The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1913 Page: 5 of 8
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; Who Am I?
I Am Every we re—Every Day.
I am purchased by the greatest number of
people in each community. I am as necessary
to you as you are to this city. I am the most
influential factor in this locality. I am a part
of the daily life of every intelligent person in
this country. I am the most effective busi-
ness builder in each community. I am indis-
pensible as a medium between the manufact-
urer, merchant and consumer.
I am YOUR DAILY NEWSPAPER.
I can serve you best by keeping you in-
formed on the newest and best things to buy,
and the lowest prices at which the better
things can be sold. I can render you a most
valuable service by protecting you against
unscrupulous manufacturers.
In order to serve you well 1 must have your
co-operation. You can co-operate by reading
THE TELEGRAM'S advertisements closely
and constantly every day. By doing this I
will keep you posted on all the most import-
ant and latest merchandising news and en-
able you to purchase everything you buy
most economically.
SONDAV AFTERNOON
Inherent Dignity of Man" Will Be
Theme at First of Y. X. C. A.
Meetings—Special Music.
The first of the series of Sunday
afternoon meetings under the aus-
pices of the Y. M. C. A. will be held
at the Crescent theater next Sunday
at 3:30. The meeting will be ad-
dressed by Dr. J. C. Hardy, president
of Baylor College. Dr. Hardy an-
nounces as his theme "The Inherent
Dignity of Man."
Miss Vesta Cooper will sing, and Mr.
Percy Smith will render a violin solo.
A Port
itt. The letter has Juit, been
r^celVe'd and Meyers sajrt thai he It
t m* to get 'back to the pom by Fete
14. ^Rrhcn his tine for enll«t*ieht est*
pires. Meyers has bean in the Army
for many years. •
THE HORSE AND MULE
WE HAVE WITH US
Automobiles Have Not Drive* These
Animals Into Obscurity—
Farm Animals Statistic*.
DOG RACES.
A. E. Curtis Pointer Made Good Show-
ign, but Outpointed.
(By Associated Press)
Grand Junction, Tenn., Jan. 28.—Of
the four dogs which ran today in the
National championship trial stake,
the setter Revenue, owned by R. E
Craig Jr. of Vlcksburg, Miss., was the
best bird finder, with eleven bevies to
his credit and while he did not finish
quite as strong as did the setter Pow-
hattan yesterday, he is regarded as a
strong contender for honors. Reve-
nue's brace mater, the pointer John
Proctor, owned by A. L. Curtis of Bel-
ton, Texas, ran a wide going race dur-
ing the first two hours of the heat.
(By Associated Press)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 2».—The in'
troduction of the automobile on
farms of the United 8tates has not
displaced the horse or mule, for the
latest estimate of the number of these
animals on farms January 1 this year
announced today by the department
of agriculture, shows more horset
than ever before except in lMt and
1910, and more mules than at any
previous record-
Horses and mules were of great-
er value than ever before except in
to bring suits at court to com-
pel payment ih cates ef default.
£/ j .
There is a now raven la th* cage
of the historic raven of Mtrseburg In
Prussian Saxony. The number in
succession of the new bird is not
*ucerded, but It occupies a plaoe that
has held a raven since the Middle
Ages, In consequence of the CohditiOn
of a certain knight of Meerteburg who
condemned to death an innocent man.
. Thllo fon TrSthd Wat the lord of
this section in the Middle Ages. One
day he missed from hit room tome
jewelry, accused a man servant of
ttealing it and had him beheaded in
the court yard. Before his decapita-
tion the condemned man proclaimed
his innocence and declared that he
would reassert it after death by rais-
ing his arms above his shoulders
Tradition declares that he did this.
Some months later the misting jew-
els were found in a raven's nett. Thi-
lo-von Trotha thereupon ordered that
for all time a raven thouid be kept
in the courtyard, and the raven just
put into the cage is the successor of
that first bird- The arms of the von
Trothas have a quartering showing a
headless human trunk with the arms
raised.
The mortality rate increased and
the birth rate decreased during 1911
1911. The number of horses in- I in Prussia. Reports Just published
creased 68,000 over last year and show deaths of 17J1 per 1,000 inhab-
mules increased 24,000. ,. . j itants. against 16.19 for 1910. The
SENATE SAFE
TODEMOCRATS
SAtTLSBtHY'S ELECTION FROM
NBW JKRftCY.GIVES PARTY
4» VOTES.
A MAJORITY OF TWO
Believed That Strength is Now Suffi-
cient to Put Through Tariff or
Other Party
as Desired.
(By Associated Press)
WASHINGTON. Jan. 29—With the
election today of Willard Saulsbury
as United States senator from Dels-
ware, the democratic strength in the
next senate swung from precarious
■While the number of beasts of I Department of the Interior finds the j figure of 48, or exactly one-half of
burden on the farm increased, the
number of food animals decreased.
Milch cows decreased 202,000 since 51.000 more persons died than in j Mr. Saulsbury's election, added to
Jan 1, 1912; other cattle decreased
1.230.000; sheep decreased 880,004
but toward the end slowed up consid- an<* swine decreased 4,232.000.
erably. He secured two decisive bevy
points but was also guilty of several
flushes.
An average value per head compar-
ed with 1912, horses Increased 14.88;
mules $3.80, milch cows $5.93, other
SANTA FE TO SPEND
$1,500,000 IN TEXAS
proximately $500,000, and on which
construction work has started.
The twenty locomotives ordered for
the Gulf lines of the Santa Fe, Gen-
eral Manager Pettibone said, are to be
Benceton, owned by Jno. Dunn of { ca**'e $5.16, sheep 48 cents, swine
Baltimore and Babble Brook Joe,
owned by Louis McGrew of Pittsburg,
made up the other brace today. The
Baltimore dog found seven bevies and
ran a strong but rather unsatisfactory
Budget for Improvements This Year's
Announced by Vice President
Pettibone.
placed in use, according to present race, his handler having difficulty
plans, by the middle of the summer of keeping him on the course. Babble
1913. Some will be set up at To- Brook Joe found three bevies shortly
peka, Kan., and a number will also after the brace was cast off but was
be set up at Cleburne. lost the greater part of the heat.
(Special to The Tflegram)
GALVESTON, Jan. The Gulf.
Colorado and Santa Fe Railway com-
pany has determined to spend approx-
imately $1,500,000 in improvements in
Texas for the coming year. The an-
nual budget of the Santa Fe was an- j ance of a group of tents resembling
at a distance a Gypsy camp on the
midwinter lawns of Central Park to-
day was explained when members of
the suffragette band that is to march
SUFFRAGETTES IN CAMP.
"Army" Learning How to Do, Before
March on Washington.
(By Associated Press)
New Tork, Jan. 29.—The appear-
NEW T. & P. CONTRACT.
Agreement on Wages and
Readied at Dallas Conference.
S 1.86. In total value the Increases
were:
Horses $105,628,000; mules $9,5S8,-
000; milch cows. $107,369,000; other
cattle $159,581,000; sheep $21,609,-
000; swine $79,781,000.
The total value of all farm ani-
mals increased $943,865,0009, or 9.1
per cent over 1912.
nounced Tuesday by Vice President F.
G. P?"ttibone. who has divided the
yearly expenditures for additions and
betterments into about twenty classi-
fications. In addition to these im- | t0 Washington next month disclosed
provements to be installed by the San- ] that they had encamped by way of
ta Fe the Gulf lines have ordered getting preliminary "experience" be-
twe-nty new locomotives at a total cost fore the "votes for women" trip is
of about $400,000, averaging $20,000 begun.
each. "General'* Rosaline Jones, chief in
All of these twenty locomotives are I command of the suffrage "army" that
of the latest improved type. Ten are | marched to Albany in December with
(Special to The Telegram)
Dallas, Jan. 29.—Firemen
large locomotives recently put into
service by the Texas & Pacific are
satisfied With the agreement on
wages and working hours reached
late yesterday at the conference be-
tween representatievs of the Broth-
erhood of Locomotive Firemen and
Hmv's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re-
ward for any case of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh
Honrs j Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. O.
We, the undersigned, ha%-e known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and
believe him perfectly honorable in all
explanation for this in the heat wave j the senate, to the safe total of 49, a |
of 1911. In that quarter of the year , majority of two.
the corresponding quarter of the pre- ; the victory recently secured in Ten- |
ceding year, and 37,000 of these were • nessee, assures the democratic party j
Infants. j absolute control of the senate after
The falling of the birth rate how- ] March 4. The vote of Vice President
ever, is the greatest recorded for any j Marshall would have been the decid-
year. It sank from 30.83 in 1910 to J »ng factor in any event, but the addi-
29 86 per 1,000 Inhabitants. As a re- j tion of another democratic vote to
suit of the higher death rate and low- j the column gives the party teadert
er birth rate the total increase of i what they believe to be a safe mar-
population was 89,000 less than in 1 gin for tariff and legislative action. j
1910 ! Contests still exist in the legisla- j
West Prussia. Posen and Westphalia tures of New Hampshire. West VIr- i
show the highest birth rate. Berlin, j«i*la and Illinois, with a total of four,
with 20 71, the lowest. Of Pruttia't eenators to be elected about whose,
33 cities with more than 100.000 in- i Political affiliations doubt now exists,
habitants fifteen show an infant mor- \ A victory in any one of these states ,
tality exceeding the total average of | would so materially strengthen the j
212.3 per 1,000 for the state as a , democratic party* that the senate.
Whole. | would be completely removed from j
There were 8 442 suicides. 250 more ; the element of uncertainty. The atti- i
than In 1910. but precisely the same . t«de of the progressives and the pro-
number as in 1909 The rate stays at gressive republicans upon tariff mat- j
about 21 suicides per 100,000 of pop- , ters Is as yet unknown, but the mar- j
ulation for the whole state, although j gin of strength promised to democrats \
on the 'business transactions and financially j Berlin, with the highest rate recorded ' makes it unnecessary, it is believed, j
by' his° nrmy out an' i)bU*ation made in any governmental division, has to count upon any combinations with
nally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces. of the system.
Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents
per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for ensti-
Enginemen and the Texas & Pacific j pation.—Advertisement.
railroad .attended by United States
Commissioner of Labor Charles P.
Neill.
General Superintendent J.W. Ever-
man of the Texas & Pacific, who had
attended the wedding of Miss Helen |
in any governmental division,
NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE. 35.09 There Were fifty lets murders j the progressives.
Toledo. Ohio. ; than in 1910 and 120 less than in
Hail's Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter- | 19Q, The murder rale u rg6 for
100,000 of population.
for freight service, five are for the | a message to Governor Sulzer led ten Gould at New York, returned in tim<
i ne
peuffit
firfal
fast passenger service
switching locomotives.
used on the Gulf lines of the Santa
Fe.
The million and a half Santa Fe ex-
lture, which has received its
approval, consists of ihe fol-
lowing Items:
Shops, engine houses and tafcrtables
$260,000, siding and spur jracksT"230,-
000, water and fuel stations $160,000,
terminal yards $140,000, station build-
ings and fixtures $125,000, track fast-
enings and appurtenances $115,000;!
Increased weight of rail $80,000, right j
of way and station grounds $50,000,
bridges, trestles and culverts $^0,000, ]
additional main tracks $40,000, block
and other signal apparatus $38,000,
telegraph and telephone lines $28.000..
shop machinery and tools $26,000.
protection of banks and drainage
$25,000, dock and wharf propertied
$21,000, fencing right of way $20,000,
ballasting $20,000, Improved frogs and
switches $5,000, Interlocking plants
$1,500, miscellaneous additions and
betterments $39,000.
The items included in the budget do
not include the terminal yards
I
and ten are women and one man, the latter the
All will be J commissary department, into Central
, Park and tents were pitched for the
J women's occupancy under the yellow
banner that waves for "the cause."
The encampment flies enough col-
ors to account for the popular im-
pression that Gypsies dared an in-
vasion.
to arrange for the settlement.
HEIKJS INFORMED.
Man Who Told About Frauds Becomes
the Goat.
GERMAN SOLUTION
OF SORE PROBLEM
Of the entire membership of 96
senators, sixty-three will hold over
beyond March 4. Of these, thirty-two
are republicans and thirty-one demo- !
crats. The terms of thirty-two sena- ;
tors expire In March and there is In !
ten tion, if they can help it, of losing addiUon_ one vacancy ln lllinolB. Thus
German manufacturers have no in-
Astonlshes Temple.
The QUICK action of bucV.thorn
bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Ad-
ler-i-ka, astonishes Temple people.
Many say ONE DOSE of. this simple
bowel and stomach remedy usually re-
lieves sour stomach, gas on the
stomach and constipation. J. C. Dal-
las & Co.—Advertisement.
KILLING NEAR DENTON.
Son-in-Law In Jnll, Claims Self-De-
fense.
(Special to The Telegram)
Denton, Texas, Jan. 29.—James
Deskin, aged 50. was shot and in-
at, stantly killed south of Lewisville yes-
Brownwood. where- the Santa Fe has ] terday afternoon. His son-in-law,
already started work on a $500,000 | named Sisson. is in jail here today
system of new division terminals, or charged with the shooting. Sisson
the new C^alveston union depot and claims self-defense. Both men mov-
general office building of the Gulf, j ed to Lewisville recently from Ard-
Colorado and Santa Fe, to cost ap- j more, Okla.
(By Associated Prjss)
Jersey City, Jan. 29.—Friends broke
to Chas. R. Heike today the news that
the United States supreme court had
affirmed his conviction of implication
in the weighing frauds of the Ameri-
can Sugar Refining company, of which
he was secretary and that he must
serve his sentence of eight months im-
prisonment and pay a fine of $5,000.
Mr Heike has been ill with heart dis-
ease for several months and the de-
cision was withheld from him until
what seemed to be a propitious mo-
ment. His illness began soon after
the death of his daughter last spring
Soldier Was Shanghaied.
(By Associated Press)
Galveston, Jan. 29.—First Sergeant
Edward Meyers of the One Hundred
and Twenty-seventh company. Coast ; officials already has become guardian
Artillery, who mysteriously disappear- j for 3,100 children. Additional guar-
(By Associated Press)
BERLIN, Jan. 29. — Illegitimate
children in Berlin are henceforward '
to be under the official guardianship j
of the municipality, and the fathers j
of such offspring are to be compelled
by representatives of the city, to sup-
port them. »
This departure is one of the latest
experiments of Berlin in the direction
of municipal socialism
Until recently guardians for such
children were selected from cititens.
wherever it was possible to obtain
suitable persons for this function, hut
the difficulties of finding them were
so great, owing to the steady increase
in the number of illegitimates .that
the city government finally decided
to establish a special office to look af-
ter the guardianships for them.
Thig new bureau is to be conduct-
ed in a thoroughly systematic man-
ner. It will be supplied with four of-
ficials whose business It is to act as
professional guardians. One of these
any of their export trade with South
America, and they are. even today, j
j preparing to meet the increased trade
! competition that they foresee will ;
| come south of the Isthmus with the
1 completion of the Panama Canal.
Merchants, manufacturers and sci-
i entific men have founded at Bonn a
j society called the "German South
! American Institute" to establish clos-
er trade relations with Latin Amer-
ica.
An extensive program has been laid
j out. Regular publications will be lt-
| tued in German, Spanish and Port-
uguese, covering elaborate investiga-
! tlons of commercial, financial, agri-
far seventeen democratic senators
have been elected and the election of
Senator Bacon in Georgia is certain,
making eighteen democrats to take
j the oath of office March 4
j The opposition forces, including
j both the republicans and the progres-
l sives, have elected eleven new sena-
tors. The senate after March 4 will
stand as follows, if the deadlocks are
not broken in Illinois, New Hampshire
tnd West Virginia:
Democrats 49; republicans and i
progressives 43; vacancies 4.
^ EVERAL big bills to out of town
O people—several to Temple pat-
rons. The fair weather has
brought us customers that in-
tended coming earlier. But fair weath-
er or wet weather, you simply cannot
atford to miss this opportunity to buy
Furniture at Bargain Prices.
Our prices are bargain prices—don't
take our word for it; come, look at our
ofierings, them compare with similar
offering elsewhere.
Daniel & Jarrell Quality combined
with Daniel & Jarrell Styles, at Daniel
& Jarrell Prices is a combination that
cannot be equaled.
Come today. Only three more days of
this great sale. Saturday is the last day
J " ' 1 v
DANIEL & JARRELL
.THE PLAGE TO BUY GOOD FURNITURE
v __ /
Don't think because you have taken
many remedies in vain that your case
cultural, geographical, geological and i 1( incurAbj€. Hood s Sarsapartlla has
mineralogical problems. Divisions 1 cure<J many hopeies, cases
have been organized for all the lead-
ing South American countries, and
also for Mexico.
Hamburg has Just become the sec-
| ond German city, with a population
! above 1,000.008. The other city is
j Berlin. This result was accomplished
by extending the city limits to in-
clude eight suburban villages with a
total population of about 21,000.
Since January 1, when the new or-
dinance went into effect. Hamburg
has a population of 1,007,74 8.
of scrofula, catarrh, rheumatism, kid
ney complaint, dyspepsia and general ,
debility. Take Hood's.
(Advertisement)
Phone E. B. Greathouse
For Wood and Coal. Prompt Delivery
big department store at Temple and
the head of various enterprises, ac-
companied by Secretary W M
Woodall of the Temple Chamber of
Commerce, are spending the day in
Waco, "reading the signs' as they
put it
Temple is figuring on putting in
one or two big electric signs of gen-
eral character, something like the
"Welcome to Waco' 'electric sign at
Austin and Fourth streets, and the
gentlemen mentioned are lookin?
over the field of electric light signs
here. These signs will blaze out bril-
liantly at dark, and a better impres-
sion can then be secured.
Secretary Woodall. who was for-
merly a member of the city counoll,
met many old friends today.
which are proposed. The ebjeet M,
he says, to get a law that will he
"fairer to the birds and fairer to the
hunters." V.
PoU Ta*
Yesterday and the preceding
in this week wens busy days at
office of the city secretary and eol-^
lector, but net so busy as today and
tomorrow are expected to be. 'n|w|
doubt a large number of the citiMae
who have not yet received their fran-
chises will wake hp this morning to
the tact that the? have only two more
days la which to qualify as citizens
entitled to vote in the elections
may be held this year.
?
The German universities are turn-
ing out yearly increasing numbers of
CITY NEWS BRIEFS
1
ed from Fort Crockett about two
months ago and for whom the police
in every city in Texas had been asked
to search, was shanghaied in Galves-
ton and taken to Vera Cruz, Mexico,
according to a letter 'Which he has
dians will be appointed as the duties
of the bureau Increase. One of the
chief tasks of the guardians Is to see
that the fathers of the children car-
ry out the orders of the courts In
paying for the support of the children
Industrial Committee Mdets.
Yesterday afternoon, the industrial
committee of the Chamber of Com-
, merce met in the Secretary's rooms to
doctors of medicine, but where and dl9CUM th. p,.opo8iUon t0 esUbli,h a
how theqe young men will collect company or Sullivan, Illinois, factory-
enough fees to meet their expenses is ; here for the manufacture of gal van
a question of vital interest. „ed ,h^t m#ul proaucts;
Depot Work in Pall Swing.
Yesterday work on the new Katy
depot was in full swing. A large
gang of men were engaged in the ex-
cavations on the site of the old struc-
ture, removing its foundations, to
prepare a space for the laying of
foundations for the new station Two
car loads of lumber had been re-
ceived, and was being unloaded. Three
large shanties have been erected in
which to store the tools of the labor-
ers at night. Altogether the scene
presented a busy aspect.
Yesterday the news was received
that the mother of Mrs. J. R. Poln-
j dexter, and Mrs. N. G Charlton, had
! died at her home at Corrlgan, Texas.
Both of these ladles have been at the
bedside of their parent and Mrs
Poindexter is still at Cerrlgan, bat
Mrs. Charlton returned here suite re-
j cently on aocount of ill health, and
will not be able to attend the funeral
I services. . .; .
The medical profession Hn Germany
is over-crowded. The number of new
ln ;
The committee has already been in-
vestigating the commercial status of
pillllllK
llllllllllllll
Physicians licensed to practice j thl8 flrm Rnd information acquired
1910-11, was 1.047. which compares thus far U distinctly favorable to them
Our New Spring Lines
ARE HERE
Vie Ifould Enjoy Showing Them to You!
We are certainly turning out the best
cleaning and pressing for both ladies
and gentlemen. = /
^ In regard to alteration, repairing, new button
holes and and all kinds of tailoring we are in a.
class all to ourselves.
Both Phones. Call ior and deliver all work.
i
with 945 in 1909-10, and the net in-
crease for 1912 was 692. against 886
for the previous year. There is now
6ne physician in Germany to every
and to their proposition. It was de-
cided at the conference to institute as
complete and thorough examination as
possible into the position this concern
i Miss Lillian McCauley of Moody
j has been quite seriously til with ap-
i pendicitis, and has submitted to an
! operation at one of the Temple ln-
| stitutione of surgery. She is a sister
Eapourmged With Game Lew Pros- j of Miss McCauley of the Baylor cel.
lege faculty. [y tjm),
J. M. Gee, who lives near Bslton,
was ln the city yesterday on busi-
ness. Mr. Gee has been on the *ck
list for about a month, and is Jwst
getting about to get around again.
1.978 persons. The number vanes occupl„ ln tht) world ^ and if
W. Goodrich Jones returned yes-
terday from Austin, where he spent
a day inter-viewing the lawmakers in
the interest of the proposed reforms
in the Texas game laws. He reports
that he is very much pleased and
encouraged with the attitude of th*
lawmakers toward the measures
Dr. W. J. Harlan of Barttett frmm im
the city yesterday.
FRED L. RYDER
THE LEADIN6 TAILOR
iiiiiiiHiniiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii
I"
£j» -
™ 'St. i.1 S#,5!
from one to every 2.857 in the min-
ing town of Gelsenkirchen to one
to every 398 ln the fashionable wat-
ering piece of Wiesbaden. In Berlin
and Its suburban cities there is one
to every 888. That the number of
physicians will undergo & further
sharp increase is indicated by the in-
creasing numbers of medical students
at the universities. In the tummer
semester of 1912 there were 13,380
medical students, or a fain of about
1.600 in a year The number has
doubled within six years.
Norris Trial
(Special to The Telegram)
Ft. Worth, Jan. 23.—The trial of
Rev. J. Prank Morris for alleged arson,
continued until the February term of
the Forty-eight district court, will
not be tried during the term, but will
be continued until the return of Sena-
tor Lattimore from the legislature at
Austin. He is the chief attorney for
ReV. Norrls.
It is new- almost a year efrace the
indictment was returned. The case
was continued in November because
the county attorney's offioe Was tied
bp with the Sneed trial.
I' tm i *
Hit by Auto.
*. (Special te The Telegram)
Ft. Worth, Jan. *9.—Mrs. A. C
Jones, 61, died Tuesday at 7 p. m.
of Injuries received when she was
struck Tuesday noon in front of her
residence. 1818 May street, by as au-
tomobile driven by James A. Walk-
up, druggist Concussion of the Main
followed by cerebral hemorrhage, was
■**
the data received regarding it is suf-
ficiently satisfactory and favorable to
reader such course advisable it it pro-
posed to send several members of the
organization to Sullivan, IHinoia, with
a view to completing the investif&tion
into the standing of the Star Manu-
facturing company and to induce
members of the concern to return
with them to Temple to look into the
local situation and close the deal If It
appeals to the company's representa-
tive as feasible and desirable.
Returns from Corpus Christ!.
A. L. Thormann. who was trans-
ferred by the Wallace people to Cor-,
pus Christ! a few weeks ago to work
up business for the new gas com-
pany in that olty, returned to Tem-
ple yesterday and will be with the
Temple Gaslight company again un-
til further orders. Mr. Thormann
says hit stay at Corpus Chrlstl will
be remembered by him largely at a
pleasure trip, as he did some fish-
ing and duck shooting while there, in
addition to finding the business re-
lations with the people there very
pleasant. He was very much grati-
fied with the amount of business
done. He hooked the business of be-
tween 300 and 400 customers, and
states that the other company which
waa recently jgranted a franchise in
Corpus Chrtsti has decided not to
enter the field. The Whliace company
he statss is making good progress
and alrea4y has twelve blocks oi
mains laid. •<"> ■: I'
That while yon are down town stop in at the
Olympian and get a steaming hot cup of Choco-
late or • hot glass of one of the many drinks we
prepare for those who are cold and want some-
thing warm before starting home.
We have, the largest and
dies In Temple. Also fruits
their favorite brands of cigai
Any drink wanted can he
the
I w
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Williams, E. K. The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1913, newspaper, January 30, 1913; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth473722/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.