The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 252, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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Now is the time to
begin Youi Adver-
Using Campaign, in
older to reap your
share of the golden
flow of Dollars. Mr.
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help you.
...THE...
TELEGRAM
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The Season
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A TEXAN'S STORIES
EDIFY VERMONTERS
PLEASAHT EXPERIENCES OP GOV.
PENDLETON VP NORTH.
Wife of Standard Oil King
Is Said to Be Seriously III
Made the Green Mountain Folks a
Speech, in Which He Expounded
True Democratic Gospel.
Brer since Governor Pendleton re-
turned from his summer visit to his
daughter in Vermont the people who
know Urn and who hare ideas of
what the people up there are like,
have been enjoying the little scrap®
of incident and of experience which
the splendid storjr teller has let drop
in conversation. Even before he re-
turned and from the time it was
known that he was.going there were
Inward chuckliuge over what would
happen to those azure bodied fellows
in the bleak north who are still vot-
ing the Republican ticket with the
idea that It is necessary to preserve
the Union. Mr. Pendleton's friends
knew that the Vermonters were in
for some wholesome lectures on the
evils of their political ways, and that
they were to be given rare touches
of Southern philosophy, humor and
language. Tbey almost envied them
the wholesome laughs that would be
theirs, as the Governor would relate
to them the "Thousand and One
Night*" of not Arabian lore, but of
purely Southern tales. He was to
be turned loose in a community
where the rich Illustrations, "to
adorn a tale" had probably never
penetrated, and tor every shifting
expression or sentiment Mr. Pendle-
ton was known to possess a story,
Illustrating and calculated to make
the intercoetals sore.
Now that be is back he grimly
smilea when his friends ask him what
he did to them, and the recollections
of the times he had in telling and
being told and in enjoying the whole-
souled hospitalities of his hosts, are
precious reflections to him. He talk-
ed democracy, too, of the unwashed
kind, and there is no doubt but that
many a Republican in that section
has a new light on political subject*
due to Mr. Pendleton's expounding
of the pure gospel.
That the anticipations of his visit
were not mistaken, and that he
really did create the Interest up
there that may be imagined, is amply
testified to by the people whom he
visited, and a reflection of the big
times for all is contained 1n an ar-
ticle from the Littletown, Vermont,
Courier, from which paper The Tele-
gram clips the following account of
a Democratic meeting held In that
city, as follows:
"The first gun In the campaign
at Whltefleld made a big noise in
the town hall last Thursday night,
when Clarence E. Carr, who will be
the unopposed candidate for the Dem-
ocratic nomination for Governo',
gave a stirring speech, end exCon-
gressman George C. Pendleton of
Temple, Tex., gave a charactertatic
Southern address on the general is-
sues of the day. The hall was fairly
well Wiled and everybody was highly
entertained, to whatsoever party he
belonged. Mr. Carr gave a most Il-
luminating talk, dwelling extensive-
ly upon the Issue of economy In State
expenses, railroad domination of the
government and on the question of
taxation. He had a vaat array of
figure* and gives evidence that he
will make a formidable campaign af-
ter the primaries, whoever may be
the Republican candidate. He spoke
for nearly an hour .being Introduced
by Wallace Brown, one of the veteran
Democrats of the town. Mr. Carr
made a strong appeal for the con-
servation of the forests and for the
conservation of the political rights of
the people.
"He was followed by ex-Congress-
man .Pendleton, who has also been
speaker of the house of representa-
tives in Texas and Lieutenant Gov-
ernor of his State. Mr. Pendleton
delighted the audience from the first.
He has a Southern twang, which
adds zest.to a most entertaining
manner of argument, and his hour's
talk seemed rather too brief. The
speaker has been visiting his son-in-
law, Morton J. Lyster, of Whltefleld,
and Whltefleld people grasped the
opportunity of listening to him eager-
ly. Mr. Pendleton fought In the
Confederate cause, but he paiid high
tribute to the wearers of the blue
and said he was glad the slave was
free. He discussed some of the lead-
ing political issues of the day, and in
a particularly breezy way paid his
compliments to the Republican party
and its policies. It Is needless to
say that Mr. Pendleton Is a Demo-
crat. He also gave estimates of
Roosevelt and Taft that pleased the
audience. He mingled his discussion
of politics with a number of good
stories, which brought down the
house. Mr. Pendleton likes White-
field and says he hopes to get up into
the North country again.
Smith Family Reunion.
Special to The Telegram.
Hamilton, O., Sept. 7.—The Butler
county families of the name of Smith,
who trace their ancestors back to the
original Captain John Smith, whose
little love affair with Pocahontas, the
Indian maid, waa the stellar piece in
McOuffey's Third Reader, will have
their first reunion tomorrow at the
home of James W. Smith, of Reily
Township.
We handle scheel tablet*.
P0WX1* DRUG 00.
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MRS, J
Special to Tne Telegram.
Cleveland, O., Sept. 7.—From For-
est Hill comes the statement that
Mrs. John D. Rockefeller i* seriously
ill and that her youngest daughter,
Mrs. Alta Prentice, has been aum-
moned to her bedside. It is said that
Mrs. Rockefeller is suffering from
the effects of a severe cold contracted
at Augusta, Oa., last fall and win-
ter, from which she has never fully
LOVE, NOT MARRIAGE,
WILL RULE, SHE SAYS
Fair Theosophist of Butte Predicts an
FnH to Wedlock as an
Institution.
recovered. The physicians treating
the oil magnate's wife deny that
there is cause for alarm, but friends
of the family are apprehensive.
POEM MAY FREE HER
FROM INSANE ASYLUM
This Once Noted Singer's Verse Stirs
Business Men in Her
Behalf.
Special to The Telegram.
New York, Sept. 7.—"When we
can grow as flowers and love as the
sun, who gives his warmth and light
to every animate and Inanimate
thing alike, then only are we able to
discard the present necessary sys-
tem of matrimony. When we have
reached this point in evolution, all
human passion and emotion will havej
been subdued and ruled, instead as
today the majority are ruled by
them, which present condition is al-
so necessary at this time for the de-
velopment of the true self."
Mrs. Lillian Hobart French, theoso-
phist, of Butte, Mont, and latterly
of New York, who is suing Fritz
Augustus Heinze for $25,000 which
she allege* she lent him during the
panic of 1907, Is writing a book. The
title is "Are These Things True?"
and Mrs. French devotes a consider-
able part of her book t<^ dilating on
the point that marriage will some
time soon be a memory as an insti-
tution. The foregoing paragraph is
quoted from the book.
Mrs. French expresses her emotions
on the subject also in the following
paragraphs:
"The time will oame when there
will be neither marriage nor giving
in marriage."
"It requires a peculiar and highly
developed mentality to grasp the uso-
lessnees of marriage."
"The divorce courts prove that
marriage Is becoming a Dailure."
"Some day unadulterated love will
rule supreme and become empress
of the wide world.'•>
"No human power can separate
two souls whom God hathi Joined to-
gether if they do not see fit to se-
parate."
"Marriage is now necessary he-
cause of financial condition of this
materialized age."
"We must love as the sun loves
the earth, as mate for mate, who will
sacrifice all for the other and glory
in the sacrifice."
WAR ON CANCER.
Started By Experts For the Crocker
Fund.
Special to The Telegram.
New York, Sept 7.—The physi-
cians and surgeons 1n charge of the
practical administration of the Geo.
Crocker cancer research fund of
Columbia University are getting |
ready for the Initial work.
It la maintained by these labora-
tory workers that for some time to
come the propaganda of early diag-
nosis and the cllntical analysis Of a
large number of cancer cases will be
Special to The Telegram.
Toledo, O., Sept. 7.—Miss Jennie
Dickeraon, once a noted singer, may
be released from' the Toledo State
Hospital for the Insane, after being
a patient there for eighteen years,
if the hospital directors act favor-
ably on the plea of a society of
Cleveland business men who desire
to allow her to spend the rest of her
life in a private home under super-
vision and care of the Cleveland Bus-
iness Men's Society.
The letter to the officiate follows:
"Our attention has been called te
the case of a woman Inmate of your
Institution who hias established a rep-
utation as a verse writer. Several
members of our society have made an
investigation Into her case, with the
result that we have decided to cause
her to be placed In a private homo
for the care of such person* In event
that It ia possible to secure her re^
lease.
"We will gladly put up bonds and
place her in such a home as you rec-
ommend. This society, which I rep-
resent, is composed of well known
Cleveland business men and was or-
ganized for the purpose of helping
a few unfortunate people who have
displayed unusual ability In one of
the arts."
Miss Dickerson Ig an exceedingly
bright woman and writes verse free-
ly. It was a poem entitled "Dream
World" which attracted the attention
of this society.
of as great importance to the patients
and the profession as the experimen-
tal study of the disease.
The keynote of the fund's attitude
toward the cancer problem 1s sound-
ed in an article written by Dr. Isaac
Levin on "The Importance of Early
Recognition of Cancer." It is issued
from the department of pathology
of Columbia University at the Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons and
printed In the Medical Record.
Among other things Dr. Levin says:
"The difficulty in diagnosing can-
cer in first stages is due to the fact
that cancer has practically no spe-
cific symptoms. The physicians
must bear in mind the possibility of
the formation of a malignant growth
In every patient of middle age and
must be watched for symptoms of
the disease."
Shcfect tfouMep!
Bit tii« Original and Btmtlnt
11 OR LICK'S
MALTED MILK
Tfcft Food-drink for AH Age#.
7or Infants, Invalid*, and Glowing children.
: jra Nutrition, up buildingthe whol^»ody.
.vigor ales thenurang mo»h« and the ag«L
■ich milk, mailed gram, m powder form.
*, quick hick prepare* ia a mate.
iak.Mscbtih.te. Ask f»H8RL!CK' S.
te No Oombktm or Trumt
WIDOW OF PLANT'S COUSIN
Dies Under Wheels of Train—Soout
Suicide Theory.
Special to The Telegram.
Branford, Conn., Sept. 7.—Mrs. Al-
bert B. Plant was instantly killed by
a train here today. Her relatives
say that they have no idea that she
committee suicide, although they can
not explain hef reason* for going
upon the railroad track at such an
early hour. She was fiff* years old.
Her husband was first cousin of the
late railroad and steamship magnate,
Henry B. .Plant, and her husband's
farm adjoined the Henry B. Plant
farm, where the multimillionaire
transportation king spent his boy-
hood. She testified in the celebrated
Plant will case, and when Mrs.
Henry B. Plant died two years ago
she left Mrs. Albert Plant $40,000.
"Mound City Paints may cost a
trifle mars, but—! R. O. HAltlLL."
New Dress Fabrics
We are now showing the choicest line of New
Dress Fabrics to be found In the city.
New Percales in solid grounds with dots and
figures, all fast colors, Q1 i
priced at ..O^u
Beautiful New Percales for children's school
wear, bright colors, all fast, J ft*
per yard {I UU
Red Seal Ginghams in plaids, stripes and** solid
. colors, Bookfold I 01 n
at only ...JZ2U
New Red Seal Ginghams in short lengths, ^10 to
20 yards, fine quality, -
per yard
New Plaids for School Dresses, rich
blues, reds, greens and browns,
per yard • ••• •••«••••• a •-« a a « • • a • t • ♦ » • • • «f-*aj
Cretons and Oriental'
Draperies
New and beautiful lines of Cretons and Orientals]
Draperies, in rich Autumn shades, three great lines
to select from, 10c, 12£o I5c
i 1
New Delineator \
I5C A
October Patterns Now Ready
Now on sale, price
only. »•» ..... •
i
The Mississippi Store
The Storm Ahead
EARLY DAYS
(Continued Prom Page 1.)
ed for, and almost at once the Pat-
terson home became a spot of loveli-
ness, In marked contrast to the bare
streets and yard, and to the barren
prairies in the midst of which this
oasis was begun.
The trees prospered, and the flow-
era and the grass covered the ground
with relieving tint* of green and
colors. As the years went by the
home became more and more attrac-
tive to the eye, and others seeing and
given the cue, improved their homes
likewise. But for many years, the
Patterson place was the most beau-
tiful in the city.
On its passing, there is no need
to dwell. Sufficient to say that bus-
iness took It and that now, while
some of the noble trees, thirty years
old, still stand, and that the beauU-
ful slope Is still covered with grass,
and that here and there are to be
se<;n mounds or holes which mark
where former beautlee flourished,
beauties In flowers and shrubs.
Those big shade trees still beckon.
They tell the present generation that
it is wise to plant—that for a life-
time and beyond, their kind will con-
tinue to grow and to beautify the
home.
To make room for ugly buildings,
some of these old friends are now be-
ing murdered. In time they will all
have to go, but they will have per-
formed well th«4r miselon, a double
mission, In that they lived to make
a beautiful home and to demonstrate
that Temple could be made beautiful
throughout the length and breadth
of Its broad streets and In its home-
like yards. And Temple Is a city
of trees, which are the offspring of
the splendid specimens new being
cleared away to give room for the
building of a city of walls.
THE GREAT ADVANTAGE of aa
account at Temple State Bank la In
knowing that your meney Is abso-
lutely safe and that you will receive
every accommodation warranted by
your balances, business and respon-
sibility. At this bank you are assur-
ed of kind and courteous treatment
and your business will receive strict
attention In every detail.
LONE BANDIT \
ns -*•
.(Continued from Page 1.)
_______ V V» ^ *T ;
4
traded the attention of the negro por-
ter in the rear sleeper, who opened tha
rear door to b« confronted with tha
revolver of the highwayman. Ths por-
ter was forced into a closet at the
point of the pistol, locked there and
the four passengers robbed before
those In the forward part of the six-
coach train were aware of the hold-up.
The names of the robbed passengers
could not be learned, as they remained
on the train and continued on their
Journey.
i
MAKES HIS GET-AWAT.
The robber is believed to have made
his escape when the train slowed up
in North St. Louis.
Conductor Brady of the train was the
first to reach the robbed sleeper, and
found the passengers in a state of
fright and the negro locked in the cloa-
et. He signalled Engineer Housman
to stop the train at the North St Louis
yardmaster's office, at the foot of Car-
rie avenue where Yardmaster 0. C,
Hill was notified of the hold-up,
We handle New Mexico alfalfa, th«
best grown. Also all other kinds oi
choice feed. Both phones, prompt
delivery. CHIT.DRESS A CO.
RECORD SWIM
Made By a Sixty-Year-Old Woman
at St Louis.
Special to The Telegram.
St. Louis, Mo„ Sept. 7.-—-Un. An-
drew Brandenburger, 60 years old
and weighing 170 pounds, swam five
miles today in the height of one of
the heaviest rainstorms in the City's
history. She swam from the east end
of the Eads bridge, at the heart of
the business section, to the St. Louia
Altenhelm, at 540S South Broadway.
She was unassisted, being accompan-
ied by only a rowboat and motor
boat John C. Meyers, noted swim-
m»r of this city, declared the swim
the most remarkable he ever saw,
considering Mrs. Brandenburger's
advanced age. She was quite fresh
at the conclusion of the awim and
climbed a flight of 495 steps from
the levee, where she landed, te the
top of the hill.
A. G. VICK J. A. MILLERMAN
Vick. and NUlerman
ABSTRACTS ARB L8ANS
Complete abstracts of Temple and Bell county. Temple of-
fice in charge of J. B. Talley, over Temple State Bank
THE KINGS DAUGHTERS' HOSPITAL
Modern hospital hnlldlng.
or east exposure. No noma e& vaat side.
Bltuated in the corporate limits of city, with a Ugn
view of the entire eaat end of the eonaty. Ventllatioe
of the taeet end moat thoroughly equipped operating
state Location la free of the noise, smoke and dust of the city.
Ample corps of trained nurses under the superiateadeaes ef 1
Orr, former aasiataat sepertntaadaat of anasa la New Weaut E
pltal, Nsw York City
MX8. K. L, OTLBERTSOS,
Bnperittemdeat
MBS MCLY HOMES 0I1»
Sept. of Mama.
U.'S-
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Williams, E. K. The Temple Daily Telegram (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 252, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1910, newspaper, September 8, 1910; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth475425/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.