linen 34c
Regular 75c Table Linen 48c
Regular $U)0 Table Linen for. 73c
Bed Spreads Cheaper
Than Ever
For our After Breakfast Sale we will give you choice of any
Bed Spread worth from $1.25 to 12.50 at the following prices:
$1.25 Quality Bed Spread 89c
$1-50 Quality Bed Spread $1.13
$1.75 Quality Bed Spreads for $1.29
$2.00 Quality Bed Spreads for $1.39
$2.50 Quality Bed Spreads for $1.79
50c Embroidered
Waist Fronts 29c
Big line of beautiful Embroidered Waist Fronts in regular waist
lengths, worth 50c each; choice for our After Break- nn.
fast Sale for each Zvv
10 yds 7\c Apron
Ginghams For 43c
Between the hours of 8:30 and 11:30 o'clock we will sell you
ten yards of regular 7 1-2 cent quality Apron Ging- M n
hams for _ TJu
-(Ten yard Limit)-
35c to 75c Fancy
Ribbons For 19c
Our regular lines of Fancy Ribbons, worth from 35 cents to
75 cents. On sale at After Breakfast Prices a q
Choice from 8:30 to 11:30, at only, per yard | JJQ
$1 Quality Ladies
Fancy Hose 49c
Beautiful line of Ladies' Fancy Hose, worth $1.00 per pair,
in colors of Lavender, Pink, Blue, Tan and Gray, for jlf)#.
After Breakfast Sale, for, choice ^rUC
5c to 10c Valencine
Laces 2c a Yard
One lot of Valencine Laces, worth from 5 cents to 10 cents
per yard—They go into the After Breakfast Sale ft
at, per yard/ only i,; jfQ
Ladies White Embd.
Trim'd Bonnets 50c
Ladies' regular $1.00 qaality White Bonnets, trimmed with
pretty Embroidery, Edges and Insertings, in our rft.
After Breakfast Sale for, each, only ■„ J)UG
10 Yds. Good Fig-
ured Lam for 39c
During our After Breakfast Sale we will sell you 10 yards
of Extra^Good quality figured Lawn, (Ten yards
limit) for only
After Breakfast Sale Prices on All Ready-to- Wear Garments:
Ladies Colored Silk Underskirts Half Price
Ladies Colored Silk Underskirts, worth from $5.00 to $8.50,
at HALF PRICE, as follows
%r 00 Under Skirts for only $2.50
$6.50 Under Skirts for only S3.25
$7.50 Underskirts for only $3.75
$8.50 Underskirts for only S4.2 5
Shirt Waists at Big Reductions
One iot White Waists, worth from 75 cents to 85 cents, on
•ale during cur great After Breakfast sale today <|n.
for only _ jJjC
Cnildrens White Dresses at a Big Sacrifice
Chudrea's Whirr Lam Dresses, age; from one to four years
•id. the tC£-\»r C5 ccr.t and 75 cent values, go into OQ«
oar Great Ailer Brcikfas: S^le at JuO
Infants Plain Slips for 29c
Regular 50 cent quality Infant Slip*- • * on sale for Ofl«
After Breakfast selling for only i £uC
Ladies B'k Pettic'ts After Breakfast Prices
A very beautiful line of Ladies' Imitation Hcatherbloom Pet-
ticoats, values from $1.50 to $1.25. your choice, if you QOn
buy them this morning, for only 0 Ju
10.00 to 15.00 Ladies Linen Suits 2.95
For our After Breakfast Sale we will offer you choice of
any Ladies' Colored Suit carried over from last season fin ftp
while they last, for only ^jjg
(By Clyde H. Travenner.>
Washington, June 15.—Why is it
that the price of articles on which
the tariff was not advanced has in-
creased since the passage of the
Payne-Aldrich bill?
I put this question to United State*
Senator Moses E. Clapp of Minnesota,
one of the genuine progressive Re-
publicans of Congress.
"1 can answer that question," re-
plied Senator Clapp, "in less than
two minutes, and no one will sue
c s.sfully contradict my statement.
"In the Payne-Aldrich revision of
the tariff the nates on scores upon
scores of articles were advanced.
^ j Those Increases have advanced the
1 price of everything; yes, have ln-
* J creased the price of articles on which
♦ | the tariff was not changed.
| "You can't raise the cost of living
I
| to a man who is producing something
I to sell, without forcing that man to
raise correspondingly the price of
What he has to sell.
'.'Suppose both of us are in busi-
ness, an4 that each has to use what
the other produces. Suppose the tar-
iff on the article I handle is increas-
ed, while the tariff on the articlfe
you handle Is not increased. By vir-
tue of my increased protection, 1
force you to pay increased prices.
What are YOU going to do about it?
What MUST you do about it? Ans-
wer: You must increase the price
of what YOU have to sell! And that
is just the way it works out all
along the line, and in the end all
of the increases fall upon the broad
shoulders of the consumer.
"But you will hear it said con
stantly with reference to something
on which the price has been advanc
ed, Oh, that isn't in the tariff at all
That increase has nothing to do with
the tariff.' But the fact is tariff re.
vision upward on a few articles
reaches all along the line.
'The new tariff law has cost, and
Is costing the American people mil
lions of dollars, in Increased cost of
living. And If tb« .Payne-Aldrich
bill had been beaten, those millions
would have been saved to the people.
Battleships Are Expensive.
Congress has authorized two more
battleships. It Is estimated each
ship will cost $12,000,000 to build
and $1,000,000 a year during its 20-
year life-time to maintain. The ag-
gregate ultimate cost of each ship,
as a matter of fact, is, therefore,
$32,000,000!
The cost of each ship would buy
8,000 farms at $4,000 ach; It Would
construct l.fiOO church throughout
the country at $20,000 each; it
would furnish the means of education
through a four-year course to 16,000
men and women at $500 per annum;
It would build and equop 50 manual
training schools with necessary tools
and appliances, giving a trade to 75,
000 young people each year; It would
build a macadam road between Chi-
cago and New York, or build an
equip 40 Y. M. C. A. buildings of
magnificent proportions, each build-
ing accommodating the young men in
a city of 200,000 people!
The Republican Platform!
The eve cf the Congressional cam-
paigns is at hand. It looks as if the
Republican party proper will boldly
«) attempt to bluff the American people
♦ ion these propositions;
♦! That Aldrichtsm Is a good thing for
J j the country.
^ I That "Uncle Joe" belongs to the
^ | Abraham Lincoln type of statesmen.
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SNAPS FOR SALE NOW:
,47 THE
AUCTION STORE
Cor. Second Street And Avenue A.
1 splendid or-
gan first class
condition
$20.00
1 Drop Head
sewing machine
first class con-
dition
$8.00
Family horse
eight years
old I surry.
new one cost
$150.00, will
sell for
$80.00
Shoes, Crockery, Dress Goods,
Clothing of all kinds, consignments
solicited. Cash ADVANCED on
consignments. Settlement made
after each sale.
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•
in House of Representatives.
Roosevelt and Taft.
Gllson Gardner, a newspaper cor-
respondent who Jollied the Roosevelt
party In Egypt and accompanied It
to Washington, and who had almost
dally interviews with the ex-Presi-
dent, stakes his reputation on the
prediction that the Taft administra-
tion has been so thoroughly l>a<i that
Roosevelt will not endorse it In any
Many Katy Men
at Galveston for
Cotton Meeting
Special to The IYi-kiuii. ' '*
(Juiveston, "lex., July 15.—Today
and tomorrow are the days set for
the annual cotton meeting of the
Katy, and many of the representa-
shape, former manner. He declares Uvea are In attendance, not alone
Taft deserted the Roosevelt policies | from Texas points, but from Okl*lio-
cold-blood«jd|y. in connection with ma and Kansas as well.
Gardner's statement, It Is slgnlfl-J Among those present might be nwn-
cunt that Roosevelt should have been tioned: J. L. West, general fretgtit
this long on American soil following agent of the Texas lines. Dallas; I„.
C. Shipley, general freight agent for
the Kanius and Oklahoma lines; E.
11 Coombs, assistant general frieght
agent, Houston, Heber Page, general
agent, Dallas, Contracting Fright
Agent Zenda.Shreveport; Jack While,
commercial agent, DenlBon; J.
lard, commercial agent at San An-
tonio; Thad Franks eotnmalvl-I
agent at Waco; F. G. Abb«ey, commer-
cial agent at Dallas, as well as
from all compress, transfer and Jurn
the Store
The Store
Q/wi \kfwto Co
Goods
TEMPLES EXCLUSIVE LADIES*STORE
That the Payne-Aid rich tariff bill
was the "best tariff bill ever passed"
and is a God-iwnd to the consumers.
That the expenditure of more than
double the sum used by Cleveland to
run the government is really necess-
ary for pirty solidarity.''
What Democracy Offer*.
Here Is the platform the average
Democratic candidate for CongreM
will present to the people;
Dower duties on the necessaries of
life.
An income tax that a large part of
the burden of the cost of govern-
ment may fall upon those best able
to bear it.
Reciprocity with Canada and our
best customers.
Repeal of Section 2 of the Aldrlch
act that forces tariff wars and retal-
iation.
Election of Senators by direct vote.
Old-time democratic economy In
public expenditures.
Restoration of popular government
his long absence In Africa without
having seen the man he made Presi-
dent or having mentioned h'm In any
way. Roosevelt and Taft have not
met Sinr» March 4, 1809.
Aldrich "Stands Pat!"
Hear ye! Hear ye! Senate Boss
Nelson Wilmarth Aldrlch stands ]«at
:>n his original statemen that the gov-
ernment is wasting $300,000,000 a
year. Senator Beveridge, fretting
under Aldrlch's Indictment of the He-
publican party on the charge of gross rion points. Including J. E. Reed of
Temple,
The meeting will occupy two days
and the general cotton business from
I the wagon to the ship-side at Gal-
and wanton extravagance, sought to
discredit Aldrlch's statement. But
Aldrlch declared he knew what he
was talking sbout, and that if he
could run the government as a bust-j v<ston, and every man present will
ness, "w ithout let or hindrance from j be asked for idc«s that would tend
anyone," he could Rive the people j to facilitate the handling of that
$300,000,000 a year. Query; Is
Aldrich contemplating joining the
ranks of the Insurgents? It would i
be Interesting to know what the
"stand pat" Republican editors of
the country think of Aldrlch's state-
ment on Republican watefulness!
Removing the Sting.
The House passed a bill requiring
the publication of campaign expenses
before an;! after election. The Sen-
ate took tlie sting Out of the treasure '
by amending it so that it provides
for the publication of expenses 'AO
days after election. What good will
it do the people to know how they
should have voted 30 days after an
election la over?
valuable traffic at any stage of the
game.
Jell-0
Ice Cream
Powder
Makes Ice Cream
for one cent
a plate
DISTRICT ORGANIZER OF
I. B & E W HERE
Guy T. White, district orgsnlb^r
of the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, with headquar-
ters at Dallas, was here last night to
assist In the work of getting the lo-
cal union together.
There are quite a number of the
craft here who either have or will
offlllate and a strong organization
will probably follow. Mr. White left
on the night train for Dallas. His
territory Includes, Texaa, Oklahoma
and Arkansas.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY.
FOR SADE—Bird do* pup. cheap.
Dr. Dlenst, 218 North 2nd street.
206 26tx
FOR SALE—Due bill against Temple
Book Concern. Will trade for a
good milk cow or huggy horar AS
dress G. care of Telegram. 206 htx
Foley's Kidney Fills Have Cured Me.
The stxn-e 1* a quotation from * letter
written by H. M Winkler, Evansville.
Ind. "I contracted a severe esse of kid-
ney trouble. My back pave out and
pained me I seemed to have lost ail
Strength and ambition; was bothered with
dissy spells, my bead would swim and
specks float before my eyes. I took Foley
Kidney Pills regularly and am now per-
fectly well and feel like a new man. Fo-
ley Kidney Pills have cured ma." Sold by
W. K. Willis. X
BECIPE:
'• "V P»ck«ae. v*7,r
v ^'OUc* ~ '• m>nut«
•«'"d ck0f"
IV Geaeset far* Feed Ca* Le ley. N. V
P*
I car
ect I
carry a very select
line of toilet articles
and Druggist's sun-
dries.
Agent for the famous
E. Burnham.
preparations, formerly
handled py Mrs. H. F.
Falk.
Gerald's
U
Advertise In the Temgrua for quick
mlta.
THE CITY
NATIONAL BANK
OF
TEMPLE, TEXAS
Cku. M. Ciipkill, Pmiliii
A. J. Jamil, Viet PresUHt
W. S. Rivtul, Ciskiir
I. W. Rnrtui Ats'l. Cithiir
J. L Cirlsli, Ass't Cuklir
How Much Caul Earn?
Is an important
quest i o n. How
much can I save?
is the vital ques-
tion. Let us as-
sist you in saving.
Vourbank business
whether large or
small will receive
our careful atten-
tion and will be
appreciated. &
L, a -ti .... i
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Williams, E. K. The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 206, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 16, 1910, newspaper, July 16, 1910; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth472167/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.